Whether the conviction of the appellant under Section 302 read with Section 149 of the IPC based on circumstantial evidence—specifically the recovery of incriminating chemical phials—remains legally sustainable when independent seizure witnesses turn hostile and the investigation is found to be faulty.
The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, affirming the concurrent findings of the Trial Court and the High Court of Madhya Pradesh, thereby upholding the appellant’s conviction and sentence of life imprisonment.
- Introduction and Factual Matrix
On July 20, 2002, four members of a family (Rajesh Shukla, his wife Madhu, son Prabhanshu, and sister Vinita) were found murdered inside their residence in Satna, Madhya Pradesh, showing severe injuries caused by a sharp weapon. An FIR was registered under Section 302 of the IPC. During the initial site inspection, the police recovered blood-stained articles and empty phials of Calmpose injections from the toilet seats. Autopsy reports and subsequent chemical analysis of the viscera confirmed that excessive hemorrhage was the cause of death, and traces of “Diazepam” (a tranquilizer found in Calmpose) were present in the bodies.
The investigation revealed that a neighbor, Devendra Singh, harbored an evil eye toward the deceased Vinita and frequently associated with the appellant, Upendra Khare. The prosecution’s case was that a group of accused individuals entered the house, first sedated the victims by administering Calmpose injections, and then brutally murdered them. The appellant was arrested on September 21, 2002, and based on his disclosure statement, the police recovered an injection phial, a cotton rope, and the clothes worn during the crime.
- Arguments Addressed
- Appellant (Accused): The appellant argued that the entire case relied on an incomplete chain of circumstantial evidence. It was contended that the primary motive was assigned only to the co-accused Devendra Singh. Furthermore, the appellant challenged the admissibility of the recoveries under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act, pointing out that both independent panch witnesses had turned hostile and that a recovery made two months after the incident was highly improbable. The defense also highlighted multiple investigative defects, such as a lack of proof connecting the recovered rope to the injuries and administrative anomalies in checking the phials. Lastly, it was argued that because fewer than five individuals were ultimately convicted, a charge of “unlawful assembly” under Section 149 IPC was legally unsustainable.
- Respondent (State): The State contended that the circumstantial chain was robust and fully established. They argued that the hostility of the panch witnesses does not automatically vitiate a recovery if the seizure can be independently verified and proved through the credible testimony of the Investigating Officer (IO).
- Legal Principles and Reasoning of the Court
The Supreme Court evaluated the appeals on the following critical legal touchstones:
- Hostility of Panch Witnesses in Discoveries: The Court rejected the appellant’s primary defense regarding the hostile seizure witnesses. Relying on settled precedents such as Rameshbhai Mohanbhai Koli v. State of Gujarat and Mallikarjun v. State of Karnataka, the Court reiterated that a recovery is not invalidated merely because independent witnesses defect from the prosecution story. If the deposition of the Investigating Officer (PW 24 Arun Singh) regarding the disclosure and physical seizure is convincing and untainted by animosity, it remains a reliable, admissible piece of evidence under Section 27 of the Evidence Act.
- Corroboration by Medical and Scientific Evidence: The Court linked the physical recovery of the injection phials from the appellant to the broader scientific narrative. The medical officer’s testimony (PW 17 Dr. B.L. Gupta) paired with the FSL viscera report conclusively proved that the deceased individuals had “Diazepam” in their systems. The recovery of identical chemical conduits from the appellant’s custody established a powerful, incriminating link to the execution of the crime.
- Impact of Defective Investigation: While the Court explicitly acknowledged that the investigation was “not up to the mark” and lacked the sensitivity required for a quadruple murder case, it held that procedural lapses cannot completely derail a prosecution. Legal errors or subpar documentation by an investigative agency do not give the Court a reason to discard separate, overwhelming material evidence that naturally bridges the chain of custody and corroborates the accused’s guilt.
- Conclusion
The Supreme Court found that the concurrent assessments made by the lower courts were anchored on a fair and legally sound appreciation of the circumstances. The presence of chemical sedatives in the victims directly synchronized with the unique articles recovered at the instance of the appellant. Finding no merit in the appeal, the Supreme Court dismissed it, upholding the conviction under Section 302 IPC and confirming the sentence of life imprisonment.
2026 INSC 538
Uperndra Khare V. State of Madhya Pradesh (D.O.J. 25.05.2026)



