Narayan Chandra Sahu & Anr vs The State Of West Bengal on 24 March, 2026

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    Calcutta High Court (Appellete Side)

    Narayan Chandra Sahu & Anr vs The State Of West Bengal on 24 March, 2026

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                           IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA
                          CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                                   APPELLATE SIDE
    
    
     Present:
    
     The Hon'ble Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay
    
    
    
                                  C.R.A. 197 of 1988
    
                             Narayan Chandra Sahu & Anr.
                                         -Vs-
                               The State of West Bengal
    
    
     For the Appellants            : Mr. Himanshu De
                                     Ms. Monami Mukherjee
    
     For the State                 : Mr. Avishek Sinha
    
     Heard on                      : 05.12.2025
    
     Judgment on                   : 24.03.2026
    
     Ananya Bandyopadhyay, J.:-
    
    1.

    This appeal is directed against an order of conviction dated 30.04.1988

    passed by the Learned Sessions Judge, Midnapore in Session Trial Case

    SPONSORED

    No.XX of March, 1987 arising out of G.R. Case No.1122 of 1980, convicting

    the appellants under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code and sentenced

    to suffer rigorous imprisonment for a period of 2 years.

    2. The prosecution case precisely stated on 02.09.1980 one Ranatosh Sahoo,

    brother of the deceased/victim lady lodged a written complaint at the police

    station alleging inter alia that his sister i.e. the victim lady was married to

    appellant no.1 and a male child was born to them. It had been alleged that

    the deceased/victim lady was cruelly tortured on account of non-fulfillment

    of demand of a radio, bi-cycle and a wrist watch. The villagers of Sadikpur
    2

    assembled and attempted to resolve the disputes. However, the torture on

    the victim lady/deceased still continued. On September 01, 1980, the

    information was received that the deceased/victim lady had committed

    suicide by hanging herself. The complainant learnt upon enquiry that on

    August 31, 1980, the appellants drove her out of the house after removing

    the conch shell bangle and iron bangle. Thereafter, upon the intervention of

    one Surendra Nath Sahoo, she entered her matrimonial home. The

    complainant also stated of receiving letters of deceased/victim lady in which

    allegations of torture meted out to her were stated by the victim lady.

    3. On the basis of a written complaint, the Ramnagar Police Station Case No.3

    dated 02.09.1980 under Sections 302/201 of the Indian Penal Code was

    initiated for investigation.

    4. Upon conclusion of the investigation, the Investigating Agency submitted a

    charge-sheet under Sections 302/34 of the Indian Penal Code & Section 306

    of the Indian Penal Code against the appellants to which they pleaded not

    guilty and claimed to be tried.

    5. In order to prove its case, the prosecution examined as many as 13

    witnesses and examined certain documents.

    6. The Learned Advocate for the appellants submitted the following points of

    argument:-

    i. Observation of the Learned Trial Judge:- “For the charge under Section

    302 IPC is concerned, the accused persons are to meet a case that in

    furtherance of their common intention they had intentionally caused the

    death of Anjali Bala Sahu. …………….. There were two accused
    3

    persons in the same house and there is nothing on record to indicate

    that either of them have committed the murder. I can only hold that the

    charge under Section 302 IPC has not been brought home against either

    of the two accused persons.”

    “For the charge under Section 306 IPC one must prove that the death

    was due to suicide. The doctor could not give any definite opinion that it

    was a case of suicide. …………….. When there is no suicide, there

    cannot be an abetment which led to suicide. I must hold that there

    being doubtful evidence of suicide by Anjali Bala, the charge under

    Section 306 IPC may not be sustained against the two accused

    persons.”

    “……………. There was consistent statement about demand of

    material dowry and of torture thereafter. I can hold that the evidence on

    record is sufficient to conclude that for non-fulfillment of the demand by

    Narayan Chandra Sahoo and Rukmini Sahoo, Anjali was consistently

    tortured physically and mentally which amounted to cruelty under

    Section 498A IPC.”

    ii. PW-1 Ranatosh Saw (Elder Brother of the Victim Lady) deposed the

    marriage between the appellant no.1 and the victim lady had taken

    place 10/12 years ago from the date of incident. The father of the

    victim lady (PW-2) received a letter where the victim lady had

    mentioned about the tortures meted out to the victim lady. It was

    further stated that when PW-1 and his father used to visit the

    matrimonial home of the victim lady, the appellant no.1 used to said
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    that he would marry for the second time and the appellant no.2 used

    to assault that he would give her brother in marriage again.

    However, the alleged four letters were produced by PW-1 before the

    Investigating Officer (PW-11) on September 27, 1980. Such letters did

    not reflect the specific date and signature of the victim lady. The said

    four letters were not produced before the Salish Sabha earlier but

    were produced before the police later. PW-11, 1st I.O. did not collect

    any handwriting of the victim lady either from the house or from

    school. Thus, it created a doubt on the genuineness of the contents of

    the letters and there was a high probability of the letters being

    manufactured.

    The evidence of PW-1, on scrutiny would reveal except for mere

    allegations that the appellant no.1 would remarry, there were no other

    allegations to nail the appellants under the charge under Section

    498A Indian Penal Code.

    Moreover, the Post-mortem doctor also did not find any external

    injuries over the person of the deceased.

    As far as Section 498A of the Indian Penal code was concerned,

    there were no specific allegations against both the appellants which

    were general and omnibus in nature.

    iii. PW-2, Ramani Kanti Sahu (Father of the Victim Lady) deposed the

    appellant no.1 used to create pressure upon the victim lady for the

    fulfilment of material dowry like radio, bicycle and wrist watch.

    However, in the entire evidence of PW-2, there was no whisper
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    regarding the mode and fashion of assault and what the various

    tortures were.

    However, no charge was framed under Section 304B of the Indian

    Penal Code and the Learned Court acquitted the appellants under

    Sections 302/306/34 of the Indian Penal Code.

    iv. PW-3, PW-4, PW-5, PW-8, PW-9 and PW-10 were declared hostile by

    the prosecution stated that the relationship between the appellant

    no.1 and the victim lady was normal and the appellants behaved

    properly with the victim lady. They further stated that they never saw

    the appellant no.1 to torture his wife.

    v. PW-6 Sri Krishna Maity (Post-mortem doctor) deposed “due to

    softening of tissues and decomposition of the body no definite opinion

    could be given regarding cause of death. But the presence of ligature

    mark itself was in favour of homicide, Death, in my opinion, took place

    more than 49 hours before my examination. If dead body is burg up by

    neat immediately after death, there may be post mortem ligature mark.

    Minor external injuries may not be found in a decomposed body, but

    major external injury may be found. The ligature mark that I have

    found in the present dead body was likely to be post mortem in nature.”

    It implied the cause of death of the victim lady was not definite.

    Accordingly, the appellants were accorded the benefit of doubt and

    rightly acquitted from the charge under Sections 302/306/34 of the

    Indian Penal Code.

    6

    Furthermore, the Post-mortem doctor did not find any external

    injuries on the person of the deceased. Therefore, the allegations of

    physical torture under Section 498A Indian Penal Code cannot be said

    to have been committed by the appellants.

    vi. The appellants were convicted under Section 498A of the Indian Penal

    Code but no charge was framed under Section 498A of the Indian

    Penal Code. It was not merely an irregularity but an illegality which

    goes to the root of the case. Learned Trial court had given reasons

    observeing the appellants were given sufficient opportunity/notice of

    the allegations that they not only assaulted deceased/victims but also

    advanced mental torture. Therefore, there was no requirement to

    frame a specific charge under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code.

    Such observation by the Learned Trial Court was totally erroneous in

    the eyes of law and it also caused serious prejudice to the appellants

    and thereby, vitiated the conviction and sentence under Section 498A

    Indian Penal Code.

    Section 216(1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure stated any Court

    may alter or add any charge at any time before judgment was

    pronounced. However, the Learned Court below had neither altered

    the charge nor added the charge before the pronouncement of the

    judgment and thereby, it had caused serious prejudice to the

    appellants.

    7. The Learned Advocate for the State submitted Section 498A of the Indian

    Penal Code came into force in the year 1983. The incident of assault on the
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    victim reportedly occurred in the year 1980, when the provision of Section

    498A of the Indian Penal Code was not applicable. The conviction under

    Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code was granted without altering the

    charge.

    8. A circumspection of prosecution witnesses reveals as follows:-

    i) PW-1 deposed he was the elder brother of the victim lady. The

    marriage between the appellant no.1 and the victim lady. The

    father of the victim lady (PW-2) received a letter where the victim

    lady had mentioned about the tortures meted out to the victim

    lady. The appellant no.1 used to create pressure upon the victim

    lady for providing radio, bicycle and wristwatch. It was further

    stated when PW-1 and his father used to visit the matrimonial

    home of the victim lady, the appellant no.1 stated he would marry

    for the second time and the appellant no.2 used to threaten to give

    her brother in marriage again. On 01.09.80, he got information

    from one Gajendra Sahu that his sister died due to hanging. On

    way to his sister matrimonial home, his father lodged a diary at

    Ramnagar P.S. about such death due to hanging. His father went

    to Sadikpur with two home guards. He went to Sadikpur on the

    next day via Ramnagar P.S. He was accompanied by police officers

    and went to the house of the appellant no.1.

    The alleged four letters (marked as Exbt.-2 to Exbt.-2/3)

    were produced by PW-1 before the Investigating Officer (PW-11) on

    September 27, 1980. Also, such letters did not contain the specific
    8

    date and signature of the victim lady. The said four letters were not

    produced before the six salish sabha earlier but were produced

    before the police later.

    ii) PW-2 reiterated the evidence of PW-1.

    iii) PW-3, PW-4, PW-5, PW-8, PW-9 and PW-10 declared hostile by the

    prosecution.

    iv) PW-6 deposed on 03.09.80 he conducted post-mortem examination

    on the dead body of a female one Anjali Bala Sahu i.e. the victim in

    connection with Ramanagar P.S. Case No.3/80. It was a

    decomposed dead body with softening of the tissues. Ligature

    marks were found around back high up of the hyoid none just near

    the chin. The ligature mark was continuous round. On dissection,

    he found the stomach slightly congested. It contained semi liquid

    material with indigested rice. The small intestine was found

    distended with gas. The bladder was empty.

    Due to softening of tissues and decomposition of the body no

    definite opinion could be given regarding cause of death. But the

    presence of ligature mark itself was infavour of homicide. Death, in

    his opinion, took place more than 49 hours before his examination.

    If a dead body was hung up by neck immediately after death, there

    might be post mortem ligature mark. The ligature mark that he

    had found in the dead body was likely to post mortem in nature.

    v) PW-7 deposed he was the officer-in-charge of Ramnagar P.S. in

    December, 1981. On 02.09.80 at 08:00 p.m., PW-1 came to the
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    P.S. and one his statement he drew up the F.I.R., which was

    marked as Exbt.-1/1. He took up investigation of that case. On

    25.08.1982 he examined PW-1 and PW-2 and recorded their

    statements. On 06.10.1982, he submitted charge-sheet after

    completing investigation.

    vi) PW-7 in his cross-examination stated that on 25.08.82 he had

    examined another witness named Gajendra Nath Sahu. In addition

    to PW-1, PW-2 and Gajendra Nath Sahu, he had examined no

    other witness. During his investigation, he made no attempt to

    collect any writing of the victim either from her home or from her

    school.

    vii) PW-11 deposed on 02.09.80 he was attached to Ramnagar P.S. as

    the 2nd officer. PW-7 was the officer-in-charge and he was the

    officer on duty on 02.09.80. The F.I.R. was drawn up by PW-7 in

    Ramnagar P.S. Case No.3 dated 02.09.80. Investigation was

    entrusted to him and he took up investigation. On 02.09.80 itself

    he went to village Sadikpur in c/w investigation of the specific

    case. He went to the house of the appellant no.1 and found there

    A.S.I. to be present. He prepared inquest report of the dead body

    and sent it for post-mortem examination. He inspected the house

    of appellant no.1 thoroughly. He prepared a rough sketch of the

    house and its precincts in his own hand with explanatory notes

    which was marked as Exbt.-4.

    10

    On 03.09.80, he had arrested the appellant no.1 and 2.

    During investigation, the complainant PW-1 had produced certain

    letters before him on 27.09.80. The same was seized under a

    seizure list which was marked as Exbt.-2, 2/1 and 2/2 only). He

    had collected the post mortem examination report of the deceased

    during investigation. Certain alamats seized by A.S.I. A. Nath were

    handed over to him and he sent the alamats, some blood stained

    earth and control earth and a printed saree to the F.S.L. for

    chemical examination and report.

    viii) PW-12 deposed on 02.09.1980 he was posted as a Constable at

    Ramnagar P.S. He had accompanied A.S.I. of Ramnagar P.S. to

    Sakidpur on 02.09.80. In his presence inquest was held on the

    dead body of the victim in the house of appellant no.1. It was

    identified to them by the villagers. After inquest, the dead body was

    taken by him to Contai S.D. Hospital under the orders of the A.S.I.

    along with challan and a copy of inquest report. He had identified

    the dead body to the doctor, who held P.M. Examination. He

    brought back the P.M. report with wearing apparels of the

    deceased/victim and some materials collected by the doctor in a

    bottle and handed over the same to I.O.

    ix) PW-13 deposed on 01.09.80 he was an A.S.I. of police attached to

    Ramnagar P.S. He was in-charge at the P.S. at 09:45 p.m. on that

    day in the absence of superior officer. At that time PW-2 came to

    the P.S. and submitted a written report concerned the death of the
    11

    victim. On that report, he started his P.S. U.D. Case No.6/80. He

    sent two Home Guards to keep watch on the dead body.

    He set out for the village of occurrence on 02.09.80 along

    with others police officials. He reached Sadikpur at the house of

    appellant no.1. He found the door lying uprooted with its frame. He

    entered the room and found a body of a woman hanging from the

    roof with the help of a rope. The appellant no.1 identified the dead

    body as that of his wife. He saw the toe of the dead body touched

    the floor and the toe was bleeding. There was a bleeding mark on

    the floor. The cot wherefrom the dead body was lying was 6′-4″

    above floor level. A portion of the rope by which the dead body was

    hanging was found tied around her right arm pit and the end of

    the rope was found pressed against that touched roof. He noticed

    three bleeding marks on the right mandible of the dead body. The

    dead body was brought out by appellant no.1 and one Murari

    Khatua. He held inquest on the dead body there. He noticed a 7″

    long hematoma on the abdomen of the dead body. The hematoma

    was 2½ wide in the lower part and 3½” wide in the upper part. The

    eyes were found a bit open. The teeth clasped against each other.

    He noticed black mark around her neck and mark of a knot below

    the chin.

    The broken door was seized under a seizure list which was

    marked as Exbt.-5/1. He had found a Biscuit tin container near

    the foot of the hanging dead body. That tin and the rope by which
    12

    the dead body was hanging as also some blood stained earth from

    the floor and some control earth were seized from the P.O. He

    made a proper seizure list which was marked as Exbt.-5/2, Exbt.-I

    and Exbt.-II.

    x) PW-13 in his cross-examination stated that after receipt of the

    written report from PW-2 he had lodged a G.D. entry in the G.D.

    book of his P.S. He had prepared an inquest report and obtained

    the signatures of the witnesses thereon.

    9. The Learned Advocate representing the respective parties have arguably

    explained the nuances of the case on the perspective of evidence and

    interpretation of law.

    10. Assessed the evidence on record as well as the respective submissions.

    Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code was inserted into the Indian Penal

    Code by the Criminal Law (Second Amendment) Act, 1983 being effective on

    and from December 25, 1983.

    11. Article 20(1) of the Constitution of India prohibited implementation of ex-

    post facto laws. Since the act of assault was not an offence under Section

    498A of the Indian Penal Code when it was committed in 1980, conviction

    under the said Section could not be legally granted.

    12. Section 222 of the Code of Criminal Procedure legally permits an accused to

    at times convicted of a minor offence without being charged, however Section

    498A of the Indian Penal Code was promulgated to address a specific offence

    requiring proof of cruelty (as defined in the explanation to Section 498A of

    the Indian Penal Code). It emphasized a series of acts constituting
    13

    continuous harassment or a willful act compelling the woman to commit

    suicide subjected to severe injury, rather than a single isolated incident of

    assault.

    13. Criminal laws in India are devoid of application and implementation

    retrospectively to offences committed prior to its existence.

    14. In the instant case Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code could not have

    been applied without altering the charge since the provisions of the said

    Sections were inapplicable retrospectively.

    15. The conviction of the appellants and the sentence accordingly are set aside.

    16. In view of the above discussion, the instant criminal appeal being CRA 197

    of 1988 is allowed.

    17. Accordingly, the instant criminal appeal stands disposed of.

    18. There is no order as to costs.

    19. Trial Court records along with a copy of this judgment be sent down at once

    to the Learned Trial Court for necessary action.

    20. Photostat certified copy of this judgment, if applied for, be given to the

    parties on priority basis on compliance of all formalities.

    (Ananya Bandyopadhyay, J.)



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