Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ASSAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAFIZUDDIN AHMED
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/01/1983
BENCH:
MISRA, R.B. (J)
BENCH:
MISRA, R.B. (J)
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1983 AIR 275 1983 SCR (2) 241
1983 SCC (2) 14 1983 SCALE (1)16
ACT:
Penal Code-Section 302-Conviction if could be based on
dying declaration which is not corroborated.
Evidence Act-Dying declaration-Accused, if could be
convicted on dying declaration which is not corroborated-
Evidence of child witness-If could be accepted.
HEADNOTE:
The prosecution case against the respondent was that
after marrying for a second time he started ill-treating his
first wife, the deceased, and that on the day of the
occurrence (10th April, 1983) he poured kerosene oil on her
and set fire to her body. When the deceased started
screaming he gagged her and wrapped her with a quilt and
threw her on the floor and in the process he himself
received burn injuries on his hands. A week later on the
18th April, 1973 when the uncle of the deceased called on
her at the hospital and enquired as to how it happened, she
told him that her husband poured kerosene oil and set fire
to her body. He then reported the matter to the police.
Since her condition was precarious, a Magistrate recorded
her dying declaration.
The respondent’s case on the other hand was that on the
day of the occurrence when his wife’s garments accidentally
caught fire when his house caught fire he attempted to
extinguish the fire by covering her with a quilt and in the
process he himself had received burn injuries.
Believing the evidence of the son of the deceased, a
boy of 7 years, and the dying declarations made to her uncle
and the Magistrate, the Sessions Judge held that the charge
under s. 302 I.P.C. was established. But the High Court did
not find it safe to convict him on the basis of the dying
declarations and the statement of the child witness and
acquitted him of the charge.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended on behalf of
the State that even if there was no evidence on record to
corroborate the dying declarations the respondent’s
conviction could be based on the dying declaration.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: It is well settled that, even in the absence of
other corroborating evidence, there can be a conviction on
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the basis of a dying declaration provided that the Court is
satisfied about the truthfulness of the dying declaration
and that it is not vitiated in any other manner. [246 B-C]
242
Maniappan v. The State of Madras, [1962] 3 S.C.R. 869,
Khushal Rao v. State of Bombay, [1958] S.C.R. 552, and
Lallubhai Devechand Shah & Ors. v. State of Gujarat, A.I.R.
1976 S.C. 1776 referred to.
In the instant case even though the occurrence took
place on 10th April and the deceased was alive till 18th
April, she did not disclose either to the villagers who
visited her or to the doctor or the nurse attending on her
that her husband sprinkled kerosene oil and set her on fire.
There was no evidence that she was not in a position to
speak or that she was unconscious between 10th April and
18th April. It was only on the 18th April that she made an
or dying declaration for the first time to her uncle and
later to the Magistrate. And secondly the name of the
husband of the deceased in the dying declaration was shown
as Mohain Ali and not the real name Mafijuddin Ahmed. The
doctor, in whose presence the dying declaration was
recorded, did not state that the declarant was the deceased;
he only stated that the Magistrate recorded the statement of
a patient of his unit who had received the burn injury.
Therefore the probability of her statement being inspired by
her uncle cannot be weeded out. The aforesaid circumstances
do cast doubt on the truthfulness of the dying declaration.
[246 D-H, 247 A-C]
From the tenor of the evidence of the son of the
deceased, a boy of about 7 years, it is evident that he was
vacillating throughout and that he was not a free agent but
he had been tutored. He said that he was in the mango grove
at the time of the occurrence; that his uncle taught him to
tell the police that he was in the grove at the time of
occurrence; that it was the house that caught fire first;
that his father poured kerosene oil on his mother and set
fire to her. He also said that his father poured sented oil
on his mother’s body and not kerosene oil. On the
application of Alimuddin Ahmed the son of the accused was
kept in the custody of his wife and thus to all intents and
purposes the custody of the boy remained with the uncle of
the deceased and his wife. [247 E-H, 248 A, D-E]
The fact that the respondent covered the deceased with
quilt to extinguish the fire and in the process had himself
got burn injuries on his hands also lend support to the
defence version. [248F]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
401 of 1976.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 26th September, 1976 of the Gauhati High Court in
Criminal Appeal No. 18 of 1975.
S.K. Nandy and Krishna Prasad for the Appellant.
D. Goburdhan for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MISRA, J. The present appeal by special leave has been
filed by the State of Assam against the judgment of the
Gauhati High
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Court dated 25th of September, 1975 whereby it set aside the
conviction of the respondent Mafizuddin Ahmed and acquitted
him of the charge of murder.
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The prosecution case as unfolded in the first
information report and the evidence is that the respondent
Mafizuddin Ahmed was a sub-Inspector of Police posted at
Gauhati. His wife and children lived at his village home at
Bholagaon within the Palashbari Police Station. The
respondent had first married Jaygun Bibi and had one son and
two daughters from her. Later on he married another lady
Smt. Lal Bari and thereafter he started maltreating Jaygun
Bibi. On 10th of April 1973 he went to his village home and
at about 2 p.m. he poured kerosene oil on his wife Jaygun
Bibi and set fire to her body with the help of a match box.
When she screamed the accused gagged her mouth and then
wrapped her with a quilt and threw her on the floor. In so
doing the respondent himself received some burn injuries on
his hands. The village people hearing the cries came there
and they took Jaygun Bibi as well as the respondent accused
to the Gauhati Medical College Hospital where they were
admitted for treatment.
Alimuddin Ahmed was the uncle of Jaygun Bibi and lived
at a distance of 6 miles from the house of the respondent.
He received a news that the house of the respondent had
burnt and that Mafizuddin and Jaygun Bibi had sustained burn
injuries. A few days thereafter Alimuddin Ahmed’s brother
developed tetanus. He got him admitted in the Isolation
Hospital at Kalapahar, Gauhati. From there he went to
Gauhati Medical College Hospital on 18th April, 1973 to see
how Jaygun Bibi was faring. He met Jaygun Bibi and asked her
how it happened and then she told that her husband had
poured kerosene oil on her body and set fire. He, thereupon
went to the Sadar Police Station and made a report (Ex. 3).
On receipt of the report police arranged for recording the
dying declaration of Jaygun Bibi by a Magistrate as her
condition was considered precarious. Shri A.C. Bhuyan (PW 2)
recorded the dying declaration of Jaygun Bibi. Eventually
Jaygun Bibi succumbed to her injuries on that very day.
The accused pleaded not guilty to the charge. His plea
was one of denial. He, however, admitted that on 10th of
April, 1973 his wife received serious burn injuries and
later died as a result of her injuries at the Gauhati
Medical College Hospital. His case was that on 10th April,
1973 his house at Bholagaon caught fire and at that
244
time his wife wearing garments also accidently caught fire.
Having seen this he tried to extinguish the fire on her body
by covering her with a quilt and in doing so he himself
received some burn injuries. He flately denied that he
poured kerosene oil on her body and then set fire as
alleged.
The only eye witness in the case is Mantaz Ali the son
of the deceased Jaygun Bibi and the accused-respondent. He
was of only 5 years and odd at the time of occurrence and of
7 years and odd at the time of his deposition. The other
material evidence relied upon by the prosecution are the two
dying declarations, one being oral made to Alimuddin Ahmed,
the uncle, and the other being written dying declaration
recorded by the Magistrate Shri A.C. Bhuyan, PW 2.
The Sessions Judge on a consideration of the evidence
adduced by the prosecution found that the charge under s.
302 IPC was fully brought home to the accused and
accordingly convicted him thereunder and sentenced him to
life imprisonment. On appeal, the High Court set aside the
order of conviction and acquitted the respondent of the
charge. The State of Assam has, as stated earlier, filed the
above appeal by obtaining a special leave.
The contention raised before the High Court on behalf
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of the respondent was that the evidence was too meagre and
unreliable to sustain the conviction and the learned
Sessions Judge failed to properly appreciate the same. The
evidence which has been relied upon by the Sessions Judge
for convicting the respondent was the evidence of the eye
witness Mantaz Ali, the child witness, and the two dying
declarations, one oral and the other written for convicting
the respondent. The High Court, however, did not find it
safe to convict the respondent on the basis of dying
declaration and the statement of PW 7.
It has been contended for the State of Assam that the
conviction could be based upon the dying declaration even if
there is no other corroborating evidence on the record and
reference was made to Tarachand Damu Sutar v. The State of
Maharashtra(1) and Maniappan v. The State of Madras.(2) Mr.
Goverdhan, counsel for the respondent-accused, on the other
hand contends that the dying
245
declaration alone without corroboration cannot be made the
basis of convicting the respondent and referred to
Madhoprasad v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1).
This Court has consistently taken the view that
conviction can be based upon the dying declaration alone. In
Maniappan’s case (supra) the dying declaration was a
completed statement which was categorical in character and
there was nothing to show that the victim had anything more
to say. This Court held that the dying declaration needed no
corroboration and could be relied upon. In Khushal Rao v.
State of Bombay(2) this Court held :
"... in our opinion, there is no absolute rule of
law, or even a rule of prudence which has ripened into
a rule of law, that a dying declaration unless
corroborated by other independent evidence, is not fit
to be acted upon, and made the basis of a conviction."
The Court referred to the following observation made in
Madho Prasad’s case (supra) :
"It is settled law that it is not safe to convict
an accused person merely on the evidence furnished by a
dying declaration without further corroboration because
such a statement is not made on oath and is not subject
to cross-examination and because the maker of it might
be mentally and physically in a state of confusion and
might well be drawing upon his imagination while he was
making the declaration. It is in this light that the
different dying declarations made by the deceased and
sought to be proved in the case have to be considered."
and observed that they were in the nature of obiter dicta.
In Lallubhai Devechand Shah & Ors. v. State of
Gujarat(3) dealing with a dying declaration this Court laid
down :
"The law with regard to dying declarations is very
clear. A dying declaration must be closely scrutinised
as to its truthfulness like any other important piece
of
246
evidence in the light of the surrounding facts and
circumstances of the case, bearing in mind on the one
hand, that the statement is by a person who has not
been examined in court on oath and, on the other hand,
that the dying man is normally not likely to implicate
innocent person falsely."
Thus, the law is now well settled that there can be
conviction on the basis of dying declaration and it is not
at all necessary to have a corroboration provided the Court
is satisfied that the dying declaration is a truthful dying
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declaration and not vitiated in any other manner.
We, therefore, find considerable force in the
contention of the counsel for the State of Assam that there
can be a conviction on the basis of dying declaration even
in the absence of other corroborating evidence but before
doing so, the Court has to be satisfied about the
truthfulness of the dying declaration.
In the instant case, the occurrence took place on the
10th of April, 1973. The deceased was alive upto 18th of
April 1973. She did not disclose earlier to anyone she met
in the hospital that her husband sprinkled kerosene oil and
set her on fire. She met so many people after the
occurrence-she met the village people who appeared on the
scene just after the occurrence and who took her to
hospital. She did not disclose the story to the doctor or
the nurse attending on her. There is no evidence of the
doctor on the record that she was not in a position to speak
or that she had become unconscious between 10th of April and
18th of April. It is only when her uncle met her on the 18th
of April that she made an oral dying declaration to him and
later to the Magistrate who recorded her statement. This
throws doubt on the dying declaration made by Jaygun Bibi
and this circumstance weighed with the High Court in
discarding the dying declaration of the deceased. The High
Court discarded the dying declaration on yet another ground
that the name of the husband of the deceased given in the
dying declaration was Mohsin Ali not Mafizuddin Ahmed and,
therefore, the identity of the lady Jaygun Bibi was itself
doubtful. Dr. Ramananda Das, Registrar of the Surgical Unit
No. 1 of the Gauhati Medical College Hospital, PW 6, in
whose presence the statement was recorded, has not stated
that the declarant was Jaygun Bibi. He has simply stated
that the Magistrate recorded the statement of a patient of
his unit who received burn injuries.
247
Further, the Magistrate, Shri A.C. Bhuyan, who recorded the
dying declaration of the Jaygun Bibi stated that the daroga
and a constable were present nearby when the statement was
recorded. Coupled with these in the absence of the thumb
impression of the deceased on the declaration.
The cumulative effect of all the circumstances which
weighed with the High Court is that they cast doubt about
the truthfulness of the dying declaration. It is not outside
the realm of probability that her statement may have been
inspired by her uncle and, therefore, it will not be safe to
base the conviction of respondent on such a dying
declaration.
The other direct evidence is the deposition of PW 7,
the son of the deceased, a lad of 7 years. The High Court
has observed in its judgment :
"... the evidence of a child witness is always
dangerous unless it is available immediately after the
occurrence and before there were any possibility of
coaching and tutoring."
A bare perusal of the deposition of PW 7 convinces us
that he was vacillating throughout and has deposed as he was
asked to depose either by his nana or by his own uncle. It
is true that we cannot expect much consistency in the
deposition of this witness who was only a lad of 7 years.
But from the tenor of his deposition it is evident that he
was not a free agent and has been tutored at all stages by
someone or the other.
He had told the police that he was in the mango grove
at the time of occurrence. If this be a fact then he could
not be an eye witness of the occurrence but when he came to
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depose before the Court he said :
"Ahmed is my father’s brother. He was not at home
at the time of the occurrence. He came later. He taught
me to tell police that I had been in the mango grove at
the time of occurrence. That is why I told police so.
Later, in company with my maternal grand father,
Alimuddin I said what I had seen."
Again, the first thing that he uttered when the house caught
fire is "Gharat Jui Lagil" (the house has caught fire). This
statement is
248
more in consonance with the defence theory. His mother was
more important for him and if it was a fact that his father
had set fire to his mother by sprinkling kerosene oil to
which he was a witness he would not have omitted to say so.
In the next breath he deposed that his father poured scented
oil on his mother’s body and not kerosene oil.
The fact that he was tutored is fully borne out by his
own statement, as will be clear from the following portion
of his deposition:
" "Nana" accompanied me when I came to depose in
the lower court, but stayed outside. I stated in that
court that I had stated what "Nana" asked me to. The
day before I came to depose, I had told "Nana" what I
would say."
It is also clear from the materials on the record that
on the advice of the police Alimuddin Ahmed, the nana of PW
7 applied for his custody during the enquiry proceedings but
the Magistrate instead of giving custody to the nana gave
the custody of PW 7 to his nani, who was no other than the
wife of Alimuddin. So to all intents and purposes the
custody of the boy remained with Alimuddin Ahmed, the nana.
Indeed, he took the boy for giving evidence in court. P.W. 7
was in the full control of the nana and deposed as he was
asked to depose. In this setting the observation made by the
High Court is fully justified.
There are two other circumstances which also cannot be
lost sight of. Covering the burning body of the Jaygun Bibi
with quilt will help in extinguishing the fire. That will
stop the passing of oxygen to the fire and the fire will
automatically extinguish. The further fact that in so doing
the husband also got burns on his hands goes a long way to
support the defence version.
For the reasons given above the appeal must fail. It is
accordingly dismissed.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
249