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from the house of the murdered couple, were relied upon to find that the
murders had been committed by the accused between 18.45 and 19.00
hours. The testimonies of Kunjikuttan, PW6 Balakrishnan and PW7 Mani
Mannadiyar [both of whom were passengers in the autorickshaw of the
appellant/accused] were relied upon to find that the accused had left
early the next morning to go to Tirupur and that he did not return home
till the Police asked him to come there for questioning. The testimonies of
PW13 Saravanan and PW14 Thiruvenkada Kumar, who were the salesman
and owner respectively of a Jewellery in Tirupur were relied upon to find
that the accused had sold the bangles worn by Anandavally Amma, that
he had cut and removed from her body, to the Jewellery at Tirupur.
Saravanan had also identified the accused at a TI parade conducted by
the Magistrate PW26. The confession statement of the accused that led to
the recovery of the murder weapon was relied upon to the extent
permitted under Section 27 of the Evidence Act, as was the testimony of
the Police Surgeon PW29, read with documents Exts.P38 and P39 and the
testimony of the Forensic expert PW27 James Philipose, Director, FSL to
find that the recovered weapon was capable of inflicting the injuries
found on the bodies of the deceased couple as also making the tool marks
on the Almirah in the house of the deceased. The trial court also found
that the accused had purchased Pepsi and Entrine, traces of which were
found at the scene of crime to infer the presence of the accused thereat.
Based on the said findings, the trial court directed the accused to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for a term of 10 years for the offence
Crl.A.No.136/2018 :: 6 ::
- the day following the day of the murder, were never in dispute, there
were serious infirmities in the evidence adduced to suggest that (i) the
appellant was seen in the vicinity of the deceased couple's house nearer
to the time of the alleged incident, (ii) that he had sold two broken golden
bangles belonging to the the deceased Anandavally Amma at a Jewellery
shop in Tirupur the next day (iii) that the salesman in the Jewellery shop
had identified him as the person who sold the broken gold bangles in a TI
parade conducted by the Magistrate (iv) that the billhook/koduval
recovered pursuant to his confession statement before the CBI officials
was the murder weapon (v) that he had sprinkled kerosene and coconut
oil on the bed sheets and pillows and lit fire to it after putting it on the
dead bodies and (vi) that he had also sprinkled the compound of Pepsi
Entrine and Phenol all over the area where he had moved so as to destroy
any evidence of his presence at the scene. It is his submission that in
respect of the above six circumstances, there is no evidence that points to
the presence of the appellant at the scene of the crime on the fateful
evening. On the aspect of sentencing, it is the submission of the learned
counsel that the appellant has been sentenced to undergo RI for 10 years
under Section 449, RI for 10 years under Section 397, RI for 2 years
under Section 201, and imprisonment for life and to pay a fine of
Rs.10,000/- (SI for 1 year in default). That the trial court directed that
the sentence under Sections 449 and 397 shall run first, and that the
same shall be consecutive in nature, and only after that would the
sentence under Section 302 would start to run. The sentence under
Crl.A.No.136/2018 :: 8 ::
appellant in the TI parade was on 25.07.2009. Quite surprisingly,
Saravanan deposed that he remembered the appellant from over two
years ago, as the man who sold him cut gold bangles, simply because he
was then dressed in the attire of a Sabarimala pilgrim. He then
proceeded to identify him in a TI parade conducted two months later.
When it is apparent that Saravanan had no prior acquaintance or
subsequent dealings with the appellant we are constrained to view the
said testimony with suspicion. We cannot also rule out the possibility of
Saravanan having been shown a photograph, or given a description, of
the appellant by Thiruvenkada Kumar who had seen the appellant when
he was taken to his shop by the investigating team on 15.05.2009. In our
opinion, the delay in obtaining the evidence of Saravanan and
Thiruvenkada Kumar, as also in holding the TI parade wherein the
appellant was identified by Saravanan, vitiates the said evidence and
renders it insufficient to connect the appellant with the gold bangles
taken from the body of Anandavally Amma which, in any event, was never
recovered. It is trite that the test identification parade has to be
conducted within a reasonable time after the commission of the offence
and the evidence regarding the TI parade loses its significance when held
after enormous delay. [See: Hasib v. State of Bihar - [AIR 1972 SC
283]; Mahabir v. State of Delhi - [AIR 2008 SC 2343]; Hari Nath v.
State of UP - [1988 KHC 849]; Girija Shankar Misra v. State of UP
- [AIR 1993 SC 2618]]. The object of holding a TI parade is two-fold.
Firstly, it is to enable the witnesses to satisfy themselves that the prisoner
Crl.A.No.136/2018 :: 20 ::
whom they suspect is really the one who was seen by them in connection
with the crime. Secondly, it is to satisfy the investigation authorities that
the suspect is the real person whom the witnesses had seen in connection
with the said occurrence [See: State of Maharashtra v. Suresh -
[(2000) 1 SCC 47]]. In the instant case, the enormous delay of almost 3
years, between the date on which Saravanan saw the appellant and then
identified him at the TI parade, coupled with the possibility of information
relating to the appellant having passed from Thiruvenkada Kumar to
Saravanan renders the evidence of Saravanan weak in character, in the
absence of further corroboration.