Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1319 of 1998
Appeal (crl.) 123 of 1999
PETITIONER:
SATVIR SINGH AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/09/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & S.N. Variava
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
A young mother of two kids, who is a double graduate,
ran into the rail in front of a running train to end her
life as well as her miseries once and for all. She was
driven to that action on account of the cruel treatments
suffered by her at her nuptial home. But the destiny also
was cruel to her as the locomotive which she desired to be
her destroyer, instead of snuffing her life out in a trice,
converted her into a veritable vegetable. She lost her
left hand from shoulder joint and got her spinal cord
ruptured. She turned into a paraplegic. She herself
described her present plight as a living corpse. Thus the
miseries she longed to end transformed into a monstrous
dimension clutching her as long as she is alive.
Her husband, father-in-law and mother-in-law (the
appellants before us) were convicted by the Sessions Court
under Section 116 read with Section 306 IPC, besides
Section 498A. On the first count they were sentenced to
rigorous imprisonment for two and a half years and a fine
of Rs.10,000/- each, and on the second count they were
sentenced to imprisonment for two years and a fine of
Rs.5,000/- each. When the appellants filed an appeal
before the High Court in challenge of the said conviction
and sentence the victim also made a motion before the same
High Court as she felt that condign punishment has not been
meted out to the guilty persons. Both were disposed of by
the impugned judgment delivered by a single Judge of the
High Court of Punjab and Haryana. The findings made by the
Sessions Court were concurred with by the High Court.
However, an alteration was made by substituting Section 306
IPC with Section 304B IPC to be read with Section 116 IPC.
Commensurate alteration was made in the quantum of sentence
by escalating it to RI for five years each.
It was during the wee hours of 17.6.1996 that
Tejinder Pal Kaur (PW-5) ran in front of a train. The
events which culminated in the said tragedy have been set
out by the prosecution like this:
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Tejinder Pal Kaur (PW-5) daughter of Narender Singh
(PW-6) obtained B.A. degree and B.Ed. degree before her
marriage. On 15.11.1992 she was given in marriage to
Satvir Singh (A-1), a businessman, and thenceforth she was
living in her husbands house. Devinder Singh (A-2) and
Paramjit Kaur(A-3) who are the parents of Satvir Singh(A-1)
were also living in the same house. Though dowry was given
at the time of marriage the appellants started harassing
the bride after about 4 or 5 months of the wedding for not
giving a car and a house as part of the dowry. They used
to hurl taunts on her pertaining to the subject, including
telling her that she had brought rags instead of wedding
costumes. After about a year a male child was born to her
and about one and a half years thereafter she gave birth to
another male child.
In the month of November 1995 her father Narender
Singh (PW-6) paid Rs.20,000/- to her husband Satvir Singh
presumably for appeasing him so that he would desist from
causing any harassment to Tejinder Pal Kaur. But that
appeared to be only a modicum of pelf for abating the
shower of abuses heaped up on the housewife.
The immediate cause for the tragic episode happened on
the night of 16.6.1996. When food was served to Satvir
Singh (A-1) in the night, it was noticed that one of the
items in the meals (salad) contained excessive salt.
(According to PW-5 the salt was added to the salad by her
mother-in-law). After tasting the salad Satvir Singh
became furious and he unleashed abuses on his wife and then
he was profusely supported by his mother and later they
were reinforced by his father. They went to the extent of
suggesting to her why not end your life in front of one of
the trains as many such trains are running nearby.
On 17.6.1996 Tejinder Pal Kaur (PW-5) left the house
all alone at about 4 A.M. and reached the railway line
yonder, expecting the arrival of a train from Jallandhar.
Within 15 minutes the expected train arrived and Tejinder
Pal Kaur, standing on the track, was run over by that
train. What happened thereafter need not be narrated in
detail over again except pointing out that she was
devastatingly maimed, yet survived. There is practically
no dispute that she went to the railway track on that
morning and in an attempt to end her life she allowed the
train to pass over her. As the doctors expressed the
opinion that the testimonial capacity of Tejinder Pal Kaur
(PW-5) was not seriously impaired prosecution examined her
as the prime witness in the case. The trial court and the
High Court believed her testimony. There is no reason to
dissent from the finding regarding reliability of her
evidence.
At the outset we may point out that on the aforesaid
facts no offence linked with Section 306 IPC can be found
against any of the appellants. The said section penalises
abetment of suicide. It is worded thus: If any person
commits suicide, whoever abets the commission of such
suicide, shall be punished with imprisonment of either
description for a term which may extend to ten years, and
shall also be liable to fine. It is a unique legal
phenomenon in the Indian Penal Code that the only act, the
attempt of which alone will become an offence. The person
who attempts to commit suicide is guilty of the offence
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under Section 309 IPC whereas the person who committed
suicide cannot be reached at all. Section 306 renders the
person who abets the commission of suicide punishable for
which the condition precedent is that suicide should
necessarily have been committed. It is possible to abet the
commission of suicide. But nobody would abet a mere
attempt to commit suicide. It would be preposterous if law
could afford to penalise an abetment to the offence of mere
attempt to commit suicide.
Learned Sessions Judge went wrong in convicting the
appellants under section 116 linked with Section 306 IPC.
The former is abetment of offence punishable with
imprisonment - if offence be not committed. But the crux
of the offence under Section 306 itself is abetment. In
other words, if there is no abetment there is no question
of the offence under Section 306 coming into play. It is
inconceivable to have abetment of an abetment. Hence there
cannot be an offence under Section 116 read with Section
306 IPC. Therefore, the High Court was correct in altering
the conviction from the penalising provisions fastened with
the appellants by Sessions Court.
Now, we have to see whether the appellants can be
convicted under Section 511 read with Section 304B IPC.
For that purpose it is necessary to extract Section 511 as
under:
511.Punishment for attempting to commit
offences punishable with imprisonment for
life or other imprisonment.- Whoever
attempts to commit an offence punishable by
this Code with imprisonment for life or
imprisonment, or to cause such an offence to
be committed, and in such attempt does any
act towards the commission of the offence,
shall, where no express provision is made by
this Code for the punishment of such
attempt, be punished with imprisonment of
any description provided for the offence,
for a term which may extend to one-half of
the imprisonment for life or, as the case
may be, one-half of the longest term of
imprisonment provided for that offence or
with such fine as is provided for the
offence, or with both.
The above section is the solitary provision included
in the last chapter of the IPC under the title Of Attempts
to Commit Offences. It makes attempt to commit an offence
punishable. The offence attempted should be one punishable
by the Code with imprisonment. The conditions stipulated in
the provision for completion of the said offence are: (1)
The offender should have done some act towards commission
of the main offence. (2) Such an attempt is not expressly
covered as a penal provision elsewhere in the Code.
Thus, attempt on the part of the accused is sine qua
non for the offence under Section 511. Before considering
the question as to what is meant by doing any act towards
the commission of the offence as an inevitable part of the
process of attempt, we may point out that the last act
attributed to the accused in this case is that they asked
Tejinder Pal Kaur (PW-5) to go to the rail track and commit
suicide. That act of the accused is alleged to have driven
the young lady to proceed to the railway line on the next
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morning to be run over by the train. Assuming that the
said act was perpetrated by the appellants and that the
said act could fall within the ambit of attempt to commit
the offence under section 304B it has to be considered
whether there is any other express provision in the Code
which makes such act punishable. For this purpose we have
to look at Section 498A which has been added to the IPC by
Act 46 of 1983. That provision makes cruelty (which a
husband of a woman or his relative subjects her to) as a
punishable offence. One of the categories included in the
explanation to the said section (by which the word cruelty
is defined) is thus:
(a) Any willful conduct which is of such a
nature as is likely to drive the woman to
commit suicide or to cause grave injury or
danger to life, limb or health (whether
mental or physical) of the woman;
Thus, if the act of the accused asking Tejinder Pal
Kaur (PW-5) to go and commit suicide had driven her to
proceed to the railway track for ending her life then it is
expressly made punishable under Section 498A IPC. When it
is so expressly made punishable the act involved therein
stands lifted out of the purview of Section 511 IPC. The
very policy underlying in Section 511 seems to be for
providing it as a residuary provision. The corollary,
therefore, is that the accused, in this case, cannot be
convicted under Section 511 on account of the acts alleged
against him.
Now, we have to consider whether the High Court was
correct in convicting the appellants under Section 116 read
with Section 304B IPC. Shri R.S. Cheema, learned senior
counsel for the appellants advanced two contentions against
it. First is that Section 304B cannot apply to a case of
suicide at all, whether it is sequel to cruelty or
harassment with the demand for dowry or not. Second is
that the concept of abetment of an offence under Section
304-B is inconceivable in the absence of death of a woman
within the statutory period mentioned in that provision.
In elaborating the first contention learned senior counsel
submitted that Section 306 IPC is now intended to cover all
cases of suicide in view of Section 113A of the Evidence
Act (which was brought in by Act 46 of 1983).
Both the contentions are fallacious. The essential
components of Section 304B are: (i) Death of a woman
occurring otherwise than under normal circumstances, within
7 years of marriage. (ii) Soon before her death she should
have been subjected to cruelty and harassment in connection
with any demand for dowry. When the above ingredients are
fulfilled, the husband or his relative, who subjected her
to such cruelty or harassment, can be presumed to be guilty
of offence under Section 304B. To be within the province
of the first ingredient the provision stipulates that
where the death of a woman is caused by any burns or
bodily injury or occurs otherwise than under normal
circumstances. It may appear that the former limb which
is described by the words death caused by burns or bodily
injury is a redundancy because such death would also fall
within the wider province of death caused otherwise than
under normal circumstances. The former limb was inserted
for highlighting that by no means death caused by burns or
bodily injury should be treated as falling outside the
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ambit of the offence. In the present context it is
advantageous to read Section 113A of the Evidence Act. It
is extracted below:
113A.Presumption as to abetment of suicide
by a married woman.- When the question is
whether the commission of suicide by a woman
had been abetted by her husband or any
relative of her husband and it is shown that
she had committed suicide within a period of
seven years from the date of her marriage
and that her husband or such relative of her
husband had subjected her to cruelty, the
Court may presume, having regard to all the
other circumstances of the case, that such
suicide had been abetted by her husband or
by such relative of her husband.
Learned senior counsel submitted that since the word
cruelty employed therein is a virtual importation of that
word from Section 498A IPC, the offence envisaged in
Section 306 IPC is capable of enveloping all cases of
suicide within its ambit, including dowry related suicide.
According to him, the second limb of the Explanation to
Section 498A which defines the word cruelty is sufficient
to clarify the position. That limb reads thus:
For the purpose this section, cruelty
means-
(b) harassment of the woman where such
harassment is with a view to coercing her or
any person related to her to meet any
unlawful demand for any property or valuable
security or is on account of failure by her
or any person related to her to meet such
demand.
At the first blush we thought that there was force in
the said contention but on a deeper analysis we found that
the contention is unacceptable. Section 306 IPC when read
with Section 113A of the Evidence Act has only enabled the
court to punish a husband or his relative who subjected a
woman to cruelty (as envisaged in Section 498A IPC) if such
woman committed suicide within 7 years of her marriage. It
is immaterial for Section 306 IPC whether the cruelty or
harassment was caused soon before her death or earlier.
If it was caused soon before her death the special
provision in Section 304B IPC would be invokable, otherwise
resort can be made to Section 306 IPC.
No doubt Section 306 IPC read with Section 113A of the
Evidence Act is wide enough to take care of an offence
under Section 304B also. But the latter is made a more
serious offence by providing a much higher sentence and
also by imposing a minimum period of imprisonment as the
sentence. In other words, if death occurs otherwise than
under normal circumstances within 7 years of the marriage
as a sequel to the cruelty or harassment inflicted on a
woman with demand of dowry, soon before her death,
Parliament intended such a case to be treated as a very
serious offence punishable even upto imprisonment for life
in appropriate cases. It is for the said purpose that such
cases are separated from the general category provided
under Section 306 IPC (read with Section 113A of the
Evidence Act) and made a separate offence.
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We are, therefore, unable to concur with the
contention that if the dowry related death is a case of
suicide it would not fall within the purview of Section
304B IPC at all. In Smt. Shanti and anr. vs. State of
Haryana {1991(1) SCC 371} and in Kans Raj vs. State of
Pubjab and ors. {2000(5) SCC 207} this Court has held that
suicide is one of the modes of death falling within the
ambit of Section 304B IPC.
Now we have to consider whether the appellants are
liable to be punished under Section 116 linked with section
304B IPC. We have already noted above that according to
the learned senior counsel for the appellants there is no
question of considering Section 304B unless death of a
woman had occurred. In the present case, death did not
occur. Before considering that contention we may delve
into the question whether Tejinder Pal Kaur (PW-5) was
subjected to cruelty or harassment in connection with the
demand for dowry soon before her death, on a hypothetical
assumption that her attempt to commit suicide had
succeeded.
Prosecution, in a case of offence under Section 304B
IPC cannot escape from the burden of proof that the
harassment or cruelty was related to the demand for dowry
and also that such cruelty or harassment was caused soon
before her death. The word dowry in Section 304B has to
be understood as it is defined in Section 2 of the Dowry
Prohibition Act, 1961. That definition reads thus:
In this Act, dowry means any property or
valuable security given or agreed to be
given either directly or indirectly-
(a) by one party to marriage to the other
party to the marriage; or
(b) by the parents of either party to a
marriage or by any other person, to
either party to the marriage or to
any other person;
at or before or any time after the marriage
in connection with the marriage of the said
parties, but does not include dower or mahr
in the case of persons to whom the Muslim
Personal Law (Shariat) applies.
Thus, there are three occasions related to dowry. One
is before the marriage, second is at the time of marriage
and the third is at any time after the marriage. The
third occasion may appear to be an unending period. But
the crucial words are in connection with the marriage of
the said parties. This means that giving or agreeing to
give any property or valuable security on any of the above
three stages should have been in connection with the
marriage of the parties. There can be many other instances
for payment of money or giving property as between the
spouses. For example, some customary payments in
connection with birth of a child or other ceremonies are
prevalent in different societies. Such payments are not
enveloped within the ambit of dowry. Hence the dowry
mentioned in Section 304B should be any property or
valuable security given or agreed to be given in connection
with the marriage.
It is not enough that harassment or cruelty was caused
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to the woman with a demand for dowry at some time, if
Section 304B is to be invoked. But it should have happened
soon before her death. The said phrase, no doubt, is an
elastic expression and can refer to a period either
immediately before her death or within a few days or even a
few weeks before it. But the proximity to her death is the
pivot indicated by that expression. The legislative object
in providing such a radius of time by employing the words
soon before her death is to emphasise the idea that her
death should, in all probabilities, have been the aftermath
of such cruelty or harassment. In other words, there
should be a perceptible nexus between her death and the
dowry related harassment or cruelty inflicted on her. If
the interval elapsed between the infliction of such
harassment or cruelty and her death is wide the court would
be in a position to gauge that in all probabilities the
death would not have been the immediate cause of her death.
It is hence for the court to decide, on the facts and
circumstances of each case, whether the said interval in
that particular case was sufficient to snuff its cord from
the concept soon before her death.
Applying the said principle in this case we have to
refer to the evidence of the prosecution to know whether
the findings made by the High Court on the facts warrant
interference. PW-5 Tejinder Pal Kaur in her evidence said
that 4 or 5 months after her marriage, she was ill-treated
on the ground of insufficiency of dowry and then she
reported the matter to her father. But PW-5 did not say
one word in her evidence regarding any other ill treatment
relating to dowry thereafter. It is true, she said in her
evidence that in November 1995, a sum of Rs.20,000/- was
paid by her father. But neither PW-5 (Tejinder Pal Kaur)
nor PW-6 (Narendra Singh) testified that the said amount
was paid as part of the dowry or in connection with the
marriage. We cannot overlook two important events which
had happened in the family during the said long interregnum
of three years. One is the birth of the elder son on
12.11.1993 and the other is the birth of the second son on
10.6.1995. We have to bear in mind the payment of
Rs.20,000/- was made five months after the birth of the
second son. Even PW-6 had no case that his daughter was
subjected to any ill treatment in connection with the
demand for dowry on any day after she reported to him about
the demand for further dowry way back in the early 1993
months. All amounts paid by the in-laws of the husband of
a woman cannot become dowry.
Shri U.R. Lalit, learned senior counsel for Tejinder
Pal Kaur (PW-5) contended that payment of Rs.20,000/- in
November 1995 should be presumed as part of the three year
old demand for further dowry. When the very participants in
the deliberations have no such case it is not proper for
the court to make an incriminating presumption against the
accused on a very crucial ingredient of the offence, more
so when it is quite possible to draw a presumption the
other way around as well.
Thus, there is dearth of evidence to show that
Tejinder Pal Kaur (PW-5) was subjected to cruelty or
harassment connected with the demand for dowry, soon before
the attempt to commit suicide. When the position is such
it is an unnecessary exercise on our part to consider
whether Section 116 IPC can ever be linked with the offence
under Section 304B IPC.
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We, therefore, conclude that appellants cannot be
convicted under Section 116 IPC either by linking it with
Section 306 or with Section 304B. Hence the conviction and
sentence passed on them under Section 116 IPC is set aside.
We have no reason to interfere with the conviction
passed on the appellants under Section 498A IPC. We do
confirm the same. We are told that first appellant Satvir
Singh (A-1) has undergone the substantial portion of the
sentence of imprisonment imposed on him and the remaining
appellants have also undergone a long period of
imprisonment by now in connection with this case. But we
feel that the fine portion of the sentence imposed on the
appellants is too insufficient, particularly when such fine
was intended to be disbursed as compensation to PW-5. In
our view PW-5 Tejinder pal Kaur should get at least three
lakhs of rupees as compensation from the appellants. We
are told that A-2 Devinder Singh and A-3 Paramjit Kaur have
now become aged as both have crossed the age of 70. We
therefore, modify the sentence under Section 498A IPC in
the following terms:
The sentence of imprisonment imposed on the appellants
shall stand reduced to the period which they have already
undergone. We enhance the fine part of the sentence for
the offence under Section 498A IPC, to Rs. one lakh each
for all the three appellants. They shall remit the fine
amount in the trial court, within three months from today,
failing which each of the defaulter shall undergo
imprisonment for a further period of nine months.
The appeals are disposed of in the above terms.
J
[ K.T. Thomas ]
J
[ S.N. Variava
September 27, 2001.