State of Maharashtra Vs. Subhaiya Kanak Maniah and Ors.
Acquittal
Acquittal – Workers of a company indulged in violent acts and damaged trucks and burnt a car resulting in death and injuries to staff members – Injured witnesses gave statement to the police but further recording of the same was stopped – Subsequently they gave some particulars of the assailants – Paucity of evidence – Prosecution not able to establish the guilt of the respondents beyond reasonable doubt – Acquittal upheld.
1. These appeals against acquittal are filed by the State of Maharashtra. There are five respondents namely original Accused nos. 5,6,7,8 and 9. They alongwith 10 others were tried for offences punishable under Sections 506, 302, 324, 426, 427, 435, 143, 144, 147 and 148 I.P.C. The learned Sessions Judge while acquitting the others convicted the respondents for the said offences and sentenced them to imprisonment for life and to various other terms of sentences. The appeals preferred by them were disposed of by a common judgment by the High Court. The learned Judges of the High Court considered the entire material and also the case against each of the convicted accused and held that the prosecution has not established its case beyond all reasonable doubt and accordingly acquitted the accused. The High Court also dismissed the appeal filed by the State questioning the acquittal of the other accused. Hence the present appeals are filed by the State limited to the extent of only challenging the acquittal of the respondents.
2. The prosecution case is as follows.
3. All the accused except A-1 and A-2 were the employees of Calico Chemicals Plastics and Fibres Division (‘Company’ for short). A-1 and A-2 were the Secretary and General Secretary respectively of the Workers Union to which the other accused belonged as members. The company had six plants and about 1500 workers including the members of the staff were engaged in working the same. There were some disputes between the workmen and the management and some of the workers were in favour of going on strike. On 6.8.73, A-3, the President of the Staff Union gheraoed and stopped the car of the Factory Manager, P.W.60. As a result of this conduct, the management of the Company terminated the services of A-3. A strike was called and it commenced. The workers started preventing other employees from entering the premises. The Company filed a suit and obtained an injunction from the Court restraining the striking workers from preventing the other workers. On 5.9.73 the workers indulged in an assault on some of the Executives of the Company. The workers indulged in a number of violent acts causing damage to the trucks and also making fiery speeches and also made sporadic attempts on individual officers. On 3.11.73 they also set fire on a car. In that car P.W. 38 Unniyal was the Driver. P.W.39 Watchman Kadam, two officers of the Company viz. P.W.34 Suvarna and and the deceased Barve, P.W.28 Miss Yvonnes, a telephone operator and two other female employees Miss Leela Ramaswamy and Miss Leela Chandane were travelling in the car to go to the office. It is alleged that the Accused nos. 5 to 9 and the absconding accused Balan threw petrol and Balan threw a fire-ball into the car on account of which the car got fire and almost all the occupants received serious burn injuries. Barve died within a few hours on the same day whereas P.W.34 received 35% burn injuries, P.W.39 received 8% burn injuries, P.W.38 received 14% burn injuries and P.W.28 received 50% burn injuries. Two other female employees received minor burns. A report was given and the accused were arrested and they were tried. The prosecution took one of the assailants Shevale as approver but he did not support the prosecution case. Altogether 12 charges were framed and the accused denied the offence and pleaded not guilty.
4. The learned Sessions Judge convicted A-5 to A-9 in view of the roles played by them while setting fire to the car. The medical evidence establishes that Barve, the deceased and other inmates of the car received burn injuries.
5. P.W.39, the main witness, who was in a better position to watch having seated himself in the front left side window of the car, deposed that while the car was moving slowly, he saw one worker of the Company watching the car. He told P.W.34 that somebody was watching. When the car moved further, the said person was giving signal. Thereafter somebody threw a tin containing petrol at the car. The tin dashed at the left door and some petrol fell inside the car. Thereafter two other persons threw petrol in the rear side and A-7 was one of them. He also identified A-5 as one of the persons giving instructions to the man holding the petrol tin. Then a lighted substance was thrown into the car by Balan, whom he knew and the car got burnt. The version given by P.W.38 is more or less the same. P.W.34 Suvarna, an Officer of the Company in general gave the same version. He, however, in the cross-examination stated that he came out with an explanation that he has not given the descriptions of any person in the statement recorded on 3.11.73 as he was in a terrific pain. The evidence of these three eye-witnesses was not found to be acceptable by the High Court.
6. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that these witnesses who received burns are the most natural witnesses and the respondents who were identified by them as having participated in the occurrence ought to have been convicted. We have gone through the entire bulky record. As noted by the High Court, the case mainly rests on the evidence of these three eye-witnesses. The identification of the alleged culprits by these witnesses assumes lot of importance in the case. Admittedly these injured witnesses did give some statements to the police but further recording was stopped. The explanation given is that they were in serious condition and therefore further recording could not have proceeded with. It is only again at a subsequent stage that their statements were recorded in which they gave some particulars of the assailants. Throughout the contention of the defence had been that these witnesses did not give any descriptive particulars of the accused and therefore they had not seen the persons concerned. It is only at a later stage after being tutored that they gave some particulars and proceeded to identify some of the assailants in the identification parade. The plea taken by the defence that some of them only had minor burns and that atleast the evidence of Dr. Nuriyani, P.W.41 shows that they were in a position to make the statements and that the Medical Officer of the Sion Hospital had no objection to their statements being taken at that time and in fact some part of the statements was recorded. P.W. 74, the Sub-Inspector who recorded the first statement of Barve, further stated that the Doctor asked him not to talk to Barve as he was under severe shock. P.W.74 came out with another story in the deposition that the same night he visited Bhatia Hospital where he could record the statements of P.Ws 28, 34, 38 and 39 who received burns. According to him,he had not completed their statements earlier. It therefore emerges that the statements of these witnesses recorded on 3.11.73 were not complete and by then descriptive particulars were not given. As a matter of fact, the statements of each of the witnesses recorded by the police at that stage ran into two or three full-scape sheets but in spite of such lengthy statements, the names and the descriptions of the culprits did not find place. Only P.W.38, the Driver mentioned Balan as the main culprit. Except his name, no other names were mentioned. The High Court examined this position and observed that except the name of Balan, the names or descriptive particulars of no other accused were mentioned and that leads to an inference that these witnesses have not actually seen the culprits and their subsequent identification either in the parade or in the court does not inspire confidence. Admittedly A-7 had deformity in his hand and Kadam, P.W.39 knew Accused nos. 6,7,8 and 9 by face and A-5 by both name and face for a long time before the incident but still no descriptive particulars were mentioned. In spite of his claim that he had known Accused nos. 6,7,8 and 9, surprisingly he did not identify A-7 in the parade. The circumstance that the statements of these witnesses were recorded on 5.11.73 and 8.11.73 supports the plea of the defence that these witnesses have not seen actually who the culprits were and for that reason they could not give descriptive particulars earlier. In this context it is also important to note that the prosecution failed to examine the two female employees Miss Leela Ramaswamy and Miss Leela Chandane, who had escaped with negligible or no burns and who would have been in a better position to give the particulars. The High Court has also given good reasons for coming to the conclusion that a deliberate attempt to implicate A-6 was made by Suvarna, P.W.34. It is rather strange that these witnesses gave some of the descriptive particulars only in their later statements. Further the circumstances show that the incident must have occurred within seconds rather in a flash of time and it is highly doubtful whether these witnesses would have been in a position to identify any of the culprits. We can not say that the reasons given by the High Court for not relying on the evidence of these witnesses are unsound and if the evidence of these main witnesses becomes doubtful and not acceptable, then the other circumstances relied upon by the prosecution do not advance the prosecution case. We do see that the culprits have acted high-handedly without any concern for law and order. But there is paucity of evidence and the prosecution could not establish the guilt of the respondents beyond all reasonable doubt. Accordingly all the appeals are dismissed.