6967 2019 1 1502 35850 Judgement 13-May-2022
6967 2019 1 1502 35850 Judgement 13-May-2022
6967 2019 1 1502 35850 Judgement 13-May-2022
SURENDRAN … APPELLANT
VERSUS
JUDGMENT
the courts below and acquitted the appellant under Section 304B of
the Indian Penal Code [for short ‘the IPC’] while confirming his
conviction under Section 498A of the IPC. The High Court has
Signature Not Verified
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2. The conspectus of the facts necessary for the disposal of the
alleged that the appellant, along with his family members, started
harassing the deceased soon after the marriage and was demanding
two brothers under Sections 304B and 498A of the IPC. Pending
trial, the appellant’s father passed away. The Trial Court, after
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under Sections 304B and 498A of the IPC. Vide judgment dated
partly allowed the revision petition and acquitted the appellant and
his mother under Section 304B of the IPC while confirming their
conviction under Section 498A of the IPC. The High Court, however,
imprisonment for one month. The appellant’s mother has not filed
counsel for the appellant are twofold. First, that the suicide note
by the Court for convicting him under Section 498A of the IPC as
they do not fall within the scope of Section 32(1) of the Indian
Evidence Act, 1872 (for short ‘the Evidence Act’). Second, that the
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cannot be relied upon to convict the appellant. On the strength of
the above two arguments, the learned counsel for the appellant
State submits that there are three concurrent finding of facts by the
India. Learned counsel for the State also submits that there is
respondentState at length.
the IPC by the High Court in revision and therefore, the statements
of the deceased could not have been relied upon by the High Court
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to sustain his conviction under Section 498A of the IPC as it would
not fall within the ambit of Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act.
concerned with one such circumstance, that is, when the person
who made the statement is dead. The learned counsel for the
by suggesting that it does not fall within the scope of the abovesaid
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(1) When it relates to cause of death.
When the statement is made by a person as
to the cause of his death, or as to any of the
circumstances of the transaction which
resulted in his death, in cases in which the
cause of that person's death comes into
question.
“dying declaration” section, although the phrase itself does not find
mention under the Evidence Act. The Courts have had occasion to
11. To rely on Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act, one of the main
conditions laid out in the subsection is that the issue must arise
“in cases in which the cause of that person's death comes into
the High Court under Section 304B of the IPC, and the absence of
any appeal challenging the same, the present case pertains to only
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Section 498A of the IPC. Therefore, the present case does not fall
longer a case in which the cause of the deceased’s death comes into
12. Learned counsel for the appellant has primarily relied upon
under:
and added:
(Emphasis supplied)
13. Although not cited by the learned counsel, the proposition put
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this Court in Inderpal v. State of MP, (2001) 10 SCC 736,
781. All of these judgments also appear to follow the same line of
(supra), i.e., that once the Court has acquitted an accused of the
Section 498A of the IPC simpliciter as then the case would no longer
14. It may bear mentioning that the phrase “cases in which the
32(1) of the Evidence Act which specifies that such statements are
and 397 of the IPC. In that case, the deceased victim was robbed
learned counsel for the accused in that case, inter alia, was that the
Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act with respect to the charges under
Section 392 and 397 of the IPC. Negativing this contention, the
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only admissible when the causing of the
death is the subject of the charge. I cannot
agree with this view. The words of section
32 are very wide and it is not necessary
that the charge should be one of
homicide. The evidence as to the cause of
death was relevant to the charge of
robbery and consequently the cause of
death that is to say the assault
committed by the appellant came in
question in the trial. Before the Indian
Evidence Act was enacted it was held in
Queen v. Bissorunjun Mookerjee [(1866) 6
W.R. (Cr.) 75.] that there was no necessity in
India for following the very narrow rule of
English law and that a dying declaration
could be used as evidence in a charge of
rape. One of the illustrations to section 32 of
the present Indian Evidence Act expressly
provides for such evidence where the charge
is not culpable homicide but rape.”
(Emphasis supplied)
directly relates to the death of a declarant and the other does not,
the Court has admitted the evidence of the declarant even if the
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being so, the mere fact that a charge of
murder failed and was not brought home
to the accused would not make the
statement inadmissible for the purposes
of other offences which were committed
in the course of the same transaction and
with which the accused were charged.
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the time of accusation and not that of the
eventual result we think we would be
justified in stating the same with respect to
the admissibility of a document…”
(Emphasis supplied)
32(1) of the Evidence Act, it appears that the test for admissibility
Rather, the test appears to be that the cause of death must come
proceeding, and that the purpose for which such evidence is being
case, the Privy Council was dealing with a case of murder wherein
one of the main pieces of evidence against the accused was the
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statement made by the deceased to his wife. The defence argued
However, the said evidence was admitted under Section 32(1) of the
Evidence Act and the accused was convicted. In appeal, one of the
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transaction, and would be so whether the
person was unknown, or was not the person
accused. Such a statement might indeed be
exculpatory of the person accused.
“Circumstances of the transaction” is a
phrase no doubt that conveys some
limitations. It is not as broad as the
analogous use in “circumstantial
evidence” which includes evidence of all
relevant facts. It is on the other hand
narrower than “res gestae.”
Circumstances must have some
proximate relation to the actual
occurrence : though, as for instance in a
case of prolonged poisoning, they may be
related to dates at a considerable distance
from the date of the actual fatal dose.
(Emphasis supplied)
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19. This principle of law has been upheld by this Court on various
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the drama would be admissible because
the entire statement would have to be
read as an organic whole and not torn
from the context. Sometimes statements
relevant to or furnishing an immediate
motive may also be admissible as being a
part of the transaction of death. It is
manifest that all these statements come
to light only after the death of the
deceased who speaks from death. For
instance, where the death takes place
within a very short time of the marriage
or the distance of time is not spread over
more than 34 months the statement may
be admissible under Section 32.
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would clearly fall within the four corners
of Section 32 and, therefore, admissible.
The distance of time alone in such cases
would not make the statement
irrelevant.”
(emphasis supplied)
498A of the IPC under Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act. There are,
21. The first condition is that her cause of death must come into
where along with the charge under Section 498A of the IPC, the
prosecution has also charged the accused under Sections 302, 306
cause of her death has come into question, whether the charge
admissibility.
22. The second condition is that the prosecution will have to show
Section 498A of the IPC must also relate to the circumstances of the
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transaction of the death. How far back the evidence can be, and
respect to this.
Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act to prove the charge under Section
498A of the IPC only because the accused stands acquitted of the
24. Coming to the present case, we are of the opinion that it is not
Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act. As the learned counsel for the
State rightly points out, this appeal can be decided even without
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25. The fact that the deceased’s wife was being harassed is clear
parental home with the threat that if extra dowry was not given, he
first time by consuming poison. While she was being treated in the
before the Trial Court as Ext P3. Although the High Court
26. The learned counsel for the appellant, despite his best efforts,
could not persuade this Court that the evidence of PW3 was
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unreliable. There are three concurrent findings of the Courts below
the learned counsel for the appellant that the evidence of PW3 is
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27. In view of the above, we see no reason to interfere with the
...........................CJI.
(N.V. RAMANA)
...........................J.
(A.S. BOPANNA)
...........................J.
(HIMA KOHLI)
NEW DELHI;
MAY 13, 2022.
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