‘Prosecution
Must Prove Intent, Knowledge’
A boy proposes to a girl. She rejects it. Feeling
humiliated, the boy commits suicide.
Should she be prosecuted for abetment of suicide?
Actress Jiah Khan’s suicide has again brought to fore a
question — what constitutes abetment of suicide? — which has been discussed
extensively by the Supreme Court through the decades.
The Supreme Court has consistently held
that a word uttered in a fit of anger or emotion without intending to trigger a
step as extreme as suicide can’t be said to be abetment of suicide.
The Supreme
Court has also consistently clarified that to prosecute a person for abetment
of suicide, prosecution has to prove that the accused had the intention and
knowledge that a specific act on his part could trigger suicidal tendency in
the victim.
Normal marital
skirmishes or what the court put it as “normal wear and tear of marriage” could not be counted as a reason for
abetment of suicide by a partner.
In that case — State of West Bengal vs Orilal Jaiswal
[(1994) 1 SCC 73] — the SC had cautioned that the court should be very careful in assessing
the facts and circumstances of each case and the evidence for purpose of
finding whether cruelty meted out to the victim had in fact induced her to
commit suicide.
“If it appears
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,” it had said.
Three years
ago, the SC in S S
Chheena vs Vijay Kumar Mahajan had said there had to be a positive act on the part of
the accused to instigate the victim to take the step of taking her own life.
“Abetment involves a mental process of
instigating a person or intentionally aiding a person in doing of a thing.
Without a positive act on the part of the accused to instigate or aid in
committing suicide, conviction cannot be sustained.”
In its 2001
judgment (Ramesh
Kumar vs Chhattisgarh), the court dealt with a classic case. After a quarrel,
the husband told the wife — “you are free to do whatever you wish and go wherever you
like”.
The wife
committed suicide and the husband faced abetment charges. The court quashed the
charges and said: “The present one is not a case where the accused had by his
acts or omission or by a continued course of conduct created such circumstances
that the deceased was left with no other option except to commit suicide, in
which case instigation may have been inferred. A word uttered in the fit of
anger or emotion without intending the consequences to actually follow cannot
be said to be instigation.”
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