Krishna Kumar Kedia, the appellant, was convicted by a Special Judge CBI-II and the conviction was upheld by the High Court of Judicature at Patna. The case involved a complaint by the Executive Engineer, Saharsa Division, regarding a supply order for 1091.95 MT of Bulk Bitumen, valued at over INR 54 lakhs. The bitumen was allegedly forged, delivered without proper sanction, or not delivered to the Road Construction Department, Saharsa. Krishna Kumar Kedia, as proprietor of M/s Cosmo Transport, was identified as the main accused and master-mind behind the misappropriation. He was charged alongside others, with one co-accused turning approver. The prosecution alleged that the appellant was involved in forging documents to lift bitumen from Indian Oil Corporation, Haldia.
Law Involved:
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC): The appellant was convicted under Section 407 (criminal breach of trust by carrier), Section 420 (cheating), Section 465 (punishment for forgery), and Section 471 (using as genuine a forged document).
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC): Section 313 (examination of accused) was relevant to the appellant’s statement.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court reviewed the conviction, which had been affirmed by the High Court1. The appellant’s counsel argued that there was no evidence of wrongful gain to the appellant or corresponding wrongful loss to the State of Bihar, and that the elements of the offences were not proven. Doubts were raised about relying solely on the approver’s statement regarding forged signatures without independent corroboration or expert handwriting analysis45. The prosecution was found to have failed to establish the appellant’s knowledge or belief regarding the alleged forged documents or an unauthorized supply order. The Court observed that the approver’s cross-examination statement contradicted his earlier claim about forging signatures at the appellant’s behest. Despite these points, the Court ultimately found that the “offences committed by the Appellant stand established and proved beyond doubt” .
However, the Supreme Court considered the appellant’s mitigating circumstances for sentencing . The appellant is a 71-year-old infirm person suffering from various age-related ailments, including diabetes and heart attacks . The alleged occurrence of the crime dates back to 1993-94, meaning the case has caused him “tremendous mental agony” for over 30 years10. Given these factors, the Court decided to take a “lenient view” on the sentence, despite the minimum imprisonment for Sections 407 and 420 IPC being seven years .
Holding: The Supreme Court partially allowed the criminal appeal . The conviction of the appellant under Sections 407, 420, 465, and 471 of the IPC was affirmed . However, the sentences for Sections 407 and 420 IPC were reduced from five years to two years and six months . The sentences for Sections 465 and 471 IPC remained at two years . All sentences were directed to run concurrently . The appellant was directed to surrender within four weeks .
Krishna Kumar Kedia V. Union Of India Through Director, Cbi
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 608: (DoJ 30-04-2025)




