'If A Man & Woman Are In A Room, Man Makes A Request & Woman Complies, Do We Need To Say Anything More' : Supreme Court In Plea Against Bail To Varun Hiremath In Rape Case
The Supreme Court on Friday dismissed the petition challenging the Delhi High Court's order granting pre-arrest bail to TV journalist Varun Hiremath accused of raping a 22 year old woman in Delhi.A vacation bench comprising Justices Navin Sinha and Ajay Rastogi dismissed the petition filed by the complainant in the rape case.Senior Advocate Nitya Ramakrishnan, appearing for the...
The Supreme Court on Friday dismissed the petition challenging the Delhi High Court's order granting pre-arrest bail to TV journalist Varun Hiremath accused of raping a 22 year old woman in Delhi.
A vacation bench comprising Justices Navin Sinha and Ajay Rastogi dismissed the petition filed by the complainant in the rape case.
Senior Advocate Nitya Ramakrishnan, appearing for the petitioner, submitted that the plea has been filed against the anticipatory bail granted by High Court in case of rape, disregarding the statutory changes in the law, which were consciously brought. She added that the Court virtually granted the benefit of doubt based on selective reading of the Section 164 statement.
"Where is your 164 statement?" the Bench asked.
"We are not entitled to it, as my Lords have said it should not be given to anybody before the chargesheet, but the High Court has virtually extracted it so I can read it from the order" Senior Counsel said.
"You don't need to extract it from High Court order, it is available otherwise also." the Bench said.
Senior Advocate Nitya Ramakrishnan added that the accused evaded arrest for 50 days, the whole family left their house, and non-bailable warrants which were pasted were ignored.
"Our question is, purely for purpose of bail only. The question of normal human conduct, behaviour and understanding. If a man and woman are in a room, the man makes a request and the woman complies with it, do we need to say anything more at this stage?" the Bench observed.
Senior Counsel responded saying that the Indian Penal Code states that to each act there has to be an unequivocal consent.
"Lets assume a situation, where I disrobe myself, but there is a particular activity man wants to indulge in, and I say no to it, and its a penetrative act, it becomes an offence" Senior Counsel said.
"That is a much larger question which will be decided later. We have repeatedly emphasized that whatever we are saying is for purpose of cancellation of bail only." the Bench said.
The Bench than asked Senior Counsel to read portions of the reply to bail application, filed by prosecution, which read that in her statement under section 164, prosecutrix has fully narrated and supported her version given in the FIR
"The portion of the FIR says that he insisted, but its not a standalone, it is preceded by her saying in the lobby that she isn't interested. The High Court has drawn a semantic difference between insistence and force. Even after disrobing, before the penetration, she pushed him away, said 'No' multiple times, vomited all over him but he insisted." Senior Counsel said.
Senior Counsel Nitya Ramakrishnan argued that the mere fact that at a point of time she disrobed is not sufficient to offset either the aggression or the trauma.
She added that, at some point of time it was indicated to the accused that the prosecutrix did not want it, but he said " Look I paid 11000 Rupees for the room, so you will have to comply with it."
"It was not a state of continued consent. Penetrative act which constitutes offence was entirely without her consent. Why should then he not comply with even one day of custodial interrogation?!" Senior Counsel concluded.
The bench observed that it was not inclined to interfere with the anticipatory bail granted to the accused and dismissed the special leave petition.