Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 267 of 1991
PETITIONER:
V.L. TRESA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/02/2001
BENCH:
Umesh C. Banerjee & K.G. Balakrishhnan.
JUDGMENT:
BANERJEE, J.
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This Appeal by the grant of special leave is against the
judgment and order dated 22nd January, 1991 of the High
Court of Kerala confirming the conviction for the offence
under Section 201 of the Indian Penal Code though however,
the sentence has been reduced to simple imprisonment for one
year as against rigorous imprisonment for five years by the
learned Sessions Judge.
The core issue pertains to impediment, if any, to a
conviction under Section 201 IPC on acquittal of the main
offence? The Appellate Bench of the High Court answered it
in the negative and confirmed conviction and sentenced as
noted above.
The contextual facts depict that Vincent, the deceased,
was a young advocate and his death was suspected to be a
murder. After investigation, his wife was indicted for
murder and also for giving false information regarding the
incident in order to screen herself from punishment. The
learned Sessions Judge however acquitted her of the charge
of murder but convicted her for the offence under Section
201 of the Indian Penal Code and thus sentenced her to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for five years and it is this
conviction and sentence which were challenged in Appeal by
the Appellant herein.
Before the High Court, it was contended in support of
the appeal; that the offence under Section 201 of the IPC
can not form the basis of any conviction without there being
any principal offence, and as such by reason of the order of
acquittal under Section 302 and there being no appeal
against such an order of acquittal, question of there being
any conviction for the alleged offence under Section 201,
would not arise. Subsequently, however, the revisional
jurisdiction of the High Court has been initiated by the
learned Single Judge suo moto against the order of acquittal
and the matter was placed before the Division Bench for
hearing of the appeal as also the revisional petition. At
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the hearing before the Bench however, the learned Public
Prosecutor very strongly canvassed for the conviction of the
appellant under Section 302 of the I.P.C.
Before proceeding with the matter any further the
prosecution case be briefly noted hereinbelow: The deceased
advocate was residing with his wife and daughter in a
separate house from his parents and since the deceased
incurred debts he wanted to dispose of the land and the
building in which they resided which stood in the name of
his wife. As a matter of fact, an agreement for sale was
more or less finalised when on the date of occurrence the
deceased advocate after consumption of alcohol returned home
in the night and informed his wife as regards the factum of
execution of the agreement for sale on the following date.
On this issue however, there was heated exchange of words
between the husband and the wife and she inflicted an injury
on the forehead of the deceased with a crowbar. The injury
however, resulted damage of skull and brain and almost
brought the death instantaneously. The accused wife,
however, became very active thereafter and the crowbar was
concealed beneath the firewood splinters stacked in the
kitchen and it has been made out to all those who reached
the house that he committed suicide by hanging. Without
knowing however, the real cause of death, the father of the
deceased (P.W.1) provided the first information to the
Police and the first information report was registered by
the Police for unnatural death but when the autopsy was
done, the Police sensed it to be a case of murder. The
accused wife was subsequently arrested and upon
interrogation, the investigation officer recovered the
crowbar from the firewood sprinters stacked in the kitchen
which was also subjected to chemical analysis and the
forensic report revealed that it was stained with human
blood of the same group as that of the deceased.
During the course of examination of the accused before
the learned Sessions Judge, she denied her complicity and
stated that as a matter of fact she was not against the sale
of the property but she insisted that the sale proceed
should be deposited in her name and since there was such a
dispute, hot exchange of words followed and the husband
tried to commit suicide on an iron beam above the wash basin
in the work area and when she caught hold of his legs to
save him, he fell down as the knot got untied and his
forehead hit hard surface resulting the fatal injury. This
has been the consistent case of the accused wife both to the
persons who came to the house immediately after the news
spread as also in court.
The learned Sessions Judge however, came to a definite
conclusion that the prosecution has not been able to adduce
sufficient and reliable evidence that it was the accused and
the accused alone who inflicted the fatal injury on Vincent
resulting in his death. The Sessions Court reminding itself
of the golden principles for having a proof beyond all
reasonable doubt recorded: it cannot also be said that the
evidence adduced by the prosecution will conclusively show
that Vincent was a person of expensive habits or squandering
money or was threatening or ill treating the wife and on a
consideration of the totality of the evidence, came to the
finding as noticed above against the prosecution. Three
decisions of this Court namely Kali Ram v. State of
Himachal Pradesh [1973 SCC (Crl.) 1048]: Ramdas v. State
of Maharashtra [1977 SCC (Crl.) 254] and Prem Thakur v.
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State of Punjab [1983 SCC Crl.) 88] were strongly relied
upon in arriving at the opinion that the accused cannot be
found guilty of murdering her husband.
The judgment under appeal does not run counter to such a
finding since the main thrust is on the effect of Section
201 IPC. The order of acquittal under Section 302 though
urged by the prosecution as otherwise not in accordance with
law was not considered by the High Court worth anything and
thus candidly recorded we refrain from distorting the
finding of the learned Sessions Judge that the Prosecution
has failed to prove that it was the accused who caused the
death of the deceased. In that view of the matter we need
not also delve into the issue in any further detail though
some attempt has been made before us also, without however
there being any cross appeal, on the plea that the entire
matter is before the Court.
The issue thus pertains to the maintainability of
conviction and sentence under Section 201. The law on this
score is well settled since the decision in Kalawatis case
( Kalawati v. The State of Himachal Pradesh :AIR 1953 SC
131) wherein, Chandrasekhara Aiyar, J. speaking for the
Bench observed:
21. But there can scarcely be any doubt that she must
have witnessed the murder of her husband lying next to her
on a charpai. Shibbi who was at a distance of 18 feet was
roused by the sound of a sword attack. Kalawati must have
woke up also at least during the course of the assault if
not at its commencement, several injuries having been
inflicted in succession. When Shibbi woke up, Kalawatis
bed was empty, and she was found in a room nearby and not at
the place of occurrence. She trotted out an elaborate story
of dacoity, which cannot be accepted as true. Even if, in
terror she ran away from her bed and stood at a distance,
she is almost sure to have known who was the offender,
unless he had his face muffled. The first version she gave
to the police head constable when he appeared on the scene
immediately after the occurrence is, we think, false, and we
are of opinion that she knew or believed it to be false.
The border line between abetment of the offence and giving
false information to screen the offender is rather thin in
her case, but it is prudent to err on the safe side, and
hold her guilty only of an offence under s.201, Penal Code,
as the learned Sessions Judge did.
It has however been contended by Shri Sushil Kumar, the
learned Senior Advocate appearing in support of the Appeal,
that the decision in Kalawatis case does not, in fact,
govern the present situation since in Kalawatis case
(supra) the wife was charged of murder of her husband
alongwith another person and the court acquitted the wife
for murder but convicted the other person and then proceeded
to consider as to whether the wife committed the offence
under Section 201 of the IPC? It has been contended that on
the factual backdrop in Kalawatis case, (supra) this Court
thus came to the conclusion that acquittal of the wife for
the main offence is no legal impediment to convict her for
the offence under Section 201 of the IPC. Reference to the
language used in Section 201 in this context may be of some
relevance.
Section 201 I.P.C. reads as below: 201. Causing
disappearance of evidence of offence, or giving false
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information to screen offender.- Whoever, knowing or having
reason to believe that an offence has been committed, causes
any evidence of the commission of that offence to disappear,
with the intention of screening the offender from legal
punishment, or with that intention gives any information
respecting the offence which he knows or believes to be
false, [if a capital offence] shall, if the offence which he
knows or believes to have been committed is punishable with
death, be punished with imprisonment of either description
for a term which may extend to seven years, and shall also
be liable to fine; [if punishable with imprisonment for
life] and if the offence is punishable with imprisonment for
life, or with imprisonment which may extend to ten years
shall be punished with imprisonment of either description
for a term which may extend to three years, and shall also
be liable to fine; [if punishable with less than ten years
imprisonment] and if the offence is punishable with
imprisonment for any term not extending to ten years, shall
be punished with imprisonment of the description provided
for the offence , for a term which may extend to one-fourth
part of the longest term of the imprisonment provided for
the offence, or with fine, or with both.
Having regard to the language used, the following
ingredients emerge:
(I) Committal of an offence;
(II) person charged with the offence under Section 201
must have the knowledge or reason to believe that the main
offence has been committed;
(III) person charged with the offence under Section 201
IPC should have caused disappearance of evidence or should
have given false information regarding the main offence and
(IV) the act should have been done with the intention of
screening the offender from legal punishment. The impact of
Section 201 thus is the intent to screen the offender from
legal punishment. It is on this score that the High Court
observed:
Such intention exists or presumed to exist in the mind
of the accused when he has some interest in the person who
committed the main offence. Though the identity of the
person who committed the main offence is not established in
evidence, there must be material to indicate that the
accused know who the main offender was, when the accused did
the act of causing disappearance of evidence or giving false
information regarding the offence. The intention to screen
the offender must be the primary and sole object of the
accused. The mere fact that the concealment was likely to
have that effect is not sufficient.
Having regard to the language used, mere suspicion would
not be sufficient. There must be available on record cogent
evidence that the accused has caused the evidence to
disappear in order to screen another known or unknown. The
fore-most necessity being that the accused must have the
knowledge or have reason to believe that such an offence has
been committed. This observation finds support in the
oft-cited decision of this Court in Palvinder Kaur v. State
of Punjab (AIR 1952 SC 354). Further, in Roshan Lal v.
State of Punjab (AIR 1965 SC 1413) this Court in paragraph
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12 of the report observed:
(12) Section 201 is somewhat clumsily drafted, but we
think that the expression knowing or having reason to
believe in the first paragraph and the expression knows or
believes in the second paragraph are used in the same
sense. Take the case of an accused who has reason to
believe than an offence has been committed. If the other
conditions of the first paragraph are satisfied, he is
guilty of an offence under S.201. If it be supposed that
the word believes was used in a sense different from the
expression having reason to believe, it would be necessary
for the purpose of inflicting punishment upon the accused to
prove that he believes in addition to having reason to
believe. We cannot impute to the legislature an intention
that an accused who is found guilty of the offence under the
first paragraph would escape punishment under the succeeding
paragraphs unless some additional fact or state of mind is
proved.
In the matter under consideration death of the deceased
was due to homicide and it must have been done either by the
accused herself or by some other person, accused has reasons
to know. On an analysis of evidence, the learned Sessions
Judge came to the conclusion that prosecution failed to
prove beyond reasonable doubt that the accused caused the
death of the deceased and it is on this score that the High
Court came to a conclusion that even if the fatal injury was
inflicted by somebody else, the accused is liable to be
convicted for the offence under Section 201. This
observation of the High Court has been made on the wake of
the version of the accused that the deceased committed or
attempted to commit suicide. Admittedly, the deceased
Vincent was living in his house with his wife and minor
child and resultantly, therefore, the circumstances under
which the deceased died would be within the special
knowledge of the inmates viz. wife and the child and the
child being asleep by reason of the timing of the incident
and the only available option of witnessing the action,
would be the wife and it is this wife who has told others
that he was trying to commit suicide by putting a rope on
his neck and while attempting to do so by reason of an
effort to stop the husband from doing so, the latter falls
on the blunt object and hits himself which caused his death.
There can be no doubt that the deceased died on account of
combination of injuries of 6 and 9 as described in the
postmortem report. For convenience sake, the same are noted
hereinbelow:
6. Lacerated wound 1.6 cm. x 1 cm. x bone deep
horizontal on the middle of upper part of forehead 7 cm.
About root of nose. The surrounding scalp tissues found
contused. The outer table of the frontal bone under the
wound found fractured and separated and produced a
depression on the bone (1 cm. x 1 cm. Size)
9. The front aspect of both the frontal lobes of brain
showed a laceration of 1 cm. x 1 cm. x 1 cm. size. There
was subarachinoid haemorrhage on both the cerbral
haemisphereas.
It may be noted in this context that according to the
accused version in the statement under Section 313, Vincent
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was disappointed to see that he was unable to persuade his
wife to sign in the Agreement for Sale of the house.
Attempt to commit suicide by hanging himself on the iron
beam fixed just below the ceiling in the work area of the
house and on the seeing the same, the accused caught hold of
his legs and since the rope was not tied to his neck but
tied to iron beam, Vincent fell down and it is the accused
version that when he fell down, he must have hit his
forehead on some hard object and that is how he sustained
serious injuries on his forehead. This statement has
received the comment of being very clever and attractive but
has been totally disbelieved by the learned Sessions Judge
on scrutiny of the evidence in its entirety. Significantly,
however, it is to be noted that the defence suggestion that
injuries No.6 and 9 could have been caused when the accused
fell down with the forehead hitting the hard object, was
completely negatived by P.W.13 being the doctor who has
conducted the autopsy. This part of the evidence of the
doctor, thus negates the defence version of the case that it
was an accidental fall which has been the factor responsible
for the injuries caused to the deceased. The analysis of
the evidence in its entirety as has been effected by the
learned Sessions Judge, could not be found faulted by the
High Court and we also do not intend to record a contra
finding disturbing the concurring finding of the learned
Sessions Judge as also of the High Court in regard to the
failure of the prosecution to prove that it was the accused
who caused the death of the deceased.
Mr. Sushil Kumar however, in support of his contentions
placed strong reliance on to the decision of this Court in
Duvvur Dasratharamareddy v. State of Andhra Pradesh (1971
(3) SCC 247) wherein this Court laid down that if once the
case of the prosecution regarding the offence of murder is
not accepted, it follows that the appellant cannot be
convicted for the offence under Section 201 IPC either
because the evidence relating to that offence is common
(vide paragraph 24 of the report at page 254). In Duvvur
Dasratharammareddys case (supra) this Court had the
following factual backdrop:
The appellant was charged of the offence of causing the
death of his father-in-law Adepareddi by beating him with a
battle axe on his head on the night of May 9, 1969 and also
for an offence under Section 201, I.P.C. by digging a pit
and burying the dead body and thus causing the evidence of
murder to disappear. Though he was convicted also for the
offence under Section 201, I.P.C., but no separate sentence
had been passed as he has been sentenced to death under
Section 302 I.P.C. The factual score further disclose that
the deceased Adepareddi was aged about 60 years was living
in his village with his wife aged 40 years, two daughters
P.Ws.4 and 5 and two young sons. One of the cousin brother
of the deceased Shri K .Ramireddi was also living with the
deceased and had been married to the eldest daughter of the
deceased. The appellant as appears used to assist the
deceased in his agricultural operations. According to the
prosecution, the appellant was in illicit intimacy with his
mother-in-law and in consequence there was frequent quarrel
between the appellant and his father-in-law, the deceased.
On May 9, 1989 after some heated exchange of words, the
deceased left to sleep in the field as usual which is about
1½ miles from the village. Shortly after the departure of
the deceased for the field, the appellant requested P.W.1 to
accompany him to the field so that the father-in-law may be
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killed but on being refused by P.W.1 being a servant of the
family he left the house with the axe alongwith P.W.2 being
the other servant available in the house. The appellant
after going to the field is stated to have given a blow on
the head of the deceased with the axe and when P.W.2
attempted to run away from the scene, he was brought back by
the accused with the threat that he will meet the same end.
P.W. 2 thereafter came back to the scene and saw the
appellant digging a pit and burying the body of the
deceased. Both the appellant and P.W. 2 thereafter came
back to the house some time in the middle of the night and
put the axe inside the house. It is a very next day morning
that PW 1 in order to attend to the agricultural operations
went to the field and found blood near the cot where the
deceased used to sleep and saw a new mound in the field.
P.W.3 being the wife of the deceased after a few days,
finding that her husband has not come back to the house,
asked her daughter to write to her uncle in another village,
who came and informed that the deceased has not come to his
village. In the meanwhile rumours afloat that appellant had
murdered his father-in-law and buried him in the field.
Subsequently, the village Munsif contacted the police
authorities who took up the investigations and the body of
the deceased was exhumed on July 3, 1969, with some
injuries. It is on the basis of these facts and having
regard to evidence available on record, this Court observed
as below:
25. Though normally this Court does not re- appraise
the evidence, which has been accepted concurrently by the
two courts, in view of the strong suspicious circumstances,
pointed out above, regarding the truth of the evidence given
by P.W.s1 to 5, we have considered it necessary in the
interest of justice to consider their evidence more
critically.
26. For the above reasons we are of the opinion that it
cannot be said that the prosecution has been proved the
guilt of the accused beyond all reasonable doubt. In
consequence the appeal is allowed. The conviction of the
appellant under Section 302, I.P.C. and the sentence of
death imposed for the said offence as well as his conviction
for the offence under Section 201, I.P.C., by the Sessions
Judge, as confirmed by the High Court, are set aside and the
accused is acquitted of those offences. He shall be set at
liberty.
In the contextual facts, the situation however, is
slightly different and since the wife alone could explain
the death of the husband in the manner as it is noted above.
The crowbar was not available for few days and it is a
subsequent discovery and on a further search, the crowbar
contained human blood which has been proved to be that of
the deceased. Both the Sessions Judge and the High Court
have categorically disbelieved the evidence of the wife and
it is in this regard it cannot but be said that the falsity
of information given by the accused cannot but warrant a
punishment under Section 201, I.P.C. since information
regarding the offence was available only with the accused
and there was a deliberate attempt to screen the offender
from legal punishment by way of providing false information
regarding the offence.
On the wake of the aforesaid, we are unable to record
our concurrence with the submissions of Mr. Sushil Kumar as
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regards the conviction for the offence under Section 201 of
the IPC . The High Court has been rather lenient in the
matter of reducing the sentence but since there is no cross
appeal by the State against the judgment, we do not intend
to proceed with the matter any further, excepting confirming
in the contextual facts the judgment of the High Court. The
Appeal therefore, fails and thus is dismissed. The
appellant be taken into custody forthwith to serve out the
sentence, if not already served.