The core of the appeal concerns the admissibility and interpretation of Prem Lal’s initial police report as a dying declaration, specifically whether an expectation of death is required for such a declaration to be valid under Indian law. The case also examines the causal link between the head injury sustained by Prem Lal and his subsequent death by asphyxia nine days later, with the court referencing medical jurisprudence to establish this connection. Ultimately, the Supreme Court upholds the High Court’s convictions against the appellants Sita Ram and Onkar Singh for culpable homicide not amounting to murder and other offenses, respectively, but reduces their sentences due to mitigating circumstances.
Penal Code, 1860, Section 304; 323, 451 – Sentence – Reduced – Medico-legal jurisprudence – Death by asphyxia – Hypoxic brain injury’ – Submission that the cause of death being asphyxia, the same had no nexus with the injury suffered by the deceased on his head repelled – Ordinarily, asphyxia is due to strangulation or throttling – However, such is not the case of prosecution – Post-mortem report reveals that the deceased while undergoing treatment of the skull fracture suffered gastroenteritis, which cut off the supply of oxygen, when the liquid in the stomach entered his lungs leading to his death by asphyxia – Although the post-mortem report simply says that the cause of death was asphyxia, yet in the medico-legal jurisprudence the cause of death of the deceased would be the wound in the head leading to a fissured fracture in the skull which led to asphyxia and ultimately the death of the deceased by this phenomenon; ‘hypoxic brain injury’ – Appellant No. 1 has been sentenced to undergo 6 years of RI with fine of Rs.5000/- under Section 304 – It appears that as an under-trial prisoner, he was in jail for about 3 months – Sentence reduced from 6 years RI to 1 year RI while maintaining the amount of fine of Rs.5000/- – In the event if the fine of Rs.5000/- is not deposited, he shall further undergo 6 months of RI – Appellant No.2 has been sentenced to undergo 6 months of RI with fine of Rs.10000/- under Section 323 and 451 IPC – His sentence reduced to the period already undergone – However, he shall pay the fine of Rs.10000/- if not yet paid – In the event if the fine of Rs.10000/- is not deposited, then he shall undergo 6 months of RI as imposed by the High Court.
(Para 34, 44, 45, 57 to 60)
(B) Penal Code, 1860, Section 304 – Evidence Act, 1872, Section 32 – Evidence – Dying declaration – Submission that when the FIR was lodged by the deceased at the Police Station, there was no expectancy of death, therefore, would not be admissible under Section 32 of the Evidence Act repelled – The law in India does not make the admissibility of a dying declaration dependent upon the person’s having a consciousness of the approach of death – Even if the person did not apprehend that he would die, a statement made by him about the circumstances of his death would be admissible under Section 32 of the Evidence Act.
(Para 52)
Sita Ram V. State Of Himachal Pradesh
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 359: (DoJ 06-03-2025)



