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Saturday, December 22, 2012

the accused-appellant was not armed with any weapon or a firearm. As already noticed the evidence do not disclose in any manner that the appellant had come with a pre-meditated mind to kill his wife, but it was only in course of hot exchange of words and abuses which mindlessly drove him to take the extreme step of beating his wife with a log of wood with such force and intensity that she sustained head injury, profusely bled and finally died on the spot. 23. We are, therefore, of the considered view that although the conviction and sentence of the appellant might not be sustainable under Section 302 I.P.C., it cannot also be scaled down to Section 304 Part-II I.P.C. But we are surely of the view that the appellant is fit to be convicted and sentenced under Section 304 Part-I of the I.P.C.


                                                                  Reportable


                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION


                        CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1091/2010




    ATTAR SINGH                               ..Appellant


                                   Versus


    STATE OF MAHARASHTRA                         ..Respondent



                       J U D G M E N  T




    GYAN SUDHA MISRA, J.
                 This appeal has been preferred against the  judgment   and
    order dated  26.6.2008 passed by   the  High  Court  of  Judicature  at
    Bombay, Bench at Aurangabad in Criminal Appeal No. 7/2007  whereby  the
    High Court  upheld the  judgment  and  order  passed  by  the  Sessions
    Judge, Dhule in Sessions Case No. 90/2005 by which  the appellant   had
    been convicted for an offence  under Section  302,  Indian  Penal  Code
    (I.P.C. for  short)  and was  sentenced to  undergo  life  imprisonment
    along with a fine of Rs.1,000/-.  In default of payment of fine, he was
    ordered to undergo simple imprisonment for three months.
    2.           The appellant was initially   charged  and  tried  for  an
    offence under Section 302 and 498-A of the I.P.C. for killing  his wife
    by hitting her on her head   with a woodenlog as he was  suspecting her
    loyalty  and character.
    3.           The specific case of the prosecution which was  registered
    under Section 302 and 498-A of  the  I.P.C.   is  that  the  appellant-
    Attarsingh  Barakya Pawara was residing  along  with  his  wife  and  9
    children at village  Majanipada  in    Shirpur  Taluk.   On  22.6.2005,
    the complainant-Khandu Kalu Ahire   who is  also  the   village  Kotwal
    received  an  information  from  one   Ramesh   Pawara,   resident   of
    Majanipada  and Appa Shahada Pawara,  resident   of   Fattepur  village
    that  the  appellant  Attarsing has committed   murder of his wife   by
    hitting her  with  a  woodenlog  on  her  head.   On  receipt  of  this
    information, the village Kotwal along with the  Sarpanch   Bhatu  Ditya
    and one Rattan Lalsing  went to the appellant’s house   and  found  the
    dead body of Nagibai (deceased wife of  the  appellant)  lying  on  the
    floor of the house which indicated that the deceased had sustained head
    injury  and had bleeded  profusely.    The  woodenlog   was found  near
    her dead body and the appellant was also found sitting  in  the  house.
    The village Kotwal enquired  about  the  incident  and  questioned  the
    appellant as to how his wife had died.  The appellant replied that  his
    wife was of a loose character and, therefore,  he had   killed  her  by
    hitting woodenlog on her  head.  He  narrated  the  incident  to  other
    persons accompanying the village Kotwal.
    4.           The village Kotwal  thereafter came to the police  station
    at Shirpur and lodged the report of the incident (Exh.15) on the  basis
    of which the offence was  registered  vide  crime  No.  161/2005  under
    Section 302 of  the  I.P.C.     The  police  thereafter  completed  the
    usual legal formality  by reaching on the spot  and  as  the  body  was
    found there, inquest was also conducted and  spot  panchnama  was  also
    prepared whereby the clothes of the  accused  containing  blood  stains
    were seized.   Woodenlog (Article No.3)   which  was  found   lying  on
    the spot was also seized  at the time of preparation of spot panchnama.
     The body of the deceased was then sent to  the   Government  Hospital,
    Shirpur where post-mortem  was conducted.
    5.             The  accused-appellant  was  subsequently  arrested  and
    taken  to the police station.  Investigation  thereafter  followed   in
    course of  which it transpired that it  was   the  appellant   who  had
    killed his wife Nagibai as he was suspecting  her  character.   Charges
    were then framed   against the appellant  under Section 498-A and   302
    of the I.P.C.  to which  the appellant pleaded not guilty  and  claimed
    to be tried.
    6.           In course of trial, the prosecution examined 12  witnesses
    on the question as to whether the appellant  had subjected his wife  to
    cruelty by giving her  beating and abuses from time to time  suspecting
    her character.  The trial court  further examined the question   as  to
    whether the accused had committed the  murder of his  wife  Nagibai  in
    his  house at village Majanipada  and thirdly as to  what other offence
    he has committed.
    7.           The defence story set up on behalf  of  the  appellant  is
    that  his wife had fallen down on the floor of the house due  to  which
    she sustained severe head injury which resulted  in her death.
    8.            The trial court on a scrutiny  of the evidence  and other
    materials on record rejected the defence story on the basis of the post-
    mortem  report  as   Dr.  Gohil    who   had   conducted    post-mortem
    categorically expressed that the head injury which the deceased Nagibai
    has sustained were not possible  due to fall on the ground.
    9.           Insofar as the charge under Section 498-A of  Indian Penal
    Code was concerned, the trial court  held that  none of the prosecution
    witnesses deposed that the accused-appellant was  subjecting  his  wife
    Nagibai to cruelty by giving her beating and abuses from time  to  time
    as alleged by the prosecution.  The  learned  Sessions  Judge  recorded
    that the evidence on record  indicates  that   it  was  only  a  single
    incident in which  accused-appellant  had assaulted  his  wife  Nagibai
    suspecting her fidelity and character as the evidence is missing   that
    the accused-appellant  was subjecting   his wife  to cruelty by abusing
    and assaulting her from time to time.  The learned Sessions Judge  thus
    was pleased to hold that the prosecution had failed to prove the charge
    under Section 498-A of the I.P.C.  against  the  accused-appellant  and
    hence acquitted him of this charge.
    10.          Insofar as the second charge is concerned  as  to  whether
    the accused-appellant is  the  author  of  the  head  injury   of   the
    deceased, the testimony of the daughter  of accused-appellant  Mangibai
    was held to be  significant  for    even  though  Mangibai  had  turned
    hostile, her testimony revealed that  on the day of the  incident,  her
    father was running behind her mother with a woodenlog for beating  her.
    On  witnessing  this  incident,  she  started  weeping  and  came  out.
    Thereafter, her father closed the door and only her father  and  mother
    were inside the house.  Immediately thereafter, her mother Nagibai  was
    found lying injured in a pool of blood inside the house and the accused
    also was there.  It  was,  therefore,   held   that  this  circumstance
    indicated that it is the accused-appellant who had assaulted  his  wife
    and caused her death.  It was further  held,  that   though  the  panch
    witness Mangibai  is a  hostile witness, such  portion of  the  hostile
    witness which is worth  believing  and  which  is  supported  by  other
    circumstances can be used and relied upon by the prosecution in view of
    well-settled legal position.    The Sessions Court thus on  a  scrutiny
    and analysis of the evidence accepted the  prosecution  version   based
    on the evidence  on record that the   accused-appellant  had  committed
    the murder of his wife by hitting her with a woodenlog  in  his   house
    and recorded a finding in the affirmative to the effect that it is  the
    accused-appellant who committed the murder of his wife-Nagibai  in  his
    house at village Majanipada. Thus, the appellant succeeded in  securing
    an  order of acquittal in his favour in so far as  the  charge    under
    Section 498-A of the Indian  Penal  Code  is  concerned,  but  suffered
    conviction and sentence of  imprisonment for  life  for  offence  under
    Section 302  of the I.P.C. for the  charge of murder of his wife.
    11.           The appellant  feeling aggrieved    with  the  conviction
    and sentence preferred an appeal before the High Court of Bombay  Bench
    at Aurangabad, but the High Court confirmed the view taken by the trial
    court  on all aspects including  the charge under Section  302  of  the
    I.P.C.
    12.          Assailing the  judgment and order  passed by the  Sessions
    Court as also the High Court which concurrently upheld  the  conviction
    of the appellant  under  Section  302  I.P.C.,   the  counsel  for  the
    appellant  first  of  all   attempted  to  demolish  the  case  of  the
    prosecution in its entirety  by  submitting  that  the  conviction  and
    sentence imposed on the appellant was not fit to be sustained   on  the
    testimony of the daughter  Mangibai   as  she  had  not  supported  the
    prosecution  version totally due to  which  she     had  been  declared
    hostile.  Hence, it was first of all contended that  the  testimony  of
    the hostile witness could not  have  been  relied  upon  for  recording
    conviction of the appellant.
    13.            We  have meticulously considered the arguments  advanced
    on this vital aspect  of  the matter   on  which  the  conviction   and
    sentence  imposed on the appellant  is   based.   This  compels  us  to
    consider as to whether the conviction  and sentence   recorded  on  the
    basis of the testimony of the witness who  has  been  declared  hostile
    could be relied upon for recording conviction of the accused-appellant.
     But it was difficult to  overlook  the  relevance  and  value  of  the
    evidence  of  even  a hostile witness while  considering   as  to  what
    extent their evidence could be allowed to be relied upon  and  used  by
    the prosecution.  It   could  not be ignored  that when  a  witness  is
    declared hostile and when his testimony  is not  shaken   on   material
    points in the cross-examination, there  is no ground   to  reject   his
    testimony in toto as it is  well-settled   by  a  catena  of  decisions
    that the  Court    is  not  precluded  from  taking  into  account  the
    statement of a hostile witness altogether and it is not  necessary   to
    discard  the same  in toto and can be relied   upon  partly.   If  some
    portion of the statement of  the hostile witness  inspires  confidence,
    it can be relied upon.  He cannot be thrown out as  wholly  unreliable.
    This was the view expressed by this court in the case  of   Syed  Akbar
    vs. State of Karnataka   reported in  AIR  1979  SC  1848  whereby  the
    learned Judges of the  Supreme  Court  reversed  the  judgment  of  the
    Karnataka High Court which had discarded  the  evidence  of  a  hostile
    witness in its entirety.  Similarly, other High Courts in the matter of
    Gulshan Kumar vs.  State (1993) Crl.L.J. 1525 as also Kunwar vs.  State
    of U.P. (1993) Crl.L.J. 3421 as also Haneefa vs. State (1993)  Crl.L.J.
    2125  have held  that it is not necessary to discard the   evidence  of
    the hostile witness in toto and can be relied upon partly.    So  also,
    in the matter of State of U.P. vs. Chet Ram reported  in  AIR  1989  SC
    1543 = (1989) Crl.L.J. 1785; it was held  that   if some portion of the
    statement of the hostile witness inspires confidence it can  be  relied
    upon and  the witness cannot be termed as  wholly  unreliable.  It  was
    further categorically  held  in the  case of Shatrughan  vs.  State  of
    M.P. (1993) Crl.L.J. 3120 that hostile witness  is  not  necessarily  a
    false witness.   Granting of a permission by the Court to cross-examine
    his own  witness does not amount to adjudication by the Court as to the
    veracity  of a witness.  It only means a declaration that  the  witness
    is adverse or unfriendly to the party calling  him  and  not  that  the
    witness is untruthful.   This was the view  expressed by this Court  in
    the matter of Sat Paul vs. Delhi Administration AIR 1976 SC 294.  Thus,
    merely because a  witness  becomes  hostile  it  would  not  result  in
    throwing out the prosecution case, but the Court must see the  relative
    effect  of his  testimony.  If the evidence of a  hostile   witness  is
    corroborated by other evidence, there  is no legal bar to  convict  the
    accused.  Thus testimony  of a hostile witness is   acceptable  to  the
    extent  it is corroborated by that  of  a  reliable  witness.   It  is,
    therefore, open to the Court  to consider the evidence and there is  no
    objection to a part of that evidence being made use of  in  support  of
    the prosecution or in support of the accused.
    14.          While examining  the instant matter on the  anvil  of  the
    aforesaid   legal  position  laid  down  by  this  Court   in   several
    pronouncements, we have  noticed that  the  support  rendered  by   the
    daughter  Mangibai  approving   the  incident  should  be  accepted  as
    reliable part of evidence in spite of she being a hostile witness.  The
    witness Mangibai’s evidence  pushes the accused  with his  bag  to  the
    wall and the accused is obliged to explain because her  evidence  shows
    that the accused  was the only  person in the company of  the  deceased
    soon before the death.  The defence of the accused     that   Nagibai’s
    injury was a result of fall is ruled out by medical  evidence  and  the
    details available of the location in the  panchnama  of  offence.   The
    courts below thus have  rightly  drawn some support from  the   reports
    of the chemical  analysis  since  all the  articles of the victims  and
    clothes of the accused are found  having blood stains  of  human  blood
    group A.  This was in view of the fact that the results of the analysis
    for determination of the blood group of the victim  and  accused   were
    conclusive  when  blood  sent  to  phial   was   analysed.   Thus,  the
    evidence  of the daughter of the deceased  coupled with other  material
    as also  evidence of other witnesses i.e.  Ramesh,  Khandu,  Bhatu  and
    Makhan,  provided a complete chain  and  the  prosecution  successfully
    proved that the incident occurred in the manner and the place which was
    alleged.  In fact, the accused in answer to questions under Section 313
    Cr.P.C.  has admitted his presence  at the place  of  occurrence  where
    his  wife Nagibai was  lying injured and dead on the  floor.   However,
    we do not wish to be understood that the failure of the defence   could
    be treated as success of the prosecution since the conviction cannot be
    based only on the replies given by the accused, but these  replies  may
    be considered as  support  to the special knowledge of  the accused and
    this lends sufficient  weight to the evidence of the  daughter  of  the
    deceased and other attending circumstances.   The trial Judge,  in  our
    view,  has rightly  placed reliance upon the evidence of Mangibai,  the
    daughter of the victim and the accused when she candidly supported  the
    prosecution story when she stated as follows:-


             “When my mother had sustained head injury, my father was  there
             only i.e. near my mother.   He  was  near  the  oven.   He  was
             talking loudly.


             It is true that my  father  hit  her  with  a  wooden  log  and
             therefore she ran to the kitchen.  It is true  that  my  father
             immediately ran after her.  I started weeping.  It is true that
             thereafter my father closed the door from inside.”…………………




    15.          Thus, we are of the view  that the  evidence  of  Mangibai
    who was declared hostile supported the prosecution case in  her  cross-
    examination and, therefore,  the courts below do      not  appear    to
    have fallen into any  error    in accepting     part of the evidence of
    Mangibai  and the retracted confession of  the witness Mangibai  cannot
    be accepted to  the  extent  that   her  evidence  in  support  of  the
    prosecution version was fit to be ruled out.  The  retracted  statement
    of Mangibai  stands fully supported by the evidence of other witnesses.
     Thus,  the  material  on  record  along  with  the   evidence  of  the
    prosecution witnesses  leads  to only one inference that  the  accused-
    appellant  was the author  of the injury  suffered by the victim and we
    have rightly been convinced that the  accused  and  the  accused  alone
    inflicted fatal injuries upon the  person of victim Nagibai.   We  are,
    therefore,  clearly of the view  that  in so far as  the  incident   of
    killing  of the deceased Nagibai is concerned, the  courts  below  have
    rightly held that she was killed by her husband-appellant in the manner
    which has been alleged by the prosecution.
    16.          However, learned counsel for the appellant  next submitted
    that the offence  alleged  to  have  been  committed  by  the  accused-
    appellant ought to be brought down within the ambit of Section 304 Part
    II of the I.P.C.  as there was  only  a single  blow inflicted  by  the
    accused-appellant which is clear    from the narration of  incident  by
    the daughter of the accused and deceased-Nagibai  which shows that  the
    accused was alone  with the  victim within the house  and  the  accused
    did not kill his wife with a pre-meditated   mind   but   the  incident
    took place  in a fit of anger due to the fact that  he was   suspecting
    his wife.  It was, therefore, submitted that the accused  in  fact  had
    no intention to kill his wife as the  death had occurred    on  account
    of  a single blow which was not the  result  of  a   pre-plan  or  pre-
    meditation.  In support of the submission, he relied upon  the judgment
    and   order of this Court  in  the  case  of  State  of  Punjab     vs.
    Bakhshish Singh & Ors. (2008) 17 SCC 411 which also had relied  on  the
    judgment  in the case of Anil Sharma & Ors.  vs.  State  of  Jharkhand,
    (2004) 5 SCC 679, Harbans Kaur vs. State of Haryana, (2005) 9 SCC  195,
    Amitsingh Bhikamsingh Thakur vs. State of Maharashtra, (2007) 2 SCC 310
    and this Court had been pleased to hold  that :


             “In all cases, it cannot be stated that when only a single blow
             is given, Section 302, IPC is made out,  yet  it  would  depend
             upon the  factual scenario of each case, more particularly  the
             nature of the offence, the background facts, the  part  of  the
             body where injuries were inflicted and  the   circumstances  in
             which the assault is made” that the offence under  Section  302
             IPC is not made out.”






    In view of the aforesaid observation, learned counsel  submitted   that
    offence under Section 302 I.P.C. in the instant matter also  cannot  be
    held to  have been made out  as the deceased  had  sustained  a  single
    blow  alleged to  have  been  inflicted   by  the  appellant.   Learned
    counsel  for  the  appellant   taking   further  assistance  from   the
    observation of the Supreme Court  in the matter of State of Punjab  vs.
    Bakhshish Singh (supra)    submitted further  that  the   past  history
    about the relations between the appellant and  the  deceased   goes  to
    prove that they did not have  any strained relations.   In  fact,  they
    had absolutely  normal relations and had  nine  children  out  of   the
    wedlock  and it was only  on  the  spur   of   the  moment   when   the
    appellant  abused suspecting   the character of deceased  Nagibai   and
    beat her with a stick unintentionally that the incident  happened.   In
    support of his argument, he relied on the case of Pannayar   vs.  State
    of Tamil Nadu  by Inspector of Police  (2009) 9 SCC  152  wherein  this
    Hon’ble Court held  that absence of motive  in case of   circumstantial
    evidence is more favourable to defence.
    17.           The  arguments  advanced   by  learned  counsel  for  the
    appellant-accused  when tested in the light  of the evidence led by the
    prosecution while considering  whether the  charge  under  Section  302
    could be  scaled  down  to  Section  304  Part-II,   we   have  already
    examined  the  circumstances in which the deceased had been killed  and
    hence it could be noticed that  the   deceased  Nagibai   and  accused-
    appellant although had been leading  a  so-called  normal  family  life
    along with their nine children, the fact remains  that  the  appellant-
    husband  had been suspecting  his wife’s character  and nurturing  deep
     rooted grudge  over a period of  time.   However,  the  evidence  does
    further  indicate  that  on  the  date   and  time  of  incident,   the
    appellant  had not  indulged    in pre-planning  the  incident  in  any
    manner  so as to eliminate  his wife by killing her.  The  evidence  of
    other witnesses also  indicated that the incident of beating   had  not
    happened  in the past and the   daughter of the  accused  and deceased-
    Mangibai  also  deposed  that  there  were  heated  exchange  of  words
    between the couple  on the date of incident and  the  appellant-accused
    heaped  abuses on his wife and then picked up a   woodenlog in a fit of
    anger by which  he  hit  the   deceased  as  a  result  of   which  she
    sustained head injury and bleeded   profusely which lead to her  death.


    18.           Thus the appellant although do not appear to have  killed
    his wife by planning out the whole incident in a methodical manner, yet
    the evidence disclosed that he was nurturing a grudge against  the wife
    over a long period of time  and on the date of the  incident  when  the
    husband started to abuse his deceased wife alleging her  of loose moral
    and character, the accused-husband  gave vent   to  his  deep    seated
    grudge by hitting her  with  such intensity  that  he  did  not  bother
    about the  consequence of his action. But  it cannot be  overlooked  or
    ignored that  the intensity with which  he hit his wife  after  abusing
    her is  indicative  of  the fact  that he was  not  oblivious  of   the
    consequence  which would  have  resulted  from  his   violent   act  of
    beating his wife with a log of  wood.     Thus,  it  will  have  to  be
    inferred  that he had sufficient  knowledge  about the  consequence  of
    his heinous  act at least to the extent  that  it was sufficient in the
    ordinary  course  of nature  to cause death of his wife.  He  was  thus
    fully aware of the consequence  that  this would result  in  a  serious
    consequence and in fact  it did result  in the said  manner  since  the
    wife  died as a result of the injury inflicted on her.  In  fact,  when
    the village Kotwal  reached the incident, the deceased  did  not   even
    expressed any remorse  for  what  he  had  done  to  his  wife  nor  he
    appeared to  be repentant   of  the incident.  This  clearly   reflects
    his state of mind  that he committed the crime with full  knowledge  to
    kill his wife Nagibai on account of his deep seated  grudge  which   he
    was carrying  since long.  Therefore, the  submission  of  the  counsel
    for the appellant that the charge under Section 302  I.P.C.  should  be
    converted into one under  Section 304 Part-II  I.P.C.   is  fit  to  be
    rejected and  accordingly  we do so.
    19.            The matter, however, do not set at rest at this stage as
    the evidence on record and the surrounding circumstances compels us  to
    consider further, whether the offence  would be made out  under Section
    302 I.P.C. or the same would fall under  Section  304  Part-I  of   the
    I.P.C. since  the  appellant-accused  and  his  wife-Nagibai  had  been
    married for a long time and were  having  nine  children  as  also  the
    manner of occurrence and the  circumstance  under  which  the  incident
    happened does indicate that the  incident  of  hot  exchange  of  words
    between the accused-appellant and his  deceased-wife  got  precipitated
    and  as  the appellant was already aggrieved  of his  wife   suspecting
    her character, he  hit his wife severely with  whatever  was  available
    without caring for the consequence.  Thus, the intention  to  kill  his
    wife and the knowledge  that she would be killed  due to the  hard  hit
    blow  by the log of wood   surely  cannot   be  ruled  out.    We  take
    assistance from the observations of this Court quoted  hereinabove that
    in all cases it cannot be  said that when only a single blow is  given,
    Section 302 I.P.C.  is made out.  Yet it would depend upon  the factual
    scenario of  each  case  more  particularly  nature  of  the   offence,
    background facts and the part of the body where  injury   is  inflicted
    and the circumstances in which the assault is made.
    20.           Taking  assistance   from   these   apt    and   relevant
    considerations when we examined the case  of  the  appellant,  we  have
    noticed  that the appellant was  living with his deceased wife  day  in
    and day out, but none of the  witness  has deposed that she was  abused
    and beaten earlier.  Thus, there is lack  of  evidence   that   on  the
    fateful day  the appellant-husband   had the pre-meditated intention to
    kill the  deceased  with a log of wood due to  which he inflicted   the
    fatal blow on the deceased. The anger  and  frustration  no  doubt  was
    acute in the mind of the appellant on account of  his  suspicion  which
    aggravated  due to hot exchange  of words  and  abuses  resulting  into
    loss of mental  balance  as a  consequence  of  which he hit  his  wife
    with such intensity that she died on the spot itself.  In view of  this
    the appellant will have to be attributed with the  knowledge  that  his
    act was sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to kill the victim-
    wife.
    21.           Thus, in our view, the accused-appellant although   might
    not be attributed with the intention   to  kill  his  wife,  sufficient
    knowledge   that  his  act   would  result  into   killing   her    was
    definitely there in the appellant’s mind and he in fact  gave  vent  to
    his  feeling  by   finally  killing  her   when  he  hit  her  with   a
    woodenlog to take revenge for her alleged  infidelity without realising
      that suspicion of her  fidelity was not proved  and even if  it  did,
    that gave no right  to him to kill his wife  in  a   brutal  manner  by
    hitting her  hard  enough with a  log  of  wood  with   such  intensity
    which was sufficient  in the ordinary course  of  nature  to  kill  the
    victim.
    22.          There are no dearth of incidents referred in the case laws
    where the husband  has gone to the extent of shooting his wife and many
    a times a paramour  shoots  the  husband  or  the  husband  shoots  the
    paramour on account of  suspicion founded or unfounded.   But  if   the
    evidence discloses that  the  accused  killed  the  victim  in  a  pre-
    meditated manner  as for instance    by using a firearm, the same might
    be  a clear case under Section 302 of the I.P.C.  But   the  facts  and
    circumstances   of the  incident   in  which  the  appellant  has  been
    convicted,  indicate that the  accused-appellant was not armed with any
    weapon or a firearm.  As already noticed the evidence do  not  disclose
    in any manner that the  appellant  had come with a  pre-meditated  mind
    to kill  his wife,  but it was only in course  of   hot  exchange    of
    words  and abuses which mindlessly  drove him to take  the extreme step
    of beating  his wife with a log of wood with such force and   intensity
    that  she   sustained head injury, profusely bled  and  finally    died
    on the spot.
    23.          We are, therefore, of the considered view   that  although
    the conviction and sentence of the appellant might not  be  sustainable
    under Section 302 I.P.C., it cannot also be scaled down to Section  304
    Part-II I.P.C.   But we are surely of the view  that the  appellant  is
    fit to be convicted and sentenced  under  Section  304  Part-I  of  the
    I.P.C. in view of the evidence on record, the surrounding  circumstance
    and the   factual  scenario  in  which   the  incident  occurred.   We,
    therefore, set aside the  conviction  and  sentence  of  the  appellant
    recorded under Section 302 I.P.C.  but convert the same  under  Section
    304  Part-I   I.P.C.    Thus,  we  deem   it  fit  and  appropriate  to
    substitute  the sentence of life imprisonment with  a  sentence  of  10
    years imprisonment.  The appeal thus, is   partly  allowed.   We  order
    accordingly.
                                                               …………………………….J
                                                           (Swatanter Kumar)



                                                               …………………………….J
                                                          (Gyan Sudha Misra)
    New Delhi,
    December 14, 2012
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