2025 INSC 220
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
(HON’BLE
PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA, J. AND HON’BLE MANOJ MISRA, JJ.)
VINOD @ NASMULLA
Petitioner
VERSUS
STATE OF CHHATTISGARH
Respondent
Criminal
Appeal No.1931 OF 2019-Decided on 14-02-2025
Criminal
(A) Penal
Code, 1860, Section 395 read with Section 397 - Arms Act, 1959, Section
25(1) (b) (a) - Appeal against conviction – Evidence Act, 1872, Section 9
– Test Identification parade – Dock identification - Though it was proved
by PW-7 (i.e., the Naib Tehsildar who executed the TIP) that the TIP for
identifying the appellant was conducted and the appellant was identified by two
out of three witnesses yet those three witnesses who participated in the
TIP of the appellant were not examined during trial - Thus, the TIP report,
which could have been used to either contradict or corroborate those witnesses,
is of no evidentiary value - Only substantive evidence on record of the case in
respect of identification of the appellant is the dock identification by PW-9 –
Held that the dock identification by PW-9 does not inspire our confidence for
the reasons: (a) PW-9 is a police personnel posted at police station Prem
Nagar. During cross-examination, on being questioned about his movement papers,
he could not provide a satisfactory explanation for his movement in that bus -
(b) As per the investigating officer, PW-9’s statement was recorded on the same
day the FIR was registered. The appellant was also arrested that very night
within few hours of the incident. Yet, PW-9 was not used for identifying the
accused during the TIP. His non-participation in the TIP, seriously dents his
credibility - (c) PW-9 in his deposition stated that he had seen the appellant
earlier on more than one occasion - If that was so, there was all the more
reason for the investigating officer to use him in the TIP - More so, when, as
a police personnel, he was under the control of the prosecution - Besides that, when you withhold the best
evidence such as that of the driver, conductor and cleaner of the Bus, who all
participated in the TIP, without giving good reason as to why they were not
produced or summoned, the dock identification by a solitary witness, that too a
police personnel, fails to inspire confidence to sustain conviction of the
appellant for the offence punishable under Section 395 read with Section
397 of the IPC, particularly, in absence of corroborative evidence of
recovery of any looted article either from, or at the instance of, the
appellant – Held that prosecution has failed to prove the guilt beyond
reasonable doubt - The appellant is therefore, entitled to the benefit of doubt
- Judgment and order of the trial court and the High Court liable to be set-aside
and the appellant is acquitted of the charge for which he was tried.
(Para 15 to 17 and 25)
(B) Evidence
Act, 1872, Section 9 – Evidence - Test Identification parade – Objective – Evidential value - Held that a test
identification parade under Section 9 of the Act, 1872 is not substantive
evidence in a criminal prosecution but is only corroborative evidence - The
purpose of holding a test identification parade during the stage of
investigation is, firstly, to ensure that the investigating agency is proceeding
in the right direction where the accused is unknown and, secondly, to serve as
a corroborative piece of evidence when the witness identifies the accused
during trial - The evidence of identification merely corroborates and
strengthens the oral testimony in court which alone is the primary and
substantive evidence as to identity.
(Para 14)
JUDGMENT
Manoj Misra, J. :- This appeal impugns
the judgment and order of the High Court of Chhattisgarh, Bilaspur[“The High Court”] dated 03.01.2018
passed in Criminal Appeal No.3014 of 1999 whereby the appeal of the appellant
against the judgment and order of the Sessions Judge, (Surgujha) Ambikapur
(then in Madhya Pradesh) dated 26.10.1999, passed in Sessions Trial No.292
of 1994, has been dismissed and conviction of the appellant under Section 395
read with Section 397 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860[“IPC”] and Section 25 of the Arms
Act, 1959[Arms Act]has been upheld.
2.
The appellant Vinod @ Nasmulla and Mohd. Kalam Ansari were jointly tried by the
Court of Session, (Surguja), Ambikapur (now in the State of Chhattisgarh).
Mohd. Kalam Ansari was acquitted whereas the appellant was convicted
under Section 395 read with Section 397 of the IPC
and Section 25 (1)(b) of the Arms Act. Under Section 395 read
with Section 397 of the IPC he was sentenced to seven years rigorous
imprisonment along with fine of Rs.2,000/-, coupled with a default sentence of
eight months; and for the offence punishable under Section 25(1) (b) (a) of
the Arms Act, he was sentenced to one and a half years of rigorous imprisonment
along with fine of Rs.500/-, coupled with a default sentence of three months.
All sentences were to run concurrently.
Prosecution
Case
3.
The prosecution case in brief is that while Bus bearing registration No. U.P.
42-A 5406 of Adarsh Transport Bus Service was going to Raipur in the
night of 28.09.1993, at about 11:30 p.m., one person, who was sitting behind
the driver, put a country-made pistol on the temple of the driver and ordered him
to stop the bus. When the bus stopped four persons already travelling in the
bus and four other persons, who boarded the bus from where it had stopped,
inter alia, started beating the passengers and robbed them of their belongings.
A shot was also fired at one of the passengers who sustained injuries. The
culprits thereafter escaped with looted articles. The driver took the bus to
the Police Station, Ambikapur where First Information Report (FIR) was lodged
at about 12:20 a.m. on 29.09.1993. Whereafter the police swung into action,
barricades were put to ensure that culprits do not escape and, ultimately, it
is claimed, in the night of 29.09.1993 itself, Khemraj Singh (PW-5) arrested
the appellant, at about 3:00 a.m., carrying a country- made pistol, which had
five cartridges, two live and three empty. On 30.09.1993, the appellant was put
to test identification parade (for short TIP) wherein he was identified by the
bus driver Ram Sajeevan Sharma (not examined) and Khalasi Ainul Khan (not
examined). The other person, who was also there in the bus, namely, Kamal Singh
(the Conductor of the bus), though was asked to identify the accused,
failed to identify him. Based on the alleged confessional statement made during
investigation, Mohd. Kalam Ansari was arrested and put to trial along with the
appellant.
Prosecution
Evidence
4.
Though a number of witnesses were examined by the prosecution but eye witnesses
(i.e., passengers in the Bus) examined were only three, namely, PW-6, PW-9 and
PW-12. However, none of them had participated in the TIP of the appellant.
PW-6, PW-9 and PW-12 proved commission of dacoity whereas PW-9 identified the
appellant in Court, during the course of the trial, as the one, amongst those
dacoits, who had put the gun on the temple of the driver. PW- 5 was witness of
appellant’s arrest and recovery of country-made pistol. PW-7 (i.e., the Naib
Tehsildar), who executed the TIP of the appellant, proved the TIP and PW-8
(i.e., the Additional Tehsildar) proved the TIP of Mohd. Kalam Ansari.
Trial
Court Finding
5.
The trial court, inter alia, held that the factum of dacoity is duly proved;
PW-9 identified the appellant as one of the dacoits who committed the crime;
PW-5 proved recovery of country-made pistol from the appellant and,
therefore, the appellant is liable to be convicted. The trial court, however,
acquitted co-accused Mohd. Kalam Ansari.
High
Court Finding
6.
Aggrieved by the judgment and order of conviction, the appellant preferred
appeal before the High Court, though without success. Aggrieved by dismissal of
the appeal, the appellant is before us.
7.
We have heard the learned counsel for the appellant; the learned counsel
representing the State of Chhattisgarh; and have perused the records.
Submissions
on behalf of Appellant
8.
The submission of the learned counsel for the appellant is as follows:
(i) The prosecution
has withheld the best evidence, namely, the driver of the bus at whom the gun
was pointed and who allegedly identified the appellant in the TIP. Besides
that, neither the conductor nor the Khalasi (i.e., the Cleaner), who
participated in the TIP, was examined by the prosecution.
(ii) PW-9 is a police
personnel whose presence in the Bus at the time of dacoity is doubtful
because, firstly, his papers relating to his
movement were not brought on record and, secondly, if he was present, there was
no reason not to use him for identification during the TIP.
Even if it is assumed
that he was travelling in the Bus, his non-participation in the TIP renders him
unreliable, more so, because in his testimony he admits that he had seen the
appellant earlier.
(iii) No stolen/
looted article was recovered either from the possession of the appellant or at
his pointing out.
(iv) The country-made
pistol alleged to have been recovered is not linked to the gun shots that were
allegedly fired with the aid of any forensic evidence.
(v) The manner in
which the appellant is stated to have been arrested by PW-5 at 3.00 a.m. in the
night does not inspire confidence. Moreover, if the appellant was carrying a
loaded pistol, why he would not use it to effect his escape, particularly, when
PW-5 was alone and attending nature’s call.
9.
Based on the above submissions, the learned counsel for the appellant submitted
that the trial court as well as the High Court has accepted the testimony of
the prosecution witnesses without testing it on the anvil of probability,
therefore, the judgment and order of conviction deserves to be set- aside.
Submissions
on behalf of State
10.
Per contra, the learned counsel for the State submitted that the factum of
dacoity is proved beyond doubt; PW-9 has identified the appellant as the
culprit who pointed the gun at the driver to ensure that the bus stopped; there
is nothing to indicate as to why PW-9 would falsely implicate the appellant;
the TIP was promptly conducted; PW-7, the Naib Tehsildar, in whose presence the
TIP was conducted, has proved that in the said parade the appellant was
identified; PW-5 proved that in the night of the incident, the appellant was
arrested while he was carrying a country-made pistol; and the forensic
examination of the pistol reveals that it was in a working condition with live
cartridges. These evidences, inter alia, duly proved the involvement of the
appellant in the commission of crime and therefore, the order of conviction and
sentence is based on proper appreciation of the evidence on record and
does not call for interference in exercise of power under Article
136 of the Constitution of India.
Analysis
11.
Before analysing the rival submissions, it would be useful to cull out facts as
regards which there is no dispute. These are:
(i) The incident for
which the prosecution was launched is of dacoity where a running bus, carrying
35 passengers, was looted by about eight armed men in the night of 28.09.1993.
However, only two
including the appellant were put to trial.
(ii) No looted article
of any kind is stated to have been recovered either from, or at the instance
of, the appellant or the other accused. The country-made pistol stated to have
been recovered from the appellant at the time of arrest is not connected to any
empty cartridge, or bullet, that might have been found at the spot or extracted
from the person injured.
(iii) Neither the FIR
nor the statements of eyewitnesses recorded under Section
161 CrPC
name the appellant or for that matter any
other accused.
(iv) Though the TIP
was carried out with the aid of Driver, Khalasi (i.e., the Cleaner) and
Conductor of the Bus, none of them was examined as a witness during trial.
(v) PW-9 is the only
witness who identified the appellant on the dock as one of the dacoits who
participated in the dacoity.
(vi) PW-5 is the only
witness of arrest of the appellant in the night of 29.09.1993.
12.
From the facts culled out above, there are just two pieces of evidence against
the appellant, namely, (a) dock identification by PW-9; and (b) arrest of the
appellant that night with a country-made pistol by PW-5. We shall deal with
each of them separately.
Dock
Identification by PW-9 not reliable
13.
Before we proceed to test the reliability of the dock identification by PW-9,
it would be apposite to examine the evidentiary value of the TIP conducted
during investigation to identify the appellant.
14.
A test identification parade under Section 9 of the Evidence Act, 1872[Section 9.- Facts necessary to explain or
introduce relevant facts. - Facts necessary to explain or introduce a fact in
issue or relevant fact, or which support or rebut an inference suggested by a
fact in issue or relevant fact, or which establish the identity of anything or
person whose identity is relevant, or fix the time or place at which any fact
in issue or relevant fact happened, or which show the relation of parties by
whom any such fact was transacted, are relevant in so far as they are necessary
for that purpose.] is not substantive evidence in a criminal prosecution
but is only corroborative evidence. The purpose of holding a test
identification parade during the stage of investigation is, firstly, to ensure
that the investigating agency is proceeding in the right direction where the
accused is unknown and, secondly, to serve as a corroborative piece of evidence
when the witness identifies the accused during trial. [Umesh Chandra v. State of Uttarakhand, (2021) 17 SCC 616, (paragraph
9); Iqbal and Another v. State of Uttar Pradesh, (2015) 6 SCC 623
(paragraph 15)] The evidence of identification merely corroborates
and strengthens the oral testimony in court which alone is the primary and
substantive evidence as to identity.
[Hari Nath and Another v. State of U.P., (1988) 1 SCC 14 (paragraph 19),]
In Rameshwar Singh v. State of Jammu and Kashmir[(1971) 2 SCC 715] , a three-Judge Bench of this Court
succinctly summarized the evidentiary value of the TIP as under:
“6……. The
identification during police investigation ……. is not substantive evidence in
law and it can only be used for corroborating or contradicting evidence of the
witness concerned as given in Court. The identification proceedings ……
must be so conducted that evidence with regard to them when given at the
trial, enables the court safely to form appropriate judicial opinion about its
evidentiary value for the purpose of corroborating or contradicting the statement
in Court of the identifying witness.” Thus, if the witness who identified a
person or an article in the TIP is not examined during trial, the TIP report
which may be useful to corroborate or contradict him would lose its evidentiary
value for the purposes of identification. The rationale behind the aforesaid
legal principle is that unless the witness enters the witness box and submits
himself for cross- examination how can it be ascertained as to on what basis he
identified the person or the article. Because it is quite possible that before
the TIP is conducted the accused may be shown to the witness or the witness may
be tutored to identify the accused. Be that as it may, once the person who
identifies the accused during the TIP is not produced as a witness during
trial, the TIP is of no use to sustain an identification by some other witness.
15.
In the instant case, though it was proved by PW-7 (i.e., the Naib Tehsildar who
executed the TIP) that the TIP for identifying the appellant was conducted and
the appellant was identified by two out of three witnesses, those three
witnesses who participated in the TIP of the appellant were not examined
during trial. Thus, the TIP report, which could have been used to either
contradict or corroborate those witnesses, is of no evidentiary value. Hence,
the only substantive evidence on record of the case in respect of
identification of the appellant is the dock identification by PW-9.
16.
The dock identification by PW-9 does not inspire our confidence for the
following reasons:
(a) PW-9 is a police
personnel posted at police station Prem Nagar. During cross-examination, on
being questioned about his movement papers, he could not provide a satisfactory
explanation for his movement in that bus.
(b) As per the
investigating officer, PW-9’s statement was recorded on the same day the FIR
was registered. The appellant was also arrested that very night within few
hours of the incident. Yet, PW-9 was not used for identifying the accused
during the TIP. His non-participation in the TIP, seriously dents his
credibility.
(c) PW-9 in his
deposition stated that he had seen the appellant earlier on more than one
occasion. If that was so, there was all the
more reason for the investigating officer to use him in the TIP. More so, when,
as a police personnel, he was under the control of the prosecution.
17.
Besides that, when you withhold the best evidence such as that of the driver,
conductor and cleaner of the Bus, who all participated in the TIP, without
giving good reason as to why they were not produced or summoned, the dock
identification by a solitary witness, that too a police personnel, fails to
inspire our confidence to sustain conviction of the appellant for the offence
punishable under Section 395 read with Section 397 of the IPC,
particularly, in absence of corroborative evidence of recovery of any looted
article either from, or at the instance of, the appellant.
Manner
in which arrest has been effected is doubtful
18.
As regards the manner in which the appellant is stated to have been arrested,
prosecution case rests on the testimony of PW-5. PW-5 is a police constable.
According to him, while he was going to attend nature’s call on 29.09.1993, at
around 3:00 a.m., he saw the appellant hiding in the bushes near a public pond,
probably to evade arrest, as the police had been on the look-out for the
dacoits. PW-5 says that the appellant tried to escape by threatening to use his
country made pistol, but he managed to overpower and arrest the appellant; and
later he along with the pistol was handed over to the police station in-charge.
19.
The prosecution evidence indicates that country-made pistol had two live
cartridges and three empty cartridges.
20.
The appellant had denied the factum of arrest in the manner alleged and had
also produced defence witnesses, but neither the trial court nor the High Court
discussed the defence evidence.
21.
Ordinarily, if a person is carrying a loaded weapon, he would use the same to
evade arrest unless the person is completely outnumbered. Here, the appellant
is stated to have been arrested by PW- 5, who was single and about to attend
nature’s call. Moreover, there is no injury on either side to suggest that
resistance was offered at the time of arrest. Such a prosecution story is too
convenient to be acceptable as true. More so, when it had support from police
witnesses only. Therefore, the court should have been circumspect so as to look
for corroborative pieces of evidence. This we say so, because it is not
uncommon for the police to be under pressure to quickly resolve a case having
implications on public order and therefore, look for soft targets.
22.
Here, there is neither recovery of any looted article from the appellant or at
his instance, nor the country-made pistol was linked to any empty cartridge
recovered from the Bus or the scene of crime. There is also no injury report to
substantiate that the appellant offered resistance before he was apprehended.
In absence of any such corroborative evidence, it would be too naive on our
part to accept the prosecution story regarding the manner in which the
appellant is stated to have been arrested.
23.
Besides above, from paragraph 34 of the trial court judgment, we could notice
that the seizure memo (Exb. P/11) of country made pistol, etc. was prepared at
11:45 hours on 29.09.1993, which is about nine hours after the appellant was
allegedly arrested. Such a long delay in producing the seized articles at the
police station for preparing seizure memo, in absence of cogent explanation,
dents the
credibility
of prosecution story regarding the arrest of the appellant at about 3 a.m. on
29.09.1993.
24.
Once we doubt the manner in which the appellant is stated to have been
arrested, the recovery of country-made pistol alleged to have been made at the
time of arrest falls to the ground. Besides that, from paragraphs 33 and 34 of
the trial court judgment, it appears that the country made pistol produced
during trial did not match with the description of the seized weapon in the
seizure memo. This discrepancy was casually brushed aside by observing that it
may be due to rusting. That apart, the seized article(s) were sent for forensic
examination on 22.06.1994, as would appear from paragraph 34 of the trial court
judgment. All these circumstances, taken cumulatively, seriously dent the
credibility of the prosecution case qua recovery of country made pistol from
the appellant at 3 a.m. in the night of 29.09.1993.
25.
In the light of the analysis above, we are of the view that the prosecution has
failed to prove the guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The appellant is therefore,
entitled to the benefit of doubt. The appeal is allowed. The judgment and order
of the trial court and the High Court are hereby set-aside. The appellant
is acquitted of the charge for which he was tried. The appellant is reported to
be on bail. He need not surrender. His bail bond is discharged.
26.
Let a copy of this order be sent to the concerned court.
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