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Mahbub Shah v. Emperor

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MANU/PR/0013/1945Equivalent Citation: AIR1945PC118

BEFORE THE PRIVY COUNCIL


Decided On: 31.01.1945
Appellants: Mahbub Shah
Vs.
Respondent: Emperor
Hon'ble Judges/Coram:
Thankerton, Madhavan Nair and John Beaumont, JJ.
JUDGMENT
Madhavan Nair, J.
1. This is an appeal by special leave against a judgment of the High Court of Judicature
at Lahore dated 14th March 1944, confirming on appeal the conviction of the appellant
of the murder of one Allah Dad and the sentence of death passed on him by the
Sessions Judge, Mianwali, on 20th December 1943. The appellant Mahbub Shah is aged
19. He has been convicted of murder under Section 302, read with Section 34, Penal
Code, He was also convicted of the attempted murder of one Hamidullah Khan and
sentenced to seven years' rigorous imprisonment; but that conviction has not been
brought before the Board. The main question raised in this appeal is whether the
appellant has been rightly convicted of murder upon the true construction of Section 34,
Penal Code. Section 34 runs as follows:
When a criminal act is done by several persons in furtherance of the common
intention of all, each of such persons is liable for that act in the same manner
as if it were done by him alone.
2 . Along with the appellant, his cousin Ghulam Quasim Shah, aged 18, was also
convicted under Section 302/34, Penal Code, and sentenced to transportation for life.
Ghulam was convicted under Section 307/34 also, and was sentenced to five years'
rigorous imprisonment by the Sessions Judge, but his convictions and sentences have
been set aside by the High Court. The deceased Allah Dad died as the result of gunshot
wounds inflicted on him. One Wali Shah, who is said to have fired the shot that killed
the deceased, is a fugitive from justice and has not been so far arrested. His father
Mohammad Hussain Shah, who was committed to the Sessions Court on a charge of
abetment of murder, was acquitted by the Sessions Judge. The following table given in
the judgment of the High Court shows the relationship between the appellant and the
other persons who are alleged to have been concerned in this crime.

3. The prosecution case as accepted by the High Court may he briefly stated: On 25th

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August 1943, at sunrise, Allah Dad, deceased, with a few others left their village
Khanda Kel by boat for cutting reeds growing on the banks of the Indus river. When
they had travelled for about a mile downstream, they saw Mohammad Shah, father of
Wali Shah (absconder) bathing on the bank of the river. On being told that they were
going to collect reeds, he warned them against collecting reeds from land belonging to
him. Ignoring his warning they collected about 16 bundles of reeds, and then started for
the return journey. While the boat was being pulled upstream by means of a rope,
Ghulam Quasim Shah,, nephew of Mohammad Huisain Shah-acquitted by the High
Court-who was standing on the bank of the river asked Allah Dad to give him the reeds
that had been collected from his uncle's land. He refused. What happened subsequently
was spoken to by two boys Nur Hussain P.W. 10, and Nur Mohammad P.W. 11, whose
version of the story has been accepted as true by the High Court and summarised as
follows:
Quasim Shah then caught the rope and tried to snatch it away. He then pushed
Allah Dad and gave a blow to Allah Dad with a small stick but it was warded off
on the rope. Allah Dad then picked up the lari from the boat and struck Quasim
Shah. Quasim Shah then shouted out for help and Wali Shah and Mahbub Shah
came up. They had guns in their hands. When Allah Dad and Hamidullah tried
to run away, Wali Shah and Mahbub Shah came in front of them and Wali Shah
fired at Allah Dad who fell down dead and Mahbub Shah fired at Hamidullah,
causing injuries to him." [Lari is a bamboo pole for propelling the boat, about
ten feet long and six inches thick.]
4. On the above facts, the learned Judges of the High Court came to the conclusion that
Ghulam Quasim was wrongly convicted of murder under Section 302/34, Penal Code.,
on the following reasoning. Bhandari J., with whom Teja Singh J. concurred, first held
that Ghulam Quasim had no common intention of killing any member of the
complainant party when he went to the bank of the river in order to demand the bundles
of reeds which had been collected from his uncle's lands. Then the learned Judge
addressed himself to the question "whether a common intention" to commit the crime
which was eventually committed by Mahbub Shah and Wali Shah came into being when
Ghulam Quasim Shah shouted to his companions to come to his rescue and both of
reasoning
by hc
them emerged from behind the bushes and fired their respective guns, and this he
answered in the negative, holding that "so far as Quasim Shah was concerned he did no
held as more than ask his companions to come to his assistance when he was knocked with a
incorrect pole by the deceased" and that "he could not have been aware of the manner in which
assistance was likely to be rendered to him or his friends were likely to shoot at and kill
one man or injure another." In the result, he was acquitted of all offences. The learned
Judge then proceeded to examine the case of the appellant and Wali Shah. He stated
that the case of Mahbub Shah, who was armed with a single barrelled gun, and of Wali
Shah, who had a double barrelled gun, however stood on a different footing. He
distinguished their case on the following ground:
As soon as they ran to the assistance of Ghulam Quasim Shah, they fired
simultaneously in the direction of the complainants killing Allah Dad on the
spot and causing injuries on the person of Hamidullah Khan. It is difficult to
believe that when they fired the shots they did not have the common intention
of killing one or more of the complainant party. If so, both of them are guilty of
murder notwithstanding the fact that the fatal shot was fired by only one of
them, namely, Wali Shah, absconder.
It will be observed that according to the learned Judge a common intention to commit

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the crime came into being when appellant and Wali Shah fired the shots. Their
Lordships will now proceed to consider whether the above reasoning is correct, and
Section 34, Penal Code, has been rightly applied to the facts of the case. Attention has
already been drawn to the words of the section. As it originally stood, the section was
in the following terms:
When a criminal act is done by several persons, each of such persons is liable
for that act in the same manner as if the act was done by him alone.
5 . In 1870, it was amended by the insertion of the words "in furtherance of the
common intention of all" after the word "persons" and before the word "each," so as to
make the object of the section clear. Section 34 lays down a principle of joint liability in
the doing of a criminal act. The section does not say "the common intentions of all" nor
does it say "an intention common to all." Under the section,
the essence of that liability is to be found in the existence of a common intention
animating the accused leading to the doing of a criminal act in furtherance of such
intention. To invoke the aid of Section 34 successfully, it must be shown that the
criminal act complained against was done by one of the accused persons in the
furtherance of the common intention of all; if this is shown, then liability for the crime
may be imposed on any one of the persons in the same manner as if the act were done
by him alone.
This being the principle, it is clear to their Lordships that common intention within the
meaning of the section implies a pre-arranged plan, and to convict the accused of an
offence applying the section it should be proved that the criminal act was done in
concert pursuant to the prearranged plan.
As has been often observed, it is difficult if not impossible to procure direct evidence to
prove the intention of an individual; in most cases it has to be inferred from his act or
conduct or other relevant circumstances of the case.
6. On careful consideration, it appears to their Lordships that in the present case there
was no evidence and there were no circumstances from which it might be inferred that
the appellant must have been acting in concert with Wali Shah in pursuance of a
concerted plan when he along with him rushed to the rescue of Ghulam Quasim. The
exaggerated circumstances alleged by the prosecution to invoke the aid of Section 34,
Penal Code, have been found against by the High Court who have acted solely on the
evidence of P.W. 10 and p.w. 11. There was no evidence to indicate that Ghulam
Quasim was aware that the complainant party had been cutting reeds from his uncle's
lands, or that the appellant and Wali Shah had been kept behind the bush to come and
help him when called upon to do so. The evidence shows that Wali Shah "happened to
be out shooting game" and when he and the appellant heard Ghulam's shouts for help
they came up with their guns; the former shot the deceased, killing him outright, and
the appellant shot at Hamidullah Khan inflicting injuries on his person. Indeed, the High
Court negatived the existence of a "common intention" at the commencement in the
sense in which their Lordships have explained the term by stating-in considering the
application of Section 34, Penal Code, to the case of Ghulam-what has been already
quoted, viz.:
that the sole point which requires consideration now is whether a common
intention to commit the crime came into being when Ghulam shouted to his
companions to come to his rescue and both of them emerged from behind the
bushes and fired their respective guns.

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7. Having answered the above question in the negative as regards Ghulam Quasim, the
learned Judges thought, as Bhandari J. has expressly stated, that with respect to the
appellant and Wali Shah, it must be held that the common intention of killing one or
more of the members of the complainant party came into being later, when they fired
the shots. Their Lordships cannot agree with this view. Their Lordships are prepared to
accept that the appellant and Wali Shah had the same intention, viz., the intention to
rescue Quasim if need be by using the guns and that, in carrying out this intention, the
appellant picked out Hamidullah for dealing with him and Wali Shah, the deceased, but
where is the evidence of common intention to commit the criminal act complained
against, in furtherance of such intention? Their Lordships find none. Evidence falls far
short of showing that the appellant and Wali Shah ever entered into a premeditated
concert to bring about the murder of Allah Dad in carrying out their intention of
rescuing Quasim Shah. Care must be taken not to confuse same or similar intention
with common intention; the partition which divides "their bounds" is often very thin;
nevertheless, the distinction is real and substantial, and if overlooked will result in
miscarriage of justice. In their Lordships' view, the inference of common intention
ratio within the meaning of the term in Section 34 should never be reached unless it is a
necessary inference deducible from the circumstances of the case. That cannot be said
about the inference sought to be deduced from the facts relied on by the High Court in
distinguishing the case of the appellant from that of Ghulam Quasim.
8. Mr. MacKenna, the learned Counsel for the Crown, besides supporting the judgment
of the High Court on the grounds mentioned in it, called their Lordships' attention to the
following additional circumstance in further support of it. Reference was made to the
concluding portion of the evidence of p. Ws. 10 and 11, where it is stated that "when
Allah Dad and Hamidullah tried to run away, Wali Shah and Mahbub Shah came in front
of them..." and fired shots. This circumstance is stated more definitely in the evidence
of P.W. 6. He stated "... we then tried to run away but Mahbub Shah and Wali Shah
coming in front of us and prevented our escape" and fired shots. It was argued that the
attempt of the appellant and Wali Shah to prevent the escape of the complainant party
shows that they were actuated by a common intention to commit the crime, and from
that moment the Court is entitled to infer a common intention to commit the crime even
though there was no pre-concerted plan to shoot till then. This additional circumstance
does not, in their Lordships' view, advance the prosecution case any further, and,
moreover, the learned Judges of the High Court do not rely on it. In the circumstances,
their Lordships are not satisfied that the appellant was rightly convicted of the offence
of murder under Section 302, Penal Code, read with Section 34. His conviction for
murder and the sentence of death passed on him should, therefore, be quashed. In this
view, the further question raised in the appeal whether, in the event of his conviction
being confirmed, the sentence of death passed on him should not, having regard to the
circumstances of the case and his age, be commuted to one of transportation for life
does not arise for consideration. For the reasons indicated above, their Lordships have
humbly advised His Majesty that the appellant having succeeded in his appeal, his
appeal should be allowed and his conviction for murder and the sentence of death set
aside.

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