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[Cites 9, Cited by 54]

Supreme Court of India

Kusa & Ors vs State Of Orissa on 17 January, 1980

Equivalent citations: 1980 AIR 559, 1980 SCR (2) 801, AIR 1980 SUPREME COURT 559, 1980 (3) MAH LR 138 (SC), 1980 CRI APP R (SC) 66, 1980 MADLW (CRI) 248, 1980 SCC(CRI) 389, (1980) 2 SCR 801, (1980) SC CR R 315, 1980 (2) SCC 207

Author: Syed Murtaza Fazalali

Bench: Syed Murtaza Fazalali, A.D. Koshal

           PETITIONER:
KUSA & ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ORISSA

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/01/1980

BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
KOSHAL, A.D.

CITATION:
 1980 AIR  559		  1980 SCR  (2) 801
 1980 SCC  (2) 207
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1987 SC  98	 (7)


ACT:
     Supreme  Court   (Enlargement  of	 Criminal  Appellate
Jurisdiction) Act 1970, S. 2 (a)-Scope.
     Indian Evidence Act 1872, S. 32(1).
     Dying  declaration-Evidentiary  value  of-Eye-witnesses
account	  inconsistent	  with	  dying	   declaration-Dying
declaration if could be relied upon.
     Dying declaration-Evidence	 of doctor that deceased was
in a state of shock-Inability of deceased to answer the last
question   of	 doctor-Whether	  invalidates	 the   dying
declaration.
     Dying declaration-Deceased	 naming some  other  persons
than accused-Such  persons not	challaned-Validity of  dying
declaration.



HEADNOTE:
     The appellants  along with	 other accused	persons were
tried under section 302/149 I.P.C. for causing murder of two
persons. While	one of	the deceased  died on  the spot	 the
other who  was removed to hospital, gave a dying declaration
to the	doctor before dying. The Sessions Judge finding that
none of	 the eye-witnesses  examined was reliable and as the
accused could  not  be	convicted  on  the  basis  of  their
testimony acquitted  all the  accused. He  further held that
the evidence  of the  eye-witnesses was	 rendered improbable
and was in fact falsified by the dying declaration Ex. 9. On
appeal by  the State,  the High	 Court held  that the  dying
declaration Ex.	 9 was	absolutely true and reliable and was
sufficient to establish the prosecution case. It accordingly
convicted and  sentenced the  appellants to imprisonment for
life.
     In the appeal to this Court, it was contended on behalf
of the appellants that (1) as the deceased was in a state of
shock, it  was unsafe  to rely on the dying declaration, (2)
as the	dying declaration  was incomplete  it could  not  be
acted upon,  and (3)  as the  deceased had  implicated	some
persons other  than the accused, the dying declaration could
not be said to be true.
     Dismissing the appeal,
^
     HELD: 1.  The High Court was right in holding that even
excluding  the	evidence  of  the  eye-witnesses  the  dying
declaration is true and reliable and sufficient to found the
conviction of the appellants. [808 F]
     2. The  Sessions Judge  committed an  error in  law  in
rejecting the  dying declaration  because if the evidence of
the eye-witnesses  was to  be rejected on the ground that it
was inconsistent  with the  dying declaration,	it would not
necessarily follow  that  the  dying  declaration  was	also
unreliable and unworthy of credence. [804 C]
802
     3. (a)  This Court	 has held that whenever a particular
view  taken   by  authors   of	Medical	  Jurisprudence,  is
adumbrated, the same must be put to the doctor to assess how
far the	 view taken by the experts apply to the facts of the
particular case. [805 G]
     In the  instant case though the doctor who had recorded
the dying  declaration had stated that the deceased was in a
state of  shock because	 he had received a serious injury in
the abdomen  which had	to be  stitched, he  was however not
crossed-examined as  to the  fact whether or not despite the
shock, the  deceased had  retained his	mental faculties. On
the other  hand, the  last certificate	given by  the doctor
towards the  end of  the dying	declaration that the patient
became semi-conscious  clearly shows  that the	deceased was
fully conscious when he started making the dying declaration
before the doctor. [804 H, 805 G]
     (b) A  perusal of	the entire dying declaration clearly
shows that  the doctor had asked all the necessary questions
that could  be asked from the deceased and the last question
"what more  you want  to say"  was merely in the nature of a
formality. Having narrated the full story, there was nothing
more that  the deceased could add. The dying declaration was
therefore not incomplete one. [806 B]
     Cyril Waugh v. The King, 54 CWN 503, distinguished.
     (c) Merely	 because some  other persons  named  in	 the
dying declaration  were not  challaned would  not by  itself
prove the  falsity of  the dying declaration. It may be that
these, persons were left out from the category of accused in
the F.I.R.  or the  challan due to ulterior motives. [806 E,
805 C]
     4. A  person on  the verge of death is most unlikely to
make an	 untrue statement  unless prompted or tutored by his
friends or  relatives. The  shadow of immediate death is the
best guarantee	of the	truth of  the statement	 by a  dying
person regarding  the causes or circumstances leading to his
death  which  are  absolutely  fresh  in  his  mind  and  is
untainted or  discoloured by  any other consideration except
speaking the truth. It is for these reasons that the Statute
(The Evidence  Act) attaches  a special	 sanctity to a dying
declaration. [808 B-C]
     5.	 It  is	 well  established  that  although  a  dying
declaration should be carefully scrutinised if after perusal
the Court  is satisfied	 that the  dying declaration is true
and is free from any effort to prompt the deceased to make a
statement and  is coherent and consistent, there is no legal
impediment in  founding	 the  conviction  on  such  a  dying
declaration even if there is no corroboration. [808 D-E]
     Khushal Rao  v. The  State of  Bombay [1958]  SCR 552,;
Tarachand Damu	Sutar v.  The State  of Maharashtra [1962] 2
SCR 775; Mannu Raja & Anr. v. State of M.P. [1976] 3 SCC 104
referred to.
     Ram Nath  Madhoprasad &  Ors. v. State of M.P. AIR 1953
SC 420, overruled.
803



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 53 of 1974.

From the Judgment and Order dated 2-11-1973 of the Orissa High Court in Govt. Appeal No. 10/1971.

Y. S. Chitle, and U. P. Singh for the Appellant. D. Mookherjee and B. P. Parthasarthi for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by FAZAL ALI J.-This appeal under s. 2(a) of the Supreme Court (Enlargement of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Act 1970 is directed against the judgment of the High Court of Orissa dated 2-11-1973 convicting the appellants u/s. 302/149 of Indian Penal Code and sentencing them to imprisonment for life.

The appellants along with other accused person were tried before the Sessions Judge under s. 302/149 for causing murder of two persons namely Ghansham and his brother Antarjami. The Trial Court after considering the evidence acquitted all the accused of the charges framed against them. Thereafter the State of Orissa filed an appeal before the High Court against the order of acquittal passed by the Sessions Judge and in the said appeal the High Court reversed the judgment of the Sessions Judge so far as the appellants were concerned and convicted and sentenced them as indicated above. Hence this appeal before us.

The facts of the case are detailed in the judgment of the High Court and it is not necessary for us to repeat them. It appears that shortly before the date of occurrence, there was a partition suit between the parties in respect of certain properties enjoyed by accused Banshi and Ghana. On 2-12-1968, according to the prosecution, the accused persons armed with lathis, Bhusas and valies came to the house of the deceased Ghansham and called him out. When Ghansham opened the door, the accused Banshi stabbed Ghansham on the chest as a result of which Ghansham fell down and died. On hearing the alarm, the other deceased Antarjami who was brother of Ghansham went to the spot and he was also assaulted by the accused persons. This occurrence had taken place near about 7.00 a.m. F. I. R. was sent to Bramhagiri Police Station where it was lodged and a case was registered. After the usual investigation, police submitted charge-sheet against all the accused persons who were tried by the Sessions Judge with the result mentioned above.

It appears that the Trial Court after considering the evidence of the eye witness examined before it came to a clear finding that none 804 of the eye witnesses were reliable and hence the accused could not be convicted on the basis of their testimony. One of the main considerations which swayed with the trial Court in coming to this conclusion was that in view of the dying declaration-Ex. 9 made by Antarjami, the evidence of the eye witnesses becomes improbable, and is in fact falsified. The learned Sessions Judge also disbelieved the dying declaration as it was inconsistent with the oral evidence. We might mention here that the Sessions Judge committed an error of law in rejecting the dying declaration because if the evidence of the eye witnesses was to be rejected on the ground that it was inconsistent with the dying declaration then it would in the circumstances not necessarily follow that the dying declaration was also unreliable and unworthy of credence.

The High Court while endorsing the findings of the Trial Court that no reliance could be placed on the eye witnesses appears to have founded the conviction of the appellants mainly on the basis of the dying declaration-Ex. 9 recorded by Dr. Mohanty on 3-12-1968 at the hospital. The High Court has given cogent reasons for holding that the dying declaration is absolutely true and reliable and was sufficient to establish the prosecution case against the appellants. We have also gone through the entire dying declaration-Ex. 9 very carefully and we find that the statement made by Antarjami is straight-forward, rational, consistent and absolutely coherent. There appears to be a ring of truth in the statement made by Antarjami. Counsel for the appellant has fairly conceded that there is no evidence whatsoever to indicate that there was any possibility of prompting the deceased to make a tainted statement. The dying declaration was attacked by the counsel for the appellant on three grounds. In the first place, it was submitted that as the deceased Antarjami was in a state of shock, it was unsafe to rely on the dying declaration; secondly it was contended that as the dying declaration was incomplete, it should not be acted upon and thirdly it was pointed out that Antarjami had implicated some persons other than the accused also in the assault on him and his brother, therefore the dying declaration could not be said to be true.

So far as the first contention is concerned; namely whether the deceased was in a state of shock, it is true that the doctor who had recorded the dying declaration had stated that the deceased was in a state of shock because he had received a serious injury in the abdomen which has to be stitched. The doctor was however not cross-examined as to the fact whether or not despite the shock, the deceased had retained his mental faculties. On the other hand; a 805 bare perusal of the dying declaration and the coherent and consistent statement made by Antarjami clearly reveals the fact that the deceased was fully conscious and was not suffering from any confusion or hallucination. The deceased has clearly stated the motive for the occurrence namely dispute about the partition. He has also named the four appellants and stated that he and his brother were assaulted by valies and lathis and it is not disputed by the prosecution that the appellants were armed with these weapons. It is true that while naming the appellants, the deceased has also named some other persons but the mere fact that those persons were not challaned does not detract from the value of the dying declaration because it may well be that what the deceased was saying was true and the persons who were left out from the category of accused in the F.I.R. or the challan may be due to ulterior motives.

Dr. Chitale however relied on a passage in Taylor's 'Principles and Practice of Medical Jurisprudence'-Twelfth Edition particularly on the following passage:

'Assess very carefully the mental condition of the patient. When shock ensues upon violence, especially when severe loss of blood or some grievous head injury is leading to death, the intellect of the dying person becomes confused. If the doctor observes any wandering or want of clearness in the mind of the patient, he must mention it in connection with his evidence; but this does not absolve him from his duty, although it should make him particularly careful when interpreting his notes."
We are unable to place any reliance on these observations in absence of any question put to the doctor by the accused in his cross-examination regarding the view expressed by the author regarding the state of mind of the deceased. It has been held by this Court in several cases that whenever a particular view taken by authors of medical jurisprudence is adumbrated, the same must be put to the doctor to assess how far the view taken by the experts apply to the facts of the particular case. On the other hand, the last certificate given by the doctor towards the end of the dying declaration that the patient became semi-unconscious clearly shows that the deceased was, fully conscious when he started making the dying declaration before the doctor. For these reasons therefore, the first ground taken by the appellant fails and is not tenable. As to the second ground, namely that the dying declaration was incomplete, we are unable to accept this contention because we find that the deceased 806 Antarjami could not answer the last question which was "what more you want to say" because he became semi-unconscious and was unable to answer any further question. A perusal of the entire dying declaration would clearly show that the doctor had asked all the necessary questions that could be asked from the deceased and the last question was merely in the nature of a formality. It is obvious that having narrated the full story there was nothing more that the deceased could add. We are therefore unable to hold that the present dying declaration is an incomplete one. Reliance was placed by the counsel for the appellant in the case of Cyril Waugh v. The King,(1)wherein it was held that no reliance could be placed where a dying declaration was incomplete. Reference to the facts of the case would show that the statement made by the deceased was really incomplete in as much as the deceased was unable to complete the main sentence where he was trying to describe the genesis and motive of the occurrence. The deceased in that case stated as "when he fired the short, he missed the other man. The man has an old grudge for me simply because.. ". It is clear from the statement of the deceased in that case that the deceased wanted to give the motive for the occurrence and other relevant facts which he could not say before the dying declaration was closed. This case therefore would have no application to the facts of the case.
As regards the last contention that the deceased had implicated some other persons also show that it was not true, we have already pointed out that merely because some other persons were named and not challaned would not by itself prove the falsity of the dying declaration. Finally on the question of law, it was argued that a dying declaration unless corroborated should not be acted upon. Reliance was placed on a decision of this Court in Ram Nath Madhoprasad & Ors. v. State of M.P.(2). This decision, no doubt, supports the contention of the appellant but since then this Court has departed from the view taken in the case referred to above and has held that if the dying declaration is believed, it can be relied upon for convicting the accused even if there is no corroboration.
In Khushal Rao v. The State of Bombay,(3) it was pointed out that s. 32(1) of the Evidence Act attaches special sanctity to a dying declaration and unless such a dying declaration can be shown to be unreliable, it will not affect its admissibility. It was further 807 held that although a dying declaration has to be closely scrutinised, once the Court comes to the conclusion that it is true, no question of corroboration arises. In this connection, the Court made the following observations:-
"The Legislature in its wisdom has enacted in s. 32(1) of the Evidence Act that "When the statement is made by a person as to the cause of his death, or as to any of the circumstances of the transaction which resulted in his death, in cases in which the cause of that person's death comes into question", such a statement written or verbal made by a person who is dead (omitting the unnecessary words) it self a relevant fact. This provision has been made by the Legislature, advisedly, as a matter of sheer necessity by way of an exception to the general rule that hearsay is no evidence and that evidence, which has not been tested by cross-examination, is not admissible. The purpose of cross-examination is to test the veracity of the statements made by a witness. In the view of the Legislature, that test is supplied by the solemn occasion when it was made, namely, at a time when the person making the statement was in danger of losing his life. At such a serious and solemn moment, that person is not expected to tell lies and secondly, the test of cross-examination would not be available. In such a case, the necessity of oath also has been dispensed with for the same reasons. Thus, a statement made by a dying person as to the cause of death has been accorded by the Legislature a special sanctity which should, on first principles, be respected.
... ... ... ...
But in our opinion, there is no absolute rule of law, or even a rule of prudence which has ripened into a rule of law, that a dying declaration unless corroborated by other independent evidence, is not fit to be acted upon, and made the basis of a conviction."

In this case this Court did not approve of the law laid down in the earlier decision which is reported in A.I.R. 1953, p. 420. To the same effect is a later decision of this Court in the case of Tarachand Damu Sutar v. The State of Maharashtra(1) which is a decision rendered by five Judges of this Court which has also taken the view that once a dying declaration is found to be true, it can be 808 acted upon without any corroboration. Thus, the view taken by this Court by the three judges in A.I.R. 1953, p. 420 stands overruled by this decision. Same view was taken by this Court in the case of Mannu Raja & Anr. v. State of M.P.(1) which has been relied upon by Mr. D. Mookherjee, counsel for the State.

There are a number of later decision of this Court also to the same effect but it is unnecessary to multiply authorities. It is thus manifest that a person on the verge of death is most unlikely to make an untrue statement unless prompted or tutored by his friends or relatives. In fact the shadow of immediate death is the best guarantee of the truth of the statement made by a dying person regarding the causes or circumstances leading to his death which are absolutely fresh in his mind and is untainted or discoloured by any other consideration except speaking the truth. It is for these reasons that the Statute (The Evidence Act) attaches a special sanctity to a dying declaration. Thus, if the statement of a dying person passes the test of careful scrutiny applied by the Courts, it becomes a most reliable piece of evidence which does not require any corroboration. Suffice it to say that it is now well established by a long course of decisions of this Court that although a dying declaration should be carefully scrutinised but if after perusal of the same, the Court is satisfied that the dying declaration is true and is free from any effort to prompt the deceased to make a statement and is coherent and consistent, there is no legal impediment in founding the conviction on such a dying declaration even if there is no corroboration.

For these reasons, therefore, we find ourselves in complete agreement with the opinion of the High Court that even excluding the evidence of the eye witnesses, the dying declaration is true and reliable and sufficient to found the conviction of the appellant.

For these reasons therefore the appeal fails and is accordingly dismissed.

N.V.K.					   Appeal dismissed.
809