Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JUGGANKHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/08/1964
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 831 1965 SCR (1) 14
CITATOR INFO :
D 1968 SC 829 (13)
ACT:
Criminal Law-Poisonous medicine-Prescription without
studying possible effect-If rash and negligent act-Indian
Penal Code, 1860 (45 of 1860) s. 304A.
HEADNOTE:
Lured by a pamphlet advertising that, among other things,
the appellant, a registered Homoeopathic medical
practitioner, treated Naru (Guinea Worm), one D went to the
clinic of the appellant. The appellant examined D and
administered 24 drops of stramonium and a leaf of dhatura.
After taking the medicine D started feeling restless and
ill, various antidotes were given but she was not relieved.
She vomited twice but the vomits were not preserved and sent
for examination. Ultimately in the evening she died. The
autopsy surgeon reported that the cause of the death could
be ascertained only after the result of the chemical analy-
sis was received and he sent to the chemical examiner the
stomach with its contents and pieces of liver, spleen and
kidney. The Chemical Examiner reported that no poison could
be detected in any of these items. The appellant’s
contention that it has not been proved that death resulted
from dhatura poisoning was negatived by both courts below,
and the High Court confirmed his conviction under s. 302,
Indian Penal Code. On appeal by special leave
HELD : (i) On the facts the conclusion of the courts below
that death was the result of Dhatura poison could not be
said to be erroneous. [16D]
(ii) The appellant was guilty under s. 304A, Indian Penal
Code. On the facts, s. 299, Indian Penal Code, did not
apply and the appellant must be acquitted of the charge
under s. 302, Indian Penal Code. [19C]
It seems that the appellant prescribed the medicine without
thoroughly studying what would be the effect of giving 24
drops of stramonium and a leaf of dhatura. It is a rash and
negligent act to prescribe poisonous medicines without
studying their possible effect. [18H]
John Oni Akerele v. The King A.I.R. 1943 P.C. 72,
distinguished
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 171 of
1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
May 10, 1962 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court Indore Bench
at Indore in Criminal Appeal No. 344 of 1961.
S. Mohan Kumaramangalam, M. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg, D.
P. Singh and S. C. Agarwal, for the appellant.
I. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri J. This is an appeal by special leave directed against
the judgment of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh con-
15
firming the conviction and sentence of the appellant under
s. 302, I.P.C.
The case of the prosecution, in brief, which has been
accepted both by the Sessions Judge and the High Court, is
as follows. The appellant is a registered Homoeopathic
medical practitioner tinder Madhya Pradesh Homoeopathic and
Bio-chemic Practitioners Act (Madhya Pradesh Act 26 of
1951).
In about May 1960, he started residing and practising at
Akodiya Mandi. He issued a pamphlet advertising that, among
other things, he treated Naru (guinea worm). Lured by this,
Smt. Deobi, aged about 20 years, who had been suffering
from guinea worm for six weeks, accompanied by her uncle
Chisaji (P.W. 3), mother Daryaobai _(P.W. 4) and aunt Gulab
Bai (P. W. 6) went to the clinic of the appellant on May 30,
1961, at about 8 a.m. She was examined by the appellant and
administered 24 drops of mother tincture stramonium and a
leaf of dhatura. After taking this medicine she started
feeling restless and ill; various antidote,-, were given but
she was not relieved. She vomited twice but the vomits were
not preserved and sent for examination to the chemical
examiner. Ultimately at about 5 p.m. she died.
Dr. Patodia (P.W. 7) performed the autopsy on May 31, 1961,
and reported that the cause of death could be ascertained
only after the result of chemical analysis is received. He
sent to the chemical examiner the stomach with its contents
and pieces of liver, spleen and kidney. The chemical
examiner, however, reported that no poison could be detected
in any of these items. This is seized by the learned
counsel for the appellant and he has urged that it has not
been proved that death resulted from Dhatura poisoning. But
both the courts below have found against him. He further
urges that what was administered was not fatal dose and he
has seriously challenged the calculations made by the
learned Sessions Judge of the contents of poison in the leaf
alleged to have been given to the deceased. He has also
challenged the concurrent findings of the courts below that
a dhatura leaf and 24 drops of mother tincture of stramonium
was administered to the deceased. His final contention is
that on the facts found it was not a case of murder under s.
302, I.P.C., but of an offence under s. 304A,I.P.C.
We have looked into the evidence bur we are unable to say
that the concurrent finding of the courts below that 24
drops of stramonium and a leaf of dhatura were administered
is mani-
16
festly wrong. They have relied on the evidence of Chisaji,
deceased’s uncle, P14, a register of patients maintained by
the appellant, P10, the prescription written by the
appellant, and the evidence of Shyam Swaroop Mishra, P.W.
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14, who recognized the handwriting of the appellant. We
think they were right in relying on the above evidence.
We are also of the opinion that the courts below were right
in concluding that death resulted from poisoning. It is
true that Dr. Patodia could not say what poison caused her
death. But he could say that death was due to something
that was an irritant, and it could be due to dhatura or
belladonna or any other poison. The deceased, according to
Chisaji, P.W. 3, was a healthy woman, and had not taken any
other medicine before arriving at the clinic. She was at
the clinic from 9 a.m. till she died. The only medicine she
took, apart from antidotes, was what was administered, i.e.,
24 drops of stramonium and a dhatura leaf. She started
feeling restless and ill soon after taking these things. On
these facts the conclusion of the courts below that death
was the result of dhatura poison cannot be said to be
erroneous.
The only question that remains is about the nature of the
offence committed by the appellant. Should he be convicted
under S. 302 or s. 304A, I.P.C? In our opinion, the
appellant is liable to be convicted under S. 304A and not S.
302, I.P.C.
Dr. Choudhary, P.W. 17, a registered medical practitioner,
in the course of his evidence, stated:
"In the opinion of Dr. Modi, the writer of
Medical Jurisprudence, a dose of. 20 to 20-1/2
grains of dhatura is fatal and according to
Dr. Taylor about 16 grains of it is a fatal
dose. Therefore, I can say that if a fresh
leaf of dhatura of 6 inches length and 4
inches breadth along with 24 drops of
stranionium mother tincture of Homoeopathic
preparation is given to any patient then the
joint effect of both may be fatal and if it is
kept in mind that the ’patient is allergic and
idiosyncratic for stramonium then such a dose
must be fatal."
This is relied on by the learned Sessions Judge to determine
what would be the fatal dose. We have however looked up
Modi’s Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology (14th Edition)
and Taylor’s Principles and Practice of Medical
Jurisprudence (Ilth Edition) but they do not quite say what
Dr. Choudhary had assumed. Modi writes at p. 713 thus
17
"Fatal Dose-Uncertain. Four datura fruits
pounded and mixed with flour were given to six
men, four of whom died. A ripe fruit weighs,
on an average, about 2 drachms, and contains
the seeds which weigh about 1-1/2 drachms.
One hundred dried datura seeds weigh 20 to 20-
1/2 grains. A decoction of 125 seeds of
datura stramonium has proved fatal to a
woman."
According to Taylor (p. 55 1, Vol. 11)
"Toxicity and Fatal Dose. The active
principle, a mixture of hyoscine, atropine and
hyoscyamine, is extremely toxic, and as the
plant contains approxi mately 1 to 1 per cent
of alkaloids, it must be considered extremely
dangerous. The seeds are highly poisonous,
inasmuch as they contain a larger proportion
of alkaloids than other parts of the plant.
Death may take place although the whole of the
seeds are ejected.
A child of 2 swallowed about 100 see& of stra-
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monium weighing 16 grains. The usual symptoms
were manifested in an hour, and the child died
in 24 hours although twenty seeds had been
ejected by vomiting and eighty by purging.
Sufficient alkaloid to destroy life had been
absorbed from the entire seeds and carried
into the blood.
In a case which became the subject of a trial
at Osnabruck, a woman administered to her
mother a decoction of the bruised seeds of the
thorn-apple, of which it was supposed there
were about 125. She very soon became
delirious, threw her arms about and spoke
incoherently; she died in 7 hours."
Dr. Patodia (P.W. 7) could not definitely say what dose of
tincture stramonium should be sufficiently fatal to life.
But he further opined that half an ounce of tincture
stramonium, which is in sufficient excess of the normal
medicinal dose (which he put at 10 to 30 drops) will be
sufficient to cause death.
On this material we cannot say that it has been established
that what the appellant prescribed was necessarily a fatal
dose. Further, the finding of the learned Sessions Judge
that the leaf weighed 40 grains and the poison content would
be 15 grains does not proceed on any sound basis. Chisaji
described the leaf as a big one but it was green and fresh.
Laxminarayan
18
Vaidya, P.W. 13, gave the dimensions of the biggest leaf as
having a length of 7 inches and breadth of 3-1/2 inches
grown on the land having application of manure. Dr.
Choudhary, P.W. 17, said that "on the basis of hypothesis if
a fresh leaf of dhatura is 6 inches in length and 4 inches
in breadth and is 40 grains in weight, it would contain 27
grains moisture and 13 grains of solid stramoniun, i.e.
poison." We think that this hypothetical evidence should not
have been relied upon to determine the content of solid
stramonium in the leaf alleged to have been administered to
the deceased. It follows from this that poisonous contents
of the leaf have not been satisfactorily established and if
this is so, the prosecution has failed to prove that the
dose given to the deceased was necessarily fatal. Further,
Dr. Choudhary stated that it had not come to his notice that
in any of the Homoeopathic systems of medicine stramonium
mother tincture or stramonium in potenised form or a green
leaf of dhatura is not given for treatment of guinea-worm.
According to Dr. R. K. Singh, P.W. 16, mother tincture
stramonium can be given for removing foreign bodies, though
it is not specifically mentioned in Materia Medica of
Homeopathy that it_ can be used for treatment of guinea-
worm. But it will be remembered that in this system
treatment is by symptoms.
On these facts, it appears to us that S. 299, I.P.C., does
not apply. It cannot be held that the appellant
administered the stramonium drops and the dhatura leaf with
the knowledge that he was likely by such an act to cause the
death of the deceased. Accordingly, we hold that the
appellant must be acquitted of the charge under S. 302.
The appellant was charged in the alternative under s. 304A.
The learned counsel for the appellant urges that the
ingredients of s. 304A have not been established inasmuch as
it was not a rash or negligent act. We are unable to accept
this contention. Stramonium and a dhatura leaf are
poisonous. The appellant was registered as a Homoeopath,
and in Homoeopathy a dhatura leaf is never administered as
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such. This much he admits himself. According to the
evidence on the record, in no system of medicine, except
perhaps in the Ayurvedic system, the dhatura leaf is given
as cure for guinea worms. It seems that the appellant
prescribed the medicine without thoroughly studying what
would be the effect of giving 24 drops of stramonium and a
leaf of dhatura. It is a rash and negligent act to prescribe
poisonous medicines without studying their probable effect.
The learned counsel for the appellant has invited our
attention to the case of
19
John Oni Akerele v. The King(1) a decision of the Privy
Council in an appeal from West Africa. But this decision is
wholly distinguishable. The doctor in that case was a duly
qualified medical practitioner and had given an injection of
Sobita, which consists of sodium bismuth tartrate. It was
alleged that the doctor had given a dose stronger than the
proper dose. On the facts, their Lordships came to the
conclusion that criminal negligence had not been proved. It
is true, as observed by their Lordships, that care should be
taken before imputing criminal negligence to a professional
man acting in the course of his, profession, but even taking
this care we have no doubt that the appellant was guilty of
a rash and negligent act. Accordingly, we hold that he is
guilty under s. 304A, I.P.C.
In the result, the appellant’s conviction under S. 302,
I.P.C., is set aside and he is convicted under s. 304A and
sentenced to 2 years’ rigorous imprisonment.
Conviction altered.
(1) A.I.R. 1943 P.C. 72.