Judgment:
S.S. Parkar, J.
1. This appeal has been filed by the appellant who has been convicted for the offence under section 302 I.P.C. and sentenced to suffer imprisonment for life and to pay a fine of Rs. 500/- in default to suffer R.I. for four months by the Judgment and order dated 20th January, 1982 by the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Greater Bombay.
2. The prosecution case briefly stated is as follows:---
The accused had been charged for committing the murder of one Arjun Ghare the deceased who was the husband of the sister of the accused by name Delfin. The murder is stated to have been committed on 19-10-1980 at about 9.00 p.m. at Dhobighat, Sonar galli, Kurla, Bombay where the deceased and the accused and their close relations were staying. The murder is said to have been committed by stabbing the deceased with a knife which is article No. 1 before the Court. It appears that two days before the incident in question deceased Arjun Ghare had assaulted his wife Delfin who is the sister of the accused and, therefore, she was having fever and went to live with her mother Roza P.W. 1. On the aforesaid date the deceased had gone to Roza's hut and apologised to her for assaulting her daughter. The accused had questioned the deceased as to why he had assaulted his sister Delfin and gave him fist blows. The accused thereafter put a lock on the hut of the deceased Arjun with a view to harass the deceased. The deceased had to go out to take his food in the afternoon. In the evening the deceased went to the house of Philomena Rodriques P.W. 5 to see a picture on the T.V. Thereafter around 8.30 p.m. he demanded the keys of his hut from his wife P.W. 2 Delfin. That time accused came out of his hut and threatened the deceased and used abusive words. P.W. 2 Delfin who is the wife of the deceased and sister of the accused pacified the accused. The deceased Arjun told the accused that he would have to go and lodge a complaint against the accused with police if the latter did not open the lock of his hut. On this accused was enraged and assaulted the deceased Arjun by giving a blow on Arjun's chest with a knife. Deceased Arjun then started running towards Kurla village but after going few paces he fell down. Delfin P.W. 2 the wife of the deceased started crying and shouted for help. Hearing her shouts people from the locality came there including close relations like P.W. 1 Roza mother of the accused, P.W. 3 Rajendra, P.W. 4 Rubi and P.W. 5 Philomena. The deceased told them that the accused had stabbed him with a knife. The deceased Arjun was then taken in a taxi to the Sion Hospital by P.W. 1 Roza who is the mother-in-law of the deceased and P.W. 3 Rajendra and another sister of the accused by name Priseilla. Arjun was examined in the hospital in the casualty department. Thereafter he was examined in detail by Dr. Harikrishnan P.W. 13 who was the R.M.O. On examination he found incised wound 1/2 x 1/2' deep. Subsequently it was found that the wound was lung deep and major blood vessels were ruptured, bronchus was found and blood had collected in the chest. The lung tear was 21/2' long x 3' deep. There was lot of blood loss from the body of the victim and he ultimately succumbed to his injuries at about 10.00 a.m. on 20th October, 1980. The post-mortem examination was performed by Dr. Narayan P.W. 15. The post-mortem examination report is Exhibit 33. The report stated that the deceased died due to left haemothorax with lung tear following stab injury.
3. The Kurla Police Station received the message from Sion Hospital on telephone about the said incident and the condition of the deceased. Therefore Sub-Inspector Motilal Jadhav P.W. 12 went to the said hospital. They took charge of the blood stained clothes of the deceased, so also the carpet that was wrapped around the deceased which was stained with blood. Police also seized the keys, ring and coins which were found on the person of the deceased under the panchanama Exhibit 11. Sub Inspector Jadhav recorded the complaint of Roza P.W. 1 at about 10.30 p.m. and thereafter investigation was taken over by Inspector Kadam P.W. 14. The inspector went to the scene of the offence and directed his staff to trace the accused and recorded statement of Delfin P.W. 2 wife of the deceased in the afternoon of 20-10-1980. Same evening the statement of P.W. 3 Rajendra who had accompanied the deceased in taxi to Sion Hospital along with Roza and of Philomena Rodrigues P.W. 5, the aunt of the accused were recorded. Accused was absconding and was traced on 23-10-1980 in village Gorai at Borivali when he was arrested by Police Constable Kashinath Nikanke P.W. 9.
4. In the course of investigation the accused is said to have made a statement to Inspector Kadam on 26-10-1980 about the whereabouts of the knife which he had thrown. Accused led the Police and panchas to Dhobighat, Kurla and took out blood stained knife from under a heap of garbage lying behind the hut of Roza. Charge-sheet was filed for offence against the accused under section 302 of I.P.C. and was, therefore, committed to Sessions Court, Greater Bombay by the learned Metropolitan Magistrate, Kurla. Before the Sessions Court the accused was charged for offence under section 302 of I.P.C. for having committed murder of Arjun Maruti Ghare on 19-10-1980 at about 9.00 p.m. at Dhobi Ghat, Sonar Galli, Kurla, Bombay by stabbing him with a knife article No. 1 before the Court. To the said charge accused pleaded not guilty.
5. The prosecution examined a number of witnesses. The prosecution had examined five witnesses who had either seen the incident of quarrel or assault by the accused on the deceased or the deceased had made oral dying declaration to them stating that accused had stabbed him with a knife. Out of these five witnesses i.e. Prosecution Witness Nos. 1 to 5, only P.W. 5, Philomena Pedru Rodriques stuck to her earlier version given before the police while other witnesses who were either relation or the neighbours of the accused, did not support the prosecution case and were, therefore, declared hostile. The prosecution had also examined panch witness Chandrakant Keru Jadhav P.W. 6 seizing the clothes of the deceased under panchanama Exhibit 11. P.W. 7 Tukaram Malekar is examined as panch for recovery of knife under panchanama Exhibit 13 dated 26-10-1980. P.W. 8 Popat Thorat is the Police Constable who seized the clothes of the deceased. P.W. 9 Kashinath Hari Nikanke is the police constable who arrested the accused from Gorai on 22nd October, 1980. P.W. 10 is Govind Hadage who had accompanied the accused and his wife to see Ramlila at about 11 O'Clock in the night of 19-10-1980, the date and night when the deceased was assaulted. It is this witness who has introduced the accused and his wife to his friend Pandurang Sawant to provide accommodation to the accused and his wife Leela in that night. P.W. 11 Dattatraya Tambe is a panch witness for the recovery of knife at the instance of the accused. P.W. 12 Motilal Jadhav is the Police Sub-Inspector who recorded the complaint of Roza P.W. 1 and participated in the investigation of the case. P.W. 3 is Harikrishnan, the doctor from Sion Hospital who examined the deceased when he was admitted to the Sion Hospital and also produced the post-mortem examination report. P.W. 14 Raghuvir Kadam is the Police Inspector then attached to Kurla Police Station who investigated the aforesaid offence.
6. The defence of the accused is of denial. He denied that he stabbed deceased Arjun with knife. He also denied to have had any quarrel with deceased Arjun. He denied that he had absconded. According to him he went to see Ramlila in the night of 19th with his wife Leela and as he was likely to be late he requested his friend Govind to arrange for his stay for that night which was arranged by the latter at the house of Pandurang Sawant where he stayed in that night. According to him he came back home next day and had gone to Gorai at Borivali to purchase fish where again he stayed for a night and in the morning came to be arrested.
7. The learned Additional Sessions Judge, Greater Bombay who tried the accused for the offence under section 302 of I.P.C. relied on the evidence of Philomena Pedru Rodriques P.W. 5 who has stated in her evidence that she was a resident of the same locality where the accused and the deceased were residing and when she went to the place of offence on hearing cries of the deceased and enquired from the deceased as to what had happened, the deceased had made an oral dying declaration to her and also to P.W. 1 Roza, the mother-in-law of the deceased that it was the accused who had stabbed him with a knife. The learned Sessions Judge has however disbelieved the evidence of discovery of knife made at the instance of the accused on the ground that although the accused was arrested on 23rd, October, 1980, there was no convincing evidence as to how the statement was made by the accused and recovery of the knife was made as late as on 26th October 1980, though the knife recovered at the instance of the accused was found to be having stains of blood according to the C.A. report. The learned trial Judge has relied on the circumstance of the accused having disappeared from the scene of offence immediately after the incident and was arrested at Gorai, Borivali two-three days thereafter. This fact of disappearance of the accused coupled with his other conduct on the night of the incident has been considered as the corroborative piece of evidence to support the case of the prosecution. In the result the trial Court held that the prosecution had proved the offence of murder under section 302 of I.P.C. against the appellant accused and accordingly convicted him and sentenced him to suffer R.I. for life and to pay a fine of Rs. 500/- in default to suffer R.I. for four months.
8. Mrs. V.R. Bhonsale, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant-accused tried to challenge the finding of the trial Court holding the accused guilty on the ground that there is no eye witness to the incident and that there was no motive proved by the prosecution against the accused who was closely related to the deceased. She also argued that it was not safe to base the conviction on the solitary evidence of P.W. 5 Philomena Rodriques who had not witnessed the incident but only spoke about the oral dying declaration having been made by the deceased to her when the latter enquired from the deceased immediately after the incident. Mrs. Bhonsale pointed out the number of omissions and her previous antecedents which show that this witness was involved in a number of police cases regarding offences under the Prohibition Act and she must have given the evidence in favour of the prosecution at the instance of or under the influence of the police. We are not impressed by these arguments of Mrs. Bhonsale. We have gone through the evidence of P.W. 5 Philomena Rodriques in detail. This witness is a middle aged lady. Accused is the son of P.W. 1 Roza D'Cunha and this witness is the wife of brother of P.W. 1 Roza, i.e. she is the wife of the maternal uncle of the accused. She stays in the same locality where the deceased and the accused were residing. She knew the accused as well as the deceased and the family of these two persons. According to her the deceased was working as a grass cutter on her grass lands. On the day of the incident deceased Arjun had gone to her place at about 12 O'Clock in the noon and also again at 4 p.m. At about 4 p.m. the deceased had told her that he was fisted or given fist blows by the accused on his body. He further told her that the accused had locked his room following the quarrel between the deceased and his wife Delfin P.W. 2 and he was not allowed to go in his own house. According to her deceased had again come to her house at about 6 p.m. and was seeing T.V. at her place upto 8 p.m. Thereafter on that night when she heard some reports she went towards the house of the deceased. That time she saw the accused Chester and his wife Leela running away from the place of the deceased. Along with her about 10 persons had collected there. She asked Arjun as to what had happened as he had injury on his chest and was bleeding. In reply to this question deceased told her 'Mother, Chester stabbed me with a knife on my chest'. The deceased was at that time lying in open space in front of his house. There was sufficient moon light at that time, and the persons who had collected there had brought lamps with them. Municipal mercury lights were there at some distance from the said place of offence. According to her there were also lights in the compound of Premier Automobile staff quarters which was situated just about 15 to 20 feet from the place where Arjun was lying. Then a taxi was arranged by one Rajendra who has been examined as P.W. 3. Then Arjun was put into taxi and he was accompanied by his mother-in-law Roza P.W. 1, Rajendra P.W. 3 and younger sister of the accused by name Pricella. The accused was not there at that time. The police had recorded the statement on the next day in the evening. The evidence of this witness was sought to be attacked in the cross-examination showing that some prohibition cases were pending against her in Andheri, Kurla and Mulund courts and that she had also stood as surety in some other liquor cases filed against the deceased. It was also sought to be pointed in the cross-examination that her husband as well as brothers were involved in some criminal cases. Certain omissions were also sought to be pointed from her police statement in the course of her cross-examination but they are not on the main point of the oral dying declaration or her presence at the place immediately after the incident where the deceased was lying. It is true that other prosecution witnesses like P.W. 1 Roza who is the mother of the accused and who has filed her complaint had stated in the complaint that she came out of her house on hearing the cries of the deceased and on enquiry from the deceased he pointed out that it was the deceased sic accused who had stabbed him with knife in his chest, but she has turned hostile in the Court so far as evidence regarding oral dying declaration of the deceased is concerned. Although the said witness has turned hostile her entire evidence cannot be rejected on that ground and the part of the evidence which otherwise supports the prosecution case can certainly be relied on as held by the Supreme Court State of U.P. v. Chet Ram, reported in : 1976CriLJ1644 . Headnote (A) of the said Judgment of the Apex Court reads as under:---
'Hostile witness-Credibility-Entire evidence of such witness does not get excluded or rendered unworthy of consideration because he is declared hostile.'
P.W. 1 Roza said that she saw the deceased Arjun lying in front of his house, he was bleeding from the chest injury and the accused was dressing his injury and when she asked Arjun as to what had happened, he replied that somebody had assaulted him and he could not see the assailant. Although she has deviated from her police statement, her evidence can be relied to the extent that it supports the evidence of P.W. 5 Philomena that the deceased was lying in injured condition having bleeding injury in his chest and he was in a position to speak. The other witness i.e. Delfin Ghare P.W. 2 who is the wife of the deceased and who is sister of the accused has also turned hostile. Although she has turned hostile, she has stated that at 9 p.m. on the night of the incident she came out of her house after hearing the shouts of her husband stating that somebody had stabbed him with a knife and run away. Other two witnesses i.e. P.W. 3 Rajendra and P.W. 4 Rubi Pereira have also turned hostile who are residing quite near the houses of the deceased and the accused. P.W. 4 Rubi Pereira also states that she saw Arjun lying in a injured condition and on asking Arjun as to who had assaulted him, he replied that he did not know who had assaulted him as it was dark. Now, although some prosecution witnesses have turned hostile, they have admitted that Arjun was conscious at the time when he was lying in an injured condition in front of the house of P.W. 1. From the above it is clear that the evidence of Philomena Rodriques is reliable when she said that immediately after hearing about the incident she came to the place of offence and on enquiry the deceased told her that the accused had stabbed him on the chest with a knife. From her evidence it also appears that there was sufficient light at the place of offence in which the deceased could have noticed the accused who was the brother of his own wife. P.W. 5 Philomena has also stated about the presence of lights at that time near the place of offence which is also supported by Sub-Inspector Jadhav who has stated that there was sufficient light at the place of offence. Even Roza P.W. 1 has stated in her evidence that she could see the face of Arjun lying injured. From the evidence of Roza and Rubi it is also clear that the deceased was conscious and was able to speak at the time when P.W. 5 stated that the deceased told her on enquiry that it was the accused who had assaulted him with a knife. Apart from this there are other circumstances which also support the prosecution case. For instance the conduct of the accused in not accompanying the deceased to the hospital. The accused is admittedly the brother of the wife of the deceased and being only male member from among relations, it was he who was expected to accompany the deceased to Sion Hospital in the taxi and if the accused had not been the person who had assaulted the deceased he would have, in all probability, accompanied the deceased to the hospital. The accused in his 313 statement admits that he was at the place of offence when in answer to question No. 2 accused stated that it was true that Arjun was lying in injured condition and was also lying in bleeding condition. He also admits that it was true that the deceased was removed to the hospital by P.Ws. 1, 2 and 3 and that he helped them to put Arjun into the taxi in reply to question No. 3 in his 313 statement. The disappearance of the accused from the place of offence and the accused not accompanying the deceased to the hospital are very strange phenomena coupled with his disappearance from his own house for about three days and attending Ramlila on the same night immediately after the incident of assault on the deceased who was closely related to the accused. These circumstances and the conduct of the accused also supports the prosecution case that it was the accused who had stabbed the deceased with a knife. So far as the evidence of P.W. 5 Philomena is concerned who is the aunt of the accused, he states in his 313 statement, when questioned as to why the witness had deposed against him, his only reply is that Philomena was having large liquor business and she had given evidence against him to oblige the police so that police should not take action against her and stop her business. This explanation cannot be accepted, the same being absolutely unreasonable and improbable. No one would expect that in order to save herself from minor criminal cases pending against her, she would go to the length of involving her own nephew falsely in a murder case. Nor would one expect that by doing so the police would not take any action against her with regard to the criminal offences in matters of Prohibition Act committed by her.
9. So far as disappearance of the accused is concerned the prosecution has led evidence of P.W. 9 Police Constable Kashinath Nikanke who has stated that on 19th October, 1980 i.e. the date of incident he was sent to the house of the accused to arrest him but he was not at his house. On that night he made enquiries in the neighbourhood but no one gave him any information about the whereabouts of the accused and that he was searching the accused for three-four days. In the evening of 22nd October, 1980 the police received information about the accused and in pursuance to that information the said witness went to village Gorai on the morning of 23rd October, 1980 along with three constables. The accused was traced in the house of his relative by name Shila Joseph in the said village Gorai in Borivali where he was arrested and thereafter was brought to Kurla Police Station. At that time his wife Leela also was with him. This goes to show that the accused had disappeared from the place of offence immediately after the incident though he admits that he was there at the place of offence and at the time of incident or immediately after the incident and saw the deceased in that condition and he remained there until he was taken to the hospital in taxi. Although the police was looking for the sic accused from that very night of the incident, the accused was not in his house and he had admitted that he had gone to see Ramleela on that night and had stayed in the house of one Savant who was the friend of P.W. 10 Govind Hadage. He also admitted that he had gone to Gorai village near Borivli where he was arrested by the police on the morning of 23rd October, 1980. This means that the accused had disappeared from the place of offence only to avoid his arrest and was staying at places other than his own house even in the night. This conduct of the accused shows that he was hiding from the police because he wanted to prevent his possible arrest and his absconding immediately after the incident and his not accompanying the deceased to the hospital shows his involvement in this offence. Conduct of the accused to go to see Ramlila in the night of the incident is a circumstance which shows the strange conduct on the part of the accused which could have only been explained by his involvement in the said offence.
10. This takes us to the evidence of Dr. Harikrishnan P.W. 13. On examination the doctor found that the deceased had suffered incised wound 1/2' x 1/2' deep. According to the doctor, patient was conscious when he was brought to the hospital and the deceased must have been in a position to speak at the place of incident when he made oral dying declaration to P.W. 5. The doctor stated that the injury suffered by the deceased could have been caused with knife article No. 6 before the Court. The testimony of the doctor has not been seriously challenged on behalf of the accused. The medical evidence also corroborates the evidence of P.W. 5 to whom the deceased told that the accused stabbed him with a knife on his chest. Although the prosecution has led evidence with regard to the recovery of knife which was recovered at the instance of the accused and which was found to have blood stains on it, the trial Court has not given any credence or reliance on the said evidence. We are of the view that even without the corroboration from the discovery evidence under section 27 of the I.P.C. (sic Evidence Act) there was sufficient evidence led by the prosecution which clearly points to the guilt of the accused. We find no fault in the testimony of P.W. 5 Philomena who was a natural witness and who has stated that the deceased had immediately after the incident told her that it was the accused who had stabbed him with a knife on his chest. It is well established that the conviction can be based solely on the basis of oral dying declaration provided that there are no infirmities. We are satisfied that evidence of P.W. 5 Philomena has not been shattered in her cross-examination and that no infirmities in her evidence are there and it is quite safe to believe in the testimony given by this witness as regards the oral dying declaration of the deceased. Her testimony has been corroborated sufficiently by the medical evidence so also absconding of the accused and his conduct immediately after the incident who was admittedly present at the time or immediately after the incident near the deceased. We have also gone through the reasons given by the trial Court who has relied on the aforesaid evidence and given cogent reasons for believing the testimony of P.W. 5 and the other circumstances proved by the prosecution.
11. We also approve the reasons given by the trial Court in paragraph 23 of its judgment regarding the circumstance of absconding by the accused. We agree with the learned Judge that the accused was absconding immediately after the incident until he was arrested on the morning of 23rd from Gorai, Borivali. The explanation given by him that he had gone to attend Ramlila on that night of the incident and subsequently had gone to Gorai for bringing fish is not at all acceptable. His conduct after the incident, to say the least, is absolutely unusual, irrational and incredible. We, therefore, uphold the conviction of the accused appellant under section 302 of I.P.C.
12. Mrs. Bhonsale, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant contended that in view of the fact that the appellant was on bail all these years and it has taken so long time for the appeal to come up for hearing, it would be in the interest of justice that the appellant should not be made to go to jail after a lapse of time of about 14 years. She, therefore, submitted that substantial amount of fine may be imposed on the appellant in lieu of the substantive sentence of imprisonment. She cited the judgement of the Supreme Court in the matter of Baldev Singh v. State of Punjab, reported in : AIR1996SC372 where the Supreme Court had imposed fine in place of substantive sentence of imprisonment. In the said case the conviction was under section 304 Part I of the I.P.C. and not 302 and the sentence of imprisonment was reduced to the period already undergone which was more than 2 years. It was in that circumstance that the Supreme Court had awarded substantial fine of Rs. 35,000/- and sentenced the accused to imprisonment already undergone. The said judgment of the Supreme Court will have no application so far as this case is concerned in as much as here the conviction of the appellant is under section 302 I.P.C. and the sentence awarded is imprisonment for life which is the minimum sentence. There is no alternative provided under the law for giving fine in place of imprisonment under section 302.
In the instant case, it is crystal clear that the offence would not fall within the ambit of section 304 I.P.C. as contended by Mrs. Bhonsale but would fall squarely within the ambit of section 302 I.P.C. Dr. Harikishanan Gopalkrishnan P.W. 13 who examined the deceased in the life time found an incised wound lung deep on the person of the deceased. He also found lung tear 21/2 long x 3' deep. In his opinion, the injury was sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause his death. The post mortem report of the deceased also shows that there was a tear of 21/2' in the left lung and it had collapsed. When we bear in mind the nature of the injury, sustained by the deceased, there can be no escape from the conclusion that the act of the appellant would fall within the ambit of Clause Thirdly of section 300 I.P.C. It can safely be concluded that the appellant intended to inflict an injury which was sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause his death. We may also mention that none of the prosecution witnesses have stated nor is it the case of the appellants under section 313 Cr.P.C. that there was any provocation or sudden fight and on the spur of the moment the appellant inflicted the fatal blow on the deceased. In view of the aforesaid position the submission of Mrs. Bhonsale fails.
13. For the aforesaid reasons, the above appeal is dismissed. The appellant-accused is on bail. He must surrender to his bail forthwith.