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[Cites 1, Cited by 8]

Supreme Court of India

Lallu Ram And Ors vs State Of U.P. And Anr on 27 September, 1984

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 1886, 1985 SCR (1) 862, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 1886, (1985) 1 SCWR 10, 1985 SCC (CRI) 15, (1984) 2 CRIMES 750, (1984) LS 108, (1985) 1 SCR 862 (SC), 1984 CRILR(SC MAH GUJ) 422, 1984 SCC (SUPP) 424, 1985 LAWYER 17 9

Author: Y.V. Chandrachud

Bench: Y.V. Chandrachud, E.S. Venkataramiah, A. Varadarajan

           PETITIONER:
LALLU RAM AND ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. AND ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT27/09/1984

BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)

CITATION:
 1984 AIR 1886		  1985 SCR  (1) 862
 1984 SCC  Supl.  424	  1984 SCALE  (2)593


ACT:
     Administration of	Justice-When a	life convict appeals
that he	 was convicted	for a  murder that  never  was,	 the
Supreme Court can reconsider the question seriously and call
for further  reports  for  done	 fuller	 justice-Acquittals-
Attempts to  secure false acquittals by forging a fictitious
documents deprecated-Constitution  of  India,  1950  Article
136.



HEADNOTE:
     The appellants  were convicted  and sentenced to suffer
imprisonment for life for the murder of a person by the name
of Kunwar  Bahadur in  the village of Bamori Kalan, District
Jalaun on  July 18,  1971. Based on a news item carried by a
Hindi daily  called 'Nav  Bharat' on  June 3, 1983, that the
dead body  of one  Kunwar Bahadur Singh was found in Vidisha
in suspicious  circumstances and  that a letter purported to
have been  written by one Kunwar Bahadur Singh was recovered
from the  person of  the deceased,  the appellants  filed  a
petition before	 the High  Court of  Madhya Pradesh, praying
for their  acquittals contending  that Kunwar  Bahadur Singh
for whose  murder they	were convicted in 1971 was alive for
twelve years thereafter and, therefore, their conviction was
illegal. The  High Court  dismissed the	 petition. Hence the
appeal by Special Leave of the Court.
     Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
     HELD; 1:1. When a person convicted of murder raised the
question that  he has material to show that he was convicted
for a murder that had never taken place, as, for example, by
showing that  the  person  who	was  alleged  to  have	been
murdered  is  in  fact	alive  the  Supreme  Court  has	 the
jurisdiction, in appropriate cases, to call for further data
from the  concerned authorities	 in  order  to	examine	 the
contention of  the convict.  This jurisdiction	on which the
Supreme Court  can exercise,  though with circumspection, is
in order  to do	 complete justice  in any  matter  which  is
pending before	it or  which has  been disposed	 of  by	 it.
[863G-H, 864A]
     1: 2.  The instant case, however, is an example of what
an incredible amount of ingenuity is exercised by the people
to secure  false acquittals. The two reports called for from
the District Magistrate, Vidisha, and the two photographs of
863
the two	 dead bodies  found in	1971 and  1983, respectively
make it	 clear that,  (1) Kunwar  Bahadur  Singh  for  whose
murder the  appellants were  convicted thirteen years ago is
not the	 same person  whose dead  body was  found on June 2,
1983 in	 Vidisha and  (2) The  letter which was found on the
person of  the dead  body on  June 2,  1983 is	a forged and
fictitious  document   manufactured  for   the	purpose	  of
obtaining false acquittals. [863D, 864E, 865E-F]



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 476 of 1984.

Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order dated the 6th December, 1983 of the Allahabad High Court in Appeal No. 611 of 1976.

Dr. N. M. Ghatate and C.K. Ratnaparkhi for the Appellants.

Manoj Swarup Dalveer Bhandari and A.K. Sanghi for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHANDRACHUD, C.J. It is necessary to record this short order so that it may be known as to what an incredible amount of ingenuity is exercised by the people to secure false acquittals.

A person by the name of Kunwar Bahadur was murdered in the village of Bamori Kalan, District Jalaun, on July 18, 1971. The appellants were convicted for that murder and were sentenced to suffer imprisonment for life.

On June 2, 1983, dead body was found in Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh. A letter purported to have been written by one Kunwar Bahadur was recovered from the person of the deceased. On the next day, June 3, 1983, a Hindi daily called 'Nav Bharat' carried a news item to the effect that the dead body of one Kunwar Bahadur Singh was found in Vidisha in suspicious circumstances and that the letter which was recovered from the person of the deceased showed that he was repentant. This news item is alleged to have come to the notice of the relatives of the appellants, who contacted the Vidisha police. The contention of the appellants is that Kanwar Bahadur, for whose murder they were convicted in 1971 was alive for 12 years thereafter and that his dead body was found on June 2, 1983. By this appeal, they pray for an order of acquittal, or rather, for an order setting aside their 12 year old conviction on the ground that they were convicted for a murder that never was.

864

Since this appeal raised a question of serious concern to the administration of justice, an order was passed by this Court on April 11, 1984 directing the District Magistrate, Vidisha, to hold an inquiry into the allegation as to whether the person called Kunwar Bahadur, who was alleged to have been murdered in 1971, was found alive after the alleged murder and was thereafter murdered in some other incident which took place in 1983. The District Magistrate, Vidisha, Shri O.P. Dube, has submitted a report which deserves high praise. He has recorded statements of 18 persons and has examined documents leading to the conclusion that the person whose body was found on June 2, 1983 is not the person who was murdered in 1971 and for whose murder the appellants were sentenced to life imprisonment.

It is clear from the report of the District Magistrate that the letter which was found on the person of the dead body on June 2, 1983 is a forged and fictitious document manufactured for the purpose of getting over the order whereby the appellants were convicted for the murder of Kunwar Bahadur in 1971. The age of Kunwar Bahadur who was murdered in 1971 does not tally with the age of the person alleged to be Kunwar Bahadur whose dead body was found on June 2, 1983. The close relatives of the real Kunwar Bahadur who was murdered in 1971, have stated before the District Magistrate that the handwriting of the letter found on the person of the dead body which was discovered on June 2, 1983 is not that of Kunwar Bahadur who was murdered in 1971.

After the receipt of the District Magistrate's Report, this appeal came up for hearing on August 13, 1984 when Dr. N.M. Ghatate, appearing for the appellants, asked that the District Magistrate should be directed further to show the photograph of the dead body which was discovered on June 2, 1983, to the close relatives of Kunwar Bahadur in order to remove any doubt on the question whether the person whose dead body was found in 1983 is the very Kunwar Bahadur for whose murder the appellants were convicted. Seeing the plausibility of this submission, a direction was given by this Court to the District Magistrate to do the needful and submit a further report to this Court.

In accordance with the aforesaid direction, the District Magistrate showed the photograph of the dead body which was 865 found on June 2, 1983 to Kaushilya Rani, Jamana Das Lodhi and Sughar Singh who are respectively the widow, brother and son of Kunwar Bahadur who was murdered in 1971. The brother and son of Kunwar Bahadur stated that the photograph of the dead body which was discovered on June 2, 1983 is not that of Kunwar Bahadur. Kaushilya Rani stated before the District Magistrate that her husband was tall and slim, that he was not fat and that his complexion was fair. However she was unable to say whether the photograph shown to her was that of her husband, since the impression in the photograph was not clear.

On the basis of these statements, the District Magistrate has submitted a Supplementary Report to this Court stating that the photograph of the dead body is not that of Kunwar Bahadur. We had directed the District Magistrate to forward to us, along with his report, the photograph of Kunwar Bahadur who was murdered in 1971 and the photograph of the dead body which was found in 1983. Having compared these two photographs, which are annexures and 10 to the report of the District Magistrate, we are of the opinion that the conclusion to which the District Magistrate has come is correct. There is no resemblance between the two photographs.

The District Magistrate has stated that the officers of the Vidisha Police Station are guilty of a serious lapse in not registering the crime of murder when a dead body was found in their jurisdiction on June 2, 1983. As observed by him in this report which is drawn with commendable care, the entire case is shrouded in suspicion and deserves to be inquired into by the higher Police authorities.

In the result, we are of the opinion that Kunwar Bahadur for whose murder the appellants were convicted 13 years ago, is not the same person whose dead body was found on June 2, 1983 in Vidisha. The appeal is accordingly dismissed.

S.R. Appeal dismissed.

866