Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/07/1962
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1908 1963 SCR (3) 396
ACT:
Criminal Law--Seduction--Assisting prostitute in her
profession--If amounts to inducement to forced or seduced
illicit intercourse--Indian Penal Code (Act 45 of 1860), ss.
84, 809, 366, 366 A.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was convicted of the offence under s. 366A
read with s. 109 of the Indian Penal Code. The case against
him was that A who was a minor below the age of 18 years was
brought up by P and had before the date of the offence been
habituated to the life of a prostitute. On the day in
question the appellant went to the residence of P and asked
him to bring A to a theatre, P accompanied A to the
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theatre where the latter sought some customers. They were
taken by another person to a place called Bohori Kathada at
which place A was invited for the purpose of prostitution.
When P accompanied A to the theatre and from there to Bohori
Kathada he knew that she was going for plying her profession
as a prostitute.
Held, that the appellant could not in law be held guilty of
abetting the commission of an offence under s. 366A of the
Indian Penal Code by P.
A person who merely accompanies a woman going out to ply her
profession of a prostitute, even if she has not attained the
age of 18 years, could not be said thereby to induce her to
go from any place or to do any act with the intent or
knowledge that she will be forced or seduced to illicit
intercourse within the meaning of s. 366 A.
Seduction implies surrender of her body by a woman who is
otherwise reluctant or unwilling to submit herself to
illicit intercourse whether such surrender is for the first
time or is preceded by similar surrender on earlier
occasions ; but where a person in the course of her
profession as a prostitute offers herself for profession as
a prostitute offers herself for intercourse, there are no
sucruples nor reluctance to be overcome, and surrender by
her is not seduction within the Code.
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 72 of
1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 20, 1960, of the Bombay High Court in Criminal
Apeal No. 1207 of 1960.
Jai Gopal Sethi, C.L. Sareen and R.L. Kohli, for the
appellant,
G. C. Mathur and P. D. Menon, for the respondent.
1962. July 24. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHAH, J.--On May 1, 1962, we ordered after arguments were
concluded that the appeal be allowed and the conviction of
the appellant be set aside. We now proceed to record our
reasons in support of the order.
398
The appellant, Ramesh Amin, and seven others were tried in
the Court of Session, Aurangabad, for offences punishable
under ss. 366, 366A. Indian Penal Code, and abetment
thereof. The appellant was the third accused at the trial.
The Sessions Judge convicted accused Nos. 1 to 4 and 7 of
the offences charged against them and sentenced them to
suffer rigorous imprisonment for two years for each offence,
and acquitted the rest. The High Court of Bombay
entertained appeal of accused Nos. 1 to 4 (but not of
accused No. 7) and set aside the order of conviction and
sentence against them for the offences punishable under s.
366 read with s. 34 and s. 366A of the Indian Penal Code.
The High Court, however, convicted the appellant of abetting
the seventh accused in inducing a minor girl, Anusaya, to go
with other persons from her residence at Kabadipura to
Gulzar Theatre, and then to a house known as Bohori Kathada
with intent that she may or knowing that she was likely to
be seduced to illicit intercourse. With special leave the
appellant has appealed to this Court.
The seventh accused, Patilba, is a resident of Aurangabad,
and the eighth accused is his wife. Anusaya is the daughter
of Shakuntala by her husband Kashinath. After the death of
Kashinath, Shakuntala brought her infant daughter Anusaya to
the house of Patilba and started living with him as his
mistress. Sometime later Shakuntala left the house of
Patilba and took up residence at Nasik but Anusaya
’continued to live with Patilba and was brought up by him.
Marriage was arranged by Patilba between Anusaya and one
Ramlal, but Anusaya declined to live with her husband. Pat-
ilba introduced Anumaya to some "customers" and she started
indulging in promiscuous intercourse, for money. It was the
prosecution case that on January 13, 1960, the appellant
went to the residence of Patilba and asked him to bring
Anusaya and
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one Chandrakala (a woman following the profession of a
prostitute) to the Gulzar Theatre, and accordingly, Patilba,
the eighth accused, Chandrakala and Anusaya went to the
Theatre. At the instance of the appellant, Anusaya and
Chandrakala were taken by one Devidas (who has given
evidence as an approver) to Bohori Kathada. Sub-Inspector
Pagare of the Police Station City Police Chowk, Aurangabad,
had received information that some persons were consuming
illicit liquor in a room at Bohori Kathada and he arranged
to raid that house. Pagare found accused Nos. 1 to 5 and
Devidas in a room consuming liquor. He also found Chandra-
kala and Anusaya in an inner apartment, Persons found in the
room were arrested and sent for medical examination to the
local Civil Hospital, and it was found that Anusaya had not
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attained the age of 18 years. Pagare then laid an
information before the Judicial Magistrate, Aurangabad, for
offence punishable under the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949-
(we are informed at the Bar that in respect of those
offences the accused were acquitted and we are not concerned
in this case with those offence) and also for offences
punishable under ss. 366 and 366A of the Indian Penal Code
against nine persons including the appellant, Patilba and
Devidas. In the course of proceedings for commitment to the
Court of Session, Devidas was tendered pardon on condition
of his making a full disclosure of the circumstances within
his knowledge. The case was then committed to the Court of
Session, Aurangabad for trial. The Court of Session held
that accused Nos. 1 to 4 had in furtherance of their com-
mon intention kidnapped Anusaya-a girl below the age of 18
years-in order that she may be forced or seduced to illicit
intercourse or knowing it to be likely that she would he
forced or seduced to illicit intercourse, and the seventh
accused Patilba had abetted the commission of that offence,
and that accused Nos. 1 to 4 and 7 had induced Anusaya to
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go from her residence to the Gulzar Theatre and from the
theatre to Bohori Kathada with intent that she may be or
knowing that it was likely that she would be forced or
seduced to illicit intercourse. He accordingly convicted
accused Nos. 1 to 4 of the offence under s. 366 read with s.
34 of the Indian Penal Code and also of the offence under a.
366A of the Indian Penal Code.
The High Court of Bombay in appeal acquitted accused Nos. 1
to 4 of the offence of kidnapping because, in their view,
accused Nos. 1 to 4 had "nothing whatever to do with the
original kidnapping by Patilba (the 7th accused) and since
he was not the lawful guardian of this girl, her being bro-
ught to this room cannot be regarded as kidnapping". The
learned Judges also acquitted accused Nos, 1 to 4 of the
offence under s. 366A observing that ,,there is no evidence
of any direct talk between any of the accused and the girl,
nor even of any inducement offered through Patilba (accused
No. 7). Even so far as accused No, 3 is concerned, there is
no direct talk between Anusaya and accused No, 3 which can
be regarded as an inducement to her to move either from the
house of Patilba or from the theatre to the room in
question." But in their view the case against tile appellant
"did not end with this" : They observed.
"The evidence........................ clearly
indicates that accused No. 3 instigated Pat-
ilba and Devidas to bring the girl to the
theatre and thereafter to the room in
question. Patilba, as we have stated, being
in custody of this girl and the girl being
minor and helpless, induced or forced her to
go to the cinema and thereafter to this room
and actually left her there. So far Patilba
was concerned, he intended that she should be
forced or seduced to illicit intercourse by
one or the other of
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the accused. Accused No. 3 by asking Patilba
to bring the girl to the theatre and asking
Devidas and Patilba to bring the girl to the
room clearly instigated Patilba in the comm-
ission of this offence. He must, therefore,
be held clearly guilty of the offence of abet-
ment of this offence by Patilba."
The High Court accordingly convicted the appellant of the
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offence under s. 366A read with s. 109 of the Indian Penal
Code, because, in their view, he had abetted the commission
of an offence punishable under s. 366A by Patilba by
instigating the latter to bring Anusaya to the theatre and
by by further instigating Patilba and Devidas to bring
Anusaya from the theatre to Bohori Kathada.
In our view, the appellant cannot in law be held guilty of
abetting the commission of an offence punishable under s.
366A, Indian Penal Code, by Patilba.
The facts proved by the evidence are these: Anusaya at the
material time had not attained the age of 18 years. She was
brought up by Patilba and even though she had married Ram
Lal she was at the material time and for many months before
living under the guardianship of Patilba. For a long time
before the date of the offence Anusaya was accustomed to
indulge in promiscuous intercourse with customers" for
money. She used to entertain, as she herself admitted, "one
or two customers every day" and bad before the date of the
offence been habituated to the life of a prostitute. On the
day in question she and her companion Chandrakala went to
the Gulzar Theatre accompanied by Patilba. In the theatre
Anusaya and Chandrakala were seeking customers: they
repaired during the break in the show to the entrance of the
theatre for that purpose, but she had to return disappointed
because they found a police van parked near the
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entrance. Anusaya and the 6th accused went to Bohori
Kathada for carrying on their profession as prostitutes.
There is no evidence that she was not willing to go to
Gulzar Theatre on the night in question nor is there any
evidence that she was unwilling to go to Bohori Kathada to
which she and her companion were invited for the purpose of
prostitution.
Do these facts make out a case against the appellant of
abetment of the offence of procuration of a minor girl
punishable under s. 366A of the Indian Penal Code? Section
366A was enacted by Act XX of 1923 to give effect to certain
Articles of the International Convention for the Suppression
of Traffic in Women and Children signed by various nations
at Paris on May 4, 1910. There are three principal
ingredients of the offence:
(a) that a minor girl below the age of 18
years is induceed by the accused,
(b) that she is induced to go from any place
or to do any act, and
(c) that she is so induced with intent that
she may be or knowing that it is likely that
she will be forced or seduced to illicit
intercourse with another person,
The evidence clearly establishes that Anusaya had not at the
material time attained the age of 18 years. But there is no
evidence on the record that Patilba induced Anusaya to go to
the theratre or from the theatre to Bohori Kathada. It must
be assumed that when Patilba accompanied Anusaya to the
theatre and from the theatre to the Bohori Kathada at the
suggestion of the appellant he knew that she was going for
plying her profession as a prostitute. But in our judgment
a person who merely accompanies a woman going out to ply her
profession of a prostitute, even if she has not
attained the age of eighteen years, does not thereby commit
an offence under s. 366A of the Indian Penal Code. It
cannot be said that thereby he induces her to go from any
place or to do any act with the intent or knowledge
contemplated by the section.
We agree that seduction to illicit intercourse contemplated
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by the section does not mean merely straying from the path
of virtue by a female for the first time. The verb "seduce’
is used in two senses. It is used in its ordinary and
narrow, sense as inducing, a woman to stray from the path of
virtue for the first time: it is also used in the wider
sense of educing a woman to submit to illicit intercourse at
any time or on any occasion. It is in the latter sense that
the expression has been used in as. 366 and 366A of the
Indian Penal Code which sections partially overlap. This
view has been taken in a large number of cases by the
Superior Courts in India, e. g. Prafula kumar Basu v. The
Emperor (1), Emperor v. Laxman Bala (1), Krishna Maharana v.
The King Emperor (3), In re Khalandar Saheb (4) Suppiah v.
Emperor (5), Pessumal v. Emperor (6), King Emperor v. Nga Ni
Ta (7) and Kartara v. The State (8). The view expressed to
the contrary in Emperor v. Baijnath (9), Saheb Ali v.
Emperor (11) Aswini Kumar Roy v. The State (10) and Nara v.
Emperor (12) that the phrase used in s. 366 of the Indian
Penal Code is "Properly applicable to the first act of
illicit intercourse, unless there be proof of a return to
chastity on the part of the girl since the first act" is
having regard to the object of the Legislature unduly
restrictive of the content of the expression "seduce" used
in the Code. But this is not a case in which a girl who
had strayed from the path of virtue when she
(1) (1929) I. L. R. 57 Cal. 1074
(2) (1934) I. L. R. 59 Bom. 652.
(3) (1929) I. L. R. 9 Pat. 647.
(4) A. I. R. 1955 A. P. 59.
(5) A. I. R. 1930 Mad. 930.
(6) (1924) 27 Cr. L. J. 1292.
(7) (1903) 10 Burma L. R. 196.
(8) I. L. R. [1957] Punjab 2003.
(9) (1932) I. L. R. 54 All. 756.
(10) (1933) I. L. R. 60 Col. 1457
(11) A. I. R. 1955 Cal. 100.(12) A. I. R. 1934 Lah. 227.
404
was in the custody of her guardian and had with a view to
carry on her affair accompanied her seducer or another
person. Such a case may certainly fall within the terms of
s.366 or s.366A whichever applies. But where a woman
follows the profession of a prostitute, that is, she is
accustomed to offer herself promiscuously for money to
"customers", and in following that profession she is
encouraged or assisted by someone, no offence under s. 366A
is committed by such person, for it cannot be said that the
person who assists a girl accustomed to indulge in
promiscuous intercourse for money in carrying on her
profession acts with intent or knowledge that she will be
forced or seduced to illicit intercourse. Intention on the
part of Patilba or knowledge that Anusaya will be forced to
subject herself to illicit intercourse is ruled out by the
evidence: such a case was not even suggested. Seduction
implies surrender of her body by a woman who is otherwise
reluctant or unwilling to submit herself to illicit
intercourse in consequence of persuasion, flattery,
blandishment or importunity, whether such surrender is for
the first time or is preceded by similar surrender on
earlier occasions. But where a woman offers herself for
intercourse for money-not casually but in the course of her
profession as a prostitute there are no scruples nor
reluctance to be overcome, and surrender by her is not
seduction within the Code. It would then be impossible to
hold that a person who instigates another to assist a woman
following the profession of a prostitute abets him to do an
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act with intent that she may or with knowledge that she will
be seduced to illicit intercourse.
Appeal allowed.
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