The case of Sivakumar v. State Rep. by the Inspector of Police (2026 INSC 318) involves a criminal appeal by two relatives convicted in connection with a fatal neighborhood altercation over a property boundary.
Factual Background
- The Dispute: The appellants—Senthil (A-1) and Sivakumar (A-2)—shared a common boundary with the deceased, Kaliyamurthy, and his brother, PW-4. On September 20, 2014, a dispute arose while the deceased was fencing the property.
- The Incident: During a melee, A-1 used an Aruval (a sickle-like tool) to strike and injure PW-4. When the deceased intervened, A-2 picked up a log from the spot and struck him once on the head.
- Fatal Outcome: The deceased suffered a depressed skull fracture and brain injury, eventually dying from these wounds.
Lower Court Decisions
- Trial Court: Convicted A-1 for voluntarily causing hurt with a dangerous weapon (Section 324 IPC) and A-2 for voluntarily causing grievous hurt (Section 325 IPC). It acquitted them of murder charges.
- High Court: Enhanced the convictions, finding both A-1 and A-2 guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder (Section 304 Part II IPC) with common intention (Section 34 IPC), sentencing them to five years of imprisonment. It also convicted them for using obscene words (Section 294(b) IPC).
Supreme Court’s Findings
The Supreme Court partly allowed the appeals, clarifying several legal points:
- Definition of Obscenity: The Court set aside the convictions under Section 294(b) IPC . It ruled that the mere use of the word “bastard” during a heated conversation does not constitute “obscenity,” which legally requires material that appeals to prurient interest or depraves the mind.
- Absence of Common Intention: The Court found no evidence that A-1 shared a common intention with A-2 to cause the fatal injury to the deceased. A-1 was engaged in a separate struggle with PW-4 and did not exhort A-2 to strike the deceased.
- Culpable Homicide (A-2): The Court upheld A-2’s conviction under Section 304 Part II IPC, noting that striking a person on the head with a log with enough force to fracture the skull demonstrates knowledge that the act is likely to cause death.
- Mitigation of Sentence: The Court reduced the sentences for both appellants:
- A-1: Sentence reduced to the period already served (approximately 1 month and 25 days) for his confirmed conviction under Section 324 IPC.
- A-2: Sentence reduced from five years to three years of rigorous imprisonment . The Court considered that the incident was a sudden fight between neighbors, no dangerous weapon was brought to the spot (the log was picked up during the heat of the moment), and only a solitary blow was struck.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court affirmed that while the fatal blow justified a conviction for culpable homicide for the person who struck it, the legal standards for obscenity and common intention must be strictly applied to avoid over-extending criminal liability.
2026 INSC 318
Sivakumar V. State Rep. By The Inspector of Police (D.O.J. 06.04.2026)



