Section 34 IPC also uses the expression “act in furtherance of
common intention”. Therefore, in each case when Section 34 is
invoked, it is necessary to examine whether the criminal offence
charged was done in furtherance of the common intention of the
participator. If the criminal offence is distinctly remote and
unconnected with the common intention, Section 34 would not be
applicable. However, if the criminal offence done or performed
was attributable or was primarily connected or was a known or
reasonably possible outcome of the preconcert/contemporaneous
engagement or a manifestation of the mutual consent for carrying
out common purpose, it will fall within the scope and ambit of the
act done in furtherance of common intention. Thus, the word
“furtherance” propounds a wide scope but should not be
expanded beyond the intent and purpose of the statute. Russell
on Crime, (10th edition page 557), while examining the word
“furtherance” had stated that it refers to “the action of helping
forward” and “it indicates some kind of aid or assistance producing
an effect in the future” and that “any act may be regarded as done
in furtherance of the ultimate felony if it is a step intentionally
taken for the purpose of effecting that felony.” An act which is
extraneous to the common intention or is done in opposition to it
and is not required to be done at all for carrying out the common
intention, cannot be said to be in furtherance of common intention
[refer judgment of R.P. Sethi J. in Suresh (supra)]. {Para 19}
20. When we apply the aforesaid principles relating to applicability of Section 34 IPC to the facts of the present case, we feel that Thimmappa and Gopala are entitled to the benefit of doubt on the ground that it cannot be with certainty held that they had common intention, viz. the injuries inflicted by Krishnamurthy on Venkatarama after he had fallen down. They did not participate thereafter by physically assaulting or causing any injury to Venkatarama. They did not facilitate and help Krishnamurthy in the assault he perpetuated. We have no grounds to accept that they could have preconceived the brutal assault by Krishnamurthy who had put his knees on the neck and jumped on the chest of the deceased to cause the injuries resulting in his death. We cannot hold that these two accused could have premeditated the result which ensued when Krishnamurthy behaved and acted in the manner he did. Clearly, they had not joined Krishnamurthy when he had acted and have stood by. There is nothing to indicate that their acts, that is, holding the hands and pulling the legs of the deceased making him fall down, were done in furtherance of the common intention that Krishnamurthy would thereupon put his leg on the neck of the deceased, crushed his chest and fracture the ribs. We would, in favour of the appellants Thimmappa and Gopala, hold that their acts cannot be primarily connected with the violence perpetuated by Krishnamurthy. Given the acts attributed to Thimmappa and Gopala, the assault by Krishnamurthy and the resultant outcome were unexpected. We are also not prepared to hold that these two accused should have known the final outcome, or it was known to them, or it was a reasonably possible outcome of the preconcert/ contemporaneous engagement or a manifestation of mutual consent for carrying out a common purpose. We, therefore, would not hold them guilty for the offence under Section 300 or even Section 299 of the IPC on the ground that they shared common intention as understood on application of Section 34 IPC.
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 288 OF 2022
KRISHNAMURTHY @ GUNODU AND OTHERS Vs STATE OF KARNATAKA .
Author: SANJIV KHANNA, J.
Dated: FEBRUARY 16, 2022.
Leave granted.
2. This appeal by Krishnamurthy (also described as Krishna Murthy),
Gopala and Thimmappa takes exception to the judgment dated
20th February 2021 passed in Criminal Appeal No. 200147 of
2017, whereby the Division Bench of the High Court of Karnataka,
Kalaburagi Bench, has affirmed their conviction under Section 302
read with Section 34 and individually for the offences under
Sections 447, 504, 506 and 341 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860
(for short, ‘IPC’).
3. Having examined the evidence in detail, we agree that
Krishnamurthy has been rightly convicted under the aforesaid
Sections, including Section 302 of the IPC. Testimonies of
Channamma (PW-1), Ramanjaneya (PW-4), Dullaiah (PW-6) and
Dodda Narasimha (PW-7), all eyewitnesses, implicate
Krishnamurthy as the perpetrator who had assaulted the
deceased-Venkatarama after he had fallen down. In view of our
analysis of the testimonies in the ensuing paragraphs, we have
reservations in entirely relying upon the depositions of Dullaiah
(PW-6) and Dodda Narasimha (PW-7). But we have no
reservation in accepting the depositions of Channamma (PW-1)
and Ramanjaneya (PW-4) implicating Krishnamurthy. We have
subsequently reproduced the relevant portions of their
depositions. Suffice at this stage is to aver that the specific acts
attributed to Krishnamurthy are that after Venkatarama had fallendown,
he had kicked and assaulted him on the neck with his legs
and hands. The version on the role of Krishnamurthy deposed by
Channamma (PW-1) and Ramanjaneya (PW-4) gets corroboration
from the Post-Mortem Report (Exhibit P-6) and the deposition of
Dr. Sharanabasava (PW-9) who had conducted the post-mortem.
Venkatarama had suffered abraded contusion of reddish blue
colour on the neck area and abraded contusion reddish in colour
on the left side of the chest. Internal dissection had revealed
profuse bleeding over the muscles of the neck surrounding the
arteries that were ruptured. The left side ribs 4, 5, 6 and 7 were
fractured. The utral part of the stemum was broken into two
pieces. The spinal cord at the level of C-5, C-6 and C-7 was
contused, edematous and elongated. The cause of death was
opined as haemorrhagic shock as a result of multiple injuries.
4. The assault by Krishnamurthy, who though not armed with any
weapon, was fearsome, brutal and cruel. He had pinned down and
tromped Venkatarama using his legs and hands fracturing four
ribs, contusing, and injuring the spinal cord, the chest, and the
neck of the deceased. Given that the injuries caused were
intended, third limb of Section 300 IPC would get attracted. The
post mortem report and deposition of Dr. Sharanabasava (PW-9)
prove the cause of death on account of injuries caused in the
chest region, asphyxia, and facture of bones. The death was
instantaneous, as has been deposed by Channamma (PW-1) and
Ramanjaneya (PW-4). The injuries were sufficient in ordinary
course of nature to have caused death. The death of Venkatarama
is homicidal as a result and direct consequence of the injuries
inflicted by Krishnamurthy.
5. This brings us to the role and acts of Gopala and Thimmappa and
whether they can be individually convicted for murder of
Venkatarama. We begin by referring to the depositions of Dullaiah
(PW-6) and Dodda Narasimha (PW-7), which are verbatim
identical, and, therefore, the suspicion that the said witnesses
were prompted. However, we would not doubt their presence at
the place of occurrence as their presence was natural, they being
farmers who were undertaking cultivation in the adjacent fields.
On the actual occurrence they both have deposed:
“While on my way, Venkatarama, his wife, and their
son Ramanjineya (sic) were in the land on Gangawara
road. Then, accused Thimmappa, ‘A’ (identity
suppressed being a juvenile) were holding
Venkataramana’s (sic) hands. Accused Gopala was
pulling down Venkataramana’s (sic) legs and as such
he fell down on his back. Then, Gopala, Krishnamurthy
assaulted with hands, kicked with legs and attacked
with their hands when Venkataramana (sic) had fallen
down. At that time, I along with Ramanjineya (sic),
Dodda Narasimhalu were present. We did not try to
save hence since accused had threatened us not to go
near them.”
Dullaiah (PW-6) and Dodda Narasimha (PW-7) in their
cross-examination had vacillated and hesitantly accepted that they
did not know as to who amongst the accused ‘A’ and Thimmappa
had held the hands of the deceased and which one had pulled the
legs of the deceased making him fall down. They testified that the
accused ‘Venkatarama’ kicked with both legs and assaulted with
hands. This statement is erroneous and could well be a
typographical error as Venkatarama was the deceased and not an
accused. However, it appears from the depositions that one of the
accused had kicked with both legs and assaulted the deceased
with his hands, a fact affirmatively deposed to by Channamma
(PW-1) and Ramanjaneya (PW-4).
6. Channamma (PW-1), in her examination in chief on the
occurrence and the acts and role of the accused, has deposed:
“Accused No.3 Thimmappa and accused No.4 ‘A’
twisted back my husband’s both hands and held them.
Accused No.2 Gopala pulled my husband down
through his leg. Accused No.1 Krishnamurthy stamped
my husband’s neck with his left leg and jumped upon
it.”
In her cross-examination she denied the suggestion that
Thimmappa and ‘A’, had neither twisted nor held the hands of her
husband and Gopala had not pulled him down with his legs. She
has also denied that Krishnamurthy had not jumped on her
husband’s legs and stomped with his legs.
Ramanjaneya (PW-4), about twelve years old when his
evidence was recorded, avers that he along with his mother and
father were at their farm land harvesting and piling up Sajje crop.
At about noon, the four accused came to the spot and had
threatened their father who had tried to run away. Thereupon:
“All the four of them chased him and accused
Thimmappa and ‘A’ held both hands of my father.
Accused Gopala held both legs of my father and
pulled him. Then, my father pleaded and fell down with
his head down. Accused Krishnamurthy kicked with his
hands and legs and assaulted heavily on the neck. At
that time, when my mother went ahead to save him, all
the accused persons threatened to do away with our
lives. Then, afraid by the same, we did not go ahead.
Accused Thimmappa told that, my father is dead and
left and went away.”
7. We would accept the versions given by Channamma (PW-1) and
Ramanjaneya (PW-4), albeit record that there could be some
minor exaggerations. However, what is clearly discernible, and
which all eyewitnesses including Dullaiah (PW-6) and Dodda
Narasimha (PW-7) accept, is that the accused were unarmed and
they did not even have a stick with them. This indicates absence
of a premediated attack to murder Venkatarama. Further, the roles
attributed to Thimmappa and Gopala are different from the brutal
assault leashed by Krishnamurthy after Venkatarama had fallen
down. Roles of Thimmappa and ‘A’, as per the versions given by
Channamma (PW-1) and Ramanjaneya (PW-4), were limited to
holding and twisting the hands of Venkatarama. Gopala had pulled
down the deceased by holding his legs. As per Dullaiah (PW-6)
and Dodda Narasimha (PW-7), Gopala and Krishnamurthy had
then assaulted Venkatarama, but as per the versions of
Channamma (PW-1) and Ramanjaneya (PW-4), only
Krishnamurthy had assaulted and not Gopala. All of them in
unison state that Thimmappa had not participated in the assault
after Venkatarama had fallen down. Given the above discrepancy
and for reasons recorded above casting doubt on the versions
given by Dullaiah (PW-6) and Dodda Narasimha (PW-7), we
accept that it was Krishnamurthy alone who had swung into
action, kicked and assaulted the deceased with his hands and
legs and stomped with his left leg on his neck. He had also
jumped on his chest. The post mortem report and the deposition
of Dr. Sharanabasava (PW-9) have attributed the death of the
deceased on account of injuries caused by Krishnamurthy. The
deceased had not suffered any fracture on his hands, arms or
legs. Thus, we accept that Thimmappa and Gopala had not
assaulted Venkatarama after he had fallen down and were not
responsible for the injuries suffered by Venkatarama resulting in
his death.
8. The underlying basic assumption or foundation in criminal law is
the principle of personal culpability. A person is criminally
responsible for act or transactions in which he is personally
engaged or in some other way had participated. However, there
are various modes and capacities in which a person can
participate in a crime. He can instigate, be a facilitator or
otherwise aid execution of a crime. Section 34 IPC incorporates
the principle of shared intent, that is, common design between the
two perpetrators, which makes the second or other participants
also an equal or joint perpetrator as the main or principal
perpetrator1. The question which arises is whether Thimmappa
1 We have used the said terms for want of a better phrase. Section 34 IPC does not postulate such distinction and Gopala can be attributed common intention under Section 34 IPC to commit murder under Section 300 or even offence under Section 304 IPC.
9. In Suresh and Another v. State of Uttar Pradesh,2 R.P. Sethi, J.
in his concurring judgment (for himself and B.N. Agarwal, J.) on
the question of common intention has observed:
“38. Section 34 of the Penal Code, 1860 recognises
the principle of vicarious liability in criminal
jurisprudence. It makes a person liable for action of an
offence not committed by him but by another person
with whom he shared the common intention. It is a rule
of evidence and does not create a substantive offence.
The section gives statutory recognition to the
commonsense principle that if more than two persons
intentionally do a thing jointly, it is just the same as if
each of them had done it individually. There is no
gainsaying that a common intention presupposes prior
concert, which requires a prearranged plan of the
accused participating in an offence. Such preconcert
or preplanning may develop on the spot or during the
course of commission of the offence but the crucial
test is that such plan must precede the act constituting
an offence. Common intention can be formed
previously or in the course of occurrence and on the
spur of the moment. The existence of a common
intention is a question of fact in each case to be
proved mainly as a matter of inference from the
circumstances of the case.
39. The dominant feature for attracting Section 34 of
the Penal Code, 1860 (hereinafter referred to as “the
Code”) is the element of participation in absence
resulting in the ultimate “criminal act”. The “act”
referred to in the later part of Section 34 means the
ultimate criminal act with which the accused is
charged of sharing the common intention. The
accused is, therefore, made responsible for the
2 (2001) 3 SCC 673
ultimate criminal act done by several persons in
furtherance of the common intention of all. The section
does not envisage the separate act by all the accused
persons for becoming responsible for the ultimate
criminal act. If such an interpretation is accepted, the
purpose of Section 34 shall be rendered infructuous.
40. Participation in the crime in furtherance of the
common intention cannot conceive of some
independent criminal act by all accused persons,
besides the ultimate criminal act because for that
individual act law takes care of making such accused
responsible under the other provisions of the Code.
The word “act” used in Section 34 denotes a series of
acts as a single act. What is required under law is that
the accused persons sharing the common intention
must be physically present at the scene of occurrence
and be shown not to have dissuaded themselves from
the intended criminal act for which they shared the
common intention. Culpability under Section 34 cannot
be excluded by mere distance from the scene of
occurrence. The presumption of constructive intention,
however, has to be arrived at only when the court can,
with judicial servitude, hold that the accused must
have preconceived the result that ensued in
furtherance of the common intention. A Division Bench
of the Patna High Court
in SatrughanPatar v. Emperor held that it is only when
a court with some certainty holds that a particular
accused must have preconceived or premeditated the
result which ensued or acted in concert with others in
order to bring about that result, that Section 34 may be
applied.”
10. Appropriate at this stage would be reference to an earlier decision
of this Court in Afrahim Sheikh and Others v. State of West
Bengal3, which referred to with approval the following quote on
the expression “act” explained by Judicial Commissioner
in Barendra Kumar Ghosh v. The King-Emperor4:
3 AIR 1964 SC 1263
4 ILR (1925) 52 Cal. 197
“criminal act means that unity of criminal
behaviour, which results in something, for which
an individual would be punishable, if it were all
done by himself alone i.e. a criminal offence”.
This “criminal act” under Section 34 IPC, it was held, applies
where a criminal act is done by several persons in furtherance of
common intention of all. The criminal offence is the final result or
outcome but it may be through achievement of individual or
several criminal acts. Each individual act may not constitute or
result in the final offence. When a person is assaulted by a
number of accused, the “ultimate criminal act” normally will
constitute the offence which finally results or which may result in
death, simple hurt, grievous hurt, etc. This is the final result,
outcome or consequence of the criminal act, that is, action or act
of several persons. Each person will be responsible for his own
act as stipulated in Section 38 IPC. However, Sections 34 and 35
expand the scope and stipulate that if the criminal act is a result of
common intention, every person, who has committed a part of the
criminal act with the common intention, will be responsible for the
offence. It was accordingly held in Afrahim Sheikh and Ors.
(supra) as under:
“8. …Provided there is common intention, the whole of
the result perpetrated by several offenders, is
attributable to each offender, notwithstanding that
individually they may have done separate acts, diverse
or similar. Applying this test to the present case, if all
the appellants shared the common intention of
severely beating Abdul Sheikh and some held him
down and others beat him with their weapons,
provided the common intention is accepted, they
would all of them be responsible for the whole of the
criminal act, that is to say, the criminal offence of
culpable homicide not amounting to murder which was
committed, irrespective of the part played by them.
The common intention which is required by the section
is not the intention which s. 299 mentions in its first
part. That intention is individual to the offender unless
it is shared with others by a prior concert in which case
Sections 34 or 35 again come into play. Here, the
common intention was to beat Abdul Sheikh, and that
common intention was, as we have held above,
shared by all of them. That they did diverse acts would
ordinarily make their responsibility individual for their
own acts, but because of the common intention, they
would be responsible for the total effect that they
produced if any of the three conditions in s. 299, I.P.C.
applied to their case. If it were a case of the first two
conditions, the matter is simple. They speak of
intention and s. 34 also speaks of intention.
9. The question is whether the second part of s. 304
can be made applicable. The second part no doubt
speaks of knowledge and does not refer to intention
which has been segregated in the first part. But
knowledge is the knowledge of the likelihood of death.
Can it be said that when three or four persons start
beating a man with heavy lathis, each hitting his blow
with the common intention of severely beating him and
each possessing the knowledge that death was the
likely result of the beating, the requirements of s. 304,
Part II are not satisfied in the case of each of them? If
it could be said that knowledge of this type was
possible in the case of each one of the appellants,
there is no reason why s. 304, Part II cannot be read
with s. 34. The common intention is with regard to the
criminal act, i.e., the act of beating. If the result of the
beating is the death of the victim, and if each of the
assailants possesses the knowledge that death is the
likely consequence of the criminal act, i.e., beating,
there is no reason why s. 34 or s. 35 should not be
read with the second part of s. 304 to make each liable
individually.”
11. Accordingly, to attract applicability of Section 34 IPC, the
prosecution is under an obligation to establish that there existed a
common intention before a person can be vicariously convicted for
the criminal act of another. The ultimate act should be done in
furtherance of common intention. Common intention requires a
pre-arranged plan, which can be even formed at the spur of the
moment or simultaneously just before or even during the attack.
For proving common intention, the prosecution can rely upon
direct proof of prior concert or circumstances which necessarily
lead to that inference. However, incriminating facts must be
incompatible with the innocence of the accused and incapable of
explanation by any other reasonable hypothesis. By Section 33 of
IPC, a criminal act in Section 34 IPC includes omission to act.
Thus, a co-perpetrator who has done nothing but has stood
outside the door, while the offence was committed, may be liable
for the offence since in crimes as in other things “they also serve
who only stand and wait”. Thus, common intention or crime
sharing may be by an overt or covert act, by active presence or at
distant location but there should be a measure of jointness in the
commission of the act. Even a person not doing a particular act
but only standing as a guard to prevent any prospective aid to the
victim may be guilty of common intention.5 Normally, however, in a
5 See Tukaram Ganpat Pandare v. State of Maharashtra, (1974) 4 SCC 544
case of offence involving physical violence, physical presence at
the place of actual commission is considered to be safe for
conviction but it may not be mandatory when pre-arranged plan is
proved and established beyond doubt. Facilitation in execution of
the common design may be possible from a distance and can
tantamount to actual participation in the criminal act. The essence
and proof that there was simultaneous consensus of mind of coparticipants
in the criminal action is however, mandatory and
essential.6 In Krishnan and Another v. State of Kerala,7 it has
been observed that an overt act is not a requirement of law for
Section 34 IPC to operate but prosecution must establish that the
persons concerned shared the common intention, which can be
also gathered from the proved facts.
12. In Suresh’s case (supra), this Court also examined whether a
passive co-perpetrator can be liable under Section 34 IPC. This
case quotes with approval the following passage from the
judgment of Richardson, J. in King Emperor v. Barendra Kumar
Ghose8:
“It appears to me that Section 34 regards the act done
as the united act of the immediate perpetrator and his
confederates present at the time and that the
language used is susceptible of that meaning. The
language follows a common mode of speech. In R. v.
6 See Ramaswami Ayyangar v. State of Tamil Nadu, (1976) 3 SCC 779
7 (1996) 10 SCC 508
8 AIR 1924 Calcutta 257
Salmon three men had been negligently firing at a
mark. One of them — it was not known which — had
unfortunately killed a boy in the rear of the mark. They
were all held guilty of manslaughter. Lord Coleridge,
C.J., said: ‘The death resulted from the action of the
three and they are all liable.’ Stephen, J., said: ‘Firing
a rifle’ under such circumstances ‘is a highly
dangerous act, and all are responsible; for they unite
to fire at the spot in question and they all omit to take
any precautions whatever to prevent danger’.
Moreover, Sections 34, 35 and 37 must be read
together, and the use in Section 35 of the phrase ‘each
of such persons who joins in the act’ and in Section 37
of the phrase, ‘doing any one of those acts, either
singly or jointly with any other person’ indicates the
true meaning of Section 34. So Section 38 speaks of
‘several persons engaged or concerned in a criminal
act’. The different modes of expression may be
puzzling but the sections must, I think, be construed
as enunciating a consistent principle of liability.
Otherwise the result would be chaotic.
To put it differently, an act is done by several persons
when all are principals in the doing of it, and it is
immaterial whether they are principals in the first
degree or principals in the second degree, no
distinction between the two categories being
recognised.
This view of Section 34 gives it an intelligible content
in conformity with general notions. The opposing view
involves a distinction dependent on identity or
similarity of act which, if admissible at all, is wholly
foreign to the law, both civil and criminal, and leads
nowhere.”
13. At this stage, we would like to refer to an old judgment of a
Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court in the case of Bashir
v. State9, which by giving examples explains the scope and
significance of the words “in furtherance” used in Section 34 of the
9 AIR 1953 All 668
IPC in the following manner:
“18. The use of the words “in furtherance” suggests that
Section 34 is applicable also where the act actually done
is not exactly the act jointly intended by the conspirators
to be done, otherwise, the words would not be needed at
all. The common intention can be to do one act and
another act can be done in furtherance of the common
intention. It may be a preliminary act necessary to be
done before achieving the common intention; or it may
become necessary to do it after achieving the common
intention or it may be done while achieving the common
intention. Going to the spot in a motor car is an act in
furtherance of the common intention to commit a crime
there; but if while going there the driver runs over and
kills a pedestrian, the collision is merely incidental and
the running aver of the pedestrian is not in furtherance of
the common intention. If, however, a conspirator who
wishes to commit a crime involving violence against X is
impeded by Y and throws Y aside in order to get at X, the
attack upon Y is made in furtherance of the common
intention; see Russell on Crime, pages 557 and 558.”
The aforesaid quotation emphasizes that it is essential that
each co-perpetrator should have necessary intent to participate or
otherwise have requisite awareness or knowledge that the offence
is likely to be committed in view of the common design. It also
follows that in some cases merely accompanying the principal
accused may not establish common intention. A co-perpetrator,
who shares a common intention, will be liable only to the extent
that he intends or could or should have visualized the possibility or
probability of the final act. If the final outcome or offence
committed is distinctly remote and unconnected with the common
intention, he would not be liable. This test obviously is fact and
circumstance specific and no straitjacket universal formula can be
applied. Two examples quoted in Bashir's case (supra) are
relevant and explain the widest and broad boundaries of Section
34 IPC and at the same time warn that the ambit should not be
extended so as to hold a person liable for remote possibilities,
which were not probable and could not be envisaged. The
examples also bring out the distinction between the criminal acts
and the intent of a co-perpetrator; and the actual offence
committed by the principal or main perpetrator.
14. In Surendra Chauhan v. State of Madhya Pradesh,10 it has been
observed:
“11. Under Section 34 a person must be physically
present at the actual commission of the crime for the
purpose of facilitating or promoting the offence, the
commission of which is the aim of the joint criminal
venture. Such presence of those who in one way or
the other facilitate the execution of the common design
is itself tantamount to actual participation in the
criminal act. The essence of Section 34 is
simultaneous consensus of the minds of persons
participating in the criminal action to bring about a
particular result. Such consensus can be developed at
the spot and thereby intended by all of them.
(Ramaswami Ayyangar v. State of T.N.) The existence
of a common intention can be inferred from the
attending circumstances of the case and the conduct
of the parties. No direct evidence of common intention
is necessary. For the purpose of common intention
even the participation in the commission of the offence
need not be proved in all cases. The common intention
can develop even during the course of an occurrence.
(Rajesh Govind Jagesha v. State of Maharashtra) To
10 (2000) 4 SCC 110
apply Section 34 IPC apart from the fact that there
should be two or more accused, two factors must be
established : (i) common intention, and (ii) participation
of the accused in the commission of an offence. If a
common intention is proved but no overt act is
attributed to the individual accused, Section 34 will be
attracted as essentially it involves vicarious liability but
if participation of the accused in the crime is proved
and a common intention is absent, Section 34 cannot
be invoked. In every case, it is not possible to have
direct evidence of a common intention. It has to be
inferred from the facts and circumstances of each
case.”
15. In Mithu Singh v. State of Punjab,11 this Court acquitted Mithu
Singh under Section 302 read with Section 34 IPC, but upheld his
conviction under Section 27 of the Arms Act, 1959 observing that
inference as to common intention should not be readily drawn;
culpable liability can arise only if such inference can be drawn with
a degree of assurance. In the facts of the said case, it was
observed that the required degree of assurance was missing. At
the same time, it was observed that while examining the question
of common intention, the court should be conscious and aware
that it is difficult, if not impossible, to collect and produce direct
evidence and in most cases inference as to the intention shall be
drawn from the acts and conduct of the accused and other
relevant circumstances as available. The entire observation or
ratio of this Court has to be kept in mind.
11 (2001) 4 SCC 193
16. In Rajesh Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh,12 this Court had
elucidated and laid down the following principles as applicable to
Section 34 IPC:
“13. Section 34 has been enacted on the principle of
joint liability in the doing of a criminal act. The Section
is only a rule of evidence and does not create a
substantive offence. The distinctive feature of the
Section is the element of participation in action. The
liability of one person for an offence committed by
another in the course of criminal act perpetrated by
several persons arises under Section 34 if such
criminal act is done in furtherance of a common
intention of the persons who join in committing the
crime. Direct proof of common intention is seldom
available and, therefore, such intention can only be
inferred from the circumstances appearing from the
proved facts of the case and the proved
circumstances. In order to bring home the charge of
common intention, the prosecution has to establish by
evidence, whether direct or circumstantial, that there
was plan or meeting of mind of all the accused
persons to commit the offence for which they are
charged with the aid of Section 34, be it pre-arranged
or on the spur of moment; but it must necessarily be
before the commission of the crime. The true contents
of the Section are that if two or more persons
intentionally do an act jointly, the position in law is just
the same as if each of them has done it individually by
himself. As observed in Ashok Kumar v. State of
Punjab (AIR 1977 SC 109), the existence of a
common intention amongst the participants in a crime
is the essential element for application of this Section.
It is not necessary that the acts of the several persons
charged with commission of an offence jointly must be
the same or identically similar. The acts may be
different in character, but must have been actuated by
one and the same common intention in order to attract
the provision.”
After referring to the facts in Rajesh Kumar (supra), the
12 (2008) 15 SCC 705
conviction was converted from Section 302 IPC to one under
Section 326 IPC highlighting the factual position that the accused
in question had assaulted the victim by a danda on a non-vital
part.
17. In Arun v. State by Inspector of Police, Tamil Nadu,13 reference
was made to the decision in Hardev Singh and Another v. State
of Punjab14 and benefit was given to one of the accused as he did
not act conjointly with others in committing the murder. This Court
referred to Dharam Pal and Others v. State of Haryana,15 on the
test which should be applied to invoke and convict a co-accused
under Section 34 IPC. We also deem it appropriate to reproduce
the said test:
“14. It may be that when some persons start with a
pre-arranged plan to commit a minor offence, they
may in the course of their committing the minor
offence come to an understanding to commit the major
offence as well. Such an understanding may appear
from the conduct of the persons sought to be made
vicariously liable for the act of the principal culprit or
from some other incriminatory evidence but the
conduct or other evidence must be such as not to
leave any room for doubt in that behalf.
15. A criminal court fastening vicarious liability must
satisfy itself as to the prior meeting of the minds of the
principal culprit and his companions who are sought to
be constructively made liable in respect of every act
committed by the former. There is no law to our
knowledge which lays down that a person
13 (2008) 15 SCC 501
14 (1975) 3 SCC 731
15 (1978) 4 SCC 440
accompanying the principal culprit shares his intention
in respect of every act which the latter might
eventually commit. The existence or otherwise of the
common intention depends upon the facts and
circumstances of each case. The intention of the
principal offender and his companions to deal with any
person who might intervene to stop the quarrel must
be apparent from the conduct of the persons
accompanying the principal culprit or some other clear
and cogent incriminating piece of evidence. In the
absence of such material, the companion or
companions cannot justifiably be held guilty for every
offence committed by the principal offender.”
18. Section 34 IPC makes a co-perpetrator, who had participated in
the offence, equally liable on the principle of joint liability. For
Section 34 to apply there should be common intention between
the co-perpetrators, which means that there should be community
of purpose and common design or pre-arranged plan. However,
this does not mean that co-perpetrators should have engaged in
any discussion, agreement or valuation. For Section 34 to apply, it
is not necessary that the plan should be pre-arranged or hatched
for a considerable time before the criminal act is performed.
Common intention can be formed just a minute before the actual
act happens. Common intention is necessarily a psychological fact
as it requires prior meeting of minds. In such cases, direct
evidence normally will not be available and in most cases,
whether or not there exists a common intention has to be
determined by drawing inference from the facts proved. This
requires an inquiry into the antecedents, conduct of the co-
participants or perpetrators at the time and after the occurrence.
The manner in which the accused arrived, mounted the attack,
nature and type of injuries inflicted, the weapon used, conduct or
acts of the co-assailants/perpetrators, object and purpose behind
the occurrence or the attack etc. are all relevant facts from which
inference has to be drawn to arrive at a conclusion whether or not
the ingredients of Section 34 IPC are satisfied. We must
remember that Section 34 IPC comes into operation against the
co-perpetrators because they have not committed the principal or
main act, which is undertaken/performed or is attributed to the
main culprit or perpetrator. Where an accused is the main or final
perpetrator, resort to Section 34 IPC is not necessary as the said
perpetrator is himself individually liable for having caused the
injury/offence. A person is liable for his own acts. Section 34 or the
principle of common intention is invoked to implicate and fasten
joint liability on other co-participants. Further, the expression/term
“criminal act” in Section 34 IPC refers to the physical act, which
has been done by the co-perpetrators/participants as distinct from
the effect, result or consequence. In other words, expression
“criminal act” referred to in Section 34 IPC is different from
“offence”. For example, if A and B strike Lathi at X, the criminal act
is of striking lathis, whereas the offence committed may be of
murder, culpable homicide or simple or grievous injuries. The
expression “common intention” should also not be confused with
“intention” or “mens rea” as an essential ingredient of several
offences under the IPC. Intention may be an ingredient of an
offence and this is a personal matter. For some offences, mental
intention is not a requirement but knowledge is sufficient and
constitutes necessary mens rea. Section 34 IPC can be invoked
for the said offence also [refer Afrahim Sheikh and Ors. (supra)].
Common intention is common design or common intent, which is
akin to motive or object. It is the reason or purpose behind doing
of all acts by the individual participant forming the criminal act. In
some cases, intention, which is ingredient of the offence, may be
identical with the common intention of the co-perpetrators, but this
is not mandatory.
19. Section 34 IPC also uses the expression “act in furtherance of
common intention”. Therefore, in each case when Section 34 is
invoked, it is necessary to examine whether the criminal offence
charged was done in furtherance of the common intention of the
participator. If the criminal offence is distinctly remote and
unconnected with the common intention, Section 34 would not be
applicable. However, if the criminal offence done or performed
was attributable or was primarily connected or was a known or
reasonably possible outcome of the preconcert/contemporaneous
engagement or a manifestation of the mutual consent for carrying
out common purpose, it will fall within the scope and ambit of the
act done in furtherance of common intention. Thus, the word
“furtherance” propounds a wide scope but should not be
expanded beyond the intent and purpose of the statute. Russell
on Crime, (10th edition page 557), while examining the word
“furtherance” had stated that it refers to “the action of helping
forward” and “it indicates some kind of aid or assistance producing
an effect in the future” and that “any act may be regarded as done
in furtherance of the ultimate felony if it is a step intentionally
taken for the purpose of effecting that felony.” An act which is
extraneous to the common intention or is done in opposition to it
and is not required to be done at all for carrying out the common
intention, cannot be said to be in furtherance of common intention
[refer judgment of R.P. Sethi J. in Suresh (supra)].
20. When we apply the aforesaid principles relating to applicability of Section 34 IPC to the facts of the present case, we feel that
Thimmappa and Gopala are entitled to the benefit of doubt on the
ground that it cannot be with certainty held that they had common
intention, viz. the injuries inflicted by Krishnamurthy on
Venkatarama after he had fallen down. They did not participate
thereafter by physically assaulting or causing any injury to
Venkatarama. They did not facilitate and help Krishnamurthy in
the assault he perpetuated. We have no grounds to accept that
they could have preconceived the brutal assault by Krishnamurthy
who had put his knees on the neck and jumped on the chest of the
deceased to cause the injuries resulting in his death. We cannot
hold that these two accused could have premeditated the result
which ensued when Krishnamurthy behaved and acted in the
manner he did. Clearly, they had not joined Krishnamurthy when
he had acted and have stood by. There is nothing to indicate that
their acts, that is, holding the hands and pulling the legs of the
deceased making him fall down, were done in furtherance of the
common intention that Krishnamurthy would thereupon put his leg
on the neck of the deceased, crushed his chest and fracture the
ribs. We would, in favour of the appellants Thimmappa and
Gopala, hold that their acts cannot be primarily connected with the
violence perpetuated by Krishnamurthy. Given the acts attributed
to Thimmappa and Gopala, the assault by Krishnamurthy and the
resultant outcome were unexpected. We are also not prepared to
hold that these two accused should have known the final outcome,
or it was known to them, or it was a reasonably possible outcome
of the preconcert/ contemporaneous engagement or a
manifestation of mutual consent for carrying out a common
purpose. We, therefore, would not hold them guilty for the offence
under Section 300 or even Section 299 of the IPC on the ground
that they shared common intention as understood on application
of Section 34 IPC.
21. Consequently, we convert their conviction to that under Section
323 read with Section 34 IPC and we would sentence them to the
maximum sentence specified therein of one year. We also uphold
the conviction of Thimmappa and Gopala for individual offences
under Sections 447, 504, 506 and 341 IPC and the sentences
imposed under the aforesaid Sections, which are up to three years
of rigorous imprisonment and fine with default stipulations.
22. Before concluding, we would like to mention the secondary argument
raised by the appellant that juvenile ‘A’ was acquitted from all
the charges and hence, the appellants are entitled to acquittal on
the ground of parity. This contention is to be rejected in view of
Sections 40 to 44 of the Evidence Act, 1872. In particular, Section
43 states judgments other than those mentioned in Sections 40 to
42 are irrelevant unless the existence of that judgment, order or
decree is a fact in issue or is relevant under some other provisions
of this Act. We have decided this appeal based on the evidence
adduced and led by the prosecution in the chargesheet in question.
We cannot decide this appeal based on the evidence and
material led by the prosecution in the proceedings against the juvenile
‘A’ which were independent and separate proceedings. Evidence,
reasoning and findings recorded therein are not in appeal
before us.
23. As Thimmappa and Gopala are on bail and have not undergone
the sentence, they shall surrender within a period of one month
from today. In case they do not surrender, the police will take
coercive steps for their arrest to undergo the remaining sentence.
The sentence awarded to Krishnamurthy would be modified to life
imprisonment without any further stipulation. The direction that life
imprisonment shall be till the end of natural life to imply that
Krishnamurthy shall not be entitled to premature release/remission
in accordance with the applicable policy is set aside. There is no
reason and justification for this condition to be imposed. The
sentences as awarded to the appellants will run concurrently. The
appellants would be entitled to the benefit of Section 428 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
24. The appeal is, accordingly, partly allowed in the aforesaid terms.
………………....................J.
(SANJIV KHANNA)
..……………....................J.
(BELA M. TRIVEDI)
NEW DELHI;
FEBRUARY 16, 2022.
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