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State Of Karnataka v. Krishna Alias Raju

State Of Karnataka
v.
Krishna Alias Raju

(Supreme Court Of India)

Criminal Appeal No. 653 Of 1986 | 21-01-1987


NATARAJAN, J.

1. The light-hearted and casual manner of disposal of the case against the respondent in C. C. No. 442 of 1980 (P.R.No. 198/80) on the file of his court by the Additional Munsif-cum-Additional Judicial magistrate (First Class) Madhugiri and the refusal of the High Court of Karnataka to enhance the sentence of the respondent in exercise of its powers under Section 377, Criminal Procedure Code in Criminal Appeal No. 451/81 preferred by the State has compelled the State of Karnataka to approach this Court under Article 136 of the Constitution to file this appeal by special leave.

2. The respondent has entered appearance but has not contested the appeal.

3. The respondent was charged under Sections 279, 337, and and 304-A, Indian Penal Code and Sections 89(a) and 89(b) of the Motor Vehicles Act for having driven an express bus bearing registration No. MYT 3066 in a rash and negligent manner at about 8.30 p. m. on April 30, 1980 on the Madhugiri-Hosakere Road and hitting a bullock cart as a result of which one of the persons travailing in the cart Rangappa alias Veeramallapa sustained fatal injuries and another passenger sustained simple injuries. After the accident the respondent failed to secure medical assistance to the injured persons and also failed to report the accident to the police authorities.

4. The respondent pleaded guilty to all the charges and was accordingly convicted. However, in awarding sentences to the respondent for the several convictions, the Magistrate imposed trivial amounts of fines which had the effect of making trial and the convictions a mere farce. The sentences awarded are as follows:


Offence Sentence provided under IPC/ Sentence awarded

MV Act

1. Section 279, IPC (Punishable with imprisonment of Fine of Rs. 25either description for a term i/d to undergo

which may extend to six months SI for one week

or with fine which may extend to

one thousand rupees or with both)

2. Section 337, IPC (Punishable with imprisonment of Fine of Rs. 50

either description for a term i/d to undergo

which may extend to six months SI for twenty

or with fine which may extend five days

to five hundred rupees or with

both)

3. Section 304-A, (Punishable with imprisonment of Fine of Rs. 250

IPC either description for a term i/d to undergo

which may extend to two years SI for one month

or with fine or with both)

4. Section 89(a) r/w (Punishable with fine which may Fine of Rs. 10

Section 112, extend to one hundred rupees) i/d to undergo

Motor Vehicles SI for five days

Act

5. Section 89(b) r/w [Same as for Section 89(a)] Same sentence

Section 112, Motor as above

Vehicles Act.


5. Perturbed and shocked by the callous manner in which the Magistrate had dealt with the case, the State preferred an appeal under Section 377, Criminal Procedure Code to the High Court of Karnataka for enhancement of sentence. The High Court, we regret to note, has declined to interfere with the sentence on grounds which have no basis or relevance. The High Court was alive to the trivial nature of the sentences awarded by the Magistrate and has observed : "The sentence imposed appears to be a lenient one." Nevertheless, the High Court has declined to exercise its powers under Section 377, CrPC and the strange reasons given by it are as follows:

The judgment of conviction and sentence has been delivered on January 30, 1981. We are today at the fag end of January 1983. The award has been hanging over the head of the accused for a very long time. Which should have made him undergo a lot of mental agony and torture. It is no doubt true that one death has taken place and injuries have been caused to one person. The sentence imposed appears to be a lenient one. Therefore, considering the fact the appeal is pending for along time and it must have caused the accused a lot of mental anxiety, we think that the appeal should be dismissed with an observation that in such serious cases the court is expected to take a serious view of the matter and not to be lenient in such matters. With this observation the appeal is dismissed.

6. The utter disregard shown by the Magistrate to the nature of the offences, particularly the one under Section 304-A, IPC, and the sentences provided for them under the Indian Penal Code and the Motor Vehicles Act, by imposing what may be termed as flea-bite sentences on the respondent, should have spurred the High Court to not only pass appropriate strictures against the Magistrate but also to set right matters by enhancing the sentence at east for the conviction under Section 304-A, IPC to a conscionable level in exercise of its powers under Section 377, IPC.

7. The High Court has failed to comprehend that the respondent has been let off with a total fine of Rs. 345 for his convictions under all the five charges relating to the death of one person and the sustainment of injuries by another due to his rash and negligent driving besides his failure to secure medical assistance to the victims as well as his failure to make a report to the authorities about the accident. The reasons given by the High Court are really non-existent as well as irrelevant ones. It is not as if the respondent had been charged or convicted for a grave offence punishable with death or imprisonment for life and his fate had remained in suspense for a long time and as a consequence thereof, he had undergone mental agony and torment for a long period of time. Here was a case where the respondent had not only driven his bus in a reckless manner and caused the death of one person and injuries to another but he had also attempted to escape prosecution by failing to report the accident to the police authorities. Considerations of undue sympathy in such cases will not only lead to miscarriage of justice but will also undermine the confidence of the public in the efficacy of the criminal judicial system. It need be hardly pointed out that the imposition of a sentence of fine of Rs. 250 on the driver of a motor vehicle for an offence under Section 304-A, IPC and that too without any extenuating or mitigating circumstance is bound to shock the conscience of anyone and will unmistakably leave the impression that the trial was a mockery of justice.

8. We are, therefore, constrained to do what the High Court should have done but failed to do viz. enhance the sentence in the interests of justice. We, however, feel that the ends of justice would be met by enhancing the sentence for the most serious of the charges for which the respondent has been convicted viz. the charge under Section 304-A., IPC. Accordingly we enhance the sentence for the conviction under Section 304-A, IPC to six months RI and fine of Rs. 1000 in default to undergo RI for two months. We leave undisturbed the other convictions and sentences.

9. To the extent indicated above the appeal will stand allowed. The respondent shall forthwith be taken into custody to serve out the sentence.

Advocates List

For the Appellant D.N. Diwedi, M. Veerappa & Ashok Kumar Sharma, Advocates. For the Respondent R. Satish, Advocate.

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A.P. SEN

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE S. NATARAJAN

Eq Citation

[1987] 1 SCR 1103

1987 (11) ACR 286 (SC)

(1987) 1 SCC 538

AIR 1987 SC 861

1987 CRILJ 776

1987 ACJ 443

JT 1987 (1) SC 217

(1987) 92 PLR 296

1987 (1) UJ 354

1987 (1) SCALE 135

1987 (1) CRIMES 397

(1987) SCC (CRI) 198

1987 1 ACJ 443

(1987) 1 MLJ (CRL) 140

LQ/SC/1987/76

HeadNote

imposed by this Court Penal Code, 1860 — Ss. 279, 337 and 304A — Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 — Ss. 89a and 89b — Death of one person and injuries to another due to rash and negligent driving of bus — Imposition of trivial amounts of fines by Magistrate, held, made trial and convictions a mere farce — Sentences awarded — Enhancement of