(1.) The appellant has been convicted under S. 302/34, I. P. C. along with the absconding accused, Yamlesmba Paka Singh and has been sentenced to imprisonment for life for having committed the murder of one Kangujam Hera Singh by the learned Additional Sessions Judge and the said conviction and sentence has been upheld in appeal by the Imphal Bench of the Gauhati High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 62 of 1987. The prosecution case in nutshell is that the deceased was a Lecturer of Standard College, Kongba. On 11-4-84, the students did not turn up and the deceased, therefore, spent some time in the College with one of his colleague, PW 8 and at 9.00 a.m. both of them left the College on a bicycle and reached the crossing between Imphal Yairipok road leading to Unchekon. At that point of time, three persons suddenly emerged who were armed with hockey sticks and 'thang' and started assaulting the deceased. The deceased raised alarm and the assailants after giving blows ran away. The deceased was then removed to the nearby house of a Doctor, one Toijam Ibotomba Singh who has been examined as a Court witness, CW 1 who gave the first aid and the Doctor then left for District Hospital, Imphal telling the injured that he would send the ambulance van very soon. CW 1 arranged for an ambulance and sent to his house for bringing the injured. PW 8 had come to the injured while he was getting the first aid in the house of CW 1 and then seeing the injured left for his house. On the way, PW 8 met another Lecturer, L. Chandra Singh and narrated the incident to him. The said L. Chandra Singh reached the house of the deceased at 11.00 a.m. and told the wife of the deceased about the occurrence whereafter the wife of the deceased proceeded to the house of PW 2 who is the elder brother of the deceased. PW 2 then came in a jeep to the place of occurrence and on the way saw the ambulance which was meant for carrying the injured to the hospital. The ambulance van was then stopped and PW 2 seeing his brother went with him to the hospital. The further prosecution case is that on the way to the hospital in the ambulance, PW 2 made a query and the deceased told him that the present appellant and one accused Yamlamba Paka Singh and another person assaulted him with lathis. When the injured reached the District Hospital, Imphal, there was no seat available in the hospital and, therefore, he was taken to the Regional Medical College Hospital wherein the injured was admitted. After getting the initial treatment from PW 11, the Medical Officer attached to the Casualty Department, he was removed to his bed and was treated as an indoor patient. In the hospital, the other brother of the deceased, PW 5 inquired from the deceased and came to know from him that he has been assaulted by the appellant, the absconding accused, Y. Paka Singh and another person. PW 5 went to the police station and lodged the complaint which was treated as an FIR, Exh. P5. On the basis of the said FIR, the police registered the case and started investigation. On completion of investigation, charge-sheet was filed for the offence as already stated and on being committed the accused stood his trial. The deceased, Hera Singh died in the hospital at 10.20 p.m. on 12th April 1986. On the basis of the evidence of the Doctor, PW 11 who had examined the deceased in the Casualty Department, the evidence of Doctor, PW 6 who conducted the postmortem examination on the dead body of the deceased as well as the evidence of Court Witness No. 1, the Doctor who examined the deceased in his house and gave the first aid, the learned Sessions Judge came to the conclusion that the deceased met a homicidal death and the injuries on his person were ante-mortem in nature. The said conclusion has been upheld in appeal and has not been assailed before us. The sole eye witness, PW 8 could not identify the accused persons including the appellant to be the assailant of the deceased and as such his evidence could not be pressed into service by the prosecution. The learned Sessions Judge, however, relied upon the evidence of PWs. 2 and 5 who are the two brothers of the deceased and to whom the deceased had made a dying declaration, to PW 2 in the ambulance van and PW 5 in the hospital and came to the conclusion that the charge against the appellant has been proved beyond reasonable doubt and accordingly convicted him. The High Court, in appeal, also relied upon their evidence and confirmed the conviction and sentence.
(2.) Mr. I. G. Shah, learned senior counsel appearing for the appellant contended that the two dying declarations alleged to have been made by the deceased to PW 2 and PW 5 do not satisfy the test of reliability and truthfulness and, therefore, Courts below have committed serious error in convicting the appellant relying upon such declaration. It may be stated that along with the appellant, one Moirangtham Thoiba Singh also stood his trial but the learned Sessions Judge acquitted him of the charges and the said order of acquittal has become final as the State did not prefer any appeal against the same to the High Court.
(3.) An oral dying declaration no doubt can form the basis of conviction, though the Courts seek for corroboration as a rule of prudence. But before the said declaration can be acted upon, the Court must be satisfied about the truthfulness of the same and that the said declaration was made by the deceased while he was in a fit condition to make the statement. The dying declaration has to be taken as a whole and the witness who deposes about such oral declaration to him must pass the scrutiny of reliability. We are, therefore, called upon to examine the evidence of PW 2 and PW 5 to find out whether the Courts below were justified in relying upon their testimony and in believing the statements alleged to have been made by the deceased while being carried to the hospital in ambulance and thereafter while he was an indoor patient in the hospital itself. So far as the statement in the ambulance is concerned, it was made to PW 2 who is the brother of the deceased. PW 2 while was coming in a jeep towards the scene of occurrence saw the ambulance van and, therefore, thought that his younger brother Hera Singh is possibly being taken in the same ambulance van and coming to know that his guess is correct boarded the ambulance van. He stated in his evidence that on inquiry about the injuries sustained by his brother, Hera Singh the injured told him that he had been given blows by Heikrujam Chaoba Singh with a dao, Yumlemba Paka Singh with a hockey stick and another person with a lathi. In his cross-examination, he candidly admitted that there were three or four persons inside the ambulance when his brother told him the names of his assailants but none of those disinterested persons have been examined by the prosecution to corroborate said PW 2. He also admitted in his cross-examination that those persons who were in the ambulance were present near him when his brother stated the words and yet the prosecution has not offered any explanation as to why none of those persons were examined who could have been disinterested persons deposing about the dying declaration said to have been made by the deceased inside the ambulance while he was being carried to the hospital. While according to the evidence of PW 2 the deceased told him that the appellant, Chaoba Singh gave him a dao blow but according to PW 5 to whom the deceased made a declaration in the hospital, the deceased told him that Chaoba Singh, the appellant held a thang and Paka Singh had a hockey stick. Intrinsically, therefore the so-called dying declaration made by the deceased to PW 2 is different from the declaration made by the deceased to PW 5. PW 2 happens to be the elder brother of the deceased. In the aforesaid premise, we do not think it safe to hold the evidence of PW 2 to be reliable and, therefore, the oral dying declaration as deposed to him by him cannot be pressed into service for bringing home the charges levelled against the accused/appellant.