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Monday, August 24, 2020

Sections 366A and 506 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (“IPC”). - The trial Court has summarily disregarded the contradictions highlighted by the defense side, on the premise that such contradictions had no material bearing and that there was no reason to disbelieve the prosecutrix. The High Court too has opined that PW­1 and PW­2 have completely corroborated each other and their testimonies were impeccable. These reasons, in our considered opinion, are not only contrary to the record but they also lead to an impermissible reversal of the burden of proof imposed in criminal trials. There are numerous clear contradictions between the testimonies of these two star­witnesses, which we find fatal to the prosecution case.

REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 283 of 2011
Parminder Kaur @ P.P. Kaur @ Soni ..... Appellants(s)
                                           VERSUS
State of Punjab .....Respondents(s)
JUDGMENT
SURYA KANT, J.
1. The present Criminal Appeal has been preferred by Parminder
Kaur, impugning the judgment dated 30.11.2009 of the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana through which her challenge to a judgment dated
27.02.1999 passed by the Additional Sessions Judge, Barnala was
turned down, thereby confirming her conviction of three years rigorous
imprisonment and fine of Rs. 2000 under Sections 366A and 506 of
the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (“IPC”).
FACTS & CASE HISTORY
2. The prosecution story, as recorded in the FIR at around noon on
24.02.1996, was that the appellant was a single lady living with her
child, mother and a young boy as her tenant in the neighbourhood of
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the prosecutrix’s1
  house. About a week prior to registration of the
police complaint, the appellant called the prosecutrix to her house and
tried to entice her to indulge in illicit intercourse with the rich tenant
boy in return for clothes and trips from him. The appellant at about
6.00 A.M. on 19.02.1996, allegedly pushed the visiting prosecutrix
into the room occupied by the tenant boy and bolted it from the
outside. It was only on hearing the prosecutrix’s screams that after
five minutes the door was unlocked, with her father (Hari Singh, PW2), Bhan Singh and Karnail Singh standing outside. Swiftly, the boy
ran out of the room and successfully escaped. Upon the prosecutrix
emerging   from   the   room,   her   father   protested   and   expressed   his
dismay to the by­standing appellant. Scared for their reputation, the
prosecutrix and her father returned to their home without reporting
the matter to anyone, except the prosecutrix’s mother. However, on
24.02.1996 at 7.00 A.M., the appellant caught hold of the prosecutrix
outside her house and threatened to kill her brother if anyone was
informed   of   the   matter.   The   prosecutrix   was   able   to   escape   the
appellant’s clutches and worried at this high­handedness, proceeded
with her father towards the police station to report these two incidents
and lodged a complaint. 
3. During trial, the prosecution examined five witnesses, including
1 The name of the prosecutrix/victim has been withheld, in compliance with the ratio
in Bhupinder Sharma v. State of Himachal Pradesh, (2003) 8 SCC 551.
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the prosecutrix (PW­1), her father (PW­2), the draftsman who prepared
the site plan (PW­3), the headmistress who proved the prosecutrix’s
age (PW­4) and the investigating officer (PW­5). The appellant, in turn,
both denied all allegations and examined one witness of her own – a
neighbour,  Gurnail Singh (DW­1) and offered an alternate version in
her statement under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 (“CrPC”), claiming that there was no tenant at all in her home
and that the complaint was nothing but motivated revenge at the
instance of one Bhola Singh against whom she had levelled allegations
of rape a few months ago.
4. This alternate version was summarily rejected by the trial Court
which concluded that the appellant’s claim of the complaint being at
the   instance   of   Bhola  Singh   was   unlikely  both   because  malicious
prosecution of sexual abuses involving minors, at the instance of third
parties, was improbable; and even DW­1 in his cross­examination had
admitted that Hari Singh was a permanent employee of the Irrigation
Department and could not be a Karinda (employee) of Bhola Singh as
claimed by the appellant.
5. Relying upon the school records produced by DW­4, the Court
observed that the prosecutrix was studying in Class VII with date of
birth as 12.04.1982, thereby unimpeachably making her a minor.
Without delving into the elements of Section 366A or 506 IPC, or
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whether   each   individual   ingredient   had   been   satisfied   by   the
prosecution,   the   learned   Additional   Sessions   Judge   focused   on
negating the defences projected by the appellant. In response to the
contradictions between important aspects of the prosecutrix and her
father’s   testimonies,   like   differences   in   physical   description   and
antecedents of the male tenant and the inability of the witnesses and
the police to catch or trace the boy, the trial Court instead noted that
there was no reason to disbelieve the prosecutrix and her father. The
five­day  delay  in   registration   of   the  FIR   was   condoned   for  having
arisen out of natural fear of reputation of the prosecutrix and her
family, as well as the mild severity of the case. Similarly, the nonexamination of the other two independent witnesses, Bhan Singh and
Karnail Singh was ignored as being normal reluctance of bystanders in
cases where there was no rape or assault.
6. Accordingly,   the  trial   Court held   that   the   appellant   had
intentionally induced the prosecutrix to perform illicit intercourse with
her male tenant, and that she had also criminally intimidated the
prosecutrix   by   threatening   her   family   member.   Noting   the   large
number of dependents that the appellant had to support as a single
lady, and considering the lack of commission of any assault or rape
against the prosecutrix, the appellant was concurrently sentenced to
three years rigorous imprisonment and fine of Rs 2,000 (or further six
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months  rigorous imprisonment in lieu thereof) under Section 366A,
and one year rigorous imprisonment and fine of Rs. 1,000 (or further
three months rigorous imprisonment in lieu thereof) under Section
506 of IPC.
7. The aggrieved appellant approached the High Court which too
refused to interfere with the order of conviction. While dismissing the
appeal, the High Court observed that the statement of the accused
under Section 313 CrPC appeared to be an after­thought, and that in
the absence of any evidence proving enmity between the parties it was
impossible that anyone would falsely implicate a woman in such like
offence. The minority of the prosecutrix was noted as having been
proved,   and   the   testimonies   of   PW1   and   PW2   were   held   to   be
impeccable and corroborating each other completely. Similar to the
trial   Court,   the   High   Court   also   explained­away   the   delay   in
registration of FIR as a result of family reputation put at stake in
matters of sexual offence cases. Other omissions in the form of nonexamination of Bhan Singh and Hari Singh and failure to catch or
trace the identity of the male tenant were deemed insignificant and
immaterial.
CONTENTIONS OF PARTIES
8. The judgments of the trial Court and High Court have been
elegantly assailed before us by learned counsel for the appellant who
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contended that the testimonies of the two star­witnesses, being full of
material contradictions, are far from reliable. The delay in registration
of the FIR and the lack of any attempt to catch or even later trace the
male tenant showed that the story was concocted by the prosecutrix’s
family with ulterior motives. Reliance was also placed on the denial
and alternate version put forth by the appellant in her statement
under Section 313 CrPC, and the failure of the Courts below to either
examine such statutory statement in­depth or for the prosecution to
belie it effectively. Emphasis was laid on the statement of DW­1 who
volunteered during his cross­examination that PW­2 was then living in
the   house   owned   by   Bhola   Singh,   the   person   against   whom   the
appellant had alleged rape. The deleterious effect of these proceedings
on Bhola Singh’s trial and his subsequent acquittal on grounds that
Parminder   Kaur   (the   appellant   here)   was   a   lady   of   questionable
character who indulged in trafficking of minors, was highlighted to
show colourable motive behind registration of this case against the
appellant.
9. On the contrary, learned state counsel supported the impugned
judgment(s) by placing emphasis on the concurrent findings of the
Courts below. Reliance was also placed on PW­2’s cross­examination
wherein   he   himself   denied   knowing   Bhola   Singh,   to   counter   the
allegation of false implication by the prosecutrix.
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ANALYSIS
I. Sweeping generalisations and superficial analysis
10. Having heard learned counsel for the parties at considerable
length through video conferencing, we find from the impugned orders
that the Courts below failed in making the desired attempt to delve
deep into the factual matrix of this case. Many aspects, as discussed
hereunder, have completely been ignored or only dealt with hastily.
Further, the reasoning is generic and is premised upon generalisations
which may not be necessarily true always.   It is indisputable that
parents would not ordinarily endanger the reputation of their minor
daughter merely to falsely implicate their opponents, but such clichés
ought not to be the sole basis of dismissing reasonable doubts created
and/or defences set out by the accused. 
11. Similarly, the five­day delay in registration of the FIR, in the
facts and circumstances of this case, gains importance as the father of
the victim is an eye­witness to a part of the occurrence. It is difficult to
appreciate that a father would await a second incident to happen
before moving the law into motion. Sweeping assumptions concerning
delays in registration of FIRs for sexual offences, send a problematic
signal to society and create opportunities for abuse by miscreants.
Instead, the facts of each individual case and the behaviour of the
parties involved ought to be analysed by courts before reaching a
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conclusion on the reason and effect of delay in registration of FIR. In
the facts of the present case, neither is Section 366A by itself a sexual
offence in the strict sense nor do the inactions of the prosecutrix or
her father inspire confidence on genuineness of the prosecution story.
No steps were taken to avail of medical examination of the victim, nor
was the Panchayat or any social forum approached for any form of
redress till the occurrence of the second alleged incident.
12. Further, it is beyond comprehension that the prosecutrix’s father
and his two male associates failed to stop the tenant boy who was
allegedly about to commit a sexual offence with the minor victim and
neither did they later make any attempt to even register a complaint
against   him.   Strangely,   the   prosecution   has   acquiesced   to   such
disappearance of the boy from the scene. Still further, the father of the
prosecutrix merely registered his protest to the appellant on the scene,
instead of reacting instinctively and approaching police authorities
when faced with possible trafficking of his daughter. This conduct of
belatedly proceeding against only the prosecutrix creates a lurking
suspicion   against   the   prosecution   case   and   it   may   not   be   totally
improbable to infer that it was a malicious attempt at the behest of
Bhola Singh to falsely implicate a weak rape victim and stifle her
ability to seek justice.
II. Shoddy investigation and prosecution
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13. The original record elucidates the lack of serious effort on part of
either the investigation agency or the prosecutor to bring home the
appellant’s guilt. Save for the initiative of the prosecutrix and her
father to register the complaint, no substantive evidence has been
gathered by the police. Despite the male tenant having been residing
with the appellant allegedly for many months, the police were unable
to   even   discover   his   name,   let   alone   his   antecedents   or   location.
Further, DW­1 casts an impressionable doubt on the existence of the
boy in the first place. This is further buttressed by the fact that PW­1
and   PW­2   differed   in   their   physical   description   of   the   boy’s   age,
clothing and his whereabouts. If the boy was indeed a tenant and if he
did live there for months, it is highly mootable that he couldn’t have
been traced.
14. The spot map prepared by PW­3 also has glaring omissions. The
location of Bhan Singh’s house and the place where the appellant
allegedly   threatened   the   prosecutrix   on   24.02.1996   are   not   even
marked. Letters which the prosecutrix alleged in her examination­inchief and police complaint that the appellant got written from her,
have not been produced during trial. These could have shed light on
the relationship between the accused, prosecutrix and the male tenant
prior to the incident. It is the duty of the prosecution to lead the best
evidence in its possession, and failure to do so ought to lead to an
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adverse inference.2
15. Non­examination of Bhan Singh and Karnail Singh is also a
noticeable lapse, given the gaps in the prosecution story. It appears
that no serious attempt was made to get them examined to resolve the
contradictions in the testimonies of PW­1 and PW­2. Such lack of
examination of material independent witnesses, adversely affects the
case of the prosecution. This Court in  Takhaji  Hiraji   v.  Thakore
Kubersing Chamansing and others3
, viewed that:
“19. … It is true that if a material witness, who would unfold the
genesis of the incident or an essential part of the prosecution case,
not convincingly brought to fore otherwise, or where there is a gap or
infirmity in the prosecution case which could have been supplied or
made good by examining a witness who though available is not
examined, the prosecution case can be termed as suffering from a
deficiency and withholding of such a material witness would oblige
the court to draw an adverse inference against the prosecution by
holding that if the witness would have been examined it would not
have supported the prosecution case. ...”
III. Gross mis­appreciation of conflicting testimonies
16. Ordinarily,   the   Supreme   Court   ought   not   to   re­appreciate
evidence.   However,   where   the   courts   below   have   dealt   with   the
material­on­record in a cavalier or mechanical manner which is likely
to   cause   gross   injustice,   then   this   Court   in   such   exceptional
2 Musauddin Ahmed v. State of Assam, (2009) 14 SCC 541, ¶ 11­15.
3  (2001) 6 SCC 145.
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circumstances may justifiably re­appraise the evidence to advance the
cause of justice. There is no gainsaying that such re­assessment ought
not to take place routinely and ought not to become substitution of an
otherwise plausible view taken by the Courts below.
17. The trial Court has summarily disregarded the contradictions
highlighted   by   the   defense   side,   on   the   premise   that   such
contradictions had no material bearing and that there was no reason
to disbelieve the prosecutrix. The High Court too has opined that PW­1
and   PW­2   have   completely   corroborated   each   other   and   their
testimonies   were   impeccable.   These   reasons,   in   our   considered
opinion, are not only contrary to the record but they also lead to an
impermissible reversal of the burden of proof imposed in criminal
trials.   There   are   numerous   clear   contradictions   between   the
testimonies of these two star­witnesses, which we find fatal to the
prosecution case.
18. First,  PW­1   states   that   when   the   door   was   unlocked   from
outside, only her father (PW­2) and Bhan Singh were present outside.
However, this contradicts both the information she gave in the police
complaint and the testimony of her father (PW­2) who states that
additionally a third person, Karnail Singh, was also present. Second,
the prosecutrix’s description of the male tenant differs significantly
from that of her father. Whereas PW­1 estimated his age at about 26
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years and described him as wearing a pant­shirt, PW­2 believed the
boy to be 18­19 years’ old and wearing a banian, underwear and dirty
shirt. Third, on the antecedents of the anonymous boy, the prosecutrix
stated that he was residing with the appellant for a year, whereas this
period was materially less at only 2­3 months per her father. Fourth,
whereas   prosecutrix   claimed   that   her   father   and   Bhan   Singh
unsuccessfully attempted to catch the tenant while he was escaping
from the room, PW­2 himself states that he was too perplexed to either
run   or   raise   any   alarm.  Fifth  and   most   notably,   on   the   point   of
recording of the FIR, the testimonies of PW­1, PW­2 and PW­5 all differ
noticeably. Whereas PW­1 claims that the complaint was recorded by
PW­5 while sitting on a “patthar” (stone), PW­2 claims that the same
was recorded by PW­5 while sitting on a  “concrete bench” in the
waiting shed of a bus stand in the presence of two other policemen.
Most intriguingly, PW­5 gives an entirely third version, claiming that
he was present at the bus stand with five other police officials and
that the statement was written not by him but by another ASI, who
placed the papers on the bonnet of the jeep while standing.
19. In addition to these inconsistencies which cast a serious shadow
of doubt over the version of events put forth by the prosecution, the
accounts of PW­1 and PW­2 are superficial and lack detail. Important
links of the story, including what happened in the crucial five minutes
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when the girl was locked inside the room or how the male tenant
reacted, are missing.
20. Similarly, other links of the story are grossly inconsistent and
don’t fit with each other. PW­2 admits to being not at home and
instead outside Bhan  Singh’s  house during the initial  part of the
incident, which as per the prosecutrix’s statement was a 10­minute
walk from the spot of the crime. It is thus unlikely that PW­2 could
have heard the prosecutrix’s screams from such afar or could have
covered   such   a   significant   distance   in   less   than   five   minutes   as
claimed   by   PW­1.   There   are,   thus,   mutual   contradictions   in   the
prosecution story.
IV. Failure to refute Section 313 CrPC statement
21. Under   the   Code   of   Criminal   Procedure,   1973   after   the
prosecution closes its evidence and examines all its witnesses, the
accused is given an opportunity of explanation through Section 313(1)
(b). Any alternate version of events or interpretation proffered by the
accused must be carefully analysed and considered by the trial Court
in compliance with the mandate of Section 313(4). Such opportunity is
a valuable right of the accused to seek justice and defend oneself.
Failure of the trial Court to fairly apply its mind and consider the
defence, could endanger the conviction itself.4
 Unlike the prosecution
4 Reena Hazarika v. State of Assam, (2019) 13 SCC 289, ¶ 19.
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which needs to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, the accused
merely   needs   to   create   reasonable   doubt   or   prove   their   alternate
version   by   mere   preponderance   of   probabilities.5
  Thus,   once   a
plausible version has been put forth in defence at the Section 313
CrPC examination stage, then it is for the prosecution to negate such
defense plea.
22. In the case at hand, the alternate version given by the appellant
could   not   be   lightly   brushed   aside.   Her   two­part   defence,   put
succinctly, was that first there was no male tenant at all and no one
except for her child and mother lived with her, and second, that she
was being falsely implicated as vengeance for filing a rape complaint
against one Bhola Singh with whom the prosecutrix’s father used to
work.
23. It is revealed that a rape complaint had indeed been made by the
appellant against Bhola Singh approximately seven months previous
to the present incident. Not only did she face difficulties in registering
an FIR of rape with the police, but she also had to take pains in filing
a private complaint and prosecuting the case against such third party.
In fact, the effect of these proceedings was in line with the appellant’s
defence,   for   in   that   rape   trial   the   trial   Court   drew   a   damning
observation against her character (calling her a child trafficker) owing
to these proceedings.
5 M Abbas v. State of Kerala, (2001) 10 SCC 103, ¶ 10.
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24. Lastly, DW­1, who lived in the neighbourhood of the parties,
both supported the appellant’s claim that there was no male tenant in
her   home   and   created   sufficiently   reasonable   connection   between
Bhola Singh and the prosecutrix’s father by volunteering that PW­2
was residing in Bhola Singh’s premises. Reliance on mere admission
by   DW­1   during   cross­examination   that   PW­2   was   a   government
employee, neither negates the defense of false implication nor does it
imply that PW­2 couldn’t be working with Bhola Singh in a parttime/casual capacity or staying in Bhola Singh’s house. Thus, the trial
Court’s analysis of the appellant’s Section 313 defence ought to have
been deeper, before concluding it as being false or untrustworthy.
V. Charge of Criminal Intimidation
25. Proving the intention of the appellant to cause alarm or compel
doing/abstaining from some act, and not mere utterances of words, is
a pre­requisite of successful conviction under Section 506 of IPC.6
 The
trial Court has undertaken no such separate analysis or recorded any
finding on this count, thus calling into question the conviction for
criminal intimidation. Further, the nature of this charge is such that it
is a derivative of the main charge of ‘procuration of minor girls’. Given
the facts of this case where the common testimony of PW­1 on both
6 Manik Taneja & Anr. v. State of Karnataka & Anr., (2015) 7 SCC 423, ¶ 12.
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charges has been doubted, it would be unwise to rely upon it as the
sole piece of evidence to convict the appellant for criminal intimidation
without any other corroboration.7
CONCLUSION
26. We are thus of the considered view that the prosecution has
failed to discharge its burden of proving the guilt of the appellant
under Section 366A and 506 of the IPC beyond reasonable doubt.
Thus,   for   the   reasons   aforesaid,   the   appeal   is   allowed   and   the
conviction and sentence awarded by the Courts below are set aside.
The appellant is acquitted and consequently set free.
…………………………….. J.
(N.V. RAMANA)
…………………………… J.
(SURYA KANT)
…………………………...J.
(KRISHNA MURARI)
NEW DELHI
DATED : 28.07.2020
7 Kamij Shaikh v. Emperor, AIR 1948 Pat 73, ¶ 5.
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