The appeal challenges a Madras High Court judgment that maintained his conviction for murder (Section 302 IPC) but acquitted him of rioting (Section 148 IPC). The case revolves around the death of a police constable who was pursuing Murugan and others suspected of illegally transporting sand. The Supreme Court ultimately overturns Murugan’s conviction, citing unreliable witness testimonies, inadmissible confessions, and unexplained delays in reporting the crime, concluding that the circumstantial evidence does not conclusively prove his guilt. The judgment emphasises the high standard of proof required in cases based on circumstantial evidence, where every link in the chain of events must be established beyond reasonable doubt.
Penal Code, 1860, Section 148 and 302 – Murder – Conviction Set aside – Testimony of eye witness – Circumstantial evidence – Last seen evidence – Delay in presenting FIR to Magistrate – High Court has ignored the factum that the evidence of the witnesses which were the basis of the prosecution case and the backbone having crumbled, with the Court itself not relying thereon while giving benefit to the co-accused, the same benefit could not have been denied to the appellant being similarly placed in the given facts and circumstances of the present case – Presentation of the FIR before the Magistrate at a belated stage also carries weight – As per the evidence, the body of the deceased was found at 5:30 a.m. on 07.05.2018 and the FIR is alleged to have been registered soon thereafter – The report and the FIR were presented to the Magistrate at 3:30 p.m. – Prosecution has failed to explain the inordinate delay in the presentation of the report to the Magistrate casting doubt on the prosecution case – Prosecution has rested its case, in its entirety, upon the evidence of PW-2, who is alleged to be the eye witness – He claims to have seen the commission of the offence, but his entire evidence has been disbelieved by the High Court on the ground that the presence of the said witness at the spot is wholly impractical, the conduct inconsistent and against the normal human behaviour – Last seen witness PW-12 had given his statement to the Police under Section 161 on 23.05.2018, after 17 days of the incident – This, again casts doubt upon the veracity of the evidence of the witness – A person who recognizes not only the appellant but also the deceased and is also present at the time of postmortem would not have, in natural course, hesitated to approach the Police officials to give information with regard to the involvement of the accused in the alleged offence – The evidence, thus of PW-12 does not command any credence which could be made the sole basis for holding the appellant guilty of an offence under Section 302 – The last seen evidence, therefore, also having been found to be not trustworthy – Merely the recovery at the site of the incident of a wheel spanner, which according to the prosecution has fingerprints of the accused on it and three pairs of slippers would not be enough for holding the appellant guilty of having caused the death of the deceased – Judgment and order of conviction and sentence as passed by the Courts below liable to be set aside.
(Para 17 to 24)
Murugan V. Staterep. By The Inspector Of Police
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 446: (DoJ 04-04-2025)




