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Sunday, September 16, 2012

As the appellant had a strained relationship with his wife, he no doubt wanted to get rid of her. Although he has claimed that the petitions for divorce by mutual consent were pending before the court, he has never submitted any documents with respect to this before the court. Thus, inference may be drawn that the appellant did in fact wish to get rid of his wife. (xiii) As the recoveries of the blood stained gunny bag, dumb bell, tie etc. were made on the basis of the disclosure statement of the appellant himself, the chain of circumstances is therefore, complete.


                                                                  Reportable



                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                      CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 2001  of 2010




      Dr. Sunil Clifford Daniel                           …Appellant

                                      Versus

      State of Punjab
      …Respondent




                               J U D G M E N T




      Dr. B.S. CHAUHAN, J.




     1. This appeal has been preferred against the  impugned  judgment  and
        order dated 1.4.2009, passed  by  the  High  Court  of  Punjab  and
        Haryana at Chandigarh in Criminal Appeal No.  399-DB  of  2000,  by
        which it has affirmed the judgment and order dated 21.8.2000 passed
        by the Sessions Judge, Ludhiana in Sessions Case No.  28  of  1996,
        convicting the appellant under Sections 302 and 201 of  the  Indian
        Penal Code, 1860  (hereinafter  referred  to  as  the  ‘IPC’),  and
        awarded him a sentence to undergo RI for life and to pay a fine  of
        Rs.2,000/- and in default of this, to  undergo  further  RI  for  a
        period of  3 months. The appellant has further  been  sentenced  to
        undergo RI for two years and to pay a fine  of  Rs.1,000/-  and  in
        default  of this, to undergo further RI  for a period of  2  months
        under Section 201 IPC.  It  has  further  been  directed  that  the
        sentences would run concurrently.




     2. The facts and circumstances giving  rise  to  this  appeal  are  as
        under:

     A. The appellant got married to Dr. Loyalla  Shagoufta,  deceased,  on
        29.10.1993. Both of them being qualified doctors, were  working  in
        the Christian Medical College (hereinafter referred to  as  ‘CMC’),
        Hospital Ludhiana. The relationship between the  husband  and  wife
        became strained and they have been  living  separately  since  June
        1994.

     B. As per the appellant, a petition for divorce by mutual consent  was
        filed on 20.2.1996, under Section 28 of the Special  Marriage  Act,
        1954 in the Court of the District Judge, Ludhiana, and both parties
        therein, appeared before the District Judge, Ludhiana on the  first
        motion of the case. However, they were asked to wait for the second
        motion.

     C. On 9.3.1996, the appellant handed  over  a  set  of  blood  stained
        clothes to  Dr.  B.  Pawar,  the  Medical  Superintendent,  (PW.1),
        stating that when he came to his room  that  day,   the  same  were
        found therein. Dr. B. Pawar (PW.1), informed the police  about  the
        said incident on the same date.

     D. Dr. Loyalla Shagoufta, wife of  the  appellant,  had  informed  her
        mother Smt. Victoria Rani (PW.2),  who  was  living  in  Jagadhari,
        District Yamunanagar, by way of a telephone call on 6.3.1996,  that
        she would visit her  on  8.3.1996.   However,  she  did  not  reach
        Jagadhari on 8.3.1996. Victoria Rani (PW.2), then came to  Ludhiana
        on 10.3.1996,  and  found  that  her  daughter  was  missing.  Smt.
        Victoria Rani (PW.2) then lodged FIR No. 16 of 1996  on  10.3.1996,
        at 9.40 p.m. wherein  being  the  complainant,  she  expressed  her
        apprehension that the appellant herein, had abducted  her  daughter
        with the intention of  killing her.

     E. In the meanwhile, Dr. Namrata Saran, one of the  residents  of  the
        hostel in which the deceased resided, also informed  Dr.  B.  Pawar
        (PW.1), Medical Superintendent that the deceased had in  fact  been
        missing from the hostel since 9.3.1996. After an enquiry it came to
        light that the deceased was on leave from 9.3.1996 to 16.3.1996.

     F. Piara Singh, ASI (PW.13), took up the investigation of the case and
        went to the appellant’s hostel,  however,  his  room  No.2010,  was
        found to be locked. A police  party  searched  for  the  appellant,
        among several other places, in the house of Mr.  Rana, one  of  his
        relatives, but he could not be traced/found anywhere. Dr. B.  Pawar
        (PW.1) handed over the blood stained clothes given to  him  by  the
        appellant,  to  the I.O.

     G. On 11.3.1996,  Vir  Rajinder  Pal  (PW.14),  SHO,  Police  Station,
        Ludhiana received a wireless message at 9.00 a.m., from the  Police
        Chowki at Lalton Kalan, which is about 20 k.m. away from  the  main
        city, informing him that the dead body of a female had been  found,
        lying in the bushes, near the main road. The Investigating  Officer
        took Victoria Rani (PW.2) with  him,  while  accompanied  by  other
        police personnel, and recovered the body of the deceased  from  the
        said place.

     H. Immediately after the recovery of the dead body, Vir  Rajinder  Pal
        (PW.14), visited the room  of  the  appellant  in  the  hostel  and
        conducted a thorough search of the same, in the presence of Dr.  B.
        Pawar (PW.1), Medical Superintendent.

     I. The post-mortem of the deceased was conducted by  a  Medical  Board
        consisting of three doctors, including Dr. U.S. Sooch  (PW.11),  on
        11.3.1996.  He  opined  that  the  deceased  had  died  by  way  of
        strangulation and a corresponding ligature mark was  found  on  her
        neck. She also had several grievous injuries to her head.

     J.     On 11.3.1996, the Investigating Officer came to  know,  in  the
         course of interrogation that, the appellant had used the car of one
         Dr. Pauli (CW.2),  and that a blood stained mat was  lying  in  the
         dicky of the said car. The police hence took possession of the said
         car and mat, and sent the mat  for preparation of an FSL report.

      K. The appellant was arrested on  11.3.1996,  and  his  room  in  the
         hostel was searched yet again, by one Ashok Kumar,  Head  Constable
         from the  Forensic Department, who scraped some blood stained earth
         from the floor of the room. He also found a pair of  blood  stained
         white V-shaped, Hawaii chappals. Photographs of the said room  were
         also taken. During interrogation, the appellant made  a  disclosure
         statement on 13.3.1996 to the effect that he would be able to  help
         in the recovery of some relevant material from a place where he had
         hidden it.  The appellant then led the  police  party  to  a  place
         behind Old Jail, Ludhiana. From there, after removing some  garbage
         etc., one blood stained gunny bag, a blood  stained  dumb-bell  and
         one blood stained tie, were recovered.

      L.    The said recovered articles alongwith the clothes  etc.,  found
         on the body of the deceased at the time of the post-mortem, and the
         blood stained clothes given  by  the  appellant  to  Dr.  B.  Pawar
         (PW.1), which were subsequently handed over  to  the  Investigating
         Officer, were sent for FSL report.

      M. The FSL and serological report was then received, and it  revealed
         that,  all  the  articles    recovered   by   the   police   during
         investigation, including the blood stained floor  of  his  room,  a
         part of the Hawaii chappals, and the recovered tie, contained human
         blood, with the sole exception of the mats found in  the  dicky  of
         the car.  The blood stains herein, had dis-integrated  and  it  was
         therefore not possible to ascertain whether the same also contained
         human blood.

      N. The police completed the investigation of the case and submitted a
         charge sheet against the appellant. The case was converted from one
         under Section 364, to  one under Sections  302  and  201  IPC.  The
         appellant was thus charged,  but  as  he  pleaded  not  guilty,  he
         claimed trial. The prosecution examined 15 witnesses and two  court
         witnesses  were  also  examined  under  Section  311  of   Criminal
         Procedure Code, 1973 (hereinafter called as `Cr.P.C.’).

      O. After the conclusion of the trial and appreciation of the  evidence
         in full, the learned Sessions Judge, vide judgment and order  dated
         21.8.2000 found the appellant  guilty  on  both  counts  and  hence
         awarded him the aforementioned punishments.

      P. Aggrieved, the appellant preferred  Criminal  Appeal  No.399-DB  of
         2000 before the High Court, which was  dismissed  by  the  impugned
         judgment and order dated 1.4.2009.

              Hence, this appeal.

     3.  Mrs.  Kanchan  Kaur  Dhodi,  learned  counsel  appearing  for  the
        appellant, submitted  that  the  investigation  was  not  conducted
        fairly. She  stated  that  the  appellant  herein,  had  no  motive
        whatsoever to commit the murder of his wife,  and  that  they  were
        going to  separate  very  soon,  as  both   parties  had  filed  an
        application  seeking  divorce,  by  mutual  consent.  Further,   no
        recovery was made from the room of the  appellant  in  the  hostel,
        rather the objects recovered had  been planted. The  appellant  did
        not make any disclosure statement. Thus,  even  the  recovery  made
        from the place in close vicinity of the Old Jail,  was not made  in
        accordance with law, as  there  was  no  independent  witness  with
        respect to the said recoveries, and the  recovery  memo  also,  was
        never  signed  by  the  appellant.  It  is  therefore,  a  case  of
        circumstantial evidence. The courts below failed to appreciate that
        the chain of circumstances  is  not  complete.  Hence,  the  appeal
        deserves to be allowed.




     4. Per contra, Shri Jayant K. Sud, AAG, appearing  for  the  State  of
        Punjab, has opposed the appeal, contending that  the  circumstances
        in the present case, point  towards  the  guilt  of  the  appellant
        without any exception. The deceased was surely killed in  the  room
        of the appellant. Recoveries were  clearly  made  in  view  of  the
        disclosure statement made by the appellant. Law  does  not  require
        the recovery memo to be  signed by the accused. He also stated that
        the appellant disappeared after the said incident and could only be
        arrested after a period of two days. It is the appellant alone  who
        could explain the circumstances surrounding the purpose  for  which
        he had borrowed the car of Dr. Pauli (CW.2), and why he had  wanted
        to hire a taxi to go to Jagadhari,  as  admittedly,  his  relations
        with his wife had been very  strained.  The  appeal  clearly  lacks
        merit and is therefore liable to be dismissed.



     5. We have considered the rival submissions made  by  learned  counsel
        for the parties and perused the records.



     6. Dr. U.S. Sooch (PW.11), was among  the  members  of  the  Board  of
        Doctors, who conducted the post-mortem of the body of the  deceased
        on 11.3.1996,  at 5.00 p.m. and found the following injuries on her
        person:

           “1.   Well defined ligature mark 9” x 3.4”  placed  horizontally
           on the front of neck and both lateral sides of the neck, in  the
           middle of neck and on the right side of the neck reaching  below
           the lobule of the right ear. On exploration of the ligature  the
           subcutaneous tissue was ecchymosed with laceration of underneath
           muscles and the hyoid bone was fractured. The larynx and trachea
           were congested.




           2.    An abrasion ½ ” x ½”  on the tip of the chin.




           3.    Abrasion ¾” x ½” and 1” below the angle, of left mandible.




           4.    Lacerated wound 2, ½” x 1” x bone deep obliquely placed on
           the right fronto parietal region and 1”  inside  the  hair  line
           near the midline.




           5.    Lacerated wound with badly crushed margins 2, ½” x ½” bone
           deep on the right occipital region.




           6.    Defused swelling 3” x 2” on  the  right  occipital  region
           across the midline.




            Therefore, it is evident from the  aforementioned  injuries,  as
      also from the medical report, that the deceased Loyalla Shagoufta was,
      without a doubt, a victim of homicide.




     7. Dr. B. Pawar (PW.1), Medical Superintendent, deposed to the  extent
        that the deceased was supposed to be  on  leave  from  9.3.1996  to
        16.3.1996, and that on the date of the said incident, she  was  not
        present in her hostel. Further, the appellant  had reported to him,
        that when he came back to  his  room,   he  had  found  some  blood
        stained clothes therein. The clothes were thereafter collected in a
        bag, and were kept in the office of Dr. B. Pawar  (PW.1),  and  the
        possession of the same, was subsequently taken, by the police.




     8. Smt. Victoria Rani (PW.2), mother of  the  deceased  supported  the
        case of the prosecution.  She deposed that her daughter’s  marriage
        with the appellant had been quite strained, since no child could be
        born out  of  the  wedlock  and  hence,  they  had  started  living
        separately. Her daughter had informed her by  way  of  a  telephone
        call, that she would visit Jagadhari on  7.3.1996,  but  she  never
        came. Therefore, the complainant, Victoria  Rani  (PW.2),  came  to
        Ludhiana to search for her  daughter,  but  she  was  found  to  be
        missing. Thus, she submitted a complaint  to  the  police,  on  the
        basis of which, an FIR  was  lodged,  wherein,  she  expressed  her
        doubts  with regard to the intention of the appellant,  as  in  her
        opinion, he had been wanting  to  get  rid  of  her  daughter,  and
        therefore, he could have kidnapped her for the purpose  of  killing
        her and fulfilling his purpose, once and for all.



     9. Some of the witnesses, particularly Sarabjit Singh (PW.7), Security
        Guard of the hospital, Anil Kumar (PW.9), a Cook,  working  in  the
        canteen of  the Junior Doctor’s Hostel  and Joginder Singh (PW.12),
         did not support the case of the prosecution  and  turned  hostile.
        However, the evidence  of   Kirpal  Dev  Singh  (PW.8),  is  highly
        relevant.  He deposed in  court that he was providing services of a
        taxi and would park the same  in  the  premises  of  CMC  Hospital,
        Ludhiana. On 8.3.1996, the Canteen Contractor Joshi, had asked  him
        to talk to Dr. Sunil of CMC, who wished to hire his taxi to  go  to
        Jagadhari. Accordingly, he went  to  speak  to  the  appellant  and
        became aware of the fact that the appellant  wished  to  travel  to
        Jagadhari  on 9.3.1996. He then went to the appellant’s hostel with
        his taxi on 9.3.1996, but  was  told  by  him  that  his  wife  had
        presently  gone  to  collect  her  salary  from  Lalton  Kalan  and
        therefore, asked him to come again at 10.00  a.m.  Thus,  the  said
        witness went to the doctor’s place again, at 10.00 a.m. but he  was
        yet again asked to come later, this time at 11.30 a.m. It was then,
        that the said witness told  the  doctor  that  he  was  no   longer
        willing to go to Jagadhari and he may engage another taxi, for this
        purpose.



    10. Piara Singh, ASI (PW.13), deposed that he came to  know  about  the
        said incident and henceforth went to  CMC  Hospital,  Ludhiana,  on
        10.3.1996, after receiving the  complaint  made  by  Victoria  Rani
        (PW.2). However, he found room No. 2010 of the said hostel occupied
        by the appellant to be  locked  from  the  outside.  He  then  went
        alongwith a police party, to the room of  the  deceased  but  found
        that, this too had been locked from the outside. The  witness  then
        attempted to search for the appellant, and  for  this  purpose,  he
        also went to the house of Mr. Rana,  who  was  a  relative  of  the
        appellant and was living in close  proximity  to  the  hospital  in
        Ludhiana itself, but the appellant could not be found either  here.
        He continued his search at various other places,  including  hotels
        but was unable to find the accused.

           On 11.3.1996, he stated that he had accompanied Vir Rajinder Pal
      (PW.14), and had therefore participated in the recovery of  the  dead
      body of deceased Dr. Loyalla Shagoufta from Lalton Kalan. He  further
      deposed that on 13.3.1996, one gunny bag, one iron dumb bell and  one
      tie were  recovered in the presence of panch witness, Randhir  Singh.
      A disclosure statement  was  also  made  by  the  appellant,  in  his
      presence  to the effect that, these  articles  were  related  to  the
      murder of the deceased and he had offered to help recover the same.




    11. After recording the evidence led by the prosecution, the  statement
        of the appellant  was  recorded  under  Section  313  Cr.P.C.   The
        appellant denied all the allegations made by  the  prosecution  and
        pleaded innocence. He stated that the  blood  stained  clothes  had
        been left in the balcony of his room,   when  he  was  not  present
        therein and that he had produced the said  clothes  before  Dr.  B.
        Pawar (PW.1), Medical Superintendent, prior to the lodging  of  the
        FIR.



    12. Vir Rajinder Pal (PW.14), supported the case of the prosecution  in
        full, giving complete  details  from  the  very  beginning  of  the
        incident, as he was posted as the SHO, Police Station, Ludhiana  on
        10.3.1996. He deposed regarding the recoveries made from  the  room
        of the accused, after the checking of the room and the  preparation
        of seizure memos. The keys of the car parked in the premises of CMC
        hospital, one  blood  stained  mat,  duly  attested  by  the  panch
        witnesses, and a photocopy of the registration certificate  of  the
        said car, were taken into possession, as also the recovery  of  the
        blood stained clothes, which were handed over  to  him  by  Dr.  B.
        Pawar (PW.1).  He further deposed with regard to how the  appellant
        was arrested as also about the items that were  recovered from  his
        body, the recovery of the blood stained floor from the  appellant’s
        room and the V-shaped pair of  Hawaii chappals. The  articles  were
        all sealed and sent for  FSL.  He  finally  deposed  regarding  the
        manner in which the  body  was  recovered,  how  the  panchnama  of
        recovery was prepared, and also about the manner in which, the post-
        mortem was conducted.



      13.   Dr. Pauli (CW.2), deposed that on 9.3.1996, he was contacted  by
      the appellant at 6.00 p.m. and was told  by  him  that  his  wife  was
      missing, as a result of which, the appellant was in need of  his  car.
      Dr. Pauli (CW.2), therefore, gave his car to  the  appellant,  bearing
      registration No. CH01-5653. The appellant returned after a duration of
      1½ hours, parked the car outside the hostel, and handed over  the  key
      to the said witness. The possession of the said car was taken  by  the
      police on 11.3.1996,  and  the  blood  stained  rubber  mat  was  then
      recovered from the dicky of the car. The said mat was sealed and taken
      away by the Investigating Officer (PW.14).




      14.     The trial court after appreciating the evidence on record came
      to the following conclusions:

                “However,  various  pieces   of   circumstantial   evidence
                discussed above  i.e.  blood  scratching  lifted  from  the
                hostel room in occupation of accused production of  various
                blood stained clothes by the  accused  before  the  Medical
                Superintendent of the Hospital and the  recovery  of  blood
                stained neck tie and dumb-bell on the basis of a disclosure
                statement suffered by the accused and the blood stained car
                mat recovered in the case leave no manner of doubt that Dr.
                Mrs. Loyalla Shagoufta was  first  done  to  death  in  the
                hostel room no.  2010  in  occupation  of  the  accused  by
                strangulating her as well as causing various  injuries   to
                her and thereafter the accused appeared to Dr.  Pauli  CW.2
                to remove the traces of evidence appearing against him  and
                was liable for the murder of  Dr.  Mrs.  Loyalla  Shagoufta
                deceased as well  as  for  causing  dis-appearance  of  the
                evidence.

                       Dr. Loyalla Shagoufta in fact appeared to have  been
                murdered in the hostel room in occupation of  the  accused.
                Various blood stains recovered from that room are  a  clear
                pointer to the fact that she was  murdered  in  that  room.
                None else could commit the crime in that room  except  with
                the knowledge and consent of the accused when  the  accused
                alone was in occupation of that room  and  was  responsible
                for the crime committed in that room. Production of various
                blood stained clothes by the  accused  before  the  Medical
                Superintendent of the Hospital also goes to  show  that  he
                was fully involved  in the crime. On the fateful evening he
                also borrowed car from Dr. Pauli CW.2, which  was  used  by
                him in removal of the dead body from the place of crime and
                the recovery of a blood stained mat from that car also goes
                to show that he in fact removed the dead body in that  car.
                All this shows that he in fact murdered his wife  Dr.  Mrs.
                Loyalla Shagoufta and later on removed  her  dead  body  to
                cause dis-appearance as well as for causing  dis-appearance
                of the evidence against him.”




            So far as the  motive  is  concerned,  the  court  came  to  the
      conclusion that there was sufficient motive to kill the  deceased,  as
      the appellant wanted to now get rid of the  deceased.   More  so,  the
      appellant could not explain how the  deceased  happened  to  meet  her
      death in his room. The  court  noted  that  though  there  were  minor
      discrepancies in the story, the same were not fatal to the case of the
      prosecution and added that the case  of  the  prosecution   was  fully
      supported  by  the   FSL  report  and  therefore,  on  such   grounds,
      convicted the appellant.




      15.     The High Court concurred with the finding of the  trial  court
      observing as under:

                “Non-production of copy of Divorce Petition shows that  the
                appellant-accused had the motive to eliminate the deceased.
                Admission of the appellant-accused before Dr. B. Pawar that
                blood stained clothes were found  lying  in  his  room  and
                later on change of stand when  examined under  Section  313
                Cr.P.C. that the blood stained clothes were  lying  in  the
                balcony of the  Junior  Doctor’s  Hospital  show  that  the
                prosecution  story  inspires   confidence.   Firstly,   Dr.
                Shagoufta  was  murdered.  Blood   stained   clothes   were
                recovered from the room and by arranging car of  Dr.  Pauli
                dead body was thrown in the area of village  Lalton  Kalan.
                Dead body lying  near  the  road  is  suggesting  that  the
                appellant-accused was in hurry to dispose of the dead body,
                that is why, after 1½ hours key of the car was returned  to
                Dr. Pauli. Tie, dumb-bell and gunny bag were  recovered  as
                per disclosure statement and the  recovered  articles  were
                found to be stained with blood.  On  9.3.1996,  Dr.  Yogesh
                through  Sarabjit  Singh,  Security  Guard   summoned   the
                appellant-accused to Operation Theatre, but nothing on  the
                file that the appellant-accused had attended the  Operation
                Theatre to assist Dr. Yogesh. PW.7 Sarabjit Singh had  gone
                to the room of the appellant-accused with the request  that
                services  of  the  appellant-accused  are  needed  in   the
                Operation Threatre. Sarabjit Singh is not  related  to  the
                deceased. So, there was no idea to disbelieve him.

                        As per post-mortem examination, death  was  due  to
                strangulation as well as by causing various injuries.  Neck
                tie recovered as per disclosure statement suffered  by  the
                appellant-accused was found to be stained with blood.”




     16.    The instant case is  a  case  of  blind  murder  and  is  based
     entirely on circumstantial evidence, as there is no eye-witness to the
     said incident.




     17.    In Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra,  AIR  1984
     SC 1622,  it was  held  by  this  court  that,  the  onus  is  on  the
     prosecution to prove, that the chain is complete and that  falsity  or
     untenability of the defence set up by the accused, cannot be made  the
     basis for ignoring any serious infirmity or lacuna in the case of  the
     prosecution. The Court then proceeded to indicate the conditions which
     must be fully established before a conviction can be made on the basis
     of circumstantial evidence. These are:

                (1) the circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is
                to be drawn should be fully established. The  circumstances
                concerned ‘must’ or ‘should’ and not ‘may be’ established;


                (2) the facts so established should be consistent only with
                the hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, that is to say,
                they should not be  explainable  on  any  other  hypothesis
                except that the accused is guilty;


                (3) the circumstances should be of a conclusive nature  and
                tendency;


                (4) they should exclude every  possible  hypothesis  except
                the one to be proved; and


                (5) there must be a chain of evidence so complete as not to
                leave any reasonable ground for the  conclusion  consistent
                with the innocence of the accused and must show that in all
                human probability the  act  must  have  been  done  by  the
                accused”.



            Thus, in a case of  circumstantial  evidence,  the  prosecution
     must establish each instance of incriminating circumstance, by way  of
     reliable and clinching evidence, and the circumstances so proved  must
     form a complete chain of events, on the basis of which, no  conclusion
     other than one of guilt of the accused can be  reached.   Undoubtedly,
     suspicion, however grave  it  may  be,  can  never  be  treated  as  a
     substitute for proof.  While dealing with  a  case  of  circumstantial
     evidence, the court must take  utmost  precaution  whilst  finding  an
     accused guilty, solely on the basis of the circumstances proved before
     it.




     18.    Admittedly, the appellant, after handing over  the  said  blood
     stained  clothes  to  Dr.  B.  Pawar  (PW.1),  on   9.3.1996,   became
     untraceable as a result  of  which,  he  could  only  be  arrested  on
     11.3.1996, at 6.00 p.m.  Though this circumstance was not  taken  into
     consideration by  the  courts  below,  the  learned  standing  counsel
     appearing for the State has relied upon it very strongly indeed before
     us.




     19.    This Court has considered this issue time and  again  and  held
     that the mere act of absconding, on the part  of  the  accused,  alone
     does not necessarily lead to a final conclusion regarding the guilt of
     the accused, as even an innocent person may become panic stricken  and
     try to evade arrest, when suspected  wrongly  of  committing  a  grave
     crime; such is the instinct of self-preservation. (See: Matru v. State
     of U.P., AIR 1971 SC 1050; State thr. CBI v.  Mahender  Singh  Dahiya,
     (2011) 3 SCC 109; and Sk. Yusuf v. State of West Bengal, AIR 2011   SC
     2283).

            In view of  the  above,  we  do  not  find  any  force  in  the
      submissions advanced by the learned counsel for the State.




      20.   In a case of  circumstantial  evidence,  motive  assumes  great
      significance and importance, for  the  reason  that  the  absence  of
      motive would put the court on its guard and cause  it  to  scrutinize
      each piece  of   evidence  very  closely  in  order  to  ensure  that
      suspicion, emotion  or conjecture do not take the place of proof.




      21.   In Subedar Tewari v. State of U.P. & Ors.,  AIR  1989  SC  733,
      this Court observed as under:

                 “The evidence regarding existence of motive which operates
                in the mind of an assassin is very  often  than  (sic)  not
                within the reach of others. The  motive  may  not  even  be
                known to the victim of the crime. The motive may  be  known
                to the assassin and no one else may know what gave birth to
                the evil thought in the mind of the assassin.”





      22.   Similarly, in Suresh Chandra Bahri v. State of Bihar, AIR  1994
      SC 2420, this court held as under:

                 “In  a  case  of  circumstantial  evidence,  the  evidence
                 bearing on the guilt of the accused  nevertheless  becomes
                 untrustworthy and unreliable because most often it is only
                 the perpetrator of the crime alone who knows  as  to  what
                 circumstances prompted him to adopt a  certain  course  of
                 action leading to the commission of the crime.  Therefore,
                 if the evidence  on  record  suggest  sufficient/necessary
                 motive to commit a crime it  may  be  conceived  that  the
                 accused had committed it.”




      23.   Thus, if the issue  is  examined  in  light  of  the  aforesaid
      settled legal proposition, we may concur with the courts below on the
      said aspect.




      24.   In Jackaran Singh v. State of Punjab, AIR 1995 SC  2345,   this
      Court held that:

                 “The absence of the signatures or the thumb impression  of
                an accused  on  the  disclosure  statement  recorded  under
                Section 27 of the Evidence Act detracts materially from the
                authenticity  and  the  reliability   of   the   disclosure
                statement.”




      25.   However, in  State of Rajasthan v. Teja Ram, AIR 1999 SC  1776,
      this Court examined the said  issue  at  length  and  considered  the
      provisions  of  Section  162(1)  Cr.P.C.,  Section  162(1)  reads,  a
      statement made by any person to a police officer in the course of  an
      investigation done, if reduced to writing, be signed  by  the  person
      making it.  Therefore, it is evident from  the  aforesaid  provision,
      that there is a prohibition in peremptory terms and law requires that
      a statement made before the  Investigating  Officer  should   not  be
      signed by the witness. The same was found to  be  necessary  for  the
      reason that, a witness  will  then  be  free  to  testify  in  court,
      unhampered by anything which the police may claim  to  have  elicited
      from him. In the event  that,  a  police  officer,  ignorant  of  the
      statutory requirement  asks a witness to sign his statement, the same
      would not stand vitiated. At the most,  the  court  will  inform  the
      witness, that he is not  bound  by  the  statement  made  before  the
      police. However, the prohibition contained in Section 162(1)  Cr.P.C.
      is not applicable to any statements made  under  Section  27  of  the
      Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (hereinafter called  ‘Evidence  Act’),   as
      explained by the provision under Section 162(2)  Cr.P.C.   The  Court
      concluded as under:

                 “The resultant position is that the Investigating  Officer
                is not obliged to obtain the signature of an accused in any
                statement attributed to him while  preparing  seizure  memo
                for the recovery of any article covered by  Section  27  of
                the Evidence Act. But if any signature has been obtained by
                an Investigating Officer, there is nothing wrong or illegal
                about it.”




     26.    In Golakonda Venkateswara Rao v. State of Andhra  Pradesh,  AIR
     2003 SC 2846, this court once again reconsidered the entire issue, and
     held that merely because the recovery  memo  was  not  signed  by  the
     accused, will   not vitiate the recovery itself, as every case has  to
     be decided on its own facts. In the event that the recoveries are made
     pursuant to the disclosure statement of the accused, then, despite the
     fact that the statement has not been signed by him, there is certainly
     some truth in what he said, for the reason that, the recovery  of  the
     material objects was made on the basis of his  statement.   The  Court
     further explained this aspect  by  way  of  its  earlier  judgment  in
     Jackaran Singh (supra) as, in this case, there was a dispute regarding
     the ownership of a revolver and the cartridge recovered  therein.  The
     prosecution was unable to lead any evidence to  show  that  the  crime
     weapon belonged to the said appellant and observations  were  made  by
     this Court in the said  context. The court held as under:

                 “The fact that the  recovery  is  in  consequence  of  the
                information  given  is  fortified  and  confirmed  by   the
                discovery of wearing apparel and skeletal  remains  of  the
                deceased which leads to believe that  the  information  and
                the statement cannot be false.”







     27.    In view of the above, the instant case is squarely  covered  by
     the ratio of the aforesaid judgments, and the submission  advanced  in
     this regard is therefore, not acceptable.




     28.    Most of the articles recovered and sent for preparation of  FSL
     and serological reports contained human blood. However, on the  rubber
     mat recovered from the car of Dr. Pauli (CW.2)  and  one  other  item,
     there can be no positive report in relation to the same as  the  blood
     on such articles has  dis-integrated.   All  other  material  objects,
     including the shirt of the accused, two T-shirts, two towels, a  track
     suit, one pant, the brassier of the deceased, bangles of the deceased,
     the under-garments of the deceased, two tops, dumb  bell,  gunny  bag,
     tie etc. were found to have dis-integrated.




     29.    A similar issue arose for consideration by this Court  in  Gura
     Singh v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 2001  SC  330,   wherein  the  Court,
     relying upon earlier judgments of this Court, particularly  in  Prabhu
     Babaji Navie v. State of Bombay,  AIR  1956  SC  51;  Raghav  Prapanna
     Tripathi v. State of U.P., AIR  1963  SC  74;  and  Teja  Ram  (supra)
     observed that a failure by the serologist to detect the origin of  the
     blood due to dis-integration of the serum,  does  not  mean  that  the
     blood stuck on the axe  would  not  have  been  human  blood  at  all.
     Sometimes  it  is  possible,  either  because   the   stain   is   too
     insufficient,  or  due  to  haematological   changes   and   plasmatic
     coagulation, that a serologist may fail to detect the  origin  of  the
     blood. However, in such a case, unless the doubt is  of  a  reasonable
     dimension, which a judicially conscientious mind may  entertain,  with
     some objectivity, no benefit can be claimed by the  accused,  in  this
     regard.




     30.    Learned  counsel  for  the  appellant  has  placed  very  heavy
     reliance on the judgment of this Court in Sattatiya @  Satish  Rajanna
     Kartalla v. State of Maharashtra, AIR 2008 SC  1184,  wherein  it  was
     held that in case the Forensic  Science  Laboratory  Report/Serologist
     Report is unable to make out a case,  that  the  blood  found  on  the
     weapons/clothes recovered, is of the same blood group as that  of  the
     deceased, the same should be treated as a serious lacuna in  the  case
     of the prosecution.

            The appellant cannot be allowed to take the benefit of such  an
     observation  in  the  said  judgment,  for  the  reason  that  in  the
     aforementioned case, the recovery itself was doubted and, in  addition
     thereto, the non- matching of blood groups was treated to be a lacunae
     and not an independent factor, deciding the case.




     31.    A similar view has been reiterated in a recent judgment of this
     court in Criminal Appeal No. 67 of 2008, Jagroop  Singh  v.  State  of
     Punjab, decided on 20.7.2012, wherein  it  was  held  that,  once  the
     recovery is made in pursuance of a disclosure statement  made  by  the
     accused, the matching  or  non-matching   of  blood  group  (s)  loses
     significance.




     32.    In John Pandian v. State represented by  Inspector  of  Police,
     Tamil Nadu, (2010) 14 SCC 129, this Court held:


                  “….The discovery appears to  be  credible.  It  has  been
                 accepted by both the courts below and we find no reason to
                 discard it. This is apart from the fact that  this  weapon
                 was sent to the forensic science laboratory (FSL)  and  it
                 has been found stained with human blood. Though the  blood
                 group could  not  be  ascertained,  as  the  results  were
                 inconclusive, the accused had to give some explanation  as
                 to how the human blood came on this weapon. He gave  none.
                 This  discovery  would   very   positively   further   the
                 prosecution case.”
                                             (Emphasis added)




     33.    In view of the above, the Court finds it impossible  to  accept
     the submission that, in the absence of the report regarding the origin
     of the blood, the accused cannot be  convicted,  upon  an  observation
     that it is only  because of lapse of time that the  classification  of
     the blood  cannot  be  determined.  Therefore,  no  advantage  can  be
     conferred upon the accused, to enable him to claim  any  benefit,  and
     the report of dis-integration of blood etc.  cannot  be  termed  as  a
     missing link, on the basis of which, the chain of circumstances may be
     presumed to be broken.

     34.    When the appellant  herein  made  a  disclosure  statement,   a
     panchnama was prepared and recovery panchnamas were  also  made.   The
     evidence on record revealed that the same  were  duly  signed  by  two
     police officials, and one independent panch witness,  namely,  Randhir
     Singh Jat, who was  admittedly, not examined.  Therefore,  a  question
     arose regarding the  effect  of  non-examination  of  the  said  panch
     witness, and also the sanctity of the evidence, in respect of recovery
     made only by two police officials.




     35.         The issue was considered at length by this Court in State,
     Govt. of NCT of Delhi v. Sunil & Anr., (2001) 1 SCC 652, wherein  this
     Court held as under:

                   “….But if no witness was present or  if  no  person  had
                agreed to affix  his  signature  on  the  document,  it  is
                difficult to lay down, as a proposition of  law,  that  the
                document so prepared by the police officer must be  treated
                as tainted and the recovery evidence unreliable. The  court
                has to consider the evidence of the  investigating  officer
                who deposed to the fact of recovery based on the  statement
                elicited from the accused on its own worth.
                    We feel that it is an archaic notion  that  actions  of
                the  police  officer  should  be  approached  with  initial
                distrust………At any rate, the court  cannot  start  with  the
                presumption that the police records are untrustworthy. As a
                proposition of law the presumption should be the other  way
                around.  That  official  acts  of  the  police  have   been
                regularly performed is a wise principle of presumption  and
                recognised even by the legislature.  Hence  when  a  police
                officer gives evidence in court that a certain article  was
                recovered by him on the strength of the statement  made  by
                the accused it is open to the court to believe the  version
                to  be  correct  if  it  is  not  otherwise  shown  to   be
                unreliable.  It  is  for  the   accused,   through   cross-
                examination of witnesses or through any other materials, to
                show that the evidence of  the  police  officer  is  either
                unreliable or at  least  unsafe  to  be  acted  upon  in  a
                particular case. If  the  court  has  any  good  reason  to
                suspect the truthfulness of such records of the police  the
                court could certainly take into account the  fact  that  no
                other  independent  person  was  present  at  the  time  of
                recovery. But it is not a legally approvable  procedure  to
                presume the police action as unreliable to start with,  nor
                to jettison such action merely for the reason  that  police
                did not collect signatures of independent  persons  in  the
                documents made contemporaneous with such actions.”





     36.    One Randhir Singh Jat  had  been  the  Panch  witness  for  the
     disclosure Panchnama and Recovery Panchnama. He has not been  examined
     by the prosecution. No question was put to the  Investigating  Officer
     (PW.14), in his cross-examination,  as  to  why  the  prosecution  had
     withheld the said witness. The I.O. was the only competent  person  to
     answer the query. It is quite possible that the witness was not  alive
     or traceable.




     37.   It is obligatory on the part of the accused while being examined
     under Section 313 Cr.P.C. to furnish some explanation with respect  to
     the incriminating circumstances associated with  him,  and  the  Court
     must take note of such explanation even in a  case  of  circumstantial
     evidence, to decide as to whether or not, the chain  of  circumstances
     is complete.  The aforesaid judgment has been approved and followed in
     Musheer Khan v. State of Madhya Pradesh, (2010) 2 SCC 748. (See  also:
     The Transport Commissioner, A.P., Hyderabad & Anr. v. S. Sardar Ali  &
     Ors., AIR 1983 SC 1225).



     ?38.   This Court in State of Maharashtra v. Suresh, (2000) 1 SCC  471,
     held that, when  the  attention  of  the  accused  is  drawn  to  such
     circumstances that inculpate him in relation to the commission of  the
     crime, and he fails to offer an appropriate  explanation  or  gives  a
     false answer with respect to the same, the said act may be counted  as
     providing a missing link for completing the chain of circumstances. We
     may hasten to add that we have referred to the said decision, only  to
     highlight the fact that the accused  has  not  given  any  explanation
     whatsoever, as regards the  incriminating  circumstances  put  to  him
     under Section 313  Cr.P.C.

     39.    In view of the  above,  a  conjoint  reading  of  the  complete
     evidence and material on record, suggests as under:

     (i)    The deceased Loyalla Shagoufta had informed her mother residing
     in Jagadhari, on 6.3.1996 that she  would  reach  there  on  7.3.1996.
     However, she did not make it there. Therefore, Victoria  Rani  (PW.2),
     that is, mother of the deceased, came to Ludhiana to  search  for  her
     daughter on 10.3.1996.

     (ii)   On 9.3.1996, the appellant handed over  certain  blood  stained
     clothes to Dr. B. Pawar (PW.1), Medical Superintendent,  stating  that
     he had found the  same,  in  his  room,  when  he  returned  from  the
     hospital. Dr. B. Pawar (PW.1), informed  the  police  about  the  said
     incident, on the same date.

     (iii)  On 10.3.1996, Victoria Rani (PW.2), filed a complaint about the
     incident and an FIR was lodged.  The Investigating Officer went to the
     room of the appellant, as well as of the deceased, in their respective
     hostels but the rooms were found to be locked  from  the  outside.  He
     then made an attempt to search for the appellant  at the residence  of
     his relative Mr. Rana, and also in other dhabas and  hotels,  but  was
     unable to trace him, despite his efforts to do so.

     (iv)   On 11.3.1996, Dr. Namrata Saran, informed Dr. B.  Pawar  (PW.1)
     that the deceased had been missing from the hostel since 9.3.1996.

           On the same day, Vir  Rajinder  Pal  (PW.14),  SHO,  received  a
      wireless message from the Police Chowki at Lalton Kalan, that the dead
      body of a female was lying in the bushes near an area of thoroughfare,
      closeby. He then rushed to the place alongwith Victoria  Rani  (PW.2),
      and recovered the dead body of the deceased and went on to prepare the
      panchanama etc.  The room  of  the  appellant  was  searched,  but  no
      recovery was made from the room.

     (v)    During the  course  of  the  investigation,  Vir  Rajinder  Pal
     (PW.14), SHO, realised that the appellant had borrowed the car of  Dr.
     Pauli (CW.2). Thus,  the  said  car  which  was  parked  in  the  same
     compound, was taken into possession by the police, and  a  mat  having
     blood stains on it, was recovered and sealed.

     (vi)   On 12.3.1996, experts were called and the room of the appellant
     was searched. Blood stains were found on the floor, which were scraped
     off  and alongwith the same, a pair of V-shaped Hawaii chappals,  also
     having blood stains on them, were recovered. The  said  articles  were
     sealed.

     (vii)  The appellant was arrested on 11.3.1996, as he was produced  by
     Joginder Singh (PW.12),   and  made  a  disclosure  statement  in  the
     presence of police officials and also one  Randhir  Singh,  the  panch
     witness, and the panchnama was prepared and in it, he stated that,  he
     would help in the  recovery of  articles, used  while  committing  the
     murder  of   the  deceased.  On  the  basis  of  the  said  disclosure
     statement, he led the police party to the Old Ludhiana Jail and  aided
     in making recoveries of a gunny bag, a dumb bell and one tie,  as  the
     same had been hidden below garbage and  bushes.  The  same  were  duly
     recovered and panchnama was prepared.  All the materials so  recovered
     were then sent for FSL/serological report,  and  the  report  received
     stated that all the said articles contained human  blood  etc.  except
     for a few, wherein the blood had dis-integrated and  as  a  result  of
     this,  no report could be submitted.

     (viii) On 11.3.1996, the dead body of the deceased, was sent for post-
     mortem examination by a Board of  doctors  including  Dr.  U.S.  Sooch
     (PW.11), and various articles of the deceased, including  her  bangles
     etc. were taken into possession by the police.

     (ix)   In his statement, under  Section  313  Cr.P.C.,  the  appellant
     changed the version of his story, from the one given to Dr.  B.  Pawar
     (PW.1), stating that blood stained clothes handed over  by  him,  were
     found in the balcony, interconnecting various rooms,  as  against  his
     original statement wherein he had disclosed that he had found them  in
     his room.  He could not furnish any explanation with  respect  to  how
     the blood stained clothes were found in his room.

     (x)    Kirpal Dev Singh (PW.8), a taxi driver, though did not identify
     the  appellant  in  court,  yet  was  not  declared  hostile  by   the
     prosecution, deposed that, on being asked by  the  canteen  contractor
     Joshi, he had gone to meet the appellant on  9.3.1996,  who  told  him
     that he wanted to go to Jagadhari.  At that time, he was told to  come
     later, as the wife of the appellant had purportedly  gone  to  collect
     her salary from Lalton Kalan. Admittedly, the appellant and his  wife,
     the deceased were living separately and they did not  have  a  cordial
     relationship. In such a fact-situation, the appellant would  not  have
     hired a taxi to go to Jagadhari. More so, if the deceased  was  living
     separately, it was not possible for the appellant to say that his wife
     had gone to Lalton Kalan, to collect her salary. The evidence  of  Dr.
     Pauli (CW.2), makes it clear that the appellant had in fact taken  his
     car,  used it for one and a half hours,  and  then  brought  the  same
     back, and parked it in the hostel compound, after which he handed over
     the keys for the same to Dr. Pauli (CW.2).

     (xi)   The nature of the injuries mentioned in the post-mortem  report
     makes it crystal clear that the deceased died  of  strangulation  i.e.
     asphyxia,  and she also had several injuries to her head, which  could
     have been caused by a dumb  bell,  which  was  one  of  the  materials
     recovered and found to have blood stains on it.

     (xii)  As the appellant had a strained relationship with his wife,  he
     no doubt wanted to get rid of her.  Although he has claimed  that  the
     petitions for divorce by mutual consent were pending before the court,
     he has never submitted any documents with respect to this  before  the
     court.  Thus, inference may be drawn that the appellant  did  in  fact
     wish to get rid of his wife.

     (xiii) As the recoveries of the blood stained gunny  bag,  dumb  bell,
     tie etc. were made on the basis of the  disclosure  statement  of  the
     appellant himself, the chain of circumstances is  therefore, complete.






     40.    In view of the above, we do not find any  reason  to  interfere
     with the concurrent findings recorded by the courts below. The  appeal
     lacks merit and is therefore, dismissed accordingly.




                                     ………………………………………J.          (Dr.   B.S.
                            CHAUHAN)




                       ……………..………………………………………J.                     (FAKKIR
    MOHAMED IBRAHIM KALIFULLA)

    New Delhi,

    September 14, 2012

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