28 April 1975
Supreme Court
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SHAMIM RAHMANI ETC. Vs STATE OF U.P.

Bench: UNTWALIA,N.L.
Case number: Appeal Criminal 121 of 1973


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PETITIONER: SHAMIM RAHMANI ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P.

DATE OF JUDGMENT28/04/1975

BENCH: UNTWALIA, N.L. BENCH: UNTWALIA, N.L. FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:  1975 AIR 1883            1975 SCR  315  1975 SCC  (4) 652

ACT: Penal  Code-S.  201-Ascertaining full  facts  before  giving information to police-If obligatory.

HEADNOTE: The  appellants were brother and sister and were  living  in different  localities  of the city.   The  sister  developed illicit intimacy with the deceased, but finding that he  was not giving her exclusive attention, fired a shot at him when he ,came to her house. On  hearing about the incident the brother gave  information to the police that his younger brother had told him that he "did  not  know how his sister took  his  (appellant’s)  gun outside and somehow a fire was shot" and that the bullet hit the deceased who had fallen and was bleeding. The  trial court convicted the sister under s.  302,  I.P.C. The  brother  was  ,charged with an offence  under  s.  201, I.P.C.  and  was  convicted and sentenced  to  three  years’ rigorous  imprisonment.   The High Court affirmed  the  con- victions but reduced the sentence against the brother to one year. Dismissing the appeal of the sister and allowing the  appeal of the brother, HELD  : All the ingredients necessary to be established  for bringing  home the charge under s. 201, to  the  appellant were not proved beyond reasonable doubt.  He may have  known or may have reason to believe that an offence of murder had been  committed  by his sister.  But the  other  possibility that he may not have known or may have not reason to believe that the offence of murder had’ been committed by his sister could  not be ruled out.  He may have only suspected.   More facts were yet to be known.  He did nothing wrong in rushing to  the police station and giving the barest information  in writing.  The prosecution could not unfold that the  younger brother had told anything further to the appellant.  It  was not  obligatory or necessary for the appellant to probe  the matter any further on the spot before rushing to the  police station. [326 GH 327-B-D]

JUDGMENT:

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Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction " Criminal Appeals Nos.  121 -123 of 1973. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated 10-4-1973  of the Allahabad High Court in Crl.  Appeal  Nos. 2224 & 2228 of 1969 and Cr.  M. P. No. 1547 of 1973. Yogeshwar Prasad, Keshava Sahai, S. K. Bagga, S. Bagga, Rani Arora and Meena Bhatia, for the appellants. D. P. Uniyal and O. P. Rana, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by UNTWALIA, J., These are three appeals by special leave.  One ,of  them was directed from some interlocutory order of  the High  Court  and  had  become  infructuous.   Mr.  Yogeshwar Prasad,  learned  counsel  for the appellants  asked  us  to dismiss that appeal as being infructuous.  We accordingly do so.   In one of the remaining two appeals ,the appellant  is Kumari Shamim Rahmani.  She has been convicted                             316 under  section  302  Indian Penal Code  for  committing  the murder   of  Dr.   Hari  Om  Gautam,  A  sentence  of   life imprisonment  has been awarded to her.  In the other  appeal the  appellant is Shri Amir Ahmad Rahmani, elder  brother-of Shamim.   He is said to have lodged a false  information  at the  Police Station in connection with the said murder  with the intention of screening his sister from legal punishment. He  has been convicted under section 201 of the Penal  Code. The Trial Judge imposed a sentence of three years’  rigorous imprisonment on him but the High Court has reduced it to one year. The  murder of the Doctor was the culmination of  the  wrong and vicious path of love and lust between him and  appellant Shamim.   As is not uncommon in such type of  love  affairs, the girl found the arms of her lover getting loose and cold. It resulted in her frustration.  In a jealous and revengeful attitude she used her arms on a gun and shot her lover dead. Thus she landed herself in the long arms of law and suffered the  conviction  for murder.  We may observe at  the  outset that in the conduct of the case on behalf of the  appellants in the Trial Court as also in the High Court there has  been overdoing  and too much hair splitting but all in vain.   On reading the two judgments of the Courts below and on perusal of the relevant materials and pieces of evidence in the case and  after  hearing  the  fair  and  able  argument  of  Mr. Yogeshwar  Prasad  we have come to the conclusion  that  not only Shamim’s appeal is concluded by the concurrent findings of fact recorded by the two courts below with which but  for very strong reasons, this Court is loathe to interfere,  the findings  in  our  opinion,  are  absolutely  correct.   The exhaustive  criticism  of  the  prosecution  case  and   the evidence adduced by it has been fully dealt with by the High Court  as also by the Trial Court.  The appeal of  appellant Amir Ahmad, for the reasons to be stated hereinafter, is fit to succeed. We proceed to state the facts of the case very briefly.   We also do not think it necessary to deal with, in any  detail, all the points urged on behalf of appellant Shamim as almost all  of them were repetitions of the arguments  advanced  in the  High  Court  and rightly rejected by it.   It  will  be hardly  of  any use to paraphrase the judgment of  the  High Court for the purpose of affirming it. The appellants’ father was one Azizur Rahman Khan since  de- meased.   Mostly  be lived at a place outside  the  City  of Lucknow.   In  a rented house at 23, Kandhari  Lane,  Police Station  Kaiserbagh,  Lucknow lived  Smt.   Sikander  Jahan, mother of the appellants, appellant Shamim, her elder sister Km.  Naseem Rahmani and her younger brother a boy of  tender

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age-named   Mohammad  Ahmad  Rahmani  alias  Sheikhu.    The appellants have another brother named F.A.A. Rahmani who  at the  relevant time was Personal Assistant to a  Minister  of the  Central Government and was living in Delhi.   Appellant Amir  Ahmad  was  living in another house  in  the  City  of Lucknow   at  No.  24,  New  Berry  Road,   Police   Station Hazratganj, Lucknow.  He ]lad a shop where he dealt in spare parts of tractors. At the time of the occurence which took place at about 11.00 or 11.15 p.m. on the 11th July, 1968 appellant Shamim was a                             317 College  going girl and was about 22 years of age.   Shortly before  in  the  year  1967  she  had  passed  her  B.   Sc. examination.   Dr. Gautam was about 35 years of age  at  the time  of occurrence.  He was a married man and had his  wife living.   There were three children born of  their  wedlock. Dr.  Gautam was attached to Balrampur hospital,  Lucknow  in the year 1966.  Azizur Rahman had a paralytic attack and was admitted in Balrampur. hospital on 7-5-1966.  He was treated as  an indoor patient in a special ward of the hospital  for about  ’-IO days by Gautam under the supervision  of  senior Doctors.  The family members including Shamim were  visiting Azizur  Rahman in the hospital and the love episode  started there  between  the voluptuous Doctor and  the  unscrupulous Shamim.   Azizur  Rahman  after being  discharged  from  the hospital  lived in the Kandhari Lane house with  his  family members  namely  his wife, the two daughters and  the  young boy, for sometime.  Dr. Gautam used to visit and look  after Azizur Rahman at the house also.  The love affair of  Gautam and  Shamim  went on progressing and  reached  a  scandalous height.   Gautam  started visiting Shamim at her  house  too frequently  almost daily-and sometimes more than once  in  a day.   He  used to take her for joy rides  on  his  Scooter. Records  of  this case do not disclose  any  resentment  or protest on the part of the family members of Shamim although being  unmarried she was carrying on almost openly  with  an elderly married person.  But the mohalla people did not like this  drama of love affair being enacted in  their  locality without  any sense of shame or scruples.  The  various  love letters  written by Gautam to Shamim and some chits  written by  the  latter, which were recovered  from  her  possession after the occurrence showed that their love had reached  the low  level  of sexual lust also.  It appears  Gautam  was  a handsome  looking man and Shamim was infatuated in her  love with  him.  She wanted his exclusive attention.  And what  a curious manifestation of human psychology and selfishness it was,  that  though Shamim had encroached  on  the  exclusive region  of Gautam’s wife, she was not prepared  to  tolerate any encroachment in the realm of her love by any other girl. Materials  in  this case do indicate that the Doctor  was  a free-lancer  and a licentious man.  He often used  to  visit cinemas, theaters, restaurants and was always after pastures new.   At  times  Shamim  used to  resent  and  feel  highly disgusted with the free lancing habits of Gautam so much  so that  on one occasion in January, 1968 it is said  that  she slapped  Gautam in front of Quality Restaurant  situated  at Hazratganj.   For  sometime  before  the  occurrence  Gautam endeavoured to be treacherous and wriggle out of her affairs with  Shamim.   She  wanted  to  keep  him  tightly  in  her clutches.   Gautam was feeling it difficult to  get  himself released  from her clutches as she was in possession of  his love  letters.   The frequency of his visits to  her  house, however,  lessened.  On the 9th of July, 1968 he  was  found going  on scooter with another girl riding on  its  pillion. The  fact  was  reported to Shamim by Ganesh  a  servant  of

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appellant  Amir  Ahmad.  This added sufficient  quantity  of fuel to the fire of jealously, and hatred which was  already burning in the heart of Shamim. There were frequent quarrels between Shamim and Gautam.   On the  10th July, 1968, Gautam visited Shamim’s house in  the evening, 118 although  for  10  or 12 days  before  the  occurrence,  the frequency of his visits had diminished.  In that visit there was  a quarrel between them.  On the 11th July, 1968  Gautam visited  Shamim again in her house at about 3.00 p.m.  There was  an  altercation  between them.   When  the  Doctor  was leaving  the  house, Shamim asked him to come for  the  last time  in  the evening under the pretext of  helping  her  in filling up her admission form. In the evening of the 11th July, Dr. Gautam first went  with his  wife  to the house of a Principal of a  College  for  a social call.  P.W. 17 Mohd.  Sabir Khan was posted as Deputy Superintendent of Police, C.I.Dat    Lucknow   at    the relevant time.  He Was a patient and a friend of Dr. Gautam. He was suffering from a severe headache and Dr. Gautamwent to  the house of the Dy.  S.P. from the  Principal’s  house. Doctor  gave him some medicine and had a cup of tea  at  his place.   He  left his house on the pretext of going  to  the Civil  Hospital  to  which  he  had  been  transferred  from Balrampur  hospital;  but instead he want to  the  house  of Shamim  at about 10.30 p.m. He rang call-bell.  Shamim  came out and opened the western door of the drawing room.  It had three doors.  The-central and the eastern doors were closed. To  the east of the drawing room was a room in which  Shamim used  to  sleep.  There is another room to the west  of  the drawing room. Gautam and Shamim talked about for 20 minutes in the drawing room.   The former came out, went to the Scooter  for  going away.   But Shamim called him back.  As soon as  he  stepped back and reached inside the western door of the drawing room Shamim  who had by then brought a DBBL gun, fired a shot  at Gautam.   It seems he crouched and the first  short  missed. Shamim  repeated the second Shot intaneously and hit  Gautam on the right side of his forehead.  He fell down.  The lower half  of the body was inside the drawing room and the  upper half  was outside the door in the verandah.  P.W. 15  Kalika Prasad the most important witness in this case and an  imme- diate  neighbour  of Shamim was lying on a cot  outside  his room.   He  has deposed to several facts to  supply  various links  in  the chain of the prosecution story.   Apart  from other facts stated by him in his deposition it is said  that he  and P.W. 18 Ram Krishna Tripathi saw Shamim  immediately after  the gun fire going with a gun in her right hand  from the  eastern side of the drawing room to the  western  room. They  went  near the dead body of Gautam,  peeped  into  the drawing room but saw no one else there. Sheikhu after the incident rushed to the house of  appellant Amir  Ahmad on a cycle.  Amir Ahmad came to the  house.   He then went and loged an information at Kaiserbagh Kotwali  at 1.30 a.m. on the 12th July, 1968.  In short his  information to the police was that Sheikhu had told him that it was  not known  how Shamim brought out the gun and how it  got  fired but  the  shot  hit Gautam who was  lying  bleeding  in  the verandah  of  the drawing room.  In the meantime  Kalika  is said  to  have heard the extra-judicial confession  made  by Shamim before her mother sitting on a cot in the  courtyard. Tripathi  claimed  to have beard  a  similar  extra-judicial confession made by Shamim before her brother Amir Ahmad.                             319

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After  receipt of the information at the Kotwali, the  first to  arrive  at  the scene of  occurrence  was  Sub-Inspector Dildar  Raza, P.W. 28.  The various steps taken by him,  the recovery  of  the  licensed gun (standing  in  the  name  of Sikander  Jahan),  the  fired cartridges  and  certain  live cartridges are all mentioned in the judgments of the  courts below.  The case naturally required a very prompt, intensive and thorough investigation.  Services of A Ballistic Expert, Handwriting Expert, Photographers belonging to the  Criminal Investigation  Department were requisitioned.  Under  orders of  P.W.  17  Mohd.   Sabir  Khan  later  in  the  day   the investigation was_ taken up by C.I.D. Inspector P. N.  Singh from   P.W.   28  Dildar  Raza.   After  a  few   days   the investigation was taken up by P.W. 31 K. P. Tiwari who even- tually submitted the Charge-Sheet. The defence of appellant Shamim was that she did not  commit the  murder.  Eventually it was admitted on her behalf  that she  was  in deep love with the Doctor.   It  was,  however, denied that she had developed any jealousy or hatred or  had any  quarrel  or difference with him.  Like a  drowning  man catching  at  the straw, wild suggestions were  thrown  that there  was a possibility of the murder of the Doctor  having been committed by her cousin Iqbal Uddin Khan, P.W. 24,  any of  his  family members or somebody  else.   Appellant  Amir Ahmad  in  his  defence  asserted  that  on  receiving   the information from Sheikh be did not go to Shamim’s residence, first  went to Hazratganj Police Station and from  there  he went to Kaiserbagh Police Station.  He denied to have lodged a  written report Ext.  Ka-12 or to have given  deliberately any false information in order to screen his sister. The Trial Court believed the prosecution case and held it to have been established against both the accused and convicted them.   The High Court affirming the findings of  the  Trial Court has maintained their conviction.  As already stated it has  reduced  the quantum of sentence imposed  on  appellant Amir  Ahmad.   The High Court has scanned  the  prosecution evidence very carefully.  It ha‘s left out of ,consideration the  evidence  of P.W. 18 Tripathi as a matter  of  abundant caution only on the ground of his having been examined  late by  the Investigating Agency on 16-12-1966.   Topic-wise  it has discussed the evidence and has met the criticism of  the defence  witness-wise also.  On consideration of the  entire evidence it has recorded the following conclusions of facts               "1.  that there was love affair between  Km.               Shamim Rahmani and Dr. Hari Om Gautam.               2.    that  after  being assured of  the  love               professed  by Dr. Gautam, Km.  Shamim  Rahmani               behaved as a lovelorn girl.               3.    that  after  seducing Km.   Shamim,  Dr.               Gautam  turned unfaithful to her and in  spite               of his written promises and the entreaties  of               Km.  Shamim, he continued to be unfaithful.                                    320               4.    that after Dr. Gautam had given  written               promises  and   had broken them,  Km.   Shamim               slapped  him  openly and publicly  in  Kwality               Restaurant.               5.    that  some 12-15 days before the  murder               Dr. Gautam had stopped visiting Km.  Shamim so               frequently  as he had been doing earlier,  and               her  entreaties  had also failed to  have  any               effect on Dr. Gautam.               6.    that  Dr. Gautam was threatened  by  Km.               Shamim on occasions for being unfaithful.               7.    that  continuously for two  days  before

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             the  murder,  there  had  been  heated   talks               between the two.               8.    that  two  days before  the  murder  Km.               Shamim had been informed by Ganesh that he had               seen  Dr.  Gautam going on  his  scooter  with               another girl like her.               9.    that  this gave rise to the jealousy  of               Km.   Shamim  Rahmani to the extent  that  she               made  enquiries about the whereabouts  of  Dr.               Gautam  from his sister and called Dr.  Gautam               at  her  house and under the  pretext  of  her               illness.               10.   that  a few hours before the murder  Km.               Shamim  Rahmani  had told Dr. Gautam  that  he               should  come  in the evening to get  her  form               filled no matter whether he came afterwards or               not.               11.   that  Dr. Gautam was found  murdered  at               the house of Km.  Shamim Rahmani.               12.   that  the gun with which the murder  had               been  committed  was  fired  from  inside  the               drawing room.               13.   that  after  the murder  no  one  except               Mohammad Ahmad Rahmani alias Sheikhu was  seen               going out of the house.               14.   that  the gun with which the murder  was               committed belonged to Smt.  Sikander Jahan and               was recovered from the bed room of Km.  Shamim               Rahmani.               15.   that  Km.   Shamim alone  had  a  strong               motive, to commit the murder of Dr. Gautam  to               the  exclusion  of  any other  member  of  the               family or outsider.               16.   that  except Km.  Shamim  Rahmani  there               was  no  other person present in  the  drawing               room shortly before and after the shooting.               17.   that Km.  Shamim Rahmani Was seen  going               in the drawing room from east to west with the               gun in her right hand soon after the murder.               321               18.   that Km.  Shamim Rahmani made an  extra-               judicial  confession  to  her  mother  of  her               having  shot at Dr. Gautam shortly  after  his               murder." It has also opined that even if the last two facts were left out  of consideration the other sixteen were  conclusive  to irresistibly  lead to the conclusion that it was Shamim  and Shamim alone who was responsible for the murder of Gautam by gun  fire.   While endorsing the view of the High  Court  in this  regard we find no justification for leaving  the  last two  facts  out of consideration for finding  the  guilt  of appellant Shamim. We  now proceed to briefly refer to the  various  topic-wise and  witness-wise discussion of the case by the High  Court. Since  we  find  ourselves in complete  agreement  with  the judgment of the High Court, we do not propose, as it is  not necessary  to  do  so, to mention  or  discuss  the  various aspects of the case in any detail.  The High Court has first pin-pointed its attention on the topography of the place  of occurrence. Thereafter  it has directed its attention  to the evidence of Dr. Suriwho  had performed the  autopsy  on the dead body of Gautam.  Fromthe  statement of  Dildar Raza  as well as from the copies of the various  photographs exhibited  in the case the position in which the  dead  body was  found was fixed up.  The various matters  mentioned  in

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the judgment of the High Court on the question "WHETHER  THE SHOTS  WERE  FIRED FROM.  INSIDE THE  DRAWING-ROOM  OR  FROM OUTSIDE"  are so convincing that one could not but  come  to the  conclusion  that the shots were fired from  inside  the drawing room and not from outside.  The various findings  of bullet marks on the wall, the calendar, the door pane in the light of the evidence of the Ballistic Expert did not  leave any scope for even a shadow of doubt that the Doctor was hit by a gun fired from inside the drawing room.  The  assailant at  the time of firing was not and could not be  visible  to persons outside as the shots were fired from a place  inside the  drawing-room which was south east of the western  door. And  that is the reason that Kalika did not say that be  saw Shamim firing the shots at Gautam.  He merely deposed to the facts   of  the  former  proceeding  to  the  western   room immediately after the firing.  It may also be added that the fact that the shots were fired from inside the drawing  room war, neither disputed in the High Court nor before us. For the reasons stated by the High Court in its judgment, we unhesitatingly  endorse its View that the shots  were  fired from  the  20  Bore DBBL gun which was  recovered  from  the eastern  room  and the licence of which was in the  name  of Sikander Jahan.  Stress was laid before us that P.W. 14 Siva Ram  Gupta. the Ballistic Expert bad deposed with  reference to the two empty cartridges found at the spot that the shots could have been fired from the 20 Bore DBBL gun of  Sikander Jahan  ;  the  expert was not definite about  it.   We  were recovered from the eastern room and keeping in view the fact that  Gupta’s  evidence  was not a direct  evidence  but  an opinion  evidence of the Expert and on appreciation  of  his evidence as a whole 322 in the background of the other facts and circumstances there could not be any shadow of doubt that it was the DBBL gun of Sikander Jahan which was used in firing the shots at Gautam. Learned  counsel for the appellant Shamim further  submitted that Gupta had found some finger prints on the gun but  the prosecution   suppressed  the  Expert’s  report   presumably because  it  did not bear the finger prints of  Shamim.   We think it has rightly been pointed out by the High Court that the  gun in all probability was handled by other members  of the  family  and the prosecution could not  be,  therefore, certain  about  the  finger  prints.   Although  we  do  not consider  it necessary, as we have repeatedly said  in  this judgment, to repeat all that was argued before us, as it was a mere repetition of the argument before the High Court, out of deference to the pains-taking arguments of  Mr.  Yogeswar Prasad,  just at times, we mention one or two  matters.   It was  argued that in the recovery memo Ext.  Ka-239 Raza  did not  mention that from the smell of the barrels it  appeared that  the gun had been recently fired as deposed to by  him in  court.  He did say so with reference to the case  diary. There  was  nothing shown either in the Trial Court  or  the High  Court to contradict the statement.  The recovery  memo of  the two fired cartridges is Ext.  Ka-240.  They were  of "twenty bore coloured brown Eley Kynoch which are giving the odour of freshly used gun-powder".  We may in passing  refer to  the recovery memo Ext.  Ka-241 which showed recovery  of five  numbers  of live cartridges of "twenty  bore  coloured brown  of  Eley Kynoch".  On consideration  of  the  entire, submissions made    on behalf of the appellant, we are fully satisfied  that the gun used in the occurrence was  the  gun the  licence  of which stood in the name of  the  mother  of appellant Shamim. The time and place of occurrence was not disputed.  Nor  was

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it disputed that "there was a love affair between Shamim and Dr.   Gautam and that they had physical intimacy  as  well." One has simply to pity the lot of Shamim who surrendered  to the Doctor her virginity and thereafter felt frustrated.  It must  have completely upset her mental balance.  Relying  on the evidence of P.W. 10 Gyani Mahendra Singh it has  rightly been  held by the High Court that the slapping  incident  in the  Kwality Restaurant as deposed by him was  true.   There were  several letters in the handwriting of Dr. Gautam  Ext. Ka-21  is dated 17-1-1968 containing a, show of  promise  by him that  thenceforward he would not witness any cinema show or go to any restaurant, coffee house or club.  Before  that is a letter Ext.  Ka-20 dt. 27-7-1967 containing promise  of Gautam  that  he would not talk about any girl.   All  these letters were addressed to Shamim and were recovered from the eastern room in which she used to reside.      The  High  Court has rightly believed the  evidence  of P.W. 19 Ganesh Prasad.  All criticisms levelled against  his testimony  were  fruitless and rightly so.  Shamim  was  so much infatuated in her love with the Doctor that at one time she  told her mother when there was a talk of  Dr.  Gautam’s transfer from Lucknow that she would embrace Hinduism and go with him to his place of transfer.  The mother consoled  her that attempts would be made to get his 323 transfer cancelled. it appears that the attempts did succeed and Dr. Gautam was eventually transferred from one  hospital to  the other in the City of Lucknow.  Ganesh deposed  about the  information given by him to Shamim on 9-7-1968 that  he had  seen the Doctor going on his scooter with a  girl  like Shamim.  This incident seems to have completely unnerved the infatuated Shamim and put her out of gear. The  evidence  of  Dr. S. N.  Roy,  P.W.  20--another  close neighbour  of  Shamim, Shushila Kumari,  P.W.  21-a  college friend  of Shamim and Kumari Shashi Kanta Gautam,  P.W.  23- sister of Dr. Gautam amply proves some of the facts found by the High Court in its ultimate conclusions.  Unnecessary and pointless  criticism was made of their evidence in the  High Court  with  no result.  The appraisal of  the  evidence  of these witnesses by the ’High Court was so very right that it was  only hoping against hope to get a different  result  in this Court. On  the point of the breaches which had been caused  by  the Doctor in his affairs with his beloved the prosecution could place on record a letter Ext. ka-29 deciphered with the help of  an Expert.  It does not bear any date.  But it has  been proved  to be a, writing of Shamim to Dr. Gautam.  It  reads thus : "Do  not commit fraud with the girl otherwise in  your  life too such a time could come sometimes." To resume the story of the last two days of the tragic  love drama,  it  may be pointed out that Kalika  saw  Dr.  Gautam going  to  the House Shamim on 10-7-1968.   He  heard  their altercation.   Again  on  11-7-1968 Kalika  saw  the  Doctor coming  to  Shamim’s house at about 3.00 p.m.  There  was  a heated  altercation between the two but he could  not  catch the words as it was going on in the drawing room.  After  15 minutes  when  both came out in the verandah then  he  could hear  Shamim  asking  Gautam to get her  work  done’  Gautam wanted  to evade but Shamim sternly told him "that  she  had already  heard such provocative words but further  requested him that her form be filled up that night and after that  be might come or not." Before  we  refer  to the  criticism  levelled  against  the testimony of the most important prosecution witness  Kalika,

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we  may  point out that Iqbal Uddin Khan was examined  as  a prosecution  witness.  He was in the house of Shamim  for  a few days prior to the occurrence but left the house at about 3.00  p.m.  for  going  to Barielly  by  Punjab  Mail.   His evidence  completely negatives the suggestion that be  could have been responsible for the murder of the Doctor.  We  may also dispose of the point which was sought to be  vehemently pressed before us that the police investigation in this case was  not  fair  and  proper.  It was  argued  that  P.W.  17 Mohammad  Sabir Khan being a, friend of the Doctor  took  an unusual interest in the investigation and he was responsible for  asking  P. N. Singh to take up the  investigation  from Dildar Raza.  It was further submitted that Crime                             324 number  was  given to the case after 4.00 p.m. on  the  12th July  although investigation started earlier.  Then  it  was argued that Ext. ka-230 the typed letter asking P. N.  Singh to take up the investigation bore the crime number  although P. N. Singh took up the investigation at about 3.00 p.m.  on the 12th July.  It was, therefore, submitted that the letter was  a  fabricated  and anti-timed  document.   The  learned Additional Sessions Judge and the learned Judges of the High Court  have  given a complete answer to all  the  criticism. The   last  point  was  repelled  with  reference   to   the handwritten  letter Ext.  Ka-254 which bore the  endorsement of   Dildar   Raza  also.   We  have  no  doubt   that   the investigation  was  conducted promptly  and  faithfully  and could not be subjected to any due criticism. The  High Court has excluded even the remote possibility  of the murder having been committed by Sikander Jahan,  Naseem, Sheikbu  or  Sughara, their maid servant.  In  our  opinion, hinting  upon  the  possibility of the  murder  having  been committed  by any of them was an attempt in  desperation  to catch in air something to save Shamim. Then  comes the evidence of Kalika.  As already  stated  his testimony  is in support of many facts which make the  cover of   circumstances   full-proof  against   Shamim.    Having considered  his evidence in the light of the  criticism,  we see  no justification to reject it in disagreement with  the two  courts below.  Apart from being a witness to  the  love affairs  of the Doctor and Shamim, the visits of the  former to the latter, he was also a witness to the fact that Gautam was not visiting Shamim’s house so frequently as be had been doing  earlier  shortly  before the occurrence.   He  was  a direct  witness to his visits to Shamim’s house on the  10th and twice on the 11tb.  His evidence that he bad seen Shamim going in the drawing room from east to west with the gun  in her   hand   immediately  after  the  shooting   was   quite trustworthy.   Even though the eastern plank of the  western room  of  the drawing room was shut, through  the  remaining open  space of the western door Kalika could very  well  see Shamim  passing in the drawing room with a gun in her  band. There  was sufficient light.  His evidence as to the  extra- judicial confession made by Shamim to her mother seems to be quite  natural and convincing.  On query by the  mother  the reply given by Shamim was that she bad done nothing wrong in shooting Dr. Gautam when he went back from his promises  and was  proving  unfaithful.   From the view  point  of  common ethics or morality one may say that Shamim committed no  sin in  shooting  dead  a  man like  Gautam,  although  she  was contributory  in the act of Gautam’s lust for her.   But  in the  eye  of law, she surely committed the crime  of  murder punishable under section 302 of the Penal Code.  Even if  we wished,   we   could  not  reduce  the  sentence   of   life imprisonment imposed on her as that is the minimum  sentence

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provided  under  section 302 of the Penal Code.   Her  mercy appeal  for  remission  of any part  of  her  sentence  lies elsewhere. The  criticism  levelled  against  the  prosecution  witness Kalika are : (1)  That lie was examined late by the police in the evening of the 12th July, 1968.                             325 (2)  That the parchas containing his statement were sent  to the office of the Superintendent of Police on the 15th July. (3)  That there are material contradictions in his evidence. (4)  That there is an interpolation in the case diary  where Kalika’s statement has been recorded. That he was inimical to Shamim’s family. (6)  That  he deposed in court as admitted by him  from  his fits  of  imagination  and not on  facts  from  his  occular observations. (7)  That  he  could not see Shamim passing in  the  drawing room with a gun in her hand. (8)  That his evidence as to the alleged extra-judicial con- fession made by Shamim before her mother is untrustworthy. We find no substance in any of the criticisms made on behalf of appellant Shamim.  Some of them have already been alluded to  On  the facts explained by him, his examination  by  the police was not late.  High Court has found a plusible reason for  the receipt of the parchas in the S.P.’s Office on  the 15th.   There is no such interpolation in his  statement  in the case diary which could cause any doubt in respect of it. He was not inimical to Shamim’s family.His statement in  the deposition  at times that whatever came in his mind  he  had stated means in the context that whatever he could recollect he  had  stated.   It is just a figment  of  imagination  to suggest  that  his  statements were  the  product-,  of  his imagination.   We  have already reiterated the view  of  the High  Court that he could very well see Shamim going in  the drawing room with a gun in her hard and that his evidence as respects her extra-judicial confession is trustworthy. Although  the  learned  Additional Sessions  Judge  was  not unjustified  in  relying  upon  the  evidence  of  P.W.   18 Tripathi,  the  High  Court also  seems  to  be  justifiably cautious  when it thought it proper to exclude his  evidence from  consideration.   There was some justification  for  it because  he was examined late by the police.  The  exclusion of  his  evidence from consideration, however, as  we  shall presently show goes a long way to help appellant Amir Ahmad. For  the  reasons stated above we see no  substance  in  the appeal filed by appellant Shamim Rahmani and dismiss it. Coming to the appeal of appellant Amir Ahmad, we would first like to quote the translation of the written report given by him at 326 the  police station, from the judgment of the  Trial  Court. It reads as follows : "Sir, I  beg to state that I reside along with my family in  24/1, New Berry Road.  My mother along with two sisters reside  in my  younger brother’s house No. 23, Kandhari ’ Lane.   Today at  night  about  11.30 my younger  brother  Mohammad  Ahmad Rahmani came to my house and started knocking the main  gate with great force on which I opened the door.  Mohammad Ahmad told me that a strange thing has   happened  in  the  house. On my asking, he told that he did  not know how his  ;sister Shamim took his gun outside and    somehow a fire was  shot. The bullet hit Dr. Gautam and he has fallen and is bleeding. After writing my report the   necessary action may be taken.

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Applicant  Amir Rahmani s/o Azizur Rahman Khan  resident  of 24/1 New Bery Road, Lucknow 12th July, 1968." We  do  not  doubt in the least that this  was  the  written report  given by this appellant at Kaiserbagh Kotwali.   The attempt made on this behalf If to show that he had not  gone to the place of occurrence before going to the Thana or that he  had  not given this written report at 1.30 a.m.  on  the 12th  of July has rightly failed in high courts below.   But the question for consideration is whether without the aid of the  evidence  of P. W. Tripathi it could be held  that  the requirements  of  section 201 of the Penal  Code  have  been fulfilled against him.   The  evidence  of Tripathi  was  as respects the extra official   confession  said to have  been made by Shamim before this appelllant.  If  that  could   be taken into consideration then one could that be   knew  that the offence of murder bad been committed by his sister.   On that basis it could be held that the written report as given by him was with the intention of screening the offender from final  punishment and he knew the information to  be  false. But once that goes out then we are left with what he  learnt from  vikhu and what was told to him by Kalika.  We  believe the  testimony of Kalika to the effect that Amir  Ahmad  had gone to the  of occurrence on a motor-cycle or a scooter and be had told him everything.  But then, what follows?  Kalika had not stated that he had seen Shamim firing at the Doctor. The  facts narrated by him must be, more or less,  in  brief those  as told by him in court.  On these facts  Amir  Ahmad could  neither  know nor could have reason to  believe  that Shamim  had committed the murder of the Doctor.  More  facts were  yet to be known.  He did nothing wrong in  rushing  to the  Police  Station  and giving the barest  information  in writing.  No other part of the statement is said to be false except the following "Mohammad Ahmad told me that a strange thing has happened in the  house.  On my asking, be told that he did not know  how his  sister Shamim took his gun outside and somehow  a  fire was  shot.  The bullet hit Dr. Gautam and be has fallen  and is bleeding." 327 Prosecution  could  not  unfold that  Mohammad  Ahmad  alias Sheikhu  had told anything further to Amir Ahmad.  The  fact that his sister Shamim took out the gun was true.  That shot was fired was also true.  It was a fact that the bullet  hit the  Doctor.   That he had lallen and was bleeding  was  not untrue,  Amir Ahmad may not be sure whether the  Doctor  was dead  or alive.  It was not obligatory or necessary for  him to  probe the matter any further at the spot before  rushing to  the police station.  In our judgment,  therefore,  after exclusion   of   the  evidence  of  P.  W.   Tripathi   from consideration   all   the  ingredients   necessary   to   be established  for bringing home the charge under section  201 of  the Penal Code to appellant Amir Ahmad were  not  proved beyond  reasonable  doubt.  He may have known  or  may  have reason  to  believe  that  an offence  of  murder  had  been committed  by his sister Shamim.  But the other  possibility that  he  may  not  have known or may  not  have  reason  to believe,  he  may have only suspected that  the  offence  of murder  had been committed by Shamim, cannot be  ruled  out. That  being  so, we think the benefit of doubt  must  go  to appellant Amir Ahmad.  We accordingly allow his appeal,  set aside  his conviction and sentence under section 201 of  the Penal Code and acquit him of that charge. Cr.  As.  Nos. 121-122/73 dismissed. Cr.  A. No. 123/73 allowed. P. B. R.

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10 sC/75-22 328