HIGH COURT OF HIMACHAL PRADESH
CHOWDHRY, J.
The State
Versus
Kaidia
Criminal Appeal No. 2 of 1951
Decided On : 20-08-1951
CRIMINAL APPEAL - Limitation - Appeal from acquittal - Time requisite for obtaining copy of judgment - S. 12 (2), Limitation Act - Conduct of appellant to be considered - Government not entitled to benefit of S. 12 (2) where copy obtained by deceased's father - Appeal dismissed as time-barred.
Fact of the Case:
The Government appealed against the acquittal of the respondent for the murder of his wife's brother's son. The prosecution alleged that the respondent had pushed the boy down a precipice for the sake of money and a gold nose-ring. The Sessions Judge acquitted the respondent due to lack of proof of corpus delicti.
Finding of the Court:
The court found that the appeal was time-barred as it was filed more than six months from the date of the Sessions Judge's order. The court held that the Government was not entitled to the benefit of S. 12 (2) of the Limitation Act, which excludes the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the decree, sentence, or order appealed from, as the copy of the judgment was obtained by the deceased's father and not by the Government.
Issues: 1. Whether the appeal was time-barred? 2. Whether the Government was entitled to the benefit of S. 12 (2) of the Limitation Act?
Ratio Decidendi: 1. The period of limitation for an appeal from acquittal is six months from the date of the order appealed from (Article 157, Limitation Act). 2. The Government is not entitled to the benefit of S. 12 (2) of the Limitation Act where the copy of the judgment was obtained by the deceased's father and not by the Government.
Final Decision: The appeal was dismissed as time-barred and the judgment and order of the Sessions Judge acquitting the respondent were maintained.
2. The respondent was charged with having murdered his wifes brothers son, a young lad of about fifteen named Occhbu, by pushing him down a precipice for the sake of Rs. 730/- in cash and a gold nose-ring. At the respondents request the boys father Mohtu is said to have sent him to the respondent with that amount and ornament in order to settle his marriage. The Sessions Judges judgment of acquittal has been strongly supported by the learned counsel for the respondent on the ground that there was no proof of corpus delicti in this case. The body of the deceased has not been found, but a prosecution witness, Phagnia, has stated that the respondent took him to the scene of occurrence, confessed there his guilt to him, asked for his help to bury the dead body and, on his refusing to comply, threw it into the river Tons at a snort distance from the base of the precipice. The prosecution also led evidence of the place of occurrence having been pointed out by the respondent, of a tabiz, trouser-string and cap of the deceased having been recovered at that spot, of marks of dragging from the base of the cliff to the bank of the river and of the recovery of Rs. 530/-, a nose-ring and a coat from the respondents house. The story of the boy having been sent with the cash and ornament to the respondent for the settlement of his marriage, and of the respondent being the suspected culprit, was set forth only in the report lodged with the police a week afterwards on 18-4-1950. It found no mention in a report (Ex. P.M.) which purports to have been scribed by one Rup Singh, Zaildar, on 15-1-1950, to the dictation of Kedar Singh, Lambardar and another, although the fact of Occhbu having been murdered by the respondent is said to have been communicated by the said Phagnia to one Jujuwa and by the latter to the deceaseds father on the very next day after the murder, and by the deceaseds father to Kedar Singh on 15-4-1950. The report Ex. P.M., which purports to have been scribed in the presence of the deceaseds father and the respondent himself, was suppressed by the investigating head-constable Sunder Lal and produced by him only on being ordered by the learned Sessions Judge to do so after its existence had been disclosed by other prosecution witnesses. The main plank of the argument of the learned Government Advocate was that Ex. P.M., should not be taken into consideration notwithstanding its production by the investigating head-constable himself because it was inadmissible in evidence, and that, on its being so rejected, the pointing out of the place of occurrence by the respondent and the recovery of the said article from there and of the cash and ornament from his house were, in the absence of any explanation from the respondent, sufficient for his conviction, even though the learned Sessions Judge be right in discarding Phagnias evidence with regard to the respondent having confessed his guilt to him and thrown the dead body of the deceased into the river in his presence. On the other hand, it was argued by the learned counsel for the respondent that on the showing of the prosecution witnesses themselves it was the police which took the accused to the place of occurrence, and not vice versa, and that the mere recovery of a portion of the alleged cash and the ornament is not sufficient for bringing the guilt home to the respondent unless and until possession of those articles by the respondent could not be attributed to any other cause but the alleged murder. And in this connection it was pointed out that the remaining Rs. 200/-, which the deceased is said to have taken to the respondents house on a second visit, were in any case not recovered from his house, so that it is possible that the boy was murdered by somebody else, if it be a fact that he has been murdered, for t
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