Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 964 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Namala Subba Rao
RESPONDENT:
State of A.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/10/2006
BENCH:
G.P. Mathur & A.K. Mathur
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
A.K. MATHUR, J.
The present appeal is directed against an order passed
by the Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature at Andhra
Pradesh in Criminal Appeal No. 77 of 2002 whereby the Division
Bench has affirmed the conviction of the accused-appellant under
Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (hereinafter to be referred to
as "I.P.C.") and sentence of imprisonment for life and a fine of
Rs. 1000/-.
Aggrieved against this order, the accused-appellant has
preferred the present appeal.
Brief facts giving rise to this appeal are that the accused is the
husband of Namala Kannamma (for short deceased). The accused
had a daughter by name Namala Venkata Laxmi. He alongwith his
deceased wife and daughter was residing in the house situated at
18th Ward, Old Town, Tanuku. He suspected his wife’s fidelity
because of the illicit intimacy with PW-2 Kokkirigadda Someswara
Rao. He asked his daughter PW-6 to keep a watch on the
deceased wife. He also communicated to the deceased wife to
snap her relationship with PW-2. But his wife did not listen to him.
Four or five days prior to the incident i.e. on 12th November, 1996,
deceased had left the house of the accused and started residing with
PW-2. On 12th November, 1996, the accused sent a word to his
deceased wife through PW-3 Velagada Suramma to return home.
PW-3 communicated the message to the deceased that her
presence was required at her house by her husband. The deceased
told PW-3 to inform her husband that she would come sometime
later. The reply of the deceased got the accused enraged. He
went to the house of PW-2 and on his way he picked MO.2 Baditha
from PW-4 Sambhana Satyanarayana, a carpenter. After reaching at
the house of the PW-2, the accused dealt blows to the deceased
with MO.2 Baditha and killed her. Later on the accused went to
PW-1, Atchuyutharama, Rao, an Administrative Officer of that
village at 1.45 P.M. and informed him the circumstances under
which he has killed his wife. The accused’s clothes were stained
with blood and he was armed with MO.2 Baditha in his hand. PW-1,
an Administrative Officer wrote out a report & obtained the signature
as well as the thumb impression of the accused thereon and
produced the same as Ex.P-1 before PW-11, A.V.R.P.V. Prasad,
Incharge, Police Station, Tanuku. The Sub-Inspector of Police,
PW-11 received the statement of the accused alongwith the
endorsement of PW-1 thereon and registered a case under Section
302, I.P.C. He seized the blood-stained shirt and blood-stained
Baditha from the accused and the same was kept under the cover of
Ex. P-19 in the presence of P.W.9, Bhogaraju Subba Rao, P.W.1-
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Administrative Officer and other Panch witnesses of the village.
Thereafter, PW-12 B.V. Chandra Rao, Inspector of Police,
Tadepalligudem Circle, inspected the scene of occurrence and
seized two pairs of hawai chappals, broken bangles and found the
blood-stained earth. Necessary panchanama of the deceased body
was also prepared in presence of the witnesses. After completion of
investigation a charge-sheet was filed against the accused under the
aforesaid section. The prosecution in support of its case examined
14 witnesses and got the documents marked Ex. P-1 to P-24 and
material objects 1 to 11.
On the basis of necessary evidence, the learned Sessions
Judge found the accused guilty for the offence under Section 302
IPC and sentenced him to suffer imprisonment for life and to pay a
fine of Rs. 1000/-. Aggrieved against the conviction by the trial court,
an appeal was preferred by the accused before the High Court and
the High Court confirmed the conviction of the accused. Hence, the
present appeal.
We have gone through the judgment of learned Sessions
Judge as well as the High Court and necessary evidence produced
on record. We have also gone through the statement of PW-1, an
Administrative Officer who has recorded the extra-judicial confession
of the accused and the statement of PW-2 from whose house the
dead body of the deceased was recovered. We have also gone
through the statement of P.W.4, carpenter from whom the accused
has taken the Baditha. We have also gone through the testimony of
other witnesses who have seen the accused with blood-stained
clothes along with Baditha. These statements make one chain which
leads to one conclusion i.e. the guilt of the accused.
Learned counsel for the appellant has strenuously urged
before us that the testimony of these witnesses is unreliable and
he has criticized the statement of PW-1 being a Police stock witness.
P.W.2 is interested witness as he had illegal intimacy with deceased
and P.W.4’s testimony suffers from contradiction.
After having considered all submissions, we find that the extra
judicial confession recorded by PW-1 has ring of truth and the same
is corroborated by the recovery of the blood-stained clothes and
Baditha with which the accused has attacked the deceased to
death. The testimony of PW-2 and PW 4 fully corroborates the
extra judicial confession recorded by PW-1, an Administrative
Officer. Therefore, there is no manner of doubt that the accused
was the assailant as he was annoyed with his deceased wife
because of co-habitation with PW-2.
Learned counsel next submitted that this case is covered
under exception 1 to Section 300,IPC as the accused was under
grave and sudden provocation of his wife not abiding his direction.
We do not think ,in the present case, it can be said to be on account
of grave and sudden provocation to the accused for dealing his wife
in this manner. This cannot be said to be sudden provocation that the
wife did not come to the house of the accused on message sent to
her. Accused had reasonable time to go to carpenter’s shop for
picking up Baditha and dealt the deceased with the Baditha. This
was not a grave and sudden provocation to give a cause to such
fatal injuries to his wife. Therefore, this case cannot cover under the
clause of grave and sudden provocation. Hence, the contention of
the learned counsel for the accused cannot be sustained and
accordingly we reject the same.
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Hence, we do not find any merit in this appeal and the same is
dismissed.