Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF HIMACHAL PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JEET SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/03/1999
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri
JUDGMENT:
Thomas, J.
Death of an Armyman’s wife was depicted as a case of
murder and the Armyman was sent up for trial. Sessions
Court found it a murder and him the murderer. Consequently
Jeet Singh, the respondent was convicted of uxoricide and
was sentenced to imprisonment for life under Section 302 of
IPC. But a Division Bench of the High Court of Himachal
Pradesh held it to be a case of suicide and exonerated him
of the charges. This appeal is by the State of Himachal
Pradesh by special leave.
Sudarshana Devi, wife of accused Jeet Singh, was a
young fair and fashionable lass, but "Leucoderma" in its
nascent stage had erupted small white patches on her bosom.
This became the cause of dislike for her husband towards her
as he mistook it to be a kind of leprosy. Though their
marriage was solemnised more than three years before her
death Jeet Singh was spending most of his days in the Army
field except for short intervals when he used to go home
availing himself of the annual leave. So Sudarshana Devi
had to remain in her nuptial home mostly without her husband
nearby, but putting up with the unsavory epithets
intermittently hurled by her mother-in-law and young
sister-in-law at her.
Jeet Singh went home in April 1987 for his annual
leave. He and his wife Sudarshana Devi left together in his
family house at Lahar village (Himirpur District), Himachal
Pradesh. On the fateful night the couple went to bed in the
"Overy" (Which is said to be a bedroom of the house but on
the next morning Sudarshana Devi was found dead. The
shocking news was conveyed to her father who rushed to the
house and saw the dead body of his daughter. As he
entertained doubts about some foul play he decided to report
the matter to the police. He did it telephonically and the
police arrived at the scene promptly. They held the inquest
on the dead body and sent it for post-mortem examination.
Three doctors of the local district hospital conducted a
joint post-mortem examination and it was then revealed that
death of Sudarahsan Devi by smothering.
Prosecution version is that accused administered some
kind of insecticide to the deceased either deceitfully or
forcefully and smothered her.
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Accused Jeet Singh was arrested on 21.4.1987. On the
strength of his disclosures PW-24 Kashmir Singh (sub
Inspector of Police, Nandaun) recovered a bottle containing
green insecticide, a towel, a vest a steel Kauli, and steel
glass and some ground "misri".
The trial judge counted a number of circumstances
which were adverse to the accused, such as the strained
relationship between the spouses, medical evidence
suggesting administration of poison, and smothering of the
deceased, recovery of incriminating articles under Section
27 of the Evidence Act, the fact that accused and deceased
were in the same room on the fateful night and that she was
found dead on the early morning and the subsequent conduct
of the accused. The Sessions Judge reached the conclusion
from the aforesaid circumstances that Sudarshana Devi was
murdered by the accused. Accordingly, he was convicted and
sentenced as aforesaid.
The Division Bench of the High Court drastically
varied from the aforesaid conclusion. Even on the
circumstances the Division Bench differed from the trial
court. In the end the High Court held like this:
"In light of the evidence that has come on record of
this case, it may be said that the deceased died of poison
but it is difficult to conclude that the death was
homicidal. As a matter of fact, it appears that it is a
case of suicide for which the accused cannot be held to be
responsible."
Shri Anil Soni, learned counsel for the State of
Himachal Pradesh, while criticising the aforesaid conclusion
of the High Court submitted that learned judges have grossly
erred in holding that it is a case of suicide. The counsel
made a forceful plea that on the medical evidence on court
could possibly reach a conclusion that it was not a case of
homicide.
Medical evidence in this case has a great
significance. Prosecution examined three doctors who
conducted the joint post-mortem examination. Ext.PB is the
Post-Mortem Report signed by all the three doctors who
conducted the joint post-mortem examination. Ext.PB is the
Post-Mortem Report signed by all the three doctors. Among
them PW.5 - Ft. P.C.Gupta seems to be the seniormost and he
gave details of the autopsy in his evidence. The defence
also examined a doctor (Dr. C. Madhav Rao - Prof. and
Head of the Department of Forensic Medicines, I.G.Medical
College, Shimla) to speak to an opinion on the data
contained in Ext.PB Post-Mortem Report.
The general features of the dead body as noted by the
doctors, have been described in the Post-Mortem Report as
"well plated hair with Sindoor in the middle partling bindi
well placed over forehead (maroon coloured with white
cresent and white dot in it) red coloured lip-stick well
applied over both lips." Then the various ornaments worn by
Subarashana Devi were described.
The following are the marks noted by the doctors for
reaching the unmistakable conclusion that Sudarashana Devi
was subjected to forcible smothering:
"1. Three bruises 1/4" x 1/4" each (on left upper
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nasolabial area)
2. Three bruises 1/4" x 1/4" each (on left side just
below the angle of mouth).
3. A semi-circular and curved bruise 1.5" x 1/2"
obliquely placed along the face extending between right
molac bone to right angle of mouth.
4. Four bruises 1/4" x 1/4" each on right side just
below and lateral to angle of mouth."
Pleurae were congested, mucous membrane of trachea and
laryinx were bright red, covered with bloody froth and
congested, right and left lungs and pericardium of the heart
were congested. The following injuries were found on the
lower limbs:
"5. Multiple linear abrasion (looking like scratch
marks) were present over dorsum of hands and forearms,
varying in size from pin head to 3" in length.
6. Five bruises were present on lateral aspect of
right thigh, measuring 1/2" x 1/4" each.
7. Two bruises 1/2" x 1/4" were present on the
anterior aspect of the left leg."
When the viscera was sent for chemical analysis Ext.
PZ Report was forwarded by the Chemical Examiner which
showed that it contained halogenated organic phosphorous
compound. In the context of the said chemical analysis
reprot the following date supplied by the doctors who
conducted the post-mortem can also be referred to: "Linear
bluish discolouration on right iliac fossa along the
ingunial ligament."
Without seeing the report of the Chemical Examiner,
the doctors who conducted the autopsy expressed their
opinion that the deceased had died of asphyxia due to
suffocation caused by smothering and/or internal airway
obstruction.
After the receipt of the Chemical Examinar’s
certificate the following data collected by the doctors also
became important:
"Oesophagus had congested mucous membranes and gave
pungent smell on the dissection. Stomach was distended and
full of pungent smelling greenish white thick liquied about
a litre. Mucous membrances were congested.... Liver,
spleen and kidney were congested. Bladder was empty."
Dr. C Madhav Rao, who was examined as a defence
witness, after looking into Ext.PB - Post-Mortem Report and
Ext. PZ - Chemical Examiner’s Report, has expressed his
opinion as follows:
"In the present case after going through the Chemical
Examiner’s report, I am of the opinion that poison is
responsible for death rather than smothering. It is true
that the Chemical Examiner’s report has not mentioned about
the strength of poison, but as these substances are not
normally in the post-mortem report are consistant with
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poisoning by these substances, in my opinion it will be
correct to assume death by poison."
But at the same time Dr. C. Madhav Rao conceded: "I
cannot rule out the possibility of administration of poisen
mixed with "Misri" under the disguise of medicine." During
cross-examination he was asked about the possibility of
death by smothering as for the deceased. The following
answer was given by him: "It is true that one of the
important distinctive features of smothering is the injuries
around the mouth including the inner surface of the lip
........ It is correct that there are symptoms of
asphyxia."
It appears to us that the High Court has totally
overlooked the features of the victim which are consistent
with the consequence of her having been subjected to
smothering. The injuries found on both the legs of the dead
body are proof positive that it was a homicidal smothering.
We can place reliance on the opinions of both sets of
doctors that even without seeing the Chemical Examiner’s
report the doctors could say that death of the deceased
might be due to smothering, and after seeing the Chemical
Examiner’s report a doctor could say that poison would also
have worked fatally in the victim.
It is more realistic to conclude that it was a
himicide either by smothering alone or by poisoning alone or
that both causes worked independently and reached the common
result. It is quite possible that the killer after
administering poison, would have felt that the victim might
expel the poison by vomitting and then he would have
smothered her to see that the venom did not get evacuated
and in that endeavour the smothering became fatal.
The court cannot ignore the large number of external
injuries particularly those on the legs. When they are
counted in association with the findings regarding the
internal organs, they all would cumulatively lead to the one
conclusion in favour of the theory of forcible smothering.
In view of such external injuries, a conclusion that
deceased would have committed suicide is a preposterous
inference. We therefore unhesitatingly dissent from the
finding of the High Court on that score.
If Sudarshana Devi was murdered on the night of
occurrence the next point for discussion is whether accused
Jeet Singh was her murderer. The formost circumstance which
stares at him is that the couple were closetted together in
the same "Overy" (bedroom) during the fateful night. PW-10
Birbal, who is the uncle of accused Jeet Singh and who is
residing in the adjoining house, has said in his evidence
that Jeet Singh and Sudarshana Devi were together in the
same "Overy" on that particular night and that on the next
morning he found Sudarshana’s dead body lying on the floor
of the "Overy". The residence of PW-10 - Birbal and accused
Jeet Singh has only one common courtyard. PW-10 said that
he slept on the said courtyard during that night. Except a
feeble suggestion put to PW-10 during cross-examination that
he had a property dispute with Jeet Singh’s father (that
suggestion was strongly denied by the witness) nothing else
is shown to doubt the truth of his version.
The conduct of the accused has some relevance in the
analysis of the whole circumstances against him. Pw-3
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Santosh Singh a member of the Panchayat hailing from the
same ward, said in his evidence that he reached Jeet Singh’s
house at 6.15 A.M. on hearing the news of that tragedy, and
then accused Jeet Singh told him that Sudarshana complained
of pain in the lever during early morning hours. But when
the accused was questioned by the trial court under Section
313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure he denied having said
so to PW-3 and further said, for the first tie, that he and
Sudarshana did not sleep in the same room but they slept in
two different rooms. Such a conduct on the part of accused
was taken into account by the Sessions Court in evaluating
the incriminating circumstance spoken to by PW-10 that they
were in the same room on the fateful night. We too give
accord to the aforesaid approach made by the trial court.
The next circumstance against the accused is the
disclosure statements made by the accused to the
Investigating Officer which lead to the recovery of EXT-P.5
- bottle (green insecticide) from the tobacco bushes,
Ext.P-6 towel and Ext.P-7 vest from the heap of rubbish
situated in the compound of his residence, and Ext.P-8 steel
Kauli from his cow-shed. PW-24 Kashmir Singh Investigating
Officer said in his evidence that when accused Jeet Singh
was interrogated after arrest he told the investigating
Officer thus: "I have concealed the bottle containing
poison under the bushes situate beyond Gohar, I have
concealed the towel and vest under the heap of rubbish and
the steel Kauli in the Lakola of the cow-shed......."
What is significant is that when Ext.P-6 and Ext.P-6
were sent to the Chemical Examiner he recorded his opinion
after analysis that they contained halogenated organic
phosphorous compound.
Learned Judges of the High Court repelled the
aforesaid circumstances on two premise. One is that PW-3
Santosh Singh, who was present when the recovery was
effected, said that the accused had not made any disclosure
statement. Second is that as the places from where the
recoveries were made were "open and accessible to others",
the recoveries cannot be used as evidence under Section 27
of the Evidence Act.
Both the aforesaid premise were not of any use to
reject the evidence tendered by PW-24 Investigating Officer.
It must have been during the interrogation of accused that
he would have made the disclosures. It is not necessary
that other witnesses should be present when the accused was
interrogated by the Investigating Officer. On the contrary,
investigating officers used to interrogate accused persons
without the presence of others. So the mere fact that any
witness to the recovery died not overhear the disclosure
statements of the accused is hardly sufficient to hold that
no such disclosures were made by the accused.
There is nothing in Section 27 of the Evidence Act
which renders the statement of the accused inadmissible if
recovery of the articles was made from any place which is
"open or accessible to others". It is a fallacious notion
that when recovery of any incriminating article was made
from a place which is open or accessible to others. It
would vitiate the evidence under Section 27 of the Evidence
Act. Any object can be concealed in places which are open
or accessible to others. For Example, if the article is
buried on the main roadside or if it is concealed beneath
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dry leaves lying on public places or kept hidden in a public
office, the article would remain out of the visibility of
others in normal circumstances. Until such article is
disinterred its hidden state would remain unhampered. The
person who hid it alone knows were it is until he discloses
that fact to any other person. Hence the crucial question
is not whether the place was accessible to others or not but
whether it was ordinarily visible to others. If it is not,
then it is immaterial that the concealed place is accessible
to others.
It is now well settled that the discovery of fact
referred to in Section 27 of the Evidence Act is not the
object recovered but the fact embraces the place from which
the object is recovered and the knowledge of the accused as
to it. (Pulikuri Kottaya AIR 1947 PC 67). The said ratio
has received unreserved approval of this Court in successive
decisions. (Jaffar Hussain Dastagir vs. State of
Maharashtra (1969 2 SCC 872), K.Chinnaswamy Reddy vs State
of Andhra Pradesh (AIR 1962 SC 1788), Earabhadrappa @
Krishnappa vs. State of Karnataka (1983 2 SCC 330),
Shamshul Kanwar vs. State of U.P. (1995 4 SCC 430), State
of Rajasthan vs. Bhup Singh 1997 10 SCC 675).
In the present case, the fact discovered by the police
with the help of (1) the disclosure statements and (2) the
recovery of incriminating articles on the strength of such
statements is that it was the accused who concealed those
articles at the hidden places. It is immaterial that such
statement of the accused is incuplatory because Section 27
of the Evidence Act renders even such inculpatory stateents
given to a police officer admissible in evidence by eploying
the words: "Whether it aounts to confession or not".
The High Court observed that the accused had no good
motive to liquidete his young wife. This is what the
learned Judges of the High Court have stated on that aspect:
"Although it is not always necessary for the
prosecution to prove motive in a criminal trial, however,
this is one of such cases where motive is essential in case
the prosecution wants to succeed in its endeavours to prove
the case against the accused. But, we are not convinced
with this kind of motive. These factors, narrated by the
prosecution, are too narrated by the prosecution, are too
trivial to be taken note of to establish trivial to be taken
note of to establish it. They are thoroughly insignificant
and do not in any way, indicate that they could influence
the accused to the extent that he would take the extreme
step of killing his wife."
Having stated the legal principle correctly that it is
not the requirement of law that unless prosecution
establishes a motive of the accused to murder the deceased
prosecution must necessarily fail, learned judges proceeded
to treat the case on hand as an exception to the aforesaid
general approach. Why should the present case be an
exception to the aforesaid legal principle?
Learned counsel for the accused invited out attention
to the decision of this Court in Sharad Birdhichand Sarda
vs. State of Maharashtra (AIR 1984 SC 1622) in which an
earlier decision in Ramgopal vs. State of Maharashtra (AIR
1972 SC 656) was followed with approval as laying down
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different tests regarding the mode and manner of proof in
cases of murder by administration of poison. They are: (1)
Whether there is a clear motive for an accused to administer
poison to the deceased. (2) Whether the deceased died of
poison which is said to have been administered. (3) Whether
the accused had poison in his possession. (4) Whether he
had an opportunity to administer it to the deceased.
On its basis learned counsel contended that the
establishment of a clear motive is sine qua non for a
conviction in cases of murder through administration of
poison.
No doubt it is a sound principle to remember that
every criminal act was done with a motive but its corollary
is not that no criminal offence would have been committed if
prosecution has failed to prove the precise motive of the
accused to commit it. When the prosecution succeeded in
showing the possibility of some ire for the accused towards
the victim the inability to further put on record the manner
in which such ire would have swelled up in the mind of the
offender to such a degree as to impel him to commit the
offence cannot be construed as a fatal weakness of the
prosecution. It is almost an impossibility for the
prosecution to unravel the full dimension of the mental
disposition of an offender towards the person whom he
offended. In this context we may extract the observations
made by a two Judge Bench of this Court (Dr. assonant, J -
as the learned Chief Justice then was and Thomas, J) in
Nathuni Yadav vs. State of Bihar (1978 9 SCC 238): "Motive
for doing a criminal act is generally a difficult area for
prosecution. One cannot normally see into the mind of
another. Motive is the emotion which impels a man to do a
particular act. Such impelling cause need not necessarily
be proportionally grave to do grave crimes. Many a murders
have been committed without any known or prominent motive.
It is quite possible that the aforesaid impelling factor
would remain undiscoverable. Lord Chief Justice Champbell
struck a note of caution in R.V. Parlmer (Shourthand Report
at p.308 CCC May 1856) thus:
But it there be any motive which can be assigned, I am
bound to tell you that the adequacy of that motive is of
little importance. We know, from experience of criminal
courts that atrocious crimes of this sort have been
committed from very slight motives; not merely from malice
and revenge, but to gain a small pecuniary advantage, and to
drive off for a time pressing difficulties.’
Though, it is a sound proposition that every criminal
act is done with a motive, it is unsound to suggest that no
such criminal act can be presumed unless motive is proved.
After all, motive is a psychological phenomenon. Mere fact
that prosecution failed to translate that mental disposition
of the accused into evidence does not mean that no such
mental condition existed in the mind of the assailant."
Be the position as it may, this is a case where
prosecution succeeded in showing that the accused had some
cause for dislike of his wife. Some of the letters which
accused had written during the preceding months were seized
by police and marked as exhibits of the prosecution. Some
of those letters contained the adverse remarks made by him
about Sudarshana Devi’s conduct in domestic activities. The
High Court did not read much in those letters as exhibiting
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any prejudice or ill will towards his wife. Of course such
an interpretation is plausible. Hence those letters do not
afford any clue for the motive to finish her.
But there was another side of it. PW.12 - Raj Kumari
one of the elder sisters of Sudarshana Devi has in her
evidence said that Sudarshana had told her about the
accusations which the accused used to make pointing to the
white patches on her body and describing them as marks of
leprosy. Of course in cross-examination PW.12 admitted that
the accused was told about such white patches even before
the solemnisation of the marriage. PW.13 - Urmila is
another elder sister of the deceased and she too has stated
in her evidence that Sudarahana Devi told her of the remarks
which her in-laws used to make that she was having leprosy.
It may be that during the pre-marital months Sudarshan
Devi had only one tiny mark of discolouration which was not
considered to be of any serious notice. But as yeres passed
the leucoderma would have caused spreading of the
discolouration to different parts of her body. In this
context it is useful to refer to what the doctors have
recorded in the post-mortem report regarding that aspect:
"Multiple depigmented patches of varying sizes were present
over the feet, anterial abdominal wall and sternal area of
chest."
If the in-laws of Sudarshana Devi had treated such
escalating white parches as symptoms of leprosy we have no
doubt that they would have conveyed that opinion to the
accused also. If the accused was making accusations against
her that she was suffering from leprosy it would have
reflected his mind towards her. It could be that he would
have thought of getting rid of a leper as his wife once and
for all.
In this case prosecution has succeeded in establishing
all the four tests laid down in Ram Gopal’ sase (supra).
The High Court Committed a grave error in reaching the
conclusion that Sudarashana Devi had committed suicide. Due
to gross misappreciation of evidence and misreading of the
circumstances proved in this case, the High Court caused a
miscarriage of justice by clearing the accused who committed
such a heinous crime by liquidating his hapless female
partner.
We therefore allow this appeal and set aside the
judgment of the High Court and restore the conviction and
sentence passed by the Sessinons Court on the accused. We
direct the Sessions Judge, Hamirpur (H.P.) to resort to
prompt steps to put the accused back in jail for undergoing
the remaining portion of the sentence.