2025 INSC 221
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
(HON’BLE
J.B.PARDIWALA, J. AND HON’BLE R. MAHADEVAN, JJ.)
VASANT @ GIRISH
AKBARASAB SANAVALE & ANR.
Appellant
VERSUS
STATE OF KARNATAKA
Respondent
Criminal
Appeal No.593 OF 2022-Decided on 11-02-2025
Criminal, Murder
(A) Penal
Code, 1860, Sections 498A, 302 and 504 read with Section 34 – Dowry Prohibition
Act, 1961, Section 3 and 4 – Evidence Act, 1872, Section 32 and 106 - Murder –
Dying declaration -
Appreciation of evidence – Judgment and order of acquittal passed by the trial
Court reversed by High Court - There is no cross examination worth the name of
the PW-2-Tehsildar who recorded the dying declaration - Nothing substantial
could be elicited through the cross examination thereby to disbelieve that the
deceased was not in a fit state of mind to give a dying declaration - There is
no cross examination of PW-15- Dr. -Nothing substantial could be elicited
through the cross examination of the Dr. so as to disbelieve the oral dying
declaration made by the deceased before him - Nowhere the husband figures - It
is only the mother-in-law, who figures in the dying declaration as well as oral
evidence of the Doctor and the Tehsildar – Evidence was looked in to so as to
ascertain whether the deceased was in a fit condition to make the dying
declaration or not - There is nothing on record to indicate that she was unable
to talk or was not conscious - There is no cogent and reliable evidence to hold
the husband-appellant guilty of the alleged offence even with the aid of
Section 34 of the IPC – Provisions of Section 106 of the Act, 1872 has no
application in the present case - It is true that when crime is alleged to have
been committed inside the four walls of the house and that too in secrecy then
the family members residing in the house are the best persons to know and
explain as to what had actually happened – Assuming for the time being that the
husband was very much present at the time of the incident however there is
nothing to indicate that he shared common intention with his mother - When the
mother-in-law poured kerosene on the deceased and set her on fire, it is
possible that the husband out of sheer fright might have run away from his house
after trying to extinguish fire by pouring water on the burning body of his
wife - For applicability of Section 106 so as to implicate the husband also in
the alleged crime the prosecution has to as a condition precedent lay the
foundational facts prima facie indicating his involvement or participation in
the alleged crime - His sudden disappearance after the incident is not
sufficient to infer common intention - High Court rightly held the
mother-in-law guilty of the alleged crime - However, the High Court at the same
time committed an error in holding the husband-appellant no.1 guilty of the
offence of murder with the aid of Section 34 IPC - Judgement and order of
conviction passed by the High court so far as the appellant no.2 is concerned
is affirmed - So far as the appellant no.1-husband is concerned, the appeal
succeeds and is allowed - The appellant no.1 is acquitted of all the charges.
(Para 30 to 37, 91 to
93)
(B)
Penal Code, 1860, Section 34 – Common intention – Position of law - with respect to Section 34 IPC and case law on
the subject discussed.
(Para 38 to 90)
ORDER
1.
This appeal arises from the judgment and order passed by the High Court of
Karnataka, Dharwad Bench in Criminal Appeal No. 100168 of 2016 dated 6th
October 2020 by which the High Court allowed the appeal filed by the State of
Karnataka and thereby quashed and set aside the judgment and order passed by
the VIth Additional District & Sessions Judge, Belagavi in S.C. No. 151 of
2013 acquitting the appellants herein of the offence punishable under Sections
498A, 302 and 504 read with Section 34 respectively of the Indian Penal Code,
1860 (for short “the IPC”) and Sections 3 and 4 respectively of the Dowry
Prohibition Act, 1961
.2.
It is the case of the prosecution that the deceased named Geetha was married to
the appellant no.1 herein viz. Vasant @ Girish Akbarasab Sanavale past 8 years
from the date of the incident. In the wedlock three children were born. It is
alleged that after a period of one year from the date of marriage the husband
and his family members started harassing the deceased. The deceased was being
harassed for dowry and in connection with the domestic house hold work.
3.
On the date of the incident at around 8.00 p.m. while the deceased was at her
matrimonial home, her mother-in-law i.e. the appellant no.2 herein is alleged
to have poured kerosene on her body and set her on fire. The deceased suffered
extensive burn injuries.
4.
The neighbours residing in the vicinity rushed to the place of the incident and
immediately shifted her to the hospital. The deceased succumbed to the burn
injuries after a period of one week. The cause of death as usual is septicemia.
5.
The mother of the deceased Tippavva Chandru Patil, lodged an FIR dated
03-01-2013 which came to be registered as crime No. 2 of 2013 in Mudalagi
Police Station, Mudalagi Circle, District Belagavi, Karnataka. The first information
report reads thus:-
“The accused persons
mentioned herein are the husband, mother-in-law and father-in-law of Geetha,
daughter of the complainant and the said accused persons looked after Geetha
cordially for 1 year after marriage but then they have not only ill-treated her
physically and mentally by insisting her to wake up early in the morning and do
the household chores and to go to the house of others to work but also
pressurized her to bring an amount of Rs.5,000/- from her maternal house and since
she did not bring money from her maternal house, the accused person had the
intention to kill her and poured kerosene on her and set fire and tried to kill
her and thereby committed offence.”
6.
On the FIR being registered the investigation started. The Tehsiladar of the
area was requested to reach the hospital for the purpose of recording of the
dying declaration of the deceased. The Tehsildar within four hours of the
incident reached the hospital and recorded the dying declaration Exhibit-46.
7.
The statements of various witnesses, more particularly, the neighbours who had
brought the deceased to the hospital were recorded under Section 161 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973(for short “the Cr.P.C.”). After the deceased
passed away her body was sent to post mortem examination. The other articles
collected in the course of the investigation like clothes etc. were sent to the
Forensic Science Laboratory for the purpose of chemical analysis.
8.
At the end of the investigation, Police filed charge-sheet against the husband
and mother-in-law respectively for the offence enumerated above. The case being
exclusively triable by the Sessions Court came to be committed to the Court of
Sessions Under Section 209 of the Cr.P.C.
9.
The trial court proceeded to frame the charge against the accused persons under
Sections 498-A, 302, 114, 323 and 504 r/w Sec.34 of IPC respectively and
Sections 3 and 4 respectively of Dowry Prohibition Act to which they pleaded
not guilty and claimed to be tried.
10.
The prosecution examined the following witnesses in support of its case:-
“PW1 Anand Shankar
Sanawale
PW2 Laxman Ramappa
Sanawale.
PW3 Sushila Dilip
Sanawale.PW
4 Shabbir Samsher
Sanawale.PW
5 Latha Shashikant
Sanawale.PW
6 Julekha Gulabsab
Sanawale.PW
7 Smt. Yallawwa Ramu
Karale.PW
8 Krishna Mukappa
Shivalli.PW
9 Malik Chandru
Patil.PW
10 Prakash Shankar
Sanawale.PW
11 Smt. Tippavva
Chandru Patil.PW
12 Hanumanth Bhima
Nayak.PW
13 Dastagir Abdulsab
Inamdar.PW
14 Dr. Adam Allasab
Nadaf.PW
15 Dr.Gopal Ramu
Wagamude.PW
16 Shivanand
Basavanthappa Dhulai.PW
17 Suresh Shankar
Murgod.PW
18 Maruti Yallappa
Padadalli.PW
19 Anil Balappa
Padedar.PW
20 Lakkappa Durgappa
Taddi.PW
21 Oudram Hammabba
BearyPW
22 Sureshbabu Rudrappa
Bandiwaddar.PW
23
Sharanappa.M.Olekar.PW
24 Mrthunjay Irayya
Mathapati.PW
25 Dr.N.Sujatha
Nanjegouda”
11.
The prosecution also led the following pieces of documentary evidence:-
“(i) Ex.P.8 Mahazar of
place of occurrence
(ii) Ex.P.27 Post
Mortem Report
(iii) Ex.P.30 Opinion
of the Doctor before recording the Dying Declaration (PW15)
(iv) Ex.P.30 Opinion
of the Doctor before recording the Dying Declaration (PW25)
(v) Ex.P.46 Dying
Declaration
(vi) Ex.P.54 FSL
Report”
12.
Upon closure of the recording of the evidence, the trial court recorded the
further statement of both the accused persons under Section 313 of the Cr.P.C.
in which both the accused said that they were innocent and had been falsely
implicated.
13.
Upon appreciation of the oral as well as documentary evidence on record, the
trial court recorded a finding that the prosecution had failed to establish its
case beyond reasonable doubt and accordingly acquitted both the accused.
14.
The State being dissatisfied with the judgement and order of acquittal passed
by the trial court went in appeal before the High Court. The High Court
reversed the finding of acquittal and held both the accused guilty of the
alleged offence. The High Court ultimately sentenced them to life imprisonment
with fine.
15.
In such circumstances, referred to above, the appellants are here before this
Court with the present appeal.
16.
Mr Faeek-ul-Farooq, the learned counsel appearing for the appellants vehemently
submitted that the High Court committed an egregious error in reversing a
well-reasoned judgement of the acquittal. According to him, even if a different
view is possible on the evidence on record, the High Court as an Appellate
Court should be slow in reversing the acquittal unless the High Court comes to
the conclusion that the findings recorded by the trial court are perverse or
contrary to the evidence on record.
17.
He would submit that the High Court committed a serious error in relying upon
the dying declaration of the deceased recorded by the Tehsildar. According to
him having regard to the medical evidence on record the dying declaration
should be discarded as the deceased at the relevant point of time was not in a
fit condition of mind to speak anything.
18.
He submitted that so far as the appellant no.1 i.e. the husband is concerned,
there is no case at all against him.
19.
He would submit that the deceased neither in the oral dying declaration made
before the Doctor nor in the dying declaration recorded by the Tehsildar has
said anything against the husband. On the contrary, according to the learned
counsel the deceased in the dying declaration before the Tehsildar has said
that the husband poured water on her to extinguish the fire.
20.
In such circumstances, referred to above, the learned counsel prayed that there
being merit in his appeal the same may be allowed and the accused persons be
acquitted.
21.
On the other hand, Mr.Singhvi, the learned counsel appearing for the State
submitted that no error not to speak of any error of law could be said to have
been committed by the High Court in reversing the acquittal and holding the
appellants herein guilty of the offence of murder. He would submit that the
only thing that weighed with the trial court in disbelieving the dying
declaration is the fact that all other witnesses, more particularly, the
neighbours had turned hostile and failed to support the case of the
prosecution.
22.
According to Mr. Singhvi, the oral dying declaration made by the deceased
before PW-15 Dr.Gopal Ramu Wagamude and the dying declaration before the
Tehsildar exhibit P-21 is sufficient enough to at least hold the appellant no.2
guilty of the alleged crime.
23.
In the last Mr. Singhvi tried to develop an argument that although the husband
may not be directly involved or in other words has not been directly implicated
in the alleged crime still it is established that he was present in the house
and it was expected of the husband to take all necessary precautions or steps
to save his wife and the failure or omission on his part would indicate
thecommon intention shared by him along with his mother.
24.
Mr. Singhvi also tried to invoke Section 106 of the Evidence Act arguing that
something within the personal knowledge of the husband should have been
disclosed by the husband in his further statement recorded under Section 313 of
the Cr.P.C. In the absence of any plausible explanation the High Court rightly
held the husband also guilty with the aid of Section 34 of the IPC.
25.
In such circumstances, referred to above, Mr. Singhvi prayed that there being
no merit in this appeal, the same may be dismissed.
ANALYSIS:
26.
Having heard the learned counsel appearing for the parties and having gone
through the materials on record, the only question that falls for our
consideration is whether the High Court committed any error in passing the
impugned judgement?
27.
We first start with the dying declaration recorded by the Tehsildar.
28.
The dying declaration exhibit-46 recorded by the Tehsildar reads thus:-
“Question No.1: Are
you conscious and in a sound state of mind?
Answer: Yes
Question No.2: Are.
you in a state to speak?
Answer: Yes
Question No.3: Where
are you now?
Answer: General
Hospital, Gokak.
Question No.4: When
and who brought you here and by what means?
Answer: The people
belonging to my lane brought me here yesterday in ambulance at about 8~30 p.m.
Question No.5: Who
attacked you?
Answer: My
mother-in-law poured kerosene on me and my mother_in-law Jaitunabi lit
matchstick and threw on me and set fire.
Question No.6: Give
their name and address?
Answer: Jaitunabi
Sanavale
Question No. 7: How do
you identify her?
Answer: I identify
her.
Question No.8: How did
you sustain injury?
Answer: I have
sustained injuries by fire.
Question No.9: What
are the weapons used and describe the shapes?
Answer: Kerosene and
matchstick.
Question No.10: In
which place you are attacked?
Answer: In the house
situated in Mudalagi.
Question No.11: Can
you identify wounds on your body?
Answer: Yes.
Question No.12: How
and in what manner you have sustained injuries?
Answer: Burnt by
pouring kerosene.
Question No.13: What
was the intention behind the attack?
Answer: I was in house
and in the evening there was quarrel due to my children and at that time my
mother-in-law Jaitunabi Sanavale got enraged due to quarrel and poured kerosene
on me and when I was going to bathroom, my mother-in-law Jaitunabi lit
matchstick and threw it on me. My husband Vasant splashed water on me but the
fire did not extinguish and at that time the residents of the lane gathered and
took me in ambulance to General Hospital at about 8.30 p.m.”
29.
In the aforesaid context we shall now look into the oral evidence of the
Tehsildar. The Tehsildar PW-21 namely Oudram in his examination in chief has
deposed thus:-
“On 3-1-2013 when I
was discharging my duty as Tahsildar Gokak. I, received requisition from
Mudalagi police station as per Ex.P.42 which was received in my said office.
On the same day I went
to Govt. hospital Gokak and wrote a letter to Medical Officer, Govt hospital
Gokak as per Ex.P.32 seeking his opinion whether Geeta was able to give any
statement, which bears my signature Ex.P. 32
(b). The said Medical
Officer in Ex.P.32 has endorsed that patient was able to give oral statement.
Accordingly, I have
recorded dying declaration of the said Geeta. She for questioning who, when and
how she was brought to hospital, she answered that the residents of her lane
brought her on previous night at 8.30 pm by ambulance. For questing who
assaulted her, she replied her mother-in_law had poured kerosene and aunt,
namely- Jaitunabi, set her fire my matchstick. For questioning whether she
could identify her, she replied that she could. For questioning how she
sustained injuries, she replied she sustained burn injuries. For questioning
where crime was committed, she replied that at home at Mudalagi. For
questioning the intention of the crime she replied when she was there in house
in the evening, there was quarrel because of her children. Her mother-in-law
enraged by the said quarrel poured kerosene on her. When she was going to
bathroom her mother-in-law Jaitunabi, lighted match stick and threw on her. Her
husband, Vasant, splashed water on her. The fire did not extinguish. At that
time the people from her lane gathered and took her to hospital at 8.30 pm by
an ambulance.
Since her palms were
burned I took finger impression of her left toe on the said dying declaration.
Afterwards I have
signed said dying declaration and the Medical Officer has also signed the same.
On 4-2-2013 I received requisition, marked Ex.P. 44, seeking to issue true copy
of dying declaration of deceased Geeta. On 4-2-2013 I sent a letter, with one
true copy of dying declaration and one sealed envelope containing original
dying declaration to CPI, marked, Ex.P.45, which bears my signature
Ex.P.45(a)(In the open court a sealed cover received from Addl. JMFC, Gokak is
opened.)
The dying declaration
of Geeta is Ex.P.46;my signature is Ex P.46(a)(b);The left toe impression of
Geeta there-in is Ex.P.46(c); The signature of medical officer there-in is
Ex.P.46(d). I have recorded the dying declaration of Geeta on 3-1-2013 from
12.15 p.m. to 12.25 p.m.”
30.
Unfortunately, there is no cross examination worth the name of the Tehsildar.
Nothing substantial could be elicited through the cross examination thereby to
disbelieve that the deceased was not in a fit state of mind to give a dying
declaration
31.
We now proceed to look into the evidence of Dr. Gopal Ramu Wagamude Exhibit 17
(PW-15). Dr. Gopal Waghmude in his examination_in-chief as deposed as under:-
“I have been serving
as Senior Specialist in General Hospital, Gokak, since 2011. On 02.01.2013 at
about 9.30 p.m., Anand S. Sanavale had brought Geetha Vasant Sanavale, aged
about 28 years; R/o Mudalagi, to our Hospital requiring treatment for burn
injuries. As per the information given by Geetha; her mother-in-law poured
kerosene on her and set her ablaze. She also informed that this incident
occurred on the same day at about 8.00 p.m. On examining her, she was in
conscious state. She was telling that she was feeling thirsty. When she was
examined, her B.P was 90/70 and her pulse was palpitating and kerosene smell
was coming out of her body. On examining her, normal burn injuries were found
on her face and neck, Deep burn injuries were found on her right hand, left
hand, right leg and left leg. Deep burn injuries were found on abdomen and back
and all these injuries appeared reddish in colour. All these injuries were
grievous in nature and also fresh in nature. Nearly 90% of burn injuries were
found. I have given treatment to the said as in-patient. I have also given
treatment to her on 03.01.2013. Except me, General Surgeon has also provided
treatment to this patient. On 03.01.2013, A.S.I of Mudalagi Police station gave
a requisition requesting to know whether the patient is in the condition to
give statement or not. The document which is shown to me now is the office copy
of the requisition which was given to me on that day. It has been marked as Ex.P.30.
Ex.P.30 bears my signature about receiving it. In Ex.P.30, I have written my
opinion that the patient is in the condition to give statement. It has been
marked as Ex.P.30 (a). I have furnished wound certificate about the injuries.
The document which is shown to me now is the wound certificate that I have
furnished. It has been marked as Ex.P.31. The signature of witness has been
marked as Ex.P.31 (a). The document which is shown to me now is the office copy
of the requisition given by the Tahsildar to N. Sujatha, Junior Specialist of
our Hospital. The said requisition bears signature of N. Sujatha. The said
document has been marked as Ex.P.32. In Ex.P.32, Junior Specialist Sujatha has
given opinion and affixed signature by stating that the patient is in the
condition to give statement. It has been marked as Ex.P.32 (a). When a person
pours kerosene on another person, there are chances of sustaining injuries
found in Ex.P.31. The above-mentioned patient was referred to KIMS Hospital,
Hubballi from our hospital for further treatment.”
32.
Again, there is no cross examination of Dr. Wagamude. Nothing substantial could
be elicited through the cross examination of the Dr. so as to disbelieve the
oral dying declaration made by the deceased before him.
33.
However, what is pertinent for us to note is that nowhere the husband figures.
It is only the mother-in-law, who figures in the dying declaration as well as
oral evidence of the Doctor and the Tehsildar.
34.
We also looked into the evidence, so as to ascertain whether the deceased was
in a fit condition to make the dying declaration or not. There is nothing on
record to indicate that she was unable to talk or was not conscious.
35.
To a very pertinent question put by us to Mr. Singhvi as to what weighed with
the High Court in holding the husband guilty of the alleged offence, he invited
the attention of this Court to para 30 of the impugned judgement. In para 30,
the High Court has observed thus:-
30. From the very
statement of Geetha, cruelty to her in the hands of the accused persons is
established invariably and without iota of doubt. The cause of death is burn
injuries and the burn injuries are established to have been inflicted by
accused Nos.1 and 2, they are charged with common intention. If the accused
No.1 was really about to save his wife, he could have done it when she was in
murderous condition by sustaining injuries to the extent of 90-95% inflicted in
his person in his presence and in the presence of hostility of himself and his
wife, he never bothered even to take her to treatment. He wanted to ensure that
she dies. In this connection, the offence may be with respect of commission or
omission.”
36.
The plain reading of para 30 referred to above would indicate that what weighed
with the High Court in holding the husband-appellant guilty is the fact that he
never bothered to take his wife to the hospital as he wanted to ensure that she
does not survive. Therefore, according to the High Court, the husband could be
said to be guiltyhaving shared common intention with his mother. We have not
been able to understand exactly what the High Court wants to convey.
37.
Be that as it may, we have reached the conclusion that there is no cogent and
reliable evidence to hold the husband-appellant guilty of the alleged offence
even with the aid of Section 34 of the IPC. Section 34 of the IPC reads thus:-
“34. Acts done by
several persons in furtherance of common intention.—When a criminal act is done
by several persons, in furtherance of the common intention of all, each of such
persons is liable for that act in the same manner as if it were done by him
alone.”
38.If
there is one decision explaining Section 34 IPC which could be termed as locus
classicus then the same is the Allahabad High Court decision in the case of Om
Prakash v. State reported in 1956 CrLJ 452. Justice M.H. Beg (as His Lordship
then was) has beautifully explained the provision and its applicability.
39.
In order that an intention should be common, it should be attributable to every
member of the group. This is also clarified by the fact that the section itself
characterises the common intention to be the ‘common, intention of all’.
Section 34, IPC, therefore, does not ignore the intention of the individual
offender.
40.
It only adds some more persons in the commission of the offence and postulates
that the same intention was jointly existing in the mind of every individual
member of the group as well. It may be that the intention was alleged to be
common, but that only means that every member shared it along with others and
not the some members shared it and others did not.
41.
The common intention required under Section 34 Penal Code need not, however, be
identical with the guilty intention or ‘mens rea’ which is the ingredient of
the offence and is to be distinguished from it. The latter might be coincident
with or collateral to the former.
42.
On the other hand, the position under Section 149, IPC, is very different. The
charge framed under Section 149, IPC, disregards the intention of the
individual members of the assembly altogether, and concentrates merely on the
common object of the assembly as a whole. The result of this position is that
there may be cases in which a person might be guilty of an offence under
Section 149, IPC though he himself had no intention to commit it or was even
unaware of its commission.
43.
There may even be cases where a person might be found guilty of an offence
under Section 149 though it was committed quite contrary to his own intention.
Supposing for instance, an unlawful assembly is formed with the object of
wiping out all members of a particular community residing in a mohalla. While
this assembly is busy in its unlawful activities, some of its members might
come across a member of the other community and might in prosecution of the
common object proceed to murder him.
44.
But a particular individual, say X, who is a member of this very unlawful
assembly might discover that Y was his old friend. X might not want that this
old friend of his should be killed, and in spite of his wishes, and contrary to
his intention, Y might be murdered.
45.
If it so happens, then X who was a member of the unlawful assembly, might be
held to be guilty of an offence committed by another member of the said
assembly, even though the offence itself was committed quite contrary to his
desires and even in opposition to his own intention provided it is shown that X
continued to remain a member of the assembly at the time of the offence and the
offence itself was directly or indirectly within the purview of the common
object of the assembly.
46.
The reason is that the criminal liability under Section 149, IPC is determined
not by the intention of the various individual members constituting it but by
the common object of the assembly as a whole. The result is that when a charge
against a person is framed for an offence under Section 149, IPC, read with a
relative section, and the person is convicted of the offence under the relative
section alone, he might legitimately complain that his own mental state having
never been put into issue under the charge at all, he was taken by surprise in
the matter and thereby misled and prejudiced.
47.
For the purpose of the above discussion I am presuming that a charge framed
under Section 149, IPC is the usual charge under which the individual
authorship of the offence is not defined or specified, and the offence is
alleged in the charge to be the act of an undefined member of the assembly. The
position under Section 34 is different. The connection here between the
offender and the offence is far closer and deeper.
48.
Under Section 34 every individual offender is associated with the criminal act
which constitutes the offence both physically as well as mentally. That is, he
is a sharer not only in what has been described as a common act but also in
what is termed as the common intention, and, therefore, in both these respects
his individual role is put into serious jeopardy although this individual role
might be a part of a common scheme in which others have also joined him and
played a role that is similar or different.
49.
To put it in other words, whereas under Section 149, IPC the entire emphasis
both in respect of the physical act as well as in respect of the mental state
is placed on the assembly as a whole, under Section 34, IPC, the weight in
respect of both is divided and is placed both on the individual member as well
as on the entire group.
50.
Section 34, IPC, as contrasted with Section 149, IPC, therefore, balances the
individual and the general aspect, although while taking into account the
individual aspect it conceives it as part and parcel of the general aspect. In
this sense, Section 34, IPC, is far more restricted than Section 149, IPC. If,
therefore, a person is charged with an offence with the application of Section
34, IPC, and convicted for the substantive offence only, it is not so easy for
him to advance the plea that he was not aware that the matter had any
individual aspect.
51.
Participation of the individual offender in the criminal act in some form or
the other which is the leading feature of Section 34, IPC differentiates it not
only from Section 149, IPC, but also from other affiliated offences like
criminal conspiracy and abetment. A bare agreement between two or more persons
to do or cause to be done an illegal act might make a person liable for the
offence of criminal conspiracy as defined in Section 120, IPC. If the said
agreement is to commit offence, then such an agreement is by itself enough to
make a man guilty and no overt act apart from the agreement would be necessary.
52.
If, however, the agreement is to commit an act which is not tantamount to an
offence, then some overt act in pursuance thereof is necessary. Such overt act
may, however, be performed by any person who is a party to the agreement and
not necessarily by the particular accused who might be guilty of the offence
without having participated in the act.
53.
On the other hand, under Section 34, IPC, a mere agreement, although it might
be a sufficient proof of the common intention, would be wholly insufficient to
sustain a conviction with the application of Section 34, IPC, unless some
criminal act is done in furtherance of the said common intention and the
accused himself has in some way or the other participated in the commission of
the said act.
54.
The offence itself would be complete even though the act abetted is not
committed; or, even if the act is committed, the abettor himself has not
participated in it. Thus, actual participation in the commission of the
offence, which is a condition precedent of Section 34 and is its main feature,
again distinguishes it from the offence of abetment.
55.
Section 34, IPC, compendiously summarises the liability imposed under English
Law on what are therein called as principal in the first degree and principal
in the second degree and assimilates the principles underlying both by
compressing them in one section and treating them as what have been called
accessories at the fact as opposed to what are termed as accessories before the
fact and accessories after the fact.
56.
In this connection, Mr. Singhvi the learned counsel for the Stateargued that a
person who is present on the spot at the time of the commission of the offence
would be guilty by the application of Section 34, IPC. although such a person
did not do anything.
57.
A person present on the scene might or might not be guilty by the application
of Section 34, IPC. If he is present on the scene for the purpose of
participating in the offence, he would certainly be guilty as a participator in
the offence. On the other hand, if he is present there merely as a spectator,
he would not be guilty.
58.
Thus, for example a person who is an eyewitness of the incident is present at
the spot as well as a person who is a confederate of the assailant. The former
is not guilty because he is present merely to see the commission of the crime.
On the other hand, the latter is guilty because he is present for the purpose
of seeing that the crime is committed. In other words, presence on the spot for
the purpose of facilitating or promoting the offence is itself tantamount to
actual participation in the criminal act.
59.
As observed by the Privy Council in the case of Barendra Kumar Ghosh v.
Emperor, AIR 1925 PC 1 (C), “It is to be remembered that in crimes as in other
things ‘they also serve who only stand and wait’”. The following observations
of Mookerjee, J. in the case of Emperor v. Barendra Kumar Ghosh, AIR 1924 Cal
257 (FB) (D) are relevant in this connection:
“It is the expectation
of aid, in case it is necessary to the completion of the crime and the belief
that his associate is near and ready to render it which encourage and embolden
the chief perpetrator, and incite him to accomplish the act. By the countenance
and assistance which the accomplice thus renders, he participates in the commission
of the offence.
60.
It is, therefore, sufficient to hold a party as principal, if it is made to
appear that he acted with another in pursuance of a common design; that he
operated at one and the same time for the fulfilment of the same pre-concerted
end, and was so situated as to be able to furnish aid to his associates with a
view to insure success in the accomplishment of the common enterprise”, (p.
280)
61.
In a similar strain are the following instructive observations in the judgment
of Richardson, J., in the same case:
“Moreover, it is
impossible to say what might have happened, if one man alone had set out to
accomplish the murder. Without the support moral and physical, of a comrade,
his resolution might have failed him and his pistol remained in his pocket or
diminution of confidence might have interfered with his aim; or again, he might
have been successfully resisted and put to flight”, (p. 296).
62.
At p. 308 col. (1) of the same case Ghose J. has quoted the following
illuminating passage from Poster's Criminal Law:
“Several persons set
out together, or in small parties, upon one common design, be it murder or
other felony, or for any other purpose unlawful in itself, and each taketh the
part assigned to him; some to commit the act, others to watch at proper
distances and stations to prevent a surprise, or to favour, if need be, the
escape of those who are more immediately engaged. They are all, provided the
act be committed, in the eye of the law present at it; for it was made a common
cause with them, each man operated in his station at one and the same instant
towards the same common end, and the part each man took tended to give
countenance, encouragement and protection to the whole gang, and to ensure the
success of their common enterprise. To sum up persons executing parts of a
crime separately in furtherance of a common intention are equally guilty”.
63.
It is, therefore, not correct for the appellant's learned counsel to say that a
person present on the spot does nothing. He plays a very important part in the
scheme of the commission of the offence. The potential utility of a person who
is present as a guilty confederate on the scene of offence cannot be
overestimated.
64.
The word ‘criminal act’ is used in Section 34, IPC in the broadest possible
sense. It would cover any word, gesture, deed or conduct of any kind on the
part of a person whether active or passive, which tends to support the common
design.
65.
A ‘criminal act’ in Section 34, IPC consists of the entire bundle of acts or
omissions tied together with the chain of common intention that have combined
to constitute the offence. The acts that it might comprise within itself may be
similar or diverse.
66.
Such acts may be performed simultaneously, successively or at intervals.
Instances to illustrate such acts are of a multifarious type. For example, two
persons may beat a man at the same time, and if their acts are in furtherance
of a common end, Section 34 IPC, would be attracted. The acts here are
simultaneous.
67.
Again, for example, two jailors whose duty it is to attend alternately on a
prisoner may conspire to starve him to death. In pursuance of this conspiracy,
they may omit to supply food to him. In this case the conduct consists of
omissions and the acts of the accused are successive and not simultaneous. Or,
for example, two persons may conspire to forge a document.
68.
One may forge a part of it on one day and the other may forge the remaining
part of it after a gap of a month. In this instance the acts of both the
persons would attract Section 34, IPC even though there is an interval between
acts performed by each of the two persons separately.
69.
Such act may consist of a mere gesture or expression or conduct that may
provide a signal for offence or help the confederate in identifying the victim.
Thus, for example two persons may conspire to kill a third man. One may know
him and the other may not know him.
70.
It may be agreed between the two that the person who knows him will stand near
the man who would be the victim and thereby enable the person to whom the part
of killing is assigned to identify the victim. If the scheme is carried out,
both would be guilty under Section 34, IPC, even though the man who stood near
the victim was merely present on the spot and apparently did nothing. If,
however, the scheme is analysed, it would appear that by his presence near the
victim he played a very important part.
71.
In fact, it was his presence near the victim that really contributed to the
successful commission of the crime. The part may consist of a mere omission.
Thus, for example, a person who is employed as a sentinel to guard the room of
the deceased might agree with the murderer to allow him entry into the room
with a view to enable him to accomplish the murderous deed.
72.
If the murderer turns up according to the pre-arranged plan and the sentinel
deliberately omits to prevent his entry into the room, he has done an act which
has contributed as effectively to the perpetration of the murder as the actual
act of killing itself.
73.
In fact, the murder might not have been possible without the omission on his
part. The various acts may be quite diverse in nature. Thus, if two persons
conspire to commit theft and devise a plan according to which one of them would
lure the shopkeeper away to an adjoining room on the pretext of having
conversation with him thereby leaving the shop unprotected in order to enable
the other persons to commit theft and the scheme is executed according to the
plan, both of them would be equally guilty of theft by the application of the provisions
of Section 34, IPC although their respective acts are of a very different type.
74.
In such a case, although only one man has committed the actual theft and the
other has done nothing except entering into a friendly chat with the shopkeeper
with a view to secure his removal from the scene, yet the part played by the
latter is no less important than that of the former.
75.
It is, therefore, evident that every person charged with the aid of Section 34,
must in some form or the other participate in the offence in order to make him
liable there under. For the above reason, I find myself unable to endorse the
argument of the appellants' learned counsel that a guilty associate merely
present on the spot cannot be said to participate in the commission of the
offence.
76.
The element of participation in the commission of the offence is the chief
feature that distinguishes Section 34, IPC from Section149, IPC and other
kindred sections. This has been emphasised in a large number of decided cases.
77.
In Shreekantiah Ramayya Munipalli v. State of Bombay, (S) AIR 1955 SC 287 (E)
while expounding the meaning of Section 34, IPC Bose, J. observed as follows:—
“It is the essence of
the section that the person must be physically present at the actual commission
of the crime. He need not be present in the actual room; he can, for instance,
stand guard by a gate outside ready to warn his companions about any approach
of danger or wait in a car on a nearby road ready to facilitate their escape,
but he must be physically present at the scene of the occurrence and must
actually participate in the commission of the offence in some way or other at
the time the crime is actually being committed. The antithesis is between the
preliminary stages, the agreement, the preparation, the planning, which is
covered by S. 109, and the stage of commission when the plans are put into
effect and carried out. Section 34 is concerned with the latter”, (p. 293).
78.
At page 294, col. (1) of the same judgment it is observed that:—
“The emphasis in S. 34
is on the word ‘done’. When a criminal act is ‘done’ by several persons, it is
essential that they join in the actual ‘doing’ of the act and not merely in
planning its perpetration”.
79.
In the same case, the following observations of their Lordships of the Privy
Council in the case in AIR 1925 PC 1 (C) on this point were cited with
approval:
“Participation and
joint action’ in the actual commission of crime’ are, in substance, matters
which stand in antithesis to abetments or attempts”.
80.
The distinction between Section 34, IPC, and Section 149, IPC in this regard
has been brought out by Lord Sumner in the well-known case in AIR 1925 PC 1 (C)
thus:
“There is a difference
between object and intention, for, though their object is common, the
intentions of the several members, may differ and indeed may be similar only in
respect that they are all unlawful, while the element of participation in
action which is the leading feature of S. 34, is replaced in S. 149 by
membership of the assembly at the time of the committing of the offence”.
81.
In Bashir v. State, AIR 1953 All 668 (F) which is a Bench decision of the
Allahabad High Court, it was observed by Desai J. that:—
“All the persons who
are sought to be made liable by virtue of S. 34 must have done some act which
is included in the ‘criminal act’. One who has not taken any part in doing the
criminal act cannot be made liable under the section”, (p. 671 col 1).
82.
In Faiyaz Khan v. Rex, AIR 1949 All 180 (G) it was held that:—“Section 34
refers to cases in which several persons both intend to do and do an act. It
does not refer to cases where several persons intend to do an act and some one
or more of them do an entirely different act. In the latter class of cases S.
149 may be applicable, but S. 34 is not”, (p. 184 col. 1).
83.
In AIR 1924 Cal 257 (D) which is a Full Bench case of the Calcutta High Court,
Cuming J. observed that:
“The expression
criminal act done by several persons includes the case of a number of persons
acting together for a common object and each doing some act in furtherance of
the final result which various acts make up the final act”, (p. 312 col. 2).
84.
In Aydrooss v. Emperor, AIR 1923 Mad 187 (2) (H) it was held that in order to
justify the application of Section 34, evidence of some distinct act by the
accused, which can be regarded as part of the criminal act in question, must be
required. (Vide h.n. (b)).
85.
To the same effect are the following observations of Sharpe J. in Abdul Kader
v. Emperor, AIR 1946 Cal 452 (I) which is a Bench decision of the Calcutta High
Court:
“We think it desirable
to draw attention to the decision in Fazoo Khan v. Jatoo Khan AIR 1931 Cal 643
(J) in which it has been observed that ‘all the accused persons can be found
guilty of an offence constructively under Section 34 of the Penal Code only on
a finding that eachof them took some part or other in, or towards, the
commission of the offence”.
86.
It is true that to convict any particular accused constructively under Section
34 of an offence, say of murder, it is not necessary to find that he actually
struck the fatal blow, or any blow, but there must be clear evidence of some
action or conduct on his part to show that he shared in the common intention of
committing murder”, (pp. 457-458).
87.
The net result of the above discussion is that although Section34 deals with a
criminal act which is joint and an intention which is common, it cannot be said
that it completely ignores or eliminates the element of personal contribution
of the individual offender in both these respects.
88.
On the other hand, it is a condition precedent of Section 34, IPC, that the
individual offender must have participated in the offence in both these
respects. He must have done something, however slight, or conduct himself in
some manner, however nebulous whether by doing an act or by omitting to do an
act so as to indicate that he was a participant in the offence and a guilty
associate in it. He must also be individually a party to an intention which he
must share in common with others.
89.
In other words, he must be a sharer both in the ‘criminal act’ as well as in
the ‘common intention’ which are the twin aspects of Section 34, IPC. In view
of the above position, it is difficult for the accused to legitimately urge
before the Court that owing to the mention of Section 34, IPC, in the charge,
he was misled or prejudiced in his defence by being persuaded to presume that
all consideration of his individual liability was completely shut out as a
result thereof. He would be presumed to know the law on the point and if, in spite
of it, he deluded himself into any such belief, he would be doing so at his own
peril. [See: Om Prakash(supra)]
90.
As held by this Court in Suresh Sakharam Nangare v. The State of Maharashtra,
2012 (9) Judgements Today 116, if common intention is proved but no overt act
is attributed to the individual accused, Section 34 of the code will be
attracted as essentially it involves vicarious liability but if participation
of the accused in the crime is proved and common intention is absent Section 34
cannot be invoked. In other words, it requires a pre-arranged plan and pre
supposes prior concert therefore there must be meeting of mind.
91.
Section 106 of the Evidence Act was also pressed into service by Mr. Singhvi
appearing for the State. We are of the view that it has no application in the
present case. It is true that when crime is alleged to have been committed
inside the four walls of the house and that too in secrecy then the family members
residing in the house are the best persons to know and explain as to what had
actually happened. Let us for the time being proceed on the footing that the
husband was very much present at the time of the incident however there is
nothing to indicate that he shared common intention with his mother. When the
mother-in-law poured kerosene on the deceased and set her on fire, it is
possible that the husband out of sheer fright might have run away from his
house after trying to extinguish fire by pouring water on the burning body of
his wife. For applicability of Section 106 so as to implicate the husband also
in the alleged crime the prosecution has to as a condition precedent lay the
foundational facts prima facie indicating his involvement or participation in
the alleged crime. His sudden disappearance after the incident is not
sufficient to infer common intention.
92.
In the overall view of the matter, we have reached the conclusion that the High
Court rightly held the mother-in-law guilty of the alleged crime. However, the
High Court at the same time committed an error in holding the husband-appellant
no.1 guilty of the offence of murder with the aid of Section 34 IPC.
93.
In the result, this appeal succeeds in part. The judgement and order of conviction
passed by the High court so far as the appellant no.2 is concerned is hereby
affirmed. So far as the appellant no.1 is concerned, the appeal succeeds and is
hereby allowed. The appellant no.1 is acquitted of all the charges.
94.
We are informed that mother-in-law is already in jail.
95.
We are further informed that husband-appellant no.1 is also in jail. He shall
be released forthwith, if not required, in any other case.
96.
The appeal stands partly allowed in the aforesaid terms.
97.
Pending application(s), if any, stand disposed of.
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