In the case of Narendra Singh v. The State of Madhya Pradesh (2026), the Supreme Court of India set aside the conviction of a father-in-law for cruelty, ruling that the prosecution failed to prove dowry harassment and that family members cannot be implicated based on contradictory and unsubstantiated claims.
Case Background
The case involved a woman who died from burn injuries in April 2001, just nine months after her marriage to Nagendra Singh. The prosecution alleged that the deceased was subjected to torture and dowry demands—specifically for a car—by her husband, father-in-law (the appellant), and mother-in-law.
Procedural History
- Trial Court: Convicted the husband and both in-laws for murder (Section 302 IPC) and cruelty (Section 498A IPC), sentencing them to life imprisonment.
- High Court: Acquitted the accused of the murder charge, citing contradictory dying declarations, but upheld the conviction for cruelty under Section 498A.
- Supreme Court Appeal: The father-in-law challenged the remaining conviction under Section 498A, while the State and the deceased’s brother appealed the acquittal on the murder charge.
Key Findings of the Supreme Court
The Court allowed the father-in-law’s appeal and dismissed the State’s appeals, based on the following analysis:
- Contradictory Dying Declarations: The deceased gave two conflicting statements. In the first, she alleged her in-laws set her on fire. In the second, she stated she set herself on fire due to quarrels. The Court found the second declaration (suicide) more believable, noting evidence that the first might have been tutored by interested parties.
- Unreliable Witness Testimony: The Court noted that family members (father, mother, and brother) introduced the specific “demand for a car” for the first time during trial. This fact was missing from their initial statements to the police, leading the Court to view these claims as an “afterthought” intended to fix guilt on the in-laws.
- Absence of Corroboration: Neighbors testified that the deceased had cordial relations with her in-laws and that the father-in-law was out for a walk at the time of the incident. Furthermore, the in-laws were the ones who rushed the unconscious victim to the hospital, which the Court noted was inconsistent with an intent to kill.
- Generic Allegations against In-laws: The Court emphasized that allegations against the father-in-law were “generic in nature”. It cautioned against the tendency to rope in all family members in matrimonial disputes without direct evidence of mental or physical torture.
- Standard of Proof: In cases relying on circumstantial evidence, the chain must be complete and exclude every hypothesis of innocence. Here, the evidence was deemed “shaky” and insufficient to establish cruelty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court concluded that the charge under Section 498A was not proven against the appellant. Consequently, the Court allowed the appeal, set aside the conviction of Narendra Singh, and dismissed the appeals seeking to restore the murder charges.
2026 INSC 433
Narendra Singh V. State of Madhya Pradesh (D.O.J. 30.04.2026)




