1 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 Anand IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.451 OF 1993 Narmadabai Narayan Zendage ..Appellant Age : 50 years, Residing at Chinchnagar Zopadpatti, Nirale Wasti, Solapur. V/s. The State of Maharashtra ..Respondent Ms Kranti Varale i/b. Mr.S.D.Thokade, Advocate, for the Appellant Ms Alpa T. Javeri, APP, for the Respondent - State CORAM : R.C.CHAVAN, J. DATE : 11TH MARCH, 2011 ORAL JUDGMENT . This Appeal is directed against the Judgment of the learned Sessions Judge, Solapur convicting the appellant for the offence punishable under Sections 306, 498 and 323 of the Indian Penal Code and inflicting a sentence of rigorous imprisonment for five years, one year and three months respectively 2 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 on the three counts. 2. Facts which are material for deciding this Appeal are as under :- The victim was married to the son of the appellant about five years before the victim's death. The victim was in her teens at the time of her marriage and had not come of age. About one and half years before her death, she had attained puberty. Before that for three and half years the victim was treated as a daughter in the house of the appellant. After the victim had attained puberty, ill treatment of the victim began because of failure of her father to fulfill demand of cot, mattresses and utensils as may be customary in the community. The victim was also possibly carrying five months pregnancy at the time of the incident. On the day of incident i. e. on 2nd July, 1992 at 4:00 p.m., the victim asked her mother-in-law for permission to visit the house of victim's aunt 3 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 one Janabai Jadhav. The appellant refused permission, and abused victim where upon the victim insisted she would go to the house of her aunt. The mother-in-law then pushed the victim inside the house, beat her, came out of the house and sat on the platform outside. There was nobody in the house when the victim set herself on fire. She was taken to the hospital by the appellant and neighbours. 3. The victim first gave a dying declaration before the Executive Magistrate stating that she had accidently caught fire when her Saree fell on stove on which she was preparing some Tea. The investigating officer seems to have taken the victim in confidence and thereafter, another dying declaration was recorded on the same night by the same Special Executive Magistrate where the victim narrated the incident as detailed in preceding paragraph. An offence was, therefore, registered. The victim died on 4th July, 1992. 4 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 Post Mortem Notes show that she had sustained 90% burn. The investigating officer recorded statements of witnesses and on completion of investigation, sent charge sheet to the Court of the learned Judicial Magistrate First Class, Solapur, who committed the case to the Court of Sessions. 4. The learned Additional Sessions Judge to whom the case was assigned charged the appellant of the offences punishable under Sections 306, 498 and 323 of the Indian Penal Code. Since she pleaded not guilty to the said charge, she was put on trial at which the prosecution has examined in all eight witnesses in its attempt to bring home guilt of the appellant. After considering the prosecution evidence in the light of defence of denial, the learned Judge convicted and sentenced the appellant as already re-counted. Being aggrieved thereby, the appellant has preferred this Appeal. 5 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 5. I have heard the learned Counsel for the appellant and the learned APP for the respondent  State and with the help of both the learned Counsel I have gone through the record. In this case, not only the victim's mother P.W.1 Kalawati Shinde but neighbours P.W.2 Shubhangi Mane, P.W.3 Shama Jawalkar and P.W.4 Sambhaji Jadhav did not state about any ill treatment being meted out to the victim on account of unlawful demands. The only demand which is stated to have surfaced after the victim came of age is that of cot and mattresses, which may be customary at the time of consumation of marriage. In any case, as pointed out by the learned Counsel for the appellant except for taunts, there does not seem to be any ill treatment on account of non-fulfillment of this demand. Even according to the 2nd Dying Declaration recorded by the Executive Magistrate, which is at Exhibit 20, those demands were not the cause for the victim to commit suicide. The victim 6 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 had specifically stated that she wanted to visit her aunt's house; her mother-in-law refused permission; she insisted that she would go to the house of her aunt and therefore, mother-in-law pushed her inside, beat her up and so she committed suicide. 6. The learned Counsel for the appellant states that the victim was treated by the appellant as if she was her daughter and the mother-in-law had only refused permission to the victim to visit her aunt's home and may be thrashed her. The question is whether it could be taken as provocation enough to commit suicide, in order to attract Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code. The learned Counsel for the appellant placed reliance on Judgment of the Supreme Court in Gangula Mohan Reddy Versus State of Andhra Pradesh in Criminal Appeal No.1301 of 2002 decided on 5th January, 2010, where the Court found there could be persons, who are hyper sensitive and may react 7 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 differently to different incidents and therefore, in the absence of an act which could be said to be instigation enough for a person to commit suicide, Courts would not be justified in convicting victim's relation for the offence punishable under Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code. In this case, even if the prosecution case is taken as it is, denial of permission to visit aunt's home and thrashing given by the appellant to detain a daughter-in-law because of her insistance to go, cannot be equated to an act on the part of the appellant to desire that the victim should commit suicide or amount to an act of instigating the victim to commit suicide. Therefore, howsoever seen offences punishable under Sections 498 and 306 of the Indian Penal Code are not at all made out. If it is presumed that victim was thrashed by the appellant as stated by her in her 2nd dying declaration, this would at worst attract complicity in offence punishable under Section 8 Cri.Appeal 451-1993 323 of the Indian Penal Code for which at this point of time, 19 years after the incident, some fine should be sufficient. 7. In view of this, the Appeal is partly allowed. Conviction of the appellant for the offence punishable under Sections 498 and 306 of the Indian Penal Code is set aside. The appellant's conviction for the offence punishable under Section 323 of the Indian Penal Code is maintained. Instead of sentence of rigorous imprisonment for three months imposed on this count, sentence is altered to fine of Rs.1000/- or in default rigorous imprisonment for three months. (R.C.CHAVAN, J.)