Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
JOSEPH S/O KOOVELI POULO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/04/2000
BENCH:
S.N.Variava, K.T.Thomas, Doraiswami
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T Raju, J. The appellant, who was ableto escape from the long arm of
law due to his acquittal by
the trial court was soon made to realise that the sword in
the hands of justice never fails to vindicate itself in
preserving ultimately law and order in the society when he
was indicted for offences under Sections 376, 392 and 302,
IPC, and imposed with punishments of imprisonment for life
under Section 302, IPC, and rigorous imprisonment for seven
years each on the other counts, to run concurrently. The
case of the prosecution is that on 16.09.94 at about 5.30
p.m., the appellant, representing himself to be the husband
of one of the sisters of Gracy the deceased went to St.
Marys Convent, Vandoor, where she was employed as Kitchen
maiden and on a false pretext that her mother was ill
seriously and had been admitted to Medical Trust Hospital,
Ernakulam, took her away with the permission of PW-5, the
Sister incharge of the Convent at the relevant time. The
further case is that the appellant after taking the victim
out of the Convent, had her walk along with him by the side
of the Railway Line in Koratty and thereafter at a desolate
place not only raped and robbed her of her ornaments, but
laid her on the Rail track to be run over by the passing
train. On 17.09.94, PW-2, the key man attached to Karukutty
Railway Station, found the dead body of a female on the up
track railway line and informed PW-1, the Station Master,
who, in turn, brought it to the notice of Koratty Police
Station as per Ex.P1, on which PW-28, the Head Constable,
registered an FIR in Crime No.166/1994 under the caption
unnatural death. An inquest was held over the dead body
and along with the findings in the inquest report, a brown
blouse, a white brassier, a brown polyester sari with blue
and green design and two under skirts, one blue in colour
and the other green were also seized, besides taking
photographs of the dead body. The autopsy was done by
PW-10, the Lecturer and Police Surgeon attached to the
Forensic Department of Medical College, Trichur, on 20.09.94
and he submitted his report under Ex.P4. While matter stood
thus, it appears that PW-7, the mother superior and incharge
of the Convent, was informed on 18.09.94 over telephone by a
person claiming to be one Joseph that Gracy would return to
the Convent in a few days since her mother had recovered.
Finding that she did not so return on 05.10.94, PW-8,
another Sister and inmate of the Convent, went to the house
of the victim and learnt that the mother of Gracy was
neither ill nor was admitted in any Hospital and that she
did not at all return home thereafter. PW-9, the brother of
deceased, went and made enquiries in the Convent and when he
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
was asked to come the next day, on 06.10.94 PW-9, PW-26
(Member of the Panchayat), the accused and two other
relatives of the deceased went and got other details and
even at that stage the accused was said to have been
identified by PW-5 as the person who took Gracy from the
Convent. PW-9 thereafter lodged a complaint, Ext. P18,
with the Circle Inspector of Police, Pudukkad, and an FIR in
Crime No.281/94 was registered under the caption man
missing. During the course of investigation, PWs-5 to 7
and 9 were asked to meet PW-29, the Sub-Inspector, Koratty
Police Station, when they seem to have also identified the
photographs to be that of Gracy and that the clothes shown
also belonged to her. Statements were also recorded from
them. On 09.10.94, PW-30, the Circle Inspector of Police,
Chalakkudy, took up the investigation, visited the scene of
occurrence, prepared a Mahazar, Ex.P22, and arrested the
accused on the same day. As per the statement of the
accused, PW-30 seized M04-diary and Ex.P7, a slip from the
accused under Ex.P6 Mahazar. MOs 1 to 3 were also seized
thereafter under Ex.P5, as per statement Ex.P5(a). The
vaginal swab and smear, collected during the course of
autopsy as also the clothes taken from the dead body and the
dhoti recovered at the instance of the accused were all sent
for chemical examination and reports in Ex.P20 and 21 were
obtained. PW-30 questioned the witnesses, recorded their
statements and completed the investigation, though his
successor in office PW-31 verified the records and
ultimately laid the charge sheet before Court. The learned
Magistrate, who took cognisance of the case, on finding the
offences to be such, exclusively triable by a Court of
Sessions, committed the case to Sessions Court, Trissur, and
thereby the case stood transferred to trial before the First
Additional Sessions Judge. After preliminary hearing and
framing of charges under Sections 376, 392 and 302, IPC, the
accused having pleaded not guilty and claimed to be tried,
the prosecution let in evidence by examining PWs-1 to 31,
besides marking Ex.P1 to P22 and MOs 1 to 4 were got
identified and also marked. Though there was no oral
evidence let in for the defence, Exs.D1 to D13 - marked
portions of statement of some of the PWs, were marked for
the defence. The accused when questioned under Section 313
of the Criminal Procedure Code, denied bluntly all the
incriminating circumstances brought out against him and
reiterated about he being innocent. The learned Sessions
Judge, on the evidence on record, came to the conclusion
that the body found on the railway track was that of
deceased Gracy, who was working at St. Marys Convent at
Vandoor,; that she met her death as a result of being run
over by a train; that there is clinching evidence to show
that it was the accused who had taken Gracy at 5.30 p.m. on
16.09.94 on the pretext that her mother was seriously ill
and that the said circumstance stand fully established. But
at the same it was held that there is no evidence to show
that the accused committed rape on Gracy, or that it is the
accused who sold the ornaments of Gracy (MOs 1 to 3) and
could not, therefore, be responsible in any manner for the
death of Gracy. The prosecution was able to, in the view of
the Sessions Judge, establish only a strong suspicion and
since it cannot take the place of proof, the accused was
entitled to the benefit of doubt and, therefore, acquitted
him of all the charges. The State pursued the matter on
appeal before the High Court and a Division Bench of the
Kerala High Court, on re-appreciation of the evidence on
record, differed from the findings recorded by the Sessions
Court on the guilt or innocence of the accused and found him
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
guilty of the charges levelled against him. The High Court
after specifically noticing the several incriminating facts
which inevitably and necessarily led to an hypothesis of the
accused being guilty of the charges levelled against him
convicted him of the offences, charged with. The manner of
consideration of the evidence and the other materials on
record, as also the method of analysis as well as the
ultimate reasoning and conclusions arrived at by the
Sessions Court were held to be perverse and resulted in
gross miscarriage of justice. Hence, the High Court
dislodged some of the findings of the trial court and
finally the accused was held guilty of the charges levelled
against him and accordingly punished for the same. The
learned counsel for the appellant contended that the
evidence on record established sufficiently the case to be
one of suicide and not homicide and that at any rate the
chain of circumstances is not so complete as to lead to the
hypothesis of guilt of the accused. It was also contended
that the deceased had not been taken away from the Convent
by the accused as alleged and even if that be so, the nature
of injuries found on the body, the probable time of death
and the other materials on record, if at all may only create
a suspicion as observed by the trial judge and that too
based upon surmises against the appellant, but those at any
rate are not sufficient to prove the guilt beyond reasonable
doubt. The learned counsel for the respondent-State
submitted that the trial court had not only over simplified
the cumulative effect of every vital circumstances leading
towards the guilt of the accused but the analysis and
consideration of evidence proceeded on too technical lines
in a superficial manner and, therefore, the High Court was
right and justified in reversing the findings of the trial
court. Argued the learned counsel for the respondent
further that the failure on the part of the appellant to
give any acceptable explanation as to what happened to the
deceased who was not only last seen alive together with the
appellant but also not seen thereafter alive anywhere itself
is sufficient to indict the appellant in this case. The
High Courts being a verdict of reversal of the acquittal,
the learned counsel on either side also took us through the
evidence and other materials on record, at length, to
substantiate their respective stand. So far as the case on
hand is concerned, there is direct evidence of the Sisters
of the Convent where the deceased was working, PWs-5 and 6
to prove beyond reasonable doubt that it was the appellant
who had taken the appellant from the Convent at about 5.30
p.m., on 16.09.94 on the pretext that her mother was
seriously ill and hospitalised. Even the trial court which
returned a verdict of acquittal was very much convinced of
this fact against the appellant and satisfied with the
evidence of PWs-5 to 8. They had nothing against the
accused and no reason to speak falsely to implicate the
appellant, and despite searching and severe
cross-examination made nothing could be brought out to
discredit their evidence. PW- 9, the brother of the
accused, and PW-26, the member of the Panchayat, also
confirmed that PWs-5 and 6 had identified the appellant as
the person who had taken away Gracy on 16.09.94 when they
went to enquire about the deceased, accompanied by the
accused also. The learned Judges of the High Court also
were got convinced with the conclusions of the trial court
in this connection and accepted the same to be correct on
the basis of the evidence of PWs-5 and 6, and PWs-9 and 26.
We see no infirmity whatsoever either in the manner of
appreciation of their evidence or the reasons assigned in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
support of the same and, therefore, this finding of fact
appears to be well justified on the materials on record.
The same does not also call for interference in this appeal.
As for the homicidal fact is concerned, there is only
circumstantial evidence. It is often said that though
witnesses may lie, circumstances will not, but at the same
time it must cautiously be scrutinised to see that the
incriminating circumstances are such as to lead only to an
hypothesis of guilt and reasonably exclude every possibility
of innocence of the accused. There can also be no hard and
fast rule as to the appreciation of evidence in a case and
being always an exercise pertaining to arriving at a finding
of fact the same has to be in the manner necessitated or
warranted by the peculiar facts and circumstances of each
case. The whole effort and endeavour in this case should be
to find out whether the crime was committed by the appellant
and the circumstances proved form themselves into a complete
chain unerringly pointing to the guilt of the appellant.
The formidable incriminating circumstances against the
appellant, as far as we could see, are that the deceased was
taken away from the Convent by the appellant under a false
pretext and she was last seen alive only in his company and
that it is on the information furnished by the appellant in
the course of investigation that the jewels of the deceased,
which were sold to PW-11 by the appellant, were seized under
Ex.P5 duly attested by PW-12 and that PWs-5 and 6 were
categorical in their evidence that those jewels were worn by
the deceased at the time when she left the Convent with the
appellant. PW-10, who conducted the post mortem, noted
about 20 injuries in detail in his Report, Ex.P4. Though
the learned counsel for the appellant attempted to
substantiate that some of the injuries taken together with
height of the deceased and the width of the railway track
could not have possibly resulted by laying the victim on the
track and, therefore, it should be reasonably presumed that
the deceased committed suicide by jumping before the moving
train, we are unable to persuade ourselves to agree with the
said line of thinking since it would require too many
hyper-technical assumptions to be made to believe such
suggestions. Having regard to the categorical and positive
medical opinion that persons who commit suicide usually do
not lay in such posture and the further evidence of PW-10
that though he could not state that the victim was
strangulated before she was laid on the railway track, he
was at any rate definite in his opinion that the nature and
type of injuries sustained by the victim is suggestive of
only a case of homicide. Though the nature of all such
injuries could not rationally be explained, they could very
well be inflicted when the body got twisted and pushed away
from its original position due to the reaction of life-force
in the body the moment it first got into contact with the
moving train and also on account of being thrown away due to
the impact of the fast moving train. There is nothing on
record to suggest or even surmise a plausible reason of her
own on that evening for the victim to commit suicide.
Consequently, the theory of suicide suggested to save the
appellant seem to be more a matter invention based on
imagination than even a remote possibility warranted or
could reasonably be justified on the proved facts. PWs-5 to
8 are the inmates of the Convent holding different positions
therein and all of them identified MOs 1 to 3 as the
ornaments belonging to the deceased Gracy and which she was
wearing when she left the Convent with the accused. PW-9,
the brother of the victim, also identified the jewels. They
have also spoken in unison to the other details relevant,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
which when cumulatively taken up for consideration
reasonably as well as with great certainty establish the
various incriminating factors against the appellant
involving with the crime, which, if at all, could be
properly and reasonably be explained only by him. But they
remain totally undeciphered and unexplained by the attitude
of total denial of everything by the appellant. PW-11 was
working as Manager in the Jewellery Shop in question at
Angamaly where the appellant was said to have taken MOs 1 to
3, and sold them for Rs.5,103/-. Before actual sale, the
jewellery was weighed and the slip, Ex.P7, seized from the
diary of the appellant, was said to have been prepared and
given to him at that time. The worker in the Shop, PW-14,
who prepared the slip after weighing the MOs 1 to 3, has
also identified the jewels and the slip. PW-12 is the gold
platter having his Shop adjacent to the Jewellery Shop in
question. Their evidence, though certain discrepancies not
so material as to effect their truthfulness are attempted to
be pointed out, positively prove that only the accused sold
those jewels representing to be that of his wife and money
was urgently required to meet some hospital expenses. There
is no reason for them to either falsely implicate or depose
against the appellant and we see no relevant or valid reason
to disbelieve them. The adverse comments made by the trial
judge against their evidence merely on account of certain
minor discrepancies are neither justified nor those
discrepancies could themselves be said to be enough to
detract from the truthfulness or genuineness of their
deposition. PW-17, a former employee of the accused in his
quarry, was shown to have been paid Rs.2,500/- by the
accused and though the prosecution would attempt to connect
the same with the sale proceeds of the jewellery of the
deceased, PW-17 could not specifically remember the actual
date of the said payment. The appellant could not explain
how he came into possession of the ornaments belonging to
and worn by the deceased when she left the Convent on the
evening of the fateful day with him. As noticed earlier,
the deceased was last seen alive only with the appellant and
thereafter she neither returned to the Convent nor her home,
alive and not found anywhere else also by any one, outside
the company of the appellant. Taking advantage of the
discrepancies pointed out by the Sessions Judge, the learned
counsel for the appellant also tried to contend that the
evidence of PWs-11 to 14 is not trustworthy. It is not that
every discrepancy or contradiction that matters much in the
matter of assessing the reliability and credibility of a
witness or the truthfulness of his version. Unless the
discrepancies and contradictions are so material and
substantial and that too are in respect of vitally relevant
aspects of the facts deposed, the witnesses cannot be
straightaway condemned and their evidence discarded in its
entirety. On going through the entire evidence of PWs-11 to
14, we are unable to come to the conclusion that they are
not speaking the truth or that they cannot inspire
confidence in the mind of any reasonable person or authority
to adjudge disputed questions of fact, so as to eschew
entirely their evidence from consideration, whatsoever. The
incriminating circumstances enumerated above unmistakably
and inevitably lead to the guilt of the appellant and
nothing has been highlighted or brought on record to make
the facts proved or the circumstances established to be in
any manner in consonance with the innocence at any rate of
the appellant. During the time of questioning under Section
313, Cr.P.C., the appellant instead of making at least an
attempt to explain or clarify the incriminating
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
circumstances inculpating him, and connecting him with the
crime by his adamant attitude of total denial of everything
when those circumstances were brought to his notice by the
Court not only lost the opportunity but stood self
condemned. Such incriminating links of facts could, if at
all, have been only explained by the appellant, and by
nobody else they being personally and exclusively within his
knowledge. Of late, Courts have, from the falsity of the
defence plea and false answers given to Court, when
questioned, found the missing links to be supplied by such
answers for completing the chain of incriminating
circumstances necessary to connect the person concerned with
the crime committed (see State of Maharashtra Vs. Suresh -
2000(1) SCC 471). That missing link to connect the
appellant-accused, we find in this case provided by the
blunt and outright denial of every one and all the
incriminating circumstances pointed out which, in our view,
with sufficient and reasonable certainty on the facts
proved, connect the accused with the death and the cause for
the death of Gracy. For all the reasons stated supra, we
have no hesitation to agree with the findings of the
Division Bench of the High Court holding the appellant
guilty of offences under Section 302 for committing the
murder of Gracy and for robbing her of her jewellery worn by
her - MOs 1 to 3, under Section 392. The deceased meekly
went with the accused from the Convent on account of the
misrepresentation made that her mother was seriously ill and
hospitalised apparently reposing faith and confidence in him
in view of his close relationship - being the husband of her
own sister, but the appellant seems to have not only
betrayed the confidence reposed in him but also took
advantage of the loneliness of the hapless women. The
quantum of punishment imposed is commensurate with the
gravity of the charges held proved and calls for no
interference in our hands, despite the fact that we are not
agreeing with the High Court in respect of the findings
relating to the charge under Section 376. The charge under
Section 376, IPC, is mainly fastened upon the appellant on
the ‘last seen together theory. The factum of rape of the
deceased is sought to be proved from Ex.P20, a report on
examination of vaginal smear collected and said to confirm
the presence of semen and spermatozoa, indicating that she
should have had sexual intercourse before her death.
Ex.P21, chemical report, also showed that semen was detected
in one of the under skirts found on the body of the
deceased. Ex.P8, certificate issued by PW-15, the doctor,
also showed that the accused appellant was potent. But in
the Report, Ex.P21, it was specifically stated that the
dhoti of the appellant, subjected to chemical examination,
contained no stains of blood or semen. If there had been
any forcible sexual intercourse, the victim must have made
some strong resistance being a grownup lady and in the
process, some injuries would have been found on the
vagina/private parts of the body or some other parts
indicative of any such use of force and it would be too much
to assume that there would have been no injuries whatsoever
on the body, on this account. Though injuries on the body
is not always a must or sine qua non to prove a charge of
rape, having regard to the case of the prosecution that the
victim had been subjected to brutal rape and forced sexual
intercourse, this aspect of the matter cannot be completely
lost sight of. The deceased was stated to be of about 26
years age, when she died and she is the sister of the wife
of the appellant. It is not as though they were shown
earlier to be on inimical terms. Anything possible might
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
have happened and the facts found proved do not irresistibly
lead to the only conclusion of the guilt of the appellant in
respect of an offence under Section 376, IPC. Consequently,
we are prepared to give the benefit of doubt to the
appellant and acquit him of the offence under Section 376,
IPC, and the conviction recorded and sentence imposed by the
High Court upon the appellant on this account is set aside.
For the reasons stated above, except for the modification
made in respect of the charge under Section 376, IPC, we see
no reason to interfere with the judgment of the High Court,
in other respects pertaining to the charges under Sections
302 and 392, IPC, and the appeal relating to the same is
dismissed.