Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1449 of 1995
PETITIONER:
Vimal Suresh Kamble
RESPONDENT:
Chaluverapinake Apal S.P. and another
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/01/2003
BENCH:
N. SANTOSH HEGDE & B.P. SINGH.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. SINGH, J.
This appeal by special leave has been preferred by the
complainant/informant against the judgment and order of the High
Court of Judicature at Bombay in Criminal Appeal No.720 of 1992
whereby the High Court allowed the appeal preferred by
respondent No.1 herein and acquitted him of the charges under
sections 342 and 376 of the Indian Penal Code. The State has not
preferred an appeal against the impugned judgment.
The case of the prosecution is that the appellant was
working as a domestic help in five flats in Vasant Vihar Society
Building, Thane, Mumbai including the flat of respondent No.1
herein which was located on the second floor. She used to clean
utensils and clothes in his flat for which she was paid Rs.80/- per
month. Respondent No.1 resided in that flat with his wife and two
children. On 17h April, 1992 his wife and children had left for the
village. While going to the village his wife had given to the
appellant duplicate keys of the flat and had requested her to clean
utensils as also to cook food for her husband for which she
promised her additional payment on her return. Usually respondent
No.1 was away to his office on working days when the appellant
went to work at about 11.30 a.m., but on Saturdays and Sundays
respondent No. 1 used to remain in his flat during those hours. She
used to open the flat with the keys given to her and did her work.
On Sunday, 26th April, 1992, as usual, she went to the flat of
respondent No.1 and started working. When she went into the
bed-room to sweep the room, respondent No.1 switched off the
light of the bed room and caught hold of her. She started shouting
but no one came to her rescue. Thereafter respondent No.1 raped
her despite her protests. The time then was about 12.30 p.m.
because she could hear the siren which used to be blown at 12.30
p.m. After he raped her, he took the lungi and his under-wear to
the bath room for washing. While he was doing so, the appellant
also wore her underwear and went to the main door. The
respondent No.1 came behind her and called her inside the flat, but
she started crying loudly. Respondent No.1 requested her not to
shout and create a scene and also begged her forgiveness.
However, she came out telling him that she would be going to the
police station. Thereafter she went to the ground floor and was
sitting there for sometime. Thereafter she again went upstairs to
the flat of respondent No.1. When she reached the second floor,
she noticed that a neighbour residing in the adjacent flat had come
out and their 1 year old daughter was playing with the chain of
the door of the flat of respondent No.1. They asked her if
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respondent No.1 was at home and she replied that she would see
whether he was at home or not. She thereafter opened the door
with the keys which she had with her. She was asked by that
neighbour as to what had happened and she replied by saying that
she will tell everything after his (respondent No.1) wife returned.
She entered the flat to find out whether respondent No.1 was there
and found that he was not there. She then locked the door and
went home. The time then was about 1.30 p.m. as stated in the
first information report. She thereafter took her bath, washed her
clothes and took two sleeping pills and went to sleep. She got up
at 5.30 p.m. but did not report the incident to her husband when he
returned home from duty, for fear that he would drive her out. That
was also the reason why she did not go to the police station to
lodge a complaint.
On the next day, she felt guilty and she narrated the incident
to her sister-in-law Smt. Tarabai (not examined) and her brothers
Baban (PW.3) and Subhash (not examined) and one Sh. Manohar
Sawant (PW.4), a Shivsena leader. She narrated the incident to
them at about 2.45 p.m. and then they came to the police station to
lodge the complaint. It appears that the first information report
was lodged at 3.00 p.m. on 27th April, 1992.
After investigation respondent No.1 was charged of offences
under sections 342 and 376 IPC and section 3(1)(2) of the SC/ST
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989. The prosecution examined
the prosecutrix as PW.1. The neighbour of respondent No.1 whom
she had met when she went to the flat of respondent No.1 soon
after the occurrence, was examined as PW.2 but he did not support
the case of the prosecution and was declared hostile. Her brother
Baban was examined as PW.3. Manohar Sawant was examined as
PW.4. The prosecution also examined Constable Ganga Ram as
PW.5 to support the case of the prosecution that respondent No.1
had come to the police chowky at 7.00 a.m. on 27th April, 1992 to
enquire whether any occurrence had been reported. The trial court
relying upon the testimony of the prosecutrix found the respondent
No.1 guilty of the offence under section 342 IPC and sentenced
him to suffer rigorous imprisonment for one month and to pay a
fine of Rs.500/-, in default to undergo rigorous imprisonment for
fifteen days. He was also found guilty of the offence under
Section 376 and sentenced to suffer rigorous imprisonment for two
years and a fine of Rs.5,000/-, in default to undergo rigorous
imprisonment for three months. He was, however, acquitted of the
charge under the provisions of the SC/ST (Prevention of
Atrocities) Act, 1989.
The respondent No.1 preferred an appeal to the High Court
which was allowed by the impugned judgment. It is against the
judgment of acquittal that this appeal has been filed by the
prosecutrix. The High Court did not find the evidence of the
prosecutrix to be reliable. It held that the medical evidence on
record did not support the case of the prosecution, since no semen
or blood stains were found on the medical examination of the
prosecutrix nor were any injuries found on her person which she
may have suffered while resisting the respondent No.1. The
chemical analyst report also did not find any blood or semen on the
clothes of the accused and the clothes of the prosecutrix or even on
the bed sheet. There was, therefore, no corroborative evidence to
support the case of the prosecution, and finding the evidence of the
prosecutrix to be unreliable, the High Court did not consider it safe
to base a conviction on the un-corroborated testimony of the
complainant/prosecutrix.
Learned counsel for the appellant has taken us through the
evidence on record. We have carefully perused the evidence of the
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prosecutrix/appellant and we find ourselves in agreement with the
view of the High Court that the testimony of the prosecutrix is not
reliable. Having carefully scrutinized her evidence, we find that
her testimony does not inspire confidence and her conduct appears
to be highly unnatural.
The prosecutrix PW.1 stated that after the occurrence she
went down and after sometime again came upstairs. She did so to
handover the keys of the flat to someone. When she came to the
door of the flat of respondent No.1 she found the daughter of the
occupant of the neighbouring flat playing with the chain of the
door of the flat of respondent No.1. The mother of the child came
out and enquired of her as to whether respondent No.1 was in the
flat. She replied by saying that she did not know whether he was
in the flat. Then she gave her the keys of the flat and that woman
opened the door. By that time the husband of that lady had also
come. She told them that respondent No.1 was a rascal. They
questioned her as to what had happened, but she told them that
what had happened was not worth telling them, and that she will
narrate the incident after the wife of respondent No.1 returned.
They thereafter entered the flat but respondent No.1 was not there.
She stated that she had decided to handover the keys of the flat to
the accused and that is why she had gone to his flat again. When
she did not find the accused there, she came back after locking the
flat and went home at about 2.30 p.m. carrying the keys with her.
It would thus appear that for about 2 hours after the incident
the prosecutrix was loitering in the same building. She met the
neighbours of respondent No.1 who in fact questioned her about
what had happened but in spite of that she did not inform them that
respondent No.1 had raped her. There is no explanation offered as
to why she did not report the matter to them, since they were the
persons whom she met first soon after the incident.
PW.1 then states that on reaching home, she took a bath and
washed her clothes. She took some medicines and went to sleep.
When her husband came at 6.00 p.m. she did not disclose the
incident to him for fear that he would drive her out. At night she
cooked food for the family and then went to sleep. She got up next
morning at about 6.00 a.m. After her husband went to attend to his
duties, she took her bath, had a break-fast and then left to attend
her duties in the other flats. She worked in all the four flats that
morning. It is surprising that though she attended to her duties and
worked in as many as four flats in the morning of 27th April, 1992,
she did not report the matter to any of the residents of those flats.
Later in the afternoon she went to the house of her brother Baban,
PW.3 and disclosed the incident to his wife Smt. Tarabai. Tarabai
has not been examined as a witness. Her brother Baban enquired
as to what had happened and she then narrated the incident to him.
Baban sent for his other brother (cousin) Subhash who works in
the police force. She told them that she wanted to make a
complaint against the accused. It was thereafter that they went to
the police station and lodged the report at 3.00 p.m. on 27th April,
1992. So far as Manohar Sawant (PW.4) is concerned, in the first
information report, the prosecutrix stated that she narrated the
incident for the first time to her sister-in-law Tarabai, her brothers
Subhash and Baban and their acquaintance Manohar Sawant. In
the course of her deposition, however, she changed her version and
stated that while going to the police station they met Manohar
Sawant, PW.4, who was a Shivsena leader, and was known to
them. But she has not stated that she narrated the incident to
Manohar Sawant, PW.4. She was categoric in her assertion that
she had told about the incident only to members of her family and
to no outsider. She had not narrated the incident to the persons in
whose flats she worked as maid-servant. At the same time she
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asserted that she was determined to lodge the complaint. She was
aware that taking bath would cause disappearance of evidence of
rape but still she took bath because she was feeling dirty.
So far as the first information report is concerned she stated
that she and her brothers Baban and Subhash thought over the
incident and thereafter went to lodge the complaint. She first
stated that Subhash had written down the report, then she changed
her version stating that Subhash had not written but had signed on
the complaint. Again she said while in the house nothing was
written, and Subhash had signed in the police chowky. Then again
she corrected herself by saying, in police chowky no one signed
but he had signed on the FIR at Vartaknagar Police Station. She
was examined by the doctor at about 9.00 p.m.
PW.1 admitted in the course of her deposition that while
leaving the flat of respondent No.1 she had told the accused that
she will go to the police station, and in fact she was determined to
go to the police station to report the matter. However, she wanted
to return the keys of the flat. That was the reason why she had
again gone to the flat of respondent No.1 on the second floor. She
had thought of giving those keys to the neighbours of the accused
but actually she did not give those keys to any of the neighbours.
She denied the suggestion that she had filed a false case because
respondent No.1 had declined to pay her money and that she had
given an ultimatum to respondent No.1 on 26th April, 1992 that if
he did not pay by 27th April, 1992 she would file a case against
him.
The evidence of PW.2, occupant of the neighbouring flat
does not support the case of the prosecution. This witness was
declared hostile. According to this witness, the day of occurrence
was a Sunday. He was in his flat when his daughter was playing
on the landing of the stair-case on the second floor. He came out
to pick up his daughter and noticed the prosecutrix entering the flat
of respondent No.1. When he was about to lift his daughter he saw
the complainant leaving the flat of the accused. Shortly thereafter
he noticed that respondent No.1 was preparing to leave but he
invited him to have a meal with him. Respondent No.1 came to his
flat and enjoyed the meal with him. He did not notice the
prosecutrix again on that day. He had not heard her shouts.
The evidence of PW.2 does not support the case of the
prosecution. What is significant is the fact that even according to
the prosecutrix, she had not told PW.2 about the incident that had
taken place in the morning.
PW.3, Baban, brother of the informant has deposed to the
effect that his sister/prosecutrix had come to his house on 27th
April, 1992 and narrated the incident. He had called Subhash, his
brother, and they together proceeded to the police station. On the
way, they met Manohar Sawant, PW.4 and on enquiry made by
him, he narrated the incident to him. Manohar Sawant, PW.4, also
accompanied them to the police station.
PW.4 Manohar Sawant has deposed to the effect that he met
the prosecutrix and her brothers while they were proceeding to the
police station. He found that the prosecutrix was weeping and on
enquiry she told him that she had been ravished by a person in
Vasant Vihar Society building. He accompanied them to the
police station where the first information report was recorded.
PW.5 Constable Ganga Ram was examined to prove that at
about 7.00 a.m. on 27th April, 1992 respondent No.1 had come to
the Gandhinagar Police Chowky to find out if any occurrence had
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been reported. He replied in the negative. On the same day at
about 8.00 p.m. when he had come to the Vartak Nagar Police
Station for roll-call he had noticed that accused had been arrested
and that he was the same person who had come in the morning to
the Gandhinagar Police Chowky. The evidence of this witness is
of no significance and also appears to be untrue. He was
confronted with his statement made before the police in the course
of investigation, but this fact was not stated by him in his statement
made before the police. It, therefore, appears that the only fact
which was sought to be proved through this witness was not stated
by him in his statement recorded in the course of investigation.
From the facts noticed above it appears to us that the
evidence of PW.1 (prosecutrix) cannot be safely relied upon to
base a conviction. The medical evidence or the report of the
chemical analyzer do not support the case of the prosecution. That
obviously is on account of the fact that the clothes had been
washed and the appellant had taken bath twice after the
occurrence. She was examined on the next day at about 8.00 p.m.
In these circumstances if no incriminating evidence was found by
the chemical analyst or the doctor, that is not surprising.
However, the evidence of the prosecutrix does not inspire
confidence. The occurrence took place at about 12.30 p.m. on a
Sunday. The High Court has observed that on a Sunday, if the
prosecutrix had raised an alarm it would have been heard by many
persons who would have immediately come to her rescue,
particularly in such a society where the respondent No.1 resided.
On a Sunday most of the residents are at home at about 12.30 p.m.
and, therefore, it was surprising that no one heard the cries of the
appellant when she was raped by respondent No.1. There after
also the conduct of the prosecutrix is rather surprising. She was
loitering in the locality till about 2.30 p.m. i.e. for about 2 hours
after the incident. She again went to the flat of respondent No.1 on
the second floor after having come down immediately after the
occurrence. The reason given by her is that she wanted to return
the keys to respondent No.1. At one stage she stated she had
decided to handover the keys to one of the neighbours, but actually
she did not handover the keys to anyone. When she went up to the
flat of respondent No.1 she met PW.2 and his wife. But she did
not tell them about the incident. She then came back home and
went to sleep. In the evening when her husband came she did not
report the incident to him. At night, as usual, she cooked food for
the family and went to sleep. Next morning she came to the
society and attended to her routine work. Admittedly she worked
in four flats on that day but she did not report the matter to anyone.
Later in the afternoon she went to the house of her brother. It is
there for the first time that she reported the matter to her sister-in-
law Smt. Tarabai, who has not been examined. Only thereafter
they went to the police station and lodged the report at about 3.00
p.m.
Respondent No.1 in his examination under Section 313 Cr.
P.C. stated that the case had been fabricated only to extort money.
He was a resident of the State of Karnataka and that is why PW.4
Manohar Sawant, a Shivsena leader, supported the prosecutrix. A
false case had been lodged against him. On 25th April, 1992 the
prosecutrix had asked him for some money but he refused to pay
her saying that her salary had already been paid by his wife. On
26th April, 1992 she again came to him and again demanded money
which he refused. She threatened him saying that if he did not give
her money, he will have to face the consequences. In sum and
substance, the defence of respondent No.1 appears to be that no
such occurrence took place at all and a false case had been filed to
extort money from respondent No.1 who was a government
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employee.
In cross-examination PW.1 (prosecutrix) asserted that she
was determined to lodge a complaint. She also knew that taking
bath would cause disappearance of the evidence of rape and yet
she took a bath as she was feeling dirty. Thereafter she went to
sleep.
On an overall appreciation of the evidence of the prosecutrix
and her conduct we have come to the conclusion that PW.1 is not a
reliable witness. We, therefore, concur with the view of the High
Court that a conviction cannot be safely based upon the evidence
of the prosecutrix alone. It is no doubt true that in law the
conviction of an accused on the basis of the testimony of the
prosecutrix alone is permissible, but that is in a case where the
evidence of the prosecutrix inspires confidence and appears to be
natural and truthful. The evidence of the prosecutrix in this case is
not of such quality, and there is no other evidence on record which
may even lend some assurance, short of corroboration that she is
making a truthful statement. We, therefore, find no reason to
disagree with the finding of the High Court in an appeal against
acquittal. The view taken by the High Court is a possible,
reasonable view of the evidence on record and, therefore, warrants
no interference. This appeal is dismissed.