Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G.V. RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
L.H.V. PRASAD & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/03/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Wadha, S.S.Ahmad
JUDGMENT:
S.SAGHIR AHMAD, J. This Special Leave Petition was
dismissed by us on 04.10.1999. We, hereinbelow, give our
reasons for dismissing the Special Leave Petition. The
petitioner is a Post-Doctoral fellow at Centre for Cellular
and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad. He invited marriage
proposals for himself through advertisement in Deccan
Chronicle dated 27th of January, 1994, in pursuance of which
respondent No.1 approached the petitioner and furnished the
particulars of respondent No.4 who is his sister. It was
represented by respondent No.1 that respondent No.4 was born
on 29th of June, 1966 and they belonged to Thurupukapu
Community. The petitioner himself gave out that he belonged
to Gujala Balija Community which was a forward community
and, therefore, he wanted a wife from a forward community.
The parents of respondent No.4, who are respondents 2 to 3
in this petition, met the parents of the petitioner and they
talked and the marriage proposal was finalised. Betrothel
ceremony took place on 27th of June, 1994 and later the
marriage took place on 19.8.94. On 4th of March, 1997, the
petitioner, allegedly, came to know that respondents 1 to 4
belonged to Kondakapu Community, which was a Scheduled
Tribe, and it was then that he realised that by
misrepresenting themselves as members of Thurupukapu
Community, they had lured the petitioner into wedlock, for
which the petitioner would not have agreed at all, had he
known that the respondents did not belong to Thurupukapu
Community but belonged to Kondakapu Community. It was in
these circumstances that he filed a complaint in the Court
on 10.7.1996 under Section 415, 419, 420 read with Section
34 IPC which was referred to Station House Officer, Police
Station Alwal, Rangareddy District, Andhra Pradesh for
investigation and report. Since the investigation was
considerably delayed, the petitioner filed Writ Petition
No.11477 of 1997 in the High Court for a Writ of Mandamus
directing the Station House Officer to expedite the
investigation. While the Writ Petition was pending, an
affidavit was filed by the Station House Officer that after
completing the investigation, he had submitted the
chargesheet in the Court on 28.5.1997 against the
respondents. The respondents, however, approached the High
Court through a petition under Section 482 Cr.P.C. seeking
the quashing of the FIR which was allowed by the impugned
judgment and it is in these circumstances that this petition
has been filed in this Court. Learned counsel for the
petitioner has contended that the High Court was not
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justified in quashing the complaint (FIR) as a chargesheet
had already been submitted after the investigation and a
prima facie case was made out against the respondents. He
has further contended that the High Court was wrong in its
interpretation of Section 415 IPC. Before considering the
contention of the learned counsel for the petitioner on
merits, we may state another important fact that the
petitioner himself is facing a case under Section 498-A IPC
instituted by the respondents against him. It is stated in
the petition that this prosecution was launched by the
respondents against the petitioner as a counter-blast to the
notice dated 13.6.1995 which was issued by him to respondent
No.1 as to why he had misrepresented about his caste and why
had he represented to the petitioner that he belonged to
Thurupukapu Community instead of Kondakapu Community. The
CHEATING is defined in Section 415 of the Indian Penal Code
which provides as under:- "415. Cheating.- Whoever, by
deceiving any person, fraudulently or dishonestly induces
the person so deceived to deliver any property to any
person, or to consent that any person shall retain any
property, or intentionally induces the person so deceived to
do or omit to do anything which he would not do or omit if
he were not so deceived, and which act or omission causes or
is likely to cause damage or harm to that person in body,
mind, reputation or property, is said to "cheat".
Explanation.- A dishonest concealment of facts is a
deception within the meaning of this section." The High
Court quashed the proceedings principally on the ground that
Chapter XVII of the Indian Penal Code deals with the
offences against properties and, therefore, Section 415 must
also necessarily relate to the property which, in the
instant case, is not involved and, consequently, the FIR was
liable to be quashed. The broad proposition on which the
High Court proceeded is not correct. While the first part
of the defition relates to property, the second part need
not necessarily relate to property. The second part is
reproduced below:- ".........intentionally induces the
person so deceived to do or omit to do anything which he
would not do or omit if he were not so deceived, and which
act or omission causes or is likely to cause damage or harm
to that person in body, mind, reputation or property, is
said to "cheat"." This part speaks of intentional deception
which must be intended not only to induce the person
deceived to do or omit to do something but also to cause
damage or harm to that person in body, mind, reputation or
property. The intentional deception presupposes the
existence of a dominant motive of the person making the
inducement. Such inducement should have led the person
deceived or induced to do or omit to do anything which he
would not have done or omitted to do if he were not
deceived. The further requirement is that such act or
omission should have caused damage or harm to body, mind,
reputation or property. As mentioned above, Section 415 has
two parts. While in the first part, the person must
"dishonestly" or "fraudulently" induce the complainant to
deliver any property; in the second part, the person should
intentionally induce the complainant to do or omit to do a
thing. That is to say, in the first part, inducement must
be dishonest or fraudulent. In the second part, the
inducement should be intentional. As observed by this Court
in Jaswantrai Manilal Akhaney vs. State of Bombay, AIR 1956
SC 575 = 1956 Crl.L.J. 1611 = 1956 SCR 483, a guilty
intention is an essential ingredient of the offence of
cheating. In order, therefore, to secure conviction of a
person for the offence of cheating, "mens rea" on the part
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of that person, must be established. It was also observed
in Mahadeo Prasad vs. State of West Bengal, AIR 1954 SC 724
= 1954 Cr.L.J. 1806, that in order to constitute the
offence of cheating, the intention to deceive should be in
existence at the time when the inducement was offered.
Thus, so far as second part of Section 415 is concerned,
"property", at no stage, is involved. Here it is the doing
of an act or omission to do an act by the complainant, as a
result of intentional inducement by the accused, which is
material. Such inducement should result in the doing of an
act or omission to do an act as a result of which the person
concerned should have suffered or was likely to suffer
damage or harm in body, mind, reputation or property. In an
old decision of the Allahabad High Court in Empress v.
Sheoram and another, (1882) 2 AWN 237, it was held by
Mahmood, J.:- "That to palm off a young woman as belonging
to a caste different to the one to which she really belongs,
with the object of obtaining money, amounts to the offence
of cheating by personation as defined in s.416 of the Indian
Penal Code, which must be read in the light of the
preceding, s.415." In an another old decision in
Queen-Empress v. Ramka Kom Sadhu, ILR (1887) 2 Bombay 59,
it was held that a prostitute may be charged for cheating
under Section 417 if the intercourse was induced by any
misrepresentation on her part that she did not suffer from
syphilis. In Queen vs. Dabee Singh and others, (1867)
Weekly Reporter (Crl.) 55, the Calcutta High Court convicted
a person under Section 417 who had brought two girls and
palmed them off as women of a much higher caste than they
really were and married to two Rajputs after receiving usual
bonus. It was further held that the two Rajputs who married
the two girls on the faith that they were marrying women of
their own caste and status, were fraudulently and
dishonestly induced by deception to do a thing (that is to
say, to marry women of a caste wholly prohibited to them)
which but for the deception practised upon them by the
accused, they would have omitted to do. In another case
which was almost similar to the one mentioned above, namely,
Queen vs. Puddomonie Boistobee, (1866) 5 Weekly Reporter
(Crl.) 98, a person was induced to part with his money and
to contract marriage under the false impression that the
girl he was marrying was a Brahminee. The person who
induced the complainant into marrying that girl was held
liable for punishment under Section 417 IPC. Having regard
to the above discussion, the High Court, as we have already
observed earlier, was not correct in its interpretation of
the provisions contained under Section 415 IPC but the
important question for our consideration is that, should we,
having regard to the facts of this case, interfere under
Article 136 of the Constitution. There has been an outburst
of matrimonial disputes in recent times. The marriage is a
sacred ceremony, the main purpose of which is to enable the
young couple to settle down in life and live peacefully.
But little matrimonial skirmishes suddenly erupt which often
assume serious proportions resulting in commission of
heinous crimes in which elders of the family are also
involved with the result that those who could have
counselled and brought about rapprochement are rendered
helpless on their being arrayed as accused in the criminal
case. There are many other reasons which need not be
mentioned here for not encouraging matrimonial litigation so
that the parties may ponder over their defaults and
terminate their disputes amicably by mutual agreement
instead of fighting it out in a court of law where it takes
years and years to conclude and in that process the parties
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lose their "young" days in chasing their "cases" in
different courts. The petitioner himself is a Scientist at
the Centre for DNA Finger Printing & Diagnostics, Hyderabad
which is a prestigious Institution of the country. In this
capacity, he can be reasonably presumed to be aware of the
bio-diversity at the Cellular and Molecular level amongst
human beings without the "caste" having any role in the
field of Human Biotechnology. It was for these reasons that
the Petition, being without merit, was dismissed on October
4, 1999.