This case involves appeals filed by the State of Himachal Pradesh challenging a High Court judgment dated 28.12.2015, which acquitted Sanjay Kumar and Chaman Shukla. The Sessions Judge, Bilaspur, had previously convicted Sanjay Kumar under Sections 363, 366, 376, and 201 read with Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), and Chaman Shukla under Section 201 read with Section 34 IPC….
The prosecution alleged that on 30.03.2012, the 14-year-old prosecutrix (PW-13), while at a temple, went to put a child to bed and subsequently did not return. Her family filed an FIR for kidnapping. Investigation revealed that Sanjay Kumar had kidnapped her in his Alto Car on 30.03.2012. She allegedly spent that night at the house of Jawala Devi (PW-6) where she was raped, and then was kept at Chaman Shukla’s house where she was threatened. A birth certificate indicated the prosecutrix was under 16 years old at the time of the incident.
The Trial Court convicted Sanjay Kumar and sentenced him to 7 years imprisonment and a fine, while Chaman Shukla received one year of simple imprisonment. The High Court subsequently set aside these convictions and sentences, leading to the current appeals before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC):
Section 363: Punishment for kidnapping.
Section 366: Kidnapping, abducting or inducing woman to compel her marriage, etc.
Section 376: Punishment for rape.
Section 201: Causing disappearance of evidence of offence, or giving false information to screen offender.
Section 34: Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention.
Code of Criminal Procedure (Cr.P.C.):
Section 164: Recording of confessions and statements (the prosecutrix’s statement was recorded under this section).
Reasoning The Supreme Court reviewed the entire evidence on record. The High Court had found that the prosecution failed to establish the charges against the accused/respondents. Key inconsistencies and lack of corroboration were highlighted:
The High Court observed that the prosecutrix’s statement under Section 164 Cr.P.C. did not disclose any involvement of PW-6/Jawala Devi or her family members, nor did she reveal that Sanjay Kumar committed rape during her journey from Bilaspur to Rampur.
There was no allegation of rape in the initial FIR lodged.
The prosecutrix’s statements regarding the date and location of the alleged rape were materially contradictory; she stated rape occurred on 31.03.2012 in the house of PW-6/Jawala Devi, but then also stated it was on 30.03.2012 when they stayed in the same house.
PW-6/Jawala Devi did not support the prosecution’s version, and her supplementary statement indicated the prosecutrix never disclosed rape at Rampur.
The High Court noted the absence of evidence regarding a relationship between Sanjay Kumar and PW-6/Jawala Devi, and that Chaman Shukla was never informed by the prosecutrix about the commission of rape.
The High Court concluded that the commission of rape by Sanjay Kumar was not proven.
The Supreme Court found the High Court’s reasoning, based on material contradictions in the prosecutrix’s statement and other evidence, to be “plausible considering the evidence on record”.
Holding The Supreme Court dismissed both appeals filed by the State of Himachal Pradesh. The Supreme Court found no reason to interfere with the judgment of acquittal rendered by the High Court. Thus, the High Court’s decision to acquit Sanjay Kumar and Chaman Shukla stands upheld.
State of Himachal Pradesh V. Sanjay Kumar
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 561: (DoJ 23-04-2025)




