The appeal challenges a High Court judgment from December 20, 2018, that upheld Sanap’s conviction. The case revolves around a murder charge where the prosecution relied heavily on circumstantial evidence, including CCTV footage and witness testimonies, to establish that the appellant and the deceased were last seen together. The Supreme Court ultimately acquits the appellant, finding that the prosecution failed to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, specifically noting issues with the admissibility of electronic records (CCTV footage) due to non-compliance with legal mandates and the unreliability of witness accounts.
(A) Penal Code, 1860, Sections 302, 364, 366, 376(2)(m), 376A, 392 read with Section 397 and 201- Evidence Act, 1872, Section 65-B(4) – Murder – Circumstantial evidence – Appreciation of evidence – Rape – Murder – Last seen together – CCTV footage – Admissibility in evidence – Held that certificate under Section 65-B(4) is a condition precedent to the admissibility of evidence by way of electronic record – Not able to place any reliance on the CCTV footage, insofar as an attempt is made by the prosecution to attribute that the appellant and the deceased EA were last seen together based on the CCTV footage and eschew the same from consideration.
(Para 49 and 51)
(B) Penal Code, 1860, Sections 302, 364, 366, 376(2)(m), 376A, 392 read with Section 397 and 201- Murder – Circumstantial evidence – Appreciation of evidence – Rape – Murder – Last seen together – While PW-20 and 21 claim to have last seen the appellant and the deceased EA – PW- 18 and 19 only claim to have seen the appellant – Analysing the evidence, the witnesses fail to inspire the necessary confidence that a Court of Law looks for, to clinchingly establish the circumstances of last seen – To start, the statement of PW-20 was recorded on 20th March, 2014 a good two and a half months after 05.01.2014 – Statement of PW-21was recorded on 04.03.2014 a good two months later – The police has not explained as to why this delay happened, particularly when they have been inquiring at the Station since 16.01.2014 – PW-20 was approached on 07.01.2014 and was interacted with for thirty minutes and PW-21 was approached on 01.03.2014 – Neither of them disclosed anything about seeing the appellant and the deceased together – PW-20, on top of it, admits to Police pressurising the taxi drivers – There is also contradiction between PW-20 and PW-21 – PW-20 states that he gave the statement only after PW-21 told him about his statement – PW-21 denies any such happening – The way his physical features are remembered also does not inspire confidence as they are referring to a time when the Station would have been bustling with hectic activity, when the train would have arrived and people would be departing in hordes in a hurried manner – To recollect something that happened two and a half months back in this situation would be a tall order – The Identification Parade conducted by PW-39 also lacks steam since the photographs of the appellant were admittedly published earlier in the newspapers as deposed by DWs 1, 2 and 3 – However, evidence of PW-20 and PW-21 does not point towards the guilt of accused even if we discount all these infirmities – The law on circumstantial evidence mandates that any other hypothesis must be ruled out – This is not a case where any conviction could be sustained even if we believe PW-20 and PW 21 on the basis of their evidence, in view of our holding with regard to the other circumstances.
(Para 69 to 75)
(C) Penal Code, 1860, Sections 302, 364, 366, 376(2)(m), 376A, 392 read with Section 397 and 201- Evidence Act, 1872, Section 65-B(4) – Circumstantial evidence – Extra judicial confession – Appreciation of evidence – Extra judicial confession, by its very nature, has been held to be a weak piece of evidence – Normally it is given to persons who enjoyed the confidence and trust of the accused – From the evidence not able to find that PW-9 enjoyed the confidence of the accused so as to safely infer that the accused would have made a clean breast of things to PW-9 – Further disturbing feature in this case is that PW-22 does speak of Police taking PW-9 into custody in connection with this case – There is no re-examination of PW-22 at this stage – Further, from DW-2 read with Article 41, it is clear there are reasonable grounds to believe that PW-9 was in interaction with Police in some capacity – In any event, discounting all that, from the cross-examination portion extracted above of PW-38 with so many omissions in the statement of PW-9, do not feel it prudent to sustain the conviction based on the purported extra judicial confession given to PW-9 – Moreover, there is no corroboration in material particulars and hence inclined to reject the extra judicial confession purportedly given to PW-9.
(Para 108 and 110)
(D) Penal Code, 1860, Sections 302, 364, 366, 376(2)(m), 376A, 392 read with Section 397 and 201- Murder – Circumstantial evidence – Held that all these facts cumulatively constrain to conclude that there are gaping holes in the prosecution story leading to the irresistible conclusion that there is something more than what meets the eye in this case – While the old adage, witness may lie but not the circumstances, may be correct, however, the circumstances adduced, as held by this Court, should be fully established – There is a legal distinction between ‘may be proved’ and ‘must be or should be proved’ as held by this Court – The circumstances relied upon when stitched together do not lead to the sole hypothesis of the guilt of the accused and we do not find that the chain is so complete as not to leave any reasonable ground for the conclusion consistent with the innocence of the accused – On the available evidence it will be extremely unsafe to sustain a conviction against the appellant – The prosecution has not established its case beyond reasonable doubt – Constrained to come to the sole irresistible conclusion that the appellant is not guilty of the offences for which he has been charged – Judgment of High Court in Confirmation Case with Criminal Appeal liable to be set aside and the appellant acquitted with regard to the offences for which he was charged in this case.
(Para 121 to 124)
Chandrabhan Sudam Sanap V. State Of Maharashtra
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 116: (DoJ 28-01-2025)




