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  4. 2024/
  5. July

Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim

Decided on 03 July 2024• Citation: Crl. A./7/2023• High Court of Sikkim
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                    THE   HIGH   COURT    OF  SIKKIM     : GANGTOK                  
                                (Criminal Appeal Jurisdiction)                      
                                            rd                                      
                                  Dated  : 3  July, 2024                            
              ------------------------------------------ -----------------------------------------
               DIVISION BENCH : THE HON’BLE MRS. JUSTICE MEENAKSHI MADAN RAI, JUDGE 
                               THE HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE BHASKAR RAJ PRADHAN, JUDGE   
              -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                            
                           Appellant      :    Mahesh Chettri                       
                                                 versus                             
                           Respondent     :    State of Sikkim                      
                           Application under Section 374(2) of the                  
                             Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973                       
                 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  Appearance                                                        
                     Mr. D. K. Siwakoti, Advocate (Legal Aid Counsel) for the Appellant.
                     Mr. Shakil Raj Karki, Additional Public Prosecutor for the     
                     Respondent.                                                    
                 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    JUDGMENT                                        
                 Meenakshi Madan Rai, J.                                            
                 1.        The Appellant herein, aged about twenty-four years,      
                 was convicted for having raped his maternal grandmother, aged      
                 about eighty years. The Learned Judge, Fast Track (S/W), West      
                 Sikkim, at Gyalshing, on appreciation of the evidence of seven     
                 witnesses furnished by the Prosecution, convicted the Appellant    
                 under Section 376(2)(f), Section 376(2)(n) and Section 506 of the  
                                                               ), vide the          
                 Indian Penal Code, 1860  (hereinafter, the “IPC”                   
                 impugned Judgment, dated 28-02-2023, in Sessions Trial (Fast       
                 Track) Case No.03 of 2022, (State of Sikkim vs. Mahesh Chettri).   
                 For each of the offences of rape that he was convicted under, the  
                 Appellant was sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for life  
                                           -(Rupees ten thousand) only. Under       
                 and to pay a fine of ₹ 10,000/                                     
                 Section 506 of the IPC he was sentenced to rigorous imprisonment   
                 for two years                   ,000/-(Rupees one thousand)        
                             and to pay a fine of ₹ 1                               

                                        Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                       
                                     Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim  2          
                 only.  The sentences of imprisonment were  ordered to run          
                 concurrently and the sentences of fine bore default stipulations.  
                 (i)       The facts as they unravel are that the victim PW-2 was   
                 living with her daughter PW-3, son-in-law PW-4 and their son the   
                 Appellant, her grandson. On 22-04-2022, PW-3 went to visit a       
                 relative in West Bengal leaving the victim PW-2 with the Appellant.
                 PW-4  being a mason  worked outside his home and returned          
                 occasionally. PW-3 returned home on 06-05-2022 after her visit     
                 and did not find PW-2 at home. On enquiry she learned that PW-2    
                 was living in the house of one Kamal Rai, their neighbour, she     
                 accordingly went to fetch PW-2, who refused to return home and     
                 revealed to PW-3 the acts of rape perpetrated on her repeatedly by 
                 the Appellant. On 08-05-2022 PW-3, accompanied by PW-2, went       
                 to the Police Station, where PW-2 lodged the FIR, Exbt P3. She     
                 stated therein inter alia that the Appellant consumes substances   
                 had previously been incarcerated and while in an inebriated        
                 condition would chase and touch her inappropriately. When she      
                 used to be alone, he would disrobe her, take her to his bed and    
                 sexually assault her. He also threatened to kill her if she disclosed
                 such facts to anyone including her daughter (PW-3). The same       
                 year the Appellant had already sexually assaulted her three times. 
                 About fifteen days prior to the lodging of Exbt P3, when she was   
                 again raped by the Appellant she left the house and stayed in the  
                 house of Kamal Rai, hence her refusal to return home with PW-3.    
                 The case was  registered against the Appellant under Sections      
                 376/506 of the IPC and endorsed to PW-7, the Investigating Officer 
                 (IO), who investigated the matter and submitted Charge-Sheet       

                                        Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                       
                                     Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim  3          
                 before the Court against the Appellant under Sections 376/506 of   
                 the IPC.                                                           
                 (ii)      Charge was framed against the Appellant under Section    
                 376(2)(f), Section 376(2)(n) and Section 506 of the IPC. Trial     
                 commenced  after the Appellant plead                               
                                                ed “not guilty” to the offences     
                 charged with.  The Prosecution furnished seven witnesses to        
                 establish its case and an opportunity was extended to the Appellant
                 to explain the incriminating evidence against him, under Section   
                 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter, the      
                        .  His response inter alia was that he was innocent. On     
                 “Cr.P.C.”)                                                         
                 analysing the evidence on record the Learned Trial Court convicted 
                 and sentenced the Appellant as already seen supra. Aggrieved,      
                 thereof the Appellant is before this Court.                        
                 2.        Learned Counsel for the Appellant while assailing the    
                 impugned Judgment and Order on Sentence, contended that, the       
                 victim was not eighty years old and hence the finding of the       
                 Learned Trial Court on this aspect was perverse. That, the delay in
                 the lodging of Exbt P3 has not been explained by the Prosecution.  
                 That, th                                              hy.          
                        e evidence of the victim’s daughter is not trustwort        
                 That, after the alleged incident occurred at night, the victim took
                 shelter in the house of her immediate neighbour, who however was   
                 not arrayed as a Prosecution witness, raising doubts about the     
                 veracity of the allegations of PW-2, added to which her wearing    
                 apparels were not seized, while the medical evidence indicated no  
                 injury on her person. Besides, the Learned Trial Court failed to   
                 obtain a psychiatric evaluation of the Appellant, considering that 
                 the Prosecution allegation is that the Appellant is a habitual drinker
                 who had assaulted his father in the past and committed sexual      

                                        Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                       
                                     Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim  4          
                 assault on the victim. That, the Appellant for the afore cited     
                 reasons deserves an acquittal.                                     
                 3.        Resisting the arguments (supra) Learned Additional       
                 Public Prosecutor submitted that there is no reason to disbelieve  
                 the Prosecution case in light of the consistency in the statements of
                 PW-2 in Exbt P3, her Section 164 Cr.P.C. statement and the facts   
                 duly corroborated by her daughter PW-3 and by PW-5 the person in   
                 whose  house  she  had  stayed  till PW-3 returned home.           
                 Consequently, the impugned Judgment and Order on Sentence of       
                 the Learned Trial Court brooks no interference.                    
                 4.        To examine whether the Judgment of conviction and        
                 Order on Sentence were correctly handed out by the Learned Trial   
                 Court, it is essential to walk through the evidence of the         
                 Prosecution witnesses. PW-2 before the Court unequivocally         
                 reiterated the facts stated by her in Exbt P3. She elucidated in her
                 deposition that the first incident of rape occurred in the Nepali  
                 month of Magh (January-February) of that year (2022), when she     
                 was alone in the house. The Appellant taking advantage of the      
                 situation, during the night forcibly removed her clothes and       
                 committed penetrative sexual assault on her. She tried to resist   
                 him but she being physically weak, he overpowered her. Being       
                 ashamed of the act committed on her by her own grandson she did    
                 not disclose the incident to anyone, apart from the threats of dire
                 consequences held out by him. That, the next incident took place   
                 in the Nepali month of Chaith (March-April) of the same year, when 
                 her daughter and son-in-law were away from home. The Appellant     
                 again dragged her to his room, forcefully removed her clothes and  
                 committed penetrative sexual assault on her despite her protests.  

                                        Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                       
                                     Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim  5          
                 Once again she did not disclose the incident to any person being   
                 concerned about the reputation of her family and also having been  
                 threatened with dire consequences by the Appellant on such         
                 disclosure. That, the third incident was in the Nepali month of    
                 Baisakh (April-May), when her daughter and son-in-law went to      
                 West Bengal and she was  left alone with the Appellant. She        
                 escaped on the pretext of attending                                
                                                nature’s call after the incident    
                                                                         ,          
                 and took shelter in her neighbour’s house located above her house  
                 where an old lady Devi was found residing. That, the next morning  
                 she went to the house of Kamal Rai and stayed there for 16-17      
                 days, but refused to return with her daughter who came to fetch    
                 her and  told her that the  Appellant had been  repeatedly         
                 committing penetrative sexual assault on her. That, she wanted to  
                 report the matter to the Police. Her daughter on hearing her       
                 accompanied her to the Police Station where she lodged her         
                 Complaint verbally. She identified Exbt P2 as her statement,       
                 recorded by the Police as narrated by her. She was taken to the    
                 hospital for medical examination where she informed the doctor     
                 that she had already taken a bath after the incident. She deposed  
                 that her statement was  recorded by a  male  Judge during          
                 investigation. Her cross-examination did not decimate her entire   
                 evidence in chief. PW-3 corroborated the evidence of PW-2. PW-5    
                 corroborated the evidence of PW-2 with regard to her having        
                 stayed in her house for about sixteen days in the Nepali month of  
                 Chait-Baishak that year. The Doctor, PW-6 who examined the         
                 victim on 08-05-2022, around 05.00 p.m., testified that she had    
                 been brought with an alleged history of sexual assault by her      
                 eldest grandson, breast groping and vaginal penetration multiple   

                                        Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                       
                                     Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim  6          
                 times by the Appellant. Exbt P1 the medical examination report of  
                 the victim reveals inter alia that sexual assault could not be ruled
                 out.                                                               
                 5.        After meticulously examining the evidence on record as   
                 well as the impugned Judgment and Order on Sentence, we find       
                 that the Learned Trial Court in the impugned Judgment has          
                 carefully analysed and appreciated the evidence on record. It has  
                 also been noted by the Learned Trial Court in Paragraph 34 as      
                 follows;                                                           
                                 34. Needless to say the law is well laid down today
                                “                                                   
                                that if a Court finds that the testimony of a       
                                prosecutrix inspires the confidence of the Court and is
                                found reliable and trustworthy, the Court can rely on
                                her sole testimony for convicting the accused and   
                                need not look for corroboration of her testimony    
                                elsewhere. In this case, apart from the victim who is
                                the grandmother of the accused, even the mother of  
                                the accused herself, has come forward to report the 
                                matter against her own son. It is thus evident that it
                                is under sheer compulsion being subjected to rape   
                                repeatedly by her accused grandson that PW-2 has    
                                mustered the courage to finally approach the police.
                                This is evidently due to the support of her daughter
                                (PW-3). Thus, both PW-2 and PW-3 have lodged the    
                                report against their own grandson/son, which unless 
                                it was for genuine reasons, no grandparent or mother
                                would have done otherwise. Thus, I am inclined to   
                                find the testimony of PW-2 reliable.                
                                                           ”                        
                 6.        The Learned Trial Court has also discussed the delay in  
                 lodging of the FIR and observed that it has been stressed in a     
                 plethora of cases by the Supreme Court that delay in reporting of  
                 cases of rape and sexual assault need not necessarily be fatal to  
                 the Prosecution case established in a case such as this, where the 
                 Appellant is the victim’s own grandson. That, it would naturally   
                 explain                ance to talk about the incident, leave      
                        the victim’s reluct                                         
                 alone the daunting task of reporting the matter to the Police. That,
                 PW-2 has stated that she was too ashamed and did not tell anyone   
                 about the incident which is absolutely understandable under the    

                                        Crl. A. No.07 of 2023                       
                                     Mahesh Chettri vs. State of Sikkim  7          
                 said circumstances. The Learned Trial Court therefore found no     
                 reason to disbelieve the victim a senior citizen, who at her age was
                 unlikely to make such allegation against her own grandchild unless 
                 she was left with no option.                                       
                 7.        This Court having carefully perused the evidence on      
                 record, the facts and circumstances of the case and arguments      
                 advanced, we are of the considered opinion that the Learned Trial  
                 Court has examined the matter meticulously and we do not see       
                 any reason to differ from the findings of the Learned Trial Court. 
                 8.        Both the  impugned Judgment  and  the Order on           
                 Sentence, are accordingly upheld.                                  
                 9.        Appeal dismissed and disposed of accordingly.            
                 10.       Copy of this Judgment be forwarded forthwith to the      
                 Learned Trial Court for information along with its records.        
                    ( Bhaskar Raj Pradhan )       ( Meenakshi Madan  Rai )          
                          Judge                           Judge                     
                           03-07-2024                     03-07-2024                
                 Approved for reporting : Yes                                       
       sdl