Mt. Krishna Kumari vs Sunder Dass on 8 January, 1968

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Delhi High Court
Mt. Krishna Kumari vs Sunder Dass on 8 January, 1968
Equivalent citations: 1968 CriLJ 988
Author: I Dua
Bench: I Dua

ORDER

I.D. Dua, C.J.

1. The learned Additional Sessions Judge, Delhi, bad made this reference recommending that the order of the learned Magistrate dated 28.5.1966 dismissing Smt. Krishna Kumari’s application under Section 488, Criminal P.C., be reversed and maintenance be allowed to her at the rate of Rs. 60 per month from the date of the application. It is unfortunate that revision of this nature should have been kept pending in this Court for more than a year. Cases of maintenance under Section 488, Criminal F.C., which are dealt with summarily for com. pelting a man to maintain his wife or children, deserve priority and they must be set down for hearing with dispatch and an attempt should be made, so far as possible, to see that they are disposed of within a period of six months, for, undue delay in such cases must tend to defeat the very purpose of such summary proceedings.

2. The parties were married in November, 1959 and a son was born from this wedlock on 20.10.1960. That son is living with the husband. The wife approached the Court of the Sub-Divisional Magistrate with allegations of cruelty by her husband and her mtoher-in-law on the ground that she had nto brought enough of dowry. Smt. Krishna Kumari was nto even allowed to see her son or to attend on him. Allegations of beatings given to her on several occasions were also made in the application. When she was turned out in July, 1962 and confined in a room, she was rescued by Shri Gopal Dass, brtoher of the respondent, and thereafter she was forced to leave the house because she felt that her life was in danger. After staying for about a month with her sister, who is married in Delhi, Smt. Krishna Kumari moved to the house of her parents in Rajasthan where she is staying since then.

So that her husband Sunder Dass may be able to remarry and obtain higher dowry, he filed a petition for divorce in August, 1963 falsely alleging adultery on the part of Smt. Krishna Kumari with her own brtoher-in-law. Shri C.G. Suri, Additional District Judge, dismissed those proceedings on 16.10.1964. The husband’s income was stated to be about Rs. 850 per month because in addition to Government service, he was also doing some toher part time work. The wife. according to the averments had incurred expenses amounting to about Rs. 1,000 in defending the divorce proceedings, but she was allowed only a sum of Rs. 500 by way of costs. Her stridhan in the form of ornaments, jewellery and cltohes valued at about Rs. 2,500 was also alleged to have been taken away by the husband at the time she was forced :to leave the matrimonial house. It was expressly stated that since July, 1962, she had nto been given any maintenance. It was prayed that maintenance be granted to her at the late of Rs. 100 per month with effect from July, 1962. This application was apparently presented sometime in December, 1964.

3. This application was contested by the husband who admitted the birth of a son from this wedlock. The allegation of beating was denied and it was pleaded that Smt. Krishna Kumari had deserted the child for an ulterior mtoive of living without any child with her. It was also averred that Smt. Krishna Kumari was living with her sister’s husband and leading an adulterous life with him. It was admitted that the petition for divorce bad been filed against the wife, but it was added that this was done on the ground of adultery on the part of Smt. Krishna Kumari with her sister’s husband. It was conceded that those proceedings failed at that time and appeal against the order dismissing Shri Sunder Dass’s suit for divorce was pending and the matter was thus described to be sub judice.

In regard to his income, it was admitted that he was getting Rs. 221.50 including allowances. The allegation of the husband doing part time work outside Government service was denied as it was described to be contrary to Government rules. The wife was stated nto to be entitled to any maintenance because she was leading an adulterous life with her sister’s bust and. It may be pointed out that in this application, at the btotom, though there was a typed verification clause, the same was scored out presumably before it was filed in Court.

4. The learned Sub-Divisional Magistrate trying these proceedings seems to me to have approached the consideration of the case from a wholly erroneous point of view. It appears that the learned Magistrate expected the witnesses to give exact date, month and year of the alleged beating given by the husband to the wife when they deposed in Court. The learned Magistrate presumably thought as if these factors have to be established in accordance with the test applicable to criminal cases that the guilt of an accused person is to be established beyond the possibility of a reasonable doubt. This approach, in my opinion, is far from correct in proceedings under Section 488, Criminal P.C.

To discredit the petitioner’s evidence on the ground that appropriate corroboration is nto forthcoming is an infirmity in the order of the learned Magistrate which must inevitably require the Court of revision to go into the evidence itself. Although the learned Magistrate bas at one place in his order observed that the statement of the wife cannto be believed on the question of beatings given to her, at antoher, he baa stated, believing the statement of the husband, that he bad a strong suspicion about Smt. Krishna Human’s character and that there was also a quarrel between them on this account. Now, when such was the feeling between the parties and has been so held by the learned Magistrate, I do nto understand how it could nto be considered to be highly probable that beatings were given by the husband to the wife as alleged.

To expect disinterested corroborative evidence on the question of beating on this premise is, in my view, to take almost a perverse view of things. Keeping in view the conditions prevailing in our society. particularly in the class from which the parties come, on the facts and circumstances found by the learned Magistrate it was highly portable that the husband actually did give beatings to the wife as alleged. To expect disinterested meticulously precise evidence from the neighbours as to the point of date, month and year was, in my view, to take almost a perverse view of the situation. The learned Magistrate, when referring to the statement of the husband in Court, made the following observations which would show the attitude of mind of the husband:

According to him (the husband) Murli Dhar took the petitioner with him. After 10 or 15 days, he (the respondent) contacted Murli Dhar and requested him that the petitioner should be sent back. The respondent says that Murli Dhar flatly refused to Bend the petitioner to him and told him that he might report to litigation if he bad to get bask his wife. After a abort while Murli Dhar sent the petitioner to her parents from where be and his younger brtoher Lakshman brought her back. After a period of 4-5 months, a child was born out of this wedlock. The petitioner again started visiting Murli Dhar on which there was again a quarrel between them. On this premise, to place implicit reliance on Sunder Dass’s statement denying to have ever beaten his wife, because there is no independent corroboration, is to take almost a perverse view of things.

5. The learned Magistrate has come to the conclusion that the wife was leading an adulterous life with Murli Dhar. He seems to have placed reliance on the testimony of the husband when he says that on one occasion be went to Murli Dhar’s house and found his wife lying in a compromising position with Murli Dhar on a charpoi. To place implicit reliance on this kind of a statement is< in my view, the height of perversity, for it is most unlikely that the wife's sister would allow this kind of open objectionable behavior in her own house with her husband on the part of her sister and to believe that Sunder Dass was allowed free access to the house, when he alleges that his wife and Murli Dhar were in a compromising position, adds to the perversity of the approach and the conclusion.

The learned Magistrate has in the concluding part of his order relied in support of the plea of adultery on the evidence of the husband and his mtoher and the evidence of the two neighbours who bad stated that there was a quarrel between the husband and the wife on account of the fact that the husband was asking his wife nto to visit the house of Murli Dhar. This, according to the learned Magistrate, is sufficient to establish that the petitioner was living in adultery with Murli Dhar. On this premise, the wife’s application was dismissed under Section 488(4), Criminal Procedure Code.

6. The learned Additional Sessions Judge he a gone into the matter with great care and has rightly held that the testimony of Methoo Lal Dhobi D.W. 1, of the husband’s mtoher Hardevi aa D.W. 2 and of the husband Sunder Bass as D.W. 4 is untrustworthy so far as the allegation of adultery is concerned. As a matter of fact, in the evidence, antoher instance of adultery with the husband’s nephew Mohan, a 14 year old boy, was also sought to be proved. This circumstance, in my view, quite clearly suggests that in order to give a bad name to his wife and to discredit her, the husband and his mtoher were willing to go to almost any length for manufacturing imaginary allegation of adultery on her put. The learned Additional Sessions Judge has further taken ntoice of the fact that the appeal presented by the husband in the Punjab High Court against the order of the learned Additional District Judge dismissing his suit for divorce was dismissed by Bedi J. on 4.10.1936. It is broadly on this basis that the present recommendation has been made to this Court and the amount of Rs. 60 per month has been fixed in view of the husband’s admission that his monthly emoluments amount to Rs. 221.50 Paise.

7. Before rue, the learned Counsel for the respondent has almost exclusively confined his defense to the submission that on revision, even in proceedings under Section 488, Cr.P.C., this Court has no jurisdiction to reconsider a conclusion on a question of fact however grossly erroneous that conclusion may be. In support of this submission, he has relied on Badrudin v. State 1961-63 Pun LR 856, Fakir Chand v. Madar Mondal , Dulari v. Mt. Sundaria AIR 1934 Oudh 278 and Edamma v. Hussainappa .

8. The petitioner Smt. Krishna Kumari was nto represented by any counsel in this Court. Shri Pritam Singh Safeer, a senior Advocate of this Court, however, offered to help this Court as amices curiae. As Smt. Krishna Kumari had to come from Rajasthan where she is staying with her parents Shri Safeer was good enough to prepare the case and has argued the case after lunch. Shri Safeer has submitted that Section 439, Code of Criminal Procedure, under which this Court exercises its power of revision, empowers this Court in its discretion to exercise any of the powers conferred on a Court of Appeal by Sections 428, 426, 427 and 428 or on a Court by Section 338 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and this power, according to the learned Counsel, is nto to be narrowly construed, if the cause of justice so demands.

He has placed reliance on Khaija Wajphei v. Ngulthang Chief AIR 1968 Mani 15 and has submitted that the case of Garasia Jorubha v. State AIR 1954 Sau 110, also suggested that any perverse or manifestly wrong decision can be interfered with on revision. In regard to the merits, he has submitted that the decision in Sunder Dass v. Krishna Kumari F.A.O. (M) No. 29-D of 1965 decided by Bedi J. on 4.10.1966 (Punj) is binding on the parties and that decision having been given after the order of the learned Magistrate, the learned Additional Sessions Judge was fully competent to take that decision into account and come to his own conclusion on the basis of that judgment. This contention has been sought to be met on behalf of Shri Sunder Dass by submitting that the said appeal had been dismissed for non-prosecution on 11.11.1965 because Sunder Dass has failed to deposit the process-fee in time for service on Krishna Kumari. I find from the final judgment in that case that Sunder Dass had later filed an application for restoration of the appeal, but that application for restoration was dismissed.

9. In so far as the evidence is concerned, the learned Counsel for Sunder Dass has nto cared to take me through the evidence for the purpose of controverting the conclusion of the learned Additional Sessions Judge.

10. The revisional power of the High Court is discernible from Section 485 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which reads as under:

435. (1) The High Court or any Sessions Judge or District Magistrate, of any Sub-Divisional Magistrate empowered by the State Government in this behalf, may call for and examine the record of any proceedings before any inferior Criminal Court situated within the local limits of its or his jurisdiction for the purpose of satisfying itself or himself as to the correctness, legality or propriety of any finding, sentence or order recorded or passed and as to the regularity of any proceedings of such inferior Court and may, when calling for such record, direct that the execution of any sentence or order be suspended and, if the accused is in confinement, that he be released on bail or on his own bond pending the examination of the record.

Explanation:- All Magistrates, whether exercising original or appellate jurisdiction, shall be deemed to be inferior to the Sessions Judge for the purposes of this sub-section and of Section 437.

(2) If any sub-Divisional Magistrate acting under Sub-section (1) considers that any such finding sentence or order is illegal or improper, or that any such proceedings are irregular, he shall forward the record, with such remarks thereon as he thinks fit, to the District Magistrate.

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(4) If an application under this section has been made-either to the Sessions Judge or District Magistrate, no further application shall be entertained by the either of them.
 

The power, therefore, as given by the statute is widely worded. Section 488 of the Code, on which Shri Mohan Behari Lal has principally relied, merely lays down that the Sessions Judge or the District Magistrate may, if he thinks tit, On examining under Section 435 or toherwise the record of any proceeding, report for the orders of the High Court the result of such examination and, when such report contains a recommendation that a sentence or an order be reversed or altered, may order that the execution of such sentence or order be suspended, and, if the accused is in confinement, that he be released on bail or on his own bond. In terms, this section. also does nto restrict the power of this Court as conferred on it by Section 435 of the Code.

Turning now to Section 489 of the Code, it is quite clear that on revision, the High Court, may, in its discretion, exercise any of the powers conferred on a Court of Appeal by Sections 428, 426, 427 and 428 or on a Court by Section 888. The scheme of the Code in regard to the power of revision, as I understand it, is that the revisional Court is given a supervisory jurisdiction to secure the correction of a patent error or defect which has resulted in miscarriage of justice, and this may arise from misconception of law or irregularity of procedure. The jurisdiction conferred on the High Court is a kind of paternal or Supervisory jurisdiction from the point of view of substantial justice.

It is undoubtedly true that the power of revision should nto be so exercised as to convert it into a right of appeal, where such a right is excluded by the Code, but unlike Sections 100 and 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the power of revision under the Code of Criminal Procedure is nto so rigidly circumscribed, within the rule requiring clear question of law or o! jurisdiction, as to exclude this Court’s jurisdiction to interfere where the conclusions of the Court below are grossly erroneous and even though grave injustice may have resulted there from.

11. Bat in the present case, the order of the learned Magistrate suffers from grave infirmities inasmuch as he has approached the consideration of the case from a wholly erroneous point of view and has nto applied his mind to the standard of proof required for finding a conclusion of adultery on the part of the wife. Whereas in his approach in considering the wife’s plea of cruelty, he has applied the standard of a criminal case which was far from appropriate, in dealing with the husband’s plea of adultery, be has relied on evidence which is, on the face of it, incredible and part of it is hearsay. la a case of this type, in my opinion, this Court would be fully competent to interfere if the justice of the case so demands. The fact that on the merits no attempt has been made by the counsel for the husband to support the conclusion of the learned Magistrate, also suggests the infirm basis on which the order of the Magistrate is founded.

12. It is true that no copy of the order of the Punjab High Court in divorce proceedings has been placed on the record, but it was conceded before the learned Magistrate that the trial Court had dismissed Sander Diss’s suit for divorce. If that was so, then it is one further reason why the highly unsatisfactory evidence on the point of adultery should nto have been implicitly relied upon, as was wrongly done by the trial Court.

13. For all the foregoing reasons, I accept the recommendation of the learned Additional Sessions Judge and in agreement with him direct that the husband should pay a sum of Rs. 60/. per month from the date of the wife’s application, with which recommendation no fault has. been found on behalf of the learned Counsel for Sunder Dass. The order of the learned Sub-Divisional Magistrate is thus set aside and replaced by the order which is made in agreement with the recommendation of the learned Additional Sessions Judge.

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