High Court
Case Details
Crl.A. 69/2011 BEFORE THE HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE P.K. SAIKIA HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE P.K. SAIKIA JUDGMENT & ORDER
Legal Reasoning
Heard Mr. P.C. Dey, learend counsel for the appellant. Also heard Mr. B. J. Dutta, learned Addl. Public Prosecutor, Assam. 2. This appeal is directed against the judgment dated 04.03.2011 passed by t he Addl. Sessions Judge, F.T.C., Nagaon, Assam in Sessions Case NO. 77(N) of 200 8 convicting one Md. Nur Islam of offences under Section 457/ 376 IPC and senten cing him to suffer rigorous imprisonment for 4 ‰ years and fine of Rs. 1,000/- i n default to undergo simple imprisonment for 15 days for offence under Section 3 76 IPC and sentencing him to simple imprisonment for 3 years and a fine of Rs. 1 , 000/- in default to undergo simple imprisonment for another period of 15 days for offence under Section 457 IPC. 3. Being aggrieved by and dissatisfied with aforesaid judgment, the peti tioner Md. Nur Islam, hereinafter, referred to as accused person, preferred this appeal citing several infirmities in the judgment, impugned. 4. The brief facts necessary for disposal of the present appeal are that on night of 07.01.2008, at about 11 p.m. accused Md. Nur Islam surreptitiously open ed the doors of the victim’s house, entered there into and had sexual intercours e with her lying her on the bed. It has been stated that at point of time, her h usband was not in her house. Being so raped, she raised hue and cry which brough t her neighbours to her house who found her in almost naked condition. 5. An FIR to that effect was lodged with O/C, Nagaon Police Station on 08.01.2008. On the receipt of the FIR, police registered a case under Section 4 57/ 376 IPC and ordered investigation. During the course of the investigation, v ictim was examined by the I.O, he also got her statement, recorded by the Magist rate and also had her examined by the Doctor. The IO, after doing all the needfu l, submitted the charge sheet under section 376/ 457 IPC and forwarded the accus ed to the Court to stand trial. 6. Since the offence under Section 376 IPC is exclusively triable by th e Court of Sessions, the learned Magistrate before whom the cahregsheet was so l aid, committed the case to the court of Sessions. The learned Sessions Judge, on the receipt of the case on commitment, transferred the case to the file of the Addl. Session Judge, FTC for disposal in accordance with law. Learned Addl. Sess ions Judge, FTC, Nagaon, on the receipt of the case on transfer and after hearin g the parties thereto, framed the charges under Section 457/ 376 IPC against the accused person and charges, so framed, on being read over an explained to the a ccused person, he pleaded not guilty and claimed to be tried. During trial, the prosecution examined as many as 7 witnesses including the victim and the I.O of the case. The statements of the accused person under Section 313 Cr.P.C. were re corded. His plea was of denial and examined himself as a defence witness in supp ort of his contention. On the conclusion of trial and on hearing the arguments, advanced by the parties, learned trial court convicted the accused of offences u nder section 457/ 376 IPC and sentenced him to punishment as aforesaid. It is th at judgment which has been challenged in the present appeal. 7. Mr. P. C. Dey, learned counsel for appellant, argues that the judgm ent of learned Trail Court is unsustainable for reasons more than one. According to the learned counsel for the appellant, the story which the informant has nar rated in her FIR is totally unbelievable since it run totally against the normal human behavior. He, therefore, argues that the story, so narrated in the FIR ru n counter to the stories stated in her evidence as well as in her statement unde r section 164 Cr. P.C which was proved as Exhibit-5. The other principle witness es too did not support the story, told and retold by the prosecutrix during the various stages of the proceeding under consideration. 8. The Doctor also did not support the prosecution version although ther e was allegation that the accused had sex with the prosecutrix forcibly. The abs ence of injury, particularly on her private part as well as absence of spermotoz oa in such body part of the victim only serves to show that the prosecutrix has founded her allegation not on facts but on falsehood and lies. The learned couns el for accused appellant therefore urges this Court to set aside the judgment of the learned trial court on acquitting the accused of offence u/s 457/376 IPC. The argument, so advanced from the side of the learned counsel for a 9. ppellant was resisted by Addl. Public Prosecutor contending that the evidence of P.W. 1, the victim of the alleged incident is quite reliable and it draws suppo rts from other witnesses, more particularly P.W.2 and PW 6. He, therefore, urges this Court to dismiss the appeal on affirming the judgment rendered by the Tria l Court. 10. I have considered the rival submissions, having regard to the judg ment impugned, including the materials available on record. Before I proceed fur ther, I find it is necessary to have a brief overview of the evidence on records and the evidence of Doctor is taken up for consideration. The Doctor who examin ed the victim at hospital on 09.01.2008 was one Dr. Chinta Ram Hazarika. On exam ining the victim, he found the following:- 1) Clothes- Sari, Petticoat, no stain, cloths intact. Height-146.5 cm, Weight 32 Kg, Teet- 16/16, Breasts-Developed, Axillary 2) hairs-present, Pubic hair-present, non matted, Hyment-absent, Vaginal- no injury , no discharge. Investigation: 1) no spermatozoa seen. 2) X-ray for age determination - X ray Nos. 239+240+241/08 dtd. 09.01.2008. Reported by Dr. B.K. Hazarika radiologist. The report the epiphysis for lower e nd of radius and ulna, lower end of humorous and right iliac bones are united. S he did not bear any sign of recently committed sexual intercourse. There was als o no sign of injury of recent origin in her private parts or on her other body. He also opined that the victim was a woman of about 20 years of age. He proved h is report as Ext.1 Vaginal smear for spermatozoa- Lab SL No.3 dated 09.01.2008. The report 11. We have already found that the chief campaigner from the side of the pro secution is the victim herself. According to her, on the fateful night, her husb and was not in her house. She was sleeping in her house along with her 2 daughte rs, aged about 3 & 6 years. At about 11 p.m. while she was so sleeping, the accu sed entered into her house by opening the bamboo doors. She first thought the in truder to be her husband. But as she did not get any answer from him she had som e suspicion about the intruder. In the meantime, the accused came to her bed and forcibly laid her down on the bed by catching both her hands and then committed rape on her. Being so raped, she raised hue and cry for which the accused fled from such place. While the accused was running away from house, she could recogn ize him in the light of torch she had at that time. Upon hearing the hue and cry , she raised, one of her relatives namely Rabia came her house. The victim there after went to the house of the brother of the accused person along with Rabia an d informed him about the alleged incident. The victim thereafter came to the hou se of the accused person taking Rabia with her and started raising hue and cry i n front of the house of the accused person. In the meantime, she met some people who were returning home after attending electioneering works. Those people were told about the alleged incident. Among the people whom she met there were one A bdul, Ward Commissioner and some other persons. The matter was also reported to the village Gaonburah, Joinal, who conv 12. ened a meeting next day in the morning. The accused was called to such meeting b ut he did not attend the same for which she lodged the FIR before the police. Po lice took her to the Doctor for medical examination and also had her statement r ecord by the Magistrate under Section 164 Cr.P.C. In her cross-examination, she had stated that there was no electricity in her house at the relevant point of t ime, that when the victim raised hue and cry, the accused prevented her from doi ng so by pressing her mouth by hand, that she met her husband and the group of t he people aforesaid soon after the alleged incident. In her cross examination, s he further admitted that the wife of the accused too filed a case against her hu sband alleging that he raped her. 13. P.W. 4, Rabia Khatoon, is a neighbor of the victim. According to he r, on the fateful night, at about 1 to 1.30 p.m, when she was still sleeping in her house, the victim came to her house, awoke her up from sleep and she her tol d what had occurred in her house little before. She along with the victim visite d the house of the accused person but they did not found anybody in his house. I n her cross-examination, she has stated that when the prosecutrix came to her ho use, it was quite dark and that she did not hear any hue and cry coming from the house of victim 14. P.W.2 Md. A. Haque is the brother of the victim. According to him, one day, at about 10.30 p.m. while he was returning home from the house of Musli muddin, Ward Member, after attending a meeting held in connection with ensuing P anchayat Election, he met the informant on his way. The informant told him that some time before, the accused having entered into her house committed rape on he r. On the next day, a village meeting was arranged to discuss the matter aforesa id but the meeting could not take any decision since the accused did not come to such meeting. In his cross-examination, he has stated that when he returned hom e there were 6/7 persons were with him which included the husband of the victim. 15. P.W. 6 Md. Joinal Abedin is the Gaonburah of the village. Accordin g to him, one day, Sahidul Islam, the husband of the victim, complained him abou t his wife being raped by the accused person and requested him to convene a mel in that regard. Accordingly, he visited the house of the victim and came to know about the incident under consideration from the prosecutrix herself. In that co nnection, a meeting was called upon next day but it could not yield any result s ince the accused remained absence. 16. The Investigating Officer who conducted the case under consideratio n is one Shri. Dilip Bhorali, who was examined as P.W. 7. According to him, on 0 8.01.2008 he was posted at Haibargaon TOP. On that day, he received an FIR from the prosecutrix and on the basis of such FIR, the G.D. Entry No.207 of Haibargao n TOP dated 08.01.2008, was made and thereafter, he forwarded the FIR to O/C Nag aon P.S. for registering a case. O/C Nagaon P.S received the FIR, registered a c ase thereon, vide Nagaon P.S. No. 27 of 2008 and ordered him to investigated the case. 17. During the course of such investigation, he met the prosecutrix, record ed her statement, had her statement recorded by the Magistrate and also sent her to hospital for medical examination. In the course of investigation, he visited the place of occurrence, prepared the sketch map of the same, recorded the stat ement of other witnesses and arrested the accused Md. Nur Islam, forwarded him t o the judicial custody and on completion on investigation, he submitted charge sheet under Section 457 / 376 IPC against the accused person. 18. In his cross examination, he has stated that P.W. 6 did not tell him d uring the investigation that the victim informed him about the accused opening t he door of her house at night or his tearing her blouse or his restraining her from raising hue and cry. P.W. 8 Smti. M. Day is a judicial officer who recorded statement of the victim under Section 164 Cr.P.C. in connection with Nagaon P.S case No. 27/2008 under Section 457/ 376 IPC. 18(a). Since the accused set up the plea of total innocent, he also got himse lf examined as D.W.1. According to him, a political rivalry between him and the husband of the informant had propelled the victim to lodge a false case against the accused person. He also stated in his evidence that P.W. 6 (Gaonburah) depos ed against him falsely since he also caught him misappropriating rice which was placed at his custody for distributing among the flood affected people. It is al so in evidence that while he was in detention, in connection with the case under consideration, the husband of the victim too attempted to commit rape on his wi fe. 19. Above being evidence on record, let see how far such evidence makes out the case brought against the accused person. We may note here that FIR is not th e encyclopedia of the prosecution case but then, prosecution side needs to state the frame up of the case in its FIR leaving the detail to be told and retold du ring trial. In our present case, too, if one considers the version recorded in t he FIR in its totality, it would appear clear that the present case too has some salient features. 20. They are :- (i) On the day in question, the accused entered into the house of the prosecutri x by opening the doors of her house. (ii) Having entered into her house, he forcibly felled her on the bed and then c ommitted rape on her. (iii) She could not raise hue and cry as she apprehended that by doing so she wo uld be inviting huge danger to her. (iv) Once the accused left her house, she started raising hue and cry which brou ght many people nearby to their house who found her in almost naked condition. 20(a). Above being from the fundamental features of the prosecution case, as pe r the FIR, one needs to know how far such a case, as narrated in the FIR, stood collaborated in view of the testimonies rendered by PWs during the trial. In thi s connection, we may also look at the prosecution story, so narrated in the Ext. 5. In her statement u/s 164 Cr. P.C ( Ext. 5), the prosecutrix alleged that on the fateful night, the accused broke open the doors of her house, entered there into and having caught her on her bed, he forcibly committed sexual intercourse with her. Once he committed rape on her, the accused fled there-from. The soon t hereafter, one Rabia came to her house and taking Rabia with her, she chased the accused person but in vain. The story, so recorded in the Ext. 5, I find, drast ically disputes the claim made in the FIR. 21. So situated, let us see, how the prosecutrix has projected her story bef ore the Court during trial. I have already found that in her evidence, the victi m claims that on the fateful night having entered into her house, the accused co mmitted rape on her. In her evidence, she further claims that the moment the acc used entered her house, she started raising hue and cry for which the accused pr essed his hands against her mouth which prevented her from raising hullaballoo. Thus, she gave some more and more new twists to her story as the trial progress from stage to stage. 21(a). However, the matter did not stop there since she also found saying du ring the course of evidence that when Rabia come to her house she along with Rab ia went to the house of brother of the accused person to complaint about the mis deed of the accused and reported the incident to him. Soon thereafter she came t o the house of the accused person armed with a dao and started raising hue and c ry in front of the house of the accused person. Unfortunately, such an account, narrated before the Court during trial contradicts not only the incident recorde d in the FIR but also the story stated in Ext.5. Such a state of affair does not augur well to advance the cause of prosecution case. 22. Coming to the evidence of P.W. 4 Ragbia, I have found that her evidence adds more and more suspicion to the prosecution case. Though the prosecutrix cla im that Rabia came to her house on hearing hue and cry from such place, she (PW. 4) very categorically claims that on the night in question, the victim came to h er house, awoke her up from sleep and told her that the accused had raped her. I t is also in her evidence that the prosecutrix came to her house without any tor ch/lamp in her hand. Thus, PW. 4 refused to support the prosecution case so proj ected by the prosecutrix. Even the PW.5, who was said to have posted about the i ncident in question moment after the alleged incident claims that he came to kno w about such incident next day in the morning. I have found on certain point the P.W.2 and P.W.6 supported the prosecutrix. However, such corroboration comes on ly on peripheral aspects of the prosecution case, and that too, on the points, w hich have no serious bearing upon the matter under consideration. 23. We may note here that in the incident occurred on a moonless night. Mo re importantly, there was no electricity in the house of the prosecutrix. The PW .4 has stated that when the prosecutrix came to his house in the night in questi on, she came there without any lamp or torch in her hand. On the other hand, the prosecutrix claims that she could recognize the accused in the light of torch w hich she had when she was subjected to rape. However, in the facts and circumsta nces, narrated above, it is quite unbelievable that the prosecutrix had a torch in her hand or that she could recognize the accused in the light of the torch wh ich she had during the time aforesaid. 24. In her evidence, the prosecutrix claims that soon after the alleged inci dent, she rushed to the house of the accused person taking a dao in her hand. Wh en she so proceeded to the house of the accused person, PW.4 Rabia was also with her. Rabia did not corroborate such a claim that when she went to the house of the accused person Rabia had a dao in her hand. Very importantly, her claim that she armed with a dao went to the house of the accused person soon after the all eged incident did not find corroboration from the statement made in the FIR eith er. Nor did the story projected in the Ext.5 support such a claim made by the P W.1 (prosecutrix) during the trial. 25. The Doctor examined the victim next day of the alleged incident and he d id not find any injury in her private part or any other body part.. He did not f ind spermatozoa in her private part either. The absence of injury on any body pa rt of the victim or absence of spernotozoa in her private part bears enormous im portance since in her evidence, the prosecutrix claims that the accused committe d rape on her subjecting her to huge physical force since she had done everythin g possible to prevent the accused from committing rape on her. It is also in her evidence that the accused forcibly felled her on her bed by catching both of he r hands. In the teeth above revelations, it is really a paradox as to how the pr osecutrix could remain unhurt despite there being a fierce fight between her and her perpetrator during the time under consideration. Similarly though the accus ed committed full fledged rape on her, the Doctor did not find any spermatozoa o n her private part although she was medically examined next day of the alleged i ncident. Such projections make the prosecution case more and more doubtful. 26. In view of above, I am of the opinion that learned Trial Court was not ju stified in convicting the accused/appellant of offence under Section 457/ 376 IP C and as such, the judgment, impugned, convicting the accused of the offences u/ s 457/ 376 IPC and punishing him as aforesaid is liable to be set aside. 27. court is set aside. 28. The Accused be set liberty forthwith if he is not required with any the case.
Decision
In the result, the appeal is allowed and the judgment of the trial