HONOURABLE SRI JUSTICE G. KRISHNA MOHAN REDDY CRIMINAL REVISION CASE No.1423 OF 2004 JUDGMENT: This Criminal Revision Case is directed against judgment dated 2.8.2002 delivered in Criminal Appeal No.353 of 2000 on the file of the Court of learned VII Additional Sessions Judge, Kakinada, whereby the learned Sessions Judge allowed the appeal setting aside conviction and sentence recorded against the respondent/accused (for short ‘the accused) in respect of offence punishable under Section 498-A read with 109 IPC. According to the prosecution, the marriage of the defacto complainant in the case namely, Needuri Suri Kumari and A1 took place on 4.6.1998 and soon after the marriage, she joined A1 and thereafter, A1 set up a separate house and on 22.6.1998, A1 took her to her parents house and left her there. On completion of Ashada masam, A1 did not take P.W.1 to his house and then her brother went to the house of A1 and asked him to take her back. Then, A1 along with the other accused in the case, demanded to pay balance of dowry and declared that unless the defacto complainant would bring the balance amount of dowry, they would not take her. Subsequently, the defacto complainant lodged a report with the police concerned, basing on which the case was registered in Crime No. 178/98 and was investigated into. On the completion of the investigation of the case, charge sheet was laid against A1 to A4. The learned Assistant Sessions Judge tried A1 to A4 for the offences punishable under Section 498-A read with 109 of IPC. In order to prove the guilt of the accused, the prosecution examined P.Ws. 1 to 7 and got marked Exs.P1 and P2 and on behalf of the accused, no oral evidence was let in, however, Exs. D1 to D7 were marked. On consideration of the entire evidence on record, the trial Court found A1 to A4 guilty of the offence punishable under Sections 498-A read with 109 of IPC and sentenced them to undergo rigorous imprisonment for three years and to pay a fine of Rs.500/- and in default to suffer simple imprisonment for a period of one month, whereas, aggrieved by that the accused preferred the appeal before the learned VII Additional Sessions Judge, Kakinada, which was allowed by setting aside the conviction and sentence recorded against the accused for the offences punishable under Sections 498-A read with 109 of IPC and hence, the defacto complainant filed the present revision. It is the contention of learned counsel for the revision petitioner- defacto complainant that even though P.Ws. 1 to 6 spoke about the complicity of the accused in the case, the lower appellate Court failed to re-appreciate the matter properly and came to erroneous conclusions and hence the judgment of acquittal recorded by the appellate Court is liable to be set aside and necessary measures are to be taken. Therefore, what is to be seen is (1) whether the prosecution placed sufficient evidence with regard to the charges levelled against the accused. 2) Whether the appellate Court examined the matter properly and came to correct conclusions ? 3) Whether the acquittal recorded in favour of the accused is liable to be set aside ? The evidence of the defacto complainant as P.W.1 is that A1 took her to her parents house four days before Ashadam and within ten days she gave a notice to A1, but no such notice is produced before the Court. Further, the defacto complainant deposed that she led marital life with A1 in her in-laws house for one week and thereafter the in-laws they made them to live separately at Chilkivari Street and then she lived along with A1 for five days separately and then A1 took her to her parents house for Ashadam. It is the evidence of P.Ws. 2 to 6 that after the marriage, A1 and the defacto complainant lived separately at Chilkivari street, which falsifies the evidence of P.W.1 that she and A1 stayed in the house of in-laws for one week and there A1 to A4 harassed her for bringing additional dowry. Further, significantly even according to her, she stayed with A1 or A1 to A4 for few days. It is unnatural that during those few days after the marriage, she was subjected to harassment. The lower appellate Court, on re-appreciation of the evidence on record, arrived at correct conclusions and rightly acquitted all the accused in the case for the offences punishable under Sections 498-A read with 109 of IPC and there is no reason to interfere with the said order. The Criminal Revision Case is accordingly dismissed. _____________________________ G. KRISHNA MOHAN REDDY,J Date: 19.7.2011 pnb