2024 INSC 156 REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1427 OF 2011
KUMAR @ SHIVA KUMAR APPELLANT(S)
VERSUS
STATE OF KARNATAKA RESPONDENT(S)
JUDGMENT
UJJAL BHUYAN, J.
This appeal by special leave takes exception to the
conviction of the appellant under Section 306 of the Indian Penal
Code, 1860 (IPC).
2. It may be mentioned that the Fast Track Court – III
Mysore vide the judgment and order dated 06.07.2004 passed in
S.C. No. 26/2002 convicted the appellant for the offence under
Section 306 IPC and sentenced him to undergo rigorous
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
ASHISH KONDLE
Date: 2024.03.01
15:18:33 IST
Reason:
imprisonment (RI) for three years and to pay fine of Rs. 2,000/-, in
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default to undergo RI for four months for the aforesaid offence.
Appeal filed by the appellant under Section 374 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Cr.P.C.) before the High Court of
Karnataka, being Criminal Appeal No. 1139/2004 (SJ-A) was
dismissed vide the judgment and order dated 17.09.2010 by
upholding the conviction and sentence imposed by the trial court.
Prosecution case
3. Case of the prosecution is that the appellant was earlier
residing in the house of the deceased as a tenant though on the
date of the incident he was residing elsewhere as the term of the
lease agreement had expired. On 05.07.2000 at about 09:00 AM,
the deceased was returning home after dropping the children of
her sister in the school. When she had reached near the Canara
Bank, the appellant was waiting there and teased her to marry
him. The deceased refused to respond. Appellant threatened her
that if she did not agree to marry him, he would destroy the family
of her sisters, outrage their modesty and would kill them. After she
reached home, she informed her sisters about the above incident
over telephone. Thereafter, she consumed poison in the house. The
neighbours saw through the window of the house the deceased
lying on the floor in a painful condition. They got the door of the
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house opened. The deceased was suffering from pain due to
consumption of poison. In the meanwhile, one of her sisters and
her husband came to the house. All of them took the deceased to
the Nirmala Devi Hospital whereafter she was shifted to the
Mission Hospital. Ultimately, she died on 06.07.2000 at 07:30 PM.
4. Raju, the father of the deceased, lodged the first
information alleging that appellant was responsible for his
daughter committing suicide. The first information was lodged on
07.07.2000 at 06:30 AM.
5. On receipt of the first information, police registered
Crime No. 100/2000 under Section 306 IPC. In the course of the
investigation, post-mortem examination of the deceased was
carried out and the viscera was sent for chemical analysis to the
Forensic Science Laboratory, Bangalore (FSL). The chemical
analysis report indicated presence of Organophosphate pesticide
in stomach, small intestine, liver, kidney and blood. Therefore, the
doctor who had carried out the post-mortem examination opined
that the death of the deceased was due to respiratory failure as a
result of consumption of substance containing Organophosphate
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compound. On completion of the investigation, police submitted
chargesheet where the appellant was named as the accused.
6. In order to prove its case, prosecution examined as
many as thirteen witnesses and got eleven documents marked as
exhibits. After closure of the prosecution evidence, the appellant
was examined under Section 313 Cr.P.C.
7. On examination of the evidence on record and after
hearing both the sides, the trial court held that the prosecution
had proved the charge against the appellant that he had abetted
the deceased to commit suicide beyond reasonable doubt.
Accordingly, the appellant was convicted for the said offence
whereafter he was sentenced to undergo RI for three years and to
pay fine of Rs. 2,000/- with a default stipulation.
8. As already mentioned above, the appellant had appealed
against the aforesaid conviction and sentence before the High
Court of Karnataka (for short ‘the High Court’ hereinafter). By the
impugned judgment and order, the High Court held that there was
no ground to interfere with the order of conviction. Accordingly,
the appeal was dismissed as being devoid of any merit.
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9. Aggrieved thereby, appellant moved this Court by filing
a petition for special leave to appeal. While the prayer of the
appellant for exemption from surrendering was rejected on
13.12.2010, notice was issued on 28.02.2011. Thereafter, this
Court passed order dated 18.04.2011 directing the appellant to be
released on bail subject to satisfaction of the trial court.
Submissions
10. Learned counsel for the appellant submits that both the
trial court and the High Court had failed to appreciate the evidence
on record in the proper perspective. Conviction of the appellant
under Section 306 IPC is not supported by the evidence on record.
Therefore, such conviction and the resultant sentence cannot be
sustained.
10.1. There are material contradictions in the evidence of the
prosecution witnesses. According to learned counsel for the
appellant, even if the prosecution case is accepted, no case for
abetment to commit suicide by the deceased could be made out
against the appellant. There is no evidence pointing out any act of
instigation, conspiracy or aiding on the part of the appellant which
had compelled the deceased to commit suicide.
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10.2. In so far the testimony of PW Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 12 are
concerned, there is a great deal of inconsistency and
contradictions in their evidence. Besides, those witnesses being
the relatives of the deceased, the trial court as well as the High
Court ought to have considered their deposition with
circumspection. PW-1 is the father of the deceased whereas PW
Nos. 2 and 4 are the sisters of the deceased. On the other hand,
PW No. 12 is the brother of the deceased. Their evidence are highly
inconsistent. He submits that it has come on record that PW-1 i.e.
the father of the deceased was living separately from the deceased
with a woman outside marriage. On the other hand, PW-2 i.e.
sister of the deceased in her deposition stated that it was the
neighbours who had told her that deceased had consumed poison
and that the neighbours had taken the deceased to Nirmala
Nursing Home. She had never stated before the police under
Section 161 Cr.P.C. that the appellant used to harass the
deceased. Therefore, it was evident that she had improved upon
her statement when in her deposition she stated that the appellant
used to tease the deceased.
10.3. Learned counsel also submits that there were injury
marks on the body of the deceased. The front of the right wrist
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showed superficial linear incised injury measuring 5cms in length,
which was partially healed. This injury was not explained by the
prosecution. That apart, the presence of the injury and the partial
healing of the same was indicative of the fact that the said injury
had occurred sometime prior to the date of occurrence. This would
also be a reflection on the suicidal tendency of the deceased.
10.4. It is further submitted that though the deceased was
hospitalised on 05.07.2000, there was delay in lodging of the first
information. The First Information Report (FIR) was lodged only on
07.07.2000 at 06:30 AM though the deceased had died on the
previous evening at 07:30 PM. This fact coupled with the non-
disclosure of alleged harassment of the appellant to anyone by the
deceased creates a great deal of doubt about the veracity of the
prosecution case. Moreover, the appellant had got married just
about two months prior to the incident. Therefore, there was no
reason for the appellant to threaten the deceased to marry him
failing which she and her family members would be visited with
dire consequences.
10.5. In support of his submissions, learned counsel for the
appellant has placed reliance on the following two decisions of this
Court:
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(i) Ude Singh and Others Vs. State of Haryana, (2019) 17
SCC 301
(ii) Mahendra K.C. Vs. State of Karnataka and Another,
(2022) 2 SCC 129.
11. Per contra, learned counsel for the respondent submits
that the evidence on record unmistakably point to the guilt of the
appellant. Prosecution could prove that it was the appellant who
had abetted the deceased to commit suicide. The charge against
the appellant was proved by the prosecution beyond all reasonable
doubt and therefore the trial court was fully justified in convicting
the appellant under Section 306 IPC and imposing the sentence as
above.
11.1. The High Court rightly affirmed the conviction of the
appellant imposed by the trial court.
11.2. There is no rule of evidence that conviction cannot be
based on the testimony of the evidence of the family members of
the deceased. A holistic reading of the evidence of the prosecution
witnesses more particularly that of PW Nos. 1, 2 and 4 would
clearly establish the prosecution case which was further
strengthened by the evidence of the doctor i.e. PW-13. He,
therefore, submits that there is no merit in the appeal which is
liable to be dismissed.
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12. Submissions made by learned counsel for the parties
have received the due consideration of the Court.
Evidence
13. Let us first deal with the evidence on record.
14. PW-1 Raju is first informant and father of the deceased.
In his evidence he stated that his deceased daughter X was a final
year B.Com student of Maharai College, Mysore. The accused
(appellant) used to reside in the ground floor of his house at
Vinayakanagar, Mysore. He had stayed there for five years as a
tenant and had vacated the house after the tenancy period was
over.
14.1. The deceased used to regularly take the two children of
his another daughter Meena to Chinamaya School at
Jayalakshmipuram around 9:00 AM. During that time, the
accused used to meet her and often used to ask her to marry him.
In fact, he had threatened his deceased daughter that if she
refused to marry him, he would murder her and her sisters. The
deceased had told him about these facts. On 06.07.2000 (corrected
to 05.07.2000 during further examination of PW-1), the accused
had threatened the deceased at about 09.30 AM near Canara
Bank, Jayalakshmipuram that if she refused to marry him, he
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would pour acid on her and her sisters and murder them.
According to him, on that day when he came to the house at 10:00
AM his daughter X was admitted to Kiran Hospital for consuming
poison. He stated that the deceased was shifted to Mission
Hospital, Mysore for further treatment. At about 7:00 PM on
06.07.2000 his daughter X died. The deceased had consumed
poison due to the unbearable harassment and cruelty of the
accused. The deceased had told him about the cruel treatment and
harassment meted out by the accused to her one week earlier to
her death. She had consumed poison when she was in the house.
The deceased had no other disappointment in her life except the
harassment and cruelty of the accused.
14.2. In his cross-examination PW-1 stated that at the time of
death of his daughter X, he was living in the house at
Vinayakanagar, Mysore. His deceased daughter had informed him
about the harassment of the accused one week prior to her death.
However, he did not confront the accused in this regard; neither
did he tell any other person nor lodged any complaint before the
police. On the day of the incident he had left the house at 7:00
AM. When he came back home at 10:00 AM his daughter X was
taken to the Kiran Hospital. When she was in the Mission Hospital,
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he visited the said hospital. His daughter X was being treated in
the said hospital and she was not in a condition to walk. He went
to the Mission Hospital at about 1:00 PM and was in the hospital
till the death of his daughter. Police had come to the hospital at
around 3:00 to 4:00 PM on the day of her death when PW-1 and
his other daughters were present. Police tried to question and talk
with his daughter X but she was not in a position to talk. Till her
death she did not talk. She died on 06.07.2000 at about 07:30 PM.
Police had visited the hospital about two to three times. He stated
that on 07.07.2000 he had lodged the complaint which was written
by Jayarama, who was present in the hospital till her death.
14.3. He further stated in the cross-examination that the
accused was running a chit fund of which he was also a member.
His daughter X was of marriageable age. He denied the suggestion
put by the defence that he wanted to give his deceased daughter
in marriage to the accused but the accused had refused. After the
death of his daughter X, he came to know that the accused was a
married man. However, he stated that he did not know where
accused used to stay after he had left his house.
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15. Sister of the deceased Meena is PW-2. In her deposition,
she stated that she, her two children and her deceased sister were
living together at Paduvarahalli (Vinayakanagar). Her two children
were studying in Chinmaya Vidyalaya at Jayalakshmipuram. The
two children were studying in 3rd and 5th standard. The deceased
used to take the children to school everyday and also used to bring
them back from school. She used to take the children at around
9:00 AM in the morning and also used to bring them back home
from the school.
15.1. She acknowledged that she knew the accused. Fifteen
days prior to her death, the deceased had told PW-2 that the
accused was teasing her and asking her to marry him. When she
refused the proposal on the ground that he was a married man,
the accused threatened to kill her and her sister. During this
period of fifteen days, the deceased did not talk and was in a
pensive mood.
15.2. She further stated in her deposition that on the day of
the incident i.e. 05.07.2000, she had left for office at 07:45 AM.
While leaving for her office, she had asked her sister X to take her
children to school. According to her, she had received a phone
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message from her neighbour that her sister X was not keeping well
and asked her to come home immediately. According to her, she
reached home at around 12.30 noon. When she reached the house,
the neighbours told her that her sister X had consumed poison
and, therefore, she was taken to the Nirmala (Karuna) Nursing
Home. Along with the neighbours she went to the Mission Hospital.
She found her sister X in an unconscious condition. On the next
day at about 7:30 PM her sister X died. She stated that as the
accused had threatened her sister X that he would kill her if she
did not agree to marry him, she had committed suicide. She
further stated that her father had also visited the hospital. Prior to
fifteen days of her death i.e. before the accused started harassing
her sister, the later was happy and healthy.
15.3. In her cross-examination PW-2 stated that the house
belonged to her mother. Her father PW-1 and her mother resided
in the said house. Accused used to stay in the ground floor of their
house for five years and had vacated the said house prior to the
incident two to three months after expiry of the mortgage (sic)
period. After vacating the house, the accused used to reside in a
house at IV cross at Paduvarahalli (Vinayakanagar). He was
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working in a cement dealer shop. After vacating the house, he did
not visit the house again and that PW-2 had not seen him.
15.4. At the time of the incident, her deceased sister X was
aged about 21 or 22 years. She stated that she and the other family
members did not try to conduct the marriage of the deceased. Her
father PW-1 was not living with them as he was residing with
another woman outside marriage separately. She stated that after
the death of her husband she started staying in the said house of
her mother. On the day of the incident, her mother had already
died.
15.5. PW-2 stated that she had not disclosed to any other
person the factum of ill treatment and harassment meted out to
her deceased sister by the accused. She had also not stated before
the police the fact that her deceased sister X had told her about
the harassment of the accused fifteen days prior to her death and
her being in a pensive mood.
15.6. She denied the suggestion of the defence that on the
date of the incident she had taken her children to the school and
that when she had returned to the house at 10:30 AM, she found
her deceased sister X in an unconscious condition.
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15.7. PW-2 further stated that they did not keep any
poisonous medicine in the house. She did not find any bottle
containing poison near the bed of the deceased. She denied a
suggestion that she along with her another sister Shantha and her
husband Diwakar had taken her sister X to Karuna Nursing Home.
15.8. PW-2 stated that she saw her father in the Mission
Hospital at 5:00 PM on 06.07.2000. She had not told and informed
her father about the incident relating to her sister. Till the dead
body of X was taken, her father was in the hospital.
15.9. PW-2 stated that while it was true that the accused was
a married person, she did not know that he had married two
months prior to the incident. There are residential houses around
the house. They were having good relation with the neighbours.
The accused was having a chit fund when he used to reside in the
house. PW-2 was also a member of the said chit fund. She denied
the suggestion that they had tried to marry the deceased with the
accused when he used to reside in their house and that the
accused had declined to marry her deceased sister which was the
reason for him to leave the house. She also denied the suggestion
that they had chit fund amount to be repaid to the accused. She
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further denied the suggestion that the deceased might have
committed suicide for some other reason and that the accused was
falsely implicated as he had refused to marry the deceased.
16. Diwakar is the husband of Shantha, the second sister
of the deceased. Diwakar is PW-3. In his examination in chief, he
stated that at the time of her death the deceased was residing with
PW-2 at Vinayakanagar. PW-2 was also the sister of his wife
Shantha.
16.1. On 05.07.2000 at about 09:30 AM, the deceased X had
telephoned his wife Shantha and told her that she had consumed
poison. At that time, he was present near his wife Shantha.
According to PW-3, he and his wife Shantha immediately went to
the house of the deceased at Paduvarahalli. The deceased talked
with his wife Shantha. They shifted the deceased X to Nirmala
Hospital and from there to Mission Hospital. On 06.07.2000, the
deceased died in the hospital during the night time.
16.2. He stated that his wife Shantha had told him that the
accused was responsible for the suicidal death of the deceased.
16.3. In his cross-examination PW-3 stated that before the
death of X his wife Shantha had told him about the accused being
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responsible for X consuming poison. When they had gone to the
house of X and were taking her to the hospital, X had told his wife
Shantha that due to the harassment of the accused she had
consumed poison. Earlier thereto he did not know this fact. He had
seen the accused when he used to reside in a portion of the house
as a tenant. The accused had vacated the house two years prior to
the incident whereafter he had neither seen the accused nor knew
about his whereabouts.
16.4. PW-3 denied the suggestion put forward by the defence
that he had stated before the police that the deceased X was in an
unconscious condition when they had reached her house and that
his wife had not told him that the accused was the reason for the
deceased consuming poison. However, he stated that he did not
hear what the deceased X had told his wife Shantha.
17. Shantha herself deposed as PW-4. She stated that on
05.07.2000 at about 11:00 to 11:15 AM. the deceased had
telephoned her and told her that while she was returning home
from the school after dropping the children the accused accosted
her on the way. He threatened her that she should marry him and
in case of her refusal he would kill her by pouring acid on her.
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Because of this she had consumed poison to finish her life to bring
an end to the matter. Immediately PW-4 and her husband PW-3
came to the house of the deceased.
17.1. PW-4 stated that when they reached the house of the
deceased X, she was lying on the floor and the phone receiver was
in a hanging position. When PW-4 questioned X, she again told the
above referred facts and the reason for her consuming poison. PW-
4 stated that she along with PW-3 and the neighbours shifted X to
Kiran Nursing Home and from there to Mission Hospital, Mysore.
On 06.07.2000 at about 7:30 PM X died while on treatment in the
Mission Hospital.
17.2. In her cross-examination, PW-4 stated that she had told
her neighbour about X telling her that she had consumed poison
due to the ill treatment and harassment meted out to her by the
accused. Her neighbours did not come to the house of the deceased
with her. When she had reached the house of X people had
gathered. According to PW-4, she knew the neighbours. When she
talked with X, the said neighbours were present.
18. PW-11 is M.S. Sathyanaraya who was the investigating
officer. In his testimony he stated that he had visited the spot of
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occurrence. He had sent the viscera of the deceased for chemical
examination. He had submitted the chargesheet against the
accused on 17.11.2000. He stated that after receiving the FSL
report he had sent the same to the concerned doctor who had
conducted post-mortem examination of the deceased for opinion
regarding cause of death of the deceased. He had obtained the final
opinion of the doctor in this regard.
18.1. In his cross-examination he stated that he had not
examined the owner of the house where the accused used to reside.
He had also not examined the neighbours of the said house. To a
pointed query, PW-11 stated that his investigation disclosed that
the accused used to threaten the deceased on public road often.
He did the same act fifteen days prior to the death of deceased X.
He admitted that he had not examined the witnesses of that area.
19. R. Vijaya Kumar is the elder brother of the deceased X.
He is PW-12. He stated that his sister X had consumed poison in
the house and had died in the hospital while undergoing
treatment. On 05.07.2000 at about 01:30 PM he had received a
phone message that his sister X had consumed poison. He reached
Mysore at about 7:30 PM and went to see his sister X in the
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Mission Hospital where she was undergoing treatment. He found
her to be not in a condition to talk.
19.1. He stated that could come to know from his another
sister PW-2 Meena that accused had harassed his sister X with
proposal for marriage which was the reason for her to consume
poison.
19.2. He further stated that he had not told the police about
the PW-2 telling him that the accused had threatened his sister.
He did not know the details as to how his sister X had consumed
poison and the amount of poison. He denied a suggestion that the
accused was not responsible for the suicidal death of X and that it
was because of their enmity with the accused that they had filed a
false complaint against the accused.
20. Dr. Devdas P.K. PW-13 was the doctor who had
conducted the post-mortem examination of the deceased on
07.07.2000. He stated that on examination of the dead body he
found multiple injection marks present in front of both the elbows.
The front of the right wrist showed superficial linear incised injury
measuring 5cm in length which was partially healed. He further
stated that the stomach, small intestine and contents, liver, kidney
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and blood were preserved and sealed and thereafter sent for
chemical analysis. On 09.01.2001, he received the chemical
analysis report dated 10.10.2000. The report showed presence of
organophosphorus compound in the viscera. Death was due to
respiratory failure as a result of consumption of substance containing
organophosphorus compound.
20.1. In his cross-examination PW-13 stated that
organophosphorus compound is a pesticide, however, the quantity
of the poison in the viscera of the blood of the deceased was not
mentioned in the FSL report. The amount of organophosphorus
could be detected during the treatment of the injury. The brain
would be conscious till the poison effected the brain. PW-13 could
not say the time when the deceased had consumed poison.
21. PW-1 in the first information had stated that before his
elder daughter could reach the house the deceased X had become
unconscious. Neighbours Kumari Hema, Mahesh, and Sarojamma
along with other neighbours, including Smt. Hiremani, had seen
through the window that the phone was ringing continuously and
that his daughter had become unconscious. They had got the door
opened and when they asked X why she had done so, her reply
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was that the accused was responsible and because of his
harassment she had consumed poison. After that she collapsed. It
was thereafter that her sister and brother-in-law came and took
her to Nirmala Devi Hospital and thereafter to Mission Hospital.
22. The post-mortem report is dated 07.07.2000. From an
external examination of the dead body it was found that there were
multiple injection marks present over the front of both the elbows.
The front of the right wrist showed superficial linear incised injury
measuring 5cm in length, partially healed. The stomach, small
intestine and contents, liver, kidney and blood were preserved to
be sent for chemical analysis. Accordingly, the blood and viscera
were sealed and sent to FSL, Bangalore for chemical analysis on
07.07.2000. The final opinion was kept reserved pending receipt of
the chemical analysis report. The chemical analysis report dated
10.10.2000 was received on 09.01.2001. As per the report, colour
test TLC method responded for presence of organophosphorus
pesticide in stomach, small intestine, liver, kidney and blood.
Thereafter the doctor gave the final opinion opining that death was
due to respiratory failure as a result of consumption of substance
containing organophosphorus compound.
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23. The evidence on record, as noted above, not only reveal
glaring inconsistencies but also gaping holes in the version of the
prosecution. That apart, there are material omissions too. PW-1 is
the father and the first informant. According to him, he used to
live in the same house as the deceased. On the fateful day, he had
gone out of the house at 7:00 AM in the morning and returned
back to the house at 10:00 AM. When he came back home at 10:00
AM, he found that his daughter X was admitted to a nursing home
for consuming poison whereafter the deceased was shifted to
Mission Hospital, Mysore for further treatment. On the other
hand, PW-2 Meena, who is the sister of the deceased and also
daughter of PW-1, deposed that the house belonged to her mother
who was already dead on the date of the incident. Father, PW-1,
was living separately with another woman outside marriage.
According to her, she along with her two children and her deceased
sister were living together in the house at Paduvarahalli
(Vinayakanagar) after the death of her husband. She was rather
categorical in her cross-examination when she stated that her
father PW-1 was not living with them, as he was residing with
another woman outside marriage separately. Interestingly, in her
cross-examination, she stated that she saw her father in the
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Mission Hospital at 05:00 PM on 06.07.2000 i.e., on the second
day of hospitalization of the deceased.
24. If the version of PW-2 is to be believed then the evidence
of PW-1, the first informant, cannot be accepted at all. His
statement that he used to stay in the same house as his deceased
daughter X was belied by his own daughter PW-2, who stated that
it was she and her two children, who used to stay in the house of
her mother along with her deceased sister X, after the death of her
husband. According to her, she saw PW-1 in the Mission Hospital
at 05:00 PM on 06.07.2000. This itself is strange and not at all a
normal behaviour of a father whose daughter had consumed
poison and was struggling for her life in a hospital. If what PW-2
says is accepted, then PW-1 had gone to see his daughter in the
hospital only in the evening of the next day of the incident, hours
before her death. Be it stated that the deceased died on 06.07.2000
at 07:30 PM.
25. Both PW-1 and PW-2 claimed that the deceased had told
them about the harassment meted out to her by the appellant
fifteen days prior to the incident. However, neither of them
confronted the appellant nor lodged any complaint before the
police.
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26. According to the evidence of PW-4 Shantha, another
sister of deceased X and daughter of PW-1, the deceased had
telephoned her in between 11:00 to 11:15 AM on 05.07.2000
informing her as to what had happened to her while returning
home from the school that led her to consume poison to end her
life. It was then that PW-4 and her husband PW-3 rushed to the
house of the deceased. When they reached the house of the
deceased, she was lying on the floor with the phone receiver in a
hanging position. She and her husband along with the neighbours
took the deceased to the nursing home and from there to the
Mission Hospital.
27. If the version of PW-4 is to be accepted, then the
deceased X had called her over telephone at around 11:00 to 11:15
AM on 05.07.2000. It was thereafter that she and her husband
rushed to the house from where with the help of the neighbours,
the deceased was taken to a nursing home and from there to the
Mission Hospital. In other words, according to PW-4, the deceased
X was taken to the nursing home only after 11:00 to 11:15 AM.
This again contradicts the statement of PW-1 that when he had
come back home on 05.07.2000 at 10:00 AM, his daughter X was
already taken to the nursing home.
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28. None of the near relatives of the deceased i.e. PW-1, PW-
2, PW-4 and PW-12 (the elder brother of the deceased) had
confronted the appellant as to why he was harassing the deceased
with proposal for marriage and in the event of refusal, threatening
her with dire consequences. Though they said that they knew
about such harassment fifteen days prior to the date of incident,
none of them thought it fit to lodge a police complaint. This creates
grave doubt about the prosecution version.
29. Though delay in lodging first information by itself cannot
be a ground to disbelieve the prosecution case, unexplained delay
coupled with surrounding circumstances can certainly dent the
prosecution version. Here is a person (PW-1) who evidently goes to
the hospital to see his daughter struggling for life twenty-four
hours after her admission in hospital, that too just hours before
her death. Such a behaviour is unusual for father, to say the least.
That apart, evidently, he was not stating the truth when he said
that he used to reside in the same house as that of the deceased
and when he returned home at 10:00 AM in the morning on the
fateful day, the deceased was already taken to the nursing home
by the neighbours. Evidence of PW-2 and PW-4 bely such
statement of PW-1. His daughter died on 06.07.2000 at 07:30 PM,
27
whereafter the body was taken by the police for post-mortem
examination. Yet he waited till the next morning to lodge the police
complaint. The police had also not examined Jayarama, the scribe,
who had written the complaint, to ascertain the reason for such
delay. According to PW-1, Jayarama was in the hospital till the
death of the deceased. In the face of such glaring conduct of the
first informant PW-1, adverse inference would have to be drawn.
But crucially, the tendered evidence, as discussed above, are
hearsay not worthy of much credence.
30. There is one more aspect. In the first information, PW-1
stated that neighbours Kumari Hema, Mahesh, Sarojamma and
others including Smt. Hiremani, wife of police personnel Nanjunda
Swami had noticed through the window that his deceased daughter
X was lying unconscious and that the phone was continuously
ringing. He further stated that these neighbours had got the door
opened whereafter PW-3 and PW-4 came and took his deceased
daughter X to the nursing home. Sarojamma and Mahesh had
deposed as PW-8 and PW-9 but both were declared as hostile
witnesses. Both stated that the police had not recorded their
statements and that they did not know the cause of death of the
deceased. Thus, only two of the neighbours were examined and
28
even they were declared hostile. No other neighbours were
examined by the police. There is no explanation by the prosecution
for such glaring omission. Again, according to the informant PW-1,
it was the neighbours who had first seen the deceased through the
window lying on the floor in pain with the phone continuously
ringing. It is not at all believable that when the receiver was
hanging (as has come out from the evidence of PW-4 Shantha), how
the phone could go on ringing continuously. Adverse inference has
to be drawn from such glaring contradictions and omissions.
Relevant legal provisions
31. In India attempt to commit suicide is an offence under
Section 309 IPC. This section provides that whoever attempts to
commit suicide and does any act towards the commission of such
offence, he shall be punished with simple imprisonment for a term
which may extend to one year or with fine or with both. But once
the suicide is carried out i.e., the offence is complete, then
obviously such a person would be beyond the reach of the law;
question of penalising him would not arise. In such a case,
whoever abets the commission of such suicide would be penalised
under Section 306 IPC. Section 306 IPC reads as under:
29
306. Abetment of suicide- if any person
commits suicide, whoever abets the commission
of such suicide, shall be punished with
imprisonment of either description for a term
which may extend to ten years, and shall also
be liable to fine.
31.1. Thus, as per Section 306 of IPC, if any person commits
suicide, then whoever abets the commission of such suicide, shall
be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term
which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine.
32. The crucial word in Section 306 of IPC is ‘abets’.
‘Abetment’ is defined in Section 107 of IPC. Section 107 of IPC
reads thus:
107. Abetment of a thing- A person abets the
doing of a thing, who-
First-Instigates any person to do that
thing; or
Secondly-Engages with one or more other
person or persons in any conspiracy for the
doing of that thing, if an act or illegal omission
takes place in pursuance of that conspiracy,
and in order to the doing of that thing; or
Thirdly- Intentionally aids, by any act or
illegal omission, the doing of that thing.
Explanation 1.- A person who, by wilful
misrepresentation, or by wilful concealment of
a material fact which he is bound to disclose,
voluntarily causes or procures, or attempts to
cause or procure, a thing to be done, is said to
instigate the doing of that thing.
Explanation 2.- Whoever, either prior to or
at the time of the commission of an act, does
30
anything in order to facilitate the commission of
that act, and thereby facilitates the commission
thereof, is said to aid the doing of that act.
32.1. From a reading of Section 107 IPC what is deducible is
that a person would be abetting the doing of a thing if he instigates
any person to do that thing or if he encourages with one or more
person or persons in any conspiracy for doing that thing or if he
intentionally aids by any act or illegal omission doing of that thing.
Explanation 1 clarifies that even if a person by way of wilful
misrepresentation or concealment of a material fact which he is
otherwise bound to disclose voluntarily causes or procures or
attempts to cause or procure a thing to be done, is said to instigate
the doing of that thing. Similarly, it is clarified by way of
Explanation-2 that whoever does anything in order to facilitate the
commission of an act, either prior to or at the time of commission
of the act, is said to aid the doing of that act.
Case law
33. Suicide is distinguishable from homicide inasmuch as
it amounts to killing of self. This Court in M. Mohan Versus State1
went into the meaning of the word suicide and held as under:
1
(2011) 3 SCC 626
31
37. The word “suicide” in itself is nowhere
defined in the Penal Code, however its meaning
and import is well known and requires no
explanation. “Sui” means “self” and “cide”
means “killing”, thus implying an act of self-
killing. In short, a person committing suicide
must commit it by himself, irrespective of the
means employed by him in achieving his object
of killing himself.
34. In Ramesh Kumar versus State of Chhattisgarh2, this
Court delved into the meaning of the word ‘instigate’ or ‘instigation’
and held as under:
20. Instigation is to goad, urge forward,
provoke, incite or encourage to do “an act”. To
satisfy the requirement of instigation though it
is not necessary that actual words must be used
to that effect or what constitutes instigation
must necessarily and specifically be suggestive
of the consequence. Yet a reasonable certainty
to incite the consequence must be capable of
being spelt out. The present one is not a case
where the accused had by his acts or omission
or by a continued course of conduct created
such circumstances that the deceased was left
with no other option except to commit suicide
in which case an instigation may have been
inferred. A word uttered in the fit of anger or
emotion without intending the consequences to
actually follow cannot be said to be instigation.
2
(2001) 9 SCC 618
32
34.1. Thus, this Court held that to ‘instigate’ means to goad,
urge, provoke, incite or encourage to do ‘an act’. To satisfy the
requirement of ‘instigation’, it is not necessary that actual words
must be used to that effect or that the words or act should
necessarily and specifically be suggestive of the consequence. But,
a reasonable certainty to incite the consequence must be capable
of being spelt out. Where the accused by his act or omission or by
his continued course of conduct creates a situation that the
deceased is left with no other option except to commit suicide, then
instigation may be inferred. A word uttered in a fit of anger or
emotion without intending the consequences to actually follow
cannot be said to be instigation.
35. Again in the case of Chitresh Kumar Chopra versus
State3, this Court elaborated further and observed that to
constitute ‘instigation’, a person who instigates another has to
provoke, incite, urge or encourage the doing of an act by the other
by ‘goading’ or ‘urging forward’. This Court held as follows:
17. Thus, to constitute “instigation”, a person
who instigates another has to provoke, incite,
urge or encourage the doing of an act by the
other by “goading” or “urging forward”. The
dictionary meaning of the word “goad” is “a
3
(2009) 16 SCC 605
33
thing that stimulates someone into action;
provoke to action or reaction” (see Concise
Oxford English Dictionary); “to keep irritating or
annoying somebody until he reacts” (see Oxford
Advanced Learner's Dictionary, 7th Edn.).
18. Similarly, “urge” means to advise or try
hard to persuade somebody to do something or
to make a person to move more quickly and or
in a particular direction, especially by pushing
or forcing such person. Therefore, a person who
instigates another has to “goad” or “urge
forward” the latter with intention to provoke,
incite or encourage the doing of an act by the
latter.
35.1. Thus, this Court has held that in order to prove that the
accused had abetted the commission of suicide by a person, the
following has to be established:
(i) the accused kept on irritating or annoying the
deceased by words, deeds or wilful omission or
conduct which may even be a wilful silence until
the deceased reacted or pushed or forced the
deceased by his deeds, words or wilful omission
or conduct to make the deceased move forward
more quickly in a forward direction; and
(ii) that the accused had the intention to
provoke, urge or encourage the deceased to
commit suicide while acting in the manner
noted above. Undoubtedly, presence of mens
rea is the necessary concomitant of instigation.
34
36. In Amalendu Pal alias Jhantu versus State of West
Bengal4, this Court after referring to some of the previous decisions
held that it has been the consistent view that before holding an
accused guilty of an offence under Section 306 IPC, the court must
scrupulously examine the facts and circumstances of the case and
also assess the evidence adduced before it in order to find out
whether the cruelty and harassment meted out to the victim had
left the victim with no other alternative to put an end to her life. It
must be borne in mind that in a case of alleged abetment of
suicide, there must be proof of direct or indirect act(s) of
incitement to the commission of suicide. Merely on the allegation
of harassment without there being any positive action proximate
to the time of occurrence on the part of the accused which led or
compelled the deceased to commit suicide, conviction in terms of
Section 306 IPC would not be sustainable. Thereafter, this Court
held as under:
13. In order to bring a case within the purview
of Section 306 IPC there must be a case of
suicide and in the commission of the said
offence, the person who is said to have abetted
the commission of suicide must have played an
active role by an act of instigation or by doing
certain act to facilitate the commission of
4
(2010) 1 SCC 707
35
suicide. Therefore, the act of abetment by the
person charged with the said offence must be
proved and established by the prosecution
before he could be convicted under Section 306
IPC.
37. Similar is the view expressed by this court in Ude Singh
(supra).
38. In Rajesh versus State of Haryana5, this Court after
referring to Sections 306 and 107 of the IPC held as follows:
9. Conviction under Section 306 IPC is not
sustainable on the allegation of harassment
without there being any positive action
proximate to the time of occurrence on the part
of the accused, which led or compelled the
person to commit suicide. In order to bring a
case within the purview of Section 306 IPC,
there must be a case of suicide and in the
commission of the said offence, the person who
is said to have abetted the commission of
suicide must have played an active role by an
act of instigation or by doing certain act to
facilitate the commission of suicide. Therefore,
the act of abetment by the person charged with
the said offence must be proved and established
by the prosecution before he could be convicted
under Section 306 IPC.
39. Reverting back to the decision in M. Mohan (supra), this
Court observed that abetment would involve a mental process of
5
(2020) 15 SCC 359
36
instigating a person or intentionally aiding a person in doing of a
thing. Without a positive act on the part of the accused to instigate
or aid in committing suicide, conviction cannot be sustained.
Delineating the intention of the legislature and having regard to
the ratio of the cases decided by this Court, it was concluded that
in order to convict a person under Section 306 IPC there has to be
a clear mens rea to commit the offence. It would also require an
active act or direct act which led the deceased to commit suicide
seeing no other option and that this act of the accused must have
been intended to push the deceased into such a position that he
committed suicide.
40. Sounding a note of caution, this Court in State of West
Bengal versus Orilal Jaiswal6 observed that the court should be
extremely careful in assessing the facts and circumstances of each
case as well as the evidence adduced in the trial for the purpose of
finding whether the cruelty meted out to the victim had in fact
induced her to end her life by committing suicide. If it transpires
to the court that the victim committing suicide was hypersensitive
to ordinary petulance, discord and differences in domestic life
6
(1994) 1 SCC 73
37
quite common to the society to which the victim belonged and such
petulance, discord and differences were not expected to induce a
similarly circumstanced individual to commit suicide, the
conscience of the court should not be satisfied for basing a finding
that the accused charged of abetting the offence of suicide should
be found guilty.
Non-recovery of trace of poison (pesticide)
41. There is one more aspect in this case. In a case of death
due to consumption or administering of poison or insecticide or
pesticide, be it homicidal or suicidal, recovery of the trace of such
poison or insecticide or pesticide is crucial.
42. The post-mortem examination report indicated multiple
injection marks over the front of both the elbows of the deceased.
That apart, it was also noticed that there was a superficial linear
incised injury measuring 5cms in length in the front of the right
wrist which was partially healed. The stomach, small intestine and
contents, liver, kidney and blood were preserved. Those were
sealed and sent for chemical analysis to FSL, Bangalore on
07.07.2000. The chemical analysis report is dated 10.10.2000.
The report dated 10.10.2000 stated that colour test for TLC
38
method was carried out which responded to the presence of
Organophosphate pesticide in stomach, small intestine, liver,
kidney and blood. On this basis, the doctor who carried out the
post-mortem examination i.e. PW-13 gave the final opinion that
death of the deceased was due to respiratory failure as a result of
consumption of substance containing Organophosphate
compound.
43. Before proceeding further, it needs to be noted that the
chemical analysis report is dated 10.10.2000 whereas the final
opinion of PW-13 is dated 09.01.2001, there being a delay of three
months. Ofcourse, PW-13 stated that he received the report only
on 09.01.2001 on which date he gave the final opinion.
Investigating officer offered no explanation as to why there was
such delay in handing over of the chemical analysis report to PW-
13.
44. Be that as it may, PW-13 in his deposition also stated
about multiple injection marks being present over front of both the
elbows besides the partially healed wrist wound on the body of the
deceased. He stated that it was only on 09.01.2000 that he had
received the chemical analysis report dated 10.10.2000 which
39
showed presence of Organophosphate compound in the viscera. In
his cross-examination, he explained that Organophosphate
compound is a pesticide. The quantity of the poison in the viscera
of the blood of the deceased was not mentioned in the FSL report.
That apart, he further stated that the smell of Organophosphate
compound could be detected during the treatment. The patient
would be conscious till the poison affected the brain. The deceased
was treated in the hospital before she died.
45. A Textbook of Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology by
Jaising P Modi is considered as authority on various facets of
medical jurisprudence and toxicology. In its 27th edition,
Organophosphate compounds and allied poisons are dealt with
under the heading Inorganic Irritant Poisons (I) in Chapter 3. It
says Organophosphate compounds are extensively used as
pesticides for soft body insects in agriculture. Their easy
availability and quick action are the reason for their popularity for
suicidal and homicidal purposes. Worth Health Organisation has
classified Organophosphate compounds on the basis of their
lethality into low toxicity, moderate and highly toxic compounds.
Organophosphate compounds include Hexaethyl Tetraphosphate
(HETP), Tetraethyl Pyrophosphate (TEPP) – Tetron and Fosvex etc.
40
The Organophosphate compounds are absorbed from the skin,
respiratory and GI system. According to the route of entry, the
respiratory or GI symptoms are more marked. Organophosphate
toxicity can lead to symptoms such as miosis, urination, diarrhoea
etc. Early headache, nausea, giddiness, dimness of vision,
twitching of the eye muscles, tremulous tongue, profuse frothing
etc. may be present. Later, vomiting, sweating, delirium, weakness
and paralysis of respiratory muscles, arflexia, incontinence,
bronchospasm, cyanosis, pulmonary edema, convulsions etc.
whereafter, coma and death may follow. Tetraethyl pyrophosphate
is the most toxic and HETP the least. A single dose that will
produce symptoms is 5 mg intramuscular or 25 mg orally. 44-50
mg of TEPP intramuscular or 25-100 mg orally will be a fatal dose.
In fatal cases, the symptoms begin in 30 minutes and death
results in 30 minutes to 3 hours.
46. In this case, the doctors who had treated the deceased
in the first nursing home and later on in the Mission Hospital, were
not examined by the police. They were also not summoned as court
witnesses. Their testimony could have been crucial. They could
have thrown light into the nature of intake of the Organophosphate
compound: whether by way of injection or consumed orally?
41
Whether they could detect the smell of Organophosphate
compound emanating from the patient? This serious lacuna is
further compounded by the fact that the prosecution had failed to
recover any syringe or needle from the crime scene. No container
or bottle containing the pesticide were also recovered from the
room where the deceased was found lying on the floor or in any
part of the house. There is no evidence to suggest that police had
made an endeavour to search for such container or bottle. If the
deceased had injected the poison herself, considering the multiple
injection marks over the front of both the elbows, then the syringe
and the needle would have been there, in and around her. If she
had orally consumed the poison, then also the bottle or the
container of the poison would have been present in the crime scene
or near about. There is absolutely no evidence in this regard. There
is also no evidence to show as to how the deceased had acquired
the pesticide. In addition to non-recovery of the syringe or the
needle or the container, the police were unable to show the source
from where the particular pesticide was obtained by the deceased.
If the prosecution case is to be believed, then the syringe and the
needle or the container must have been present in the scene of
occurrence itself. Those were not found by the prosecution. Neither
42
any trace of pesticide was seen by the investigating officer in the
room. The FSL report as well as the chemical analysis report are
silent as to whether any trace of the pesticide was detected from
any of the seized articles. Prosecution is silent as to why no
investigation was done in this regard. In a case of this nature,
where the oral evidence including that of PW Nos. 1, 2 and 4 are
not at all convincing, the absence of the container or the bottle
containing the pesticide from where the deceased had orally
consumed the pesticide, becomes very crucial. Similarly, recovery
of syringe and needle if the deceased had injected the poison, is
also crucial. As a general principle, it can be said that in a case of
death by poisoning, be it homicidal or suicidal and which is based
on circumstantial evidence, recovery of the trace of poison
consumed by or administered to the deceased is of critical
importance. It forms a part of the chain; rather it would complete
the chain to prove homicide or suicide.
Conclusion
47. Human mind is an enigma. It is well neigh impossible
to unravel the mystery of the human mind. There can be myriad
reasons for a man or a woman to commit or attempt to commit
43
suicide: it may be a case of failure to achieve academic excellence,
oppressive environment in college or hostel, particularly for
students belonging to the marginalized sections, joblessness,
financial difficulties, disappointment in love or marriage, acute or
chronic ailments, depression, so on and so forth. Therefore, it may
not always be the case that someone has to abet commission of
suicide. Circumstances surrounding the deceased in which he
finds himself are relevant.
48. Coming to the facts of the present case, we do not find
any evidence on the basis of which we can hold the appellant guilty
of abetting the suicide of the deceased. While the death of a young
woman is certainly very tragic, it cannot be said with any degree
of certainty that suicide has been proved; the other essential
ingredient constituting the offence under Section 306 IPC, viz,
abetment cannot also be said to have been proved.
49. Thus on a conjoint reading of the entire materials on
record, this Court is of the opinion that the prosecution had failed
to prove the charge of abetment to commit suicide under Section
306 IPC against the appellant. The settled legal position, the
evidence on record and the glaring omissions of the prosecution
44
as pointed out above, leaves no room for doubt. We are therefore
of the unhesitant view that the conviction of the appellant is wholly
unsustainable.
50. That being the position, conviction of the appellant
under Section 306 of the IPC is set aside. The judgment and order
of the trial court dated 06.07.2004 as affirmed by the High Court
vide the judgment and order dated 17.09.2010 are hereby set aside
and quashed.
51. Since the appellant is already on bail, the bail bonds
shall stand discharged.
52. The appeal is accordingly allowed. No costs.
...………………………………J
[BELA M. TRIVEDI]
…………………………………J.
[UJJAL BHUYAN]
NEW DELHI;
01.03.2024