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A private offence committed in the privacy of a home with no design or
purpose contemplated by section 6(1)(b) or (c) of the Anti-Terrorism Act,
1997. We have, thus, entertained no manner of doubt that the allegations
leveled against the appellant and his co-accused in the present criminal
case did not attract the jurisdiction of an Anti-Terrorism Court, the
learned Sessions Judge, Mastung was not justified in transferring the case
to an Anti-Terrorism Court and the High Court was also not legally correct
in dismissing the appellant’s revision petition. This appeal is,
therefore, allowed, the impugned orders passed by the learned Sessions
Judge, Mastung as well as the High Court of Balochistan, Quetta are set
aside and it is declared that the appellant’s case is to be tried by a
court of ordinary jurisdiction. .....Khuda-e-Noor =VS= The State
(Criminal), 2016-[1 LM (SC) 650] ....View Full Judgment
Mens rea–
Another Law point agitated by Mr. Razzak is on mens rea.
The following observation of Smith & Hogan negatives Mr. Razzak’s
complaint that the principle of mens rea was not applied by the Tribunal,
“Everyone agrees that a person intends to cause a result if he acts with
the purpose of doing so. If D has resolved to kill P and fires a loaded gun
at him with an object of doing so, he intends to kill. It is immaterial
that he is aware that he is a poor shot, that P is nearly out of range, and
that his chances of success are small. It is sufficient that killing is his
object or purpose, that he wants to kill, that he acts in order to kill”.
(Page 70, Tenth Edition Criminal Law: Smith & Hogan). In Moloney (1985, AC,
905) the House of Lords held that the mens rea of murder is intention to
cause death or serious bodily harm. So, it was essential to determine the
meaning of intention. Moloney must be read in the light of the explanation
of it by the House in Hancock and Shankland 1986, AC, 455, the Court of
Appeal in Nedrick and by the House in Woollin. When it is so read it
appears that (1) a result is intended when it is the actor’s purpose to
cause it, (2) a court or jury may also find that a result is intended,
though it is not the actor’s purpose to cause it, when- (a) the result is
virtually certain consequence of that act, and (b) the actor knows that it
is a virtually certain consequence”.
In order to establish that an accused possesses the requisite mens rea for
instigating a crime, it must be shown that the accused directly or
indirectly intended that the crime in question be committed and that the
accused intended to provoke or induce the commission of the Crime, or was
aware of the substantial likelihood that the Commission of the Crime would
be a probable consequence of his acts (Prosecutor –vs-Muvunyi, Prosecutor
–vs- linaj etal) Archbold Page-855.
Mind of a person cannot be read and hence mens rea is only to be assessed
from the attending facts and circumstances and also from the nature of the
actus reas. In this case there are ample evidence to substantiate the
allegation that the Appellant had mens rea of aiding and abetting as well
for committing the offences by himself.
On the Appellant’s participation in the offences at the dwelling of
Hazrat Ali, the Privy Council’s decision in Barendra Kumar Ghosh –v-
Emperor, the infamous Post Office Case, is relevant. In that case, a gang
went to rob a post office and all except the appellant went inside the Post
Office, killed the Post Master, but the appellant stayed out with a gun to
look around. The Privy Council opined that he also would be liable of
murder, though he was outside and did not shoot. Lord Sumner, in his part
of the Councils opinion expressed, “ Even noting, as he stood outside the
door, it is to be remembered that in crimes as in other things they also
serve who only stand and wait.” (AIR 1925 1PC) (A. H. M. Shamsuddin
Choudhury, J) …Government of Bangladesh =VS= Abdul Quader Molla,
(Criminal), 2020 (1) [8 LM (AD) 375] ....View Full Judgment
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