Full Judgment Text
Reportable
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO 737 OF 2006
Rumi Bora Dutta ... Appellant
Versus
State of Assam ...Respondent
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO 738 OF 2006
Probal Dutta ... Appellant
Versus
State of Assam ...Respondent
J U D G M E N T
JUDGMENT
Dipak Misra, J.
The factual score from which the present appeals arise has a
sad and sordid story to tell reflecting the morbid obsession of the
appellants with lust, abandonment of kernel of all human virtues
and deep addiction with carnal desires. The deceased- husband,
as expected, trusted the wife, Ruma Bora, and such an emotional
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trust has always been regarded as a great complement to any
person. The other appellant, Probal, nephew of the deceased,
was shown affection, a beautiful and sacred sentiment in a human
| he wonde | r of life |
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kept at his home to prosecute his studies but, an obnoxious one,
the infidelity of the wife with incurable sensuality and the
monstrous ingratitude of the nephew, brought his tragic end. The
falsehood of both the wife and the nephew culminated in the
murder of the deceased, an Upper Division Clerk in the office of
the Deputy Superintendent of Schools, Jorhat. The wife, a teacher
in the school and the nephew, a student of Class-X, ultimately
faced trial and being convicted by the learned trial Judge under
Section 302 read with 34 of Indian Penal Code (for short ‘IPC’) and
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sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment of life and to pay a
fine of Rs.10,000/-, in default of payment of fine, to suffer further
rigorous imprisonment for three months, preferred Criminal
Appeal No. 16 of 2002 before the Gauhati High Court which
affirmed the conviction and the sentence. Hence, they have
preferred the present appeals by special leave.
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2. Shorn of details, the prosecution case is that on 4.6.1997
about 4.30 a.m. the police came to know that at 1.30 a.m.
one Naren Dutta had been hospitalized on being hit by a
| wn misc | reants. |
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hospital and found him dead. A general diary entry was
made on 4.6.1997 and thereafter the police moved to the
house of the deceased at Gajpuria Village. When the
Investigating Officer reached the house, wife of the
deceased lodged a written FIR, Ext.-2, stating that about
1.30 a.m. three unknown persons with their faces covered
with black clothes had entered into the house, tied her up
with the point of pistol and while one guarded her, two
others entered their bed room and after 15 minutes they
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came out. As alleged, they lifted their child, Pranjal, and
took him out. When she shouted, her nephew Probal Dutta,
who was inside the house, came out and both of them
looked for the child first and found him from the road.
Thereafter, they proceeded to the bed room where the
deceased was lying on the bed and a rope had been
fastened around his neck. They moved him to the civil
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hospital where he was declared brought dead by the doctor.
The Investigating Officer on enquiry found the story
narrated, vide Ext. P-2, to be absolutely false, concocted and
| ordingly, | arreste |
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In course of investigation Probal Dutta confessed before the
police that he along with his aunt had strangulated the
deceased and he had stabbed him on his chest. Similar
confession was made by the wife. Thereafter a case under
Section 302/34 IPC was registered and during investigation
Probal Dutta, in pursuance of his disclosure statement, Ext.-
6, led to discovery of the two pieces of handle of the
skipping rope and the knife hidden inside the house. The
wife led to the discovery of the skipping rope that was used
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for strangulation. Thereafter, the investigating agency got
the post mortem done, recorded the statements of the
witnesses and after completing all the formalities placed the
charge-sheet before the competent court which, in turn,
committed the matter to the court of Session.
3. The accused persons abjured their guilt and claimed to be
tried.
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4. The prosecution, in order to bring home the charge,
examined nine witnesses and two witnesses were examined
as court witnesses. The defence chose not to adduce any
evidence.
5. The trial court, appreciating the material brought on record,
came to hold that death was homicidal in nature; that there
was no bullet injury on the chest but a stab injury with the
knife that had been seized; that though the confession made
before the police officer was not admissible in evidence, yet
the statement that provided information pertaining to
recovery was admissible; that the recovery made by the
prosecution was absolutely believable; that the story put
forth by the wife being disowned by her was a circumstance
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against the accused to be taken note of; and that there was
motive as the evidence on record would show existence of
illicit relationship between the accused persons and,
accordingly, found them guilty and imposed the sentence as
has been stated hereinbefore.
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6. On an appeal being preferred the High Court re-appreciated
the evidence, took note of all the circumstances and opined
that the prosecution had proven the charge to the hilt and
| ined to | interfer |
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judgment of conviction.
7. We have heard Ms. Kiran Bhardwaj, learned counsel for the
appellant, and Mr. Navnit Kumar, learned counsel for the
respondent-State.
8. First we shall refer to the post mortem report conducted by
Dr. Narayan Bardoloi, PW-6. The relevant part of the report
is as follows: -
“(1) The dead body was in stout condition. One stab
wound on the right side of the chest wall, size 5 c.m.
lateral to the sternum, measuring 1 c.m. in length and
1.5 c.m., in length and 1.5 c.m. in depth. The wound is
gapping. Clotted blood seen at the external margin and
at the level of the rib. Underlying bony cage is intact.
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(2) One transverse, continuous ligature mark seen
around the neck at the level of thyroid cartel edge. The
breadth of the mark is about 4 m.m. The base of the
mark is redid and there is achymosis at the edges of
the ligature mark. On dissection – the subcutenous
tissue is found acchymosed.
The head and the facre are congested. The
tongue is swelled.
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The scalp, membrance and brain are all congested
Pleaurae, lungs, pericardium and heart are all
congested (affected)
Paritonium, stomach, intestine are also congested.
| ere ante | mortem. |
|---|
9. In his report he has opined that the cause of death is due to
asphyxia following strangulation and the same was caused
with a rope. It is further opined that the injury on the chest
of the deceased was caused with some pointed weapon like
dagger. Thus, from the post mortem report it is manifest
that the FIR lodged by the wife was a maladroit attempt to
save her skin. It was totally false. It is interesting to note
that she in her statement under Section 313 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure has disowned the same. We would
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advert to the effect of the same at a later stage.
10. It is seemly to state here that the whole case of the
prosecution rests on the circumstantial evidence. The
learned trial Judge as well as the High Court has referred to
certain circumstances. When a case is totally hinges on the
circumstantial evidence, it is the duty of the Court to see
that the circumstances which lead towards the guilt of the
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accused have been fully established and they must lead to a
singular conclusion that the accused is guilty of the offence
and rule out the probabilities which are likely to allow the
| cence of | the acc |
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11. More than six decades back this Court in Hanumant
1
Govind Nargundkar v. State of M.P. , had laid down the
principles as under:-
“It is well to remember that in cases where the
evidence is of a circumstantial nature, the
circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is to
be drawn should be in the first instance be fully
established, and all the facts so established should be
consistent only with the hypothesis of the guilt of the
accused. Again, the circumstances should be of a
conclusive nature and tendency and they should be
such as to exclude every hypothesis but the one
proposed to be proved. In other words, there must be a
chain of evidence so far complete as not to leave any
reasonable ground for a conclusion consistent with the
innocence of the accused and it must be such as to
show that within all human probability the act must
have been done by the accused.”
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12. In Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of
2
Maharashtra , the five golden principles which have been
stated to constitute the panchsheel of the proof of the case
1
AIR 1952 SC 343
2
(1984) 4 SCC 116
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based on circumstantial evidence are (i) the circumstances
from which the conclusion of guilt is to be drawn must or
should be and not merely ‘may be’ fully established, ( ii ) the
| d shoul | d be co |
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hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, that is to say, they
should not be explainable on any other hypothesis except
that the accused is guilty, ( iii ) the circumstances should be
of a conclusive nature and tendency, ( iv ) they should
exclude every possible hypothesis except the one to be
proved, and ( v ) there must be a chain of evidence so
complete as not to leave any reasonable ground for the
conclusion consistent with the innocence of the accused and
must show that in all human probability the act must have
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been done by the accused.
3
13. In C. Chenga Reddy and others v. State of A.P. , it has
been held that in a case based on circumstantial evidence,
the settled law is that the circumstances from which the
conclusion of guilt is drawn should be fully proved and such
circumstances must be conclusive in nature. Moreover, all
3
(1996) 10 SCC 193
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the circumstances should be complete and there should be
no gap left in the chain of evidence. Further, the proved
circumstances must be consistent only with the hypothesis
| accused | and tota |
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innocence.
14. Keeping the aforesaid principles in view the circumstances
that have been established in the present case are required
to be scrutinized.
15. The principal criticism advanced against the analysis in the
impugned judgments by the learned counsel, appearing for
the appellant, is that the trial court and the High Court have
misdirected themselves in accepting the factum of recovery
as admissible in evidence. It is her further submission that
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the recovery part being a part of the confession before a
police officer should have been discarded and once the said
fact is kept out of consideration, the dents into other
circumstances would be manifest and the chain of
circumstances would be incomplete to establish the charge
against the accused-appellants.
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16. In this context, we may refer with profit to the ruling in
State of Maharashtra v. Damu S/o Gopinath Shinde
4
and others wherein it has been observed that the basic
| Section | 27 of t |
|---|
doctrine of confirmation by subsequent events. The doctrine
is founded on the principle that if any fact is discovered in a
search made on the strength of any information obtained
from a prisoner, such a discovery is a guarantee that the
information supplied by the prisoner is true. The information
might be confessional or non-inculpatory in nature, but if it
results in discovery of a fact it becomes a reliable
information. Hence, the legislature has permitted such
information to be used as evidence by restricting the
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admissible portion to the minimum. Thereafter, the two
learned Judges proceeded to state as follows: -
“It is now well settled that recovery of an object is not
discovery of a fact as envisaged in the section. The
decision of the Privy Council in Pulukuri Kottaya v.
5
Emperor is the most quoted authority for supporting
the interpretation that the “fact discovered” envisaged
in the section embraces the place from which the object
4
(2000) 6 SCC 269
5
AIR 1947 PC 67
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was produced, the knowledge of the accused as to it,
but the information given must relate distinctly to that
effect.”
| b v. Gur | nam Ka |
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accused some facts have been discovered, the same would
be admissible against the person who had made the
statement in terms of Section 27 of the Evidence Act.
7
18. In Aftab Ahmad Anasari v. State of Uttaranchal , after
referring to earlier decision in Pulukuri Kotayya (supra), a
two-Judge Bench opined in the context of the said case that
when the accused was ready to show the place where he
had concealed the clothes of the deceased, the same was
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clearly admissible under Section 27 of the Evidence Act
because the same related distinctly to the discovery of the
clothes of the deceased from that very place.
8
19. In Bhagwan Dass v. State (NCT) of Delhi , relying on the
decisions in Aftab Ahmad Anasari (supra) and Manu
6
(2009) 11 SCC 225
7
(2010) 2 SCC 583
8
AIR 2011 SC 1863
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9
Sharma v. State , the Court opined that when the accused
had given a statement that related to discovery of an
electric wire by which the crime was committed, the said
| t was ad | missible |
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20. In the case at hand, both the accused have led to discovery
of the knife and the skipping rope used in the crime. It was
within their special knowledge. The medical evidence
corroborates the fact that the deceased died because of
strangulation and further there was a stab injury on his
chest. Thus, the weapon and the other articles have direct
nexus with the injuries found in the post mortem report.
21. At this juncture, as mentioned earlier we proceed to advert
to the issue pertaining to falsehood. In this context we may
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fruitfully refer to the authority in State of Maharashtra v.
10
Suresh , wherein it has been held that a false answer
offered by the accused when his attention is drawn to the
circumstances, it renders the circumstances can be of
inculpating nature. In such a situation a false answer can
9
AIR 2010 SC 2352
10
(2000) 1 SCC 471
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also be counted as providing “a missing link” for completing
the chain. In the case at hand, the factum of recovery
through the witnesses has been proven that the accused-
| recovery | . When |
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had given an answer in the negative in a non-challant
manner. The incriminating materials were concealed and
they were discovered being led by the accused persons. In
the case of Suresh (supra) it has been held that there are
three possibilities when an accused points out the place
where the incriminating material is concealed without
stating that it was concealed by himself. Elaborating on the
three possibilities the Court proceeded to state as follows: -
“One is that he himself would have concealed it.
Second is that he would have seen somebody else
concealing it. And the third is that he would have
been told by another person that it was concealed
there. But if the accused declines to tell the
criminal court that his knowledge about the
concealment was on account of one of the last two
possibilities the criminal court can presume that it
was concealed by the accused himself. This is
because the accused is the only person who can
offer the explanation as to how else he came to
know of such concealment and if he chooses to
refrain from telling the court as to how else he
came to know of it, the presumption is well-justified
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course to be adopted by the criminal court that the
concealment was made by himself”
| n beyo | nd reas |
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prosecution.
23. Presently to the cumulative effect of the circumstances
brought by way of evidence. The prosecution witnesses
have clearly deposed that the deceased was lying on the
bed and they were told about the arrival of the miscreants
and causing the injury. It is also brought in evidence that
apart from the appellants the old mother of the deceased
was in the house. The learned trial Judge as well as the
High Court has rightly disbelieved the attack by any
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miscreant. It is also interesting to note that the child was
immediately recovered by the accused Probal from the
road. All probabilities thought to be covered by the
accused-appellants gradually melted and their complicity in
the crime and the criminality of the mind stood revealed.
On a studied scrutiny of the evidence on record, we are
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convinced that the circumstances that have been proven
are that (i) occurrence took place about 1.30 a.m.; (ii) the
deceased was found lying dead on his bed; (iii) the accused
| h him in | his hou |
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the time the incident took place; (iv) accused Probal made a
statement under Section 27 of the Evidence Act and led the
police to recover the knife, the weapon of assault and the
missing handle of the skipping rope; (v) the skipping rope
was found in the bed room and was recovered at the
instance of the wife; (vi) the accused-appellant Rumi Bora
gave a false information and tried to mislead the police; (vii)
the wife had disowned the information in her statement
under Section 313 Cr.P.C; (viii) that the accused persons
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had not offered any explanation with regard to recovery of
weapons from their house except making a bald denial; (ix)
there is evidence on record that the wife had developed an
illicit relationship with the nephew of the deceased, which
provides a motive; (x) nothing had been stated in their
examination under Section 313 that any one had any
animosity with the deceased; (xi) nothing was stolen from
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the house; and (xii) the child was immediately found from
the road.
| oved the | guilt of |
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and the circumstances are conclusive in nature to exclude
every hypothesis but the one proposed to be proved. The
chain of evidence is absolutely complete. Thus, we have no
hesitation in affirming the judgment of conviction and order
of sentence passed by the learned trial Judge that has been
given the stamp of approval by the High Court.
25. Consequently, the appeals, being devoid of merit, stand
dismissed.
| …………………………… | .J. | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| [Dr. B.S. Chauhan] |
| … | .………………………….J. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [Dipak Misra] |
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