Calcutta High Court Acquits Husband In 30-Year-Old Dowry Death Case, Finds No Proof Of Abetment To Suicide Or Cruelty
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of a husband under Sections 306 and 498A of the IPC in a 1994 suicide case, holding that the prosecution failed to establish the essential ingredients of abetment or cruelty beyond reasonable doubt. Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das allowed the criminal appeal and acquitted the appellant, observing that there was “no direct act or incitement...
The Calcutta High Court has set aside the conviction of a husband under Sections 306 and 498A of the IPC in a 1994 suicide case, holding that the prosecution failed to establish the essential ingredients of abetment or cruelty beyond reasonable doubt. Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das allowed the criminal appeal and acquitted the appellant, observing that there was “no direct act or incitement to the commission of suicide” attributable to him.
The case arose from a complaint lodged by the deceased woman's brother, who alleged that his sister had been subjected to sustained physical and mental torture by her husband and his sister, culminating in her death by hanging in her matrimonial home. The trial court had convicted the husband in 2009, sentencing him to seven years' rigorous imprisonment under Section 306 IPC and three years under Section 498A IPC. Aggrieved, the husband approached the High Court.
At the outset, the High Court noted that the medical and inquest evidence unequivocally established that the death was suicidal in nature. The post-mortem report revealed that the cause of death was “severe suffocation due to hanging,” and no external injuries were found on the body except a ligature mark. This, according to the Court, did not support the prosecution's initial suspicion of homicidal death.
Examining the charge under Section 306 IPC, the Court emphasised that abetment to suicide necessarily requires proof of the ingredients under Section 107 IPC—namely, instigation, conspiracy, or intentional aid. Relying on settled Supreme Court jurisprudence, the Court held that “without a positive act on the part of the accused to instigate or aid in committing suicide, conviction cannot be sustained.” On a careful appraisal of the evidence, the Court found no material to indicate any such instigation or mens rea on the part of the appellant. The allegations of harassment were found to be general and lacking in specificity.
The Court was particularly critical of the prosecution evidence, noting that most witnesses were hearsay witnesses who had no direct knowledge of the alleged acts of cruelty. The sole purported eyewitness to an incident of assault had neither reported the matter to the police nor disclosed it to anyone prior to his deposition in court, rendering his testimony unreliable. Additionally, the family members of the deceased admitted that despite allegedly being aware of long-standing torture, they had never approached any authority during the subsistence of the marriage.
A significant factor that weighed with the Court was the testimony of the deceased's daughter, who was examined as a prosecution witness. While she was declared hostile, the Court reiterated that the evidence of a hostile witness cannot be discarded in toto and must be evaluated to the extent it is credible. The daughter stated that the relationship between her parents was cordial and alleged that her earlier statement had been tutored under pressure from her maternal uncle and the investigating officer. She further suggested that her mother was under stress due to financial demands made by her maternal uncle. The Court found that this testimony introduced a “different version” which undermined the prosecution's case.
On the charge under Section 498A IPC, the Court held that the prosecution had failed to prove either dowry demand or cruelty of such a nature as would drive a woman to commit suicide. It noted that there were only “general and omnibus allegations” without any specific instances of cruelty. The absence of any prior complaint during the 12-year marriage and the lack of corroborative evidence further weakened the prosecution's case.
The Court also took note of the mother's admission that the complaint had been lodged out of a sense of grievance following the victim's death. Observing that such admitted grudge could not be ignored, the Court held that the prosecution evidence was not of a “clinching nature” sufficient to sustain a conviction.
In conclusion, the Court held that the prosecution had failed to prove the case beyond reasonable doubt and that the trial court had erred in convicting the appellant without establishing the foundational requirements of Sections 306 and 498A IPC. The conviction and sentence were accordingly set aside, and the appellant was acquitted and discharged from his bail bonds.
Case: BIKASH CHANDRA PAUL VS THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Case No: CRA 445 OF 2009