Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAHOO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/02/1965
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 40 1965 SCR (3) 86
CITATOR INFO :
R 1985 SC 48 (15)
ACT:
Confession--Accused muttering self-incriminating
statement to himself--Whether amounts to
confession--Communication to another person whether
necessary.
HEADNOTE:
The Sessions Judge in convicting the appellant of murder
took into account an extra-judicial confession alleged to
have been made by him when shortly after the murder he was
muttering to himself that he had finished the deceased. The
High Court confirmed the conviction. In appeal before this
Court it was contended that the muttering of the accused
did not amount to a confession as it was implicit in the
concept of confession whether judicial or extra judicial
that it should be communicated to another. A man can. not
confess to himself; he can only confess to another.
HELD: (i) Sections 24 to 30 of the Evidence Act deal
with the admissibility of confessions, but the expression
’confession’ is not defined. Shortly stated a confession is
a statement made by an accused admitting his guilt. [88 E]
Pakala Narayana v. R.L.R. 66 I.A. 66, referred to.
(ii) It is not a necessary ingredient of the term confession
that it shall be communicated to another. The dictionary
meaning of the term does not warrant any such extension,
nor the reason of the rule underlying the doctrine of
admission or confession demands it. The probative nature of
an admission or confession does not depend on its
communication to another though just like any other piece of
evidence can be admitted in evidence only on proof. The
following illustration pertaining to a written confession
brings out the idea: A kills B; enters in his diary that he
had killed him, puts it in his drawer and absconds. When he
places his act on record he does not communicate to another;
indeed he does not have any intention of communicating it to
a third party. Even so at the trial the said state agent of
the accused can certainly be proved as a confession made by
him. If that be so in the case of a statement in writing,
there cannot be any difference in principle in the case of
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an oral statement, [88 H-89 C]
Bhogilal Chunilal Pandya v. State of Bombay, [1959]
Supp. 1 S.C.R.310,reliedon.
(iii) But there is a clear distinction between the
admissibility of an item. of evidence and the weight to be
attached to it. A confessional soliloquy is a direct piece
of evidence. Generally such soliloquies are mutterings of a
confused mind. Before such evidence can be accepted it must
be established by cogent evidence what were the exact words
used by the accused. Even if so much was established
prudence and justice demand that such evidence cannot be
made the sole ground of conviction. It may be used only as a
corroborative piece of evidence. [90 B, D]
In the present case the confession along with the other
evidence of circumstances was sufficient to prove the guilt
of the appellant.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 248 of
1964.
87
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 16,
1964 of the Allahabad High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 348
of 1964 and capital sentence No. 26 of 1964.
P.C. Khanna, for the appellant.
O.P. Rana, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. Sahoo, the appellant, is a resident of
Pachperwa in the District of Gonda. He has two sons, Badri
and Kirpa Shanker. He lost his wife years ago. His eldest
son, Badri, married one Sunderpatti. Badri was employed in
Lucknow, and his wife was residing with his father. It is
said that Sunderpatti developed illicit intimacy with Sahoo;
but there were incessant quarrels between them. On August
12, 1963, during one of those quarrels,Sunderpatti ran away
to the house of one Mohammed Abdullah ,a neighbour of
theirs. The appellant brought her buck, and after some wordy
altercation between them they slept in the only room of
their house. The only other inmate of the house was the
appellant’s second son, Kirpa Shanker, a lad of about 8
years. On the morning of August 13, 1963, Sunderpatti was
found with serious injuries in the room of the house where
she was sleeping and the appellant was not in the house.
Sunderpatti was admitted in the Sadar Hospital Gonda, at
5.25 p.m. on that day and she died on August 26, 1963 at 3
p.m. Sahoo was sent up for trial before the Court of
Sessions, Gonda, on a charge under s. 302 of the Indian
Penal Code.
The learned Sessions Judge, on a consideration of the
entire evidence came to the conclusion that Sahoo killed
Sunderpatti. On that finding, he convicted the accused under
s. 302 of the Indian Penal Code and sentenced him to death.
On appeal, a Division Bench of the High Court at Allahabad
confirmed both the conviction and the sentence. Hence the
appeal.
Except for an extra-judicial confession, the entire
evidence in the case is circumstantial. Before we advert to
the arguments advanced in the appeal it will be convenient
to narrate the circumstances found by the High Court, which
are as follows: (1) The accused had illicit connections with
the deceased; (2) the deceased and the accused had some
quarrel on the Janmashtami day in the evening and the
deceased had to be persuaded through the influence of their
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neighbors, Mohammed Abdullah and his womenfolk, to go back
to the house of the accused; (3) the deceased was seen in
the company of the accused for the fast time when she was
alive; (4) during the fateful night 3 persons, namely. the
accused. the deceased and the accused’s second son, Kirpa
Shanker (P.W. 17), slept in the room inside the house; (5)
on the early morning of next day, P.W. 17 was asked by his
father to go out to attend to calls of nature, and when he
came back to the verandah of the house he heard some
gurgling sound and he saw his father going out of the house
murmuring something; and (6) P. Ws. 9, 11, 13
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and 15 saw the accused going out of the house at about 6
a.m. on that day soliloquying that he had finished
Sunderpatti and thereby finished the daily quarrels.
This Court in a series of decisions has reaffirmed the
following well-settled rule of "circumstantial evidence".
The circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is to
be drawn should be in the first instance fully established.
"All the facts so established should be consistent only with
the hypothesis of the guilt of the accused and the
circumstances should be of a conclusive nature and tendency
that they should be such as to exclude other hypotheses but
the one proposed to be proved."
Before we consider whether the circumstances narrated above
would stand the said rigorous test, we will at the outset
deal with the contention that the soliloquy of the accused
admitting his guilt was not an extra-judicial confession as
the Courts below held it to be. If it was an extra-judicial
confession, it would really partake the character of direct
evidence rather than that of circumstantial evidence. It is
argued that it is implicit in the concept of confession,
whether it is extra-judicial or judicial, that it shall be
communicated to another. It is said that one cannot confess
to himself: he can only confess to another. This raises an
interesting point, which fails to be decided on a
consideration of the relevant provisions of the Evidence
Act. Sections 24 to 30 of the Evidence Act deal with the
admissibility of confessions by accused persons in criminal
cases. But the expression "confession" is not defined. The
Judicial Committee in Pakala Narayana v. R.(1) has defined
the said expression thus:
"A confession is a statement made by an
accused’ which must either admit in terms the
offence. or at any rate substantially all the
facts which constitute the offence."
A scrutiny of the provisions of ss. 17 to 30 of the Evidence
Act discloses, as one learned author puts it, that statement
is a genus. admission is the species and confession is the
sub-species. Shortly stated, a confession is a statement
made by an accused admitting his guilt. What does the
expression "statement" mean? The dictionary meaning of
the word "statement" is "the act of stating, reciting or
presenting verbally or on paper." The term "statement"
therefore, includes both oral and written statements. Is it
also a necessary ingredient of the term that it shall be
communicated to another? The dictionary meaning of the term
does not warrant any such extension; nor the reason of the
rule underlying the doctrine of admission or confession
demands it. Admissions and confessions are exceptions to the
hearsay rule. The Evidence Act places them in the category
of relevant evidence, presumably on the ground that, as they
are declarations against the interest of the person making
them, they are probably true. The probative value of
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an admission or a confession does not depend upon its
communication to another, though, just like any other piece
of evidence, it can be admitted in evidence only on proof.
This proof in the case of oral admission or confession can
be offered only by witnesses who heard the admission or
confession, as the case may be. The following illustration
pertaining to a written confession brings out the said idea:
A kills B; enters in his diary that he had killed him, puts
it in his drawer and absconds. When he places his act on
record, he does not communicate to another; indeed, he does
not have any intention of communicating it to a third party.
Even so, at the trial the said statement of the accused can
certainly be proved as a confession made by him. If that be
so in the case of a statement in writing, there cannot be
any difference in principle in the case of an oral
statement. Both must stand on the same footing. This aspect
of the doctrine of confession received some treatment from
wellknown authors on evidence, like Taylor, Best and
Phipson. In "A Treatise on the Law of Evidence" by Taylor,
11th Edn., Vol. I, the following statement appears at p.
596:
"What the accused has been overheard
muttering to himself, or saying to his wife or
to any other person in confidence, will be
receivable in evidence."
In "The Principles of the Law of Evidence" by
W.M. Best, 12th Edn., at p. 454, it is stated
much to the same effect thus:
"Words addressed to others, and writing,
are no doubt the most usual forms; but words
uttered in soliloquy seem equally receivable."
We also find the following passage in "Phipson
on Evidence", 7th Edn., at p. 262:
"A statement which the prisoner had been
overheard muttering to himself,f, if otherwise
than in his sleep, is admissible against him,
if independently proved."
These passages establish that communication to another is
not a necessary ingredient of the concept of "confession".
In this context a decision of this Court in Bhogilal
Chunilal Pandya v The State of Bombay(1) may usefully be
referred to. There the question was whether a former
statement made by a witness within the meaning of $. 157 of
the Evidence Act should have been communicated to another
before it could be used to corroborate the testimony of
another witness. This Court, after considering the relevant
provisions of the Evidence Act and the case-law on the
subject came to the conclusion that the word "statement"
used in s. 157 meant only "something that is stated" and the
element of communication was not necessary before "something
that is stated" became a statement under that section. If,
as we have said, statement is the genus and confession is
only a sub-species of that genus, we do not see any reason
why the statement implied in the confession should be given
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 310.
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a different meaning. We, therefore, hold that a statement,
whether communicated or not, admitting guilt is a confession
of guilt.
But, there is a clear distinction between the
admissibility of an evidence and the weight to be attached
to it. A confessional soliloquy is a direct piece of
evidence. It may be an expression of conflict of emotion; a
conscious effort to stifle the pricked conscience; an
argument to find excuse or justification for his act; or a
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penitent or remorseful act of exaggeration of his part in
the crime. The tone may be soft and low; the words may be
confused; they may be capable of conflicting interpretations
depending on witnesses, whether they are biased or honest,
intelligent or ignorant, imaginative or prosaic, as the case
may be. Generally they are mutterings of a confused mind.
Before such evidence can be accepted, it must be established
by cogent evidence what were the exact words used by the
accused. Even if so much was established, prudence and
justice demand that such evidence cannot be made the sole
ground of conviction. It may be used only as a corroborative
piece of evidence.
The circumstances found by the High Court, which we have
stated earlier, lead to the only conclusion that the accused
must have committed the murder. No other reasonable
hypothesis was or could be suggested.
Further, in this case, as we have noticed earlier, P.W.s
11, 13 and 15 deposed that they clearly heard the accused
say when he opened the door of the house and came out at
60’clock in the morning of the fateful day that he had
"finished Sunderpatti, his daughter-in-law, and thereby
finished the daily quarrels". We hold that this extra-
judicial confession is relevant evidence: it certainly
corroborates the circumstantial evidence adduced in
the .case.
In the result, we agree with the conclusion arrived at
by the High Court both in regard to the conviction and the
sentence. The appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
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