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1989 DIGILAW 295 (MAD)

Annamalai v. State by Inspector of Police, Uppilapuram Police Station, Tiruchirapalli District

1989-04-25

DAVID ANNOUSSAMY, JANARATHANAM

body1989
JUDGMENT Janarathanam, J. : This appeal is directed against the judgment dated 19th November, 1982 of the Court of Session, Trichi, in S.C.No.86 of 1981. 2. It arises from these facts: (i) The accused hails from Chinna Chithur village, which is situate within the jurisdiction of Uppiliapuram Police Station. P.W.1 is his elder brother. He has given his daughter born through his first wife to P.W.3 who is the son of P.W.2. P.Ws.1 and 2 are adjacent land-owners. P.W.1 became a widower some time prior to the occurrence, which happened on 2.1.1981. Seethammal (since deceased) was originally married to the accused. No issue was born to the deceased. So the accused, thinking that the deceased could not give birth to a child, decided to divorce her once and for all. A Panchayat took place in the village. P.W.4wasone of the panchayatdars and in that panchayat, the divorce between the deceased and the accused was effected. Thereafter, the deceased went to her parents’ home and resided there for some time, (ii) P.W.1 decided to marry the deceased and, in fact, married her after paying Rs.600 to the accused, the amount spent by him for contracting his marriage with the deceased, some five or six years prior to the occurrence. Though the accused divorced the deceased, yet he was having the desire to have sexual connection with her. So, some time prior to the occurrence, he expressed his desire to have sexual intercourse with the deceased, to which course, the deceased was not amenable. She complained of the same to P.W.1. Subsequently want of cordiality came to prevail between P.W.1 and the accused. The ill-will between P.W.1 and the accused further heightened, when the accused demanded more properties towards his share from P.W.1. This apart, the accused gave a complaint to the police against P.W.1 his brother, as if he had committed theft of some utensils from his house. The case was referred. However, the feelings of animosity between them on account of the vexatious complaint got nurtured and developed further. (iii) On the early morning of the day of occurrence, the deceased went to the nearby forest to collect firewood. P.W.5, who was available then in the forest, saw the deceased cutting the wood for fuel purposes P.W.2 had been to his fields for turning out agricultural operations. P.W.1 also, for a similar purpose, went to his fields. (iii) On the early morning of the day of occurrence, the deceased went to the nearby forest to collect firewood. P.W.5, who was available then in the forest, saw the deceased cutting the wood for fuel purposes P.W.2 had been to his fields for turning out agricultural operations. P.W.1 also, for a similar purpose, went to his fields. At about 9 A.M., P.W.2 saw the accused carrying a body on his shoulders and dropping the same into the well situate in his lands. He raised a hue and cry. Attracted by such cries, P.W.1 and P.W.3 who were available in the adjacent fields came running and in that process, they happened to see the accused running away from there. The body thrown was recovered from the well and it was found out to, be the body of the deceased. (iv) P.W.1 went to Uppiliapuram Police Station and gave Ex.P1 complaint at 10.45 P.M. P.W.13, who was incharge of the station registered a case in Crime No.1 of 1981 under Sec.302 of the Indian Penal Code. He prepared express reports and sent the same to the concerned officials. He also sent a V.H.F. message to the Inspector of Police P.W.14. (v) P.W.14 the Inspector of Police, on receipt of the message at 3 A.M. on 3.1.1981 took up further investigation in this case. He reached the scene at 6.30 A.M. He inspected the scene and prepared Ex.P2 observation mahazar. He also drew a rough sketch of the scene of occurrence Ex.P13. Ex.P2 was attested by P.W.6 and another. He caused photographs to be taken of the scene by P.W.10. M.O.4 series are the photographs and M.O.3 series are the negatives. Then he sent a requisition Ex.P3 to the doctor P.W.7 for conducting autopsy over the body of the deceased in the scene itself. Between 8 AM., and 11.30 AM., he held inquest over the body of the deceased. During the inquest he examined P.Ws.1 to 3 and 5 and others. Ex.P12 is the inquest report. He, thereafter, handed over the body to the constable P.W.11 along with Ex.P3 requisition for guarding the same till the autopsy was conducted. (vi) The doctor P.W.7 reached the scene village and conducted autopsy over the body of the deceased at 11.30 A.M. on 3.1.1981. Ex.P4 is the post-mortem certificate. Ex.P12 is the inquest report. He, thereafter, handed over the body to the constable P.W.11 along with Ex.P3 requisition for guarding the same till the autopsy was conducted. (vi) The doctor P.W.7 reached the scene village and conducted autopsy over the body of the deceased at 11.30 A.M. on 3.1.1981. Ex.P4 is the post-mortem certificate. The doctor opined that the deceased would appear to have died of shock and haemorrhage due to multiple injuries and the injuries could have been caused by cutting with a weapon like M.O.1 aruval. He also opined that external injury No.4 with its corresponding internal injuries is fatal in nature. (vii) At 1 P.M. P.W.14, Inspector of Police seized from the land of one Sobanapuram Rengaraj M.O.7 series bloodstained withered leaves, M.O.8 series bloodstained stones and M.O.9 bloodstained earth. He also noticed track of blood from there till upto the well, where the body was dropped. Regarding this he prepared Ex.P5 observation mahazar, which was attested by P.W.8 and another. He searched for the accused, but he was absconding. (viii) On 5.1.1981 at 9.15 AM., he arrested the accused at the Mayilapallam Road in Chinna Chittur in the presence of P.W.9. The accused on interrogation gave a confessional statement, the admissible portion of which is Ex.P6 pursuant to the confession, the accused, took P.W.14 and others to a mango tree situate on the west of his cattle shed and took out and produced M.O.1 aruval and M.O.2 bedsheet kept in between the two branches of the mango tree, which was seized under Ex.P7 mahazar. Exs.P6 and P7 were attested by PiW.9. On 6.1.1981, he sent the accused to the Court for remand. On 20.1.1981, he gave Ex.P8 requisition to the Judicial Second Class Magistrate, Thuraiyur for sending the incriminating objects to the Chemical Examiner for the purposes of analysis. (ix) P.W.12, the Head Clerk attached to the Court of the Judicial Second Class Magistrate, Thuraiyur sent the incriminating articles as per the directions of the Magistrate to the Chemical Examiner under the original of Ex.P9 office copy of letter. (ix) P.W.12, the Head Clerk attached to the Court of the Judicial Second Class Magistrate, Thuraiyur sent the incriminating articles as per the directions of the Magistrate to the Chemical Examiner under the original of Ex.P9 office copy of letter. Exs.P10 and P11 are the reports of the Chemical Examiner and Serologist respectively, (x) After completing the formalities of the investigation, P.W.14 filed a report under Sec.173 of the Code of Criminal Procedure before the Judicial Second Class Magistrate, Thuraiyur, on 24.4.1981 for offences under Secs.302 and 201 of the Indian Penal Code, appeared to have been committed by the accused. 3. The learned Sessions Judge upon committal framed charges under Secs.302 and 201 of the Indian Penal Code, against the accused. 4. The accused denied the same and claimed to be tried. The prosecution in proof of the charges, examined P.Ws.1 to 14, filed Exs.P1 to P13 and marked M.Os.1 to 9. 5. The accused when questioned under Sec.313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure as regards the incriminating circumstances appearing in evidence against him denied his complicity in the crime. The accused did not choose to examine any witness as his side. 6. Learned Sessions Judge, on a perusal of the materials placed before him and upon hearing the arguments of the learned Public Prosecutor and learned counsel for the defence found the accused guilty under Secs.302 and 201 of the Indian Penal Code, convicted him thereunder and sentenced him to imprisonment for life for the offence under Sec.302 of the Indian Penal Code, besides, sentencing him to rigorous imprisonment for two years for the offence under Sec.201 of the Indian Penal Code, with a direction that the sentences are to run concurrently. 7. The accused aggrieved by this conviction and sentence, has come forward with this appeal. 8. 7. The accused aggrieved by this conviction and sentence, has come forward with this appeal. 8. Learned counsel appearing for the appellant would assail the convictions and sentences imposed on the accused by the Court below by pressing the following points: (1) The various facets of the motive aspect of the case of the prosecution, instead of improving or advancing the case of the prosecution to any extent whatsoever, actually causes an irreparable dent in the sense of tilting the case in favour of the defence; (2) There is practically dearth of evidence to connect the accused with the offence of murder, or even if the arrest, confession and consequent recovery effected thereby coupled with the Serologist's report disclosing M.O.1, the weapon said to have been used in the commission of the crime containing the group of human blood as that of the deceased are taken for granted to have been proved in the manner allowed by law which stare at the face of the accused as incriminating circumstances, even then, those incriminating factors could not form the foundation of the case of the prosecution for proving the offence of murder against the accused, in view of the fact that excepting in cases where the gist of the offence is possession of concealment of and object the information under Sec.27 of the Evidence Act and recovery effected thereby cannot form the foundation of the prosecution case; and (3) In case the Court comes to the conclusion that there is no evidence at all against the accused for the commission of the offence of murder, then, by no stretch of imagination, he could be mulcted or fastened with criminal liability for the offence under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code as such a course is not legally permissible. (4) There is undue delay in lodging the first information report before the police, which is fatal to the case of the prosecution. 9. The motive part of the case of the prosecution consists of three parts. The first part consists of the complaint made by the deceased to P.W.1 sometime prior to the occurrence that the accused entreated her for sexual intercourse with him to which course she was not amenable at all. 9. The motive part of the case of the prosecution consists of three parts. The first part consists of the complaint made by the deceased to P.W.1 sometime prior to the occurrence that the accused entreated her for sexual intercourse with him to which course she was not amenable at all. The statement of the deceased to P.W.1 can, by no stretch of imagination, be construed as an admissible piece of evidence unless the statement falls within the ambit of Sec.32(1) of the Evidence Act as a circumstance of the transaction resulting in her death. This statement of the deceased on the face of it cannot be said to be one which resulted in her death. Therefore, it is practically an inadmissible piece of evidence which has to be eschewed out of consideration for any purpose whatever. 10. This apart, the statement of the deceased stated to have been made by P.W.1 is as vague as vagueness could be in the sense of P.W.1 not furnishing any detail as to when the accused entreated the deceased for intercourse, at what place this had happened etc. Further, P.W.1 kept mum and silent all along without taking any action whatever. The fact that such an incident happened at all is a matter not above reproach and beyond suspicion. As such, this part of the motive facet of the case of the prosecution has to fall to the ground. 11. The next facet of the motive part is that the accused had been demanding more properties towards his share from P.W.1. In such an eventuality, the motive for the accused is to rise in revolt against P.W.1 and not against the deceased, who was married to P.W.1 for the second time with his permission, after he had received Rs.600 the amount which he expended in contracting his marriage with the deceased on an earlier occasion. As such, this part of the motive also fails. 12. Coming to the third facet of the motive that the accused was said to have given a complaint to the police that P.W.1 had committed theft of some utensils from his house, the case, admittedly, was referred. In such a situation, the person aggrieved could have been only P.W.1 in the sense of himself being dragged on to a police station for facing a false charge of theft. In such a situation, the person aggrieved could have been only P.W.1 in the sense of himself being dragged on to a police station for facing a false charge of theft. As such the motive projected by the prosecution, as a whole, is of no consequence in the sense of advancing its case to any extent further. 13. Regarding the murder of the deceased, in fact, there is no direct evidence at all. The two pieces of evidence available are that the accused was found carrying the body and dropping it in the well situate in the land belonging to P. W.2, and recovery of M.O.1 aruval, at the instance of the accused pursuant to the confession Ex.P6 made by him to the Inspector of Police (P.W.14), which was found to contain the group of human blood as that group of the deceased. 14. On the aspect of carrying of the dead body, there is only the evidence of P.W.2, coupled with the evidence of P.Ws.1 and 3, who had seen the accused run’ away from there. The evidence of P.Ws.1 to 3, even taken for granted to be true, even then it cannot be stated that their evidence would point out the culpability of the accused in committing the murder of the deceased. It may of course point out that the accused was having a hand in the disposal of the dead body by dropping the same into the well. 15. So far as the other circumstance, viz. the recovery of M.O.1 aruval stained with the group of human blood as that group of deceased is concerned, it may connect the weapon with the crime but not the accused as the prepetrator or participant in the commission of the murder of the deceased. The confession under Sec.27 of the Evidence Act can never form the foundation of the case of the prosecution, excepting in cases where the gist of the offence is possession or concelament of an object as in the case of possession of stolen articles punishable under Sec.411 of the Indian Penal Code and such other analogous offences. In other cases, the confession under Sec.27 of the Evidence Act is only a circumstance of incriminating nature serving as a lending assurance factor if there is any evidence aliunde pointing out clinchingly the hand of the person in committing the offence of which, he was accused of. In other cases, the confession under Sec.27 of the Evidence Act is only a circumstance of incriminating nature serving as a lending assurance factor if there is any evidence aliunde pointing out clinchingly the hand of the person in committing the offence of which, he was accused of. As I have already stated, so far as the case on hand is concerned, there is no evidence aliunde at all to connect the accused in the commission of the murder of the deceased. In the absence of such evidence, the incriminating circumstance of recovery of the weapon M.O.1 containing the group of human blood as that of the deceased is of no consequence, in the sense of the same not being sufficient to fasten criminal liability upon the accused for the offence of murder under Sec.302 of the Indian Penal Code. As such, the conviction of the accused by the Court below for the offence under Sec.302 of the Indian Penal Code and the sentence imposed thereunder are not sustainable in law and they deserve to be set aside. 16. The argument of learned counsel for the appellant that in the event of the accused being acquitted of the charge of the commission of the offence of murder, it is not legally permissible to convict him under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code for causing disappearance of the evidence of the commission of murder cannot be expected to commend acceptance at the hands of the Court. 17. A similar situation arose before us in Poonkavanam v. State, Crl.App.No. 668 of 1984 where we happened to deal with the question and held that offences under Secs.302 and 201, Indian Penal Code are distinct offences and on proof forthcoming of any of these two offences, in respect of which the accused was charged, criminal liability can be fastened upon him for the proved offence. Following the decision of the Supreme Court in Ram Dahin Singh v. State of U.P. Ram Dahin Singh v. State of U.P. 1971 Crl.L.J. 1451: A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 2013. 18. Following the decision of the Supreme Court in Ram Dahin Singh v. State of U.P. Ram Dahin Singh v. State of U.P. 1971 Crl.L.J. 1451: A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 2013. 18. As such, there is no legal impediment to convict the accused for the offence under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code provided there is evidence for commission of such offence, but dearth of evidence for the commission of the offence of murder by the accused and what is required for fastening or mulcting criminal liability upon the accused for the offence under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code is that the accused knowing or having reason to believe that the offence of murder has been committed, causes evidence of the commission of the offence of murder to disappear with the intention of screening himself from legal punishment, then criminal liability can be fastened upon him for such an offence. There is no manner of doubt whatever so far as this case is concerned that the deceased died of homicidal violence as disclosed by the testimony of the doctor P.W.7, who conducted the autopsy and the post-mortem certificate Ex.P4, which he issued. 19. The accused must be having knowledge or at least reason to believe while he was carrying her body for the purpose of dropping it into the well that the deceased died of homicidal violence, in the circumstances of the case. As such, the conviction and sentence imposed on the accused for the offence under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code, is perfectly justifiable and do not call for interference. 20. The act of dropping of the body of the deceased was first noticed by P.W.2 at 9 A.M. and the same had come to the knowledge of P.W.1 after a short while when the body was recovered from the well. It is P.W.1, who lodged the first information report Ex.P1 before the police at 10.45 P.M. Of course, there is a delay of 13 hours and 45 minutes in lodging the first information report before the police. The delay so caused in the circumstances of the case, we feel is of no consequence. Admittedly, the place where the occurrence had happened is a mountainous hilly track and enormous time is consumed for one to reach the plains. It is also not in dispute that the scene of occurrence is situate sixteen miles away from the Uppiliapuram Police Station. Admittedly, the place where the occurrence had happened is a mountainous hilly track and enormous time is consumed for one to reach the plains. It is also not in dispute that the scene of occurrence is situate sixteen miles away from the Uppiliapuram Police Station. In such a circumstance, the lodging of the first information of P.W.1 at 10.45 P.M. on the date of the occurrence cannot be stated to have been done, after a long delay with any ulterior motive, ion the sense of painting an embedlished version before the police. Such an ulterior motive in the circumstance of the case cannot be spelt out for the simple reason that if P.W.1 wanted, he could have filed the first information report before the police implicating the accused in the heinous crime of murder of the deceased by incorporating necessary recitals in the first information report. Pertinent it is to mention here that Ex.P1 contains only a bare recital as stated by P.W.2 as regards the carrying of the dead body of the deceased by the accused and dropping of the same into his well situate in his land. 21. The sentence imposed by the Court below for the offence under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code does not appear to be severe calling for interference. 22. In the result, the conviction of the accused under Sec.302, Indian Penal Code and the sentence of imprisonment for life imposed upon him by the Court below are set aside, but the conviction and sentence imposed upon him by the Court below for the offence under Sec.201, Indian Penal Code are confirmed. Accordingly, the criminal appeal shall stand allowed in part. B.S. ----- Appeal allowed in part.