Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FRANCIS ALIAS PONNAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/05/1974
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 2281 1975 SCR (1) 485
1975 SCC (3) 825
ACT:
Penal Code--S. 300---Murder--Sentence--Grounds for reducing.
HEADNOTE:
It is not possible for courts to attempt to explore the
murky depths of a warped and twisted mind so as to discover
whether an offender is capable of reformation or redemption,
and, if so, in what way. This is a subject on which only
experts in that line after a thorough study of an
individual’s case history, could hazard an opinion with any
degree of confidence. Judicial psychotherapy has its
obvious and inherent limitations. The mere possession of a
warped or twisted mind which many a criminal has, could not
either absolve him from criminal liability or mitigate his
crime. Courts are generally concerned only with the nature
and extent of punishment once the accused’s guilt is
established. In considering the question of appropriate
sentence to be awarded, while the common fragilities and
failings of ordinary human beings. to which the offender
gives vent, may, without affecting the criminality of the
acts punished, be enough to show that a lesser sentence will
meet the ends of justice, abnormal twists of the mind or
indications of an obdurate and unrelenting viciousness of
mind and conduct of the offender may show the need for a
severer sentence. [491D-F]
The murdered man had attacked the brother of the appellant
in Crl. A. 133 of 1973. Later he had attacked the brother-
in-law of the appellant. who was so badly injured that he
had to remain in hospital for some days. On the day
following the day of attack of his brother-in-law, the
appellant had attacked the murdered man in broad daylight.
Several witnesses spoke of the determined manner in which
the appellant had told them that he had made up his mind to
kill the deceased. The appellant hid himself in a compound
waiting for the deceased and when the deceased was going on
his bicycle, the appellant chased him and attacked and
killed him with a chopper.
The High Court convicted and sentenced him to death.
The appellant in, Cr. A. 46 of 1974 was tried jointly for
three murders committed at different times and places close
to each other. in all the three cases the victims were
beguiled by the appellant on one pretext or another to
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accompany him on a journey and the victims did not return
after that. The appellant was convicted and sentenced to
death.
On the question of sentence,
HELD : (1) The provocation contemplated by law must be grave
as well as sudden so as to deprive the individual of the
power of self-control before the first exception to section
300 could apply. In deciding whether the case merits a less
severe of the two penalties prescribed for murder the
history of relations between the parties concerned, the
background, the context or the factual setting of the crime.
and the strength and nature of the motives operating on the
mind of the offender are relevant considerations. The state
of feelings and mind produced by these, while insufficient
to bring in the exception. may suffice to make the less
severe sentence more appropriate. [489D-E]
In the instant case the motives of the appellant, who in his
obviously frenzied state of mind, decided to do away with
someone who appeared to him to be a standing menace to the
lives and limbs of his near and dear ones could not be said
to be reprehensible. Nor could his inflamed feelings be
less worthy of consideration in pronouncing upon the
question of sentence. [489F-G]
It is not enough for deciding such a question to find that
facts of the case indicated deliberation or premeditation
before the offence, although this is quite
486
important. Even the period of time which had elapsed
between the two incidents was not so lengthy as to enable
the court to say that the effect of provocation given by the
previous night’s occurrence, in the background of another
similar occurrence, and the feelings of fear or alarm which
must have engendered, so as to disturb the mind of a person
in the position of the appellant, must have evaporated
before the murder was committed. These may have become even
intensified by brooding over or talking and thinking about
the incidents. Although the previous incidents could not
constitute sufficient provocation to reduce the crime of
murder to one of culpable homicide not amounting to murder,
yet, the context of the crime justified the imposition of a
lesser penalty than that given in this case. [489G; 490A-C]
Jagmohan Singh v. State of U.P. [1973] 1 S.C.C. 20 referred
to.
Ediga Anama v. State of Andhra Pradesh’, [1974] 3 S.C.R. 329
followed.
(2) In the case of the appellant in Cr. A. 46 of 1974 no
fact was proved as could so disturb or unhinge the mind of
an average individual as to impel him towards murder. It is
apparent, from the way in which the appellant committed
gruesome murders, the relationships of those he murdered,
the absence of any intelligible reasons for which he could
have murdered them, and the casual manner in which he used
to dispose of the bodies that he had no respect whatsoever
for the sanctity of human life. He apparently murdered for
the sheer pleasure which killing those he disliked for some
reason seemed to give him. Furthermore there is no evidence
Lo Suggest that the appellant suffered from insanity or
mental ill-health of a kind which incapacitated him from
understanding the nature of the acts committed by him or
that they were wrong. Evidence in the case indicates that
he knew very well what he was doing and that this was wrong.
[490H; 491A-C]
If, however, proved facts disclose that something even
falling short of either legal insanity, satisfying the tests
laid down in M’naghten rules, which is receiving increasing
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jurisprudential recognition for absolving its victim from
criminal ’liability, or grave and sudden provocation. which
Will reduce a culpable homicide from murder to one which is
not murder. is present in the case so as to only disturb the
normal balance of an individual’s mind what is proved may be
sufficient to avert death penalty. While mitigating
circumstances were shown to exist in the first case the
circumstances revealed in the second were of an aggravating
kind. There is a vast difference between the two cases-the
difference between the case of a scared human being, with a
weak control over his feelings, carried away by what was too
strong and long-lasting a gust of passion against another
who had given him genuine cause for anger, and that of a
person whose conduct in carrying out cold blooded and
calculated murders of several relatives disclose nothing
short of a fiendish callousness and cruelty. [491G-H; 492A-
B]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 133 of
1973.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 4th January, 1973 of the Kerala High Court in Crl. A.
No. 348 of 1972 and Referred Trial No. 18 of 1972.
Criminal Appeal No. 46 of 1974.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 23rd/24th July, 1973 of the Bombay High Court in
Criminal As. Nos. 44-4, 543 and 544 of 1973.
Lily Thomas, for the appellant (in Crl. A. No. 133/73).
Yogeshwar Prasad, for the appellant (in Crl. A. No. 46/74).
487
K. R. Nambiar, for the respondent (in Cr. A. No. 133/73).
S. B. Wad, for the respondent (in Cr. A. No. 46/74).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BEG, J. We propose to decide the two criminal appeals before
us by special leave by a common judgment. The only question
which arises for consideration is whether the sentence of
death imposed upon the appellant in each case is appropriate
or deserved. Special leave was granted in each of the two
appeals solely on the question of propriety of sentence
awarded. It is urged before us that the lesser penalty of
life imprisonment was enough, in the circumstances of each
of the two cases, to meet the ends of justice.
The first case before us is of Francis alias Ponnan v. State
of Kerala, where the facts were : The murdered man,
Pappachan. with some others had attacked Pandoth Joseph,
P.W. 3, the brother of the appellant on 28-11-1971, and P.
P. George, P.W. 4, the brother-in-law of the appellant, on
23-12-1971, at about 10 p.m. On each occasion, a F.I.R. was
lodged and the injured had to be sent to Hospital. In the
second incident, George, P.W. 4, the brother-in-law of the
appellant,, was so badly injured that he had to remain in
hospital for 17 days. Close upon the heels of this attack
at about 10 p.m. on 23-12-1971, upon the brother-in-law of
the appellant, came the incident of 24-12-1971 for which the
appellant has been charged, convicted for murder, and
sentenced to death. It appears that several witnesses spoke
of the determined manner in which the appellant had told
them that he had made up his mind to kill Pappachan. It is
evident that the appellant’s mental balance had become
seriously disturbed. On 24-12-1971, in the afternoon, the
appellant hid himself in a compound waiting for Pappachan to
come along. On seeing the deceased pass along a road on, a
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bicycle at about 3 p.m., the appellant came out of the
compound with a chopper in his hand and chased and attacked
Pappachan with it so that the deceased fell down after
exclaiming : "O my mother ". The appellant then left the
scene. The incident took place in broad day-light and was
witnessed by passersby who gave evidence at the trial. The
post-mortem report indicated that there were three incised
wounds on the head of the deceased in addition to a
contusion below the left eye and abrasions on the leg and
another-on the left scapular region which was fractured. It
was apparent that the appellant intended to kill Pappachan
deceased. and he made no secret of his intention to do so
although, at the trial, he denied knowledge of the incident.
-177 Sup.CI/75
488
The question of appropriate sentence to be awarded in the
case was argued particularly in the High Court and both the
Judges of the Division Bench which heard the death reference
gave their reasons separately for awarding death sentence.
Moidu, J., said
"So we, have to. consider the facts and
circumstances of the present cam to hold
whether the death sentence is the proper
sentence to be passed on the appellant. In
this case, the appellant met P.Ws. 1 to 9, 13
and 17 before and after the incident and made
public declaration that he would do away with
Pappachan. He had predetermined to kill the
deceased Pappachan. There was absolutely no
provocation whatsoever during the incident and
nothing of that sort was suggested to P.Ws. 1
and 2. The appellant committed murder only to
wreak vengeance against deceased Pappachan on
account of two previous incidents mentioned in
Exts. P-2 and P-3. This is a case in which
the appellant caused the death of Pappachan in
a prearranged manner to wreak his vengeance
against him. The murder was cold-blooded and
premeditated. The aggravating stances are
such that it is difficult to hold that the
lesser of the two sentences provided by law
would meet the ends of justice. He has
rightly been sentenced to death for the murder
of Pappachan. We find no ground to interfere
with the conviction or the sentence".
Narayana Pillai, J., said
"I agree. The incident took place in broad
daylight on a public road. The first
information statement was given by P.W. 1
within a short time after the occurrence. The
facts mentioned therein corroborate his
evidence before Court. His evidence is also
corroborated by the evidence of the other
occurrence witness, P.W. 2. Their evidence is
corroborated by the circumstances brought out
in the cast also. There was a motive for the
occurrence. The appellant was absconding for
a long time. The chopper M.O. I used by him
at the time of the occurrence was recovered
pursuant to the information given by him. The
prosecution evidence is completely dependable.
The victim died immediately after he sustained
the injuries. The appellant was waiting for
the victim to come that way. He hired a
bicycle and came to the place knowing before
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hand that the deceased would come that way.
It was a revengeful and merciless attack that
he made on the deceased. He ran after the
deceased and began the attack by striking him
with the chopper on the head. Even after the
deceased fell down from the bicycle he did not
spare him. Two more injuries were inflicted
with the chopper. In the circumstances
nothing but the extreme penalty would meet the
ends of justice".
489
Miss Lilly Thomas, appearing for the appellant Francis,
contended that the case did not call for the extreme penalty
of death. She also submitted that the appellant had not had
a separate opportunity to show cause why sentence of death
should not be imposed upon him. In Jagmohan Singh v. State
of U.P.,(1) the constitutional validity of death penalty was
assailed, upon the ground, among others, that no provision
is made for a separate hearing on this question, but a
Constitution Bench of this Court repelled it. The appellant
had raised and was heard on the question of correctness of
his sentence in the High Court. The procedure for a hearing
before confirmation of the death sentence is de-signed to
afford the person sentenced to death a hearing on this
question too before the death sentence is confirmed. The
question of appropriate sentence, however, deserves some
more consideration than the learned Judges of the High Court
had given to it.
It is clear that there was no case of provocation made out
and much less of any grave or sudden provocation to Francis
during or immediately preceding the incident so as to enable
the appellant to plead the first Exception to Section 300
Indian Penal Code. The, provocation contemplated by the law
must be grave as well is sudden so as to deprive the
individual of the power of self control before the first
Exception to Section 300 could apply. Nevertheless, in
deciding whether the case merits the less severe of the two
penalties prescribed for murder a history of relations
between the parties concerned, the background, the context,
or the factual setting of the, crime, and the strength and
nature of the motives operating on the mind of the offender,
are relevant considerations. The state of feelings and mind
produced by these, while insufficient to bring in an
exception. may suffice to make the less severe sentence more
appropriate.
In Ediga Anamma v. State of Andhra Pradesh(2) this Court had
dealt with a case of a premeditated and cleverly planned
murder by a young woman whose mind had become filled with
frenzy and irrational jealously because of rivalry between
her and the murdered woman for the affections of an illicit
Iover or paramour. Her sentence for murder was reduced from
death to life imprisonment. If that was done in that case,
the motives of the appellant, Francis, before us, who
decided. in his obviously alarmed and frenzied state of
mind, to do away with someone who appeared to him to be a
standing menace to the lives and limbs of his near and dear
ones, could not be said to be more reprehensible. Nor could
his inflamed feelings be less worthy of consideration in
pronouncing upon the question. of sentence. It is not
enough, for deciding such a question, to find that facts of
the case indicated deliberation or premeditation before the
offence although this is quite important. It is true that
the attack upon the appellant’s brother-in-law had taken
place on the previous night on 23rd December, at about 10 p.
m. whereas the murder was committed at about
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(1) [1973] (1) S.C.C. P. 20 [1974] 3 S.C.R. 329
490
3.30 p.m. on 24th December. Nevertheless, even the period
of time which had elapsed between the two incidents was not
so lengthy as to enable us to say that the effect of the
provocation given by the previous night’s occurrence, in the
background of another similar occurrence, and the feelings
of fear or alarm it must have engendered, so as to disturb
the mind of a person in the position.-of the appellant, must
have evaporated before the murder was committed. These may
have become even intensified by brooding over or talking and
thinking about the incidents. No doubt the appellant was
about 30 years in age, but that is not a guarantee against
the disturbance of mind which could be produced by the, kind
of attacks which had previously taken place on his elder
brother and his brother-in-law. Although, the previous
incidents could not constitute sufficient provocation to
reduce the crime of murder to one of culpable homicide not
amounting to murder, yet, we think that the context of the
crime justified the imposition of a lesser penalty than that
given in this case.
The next case for decision before us is that of Bhagwanta v.
State of Maharashtra. Here, we find that the appellant was
prosecuted and tried jointly for three murders committed at
different times and places close to each other. The three
victims for whose murder he was tried were : Bhagubai, the
appellant’s mother-in-law; Sarjabai, the sister-in-law of
the appellant; and, Sakharam, the husband of Sarjabai. The
victims used to be beguiled by the appellant on one pretext
or another to accompany him on a journey and did not return
after that. Three other alleged victims, who similarly
disappeared were: Mainaji, the father-in-law of the
appellant; and Bhim, the appellant’s own brother; and,
Thakubai, the daughter of Sakharam. The appellant was not
tried for the murder of the last mentioned three persons
presumably because more than three similar charges could not
be joined at one trial. The appellant had confessed the
commission of murder to his wife, Giriabaj, P.W. 3, when she
pestered him too much to find out the whereabouts of her
relatives who had disappeared. He had shut her up by
threatening to do violence to her also if she divulged the
secret. But, she and her sister Sitabai had managed to
escape and to reveal to the police the highly suspicious
facts and circumstances indicating that the appellant was
the murderer. The appellant had also absconded. The bodies
of some of the murdered persons were discovered and cir-
cumstances showing the extremely suspicious movements and
conduct of the appellant, who was last seen with the
murdered individual on each occasion and then had made false
assertions about the whereabouts of the victim, were duly
proved. The appellant had even made a confession recorded
before a Magistrate. But, he had gone back on the
confession at the trial. However, both the Trial Court and
the High Court had, after thoroughly examining all the facts
and circumstances, correctly reached the conclusion that the
appellant was the murderer.
In Bhagwanta’s case, no such fact was proved as could so
disturb or unhinge the mind of an average individual as to
impel him towards murder. It is apparent, from the-way in
which the appellant committed gruesome murders, the
relationships of those he. murdered, the absence
491
of any intelligible reasons for which he could have murdered
them, and the casual manner in which he used to dispose of
the bodies, that he had no respect whatsoever for the
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sanctity of human life. He, apparently, murdered for the
sheer pleasure which killing those he disliked for some
reason seemed to give him.
It is possible that the appellant Bhagwanta had the diseased
mind of a paranoiac. No evidence was, however, given to
show that he suffered from mental ill health of any type.
Moreover, every sort of mental disorder does not either
absolve the sufferer from criminal liability or justify a
less severe punishment. No evidence is there to suggest
that the appellant suffered from insanity or mental ill
health of a kind which incapacitated him from understanding
the nature of the acts committed by him or that they were
wrong. Indeed, evidence in the case indicates that he knew
very well what he was doing and that this was wrong.
It is not possible for Courts to attempt, on the slender
evidence there generally is on this aspect, to explore the
murky depths of a warped and twisted mind so as to discover
whether an offender is capable of reformation or redemption,
and, if so, in what way. That is a subject on which only
experts in that line, after a thorough study of. an
individual’s case history, could hazard an opinion with any
degree, of confidence. Judicial psychotherapy has its
obvious and inherent limitations. The mere possession of a
warped or twisted mind, which many a criminal has, could not
either absolve him from criminal liability or mitigate his
crime. Courts are generally concerned only with the nature
and extent of punishment called for once the accused’s guilt
is established. In considering the question of appropriate
sentence to be awarded, while the common frailties and
failings of ordinary human beings, to which the offender
gives vent, may, without affecting the criminality of the
acts punished, be enough to show that a lesser sentence win
meet the ends of justice, abnormal twists of the mind or
indications of an obdurate and unrelenting viciousness of
mind and conduct of the ,offender may show the need for a
severer sentence.
If, however, proved facts disclose that something even
falling short of either legal insanity, satisfying the test
laid down in M’Naghten Rules, which will negative criminal
liability, or, "insane impulse", which is receiving
increasing jurisprudential recognition for absolving its
victim from criminal liability, or, grave and sudden provo-
cation, which will reduce a culpable homicide from murder to
one which is not murder, is present in the case so as to
only disturb the normal balance of an individual’s mind,
what is proved may be sufficient to avert the death penalty.
We think that, while some mitigating circumstances of this
kind, discussed above, were shown to exist in the case of
Francis appellant, the circumstances revealed in the case of
Bhagwanta are of an aggravating kind. Indeed, there is a
vast difference between the two cases-the difference between
the case of a scared
492
human being, with a weak control over his feelings, carried
away by what was too strong and too long lasting a gust of
passion against another who bad given him genuine cause for
anger, and that of a person whose conduct, in carrying out
cold blooded and calculated murders of several relatives,
who had apparently done nothing to provoke him, discloses
nothing short of a fiendish callousness and cruelty. If
death sentence, a legally prescribed punishment still
considered necessary to deter potential murders from
violating the basic law of civilised human existence-"thou
shalt not kill"--is deserved by an offender, we think that
Bhagwanta, appellant, is such an offender.
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The result is: We allow the appeal of Francis alias Ponnan
only to the extent that we set aside the sentence of death
passed upon him, but we maintain his conviction and impose a
sentence of life imprisonment upon him for the offence of
murder committed by him.
We, think that Bhagwanta was rightly convicted and sentenced
to death. We, therefore, dismiss his appeal.
Cr. A. No. 133/73 partly allowed.
P.B.R. Cr. A. No. 46/74 dismissed.
493