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Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Rape and murder - who took a female child on pretext of getting biscuits took the child and in isolated place brutally raped and killed her left the body with out any coverage. Apex court confirmed the death penalty as the accused is deserved for it
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS.145-146 OF 2011
Rajendra Pralhadrao Wasnik ... Appellant
Versus
The State of Maharashtra ...
Respondent
J U D G M E N T
Swatanter Kumar, J.
1. The present appeals are directed against the judgment dated
26th March, 2009 passed by the High Court of Bombay, Nagpur
Bench affirming the conviction of the accused under Sections
376(2)(f), 377 and 302 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (hereafter
`IPC') and the sentence of death awarded to the accused-appellant
1
herein vide judgment of the First Additional Sessions Judge,
Amrawati, dated 10th September, 2008.
2. The facts giving rise to the present appeal fall within a narrow
compass and are as follows :
Mahendra Namdeorao Wasnik, PW12, was living with his wife,
three children and parents in Village Asra. He used to go to Village
Tarkheda for earning his livelihood at the thresher of one Zafarbhai.
Normally, he used to return to his village at about 10.00 p.m. after
doing his day's work. On 2nd March, 2007, he left his house at 7.00
a.m. and returned from his work at about 9.00 p.m. Upon his
arrival, he was informed by his wife Kantabai Wasnik that at about
4.00 p.m. one person, whose name she did not know, had come to
the house and after taking tea, he left. The said person had again
come at about 6.30 p.m. On his second visit, he told that he would
take out their daughter, namely Vandana, to get her biscuits. After
talking to the mother of Vandana, the accused had taken Vandana
for purchasing biscuits but never brought her back to her house.
Having learnt this, PW12 started searching for his daughter
Vandana along with others, but they were unable to find her. On
2
3rd March, 2007 at about 8.00 a.m. when he was going to the Police
Station for lodging the report, he saw that some persons had
gathered in the fields of Pramod Vitthalrao Mohod. He went there
and saw the dead body of his daughter in that field. The dead body
of Vandana was lying in a nude condition and there were injuries
on her person. It has come in evidence that the accused had visited
the house of PW12, Mahendra Namdeorao Wasnik to see his ailing
father. He left after a cup of tea. It was on this information
received from his wife that PW12 suspected that the accused was
the person who was a resident of Village Parlam and had taken
away his daughter. Consequently, PW12 lodged the report with the
Police, Exhibit 71 in respect of the incident. As the body of the
deceased minor girl, Vandana, had been recovered, an FIR was
registered being Crime Case No.23/2007 under Sections 376(2)(f),
377 and 302 IPC. The Investigating Officer started the investigation,
prepared the inquest panchnama in respect of the dead body of the
deceased Vandana vide Exhibit 11. Sample of soil, soil mixed with
urine and clothes of the deceased Vandana were seized from the
spot under Panchanama Exhibit 12. The Investigating Officer had
also drawn a sketch map of the spot of the incident on 16th June,
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2007 vide Exhibit 64. At the request of the Police, the Judicial
Magistrate recorded statement of the witnesses, namely, Bhimrao
Gulhane, Nilesh Gedam, Ravindra Borkar and Sumit Ramteke
under Section 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
(hereafter `Cr.P.C.') The accused was arrested on 10th April, 2007
his clothes were seized vide Exhibit 14. He was subjected to
medical examination. The doctor had taken blood and semen
sample of the accused. These samples and the viscera were sent for
medical examination vide Exhibits 21 and 22. The reports thereof
are Exhibits 76 to 79.
3. The accused was produced before the Court and was
committed to the Court of Sessions where he was charged with the
offences punishable under Sections 376(2)(f), 377 and 320 IPC. He
was tried for these offences. Learned Trial Court found him guilty
of all the offences and awarded him punishments as follows :
Offences Punishment/Sentence
302 IPC Sentenced to death and he shall be hanged
by neck till he is dead subject to
confirmation by the Hon'ble High Court,
Bombay, Bench at Nagpur as per the
provisions of Section 366 of Cr.P.C.
376(2)(f) IPC Sentenced to imprisonment for life and to
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pay fine of Rs.1,000 (one thousand), in
default to suffer rigorous imprisonment for
six months.
377 IPC Sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for 10
(ten) years and to pay fine of Rs.1,000 (one
thousand) in default to suffer further
rigorous imprisonment for six months.
4. Aggrieved by the said judgment, the accused preferred an
appeal before the High Court which, as already noticed, came to be
dismissed. The High Court upheld the conviction and sentence of
the accused giving rise to the filing of the present appeals.
5. Learned counsel appearing for the appellant-accused
contended that the complete chain of events leading to the
involvement of the appellant in the crime, in question, have not
been established by the prosecution. According to him, the
prosecution has failed to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt.
The case is one of circumstantial evidence and the onus to prove
the case by leading cogent, appropriate and linking evidence is on
the prosecution. The prosecution has failed to establish the charge
against the appellant. All witnesses are interested witnesses as
they are the relatives of the informant or the deceased and as such
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cannot be safely relied upon by the Court to hold the appellant
guilty of the alleged offences. Lastly, it is also contended that it was
not a case which fell in the category of `rarest of rare' cases where
the Court would find that any other sentence except death penalty
would be inadequate and unjustifiable. Thus, the imposition of
penalty of death imposed by the High Court calls for interference by
this Court. Though the accused, in his statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C., while replying to question No.9 about the death of
Vandana and injuries on her body, had stated that it was false but
from the evidence led by the prosecution, it is clear that the death
of the deceased Vandana was homicidal. One can get the idea of
the torture and brutality that the minor girl suffered at the hands of
the accused from the injuries found on her person in the post-
mortem report. They have been described by the doctor as follows:
"External Vaginal Swelling present Vaginal
wall lacerated, wound extending from labia
mejora to inside vaginal canal in lower 1/3rd on
both side 1=" x <" x muscle deep
Stains of semen present on inner side of thigh.
Hymen absent, one finger easily pass.
Swelling present on anal region.
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Multiple abrasions with Contusions present on
body on face, chest back & both shoulders and
knees Interiorly.
Bite mark on chest (L) side around Nipple
elliptical with diameters 1=" x 1<".
Right Lung collapsed, 150 gm, Congested on
section collapsed.
Left Lung Collapsed, 100 gm, Congested on
section collapsed.
Large vessels - contained blood."
6. Exhibit 11, the inquest panchnama is admitted while the post
mortem report Exhibit 71 has been proved in accordance with law.
Both these documents demonstrate, beyond reasonable doubt, that
it was a case of homicidal death and as per the post mortem report,
the cause of death was rape and asphyxia.
7. There is no doubt that it is not a case of direct evidence but
the conviction of the accused is founded on circumstantial
evidence. It is a settled principle of law that the prosecution has to
satisfy certain conditions before a conviction based on
circumstantial evidence can be sustained. The circumstances from
which the conclusion of guilt is to be drawn should be fully
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established and should also be consistent with only one hypothesis,
i.e. the guilt of the accused. The circumstances should be
conclusive and proved by the prosecution. There must be a chain
of events so complete as not to leave any substantial doubt in the
mind of the Court. Irresistibly, the evidence should lead to the
conclusion which is inconsistent with the innocence of the accused
and the only possibility is that the accused has committed the
crime. To put it simply, the circumstances forming the chain of
events should be proved and they should cumulatively point
towards the guilt of the accused alone. In such circumstances, the
inference of guilt can be justified only when all the incriminating
facts and circumstances are found to be incompatible with the
innocence of the accused or the guilt of any other person.
Furthermore, the rule which needs to be observed by the Court
while dealing with cases of circumstantial evidence is that the best
evidence must be adduced which the nature of the case admits.
The circumstances have to be examined cumulatively. The Court
has to examine the complete chain of events and then see whether
all the material facts sought to be established by the prosecution to
bring home the guilt of the accused, have been proved beyond
8
reasonable doubt or not. It has to be kept in mind that all these
principles are based upon one basic cannon of our criminal
jurisprudence that the accused is innocent until proven guilty and
that the accused is entitled to a just and fair trial. [Ref.
Dhananajoy Chatterjee alias Dhana vs. State of W.B. [JT 1994 (1) SC
33]; Shivu & Anr. v. R.G. High Court of Karnataka & Anr. [(2007) 4
SCC 713]; and Shivaji @ Dadya Shankar Alhat v. State of
Maharashtra [(AIR 2009 SC 56].
8. Now, we will revert to the facts of the present case in light of
the above-stated principles. We must spell out the circumstances
which would show that for the undisputable rape and murder of the
deceased minor girl, the accused is not only the suspect but is also
the person who has committed the crime. These circumstances are:
1. The accused had taken Vandana from her home on the pretext
of purchasing her biscuits.
2. Neither Vandana nor the accused returned to the house.
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3. Accused was seen with the deceased Vandana on 2nd March,
2007 at about 6.00 p.m. at the bus stand where, in the normal
course of life, such shops are situated.
4. Thereafter, the nude body of Vandana was found in the field of
Pramod Vitthalrao Mohod on 3rd March, 2007.
5. Exhibit 11 and 71, show beyond reasonable doubt that the
three year old girl was subjected to rape, injuries and then
murdered.
9. The above circumstances and the chain of events is complete
with regard to the commission of crime and undoubtedly points
towards the accused. Now, we have to examine whether the
prosecution has provided these facts as required in law.
10. PW2, Kanta, is the mother of the deceased Vandana. In her
statement she has stated that she was living along with her
husband, one daughter and two sons. According to her, her in-laws
were residing in the same house, though separately. Vandana was
three years old at the time of her death. According to her, the
occurrence took place on the day of Holi festival. She identified the
10
accused, who was present in the court and stated that he had come
to their house earlier and then on the date of the incident as well.
Supporting the case of the prosecution, she stated that he had
come to the house at about 3.00 p.m. and then left after having tea
by saying that he wanted to meet his friends and thereafter, he
again came back at 6.00 p.m. Vandana was playing in front of the
house at that time. The accused told her that he would purchase
biscuits for the child and took Vandana with him. They had gone
towards the bus-stand and thereafter, neither Vandana nor the
accused returned home. She had told her husband, PW1, about
the incident on his return from work. PW2 also stated that on the
next day body of deceased was found in the fields. There was blood
in her nostrils and mouth. Marks of bites were found on her
breast. There was swelling in the private parts of her body. She
came to know the name of the accused subsequently. Her
statement remained uncontroverted or nothing material came in her
cross-examination. The accused was also seen in the house of
PW12 by PW3, Preeti, who is the niece of PW12. She also
corroborated the statements of PW12 and PW2. PW4, is the other
material witness, Ravindra, who stated that on the day of the
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incident, i.e. 2nd March, 2007, he was present at the S.T. Bus stand
of Asra and he had seen the accused along with Vandana in hotel
Rajendra Bhojane. She was on the waist of the accused and they
had purchased a packet of biscuits. Thereafter, he saw the accused
going on the road which goes to Amrawati. Thereafter, he even
searched for Vandana along with Vikram Meshram. PW5, Bhimrao
Pundlik Gulhane is a witness who owns 13 acres of agricultural
land at Village Khargodi in Village Nagthana. For the purposes of
cultivating his land, he used to engage labourers, and the accused
was engaged by him for doing the work on his agricultural field and
he disclosed the name of accused as Sanjay Manohar Wankhede.
According to this witness, he maintained a regular register for
marking `presence' and `payment of wages' to the labourers he
engaged. The said witness deposed that on the date of occurrence,
i.e. 2nd March, 2007, the accused did not come for duty. However,
on that day in the morning, the accused came to him and
demanded Rs. 500/- saying that he wanted to go to Asra and
thereafter, he did not come back. He produced the register which
had been seized by the police earlier and had the signatures and it
was exhibited as Ex.36. PW7, is another witness, who had seen the
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accused holding Vandana when he was going back to his house
from the S.T. bus stand Asra.
11. The accused was subjected to medical examination and was
examined by Dr. Ravindra Ruprao Sirsat, PW9 and he noticed no
injuries on his person. Father of the deceased minor girl was
examined as PW12 and he provided the complete chain of events,
right from the time he got the information that his daughter had
been taken away till the time when her dead body was recovered
from the fields. Dr. K.V. Wathodkar, Dr. (Mrs.) V.K. Wathodkar
and Dr. Varsha S. Bhade had prepared the postmortem report, Ex.-
17, which clearly shows that the cause of death of the three-year
old girl was rape and asphyxia. All these factors have been proved
by the prosecution both by documentary as well as oral evidence.
The accused admitted the documents i.e. the sketch map, Ex.64,
spot panchnama, Ex.10, inquest panchnama, Ex.11, seizure
panchnamas Exihibits 12, 13 and 14 in respect of the seizure of
clothes of the accused and in respect of blood sample, public hair
sample, semen sample of the accused, arrest panchnama, Ex.16,
postmortem report Ex.17 and letters Ex.19 to 27.
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12. Once these crucial pieces of documentary evidence have been
admitted by the accused and other factual links in the story of the
prosecution have been duly proved by the witnesses by
circumstantial or direct evidence, there is no occasion for this Court
to doubt that the prosecution has not been able to prove its case
beyond reasonable doubt.
13. It has been vehemently argued on behalf of the appellant that
the report of the FSL does not connect the accused to the
commission of the crime. This, being a very material piece of
evidence which the prosecution has failed to establish, the accused
would be entitled to the benefit of doubt. There were two kinds of
Exhibits which were sent by the Police to the Forensic Science
Laboratory for examination - one, the blood-stained clothes of the
deceased and second, the sample of blood, semen and pubic hair
sample of the accused which were sent vide Exhibit 57. The reports
of the laboratory are Exhibits 76, 77, 78 and 79. As far as the
reports in respect of the appellant's sample of semen and blood are
concerned, they were inconclusive as was stated by the FSL in
Exhibit 76. His clothes which were seized by the Police did not bear
14
any blood or semen stains and that was duly recorded in Exhibit
78. Exhibit 77 were the clothes of the deceased which were blood
stained. The clothes contained blood group `O' which was the blood
group of the deceased girl. From the report of the experts, it is clear
that there is no direct evidence connecting the appellant to the
commission of the crime but it is not the case of the defence that
the FSL report was in the negative. Merely because the report was
inconclusive, it is not necessary that the irresistible conclusion is
only one that the accused is not guilty, particularly where the
prosecution has been able to establish its case on circumstantial
evidence as also by direct oral evidence. It is a settled principle of
law that the evidence has to be read in its entirety. If, upon reading
the evidence as such, there are serious loopholes or lacking in the
case of the prosecution and they do not prove that the accused is
guilty, then the Court would be justified in giving the benefit of
doubt to the accused on the strength of a weak FSL report. The
FSL report Exhibit P77 had clearly established that the blood of
group `O' was found on the clothes of the deceased and that was her
blood group. The prosecution has been able to establish not only
by substantial evidence but clearly by medical evidence as well, that
15
the minor girl had suffered serious injuries on her private parts and
there were bite marks on her chest.
14. An attempt was also made to cast certain doubts as to the very
identity of the accused but we find this submission without any
substance. The accused has been identified by PW2, PW3 and
PW4. Besides them, even PW7 Sumeet Ramteke had also stated
that he had seen the victim minor girl with the appellant in the
house of PW2, Kantabai and then again seen him with the victim
going towards the ST bus stand. Statement of these four witnesses
successfully stood the lengthy cross-examination conducted on
behalf of the defence. There cannot be any doubt in these
circumstances that the accused had taken away the victim from the
house of PW2 and was seen at the ST stand.
15. In our considered opinion, the tests laid down by this Court in
Baldev Singh v. State of Haryana, AIR 2009 SC 963 in relation to
cases of circumstantial evidence are completely satisfied in the
present case. The circumstances and the chain of events proved by
the prosecution is fully established and the circumstances which
were required to be proven by the prosecution, have been proved by
16
them successfully. The cumulative effect of the entire prosecution
evidence is that it points unmistakably towards the guilt of the
accused. It is not only a case of circumstantial evidence simpliciter
but also the `last seen together' principle. There are witnesses who
had seen the accused at the house of PW2 with the deceased minor
girl. Thereafter, he was again seen with the child at the ST bus
stand, Asra and lastly while going away from the ST bus stand with
the minor child. Thus, once the evidence had successfully shown
that the accused was last seen with the minor girl, it was for the
accused to explain the circumstances. The accused in his
statement under Section 313 Cr.P.C., in response to all the 68
questions put to him, answered only one simple answer - `it is
false'. He also stated that the Police had registered a false case
against him and that he did not want to lead any defence. It is very
difficult to assume that as many as 13 witnesses from the same
village, the Police and doctors would falsely implicate the accused.
There are no circumstances which can even remotely suggest that
this plea taken by the accused even deserves consideration. Ex facie
this is an incorrect stand.
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16. Having dealt with the contentions of the learned counsel
appearing for the appellant on the merits of the case, now we would
proceed to discuss the last contention raised on behalf of the
appellant that this is not one of the rarest of rare cases where
awarding death sentence is justified. We have already held that the
prosecution has been able to bring home the guilt of the accused for
the offences under Sections 376(2)(f), 377 and 302 of the IPC. In
order to deal with this contention raised on behalf of the appellant,
we may, at the very outset, refer to the basic principles that are to
be kept in mind by the Court while considering the award of death
sentence to an accused. This very Bench in a recent judgment,
considered various judgments of this Court by different Benches
right from Bachan Singh's case, in relation to the canons governing
the imposition of death penalty and illustratively stated the
aggravating circumstances, mitigating circumstances and the
principles that would be applied by the Courts in determining such
a question. It will be useful to refer to the judgment of this Bench
in the case of Ramnaresh vs. State of Chattisgarh, Crl. Appeal No.
166-167/2010 decided on February 28, 2012 wherein it was held
as under: -
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"The above judgments provide us with the
dicta of the Court relating to imposition of
death penalty. Merely because a crime is
heinous per se may not be a sufficient reason
for the imposition of death penalty without
reference to the other factors and attendant
circumstances.
Most of the heinous crimes under the IPC
are punishable by death penalty or life
imprisonment. That by itself does not suggest
that in all such offences, penalty of death
should be awarded. We must notice, even at
the cost of repetition, that in such cases
awarding of life imprisonment would be a rule,
while `death' would be the exception. The
term `rarest of rare case' which is the
consistent determinative rule declared by this
Court, itself suggests that it has to be an
exceptional case. The life of a particular
individual cannot be taken away except
according to the procedure established by law
and that is the constitutional mandate. The
law contemplates recording of special reasons
and, therefore, the expression `special' has to
be given a definite meaning and connotation.
`Special reasons' in contra-distinction to
`reasons' simplicitor conveys the legislative
mandate of putting a restriction on exercise of
judicial discretion by placing the requirement
of special reasons.
Since, the later judgments of this Court
have added to the principles stated by this
Court in the case of Bachan Singh (supra) and
Machhi Singh (supra), it will be useful to re-
state the stated principles while also bringing
them in consonance, with the recent
judgments.
19
The law enunciated by this Court in its
recent judgments, as already noticed, adds
and elaborates the principles that were stated
in the case of Bachan Singh (supra) and
thereafter, in the case of Machhi Singh (supra).
The aforesaid judgments, primarily dissect
these principles into two different
compartments - one being the `aggravating
circumstances' while the other being the
`mitigating circumstance'. The Court would
consider the cumulative effect of both these
aspects and normally, it may not be very
appropriate for the Court to decide the most
significant aspect of sentencing policy with
reference to one of the classes under any of the
following heads while completely ignoring other
classes under other heads. To balance the two
is the primary duty of the Court. It will be
appropriate for the Court to come to a final
conclusion upon balancing the exercise that
would help to administer the criminal justice
system better and provide an effective and
meaningful reasoning by the Court as
contemplated under Section 354(3) Cr.P.C.
Aggravating Circumstances :
1. The offences relating to the commission of
heinous crimes like murder, rape, armed
dacoity, kidnapping etc. by the accused with a
prior record of conviction for capital felony or
offences committed by the person having a
substantial history of serious assaults and
criminal convictions.
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2. The offence was committed while the
offender was engaged in the commission of
another serious offence.
3. The offence was committed with the
intention to create a fear psychosis in the
public at large and was committed in a public
place by a weapon or device which clearly
could be hazardous to the life of more than one
person.
4. The offence of murder was committed for
ransom or like offences to receive money or
monetary benefits.
5. Hired killings.
6. The offence was committed outrageously
for want only while involving inhumane
treatment and torture to the victim.
7. The offence was committed by a person
while in lawful custody.
8. The murder or the offence was
committed, to prevent a person lawfully
carrying out his duty like arrest or custody in
a place of lawful confinement of himself or
another. For instance, murder is of a person
who had acted in lawful discharge of his duty
under Section 43 Cr.P.C.
9. When the crime is enormous in
proportion like making an attempt of murder
of the entire family or members of a particular
community.
21
10. When the victim is innocent, helpless or a
person relies upon the trust of relationship
and social norms, like a child, helpless
woman, a daughter or a niece staying with a
father/uncle and is inflicted with the crime by
such a trusted person.
11. When murder is committed for a motive
which evidences total depravity and meanness.
12. When there is a cold blooded murder
without provocation.
13. The crime is committed so brutally that it
pricks or shocks not only the judicial
conscience but even the conscience of the
society.
Mitigating Circumstances :
1. The manner and circumstances in and
under which the offence was committed, for
example, extreme mental or emotional
disturbance or extreme provocation in
contradistinction to all these situations in
normal course.
2. The age of the accused is a relevant
consideration but not a determinative factor by
itself.
3. The chances of the accused of not
indulging in commission of the crime again
and the probability of the accused being
reformed and rehabilitated.
4. The condition of the accused shows that
he was mentally defective and the defect
22
impaired his capacity to appreciate the
circumstances of his criminal conduct.
5. The circumstances which, in normal
course of life, would render such a behavior
possible and could have the effect of giving rise
to mental imbalance in that given situation
like persistent harassment or, in fact, leading
to such a peak of human behavior that, in the
facts and circumstances of the case, the
accused believed that he was morally justified
in committing the offence.
6. Where the Court upon proper
appreciation of evidence is of the view that the
crime was not committed in a pre-ordained
manner and that the death resulted in the
course of commission of another crime and
that there was a possibility of it being
construed as consequences to the commission
of the primary crime.
7. Where it is absolutely unsafe to rely upon
the testimony of a sole eye-witness though
prosecution has brought home the guilt of the
accused.
While determining the questions
relateable to sentencing policy, the Court has
to follow certain principles and those
principles are the loadstar besides the above
considerations in imposition or otherwise of
the death sentence.
Principles :
1. The Court has to apply the test to
determine, if it was the `rarest of rare' case for
imposition of a death sentence.
23
2. In the opinion of the Court, imposition of
any other punishment, i.e., life imprisonment
would be completely inadequate and would not
meet the ends of justice.
3. Life imprisonment is the rule and death
sentence is an exception.
4. The option to impose sentence of
imprisonment for life cannot be cautiously
exercised having regard to the nature and
circumstances of the crime and all relevant
circumstances.
5. The method (planned or otherwise) and
the manner (extent of brutality and
inhumanity, etc.) in which the crime was
committed and the circumstances leading to
commission of such heinous crime.
Stated broadly, these are the accepted
indicators for the exercise of judicial discretion
but it is always preferred not to fetter the
judicial discretion by attempting to make the
excessive enumeration, in one way or another.
In other words, these are the considerations
which may collectively or otherwise weigh in
the mind of the Court, while exercising its
jurisdiction. It is difficult to state, it as an
absolute rule. Every case has to be decided on
its own merits. The judicial pronouncements,
can only state the precepts that may govern
the exercise of judicial discretion to a limited
extent. Justice may be done on the facts of
each case. These are the factors which the
Court may consider in its endeavour to do
complete justice between the parties.
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The Court then would draw a balance-
sheet of aggravating and mitigating
circumstances. Both aspects have to be given
their respective weightage. The Court has to
strike a balance between the two and see
towards which side the scale/balance of
justice tilts. The principle of proportion
between the crime and the punishment is the
principle of `just deserts' that serves as the
foundation of every criminal sentence that is
justifiable. In other words, the `doctrine of
proportionality' has a valuable application to
the sentencing policy under the Indian
criminal jurisprudence. Thus, the court will
not only have to examine what is just but also
as to what the accused deserves keeping in
view the impact on the society at large.
Every punishment imposed is bound to
have its effect not only on the accused alone,
but also on the society as a whole. Thus, the
Courts should consider retributive and
deterrent aspect of punishment while imposing
the extreme punishment of death.
Wherever, the offence which is
committed, manner in which it is committed,
its attendant circumstances and the motive
and status of the victim, undoubtedly brings
the case within the ambit of `rarest of rare'
cases and the Court finds that the imposition
of life imprisonment would be inflicting of
inadequate punishment, the Court may award
death penalty. Wherever, the case falls in any
of the exceptions to the `rarest of rare' cases,
the Court may exercise its judicial discretion
while imposing life imprisonment in place of
death sentence."
25
17. We shall tentatively examine the facts of the present case in
light of the above principles. First and foremost is that the crime
committed by the accused is heinous. In fact, it is not heinous
simplicitor, but is a brutal and inhuman crime where a married
person, aged 31 years, chooses to lure a three year old minor girl
child on the pretext of buying her biscuits and then commits rape
on her. Further, obviously intending to destroy the entire evidence
and the possibility of being identified, he kills the minor child. On
the basis of the `last seen together' theory and other direct and
circumstantial evidence, the prosecution has been able to establish
its case beyond any reasonable doubt. It can hardly be even
imagined that what torture and brutality the minor child must have
faced during the course of commission of this crime. All her private
parts were swollen and bleeding. She was bleeding through her
nose and mouth. The injuries, as described in EX.P17 (the post
mortem report) shows the extent of brutal sexual urge of the
accused, which targeted a minor child, who still had to see the
world. He went to the extent of giving bites on her chest. The pain
and agony that he must have caused to the deceased minor girl is
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beyond imagination and is the limit of viciousness. This Court has
to examine the conduct of the accused prior to, at the time as well
as after the commission of the crime. Prior thereto, the accused
had been serving with PW5 and PW6 under a false name and took
advantage of his familiarity with the family of the deceased. He
committed the crime in the most brutal manner and, thereafter, he
opted not to explain any circumstances and just took up the plea of
false implication, which is unbelievable and unsustainable. When
the Court draws a balance-sheet of the aggravating and mitigating
circumstances, for the purposes of determining whether the
extreme sentence of death should be imposed upon the accused or
not, the scale of justice only tilts against the accused as there is
nothing but aggravating circumstances evident from the record of
the Court. In fact, one has to really struggle to find out if there
were any mitigating circumstances favouring the accused. Another
aspect of the matter is that the minor child was helpless in the
cruel hands of the accused. The accused was holding the child in a
relationship of `trust-belief' and `confidence', in which capacity he
took the child from the house of PW2. In other words, the accused,
by his conduct, has belied the human relationship of trust and
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worthiness.
18. The accused left the deceased in a badly injured condition in
the open fields without even clothes. This reflects the most
unfortunate and abusive facet of human conduct, for which the
accused has to blame no one else than his own self.
19. Thus, for the reasons afore-recorded, we find that the learned
trial court was fully justified in law and on the facts of the present
case, in awarding the extreme penalty of death for an offence under
Section 302 IPC along with other punishments for other offences.
We find no justifiable reason to interfere with the judgment of
conviction and order of sentence under the impugned judgment.
The appeals are dismissed.
...................................,J.
[A.K. Patnaik]
...................................,J.
[Swatanter Kumar]
New Delhi;
February 29, 2012
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