Meghalaya High Court has modified the murder conviction of a man who allegedly killed his wife's ex-husband after finding them in a compromising position. The Division Bench of Chief Justice S. Vaidyanathan and Justice W. Diengdoh termed the act as a reaction to "safeguard his right over his wife" without premeditation, provoked by seeing his wife betray their sacred relationship.
The Court observed that in a marriage, the husband and wife are each other's property and such betrayal can lead to incidents like this due to sudden provocation and emotion. It likened married life to a bicycle where if one wheel (spouse) is dysfunctional, the family cannot run smoothly.
While the wife claimed her ex-husband pointed a pistol first, the Court found contradictions in her statements. It held the husband's act fell under Exception 2 of Section 300 IPC dealing with grave and sudden provocation. He was convicted for culpable homicide not amounting to murder instead of murder and sentenced to 3 years rigorous imprisonment.
The judgment cited examples from Ramayana and a recent Supreme Court ruling stressing the solemn nature of marriage in Indian society.
Copyright©2024 Living Media India Limited. For reprint rights: Syndications Today