Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 68-69 1999
PETITIONER:
MOHD.CHAMAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE (N.C.T.OF DELHI)
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/12/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Mohapatro, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
L.....I.........T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
D.P. Mohapatra, J.
Mohd.Chaman, the accused in Sessions Case No.134 of
1996 (State Vs. Mohd. Chaman) has filed these appeals by
special leave challenging the judgment passed by the High
Court of Delhi in Murder Ref.No.5/97 and Crl. Appeal
No.305/97 confirming sentence of death passed against him by
the Additional Sessions Judge, Shahdara, Delhi. This court,
by the order dated 22.1.99 granted leave confined to the
question of sentence and further directed execution of death
sentence be stayed during pendency of the appeal. Thus the
matter to be considered in the case relates to sentence
only. The question for determination is whether, on the
facts and in the circumstances appearing from the materials
on record the trial Court and the High Court were right in
imposing death sentence against the appellant. The answer
to this question depends on the finding whether the case can
be classified as a rarest of rare cases for imposition of
the maximum penalty of death. The facts of the case
relevant for the determination of the question may be stated
thus: The appellant Mohd.Chaman was aged thirty years at
the time of the incident and the victim girl Kumari Ritu
(deceased) was aged one and half years then. Bindu Shah
(PW-4), father of the deceased along with his wife
Smt.Lalita (PW-2) and two daughters Soni and Ritu used to
reside in House No.5416/6, Gali No.4, Shakti Gali, Amar
Mohalla, Raghupura, Gandhi Nagar. Bindu Shah was running a
tailoring factory near his house. The appellant was
residing in the same house in a room adjacent to the room of
Bindu Shah. On 10-4-95 at about 7.30 p.m. when Bindu Shah
was in his factory, Smt.Lalita left her two daughters in the
care of a neighbour and went out for marketing. On her
return Smt.Lalita did not find Ritu in the house. She made
a search in the locality nearby and sent her elder daughter
to call her brother Vidya Nand Sagar (PW-7). Vidya Nand
Sagar accompanied by Shankar (PW- 15) reached the house of
Smt.Lalita and made some search for Ritu but did not find
her. However, Smt.Lalita found the room of the appellant
half open and on peeping into it saw Ritu lying on the floor
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and the appellant present in the room. On seeing
Smt.Lalita, the appellant picked up Ritu from the floor in
her unconscious state and handed her over to Smt.Lalita. At
that time the mother found that Ritu was without
undergarment (kaccha) and was wearing a frock. She observed
several bleeding teeth bite marks on the cheek and other
parts of the body of Ritu. On her query about the condition
of Ritu the appellant told her to go away silently otherwise
she would also meet the same fate and the Police could do
nothing against him. Thereafter Smt.Lalita rushed to the
factory of her husband. The parents took Ritu to a doctor
who advised them to take her immediately to a hospital.
Then Ritu was taken to Surya Hospital where she was declared
brought dead by the doctor. In the meantime some people
who had collected at the place of occurrence, kept the
appellant under close guard till sub-inspector Magan Singh
(PW-16) of Gandhi Nagar Police Station reached the spot and
took control of the situation. Soon thereafter SHO,
N.S.Khan (PW-20) arrived at the scene of occurrence on
receiving information about the incident. The police
officers were told by the persons at the spot that the
appellant had raped and killed Ritu. SHO N.S.Khan took the
investigation. He noticed that there were teeth bite marks
on the breast, neck, abdomen and thighs of the deceased. He
also observed that private parts of the deceased were
swollen. He recorded the statement of Smt.Lalita, mother of
the deceased and that statement was treated as the FIR of
the case. Ex-PW 3/A, post-mortem report was prepared by
Dr.K.Goel (PW-3), who found the following external and
internal injuries on the body of Ritu:- External: 1.
Teeth bite marks in the form of two linear, semi-linear
marks with intermittently placed abrasions. These marks are
3.5 cm. long, placed 2.5 cm. apart with thejr concavity
facing each other over Rt. Cheek near Rt. angle of mouth.
2. Abrasion 1.7 x 0.6 cms. Over chin. 3. One oval
bruise having width of about 6 mm. With central pale area
with dimensions 4.5 x 4 cm. & an another same bruise of
same width overlapping lower point of previous one having
dimensions about 5 x 4 cm. Both are present over Rt. Side
of abdomen at upper part.
4. Oval bruise about 6.5 mm. Diameter c central pale
area c dimensions 5.5 cm. x 4.5 cm. c two small abrasion
marks at periphery each about 3 mm. Size at 4 & 5 O clock
position.
5. Small abrasions with bruising in the vaginal wall
at 4, 5 and 6 Oclock positions. Hymen is partially torn
admitting two fingers, small tear present over posterior
fornix. Small blood clots present over injured parts in the
vagina.
Internal: Head Scalp tissues, bones intact,
meninges and brain matter intact and NAD and pale.
Neck All structures are intact. No extra vasation
of blood.
Chest Rib cage intact. Heart and Lungs intact
and NAD.
Abdomen Rt.lobe of liver is badly lacerated with
vertical deep laceration. Large amount of blood and clots
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present in peritonial cavity and around liver.
Spleen and kidneys intact and pale.
Stomach contains small amount of semi-digested food
having no abnormal small and NAD.
Bowels Intact. Bladder and Rectum empty.
Pelvis Intact. Uterus empty and NAD.
Blood sample, vaginal swab, rectal swab, swam from
surrounding area of genitalia and swab from injury sides are
preserved sealed and handed over to the police.
OPINION:- All injuries were ante-mortem in nature.
Injury no.1 is love bite marks. Injury no.3 and 4 (pattern
bruises) are probably as a result of impact of some object
of the shape described in the injuries. Injuries to
genitalia are caused during sexual assault. Injury to the
liver is caused by application of blunt forch and is
sufficient to cause death in ordinary course of nature.
Cause of death is haemorrhagic shock consequent to
liver injury.
Time since death is about 19 hours.
On completion of the investigation the charge-sheet
was submitted against the appellant of having committed the
offences of murder and rape punishable under Sections
302/376 of the Indian Penal Code. The case against the
appellant was based on circumstantial evidence only. The
circumstances which have emerged from testimony of the
relevant witnesses, like, PWs 2, 3, 4, 7, 10, 15, 19 and PW-
20 are the following: 1. On 10.4.1996 at 7.30 p.m.
Smt.Lalita, PW-2 left her two daughters, namely, Soni and
Ritu in the care of a neighbour and went out for marketing.
2. PW 10 and PW 15 saw the accused taking Ritu to his
room.
3. When at 7.45 p.m. on that very date Smt.Lalita
returned, she found Ritu missing.
4. Smt.Lalita sent her elder daughter Soni to fetch
her brother Vidya Nand Sagar, PW7.
5. A search for Ritu was made by Smt.Lalita and Vidya
Nand Sagar in the vicinity.
6. Smt.Lalita peeped into the room of the accused and
found Ritu lying on the floor and the accused present there.
7. On query made by Smt.Lalita, the accused handed
over the body of Ritu to her and when she made injuries
about the condition of the girl, the accused told her to go
away otherwise she would also meet the same fate and that
Police could not do anything against him.
8. Smt.Lalita took Ritu to her husband Bindu Shah,
who was working in his tailoring factory.
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9. Vidya Nand Sagar, PW 7 remained standing near the
door of the room of the accused, who remained in his room.
10. Several persons collected at the place of
occurrence and held the accused.
11. Bindu Shah, took Ritu to a neighbouring Doctor,
who told him to take her to a hospital.
12. Bindu Shah took Ritu to Surya Hospital where she
was declared brought dead at 8.15 p.m.
13. Bindu Shah along with his wife returned to the
place of occurrence with the dead body of Ritu.
14. PW 16 SI Magan Singh arrived at the place of
occurrence and found the accused in the custody of some
persons outside the room and that the persons were shouting
that the accused had raped Ritu inside his own room and had
killed her. He controlled the scene and took the accused in
his custody.
15. PW 20, N.S.Khan, SHO of the police station and
the IO of this case, on receiving information about this
case, reached the place of occurrence at 9.35 p.m. on that
very day and found a large crowd having gathered there and
shouting that the accused present there had committed rape
and murder of Ritu. He took the accused in custody and sent
him to the police station with police escort for safety.
16. PW 13, Dr.K.Goel, who performed the post-mortem
examination opined that the incident took place on 10.4.1995
around 7.45 p.m.
The learned trial Judge on appreciation of the
evidence in the case in the light of settled principles for
judging a case based on circumstantial evidence, held that
the prosecution has succeeded in establishing the guilt of
the accused and accordingly convicted him under Sections 302
and 376 IPC. Regarding the sentence the court considered
the relevant aspects of the case like the appellant being a
neighbour of the family of the deceased; that during the
temporary absence of the mother of the child (deceased) from
the house had taken over her (deceased) to his room where he
committed the barbaric act of rape on the innocent child
aged one and half years and in the process of committing
rape inflicted injuries on her liver which resulted in death
of the child. The learned trial Judge while sifting the
relevant materials on record referred to the principles laid
down by this Court in the case of Bachan Singh vs. State of
Punjab AIR 1980 SC 898, Machhi Singh & Ors. Vs. State of
Punjab (1983 (3) SCC 470), Kamta Tiwari v. State of MP
Vol.III (1996) CCR, SC page 141, Laxman Naik v. State of
Orissa, Vol.III (1994) SCC page 381, and came to the
conclusion that it is fit case in which the extreme penalty
of death should be awarded. The High Court on assessing the
evidence on record held that the trial Court rightly
convicted the accused of rape and murder of Kumari Ritu. On
the point of sentence the High Court observed, In the case
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before us a baby girl aged about one and half years, like a
growing bud of a flower, had been a prey to the lust of a
thirty years old man and had been killed in a most revolting
manner arousing intense and extreme indignation of the
community. It is an act of extreme depravity and arouses a
sense of revulsion in the mind of the common man. Such a
person is menace to the society. The facts of the case
persuade us to hold that this is a rarest of the rare cases
where the sentence of death is eminently desirable. The
High Court confirmed the death penalty against the
appellant.
The question that arises for consideration is whether
the accused in this case deserves the harshest punishment of
death. In this connection we can do no better than take
note of the observations and the formulations made by this
Court in Bachan Singh (supra). Therein a Constitution Bench
of this Court after an exhaustive discussion of the relevant
provisions like sections 299,300 and 302 of the IPC,
sections 235(2) and 354(3) of the Criminal Procedure Code,
and Articles 13,14,19(2) to (6) and 21 of the Constitution
held, inter alia, that the founding fathers recognised the
right of the State to deprive a person of his life or
personal liberty in accordance with fair, just and
reasonable procedure established by valid law; that there
are several other indications, also, in the Constitution
which show that the Constitution- makers were fully
cognizant of the existence of death penalty for murder and
certain other offences in the Indian Penal Code. This Court
further observed that the mention in the legislative list,
right of Governor and President to suspend, commute or remit
death sentence and right of appeal to the Supreme Court
under Article 134 show that death penalty or its execution
cannot be regarded as an unreasonable, cruel or unusual
punishment. Nor can it be said to defile "the dignity of
the individual" within the preamble to the Constitution. On
parity of reasoning, it cannot be said that death penalty
violates the basic structure of the Constitution.
Regarding the question of laying down standards and norms
restricting the area of imposition of death penalty, if by
"laying down standards", it is meant that ’murder’ should be
categorised beforehand according to the degrees of its
culpability and all the aggravating and mitigating
circumstances should be exhaustively and rigidly enumerated
so as to exclude all free play of discretion, the argument
merits rejection. Such standardisation is well-nigh
impossible. Firstly, degree of culpability cannot be
measured in each case; secondly, criminal cases cannot be
categorised, there being infinite, unpredictable and
unforseeable variations; thirdly, on such categorization,
the sentencing process will cease to be judicial; and
fourthly, such standardisation or sentencing discretion is a
policy- matter belonging to the legislature beyond the
court’s function.
In paragraphs 176-177 of the Judgment this Court
quoted with approval the following observations of Earl
Loreburn L.C. in Hyman V. Rose (1912 AC 623) :
"I desire in the first instance to point out that the
discretion given by the section is very wide... Now it
seems to me that when the Act is so expressed to provide a
wide discretion... it is not advisable to lay down any
rigid rules for guiding that discretion. I do not doubt
that the rules enunciated by the Master of the Rolls in the
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present case are useful maxims in general, and that in
general they reflect the point of view from which Judges
would regard an application for relief. But I think it
ought to be distinctly understood that there may be cases in
which any or all of them may be disregarded. If it were
otherwise, the free discretion given by the statute would be
fettered by limitations which have nowhere been enacted. It
is one thing to decide what is the true meaning of the
language contained in an Act of Parliament. It is quite a
different thing to place conditions upon a free discretion
entrusted by statute to the court where the conditions are
not based upon statutory enactment at all. It is not safe,
I think, to say that the court must and will always insist
upon certain things when the Act does not require them, and
the facts of some unforeseen case may make the court wish it
had kept a free hand.
"Judges have to decide cases as they come before them,
mindful of the need to keep passions and prejudices out of
their decisions. And it will be strange if, by employing
judicial artifices and techniques, we cut down the
discretion so wisely conferred upon the courts, by devising
a formula which will confine the power to grant anticipatory
bail within a strait-jacket. While laying down cast iron
rules in a matter like granting anticipatory bail, as the
High Court has done, it is apt to be overlooked that even
Judges can have but an imperfect awareness of the needs of
new situations. Life is never static and every situation
has to be assessed in the context of emerging concerns as
and when it arises. Therefore, even if we were to frame a
’code for the grant of anticipatory bail’, which really is
the business of the legislature, it can at best furnish
broad guidelines and cannot compel blind adherence."
From what has been extracted above, it is clear that
this Court should not venture to formulate rigid standards
in an area in which the Legislature so warily treads. Only
broad guidelines consistent with the policy indicated by the
legislature in Section 354(3) can be laid down. Taking note
of the decision of the Supreme Court of the USA in Gregg v.
Georgia [ 428 US 153 = 49 L Ed 859] this Court observed :
"Critically examined, it is clear that the decisions
in Gregg v. Georgia and its companion cases demonstrate the
truth of what we have said earlier, that it is neither
practicable nor desirable to imprison the sentencing
discretion of a judge or jury in the strait-jacket of
exhaustive and rigid standards. Nevertheless, these
decisions do show that it is not impossible to lay down
broad guidelines as distinguished from iron-cased standards,
which will minimise the risk of arbitrary imposition of
death penalty for murder and some other offenses under the
Penal Code."
Then this Court proceeded to consider the question of
indicating the broad guidelines which should guide the Court
in the matter of sentencing a person convicted of murder
under section 302, Indian Penal Code. Making a cautious
approach, this Court observed :
"Before we embark on this task, it will be proper to
remind ourselves, against that "while we have an obligation
to ensure that the constitutional bounds are not
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overreached, we may not act as judges as we might as
legislatures."
Reiterating the principles laid down in Jagmohan vs.
State of U.P. [(1973) 1 SCC 207)] this Court held that:
the application of those principles is now to be guided by
the paramount beacons of legislative policy discernible from
Sections 354(3) and 235(2), namely : (1) The extreme
penalty can be inflicted only in gravest cases of extreme
culpability; (2)In making choice of the sentence, in
addition to the circumstances of the offence, due regard
must be paid to the circumstances of the offender also.
Noticing some of the aggravating circumstances this
Court observed that: pre-planned, calculated, cold-blooded
murder has always been regarded as one of an aggravated
kind. Some other aggravations were enumerated in para 202
of the Judgement.
After enumerating the circumstances, this Court added:
"Stated broadly, there can be no objection to the
acceptance of these indicators but as we have indicated
already, we would prefer not to fetter judicial discretion
by attempting to make an exhaustive enumeration one way or
the other."
Similarly some of the mitigating circumstances
suggested by the counsel appearing in the case were
enumerated in para 206 of the Judgement :
"Mitigating circumstances :- In the exercise of its
discretion in the above cases, the court shall take into
account the following circumstances:- (1) That the offence
was committed under the influence of extreme mental or
emotional disturbance. (2) The age of the accused. If the
accused is young or old, he shall not be sentenced to death.
(3) The probability that the accused would not commit
criminal acts of violence as would constitute a continuing
threat to society. (4) The probability that the accused can
be reformed and rehabilitated. The State shall by evidence
prove that the accused does not satisfy the conditions (3)
and (4) above. (5)That in the facts and circumstances of
the case the accused believed that he was morally justified
in committing the offence. (6) That the accused acted under
the duress or domination of another person. (7) That the
condition of the accused showed that he was mentally
defective and that the said defect impaired his capacity to
appreciate the criminality of his conduct.
This Court further observed that :
"We will do no more than to say that these are
undoubtedly relevant circumstances and must be given great
weight in the determination of sentence. Some of these
factors like extreme youth can instead be of compelling
importance. In several States of India, there are in force
special enactments, according to which a ’child’, that is,
’a person who at the date of murder was less than 16 years
of age’, cannot be tried, convicted and sentenced to death
or imprisonment for life for murder, nor dealt with
according to the same criminal procedure as an adult. The
special Acts provide for a reformatory procedure for such
juvenile offenders or children."
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The views of the majority of the judges were summed-up
as follows:
"There are numerous other circumstances justifying the
passing of the lighter sentence; as there are
countervailing circumstances of aggravation. "We cannot
obviously feed into a judicial computer all such situations
since they are astrological imponderables in an imperfect
and undulating society." Nonetheless, it cannot be
over-emphasised that the scope and concept of mitigating
factors in the area of death penalty must receive a liberal
and expansive construction by the courts in accord with the
sentencing policy writ large in Section 354(3). Judges
should never be bloodthirsty. Hanging of murderers has
never been too good for them. Facts and figures, albeit
incomplete, furnished by the Union of India, show that in
the past, courts have inflicted the extreme penalty with
extreme infrequency-a fact which attests to the caution and
compassion which they have always brought to bear on the
exercise of their sentencing discretion in so grave a
matter. It is, therefore, imperative to voice the concern
that courts, aided by the broad illustrative guide-lines
indicated by us, will discharge the onerous function with
evermore scrupulous care and humane concern, directed along
the highroad of legislative policy outlined in Section
354(3), viz., that for persons convicted of murder, life
imprisonment is the rule and death sentence an exception. A
real and abiding concern for the dignity of human life
postulates resistance to taking a life through law’s
instrumentality. That ought not to be done save in the
rarest of rare cases when the alternative option is
unquestionably foreclosed."
In the case of Machhi Singh (Supra) three learned
Judges of this Court making an in-depth examination of the
principles laid down in Bachan Singh case (supra) observed
that between the protagonists of the ’an eye for an eye’
philosophy who demand ’death-for- death’; the ’Humanists’
on the other hand who press for the other extreme viz.,
’death-in-no- case’; a synthesis has emerged in Bachan
Singh case (supra) wherein the ’rarest-of-rare-cases’
formula for imposing death sentence in a murder case has
been evolved by this Court. This Court then took note of
the problems emerging for identification of the guidelines
spelt out in Bachan Singh case in order to determine whether
or not death sentence should be imposed. Discussing the
question of application of the rarest of rare case rule to
the facts of individual cases in the context of the relevant
guidelines this Court observed (at p.487-88): "The reasons
why the community as a whole does not endorse the humanistic
approach reflected in ’death sentence -in-no- case’ doctrine
are not far to seek. In the first place, the very
humanistic edifice is constructed on the foundation of
’reverence for life’ principle. When a member of the
community violates this very principle by killing another
member, the society may not feel itself bound by the
shackles of this doctrine. Secondly, it has to be realized
that every member of the community is able to live with
safety without his or her own life being endangered because
of the protective arm of the community and on account of the
rule of law enforced by it. The very existence of the rule
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of law and the fear of being brought to book operates as a
deterrent of those who have no scruples in killing others if
it suits their ends. Every member of the community owes a
debt to the community for this protection. When ingratitude
is shown instead of gratitude by ’killing’ a member of the
community which protects the murderer himself from being
killed, or when the community feels that for the sake of
self-preservation the killer has to be killed, the community
may well withdraw the protection by sanctioning the death
penalty. But the community will not do so in every case.
It may do so ’in rarest of rare cases’ when its collective
conscience is so shocked that it will expect the holders of
the judicial power centre to inflict death penalty
irrespective of their personal opinion as regards
desirability or otherwise of retaining death penalty. The
community may entertain such a sentiment when the crime is
viewed from the platform of the motive for, or the manner of
commission of the crime, or the anti-social or abhorrent
nature of the crime, such as for instance:
I. Manner of Commission of murder
33. When the murder is committed in an extremely
brutal, grotesque, diabolical, revolting or dastardly manner
so as to arouse intense and extreme indignation of the
community. For instance,
(i) when the house of the victim is set aflame with
the end in view to roast him alive in the house. (ii) when
the victim is subjected to inhuman acts of torture or
cruelty in order to bring about his or her death.
(iii) when the body of the victim is cut into pieces
or his body is dismembered in a fiendish manner."
This Court in the background of the guidelines
indicated in Bachan Singh case (supra) formulated the
following propositions for application to the facts of each
case for determination of the question (at p.489):
(i) The extreme penalty of death need not be
inflicted except in gravest cases of extreme culpability.
(ii) Before opting for the death penalty the
circumstances of the ’offender’ also require to be taken
into consideration along with the circumstances of the
’crime’.
(iii)Life imprisonment is the rule and death sentence
is an exception. In other words death sentence must be
imposed only when life imprisonment appears to be an
altogether inadequate punishment having regard to the
relevant circumstances of the crime, and provided, and only
provided, the option to impose sentence of imprisonment for
life cannot be conscientiously exercised having regard to
the nature and circumstances of the crime and all the
relevant circumstances.
(iv) A balance-sheet of aggravating and mitigating
circumstances has to be drawn up and in doing so the
mitigating circumstances have to be accorded full weightage
and a just balance has to be struck between the aggravating
and the mitigating circumstances before the option is
exercised.
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39. In order to apply these guidelines inter alia the
following questions may be asked and answered:
(a) Is there something uncommon about the crime which
renders sentence of imprisonment for life inadequate and
calls for a death sentence?
(b) Are the circumstances of the crime such that there
is no alternative but to impose death sentence even after
according maximum weightage to the mitigating circumstances
which speak in favour of the offender?"
The principles laid down in Bachan Singh case (supra)
and the formulations made in Machhi Singh case (supra) as
noted earlier have been applied by this Court in different
cases depending on the facts and circumstances thereof. In
the case of Nirmal Singh and ors. Vs. State of Haryana [JT
1999 (2) SC 225] this Court while confirming the death
sentence imposed on accused Dharam Pal, commuted such
sentence to life imprisonment of the co- accused, taking
note of the facts that the accused had no criminal
antecedents, no possibility of continued threat to society,
he was only accompanying his brother co-accused and gave
three blows to one deceased only after his brother had given
2-3 blows to deceased. No assault by him on other victims
who were killed by his brother; This Court, in the above
case held that his case is not of "rarest of rare" nature
and hence commuted death sentence to life imprisonment. A
Bench of two learned Judges of this Court in case of Anshad
and others vs. State of Karnataka [ 1984 (4) SCC 381]
observed (at p.389-90):
"The Courts must be alive to the legislative changes
introduced in 1973 through Section 354(3) Cr.PC. Death
sentence, being an exception to the general rule, should be
awarded in the "rarest of the rare cases" for ’special
reasons’ to be recorded after balancing the aggravating and
the mitigating circumstances, in the facts and circumstances
of a given case. The number of persons murdered is a
consideration but that is not the only consideration for
imposing death penalty unless the case falls in the category
of "rarest of the rare cases". The courts must keep in view
the nature of the crime, the brutality with which it was
executed, the antecedents of the criminal, the weapons used
etc. It is neither possible nor desirable to catalogue all
such factors and they depend upon case to case.
This Court in the above case, preferred to adopt the
safer course and imposed the sentence of life imprisonment
on A-1 to A-3 for the offences under section 302/34 IPC and
set aside the sentence of death. Coming to the case in
hand, the crime committed is undoubtedly serious and heinous
and the conduct of the appellant is reprehensible. It
reveals a dirty and perverted mind of a human-being who has
no control over his carnal desires. Then the question is:
whether the case can be classified as of a ’rarest of rare
category justifying the severest punishment of death.
Testing the case on the touchstone of the guidelines laid
down in Bachan Singh (supra), Machhi Singh (supra) and other
decisions and balancing the aggravating and mitigating
circumstances emerging from the evidence on record, we are
not persuaded to accept that the case can be appropriately
called one of the ’rarest of rare cases deserving death
penalty. We find it difficult to hold that the appellant is
such a dangerous person that to spare his life will endanger
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the community. We are also not satisfied that the
circumstances of the crime are such that there is no
alternative but to impose death sentence even after
according maximum weightage to the mitigating circumstances
in favour of the offender. It is our considered view that
the case is one in which a humanist approach should be taken
in the matter of awarding punishment. Accordingly, the
capital sentence imposed against the appellant by the Courts
below is set aside, instead the appellant shall suffer
rigorous imprisonment for life. Subject to the above
modification of sentence, the appeals filed by the accused
are dismissed.