New Delhi: The Delhi High Court has upheld the acquittal of a man in his wife’s suicide case, saying that the mere existence of an extramarital affair of the husband was not enough to attract the offence.
The high court said since the couple was otherwise living happily, the allegation of demand for dowry was neither believable nor, in any manner, proved by the prosecution.
“It thus becomes evident that mere existence of extramarital affair is not sufficient to attract section 306 (abetment to suicide) of the IPC. There is no material indicating any immediate or direct instigation or conduct of a nature, compelling Nazrin (victim) to commit suicide. We, therefore, do not find any perversity in the findings returned by the trial court,” a bench of Justices Vivek Chaudhary and
Manoj Jain said.
The court, by its December 12 judgment, dismissed an appeal filed by the prosecution challenging the acquittal of Hamid, who was accused of abetment to suicide after his wife died in November 2010.
According to the prosecution, Nazrin was brought to AIIMS on October 30, 2010, by her relatives with an alleged history of ‘attempted hanging’. Her mother told the police that her daughter had married Hamid in 2004 and the couple, who had two children,
were living happily.
However, over the previous two years, Hamid indicated his intention to marry another woman, and that’s when the marriage hit a rough patch. The victim’s mother claimed that Hamid would beat his wife.
It was alleged that the man offered Rs 2 to 4 lakh to his wife to relieve him of marital obligations so that he could
marry the other woman.
The victim’s mother claimed that her daughter could not have committed suicide and that she was killed by her husband and in-laws. Nazrin died in the hospital on
November 30, 2010.
Hamid, on the other hand, claimed that his relationship with his wife was smooth till June 2010, when she got pregnant, and later, he learnt that she had undergone an abortion. Her behaviour changed thereafter, he claimed.
According to him, she looked depressed after the abortion and was taking
some medicines. The High Court ruled that the husband’s extramarital affair did not constitute cruelty or abetment to suicide, noting no recent act or evidence suggested instigation, and the affair was known to the wife and her family
for two years.