LAWS(PVC)-1933-6-10

BABUCHAND TELI Vs. EMPEROR

Decided On June 23, 1933
BABUCHAND TELI Appellant
V/S
EMPEROR Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) The petitioner has been convicted under Section 47(a), Bihar and Orissa Excise Act, and sentenced to three months rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 50. His appeal to the Sessions Judge has been dismissed and he has moved this Court in revision. The offence alleged was possession of one bottle of illicitly distilled liquor; one labni (earthen pot having a hole at its bottom) and one basket smelling of liquor. They were found not in the residential house of the accused which is a two storeyed building, but in his khand or out-house which is at a little distance from the residential house. It comprises three rooms, so called, but none of them is provided with door-planks and the compound wall of the khand is only breast high.

(2.) The defence consisted not in denying the fact that the articles were recovered from the place alleged, but in denying that they were there with the knowledge of the accused and suggesting that they might have been put there by his enemies Bajrangi Kahar and Sitwa Kahar. The Magistrate was not satisfied apparently that the basket and labni were implements for distillation of liquor and therefore did not convict him in respect of these, but recorded a conviction in respect of the possession of one bottle of illicitly distilled liquor. He rejected the defence on the ground that there was no evidence to show that the exhibits were introduced by Bajrangi and Sitwa.

(3.) Of this however it was, in the nature of things, impossible that the accused should be able to adduce direct evidence if they were introduced, as he says, without his knowledge. All that it was possible for an innocent accused to prove was that the articles could have been introduced without his knowledge and that there was a motive for their introduction. The accused gave defence evidence and proved hand-notes executed in his favour by Bajrangi Kahar and by the father of Sitwa and that there had been an altercation between accused and Bajrangi and Sitwa over these debts. Of this part of the defence the Magistrate has not expressed disbelief. One of the witnesses tried to go further and told an unconvincing story about the production of the exhibits before the Sub-Inspector which the Magistrate rejected, no doubt rightly; but he observed: The onus lies heavily on the accused to prove that he was not in possession of the liquor etc.