Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAFIQ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/08/1980
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 559 1981 SCR (1) 402
1980 SCC (4) 262
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950 Art. 136-Concurrent findings
of fact Appeal by special leave against conviction for rape
by Lower Courts-Supreme Court when would interfere.
HEADNOTE:
Indian Penal Code 1860, s. 376-Evidence and proof-
Absence of injuries on prosecution-Whether fatal to the
prosecution-Testimony of prosecutrix-Corroboration whether
necessary.
The petitioner was convicted on the charge of
committing rape on a middle aged Bal Sewika in a village
welfare organisation who was sleeping a girls school. The
trial Court imposed a sentence of 7 years’ rigorous
imprisonment. The High Court, confirmed the conviction and
sentence.
In the Special Leave Petition to this Court it was
contended on behalf of the petitioner relying on the
decision of this Court in Pratap Mishra & Ors. vs. State of
Orissa, A.I.R. 1977 S.C. 1307 that absence of injuries on
the person of the victim was fatal tb the prosecution and
that corroborating evidence was an imperative component of
judicial credence in rape cases. It was also submitted that
the sentence of 7 years was too severe.
Dismissing the petition;
^
HELD: 1. No interference on the score of culpability or
quantum of punishment is called for. 1405
2. Concurrent findings of fact ordinarily acquire a
deterrent sanctity and tentative finality when challenged in
this Court. The special jurisdiction under Article 136 of
the Constitution which is meant mainly to correct manifest
injustice or errors of law of great moment cannot be invoked
in the instant case. [403 H]
3.(i) The facts and circumstances often vary from case
to case, the crime situation and the myriad psychic factors,
social conditions and people’s life-styles may fluctuate,
and so, rules of prudence relevant in one fact-situation may
be inept in another. The argument that regardless of the
specific circumstances of a crime and criminal milieu, some
strands of probative reasoning which appealed to a Bench in
one reported decision must mechanically be extended to other
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cases cannot be accepted. [404 D]
(ii) Pratap Misra’s case laid down no inflexible axiom
of law on either point. [404 C]
4. Corroboration as a condition for judicial reliance
on the testimony of a prosecutrix is not a matter of law,
but a guidance of prudence under given circumstances. [404
E]
403
In the instant case the testimony of the prosecutrix
has commanded acceptance from two courts. A sensitized judge
who sees the conspectus of circumstances in its totality
hardly rejects the testimony of a rape victim unless there
are very strong circumstances militating against its
veracity. There is none in this case. The confirmation of
the conviction by the Courts below must therefore, be a
matter of course. [404H, 405B]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Criminal) No. 950 of 1980.
From the Judgment and order dated 21-9-1979 of the
Allahabad High Court in Crl. A. No. 2305/74.
U. S. Prasad for the Petitioner.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by,
KRlSHNA IYER, J.-This special Leave Petition relates to
a conviction and sentence for an offence of rape. The
escalation of such crimes has reached proportions to a
degree that exposes the pretensions of the nation’s
spiritual leadership and celluloid censorship, puts to shame
our ancient cultural heritage and - humane claims and
betrays a vulgar masculine outrage on human rights of which
woman’s personal dignity is a sacred component. We refuse
special leave and briefly state a few reasons for doing so.
Draupadi, a middle-aged Bal Sewika in a village welfare
organization’ was sleeping in a girls’ school where she was
allegedly raped by Rafiq, the petitioner, and three others.
The offence took place around 2.30 a.m. On August 22/23,
1971, and the next morning the victim related the incident
to the Mukhiya Sewika of the village. A report was made to
the Police Station on August 23. 1971 at mid-day. The
investigation that followed resulted in a charge-sheet, a
trial and, eventually, in a conviction based substantially
on the testimony of the victim. Although some of the
witnesses. tell-tale fashion. shifted their loyalties and
betrayed the prosecution case, the trial court’ entered a
finding of guilt against the appellant, giving the benefit
of doubt to the other three obscurely. A 7-year sentence of
rigorous imprisonment was awarded as justly merited. having
regard to the circumstances. The appeal carried to the High
Court proved unsuccessful but, undaunted, he petitioner has
sought leave to appeal to this Court.
Concurrent findings of fact ordinarily acquire a
deterrent sanctity and tentative finality when challenged in
this Court and we rarely invoke the special jurisdiction
under Art. 136 of the Constitution which is meant mainly to
correct manifest injustice or errors of law of great moment.
By these substantial canons the present petition for leave
has not even a dog’s chance.
404
Counsel contended that there was absence of
corroboration of the testimony of the prosecutrix, that
there was absence of injuries on the person of the woman and
so the conviction was unsustainable, tested on the
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touchstone of case-law. None of these submissions has any
substance and we should, in the ordinary course, have
desisted from making even a speaking order but counsel cited
a decision of this Court in Pratap Misra & Ors. v. State of
Orissa and urged that absence cf injuries on the person of
the victim was fatal to the prosecution and that
corroborative evidence was an imperative component of
judicial credence in rape cases.
We do not agree. For one thing, Pratap Misra’s case
(supra) laid down no inflexible axiom of law on either
point. The facts and circumstances often vary from case to
case. the crime situation and the myriad psychic factors,
social conditions and people’s life-styles may fluctuate,
and so, rules of prudence relevant in one fact-situation may
be inept in another. We cannot accept the argument that
regardless of the specific circumstances of a crime and
criminal milieu, some strands of probative reasoning which
appealed to a Bench in one reported decision must
mechanically be extended to other cases. Corroboration as a
condition for judicial reliance on the testimony cf a
prosecutrix is not a matter of law, but a guidance of
prudence under given circumstances. Indeed, from place to
place, from age to age. from varying life-styles and
behavioural complexes, inferences from a given set of facts,
oral and circumstantial, may have to be drawn not with dead
uniformity but realistic diversity lest rigidity in the
shape of rule of law in this area be introduced through a
new type of precedential tyranny. The same observation holds
good regarding the presence or absence of injuries on the
person of the aggressor or the aggressed.
There are several "sacred cows" of the criminal law in
Indo-Anglian jurisprudence which are superstitious survivals
and need to be re-examined. When rapists are revelling in
their promiscuous pursuits and half of humankind-womankind-
is protesting against its hapless lot, when no woman of
honour will accuse another of rape since she sacrifices
thereby what is dearest to her, we cannot cling to a fossil
formula and insist on corroborative testimony, even if taken
as a whole, the case spoken to by the victim strikes a
judicial mind as probable. In this case, the testimony has
commanded acceptance from two courts. When a woman is
ravished what is inflicted is not merely physical injury.
but ’the deep sense of some deathless shame".
405
"A rape! a rape!......................
Yes, you have ravish’d justice;
Forced her to do your pleasure.
Hardly a sensitized judge who sees the conspectus of
circumstances in its totality and rejects the testimony of a
rape victim unless there are very strong circumstances
militating against is veracity. None we see in his case, and
confirmation of the conviction by the courts below must,
therefore, be a matter of course. Judicial response to human
rights cannot be blunted by legal bigotry.
The case before us occurred in 1971 and is drawing to a
close in 1980. What a pity ! Now that there is considerable
public and parliamentary attention to the violent frequency
of rape cases it is time that the court reminds the nation
that deterrence comes more effectively from quick
investigations, prompt prosecutions and urgent finality,
including special rules of evidence and specialised agencies
for trial. Mechanical increase of punitive severity, without
more, may yield poor dividends for women victims. In Dr.
Johnson’s time public hanging for pick-pocketing was
prevalent in England but as Dr. Johnson sardonically noted
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pick-pockets were busy plying their trade among crowds
gathered to see some pick-pocket being publicly executed.
Dr. Johnson’s wit is our wisdom. The strategy for a crime-
free society is not draconian severity in sentence but
institutional sensitivity, processual celerity and prompt
publicity among the concerned community. "Lawlessness is
abetted by a laggard, long-lived, lacunose and legalistic
litigative syndrome rather than by less harsh provisions in
the Penal Code". The focus must be on the evil, not its
neighbourhood.
Counsel submitted that a 7-year sentence was too
severe. No, because, as we have stated earlier, rape for a
woman is deathless shame and must be dealt with as the
gravest crime against human dignity. No interference on the
score of culpability or quantum of punishment is called for
in the circumstances.
We refuse special leave.
N.V.K. Petition dismissed.
406