Madhya Pradesh High Court
Matru @ Rakesh vs The State Of Madhya Pradesh on 20 June, 2018
Author: S.K. Gangele
Bench: Rajendra Kumar Srivastava, S.K. Gangele
THE HIGH COURT OF MADHYA PRADESH
PRINCIPLE SEAT AT JABALPUR
D. B. :Hon'ble Shri Justice. S.K.Gangele &
Hon'ble Shri Justice Rajendra Kumar Srivastava
Criminal Appeal No. 213/2008
Pramendra @ Praveen
Vs
State of M.P.
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Shri Alok Vagrecha with Shri B.K. Upadhaya, learned
counsel for the appellant.
Shri Aditya Jain, learned Deputy G. A. for the
respondent/State.
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Criminal Appeal No. 247/2008
Jiwanlal @ Munna Badkur
Vs.
State of M.P.
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Shri Imtiaz Husain, learned counsel for the appellant.
Shri Aditya Jain, learned Deputy G.A. for the
respondent/State.
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Criminal Appeal No. 370/2008
Devendra Choudhary
Vs.
State of M.P.
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Shri Alok Vagrecha with Shri B.K. Upadhaya, learned
counsel for the appellant.
Shri Aditya Jain, learned Deputy G.A. for the
respondent/State.
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Criminal Appeal No. 415/2008
Matru @ Rakesh
Vs.
State of M.P.
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Shri Alok Vagrecha with Shri B.K. Upadhaya,
learned counsel for the appellant.
Shri Aditya Jain, learned Deputy G.A. for the
respondent/State.
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JUDGMENT
(Delivered on 20.06.2018) Per S.K. Gangele, J.
These four appeals have been filed against the common judgment dated 14.01.2008, passed by 1 st Additional Session Judge, Hoshangabad in Session Trial No. 48/2007 . The appellants were tried for commission of offences punishable under Sections 302, 149, 147 and 341 of the I.P.C.
2. Prosecution story in brief is that there was quarrel between accused, Surendra (absconded co- accused) and deceased, Maheshchandra Choudhary. Sukhdeo @ Baba pacified the quarrel. Thereafter these accused persons- present appellants alongwith other 3 accused persons went on the spot. The present appellants were armed with lathis and other accused persons were armed with farsa, sword and axe. They had beaten the deceased. He was died on the spot. The Station Officer received information on phone that somebody was killed. He reached on the spot and registered Dehati Nalishi Ex. P-7. Thereafter investigation was conducted and police filed the charge-sheet. Seven persons were made accused. These four persons were tried separately, one accused was tried in other trial and two accused persons are absconding.
3. Appellants abjured their guilt during trial and pleaded that they have been falsely implicated in the case. The trial Court held the appellants guilty for commission of offences punishable under Sections 302, 149, 147 and 341 of the I.P.C. and awarded the sentence as mentioned in the impugned judgment.
4. Learned counsel for the appellants have contended that as per the evidence of prosecution, the appellants were armed with lathis and they had inflicted 4 injuries on the person of the body of the deceased by lathis. However, as per the postmortem report except injury no. 10, there was no injury caused by lathi on the person of the deceased. The injury no. 10 could be caused by falling down on the ground. It is further submitted by the learned counsel for the appellants that there are major discrepancies in the evidence produced by the prosecution Investigating Officer prepared the documents after sometime of the incident. The lathis seized from the appellants were not sent to Forensic Laboratory for examination. The trial Court has committed an error in holding the appellants guilty for commission of offence beyond reasonable doubt. Learned counsel for the appellants further contended that the alleged eye witnesses are relatives of the deceased, hence their evidence is not reliable. In support of their contentions, learned counsel for the appellants relied on the following judgments of the Apex Court :
(1) Datar Singh Vs. The State of Punjab reported in (1975) 4 SCC 272.5
(2) Mahavir Singh Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh reported in 2016 (10) SCC 220.
(3) Juwar Singh and others v. State of Madhya Pradesh reported in 1980 CRI. L. J 1418 Supreme Court.
(4) Jodhan Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh reported in (2015) 11 SCC 52, (5) Abdul Sayeed Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh reported in (2010) 10 SCC 259.
5. Learned counsel for the State has submitted that the presence of the eye witnesses on the spot was natural. FIR was lodged promptly. In the FIR, names of the present appellants have been mentioned. The appellants were armed with lathis and they had participated in the offence. Trial Court has rightly convicted the appellants and awarded proper sentence. In support of his contentions, learned counsel for the State relied on the judgment of the Apex Court in the matter of Rajnath Shamrao Dhas Vs. State of Maharastra reported in 2009 (4) SCC 33.
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6. Conviction of the appellants is based on the testimony of eye witness Mahesh Chandra Choudhary (PW-3), who is the uncle of the deceased. He lodged the FIR. He deposed that on the date of incident at around 6-7 O' clock in the evening, I and Sukhdeo were coming to our house with grass. Near Gumti of Devendra there was quarrel between Surendra and Kallu @ Keerat. I and Sukhdeo pacified both of them. After one hour of the aforesaid incident, Surendra, Chiman, Omprakash, Devendra, Ramendra, Matru and Jiwan armed with lathi, ballam, farsa, sword and axe came there. They were shouting, where is Kallu. Kallu had ran away from the house of Sukhdeo. He reached in front of house of Lakhan, thereafter Surendra inflicted a blow of farsa on the neck of the deceased, thereafter, other accused persons had beaten him. He specifically deposed that the present appellants Devendra, Pramod, Jiwan and Matru were armed with danda (wooden stick) and they had beaten the deceased with sticks. I, Sukhdeo, Nakul, and Akhilesh tried to save the deceased. The accused persons had also 7 tried to beat us. We ran away from the spot up to some distance. Kallu was died on the spot, his motorcycle was also damaged. There was an enmity with the accused persons because of land dispute and Panchayat Election. Police came on the spot at 10.00 O'clock in the night. I told the police about the incident, thereafter Dehati Nalishi (Ex. P-7) was recorded. I signed the same. I also signed Ex. P-8.
7. Akhilesh Choudhary (P.W.6) is another eye witness. He is the son of Maheshchandra Choudhary (PW-
3). He also deposed the same facts as deposed by Maheshchandra Choudhary. He specifically deposed that present appellants were armed with danda and the accused persons had beaten the deceased by danda. Deceased received injuries on his body. On the instructions of my father, I informed the police from my mobile and after an hour police reached on the spot.
8. Nakul Choudhary (PW-4) turned hostile. He simply deposed that he had seen that the deceased was lying on the spot. Similarly Sukhdeo @ Baba (P.W.-5) 8 also turned hostile. P.K. Raikwar (PW-7) recorded FIR (Ex.P-9) and Marg (Ex.P-10). He admitted his signature on both the documents. Ram Shankar (P.W.-8) turned hostile. Similarly Naveen Tiwari (P.W.-9) also turned hostile.
9. Pankaj Choudhary (P.W.-1) admitted his signature on Exhibit P-1 and dead body Panchnama Ex.P-
2.
10. Dr. A.D. More (P.W.-2) performed postmortem of the deceased. He deposed that I noticed following injuries on the person of the body of deceased:-
1- dVk gqvk ?kko] xnZu esa nkbZ vksj Dysfody ds Bhd Åij 8 ls- eh- x 4 ls-eh- x 6 ls-eh-A 2- dVk gqvk ?kko pksV Ø- 1 ls nks ls-eh- Åij xnZu ij 8 ls-eh- @2 ls-eh- x 6 ls-eh- dk FkkA 3- dVk gqvk ?kko xnZu ij pksV Ø- 2 ds ,d ls-eh- Åij 8x2x6 ls-eh- dk FkkA 4- dVk gqvk ?kko xnZu ij chpksachp 9 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- x 6 ls-eh- dk FkkA 5- dVk gqvk ?kko xnZu ij nkbZ vksj Åij dh rjQ nkfgus tcM+s dh gM~Mh ds uhps 8 ls-eh- x 3 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh- dk FkkA 6- dVk gqvk ?kko xnZu esa ihNs dh vksj nkfgus dku ls vkM+k xnZu dh nwljh rjQ dk Fkk ftldk vkdkj 18 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh- x 6 ls-eh- FkkA 9 7- dVk gqvk ?kko xnZu esa ckbZ rjQ uhps dh vksj 5 ls-eh- x 4 ls- eh- x 7 ls-eh- dk FkkA 8- xnZu esa ckbZ vksj Åij dh rjQ ?kko ckbZ tcM+s dh gM~Mh ds uhps 7 x 3 x 4 ls-eh- dk FkkA 9- dVk gqvk ?kko ekFks ij ckbZ vksj 7 ls-eh- x 1 ls-eh- x 1@2 ls- eh- dk FkkA 10- QVk gqvk ?kko nkfguh HkkSag ij 2 ls-eh- x 1@2 x 1@2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 11- dVk gqvk ?kko xnZu esa ihNs dh vksj 3 ls-eh- pksV Ø- 6 ds uhps Fks] ftldk vkdkj 16 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh- dk FkkA 12- dVk gqvk ?kko nkfgus da/ks ij 7 ls-eh- x 3 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 13- dVk gqvk ?kko nkfgus gkFk ij dksguh ds uhps 10 ls-eh- x 6 ls- eh- x 5 ls-eh- dk FkkA 14- dVk gqvk ?kko ck;as gkFk esa ckbZa dykbZ ds Åij 7 ls-eh- x 2 ls- eh- x 1 ls-eh- dk FkkA 15- dVk gqvk ?kko ck;sa gkFk ij gFksyh ds mYVh rjQ NksVh maxyh ij 11 ls-eh- x 1 ls-eh- x 1@2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 16- dVk gqvk ?kko nk;s gkFk ij 3 ls-eh- ckbZ vksj pksV Ø- 15 ls Fkk] ftldk vkdkj 6 ls-eh- x 1 ls-eh- x 1@2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 17- dVk gqvk ?kko ck;sa gkFk dh vaxwBh okyh maxyh ij 3 ls-eh- x 1@2 ls-eh- x 1@2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 18- dVk gqvk ?kko ckfguh gkFk dh rtZuh maxyh ij 2 ls-eh- x 1@2 ls-eh- x 1@4 ls-eh- dk FkkA 19- dVk gqvk ?kko isV ij ckbZ vksj lekukarj ukHkh ls 3 ls-eh- Åij 17 ls-eh- x 5 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 10 20- dVk gqvk ?kko ck;sa ikao ij ck;sa V[kus ls Åij ihNs dh vksj 10 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 21- dVk gqvk ?kko ck;sa ikao ij vkxs dh vksj chpksa chp 10 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 22- dVk gqvk ?kko ihB ij chpksachp lekukarj 16 ls-eh- x 4 ls-eh-
x 8 ls-eh- dk FkkA 23- dVk gqvk ?kko ihB ij nkbZ vksj chpksa chap 10 ls-eh- x 3 ls-eh- x 3 ls-eh- dk FkkA 24- dVk gqvk ?kko ihB ij nkfguh vksj uhps dh rjQ 8 x 2 x 2 ls-eh- dk FkkA 25- dVk gqvk ?kko ihB ij nkbZ vksj pksV Ø- 24 ls nks ls-eh- ls uhps 10 ls-eh- x 3 ls-eh- x 3 ls-eh- dk vkdkj dk FkkA 26- dVk gqvk ?kko pksV Ø- 25 ls nks ls-eh- uhps 8 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- x 2 ls-eh- ds vkdkj dk FkkA 27- dVk gqvk ?kko pksV Ø- 26 ls 3 ls-eh- uhps chpksa chp 3 ls-eh- x 1 ls-eh- x 1 ls-eh- dk FkkA 28- dVk gqvk ?kko ihB ij ckbZ vksj uhps dh rjQ 11 ls-eh- x 4 ls- eh- x 3 ls-eh- dk FkkA Out of the total 28 injuries, injury no. 10 is the lacerated wound which was on right eyebrow 2cm.× ½× ½ cm.
11. Investigating Officer K.P.S. Chouhan (P.W.-
10) deposed that I was posted as Station House Officer-In- Charge, Police Station Hoshangabad. I received information on phone that on 06.10.2006 somebody was 11 died. I reached at the village and noticed that the dead body was lying by the side of the road. I inquired about the incident from Maheshchandra. He told me that accused persons had killed the deceased. I recorded Dehati Nalishi (Ex.P-7) and signed the same. I prepared the Panchnama of dead body and the spot map on the next day in the morning. Spot map is Ex.P-23. I also seized plain earth, red earth and some clothes from the spot vide Seizure Memo (Ex.P-22) and a motor bike. Thereafter, I signed all the documents and I recorded statements of Sukhdev, Nakul and Mahesh. Accused persons were arrested on 13.10.2006. At the instance of appellant- Devendra from his possession cloths were seized by Seizure Memo (Exhibit P-18), from the possession of appellant-Matru, at his instance, cloths and Danda were seized by Ex.P-19. Similarly, from the possession of appellant-Jivan Lal, Danda was seized by Ex.P-20.
12. Dehati Nalishi is Ex.P-7. It is mentioned in the Dehati Nalashi that the present appellants were armed 12 with dandas and they had beaten the deceased by dandas. Same facts have been mentioned in the FIR (Ex. P-9).
13. As per the Dehati Nalishi, FIR and evidence of witnesses. The present appellants were armed with dandas and they had beaten the deceased with dandas. This fact has been established from the evidence of Maheshchandra Choudhary (PW-3) and Akhilesh Choudhary (PW-6), who are the eyewitnesses. Maheshchandra Choudhary (PW-3) is the uncle of the deceased. Akhilesh Choudhary (P.W.-6) is the son of Maheshchandra Choudhary (P.W.-3), both witnesses are relatives of the deceased.
14. The Hon'ble Apex Court, in regard to credibility of related witnesses in the case of Jodhan Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh reported in 2015 (11) SCC 52 has held as under:-
"24. First, we shall deal with the credibility of related witnesses. In Dalip Singh v. State of Punjab (AIR 1953 SC 364), it has been observed thus: (AIR p. 366, para 25) "25.We are unable to agree with the learned Judges of the High Court that the testimony of the two eyewitnesses requires corroboration. If the foundation for such an observation is based on the fact that the witnesses 13 are women and that the fate of seven men hangs on their testimony, we know of no such rule. If it is grounded on the reason that they are closely related to the deceased we are unable to concur. This is a fallacy common to many criminal cases and one which another Bench of this Court endeavoured to dispel in Rameshwar v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1952 SC54."
In the said case, it has also been further observed:- (AIR p. 366,para 26) "26. A witness is normally to be considered independent unless he or she springs from sources which are likely to be tainted and that usually means unless the witness has cause, such as enmity against the accused, to wish to implicate him falsely. Ordinarily a close relative would be the last to screen the real culprit and falsely implicate an innocent person. It is true, when feelings run high and there is personal cause for enmity, that there is a tendency to drag in an innocent person against whom a witness has a grudge along with the guilty, but foundation must be laid for such a criticism and the mere fact of relationship far from being a foundation is often a sure guarantee of truth."
25. In Hari Obula Reddy v. State of A.P., (1981) 3 SCC 675, the Court has ruled that evidence of interested witnesses per se cannot be said to be unreliable evidence. Partisanship by itself is not a valid ground for discrediting or discarding sole testimony. We may fruitfully reproduced a passage from the said authority:-
(SCC pp.683-84,para 13) "13.......An invariable rule that interested evidence can never form the basis of conviction unless corroborated to a material extent in material particulars by independent evidence. All that is necessary is that the evidence of interested witnesses should be subjected to careful scrutiny and accepted with caution. If on such scrutiny, the interested testimony is found to be intrinsically reliable or inherently probable, it may, by itself, be sufficient, in 14 the circumstances of the particular case, to base a conviction thereon."
26. The principles that have been stated in number of decisions are to the effect that evidence of an interested witness can be relied upon if it is found to be trustworthy and credible. Needless to say, a testimony, if after careful scrutiny is found as unreliable and improbable or suspicious it ought to be rejected. That apart, when a witness has a motive or makes false implication, the Court before relying upon his testimony should seek corroboration in regard to material particulars. In the instant case, the witnesses who have deposed against the accused persons are close relatives and had suffered injuries in the occurrence. Their presence at the scene of occurrence cannot be doubted, their version is consistent and nothing has been elicited in the cross-examination to shake their testimony. There are some minor or trivial discrepancies, but they really do not create a dent in their evidence warranting to treat the same as improbable or untrustworthy."
The Apex Court has specifically held that the principle of law is that evidence of an interested witness can be relied upon if it is found to be trustworthy and credible and if the testimony after careful scrutiny is found unreliable and improbable or suspicious it ought to be rejected.
15. On the basis of above principle of law, we would like to scrutinize the testimony of Maheshchandra Choudhary (P.W.-3) and Akhilesh Choudhary (P.W.-6). Both the witnesses have stated that these appellants were 15 armed with dandas and they had inflicted injuries on the deceased with wooden stick (danda). Dr. A.D. More (P.W.-2), who performed autopsy of the deceased deposed that he noticed total 28 injuries on the body of the person of the deceased, except injury No.10, all other injuries were incised injuries. Injury no.10 is lacerated wound it was on the right eyebrow. It could be caused by falling the deceased on the ground.
16. There is a discrepancy in regard to ocular evidence and medical evidence. The Hon'ble Apex Court in case of Mahavir Singh Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh reported in (2016) 10 SCC 220 in regard to appreciation of evidence medical evidence vis-a-vis ocular evidence has held as under:-
"18. The High Court has attached a lot of weight to the evidence of the said Madho Singh (PW 9) as he is an independent witness. On perusal of the record, it appears that the said person already had deposed for the victim family on a number of previous occasions, that too against the same accused. This being the fact, it is important to analyze the jurisprudence on interested witness. It is a settled principle that the evidence of interested witness needs to be scrutinized with utmost care. It can only be relied upon if the evidence has a ring of truth to it, is cogent, credible and trustworthy. Here we may refer to chance witness also. It is to be seen that although 16 the evidence of a chance witness is acceptable in India, yet the chance witness has to reasonably explain the presence at that particular point more so when his deposition is being assailed as being tainted."
17. The Hon'ble Apex Court has considered in detail. The appreciation of ocular evidence as well as medical evidence and held as under:-
32. ,In Ram Narain Singh v. State of Punjab (1975) 4 SCC 497, this Court held that where the evidence of the witnesses for the prosecution is totally inconsistent with the medical evidence or the evidence of the ballistics expert, it amounts to a fundamental defect in the prosecution case and unless reasonably explained it is sufficient to discredit the entire case.
33. In State of Haryana v. Bhagirath, (1999) 5 SCC 96, it was held as follows:(SCC p. 101, para 15) "15. The opinion given by a medical witness need not be the last word on the subject. Such an opinion shall be tested by the court. If the opinion is bereft of logic or objectivity, the court is not obliged to go by that opinion. After all opinion is what is formed in the mind of a person regarding a fact situation. If one doctor forms one opinion and another doctor forms a different opinion on the same facts it is open to the Judge to adopt the view which is more objective or probable. Similarly if the opinion given by one doctor is not consistent with probability the court has no liability to go by that opinion merely because it is said by the doctor. Of course, due weight must be given to opinions given by persons who are experts in the particular subject." (Emphasis added) 17
34. Drawing on Bhagirath's case (supra.), this Court has held that where the medical evidence is at variance with ocular evidence, " it has to be noted that it would be erroneous to accord undue primacy to the hypothetical answers of medical witnesses to exclude the eyewitnesses' account which had to be tested independently and not treated as the "variable" keeping the medical evidence as the "constant".
35. Where the eyewitnesses' account is found credible and trustworthy, a medical opinion pointing to alternative possibilities can not be accepted as conclusive. The eyewitnesses' account requires a careful independent assessment and evaluation for its credibility, which should not be adversely prejudged on the basis of any other evidence, including medical evidence, as the sole touchstone for the test of such credibility.
"21..........The evidence must be tested for its inherent consistency and the inherent probability of the story; consistency with the account of other witnesses held to be creditworthy; consistency with the undisputed facts, the "credit"
of the witnesses; their performance in the witness box; their power of observation etc. Then the probative value of such evidence becomes eligible to be put into the scales for a cumulative evaluation."
(Vide Thaman Kumar v. State of Union Territory of Chandigarh, (2003) 6 SCC 380; and Krishnan v. State, (2003) 7 SCC 56). at SCC pp. 62-63, para
21)
36. In Solanki Chimanbhai Ukabhai v. State of Gujarat, (1983) 2 SCC 174, this Court observed, ( SCC p. 180, para 13) "13. Ordinarily, the value of medical evidence is only corroborative. It proves that the injuries could have been caused in the manner alleged and nothing more. The use which the defence can make of the medical evidence is to prove that the injuries could not possibly have been caused in the manner alleged and thereby discredit the eye-witnesses. Unless, however the medical evidence in its turn goes so far that it completely 18 rules out all possibilities whatsoever of injuries taking place in the manner alleged by eyewitnesses, the testimony of the eye-witnesses cannot be thrown out on the ground of alleged inconsistency between it and the medical evidence." [Emphasis added]
37. A similar view has been taken in Mani Ram v. State of U.P., 1994 Supp (2) SCC 289; Khambam Raja Reddy. v. Public Prosecutor, High (2006) 11 SCC 239; and State of U.P. v. Dinesh, (2009) 11 SCC 566.
38. In State of U.P. v. Hari Chand, (2009) 13 SCC 542, this Court reiterated the aforementioned position of law and stated that, "13............In any event unless the oral evidence is totally irreconcilable with the medical evidence, it has primacy."
18. In the aforesaid judgment, the Hon'ble Apex Court has considered number of previous judgments on this point and held as under:-
"39. Thus, the position of law in cases where there is a contradiction between medical evidence and ocular evidence can be crystallised to the effect that though the ocular testimony of a witness has greater evidentiary value vis-a-vis medical evidence, when medical evidence makes the ocular testimony improbable, that becomes a relevant factor in the process of the evaluation of evidence. However, where the medical evidence goes so far that it completely rules out all possibility of the ocular evidence being true, the ocular evidence may be disbelieved."
19. P.W.-3 and P.W.-6 are the related witnesses. There evidence has to be appreciated carefully. As per the 19 medical evidence there was one lacerated wound on the person of the deceased. All other injuries are incised wound. It is not possible that four persons armed withlathis and they had beaten the deceased with lathis, then the doctor, who performed postmortem did notice only one lacerated wound on the person of deceased. The prosecution has not asked any question from the doctor that whether it is possible that if the injuries were caused by lathis and those injuries could have been went unnoticed.
20. In our opinion the evidence of P.W. -3 and PW-6 against the appellants is unreliable. Looking to the large number of accused, it cannot be ruled out that the interested witnesses may have been roping the aforesaid appellants.
21. Apart from this seized wooden sticks (danda) were not sent by the prosecution for examination to forensic laboratory, hence prosecution has not proved that there were any blood stains on the wooden sticks (danda) seized from the appellants. Trial Court convicted the 20 appellants on the basis of assumption that it may be possible that appellants had inflicted injuries by wooden sticks (danda) and those injuries were not found on the body of deceased. This is an hypothesis. In our opinion the appellants are entitled for benefit of doubt.
22. Division Bench of this Court in the case of Mahesh Vs. State of M.P. Reported in I.L.R. (2008) M.P., 582 has also held that the conviction of the appellant is not proper in absence of injuries which could be caused by lathi, as per the medical evidence.
23. Learned Government Advocate placed reliance on the judgment of Hon'ble Apex Court in the case of Rajnath Shamrao Dhas Vs. State of Maharastra reported in 2009 (4) SCC 33. However, this judgment is distinguishable on facts because in this judgment, it has been held that medical evidence is not a total variance with ocular evidence later cannot be discarded.
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24. Similarly judgment of Hon'ble Apex Court, Anil Kumar Vs. State of U.P. reported in 2004 (13) SCC 257 is also distinguishable on facts.
25. Consequently, the appeals filed by the appellants are hereby allowed. The appellants are acquitted from the charges. The judgment passed by the trial court is hereby set aside. The appellants are on bail their bail bonds are hereby discharged.
(S. K. Gangele) (Rajendra Kumar Srivastava)
Judge Judge
L.R.
Digitally signed by LALIT SINGH RANA
Date: 2018.06.26 02:13:28 -07'00'