LAWS(PVC)-1920-6-25

EMPEROR Vs. CHATUR SINGH

Decided On June 26, 1920
EMPEROR Appellant
V/S
CHATUR SINGH Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) The five applicants, Chatur Singh, Tula Ram, Johri, Poltu and Sri Chand have been convicted each of an offence under Section 500 of the Indian Penal Code and have been sentenced to a fine of Rs. 51 each, or in default, to undergo one month s rigorous imprisonment. These five persons were called as witnesses in a certain case. As the learned Sessions Judge has pointed out, the question in that case was whether one Lallu Singh had been to a certain house. The question was relevant to the case and in order to prove that he had not been to that house these five persons were called to prove that he could not have gone there because he had been outcasted by reason of what is known as a dharecha marriage with his uncle s wife. In that case Lallu Singh was a witness for the prosecution, and the present five applicants were witnesses for the defence and apparently they were called to disprove the statement of Lallu Singh in order that the accused might be acquitted. In the result the accused was acquitted. Thereupon Lallu Singh made a complaint against these five persons charging them under Section 500 of the Indian Penal Code, in that they had falsely stated that he had been outcasted for the reasons mentioned above. The magistrate who tried the case found that the statement of outcasting was untrue, because he found it satisfactorily established by evidence that a dharecha marriage of this description is common in the caste and did not constitute a reason for outcasting. He, therefore, held that the statements made by these persons in the former case were untrue and therefore defamatory, and he convicted and fined the accused as above stated.

(2.) The learned Sessions Judge on appeal upheld the convictions. Two points were taken before him which have also been taken before this Court. The first was that the statements made by these persons were privileged statements and that they were compelled to answer the questions put to them when they were called as witnesses; that the questions were relevant to the trial which was then before the court, and that therefore under Section 132 of the Indian Evidence Act they were protected and could not be prosecuted for any offence other than that of perjury. The second point taken was that the trial of these five persons in one joint trial was illegal, as each man was solely responsible for his own statement and not for the statements of his other co-accused.

(3.) The learned Sessions Judge held that the accused persons could not claim the protection of Section 132 of the Indian Evidence Act because they had not protested when the question was put to them but answered it voluntarily. His judgment runs as follows: "The question as to whether Lallu Singh had been to a certain house was relevant in that case and an attempt was made to show that he could not have gone to the house as he was an outcaste. Under Section 132 of the Evidence Act the witnesses could have been compelled to answer the questions that were put to them, but it appears that they took no objection when the questions were put, and so, according to the interpretation placed upon the law by the various High Courts, they were not entitled to the protection afforded by the proviso to that section." The rulings to which the learned Sessions Judge probably referred, though he does not say so, are to be found in Queen-Empress v. Gopal Das (1881) I.L.R. 3 Mad. 271 and Queen-Empress v. Moss (1893) I.L.R. All. 88. Perhaps also the Judge may have had in his mind the decision of this Court in Kallu v. Sital (1918) I.L.R. 40 All. 271. My attention has also been called to the decision of a single Judge of this Court in Ganga Sahai v. Emperor (1920) I.L.R. 42 All. 357.