Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHAN LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/04/1980
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1252 1980 SCR (3) 305
1980 SCC (3) 159
CITATOR INFO :
F 1983 SC 911 (9)
ACT:
Indian Penal Code 1860 (XLV of 1860) Section 376-Rape
on young girl-Necessity of corroboration of girl’s
testimony-Nature and extent of corroboration necessary.
HEADNOTE:
The prosecution alleged that a girl below 16 years of
age was sleeping outside her house with her family and that
the petitioner in the company of another (acquitted accused)
carried her away under intimidation to a neighbouring godown
belonging to another acquitted accused and in that secluded
venue committed rape on the young woman and afterwards put
her back on her cot.
The trial court convicted the petitioner but on grounds
of benefit of doubt acquitted the other accused. The High
Court affirmed this order.
In the special leave petition to this Court, it was
contended on behalf of the petitioner that the evidence of
the prosecutrix without substantial corroboration, was
inadequate to rest a conviction under section 376 IPC.
Dismissing the special leave petition,
^
HELD 1. To forsake vital consideration and go by
obsolete demands for substantial corroboration is to
sacrifice commonsense in favour of an artificial concoction
called ’judicial’ probability. [308A]
2. Human psychology and behavioural probability must be
borne in mind when assessing the testimonial potency of the
victim’s version. What girl would foster rape charges on a
stranger unless a remarkable set of facts or cleanest
motives are made out? The inherent bashfulness, the innocent
naivete and the feminine tendency to conceal the outrage of
masculine sexual aggression are factors which are relevant
to improbabilise the hypothesis of false implication. The
injury on the person of the victim has corroborative value.
[307G]
3. The court loses its credibility if it rebels against
realism. The law court is not an unnatural world. [308 B]
4. Merely because the trial court has ultra-cautiously
acquitted someone, the higher court must, for that reason,
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cannot acquit everyone. [308C]
5. A socially sensitized judge is a better statutory
armour against gender outrage than long clauses of a complex
section with all the protections writ into it. [308C]
6. Observation on probative force of circumstances are
not universal laws of nature but guidelines and good
counsel. [307 F]
Gurcharan Singh v. State of Haryana AIR 1972 SC 2661
referred to.
306
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Crl.) 2599 of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 9-7-1979 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Crl.A. 1228/1976.
S. K Sabharwal and R.C. Kohli for the petitioner.
The order of the Court was delivered by,
KRISHNA IYER, J, A rapist-if the concurrent findings of
the courts below were correct has chosen to seek special
leave to challenge his crime and punishment, and his counsel
has attacked the verdict of culpability as wholly unfounded.
Indeed, it is redundant, and absent exceptional
circumstances, out of bounds, for this Court, exercising its
jurisdiction under Art. 136, to launch upon an exploration
and re-appreciation of the evidence, its strengths and
weaknesses with a view to sit in judgment over the holdings
of the High Court in affirmance of those of the trial Court.
Briefly, we will touch upon one or two circumstances
without claiming to be exhaustive in any manner. One Shashi
Bala of Ambala was sleeping, with her mother and other
children, outside her house in hot July (1975). The
petitioner, in the company of another (acquitted accused),
carried her away under intimidation to a neighbouring godown
belonging to one Tilak Raj (another acquitted accused) and
in that secluded venue committed rape on the young women.
After subjecting her to these beasteal acts of lust, Shashi
Bala, who by then was nearly unconscious, was put back in
her cot from where she had been removed. In the morning, the
mother of the victim found blood on the daughter’s salwar
and thereupon she complainingly narrated the criminal
assault of the previous night. On the return of the father,
P.W. 7, who had been away, the victim went, in his company,
to the police station, lodged a report which was followed by
investigation and charge-sheet. The Court, after a trial,
convicted the present petitioner but, on grounds of benefit
of doubt, acquitted the rest. Medical evidence showed that
the raped girl was below 16 years of age. We are not too
happy about the acquittal but since the State has not chosen
to come up in appeal against the acquittal, we do not probe
the matter further.
Counsel for the petitioner persistently urged that the
evidence of the prosecutrix, without substantial
corroboration, was inadequate to rest a conviction under s.
376 I.P.C. He relied on observations of this Court in
Gurucharan Singh v. State of Haryana for the pro-
307
position that although a prosecutrix is not an accomplice,
her evidence, as a rule of prudence, is viewed by courts
unfavourably unless reinforced by corroboration "so as to
satisfy its conscience that she is telling the truth and
that the present accused of rape on her has not been falsely
implicated". It is true that old English cases, followed in
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British Indian courts, had led to a tendency on the part of
judge made law that the advisability of corroboration should
be present to the mind of the Judge "except where the
circumstance make it safe to dispense with it". Case-law,
even in those days, had clearly spelt out the following
propositions:
"The tender years of the child, coupled with other
circumstances appearing in the case, such, for example
as its demeanour, unlikelihood of tutoring and so
forth, may render corroboration unnecessary but that is
a question of fact in every case. The only rule of law
is that this rule of prudence must be present to the
mind of the judge or the jury as the case may be and be
understood and appreciated by him or them. There is no
rule of practice that there must, in every case, be
corroboration before a conviction can be allowed, to
stand."
"It would be impossible, indeed it would be
dangerous to formulate the kind of evidence which
should, or would, be regarded as corroboration. Its
nature and extent must necessarily vary with
circumstances of each case and also according to the
particular circumstances of the offence charged."
Observations on probative force of circumstances are not
universal laws of nature but guidelines and good counsel.
We must bear in mind human psychology and behavioural
probability when assessing the testimonial potency of the
victim’s version. What girl would foist a rape charge on a
stranger unless a remarkable set of facts or clearest
motives were made out? The inherent bashfulness, the
innocent naivete and the feminine tendency to conceal the
outrage of masculine sexual aggression are factors which are
relevant to improbabilise the hypothesis of false
implication. The injury on the person of the victim,
especially her private parts, has corroborative value. Her
complaint to her parents and the presence of blood on her
clothes are also testimony which warrants credence. More
than all, it baffles belief in human nature that a girl
sleeping with her mother and other children in the open will
come by blood on her garments and injury in her private
parts unless she has been subjected to the torture of rape.
And if rape has been committed,
308
as counsel more or less conceded, why, of all persons in the
world, should the victim hunt up the petitioner and point at
him the accusing finger? To forsake these vital
considerations and go by obsolescent demands for substantial
corroboration is to sacrifice commonsense in favour of an
artificial concoction called ’Judicial’ probability. Indeed,
the court loses its credibility if it rebels against
realism. The law court is not an unnatural world.
We are not satisfied that merely because the trial
court has ultra-cautiously acquitted someone, the higher
court must, for that reason, acquit everyone, Reflecting on
this case we feel convinced that a socially sensitised judge
is a better statutory armour against gender outrage than
long clauses of a complex section with all the protections
writ into it.
N.V.K. Petition dismissed.
309