Research › Search › Judgment

Patna High Court · body

2012 DIGILAW 1616 (PAT)

Ram Ashish Sahni v. State of Bihar

2012-12-04

SHEEMA ALI KHAN

body2012
JUDGMENT S.A. Khan, J. Heard Ms. Archana Sinha, learned counsel, who has been appointed Amicus Curiae to assist the Court on behalf of the appellant in this appeal. 2. The appellant has been convicted under Section 376/511 of the Indian Penal Code and has been convicted to undergo rigorous imprisonment for two years. He has also been convicted under Section 447 of the Indian Penal Code and sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for three months. 3. Munshi Pandit, the informant of this case alleges that during the early hours of 11th March 1999, he was sleeping in his house in the courtyard whereas his wife Bimla Devi was sleeping in the verandah. He alleges that accused Ramashish Sahni entered his house. On hearing the shouts for help he woke up and saw the appellant running out from his house. His wife disclosed that the appellant was trying to rape her. The informant and his family members chased the appellant which led him to fall and hit his head on a brick. Apart from this, he received certain other injuries on various parts of his body. He was taken for treatment to the doctor and thereafter produced in the police station. 4. The defence of the appellant is that there is a dispute between him and the informant due to a pathway. Both the parties are living just opposite each other. It has been suggested that due to the dispute the informant alongwith his family members had assaulted the appellant and thereafter had caught him and lodged a fabricated case. 5. Altogether nine witnesses have been examined in this case. P.W.1 Sone Lal Pandit claims that he heard the sound of raised voices, when he came to the place of occurrence, he saw that the appellant was lying on the ground. The appellant was taken to the hospital for treatment. Attempt of rape by the appellant was disclosed by the victim lady in question, Bimla Devi. Suggestion had been given to him that there was a dispute between the informant and the appellant due to which the informant and his family members had assaulted the appellant, as a result of which he had sustained injuries. Thereafter they got him treated and lodged a false case in order to save themselves. The suggestion has been denied. 6. Suggestion had been given to him that there was a dispute between the informant and the appellant due to which the informant and his family members had assaulted the appellant, as a result of which he had sustained injuries. Thereafter they got him treated and lodged a false case in order to save themselves. The suggestion has been denied. 6. P.W.2 Birju Pandit is nephew of the informant and has supported the prosecution version and deposed in the same manner as P.W.1. Both P.W.1 and P.W.2 had not actually seen the appellant entering or leaving the house of the informant. A suggestion has been made that the appellant had been assaulted by the informant due to a dispute between them which has been denied by this witness. 7. P.W.3 Shiv Shankar Pandit is also a hearsay witness. When he came to the place of occurrence he saw the appellant was lying on the ground in an injured condition due to the impact of falling on a heap of bricks. He identified the appellant in the light of torch. He was taken to private clinic, where he was treated and thereafter taken to the police station. He admits that no medical report was prepared by the private doctor who had initially treated Ramashish Sahni the appellant. This witness admits that all the witnesses had caught hold of Ramashish. He also admits that all the witnesses are related to each other. He denied the suggestion that there is a dispute between the informant and the appellant, and the appellant was falsely implicated in this case. 8. P.W. 4 Jagdish Pandit has deposed in the same manner as P.W.3. He denies the suggestion that after Ramashish had fainted, the people of the tola had suggested that a false case should be instituted by his Bhabi, namely, Bimla Devi, in order to explain the injuries on Ramashish. 9. P.W. 5 Parmeshwar Pandit came to the place of occurrence and heard about the manner in which the occurrence had taken place, and he found Ramashish lying on the ground in an injured condition. He denies the suggestion that he has given a false statement in court because he is uncle of the informant. 10. P.W.6 Munshi Pandit is the informant in this case. He supports the case made out in the First Information Report. He denies the suggestion that he has given a false statement in court because he is uncle of the informant. 10. P.W.6 Munshi Pandit is the informant in this case. He supports the case made out in the First Information Report. According to this witness, it was dark and he has been able to identify the person who had come out of his house with him, with the help of a torch that he was carrying. He admits that Ramashish was taken to a private doctor with the help of his `gotias’ where he was treated and thereafter he was taken to the police station where the informant had given his beyan. He too denies the suggestion that there was any dispute between the parties and the appellant was brutally assaulted by the informant and his family members for a petty dispute. He denies that the case has been instituted to save himself from a criminal case by filing a false case against the appellant. 11. Bimla Devi, P.W.7, the supposed victim of the entire episode has obviously supported the statement of her husband made in the First Information Report. She admits that Ramashish lives in the same locality. She claims that she does not know him, and had no occasion to see him. She admits that when she raised alarm, Ramashish was trying to escape, the inmates of the house woke up and caught hold of the appellant and the appellant hurt himself while running away. She denies that her house is opposite the house of Ramashish. She also denies that there has been dispute with respect to a pathway between the parties and that she has filed a false case of alleged attempt to rape. 12. The ocular evidence in this case is that Ramashish was assaulted by the informant and his family members, the reason for the assault differ – according to the prosecution version, it is because the appellant had tried to rape the wife of the informant Munshi Pandit, whereas the defence is that the assault was because of a petty dispute. The wife Bimla Devi states that she had no connection with the appellant and in fact was not in a position to identify him and denies that he lives opposite her house is obviously untrue in view of the fact that P.W.1 to P.W.6 admit that Ramashish lives just opposite to the informant. The wife Bimla Devi states that she had no connection with the appellant and in fact was not in a position to identify him and denies that he lives opposite her house is obviously untrue in view of the fact that P.W.1 to P.W.6 admit that Ramashish lives just opposite to the informant. It is quite unbelievable that Bimla Devi was not able to identify a person who lives opposite her house (hut) although they have been living in the same place for years together. It is admitted by one and all witnesses that Bimla Devi would be about 45 years of age whereas Ramashish would be of 55 years of age. Both of them have grand-children and as such it is not a case where the appellant would one day wake up to the charm of Bimla Devi and try to commit the alleged offence. The whole story regarding the attempt to rape or rape on a neighbour’s wife, that too, by a person who was living in the same place for last 30 years does not sound in the least probable and is completely unbelievable. 13. In this case the evidence would show that the husband was sleeping in the courtyard, whereas Bimla Devi was sleeping in the verandah adjoining the courtyard, the son alongwith the nephew were sleeping just outside the door (darwaja ke bahar), in such circumstances it cannot be believed that the appellant would dare to enter the house of the informant to commit rape knowing very well that the adult male members were sleeping in the vicinity. 14. The oral evidence should be read with the medical evidence which shows that the appellant sustained several injuries. There is no injury on the head as indicated in the evidence. However, the appellant got injury on his mouth, hand and leg and lost two teeth. He had abrasions on right thigh. Apart from scratches on right knee joint, which may be due to the fall. Apart from which he received injuries on his left forearms with bruise and swelling. The injuries indicate that the appellant was assaulted by several persons. Surprisingly the I.O. who has been examined as P.W.9 has not bothered to question Ramashish the appellant regarding the manner in which he received the injuries. Apart from which he received injuries on his left forearms with bruise and swelling. The injuries indicate that the appellant was assaulted by several persons. Surprisingly the I.O. who has been examined as P.W.9 has not bothered to question Ramashish the appellant regarding the manner in which he received the injuries. The I.O. has also not bothered to get the medical report from the private doctor who had first examined the appellant or take his statement in order to come to the truth of the matter. In the circumstances, this Court does not find the appellant would be held guilty for the offence alleged. 15. The appeal is allowed. Appeal allowed.