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[Cites 9, Cited by 33]

Supreme Court of India

State Of West Bengal vs Shew Mangal Singh & Ors on 25 August, 1981

Equivalent citations: 1981 AIR 1917, 1982 SCR (1) 360, AIR 1981 SUPREME COURT 1917, 1981 (4) SCC 2, 1981 SCC(CRI) 782, (1981) ALLCRIR 368

Author: Y.V. Chandrachud

Bench: Y.V. Chandrachud, V. Balakrishna Eradi

           PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SHEW MANGAL SINGH & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/08/1981

BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)

CITATION:
 1981 AIR 1917		  1982 SCR  (1) 360
 1981 SCC  (4)	 2	  1981 SCALE  (3)1249


ACT:
     Constitution of  India, 1950, Art. 136-Special Leave to
appeal-Criminal Trial-Conviction by trial court-Acquittal by
High Court-Interference by Supreme Court-When arises.
     Indian Penal Code 1860 (Act 45 of 1860) S. 76-Scope of-
Command of superior officer to open fire-Subordinate officer
in execution  of command  causes death-Subordinate officer's
belief that command was lawful-Enquiry into-When arises.
     Criminal Trial-Duty  of Courts-To ensure that innocents
are not convicted and guilty are not acquitted.



HEADNOTE:
     The respondents  were police  officers. The prosecution
alleged that  when the deceased and his brother were sitting
outside	 the   house  three  police  vehicles  carrying	 the
respondents and	 other police  officers suddenly  stopped in
front of  their house  and  that  a  police  officer  rushed
towards them  and when	the deceased  disclosed his identity
the officer  fired at  point blank  range. The	shot  having
missed him, he rushed in the house. Pursuing him respondents
2 and 4 dragged him out of the house, whereupon respondent 4
fired a	 shot at  him. In  the meanwhile, the other brother,
who was	 trying to  get into the house was caught hold of by
some of the respondents and respondent 1 fired at him.
     The two  brothers were  thereafter dumped into a police
jeep, and  the convoy  of police  officers departed from the
scene of the occurrence. Both the brothers were taken to the
hospital where	the deceased  was declared  dead on the spot
and his brother died, before any medical assistance could be
given to him.
     The defence  of the  respondents was  as follows:	that
while they  were on  patrol duty led by one of the officers,
they were  attacked by	some persons,  as a  result of which
respondent 1  was injured  and was  removed to the hospital.
When fire  was opened  under orders  of the  officer the two
deceased received  injuries, and  that respondents  1 and  2
were falsely  implicated after an attempt to pressurise them
into deposing against the officer had failed.
     Prosecution was  initiated on  the basis  of a  private
complaint  filed  by  the  third  brother  of  the  deceased
implicating the	 respondents and two officers. No action was
taken against  the two	officers for  want of section 197 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure.
     While the	trial  judge  convicted	 and  sentenced	 the
respondents, the  High Court acquitted them. Before the High
Court it was contended on behalf of the
361
State that  this was  a case  in which the protectors of law
and order  had become  A predators  and in the circumstances
the Court should not, insist upon the same standard of proof
as in  other criminal  cases,  and  as	the  witnesses	were
desposing nearly  nine years  after the date of the incident
there was  bound to  be	 discrepancies	in  their  evidence.
Taking note of the unsettled political conditions prevailing
in Calcutta  during the	 time, and  on an  analysis  of	 the
prosecution evidence,  the High Court found it impossible to
believe that the incident had happened in the manner alleged
by the prosecution. Believing the defence version that there
was mob	 violence which resulted in injuries to Respondent I
and that  in the circumstances the respondents were bound to
obey the  orders given	by their  officer,  the	 High  Court
acquitted them.
     Dismissing the Special Leave Petition of the State,
^
     HELD: 1.  If the  order to	 open fire  was justified as
found by  the High Court and is therefore lawful, no further
question can  arise whether  the respondents,  who acted  in
obedience to  that order,  believed or did not believe it to
be lawful. [365 F-G]
     In the  instant case  since the situation prevailing at
the scene  of the  offence was	such as to justify the order
given by  the officer  to open	fire, the  respondents could
plead in  defence that they acted in obedience to that order
and therefore  they could  not be held guilty of the offence
of which they were charged. [366 C]
     2.	 A   miscarriage  of  justice  may  arise  from	 the
acquittal of  the guilty no less than from the conviction of
the innocent and that if unmerited acquittal become general,
they tend  to lead to a cynical disregard of the law. Courts
must take  equal care  to ensure  that the  innocent are not
convicted and the guilty are not acquitted. [367 A-B] E
     In the instant case, what the High Court has done is to
acquit the innocent.[367 B]
     S.S. Bobade  v. State  of Maharastra [1974] 1 S.C.R 489
referred to.
     3. It  is a  self-rigteous assumption to argue that the
respondents are	 "undoubtedly guilty of murder" or that they
have been  acquitted by	 the High  Court  "light-heartedly".
Respondents are	 undoubtedly not  guilty of murder. The High
Court's judgment  reflects its	serious concern for justice.
Judgments of  acquittal are  not to  be condemned as "light-
hearted" for  the reason  that the Government considers that
it has a stake in the conviction of the accused. [367 C-D]
     In the  instant case  the particular night on which the
incident took  place was  cloudy and it was drizzling. It is
very difficult	to take	 the witnesses	at their  word	when
their evidence	suffers	 from  various	contradictions.	 The
witnesses were	deposing to  the incident  nearly nine years
later. Their  evidence	is  insufficient  to  establish	 the
complicity of  the respondents	in causing  the death of the
deceased. The  surviving brother  lodged the  complaint more
than a	month after  the incident.  The name  of  PW.  2  an
important witness  who was in the company of P.W. 1 from the
beginning  of	the  incident	was  not  mentioned  in	 the
complaint. [366 E-H]
362



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition (Criminal) No. 3459 of 1980.

From the judgment and order dated the 1st August, 1980 of the High Court of Calcutta in Criminal Appeal No. 18 of 1980.

A. P. Chatterjee, A.K. Ganguly and B. K Chatterjee for the Petitioner.

A. K. Sen, D. N. Mukherjee and N. R. Choudhury for Respondent Nos. 1.4 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHANDRACHUD, C.J: This Special Leave Petition is filed by the State of West Bengal against the judgment of acquittal dated August 1, 1980 passed by the High Court of Calcutta in Criminal Appeal No. 18 of 1980.

The respondents, who are all Police officers, were tried by the learned Judge, City Sessions Court, Calcutta, under section 302 read with section 34 of the Penal Code, on the charge that at about 10.00 p.m. On November 11, 1970 they, along with Bibhuti Chakraborty the then Deputy Commissioner of Police (North Division), P. R. Dey, the then Assistant Commissioner of Police (N.S.) and some others, caused the death of Ranjit Chakraborty and Samir Chakraborty by causing them gunshot injuries.

The case of the prosecution is that the deceased Ranjit and his brother Samir were sitting outside their house when three police vehicles carrying the respondents and other Police officers, numbering about 15 or 20 in all, suddenly stopped in front of the house. The Police officers, led by Bibhuti Chakraborty, rushed towards them and their elder brother Benoy, with revolvers in their hands. Ranjit disclosed that he was a constable of the Calcutta Police and Samir said that he was an N. V. F. cadet. Bibhuti Chakraborty then fired a shot from his revolver at Ranjit from a point-blank range. Respondent 2, Chitta Ranjan Ganguly, and respondent 4, Bimal Thakur pursued Ranjit who had in the meanwhile rushed into his house. They dragged him out of the house, whereupon respondent 4 fired a shot at him. The other Police officers, including some of the respondents, also fired at Ranjit. In the meantime, the other brother Samir, who was trying to get into the house, was caught hold of by 363 some of the respondents and respondent 1, Shew Mangal Singh, fired a shot at him. Samir and Ranjit were thereafter dumped in to a Police jeep and the convoy of the Police officers went to a place near Rajarghat on the bank of the river Hooghly. Samir was crying in agony. Some of the Police officers who were sitting in an Ambassador car ordered that Samir's voice should be silenced. Thereupon respondent 3 Anil Maitra: who was sitting in a jeep, fired a shot at him. Ranjit and Samir were then taken to R. G. Kar Hospital, where Ranjit was declared dead. Samir died within a few minutes thereafter, before any medical assistance could be given to him. Their brother Benoy was taken into custody by the Police Officers and was produced before a Magistrate on the following day, when he was released on bail.

The defence of the respondents is that they were on patrol duty Led by Bibhuti Chakraborty, the Deputy Commissioner of Police. When the police party entered Shyampukur Street, they were attacked by some persons, as a result of which respondent 1 Shew Mangal Singh was injured. He was immediately removed by respondent 2 and P. R. Dey, the Assistant Commissioner of Police, to the R.G. Kar Hospital. Thereafter the Deputy Commissioner of Police gave firing orders, as a result of which Ranjit and Samir received injuries. The contention of respondents 1 and 2 is that they were implicated falsely in the case after an attempt to pressurise them into deposing against the Deputy Commissioner had failed.

The prosecution was initiated on the basis of a private complaint filed on December 22, 1970 by Benoy Chakraborty (P. W. l). In addition to the four respondents, Deputy Commissioner Bibhuti Chakraborty and Assistant Commissioner P. R. Dey were also included in the array of the accused. The learned Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Calcutta, issued process against the respondent but refused to do so against the two other officers on the ground of want of sanction for their prosecution under section 197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

The complainant applied for sanction under section 197 Cr. P. C., for the prosecution of the two officers but his application was rejected. In July 1977, after the change of Government, the complainant filed another application for sanction, which was granted on August 4, 1977. But the officers filed a petition in the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution challenging the order of sanction. A learned single Judge dismissed that petition but in 364 appeal, a Division Bench of the High Court set aside the order sanctioning prosecution on the ground of mala fides on the part of the State Government and on the ground of violation of the rules of natural justice. There the matter rested in so far as those two officers are concerned.

The learned trial Judge convicted the respondents under section 302 read with section 34 of the Penal Code and sentenced them to life imprisonment.

In an appeal by the respondents, the High Court has acquitted them, against which the State of West Bengal has filed this Special Leave Petition under Article 136 of the Constitution.

The learned Advocate General of the State of West Bengal, who appeared to defend the appeal in the High Court, contended there that this is not a normal case of murder but a rather unique one in which the protectors of law and order had themselves become predators and, in the circumstances, there were bound to be loop holes in the prosecution case. It was urged in the High Court that one should not, therefore, expect or insist upon the same standard of proof as in other criminal cases. In regard to the discrepancies in the evidence of the prosecution witnesses, it was urged by the learned Advocate General in the High Court, that the witnesses were deposing nearly nine years after the date of the incident, as a result of which there were bound to be discrepancies in their evidence. On the question of application of section 34, it was urged in the High Court on behalf of the State Government that even if it may not be possible to apportion the guilt amongst the accused, their mere presence at the spot would establish their involvement in the offences with which they were charged.

The judgment of the High Court shows that in the year 1970-71 certain parts of the State of West Bengal, including the City of Calcutta, were passing through a critical period of lawlessness on account or the "Naxal Movement". A sitting Judge of the High Court and a member of the Higher Judicial Service were killed in Calcutta during that period. Political leaders, businessmen and members of the Police Force also met with their death during that period of turbulence. Benoy Chakraborty (P. W. l) admitted in his evidence to have stated in the committal Court that newspapers had reported seven or eight murders between August 1970 and April 1971. Manicklal Ghose (P. W. ') stated in his evidence that many 365 murders were committed during 1970-71 within the jurisdiction of A the Shyampukur Thana. On an analysis of the prosecution evidence, the High Court found it impossible to hold that the incident in question had happened in the manner alleged by the prosecution. According to the High Court, the police, while on patrol duty, were compelled to open fire after respondent l, Shew Singh, received injuries as a result of the mob violence. Since the orders given by the Deputy Commissioner to open fire were justified, respondents were bound to obey the lawful orders of their superior officer. On this ground alone, according to the High Court, the accused were entitled to be acquitted.

Learned counsel who appears for the State of West Bengal argued this Special Leave Petition for quite some time and in addition, at our direction, he filed written submissions in support of the petition. We adjourned the matter to enable us to go through those submissions. Having done so we are unable to hold that this is a fit case for granting leave to the State Government to appeal against the judgment of the High Court.

A very interesting and important question was raised in the High Court as to whether the command of a superior officer to open fire affords a complete defence to a subordinate officer if, while acting in the execution of that command he causes injury or death. The High Court has referred in its judgment to passages from Cross E and Jones' "Introduction of Criminal Law" (8th edition, page 371); Granville William's Text Book of Criminal Law (1978 edition, page 408); Smith & Hogan's Criminal Law (1978 edition, page

209); Colin Howard's Criminal Law (page 424) and to a South African Case. It is unnecessary for us to go into that question for the simple reason that we are of the view that the High Court was justified in coming to the conclusion that the particular situation warranted and justified the order issued by the Deputy Commissioner of Police to open fire. If that order was justified and is therefore lawful, no further question can arise as to whether the respondents, who acted in obedience to that order, believed or did not believe that order to be lawful. Such an enquiry becomes necessary only when the order of the superior officer, which is pleaded as a defence, is found not to be in conformity with the commands of the law.

Section 76 of the Penal Code provides that nothing is an offence which is done by a person who is, or who by reason of a mistake of fact and not by reason of a mistake of law in good faith 366 believes himself to be, bound by law, to do it. The illustration to that section says that if a soldier fires on a mob by the order of his superior officer, in conformity with the commands of the law, he commits no offence. The occasion to apply the provisions of the section does not arise in the instant case since the question as to whether the accused believed in good faith on account of a mistake of fact that he was bound by law to do the act which is alleged to constitute an offence, would arise only if, to the extent relevant in this case, the order or command of the superior officer is not justified or is otherwise unlawful. Since the situation prevailing at the scene of the offence was such as to justify the order given by the Deputy Commissioner of Police to open fire, the respondents can seek the protection of that order and plead in defence that they acted in obedience to that order and therefore they cannot be held guilty of the offence of which they are charged. That is the purport of the illustration to section

76. But considering that a little politics appears to have got mixed up with the trial of this case, it would be more satisfactory not to rest our judgment on this aspect of the matter and to consider whether the evidence led by the prosecution is such on which a conviction can safely be founded.

The particular night on which the incident took place was cloudy and it was drizzling. On the question whether the witnesses were able to identify the respondents, it is very difficult to take them at their word when their evidence suffers from the various contradictions to which the High Court has referred. The witnesses were deposing to the incident nearly nine years later and it appears that the made good the lapses of memory by giving a free play to their imagination. Their evidence leaves much to be desired and is insufficient to establish the complicity of the respondents in causing the death of Ranjit and Samir Chakraborty. Benoy lodged his complaint (Ext. 2) more than a month after the incident and yet there are material discrepancies between what he stated in the complaint and what he said in his evidence. Manick is an important witness from the point of view of the prosecution because he was in the company of Benoy from the beginning of the incident until they were released on bail the next day. It is surprising that in the list of witnesses filed by Benoy along with his complaint, Manick's name does not figure at all.

Towards the end of his written submissions, learned counsel for the State of West Bengal has extracted passages from a judgment 367 of this Court in S. S. Bobade v. State of Maharashtra(1) to the effect A that a miscarriage of justice may arise from the acquittal of the guilty no less than from the conviction of the innocent and that if unmerited acquittals become general, they tend to lead to a cynical disregard of the law. With respect, we share this opinion but do not appreciate its relevance here. Courts must take equal care to ensure that the innocent are not convicted and the guilty are not acquitted but, what the High Court has done is to acquit the innocent. Relying upon the observations in S. S. Bobade, the learned counsel has stated further that the judicial instrument has a public accountability and that the history will never forgive "us" if police officers, undoubtedly guilty of murder, are acquitted "lightheartedly". We cannot agree more. But the snag lies in the self-righteous assumption that respondents are "undoubtedly guilty of murder" or that they have been acquitted by the High Court "lightheartedly". Respondents are undoubtedly not guilty of murder and the High Court' s judgment reflects its serious concern for justice. Judgments of acquittal are not to be condemned as "lighthearted" for the reason that the Government considers that it has a stake in the conviction of the accused.

For these reasons, we dismiss the Special Leave Petition.

N V. K.					 Petition dismissed.
368