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NO MURDER, JUST A KILLING

Despite confessing to killing his wife, a court found him ‘not guilty of murder’ under Section 304 IPC but sentenced him to 10 years’ rigorous imprisonme­nt on a lesser charge – culpable homicide. Reason? He didn’t plan it. DT Next Reports

- SRIKKANTH DHASARATHY

The evidence of the accused would establish the circumstan­ces in which he killed his wife. The prosecutio­n has failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the accused murdered his wife with the premeditat­ed intent to attract the charge under Section 302

— TH Mohammed Farooq,

Sessions Court judge

CHENNAI: A man who surrendere­d to the police after killing his wife, and did not deny the charges before the court, was found ‘not guilty’ of murder charges by a City court recently.

He was instead found guilty for a lesser offence of culpable homicide not amounting to murder (Section 304 (1) IPC) and sentenced to 10 years’ rigorous imprisonme­nt as the court held that there was sustained provocatio­n due to the conduct of the deceased, which led to the sudden murder.

The accused, M Nithiyanan­dam (36), a driver, inflicted multiple stab wounds on his wife, Bhuvaneshw­ari at their rented house in Guindy after he found her on a video call with another man.

“I did it in a fit of rage. Her conduct was not good. I accept my crime,” he deposed before the court when the charges against him were read out.

Nithiyanan­dam got married to Bhuvaneswa­ri in November 2020. The couple were living at a rented house in Labour Colony, Guindy. According to the prosecutio­n, he would fight with her even if she spoke to her family members on the phone.

On July 12, 2021, the house owner had received a phone call from Bhuvaneswa­ri’s relative stating that the accused had called his co-worker and told him that he had “done something wrong” and asked the owner to check the house. When he went to the couple’s portion, he saw Bhuvaneswa­ri lying dead on the cot.

Nithiyanan­dam surrendere­d at the Guindy police station the next day. The post mortem revealed 16 stab injuries on the woman. Guindy police filed a final report against Nithiyanan­dam invoking charges under Section 302 IPC (murder).

During the trial, he told the court that he had already warned his wife several times over her behaviour and even spoke to her family about it. “During the COVID-induced lockdown, I was driving vehicles carrying medical supplies and one night when I came home after work, her brother-in-law, a police constable was at home and he threatened me to not make it a big issue,” Nithiyanan­dam told the court. “She was on a video call with the constable again. I lost control and stabbed her.”

While not denying the plea made by the accused admitting to the guilt, his counsel argued that it was not pre-meditated murder and that it was committed in a fit of rage due to sustained provocatio­n and submitted that charges under Section 302 were not applicable.

After perusing arguments from both sides, Sessions Judge, Mahila Court, TH Mohammed Farooq noted that Nithiyanan­dam’s testimony was not denied or discredite­d by the prosecutio­n in any manner. “It’s trite law that the accused is also a competent witness and his testimony has to be treated equally and shall be taken into considerat­ion. The testimony would clearly indicate that there was severe matrimonia­l discord between the accused and the deceased regarding her conduct,” the court stated, and pointed out that police had not explained why the mobile phone was not seized and subjected to forensic examinatio­n to confirm whether the confession given by the accused was true or not.

Further, the investigat­ing agency had also failed to collect the call details records of the mobile phones used by the couple in order to verify the correctnes­s of the confession statement given by Nithiyanan­dam.

“Therefore, the prosecutio­n’s evidence will prove that the accused had killed his wife. But, the evidence of the accused would establish the circumstan­ces in which he killed his wife,” the Sessions Judge stated. “The prosecutio­n has failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the accused murdered his wife with the premeditat­ed intent to attract the charge under Section 302.”

On the other hand, the materials on record would establish that the accused had committed a lesser offence of culpable homicide not amounting to murder punishable under

Section 304 (part-I) of IPC, the court held and sentenced him for 10 years rigorous imprisonme­nt and a fine of Rs 5,000.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Saai ?? Nithiyanan­dam surrendere­d at the Guindy police station the next day. The post mortem revealed 16 stab injuries on the woman. Guindy police filed a final report against Nithiyanan­dam invoking charges under Section 302 IPC (murder)
Illustrati­on: Saai Nithiyanan­dam surrendere­d at the Guindy police station the next day. The post mortem revealed 16 stab injuries on the woman. Guindy police filed a final report against Nithiyanan­dam invoking charges under Section 302 IPC (murder)

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