Raju Ram Vs. State of Bihar
Indian Penal Code, 1860
Section 34 – Common intention – Deciphering of – Three accused asking shop-owner to come out – On coming out two persons holding revolver on his head – Third, armed with dagger – All asking the shop owner to pay Rs. 5000/- and entire day’s collection – When he and his son showed their helplessness, third accused plunging dagger in abdomen of shop owner – Plea advanced that two revolvers may be toys and their intention at best might have been only extortion – Whether accused with revolvers would not have intended to commit murder. Held that there is no possibility of the accused of not sharing common intention.
1. The appellant is one of the three accused persons convicted for offences under sections 302, 387 read with section 34 of the IPC. On 22.1.92 at 6.30 p.m., the three persons were alleged to have gone to the shop of the deceased. They asked the shop-owner to come out. As the deceased came out of the shop, two of the assailants (one of them is the appellant) held two revolvers on the head of the victim, the third one (A1-Naresh Lal) had a dagger with him. Keeping the victim in that form, they asked him to pay Rs. 5000/- plus the entire collection in the shop for that day. As the victim could not pay the said amount he expressed his helplessness. Keeping the victim in this form they asked his son PW4-Anil Kumar to meet the demand. PW4 also expressed helplessness to oblige the assailants. Then A1-Naresh Lal plunged the dagger into the abdomen of the victim. Thereafter, all the three ran away from the scene. Deceased succumbed to the injury sustained thereby.
2. As the trial court and the High Court believed the aforesaid version put forth by three witnesses (one of them was an employee of the same shop, another one was the neighbouring shop-owner and the third PW4 – Anil Kumar) there is no scope for us to think that the incident would not have happened as per the said version.
3. However, Mr. Ashok Kumar Sharma, counsel appointed as amicus curiae made a bold endeavour to contend that the maximum which the present appellant would have intended along with his co-assailants was to commit extortion and nothing more. We applied our mind seriously on various facets of the said contention. Learned counsel first submitted that it is possible that the two persons who held the victim with revolvers would not have intended to murder him because if they had intended, they would certainly have used the revolver. Second is an alternative contention that they would have carried and shown only toy revolvers.
4. Either of the said alternatives is not enough to dispel the possibility of the three persons entertaining common intention to commit the murder of the deceased. Our reasons are the following. If the two persons carried only toy revolvers that would explain why those two persons could not kill the deceased. If the revolvers were genuine why one of them at least did not use it, need not be countenanced by us because the third one had plunged his dagger which itself was a lethal weapon. If the three persons have decided to go for committing extortion they would have thought of what should be done in case they failed to extract the money. It is unthinkable for us that the three would have decided to walk back coolly on failure of their mission to commit extortion.
5. Mr. B.B. Singh, learned counsel for the State of Bihar invited our attention to the situation and the time, in order to emphasise his point that there would not have been the possibility of the three persons walking back without achieving purpose and without inflicting any harm to the victim. Incident happened at 6.30 p.m on a day in the month of January at Ranchi. Evidently, it would have been dark then. Be that as it may. We find it extremely difficult to decipher the intention of the third accused from that of the other two persons for the purpose of de-escalating the penal liability to be fastened on him. In the result, we dismiss this appeal.