Roop Singh Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh
[From the Judgment and Order dated 13.12.2004 of the High Court of Judicature, Madhya Pradesh, bench at Gwalior in Criminal Appeal No. 452 of 2002]
[From the Judgment and Order dated 13.12.2004 of the High Court of Judicature, Madhya Pradesh, bench at Gwalior in Criminal Appeal No. 452 of 2002]
Mr. R.C. Kohli, Advocate for the Appellant.
Ms. Vibha Datta Makhija, Ms. Archi Agnihotri, Advocates for the Respondent.
Penal Code, 1860
Sections 450, 376 – Trespass and rape – Appellant trespassing the house of prosecutrix, while she was sleeping and committing rape on her – Plea that she was a consenting party. Held cannot be accepted. Her sister-in-law was sleeping within a short distance from her. The house in which prosecutrix and her sister-in-law were sleeping, had three rooms in it. Had she been consenting party, she could have moved into another room, specially when her husband also was not at home. She was not a consenting party.
Trespass and rape – Plea of false implication due to land dispute – No proof of any litigation between two parties. Held in absence of any proof, court cannot hold appellant innocent and falsely implicated.
PW-5 has further stated in her evidence that her sister-in-law (PW-4) woke up when she shouted and prior to that she did not wake up and she was sleeping and there is no discrepancy in the evidence of PW-5 and PW-4 on this point. Hence, the evidence on record is clear that PW-5 was not a willing party to the sexual intercourse. (Para 6.1)
Thus, unless there is voluntary participation by the woman to a sexual act after fully exercising the choice in favour of assent, the Court cannot hold that the woman gave consent to the sexual intercourse. From the evidence of PW-4 and PW-5 discussed above, we cannot hold that PW-5 voluntarily participated in the sexual intercourse with the appellant after fully exercising her choice in favour of assent. (Para 7.1)
Learned counsel for the appellant has also not brought to our notice any evidence to show that there was any land dispute between the two families. In the absence of any evidence to show that there was a dispute between the families in relation to a land on account of which PW-4 and PW-5 had lodged the FIR against the appellant, the Court cannot hold that the appellant had been falsely implicated in the offences under Sections 450 and 376, IPC. (Para 8)
2. State of H.P. v. Mango Ram [JT 2000 (9) SC 408] (Para 7)
1. This is an appeal by way of special leave under Article 136 of the Constitution against the judgment dated 13.12.2004 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Gwalior Bench.
2. The facts very briefly are that a First Information Report (for short FIR) was lodged by the complainant in Police Station, Civil Lines, Morena, on 01.03.2000 at 7.50 p.m. in the evening. In her verbal statement which was registered as FIR, the complainant stated that on the previous night while she was sleeping in her house in village Tighrapura in a room at about 2 a.m., the appellant, who was her neighbour, entered into her house and forcibly committed intercourse with her when her sister-in-law Guddi Bai sleeping in a nearby cot woke up after listening to weeping of the complainant and then the appellant ran away. The complainant further stated that her husband Rajesh had been to the well to give water to the field and when he came in the morning she told him about the incident and he went to Khadiahar to call her father-in-law Ram Bhajan but he did not meet him and then the complainant has come with her husband to lodge the FIR. Pursuant to the FIR, an x-ray was conducted on the complainant. The complainant was also medically examined. Investigation was conducted and the statements of witnesses were recorded by the police and charge-sheet was filed against the appellant under Section 450, IPC, (house trespass in order to commit an offence) and Section 376, IPC, (rape).
3. At the trial of Sessions Case No.129 of 2000, the FIR was marked as Ex.P-6. Dr. Yogender Singh, who carried out the x-ray examination, was examined as PW-1 and the x-ray report was marked as Ex.P-1. Dr. Smt. Chandra Jatav, who conducted the medical examination on the complainant, was examined as PW-2 and her examination report was marked as Ex.P-5. The Petticoat of the complainant along with the slide of her vaginal liquid were sent to the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL), Gwalior, and the FSL report was marked as Ex.P-7. Guddi Bai, the sister-in-law of the complainant, was examined as PW-4 and the complainant was examined as PW-5. On the basis of the ocular evidence of PW-4 and PW-5 and the medical evidence and FSL report, the learned Sessions Judge, Morena, convicted the appellant by judgment dated 31.07.2002 and sentenced him to three years rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs.250/- for the offence under Section 450, IPC and also sentenced him to seven years rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs.500/- for the offence under Section 376(1) IPC. Aggrieved, the appellant filed Criminal Appeal No.452 of 2002 before the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Gwalior Bench, but by the impugned judgment the High Court maintained the conviction and sentences under Sections 376 and 450, IPC, and dismissed the appeal.
4. At the hearing of this appeal, Mr. R.C. Kohli made two submissions before us: (i) the appellant was not guilty of the offence of rape as PW-5, the complainant, had given her consent to the sexual intercourse as would be clear from the evidence on record; and (ii) the complainant has made out a false case against the appellant because of a grudge that the family of the complainant bore against the appellant over a land dispute.
5. Ms. Vibha Datta Makhija, learned counsel appearing for the State, on the other hand, referred to the evidence of PW-5 to show that the complainant made all efforts to resist the appellant and submitted that this was thus not a case where the complainant had given her consent for the sexual intercourse. She cited the judgment in State of U.P. v. Chhotey Lal [JT 2011 (1) SC 228 : (2011) 2 SCC 550] to submit that the word consent in the definition of rape in Section 376, IPC, connotes exercise of intelligence based on knowledge of the significance and moral quality of the act to which consent is given and also presupposes a choice of the woman who is said to have given consent between resistance and assent. In reply to submission of Mr. Kohli that the complainant had made the false allegation of rape against the appellant only because of the dispute over the land between the appellant and the family of the complainant, Ms. Vibha Datta Makhija submitted that the trial court has held that there is no evidence whatsoever in support of this defence taken by the appellant.
6. We cannot not accept the submission of Mr. Kohli that the complainant had given her consent to the sexual intercourse committed by the appellant. The evidence of PW-4 and PW-5 is that the complainant was sleeping within 2-3 feet away from her sister-in-law (PW-4) and she could not have given her consent for the sexual intercourse when her sister-in-law was sleeping within a short distance from her. Moreover, from the evidence of PW-4, we find that there were three rooms in the house where PW-4 and PW-5 were sleeping and the husband of PW-5 was not in the house and hence PW-5 and the appellant would have moved on to another room if PW-5 was willing for the intercourse. PW-5 has also stated in her evidence:
I made efforts to remove aside the accused but did not scratch him. It is wrong to say that I had got done the bad act from the accused, or unknown person, with sweet-will.
6.1 PW-5 has further stated in her evidence that her sister-in-law (PW-4) woke up when she shouted and prior to that she did not wake up and she was sleeping and there is no discrepancy in the evidence of PW-5 and PW-4 on this point. Hence, the evidence on record is clear that PW-5 was not a willing party to the sexual intercourse.
7. In State of U.P. v. Chhotey Lal (supra), the following passage from the judgment of a three-Judge Bench of this Court in State of H.P. v. Mango Ram [JT 2000 (9) SC 408 : (2000) 7 SCC 224] on the meaning of consent for the purpose of the offence of rape as defined in Section 375, IPC, is quoted:
Consent for the purpose of Section 375 requires voluntary participation not only after the exercise of intelligence based on the knowledge of the significance and moral quality of the act but after having fully exercised the choice between resistance and assent. Whether there was consent or not, is to be ascertained only on a careful study of all relevant circumstances.
7.1 Thus, unless there is voluntary participation by the woman to a sexual act after fully exercising the choice in favour of assent, the Court cannot hold that the woman gave consent to the sexual intercourse. From the evidence of PW-4 and PW-5 discussed above, we cannot hold that PW-5 voluntarily participated in the sexual intercourse with the appellant after fully exercising her choice in favour of assent.
8. On the second contention of the learned counsel for the appellant that PW-5 has falsely named the appellant out of grudge arising out of a dispute on the land between the two families, we find that the trial court has held that there is no proof of any litigation being there between both the parties. Learned counsel for the appellant has also not brought to our notice any evidence to show that there was any land dispute between the two families. In the absence of any evidence to show that there was a dispute between the families in relation to a land on account of which PW-4 and PW-5 had lodged the FIR against the appellant, the Court cannot hold that the appellant had been falsely implicated in the offences under Sections 450 and 376, IPC.
9. In the result, we do not find any merit in the appeal and we accordingly dismiss the same.
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