This case involved appeals against a February 2019 judgment by the Allahabad High Court, which had modified an earlier High Court order from May 2018. The original May 2018 judgment had upheld the conviction and life imprisonment of accused persons (Bhupendra Singh, Moti Lal, Prahlad) for murder under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), along with other offences. The modification originated from a “Correction Application” filed by the accused, who claimed that the High Court had orally pronounced a reduced conviction (to Section 304 Part II IPC) and sentence in open court, but the written judgment incorrectly dismissed their appeals. The High Court, in its February 2019 judgment, allowed this application, changing the conviction to Section 304 Part II IPC and reducing sentences (e.g., Bhupendra Singh’s life imprisonment to 10 years). The original complainant, Ramyash, appealed this modification, while one of the accused sought acquittal. The incident leading to the convictions was a land dispute in May 2012, which escalated into an assault causing the death of Ramyash’s father, Jeet Lal [5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 10].
Law Involved The core legal issue revolved around Section 362 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1873 (Cr. PC). This section explicitly states that once a court has signed its judgment or final order, it “shall not alter or review the same except to correct a clerical or arithmetical error”8. The judgment also involved:
Section 302 IPC: For murder.
Section 304 Part II IPC: For culpable homicide not amounting to murder5. The Supreme Court referred to its precedents to interpret Section 362 Cr. PC:
Smt. Sooraj Devi v. Pyare Lal and Another: This case defined “clerical or arithmetical error” as an accidental slip or omission, a mistake in writing or typing, or an error apparent on the face of the record, not requiring argument for discovery. It also clarified that inherent powers (such as under Section 482 Cr. PC) cannot be used to circumvent the specific prohibition in Section 362.
Naresh and Others v. State of Uttar Pradesh: In this case, the Supreme Court had previously condemned a similar attempt by a High Court to alter a conviction from murder to culpable homicide by labeling it a clerical mistake, calling it a “grievous error” and a contravention of Section 362 Cr. PC..
The Supreme Court found the High Court’s modification procedure “totally contrary to the provisions of Section 362 of the Cr.P.C.”. It explained that Section 362 only permits alterations for “clerical or arithmetical errors,” which are accidental slips, omissions, or obvious mistakes in writing or calculation, and not a substantive review or change of a judgment….
The Court meticulously compared the High Court’s “First Judgment” with its “impugned judgment” (the modified one). The “First Judgment” contained detailed reasoning, analysing witness testimony and medical evidence, and specifically rejected defence arguments to firmly uphold the murder conviction under Section 302 IPC…. In stark contrast, the “impugned judgment” presented entirely new reasoning, concluding that the incident resulted from “sudden provocation” and occurred “at the heat of the moment,” thereby converting the conviction to Section 304 Part II IPC. The Supreme Court stated that this was a complete alteration of the original finding and reasoning, not a mere correction of a clerical error.
The Supreme Court reiterated that the High Court’s inherent powers cannot be invoked to bypass the explicit prohibition of Section 362. It expressed significant concern that the Allahabad High Court committed such an error despite the “plain and unambiguous words” of Section 362 Cr. PC, particularly given that a similar mistake had been condemned in the Naresh and Others case….
The Supreme Court allowed the complainant’s appeals and dismissed the appeal filed by accused Bhupendra Singh [42(i), 42(ii)]. It quashed and set aside the Allahabad High Court’s judgment dated 8th February 2019, declaring that the High Court was “not competent” to review its original judgment dated 21st May 2018 [42(iii)].
Consequently, the accused persons (Bhupendra Singh, Moti Lal, and Prahlad) were directed to surrender before the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Jaunpur, within four weeks to undergo the remaining part of their sentences as originally recorded by the High Court in its first judgment (i.e., conviction under Section 302 IPC with life imprisonment) [42(iv)]. The Supreme Court, however, reserved the right of the accused to challenge the High Court’s original judgment (21st May 2018) on its own merits through proper legal channels. All pending applications were disposed of.
Ramyash @ Lal Bahadur V. The State Of Uttar Pradesh And Another Etc. Etc.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 544: (DoJ 23-04-2025)




