Caught wife with lover at night—was it murder or loss of control? Gujarat High Court says “grave and sudden provocation”… but what really happened inside that house?
AHMEDABAD: The Gujarat High Court has upheld a 2001 conviction of a husband for culpable homicide not amounting to murder after he assaulted his wife on finding her in an intimate situation with another man inside his own house. The court accepted that the incident involved “grave and sudden provocation” and ruled that it did not amount to murder.
The court clarified that the case falls under Section 304 Part II of the IPC, meaning the act was done with knowledge that it could cause death, but without intention to kill. Under this section, punishment can extend up to 10 years, or fine, or both.
Justice Gita Gopi observed that the husband’s defence was based on losing control after witnessing his wife with her paramour. The court examined Exception 1 of Section 300 IPC, which deals with cases where grave and sudden provocation reduces the offence from murder to culpable homicide.
The court stated:
“The provocation must be both ‘grave’ as well as ‘sudden’. If the provocation is ‘grave; but not ‘sudden’ the accused cannot get the benefit of this Exception. In the same way he cannot get the benefit, where the provocation is though ‘sudden’ but is not ‘grave’. It must be established that the act committed by the accused was a simultaneous reaction of grave as well as sudden provocation which deprive him of the power of self control”.
As per the facts recorded, the husband had suspicion about his wife’s fidelity for about a week before the incident. On the night of 30 July 1997, he pretended to sleep. Around 12:30 AM, his wife moved to another room where another man had entered the house from the back door. Hearing them, the husband followed and saw both in a compromising situation.
The court noted:
“According to the complaint he became suspicious one week prior to the incident. The complaint was given on 31.07.1997 and the accused stated that on 30.07.1997 during the night hours after watching T.V. he and his wife and son all were sleeping in the same room and since he was doubting the fidelity of his wife he pretended to sleep and during that time at 0.30 hours at night of 31.07.1997 his wife stood up and entered the next room and at that time Sharma had come in his house from the rear door and he heard both of them in intimate relation, therefore he stood up from his bed, and on entering the next room he saw his deceased wife and the other person in the compromising state and seeing so he got angry and suddenly when he confronted them, deceased wife told him that if he would come in between both of them, then he would not be left alive, therefore he got further enraged.
Sharma fled away from the place. The compromising situation, which he saw of his wife and the paramour could be considered as grave and sudden provocation, taking into consideration our Indian Society and the law,”.
The court further recorded that the wife threatened the husband during confrontation. It noted that she “on her own-self and on behalf of the paramour threatened to kill the husband if he would dare to come in between them”.
This threat added to the emotional breakdown of the husband. The court said this statement “further provoked the husband” and he assaulted her by beating and hitting her against the wall and later with an object on her head.
After the incident, both went to sleep. Later, when the husband woke up and tried to wake his wife, he found her dead.
The court concluded:
“When he saw on 31.07.1997 in the wee hours, his wife with the paramour he lost self-control, thus the case under Exception-I of Section 300 could be said to be proved, hence, the case would not be of murder but of culpable homicide not amounting to murder punishable under Section 304 IPC.
The accused is sentenced under Par-II of Section 304 IPC. If there is intent and knowledge then the same would be a case of Section 304 Part-I and if it is only a case of knowledge and not intention to cause murder of bodily injury then the same would fall under Section 304 Part-II.
The intent along with knowledge to the act cannot be attributed to the accused, in the case on hand. He had suspicion on his wife’s fidelity, but may not have contemplated, that his wife would establish physical relation with the neighbour, as her paramour, in his own house.
The provocation cannot be said to be sought on voluntarily provoked by the offender, as an excuse for killing or doing harm to his wife, thus the Exception-1 of Section 300 would not fall under the proviso to consider it a deliberate act of killing the wife.”
On the argument of self-defence raised by the husband, the court rejected it, noting there was no evidence that he acted to protect himself from any physical threat.
The court said:
“So the case of the appellant-accused could only be weighed under Exception-1 of Section 300 IPC, of causing death of wife under ‘grave and sudden provocation’, having lost the power of self-control, so benefit under Section 100 IPC cannot be claimed by the accused.
Thus, the case being of Culpable Homicide not amounting to murder, the punishment would be under Section 304 of IPC.
The intention of causing death of the wife cannot be attributed to the accused, hence the case would not fall under Part-I of Section 304 IPC. In the result, there is no reason to interfere in the judgment of conviction and sentence passed under Section 304 IPC Part-II. The learned Trial Court Judge has considered the merits of the case and declared the judgment in accordance to the provision of law.”
The Sessions Court had earlier convicted the husband under Section 304 Part II IPC in 2001 and sentenced him to 5 years of rigorous imprisonment along with a fine of ₹3,000.
The defence argued that the act was not planned but happened due to sudden emotional breakdown after seeing the situation and hearing the threat. It was also submitted that there was no criminal intention and his conduct after the incident was not suspicious.
The prosecution argued that the husband used allegations of infidelity as an excuse and had waited for the opportunity.
However, the High Court found no reason to interfere with the trial court’s findings and dismissed the appeal, maintaining the conviction under Section 304 Part II IPC.
Explanatory Table – Laws & Sections Involved
| Section / Law | Legal Meaning | Application in This Case |
| Section 302 IPC | Punishment for murder | Initially charged as murder by prosecution |
| Section 304 Part-II IPC | Culpable homicide without intention to kill, but with knowledge | Final conviction upheld under this section |
| Section 300 IPC | Defines murder | Court examined whether act qualifies as murder |
| Exception 1 to Section 300 IPC | Grave and sudden provocation reduces murder to culpable homicide | Applied here—husband lost self-control after discovering wife with paramour |
| Exception 2 to Section 300 IPC | Exceeding right of private defence | Not applicable in this case |
| Section 100 IPC | Right of private defence extending to causing death | Rejected by court—no immediate threat from wife |
| Section 452 IPC | House trespass after preparation for hurt | Applied in separate case against paramour |
| Section 323 IPC | Voluntarily causing hurt | Part of case against paramour |
| Section 504 IPC | Intentional insult provoking breach of peace | Applied in related complaint |
| Section 313 CrPC | Statement of accused | Used by accused to explain provocation and defence |
| Section 24 C | Confession must be voluntary | Court assessed extra-judicial confession validity |
| Section 25 Evidence Act | Confession to police not admissible | FIR confession not relied upon directly |
| Section 8 Evidence Act | Conduct as evidence | FIR by accused considered as conduct |
| Section 21 Evidence Act | Admissions are relevant | Used for evaluating accused statements |
Case Details
- Case Title: Hasmukhbhai Bhurabhai Vasava vs State of Gujarat
- Court: High Court of Gujarat at Ahmedabad
- Case Number: R/Criminal Appeal No. 816 of 2001
- Date of Judgment: 25/03/2026
- Bench: Honourable Ms. Justice Gita Gopi
- Trial Court: Additional Sessions Judge, Panchmahal, Godhra (Sessions Case No. 100 of 1998)
- COUNSELS
- For Appellant (Accused): Mr. V.D. Parghi
- For State (Respondent): Ms. Jyoti Bhatt, APP
Key Takeaways
- The court clearly accepted that a man catching his wife in an affair inside his own home can trigger extreme emotional breakdown, yet the law still criminalises his reaction.
- Even after acknowledging provocation and absence of intent to kill, the system ensured punishment, showing zero space for male emotional trauma in law.
- The wife’s alleged threat “you won’t be left alive” was recognised, but still not treated as sufficient for self-defence, exposing how male fear is legally undervalued.
- The paramour walked away from the situation, while the husband alone faced full criminal liability, highlighting selective accountability.
- This case exposes a harsh reality: when men are betrayed, humiliated, and mentally pushed to the edge, the legal system may reduce the charge—but it will not stand with them.
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