Supreme Court of India
Saheb S/O Maroti Bhumre vs The State Of Maharashtra on 18 September, 2024
Author: Sanjay Kumar
Bench: Aravind Kumar, Sanjay Kumar
Non-reportable 2024 INSC 700 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS. 313-314 OF 2012 Saheb, s/o Maroti Bhumre etc. … Appellants Versus The State of Maharashtra … Respondent JUDGMENT
SANJAY KUMAR, J
1. Twenty-two persons stood accused of the murder of Madhavrao
Krishnaji Gabare and were tried by the learned Additional Sessions Judge,
Basmathnagar, Maharashtra, in Sessions Trial No. 20 of 2006. By judgment
dated 24.04.2008, the learned Additional Sessions Judge held nine of them
guilty of offences punishable under Sections 148, 302 and 324, both read
with Section 149, of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC). They were sentenced
to imprisonment coupled with fine. Aggrieved thereby, all nine of them filed
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Deepak Guglani
appeals under Section 374 Cr.P.C. before the High Court of Judicature of
Date: 2024.09.18
15:31:40 IST
Reason:
Bombay, Aurangabad Bench. Accused No. 2 (Khemaji s/o Maroti Gabare),
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was the appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 695 of 2008, Accused No. 3 (Sahebs/o Maroti Bhumre), was the appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 89 of 2009; and
Accused No. 5 (Sitaram Pandurang Gabare), was the appellant in Criminal
Appeal No. 618 of 2009. By judgment dated 06.12.2010, a Division Bench of
the High Court sustained the conviction of Accused Nos. 2, 3 and 5 and
acquitted the remaining six accused on the ground that the charges levelled
against them were not specific in relation to the injuries afflicted on the
deceased and other injured persons. Accused Nos. 2, 3 and 5 were also
acquitted of the offence punishable under Section 324 IPC read with Section
149 IPC, but their conviction under Section 302 IPC read with Section 149
IPC and under Section 148 IPC were confirmed. Aggrieved thereby, Accused
Nos. 3 and 5 are in appeal before this Court. Criminal Appeal No. 313 of 2012
was filed by Saheb, Accused No. 3, while Criminal Appeal No. 314 of 2012
was filed by Sitaram Pandurang Gabare, Accused No. 5. Significantly,
Khemaji s/o Maroti Gabare, Accused No. 2, did not choose to file an appeal
against the confirmation of his conviction.
2. Both the appellants were incarcerated on 08.04.2006 and remained
in custody. It was only on 30.06.2016 that this Court directed their release on
bail. In effect, the appellants have suffered imprisonment for over ten years.
3. The case of the prosecution was as follows: On 08.04.2006, at
about 7.30-8.00 pm, the deceased Madhavrao Krishnaji Gabare and his
family members, viz., his wife, Janakibai Gabare, their son, Ganesh, and their
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daughter-in-law, Annapurnabai, and others were attacked by the accused with
axes and sticks at the residence of the deceased in Village Singi. On
Janakibai Gabare’s complaint, FIR No. 36 of 2006 was registered. The
deceased was stated to have expired on the spot. His post-mortem
examination revealed that he had suffered as many as nine injuries. The
cause of his death was ascertained as – head injury and intracranial
hemorrhage with multiple fractures. Nine other persons were said to have
been injured during the incident. The cause for the altercation was stated to
be political rivalry. The deceased, as per his widow, was the Sarpanch of the
Village about 15 years prior to the incident and since then, Khemaji and
Sambhaji, two of the accused, were on inimical terms with him. Thereafter,
Laxmibai, the wife of the nephew of the deceased, became the Sarpanch of
the Village, leading to further animosity. Significantly, both Khemaji and
Sambhaji were the nephews of the deceased being the sons of his brothers,
Maroti and Deorao.
4. Admittedly, at the time of the incident, there was a power cut due to
load shedding, but according to the widow, Janakibai, who was examined as
PW-1, there was sufficient moonlight to identify all the accused and the
weapons that they used during the attack. Fifteen witnesses, in all, were
examined by the prosecution to bring home the guilt of the accused.
Documents and material objects were marked in evidence through them.
PW-1 (Janakibai Gabare), PW-4 (Kamalbai Gabare), PW-5 (Govind Gabare)
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and PW-8 (Ganesh Gabare) were examined as eye-witnesses to the attack
on the deceased. All four of them are closely related. As already noted,
Janakibai Gabare is the wife of the deceased while Ganesh Gabare is their
son. Govind Gabare is the nephew of the deceased and Kamalbai Gabare is
his wife. The Trial Court, having placed reliance on the evidence of these
witnesses, came to the conclusion that except Accused Nos. 1 to 5, 11 to 13
and 15, none of the other accused participated in the assault on the
deceased. Holding so, the Trial Court convicted and sentenced Accused Nos.
1 to 5, 11 to 13 and 15 accordingly.
5. However, in appeal, the High Court found that there was no
indication as to when Govind Gabare (PW-5) and his wife, Kamalbai Gabare
(PW-4), actually came to the spot so as to witness the incident. Janakibai
(PW-1) had clearly stated that, at the time of the incident, she, along with her
husband, her son, Ganesh (PW-8), and daughter-in-law, Annapurnabai, were
present in the house. In view of this, the High Court disbelieved that PW-4
and PW-5 were eye-witnesses. Similarly, the evidence of Ganesh Gabare
(PW-8) was discarded by the High Court on the ground that he did not state
anything about the assault on the deceased. The High Court, therefore,
placed reliance only upon the evidence of Janakibai (PW-1). Even in relation
to her testimony, the High Court recorded that she had, no doubt,
embroidered her story but concluded that it did not mean that her evidence
was not reliable totally. As she had stated that the assault on the deceased
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was made by Khemaji (Accused No. 2), Saheb (Accused No. 3) and Sitaram
(Accused No. 5), the High Court acted upon the same. As she did not
attribute any overt act or active participation to Sambhaji who had
accompanied Khemaji (Accused No. 2), the High Court gave him the benefit
of doubt. Similarly, the other accused, who were found guilty by the Trial
Court, were let off by the High Court on the ground of omissions. Insofar as
conviction under Section 324 IPC read with Section 149 IPC was concerned,
the High Court opined that as no specific charges were levelled against each
of the accused in relation to inflicting of the injuries sustained by injured
persons, as evidenced by their medical certificates, their conviction under
Section 324 IPC read with Section 149 IPC could not be sustained.
6. We are conscious of the fact that Madhavrao Krishnaji Gabare was
brutally murdered in his own house on 08.04.2006, but the guilt of those
responsible for his murder has to be proved beyond reasonable doubt. All that
the defence needs to establish is the existence of reasonable doubt for the
accused to be given the benefit thereof. In the case on hand, the guilt of the
appellants hinges solely upon the testimony of the widow, Janakibai (PW-1),
as the other so-called eye-witnesses have been discarded by the High Court.
Notably, Annapurnabai, the daughter-in-law, a key eye-witness by all
accounts, was not even examined by the prosecution.
7. Certain facts, admitted as they are, may first be noted. The incident
occurred between 7:30-8:00 PM on 08.04.2006 and there was a power cut at
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that point of time. The attack upon the deceased appears to have been in the
courtyard of his house, as his dead body was also found there. However,
except for the statement of Janakibai (PW-1), that there was moonlight at that
time, no other evidence has been adduced by the prosecution to substantiate
that fact. Further, Janakibai (PW-1) also does not state that it was a full-moon
night or, at least, nearing the full-moon night, whereby the moonlight would
have been bright enough for her to see, with clarity and certainty, the events
that unfolded during the attack, i.e., the weapons used in the course thereof
and the persons who actually wielded those weapons.
8. In her deposition before the Trial Court, Janakibai (PW-1) stated
that, at the time of the incident, along with the deceased, their son, Ganesh,
daughter-in-law, Annapurnabai, and she were present in the house. Accused
No. 2, Khemaji, and Accused No. 4, Sambhaji, allegedly came to the house
and the rest of the accused followed them. She further stated that Accused
No. 13, Chandu Gabare, caught hold of the hands of the deceased and
Accused No. 2, Khemaji; Accused No. 3, Saheb; and Accused No. 5, Sitaram;
dealt axe blows to him. The rest of the accused were stated to be holding
sticks in their hands. She said that the deceased succumbed to the injuries
on the spot. She further stated that one of the accused hit her on the head
with a stick and that, her son, Ganesh, and her daughter-in-law,
Annapurnabai, were also beaten. She then added that the accused also beat
Govind Gabare and others. According to her, one of the accused picked up
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Govind’s infant daughter from the cradle and threw her down. Thereafter, she
said that all the accused persons ran away from the spot. She identified the
complaint given by her in the hospital which was marked as Exh-111. In her
cross-examination, PW-1 stated that, except for Khemaji, Accused No. 2, and
Sambhaji, Accused No. 4, they had cordial relations with the other accused till
the incident. She stated that the moon was there on that night at about 7:00
PM and denied the suggestion that the moon rose at 10:00 PM on that day.
She further denied that there was darkness throughout the village due to load
shedding. She further stated that Ganesh and Pravin, her sons, had not taken
dinner at home on that night. She added that they were intending to take their
dinner after her sons ate. She claimed that the deceased returned to the
house at 7:30 PM and that she did not enquire with him about his dinner. She
again stated that one of the accused picked up Govind’s 2-3 months old
daughter and threw her in front of the house. She, however, did not know
whether the baby sustained any injury, which is rather unbelievable and
manifests that this allegation was an afterthought, added to shock and
prejudice the Court. She conveniently claimed that she had stated this fact
but the same was not recorded in her complaint given at the hospital. She
further stated that she could not say as to which accused had held which axe
or stick in his hand. According to her, the incident went on for two hours!! She
then stated that the accused first beat the deceased and, thereafter, hit her on
the head. She said that she lost consciousness after she was given the blow
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on the head and remained unconscious till she was taken to the hospital at
Basmathnagar.
9. Significantly, in her complaint recorded on 09.04.2006 at the
hospital, Janakibai (PW-1) had a different story to tell. She stated that the
deceased and Ganesh, her son, had their dinner and she along with her
daughter-in-law were just sitting down to have their dinner at the time the
attack occurred. She further stated that the accused, without speaking a
single word, started beating the deceased and her, her son, Ganesh, her
daughter-in-law, Annapurnabai, her nephew, Govind, and others. She
identified Khemaji, Accused No. 2; Sitaram, Accused No. 5; Saheb, Accused
No. 3 and Chandu Gabare, Accused No. 13, as the persons who had axes
and who attacked them with the same. She further stated that she was hit on
the head and was also injured on her back but owing to the chaos, she did
not know who had hit her.
10. Juxtaposition of her deposition before the Trial Court and her initial
complaint clearly demonstrate that Janakibai (PW-1) embellished her
narration of how the attack occurred, resulting in a lot of inconsistencies. On
the one hand, she stated that Chandu, Accused No. 13, was holding an axe
and was one of the persons who attacked with an axe, but on the other, she
stated that Chandu caught hold of the hands of the deceased as soon as the
accused came to their house, which would mean that he was unarmed.
Further, she clearly tried to include more witnesses and added extra details of
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the assault in her deposition. The contradictions in her story would raise
reasonable doubt, as her statement in her deposition that she was attacked
after the attack on the deceased was made to buttress her narration as to
who attacked the deceased with axes, but in the first instance, she had stated
that the accused attacked all of them as soon as they entered the house.
11. Picturing a scenario where twenty-two persons entered into the
premises armed with axes and sticks on a dark night, even if dimly lit by
moonlight, it is difficult to believe that, in the melee that ensued, any person
who was under attack would be in a position to identify, clearly and with
certainty, as to who was assaulting whom and with what weapon. More so, as
PW-1 claimed that Sambhaji, Accused No. 4, was one of the first persons to
enter the premises along with Khemaji, Accused No. 2, but no attack was
attributed to him, leading to his acquittal by the High Court.
12. It is no doubt possible that PW-1 could have identified the accused
who first entered the premises armed with axes and launched the initial attack
on her husband, but given her contrary statements on even these crucial
facts and more particularly, in the context of Sambhaji, Accused No.4, and
Chandu, Accused No.13, her evidence is placed wholly in the realm of
uncertainty and no credence can be given to her solitary testimony on any
aspect. Though the maxim ‘Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus’ is only a rule of
caution and has not assumed the status of a rule of law in the Indian context,
an attempt must be made to separate truth from falsehood and where such
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separation is impossible, there cannot be a conviction (See Narain vs. State
of M.P.1). We find that to be so in the case on hand.
13. As already noted, the appellants have suffered 10 years’
incarceration. Given the lacunae in the prosecution’s case and the shaky
evidence adduced in support thereof by PW-1, we necessarily have to extend
the benefit of doubt to the appellants. The appellants are, therefore, acquitted
of the offences under Section 148 IPC and Section 302 IPC read with Section
149 IPC.
The appeals are accordingly allowed.
The bail bonds and sureties furnished by the appellants shall stand
discharged. Fine amount, if any, paid by the appellants shall be refunded.
………………………..,J
(SANJAY KUMAR)
………………………..,J
(ARAVIND KUMAR)
September 18, 2024;
New Delhi.
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(2004) 2 SCC 455
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