Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1975 of 1996
PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
OM PRAKASH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/05/2002
BENCH:
Y.K. Sabharwal & B.P. Singh
JUDGMENT:
Y.K. Sabharwal, J.
It is necessary for the courts to have a sensitive approach when dealing
with cases of child rape. The effect of such a crime on the mind of the child
is likely to be lifelong. A special safeguard has been provided for children in
the Constitution of India in Article 39 which, inter alia, stipulates that the
State shall, in particular, direct its policy towards securing that the tender
age of the children is not abused and the children are given opportunities and
facilities to develop in a healthy manner and in conditions of freedom and
dignity and that the childhood and youth are protected against exploitation and
against moral and material abandonment. In the present case, the victim at the
time of occurrence of rape was a child aged eight years. The accused was youth
aged 18 years. The Additional District and Sessions Judge found him guilty for
offence under Section 376, Indian Penal Code and imposed rigorous imprisonment
for seven years and fine of Rs.1,000/- and in default of payment of fine to
further undergo six months’ rigorous imprisonment. The High Court by the
impugned judgment dated 14th November, 1995 giving to the accused the benefit of
doubt acquitted him. The State is in appeal on grant of special leave.
The house of the accused is quite close to that of the prosecutrix. The
incident of rape is said to have taken place on 19th March, 1989 in a village.
The FIR was registered on 20th March, 1989. The medical examination of the
prosecutrix also took place on 20th March, 1989. The prosecution to bring home
the charge against the accused examined 14 witnesses including the parents of
the prosecutrix, her brother, aunt, four doctors, police officials besides the
prosecutrix. The respondent-accused was held guilty of the offence by the trial
court primarily relying upon the testimony of the father of prosecutrix (PW-1),
mother (PW-2), the prosecutrix (PW-5) and Dr. Harsh Chand Jain (PW-11).
The testimony of PW-2 is that her daughter had gone to the house of Sita
Singh to take therefrom butter milk. Accused is the son of Sita Singh. When
she did not return for a long time, PW-2 went to see her in the said house.
When she went to that house, the door was closed which she pressed open. There
she found that her daughter was lying naked on a cot and the accused was lying
over him penetrating his penis into her vagina. On seeing this she shouted.
Whereupon leaving her daughter, the accused ran away. She found her daughter
totally unconscious. She lifted her and brought her back home. At that time,
husband and brother-in-law of PW-2 had gone to another village. Her daughter
gained consciousness at the time of sunset. She deposed that Om Prakash, the
respondent, was alone at home. Next day a report was lodged with the police.
She also deposed in her cross-examination that earlier too her daughter used to
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bring butter milk from the house of Sita Singh.
PW-1, father of the prosecutrix, deposed that he had gone with his brother
to his relatives in village Bateri and came back in the evening at about 7 o’
clock when his wife told him as to what Om Prakash had done to their daughter.
He did not go to the police station at night as there was no means of conveyance
and reached the police station at 10/11 a.m. the next day and lodged the report.
The police station is about 15 kms. away from their village.
PW-4 is the wife of brother of PW-1. Her testimony is that she saw PW-2 coming
weeping and taking prosecutrix in her lap. She also deposed that her husband
and younger brother-in-law had gone to the relatives in village Bateri on that
date. She has supported the version given by PW-2.
PW-5 is the prosecutrix. Being a child witness, the learned Additional District
and Sessions Judge before administering her oath asked general questions so as
to satisfy that she is competent to answer the questions and take oath. Her
statement in court was recorded about four years after the date of the incident.
Her deposition was that she had gone to the house of Om Prakash to bring butter
milk on that date. At that time no other person was at his house. Om Prakash
closed the door and asked her to come inside and he will put butter milk in the
utensil; he incited her and carried her in room; took out her under garments,
inserted cloth in her mouth and widened her both legs and put his body on her
and penetrated his penis into her vagina as a result whereof vagina started
bleeding and she became unconscious.
PW-11 is Dr. Harsh Chand Jain. His testimony is that, on 20th March, 1989
he was on duty in General Hospital, Alwar. On the request of the S.H.O. he
examined prosecutrix. Externally there was no injury on her body but on the
internal parts of both thighs and at the outer part of the left foot there were
signs of blood. For internal examination she was referred to Family Incharge
Hospital. The injury report exhibit P8 was in his handwriting. In Ex.P-8, the
reports of Dr. Pushpa Gupta and Dr. V.P. Agarwal had been incorporated. PW-11
stated that "In my opinion, the intercourse was done with the girl i.e. the
possibility of doing the intercourse cannot be ruled out". The tip of the
finger in the whole of her uterus was passing easily. PW-11 deposed that
"According to the opinion of the lady doctor, the opinion of the pathologist and
my opinion of the examination, something was penetrated in her vagina."
(Emphasis has been supplied by us). The only cross-examination of the witness
was that "The main examination report by Doctor Rupa Gupta and Doctor V.P.
Agarwal is not there before me. The seminal stains were not present on the
clothes. After the sexual contact, the vagina remains in tact."
The aforesaid in brief is the evidence which resulted in judgment of
conviction by the trial court and acquittal by the High Court.
There was delay of nearly 26 hours in lodging the FIR. The offence is alleged
to have taken place at about 9 a.m. The FIR was registered at about 11.30 a.m.
on the next day. It was contended by Mr. Bachawat, learned counsel for the
respondent, that this delay had assumed importance and was fatal particularly
when the brother of the prosecutrix , namely, Mam Raj (PW-6) was admittedly at
the house. The delay, according to the counsel, has resulted in embellishments.
Reliance has been placed on the decision in the case of Thulia Kali v. The State
of Tamil Nadu [AIR 1973 SC 501] holding that the first information report in a
criminal case is extremely vital and valuable piece of evidence for the purpose
of corroborating the oral evidence adduced at the trial. The object of
insisting upon prompt lodging of the report to the police in respect of
commission of an offence is to obtain early information regarding the
circumstances in which the crime was committed, the names of the actual culprits
and the part played by them as well as the names of eye witnesses present at the
scene of occurrence. Delay in lodging the first information report quite often
results in embellishment which is a creature of afterthought. On account of
delay, the report not only gets bereft of the advantage of spontaneity, danger
creeps in of the introduction of coloured version, exaggerated account or
concocted story as a result of deliberation and consultation. There can be no
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dispute about these principles relied upon by Mr. Bachawat but the real question
in the present case is about the explanation for the delay. It is not at all
unnatural for the family members to await the arrival of the elders in the
family when the offence of this nature is committed before taking a decision to
lodge a report with the police. The reputation and prestige of the family and
the career and life of a young child is involved in such cases. Therefore, the
presence of the brother of the prosecutrix at home is not of much consequence.
It has been established that the father of the girl along with his brother came
back to their house at 7 o’clock in the evening. The girl was unconscious
during the day. PW-2 told her husband as to what had happened to their
daughter. The police station was at the distance of 15 kms. According to the
testimony of PW-1 no mode of conveyance was available. The police was reported
the next day morning and FIR was recorded at 11.30 a.m. The delay in reporting
the matter to the police has thus been fully explained.
A contention was also urged on behalf of the accused before the High Court
that his age was 15 years and not 18 years at the time of incident. The basis
of this contention was an affidavit of the mother of the accused and certain
school certificates. Both the courts relying upon the evidence of Dr. Raj Kumar
Misra, PW-9, held otherwise and came to the conclusion that the accused was
capable of doing intercourse.
The main reasons which prevailed with the High Court in reversing the conviction
were two. First, the non-examination of other independent witnesses and second
the rejection of medical evidence, i.e., testimony of Dr. Harsh Chand Jain (PW-
11).
As to non examination of other witnesses, the High Court has noticed that
the incident had taken place in the environment of the village where there are
other residential houses; the house of the prosecutrix from where the incident
took place is 2-3 houses away and in the house of the accused his other brothers
and sisters-in-law also live. The testimony of PW-2 is that seeing her the
accused ran away. The High Court has held that in the light of these facts it
was unnatural that PW-2 and PW-5 would not have shouted and others might not
have gathered at the place of incidence and astonishingly except the family
members no other witness has come forward to support the case of the
prosecution. The High Court has also described as unnatural the statement of
the mother that except her husband’s brother’s wife PW-4, not a single person of
the village had come to her house. The approach of the High Court can be best
described in the words of the High Court itself as follows:
"It is not acceptable that on committing such type of heinous crime, not a
single person might have come forward to give the statement. In such type of
crime in which an innocent girl is the victim, not only the neighbour but other
persons can come to give the evidence and doing such thing by them indicate
their natural conduct."
The conviction for offence under Section 376 IPC can be based on the sole
testimony of a rape victim is well settled proposition. In State of Punjab v.
Gurmit Singh & Ors. [(1996) 2 SCC 384], referring to State of Maharashtra v.
Chandraprakash Kewal Chand Jain [(1990) 1 SCC 550], this Court held that it must
not be overlooked that a woman or a girl subjected to sexual assault is not an
accomplice to the crime but is a victim of another person’s lust and it is
improper and undesirable to test her evidence with a certain amount of
suspicion, treating her as if she were an accomplice. It has also been observed
in the said decision by Dr. Justice A.S. Anand (as His Lordship then was),
speaking for the court, that the inherent bashfulness of the females and the
tendency to conceal outrage of sexual aggression are factors which the courts
should not overlook. The testimony of the victim in such cases is vital and
unless there are compelling reasons which necessitate looking for corroboration
of her statement, the courts should find no difficulty to act on the testimony
of a victim of sexual assault alone to convict an accused where her testimony
inspires confidence and is found to be reliable. Seeking corroboration of her
statement before relying upon the same, as a rule, in such cases amounts to
adding insult to injury.
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In State of H.P. v. Gian Chand [(2000) 1 SCC 71] Justice Lahoti speaking for the
Bench observed that the Court has first to assess the trustworthy intention 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 have been
examined but were not examined.
We have scanned and scrutinized very carefully the evidence on record in
particular the evidence of the parents of the prosecutrix, her brother,
prosecutrix and PW-11, Dr. Harsh Chand Jain with a view to satisfy our conscious
to find out whether the verdict of conviction of the respondent that had been
rendered by the learned Additional District and Sessions Judge could, in law, be
upset by the High Court. The evidence has been found by us to be trustworthy,
convincing and reliable. The High Court seems to have overlooked that it had
been established on record that at the time of the incident Om Prakash was alone
at home. When such an act is done, the natural tendency is not to talk about it
to others but, to an extent possible, hide it. There was nothing unnatural for
other villagers not visiting the house of PWs-1 and 2. Being a child witness,
we have examined the testimony of PW-5 and that of her mother with utmost care
and caution. The High Court has clearly committed a serious illegality in
assuming that in natural course of events if rape had been committed, the young
child girl and her mother would have shouted so as to collect others and they
would have visited her house. The prosecutrix was unconscious. There was no
question of prosecutrix shouting as assumed by the High Court. Too much was
made by the High Court on account of non-examination of persons other than the
family members. The aspect of the non-examination was given undue importance
without having regard to the contextual facts. The cases involving sexual
molestation and assault require a different approach a sensitive approach and
not an approach which a court may adopt in dealing with a normal offence under
penal laws. It was also sought to be suggested that there were some disputes
between the accused and the father of the prosecutrix over exchange of some land
and that is the reason for their implicating the accused. There is nothing
reliable on the record to substantiate that aspect. No such suggestion was even
put in the cross-examination of the father of the prosecutrix. On the facts in
hand, we find it difficult to accept that the revenge on account of alleged
dispute regarding exchange of land would be taken by the father of the
prosecutrix by foisting on the accused a false case of rape involving his young
daughter particularly in the setting of a village environment. The conviction
could not be set aside for the non-examination of independent witness.
As to the second reason, we find that the evidence of PW-11, Dr.Harsh
Chand Jain, is clear and specific. He was the author of the report. Though
ideally Dr. Pushpa Gupta could have been examined or her absence explained but
that does not destroy the prosecution case which otherwise stands proved. The
High Court was clearly in error in coming to the conclusion that in the absence
of evidence of Dr. Pushpa Gupta, there was no support from any medical evidence.
PW-11 had also examined her. He had referred the prosecutrix to Dr.Pushpa
Gupta. Dr. Pushpa Gupta had reported to PW-11 who categorically stated that in
his opinion on examination something had been penetrated in the vagina of the
prosecutrix and that intercourse was done with the girl i.e. the possibility of
doing the intercourse cannot be ruled out. For no valid reason the High Court
discarded the evidence of the doctor.
The evidence of a child witness is required to be evaluated carefully as the
child may be swayed by what others may tell him or her as the child is an easy
pray to tutoring. Wisdom requires that the evidence of child witness must find
adequate corroboration before it is relied on {State of U.P. v. Ashok Dixit &
Anr. [JT 2000 (2) SC 107]}. We have already held that in the present case we
have carefully examined the evidence of the child and the other evidence. We
find the reasons given by the High Court for rejecting the said evidence wholly
unconvincing. It is unfortunate that what to talk of considering, the High
Court has not even noticed the testimony of the prosecutrix in the judgment
under appeal
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Learned counsel for the respondent contended that if there was any forcible
sexual intercourse, it would have resulted in some injuries upon the prosecutrix
and in support relied upon Joseph s/o Kooveli Poulo v. State of Kerala [JT 2000
(6) SC 195]. This decision has no relevance. As observed therein, the injuries
are not always a sine qua non to prove a charge of rape. Let it not be
forgotten that we are considering the case of a rape on a girl child aged eight
years and not on a grown up woman.
Child rape cases are cases of perverse lust for sex where even innocent
children are not spared in pursuit of the sexual pleasure. There cannot be
anything more obscene than this. It is a crime against humanity. Many such
cases are not even brought to light because of social stigma attached thereto.
According to some surveys, there has been steep rise in the child rape cases.
Children need special care and protection. In such cases, responsibility on the
shoulders of the courts is more onerous so as to provide proper legal protection
to these children. Their physical and mental immobility call for such
protection. Children are the natural resource of our country. They are
country’s future. Hope of tomorrow rests on them. In our country, a girl child
is in a very vulnerable position and one of the modes of her exploitation is
rape besides other mode of sexual abuse. These factors point towards a
different approach required to be adopted. The overturning of a well considered
and well analyzed judgment of the trial court on the grounds like non-
examination of other witnesses, when the case against the respondent otherwise
stood established, beyond any reasonable doubt was not called for. The minor
contradiction of recovery of one or two underwear was wholly insignificant.
Lastly, it was contended on behalf of the respondent that the incident took
place about 13 years back and by now the accused has matured and would be around
31 years of age and having already undergone nearly three years of sentence, the
same may be treated by this Court as sufficient punishment to him and,
therefore, taking a sympathetic view, the sentence already undergone be imposed.
We are unable to accept the contention. The trial court imposed on the
respondent sentence of seven years’ rigorous imprisonment besides fine, as
earlier noticed. Having played with the life of a child, the respondent does
not deserve any leniency and for him sympathy on the ground sought for will be
wholly uncalled for. The respondent deserves to undergo the remaining part of
the sentence awarded by the learned Additional District and Sessions Judge.
For the aforesaid reasons, we allow the appeal and set aside the judgment
of the High Court and restore that of the trial court. Bail bonds of the
respondent shall be cancelled and respondent be taken into custody forthwith to
undergo the remaining sentence.
..............................,J.
[Y.K. Sabharwal]
..............................,J.
[B.P. Singh]
May 3, 2002.