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Bennichan Joseph vs State Of Kerala
2024 Latest Caselaw 19056 Ker

Citation : 2024 Latest Caselaw 19056 Ker
Judgement Date : 1 July, 2024

Kerala High Court

Bennichan Joseph vs State Of Kerala on 1 July, 2024

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008           :1:




                  IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

                                   PRESENT

                  THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON JOHN

            MONDAY, THE 1ST DAY OF JULY 2024 / 10TH ASHADHA, 1946

                            CRL.A NO. 2123 OF 2008

AGAINST THE JUDGMENT DATED 05.09.2008 IN SC NO.252 OF 2007 OF ADDITIONAL

DISTRICT AND SESSIONS COURT (ADHOC)-II, KOTTAYAM

APPELLANTS/ACCUSED 2 & 3:

             BENNICHAN JOSEPH
             NADAKKAL HOUSE, PALKADU BHAGOM, PEROOR VILLAGE.

             BY ADV SRI.S.RAJEEV



RESPONDENT/STATE:

             STATE OF KERALA, REP. BY PUBLIC PROSECUTOR, HIGH COURT OF
             KERALA,, ERNAKULAM (CRIME NO.137 OF 2007 OF, ETTUMANOOR
             POLICE STATION)




             SRI. VIPIN NARAYAN, PUBLIC PROSECUTOR




       THIS CRIMINAL APPEAL HAVING BEEN FINALLY HEARD ON 24.06.2024, THE

      COURT ON 01.07.2024 DELIVERED THE FOLLOWING:
 Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008             :2:




                            JOHNSON JOHN, J.
           ---------------------------------------------------------
                      Crl. Appeal No. 2123 of 2008
            --------------------------------------------------------
               Dated this the 1st day of July, 2024.

                                    JUDGMENT

The appellant is the accused in S.C. No. 252 of 2007 on the file

of the Additional District and Sessions Judge (Adhoc-II), Kottayam

and he is challenging the conviction and sentence imposed on him for

the offence under Section 326 IPC.

2. The prosecution case is that the accused was employed as a

driver in the house of the father-in- law of PW1 at Peroor. Since the

conduct and behaviour of the accused was not good, he was

subsequently removed from that job. PW1, who is residing at

Thiruvananthapuram came to Kottayam along with his business partner

on 21.03.2007 for taking his wife and children to Thiruvananthapuram.

Subsequently, while PW1 was in his wife's house, at about 9 p.m., the

accused reached there and addressed PW1 in obscene words. Thereafter,

at about 11 p.m., while PW1 was returning from the house of his friend,

Kurian Koshy, at Peroor and when he was about to enter the car parked

near the gate of the house of Kurian Koshy, the accused came running

with a chopper in his hand and attacked PW1 with the chopper aiming

his neck and when PW1 prevented the attack with his left hand, the tip Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :3:

of the chopper caused to hit on his neck and cheek causing injury and he

also sustained comminuted fracture to his left hand and the accused is

thereby alleged to have committed the offences under Sections 326 and

308 of IPC.

3. In the trial court, when the accused pleaded not guilty to the

charge, PWs 1 to 9 were examined and Exhibits P1 to P7 and MO1 were

marked from the side of the prosecution and from the side of the

accused, Exhibits D1 to D5 were marked.

4. After hearing both sides and considering the oral and

documentary evidence on record, the learned Additional Sessions Judge,

as per the impugned judgment dated 05.09.2008, found the accused

guilty under Section 326 IPC, convicted and sentenced him to undergo

rigorous imprisonment for three years and to pay a fine of Rs.10,000/-

and in default of payment of fine, to undergo simple imprisonment for

six months.

5. Heard Sri. Aneer M. S., the learned counsel representing the

learned counsel for the appellant on record and Sri. Vipin Narayan, the

learned Senior Public Prosecutor and perused the record.

6. The point that arises for consideration in this appeal is whether

the conviction and sentence passed against the appellant/accused is

legally sustainable?

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :4:

7. The learned counsel for the appellant argued that PWs 1 to 4

are interested witnesses and there are serious contradictions and

omissions in their evidence and the prosecution has not produced the

copy of the x-ray or treatment records of PW1 to prove that he sustained

grievous hurt to attract the offence under Section 326 IPC. It is also

argued that MO1, chopper, was not sent for forensic examination and

that the Investigating Officer has not seized the dress worn by PW1 at

the time of occurrence and the prosecution has also not examined any

independent witness and therefore, the accused is entitled for the

benefit of reasonable doubt.

8. The learned Public Prosecutor pointed out that the evidence of

PW1, the injured victim, is supported by the evidence of PWs 2 to 4

regarding the occurrence and there is no reason to doubt the presence

of PWs 2 to 4 at the place of occurrence and therefore, they are natural

witnesses. It is also pointed out that the evidence of PW5 doctor and

Exhibit P2, wound certificate, also corroborate the evidence of PW1

regarding the injury sustained and there is no material contradiction or

omission in the evidence of the material witnesses, who supported the

prosecution, and in that circumstance, there is no reason to interfere

with the findings in the impugned judgment.

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :5:

9. PW1 deposed that the incident occurred in between 10.30 p.m.

and 11.30 p.m., on 21.03.2007 while he was returning from the house

of Kurian Koshy at Peroor. According to PW1, while he was about to

enter his vehicle, the accused came running by asking 'will you remove

me from job' and attacked him with a chopper aiming his neck and when

he resisted the blow with his left hand, the tip of the chopper hit on his

neck and cheek and the chopper hit on his left forearm and he sustained

injuries on his neck and cheek and fracture to the bone. The evidence of

PW1 shows that from the place of occurrence, he was taken to Matha

Hospital by his friend Kurian Kozhy and Raveendran and there he has

undergone an operation. PW1 identified the accused and MO1 chopper

before the court. PW1 also identified his signature in Exhibit P1, First

Information Statement to the police.

10. PW2, Raveendran, is the business partner of PW1 and his

evidence shows that on the night of 21.03.2007, he was also there in

the house of Kurian Koshy and that at about 11 p.m., they came out of

the house for proceeding to Thiruvananthapuram and when PW1 was

about to enter his car, the accused attacked him with a chopper and that

he saw the occurrence in the light in the gate and the street light.

11. PW3, Kurian Koshy, deposed that PW1, Thomas, and PW2,

Raveendran, reached his house on the night of 21.03.2007 and that the Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :6:

incident occurred in between 10.30 p.m. and 11 p.m. According to PW3,

while PW1, Thomas, was about to enter his car, he heard Thomas saying

that Benny hacked him and at that time, PW3 and his son were following

Thomas and Ravi towards the gate and the witness saw blood oozing

from the left hand of PW1 and the accused escaping from there in his

autorickshaw.

12. PW4 is the driver of PW1 and his evidence shows that while he

was waiting inside the car, in front of the gate of the house of the owner

of Hotel Maly and at about 11 p.m., while PW1 was about to enter the

car, the accused came running from the front side of the vehicle with a

chopper and attacked Thomas by asking whether he will remove him

from the job. According to PW4, Thomas resisted the attack with his left

hand and then Thomas sustained injuries on his left hand and right

cheek and then the accused ran away. The evidence of PW4 shows that

two lights were there on the pillar of the front gate and street light was

also there.

13. The Chief Medical Officer of Matha Hospital, Thellakam, who

examined PW1 on 22.03.2007 at 12.20 a.m. and issued Exhibit P2

wound certificate, is examined as PW5. The evidence of PW5 and Exhibit

P2 shows that PW1 sustained the following injuries:

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :7:

1. Incised wound left forearm with comminuted fracture along 6 x 3 x 2 cm.

2. Incised wound occipital region 3 x 2 x 0.5 cm.

3. Incised wound left upper lip 2 x 1 x 1 cm

14. PW8 was the head Constable who recorded Exhibit P1

statement of PW1 after reaching Matha hospital on 22.03.2007 . PW9

deposed that while he was the Sub Inspector of the Ettumanoor Police

Station, he registered Exhibit P5 FIR on the basis of Exhibit P1 statement

of PW1 on 22.03.2007. Exhibit P3 is scene mahazar prepared by PW9 .

15. According to PW9, he arrested the accused on 29.03.2007 and

Exhibit P7 is the report regarding the correct address of the accused.

PW9 deposed that on the basis of the disclosure statement of the accused

that he kept the chopper under the culvert in front of Peroor Post Office

and that he will point out the said place and take out the chopper, if he is

taken to that place and as led by the accused, he recovered MO1 chopper

and the relevant portion of the disclosure statement of the accused in this

connection is marked as Exhibit P4(a).

16. In cross examination, PW1 admitted that he was an accused

in Crime No. 138 of 2007 of Ettumanoor Police Station. According to

PW1, the said case was registered on the basis of a complaint by his

former housemaid in Kottayam with the allegation that he misbehaved

to her and that she filed the complaint when she was dismissed from the Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :8:

job. The copy of the FIS and FIR in the said case are marked as Exhibits

D1 and D2.

17. But, a perusal of Exhibits D1 and D2 would show that the de

facto complainant is the accused herein and the allegation is that PW1

and others attacked him at 8.45 p.m. on 21.03.2007. Even though the

alleged occurrence in Exhibit D2 FIR is on 21.03.2007, the said FIR is

seen registered only at 5 p.m. on 23.03.2007. The evidence of PW9, Sub

Inspector of Ettumanoor Police Station, shows that he conducted the

investigation in Crime No. 138 of 2007 and filed the final report stating

that the allegations are false.

18. In cross examination, PW3 stated that he heard Thomas

saying that Benny hacked him and he has not stated to the police that

Thomas told him that it was Benny who ran away after hacking him and

the said portion in the statement of PW3 to the police is marked as

Exhibit D3.

19. In cross examination, PW4 stated that he has not stated to

the police that suddenly a person came running from dark and the said

portion in the statement of PW4 to the police is marked as Exhibit D4.

According to PW4, PW1 has not kicked the accused at the time of

occurrence and he has not stated to the police that even though PW1 Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 :9:

kicked the accused, it did not hit on the body of the accused and the said

portion in the statement of PW4 to the police is marked as Exhibit D5.

20. I find no reason to disagree with the finding of the trial court

that Exhibits D3 to D5 cannot be accepted as material contradictions. It

is well settled that when eyewitnesses are examined at length, it is quite

possible for them to make some discrepancies and only when the

discrepancies in the evidence of witnesses are so incompatible with the

credibility of their version, the court will be justified in disbelieving their

evidence.

21. In State of Uttar Pradesh vs. M.K. Anthony [AIR 1983 SC

48], the Honourable Supreme Court held that minor discrepancies on

trivial matters not touching the core of the case, hypertechnical

approach by taking sentences torn out of context here or there from the

evidence, attaching importance to some technical error committed by

the investigating officer not going to the root of the matter, would not

ordinarily permit rejection of the evidence as a whole.

22. The decision of the Honourable Supreme Court in Tahsildar

Singh and another v. State of UP [AIR 1959 SC 1012] shows that the

proviso to Section 162 of the Code of Criminal Procedure only enables

the accused to make use of such statement to contradict a witness in the

manner provided by Section 145 of the Indian Evidence Act and it would Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 : 10 :

be doing violence to the language of the proviso, if the said statement

be allowed to be used for the purpose of cross examining a witness

within the meaning of the first part of Section 145 of the Indian Evidence

Act. In the said decision, it was also held by the Honourable Supreme

Court that the contradiction, under the Section, should be between what

a witness asserted in the witness-box and what he stated before the

police-officer, and not between what he said he had stated before the

police officer and what he actually made before him.

23. PW1 is the injured witness and his evidence regarding the

occurrence is supported by the evidence of PWs 2 to 4 and there is

nothing to disbelieve the evidence of PWs 2 to 4 regarding the

occurrence and their presence at the time and place of occurrence It is

also well settled that the evidence of the injured witness has greater

evidential value and unless compelling reasons exist, their statements

are not to be discarded lightly. In Balu Sudam Khalde and another v.

State of Maharashtra [2023 Livelaw (SC) 279], the Honourable

Supreme Court held that the following legal principles are required to be

kept in mind, while appreciating the evidence of an injured witness:

"(a) The presence of an injured eye-witness at the time and place of the occurrence cannot be doubted unless there are material contradictions in his deposition.

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 : 11 :

(b) Unless, it is otherwise established by the evidence, it must be believed that an injured witness would not allow the real culprits to escape and falsely implicate the accused.

(c) The evidence of injured witness has greater evidentiary value and unless compelling reasons exist, their statements are not to be discarded lightly.

(d) The evidence of injured witness cannot be doubted on account of some embellishment in natural conduct or minor contradictions.

(e) If there be any exaggeration or immaterial embellishments in the evidence of an injured witness, then such contradiction, exaggeration or embellishment should be discarded from the evidence of injured, but not the whole evidence.

(f) The broad substratum of the prosecution version must be taken into consideration and discrepancies which normally creep due to loss of memory with passage of time should be discarded."

24. As noticed earlier, the evidence of PWs 1 to 4 regarding the

occurrence is supported by the evidence of PW5, doctor and Exhibit P2,

wound certificate. But, the learned counsel for the appellant invited my

attention to the evidence of PW5, doctor, in cross examination to show

that PW5 has admitted that an x-ray was taken and that apart from the

evidence of PW5 doctor and Exhibit P2 wound certificate, the prosecution

has not adduced any reliable evidence to prove that PW1 sustained a

comminuted fracture as alleged and that it is possible to confirm a

fracture only by taking an x-ray or CT scan, unless the broken bone is

visible through the injury.

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 : 12 :

25. To attract the offence under Section 326 IPC, the prosecution

has to prove that the injury sustained is a grievous hurt coming under

Section 320 IPC. It is true, fracture is a grievous hurt coming under

Section 320 IPC. But, in spite of the evidence of PW5 that an x-ray was

taken, the prosecution has not produced the same or the treatment

records of PW1 to establish that he sustained a grievous hurt and in that

circumstance, the finding of the trial court that the prosecution has

proved the offence under Section 326 IPC against the accused is not

legally sustainable and in this connection, the learned counsel for the

appellant also cited the decision of this Court in P. Johnson and others

v. State of Kerala [1998 ICO 2059].

26. The learned counsel for the appellant also argued that from

the available evidence, it cannot be held that the accused committed the

offence under Section 324 of IPC and in this connection, the learned

counsel for the appellant argued that the Investigating Officer has not

seized the dress worn by PW1 at the time of occurrence and that no

steps were taken for scientific examination of MO1 chopper. But, the

learned Public Prosecutor pointed out that the injured and the

occurrence witnesses identified MO1 as the weapon of offence used by

the accused and PW5, doctor, also stated that MO7 can cause the

injuries noted in Exhibit P2 wound certificate.

Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 : 13 :

27. The Hon'ble Supreme Court in State of Karnataka vs. K. Yarappa

Reddy[(1999) 8 SCC 715], held as follows:

"It can be a guiding principle that as investigation is not the solitary area for judicial scrutiny in a criminal trial, the conclusion of the court in the case cannot be allowed to depend solely on the probity of investigation. It is well- nigh settled that even if the investigation is illegal or even suspicious the rest of the evidence must be scrutinized independently of the impact of it. Otherwise the criminal trial will plummet to the level of the investigating officers ruling the roost. The court must have predominance and pre-eminence in criminal trials over the action taken by investigating officers. Criminal justice should not be made a casualty for the wrongs committed by the investigating officers in the case. In other words, if the court is convinced that the testimony of a witness to the occurrence is true the court is free to act on it albeit the investigating officer's suspicious role in the case...."

28. As already noticed, the evidence of PWs 1 to 4 regarding the

occurrence is reliable and trustworthy and their evidence is supported by

the evidence of PW5, doctor, and Exhibit P2, wound certificate and

therefore, on a careful re-appreciation of the entire evidence, I find that

the prosecution has succeeded in proving that the accused voluntarily

caused hurt to PW1 by using MO1, chopper, and thereby, committed the

offence under Section 324 IPC.

29. In the result, the conviction and sentence passed against the

appellant/accused for the offence under Section 326 IPC is set aside and Crl. Appeal No 2123/2008 : 14 :

he is found guilty and convicted under Section 324 IPC. Considering the

nature of the offence and the facts and circumstances of the case, the

accused/appellant is sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for

one year and to pay a fine of Rs.10,000/- and in default of payment of

fine, to undergo simple imprisonment for three months for the offence

under Section 324 IPC.

The appeal is partly allowed as above. Interlocutory applications,

if any pending, shall stand closed.

sd/-

JOHNSON JOHN, JUDGE.

Rv

 
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