Supreme Court judgment regarding an appeal against a death sentence for the murder of five family members. The source outlines the prosecution’s case, based on circumstantial evidence, witness testimonies, and the discovery of incriminating weapons at the crime scene. It also presents the appellant’s defense, which asserts an alibi and challenges the reliability of the evidence. The court ultimately confirms the conviction for murder but commutes the death penalty to life imprisonment, citing the appellant’s lack of prior criminal history and satisfactory prison conduct as mitigating factors.
(A) Penal Code, 1860, Section 302 – Evidence Act, 1872 Section 106 – Murder – Circumstantial evidence – Appreciation of evidence – Upon a cumulative evaluation of the circumstances, it appears that: (i) the victims were last seen alive in the Appellant’s exclusive custody (his own house) on that fateful night – (ii) the Appellant was found inside the same house soon after the murders, with a blood-stained axe, – (iii) the postmortem reports confirm cause of death by repeated blows of sharp-edged weapons, – (iv) no satisfactory explanation has been provided by the Appellant to displace the inference of guilt – Held that these circumstances form an unbroken chain pointing unmistakably to the Appellant as the perpetrator of the crime – Find no cogent basis to disturb the concurrent findings of the Trial Court and the High Court that the Appellant committed the murders of his wife and four minor daughters in the intervening night of 11/12.11.2011 – Conviction of the Appellant under Section 302 IPC is fully justified and does not warrant any interference at this stage.
(Para 16)
(B) Penal Code, 1860, Section 302 – Death sentence – Rarest of rare case – Appellant has been found guilty of murdering five persons his own wife and four minor daughters – This crime, by its very nature, is undeniably grave and horrific – The deceased were defenseless, particularly the four minor daughters, placing a moral onus on the Appellant to protect them – Instead, they were brutally killed in their own home – Held that while the offence is undoubtedly brutal, certain mitigating factors, especially the Appellant’s lack of criminal antecedents and his reported conduct in prison, tilt the scales in favour of commutation – There is no material demonstrating that he would remain a perpetual threat to society or that he is beyond reform – Indeed, the Probation Officer’s input and the Superintendent of District Jail’s report show a potentially reformable individual – Further, this Court has consistently recognized that the imposition of capital punishment is an exception and not the rule – Even where multiple murders have been committed, if there is evidence or at least a reasonable possibility of reform, a lesser sentence must be preferred – Weighing the totality of circumstances and having regard to the legal principles discussed while the crime is heinous and deserves the highest degree of condemnation, it does not meet the threshold of “the rarest of rare” so as to irrevocably foreclose the option of life imprisonment – While confirming the conviction of the Appellant for the offence punishable under Section 302 IPC, consider it appropriate to commute the death sentence to one of life imprisonment till his last breath.
(Para 19 to 22 and 24)
(C) Constitution of India, Article 136 – Death Sentence – Commutation of – Held that while exercising its appellate jurisdiction under Article 136 of the Constitution of India, Apex Court possesses the authority to scrutinize not only the conviction of an accused but also the appropriateness of the sentence imposed – The power to impose or modify a sentence within the prescribed framework of the Penal Code is exclusively vested in the High Court and this Court – The alternate punishment for offences punishable by death, such as imprisonment for a specific term exceeding 14 years or until the natural life of the convict, remains within the judicial conscience of this Court and the High Court – This ensures that the gravity of the offence, the mitigating and aggravating circumstances, and the possibility of reformation are thoroughly assessed before irrevocable sentences such as capital punishment are affirmed – Therefore, the commutation of a death sentence to imprisonment for the remainder of the convict’s natural life, as an alternative to death, is well within the judicial prerogative of this Court and adheres to the constitutional mandate of ensuring justice.
(Para 23)
Deen Dayal Tiwari V. State Of Uttar Pradesh
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 111: (DoJ 16-01-2025)




