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Sunday, August 19, 2012

From the judgment of the Trial Court, there does not appear to be any substantial discussion on the effect of non-holding of the test identification parade or the non-examination of the doctor. None of the witnesses, not even the accused, in his statement, had stated that the jeep was at a fast speed but still the Trial Court recorded a finding that the jeep was at a fast speed and was not being driven properly. The Trial Court also recorded that a suspicion arises as to whether Ravi Kapur was actually driving the bus at the time of the accident or not and identification was very important. We are unable to understand as to how the Trial Court could ignore the statement of the eye-witnesses, particularly when they were reliable, trustworthy and gave the most appropriate eye account of the accident. The judgment of the Trial Court, therefore, suffered from errors of law and in appreciation of evidence both. The interference by the High Court with the judgment of acquittal passed by the Trial Court does not suffer from any jurisdictional error.



                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.1838 OF 2009

Ravi Kapur                                   … Appellant

                                   Versus

State of Rajasthan                                 … Respondent







                               J U D G M E N T


Swatanter Kumar, J.


1.    The present appeal is directed against the judgment of the High  Court
of Judicature for Rajasthan at Jaipur  Bench,  Jaipur,  dated  12th  August,
2008.

2.    The facts giving rise to the present appeal in brief are :

      One Sukhdev Singh, PW2, had informed  and  made  a  statement,  parcha
bayan, Ex.P2, to the police at the  police  station  M.I.A.  Alwar  on  20th
April, 1991 stating that at about 9.15 a.m. on that very day, he  was  going
in a jeep to Govindgarh from Alwar to attend the marriage of his brother-in-
law, Joga Singh.  When they reached Baggad Tiraya, one jeep bearing no. RNA-
638 was also going ahead of his jeep and in the said jeep,  his  wife,  Chet
Kaur, daughter Rinki, father-in-law, Lahori Singh, mother-in-law,  Gita  and
paternal uncle father-in-law  (Fufi  sasur)  Niranjan  Singh  and  his  wife
Kailashwati and his brother-in-law Multan  Singh  and  his  son  Tinku  were
travelling.  A maruti car was also going ahead of them.   Bus  No.  RNA  339
was coming from Baggad Tiraya side at a very high speed.  The driver of  the
Maruti car immediately turned his car to one side to save  himself  and  the
bus crashed into the jeep bearing no. RNA-638.  As a result  of  this  fatal
accident, Chet Kaur, Rinki, Geeta and the jeep  driver  died  on  the  spot.
The condition of the  other  occupants  of  the  jeep,  particularly  Lahori
Singh, Niranjan Singh, Kailashwanti and Tinku was  very  critical  and  they
were admitted to the hospital where they  later  died.   According  to  this
witness, the bus was being driven by Ravi Kapur who  took  the  bus  towards
large pits in the agricultural fields and after parking the  bus  there,  he
ran away from the spot.

3.    On the basis of Ex.P2, a case under Section 304-A of the Indian  Penal
Code, 1860 (for short, the ‘IPC’) was registered against  the  accused  Ravi
Kapur.   The  Investigating  Officer,  PW11,  conducted  the  investigation,
prepared the site  plan,  Ex.P3,  and  recorded  the  statement  of  various
witnesses.  A chargesheet [report under Section 173 of the Code of  Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (for short the ‘Cr.P.C.’)] was  filed  against  the  accused
under Sections 279, 337, 338  and  304-A  IPC.   The  court  framed  charges
against the accused and he was put to trial.

4.    The prosecution examined as many as 11 witnesses including  four  eye-
witnesses, doctors and the Investigating Officer himself.  Upon  closing  of
the case of the prosecution, all  the  incriminating  evidence  against  the
accused was put before him and  his  statement  under  Section  313  of  the
Cr.P.C. was recorded wherein he  took  the  stand  of  complete  denial  and
stated that the case of the prosecution was false.  The  trial  court,  vide
its judgment dated 11th May, 2006, held that the prosecution  has  not  been
able to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt and the accused was  entitled
to an order of acquittal.  Consequently, the  Court  acquitted  the  accused
Ravi Kapur of all the above-mentioned charges.  At  this  stage  itself,  we
may refer to the relevant extract of the judgment of the trial court,  which
is the reasoning for acquitting the accused:

           “Now only 3 witnesses remain to be  considered  in  the  instant
           case, viz., P.W.2-Sukhdev Singh; P.W.4-Multan Singh and  P.W.11-
           Sohan Lal who is the investigating officer.  The  Court  has  to
           consider testimonies adduced by these witnesses and has  to  see
           whether it is proved from the statements of these witnesses that
           accused was driving the bus rashly and negligently and  hit  the
           jeep or not and whether accused Ravi Kapur was driving the  said
           bus no.RNA-339 at the time of the  accident  or  not?   In  this
           regard, P.W.2-Sukhdev Singh who is also the  person  who  lodged
           first information report has  stated  in  his  parcha  statement
           Ex.P2 (sic) that one Maruti Van was gone ahead of jeep which had
           met with the accident and his jeep  was  behind  the  said  jeep
           involved in accident.  All these three vehicles were on one side
           of the road and were at a distance of 20 Ft.  from  each  other.
           One bus came no. RNA-339 towards them near Bagar tiraha and this
           bus was driven rashly and negligently and directly hit the jeep.
            However, the Maruti car which was ahead of  accident  jeep  and
           the jeep in which he was travelling and  which  was  behind  the
           accident jeep, escaped in the said accident by bus.  Both  these
           vehicles swerved towards kuchha side of the road.  This  witness
           has mentioned in his first information report that driver of the
           Bus no.RNA-339 hit the jeep with intention to kill  the  persons
           travelling in the accidented jeep.  He has further  stated  that
           he identified the driver of the bus  and  he  was  accused  Ravi
           Kapur.  He was identified by the passers-by also and  they  also
           disclosed his name.   Therefore,  now  this  Court  has  to  see
           whether facts disclosed by this witness  in his parcha statement
           –  first  information  report,  stand  fully  proved   or   not?
           Conclusion which can be drawn from  perusal  of  examination  in
           chief of this  witness  is  that  this  witness  has  stated  in
           statement before court that Maruti car was ahead of all and  the
           jeep in which he was sitting was behind the Maruti car  and  the
           jeep which met with the accident was in behind (sic)  the  above
           vehicles.    Therefore,   in   the   circumstances   there    is
           contradiction in the statements of this witness given by him  in
           his parcha statement and in court with  regard  to  fact  as  to
           whether the  accidented  jeep  was  in  front  or  rear  of  the
           aforesaid vehicles.  In his statement in court  he  states  that
           the jeep in which he was sitting was behind the accidented  jeep
           and he himself was sitting behind driver’s seat.  Therefore,  in
           such circumstances  it  cannot  be  safely  accepted  that  this
           witness has actually  seen  the  accident.   Because  there  are
           material self-contradictions regarding the fact  as  to  whether
           the jeep of this witness was  ahead  or  behind  the  accidented
           jeep….


           …In the circumstances it is not clear  from  the  statements  of
           this witness whether driver of the bus was negligent,  what  was
           the speed of the bus and accidented jeep was in its  right  side
           of the road.  This witness also states that there was  one  jeep
           and a maruti car ahead the accidented jeep, but drivers of  both
           these vehicles saved their vehicles from the bus  and  therefore
           the bus hit the jeep in which this witness was  sitting.   Court
           has to see that if driver of the bus was  actually  driving  the
           bus rashly and negligently, then why he did not collide with the
           jeep and maruti car which were plying ahead the accidented  jeep
           and why it collided with the accidented  jeep.   The  court  has
           also to consider whether the accident was due to over-taking  of
           the jeep by the driver  of  the  jeep.   Because  witnesses  who
           appeared on behalf of prosecution have stated that right side of
           bus suffered moch.  But prosecution has not filed any mechanical
           expert report nor has produced any expert witness in this regard
           which could have proved that the bus actually hit the jeep  from
           front.  It is also not clear whether any loss was caused to  bus
           in front or not.  Conclusion which can be drawn out from perusal
           of statement made by P.W.11-Sohan Lal/investigating  officer  in
           his cross examination, is that accident took place  at  a  place
           where there was a turn/crossing on road and therefore  both  the
           drivers of the bus as well as jeep ought to  have  been  careful
           and cautious.  Moreover it is also not clear from  statement  of
           this witness that the bus had actually collided with  the  front
           portion of jeep.  He has stated that accident  could  have  been
           caused due to over-taking of the middle vehicle.   Whereas  this
           witness ought to have been proved that the accident is a head-on
           collision between bus and jeep.  Apart from this,  this  witness
           did  not  conduct  identification  proceedings  of  the  accused
           because the persons present at the spot had told him  that  Ravi
           Kapur is the accused and he is the owner and driver of the  bus.
           This witness has not clarified as to why he  did  not  send  any
           notice under Section 133 of M.V. Act to the  owner  of  vehicle.
           Therefore,  in  these  circumstances,  it   is   apparent   from
           statements of this witness that neither notice under Section 133
           of M.V.Act was given to owner  of  the  bus  nor  identification
           proceedings of accused were held.  Although persons at the  spot
           had told that Ravi Kapur was driver of the bus,  but prosecution
           has not produced and examined any such independent  witness  who
           was present at the spot at the time of this accident  who  could
           have explained that Ravi Kapur was driving the bus no.  RNA-339.
           Infact prosecution ought to have recorded the statements of  eye
           witnesses  and  produced  them  in  court   which   could   have
           corroborated statement of  P.W.2-Sukhdev  that  Ravi  Kapur  was
           driving Bus No.RNA-339 at the time  of  accident  and  also  the
           identification  proceedings  of  accused  were  very   necessary
           because  both  the  witnesses  who   have   been   produced   by
           prosecution, have not identified accused Ravi Kapur or that  the
           accident was caused to rash and negligent driver of the  bus  by
           Ravi Kapur.  One of the witness  has  stated  that  he  saw  the
           driver running away from the spot, but he has not stated that he
           saw the driver of  the  bus  hitting  the  jeep.   Notice  under
           Section 133 of the M.V. Act was very necessary which could  have
           proved that Ravi Kapur was actually driving the  bus  no.RNA-339
           at the time of accident.   Moreover,  none  of  the  prosecution
           witnesses have explained that the bus was  being  driven  rashly
           and negligently….”



5.    The above findings recorded by the trial court were  reversed  by  the
High Court, which set aside the judgment  of  acquittal.  Upon  appreciating
the evidence, the High Court, vide its judgment  dated  12th  August,  2008,
came to the conclusion that the judgment of the trial  court  was  incorrect
and while particularly dealing with the  issue  of  grant  of  notice  under
Section 133 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988  (for  short,  ‘the  Act’),  the
Court held as under :

           “Now so far as notice under section 133 of  the  Motor  Vehicles
           Act was concerned which was not served upon the  owner,  because
           the statement of PW.2 Sukh Dev Singh, Multhan Singh P.W.4 stated
           that the  accused  respondent  was  the  driver  and  they  have
           identified him on the spot as well as in  the  court  also.   In
           such situation, service of notice under section 133 of the Motor
           Vehicle upon the owner has no relevancy.  As such, in the  light
           of the statement of PW.2 Sukh Dev Singh and P.W.4 Multhan  Singh
           no identification parade is necessary.   The  FIR  Ex.P.1  shows
           that the name of the accused respondent has already mentioned.”



6.    The High Court convicted the  accused  under  Section  304-A  IPC  and
awarded him simple imprisonment for two years with  fine  of  Rs.5000/-,  in
default of payment of fine, to undergo further imprisonment of  six  months.
The Court also convicted the accused for offences  under  Sections  279  and
337 of the IPC, awarding him six months simple  imprisonment  with  fine  of
Rs.1000/-, in default of  payment  of  fine  to  undergo  one  month  simple
imprisonment and one month simple imprisonment with  fine  of  Rs.500/-,  in
default of payment  of  fine  to  undergo  15  days  rigorous  imprisonment,
respectively. Aggrieved  from  the  judgment  of  conviction  and  order  of
sentence passed by the High Court, the present Special  Leave  Petition  has
been filed.

7.    Mr. Patwalia, learned senior advocate  appearing  for  the  appellant,
while raising a challenge to the judgment of  the  High  Court,  has  prayed
that the judgment of acquittal recorded by the Trial Court be  restored  and
the judgment of the High Court  be  set  aside.   The  learned  counsel  has
raised the following submissions:

(a)   It is a settled principle of  law  that  the  Appellate  Court  should
       normally not interfere with the judgment of acquittal  unless  it  is
       perverse and contrary to the evidence on record.   The  scope  of  an
       appeal against an order of acquittal is very  limited  and  the  High
       Court,  in  the  present  case,  has  exceeded  its  jurisdiction  in
       reversing the judgment of acquittal passed by the Trial Court.

(b)   There is no evidence on record to identify or link  the  accused  with
       the commission of the offence, i.e., whether or not  he  was  driving
       the said vehicle.  In fact, according to the  counsel,  there  is  no
       direct evidence to show that the accused Ravi Kapur was  driving  the
       bus involved in the accident.

(c)   Even if it is presumed that the accused was  the  person  driving  the
       bus at the relevant time, still there is no evidence to prove that he
       drove the bus rashly and negligently.

       In absence of any evidence on these  two  counts,  the  appellant  is
       entitled to acquittal.

8.     While  refuting  the  above-said  arguments,  the   learned   counsel
appearing for the State has contended that there are  eye-witnesses  to  the
occurrence who have categorically stated the  entire  incident.   After  the
case had been remanded by the Court of Special Judge, by  order  dated  28th
October,  1999,  in  regard  to  the   issue   of   non-holding   the   test
identification parade and non-examination of the  doctor,  the  Trial  Court
had disturbed its own earlier judgment of conviction dated 24th  June,  1999
vide its above-mentioned judgment dated 11th  May,  2006.   This  subsequent
judgment of the Trial Court was challenged before the High Court.  The  High
Court reversed the judgment  of  acquittal  to  that  of  conviction.   This
itself shows that there were apparent errors and  complete  lack  of  proper
appreciation  of  evidence  in  the  later  judgment  of  the  Trial  Court.
Therefore, that judgment should not be restored by  this  Court.   According
to him, the statements of PW2, PW4 and PW11 clearly establish  the  case  of
rash  and  negligent  driving  by  the  accused.   There  is   no   material
contradiction between  the  statements  of  the  witnesses  and  the  parcha
statement, etc.  The judgment of the  High  Court  does  not  call  for  any
interference by this Court.

9.    Firstly, we would discuss the last contention raised on behalf of  the
appellant, as  it  relates  to  appreciation  of  evidence  by  this  Court,
particularly keeping in view the  fact  that  the  impugned  judgment  is  a
judgment of reversal against the judgment of acquittal.

10.   In order to examine the merit or otherwise of contentions (b) and  (c)
raised on behalf of the appellant, it is necessary for the  Court  to  first
and foremost examine (a)  what  is  rash  and  negligent  driving;  and  (b)
whether it can be gathered  from  the  attendant  circumstances.   Rash  and
negligent  driving  has  to  be  examined  in  light  of   the   facts   and
circumstances of a given case.  It is a fact incapable  of  being  construed
or seen in isolation.  It  must  be  examined  in  light  of  the  attendant
circumstances.  A person who drives a vehicle on the road is  liable  to  be
held responsible for the act as well as for  the  result.   It  may  not  be
always possible to determine with  reference  to  the  speed  of  a  vehicle
whether a person was  driving  rashly  and  negligently.   Both  these  acts
presuppose an abnormal conduct.  Even when one is driving  a  vehicle  at  a
slow speed but recklessly and negligently, it  would  amount  to  ‘rash  and
negligent driving’ within the meaning of the language of  Section  279  IPC.
That is why the legislature in its wisdom has  used  the  words  ‘manner  so
rash or negligent as to endanger human life’.  The  preliminary  conditions,
thus, are that (a) it is the manner in which the vehicle is driven;  (b)  it
be driven either rashly or negligently;  and  (c)  such  rash  or  negligent
driving should be such as to endanger human life.   Once  these  ingredients
are satisfied, the penalty contemplated under Section 279 IPC is attracted.

11.   ‘Negligence’ means omission to do something  which  a  reasonable  and
prudent person guided by the considerations which ordinarily regulate  human
affairs would do or doing something which a prudent  and  reasonable  person
guided by similar  considerations  would  not  do.   Negligence  is  not  an
absolute term but is a relative one; it is rather a  comparative  term.   It
is difficult to state with precision any  mathematically  exact  formula  by
which negligence or lack of it can be infallibly measured in a  given  case.
Whether there exists negligence per se or the course of conduct  amounts  to
negligence will normally depend upon the  attending  and  surrounding  facts
and circumstances which have to be taken into consideration  by  the  Court.
In a given case, even not doing what one was  ought  to  do  can  constitute
negligence.

12.   The Court has to adopt another parameter, i.e., ‘reasonable  care’  in
determining the question of  negligence  or  contributory  negligence.   The
doctrine of reasonable care imposes an obligation or a duty  upon  a  person
(for example a driver) to care for the pedestrian on the road and this  duty
attains a higher degree when the pedestrian happen to be children of  tender
years.  It is axiomatic to say that while driving  a  vehicle  on  a  public
way, there is an implicit duty  cast  on  the  drivers  to  see  that  their
driving does not endanger the life of the right users of the  road,  may  be
either  vehicular  users  or  pedestrians.   They  are  expected   to   take
sufficient care to avoid danger to others.

13.   The other principle that is pressed in  aid  by  the  courts  in  such
cases is the doctrine of  res  ipsa  loquitur.   This  doctrine  serves  two
purposes – one that an accident may by its nature be  more  consistent  with
its being caused by negligence for which the opposite party  is  responsible
than by any other causes and that in such a  case,  the  mere  fact  of  the
accident is prima facie evidence of such negligence.   Secondly,  it  is  to
avoid hardship in cases where the claimant is able  to  prove  the  accident
but cannot prove how the accident occurred.  The courts  have  also  applied
the principle of res ipsa loquitur in cases where  no  direct  evidence  was
brought on record.  The Act itself contains a provision which concerns  with
the consequences of driving dangerously alike the provision in the IPC  that
the vehicle is driven in a manner dangerous to public life.  Where a  person
does such an offence he is punished as per the provisions of Section 184  of
the Act.  The courts have also taken the concept of ‘culpable rashness’  and
‘culpable  negligence’  into  consideration  in  cases  of  road  accidents.
‘Culpable rashness’ is acting with the consciousness  that  mischievous  and
illegal consequences may follow but with the hope that  they  will  not  and
often with the belief that the actor has  taken  sufficient  precautions  to
prevent their  happening.   The  imputability  arises  from  acting  despite
consciousness  (luxuria).   ‘Culpable  negligence’  is  acting  without  the
consciousness that the illegal and mischievous effect will  follow,  but  in
circumstances which show that  the  actor  has  not  exercised  the  caution
incumbent upon him and that if he had, he would have had the  consciousness.
 The imputability arises from the neglect of civic duty  of  circumspection.
In such a case the mere fact of accident is prima  facie  evidence  of  such
negligence.  This maxim suggests that on the circumstances of a  given  case
the res speaks and is eloquent because the  facts  stand  unexplained,  with
the result that the natural and reasonable inference from the facts,  not  a
conjectural inference, shows that the act is attributable to  some  person’s
negligent conduct.  [Ref. Justice Rajesh Tandon’s ‘An Exhaustive  Commentary
on Motor Vehicles Act, 1988’ (First Edition, 2010].

14.   We have noticed these principles in order  to  examine  the  questions
raised in the present case in their  correct  perspective.   We  may  notice
that certain doctrines falling in the realm of accidental civil or  tortuous
jurisprudence, are quite applicable to  the  cases  falling  under  criminal
jurisprudence like the present one.

15.   Now, we may refer to some judgments of this Court which would  provide
guidance for determinatively answering  such  questions.   In  the  case  of
Alister Anthony Pareira v. State of Maharashtra [(2012)  2  SCC  648]  where
the driver of a vehicle was driving the vehicle at  a  high  speed  at  late
hours of the night in a drunken state and killed  seven  labourers  sleeping
on the pavement, injuring other eight, this  Court  dismissing  the  appeal,
laid down the tests to  determine  criminal  culpability  on  the  basis  of
‘knowledge’, as follows :

            “41. Rash or negligent  driving  on  a  public  road  with  the
           knowledge of the dangerous character and the  likely  effect  of
           the act and resulting in death  may  fall  in  the  category  of
           culpable homicide not amounting to murder.  A person,  doing  an
           act of rash or negligent driving, if aware  of  a  risk  that  a
           particular consequence is  likely  to  result  and  that  result
           occurs, may be held guilty not only of the act but also  of  the
           result.  As a matter of law—in view of the provisions of IPC—the
           cases which fall within the last clause of Section 299  but  not
           within clause “Fourthly” of Section 300 may cover the  cases  of
           rash or negligent act done with the knowledge of the  likelihood
           of its dangerous consequences and may  entail  punishment  under
           Section 304 Part II IPC.  Section 304-A IPC  takes  out  of  its
           ambit the cases of death of any person  by  doing  any  rash  or
           negligent  act  amounting  to  culpable   homicide   of   either
           description.”




 16.  Again, in the case of Naresh Giri v. State  of  M.P.  [(2008)  1  SCC
791], where a train had hit a bus being driven  by  the  appellant  at  the
railway crossing and the bus was badly damaged and two persons  died,  this
Court, while altering the charges from Section 302  IPC  to  Section  304-A
IPC, observed :

           “7. Section 304-A  IPC  applies  to  cases  where  there  is  no
           intention to cause death and no knowledge that the act  done  in
           all probability will cause death. The provision is  directed  at
           offences outside the range of Sections 299 and 300 IPC.  Section
           304-A applies only to such acts which are rash and negligent and
           are directly the cause of death of  another  person.  Negligence
           and rashness are essential elements under Section 304-A.


           8. Section 304-A carves out a specific offence  where  death  is
           caused by doing a rash or negligent act and that  act  does  not
           amount to culpable homicide under Section 299  or  murder  under
           Section 300. If a person wilfully drives a  motor  vehicle  into
           the midst of a crowd and thereby causes death to some person, it
           will not be a case of mere rash and negligent  driving  and  the
           act will amount to culpable homicide.  Doing  an  act  with  the
           intent to kill a person or  knowledge  that  doing  an  act  was
           likely to cause a person's  death  is  culpable  homicide.  When
           intent or knowledge is the direct motivating force of  the  act,
           Section 304-A has to make room for the graver and  more  serious
           charge of culpable homicide. The provision of  this  section  is
           not limited to rash or negligent driving. Any rash or  negligent
           act whereby death of any person is  caused  becomes  punishable.
           Two elements either of which or both of which may be  proved  to
           establish the guilt of an  accused  are  rashness/negligence;  a
           person may cause death by a rash or negligent act which may have
           nothing to do with driving at all. Negligence and rashness to be
           punishable in terms of Section 304-A must be attributable  to  a
           state of mind wherein the criminality arises because of no error
           in judgment but of a deliberation in the mind risking the  crime
           as well as the life of the person who may lose  his  life  as  a
           result of the crime. Section 304-A  discloses  that  criminality
           may be that apart from any mens rea, there may be no  motive  or
           intention still a person may venture or practise  such  rashness
           or negligence which may cause the death of other. The  death  so
           caused is not the determining factor.



           9. What constitutes negligence has been analysed  in  Halsbury's
           Laws of England (4th Edn.), Vol. 34, Para 1 (p. 3), as follows:



                       “1.   General    principles    of    the    law    of
                 negligence.—Negligence is a specific tort and in any  given
                 circumstances is the failure to exercise  that  care  which
                 the  circumstances  demand.  What  amounts  to   negligence
                 depends on the  facts  of  each  particular  case.  It  may
                 consist in omitting to do something which ought to be  done
                 or in doing something which ought to be done  either  in  a
                 different manner or not at all. Where there is no  duty  to
                 exercise care, negligence in the popular sense has no legal
                 consequence. Where  there  is  a  duty  to  exercise  care,
                 reasonable care must be taken to avoid  acts  or  omissions
                 which can be reasonably foreseen  to  be  likely  to  cause
                 physical injury to persons or property. The degree of  care
                 required in the particular case depends on the  surrounding
                 circumstances, and may vary according to the amount of  the
                 risk  to  be  encountered  and  to  the  magnitude  of  the
                 prospective injury. The duty of care is owed only to  those
                 persons who are in the area of foreseeable danger; the fact
                 that the act of the defendant violated his duty of care  to
                 a third person does not enable the plaintiff  who  is  also
                 injured by the same act to claim unless he is  also  within
                 the area of foreseeable danger. The same  act  or  omission
                 may accordingly in some circumstances involve liability  as
                 being negligent, although in other  circumstances  it  will
                 not do so. The material considerations are the  absence  of
                 care which is on the part of  the  defendant  owed  to  the
                 plaintiff in the  circumstances  of  the  case  and  damage
                 suffered by the plaintiff,  together  with  a  demonstrable
                 relation of cause and effect between the two.”


           13.  According  to  the  dictionary  meaning  “reckless”   means
           “careless”, regardless  or  heedless  of  the  possible  harmful
           consequences of one's acts. It presupposes that if  thought  was
           given to the matter by the doer before  the  act  was  done,  it
           would have been apparent to him that there was a  real  risk  of
           its having the relevant harmful consequences; but, granted this,
           recklessness covers a whole range of states of mind from failing
           to give any thought at all to whether or not there is  any  risk
           of those harmful consequences, to recognising the  existence  of
           the risk and nevertheless deciding to ignore it.”



17.   In the case of Mohd. Aynuddin alias Miyam v. State of A.P. [(2000)  7
SCC 72], wherein the appellant was driving a bus and while a passenger  was
boarding the bus, the bus was driven which resulted  in  the  fall  of  the
passenger and the rear wheel of the  bus  ran  over  the  passenger.   This
Court, drawing the distinction between a rash act and a negligent act  held
that it was culpable rashness and criminal negligence and held as under :

           “7. It is a  wrong  proposition  that  for  any  motor  accident
           negligence of the driver should be presumed. An accident of such
           a nature as would prima facie show that it cannot  be  accounted
           to anything other than the  negligence  of  the  driver  of  the
           vehicle may create a presumption and in such a case  the  driver
           has to explain how the accident happened without  negligence  on
           his part. Merely because a passenger  fell  down  from  the  bus
           while boarding the bus, no  presumption  of  negligence  can  be
           drawn against the driver of the bus.

           9. A rash act is primarily an overhasty act. It is opposed to  a
           deliberate act. Still a rash act can be a deliberate act in  the
           sense that it was done without due care  and  caution.  Culpable
           rashness  lies  in  running  the  risk  of  doing  an  act  with
           recklessness and  with  indifference  as  to  the  consequences.
           Criminal  negligence  is  the  failure  to  exercise  duty  with
           reasonable and  proper  care  and  precaution  guarding  against
           injury  to  the  public  generally  or  to  any  individual   in
           particular. It is the imperative duty of the driver of a vehicle
           to adopt such reasonable and proper care and precaution.”




18.   In light of the above, now we have to examine if  negligence  in  the
case of an accident can be gathered from the attendant  circumstances.   We
have already abused that the doctrine  of  res  ipsa  loquitur  is  equally
applicable  to  the  cases  of  accident  and  not  merely  to  the   civil
jurisprudence.  Thus, these principles can equally be extended to  criminal
cases provided the attendant circumstances and basic facts are proved.   It
may also be noticed that either the accident must be proved by  proper  and
cogent evidence or it should be an admitted fact before this principle  can
be applied.  This doctrine comes to aid at a subsequent stage where  it  is
not clear as to how and due to whose negligence the accident occurred.  The
factum of accident having been established,  the  Court  with  the  aid  of
proper evidence may take assistance  of  the  attendant  circumstances  and
apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. The mere fact of occurrence of  an
accident does not necessarily imply that  it  must  be  owed  to  someone’s
negligence.  In cases where negligence is the primary  cause,  it  may  not
always be that direct evidence to prove it  exists.   In  such  cases,  the
circumstantial evidence may be adduced to prove negligence.  Circumstantial
evidence consists of facts  that  necessarily  point  to  negligence  as  a
logical conclusion rather than providing an outright demonstration thereof.
 Elements of this doctrine may be stated as :
       ? The event would not have occurred but for someone’s negligence.
       ? The evidence on record rules out the possibility that  actions  of
         the victim or some third party could  be  the  reason  behind  the
         event.
       ? Accused was negligent and owed a duty of care towards the victim.

19.   In the case of Thakur Singh v. State of Punjab [(2003)  9  SCC  208],
the petitioner drove a bus rashly and negligently with  41  passangers  and
while crossing a bridge, the bus fell into the nearby  canal  resulting  in
death of all the passengers.  The Court applied the doctrine  of  res  ipsa
loquitur since admittedly  the  petitioner  was  driving  the  bus  at  the
relevant time and it was going over the bridge  when  it  fell  down.   The
Court held as under:



           “4. It is admitted that the petitioner himself was  driving  the
           vehicle at the relevant time. It is also admitted that  bus  was
           driven over a bridge and then it fell  into  canal.  In  such  a
           situation the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur comes into play  and
           the burden shifts on to the  man  who  was  in  control  of  the
           automobile to establish that the  accident  did  not  happen  on
           account of any negligence on his part. He  did  not  succeed  in
           showing that the accident happened  due  to  causes  other  than
           negligence on his part.”



20.   Still, in the case of Mohd. Aynuddin (supra), this Court has also
stated the principle :

           “8. The principle of  res  ipsa  loquitur  is  only  a  rule  of
           evidence to determine the onus of proof in actions  relating  to
           negligence. The said principle has  application  only  when  the
           nature of the accident and  the  attending  circumstances  would
           reasonably lead to the belief that in the absence of  negligence
           the accident would not have occurred and that  the  thing  which
           caused injury is shown to have been  under  the  management  and
           control of the alleged wrongdoer.”

21.   It has also been stated that  the  effect  of  this  maxim,  however,
depends upon the cogency of the inferences to be drawn and must, therefore,
vary in each case.   In light of these principles, let us examine the facts
of the present case and the evidence on record.  The contention  raised  is
that there is not even an iota of evidence to show that either the  accused
was driving the vehicle or, as alleged, he was driving the same rashly  and
negligently.  The concerned police officer had recorded ‘Parcha  statement’
(Exhibit P2) of Sukhdev, who in Court was examined as PW2.  In  furtherance
to this statement, a First Information Report (FIR) was registered.  It was
stated in this document that on 20th April, 1991, Sukhdev  was  going  from
Alwar to Govindgarh sitting in the jeep  to  attend  the  marriage  of  his
brother-in-law.  It was at about 9.15 a.m. when they reached near  crossing
of Bagad Tiraya, ahead of that jeep was one jeep RNA 638 in which his  wife
and other family members were travelling.  One more Maruti van was  running
ahead of that jeep.  A bus RNA 339 was approaching in fast speed  from  the
side of Baggad.  Maruti van which having saved itself took to the side  and
the driver of the Bus with an intention to  kill  the  passengers  collided
with the jeep RNA 638.  Chet Kaur, Rinki, Geeta and the driver died at  the
spot and the condition of the rest, i.e.,  Niranjan  Singh,  Lahori  Singh,
Kailash, Vainto and Tinku was serious.  They were admitted to hospital.  At
the time of the accident, the bus was being driven by  Ravi  Kumar  (Kapur)
who was identified by the passersby who told his name  to  Sukhdev.   Along
with him, others sitting in the jeep also identified the bus  driver.   The
driver parked the vehicle beneath the pit on the road and fled away.   Upon
his examination as PW2, this witness stated that the Maruti van got down on
the kachha road side and even their own jeep was pulled to the kachha  side
but the third  jeep  collided  with  the  bus  from  the  front  side.   He
identified that the accused person in the Court was driving the bus himself
and confirmed his statement in parcha bayan (statement),  Exhibit  P2.   He
was subjected to a detailed cross-examination in which he admitted that  he
did not see the bus driver while sitting in the jeep, though  he  had  seen
the accused while the accused was getting down from the bus and  that  this
fact was not in his statement (Exhibit P2) because  he  did  not  remember.
The passersby had told him the name of the driver  which  was  recorded  in
Exhibit P2.  He stated that Exhibit P3, the site plan, was not prepared  in
his presence and his signatures were obtained in the hospital.

22.   PW1, Ms. Sheela Gupta, stated that  Joga  Singh  and  relatives  were
going in another vehicle ahead of the vehicle in which she was  travelling.
It collided with the bus.  She was unconscious and she did not see  anybody
or the driver of the bus.

23.   PW3, Subhash Chawla, in his examination, admitted  the  accident  but
stated that he did not know the name of the driver of the bus and also that
the jeep behind him was giving horns and as soon as the jeep in the  middle
reached the accident took place.  He was declared hostile.

24.   PW4, Multan Singh, has also similarly stated the facts leading to the
accident.  He stated that he was sitting in the second jeep.  According  to
him, the bus came with speed from the side of Delhi road.  It was a private
bus and it hit the jeep.  The bus was coming on the wrong side and  it  hit
the front of the jeep.  He also got injuries on his head and  back.    When
he got down and stood, he saw the  driver  running  away.   Though  he  was
injured, he claims to have seen the driver  and  confirmed  that  the  said
driver was present in Court and identified  the  accused.   In  his  cross-
examination, he stated that on  collision,  he  heard  sound  like  cracker
burst.

25.   PW11, Sohan Lal, is the investigating officer  who  confirmed  having
written the ‘parcha statement’ in furtherance to which he proceeded to  the
site and thereafter recorded the FIR No.119/91 under Section 304  IPC.   He
prepared the site plan, Exhibit P29/P3 of the place of occurrence, prepared
inquest reports and seized bus No.RNA 339 vide seizure memo Exhibit P31 and
the jeep vide seizure memo  Exhibit  P32.   In  his  cross-examination,  he
admitted that the place of occurrence was  a  turn  around.    He  did  not
remember whether the jeep hit the front of the bus and it was not  recorded
in Exhibit P32 as to which portion of the jeep hit the bus.  He stated,  “I
don’t know whether driver Ravi Kapur was present at the  spot  or  not.   I
don’t know whether the bus passengers were there or not. But bus was there.
 I tried to inquire from the passengers but they had  already  left.   Test
identification of accused was not got done from the injured because all the
people present at the spot had already told me about the accused”.

26.   According to the learned counsel appearing for the  appellant,  there
are contradictions in the statements of these witnesses and the  site  plan
Exhibit P29/P3 does not exhibit any negligence on behalf of the  appellant.
The appellant was not driving the vehicle involved in the accident  and  as
such he is entitled to acquittal.

27.   We are not impressed with this  contention.   Firstly,  the  bus  was
seized vide seizure memo Exhibit P31 and was later on given on superdari to
the owner of the bus, i.e., the accused.  This bus was  certainly  involved
in the accident, in fact, there is no serious dispute before  us  that  the
accident between the jeep RNA 638 and the bus RNA 339  took  place  at  the
place of occurrence.  If one examines Exhibit P29/P3, it is clear  that  it
was a narrow road which was about 18 ft. in  width  and  the  accident  had
occurred at a turning point of the road.  The accident took place at  point
8.  The jeep in which number of people died remained stationed at or around
point XA while the point 8 shows mud divider (dam-bandh), the accident  had
taken place at point 1 and point 8 where  the  bus  was  parked  was  at  a
distance which clearly show that the bus had been moved after the accident.
 Applying the principle of res ipsa loquitur, it  can  safely  be  inferred
that it was a serious accident that occurred at a turning  point  in  which
number of people had died.  After the accident, the bus  driver  moved  the
bus away to a different point.  If what  is  submitted  on  behalf  of  the
appellant had even an iota of truth in it, the most appropriate conduct  of
the bus driver would have been  to  leave  the  vehicle  at  the  place  of
accident to show that he was on the extreme left  side  of  the  road  (his
proper side for driving) and the jeep which  was  trying  to  overtake  the
other vehicle had come on the wrong side  of  the  road  resulting  in  the
accident.  This would have been a very material circumstance  and  relevant
conduct of the driver.

28.   All the witnesses, PW1, PW2  and  PW4,  have  so  stated.   There  is
consistency in the statement of the witnesses that the accused was  driving
the vehicle and after parking the vehicle at a place away from the place of
occurrence, he  had  run  away.   We  have  no  reason  to  disbelieve  the
statements of these witnesses which are fully supported by the  documentary
evidence, Exhibit P2, to which there was hardly any  challenge  during  the
cross-examination of PW11.  We are unable to notice any serious or material
contradiction in the statements of the prosecution witnesses much  less  in
Exhibit P2, the parcha statement of PW2.  Minor  variations  are  bound  to
occur in the statements of the witnesses when their statements are recorded
after a considerable lapse from the date of occurrence.  The Court can also
not ignore the fact that these witnesses are  not  very  educated  persons.
The truthfulness of the witnesses is also demonstrated from the  fact  that
PW1, even in her examination-in-chief, stated that she was unconscious  and
did not see the driver.  Nothing prevented her from making a statement that
she had actually seen the accused.  Thus, we have no hesitation in  holding
that the three witnesses, i.e., PW1, PW2 and PW4 have given a  correct  eye
account of the accident.  We find their statements worthy of  credence  and
there is no occasion for the Court to disbelieve these witnesses.  It is  a
settled principle that the variations in the statements of witnesses  which
are neither  material  nor  serious  enough  to  affect  the  case  of  the
prosecution adversely are to be ignored by  the  courts.   {Ref.  State  v.
Saravanan and Anr. [(2008) 17 SCC 587]; and Sunil Kumar  Sambhudayal  Gupta
v. State of Maharasthtra [(2010  13  SCC  657]}.   It  is  also  a  settled
principle that statements of the witnesses have to be read as a  whole  and
the Court should not pick up  a  sentence  in  isolation  from  the  entire
statement and ignoring its proper reference, use the  same  against  or  in
favour of a party.  The contradictions have to be material and  substantial
so as to adversely affect the case of the prosecution.  Reference  in  this
regard can be made to Atmaram & Ors. v. State of Madhya Pradesh  [(2012)  5
SCC 738].

29.   In the case of Nageshwar Shri Krishna Ghobe v. State  of  Maharasthra
[(1973) 4 SCC 23], this Court observed that the statements of the witnesses
who met with an accident while travelling in a  vehicle  or  those  of  the
people who were travelling in the vehicle driven nearby should be taken and
understood in their correct perspective as it is  not  necessary  that  the
occupants of the vehicle should be looking in  the  same  direction.   They
might have been attracted only by the noise or the  disturbance  caused  by
the actual impact resulting from the accident itself.  The  Court  held  as
under :

           “6. In cases of road accidents by fast  moving  vehicles  it  is
           ordinarily difficult  to  find  witnesses  who  would  be  in  a
           position to affirm  positively  the  sequence  of  vital  events
           during  the  few  moments  immediately  preceding   the   actual
           accident, from which its true cause  can  be  ascertained.  When
           accidents take place on the road, people using the road  or  who
           may happen to be in close vicinity would  normally  be  busy  in
           their  own  pre-occupations  and  in  the  normal  course  their
           attention  would  be  attracted  only  by  the  noise   or   the
           disturbance caused by  the  actual  impact  resulting  from  the
           accident itself. It is only then that they  would  look  towards
           the direction of the noise and see  what  had  happened.  It  is
           seldom — and it is only a matter of coincidence — that a  person
           may already be looking in the direction of the accident and  may
           for that reason be in a position to see and later  describe  the
           sequence of events in which the accident occurred. At  times  it
           may also happen that after casually  witnessing  the  occurrence
           those persons may feel disinclined to take any further  interest
           in the matter, whatever be the reason for  this  disinclination.
           If, however, they do feel interested in going  to  the  spot  in
           their curiosity to know some thing  more,  then  what  they  may
           happen to see there, would lead them to  form  some  opinion  or
           impression as to what in all likelihood must  have  led  to  the
           accident. Evidence of such persons,  therefore,  requires  close
           scrutiny for finding out what they actually saw and what may  be
           the result of their imaginative inference. Apart from  the  eye-
           witnesses, the only person who can be  considered  to  be  truly
           capable of satisfactorily explaining  as  to  the  circumstances
           leading to accidents like the present is the driver  himself  or
           in certain circumstances  to  some  extent  the  person  who  is
           injured. In the present case the person who died in the accident
           is obviously not  available  for  giving  evidence.  The  bhaiya
           (Harbansingh) has also not been produced as a  witness.  Indeed,
           failure to produce him in  this  case  has  been  the  principal
           ground of attack by Shri Pardiwala and  he  has  questioned  the
           bona fides and the fairness  of  the  prosecution  as  also  the
           trustworthiness of the version given by the other witnesses.”




30.   The learned  counsel  for  the  appellant,  while  relying  upon  the
judgment of this Court in the case of  Mulla  &  Anr.  v.  State  of  Uttar
Pradesh [(2010) 3 SCC 508] and Amit v. State of Uttar Pradesh [(2012) 4 SCC
107], argued that none of the  witnesses  had  actually  seen  the  accused
driving the vehicle and, therefore, in absence of the  test  identification
parade, it has to be held that the accused was not driving the vehicle  and
that he was not identified.  In the case of Mulla (supra), relied  upon  by
the learned counsel, the Court had observed that it  is  desirable  that  a
test identification parade should be conducted as soon  as  possible  after
the arrest of the  accused  to  avoid  any  mistake  on  the  part  of  the
witnesses.

31.   On the other hand, to contra this  submission,  the  learned  counsel
appearing for the State relied on the judgment of this Court in the case of
Myladimmal Surendran & Ors. v. State of Kerala [(2010) 11 SCC 129]  to  say
that the test identification parade in the facts and circumstances  of  the
case was not necessary and in any case no prejudice has been caused to  the
accused and holding of test identification parade is not always necessary.

32.   In the present case, the accused had been seen by PW2  and  PW4.   In
addition, they had also stated that the passersby had  informed  them  that
the accused was driving the bus and, in fact, he was the owner of the  bus.
One fact of this statement is established that  the  bus  in  question  was
given on superdari to the accused.  It is also stated by these persons that
after they had seen the accused, he had run away from the  place  where  he
parked the vehicle.  These witnesses also identified  the  accused  in  the
Court.  It is not the case of the accused before us that he had been  shown
to the witnesses prior to his being identified in  the  Court.   The  Court
identification itself is a good identification in the eyes of law.   It  is
not always necessary that it must be preceded by  the  test  identification
parade.  It will always depend upon the facts and circumstances of a  given
case.  In one case,  it  may  not  even  be  necessary  to  hold  the  test
identification parade while in the other, it may be  essential  to  do  so.
Thus, no straightjacket formula can be stated in this regard.  We may refer
to a judgment of this Court in the case of Shyamal Ghosh v. State  of  West
Bengal [2012 (6) SCALE 381] wherein this Court has held that  the  Code  of
Criminal  Procedure,  1973  (for  short  “Cr.P.C.)  does  not  oblige   the
investigating agency to necessarily hold  the  test  identification  parade
without exception.  The Court held as under :

           “55.  On behalf of accused Shyamal, it was also  contended  that
           despite  the  identification  parade  being  held,  he  was  not
           identified by the witnesses and  also  that  the  identification
           parade had been held after undue delay  and  even  when  details
           about  the  incident  had  already  been   telecasted   on   the
           television.    Thus,  the  Court  should  not  rely   upon   the
           identification of the accused persons as the persons involved in
           the commission of the crime and they should be given the benefit
           of doubt.

           56.  The whole idea of a  Test  Identification  Parade  is  that
           witnesses who claim to have seen the culprits  at  the  time  of
           occurrence are to identify them from the midst of other  persons
           without any aid or any other source.  The test is done to  check
           upon their veracity. In other words, the main object of  holding
           an identification parade, during the investigation stage, is  to
           test the memory of the witnesses based upon first impression and
           also to enable the prosecution to decide whether all or  any  of
           them could be cited as eyewitnesses of the crime.

           57.   It is equally correct that the CrPC does  not  oblige  the
           investigating agency to necessarily hold the Test Identification
           Parade.   Failure to hold the test identification  parade  while
           in police custody, does not by itself  render  the  evidence  of
           identification in court inadmissible  or  unacceptable.    There
           have been numerous cases where the accused is identified by  the
           witnesses in the court for the first time.   One  of  the  views
           taken is that identification in court for the first  time  alone
           may not form the  basis  of  conviction,  but  this  is  not  an
           absolute rule.  The purpose of the Test Identification Parade is
           to test and strengthen the trustworthiness of that evidence.  It
           is accordingly considered a safe rule of prudence  to  generally
           look for corroboration of the sworn testimony of  the  witnesses
           in court as to the identity of the accused who are strangers  to
           them, in the form of earlier  identification  proceedings.  This
           rule  of  prudence  is,   however   subjected   to   exceptions.
           Reference can be made  to  Munshi  Singh  Gautam   v.  State  of
           M.P.[(2005) 9 SCC 631], Sheo Shankar Singh v State of  Jharkhand
           and Anr. [(2011) 3 SCC 654].

           58.   Identification Parade is a tool of  investigation  and  is
           used primarily to strengthen the case of the prosecution on  the
           one hand and to make doubly sure that persons named  accused  in
           the case are actually the culprits.  The  Identification  Parade
           primarily belongs to the stage of investigation by  the  police.
           The fact that a particular witness has been able to identify the
           accused at an  identification  parade  is  only  a  circumstance
           corroborative of the identification in court.   Thus, it is only
           a relevant consideration which may be examined by the  court  in
           view of other attendant circumstances and corroborative evidence
           with reference to the facts of a given case.”




33.   In our considered view,  it  was  not  necessary  to  hold  the  test
identification parade of the  appellant  for  two  reasons.   Firstly,  the
appellant was already known to the passersby who had recognized  him  while
driving the bus and had stated his name and, secondly, he  was  duly  seen,
though for a short but reasonable period, when after parking  the  bus,  he
got down from the bus and ran away.

34.   Equally without merit is the contention on behalf  of  the  appellant
that the Court should draw adverse inference against the prosecution as the
investigating officer did not serve notice under Section  133  of  the  Act
upon the owner of the vehicle.  The High Court has  rightly  rejected  this
contention on the basis that the driver of the vehicle  was  identified  at
the place of occurrence and even passersby  had  informed  the  prosecution
witnesses that the driver, Ravi Kapur, was the owner of the  vehicle.   The
name of the accused was  duly  recorded  in  the  FIR  itself.   This  fact
remained undisputed.  With some emphasis, it was even argued before us that
he was not driving the vehicle, though it was not disputed that he  is  the
registered owner of the vehicle in question.   If  that  be  so,  when  the
statement of the accused under Section 313 of the Cr.P.C. was  recorded  by
the Trial Court, except denial, he did not  state  anything  further.   For
reasons best known to the accused, instead of stating as  to  whom  he  had
given his vehicle for being driven on that date, he preferred  to  maintain
silence and denied the case of the prosecution.

35.   It is true that the prosecution is required to prove its case  beyond
reasonable doubt but the provisions of Section 313 Cr.P.C. are not  a  mere
formality or purposeless.  They have a dual purpose to discharge,  firstly,
that the entire material parts of the incriminating evidence should be  put
to the accused  in  accordance  with  law  and,  secondly,  to  provide  an
opportunity to the accused to explain his conduct or  his  version  of  the
case.  To provide this opportunity to the accused is the mandatory duty  of
the Court.  If the accused deliberately fails to  avail  this  opportunity,
then the consequences in law have to follow, particularly when it would  be
expected of the accused in the normal course of conduct to disclose certain
facts which may be within his personal knowledge and have a bearing on  the
case.

36.   In our considered view, no prejudice has been caused to  the  accused
by non-serving of the notice under Section 133 of the Act and, in any case,
the accused cannot take any advantage thereof.

37.   Lastly, we may proceed to discuss  the  first  contention  raised  on
behalf of the accused.  No doubt, the Court of  appeal  would  normally  be
reluctant to interfere with the judgment of acquittal but this  is  not  an
absolute rule and has a number of well accepted exceptions.  In the case of
State of UP v. Banne & Anr. [(2009) 4 SCC 271], the Court  held  that  even
the Supreme Court would be justified in interfering with  the  judgment  of
acquittal of the High Court but only when there are  very  substantial  and
compelling reasons to discard the High Court’s decision.  In  the  case  of
State of Haryana  v.  Shakuntala & Ors. [2012 (4) SCALE  526],  this  Court
held as under :

           “36.  The High Court has acquitted some accused while  accepting
           the plea of alibi taken  by  them.    Against  the  judgment  of
           acquittal, onus is on the prosecution to show that  the  finding
           recorded by the High Court is perverse and  requires  correction
           by this Court, in exercise of its powers under  Article  136  of
           the Constitution of India.   This Court has repeatedly held that
           an appellate Court must bear in mind that in case of  acquittal,
           there  is  a  double  presumption  in  favour  of  the  accused.
           Firstly, the presumption  of  innocence  is  available  to  such
           accused   under   the   fundamental   principles   of   criminal
           jurisprudence,   i.e., that every person shall be presumed to be
           innocent unless proved guilty before  the  court  and  secondly,
           that a lower court, upon due appreciation of  all  evidence  has
           found in favour of his innocence.   Merely because another  view
           is possible, it would be no reason for this Court  to  interfere
           with the order of acquittal.




           37.   In Girja Prasad (Dead) By Lrs. v. State of M.P. [(2007)  7
           SCC 625], this Court held as under:-

                 “28.  Regarding setting aside acquittal by the High  Court,
                 the learned Counsel for the  appellant  relied  upon  Kunju
                 Muhammed v. State of Kerala (2004) 9 SCC 193, Kashi Ram  v.
                 State of M.P. AIR 2001  SC  2902  and  Meena  v.  State  of
                 Maharashtra 2000 Cri LJ 2273.   In our opinion, the law  is
                 well settled.   An appeal  against  acquittal  is  also  an
                 appeal under the Code and  an  Appellate  Court  has  every
                 power to reappreciate, review and reconsider  the  evidence
                 as a whole before it.   It is, no doubt, true that there is
                 presumption of innocence in favour of the accused and  that
                 presumption is reinforced by an order of acquittal recorded
                 by the Trial Court.   But  that  is  not  the  end  of  the
                 matter.   It is for the Appellate Court to keep in view the
                 relevant principles of law, to reappreciate and reweigh the
                 evidence as a whole and to come to its  own  conclusion  on
                 such evidence in consonance with the principles of criminal
                 jurisprudence.”




           38.   In Chandrappa v. State of Karnataka [(2007)  4  SCC  415],
           this Court held as under:-

                 “42. From the above decisions, in our considered view,  the
                 following  general  principles  regarding  powers  of   the
                 appellate court while dealing with  an  appeal  against  an
                 order of acquittal emerge:


                       (1) An appellate court  has  full  power  to  review,
                       reappreciate and reconsider the evidence  upon  which
                       the order of acquittal is founded.


                       (2) The Code of  Criminal  Procedure,  1973  puts  no
                       limitation, restriction or condition on  exercise  of
                       such power and an appellate  court  on  the  evidence
                       before it may  reach  its  own  conclusion,  both  on
                       questions of fact and of law.


                       (3) Various expressions, such  as,  “substantial  and
                       compelling reasons”, “good and  sufficient  grounds”,
                       “very strong circumstances”, “distorted conclusions”,
                       “glaring mistakes”, etc. are not intended to  curtail
                       extensive powers of an appellate court in  an  appeal
                       against acquittal. Such phraseologies are more in the
                       nature of “flourishes of language” to  emphasise  the
                       reluctance of an appellate court  to  interfere  with
                       acquittal than to curtail the power of the  court  to
                       review  the  evidence  and  to  come   to   its   own
                       conclusion.

                       (4) An appellate court, however, must  bear  in  mind
                       that  in  case  of   acquittal,   there   is   double
                       presumption in favour of the  accused.  Firstly,  the
                       presumption of innocence is available  to  him  under
                       the fundamental principle of  criminal  jurisprudence
                       that every person shall be presumed  to  be  innocent
                       unless he is proved guilty by a  competent  court  of
                       law.  Secondly,  the  accused  having   secured   his
                       acquittal,  the  presumption  of  his  innocence   is
                       further reinforced, reaffirmed  and  strengthened  by
                       the trial court.


                       (5) If two reasonable conclusions are possible on the
                       basis of the evidence on record, the appellate  court
                       should not disturb the finding of acquittal  recorded
                       by the trial court.”



           39.   In C. Antony v. K.G. Raghavan Nair [(2003) 1 SCC 1],  this
           Court held :-

                      “6. This Court in a number  of  cases  has  held  that
                      though the appellate court has full  power  to  review
                      the evidence upon which  the  order  of  acquittal  is
                      founded, still  while  exercising  such  an  appellate
                      power in a case of  acquittal,  the  appellate  court,
                      should not only consider every matter on record having
                      a bearing on the question  of  fact  and  the  reasons
                      given by the courts below in support of its  order  of
                      acquittal, it must express its reasons in the judgment
                      which led  it  to  hold  that  the  acquittal  is  not
                      justified. In those line of cases this Court has  also
                      held that the appellate court must also bear  in  mind
                      the fact that the  trial  court  had  the  benefit  of
                      seeing the  witnesses  in  the  witness  box  and  the
                      presumption of innocence is not weakened by the  order
                      of acquittal, and in  such  cases  if  two  reasonable
                      conclusions  can  be  reached  on  the  basis  of  the
                      evidence on record, the  appellate  court  should  not
                      disturb the finding of  the  trial  court.  (See  Bhim
                      Singh Rup Singh v. State of Maharashtra1 and Dharamdeo
                      Singh v. State of Bihar.)”

           40.   The State has  not  been  able  to  make  out  a  case  of
           exception to the above settled principles.  It was for the State
           to show that the High Court has completely fallen  in  error  of
           law or that judgment in relation to these accused  was  palpably
           erroneous, perverse or untenable.  None of these parameters  are
           satisfied in the appeal  preferred  by  the  State  against  the
           acquittal of three accused.”



38.   In the present case, there are more than sufficient reasons  for  the
High Court to interfere with the judgment  of  acquittal  recorded  by  the
Trial Court.  Probably, this issue was not  even  raised  before  the  High
Court and that is why we find that there are hardly any reasons recorded in
the judgment of the High Court impugned in the present appeal.  Be that  as
it may, it was not a case of non-availability of evidence  or  presence  of
material and serious contradictions  proving  fatal  to  the  case  of  the
prosecution. There was no  plausible  reason  before  the  Trial  Court  to
disbelieve the eye account given by PW2 and PW4 and  the  Court  could  not
have ignored the fact that the accused had  been  duly  identified  at  the
place of occurrence and even in the Court.  The Trial Court  has  certainly
fallen in error of law and appreciation of evidence.  Once the Trial  Court
has ignored material  piece  of  evidence  and  failed  to  appreciate  the
prosecution evidence in its  correct  perspective,  particularly  when  the
prosecution has proved its case beyond  reasonable  doubt,  then  it  would
amount to failure of justice.  In some cases, such error in appreciation of
evidence may even amount to recording of perverse  finding.   We  may  also
notice at the cost of repetition that the Trial Court had  first  delivered
its judgment on 24th June, 1999 convicting the  accused  of  the  offences.
However,  on  appeal,  the  matter  was  remanded  on  two  grounds,  i.e.,
considering the effect of non-holding of test identification parade and not
examining the doctor.  Upon remand, the Trial Court had taken  a  different
view than what was taken by it earlier and vide judgment  dated  11th  May,
2006, it had acquitted the  accused.   This  itself  became  a  ground  for
interference by the High Court in the judgment of acquittal recorded by the
Trial Court.  From the judgment of the Trial Court, there does  not  appear
to be any substantial discussion on the effect of non-holding of  the  test
identification parade  or  the  non-examination  of  the  doctor.   On  the
contrary, the Trial Court passed its judgment on certain assumptions.  None
of the witnesses, not even the accused, in his statement, had  stated  that
the jeep was at a fast speed but still the Trial Court recorded  a  finding
that the jeep was at a fast speed and was not being driven  properly.   The
Trial Court also recorded that a suspicion arises as to whether Ravi  Kapur
was actually driving the bus at  the  time  of  the  accident  or  not  and
identification was very important.

39.   We are unable to understand as to how the Trial  Court  could  ignore
the statement of the eye-witnesses, particularly when they  were  reliable,
trustworthy and gave the most appropriate eye account of the accident.  The
judgment of the Trial Court, therefore, suffered from errors of law and  in
appreciation of evidence both.  The interference by the High Court with the
judgment of acquittal passed by the Trial Court does not  suffer  from  any
jurisdictional error.

40.   For the reasons afore-recorded, we  find  no  merit  in  the  present
appeal.  The same is dismissed accordingly.



                                        ………...….…………......................J.
                                                           (Swatanter Kumar)





                                        ………...….…………......................J.
                                          (Fakkir Mohamed Ibrahim Kalifulla)

New Delhi,
August 16, 2012