Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • Latest
    • Supreme Court
    • Madras High Court
    • Madurai Bench
  • Quick Recall
    • Arms Act
    • BNSS
    • BNS
    • BSA
    • Evidence
    • Drugs Act
    • Cr.P.C
    • IPC
    • N.I.Act
    • PMLA
    • NDPS
    • Corruption Laws
    • General
    • Passports Act
    • Pocso
    • MCOP
    • Writ
  • Acquittal
    • S.C
    • Madras High Court
  • 3 judge bench
  • Resources
    • Notes
      • Cr.P.C 1973
      • Crimes
    • Articles
      • P.G.Rajagopal
      • AD. RAMPRAKASH RAJAGOPAL
      • Ad. Karunanithi
      • Ad. Ravindran Raghunathan
      • James Raja
    • Digest
      • Monthly Digest
      • Weekly digest
      • Subject wise
    • Bare Acts
      • BSA 2023
      • BNS 2023
      • BNSS 2023
  • Must Read
  • Author’s note
  • Legal words
  • Civil
    • s. 91 cpc
  • About
    • Terms
    • Privacy policy
    • Cancellation & Refund Policy
    • Team
  • My Bookmarks
Reading: Dowry death: Acquittal: Evidence on record is full of omissions amount to material contradiction to peril the prosecution story of demand of dowry
Share
Font ResizerAa
  • Latest
  • Acquittal
  • Digest
  • Resources
Search
  • Latest
    • Madras High Court
    • Madurai Bench
    • Supreme Court
  • Quick Recall
    • Evidence
    • Cr.P.C
    • IPC
    • N.I.Act
    • Pocso
    • PMLA
    • NDPS
    • Corruption Laws
    • General
    • Passports Act
  • Acquittal
    • S.C
    • Madras High Court
  • Digest
    • Monthly Digest
    • Weekly digest
  • Resources
    • Notes
    • Articles
  • 3 judge bench
  • Must have
  • Author’S Note
  • Legal words
  • About
    • Terms
    • Privacy policy
    • Cancellation & Refund Policy
    • Team
  • Mobile APP
  • My Bookmarks

Get Notifications

Notification
Follow US
> Quick Recall> Cr.P.C> Dowry death: Acquittal: Evidence on record is full of omissions amount to material contradiction to peril the prosecution story of demand of dowry

Dowry death: Acquittal: Evidence on record is full of omissions amount to material contradiction to peril the prosecution story of demand of dowry

This judgment pertains to the case where the accused was initially found guilty of the offence under Section 304B of the Indian Penal Code (I.P.C.) for causing the death of his wife under circumstances suggesting dowry-related cruelty. However, upon appeal, the High Court scrutinized the evidence and determined that the prosecution failed to substantiate the claim of a dowry demand of ₹4,00,000/-, concluding that the financial and social circumstances of the parties made such a demand improbable. Consequently, the court upheld the presumption of innocence and reversed the decision of acquittal, reinforcing the principle that appellate courts are reluctant to overturn an acquittal unless there is compelling evidence of guilt.
Ramprakash Rajagopal February 13, 2025 15 Min Read
Share
omission
Points
AppealBride hanging within six months of marriageFactsFIR to conviction under section 304B IPCHigh Court acquitted the accusedAnalysisMany omissions occurred in the depositions and the same amounts to contradiction   ConclusionAccused acquittedJudgments cited/relied in this judgmentParty

Appeal

Bride hanging within six months of marriage

Death, the causation of which is a demand for dowry is akin to murder, even if it is not homicidal, as is evident from Section 304B of the Indian Penal Code, 18601 read with Section 113B of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. However, the Courts are warranted to be more cautious and circumspect with respect to the allegations under Section 304B of the I.P.C since allegations coming forth often could be motivated by the “the I.P.C.” “the Evidence Act” despair of an abrupt death of a daughter or sibling, at the matrimonial home; especially when there is a history of a marital discord which otherwise would not escalate to this magnitude. In the present case, a young bride, hardly into six months of marriage, was found hanging on the fateful day, by her father and brother who reached the matrimonial home, wherein she resides with her husband.

Facts

FIR to conviction under section 304B IPC

2. A First Information Report was lodged and the husband, the respondent-herein was arrested. Later, the husband’s relatives i.e., his parents, grandfather and brother were also implicated and joined as accused. The family stood trial in which the prosecution examined nine witnesses. The Trial Court acquitted everyone except the husband, finding that the prosecution could not prove their presence in the separate household in which the couple resided and there was no proof of a proximate allegation of harassment on account of demand of dowry which could be co-related with the death of the deceased. The accused/respondent was convicted primarily on the ground that the scratches on the body of the deceased cannot be explained by reason only of the hanging, since the body was at a distance from the walls of the room. The Court “F.I.R.” presumed that the scratches were the result of torture perpetrated by the husband. The said fact proved cruelty alleged on the unrequited demand for dowry and together, it brought in the presumption under Section 113B of the Evidence Act, and it was the reasoning which led to the accused being found guilty of the offence under Section 304B of the I.P.C. The respondent was sentenced under Section 304B of the I.P.C. for seven years Rigorous Imprisonment (R.I.)

High Court acquitted the accused

3. The High Court after examining the evidence of the witnesses, specifically that of the brother and father found that the financial and social status of the parties; made improbable a demand of ₹4,00,000/- and a plot for construction of a house and hence, the demand for dowry having led to the death of the deceased was not proved by the prosecution.

5. Trite is the principle that the Appellate Courts would be slow in reversing an order of acquittal, especially since the presumption of innocence that is always available to the accused; as a basic principle of criminal jurisprudence, 3 stands reinforced and reaffirmed by the acquittal and unless there are very substantive and compelling reasons to do so, there cannot be a reversal of an order of acquittal. Unless it is found that the findings are perverse and the only conclusion possible from the compelling evidence is of guilt; Appellate Courts will be slow to reverse an order of acquittal. Recently, in Constable 907 Surender Singh Vs. State of Uttarakhand, one of us (B.R. Gavai, J.) referring to various binding precedents of this Court succinctly laid down the principle in the following manner in paragraph 12:  

“12. It could thus be seen that it is a settled legal position that the interference with the finding of acquittal recorded by the learned trial judge would be warranted by the High Court only if the judgment of acquittal suffers from patent perversity; that the same is based on a misreading/omission to consider material evidence on record; and that no two reasonable views are possible and only the view consistent with the guilt of the accused is possible from the evidence available on record.”

Analysis

7. That the death was suicidal was established by the expert opinion of PW 7 who proved the wound certificate issued by him. PW 7 referred to two sets of injuries as indicated in the wound certificate; injury No.1; a slanting ligature mark on both sides of the neck between the vocal chords and chin and above the thyroid cartilage; 22 cm long 1.8 cm wide, which was the cause of death, opined to be ‘suffocation due to hanging, prior to death’. Injury No.2 was a mark of scratch which was 2×1 cm with redness, which injury had led the Trial Court to presume that there was physical violence perpetrated on the deceased. Immediately we have to state that by the nature of the injury and the failure of the prosecution to elicit any such opinion from the Doctor, the expert witness, we find that difficult to believe.

8. That the death was suicidal is very clear from the expert evidence, which however would not absolve the accused under Section 304B of the I.P.C. This Court in Surender Kumar Singh Vs. State of U.P. considered the effect of Section 113B of the Evidence Act on Section 304B of the I.P.C. It was held that Section 304B of the I.P.C. presupposes several factors for its applicability, which are; (i) the death of a woman caused by burns or bodily injury or otherwise than under normal circumstances; (ii) such death having occurred within seven years from the date of the marriage; (iii) soon before her death, the woman having been subjected to cruelty or harassment by her husband or any relative of her husband and (iv) such cruelty or harassment being in connection with the demand of dowry. It was, categorically held that if one of the ingredients is absent, the presumption under Section 113B of the Evidence Act would not be available to the prosecution and the onus of proof would not shift to the defense.

Many omissions occurred in the depositions and the same amounts to contradiction   

9. In the present case, though the 1st informant-the father spoke of the demand of dowry of ₹4,00,000/- and a house-plot, as seen from the F.I.R, in the Section 161 Cr.P.C. statement recorded from him no such demand was spoken of. This omission was confronted to him, when he was examined as PW 2 and affirmed by the I.O in his deposition. PW 1, who was the brother of the deceased also did not make such a statement before the police and the said omission was marked in evidence which is confirmed by the I.O; PW 9. In addition to this, both the said witnesses spoke of a head injury by reason of the torture inflicted by the husband and the relatives, on the deceased, which also was not spoken of before the police. Both the witnesses admitted that the parental home of the respondent-husband and the separate home where the couple resided had a number of houses within the vicinity. None were questioned and examined to bring out the alleged bickering and the physical torture asserted. PW 4, a neighbour of the deceased, who was witness to the inquest report, was not asked about any such quarrel on dowry having existed between the couple or about the husband or his relatives having perpetrated physical violence on the deceased when she was alive.

10. In fact, PW’s 1 and 2 omitted also to state under Section 161 Cr.P.C. that the nephew of PW 2 on the earlier part of the fateful day reached the house of the deceased, wherein he saw that the parents, sibling and father of the accused taunting the deceased with demands of dowry and inflicting physical violence on her. The said nephew was never questioned by the police or offered as a witness. There was also no oral evidence to prove the violence perpetrated on the young bride, by the family of the accused, at their house when she had been residing there. PW 3, the sister of the accused though, deposed about the earlier incidents of demand of dowry from both the accused and his parents; omitted to state the same before the police as evident from the suggestions made during cross-examination; which omission is confirmed in the deposition of the I.O.

12. On a reading of the evidence recorded at trial, we are of the considered opinion that the demand of dowry was not proved by the prosecution. The omissions in the statements under Section 161 Cr.P.C.; which are deemed to be material contradictions put to peril the prosecution story of demand of dowry. A three judge bench of this Court on such omissions held so in Darshan Singh vs. State of Punjab, in paragraph 31:

“31. If the PWs had failed to mention in their statements under Section 161CrPC about the involvement of an accused, their subsequent statement before court during trial regarding involvement of that particular accused cannot be relied upon. Prosecution cannot seek to prove a fact during trial through a witness which such witness had not stated to police during investigation. The evidence of that witness regarding the said improved fact is of no significance. [See : (i) Rohtash v. State of Haryana [Rohtash v. State of Haryana, (2012) 6 SCC 589, (ii) Sunil Kumar Sambhudayal Gupta v. State of Maharashtra [Sunil Kumar Sambhudayal Gupta v. State of Maharashtra, (2010) 13 SCC 657, (iii) Rudrappa Ramappa Jainpur v. State of Karnataka [Rudrappa Ramappa Jainpur v. State of Karnataka, (2004) 7 SCC 422 and (iv) Vimal Suresh Kamble v. Chaluverapinake Apal S.P. [Vimal Suresh Kamble v. Chaluverapinake Apal S.P., (2003) 3 SCC 175]”

Conclusion

13. Both PWs 1 and 2 admitted in their deposition that they had not personally witnessed any physical violence on the wife and PW 2-the father also deposed that the son-in-law was quite aware of his financial condition; which would not have enabled him to raise ₹4,00,000/- or purchase a plot for construction of a house. It was his specific statement that the son-in-law and his family was apprised of this fact at the time of marriage and they had agreed to accept his daughter, as such. The essential ingredient of a demand of dowry being absent under Section 304B of the I.P.C., we cannot find the suicidal death; though, categorized as an unnatural one, as one akin to murder inviting a punishment under Section 304B of the I.P.C.

Accused acquitted

14. We, hence, reject the appeal, confirming the order of acquittal of the High Court; but for the different reasons, stated herein above. Parties to bear their own costs.

Judgments cited/relied in this judgment
  • Constable 907 Surender Singh Vs. State of Uttarakhand – 2025 INSC 114.
    • Surender Kumar Singh Vs. State of U.P. – (2009) 17 SCC 243.
    • Darshan Singh vs. State of Punjab – (2024) 3 SCC 164.
    • Rohtash v. State of Haryana – (2012) 6 SCC 589.
    • Sunil Kumar Sambhudayal Gupta v. State of Maharashtra – (2010) 13 SCC 657.
  • Rudrappa Ramappa Jainpur v. State of Karnataka – (2004) 7 SCC 422.
  • Vimal Suresh Kamble v. Chaluverapinake Apal S.P. – (2003) 3 SCC 175.

Party

The State of Uttarakhand vs. Sanjay Ram Tamta @ Sanju @ Prem Prakash – Criminal Appeal No. 112/2014 – 2025 INSC 187 – February 11, 2025.

The State of Uttarakhand vs. Sanjay Ram Tamta @ Sanju @ Prem Prakash – 371302013_2025-02-11Download

Subject Study

  • No moral conviction: Unless the deceased was subjected to cruelty or harassment or in connection with demand of dowry soon before her death presumption under section 113A IEA cannot be invoked
  • Dowry Death: Since witnesses stating the dowry demand only before the court (significant omission) would not establish section 304B IPC
  • Dowry death: Demand is for celebrating birth of male child and not for marriage further difference between admissibility and acceptability/reliability is explained
  • Dowry death: Absence of any positive viscera report is not fatal to the prosecution
  • Dying declaration: Section304-B IPC – In dowry death cases prosecution has to prove the initial burden
  • Dowry death: Presumption
  • Omissions: Witness does not recall if he told the police he was standing fifteen feet away during the incident
  • Contradictions & Omissions: What are contradictions and omissions and how to cross (contradict) the witnesses with their previous statement has been explained

Further Study

Hostile witness contradiction: Public Prosecutor has to confront relevant portions to the witness and contradict as required by section 145 IEA

Dying declaration: Section 32 & 27 Evidence Act Appreciation of dying declaration (many persons around) & recovery from open place

Section145 Evidence Act – How not to contradict a wintess?

Section 376 IPC: Rape not proved by the prosecution

Section 24 Evidence Act: How to approach extra-judicial confession?

TAGGED:304B ipcacquittalcontradictiondowry deathomission amounts to contradictionomissions
SOURCES:https://www.sci.gov.in/view-pdf/?diary_no=371302013&type=j&order_date=2025-02-11&from=latest_judgements_order
Previous Article firearm Firearm: Acquittal: Ballistic report opined that two bullets found in the bodies were not sufficient for comparison with the test fired bullets
Next Article pmla bail PMLA-Bail:  Mandatory requirements of Section 45 PMLA not considered while releasing the accused on bail hence matter remanded back for fresh consideration
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Study

manusmriti

Petitioner should not be found fault for presenting words from ‘Manusmriti’ that degrade women

Ramprakash Rajagopal December 27, 2024
An offence under section 13(1)(e) PC Act can be abetted by any other person who is a non-public servant
After 45 years, the rape case has come to an end with the acquittal being set aside
No Original Documents No Registration of Deed?
Weekly Digest: November final’ 2024

Related Study

Murder case acquittal: Strangulation established but failed to connect the accused with the crime
December 10, 2023
Parole: Whether deemed to be in prison or custody?
April 6, 2023
Supreme court quashes fir in property dispute emphasizes civil in nature and held it is impossible to appreciate how appellant deceived the respondent
January 10, 2025
Limitation to initiate contempt proceedings is within one year either by filing an application or by the Court issuing notice Suo motu
May 6, 2025
Charge sheet: RTI: Whether a public document?
January 21, 2023

About

Section1.in is all about the legal updates in Criminal and Corporate Laws. This website also gives opportunity to publish your (readers/users) articles subject to the condition of being edited (only if necessary) by the team of Advocates. Kindly send your articles to paperpageindia@gmail.com or WhatsApp to +919361570190.
  • Quick Links
  • Team
  • Terms
  • Cancellation Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • My Bookmarks

section1.in is powered by Paperpage.             © Paperpage Internet Services.                       All Rights Reserved.

Subscribe Newsletter for free

Subscribe to our newsletter to get judgments instantly!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

ஓர்ந்துகண் ணோடாது இறைபுரிந்து யார்மாட்டும் தேர்ந்துசெய் வஃதே முறை [541].

_திருவள்ளுவர்
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?