Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PRAHLAD SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/08/1997
BENCH:
G. N. RAY, G. B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
Present:
Hon’ble Mr Justice G.N. Ray
Hon’ble Mr. Justice G.B. Pattanaik
Manoj Prasad, Adv. for the appellant
K.N. Shukla, Sr. Adv., Mrs. Shushila Shukla and Uma Nath
Singh Advs. with him for the Respondent,
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
PATTANAIK, J.
This appeal is directed against the judgment of the
Madhya pradesh High Court dated 7th September, 1992 in
Criminal Appeal No. 34 of 1986. The High Court by the
impugned judgment set aside the order of acquittal of the
appellant passed by the 2nd Additional Sessions Judge, Sagar
(MP), in Sessions Trial No. 185 of 1984 and convicted the
appellant under section 376 I.P.C and sentenced to undergo
rigorous imprisonment for 10 years.
The appellant stood charged of the offence of
committing rape on the allegation that on 26th May, 1984 he
committed rape on a minor girl Kumari Sarvesh, PW-5 when the
girl was playing outside her house in the company of her two
younger sisters. The prosecution alleged that while the
prosecutrix PW-5 was playing, the appellant induced her and
then took her outside the military camp and subjected her to
sexual assault on account of which the girl started
profusely bleeding. Her father, Siyaram, PW-9 went in search
of the girl and found her standing on the road and crying,
as the accused had left her near that place. The girl then
narrated the incident to her father who lodged a report
which was treated as F.l.R. and Police thereafter started
investigation. The further prosecution case is that on
suspicion the appellant prosecution case is that on
suspicion the appellant who was also an army jawan was
arrested and his identification parade was held on 23.71984
by PW-2 wherein the appellant was identified by the
prosecutrix. On completion of investigation the charge-sheet
was submitted and the accused stood the trial. The learned
Sessions Judge relying upon the evidence of Doctor - PW-4,
prosecutrix PW 5 and her parents PWs 7 and 9 came to the
conclusion that on the relevant date of occurrence the
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prosecutrix was raped. But so far as the complicity of the
appellant with the incident is concerned, the learned
Sessions Judge could not find any reliable evidence and
acquitted him of the charge. On an appeal being carried, the
High Court by the impugned judgment interfered with the
order of acquittal and relying upon the evidence of the
prosecutrix more particularly the identification of the
appellant by the prosecutrix convicted the appellant as
already stated.
The learned counsel for the appellant contended that
there is not an iota of acceptable evidence before the Court
which can be said to have brought home the charge against
the appellant and the High Court committed an error in
altering an order to acquittal to one of conviction by mere
surmises and conjectures. The learned counsel urged that so
far as the so-called identification parade which was held on
23.7.1984 is concerned no credence can be given to the same
as inasmuch as the same identification-parade was held two
months after the incident and that the accuse was shown to
the prosecutrix earlier to the identification in question.
According to the learned counsel the Sessions Judge rightly
did not give any credence to the identification. In this
Court also the counsel appearing, for the appellant stated
that no credence can be given to the so-called
identification that was held two months after the occurrence
wherein the prosecutrix is alleged to have identified the
accused. It may be appropriate to extract in this connection
the statement of the prosecutrix in crosss-examination
wherein she stated:
"The accused was kept in custody in
the Quarter Guard, where my father
had taken me and Major Raizada was
also present there. Thereafter, my
father had taken me again to the
camp for re-identification of the
accused. My father had told me to
move to the place of identification
and to identify the accused."
It may be stated that though the prosecution had sought
to establish a case that the accused had been identified
even prior to the test identification-parade before one
Major Raizada but no evidence was laid in that regard and
even Major Raizada was not examined as a witness. The
identification was supposed to have been made also in the
presence of one Subedar Harphool Singh but said Harphool
Singh also was not examined by the prosecution. In the
aforesaid circumstances our opinion no credence can be given
to the identification said to have been made before the test
identification-parade on 23.7.1984.
The learned counsel for the appellant further urged
that the only other item of evidence to prove the complicity
of the appellant with the offence is the substantive
evidence of the prosecutrix in the Court as inasmuch as she
identified the appellant to be the person who committed the
sexual assault on her on the date of occurrence. But that
evidence is also wholly unacceptable in view of the
statement of the prosecutrix in the cross examination
wherein she stated:
"Today, I have come alongwith my
father. The Police uncle was also
with me outside. Now when the
accused entered into the court,
then the Policewala and my father
had told me that he is the accused
and that is why that I have stated
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that he is the accused. The
Policewala uncle had tutored my
statement outside today and
accordingly I am deposing my same
tutored statement."
In view of the aforesaid evidence of the prosecutrix,
in our opinion the learned counsel for the appellant is
wholly justified in making his submission that the
substantive evidence of the prosecutrix in court identifying
the accused is absolutely of no relevance and is wholly
unacceptable and no conviction can be based on the same Mr.
Shukla, the learned senior counsel appearing for the
respondent, however, submitted that the accused belong an
army Jawan and a colleague of the father of the prosecutrix
and prosecutrix having been sexually assaulted by the
accused, there is no reason for the prosecutrix to
unnecessarily involve an innocent man and since the fact of
rape on the prosecutrix has been established beyond
reasonable doubt the High Court rightly convicted the
appellant. We are. however, unable to accept this contention
since until and unless there is reliable and acceptable
evidence to come to a conclusion that it is accused -
appellant who committed rape he cannot he convicted even if
the factum of rape on the prosecutrix is established beyond
reasonable doubt. In our considered opinion, therefore, the
High Court interfered with an order of acquittal on mere
surmises and conjectures without having an Iota of
acceptable evidence bringing complicity of the accused and
as such the said conviction and sentence cannot be sustained
in law. Accordingly we set aside the conviction and sentence
passed by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh and acquit the
appellant of the charges leveled against him. The criminal
appeal is allowed. The bail bond furnished by the appellant
shall stand discharged.