Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAGHUBIR SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/02/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 677 1974 SCR (3) 356
1975 SCC (3) 37
CITATOR INFO :
MV 1982 SC1325 (69)
ACT:
Murder--Death penalty when can be reduced to life
imprisonment.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant developed illicit intimacy with the deceased.
When the deceased feigned pregnancy and pressed him to marry
her, he gave her a deadly poison mixed in milk. On the
death of the deceased he wrapped the dead body in a blanket
and left it in a railway compartment. He was convicted and
sentenced to death.
On appeal to this Court on the question of sentence
HELD : While murder in its aggravated form and in the
absence of extenuating factors connected with crime,
criminal or legal process, still is condignly visited with
death penalty, a compassionate alternative of life
imprisonment in all other circumstances is gaining judicial
ground. [357 G-H]
In the instant case a few ameliorative features fall to
be noticed since judicial temper has more components than
indignation against murder. The appellant is in his
twenties, not irrelevant in considering death sentence.
He was a married man. He was promiscuous with women, a
salacious sin for which the deceased was a contributory.
The latter’s pressure to get him to marry her must have
planted the seed of murderous thought in him. He bargained
for romance, encouraged by the-victim but her pretended
pregnancy upset the appellant. Some planning and treachery
have aggravated the crime. Yet another circumstance is that
the man was sentenced to death nearly two years ago and the
specter of death penalty must have tormented his soul.
Taken separately, none of these matters may suffice to
commute but the conspectus of factors, personal and social,
tilt the scales in favour of life term. L357 El
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL, APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 124
of 1973.
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Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 30th November, 1972 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
in Criminal Appeal No. 632 of 1972 and Murder Ref. No. 27
of 1972.
Nuruddin Ahmed and S. K. Mehta, for the appellant.
Gautam Goswami and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. A young woman was vomitted into death by a
young man by giving her a cup of milk mixed with a lethal
dose of stricnine. He, along with two others, bundled the
cadaver into a Delhibound train but the coach cleaner
discovered it, the police unearthed the crime, the court
convicted the culprits awarding capital sentence to the
killer and lighter punishments to the two accessories after
the fact, under S. 201, I.P.C. Special leave has been
granted to the only appellant on the sole ground of sentence
and so our scrutiny is confined to the circumstances of the
crime and criminal and the penological propriety of
inflicting the higher or lesser punishment.
357
Twenty six-years-old Raghubir Singh--the appellant-was a
lesser official in the Malaria Eradication Department in
Gorior, a village in Rajasthan. He became friends with a
veterinary official, Sri Sharma, P.W. 13, and by a
concatenation of innocent circumstances the appellant came
into carnal comity with Kailashwati, the 2nd accused, a
midwife in a local hospital. Later, the appellant was
transferred to a village Mandhapia in the Family Planning
Department where he came across Sushma Thomas, a nurse in
the same department. Prurient Raghubir picked up a
liaison with this malayalee belle older to him by five
years and-going by the medical evidence, not a virgin.
She seems to have feigned pregnancy probably to force a
matrimony for which Raghubir was reluctant. After many
twists and turns of events, on June 6, 1971, the appellant
secured half a grain of stricnine hydrochloride from Sharma,
the friend, on the pretext that it was needed for killing
stray dogs. This Sharma’s naivete in supplying poison looks
suspicious and it is for Government to look into, re-
membering that he was more than a dispensing chemist in this
case. Anyway, the amorous pair spent the night of the 10th
June at the quarters of the 2nd accused, and the appellant
brought-milk for the deceased who consumed the cup of death.
After agonising hours of vomitting struggle, she breathed
her last, was wrapped in a blanket and given a railway
burial.
The criminal act was treacherous murder and deserved the
sterner sentence. But a few ameliorative features fall to
be noticed since judicial temper has more components than
indignation against murder. The convict is in his twenties,
not irrelevant in considering death sentence. He is said to
be a married man. He was promiscuous With women, a
salacious sin for which the deceased was a contributory.
The latter’s pressure to get him to marry her must have
planted the seed of murderous thought in him. He bargained
for romance, encouraged by the victim but the pregnancy-
though pretended-in a society which views unmarried mothers
as vicious upset the appellant. These have no bearing on
guilt at all but attenuate the lethal touch of the sentence.
Some planning and treachery have aggravated the crime, which
also must not be overlooked. Yet another circumstance. The
man was sentenced to death as early as 23rd May, 1972, and
for twenty months the specter of death penalty must have
tormented his soul. Taken separately, none of these may
suffice to commute but the conspectus of factors, personal
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and social, tilt the scales in favour of a life term. We
have in another case discussed at some length how modern
penology leans less towards death penalty and the winds of
criminological change blow over Indian statutory thought.
While murder in its aggravated form and in the absence of
extenuating factors connected with crime, criminal or legal
process, still is condignly visited with death penalty, a
compassionate alternative of life imprisonment in all other
circumstances is gaining judicial ground.. Taking an overall
view of forensic clemency we modify the death sentence and
direct the appellant to suffer imprisonment for life.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed in part.
358