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Jalal Uddin And Another vs Irshad Husain

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|29 April, 1998

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT S.C. Verma, J.
1. The plaintiffs' Suit No. 41 of 1977 for specific performance of contract was dismissed by judgment and decree dated 12.4.1979. The Civil Appeal No. 37 of 1979 filed by the Plaintiffs was also dismissed by judgment and decree dated 18.10.1979. The present second appeal has been filed against the aforesaid judgment and decree dated 18.10.1979 and 12.4.1979 mainly on the ground that the learned District Judge was not competent to act as an expert in comparing and determining the forged signatures with the admitted signatures on the documents.
2. The case set up by the plaintiffs was that an agreement to sell was entered in respect of plot No. 530, measuring 8 bighas, 2 biswas and 16 biswansis for a consideration of Rs. 11,000 on 24.6.1974 and Rs. 10,500 was paid in advance through a separate receipt dated 24.6.1974 and the sale deed was to be executed after the payment of the balance of Rs. 500. The plaintiffs have alleged that the defendant did not execute the sale deed although the plaintiffs had always been ready to perform their part.
3. The defendant contested the suit denying the disputed agreement for sale executed on 24.6.1974 and to have received advance of Rs. 10,500 through receipt dated 24.6.1974. The defendant has alleged that the documents and the signatures appended on it are forged. The defendant had executed sale deed in respect of different plot of land and had executed a receipt.
4. The trial court after considering the oral and documentary evidence as also the expert opinions both on behalf of the plaintiffs and the defendant, held that the defendant did not enter into any agreement for sale nor executed the receipt dated 24.6.1974 with regard to advance of Rs. 10,500. The trial court also held that the plaintiffs were admittedly the Government servants at the time of execution of the alleged agreement and the plaintiff No. 1 was working as Sadar Munsarim in the civil court and without obtaining prior permission of the department, they entered into the agreement for the sale. It was also held that the entire oral evidence demonstrate that the defendant was not in need of money and he would receive payment of Rs. 10,500 for the sale of the land when the total price being Rs. 11,000. The lower appellate court has in great detail dealt with the disputed and admitted signatures on the receipt and the expert opinion placed on record both by the plaintiffs and the defendant. The learned Judge held that the expert on behalf of the plaintiffs has not used the correct filter in order to bring out the signatures on the stamps of the disputed document and the admitted signatures. On the other hand the expert of the defendant has used the filter correctly in order to bring out the disputed and correct signatures in contrast, the background being white.
5. The opinion of the expert produced by the plaintiffs was that the signatures of Irshad Husain has many signs of genuineness, as he thinks it has been written freely and fluently despite having been made over and across the revenue stamps. The strokes are firm and fluent, the coordination of the writing muscles is good, the pen pressure is rythmic and modulated, showing smooth line quality. The expert further indicated that it is free from all suspicious features such as tremor, hesitation, careful retouchings or overwritings, unnatural pen lifts or pen-pauses etc. According to him, the disputed and specimen signatures tally in skill of writing, speed movement, coordination of the writing, muscles, shape and design of letters, method of production of letters, relative size, spacing and positioning of letters, relative slant of letters, pen presentation and pen pressure, alignment and individual writing habits.
6. The expert produced on behalf of the defendant has indicated that the disputed signatures are not in the writing of the writer of the specimen signatures as the disputed signatures have been slowly and carefully written with attention to the writing process as was evident by the slow-drawn movement and blunt terminals of the strokes of the letters. The specimen signatures or the admitted signatures have been written freely and carelessly without undue attention to the writing process and there are also pen-pauses and hesitations at unnatural places in the disputed signatures. The disputed signatures have been written with finger movement and slight wrist action with slow speed, whereas the comparison signatures have been written with combined finger and wrist movement with rapid speed. The size and space between the letters vary in the disputed signatures whereas the size and space between the letters are regular in the comparison signatures. The pen presentation is flat in both the sets, but the pen-pressure is heavy and medium in the comparison signatures. The letter "He" of "Husain" has been rewritten which shows the hesitancy of the forger. The letter "Noon" of the word "Hussain" is oval shaped, whereas in the comparison signatures, it is not oval. The words "Bakalam Khud" are also different in the admitted and the disputed signatures.
7. In the presence of the opinion of the two experts, the learned Judge minutely looked to the signatures in the light of the opinion expressed by the expert and thereafter recorded the findings. The slant of the signatures of the disputed receipt was different from the specimen signatures of Irshad Husain. There is great tremor in the word "Sha" made of "Sheen" and "Alif". The letter "He" of the word "Husain" and on the stamp the letter "He" of the word "Husain" is different from the Ink of the letters "Ye" and "Noon" on the other stamps. The experts have not considered the ink of the signatures on the stamps and no explanation has been given although there was difference. The learned Judge further held that the two portions of the signature. "Irshad Husain" were on different stamps and were not written in the same continuation, or such type of pen-stop and writing of letter "He" again would not have been found on the stamp. Apart from that, the alignment of the disputed and the admitted and specimen signatures is different. The learned Judge did not agree with the skill of writing, speed, movement, co-ordination of the writing muscles, slant of letters and alignment, etc. In the disputed and admitted signatures to be identical. The learned Judge accepted the opinion of the expert of the defendant to be more correct with better details of comparison.
8. The learned Judge further held that there appears to be no plausible reason to the payment of a sum of Rs. 10,500 out of the sale price of Rs. 11,000 without obtaining possession and anything in writing except the disputed receipts. The lower appellate court has also considered in detail the evidence on record and has recorded findings of fact that there was no agreement to sell and the receipt dated 26.4.1976 for Rs. 10,500 alleged to have been executed by the defendant was forged.
9. The main contention raised by the learned counsel for the appellants is with regard to the role played by the Court in examining the signatures as an expert. The learned counsel placed reliance on the decision of the case of Ram Shakal and another v. State of U. P. and others, 1987 LCD 261. In this case, it has been held :
"I find that the Joint Director of Consolidation committed a manifest error in basing his findings on his own observation about the signatures appearing on the plaint of the said suit and holding that the said suit was instituted by the petitioners against defendant Ram Pher on 29.7.1960, wherein they admitted possession of the defendant Ram Pher since 1365F. The prudent course should have been to obtain assistance of the expert by calling upon the opposite party Ram Pher to get expert's opinion on the points as to whether the plaint of the said suit bears signatures of the petitioners or not."
In my opinion, in the present case, the learned Judge apart from his decision regarding the genuineness of the signatures has considered in detail the two expert opinions placed on record. A handwriting expert was examined on behalf of the plaintiffs, who had submitted his report and another handwriting expert was examined on behalf of the defendant who had also submitted his detailed report. The learned Judge in presence of the expert opinion has given cogent reasons for arriving at the conclusion and for accepting the report of the expert produced by the defendant.
10. The correct role to be played by the Court as an expert has been laid down by Hon'ble Supreme Court while interpreting Section 73 of the Evidence Act in State (Delhi Administration) v. Pali Ram, AIR 1979 SC 14. The Hon'ble Supreme Court after considering the previous decisions on the subject held :
"The matter can be viewed from another angle, also. Although there is no legal bar to the Judge using his own eyes to compare the disputed writing with the admitted writing, even without the aid of the evidence of any handwriting expert, the Judge should as a matter of prudence and caution, hesitate to base his finding with regard to the Identity of a handwriting which forms the sheet-anchor of the prosecution case against a person accused of an offence, solely on comparison made by himself. It Is, therefore, not advisable that a Judge should take upon himself the task of comparing the admitted writing with the disputed one to find out whether the two agree with each other, and the prudent course is to obtain the opinion and assistance of an expert.
It is not the province of the expert to act as Judge or Jury. The real function of the expert is to put before the Court all the materials, together with reasons which induce him to come to the conclusion, so that the Court, although not an expert, may form its own judgment by its own observation of those materials. Ordinarily, it is not proper for the Court to ask the expert to give his finding upon any of the issues, whether of law or fact, because, strictly speaking, such issues are for the Court or jury to determine. The handwriting expert's function is to opine after a scientific comparison of the disputed writing with the proved or admitted writing with regard to the points of similarity and dissimilarity in the two sets of writings. The Court should then compare the handwriting with its own eyes for a proper assessment of the value of the total evidence.
Since even where proof of handwriting which is in nature comparison, exists, a duty is cast on the Court to use its own eyes and mind to compare the admitted writing with the disputed one to verify and reach its own conclusion, it will not be wrong to say that when a Court seized of a case, directs an accused person present before it to write down a sample writing such direction in the ultimate analysis, "is for the purpose of enabling the Court to compare" the writing so written with the writing alleged to have been written by such person, within the contemplation of Section 73. That is to say, the words "for the purpose of enabling the Court to compare" do not exclude the use of such 'admitted' or sample writing for comparison with the alleged writing of the accused, by a handwriting expert cited as a witness by any of the parties. Even where no such expert witness is cited or examined by either party, the Court may if it thinks necessary for the ends of justice, on its own motion, call an expert witness, allow him to compare the sample writing with the alleged writing and thus give his expert assistance to enable the Court to compare the two writings and arrive at a proper conclusion."
11. in the State of Gujarat v. Vinaya Chandra Chhote Lal Pathi, AIR 1967 SC 778, it has been held :
"A Court is competent to compare the disputed writing of a person with others which are admitted or proved to be his writings. It may not be safe for a Court to record a finding about a person's writing in a certain document merely on the basis of comparison, but a Court can itself compare the writings in order to appreciate properly the other evidence produced before in that regard. The opinion of a handwriting expert is also relevant in view of Section 45 of the Evidence Act, but that too is not conclusive. It has also been held that the sole evidence of a handwriting expert is not normally sufficient for recording a definite finding about the writing being of a certain person or not. It follows that it is not essential that the handwriting expert must be examined in a case to prove or disprove the disputed writing. It was, therefore, not right for the learned Judge to consider it unsafe to rely upon the evidence of the complainant in a case like this, i.e., in a case in which no handwriting expert had been examined in support of his statement."
12. in the case of Fakhruddin v. State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR 1967 SC 1326, it has been held :
"Evidence of the identity of handwriting receives treatment in three sections of the Indian Evidence Act. They are Sections 45, 47 and 73. Handwriting may be proved on admission of the writer, by the evidence of some witness in whose presence he wrote. This is direct evidence and if it is available the evidence of any other kind is rendered unnecessary. The Evidence Act also makes relevant the opinion of a handwriting expert Section 45 or of one who is familiar with the writing of a person who is said to have written a particular writing. Thus, besides direct evidence which is of course the best method of proof, the law makes relevant two other modes. A writing may be proved to be in the handwriting of a particular individual by the evidence of a person familiar with the handwriting of that individual or by the testimony of an expert competent to the comparison of handwritings on a scientific basis. A third method Section 73 is comparison by the Court with a writing made in the presence of the Court or admitted or proved to be the writing of the person.
Both under Section 45 and Section 47 the evidence is an opinion in the former by a scientific comparison and in the latter on the basis of familiarity resulting from frequent observations and experience. In either case the Court must satisfy itself by such means as are open that the opinion may be acted upon. One such means open to the Court is to apply its own observation to the admitted or proved writings and to compare them with the disputed one, not to become a handwriting expert but to verify the premises of the expert in the one case and to appraise the value of the opinion in the other case. This comparison depends on an analysis of the characteristics in the admitted or proved writing and the finding of the same characteristics in large measure in the disputed writing. In this way the opinion of the deponent whether expert or other is subjected to scrutiny and although relevant to start with becomes probative. Where an expert's opinion is given, the Court must see for itself and with the assistance of the expert come to its own conclusion whether it can safely; be held that the two writings are by the same person. This is not to say that the Court must play the role of an expert but to say that the Court may accept the fact proved only when it has satisfied itself on its own observation that it is safe to accept the opinion whether of the expert cr other witness."
13. Applying the above law to the facts of the present case and the findings recorded by the two Courts below, it is established that great pains have been taken by both the Courts in dealing with the evidence on record and in considering the case of the parties regarding all aspect of the matter. The judgment of the Courts below are absolutely correct both on law and on facts.
14. The Second Appeal is devoid of merits and is accordingly dismissed.
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Title

Jalal Uddin And Another vs Irshad Husain

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
29 April, 1998
Judges
  • S Verma