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[Cites 12, Cited by 28]

Supreme Court of India

Balwant Kaur vs Union Territory Of Chandigarh on 3 November, 1987

Equivalent citations: 1988 AIR 139, 1988 SCR (1) 745, AIR 1988 SUPREME COURT 139, 1988 (1) SCC 296, 1988 33 ELT 4, 1988 EASTCRIC 244, 1988 ALLCRIC 15, 1988 SCC(CRI) 116, 1987 2 REPORTS 529, 1988 APLJ (CRI) 1, 1988 EFR 1, 1988 IJR 17, 1988 SC CRI R 127, 1987 5 JT 378, 1987 3 REPORTS 707, 1987 (5) JT 239, 1988 CRIAPPR(SC) 17, 1988 (1) SCC 1, 1988 CALCRILR 17, 1988 CURCRIJ 56, 1988 SCC(CRI) 1, 1988 (1) UJ (SC) 103, 1987 (2) IJR (SC) 529, (1987) 3 CRIMES 741, (1988) 1 RECCRIR 60, (1988) 1 CRILC 197, (1988) ALLCRIC 3, (1988) CHANDCRIC 22, (1988) 1 SCJ 619

Author: A.P. Sen

Bench: A.P. Sen

           PETITIONER:
BALWANT KAUR

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
UNION TERRITORY OF CHANDIGARH

DATE OF JUDGMENT03/11/1987

BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:
 1988 AIR  139		  1988 SCR  (1) 745
 1988 SCC  (1)	 1	  JT 1987 (4)	239
 1987 SCALE  (2)1019


ACT:
     Indian Evidence  Act, 1872:  Section 114  111. (b)	 and
133-Accomplice's evidence-Credibility  of-Nature and  extent
of   corroboration-Necessity   for-Accused's   conviction-on
uncorroborated evidence-Effect of.
     Criminal Procedure	 Code, 1973:  Section 313-Approver's
testimony-To be put to accused in examination-Necessity for.



HEADNOTE:
%
     The prosecution  alleged that  the married	 life of the
appellant, who	was said  to be 151/2 years of age, was in a
serious disarray,  that she  and the  non-appealing  accused
were on	 terms of  illicit intimacy, that she also submitted
herself to  PW 2  in  an  extra-marital	 relation,  that  on
13.11.73 she  implored the non-appealing accused and PW 2 to
free her  from a  cruel husband by doing away with him, that
she agreed  that she  would, thereafter	 live with  the non-
appealing accused  as his  wife, that the three designed and
conspired to  do away  with the	 deceased, in  pursuance  of
which the  appellant persuaded	her husband to go to the bus
stand at  Chandigarh at	 9.30 a.m.  On 14th  November, 1973,
where the  non-appealing accused  and PW  2 were waiting for
him as	pre-arranged, and  took him to Pinjore by bus, where
they consumed  liquor together and the non-appealing accused
purchased Ghotna, that while all the three were walking back
to Chandigarh  and  climbed  the  way  side  hill  the	non-
appealing accused gave blows on the head of the unsuspecting
deceased with  the Ghotna,  while PW 2 pinned him down, that
they concealed	the clothes  and body of the deceased in the
nearby bushes,	that both  of them returned to Chandigarh by
night fall,  and the nonappealing accused informed PW 2 that
he, in	turn, had informed the appellant of the death of her
husband, that  the mother  of the  deceased, PW 19, lodged a
complaint on  13.12.73 about her missing son in writing with
the Senior  Superintendent of  Police, Chandigarh,  alleging
that she  had learnt  that a  certain person  of the village
Lahor Khoda  with his two sons and the Sarpanch with his two
other relatives	 had killed  her son,  the motive being that
her son had developed illicit relations with the daughter of
the person, that after coming to know of her husband's death
the appellant  misled her mother-in-law PW 19. into making a
H
746
report	to   the  police  containing  false  and  misleading
information in	an attempt  to draw a red-herring across the
trial.
     The non-appealing	accused was  arrested on  3.4.75. On
his information Ex. P8, a pair of shoes, purse, 25 pieces of
bones including	 an incomplete	human skull  were recovered.
The appellant and PW 2 were arrested on 8.5.75.
     After  completing	 the  investigation,   charges	were
brought against	 the appellants	 and  the  two	accused	 for
conspiracy and	murder. PW 2, who was one of the co-accused,
turned approver.
     The  trial	  court	 on  the  basis	 of  the  approver's
testimony as   corroborated  by other evidence held the non-
appealing accused  and the  appellant guilty of the offences
under sections	302 and	 120-B of  the I.P.C.  and sentenced
them to	 imprisonment for  life. The  High  Court  dismissed
their appeals and confirmed the convictions and sentence.
     In the  appeal to	this Court,  it was  urged that	 the
evidence of  the approver  insofar as  the compicity  of the
appellant was  concerned, lacked  corroboration on  material
particulars and	 that no  conviction could  be sustained  on
such uncorroborated accomplice's testimony.
     On the  question as  to: (1)  the nature  and extent of
corroboration of  an  accomplice's  evidence;  and  (2)	 the
procedure for  the trial  of offences by a 'child' under the
East Punjab Children's Act, 1949,
^
     HELD: 1.1	An accomplice, by long legal tradition, is a
notoriously  infamous	witness,  one  who  being  partipes-
criminis, purchases  his immunity  by  accepting  to  accuse
others. Section	 114, illustration  (b) of  the Evidence Act
envisages   the	  presumptive	uncreditworthiness   of	  an
accomplice. But, then section 133 provides that a conviction
is not	illegal merely because it rests upon an accomplice's
uncorroborated testimony. [753C- D]
     1.2 In  indictments, particularly	of  serious  crimes,
counsel of  caution and	 the rule of prudence enjoin that it
is unsafe  to rest  a conviction on the evidence of a guilty
partner in  a crime without independent corroboration on the
material  particulars.	 Judicial  experience	was,   thus,
elevated to  a rule  of law. lt is a practice which deserves
all the reverence of law. [753D-E]
     l.3 The  nature and  extent of  the corroboration	must
necessarily
747
vary  with  the	 nature	 and  circumstances  of	 each  case.
Enunciation of any general rule, valid for all occasions is,
at once, unwise and unpractical. [753F]
     1.4 The  corroboration has	 to be	of two	kinds; first
belonging to  the area	of reassurance	of the credit of the
approver himself  as a	trustworthy witness; and the second-
which arises  for conclusion  after the	 court is  satisfied
about  the   creditibility  of	 the  approver-as   to	 the
corroboration  in  material  particulars  not  only  of	 the
commission of  the crime but also of the complicity of other
accused-person in  the crime. If on the first area the court
is not	satisfied, the	second does  not arise. However, the
two areas  of corroboration are not two separate, watertight
compartments. The  evidence as	a  whole  will	have  to  be
examined to  reach conclusions	on  both  aspects.  [757G-H;
752C]
     Sharvana Bhavan  v. State	of Madras,  AIR 1966 SC 1273
referred
     1.5 The controversy in the present case in the ultimate
analysis, belongs to the second area, whether the approver's
testimony as  to appellant's  complicity in  the  conspiracy
could  safely	be  held   to  have   been  corroborated  by
independent evidence on the material particulars. [758F-G]
     There was	a considerable	lapse of  time	between	 the
death of  decease and  the arrest  of the  appellant and the
non-appealing accused. There is no evidence to show that, in
the interregnum,  there was any liasion between the two. The
incriminating circumstances  in the evidence of the approver
appearing against the appellant that on 13.11.1973 appellant
wept and  implored the	non-appealing accused and PW 2 to do
away with  the deceased	 and that appellant also agreed that
she would,  thereafter, live  with the non-appealing accused
had had	 to be	put to	the appellant  m the  course of	 her
examination under section 313 Cr. P.C. but this has not been
done. Appellant was not afforded an opportunity to submit an
explanation to	it. That  part of the evidence must for that
reason, be excluded from consideration. [759C-E]
     Harijan Magha  Jesha v.  State of Gujarat, [1979] 3 SCC
474, referred to.
     On a consideration of the entire matter, the approver's
evidence in regard to the complicity of the appellant in the
conspiracy   lacks   corroboration   on	  certain   material
particulars necessary to connect the
748
appellant. A little more reassurance than is afforded by the
state of  evidence in  the  case  is  perhaps  necessary  to
convict appellant.  The appellant in the circumstances would
be entitled to the benefit of doubt. [759F]
     At the  time of  the commission  of  the  offence,	 the
appellant, even on the basis of the observations made by the
sessions court,	 was about 15 years of age and was a 'child'
within the  meaning of East Punjab Children's Act, 1949. The
sessions court	invoked the proviso to section 27 of the Act
and held that the appellant was so depraved a character that
none of	 the other methods mentioned in the section in which
the case  could legally	 be dealt  with was  suitable in her
case. [759G; 760C]
     In view  of the  finding that the appellant is entitled
to the	benefit of doubt, any examination of the legality or
propriety of the procedure adopted in the case in the matter
of trial  of a 'child' under the East Punjab Children's Act,
1949 and  the correctness  of the view of the sessions court
in appealing  to the  proviso to  section 27, and sentencing
appellant to  imprisonment for	life is not necessary . [760
C-D]
     Appeal  allowed.	Conviction  and	  sentence  of	 the
appellant set  aside and  appellant directed  to be  set  at
liberty. However,  conviction and sentence of the other non-
appearing accused left undisturbed. [760E]
     Wigmore on	 Evidence: 3rd Editition Vol. VII para 2054,
Rex v. Bhaskerville, [1916] 2 KB 658, Rameshwar Kalyan Singh
v. State  of Rajasthan	AIR 1952  SC 54,  Director of Public
Persecutions v.	 Kill bourne,  [1973]  Appeal  A.C.  729/All
England law  reports 1982(1) page 815(g), R. v. Beck, [1982]
1 All  ER 807(CA), R. v. Spencer, [1986] 2 All ER 928, R. v.
Donat, [1986]  2 Cr.  App.  R.	1973,  Attorney	 General  of
Hongkong  v.  Wong  Muko  Ping	[1987]	2  W.L.R.  1033	 and
Halsbury's Laws	 of England  IV Ed. Vol. II p. 268, para 454
referred to.



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 742 of 1979.

From the Judgment and order dated 16.1.1979 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Crl. A.No. 656 of 1976.

A.S. Sohal and P.N. Puri for the Appellant. Kiran Choudhri and T. Sridharan for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by 749 VENKATACHALIAH J. This appeal, by Special Leave, preferred against the Judgment dated April 26, 1976 of the High Court of Punjab & Haryana affirming the judgment dated 26 4 1976 of the Sessions Judge in S.C. No. S of 1976 convicting appellant for offences under Sections 302 and 120-B of the Indian Penal Code and sentencing her to imprisonment for life, raises certain questions as to the nature and extent of corroboration of an accomplice's evidence; and as to the procedure for the trial of offences by a "child" under the East Punjab Children's Act 1949.

Appellant-Balwant Kaur was said to be 15 1/2 years of age at the time of the commission of the offence alleged against her.

2. From 14.11.1973 the whereabouts of appellant's husband Pritam Singh, a police-constable, were not known. His mother Mukhtiar Kaur (P.W. 19) reported this fact and expressed her apprehensions in the matter in her complaint to the Superintendent of Police. Appellant was arrested on 8.5.1975. Nand Singh and Ram Sarup were also arrested on 8.5. 1975. Ram Sarup became an approver. Appellant's defence was one of total denial.

3. The judgment of the High Court under appeal is common to Criminal Appeal No. 676 of 1976 preferred by Nand Singh who was convicted under Sections 302, 364, 201 and 120-B of I.P.C. and also sentenced to imprisonment for life.

4. Appellant's husband, Pritam Singh for whose murder appellant and the said Nand Singh had been arraigned, was, at the relevant time, a police-constable at the Police Station West, Sector-11 Chandigarh. Nand Singh was another constable at the same Police Station. Nand Singh's brother Bhag Singh and Pritam Singh were neighbours, residing in adjacent Government-quarters in Sector 20-A, Chandigarh. Ram Sarup, who later turned approver, was another police- constable on Guard duty at the Punjab Raj Bhavan, Chandigarh.

5. The married life of Appellant and Pritam Singh, according to the prosecution, lacked connubial felicity and was marked by constant bickerings and quarrels, the cause for this discord being the addiction of Pritam Singh to liquor. It is the prosecution case that Pritam Singh was a dipsomaniac and was constantly subjecting appellant to corporeal intransigence. It was further alleged that appellant had developed illicit intimacy with Nand Singh. Ram Sarup, in the course of his visits 750 to Bhag Singh's house met, and became friendly with Nand Singh and the two become accustomed to take liquor together. Ram Sarup also knew deceased Pritam Singh. It is alleged that on occasions Nand Singh, when he lost self-control under the influence of liquor, used to confide in Ram Sarup of his illicit sexual exploits with appellant. This appears to have tempted Ram Sarup to ask Nand Singh to introduce Ram Sarup also to appellant for a similar intrigue.

6. On November 13, 1973, in the afternoon when Ram Sarup was off-duty, Nand Singh took Ram Sarup to his own quarters in Sector 20 A-said to be at a short distance from the appellant's residence-and the two had liquor together. Thereafter, Nand Singh is stated to have taken Ram Sarup to the residence of, and introduced him to the appellant and persuaded her to gratify the desire of Ram Sarup also. Appellant and Ram Sarup are stated to have indulged in acts of illegal intimacy.

Later, the same afternoon, the three met again at appellant's home when, it would appear, appellant while narrating the privations and hardships endured by her at the hands of her husband broke-down and implored Nand Singh and Ram Sarup to do away with Pritam Singh. She appears to have also offered that after Pritam singh's death she would marry and live with Nand Singh, who was then unmarried. According to the prosecution, it was agreed amongst the three that the appellant should persuade her husband to reach Chandigarh bus-stand the following day i.e. November 14, 1973 and that Nand Singh and Ram Sarup, who would be present three, would entice him away to Pinjore with the inducement of liquor and, do away with him there.

7. Pursuant to this design and conspiracy, appellant is stated to have persuaded her husband to go to the bus-stand at Chandigarh at 9.30 a.m. On 14.11.1973 where Nand Singh and Ram Sarup who were waiting for him as pre-arranged took him to Pinjore by bus. There, all the three cumsumed liquor together. Nand Singh is also stated to have purchased "Ghotna" on the pretext that his sister-in-law had asked for the purchase of one. Thereafter, all the three agreed to go back Chandigarh on foot which took them along a 'dandi' passing by the side of the Pinjore gardens. They reached the railway line near Surajpur Cement Factory and took the foot- path towards Chandigarh. When the three reached a distance of almost 2 miles from Surajpur, Nand Singh suggested that they should climb up a hill on the way side to enjoy a panoramic view of Chandigarh. Accordingly, all the three started climbing. Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) was ahead; Pritam Singh was in 751 the middle with Nand Singh following behind him. Nand Singh is stated to have suddenly administered 2-3 Ghotna blows on the head of the unsuspecting Pritam Singh and told Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) to pin the tottering Pritam Singh down. Ram Sarup pulled Pritam Singh down whereupon Nand Singh gave 8 to 10 more blows with the Ghotna on the person of Pritam Singh. Then Nand Singh threw away the Ghotna and the two, namely, i.e. Nand Singh and Ram Sarup, hastened towards Chandigarh. However, after the two had gone 2 furlongs or so, Nand Singh urged Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) that they both go back to find out whether Pritam Singh was really dead or not. They, accordingly, returned and ensured that Pritam Singh had died. They removed the pants and Bush-shirt of the deceased and concealed them in a bush. Then, the body of Pritam Singh was also concealed in the nearby hushes. The turban of the Pritam Singh had fallen down at the spot.

Thereafter, the two returned to Chandigarh by night- fall. Next day, i.e. On 15.11.1973, Nand Singh came to Raj Bhavan where Ram Sarup was on duty and told the latter that he had, in turn, informed Balwant Kaur of the death of Pritam Singh. This, in substance is the prosecution case as unfolded in the evidence of the Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) who turned approver.

8. On 13. 12.1973, Mukhtiar Kaur (P.W. 19), the mother of deceased-Pritam lodged a complaint about her missing son in writing with the Senior Superintendent of Police, Chandigarh. In that, it was stated that she had learnt from Pandit Sita Ram that a certain Naik Singh and his two sons of the village Lahor Khuda and Dev Singh, the Sarpanch of that village along with two other relatives of the Sarpanch had killed Pritam Singh, the alleged motive was that deceased Pritam Singh, when he was earlier serving in Lahorkhuda had developed illicit relations with Naik Singh's daughter, Prito. At the trial Mukhtiar Kaur was examined to establish that this complaint was engineered by the appellant and Nand Singh to put the investigation on a wrong scent.

Apparently, nothing was heard of the matter for along time till 3.4.1975, when Nand Singh was arrested by ASI Gulzara Singh (P.W. 24). On his information Exg. P. 8, a pair of shoes, a purse, 25 pieces of bones including an incomplete human skull were recovered. Dr. Inderjit Dewan (P.W. I) examined the bones and was of the opinion that they were the remains of a well-built adult, but not old, male of a height of about S-9. According to P.W. 1, the person had died more than 4 months previously. The death was ascribed in all probability to the injuries to the skull administered by a blunt weapon. P.W. 1 could 752 not, however confirm whether the injuries were ante-mortem or not.

Appellant was arrested by ASI Subhash Chander (P.W. 23) on 8.5.1975 and Ram Sarup was also arrested the same day. After the completion of the investigation charges were brought against them for conspiracy and murder. The trial court on the basis of the approver's testimony as corroborated by other evidence, held both Nand Singh , and the appellant guilty of the offences they were charged with and sentenced them to imprisonment for life. The High Court has dismissed their appeals and has confirmed the convictions and the sentences.

9. Shri A.S. Sohai, Learned counsel appearing in support of the appeal urged that the evidence of the Approver in so far as the complicity of appellant is concerned, lacked corroboration on materials particulars and that no conviction could be sustained on such uncorroborated accomplice's testimony.

10. The development of the law touching the competency and credit of an accomplice as witness against others is not without its interesting antecedents.

Historically, in the background of the political trials since the time of Henry VIII where 'King's Evidence' was the main dependence of the crown in its prosecutions, the question of the very admissibility of the evidence of the accomplice loomed large. In the 17th and the 18th centuries, it was ruled repeatedly by the English courts that an accomplice was a competent witness. His 'credit' or the sufficiency of his evidence as a quantitative conception, however, remained in the background. Those were days when 'form' pre-dominated over the 'substance' and the oath had a dead-weight of its own. It was for this reason that struggle was made to keep-out this evidence even at the threshold. On the further development in the law which slowly began to recognise the distinction between 'competency' and 'credit', Wigmore says: Wigmore on Evidence: 3rd Edition Vol. VII para 2054. G "As time went on, and the modern conception of testimony developed, the possibility of admitting a witness and yet discriminating as to the qualitative sufficiency of his testimony became more apparent; and the way was open for the consideration of this question. In a few instances, as the 1700s wore on, and even before then, judicial suggestions are found as to feasibility of such a discrimination. But not until the end of that century does any Court seem 753 to have acted upon such a suggestion in its directions to the jury. About that time there comes into acceptance a general practice to discourage a conviction founded solely upon the testimony of an accomplice uncorroborated.

But was this practice founded on a rule of law? Never, in England,-until modern times. It was recognised constantly that the judge's instruction upon this point was a mere exercise of his common- law function of advising the jury upon the weight of the evidence, and was not a statement of a rule of law binding upon the jury".

ll. An accomplice, by long legal tradition, is a notoriously infamous witness, one who being partipes- criminis, purchases his immunity by accepting to accuse others. Section 114 Illus: (b) of the Evidence Act envisages the presumptive uncredit-worthiness of an accomplice. But then, Section 133 provides that a conviction is not illegal merely because it rests upon an accomplice's uncorroborated testimony.

In indictments, particularly of serious crimes, the counsel of caution and the rule of prudence enjoin that it is unsafe to rest a conviction on the evidence of a guilty partner in a crime without independent corroboration on the material particulars. Judicial experience was, thus, elevated to a rule of law. "It is a practice" it is said "which deserves all the reverence of law."

The nature and extent of the corroboration must necessarily vary with the nature and circumstances of each case. Enunciation of any general rule, valid for all occasions is, at once, unwise and unpractical. The aspect as to the extent and content of independent corroboration is, again, an interesting area of study. One view was that independent evidence tending to verify any part of the testimony of the accomplice should suffice. The other view required that the corroborative evidence should not only show that part of the accomplice testimony is true; but should go further and also implicate the other accused. In R. v. Bhaskerville, the Court of Criminal appeal in England favoured and adopted the second view.

Thirtyfive years ago, Bose J referring with approval to the principles in Bhaskerville said that this branch of the law in India is the same as in England and that the lucid exposition of it given by Lord Reading, cannot be bettered.

754

The felicitous formulation of the law on the matter by that great master of phrase, Bose J, which has now become classical, may be re-called:

" ... But to this extent the rules are clear:
(21) First, it is not necessary that there should be independent confirmation of every material circumstance in the sense that the independent evidence in the case, apart from the testimony of the complainant of the accomplice, should in itself be sufficient to sustain conviction. (22) Secondly, the independent evidence must not only make it safe to believe that the crime was committed but must in some way reasonably connect or tend to connect the accused with it by confirming in some material particular the testimony of the accomplice or complainant that the accused committed the crime. This does not mean that the corroboration as to identity must extend to all the circumstances necessary to identify the accused with the offence. (23) Thirdly, the corroboration must come from independent source and thus ordinarily the testimony of one accomplice would not be sufficient to corroborate that of another (24) Fourthly, the corroboration need not be direct evidence that the accused committed the crime. It is sufficient if it is merely circumstantial evidence of his connection with the crime .... "

(See Rameshwar Kalyan Singh v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1952 SC 54).

In Rex v. Bhaskerville, [ 1916] 2 KB 658 Lord Reading, CJ noticed the different views as to the extent and scope of reasonable corroboration:

".... The difference of opinion has arisen in the main in reference to the question whether the corroborative evidence must connect the accused with the crime. The rule of practice as to corroborative evidence has arisen in consequence of the danger of convicting a person upon the unconfirmed testimony of one who is admittedly a criminal .. "
755

Resolving the difference of opinion it was held:

"We hold that evidence in corroboration must be independent testimony which affects the accused by connecting or tending to connect him with the crime. In other words, it must be evidence which implicates him, that is, which confirms is some material particular not only the evidence that the crime has been committed, but also that the prisoner committed it. The test applicable to determine the nature and extent of the corroboration is thus the same whether the case falls within the rule of practice at common law or within that class of offences for which corroboration is required by statute".

In Halsbury's (IV Edition Vol. II para 454) the following passage obtains:

"Corroboration of a witness's testimony must be afforded by independent evidence which affects the defendant by connecting or tending to connect him with the offence charged. It must be evidence which implicates him, that is which tends to confirm in some material particular not only that the offence was committed, but also that the defendant committed it".

12. As to independent nature of the corroboration learned Chief Justice observed in Bhaskerville case:

" .. Again, the corroboration must be by some evidence other than that of an accomplice, and therefore one accomplice's evidence is not corroboration of the testimony of another accomplice: Rex v. Noakes .. "

As to the extent of the requisite reassurance by way of corroboration, learned Chief Justice said:

" .. .It is sufficient if there is confirmation as to a material circumstance of the crime and of the identity of the accused in relation to the crime. Parke B gave this opinion as a result of twenty- five years' practice; it was accepted by the other judges; and has been much relied upon in later cases .. "
756
" .... Indeed, if it were required that the accomplice A should be confirmed in every detail of the crime, his evidence would not be essential to the case it would be merely confirmatory of other and independent testimony .... " (page 664 in Rex v. Bhaskerville) In Halsbury's Laws of England-IV Edn.-Vol. II-page 268- this proposition is stated thus:
"The word 'corroboration' is not a technical term of art; it means by itself no more than evidence tending to confirm, support or strengthen, other evidence .. "
" ... .The corroboration need not consist of direct evidence that the defendant committed the offence nor need it amount to confirmation of the whole account given by the witness, provided that it corroborates the evidence in some respects material to the charge under consideration. It is sufficient if it is circumstantial evidence of the defendant's connection with the offence, but it must be independent evidence, and must not be vague However there were some observations in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Killbourne (1973) Appeal A.C. 729 which tended towards a departure from the rule in Rex v. Bhaskerville. In Killbourne case Lord Hailsham said-and this is also the statement of the law in Halsbury-IV Edition "Evidence which is admissible, relevant to the evidence requiring corroboration and (if believed) conformatory of that evidence in a material particular, is capable of being corroborative and, when believed, is corroboration".

The above passage was not wholly in consonance with what Lord Reading had earlier said:

".... For example confirmation does not mean that there should be independent evidence of that which the accomplice relates, or his testimony would be unnecessary Reg v. Mullins ( 1) per Maule J ...."

But, in R. v. Beck., [ 1982] 1 All ER 807 (CA), it was reiterated by way of clarification that corroborating evidence need not relate to 757 the particular evidence spoken to by a suspect-witness, and that it was merely independent testimony which confirmed in some material particular not only the evidence that a crime had been committed but also that the accused-person had committed it. Referring to the statement of Lord Hailsham in Killbourne case, All England law reports 1982(1) page 815(g) it was observed:

"The learned editors of Archbold para 1416, after, in our judgment correctly, stating that the corroborative evidence need not relate to the particular incident or incidents spoken to by the "suspect witness", express the view that 'Lord Hailsham's dictum that the corroborative evidence must be "relevant to the evidence requiring corroboration" may be misleading'. We agree. We do not think that Lord Hailsham LC was expressing any support for the proposition of counsel for the appellant."

The position of law in Rex v. Bhaskerville was, thus restored.

13. However, a marked tendency in England towards arresting the formalism in regard to the specific words to be used to caution the jury against the danger of accepting the testimony of the uncorroborated accomplice is now discernible. In R. v. Spencer [ 1986 2 All ER 928] the grievance of the convicted person was that the trial judge, in cautioning the jury, failed to use the word 'dangerous' in describing the risks of injustice involved in convicting a person on the testimony of an uncorroborated accomplice. The Court of appeal and the House of Lords declined to set aside-the verdict and said that the summing up did not involve some legalistic ritual to be incanted in the summing-up.

However, in regard to the quality and extent of corroboration, in R. v. Donat, [19861 2 Cr. App. R. 1973, it was reiterated that to count as corroboration, it is not enough that a piece of evidence merely supports the accomplice's credibility, however, convincingly and independently; but it must go a little further and implicate the accused. (See All England Reports: Annual Review 1986 page 158).

14. In Sharvana Bhavan v. State of Madras, (AIR 1966 SC 1273 the corroboration was held to be of two kinds: the first belonging to the area of reassurance of the credit of the approver himself as a trustworthy witness; and the second-which arises for conclusion after the court is satisfied about the credibility of the approver-as to the corroboration in material particulars not only of the commission of the 758 crime but also of the complicity of other accused-persons in the crime. If on the first area the court is not satisfied the second stage does not Arise. The position is attractively presented in Halsbury:- (IV Edition Vol. II) Page 268.

"Corroboration is required or afforded only if the witness requiring or giving it is,otherwise, credible; if testimony falls of its own inanition, the question of his needing or being capable of giving, corroboration does not arise."

However, the two areas of corroboration are not two separate, water-tight compartments. The evidence as a whole will have to be examined to reach conclusions on both aspects.

In Attorney General of Hongkong v. Wong Muko Ping, [ 1987] 2 W.L.R. 1033. Lord Bridge of Harwich speaking for the Judicial Committee of the Privy-council said:

".... It is said that this two stage approach is implicitly indicated by passages from speeches in the House of Lords in two of the leading authorities".
" ..... The presence or absence of corroborated evidence may assist a jury to resolve, one way or the other, their doubts as to whether or not to believe the evidence of a suspect witness, it must, in their Lordship's Judgment, be wrong to direct them to approach the question of credibility in two stages as suggested in the submission made on behalf of the defendant."

15. The controversy in the present case in the ultimate analysis, belongs to the second area, whether the approver's testimony as to appellant's complicity in the conspiracy could safely be held to have been corroborated by independent evidence on the material particulars The facts that require sequentially to be established are that appellant's married life was in a serious disarray:

that she and Nand Singh were on terms of illicit intimacy; that she also submitted herself to Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) in an ex-marital relation; that on 13.11.1973 she implored Nand Singh and Ram Sarup to free her from a cruel husband by doing away with him; that she agreed that she would, 759 thereafter, live with Nand Singh as his wife and that after coming to know of Pritam Singh's death she deliberately missed her mother-in-law, Mukhtiar Kaur (P.W. 19) into making a report to the police containing false and misleading information in an attempt to draw a red-herring across the trial.
The evidence of P.Ws. 17 & 18 on the first two points has been discarded by the sessions court. It is not also suggested that after the murder of Pritam Singh, appellant began to live with Nand Singh. There was a considerable lapse of time between the death of Pritam Singh and their arrest. There is no evidence to show that, in the interregnum, there was any liasion between the two.

16. There is yet another impediment in accepting the evidence on an important area of the alleged conspiracy. The incriminating circumstances in the evidence of the approver appearing against the appellant had had to be put to the appellant in her examination under Section 313 Cr. P.C. The incriminating testimony of the approver pertaining to the case that on 13.11.1973 appellant wept and implored Nand Singh and Ram Sarup to do away with Pritam Singh and that appellant also agreed that she would, thereafter, live with Nand Singh has not been put to the appellant in the course of her examination under Section 313 Cr. P.C. Appellant was not afforded an opportunity to submit an explanation to it. That part of the evidence must for that reason, be excluded from consideration (See Harizan Mogha: 1979 3 SCR 474).

17. On a consideration of the entire matter, it appears to us that the approver's evidence in regard to the complicity of the appellant in the conspiracy lacks corroboration on certain material particulars necessary to connect the appellant. A little more reassurance than is afforded by the State of evidence in the case is perhaps, necessary to convict appellant. Appellant, in the circumstances would be entitled to the benefit of doubt.

18. At the time of the commission of the offence, the appellant, even on the basis of the observations, made by the session court, was about 15« years of age and was a "child" within the meaning of East Punjab Children's Act 1949. The relevant date is the date of the commission of the offence. Section 27 of the Act provides:

"27. Sentences that may not be passed on child- Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any law, 760 no person who as a child at the date of the commission of the offence shall be sentenced to death or transported or committed to prison for any offence or in default of payment of fine, damages or costs:
Provided that a child who is fourteen years of age or upwards may be committed to prison where the court certifies that he is of so unruly or of so depraved a character that he is not fit person to be sent to a certified school and that none of the other methods in which the case may legally be dealt with is suitable".

The sessions court has invoked the proviso and has held that appellant was so depraved a character that none of the other methods in which the case could legally be dealt with is suitable in her case. An examination of the legality or propriety of the procedure adopted in the case in the matter of the trial of a 'child' under the East Punjab Children's Act 1949 and as to the correctness of the view of the sessions court in appealing to the proviso to Section 27 and in sentencing appellant to imprisonment for life may not be necessary in this case, in view of our finding that appellant is entitled to the benefit of doubt.

19. In the result, this appeal is allowed and while the conviction and sentence of the other non-appealing accused is left undisturbed, the conviction and sentence of the appellant is set aside and appellant is directed to be set at liberty forthwith.

N.P.V.					    Appeal allowed.
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