In a case stemming from a brutal murder on 28.04.2011, the deceased, an entrepreneur, was hacked to death in front of his son (PW8)1. The prosecution alleged that the motive was a property dispute and sibling rivalry involving accused A1 (the deceased’s brother, an employee of one of his institutions) and his brother PW4, who allegedly hired contract killers (A2 to A7)12. Out of 87 witnesses, 71, including crucial eyewitnesses, turned hostile, significantly weakening the prosecution’s case23. The Trial Court acquitted all accused. However, the High Court reversed the acquittal for A1, convicting him for murder and criminal conspiracy (Section 302 read with Section 120-B IPC), while affirming A7’s acquittal. This appeal challenged the High Court’s reversal of A1’s acquittal.
Law Involved The judgment centered on principles of criminal jurisprudence, particularly concerning:
Indian Penal Code, 1860: Section 302 (Murder) and Section 120-B (Criminal Conspiracy).
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973: Section 161 (Statements recorded by police during investigation) and Section 162 (Use of such statements only for contradiction, not as substantive evidence).
Indian Evidence Act, 1872:
Sections 25 & 26 (Confessions made to police officers are inadmissible).
Section 27 (Information leading to the discovery of a fact, even if from an accused in custody, is admissible).
Precedents: The Supreme Court referred to its own established principles for appellate courts reversing acquittals, notably Chandrappa v. State of Karnataka (2007)431. It also discussed the limited scope of Section 27 of the Evidence Act, relying on Pulukuri Kottaya v. Emperor (1947), and the inadmissibility of confessions and Section 161 statements as substantive evidence, citing cases like Kashmira Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh and Haricharan Kurmi v. State of Bihar.
Reasoning The Supreme Court found the High Court’s reversal of acquittal “egregiously erroneous”. Its reasoning hinged on several critical points:
Hostile Witnesses: The sheer number of hostile witnesses (71 out of 87), including key eyewitnesses who failed to identify assailants or weapons, severely undermined the prosecution’s case.
Improper Reliance on Evidence:
Section 161 Statements: The High Court heavily relied on statements made to the police under Section 161 Cr.P.C.635. The Supreme Court reiterated that such statements are not substantive evidence and can only be used for contradiction.
Section 27 Recoveries: While the High Court relied on recoveries (cash, mobile phones, clothes, weapons) under Section 27 Evidence Act, the Supreme Court noted significant issues: lack of independent attestation (Mahazar witnesses turned hostile or were not produced), and the principle that only the “fact discovered” (the object itself) is admissible, not the confession leading to it. The Court found the recovered items’ connection to the crime and the accused highly questionable.
Inadmissible Confessions: Alleged confessions to police officers are inadmissible under Sections 25 and 26 of the Evidence Act.
Motive and Conspiracy Unproven: The Court found the High Court’s conclusion on motive and conspiracy unsupported by reliable evidence, as key testimonies and documents were denied or contradicted.
Presumption of Innocence: The Supreme Court emphasized that an appellate court reversing an acquittal must demonstrate that the Trial Court’s view was “absolutely unreasonable”. The “consternation” of the High Court over hostile witnesses should not lead to a conviction based on “surmises and conjectures” or “lack of evidence”. The prosecution failed to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeals, thereby setting aside the judgment and order of the High Court which had reversed A1’s acquittal. The Court concluded that the High Court had committed an “egregious error” in its decision. Consequently, A1’s acquittal by the Trial Court was reinstated, and he was ordered to be released if in custody, with his bail bonds cancelled.
Renuka Prasad V. State Represented By Assistant Superintendent Of Police
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 657: (DoJ 09-05-2025)



