Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF KERALA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
O.C.KUTTAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/02/1999
BENCH:
G B Pattanaik, M.B. Shah
JUDGMENT:
Pattanaik.J
Leave granted in both the matters.
These two appeals one by State of Kerala and another
by the State Women’s Commission as well as the alleged
victim lady are directed against one and the same order of
the High Court of Kerala. By the impugned Judgment and Order
Dated 4th November, 1997 the Division Bench of Kerala High
Court in exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India has quashed the
criminal proceedings as against five of the accused persons
manely Shri O.C.Kuttan, Shri G. Mohanan, Shri S.Suresh
Kaimal, Shri Tony Antony and Shri K.C. Pater, on coming to a
conclusion that the uncontroverted allegations made in the
F.I.R. and other statements do not constitute the offence of
rape.
On 23.7.96, Seens gave a vivid account as to how she
was being exploited and sexually harassed by large number of
accused persons under threat, coercion, force, allurement
and on the basis of the said statement, a case was
registered as Crime No. 5.96 of Vanitha Polic Station,
Ernakulam. The case was registered under Sections 366A,
372, 376 and 344 read with Section 34 I.P.C. The Police
started investigating into the said allegations and in the
course of investigation the victim girl was examined on
24.8.96 and on 25.8.96. These respondents filed writ
petitions in the kerala High Court praying therein that the
FIR and the Criminal Proceedings arising out of the said
allegations should be quashed as against them since the
allegations do not make out any offence so far as they are
concerned. When those writ petitions were listed before the
learned Single Judge, the learned Single Judge was of the
opinion that the matter should be heard by a Division Bench
to decide the question whether criminal proceedings could be
quashed in exercise of extraordinary jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India and that is how the
matter was heard by the Division Bench. By the impugned
Judgment, the Division Bench though indicated how the lady
has unfolded her pathetic story as a victim of rape and
narrated the events of her life right from the time when she
went to school till she was arrested by the Police, but on
comparison of the three statements of the victim girl and on
entering into an arena of conjecture and improbability came
to the conclusion that the lady was more than 16 years of
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age when she came to Ernakulam and indulged into the
activities of leading immoral life and further she was not
put to force of death or hurt or her consent was obtained by
putting her in fear of death or hurt and on the other hand
it is she, who exercised her discretion to have sex with
those persons whom she liked or got money and willingly
submitted herself to the sexual activities and therefore
this is a fit case where the High Court would be justified
in quashing the criminal proceedings as against those who
have approached the court.
Mr. Ramachandran, learned Senior Counsel appearing
for the State of Kerala and Ms. Indira Jaisingh, appearing
for the Kerala Women’s Commission, vehemently argued that in
view of the graphic statements of the lady herself, the High
Court committed serious error in preventing investigation
against the accused respondents, who happened to be very
influential people of the society. The learned counsel also
urged that the conclusion of the High Court that the lady
was more than 16 years of age by shifting the materials and
evidence on record at this stage was wholly unwarranted. It
was further urged that the allegations made by the lady not
only amounts to commission of offence of rape alone but also
the offence under lmmoral Traffic Act and the High Court
never applied its mind to find out whether the allegations
taken at their face value would constitute other offences
for which the criminal case had been registered. According
to the learned counsel for the appellants in the case in
hand to quash the proceedings at the stage of lodging of FIR
in case of an offence which is having a cancerous growth in
the society is against the interest of justice and cannot be
held to be an abuse of process of court as concluded by the
High Court.
Mr. UR Lalit, appearing for accused Kuttan and
Mohanan, Mr. Ranjit Kumar and Mr. Anam, appearing for
other accused respondents however contended with force that
if the statements of the alleged victim lady do not make out
any offence then the High Court would be fully justified in
quashing the FIR so far as those alleged accused persons
against whom the allegation do not make out the offence as
in such a case allowing the investigation to continue would
be an abuse of the process of court. According to Mr.
Lalit, a bare look at the statements made by Seena would
make it explicitly clear that these respondents had not even
been named in the earliest statement dated 23rd of July,
1996 on the basis of which the case was registered but in
course of investigation, she has been examined on 24.8.96
and 25.8.96 wherein she has added the names of several
persons including the present respondents which would
suggest that the additions of names of persons are nothing
but an after-thought made after due deliberations and
several people have been unnecessarily added and have been
subjected to harassment. Mr. Lalit also further urged that
the statements of the lady would further indicate that there
was no force, no coercion, no fear of life was exercised by
any of these accused persons even if the allegations that
they had sexual intercourse with the lady is believed and
she being found to be more than 16 years of age when she
came to Emakulam, the High Court was fully justified in
holding that the allegations do not constitute the offence
of rape and therefore, was well within its powers to quash
the proceedings so far as these respondents are concerned.
According to Mr. Lalit the impugned order of the High Court
is a fair and just order and has been passed by the High
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Court to prevent the abuse of process of court, and
therefore, this court should not interfere with the same in
exercise of its powers under Article 136 of the Constitution
of India. It may be stated at this stage that Shri O C
Kuttan was the Assistant Commissioner of Excise and Shri
G.Mohanan was the Managing Director of Keral State Beverages
Corporation, whereas Shri S.Suresh Kaimal was the Assistant
Collector of Customs, Trivandrum Airport and Shri Tony
Antony was a businessman and Shri K C Peter was an Advocate
and at the relevant point of time was Additional Director
General of Prosecution.
At the outset there cannot be any dispute with the
proposition that when allegations in the FIR do not disclose
prima facie commission of a cognizable offence then the High
Court would be justified in interfering with the
investigation and quashing the same as has been held by this
Court in Sanchaita Investment’s case 1982(1)SCC 561. In the
case of State of Haryana and Other Vs. Bhajan Lal and
Others 1992 Supp.(1)SCC 335, this court considered the
question as to when the High Court can quash a criminal
proceeding in exercise of its powers under Section 482 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure or under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India and had indicated some instances by
way of illustrations, though on facts it was held that the
High Court was not justified in quashing the first
information report. this Court held that such powers could
be exercised either to prevent abuse of the process of any
court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice, though it
may not be possible to lay down any precise, clearly defined
and sufficiently channelised and inflexible guidelines or
rigid formulae and to give an exhaustive list of myriad
kinds of cases wherein such power should be exercised. But
as an illustration several circumstances were enumerated.
Having said so, the court gave a note of caution to the
effect that the power of quashing the criminal proceedings
should be exercised very sparingly with circumspection and
that too in the rarest of rare cases, that the court will
not be justified in embarking upon an inquiry as to the
reliability or genuineness or otherwise of the allegations
made in the FIR or the complaint and that the extraordinary
or inherent powers do not confer an arbitrary jurisdiction
on the court to act according to its whim or caprice. It is
too well settled that the first information report is only
an initiation to move the machinery and to investigate into
a cognizable offence and, therefore, while exercising the
power and deciding whether the investigation itself should
be quashed, utmost care should be taken by the court and at
that stage it is not possible for the court to shift the
materials or to weigh the materials and then come to the
conclusion one way or the other. In the case of State of UP
vs. O.P.Sharma 1996(7) SCC 705, a three Judge Bench of this
Court indicated that the High Court should be loath to
interfere at the threshold to thwart the prosecution
exercising its inherent power under Section 482 or under
Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India, as the
case may be and allow the law to take its own course. The
same view was reiterated by yet another three Judges Bench
of this Court in the case of Rashmi Kumar vs. Mahcsh Kumar
Bhada 1997(2) SCC 397, where this court sounded a word of
caution and stated that such power should be sparingly and
cautiously exercised only when the court is of the opinion
that otherwise there will be gross miscarriage of justice.
The court had also observed that social stability and order
is required to be regulated by proceeding against the
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offender as it is an offence against the society as a whole.
Bearing in mind the parameters laid down in the aforesaid
judgments and on a thorough scrutiny of the statement of
Senna dated 23rd of July, 1986, which was treated as an FIR
and on the basis of which criminal case was registered and
her subsequent statements dated 24.8.96 and 25.8.96, we have
no hesitation to come to the conclusion that the High Court
committed gross error in embarking upon an inquiry by
shifting of evidence and coming to a conclusion with regard
to the age of the lady on the date of alleged sexual
intercourse, she had with the accused persons and also in
recording a finding that no offence of rape can be said to
have been committed on the allegations made as she was never
forced to have sex but on the other hand she willingly had
sex with those who paid money. We do not think it
appropriate to express any opinion on the materials on
record as that would embarrass the investigation as well as
the accused persons, but suffice it to say that this cannot
be held to be a case where the court should have scuttled
investigation by quashing the FIR, particularly when the
criminal case had been registered under several provisions
of the Penal Code as well as under Immoral Traffic Act. We
also do not approve of the uncharitable comments made by the
High Court in paragraph (12) of the Judgment against the
woman who had given the FIR. It is not possible and it was
not necessary to make any comment on the character of the
lady at this stage. We also have no hesitation to come to
the conclusion that the High Court exceeded its jurisdiction
to record a finding that the lady exercised her discretion
to have sex with those whom she liked or got money and she
willingly submitted herself to most of them who came to her
for sex. We refrain from making any further observations in
the case as that may affect the investigation or the accused
persons but we have no hesitation to come to the conclusion
after going through the statements of the victim lady that
the High Court certainly exceeded its jurisdiction in
quashing the FIR and the investigations to be made pursuant
to the same so far as respondents are concerned. We,
accordingly set aside the impugned order of the High Court
and direct the Investigating Agency to proceed with the
investigation and conclude the same as expeditiously as
possible in accordance with law. These appeals are
accordingly allowed.