Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
RAM SARAN MAHTO AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/09/1999
BENCH:
M.B.Shah, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
The corpse of a teenaged dame was recovered from a
well attached to her nuptial home. That corpse was
consigned to flames without loss of time. For that incident
her husband Kalpu Mahto and three others stand convicted of
the offence under Section 201 of the Indian Penal Code;
Though the prosecution did not even venture to establish any
other offence in respect of the death of that young lady,
the trial court passed a sentence of rigorous imprisonment
for seven years on one of the convicted persons while a
sentence of RI for three years was imposed on the remaining
convicted persons. They appealed to the High Court of
Patna, but failed.
We cannot comprehend how the Sessions Court could have
escalated the conviction to the topmost layer of the offence
for awarding the maximum sentence of imprisonment for seven
years as the said upper limit is fixed only for one category
of cases falling under Section 201 IPC. The Sessions Judge
did not even advert to the possibility of the offence
falling within the aforesaid top category though he had
chosen to award the maximum sentence only to one of the four
convicted persons. Learned Single of the Patna High Court
while restating the sentence portion in his judgment seems
to have committed an error in the following manner:
4By the judgment and order the learned trial court
convicted the 4 appellants under Section 201 of the Indian
Penal Code and sentenced them to undergo R.I. for 7 years
each.
The aforesaid error in the restatement would have
escaped the notice of the learned Single Judge, but we
mention it here for averting any possible consequences on
its account.
Facts of the case are these: Deceased Asha Kumari was
aged only 18 when she died. She was given in marriage to
Kalpu Mahto (A-2). While she was living in her husbands
house A-3-Ram Saran Mahto (a cousin of her husband) dashed-
down to her parental house during the wee hours of 11-6-
1986 and conveyed the disquieting information that Asha
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
Kumari was missing from the house. Immediately her brother
Ram Balak Mahto (PW-3) rushed to the marital home of Asha
Kumari on a bicycle, followed by his father (PW-1) on foot.
PW-3 Ram Balak Mahto could reach the house earlier as
he was on a two-wheeler. In his presence A-3 Ram Saran
Mahto suggested that the well of the house should be
searched. When a search was made pursuant thereto the dead
body of Asha Kumari was spotted out and later that was
winched out of the well. Thus far the story seems to be, by
and large, undisputed.
Thereafter, Asha Kumaris hushand Kalpu Mahto and some
other peprsons, who were closely related to him, showed
impatience to have the obsequies of the departed soul. PW.3
only wanted the cremation to be postponed till the arrival
of his father but that suggestion was spurned down. An
altercation would have followed and a wrangle was ensued
therefrom. PW-3 was trussed up and his cycle was snatched
away. When PW-1 father of Asha Kumari arrived at the place
he too was fastened with a tether. Dead body of Asha Kumari
was then removed to the nearby orchard where it was set
ablaze and cremated.
PW-1 and PW-3 went to the police station and lodged a
complaint. After investigation the police charge-sheeted 13
persons, including the appellants, for various offences such
as Section 302 read with Sections 34, 201, 342 and 379 of
the Penal Code. The trial court came to the undisputed
conclusion that prosecution has failed to prove the charge
of commission of murder. Nevertheless, learned Sessions
Judge proceeded to award the sentence under Section 201 of
the Penal Code and the only discussion he made for that
purpose was on the question whether any one other than the
four appellants had committed that offence. After holding
that none among them, except the four appellants, can be
convicted, learned Sessions Judge proceeded to convict all
the four appellants without even resorting to a one sentence
discussion on the culpability of the appellants regarding
the said offence.
Of course appellant Ram Saran Mahto alone was
convicted under Sections 379 and 342 of the Penal Code also
and he was sentenced to undergo R.I. for six months and
three months respectively and the High Court has confirmed
the said conviction and sentence. We are not dealing with
the conviction and sentence on those two counts as they have
not been challenged before us. For convicting the
appellants under Section 201 of the Penal Code learned
Single Judge of the High Court discussed the case only in
the following lines:
However, the learned trial court proceeded to
consider the evidence on the point of charge under section
201 I.P.C. On this point the informant himself came to his
sisters village and started first and on arrival at the
village he started searching for the sister and the dead
body was recovered from a well and when the accused persons
were contemplating to dispose of the dead body he objected
and then he was overpowered. His father (R.W.1) Moti Mahto
was also supported the prosecution story on this point that
when he arrived subsequently he found that the accused
persons were engaged in burning the dead body. The father
(P.W.2) had arrived late because he was going on foot;
while his son proceeded on a cycle. It has been stated that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
cycle of the informant was snatched by the accused persons.
Thus, learned trial court held that unless the dead body was
burnt by the accused, they could not inform the police
station and give opportunity to Police to seize the dead
body to hold postmortem examination. It is therefore
obvious that the appellants have disposed of the dead body
with a view to suppress the crime.
In this case we find it necessary to extract Section
201 of the Penal Code which is as follows:
201. Causing disappearance of evidence of offence,
or giving false information to screen offender.- Whoever,
knowing or having reason to believe that an offence has been
committed, caused any evidence of the commission of that
offence to disappear, with the intention of screening the
offender from legal punishment, or with that intention gives
any information respecting the offence which he knows or
believes to be false,
if a capital offence shall, if the offence which he
knows or believes to have been committed is punishable with
death, be punished with imprisonment of either description
for a term which may extend to seven years, and shall also
be liable to fine;
if punishable with imprisonment for life and if the
offence is punishable with imprisonment for life, or with
imprisonment which may extend to ten years, shall be
punished with imprisonment of either description for a term
which may extend to three years, and shall also be liable to
fine;
if punishable with less than ten years imprisonment
and if the offence is punishable with imprisonment for any
term not extending to ten years, shall be punished with
imprisonment of the description provided for the offence,
for a term which may extend to one- fourth part of the
longest term of the imprisonment provided for the offence,
or with fine, or with both.
The first paragraph of the section contains the
postulates for constituting the offence while the remaining
three paragraphs prescribe three different tiers of
punishments depending upon the degree of offence in each
situation. The two indispensable ingredients for all the
three tiers in Section 201 are: (1) The accused should have
had the knowledge that an offence has been committed or at
least that he should have had reasons to believe it. (2) He
should then have caused disappearance of evidence of
commission of that offence. Prosecution cannot escape from
establishing the aforesaid two basic ingredients, for
conviction of the accused under Section 201. The gravest
degree contemplated in Section 201 is punishable with the
maximum sentence of imprisonment for seven years. The
minimum requirement for the offence to reach the said peak
degree is that the offender should have caused disappearance
of evidence of another offence which is punishable with
death, and that should be established in addition to the
above-mentioned two basic ingredients. Even if the two
basics are established, and the prosecution failed to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
establish the next requirement the court cannot convict the
accused for the highest tier specified in the section.
It is not necessary that the offender himself should
have been found guilty of the main offence for the purpose
of convicting him of offence under Section 201. Nor is it
absolutely necessary that somebody else should have been
found guilty of the main offence. Nonetheless, it is
imperative that prosecution should have established two
premises. First is that an offence has been committed and
second is that the accused knew about it or he had reasons
to believe the commission of that offence. Then and then
alone the prosecution can succeed, provided the remaining
postulates of the offence are also established.
The above position has been well stated by a three-
Judge Bench of this Court way back in 1952, in Palvinder
Kaur v. The State of Punjab (AIR 1952 SC 354):
In order to establish the charge under s.201, Penal
Code, it is essential to prove that an offence has been
committed, mere suspicion that it has been committed is not
sufficient - that the accused knew or had reason to believe
that such offence had been committed and with the requisite
knowledge and with the intent to screen the offender from
legal punishment causes the evidence thereof to disappear or
gives false information respecting such offences knowing or
having reason to believe the same to be false.
It is well to remind that the Bench gave a note of
caution that the court should safeguard itself against the
danger of basing its conclusion on suspicions however strong
they may be. In Kalawati and anr. v. The State of
Himachal Pradesh (1953 SCR 546) a Constitution Bench of this
Court has, no doubt, convicted an accused under Section 201
IPC even though he was acquitted of the offence under
Section 302. But the said course was adopted by this Court
after entering the finding that another accused had
committed the murder and the appellant destroyed the
evidence of it with full knowledge thereof. In a later
decision in Nathu and anr. v. State of Uttar Pradesh {1979
(3) SCC574} this Court has repeated the caution in the
following words: Before a conviction under Section 201 can
be recorded, it must be shown to the satisfaction of the
court that the accused knew or had reason to believe that an
offence had been committed and having got this knowledge,
tried to screen the offender by disposing of the dead body.
In this context a reference to a more recent decision
of this Court would be apposite. The following observations
of the Bench in Hanuman and ors. v. State of Rajasthan
{1994 Supple. (2) SCC 39} are relevant:
The mere fact that the deceased allegedly died an
unnatural death would not be sufficient to bring home a
charge under Section 201 IPC, unless the prosecution was
further able to establish that the accused persons knew or
had reason to believe that an offence had been committed,
causing the evidence of the commission of the offence to
disappear.
In the present case, all that the prosecution could
establish was that dead body of Asha Kumari was recovered
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
from the well situated in the compound of her marital home
and that the cremation was hurried through after physically
keeping her kith and kin away from the scene. No doubt,
such a culpable hurry enkindles fumes of suspicion which can
be regarded as an incriminating circumstance against those
who showed such a haste. But that circumstance stands
isolated and unconcatenated with any other circumstance.
Prosecution has not even attempted to show, much less
prove, that any offence has been committed by any one in
respect of the death of Asha Kumari, which should have been
the foundation for establishing the offence under Section
201 IPC. It now stands as an unfounded conviction and hence
we have to interfere. We, therefore, allow this appeal and
set aside the conviction and sentence passed on the
appellants. They are acquitted. We direct the appellants
to be set at liberty forthwith unless they are required in
any other case.