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A bench comprising Justices R Subhash Reddy and Hrishikesh Roy said that without positive act on the part of the accused to instigate or aid in committing suicide, no one can be convicted for offence under Section 306 (Abetment of suicide) of the Indian Penal Code.
“Abetment involves the mental process of instigating a person or intentionally aiding a person in doing a thing…
“To proceed against any person for the offence under Section 306 IPC it requires an active act or direct act which led the deceased to commit suicide, seeing no option and that act must have been intended to push the deceased into such a position that he committed suicide,” the bench said.
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An FIR was registered on May 11, 2018 at TP Nagar Police Station in Meerut district on the complaint of a man alleging that his brother was called by the woman at her house wherein her parents and sister made casteist abuses and poisoned him unconscious.
The complainant further stated that his brother was taken to the hospital where he died of negligence.
The top court said that except the self-serving statements of the complainant and other witnesses stating that the deceased was in love with the woman, there is no other material to show that she maintained any relation with the deceased.
“From the material placed on record it is clear that on the date of the incident on May 4, 2018 the deceased went to the house of the woman and consumed poison by taking out from a small bottle which he had carried in his pocket. Merely because he consumed poison in front of the house of the appellant, that itself will not indicate any relation of the appellant with the deceased,” the bench said.
The top court said there is nothing on record to show that woman was maintaining relation with the deceased and further there is absolutely no material to allege that appellant (woman) abetted for suicide of the deceased within the meaning of Section 306, IPC
“In fact, at an earlier point of time when the deceased was stalking the appellant, the appellant along with her father went to the police station to complain about the calls which were being made by the deceased to the appellant,” the apex court said.