Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF KARNATAKA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GANGADHARAIAH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/08/1997
BENCH:
M.K. MUKHERJEE, D.P. WADHWA
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Mukherjee, J.
This appeal by the State of Karnataka is directed
against the judgment and order dated August 25, 1987
rendered by the Karnataka High Court in Criminal Appeal No.
544 of 1986, whereby it set aside the conviction and
sentence recorded against the respondent under Section 302
I.P.C. by the First Additional City Session Judge, Bangalore
for committing the murder of his wife, Gangaboramma @
Papachhi and acquitted him.
2.(a) According to the prosecution case, the respondent
married the deceased in or about the year 1971 and since
then they were living together in his native village
Kanakkuppa in the district of Tumkur. While residing there
the respondent used to frequently come home drunk and beat
and ill-treat the deceased. In expectation that good sense
might prevail upon him if he was shifted to some other
place, the parents of the decease brought them to Bangalore
and put them up in a house in Vivekananda Block, Place
Guttahalli. Their expectations were however belied as the
respondent continued to come home late and under the
influence of liquor, quarrel with the beat the deceased.
(b) In the evening of April 19, 1985 the respondent started
quarrelling with the deceased and when Chinnathambi (P.W.5),
neighbour of the respondent, tried to intervene the deceased
called him names and sent him back. At or about 9 P.M. when
the quarrel reached a high pitch the deceased asked Kala
(P.W.4), another neighbour, to go and fetch her (deceased’s)
mother (P.W.6) who lived nearby. Before however P.W.4 and
P.W.6 could reach the house of the deceased, the respondent
gave a knife blow on her neck which resulted in a severe
bleeding injury. On being so assaulted she started running
away but fell down in front of the house of Kempaiah who
lived nearby. Soon thereafter Kala (P.W.4) and Narasamma
(P.W.6) reached there and saw Papachhi lying dead. P.W.6
then went to Vyalikaval Police Station and lodged a report.
On that report a case was registered against the respondent
and on completion of investigation charge sheet was
submitted against him.
3. The respondent pleaded not guilty to the charge
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levelled against him and contended that his co-brother
Guddalah was liked by his parent-in-law but he was not. In
his absence Guddalah used to visit his house and since the
death of his wife they have been living together. After his
examination under Section 313 Cr.P.C. the respondent filed a
written statement in his defence (Ex. D-5) wherein he took a
plea of alibi also stating that on April 16, 1986 he had
gone to Kanakuppe village to attend a fair and during his
absence Guddalah had murdered his wife and had taken away
her jewels and other articles.
4. To bring home the charge levelled against the
respondent, the prosecution relied upon the ocular version
of the incident as given out by Chinnathambi (P.W.5), oral
dying declaration made by the deceased before some femal
neighbours which was over-heard by Narasimhamurthy (P.W.8)
and recovery of a knife from the trouser pocket of the
appellant at the time of his arrest. Besides, the
prosecution laid evidence through Dr. S.B. Patil (P.W.7),
who held the post mortem examination upon the deceased, to
prove that she met with a homicidal death owing to injury
sustained on the neck.
5. On a detailed discussion of the evidence the trial
Court found P.Ws.5 and 8 reliable and as their evidence
stood corroborated by the prompt lodging of the FIR by P.W.6
and the recovery of the knife from the respondent convicted
him. In appeal the High Court concurred with the finding of
the trial Court that the deceased met with a homicidal death
but differed with the other findings.
6. We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
gone through the entire record. Our such exercise persuades
us to hold that the reasons given by the High Court for
setting aside the conviction of the appellant are patently
wrong.
7. In view of the concurrent finding of the learned courts
below that on the fateful night Papachhi met with a
homicidal death owing to an injury inflicted on her neck and
the fact that the above finding was not assailed before us,
the only question that require an answer in proving that the
respondent was the author of the above crime. To answer this
question it will be necessary to first examine the evidence
of Chinnathambi (P.W.5), the sole eye witness to the crime.
8. It is not in dispute that P.W.5 is the next door
neighbour of the respondent. He testified that in the
evening in question, he came back from his place of work
around 5.00 P.M. and since then was in his house. At or
about 6 P.M. he found that the respondent and his wife had
started quarrelling with each other. He then went to their
house and asked the respondent to stop the quarrel, to which
he replied that as he (P.W.5) was a Tamilian, he should not
intervene into their matter. P.W.5 next stated that at or
about 10.00 P.M. while he was sitting in front of the door
of his house, he saw the respondent inflicting a knife blow
on the neck of the deceased. The deceased then started
running away. After going some distance, she fell down on
the ground and met with her death. He lastly stated that the
respondent then left the house through the rear door. In
disbelieving his evidence the High Court first referred to
the following answer elicited in his cross examination : "At
7 P.M. I tried to intervene in the quarrel but they did not
allow. Then I went in my house" and observed that if he went
inside his house his evidence in the examination-in-chief
that he was sitting throughout in front of the door of his
house - so as to enable him to see the assault - could not
be believed. This observation of the High court is clearly
unsupportable P.W.5 testified that since evening he was in
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his house and at or about 10.00 P.M when he was sitting in
front of the door of his house the assault took place. When
a person is in his house continuously for three or four
hours, it is reasonably expected that he would occasionally
come out. The High Court was, therefore, not at all
justified in inferring from the above noted answer elicited
in cross-examination that P.W.5 could not have been an eye
witnesss to the incident. Another reason which weighed with
the High Court to discard his evidence was that he admitted
in cross-examination that the only thing he was that
Papachhi was lying on the road, which, according to it,
clearly meant that he did not see the incident. The above
observation of the High Court is also unsustainable for the
above statement of P.W.5 has to be read in the context of
his entire testimony and not in isolation. When the evidence
of this witness is read as a whole it is abundantly clear
that what P.W.5 intended to say was that after the deceased
fell down the saw her dead body only. In other words, the
above statement related to a stage after the murder was
committed and not prior to that. As P.W.5 lived in the
adjacent house he was the most probable and natural witness.
That apart, when nothing could be elicited in his cross-
examination to indicate that he was inimically deposed
toward the respondent or was interested in the cause of the
prosecution it must also be said that he was a completely
disinterested witness. We are, therefore, of the opinion
that the High Court was not at all justified in disbelieving
the evidence of P.W.5.
9. The evidence of P.W.5 gets ample support from that of
Smt. Kala (P.W.4), whose house also adjoins the house of the
respondent. This witness testified that in the night in
question, she found the respondent. This witness testified
that in the night in question, she found the respondent and
the deceased quarrelling. Then the deceased called her and
told to fetch her (deceased’s) mother. She then went to the
house Narasamma (P.W.6), mother of the deceased, and
reported that the respondent and the deceased were
quarrelling with each other. To that, her mother told P.W.4
that as they frequently quarrelled she would go after she
had collected water from the tap. Thereafter, both of them
proceeded to the house of the deceased only to find her
lying on the ground in front of the house of one Kempaiah
with bleeding injury. The evidence of P.W.6 is also in
conformity with the above evidence of P.W.4.
10. In our considered view, however, the most important
circumstance which goes a long way to prove the prosecution
case and which was not at all considered by the High Court -
is that no body other than the respondent could have
committed the murder. The evidence on record clearly
indicates that at the time the incident took place the only
persons inside the house of the respondent were - beside the
respondent - the deceased and their two minor children. When
this circumstance is considered in the light of the
unimpeachable evidence on record that the death took place
in course of a quarrel that took place between the
respondent and the deceased in their house the only
legitimate inference that can be drawn is that nobody else
other than the respondent could have committed the murder.
Indeed, even if the ocular version of the incident as given
out by P.W.5 is left out of the consideration as also the
other circumstances brought on record by the prosecution,
namely the dying declaration and the recovery of the knife
from the possession of the respondent, still then the
respondent must be held to be guilty for the murder of his
wife. This inference of ours gets further assurance from the
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fact that the respondent who was seen by all the witnesses
in his house at the material time ran away from the house
immediately after the death of his wife and he could be
apprehended only after three weeks. On the conclusion as
above we need not go into the question whether the dying
declaration or the other circumstance relied upon by the
prosecution stand proved or not and, for that matter,
whether the findings of the High Court in this regard are
proper.
11. For the reasons aforesaid, we are constrained to say
that the High Court has reversed the findings of the trial
Court without properly displacing the cogent reasons given
by the latter and the High Court did not consider the vital
points in the case. We, therefore, allow this appeal, set
aside the impugned judgment of the High Court and restore
that of the trial Court.