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        Judgment: 
        CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.1464 OF 2007Arijit Pasayat, J.
 
                          
        Challenge in this appeal is to the 
        order passed by a learned Single Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High 
        Court upholding appellant's conviction for offence punishable under 
        Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short 'IPC') and sentence 
        of 7 years RI. 
                          
        2. Background facts in a nutshell 
        are as follows:First Information Report lodged by Shri Rajiv Lochan Jain (PW4) was to 
        the effect that Jyoti (hereinafter referred to as the 'deceased') had 
        written in her letter that her husband Sohan Raj Sharma the 
        accused-appellant was torturing him for sex in many different ways, 
        mostly pervert and tired of the same, she had poisoned her children, and 
        had consumed poison herself. The FIR is further to the effect that 
        appellant-Sohan Raj Sharma, because of the circumstances, had compelled 
        Jyoti to consume poison.
 
                          
        The first endorsement of the 
        Investigating Officer ASI Rohtash Singh (PW10) on the statement Ex.PL of 
        Shri Rajiv Lochan Jain (PW4) is Ex.PL/1 and it is to the effect that on 
        his reaching B.K. Hospital Faridabad alongwith other police officials, 
        Shri Rajiv Lochan Jain had handed him over one letter (Ex.PX ) of eight 
        pages Ex.PM and from the statement of Shri Rajiv Lochan Jain and the 
        letter produced by him, the allegations of commission of offences 
        punishable under Section 306 IPC on the part of the Sohan Raj Sharma 
        were made out. Statement Ex. PL/1, the statement Ex. PL alongwith 
        endorsement Ex.PL/1 was sent to the police station for registration of 
        the case on which formal FIR was recorded. During investigation, the 
        incriminating evidence in the form of medical evidence regarding death 
        of Jyoti, Pinki and Gudiya having been caused due to consumption of 
        poison surfaced. Further the report regarding letter (Ex.PX) and other 
        oral evidence of the witnesses regarding circumstances connected with 
        the occurrence were collected. Accused Sohan Raj Sharma was put on trial 
        for offence punishable u/s 306 IPC, he was challaned by the police and 
        was committed to the court of Sessions for trial by the Illaqa 
        Magistrate. 
                          
        3. Prosecution examined 11 witnesses 
        and exhibited several documents. Most vital one is purported suicide 
        note Ex.PX. Appellant took the stand during examination under Section 
        313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (in for 'Code') that she was 
        never married to the deceased officially. It also alleged that she was a 
        lesbian and in proof of this stand, one Anita Parmar was examined as 
        DW1. The Trial Court found the contents of Ex.PX satisfied ingredients 
        of Section 306 IPC. Accordingly, the appellant was found guilty and 
        convicted and sentenced as aforesaid. 
                          
        4. In appeal before the High Court, 
        the stand taken before the Trial Court that ingredients of Section 306 
        IPC have not been fulfilled was reiterated. Stand of the prosecution was 
        that the ingredients have been established. 
                          
        5. The High Court found that Ex.PX 
        was sufficient to show as to what was the reason for deceased committing 
        suicide. 
                          
        6. Learned counsel for the appellant 
        submitted that letter Ex.PX in no way establishes that the appellant had 
        abeted the suicide. As a matter of fact, the fact that the deceased took 
        the lives of two innocent children and then committed suicide without 
        any doubt establishes that she was mentally unsound. The letter at the 
        most describes the accused as a sexual pervert, but his behaviour, if 
        any, cannot be taken to be an act of abeting the suicide. It is pointed 
        out that in Ex Px she has clearly stated that she wanted to take 
        appellants' life. 
                          
        7. Learned counsel for the 
        respondents-State on the other hand supported the judgment of the courts 
        below.  
                          
        Section 306 IPC deals with abetment 
        of suicide. The said provision reads as follows:
 
                          
        "306 ABETMENT OF SUICIDE. If any 
        person commits suicide, whoever abets the commission of such suicide, 
        shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term 
        which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine." 
                          
        8. Abetment involves a mental 
        process of instigating a person or intentionally aiding that person in 
        doing of a thing. In cases of conspiracy also it would involve that 
        mental process of entering into conspiracy for the doing of that thing. 
        More active role which can be described as instigating or aiding the 
        doing of a thing it required before a person can be said to be abetting 
        the commission of offence under Section 306 of IPC. 
                          
        9. In State of West Bengal v. 
        Orilal Jaiswal (AIR 1994 SC 1418) this Court has observed that the courts should be extremely 
        careful in assessing the facts and circumstances of each case and the 
        evidence adduced in the trial for the purpose of finding whether the 
        cruelty meted out to the victim had in fact induced her to end her life 
        by committing suicide. If it transpires to the Court that a victim 
        committing suicide was hypersensitive to ordinary petulance, discord and 
        differences in domestic life quite common to the society to which the 
        victim belonged and such petulance discord and differences were not 
        expected to induce a similarly circumstanced individual in a given 
        society to commit suicide, the conscience of the Court should not be 
        satisfied for basing a finding that the accused charged of abetting the 
        offence of suicide should be found guilty.
 
                          
        10. Section 107 IPC defines abetment 
        of a thing. The offence of abetment is a separate and distinct offence 
        provided in the Act as an offence. A person, abets the doing of a thing 
        when (1) he instigates any person to do that thing; or (2) engages with 
        one or more other persons in any conspiracy for the doing of that thing; 
        or (3) intentionally aids, by act or illegal omission, the doing of that 
        thing. These things are essential to complete abetment as a crime. The 
        word "instigate" literally means to provoke, incite, urge on or bring 
        about by persuasion to do any thing. The abetment may be by instigation, 
        conspiracy or intentional aid, as provided in the three clauses of 
        Section 107. Section 109 provides that if the act abetted is committed 
        in consequence of abetment and there is no provision for the punishment 
        of such abetment, then the offender is to be punished with the 
        punishment provided for the original offence. 'Abetted' in Section 109 
        means the specific offence abetted. Therefore, the offence for the 
        abetment of which a person is charged with the abetment is normally 
        linked with the proved offence 
                          
        11. In cases of alleged abetment of 
        suicide there must be proof of direct or indirect acts of incitement to 
        the commission of suicide. The mere fact that the husband treated the 
        deceased-wife with cruelty is not enough. [See Mahinder Singh v. State of M.P. (1995 AIR SCW 4570)].
 
                          
        12. When the factual scenario is 
        examined, it is clear that the accused has been described as a sexual 
        pervert and that he had behaved like an animal and the deceased had 
        tolerated the insulting manner in which he behaved. They were married in 
        court. It was stated that the accused was impotent and he was trying to 
        defame the deceased for having relationship with ladies. 
                          
        13. The most significant part of the 
        letter the deceased had written is as follows: "I desired to kill you alongwith us but no, if you have any sense of 
        shame you will die as a result of the sequence of events. But it do not 
        make any difference for shameless person because these abuses will sound 
        as correct if you realize your capacity. You have not spent even eight 
        days in a period of eight years in peace with me. You yourself are 
        responsible for death of these children. Flowers had been prayed for 
        from the deities of your family regarding whom you disclosed "they are 
        not mine they are with me from my friend. (girl friend) on, you, the 
        condemned the day children will be born as a result of co-habitation of 
        a woman with woman, a woman will stop giving birth to man like you." 
        (Underlined for emphasis)
 
                          
        14. Above being the factual 
        scenario, it cannot be said that the ingredients of Section 306 IPC have 
        been established. Therefore, the conviction as recorded cannot be 
        maintained. The order of the High Court is set aside. The appellant be 
        released forthwith unless required in connection with other case.  
                          
        
        
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