28 April 1972
Supreme Court
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NIKA RAM Vs THE STATE OF HIMACHAL PRADESH

Case number: Appeal (crl.) 11 of 1972


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PETITIONER: NIKA RAM

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF HIMACHAL PRADESH

DATE OF JUDGMENT28/04/1972

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ SHELAT, J.M.

CITATION:  1972 AIR 2077            1973 SCR  (1) 428  1972 SCC  (2)  80

ACT: Code  of  Criminal Procedure s. 164-Confession  recorded  by Magistrate not empowered to record it is inadmissible-So  is oral   evidence  of  such  Magistrate  in  support  of   the confession-Reduction of sentence, considerations for.

HEADNOTE: The appellant was tried by the Sessions Judge for an offence under  s. 30 of the Indian Penal Code for the murder of  his wife..  According  to  the  prosecution  the  appellant  had suspected the fidelity of his wife because he believed  that a  son born to her was not his.  The wife was last  scen  in the  company of the appellant on the evening of the  murder. It was alleged that the appellant went to the Tahsildar  and made  a  confession.  The Tahsildar  thereafter  called  the police.   At the instance of the appellant the body of  his wife  was recovered from his house.  When produced before  a first class Magistrate for having his confessional statement ’recorded  the appellant declined to make  any  confessional statement.    Relying  upon  the  confession  made  to   the Tahsildar   and  the  other  evidence  the  Sessions   Judge convicted   the  appellant.   The  High  Court  upheld   the conviction.   In appeal before this Court it was inter  alia contended  on behalf of the- appellant that  the  confession recorded by the Tahsildar was inadmissible in evidence since he was a second class Magistrate not specially empowered  by the  State  Government  in terms of s. 164 of  the  Code  of Criminal Procedure, to record a confession, HELD : In Singhara Singh’s case this Court relying on  Nazir Ahmed’s  ’case laid down that a confession  recorded  during the investigation of a case by a second class Magistrate not specially  empowered could not be put in evidence under  ss. 74 and 80 of the Indian Evidence Act.  It was also held that the oral evidence of the Magistrate to prove the  confession was  inadmissible.   In  the  present  case  therefore   the confession recorded by the Tahsildar was inadmissible and so was his oral testimony to prove ,It. [434 B-C] State of Uttar Pradesh v. Singhara Singh and Others,  [1964] 4  S.C.R. 485 and Nazir Ahmed v, King Emperor, L.R. 63  I.A. 372, applied It  could  not  be  said that  the  Tahsildar  recorded  the statement  before  the commencement  of  investigation,  The

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confession  was recorded at It p.m. while the intimation  to the police regarding a murderer having come to the residence of  the  Tahsildar was entered in the daily diary  at  10.50 p.m.  The  Head  Constable  after  having  made  that  entry proceeded  to the residence of the Tahsildar and on  arrival there put the accused under arrest.  It is well  established that  the discovery and arrest of the suspected offender  is one  of  the essential steps in the course  of  an  investi- gation. [435 E-G] H. R. Rishbud and Inder Singh v. The State of Delhi,  [1955] 1  S.C.R.  1150 and The State of Madhya Pradesh  v.  Mubarak Ali, [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 201, followed. In  re  Yendra  Narasimha  Murthy,  A.I.R.  1966  A.P.  131, referred to 429 However  in  the  present case even if  the  confession  was excluded  the  ,rest of the material on  record  proved  the guilt of the accused. [435 E] [Conviction  maintained but in view of the special facts  of the  case ,sentence reduced from death to  imprisonment  for life.]

JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 11  of 1972. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated September  16,  1971 of the Himachal Pradesh High  Court  in Criminal Appeal No. 37 of 1970 and Murder Reference No. 3 of 1970. G.   Narayana Rao, for the appellant. H.   R. Khanna and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Khanna,  J. Nika Ram (34) was convicted by learned  Sessions Judge  Mahasu  under  section  302  Indian  Penal  Cods  for committing  the  murder  of  his wife  Churl  (26)  and  was sentenced  to death.  On appeal and reference under  section 374  of  the Code of Criminal Procedure, the High  Court  of Himachal   Pradesh  confirmed  the  conviction   and   death sentence.  Nika Ram has now come up in appeal to this  Court by Special leave. The  prosecution case is that Nika Ram was married to  Churi deceased near about 1958.  In 1964 Churi gave birth to a son named  Joginder.  Nika Ram considered that Joginder was  not his son and had been born as a result of adulterous  conduct on  the part of Churi.  When Joginder was three months  old, Churi and Joginder were sent to the house of Churi’s  mother Smt.  Nagju (PW 2) in village Gani.  Churi on arrival at her mother’s  house  told  her that the  accused  had  not  been treating  her well.  After Churi had stayed at her  mother’s house for about three or four years, the accused paid visits to her and wanted to take Churl to his house.  The  accused, however,  declined  to  take  Joginder  with  him.   At  the suggestion  of Nagju, Churi, Joginder and Nagju came to  the house  of  the  accused in village Shilaroo which  is  at  a distance  of  1  1/2 mile from, Gani.  At  his  house,,  the accused gave beating to Churi deceased.  Nagju  consequently returned along with Churi and Jogindler to her village Gani. On the day of Shivratri before ’the present occurrence’, the accused  took Churi along with him to his  house.   Joginder was,  however,   left with Churi’s  mother  Nagju.  ,  The accused  and  his  wife  lived  alone,  in  their  house  in Shilaroo.  No one else resided with them in that house.   On the evening of September 16, 1969, the accused and his  wife

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were seen together at the house. 430 Kotkhai  is at a distance of 2 1/2 furlongs  from  Shilaroo. At  about 10.30 p.m. on September 16, 1969 the accused  went to  the residence of Shri Sudershan Kumar Mahajan  (PW  15), Naib  Tehsildar  who exercised the powers of  second class magistrate,, in Kotkhai.  The accused appeared to be nervous and  told Shri Mahajan that he had murdered his wife.   Shri Mahajan  told the accused to sit down and be  composed.   On enquiry  of Shri Mahajan, the accused stated that  his  wife was   of  loose  character  and  had  given  birth   to   in illegitimate son.  His relations with her were  consequently strained. the accused, who was wearing a Kachha and a  coat, added  that he had tried to commit suicide by  jumping  into nulla  but  had somehow survived.  Shri  Mahajan  thereafter recorded  statement PH of the accused, wherein  the  accused stated  +that he had murdered his wife by giving  her  three Khokhri  blows.  According to the accused,  he,had  enquired from  the wife regarding the father of the child,  whereupon she had abused him.  He consequently killed her.  There  was no  reference to the attempt at suicide in statement PH  of- the accused. At about .10.45 p.m. Shri Mahajan called his peon Mangan Ram (PW  10) and sent him to the police post at Kotkhai to  call the officer incharge of the police post.  Mangat Ram went to the  police  post  and arrived there at 10-50  p.m.  At  the police  post he told Head Constable Bhag Singh (PW 13)  that an accused in a murder case had come at the residence of the Naib  Tehsildar and the police was wanted there.  Entry  26, copy  of  which is PV, was made in the daily  diary  of  the police  post at 10-50 p.m. regarding the  above,  intimation given by Mangat Ram.  The entry was signed by Mangat Ram. Head Constable Bhag Singh then went to the residence of Shri Mahajan  Naib  Tehsildar.   The, accused,  who  was  present there, was Put under arrest by the Head Constable.  The Head Constable found that the coat and Kachha of the accused were wet.  Writing PH was also handed over by the Naib  Tehsildar to the Head Constable.  The Head Constable returned with the accused  to  the  police post and made entry  in  the  daily diary.   Intimation  about the occurrence was also  sent  to Police  station  Theog as well as to the  Superintendent  of Police.  At  about 12 mid night, Head Constable Bhag Singh  went  to the. village of the accused.  He awakened Poshu Ram (PW  7), Mani Ram (PW 8) and Bhagat Ram (PW 16) and went to the house of the accused with those witnesses The door of the verandah of  the accused was found bolted from inside.  Poshu Ram  PW jumped into the verandah and unbolted the door.  The door of the residential room of the accused was found closed and was opened.  Torch light was thrown inside and the dead body (If Churi  deceased was found lying in a pool of  blood.   There was 431 a quilt up to the, chest of the body.  A number of  injuries were found on the body.  A Khokhri, its scabbard, male shirt and  a pair of tongs were lying near the body  stained  with blood.   The  Read Constable then took steps for  keeping  a watch over the house. Police  station  Theog  is at a distance of  20  miles  from Shriaroo.  Sub Inspector Devi Singh of Theog police  station was on the night of September 16, 1969 away to Gajairi at  a distance of five. or six miles from Theog in connection with a  fair  there.   At mid night the  Sub  Inspector  received intimation  that a murder had taken place at  Kotkhai.   The Sub  Inspector  accordingly went in a truck to  Kotkhai  and

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reached there at about 3 a.m The Sub Inspector took rest  at the  police  post  and after sunrise went Lo  the  place  of occurrence,.  The accused too was taken by the Sub Inspector to the spot.  The party reached, the house of the accused at about  8  a.m. Inside the room the Sub Inspector  found  the dead  body of Churi deceased lying on. the floor.   Ile  Sub Inspector  prepared  injury statement and.  inquest  report. The  blood-stained clothes as well as Khokhri P. 1  and  its scabbard  were  taken  into possession and  were  made  into sealed.  parcels.  The dead body of Chun deceased  was  sent for post mortem examination to Civil Hospital Kotkhai.  Post mortem examination was performed at the said hospital by Dr. G.  C.  Gupta  at 6 p.m. on  September  17,  1969.   Parcels containing  the bloodstained articles which had  been  taken into  possession  from the spot were sent  to  the  Chemical Examiner and the Serologist, whose report showed that  human blood was found on the Khokhri, scabbard and the male shirt. The  accused was sent to judicial lock up on  September  17, 969.   On September 29, 1969 Sub Inspector Devi  Singh  made ail  application to PW 6 Shri Raj Kumar  Sharma,  magistrate first class Theog for recording- the confessional  statement of the accused.  The accused was also, produced before  Shri Sharma.   Shri  Sharma  then apprised the  accused  of  the, consequences of confession.  The accused volunteered to make a confessional statement.  Shri Sharma, however,  considered it necessary to give him time to think over the matter.  The accused  was accordingly ordered to be, produced on  October 4, 1969.  Shri Shalma, who also holds his court at Kasumpti, could  not visit Theog on October 4, 1969.  The accused  was directed  to be produced before Shri Sharma on  October  18, 1969.   On  that  day  the  accused  declined  to  make  any confessional statement. At the trial the accused stated that he had been, married to Churi;  deceased- in 1957.  It was admitted by  the  accused that  Churi  had given birth to Joginder about  four  years: after  the marriage, but he denied having maltreated  Churi. The  accused admitted that Churi had come, to his  House  on the Shivratri day, 432 but,  according  to him, the child too had come  along  with her.  As regards the date of occurrence, the accused  stated that he was with Churi in the house during the day but at  6 p.m.  he  left  for Kotkhai leaving his wife  alone  at  the house.   The accused denied having gone to Shri Mahaian  and having  made  any  confessional statement on  the  night  of occurrence.   It  was also denied by the, accused  that  his Kachha and coat were in a wet condition at the ,time, of his arrest, As regards the ’blood-stained Khokhri and shirt, the accused stated that those articles did not belong to him The accused further made the following statement "I had cordial relations with my wife for the fast 14 years. I  claim the son to be my own.  He is not  illegitimate.   I left my house, at 6 P. m. on 1st of Asuj last year.  It was Tuesday  2026  Bk.  leaving,  my wife  at  home,  to  see  a documentary film being exhibited at Kotkhai.  Gaddu Ram  was with  me  in the show.  The picture finished at  about  9-30 p.m.  I was taken by the police to the Police Post from  the bazar.  I was called through a police constable who was  not produced as prosecution witness.  I was given beating at the police post.  A.S.I. was there besides other Foot Constable. My signatures were obtained on a paper.  I do not know  what had  been  written on that.  It was disclosed to me  by  the S.H.O.  next morning that my wife had been murdered,  and  I was taken to my village.  From there I was brought to Theog. I am innocent and have no hand in the, crime."

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No evidence was produced in defence.  Learned Sessions Judge accepted ,lie prosecution case  that it  was  the  accused  who  had  caused  injuries  to  Churi deceased,  as a result of which she died.  Reliance in  this connection was placed upon the other evidence adduced by the prosecution in the case as well as upon the confession  made to  Shri  Mahajan PW.  On appeal the learned Judges  of  the High  Court  in maintaining the conviction  of  the  accused relied  upon  the  confession made by the  accused  to  Shri Mahajan  PW as well as upon the other circumstances  of  the case.    The  confession  was  found  to  have  been   amply Corroborated by the other evidence on record. The  present  appeal  was  filed  by  the  accused-appellant through  jail.  Arguments have, however, been  addressed  on his behalf by Shri Narayana Rao, who has contended that the material  on  record  is  not  sufficient  to  justify  the- conviction  of the accused-appellant.  Admissibility of  the confessional  statement  of  the accused  recorded  by  Shri Mahajan  PW has also been questioned.  As against that,  Mr. Khanna on behalf of the State has convassed for the correct- ness of the view taken by the High Court. 433 It  cannot be disputed that Churi deceased died as a  result of  the injuries inflicted upon her.  Dr. G. C.  Gupta,  who performed  post mortem examination on the dead body  of  the deceased, found  ten injuries on the body of  the  deceased, out of which the    following   three   were    individually sufficient to cause death in the   ordinary course of nature "(1) Punctured  wound  right  side of  the  neck,  2  inches diameter 1 1/2 inches deep.  (2) Punctured  wound  2" diameter, 1 1/2"  deep,  2"  below injury No. 1. (3)  Incised wound 6 X 1" x 1" on left side of the neck." Besides  the, above three injuries, there were  one  incised wound  on  the left eyebrow two incised wounds on  the  left forearm  one incised wound on the fingers of the left  hand, one incised wound on the right hand and one incised wound in the right arm.  A scratch was also found on the right  hand. The  punctured  and incised wounds, in the  opinion  of  the doctor,  could be caused by Khokhri P. 1 Larynx and  trachea were found to be torn and punctured.  Probable time  between the  receipt of injuries and death was five  minutes,  while between I death and post mortem was 19 1/2 hours. According to the prosecution case, the injuries found on the body  of  Churi deceased were caused by  the  accused.   The accused, as stated earlier, has denied this allegation.   In order  to  bring  the  charge  home  to  the  accused,   the prosecution has relied upon the confessional statement PH of the  accused recorded by Shri Mahajan as well as  the  other circumstances of the case. It has been argued on behalf of ,lie accused-appellant  that confessional   statement  Ex.   PH  is  not  admissible   in evidence.   In this connection it is pointed out  that  Shri Mahajan  was a second class magistrate and there is  nothing on the record to indicate that he was specially empowered by the   State   Government  to  record  a   confession.    The confession,  it is further stated, was recorded during,  the investigation of the case and as it was not recorded in  the manner  prescribed  by section 164 of the Code  of  Criminal Procedure,  the same is inadmissible in evidence.   In  this contexts  we  find  that according  to  sub-section  (1)  of section   164  of  the  Code  of  Criminal  Procedure,   any Presidency Magistrate, and Magistrate of the First Class and any  Magistrate of the Second Class specially  empowered  in this  behalf  by the State Government may, if he  is  not  a

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police  officer, record any statement or confession made  to him  in  the course of an investigation under  this  chapter (Chapter  XIV  of the Code) be under any other law  for  the time  being  in force or at any time afterwards  before  the commencement 434 of the enquiry of trial.  ’Mete is no material on the record to indicate that Shri Mahajan was a second class  magistrate who had been specially empowered by the State Government  to record  a confession.  Indeed, Mr. Khanna on behalf  of  the respondent State has argued the care on the assumption  that Shri  Mahajan  was not specially empowered in  this  behalf. question  as  to whether a confession  recorded  during  the investigation  of  a case by a second class  magistrate  not specially   empowered   was  admissible  in   evidence   was considered  by  this  Court in the case of  State  of  Uttar Pradesh  v. Singhara Singh and Others.(1) It was  held  that the record of such a confession could not be put in evidence under  sections  74  and  80 of  the  Indian  Evidence  Act. Reliance in this connection was placed upon the decision  of the  Judicial Committee in the case of Nazir Ahmed  v.  King Emperor.  (  2 ) Argument was further advanced  in  Singhara Singh’s  case that oral evidence of the magistrate to  prove the confession was admissible.  This contention was rejected by this Court in the following words : "When  a  statute,  confers  a  power  on  certain  judicial officers,  that  power can obviously be  exercised  only  by those  officers.  No other officer can exercise that  power, for  it  has not been even to him.  Now the power  has  been conferred  by  s.  164  on  certain  magistrates  of  higher classes.  Obviously, it was not intended to confer the power on  magistrates of lower classes.  If, therefore,  a  proper construction  of  s.  164,  as  we  have  held,  is  that  a magistrate  of a higher class is prevented from giving  oral evidence  of  a confession made to him because  thereby  the safeguards  created for the benefit of an accused person  by s. 164 would be rendered nugatory, it would be an  unnatural construction  of the section to hold that  these  safeguards were not thought necessary and’ could be ignored, where  the confession  bad been made to a magistrate of a  lower  class and that such a magistrate was, therefore, free to give oral evidence  of the  confession made to him.  We cannot put  an               interpretation  on s. 164 which  produces  the               abnormaly  that while it is not  possible  for               higher   class  magistrates  to,   practically               abrogate the safeguards created in s. 164  for               the  benefit of an accused person, it is  open               to  a lower ’class magistrate to do  so.   We,               therefore,  think that the ’decision in  Nazir               Ahmed’s  case (supra) also covers the case  in               hand and that on the principles there applied,               here  to oral evidence given by Mr.  Dixit  of               the  confession  made  to  him  must  be  held               inadmissible." Mr.   Khanna on behalf of the State concedes that in view of the a    decision,  a confession recorded by a second  class magistrate (1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 485. (2)  L.R.63 I.A. 372. 435 not  specially empowered during the investigation of a  case is  not  admissible  in evidence and  no  oral  evidence  in respect  of that confession can also be led at  the:  trial. Mr.  Khanna, however, contends that the restriction  on  the admissibility  of the above evidence would operate  only  if

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the   confession   is   recorded  during   the   course   of investigation.  If, however. the confession is recorded at a stage  prior  to the commencement  of  investigation,  there would  be no bar to the admissibility of such a  confession. Reference in this connection has been made to the case of In re  Yondra  Narasimha Murthy. (1) In that  case  an  accused after  committing murder went to a second  class  magistrate and  made a statement that he had killed the deceased.   The statement  was recorded by the magistrate and was signed  by the  accused.  It was held that the aforesaid statement  was admissible  in evidence.  Dealing with the  contention  that there had not been compliance with sect-ion 164 of the  Code of  Criminal Procedure, the court observed that  the  person making the confession was not an accused at the time he went to the magistrate and no investigation of a crime registered against him was in progress at that time. Question  consequently arises whether statement Ex.  PH  was recorded  by  Shri Mahajan during the investigation  of  the case  or whether it was recorded before the commencement  of the investigation.  In this connection we find that the time mentioned  by Shri Mahajan of the recording of  confessional statement  was 11 p.m. while the intimation which was  given by  Mangat  Ram (PW 10) to the police regarding  a  murderer having come to the residence of Shri Mahajan was entered  in the daily diary at 10.50 p.m. Head Constable Bhag Singh  (PW 13) after having made that entry proceeded to the  residence of  Shri Mahajan and on arrival there put the accused  under arrest.   It  is  well established that  the  discovery  and arrest  of  the suspected offender is one of  the  essential steps  in  the  course  of an  investigation  (see  in  this connection  H.  N. Rishbud and Inder Singh v. The  State  of Delhi(2) and The State of Madhya Pradesh v. Mubarak  Ali.(2) We  are, therefore of the view that the contention  advanced on  behalf of the appellant that the confessional  statement Ex.   PH was recorded during the investigation of  the  case cannot be deemed to be devoid of force.  It is not, however, necessary  to dilate upon this aspect of the matter  because we  are  of the opinion that even after excluding  the  con- fessional   statement  PH  from  consideration,  the   other material on record proves the guilt of the accused. It  is in the evidence of Girju PW that only the accused  in Churi  deceased  resided in the house of  the  accused.   To similar effect are the statements of Mani Rm (PW 8), who  is the uncle (1) A.I.R. 1966 A.P. 131.     (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1150. (3)  [1959] supp. 2 S.C.R. 201. 436 of the accused, and Bhagat Ram school teacher (PW 16).   Ac- cording  to Bhagat Ram, he saw the accused and the  deceased together at their house on the day of occurrence.  Mani  Ram (PW 8)    saw  the accused at his house at 3 p.  in.,  while Poshu Ram (PW 7)    saw  the  accused and  the  deceased  at their house or, the evening of the day of occurrance.  The accused also does not deny that he was with the deceased  at his  house  on  the day of occurrence.   The  house  of  the accused, according to plan PM, consists, of one  residential room  one other small room and a varandah.  The  correctness of that plan is proved by A.- R. Verma overseer (PW 5).  The fact  that the accused alone was with Churi deceased in  the house  when she was murdered there with the Khokhri and  the fact that the relations of the accused with the deceased, ts would  be  shown  hereafter. were  strained  would,  in  the absence  of  any  cogent explanation by him,  point  to  his guilt. The evidence of Nagju (PW 2), mother of the deceased,  shows

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that the accused had been illtreating Churi deceased.  It is further  in the testi mony of Girju (PW 1) that the  accused had  a Khokhri at his house similar to Khokliri P.  1  which was found near the dead body of the deceased and with  which the  injuries on the body of the deceased, according to  Dr. Gupta,  could  have    been  caused.   Besides  that  it   is established  by the evidence of Mangat Ram (PW 10) and  Shri Mahajan (PW 15) ’that the accused on the night of occurrence at  about 10.30 p.m. went to the house of Shri  Mahajan  and talked  to  him.   Shri Mahajan  thereafter  sent  for  Head Constable  Bhag  Singh through Mangat Ram.   Head  Constable Bhag  Singh lids deposed regarding his having  arrested  the accused  at  the house of Shri Mahajan.  The  dead  body  of Churi deceased was thereafter discovered lying in the  house of  the  accused.  The discovery of the dead body  from  the house of the accused can thus be traced to the visit of  the accused to the residence of Shri Mahajan. The  various  circumstances  referred  to   above,  in   our opinion.  clearly point to the conclusion that it  was  tile accused and none else who was responsible for the murder  of Churi deceased.  The plea of the accused that he had gone to see film show at Kotkbai on that evening and that the murder of  the deceased was committed during his absence cannot  be accepted.   I-lad  the accused gone to the  film  show,  the persons with whom he sat at the film show must have  noticed his presence there, but no evidence has been adduced to show that anyone noticed the accused at the film show.  According to  the  accused, Gaddu Ram was with him at the  film  show. Gaddu Ram has, however, not been examined as a witness.  The film  show  at  Kotkhai,  which had  been  arranged  by  the Publicity Department, according to Head Constable Bhag Singh PW,  lasted  from 7 to 8-30 p.m. Assuming that  the  accused went to the film show, it would not have taken more than  10 or 437 15  minutes ’for the accused to return’ to his  house  after the  film  show.  The accused would thus be present  at  his house  at about 9-30 p.m. when the present  occurrence  took place.  Had someone other than the accused murdered his wife Churi,  the accused would have raised hue and cry  and  this fact  must. have attracted to the spot his  neighbours  like Poshu  Ram  PW.  The accused would have also in  that  event gone  and made a report to the police.  The conduct  of  the accused  in  neither raising hue and cry nor  going  to  the police  even  though his wife was murdered in his  house  is hardly  consistent with his innocence.  The version  of  the accused  that he was taken by the rolice to the police  post from  the bazar cannot be accepted because there is  nothing to  show  that the police was aware of the murder  of  Churi deceased  before  the visit of the accused to the  house  of Shri  Mahajan.   On  the contrary, the  evidence  on  record establishes beyond any manner of doubt that the dead body of the deceased was recovered after the accused had visited the house of Shri Mahajan.  We are, therefore, of the view  that it  was  the accused and none else who caused  injuries,  to Churi  deceased  as  a  result  of  which  she  died.    We, therefore, maintain his conviction.  So  far  as the sentence is concerned, we are of  the  view that it is not a fit case in which the extreme penalty  need be  exacted  from  the  accused.  It  is  the  case  of  the prosecution  itself that the accused suspected the  fidelity of  Churi deceased and believed that Joginder had been  born to her as a result of her adulterous conduct.  Had  Joginder been  the son of the accused, the accused would have  had  a natural  affection  for  the child and it  is  difficult  to

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believe that he would have insisted upon Churi staying  with him  without  the  child.   It  is  also  the  case  of  the prosecution that shortly before the occurrence, the  accused enquired  from the deceased regarding the father of the  boy and  the  deceased  thereupon abused him.  The  act  of  the deceased in abusing the accused must have been taken by  the accused  to  be adding insult to the injury by  an  unchaste wife.  In view of the above, it would, in our opinion,  meet the  ends of justice if the accused is awarded  tile  lesser penalty.   We,  therefore, alter his sentence into  that  of imprisonment for life. G.C. 438