Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1119-1120 1998
PETITIONER:
STATE, GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUNIL AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/11/2000
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, R.P.Sethi
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J. Two sex maniacs libidinously ravaged a
tiny female tot like wild beasts and finished her off.
Police after investigation found that the two respondents
herein are those two fiends. A Sessions Court upheld the
said police version as correct. He sentenced one of them to
death penalty and the other to life imprisonment, but a
Division Bench of the High Court of Delhi declined to
believe the police version as true and consequently the two
respondents were acquitted. This appeal by the State is by
special leave.
The little girl was Anuradha and she was aged only
four. She was fondly taken away from her mothers house on
the forenoon of 5.9.1992. Her dead body was taken up by her
mother on the same night from the house of first accused
Sunil. When the doctor conducted autopsy on the dead body
he described the dimensions of the imprints left in the
infantile body reflecting a horrible sexual molestation
inflicted on the child. Next day the police arrested the
two accused (A1-Sunil and A2-Ramesh) and after completing
the investigation charge-sheeted both of them for offences
under Sections 364, 376, 377 and 302 read with Section 34 of
the Indian Penal Code. After the trial the sessions court
convicted both of them under all the aforesaid counts and
sentenced A2 Ramesh to death and A1 Sunil to imprisonment
for life on the charge of murder and awarded lesser
sentences for the remaining counts.
Details of the prosecution case are the following:
Anuradhas mother Sharda (PW10) was known to A1 Sunil and
his mother (Giano Devi). Sharda had stayed in the house of
Giano Devi for a few days and their acquaintance became
closer. Sharda was working in a tube-light manufacturing
factory during those days. As she needed a place to live in
Giano Devi arranged a small hutment (Jhuggi) with the help
of another lady (PW8 Tara) who was residing close-by. On
the occurrence day Sharda went to the factory for work
leaving her child Anuradha in the custody of PW8-Tara. At
about 11 A.M. Sunil visited them and expressed to PW8-Tara
that he would take the child and her clothes as well as some
domestic utensils to PW10. Though PW8 suggested that this
should be done only if Sharda permits, A1-Sunil took the
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child and her clothes and the utensils from his house during
a short time when PW8-Tara had gone out to fetch milk. When
she came home in the night she learnt from PW8-Tara that her
child was taken away by Sunil. So she went to Sunils
house. It was about 9.00 P.M. then. To her dismay she
found her little child lying completely nude next to
A2-Ramesh, on the second floor of the house, who was then
deep in his sleep. Then Sunil, who was found in an
inebriated mood, hurled a remark that I have dispatched
Anuradha to heaven. She felt concerned as to what would
have happened to the child. It was then she realised that
her child was breathless. PW10- Sharda then took the child
to the hospital, but the doctor who examined her pronounced
her dead.
PW1 - Dr. Basant Lal conducted the autopsy on the
dead body of the child at 12.00 noon on 7.9.1992. In his
opinion the child would have died about 36 to 48 hours prior
to the autopsy. He gave full details in his post-mortem
report about the features noticed by him on the dead body.
The corpse was full of abrasions and contusions. The
prominent among them were counted by the doctor as 25 in
number and he described the situs and dimensions of all of
them. Among them, oval fashioned multiple abrasions on the
left cheek appeared to him as marks of biting. Both the
upper and lower lips of the child were bruised violently.
Marks of violent handling of both the thighs, lower abdomen
and pubic region are also described by the doctor. The
vaginal orifice is described by the doctor in his report as
follows: Labia majora and minora swollen and reddish blue
in colour. Vaginal orifice dilated and blood is coming out
of it. Right labia minora showing tears 1.6 x 0.1 cm. and
on left side labia minora showing tear in an area of 1.5 x
0.2 cm in vertical plane. Labia majora showing contusion on
both sides in an area of 3 x 2 cm each.
About hymen the doctor described thus: Hymen
showing tear at 5 and 6 Oclock position which was going
upto the vaginal wall and triangular in shape in an area of
1.5 x 1 x 1 cm. There were tears on the sides and back of
urethra opening upto hymen in an area of 1.4 x 1.2 cm. in
triangular fashion.
About the anus the doctor described as follows:
Dilated and blood was coming out of it. The diameter
was 1.5 cm. The area around the orifice was showing
swelling with reddish contusion in an area of 2 cm.
DR. Basant Lal (PW-1) further noted that the vaginal
orifice was so badly mutilated that one middle finger could
be easily admitted into it. Even the tongue was not spared
in that violence as the doctor found its position like this:
The tongue was showing abrasion 0.5 x 0.5 cm. on its
front right outer aspect with contusion around. Reddish
bluish in colour Bite mark.
During examination of the head of the body PW1 noticed
thick layered bluish-reddish effusion of blood on the right
temporal parietal region. Though there was no fracture of
the skull the duramater on the left side looked bluish, and
there was thick subdural haemotoma in an area of 20x10x0.8
cm. and one fist full clotted blood, and patchy
subarachnoid haemorrage all over the brain which were also
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noticed by the doctor.
From the woeful and eerie features described by the
doctor no court could possibly escape from the conclusion
that the little child was violently molested, ravished,
raped and sodomised besides penile penetration having been
made into her mouth. The remnants of extensive mangling of
the tender body of the child would reflect the possibility
of more than one rapist subjecting the child to such beasty
ravishment.
Though the Sessions Court acted on the above medical
report as reliable it is unfortunate that the Division Bench
of the High Court expressed misgivings about it. The only
basis for entertaining doubt about the correctness of the
findings recorded by PW1 Dr. Basant Lal was that when the
deceased was first examined by one Dr. Gajrat Singh at
11.40 P.M. on 5.9.1992 he noted only multiple bruises all
over the body in Ext.PW11/1 MLC(Medico Legal Certificate).
It was the said doctor who pronounced the girl dead. He
made the above entry in the MLC. It must be noted that Dr.
Gajrat Singh was not examined as a witness in the court.
Apparently that doctor was not disposed to conduct a
detailed examination on the dead body either because he was
pretty sure that the body would be subjected to a detailed
autopsy or because the doctor himself was in a great hurry.
Whatever be the reason, no court could afford to ignore the
report of the doctor who conducted the autopsy with
meticulous precision about all the features noticed, merely
on the strength of what another doctor had scribbled in the
MLC at the initial stage.
Learned Judges of the High Court should have noticed
that the evidence of PW1 Dr. Basant Lal was not even
controverted by the defence as no question was put to him in
cross-examination by the defence counsel. His testimony
ought to have been given due probative value particularly
when nothing was shown to doubt the evidence of that medical
practitioner. Learned counsel for the respondents was not
able to pick out even a single answer from his evidence
which could at least throw a modicum of doubt about the
correctness of his evidence. Hence we have to proceed on
the premise that whatever PW1 Dr. Basant Lal - found on
the dead body were the actual position noticed by him during
autopsy. The Sessions Judge has rightly accepted that
evidence and no exception can be taken thereto. Thus, it is
beyond doubt that the little girl was raped and sodomised
and that death was due to the injuries sustained in that
exercise.
When the above premise is so certain the task of the
court is narrowed down to the limited area i.e., were the
two respondents the rapists or is there any reasonable scope
to think that somebody else would have done those acts.
The trial court came to the conclusion that the
culprits are the two respondents and none else. The
Sessions Judge found that prosecution has established the
following circumstances: (1) Sunil (1st accused) had taken
the child from the house of PW8 Tara by about noon on
5.9.1992. (2) The child was recovered from the house of A1
Sunil and she was then found breathless. (3) That child
was lying naked by the side of A2 Ramesh who was in deep
sleep when the mother of the child lifted her up. (4) A1
Sunil, who was then in inebriated condition, blurted out
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that Anuradha was sent to heaven. (5) The blood-stained
nicker of Anuradha was later recovered from the house of A2
Ramesh on the basis of a statement given to the police.
The trial court concluded on the strength of those
circumstances that both the respondents are liable to be
convicted for murder, rape and unnatural offence, while A1
Sunil is additionally liable for kidnapping the child for
murder. Accordingly the trial court convicted both the
respondents and sentenced them as aforesaid.
Regarding the first circumstance that it was A1
Sunil who took the child from the care of PW8 Tara,
prosecution has examined PW8 Tara and her neighbour PW12 -
Dariba besides the evidence of PW10 Sharda. PW8 Tara
said that she knew both the accused since they used to stay
in the house of Sharda for some days earlier. According to
PW8 Tara, the child and her mother had stayed in her
Jhuggi for a few days and on the date of occurrence A1
Sunil visited the Jhuggi at 11 A.M. and requested her to
let the child Anuradha be taken with him along with some
utensils and clothes. The suggestion was that he had to
take the child to the factory where Sharda was working. It
appears that PW8 Tara was reluctant to allow him to take
the child presumably because she did not know whether Sharda
herself wanted the child then. But during the short
interval when she went out of the house for purchasing milk
A1 Sunil had taken away the child. As she did not know
where Sharda was working and as the child was taken away by
A1 Sunil who was familiar to Sharda no immediate step was
taken by PW8 Tara and she chose to wait till Sharda
returned.
The above evidence of PW8 Tara is to be appreciated
in the light of what PW10 Sharda herself had said. PW10
deposed that she was quite familiar with A1 Sunil and she
and the child had stayed at Sunils house for a few days
sometime back. PW10 has stated that on the date of
occurrence when she returned to Taras house she was told
that Sunil had taken the child away by saying that PW10
would take the child back in the evening. She further
deposed that she went to A1s house at 9.30 P.M. along with
PW8 Tara and PW12 Dariba and collected the child from
that house and the child was then lying next to A2 Ramesh
who too was then sleeping. As the child was found
breathless and in view of the comment blurted out by A1
Sunil, she rushed the child to the hospital.
The Division Bench of the High Court expressed
difficulty to believe the said version of the prosecution
i.e. A1 Sunil had taken away the child from the Jhuggi of
PW8 Tara. The reasons of the High Court for it are: (1)
There was no need for A1 Sunil to take the clothes and
utensils even if he wanted to take the child to its mother
Sharda. (2) There is nothing to indicate that PW10 Sharda
made any enquiry about the clothes and utensils. (3) PW8
Tara could not explain as to what she understood when A1
Sunil wanted to take away the child with him. (4) Nobody
from the neighbourhood of Tara was examined to corroborate
her evidence. (5) The testimony of PW8 Tara was
contradictory with the evidence of PW10 Sharda.
We perused the evidence of PW8-Tara, PW10-Sharda and
their neighbour PW12-Dariba. True, there are discrepancies
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between the evidence of those three witnesses, but we have
not come across any discrepancy worth quoting for
consideration as they are immaterial. Such discrepancies
are common features in the testimony of any two witnesses.
It was too much of a strain for the judicial mind to ferret
out some minor discrepancies as between the testimony of
those three witnesses. Even the other reasons advanced by
the Division Bench of the High Court are ex facie puerile
and evidence given on oath by the bereaved mother
PW10-Sharda and her other associate PW8-Tara, cannot be
jettisoned on such insignificant reasons. In our view the
High Court ought not to have sidelined the evidence of those
three witnesses.
The circumstance relating to the recovery of the
bloodstained nicker is a formidable one. But the Division
Bench did not attach any importance to it solely on the
ground that the seizure memo was not attested by any
independent witness. Here the circumstance is that when A2-
Ramesh was interrogated by PW17-Investigating Officer he
said: Her underwear is in my house and I can point out the
place where it is. Pursuant to the said information the
police recovered the nicker from the house of A2-Ramesh. It
was identified by PW10-Sharda as her childs nicker. When
the nicker was subjected to chemical test it was revealed
that the under-cloth of the child was stained with blood of
O group (same is the blood group of Anuradha). The said
statement of A2-Ramesh would fall within the purview of
Section 27 of the Evidence Act as the fact discovered was
that the nicker of the deceased was in the house of A2-
Ramesh. The presumption which can be drawn therefrom is
that it was A2 who removed the nicker and kept it in his
house. A2 had no explanation to be offered about that
circumstance.
Recovery of the nicker is evidenced by the seizure
memo Ext.PW-10/G. It was signed by PW10-Sharda besides its
author PW17-Investigating Officer. The Division Bench of
the High Court declined to place any weight on the said
circumstance purely on the ground that no other independent
witness had signed the memo but it was signed only by
highly interested persons. The observation of the
Division Bench in that regard is extracted below:
It need hardly be said that in order to lend
assurance that the investigation has been proceeding in fair
and honest manner, it would be necessary for the
Investigating Officer to take independent witnesses to the
discovery under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act; and
without taking independent witnesses and taking highly
interested persons and the police officers as the witnesses
to the discovery would render the discovery, at least, not
free from doubt.
In this context we may point out that there is no
requirement either under Section 27 of the Evidence Act or
under Section 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, to
obtain signature of independent witnesses on the record in
which statement of an accused is written. The legal
obligation to call independent and respectable inhabitants
of the locality to attend and witness the exercise made by
the police is cast on the police officer when searches are
made under Chapter VII of the Code. Section 100(5) of the
Code requires that such search shall be made in their
presence and a list of all things seized in the course of
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such search and of the places in which they are respectively
found, shall be prepared by such officer or other person
and signed by such witnesses. It must be remembered that
search is made to find out a thing or document which the
searching officer has no prior idea where the thing or
document is kept. He prowls for it either on reasonable
suspicion or on some guess work that it could possibly be
ferreted out in such prowling. It is a stark reality that
during searches the team which conducts search would have to
meddle with lots of other articles and documents also and in
such process many such articles or documents are likely to
be displaced or even strewn helter-skelter. The legislative
idea in insisting on such searches to be made in the
presence of two independent inhabitants of the locality is
to ensure the safety of all such articles meddled with and
to protect the rights of the persons entitled thereto. But
recovery of an object pursuant to the information supplied
by an accused in custody is different from the searching
endeavour envisaged in Chapter VII of the Code. This Court
has indicated the difference between the two processes in
the Transport Commissioner, Andhra Pradesh, Hyderabad & anr.
vs. S. Sardar Ali & ors. (1983 SC 1225). Following
observations of Chinnappa Reddy, J. can be used to support
the said legal proposition: Section 100 of the Criminal
Procedure Code to which reference was made by the counsel
deals with searches and not seizures. In the very nature of
things when property is seized and not recovered during a
search, it is not possible to comply with the provisions of
sub-section (4) and (5) of section 100 of the Criminal
Procedure Code. In the case of a seizure [under the Motor
Vehicles Act], there is no provision for preparing a list of
the things seized in the course of the seizure for the
obvious reason that all those things are seized not
separately but as part of the vehicle itself.
Hence it is a fallacious impression that when recovery
is effected pursuant to any statement made by the accused
the document prepared by the Investigating Officer
contemporaneous with such recovery must necessarily be
attested by independent witnesses. Of course, if any such
statement leads to recovery of any article it is open to the
Investigating Officer to take the signature of any person
present at that time, on the document prepared for such
recovery. But if no witness was present or if no person had
agreed to affix his signature on the document, it is
difficult to lay down, as a proposition of law, that the
document so prepared by the police officer must be treated
as tainted and the recovery evidence unreliable. The court
has to consider the evidence of the Investigating Officer
who deposed to the fact of recovery based on the statement
elicited from the accused on its own worth.
We feel that it is an archaic notion that actions of
the police officer should be approached with initial
distrust. We are aware that such a notion was lavishly
entertained during British period and policemen also knew
about it. Its hang over persisted during post-independent
years but it is time now to start placing at least initial
trust on the actions and the documents made by the police.
At any rate, the court cannot start with the presumption
that the police records are untrustworthy. As a proposition
of law the presumption should be the other way around. That
official acts of the police have been regularly performed is
a wise principle of presumption and recognised even by the
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legislature. Hence when a police officer gives evidence in
court that a certain article was recovered by him on the
strength of the statement made by the accused it is open to
the court to believe the version to be correct if it is not
otherwise shown to be unreliable. It is for the accused,
through cross-examination of witnesses or through any other
materials, to show that the evidence of the police officer
is either unreliable or at least unsafe to be acted upon in
a particular case. If the court has any good reason to
suspect the truthfulness of such records of the police the
court could certainly take into account the fact that no
other independent person was present at the time of
recovery. But it is not a legally approvable procedure to
presume the police action as unreliable to start with, nor
to jettison such action merely for the reason that police
did not collect signatures of independent persons in the
documents made contemporaneous with such actions.
In this case, the mere absence of independent witness
when PW17 recorded the statement of A2-Ramesh and the nicker
was recovered pursuant to the said statement, is not a
sufficient ground to discard the evidence under Section 27
of the Evidence Act.
Thus on consideration of the entire evidence in this
case we have no doubt that the trial court had come to the
correct conclusion that the two respondents were the rapists
who subjected Anuradha to such savagery ravishment. The
Division Bench of the High Court has grossly erred in
interfering with such a correct conclusion made by the trial
court as the reasons adopted by the High Court for such
interference are very tenuous. Nonetheless it is difficult
to enter upon a finding that the respondents are equally
guilty of murder of Anuradha. In the opinion of PW1 doctor
the child died due to intracranial damage consequent upon
surface force impact to the head. The said opinion was
made with reference to the subdural haemotoma which resulted
in subarachnoid haemorrage. Such a consequence happened
during the course of the violent ravishment committed by
either both or by one of the rapists without possibly having
any intention or even knowledge that their action would
produce any such injury. Even so, the rapists cannot
disclaim knowledge that the acts done by them on a little
infant of such a tender age were likely to cause its death.
Hence they cannot escape conviction from the offence of
culpable homicide not amounting to murder.
In the result, we set aside the impugned judgment of
the High Court. We restore the conviction passed by the
trial court under Section 376 and 377 read with Section 34
of the IPC. The trial court awarded the maximum sentence to
the respondents under the said counts i.e. imprisonment for
life. The fact situation in this case does not justify any
reduction of that sentence. We also convict the respondents
under Section 304 Part II, read with Section 34 of the IPC
though it is unnecessary to award any sentence thereunder in
view of the sentence of imprisonment for life awarded to the
respondents under the other two counts.
This appeal is disposed of accordingly.