A bench of the Honorable Supreme Court of India recently in
Maheshwar Tigga
v. State of Jharkhand[1] while acquitting a man accused of raping a woman on
pretext of marriage held that misconception of fact arising out of promise to
marry has to be in proximity of time to the occurrence of sexual relations
between individuals so as to invoke the provision of rape.
The allegations made were that the accused had been promising to marry the girl
and on that pretext continued to establish sexual relations with her just like
husband and wife.
The Trial Court convicted him under Sections 376, 323 and 341
of the Indian Penal Code[2] (hereinafter, the IPC). The Karnataka High Court
dismissed the appeal.
When the matter reached the Supreme Court, a Bench comprising of Justice R. F.
Nariman, Justice Navin Sinha and Justice Indira Banerjee noted that the accused
belonged to the Scheduled Tribe while the girl belonged to the Christian
community. The Court observed that letters exchanged between them produced as
Exhibits, made it apparent that their love for each other grew with time.
The Bench observed:
They were both smitten by each other and passions of youth ruled over their
minds and emotions. The physical relations that followed was not isolated or
sporadic in nature, but regular over the years. The prosecutrix had even gone
and resided in the house of the appellant. In our opinion, the delay of four
years in lodgement of the FIR, at an opportune time of seven days prior to the
appellant solemnising his marriage with another girl, on the pretext of a
promise to the prosecutrix raises serious doubts about the truth and veracity of
the allegations levelled by the prosecutrix. The entire genesis of the case is
in serious doubt in view of the admission of the prosecutrix in cross
examination that no incident had occurred on 09.04.1999.
It was further observed:
The prosecutrix acknowledged that an engagement ceremony had also been
performed. She further deposed that the marriage between them could not be
solemnised because they belonged to different religions. She was therefore
conscious of this obstacle all along, even while she continued to establish
physical relations with the appellant.
On the question of misconception of fact, the Court observed:
Under Section 90 IPC, a consent given under a misconception of fact is no
consent in the eyes of law. But the misconception of fact has to be in proximity
of time to the occurrence and cannot be spread over a period of four years. It
hardly needs any elaboration that the consent by the appellant was a conscious
and informed choice made by her after due deliberation, it being spread over a
long period of time coupled with a conscious positive action not to protest.
It was also observed by the Court that recently in
Dhruvaram Murlidhar Sonar v.
State of Maharashtra and Ors.[3] and in
Pramod Pawar v. State of Maharashtra and
another[4] where relationship originated from a love affair, developed over a
period of time accompanied with physical relations, consensual in nature, but
the marriage could not be solemnized as parties belonged to different castes and
communities, the Apex court quashed the proceedings.
It was also observed that the prosecutrix was aware about the obstacles in the
relationship because of different religious beliefs. From the letters and other
evidence produced before the court it is not possible to hold that the appellant
since inception never intended to marry the prosecutirix and had fraudulent
intentions to only establish physical relations.
It was held that no offence against the appellant is made out and hence he was
acquitted.
Importance Of This Judgment
The provision of rape has become a toy in the hands of people who want to settle
scores with someone and moreover it has given undue freedom to women to indulge
in consensual sexual relations with people and then file cases under this
provision of law once the relationship ends.
In this matter the girl was completely aware of the hindrances in the
relationship and willfully indulged in sexual relations. There was no force or
coercion which is essence of the crime under Section 375 of IPC that defines
rape.
If relations were not established by force or coercion, the provision under
Section 375 will not get attracted and this is for the judiciary to consider
while deciding such criminal cases.
End-Notes:
- Crl Appeal No. 635 of 2020 arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 393 of 2020.
- Act 45 of 1860.
- AIR 2019 SC 327.
- (2019) 9 SCC 608.
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