Full Judgment Text
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 389 OF 2007
Sudhakaran … Appellant
VERSUS
State of Kerala …Respondent
J U D G M E N T
SURINDER SINGH NIJJAR, J.
1.
The present appeal is directed against the judgment
and final order in Criminal Appeal No. 1092 of 2003
dated 21.10.2005 whereby the High Court of Kerala
at Ernakulum dismissed the criminal appeal filed
by the appellant and thereby affirmed his conviction
under Section 302 IPC as held by the trial court
vide judgment dated 30.11.2002.
2. Shorn of unnecessary details, the facts essential for
adjudication of the present appeal are:
1
The appellant herein was convicted and sentenced to
rigorous imprisonment for life under Section 302 IPC for
murdering his wife on 3.11.2000 at about 7.30 p.m. He
had killed his wife by assaulting her with a chopper on
her neck in the bedroom of his house. There is no direct
evidence of the murder. However, the factum of death of
the appellant’s wife by the injuries noticed in post
mortem report (Exb.P5) is not disputed. The appellant
had taken the defence of insanity based on
Section 84 IPC. He had examined four witnesses in
support of his defence. Now, the appellant had claimed
the defence of insanity at the time of murder; no such
plea was taken at the time of the trial. Aggrieved by the
judgment of the trial court, the appellant had approached
the High Court in Criminal Appeal No.1092 of 2003. The
aforesaid appeal was dismissed by the Division Bench of
the Kerala High Court by the judgment dated
21.10.2005. It is this judgment which is impugned before
us in the present appeal.
2
3. We may now notice the prosecution version as it
emerges through the evidence of PW1 and PW5. It
was alleged that on 3.11.2000 at about 7.30 p.m.
The appellant with the intention of killing his wife,
namely, Ajitha @ Poonamma had struck her on her
neck with a chopper when she was in the bedroom
of his house which is named ‘Kallumkuzhi’, bearing
No.289 situated in ward No. IX of Kanjikuzhy
panchayat. After committing the murder, the
appellant came out of the house and met PW1 and
PW5 who were sitting in front of their house. PW1 is
the son of PW5. At the time when the appellant
approached them he was carrying his child in one
arm. He asked PW5 as to whether he could hold the
child. When PW5 stepped towards the appellant to
take the child, he saw that the appellant was
carrying a chopper in the other hand. Immediately
PW1 and his father rushed into their house and
closed the door. At that time the appellant was seen
roaming around their house. He was trying to lay
3
down the child in a lean-to attached to their house.
At that stage, PW1 had pointed the beam of a torch
on to the appellant, through the window. He saw, in
the torch light, that the shirt of the appellant was
blood stained and he was also carrying a blood
stained chopper. PW1 then came out of his house
and went to the nearby house of PW2 and narrated
the entire incident to him. Thereafter PW1 and PW2
together went to the adjacent house of PW3. When
they came back together, they saw that appellant
had left the house of PW1. At that stage they were
told by PW5 that the appellant had come after
killing his wife. According to PW5, the appellant had
confessed to the crime. Thereafter all the people in
the nearby houses got together and went to the
house of the appellant where they found that his
wife Ajitha was lying on a cot in her bedroom with
blood splattered all over her. They also found that
there was no movement in the body of Ajitha. It is
further the case of the prosecution that when all the
4
neighbours had gathered in the house of the
appellant he had confessed to all of them that he
had killed his wife.
4. The FIR was registered on the basis of the statement
Exb.P1 made by PW1 wherein he narrated the
incident as stated above. This witness PW1 has also
identified M.O.1 knife which he had seen in the
hand of the appellant on the evening of 3.11.2000.
PW2 also gave a similar statement. He further
stated that the appellant had come to him and
asked him to look after the child as he was going to
the police station. He is alleged to have stated to
PW2 that –
“I have child in my hand. Kindly hold him. I
am going to the police station.”
5. PW2 further stated that the appellant had put the
knife on the ground in the verandah on being asked by
one of the neighbours. While putting the knife down the
appellant said “till today she had been cheating upon
5
me.” After putting the knife down the appellant went to
the house of PW3. He is stated to have entrusted the
child to PW3. Thereafter the appellant had gone to a
place named Aippara City. PW4 is another neighbour
who stated that the appellant had come to the house of
PW1 with his 8 months old child in one hand and the
knife in the other hand. He came to know about the
incident when PW1 and PW2 came to his house and
narrated the story. Thereafter he saw the appellant in the
residential compound of Poonamakkal Thomas. He also
deposed that on the request of his father and Narayan,
appellant had put the knife on the floor. PW5 also
corroborated the statement given by PW1 to PW4. PW6 is
another witness who came to know about the incident
while he was in the Aippara City. According to him, he
came to know about the murder of the wife of appellant
at about 8 o’clock on 3.11.2000. According to PW11,
Sub-Inspector of Police Kanjikuzhi police, the appellant
was produced early in the morning by PW2, 3 and 4. He
was arrested by PW12, C.I. of Police.
6
6. The trial court notices that the prosecution has
relied on the oral evidences given by PW1 to PW12. The
prosecution had also produced the blood stained chopper
which had been recovered from the appellant. After
examining the dead body of the deceased, inquest report
was prepared by PW11 in the presence of the witnesses.
The chopper had been seized by him as per Ext.P2
Mahaska. Ext.P3 is the Mahaska prepared by him for
seizure of the shirt and dhoti worn by the appellant.
These materials were produced before the court as Ext.P7
and P8. The articles recovered from the body of the
deceased were produced as M.O.3 to 10 and 10(a). These
included night gown, and other under garments, gold
ornaments worn by the deceased at the time of the
murder. All the recovered articles were sent for Forensic
Examination. The Forensic Report was relied upon by the
prosecution at the trial. Ext.P10 is the Forensic Science
Report. This report revealed that all the items examined,
contained human blood belonging to group A.
7
7. Taking note of the evidence adduced by the
prosecution, the trial court noticed that Ext.P5 post
mortem certificate revealed nine injuries on the body of
the deceased. These injuries may be tabulated as
under :-
1. Incised wound, 14x4x6 cm horizontal, on
the middle of back of neck, 6 cm below
occipital protuberance. The muscles of the
back of neck found but and vertebral
column was found cut and separated
nd rd
between 2 and 3 cervical vertebra.
Spinal cord underneath and vertebral
arteries were found several.
2. Incised wound 9x2x2cm oblique, on right
side of back of head upper inner end at the
level of occipital protuberance and lower
outer and just above right ear.
3. Incised wound 5x1x1cm oblique on right
side of neck, upper outer end just below
right ear and lower inner end 1cm, below
right angle of mandible.
4. Incised wound, 2x1cm oblique on pine of
right ear involving its entire thickness.
8
5. Incised wound 5x1x2 cm oblique on the
back of chest over right shoulder blade.
6. Incised wound 2x1x0.5 cm oblique on the
outer aspect of left shoulder.
7. Incised wound 3x1x0.5 cm oblique on the
out aspect of left shoulder 2 cm below
injury No.6.
8. Incised wound 5.5x1 cm. oblique on the
back of left little finger, 3 cm above its trip
with distal potion connected by skin only.
9. Incised wound, 5x4x1cm on the left
palmate the root of thumb.”
8. PW9, the doctor who conducted the post mortem
opined that the injuries noted by him could be caused by
an attack with a chopper such as M.O.1. The doctor also
opined that there were wounds on palm and fingers of
the deceased. This would indicate that she was defending
herself, therefore, she was attacked while she was awake
and not when she was asleep. The injuries noted by the
doctor in Ext.P5 also indicate that the appellant had
caused the death of his wife by attacking her with
chopper M.O.1.
9
The trial court upon consideration of the entire evidence
observed that the entire sequence of events led to the
only conclusion that the appellant had killed his wife by
striking her on her neck with a chopper. The trial court
specifically held that it did not find any missing link fatal
to the prosecution case.
9. The trial court thereafter considered the defence
pleaded by the appellant under Section 84 IPC. Upon
examination of the entire medical evidence, the trial court
concluded that there is no material to indicate that at the
time of the commission of the offence or immediately
before the occurrence of the incident, the appellant was
suffering from any mental illness. Although he had taken
some treatment in the year 1985 for mental illness but
he had fully recovered from that. Subsequently, long after
that he had married the deceased. Even though they
were living a disturbed married life, a child was born out
of the wedlock. The child was 8 months old at the time
when the crime was committed. The trial court also
10
noticed that, although the appellant was irregular, he
used to take on casual jobs for his sustenance. The trial
court concluded that even after taking note of the
evidence produced by the defence, the conclusion was
that the appellant was capable of understanding the
nature of the act and the consequences thereof.
10. The High Court, in appeal, re-examined the entire
issue and concluded that the evidence given by PW1 to
PW5 is unimpeachable. Therefore, the conclusions
reached by the trial court were duly affirmed by the
Division Bench of the High Court. The defence under
Section 84 was held to be not proved.
11. We have heard the learned counsel for the parties.
12. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that
the entire story is unbelievable. The appellant was living
with his wife in a thickly populated locality. The houses
11
of the neighbours are in a close proximity. The defence of
the appellant has been illegally discarded by the trial
court as well as by the High Court. The appellant had
produced expert witnesses. In support of the medical
history of his mental illness, DW2 and DW4 had
produced the record relied upon by them which shows
that the appellant had been treated for paranoid
schizophrenia, 11 days after the alleged murder. Even
during the trial, the appellant had to be taken to the
mental hospital on 15.11.2000.
13. According to the learned counsel, both the courts
below have failed to appreciate the exact nature of the
disease “paranoid schizophrenia”. Such patients
experience an extremely rapid change of emotion within a
matter of seconds and minutes, they may be angry,
depresses, perplexed, ecstatic and anxious. Therefore, it
is not possible to say that at the time of the murder the
appellant was in his senses.
12
14. We are unable to accept the submissions made by
the learned counsel for the appellant. So far as the actual
physical murder is concerned, all the circumstances
adverted to above, chillingly point towards the guilt of the
appellant. PW1 and PW5 have clearly stated how the
appellant had approached them with a chopper soaked in
blood in one hand and his 8 months old son in other
arm. The blood stained chopper remained in the
possession of the appellant till he was asked to put the
same on the ground. PW1 actually saw the blood stained
chopper in the hand of the appellant when he pointed the
torchlight on the appellant through the window. After
entrusting the child to PW3, the appellant went away.
The dead body of his wife was discovered by the
neighbours which was soaked in blood. According to the
PW3 there was so much blood on the body that she
seemed to have taken a bath in a pool of blood. The
ocular evidence has been corroborated by medical
evidence. The doctor, PW9, who conducted the post
mortem, has clearly stated that the injuries which were
13
found on the body of the deceased could have been
caused with a weapon which was seized from the
appellant.
15. Therefore, in our opinion, both the courts below
have correctly concluded that the circumstances lead to
the only conclusion that the appellant has committed the
murder of his wife.
16. As far as, the defence under Section 84 is
concerned, we also see no reason to differ with the
opinion expressed by the trial court as also the High
Court. The evidence given by DW1, Assistant Surgeon of
Idduki District Hospital has been rightly discarded by the
High Court. It is true that DW1 had stated on the basis of
the out patient register that the appellant had come for
consultation. However, no records were produced as to
what treatment had been given to him. Even the out
patient ticket was not produced. Ultimately, this doctor
admitted that he cannot say that the appellant had come
14
there for psychiatric treatment. He did not even
remember the medicine which had been given to the
appellant. Similarly, the evidence of Superintendent of
Jail DW2 also only indicates that the appellant had been
sent to Medical Health Centre. Even the evidence of the
Health Centre was incomplete and wholly unreliable. The
entire medical evidence produced was not sufficient to
show that at the time of the commission of the murder
the appellant was medically insane and incapable of
understanding the nature of the consequences of the act
performed by him.
17. The defence of insanity has been well known in the
English Legal System for many centuries. In the earlier
times, it was usually advanced as a justification for
seeking pardon. Over a period of time, it was used as a
complete defence to criminal liability in offences involving
mens rea. It is also accepted that insanity in medical
terms is distinguishable from legal insanity. In most
cases, in India, the defence of insanity seems to be
15
pleaded where the offender is said to be suffering from
the disease of Schizophrenia. The plea taken in the
present case was also that the appellant was suffering
from “paranoid schizophrenia”. The term has been
1
defined in Modi’s Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology
as follows:
“Paranoia is now regarded as a mild form of
paranoid schizophrenia. It occurs more in
males than in females. The main characteristic
of this illness is a well-elaborated delusional
system in a personality that is otherwise well
preserved. The delusions are of persecutory
type. The true nature of this illness may go
unrecognized for a long time because the
personality is well preserved, and some of
these paranoiacs may pass off as a social
reformers or founders of queer pseudo-
religious sects. The classical picture is rare
and generally takes a chronic course.
Paranoid Schizophrenia, in the vast majority of
case, starts in the fourth decade and develops
insidiously. Suspiciousness is the
characteristic symptom of the early stage.
Ideas of reference occur, which gradually
develop into delusions of persecution. Auditory
hallucinations follow which in the beginning,
start as sound or noises in the ears, but later
change into abuses or insults. Delusions are at
first indefinite, but gradually they become fixed
and definite, to lead the patient to believe that
he is persecuted by some unknown person or
1 rd
[ 23 Ed. Page 1077]
16
some superhuman agency. He believes that his
food is being poisoned, some noxious gases are
blown into his room and people are plotting
against him to ruin him. Disturbances of
general sensation give rise to hallucinations
which are attributed to the effects of
hypnotism, electricity, wireless telegraphy or
atomic agencies. The patient gets very irritated
and excited owing to these painful and
disagreeable hallucinations and delusions. ”
The medical profession would undoubtedly treat the
appellant herein as a mentally sick person. However, for
the purposes of claiming the benefit of the defence of
insanity in law, the appellant would have to prove that
his cognitive faculties were so impaired, at the time when
the crime was committed, as not to know the nature of
the act. Section 84 of the Indian Penal Code recognizes
the defence of insanity. It is defined as under:-
“Nothing is an offence which is done by a
person who at the time of doing it, by reason of
unsoundness of mind, is incapable of knowing
the nature of the act, or that he is doing what
is either wrong or contrary to law.”
A bare perusal of the aforesaid section would show that
in order to succeed, the appellant would have to prove
17
that by reason of unsoundness of mind, he was incapable
of knowing the nature of the act committed by him. In
the alternate case, he would have to prove that he was
incapable of knowing that he was doing what is either
wrong or contrary to law. The aforesaid section clearly
gives statutory recognition to the defence of insanity as
developed by the Common Law of England in a decision
of the House of Lords rendered in the case of R. Vs.
2
Daniel Mc Naughten . In that case, the House of Lords
formulated the famous Mc Naughten Rules on the basis
of the five questions, which had been referred to them
with regard to the defence of insanity. The reference
came to be made in a case where Mc Naughten was
charged with the murder by shooting of Edward
Drummond, who was the Pvt. Secretary of the then Prime
Minister of England Sir Robert Peel. The accused Mc
Naughten produced medical evidence to prove that, he
was not, at the time of committing the act, in a sound
state of mind. He claimed that he was suffering from an
2
[1843 RR 59: 8ER 718(HL)]
18
insane delusion that the Prime Minister was the only
reason for all his problems. He had also claimed that as
a result of the insane delusion, he mistook Drummond
for the Prime Minister and committed his murder by
shooting him. The plea of insanity was accepted and Mc
Naughten was found not guilty, on the ground of
insanity. The aforesaid verdict became the subject of
debate in the House of Lords. Therefore, it was
determined to take the opinion of all the judges on the
law governing such cases. Five questions were
subsequently put to the Law Lords. The questions as
well as the answers delivered by Lord Chief Justice
Tindal were as under:-
“Q.1 What is the law respecting alleged crimes
committed by persons afflicted with
insane delusion in respect of one or more
particular subjects or persons: as, for
instance, where at the time of the
commission of the alleged crime the
accused knew he was acting contrary to
law, but did the act complained of with a
view, under the influence of insane
delusion, of redressing a revenging some
supposed grievance or injury, or of
producing some public benefit?
19
Answer
“Assuming that your lordships’ inquiries are
confined to those persons who labour under
such partial delusions only, and are not in
other respects insane, we are of opinion, that,
notwithstanding the party did the act
complained of with a view, under the influence
of insane delusion, of redressing or revenging
some supposed grievance or injury, or of
producing some public benefit, he is
nevertheless punishable, according to the
nature of the crime committed, if he knew, at
the time of committing such crime, that he was
acting contrary to law, by which expression we
understand your lordships to mean the law of
the land.
Q.2. What are the proper questions to be
submitted to the jury when a person
alleged to be afflicted with insane
delusion respecting one or more
particular subjects or persons, is charged
with the commission of a crime (murder,
for example), and insanity is set up as a
defence?
Q.3. In what terms ought the question to be
left to the jury as to the prisoner’s state of
mind at the time when the act was
committed?
Answers – to the second and third questions
That the jury ought to be told in all cases that
every man is presumed to be sane, and to
possess a sufficient degree of reason to be
responsible for his crimes, until the contrary
be proved to their satisfaction; and that, to
establish a defence on the ground of insanity,
20
it must be clearly proved that, at the time of
the committing of the act, the party accused
was labouring under such a defect of reason,
from disease of the mind, as not to know the
nature and quality of the act he was doing, or
if he did know it, that he did not know he was
doing what was wrong. The mode of putting
the latter part of the question to the jury on
these occasions has generally been, whether
the accused, at the time of doing the act, knew
the difference between right and wrong, which
mode, though rarely, if ever, leading to any
mistake with the jury, is not, as we conceive,
so accurate when put generally, and in the
abstract, as when put as to the party’s
knowledge of right and wrong in respect to the
very act with which he is charged. If the
question were to be put as to the knowledge of
the accused, solely and exclusively with
reference to the law of the land, it might tend
to confound the jury, by inducing them to
believe that an actual knowledge of the law of
the land was essential in order to lead to a
conviction, whereas the law is administered
upon the principle that every one must be
taken conclusively to know it without proof
that he does know it. If the accused was
conscious that the act was one which he ought
not to do, and if that act was at the same time
contrary to the law of the land, he is
punishable; and the usual course, therefore,
has been to leave the question to the jury,
whether the party accused had a sufficient
degree of reason to know that he was doing an
act that was wrong: and this course, we think,
is correct, accompanied with such
observations and explanations as the
circumstances of each particular case may
require.
21
Q.4. If a person under an insane delusion as
to the existing facts commits and offence
in consequence thereof, is he thereby
excused?
Answer
The answer must, of course, depend on the
nature of the delusion, but making the same
assumption as we did before, that he labours
under such partial delusion only, and is not in
other respects insane, we think he must be
considered in the same situation as to
responsibility as if the facts with respect to
which the delusion exists were real. For
example, if, under the influence of his
delusion, he supposes another man to be in
the act of attempting to take away his life, and
he kills that man, as he supposes in self-
defence, he would be exempted from
punishment. If his delusion was that the
deceased had inflicted a serious injury to his
character and fortune, and he killed him in
revenge for such supposed injury, he would be
liable to punishment.
Q.5. Can a medical man, conversant with the
disease of insanity, who never saw the
prisoner previously to the trial, but who
was present during the whole trial, and
the examination of all the witnesses, be
asked his opinion as to the state of the
prisoner’s mind at the time of the
commission of the alleged crime, or his
opinion whether the prisoner was
conscious, at the time of doing the act,
that he was acting contrary to law, or
whether he was labouring under any and
what delusion at the time?
22
Answer
We think the medical man, under the
circumstances supposed, cannot in strictness
be asked his opinion in the terms above stated,
because each of those questions involves the
determination of the truth of the facts deposed
to, which it is for the jury to decide; and the
questions are not mere questions upon a
matter of science, in which case such evidence
is admissible. But where the facts are
admitted or not disputed, and the question
becomes substantially one of science only, it
may be convenient to allow the question to be
put in that general form, though the same
3
cannot be insisted on as a matter of right.”
A comparison of answers to question no. 2 and 3 and the
provision contained in Section 84 of the IPC would clearly
indicate that the Section is modeled on the aforesaid
answers.
18. This Court has on several occasions examined the
standard of proof that is required to be discharged by the
appellant to get the benefit of Section 84 IPC. We may
make a reference here to the observation made in
Dahyabhai Chhaganbhai Thakkar Vs. State of
3
[ Archbold 2010 Ed. Pg. No. 1880-1881]
23
4
Gujarat . The relevant aspects of the law and the
material provisions relating to the plea of insanity were
noticed and considered as follows:-
“ Indian Penal Code
299. Whoever causes death by doing an act
with the intention of causing death, or with the
intention of causing such bodily injury as is
likely to cause death, or with the knowledge
that he is likely by such act to cause death,
commits the offence of culpable homicide.
84. Nothing is an offence which is done by a
person who, at the time of doing it, by reason
of unsoundness of mind, is incapable of
knowing the nature of the act, or that he is
doing what is either wrong or contrary to law.
Indian Evidence Act
105. When a person is accused of any offence,
the burden of proving the existence of
circumstances bringing the case within any of
the General Exceptions in the Indian Penal
Code (45 of 1860) or within any special
exception or proviso contained in any other
part of the same Code, or in any law defining
the offence, is upon him, and the Court shall
presume the absence of such circumstances.
4. Shall presume.—Whenever it is directed by
this Act that the Court shall presume a fact, it
shall regard such facts as proved unless and
until it is disproved.
4
[AIR 1964 SC 1563]
24
Proved.—A fact is said to be ‘proved’ when after
considering the matters before it, the Court
either believes it to exist, or considers its
existence so probable that a prudent man
ought, under the circumstances of the
particular case, to act upon the supposition
that it exists.
Disproved.—A fact is said to be disproved
when, after considering the matters before it,
the Court either believes that it does not exist,
or considers its non-existence so probable that
a prudent man ought, under the
circumstances of the particular case, to act
upon the supposition that it does not exist.
101. Whoever desires any Court to give
judgment as to any legal right or liability
dependent on the existence of fact which he
asserts, must prove that those facts exist.
When a person is bound to prove the existence
of any fact, it is said that the burden of proof
lies on that person.”
It is a fundamental principle of criminal
jurisprudence that an accused is presumed to
be innocent and, therefore, the burden lies on
the prosecution to prove the guilt of the
accused beyond reasonable doubt. The
prosecution, therefore, in a case of homicide
shall prove beyond reasonable doubt that the
accused caused death with the requisite
intention described in Section 299 of the
Indian Penal Code. This general burden never
shifts and it always rests on the prosecution.
But, as Section 84 of the Indian Penal Code
provides that nothing is an offence if the
25
accused at the time of doing that act, by
reason of unsoundness of mind was incapable
of knowing the nature of his act or what he
was doing was either wrong or contrary to law.
This being an exception, under Section 105 of
the Evidence Act the burden of proving the
existence of circumstances bringing the case
within the said exception lies on the accused;
and the court shall presume the absence of
such circumstances. Under Section 105 of the
Evidence Act, read with the definition of “shall
presume” in Section 4 thereof, the court shall
regard the absence of such circumstances as
proved unless, after considering the matters
before it, it believes that said circumstances
existed or their existence was so probable that
a prudent man ought, under the
circumstances of the particular case, to act
upon the supposition that they did exist. To
put it in other words, the accused will have to
rebut the presumption that such
circumstances did not exist, by placing
material before the court sufficient to make it
consider the existence of the said
circumstances so probable that a prudent man
would act upon them. The accused has to
satisfy the standard of a “prudent man”. If the
material placed before the court such, as, oral
and documentary evidence, presumptions,
admissions or even the prosecution evidence,
satisfies the test of “prudent man”, the
accused will have discharged his burden. The
evidence so placed may not be sufficient to
discharge the burden under Section 105 of the
Evidence Act, but it may raise a reasonable
doubt in the mind of a judge as regards one or
other of the necessary ingredients of the
offence itself. It may, for instance, raise a
reasonable doubt in the mind of the judge
26
whether the accused had the requisite
intention laid down in Section 299 of the
Indian Penal Code. If the judge has such
reasonable doubt, he has to acquit the
accused, for in that event the prosecution will
have failed to prove conclusively the guilt of
the accused. There is no conflict between the
general burden, which is always on the
prosecution and which never shifts, and the
special burden that rests on the accused to
make out his defence of insanity.”
Thereafter, upon further consideration, this Court
defined the doctrine of burden of proof in the context of
the plea of insanity in the following propositions:-
“(1) The prosecution must prove beyond
reasonable doubt that the appellant had
committed the offence with the requisite mens
rea; and the burden of proving that always
rests on the prosecution from the beginning to
the end of the trial.
(2) There is a rebuttable presumption that the
appellant was not insane, when he committed
the crime, in the sense laid down by Section
84 of the Indian Penal Code: the appellant may
rebut it by placing before the court all the
relevant evidence – oral, documentary or
circumstantial, but the burden of proof upon
him is no higher than that rests upon a party
to civil proceedings.
(3) Even if the appellant was not able to
establish conclusively that he was insane at
27
the time he committed the offence, the
evidence placed before the court by the
appellant or by the prosecution may raise a
reasonable doubt in the mind of the court as
regards one or more of the ingredients of the
offence, including mens rea of the appellant
and in that case the court would be entitled to
acquit the appellant on the ground that the
general burden of proof resting on the
prosecution was not discharged.”
19. It is also a settled proposition of law that the crucial
point of time for ascertaining the existence of
circumstances bringing the case within the purview of
Section 84 is the time when the offence is committed. We
may notice here the observations made by this Court in
5
the case of Ratan Lal Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh . In
Paragraph 2 of the aforesaid judgment, it is held as
follows:-
“It is now well-settled that the crucial point of
time at which unsoundness of mind should be
established is the time when the crime is
actually committed and the burden of proving
this lies on the appellant.”
5
[1970 (3) SCC 533]
28
20. The High Court on examination of the evidence
before it, came to the conclusion that the appellant had
failed to prove that he was suffering from such mental
illness that would enable him to take benefit of Section
84 IPC.
21. The High Court took into consideration the totality
of the circumstances and came to the conclusion that
there was no evidence indicating that appellant was
suffering from mental illness at the crucial time. The only
evidence placed on record shows that the appellant had
been treated in a Psychiatric Hospital for 13 days in the
year 1985 even at that time the doctor had diagnosed the
disease as psychotic disorder. The record did not indicate
that the patient was suffering from such mental disability
which incapacitated him to know the nature of the act
that he had committed. The High Court further observed
that there was no evidence to indicate that the appellant
suffered from mental illness post 1985. The High Court,
in our opinion, rightly concluded that the appellant was
29
capable of knowing the nature of the act and the
consequences thereof on the date of the alleged incident.
Whilst he had brutally and callously committed the
murder of his wife, he did not cause any hurt or
discomfort to the child. Rather he made up his mind to
insure that the child be put into proper care and custody
after the murder. The conduct of the appellant before and
after the incident was sufficient to negate any notion that
he was mentally insane, so as not to be possessed of the
necessary mens rea, for committing the murder of his
wife.
22. In such view of the matter, we see no reason to
interfere with the concurrent findings recorded by the
courts below. The appeal is dismissed.
…………………….……J.
…
[B.SUDERSHAN REDDY]
30
.………………………………J.
[SURINDER SINGH NIJJAR]
NEW DELHI;
OCTOBER 26, 2010.
31