Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 649 of 1996
PETITIONER:
STATE OF HIMACHAL PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GIAN CHAND
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/05/2001
BENCH:
CJI, R.C. Lahoti & Doraiswamy Raju
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
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The accused-respondent was charged under Section 376 IPC
for having committed forcible sexual intercourse with the
prosecutrix, a girl of the age of the 5 years and 6 months,
on 29.10.1991 at about 6.30 p.m. at Village Baru. On
trial, the learned Sessions Judge found the accused guilty
and sentenced him to undergo rigorous imprisonment for a
period of 10 years and to pay a fine of Rs.5,000 and in
default of payment of fine to undergo rigorous imprisonment
for a further period of 6 months. The amount of fine, if
realised, was directed to be paid to the mother of the
prosecutrix. The accused- respondent preferred an appeal.
A Division Bench of the High Court has by judgment dated
22.12.1995 allowed the appeal, set aside the conviction and
directed the accused-respondent to be released. Feeling
aggrieved thereby, the State of Himachal Pradesh has come up
in appeal by special leave which has been granted.
PW1 is the mother of the prosecutrix. Her husband had
expired a few years before the date of the incident. She
was residing in the family house. However, her
father-in-law, her two brothers-in-law and she herself had
separated in residence and they were living in three
separate portions of the house. PW1 has a son and two
daughters. The prosecutrix is the youngest of the three
children. The accused is brother of wife of PW1s
brother-in-law, i.e., jeth or her deceased husbands
brother. The accused, being a relation, was often visiting
the house. According to the prosecution on the date of the
incident, PW1 had gone to the fields for collecting grass.
Her son and the elder daughter had accompanied her. They
returned to home at about 7 p.m. PW1, on her return, found
her youngest daughter lying below a cot on the lintel of the
house. Her salwar and shirt were having blood stains.
There was blood on the bed sheet and a towel lying on the
cot. She looked into the private parts of the victim child
and found blood and inflammation therein. On being asked,
the prosecutrix told the mother, that when she was playing
the accused had committed Bura Kaam (a sinful act) with
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her. The mother PW1 told about the incident the next
morning to her parents-in-law and co-sister (i.e. husbands
brothers wife). The father of the accused was summoned and
was told of what the accused had done. The father of the
accused defended his son saying that he could not have
indulged into such a wrongful act. On the third day, in the
morning hours, when PW1 was going to police station, Ruldu
Ram, PW9, a member of village Panchayat met her on way and
agreeing with her advised PW1 to lodge the report with the
police. The FIR of the incident was lodged in the morning
of 31.10.1991. An offence under Section 376 IPC was
registered and the investigation commenced.
On 31.10.1991 at 12.15 p.m. Dr. Mudita Gupta, PW5,
conducted medico-legal examination of the prosecutrix and
found the following injuries on her person :
Local Exam - No external injury. On retracting the
labia - erythema seen. Hymen torn - irregular edges.
Posterior vaginal wall tear about 0.5 cm in length. No
blood clot seen. No evidence of healing, no pus seen - foul
smell.
Tenderness. No sperms were seen.
The observations noted by Dr. Mudita Gupta were that
the prosecutrix had changed her clothes and taken a bath
also on the next day of the incident. The victim had passed
urine and stool about one hour after the incident. There
was no external injury on any part of the body of the
victim. Dr. Mudita Gupta opined that possibility of
commission of rape on the prosecutrix on 29.10.1991 could
not be ruled out.
The accused was arrested on 31.10.1991 and subjected to
medico-legal examination on the same day. Dr. Jagdish
Gupta P.W.6, who examined the accused, recorded the result
of his medico-legal examination as under:-
The general behaviour of the patient was normal. The
mental condition was normal. Bath not taken for the last
five days. Urine passed many times. Passing motion
normally.
No stains were found on the body of the patient. Clothing and
under-garments.
No injury marks were present on genitals.
No venereal disease was found.
On examination of genital, pubic hairs were present.
Penis normal, prepuse retracted, frenum normal. Testicles
were normal. There were following injuries present on his
person:-
Multiple contusions, some of them were patterned on
back, buttocks posteromedial aspect of thigh. Redish in
colour.
Dr. Jagdish Gupta opined that there was nothing to
suggest that the accused was not fit to perform sexual
intercourse.
At the trial the prosecutrix appeared as PW7 and her
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mother was examined as PW1. The prosecutrix was 8 years of
age at the time of her examination. The Court conducted
preliminary examination of the witness and observed that the
witness understood the sanctity of oath and then proceeded
to examine her after administering oath to her. She stated
that the accused was known to her as he was the brother of
her Mausi (Aunt) and was on visiting terms with her Mausi
residing in her neighbourhood. On the date and at the time
of the incident the accused came to her house in the absence
of her mother or any other member of the family, untied the
string of her salwar and also untied the string of his
kachcha (underwear). Thereafter the accused put his organ
into her private part. The learned Sessions Judge has noted
in the statement of the witness that the witness had
specifically stated that the accused had inserted his penis
into her private part and due to the act committed by the
accused blood had started oozing out of her. The accused
remained at the place of the incident for one or two minutes
and thereafter disappeared. She had felt pain when the act
was committed by the accused. The accused had made the
prosecutrix lie down on the cot which was spread on the
lintel of the house. At that time the sun had set in and
darkness had started spreading. The mother returned to home
at about 8 p.m. when she narrated the incident to her.
PW1, the mother of the prosecutrix, has corroborated the
version of the victim.
The doctors, who had examined the prosecutrix and the
accused respectively, appeared in the witness box and stated
the results of the respective medico-legal examinations
conducted and observations made by them as noticed
hereinabove. Ruldu Ram, PW9 corroborated the version of
PW1. Smt. Premi, co-sister of PW1, appeared in the witness
box as PW8 but she turned hostile and denied having any
knowledge of the occurrence. The learned Sessions Judge
found the prosecution story having been substantiated fully
by the prosecution evidence. He found the prosecutrix and
her mother truthful witnesses and worthy of credence. The
version of the prosecutrix stood corroborated by the
testimony of her mother and the latter testimony stood
corroborated by the statement of Ruldu Ram, PW9, the village
Panch and the FIR. The learned Sessions Judge also found
that the medical testimony corroborates the version of the
incident as given by the prosecutrix. The clothes of the
prosecutrix were blood-stained. The salwar which was worn
by the prosecutrix at the time of the incident and which was
seized by the police was sent for chemical examination.
According to the report of Chemical Examiner of State of
Punjab spermatozoa was detected on the salwar though not on
the shirt of the prosecutrix and underwear of the accused.
The learned Sessions Judge convicted the accused and
sentenced him as stated hereinabove.
A perusal of the judgment of the High Court shows that
delay in lodging the FIR, change in the description by PW1
of the exact place where the prosecutrix was raped (i.e.
shifting of the scene of incident), and non-examination of
two or three little girls who were playing with the
prosecutrix soon before the incident - are the factors,
which have persuaded the learned Judges of the High Court in
forming an opinion that prosecution story was doubtful. The
learned Judges have also noted that the prosecutrixs hymen
could have been ruptured by a fall also and there was no
corresponding injury on the private parts of the accused
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which factors taken together rendered the prosecution story
doubtful.
Here it would be worthwhile to mention that in his
statement under Section 313 of the Cr.P.C. the accused
denied the prosecution story and at the end of the statement
stated that he was suffering from mental disorder at the
time of the incident. While the learned Sessions Judge
found the plea raised by the accused of no significance, the
learned Judges of the High Court have observed that in view
of the mental condition of the appellant who was suffering
from schizophrenia before and after the occurrence there is
a reasonable doubt as regards one or more of the ingredients
of the offence. In support of such observation the High
Court has referred to the decision of this Court in
Dahyabhai Chhaganbhai Thakkar Vs. State of Gujarat - (1964)
2 Cr.L.J. 472.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties. Shri
Anil Soni, the learned counsel appearing for the State of
Himachal Pradesh has vehemently attacked the judgment of the
High Court submitting that on the evidence available the
findings arrived at by the learned Sessions Judge were not
liable to be interfered with and the judgment of the High
Court verges on perversity. An entirely unmerited acquittal
and that too from a serious charge where an innocent girl of
tender years was raped by a distant relation of hers in her
own house has occasioned a gross failure of justice and
therefore the judgment of the High Court deserves to be set
aside, submitted the learned Counsel for State. Shri Shrish
Kumar Misra, the learned counsel for the respondent has
supported the judgment of the High Court. Having carefully
considered the contending submissions, we are of the opinion
that the appeal deserves to be allowed and the judgment of
the High Court deserves to be set aside. We have given our
thoughtful consideration to the submission made and have
independently appreciated the evidence to satisfy our
judicial conscious. We deal with each of the reasonings
which have prevailed with the High Court in doubting the
prosecution story.
Delay in lodging the FIR cannot be used as a ritualistic
formula for doubting the prosecution case and discarding the
same solely on the ground of delay in lodging the first
information report. Delay has the effect of putting the
Court in its guard to search if any explanation has been
offered for the delay, and if offered, whether it is
satisfactory or not. If the prosecution fails to
satisfactorily explain the delay and there is possibility of
embellishment in prosecution version on account of such
delay, the delay would be fatal to the prosecution.
However, if the delay is explained to the satisfaction of
the court, the delay cannot by itself be a ground for
disbelieving and discarding the entire prosecution case. In
the present case, PW1__the mother of the prosecutrix is a
widow. The accused is a close relation of brother of late
husband of PW1. PW1 obviously needed her family members
consisting of her in-laws to accompany her or at least help
her in lodging the first information report at the police
station. The incident having occurred in a village, the
approach of the in-laws of PW1 displayed rusticity in first
calling upon the father of the accused and complaining to
him of what his son had done. It remained an unpleasant
family affair on the next day of the incident which was
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tried to be settled, if it could be, within the walls of
family. That failed. It is thereafter only that the
complainant, the widow woman, left all by herself and having
no male family member willing to accompany her, proceeded
alone to police station. She was lent moral support by
Ruldu Ram, the village Panch, whereupon the report of the
incident was lodged. The sequence of events soon following
the crime and as described by the prosecution witnesses
sounds quite natural and provides a satisfactory explanation
for the delay. It was found to be so by the learned
Sessions Judge. The High Court has not looked into the
explanation offered and very superficially recorded a
finding of the delay having remained unexplained and hence
fatal to the prosecution case. It is common knowledge and
also judicially noted fact that incidents like rape, more so
when the perpetrator of the crime happens to be a member of
the family or related therewith, involve the honour of the
family and therefore there is a reluctance on the part of
the family of the victim to report the matter to the police
and carry the same to the court. A cool thought may precede
lodging of the FIR. Such are the observations found to have
been made by this Court in State of Punjab Vs. Gurmit Singh
& Ors., (1996) 2 SCC 384 and also in the case of Harpal
Singh (1981) SCC Crl. 208. We are satisfied that the delay
in making the FIR has been satisfactorily explained and
therefore does not cause any dent in the prosecution case.
According to the High Court, the FIR states the
occurrence of rape to have taken place in the room on the
first floor of the building but according to the statement
of PW1 as recorded in the Court, the rape was committed on
the prosecutrix in the open on the lintel of the house thus,
according to the High Court, there was a doubt raised about
the place of the incident which was an infirmity in the
prosecution story. The room and the lintel are situated
close to each other. PW1 is not an eye-witness to the
incident. When she reached home she found her daughter, the
victim of rape lying on the lintel of the house below the
cot. A perusal of the site plan shows the distance between
the two places is insignficant. Moreover, such minor
inconsistency coming from the mouth of PW1, who is not an
eye- witness, was of no significance and caused no infirmity
in the prosecution case when the overall narration of the
incident given by her is found to be natural and
trustworthy. It is pertinent to note that PW1 was only
corroborating the statement of PW7, the young victim of rape
and the latters testimony was found to be very natural and
inspiring confidence by the learned Sessions Judge who had
recorded her statement. The learned Sessions Judge had
himself inspected the site of the incident and noted in his
inspection note inter alia that the other houses were
situated at a distance and another house situated nearest to
the house where incident had taken place was about 50 yards
away. The main road was at a distance of 100 or 150 yards
from the house as shown in the site plan and there was also
a tree which blocked the vision to some extent from the main
road towards the first floor and rooms as shown in the site
plan on the first floor. Thus, the place of the incident
was secluded one and not visible from distance. Similar
facts were deposed to by the investigating officer. The
learned Sessions Judge had rightly noted in his judgment,
relying on the evidence adduced and the observations made at
the time of spot inspection, that the room and the lintel
are situated near to each other and therefore the so-called
inconsistency was immaterial and insignificant. The High
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Court was not right in ignoring this finding of the trial
court or even otherwise making this insignificant
discrepancy, if at all it is a discrepancy, a major lacuna
in the prosecution case. It is not so.
So far as non-examination of other witnesses and an
adverse inference drawn by the High Court therefrom is
concerned, here again we find ourselves not persuaded to
subscribe to the view taken by the High Court. The
prosecutrix PW7 has stated that soon before the incident she
was playing with three girl-children of the same age as of
hers and they were present when the accused committed rape
on her. One of the girls picked up a broom and had tried to
scar away the accused by striking the broom on him. This
little friend of the victim had also raised a hue and cry
but none from the neighbourhood came to the spot. These
girls were none else than daughters of her uncle. What the
High Court has failed to see is that these girls were of
tender age and could hardly be expected to describe the act
of forcible sexual intercourse committed by the accused on
PW7. Secondly, these girls would obviously be under the
influence of their parents. We have already noted the
co-sister of PW1 turning hostile and not supporting the
prosecution version. How could these little girls be
expected to be away from the influence of their parents and
depose freely and truthfully in the Court? Non-examination
of a material witness is again not a mathematical formula
for discarding the weight of the testimony available on
record howsoever natural, trustworthy and convincing it may
be. The charge of withholding a material witness from the
Court levelled against the prosecution should be examined in
the background of facts and circumstances of each case so as
to find whether the witnesses were available for being
examined in the Court and were yet withheld by the
prosecution. The Court has first to assess the
trustworthiness of the evidence adduced and available on
record. If the Court finds the evidence adduced worthy of
being relied on then the testimony has to be accepted and
acted on though there may be other witnesses available who
could also have been examined but were not examined.
However, if the available evidence suffers from some
infirmity or cannot be accepted in the absence of other
evidence which tough available has been withheld from the
Court then the question of drawing an adverse inference
against the prosecution for non-examination of such
witnesses may arise. It is now well-settled that conviction
for an offence of rape can be based on the sole testimony of
prosecutrix corroborated by medical evidence and other
circumstances such as the report of chemical examination
etc. if the same is found to be natural, trustworthy and
worth being relied on. If the evidence of the prosecutrix
inspires confidence, it must be relied upon without seeking
corroboration of her statement in material particulars. If
for some reason the court finds it difficult to place
implicit reliance on her testimony, it may look for evidence
which may lend assurance to her testimony, short of
corroboration required in the case of an accomplice. The
testimony of the prosecutrix must be appreciated in the
background of the entire case and the trial court must be
alive to its responsibility and be sensitive while dealing
with cases involving sexual molestations. ___ is the law
declared in State of Punjab Vs. Gurmit Singh & Ors. (1996)
2 SCC 384. [Also see State of Rajasthan Vs. N.K. -(2000)
5 SCC 30, State of Himach Pradesh Vs. Lekh Raj & Anr. -
(2000) 1 SCC 247, Madan Gopal Kakkad Vs. Naval Dubey and
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Anr. - (1992) 3 SCC 204]. In the present case we are
clearly of the opinion that in view of the accused being a
relation of the in-laws of the mother of the prosecutrix and
the other young girls who are alleged to have been not
examined being from the family of such in-laws, it is futile
to expect that such girls would have been allowed by their
parents to be examined as witnesses, and if allowed, could
have freely deposed to in the Court. The question of
drawing an adverse inference against the prosecution for
such non-examination does not arise.
The observations made and noted by Dr. Mudita Gupta
during medico legal examination of PW7 clearly make out the
prosecutrix having been subjected to rape. The prosecutrix
has spoken of penetration in her statement. The discovery
of spermatozoa in the private part of the victim is not a
must to establish penetration. There are several factors
which may negative the presence of spermatozoa. [See -
Narayanamma Vs. State of Karnataka - (1994) 5 SCC 728].
Slightest penetration of penis into vagina without rupturing
the hymen would constitute rape. [See - Madan Gopal Kakkad
Vs. Naval Dubey - (1992) 3 SCC 204]. The suggestion made
in the cross examination of Dr. Mudita Gupta that injury of
the nature found on hymen of prosecutrix could be caused by
a fall does not lead us anywhere. Firstly, no such
suggestion was given to prosecutrix or her mother during
cross examination. Secondly, why would the girl or her
mother implicate the accused, charging him with rape, if the
injury was caused by a fall? There is nothing to draw such
an inference not even a suggestion, to be found on record.
Answer to the suggestion made to Dr. Gupta cannot discredit
the prosecution case in the absence of any other material to
support the suggestion. So is the case with absence of
external marks of violence on the body of the victim. In
case of children who are incapable of offering any
resistance external marks of violence may not be found.
(See Modis Medical Jurisprudence, 22nd Edn., p.502). It is
true that marks of external injury have not been found on
the person of the accused but that by itself does not negate
the prosecution case. Modi has opined (see, Modi ibid, page
509) that even in the case of a child victim being ravished
by a grown up person it is not necessary that there should
always be marks of injuries on the penis in such cases.
Further, it is to be noted that about two days had elapsed
between the time of the incident and medical examination of
the accused within which time minor injuries, even if
caused, might have healed.
Lastly, remains the observation of the High Court
regarding mental state of the accused-respondent. The plea
taken by the accused was that he was suffering from some
mental disorder and not that he was insane at the time of
incident. In his defence the accused examined Dr. R.S.
Dalwalia, DW2. He had examined the accused on 9.6.1992 on a
requisition made by jail authorities for his psychiatric
examination. He was diagnosed to be a case of schizophrenia
and necessary treatment was prescribed for him. Before the
commencement of trial the learned Sessions Judge had also
held an enquiry under Section 329 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure to find out if the accused-respondent was fit and
capable to defend himself. Vide order dated 24.6.1993 the
learned Sessions Judge recorded a finding that the accused
was fit to make his defence and accordingly the trial was
proceeded ahead. The only provision of law relevant to the
plea of the accused is Section 84 of the Indian Penal Code,
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1860 which provides that 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. Such is neither the plea nor evidence
adduced by the accused. In Dahyabhais case (supra) relied
on by the High Court, this Court has held - when a plea of
legal insanity is set up, the Court has to consider whether
at the time of commission of the offence the accused, by
reason of unsoundness of mind, was incapable of knowing the
nature of the act or that he was doing what was either wrong
or contrary to law. The crucial point of time for
ascertaining the state of mind of the accused is the time
when the offence was committed. Whether the accused was in
such a state of mind as to be entitled to the benefit of
Section 84 of the Penal Code can only be established from
the circumstances which preceded, attended and followed the
crime. The High Court has picked up and quoted another
passage from the judgment dealing with burden of proof
according to which the burden of proof on the accused is no
higher than that which rests upon a party to civil
proceedings and it is sufficient if the evidence adduced by
the accused raises 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 accused though not
establishing conclusively the plea of insanity at the time
of commission of the offence. We fail to understand and
appreciate how the passage quoted by the High Court advanced
the plea of the accused or raised any doubt about his guilt.
On the contrary, the passage reproduced hereinabove from the
judgment of this Court in Dahyabhais case (supra) supports
the prosecution. In the case of Dahyabhai itself
wantonness, vengeful mood or determination of the accused to
see that the victim did not escape was held not sufficient
to prove that the accused was doing the act under some
hallucination. The plea raised before and entertained by
the High Court, in the present case, was one of the accused
suffering from schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is one of a
group of severe emotional disorders, usually of psychotic
proportions, characterized by misinterpretation and retreat
from reality, delusions, hallucinations, ambivalence,
inappropriate affect, and withdrawn, bizarre, or regressive
behavior; Popularly and erroneously called split
personality. [See - Medical- Legal Dictionary, Sloane-
Docland, p. 628]. We are not persuaded to hold even prima
facie, on the material available on record, that the accused
was suffering from unsoundness of mind and that too of a
nature which would have rendered him incapable of knowing
the nature of the act which he was doing or incapable of
distinguishing between wrong or right as per law. The
entire discussion by the High Court on this aspect of the
case was irrelevant and meaningless. The learned counsel
for the respondent has very fairly not persisted in pressing
this plea before us.
In State of Punjab Vs. Gurmit Singh & Ors., (1996) 2
SCC 384, one of us, Dr. A.S. Anand, J. (as His Lordship
then was) has thus spoken for the court __ A murderer
destroys the physical body of his victim, a rapist degrades
the very soul of the helpless female. The courts,
therefore, shoulder a great responsibility while trying an
accused on charges of rape. They must deal with such cases
with utmost sensitivity. The courts should examine the
broader probabilities of a case and not get swayed by minor
contradictions or insignificant discrepancies in the
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statement of the prosecutrix, which are not of a fatal
nature, to throw out an otherwise reliable prosecution
case. The approach adopted by the High Court runs into the
teeth of law so stated and hence stands vitiated. For the
foregoing reasons we hold the judgment of the High Court
wholly unsustainable in law. We are unhesitatingly of the
opinion that the Division Bench of the High Court ought not
to have interfered with the well-reasoned, detailed and
well-articulated judgment of the Sessions Court wherein we
find no infirmity. For the foregoing reasons the appeal is
allowed. The judgment of the High Court is set aside and
the judgment of the Sessions Court holding the accused
guilty of an offence punishable under Section 376 IPC along
with the sentence passed is restored. The bail bonds of the
accused-respondent are cancelled. He shall be taken into
custody to serve out the sentence passed by the trial court.