(1.) WE have heard the learned SPP at length and on merits in this appeal. In the first instance, he has seriously assailed the order of acquittal because it is his submission that the inquest Panchanama very conclusively establishes that the dead body of the deceased was found in the hut of the accused and secondly that the medical evidence conclusively indicates that the deceased had sustained head injuries as a result of which he had died. The submission canvassed is that these circumstances establish a very clear nexus between the accused and the deceased and the learned SPP has then reinforced his submission by pointing out to us that the prosecution has established that these two persons had gone together on that afternoon to the toddy shop and they had consumed toddy together and that the evidence indicates that they were last seen together. The submission canvassed is that each of the circumstances is strong and conclusive in its own right and secondly, that the case law very clearly establishes that where the circumstances point to the guilt of the accused in the absence of the accused tendering a cogent and valid explanation before the Court that the prosecution is entitled to a conviction on the basis of this material. The learned Counsel has also drawn our attention to the fact that the supportive evidence comes from the parents and the wife of the deceased who have deposed to the fact that the accused himself came and told them that the deceased was sleeping in his hut pursuant to which they went there and they have found that the deceased was dead, that he was lying in a pool of blood having sustained head injuries. Learned Counsel submits that the evidence of these 3 witnesses again establishes the presence of the dead body in an injured condition in the hut of the accused and furthermore that despite the close relations and the family members having come there that the accused did not volunteer any explanation as to how the deceased had sustained these injuries. He has also drawn our attention to the legal position whereby the Supreme Court has now laid down in a series of decisions that where incriminating circumstances have been established by the prosecution that the accused owes a duty to the Court to explain those circumstances and that if there is a mere denial, it is wholly insufficient. In view of this material, it is submitted that the order of acquittal is unsustainable and that interference is necessary in the present instance.
(2.) WE have very carefully re -assessed the evidence and we have also taken note of the fact that this is a case in which the trial Court has applied its mind in detail to every aspect of the evidence. There is a detailed consideration of the material on record and reasons have been adduced by the trial Court for having refrained from convicting the accused. The trial Court has also elaborately discussed the law on the point and has recorded the finding that being a case of circumstantial evidence, the material on record falls short of the legal requirements that are necessary for purposes of sustaining a conviction. While reassessing the reasoning in the Judgment of the trial Court we have taken note of the two necessary factors, the first of them is as to whether the learned Trial Judge has overlooked any head or any part of the evidence or whether he has misread any of it and the answer to that question is in the negative. The second main aspect which emanates in the light of the submissions canvassed by the learned SPP is the question as to whether the approach can be legally defined as having been perverse or legally unsustainable and again, we are required to record the finding that neither of the two conclusions are warranted vis -a - vis the present Judgment.
(3.) IT is for this reason that the learned SPP has argued the appeal on merits, on facts and in law and we have very carefully heard him in detail. What we need to lay emphasis on is the fact that admittedly this is a case of circumstantial evidence and the law on the point may be reiterated or summarised by us to the limited extent of recording that it is necessary in such situations for the prosecution to prove that the entire chain of circumstances has been established and that the chain or web of circumstances points to one and only one conclusion viz., the guilt of the accused. We need to further elaborate to the extent of pointing out that the Supreme Court has very clearly postulated that the chain of circumstances presupposes a set of circumstances and not only one or two links. It is the set of circumstances that are required to be complete in themselves and the Apex Court has been very quick to lay down that in such circumstances one link or two links do not constitute a chain. We refer to the law and to the facts to the limited extent because the learned SPP was very vehement with regard to the circumstance No. 1 viz., the finding of the body in the hut of the accused which is established by the inquest Panchanama as per the prosecution. We have reminded ourselves that the law further requires that each circumstance has to be individually established in its own right and to this extent, we have pointed out to the learned Counsel that there is a clear admission on record that the body was found in the hut of one Earappa. This is accepted by the prosecution, and not offset in reexamination, and in this background that though the learned Counsel submitted that this case was not put either to the I.O or any of the witnesses, we need to hold that some level of ambiguity is established. Secondly, the learned Counsel had submitted that the injuries on the dead body clearly incriminate the accused in so far as nobody else could have inflicted them. Unfortunately, we have on record admissions to the effect that the deceased was in the habit of excessive consumption of alcohol and he used to behave in boisterous manner in the village and there is an expression used by the witnesses to the effect that he was given to "rowdy" behaviour. This being the position, in the background of the record of toddy consumption we cannot rule out the possibility of his either having sustained a fall or having been beaten up by some of the other villagers.