Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 646 of 1994
PETITIONER:
Sudhansu Sekhar Sahoo
RESPONDENT:
State of Orissa
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/12/2002
BENCH:
Y.K. Sabharwal & K.G. Balakrishnan.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
K.G. Balakrishnan, J.
This appeal is preferred against the judgment of the High Court of
Orissa, dated 27th July, .1993. The appellant was found guilty of offences
punishable under section 376 IPC and 342 IPC by the Sessions Court,
Kalahandi, and was sentenced to undergo imprisonment for seven years for the
offence under section 376 IPC and for three months for the offence under section
342 IPC. The conviction and sentence of the appellant was confirmed by the
High Court.
During the relevant time, the appellant was a District Malaria Officer.
The complainant, (hereinafter referred to as Ms. X) was a lady Supervisor
working in the Integrated Child Development Project. She was a post-graduate
and was about 29 years of age during the relevant time. She was staying in a
rented house owned by the local post master. The case of the prosecution was
that on 1.3.1987, PW-2, a female Anganwadi worker, along with her female
helper came to Ms. X at 6. P.M. in a jeep and told her that she was required
by District Social Welfare Officer. Ms. X accompanied them in the jeep which
was being driven by a driver and there was also a Malaria Inspector in the jeep.
PW-2 told Ms. X that she had come pursuant to the direction given by the
appellant and that she had been told to inform Ms. X that D.S.W.O. required her
presence. At about 7 P.M., all of them left in the jeep and when they reached a
small town, which was about 13 kms. away from the residence of Ms. X, the
appellant was waiting there. The further case of the prosecution is that when the
jeep reached that place, PW-2, (the female Anganwadi worker) and her helper
alighted from the jeep and Ms. X though wanted to alight, but she was prevented
from doing so and the appellant got into the driver’s seat of the jeep and drove
away the vehicle speedily. The jeep driven by the appellant along with
Ms. X , the Malaria Inspector and the driver reached the house of the appellant
at about 11.30 P.M. The house of the appellant was about 120 kms. away
from the place of residence of Ms. X. Ms. X was told that D.S.W.O. was sitting
inside the house and the appellant invited Ms. X to his house. The bag of Ms. X
was carried inside the house of the appellant by a peon. The case of the
prosecution is that as soon as Ms. X entered the house of the appellant, the
appellant closed the door. Though Ms. X wanted to leave the place, she was not
allowed to go. She was offered dinner, but she declined to have it.
Thereafter, according to the prosecution, the appellant had forcible sexual
intercourse with Ms. X and she fell unconscious. When she regained her
senses, she found her clothes in disorder and discovered that she had
been ravished by the appellant. At about 7.30 A.M. on 2.3.1987, PW-3, the
driver along with one Junior Engineer came to the house of the appellant and
made enquiries about Ms. X. The Junior Engineer told that he came to know
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that Ms. X was ill and had come for treatment and that she was in the house of
the appellant. PW-3 brought an autorickshaw and in that autorickshaw Ms. X
proceeded to the bus stand and travelled in a bus and reached the house of
PW-4, a project officer. PW-4 found Ms. X in a disturbed mood and in spite of
repeated questions, Ms. X did not tell as to what had happened to her. In the
evening, PW-4 came back from her office and made further enquiries when she
found Ms. X crying and not taking any food. On the next morning, Ms. X told
everything about the incident that had taken place in the house of the appellant
and narrated how she was subjected to forcible sexual intercourse. PW-4
advised her to give a statement in writing. On 4.3.1987, PW-4, along with Ms.
X, went to the police station and handed over the written statement. As per the
direction of the Investigating Officer, Ms. X was sent for medical examination.
On the next day, she handed over the clothes worn by her at the time of
commission of offence by the appellant.
The Investigating Officer got the statements of the witnesses recorded
under Section 164 Cr.P.C. The Sessions Court after considering the evidence
came to the conclusion that the appellant had committed the offence of wrongful
confinement and rape. In the Sessions Court, the appellant admitted that Ms. X
was brought to his house in a jeep. According to the appellant, he was told that
a sick lady required treatment urgently. The Malaria Inspector and the driver
were present in the jeep and he took the sick lady in the jeep and when the jeep
reached his place of residence at about 11.30 P.M., he asked the Malaria
Inspector to take the sick lady to the hospital, but she requested that she may be
given shelter in his house. As it was difficult to find an alternative place, he
allowed the lady to stay in his house and asked the watchman to give her food.
The sick lady was found vomiting. The watchman gave her a separate room
and the appellant slept in his own room. The appellant completely denied the
offence of rape and wrongful confinement.
The Sessions Court after elaborate consideration of the matter came to
the conclusion that Ms. X had no motive to falsely implicate the appellant who
was a superior officer and that she being the prosecutrix in a rape case, her
evidence has to be given due weight. The High Court also agreed with the
conclusion reached by the Sessions Court.
The learned counsel who appeared for the appellant drew our attention to
the various circumstances which made the prosecution story highly improbable.
It was argued that Ms. X travelled nearly 120 kms. during night and reached the
appellant’s house, but she had not raised any protest against the conduct of
the appellant till she filed her written statement before the police. It was also
pointed out that the evidence of the prosecutrix is not supported by any medical
evidence and there are so many other circumstances which would belie the
prosecution case.
Ms. X was staying near the place of her work in a rented house. When
the female Anganwadi worker along with her helper came to her and told that
she was required by her superior officer, she did not ask anything as to why her
presence was required during night. She readily followed them and went in a
jeep to the place which was about 13 kms. away. There, she met the appellant
and according to Ms. X, she was prevented from alighting from the jeep and the
appellant drove away the vehicle hastily in order to prevent Ms. X from getting
down from the vehicle. But she admitted during cross-examination that she had
not stated these facts in the written complaint made by her. Therefore, the
element of forcible taking away of Ms. X by the appellant is lacking in the
complaint. According to Ms. X, the appellant forcibly had sexual intercourse with
her though she resisted this physical onslaught and sustained injuries.
According to her, both nail marks and biting marks were there on her body.
Ms. X was examined by a doctor on 4.3.1987, but she was not satisfied with this
examination and she was again taken to another doctor on 10.3.1987 for medical
examination. The doctor, who examined her on 4.3.1987 was not examined and
the medical certificate also was not produced as an item of evidence. In the
medical certificate that was produced pursuant to the medical examination done
on 10.3.1987, there was no mention of nail marks or any other signs of
violence on her body. Thus, the corroborative evidence is lacking in this
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case. It is significant to note that according to Ms. X, her clothes had seminal
stains. She produced these clothes before the police, but these clothes did not
contain any stain either of blood or semen. Had there been any stains of semen
or blood on the clothes allegedly worn by her at the time of commission of
offence, it would have gone a long way to prove the case of the prosecution,
especially Ms. X being an unmarried woman.
That apart, there is no valid explanation offered by Ms. X to travel all the
way from her place of residence. Ms. X being an educated woman would have
naturally foreseen the impropriety of travelling along with other males in a jeep
for such a long distance during night. It is true, people act differently to same
situations. There are persons who are unduly timorous and imagine every path
beset with lions and there are others of more of robust temperament who fail
to foresee or non-challantly disregard even the most obvious dangers. Ms.
X, an unmarried woman travelled in a jeep for long distance in night and her
conduct appears to be unusual and there is no rational explanation as to what
urgent official work could have been there to undertake this nocturnal journey to
meet her superior officer.
It is also pertinent to note that the appellant and the Malaria Officer were
known to Ms. X. Two days prior to 2.3..1987, i.e. 28.2.1987, there was a circle
meeting where Ms. X was required in her capacity as lady supervisor. The
place of that meeting was 35 kms. away from her residence. Ms. X admitted in
her evidence that on the same day the appellant came to her house and
enquired why she had not attended the circle meeting and the appellant offered
help for her treatment. She also deposed that the appellant noted his address
in her diary. This shows the previous acquaintance of Ms. X with the
appellant. It is also significant to note that on the next day at about 7.30 A.M.,
the Junior Engineer and one driver came and enquired about Ms. X. How
these two persons came to know of the presence of Ms. X in the house of the
appellant, also is not known.
It is true that the evidence of the prosecutrix in a rape case is to be given
due weight. The sexual violence is a dehumanising act and it is an unlawful
encroachment into the right to privacy and sanctity of woman. The courts also
should be strict and vigilant to protect the society from such evils. It is in the
interest of the society that serious crimes like rape should be effectively
investigated. It is equally important that there must be fairness to all sides. In a
criminal case, the court has to consider the triangulation of interests. It
involves taking into account the position of the accused, the victim and his or her
family and the public. The purpose of criminal law is to permit everyone to go
about their daily lives without fear of harm to person or property.
The counsel for the respondent State contended that the evidence of the
prosecutrix , which is accepted by two courts, is sufficient to uphold the
conviction of the appellant for the offence of rape and it was argued that in rape
cases, the sole testimony of the victim is sufficient to enter a conviction.
It is true that the sole testimony of the victim of a sexual offence can be a
basis for conviction provided it is safe, reliable and worthy of acceptance. This
Court had occasion, in many cases, to consider the nature of evidence required
when the conviction mainly based on the testimony of the victim of the sexual
offence.
In Balwant Singh & Ors. Vs. State of Punjab (1987) 2 SCC 27, the
victim was a 19 years old student and the allegation was that when she was on
her way to the college, three accused persons forcibly took her away in a car to
the canal bank where she was subjected to sexual intercourse by the accused.
She fell unconscious and later she was found lying in a state of
unconsciousness under a Banyan tree by her father. There was no eye
witness. On medical examination, her hymen was found torn and there were
reddish abrasions on her breast. The police investigated the case and the case
was reported to be cancelled. The victim filed a private complaint and the
Magistrate committed the accused persons for trial to the court of sessions. The
Sessions Judge convicted the accused persons and this Court confirmed the
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conviction. This Court held that both the learned Additional Sessions Judge
and the High Court have believed the evidence of the prosecutrix and her father
and in their opinion there is no reason why their evidence should not be believed
and the conviction was thus solely based on the evidence of the prosecutrix.
In Rafiq vs. State of U.P. (1980) 4 SCC 262, a middle-aged bal sewika
in a village welfare organisation was raped by the appellant around 2.30 a.m.
when she was sleeping in a girls’ school. On the next day, she reported the
matter to the mukhya sewika of the village. The counsel for the accused
contended that there was absence of corroboration of the testimony of the
prosecutrix and that there was absence of injuries on the person of the woman
and so the conviction was unsustainable. But this plea was rejected and this
Court held :
"The facts and circumstances often vary from case to case, the
crime situation and the myriad psychic factors, social conditions
and people’s life-styles may fluctuate, and so, rules of prudence
relevant in one fact-situation may be inept in another. We cannot
accept the argument that regardless of the specific circumstances
of a crime and criminal milieu, some strands of probative reasoning
which appealed to a Bench in one reported decision must
mechanically be extended to other cases. Corroboration as a
condition for judicial reliance on the testimony of a prosecutrix is
not a matter of law but a guidance of prudence under given
circumstances."
In Krishan Lal vs. State of Haryana (1980) 3 SCC 159, the victim was
sleeping with her mother and other children outside her house on a hot night
and the two accused persons carried her away to a nearby godown under
intimidation and allegedly committed rape on the young woman. In the morning,
the mother of the victim found blood on the daughter’s salwar and thereupon she
narrated the criminal assault of the accused on the previous night. The
counsel for the accused urged that the evidence of the prosecutrix, without
substantial corroboration, was inadequate to rest a conviction under Section 376
IPC. This plea was rejected and it was held by this Court as under :
"We must bear in mind human psychology and behavioural
probability when assessing the testimonial potency of the victim’s
version. What girl would foist a rape charge on a stranger unless a
remarkable set of facts or clearest motives were made out? The
inherent bashfulness, the innocent naivete and the feminine
tendency to conceal the outrage of masculine sexual aggression
are factors which are relevant to improbabilise the hypothesis of
false implication. The injury on the person of the victim, especially
her private parts, has corroborative value..To forsake
these vital considerations and go by the obsolescent demands for
substantial corroboration is to sacrifice common sense in favour of
an artificial concoction called ’Judicial’ probability. Indeed, the
Court loses its credibility if it rebels against realism. The law court
is not an unnatural world."
In State of Maharashtra vs. Chandraprakash Kewalchand Jain (1990)
1 SCC 550, a girl eloped with a 25 years old young man. They went to
Bombay and got married. Thereafter they came to a place near Nagpur and
checked in a lodge. The local Police Sub-Inspector came to know that the
couple was staying in the said lodge and he took them to the police station
where the husband was beaten up and the wife was threatened. The Sub-
Inspector registered a case against the husband alleging that he was found
misbehaving on a public street and put him in the lock-up. The girl was left in a
hotel. It was alleged that the Sub-Inspector visited the girl’s room and
committed rape on her. In that case, this Court elaborately considered the
question whether conviction can be based on the sole testimony of the victim of
the sexual offence and held :
"Is it essential that evidence of prosecutrix should be corroborated
in material particulars before the court bases a conviction on her
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testimony? Does the rule of prudence demand that in all cases
save the rarest of rare the court should look for corroboration
before acting on the evidence of the prosecutrix..
A prosecutrix of a sex offence cannot be put on par with
accomplice. She is in fact a victim of the crime. The Evidence Act
nowhere says that her evidence cannot be accepted unless it is
corroborated in material particulars. She is undoubtedly a
competent witness under Section 118 and her evidence must
receive the same weight as is attached to an injured in cases of
physical violence. The same degree of care and caution must
attach in the evaluation of her evidence as in the case of an injured
complainant or witness and no more. What is necessary is that the
court must be alive to and conscious of the fact that it is dealing
with the evidence of a person who is interested in the outcome of
the charge levelled by her. If the court keeps this in mind and feels
satisfied that it can act on the evidence of the prosecutrix, there is
no rule of law or practice incorporated in the Evidence Act similar
to illustration (b) to Section 114 which requires it to look for
corroboration. If for some reason the court is hesitant to place
implicit reliance on the testimony of the prosecutrix, it may look for
evidence which may lend assurance to her testimony short of
corroboration required in the case of an accomplice. The nature of
evidence required to lend assurance to the testimony of the
prosecutrix must necessarily depend on the facts and
circumstances of each case. But if a prosecutrix is an adult and of
full understanding the court is entitled to base a conviction on her
evidence unless the same is shown to be infirm and not
trustworthy. If the totality of the circumstances appearing on the
record of the case disclose that the prosecutrix does not have a
strong motive to falsely involve the person charged, the court
should ordinarily have no hesitation in accepting her evidence. We
have, therefore, no doubt in our minds that ordinarily the evidence
of a prosecutrix who does not lack understanding must be
accepted. The degree of proof required must not be higher than is
expected of an injured witness."
In State of H.P. vs. Lekh Raj (2000) 1SCC 247, this Court held that
"the hypertechnicalities or figment of imagination should not be allowed to divest
the court of its responsibility of sifting and weighing the evidence to arrive at the
conclusion regarding the existence or otherwise of a particular circumstance
keeping in view the peculiar facts of each case, the social position of the victim
and the accused, the larger interests of the society particularly the law and order
problem and degrading values of life inherent in the prevalent system. The
realities of life have to be kept in mind while appreciating the evidence for arriving
at the truth."
In State of Rajasthan vs. N.K. (2000) 5 SCC 30, this Court held :
"It is well settled that a prosecutrix complaining of having been a
victim of the offence of rape is not an accomplice after the crime.
There is no rule of law that her testimony cannot be acted without
corroboration in material particulars. Her testimony has to be
appreciated on the principle of probabilities just as the testimony of
any other witness; a high degree of probability having been shown
to exist in view of the subject-matter being a criminal charge.
However, if the court of facts may find it difficult to accept the
version of the prosecutrix on its face value, it may search for
evidence, direct or circumstantial, which would lend assurance to
her testimony."
It is well settled that in rape cases the conviction can be solely based on
the evidence of the victim, provided such evidence inspires confidence in the
mind of the court. The victim is not treated as accomplice, but could only be
characterised as injured witness. It is also reasonable to assume that no
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woman would falsely implicate a person in sexual offence as the honour and
prestige of that woman also would be at stake. However, the evidence of the
prosecution shall be cogent and convincing and if there is any supporting
material likely to be available, then the rule of prudence requires that evidence of
the victim may be supported by such corroborative material.
Unfortunately, the broad probabilities of the case were not considered
by the Sessions Court or the High Court in the instant case. Ms. X, though
asserted that she had sustained scratch injuries by nails and biting, her
medical examination did not reveal any such injuries. It is true that in view of
social conditions prevalent in India, there may be delay in giving the first
information of such an offence to the police. A rape victim may think seriously
before giving the information to the police about rape as the onslaught of a social
stigma may haunt her for life. Though the delay as such is not serious, but
while considering broad probabilities of the case, the delay in giving the
information to the police, in the instant case, also assumes some importance.
Though the past conduct of the prosecutrix is an irrelevant matter, in the instant
case, Ms. X asserted that she was a virgin till the alleged incident, but the
medical evidence supported by her physical features revealed that she was
habituated to sex. All these factors cast a serious doubt on the prosecution
case. Though there is no apparent motive for Ms. X to falsely implicate the
appellant, it may be that Ms. X must have changed her mind when she came to
know that others must have come to know of her conduct. So there are so many
loose ends in the prosecution case. On a consideration of the broad
probabilities of the case, we feel that various factors cast a serious doubt about
the genuineness of the case of Ms. X that she had been forcibly ravished by the
appellant. The appellant is certainly entitled to the benefit of doubt. Therefore,
we set aside the conviction of the appellant under section 376 and 342 IPC and
allow his appeal. The appellant was granted bail by this Court. The bail
bonds furnished by the appellant are cancelled.