Appellant who was convicted of murder under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code, 1861 (IPC). The conviction, initially by a Sessions Judge and upheld by the Bombay High Court, was based primarily on extra-judicial confessions made by the appellant to various witnesses. The Supreme Court reviews the admissibility and evidentiary value of extra-judicial confessions, noting they are a “weak piece of evidence” requiring careful scrutiny and corroboration. Ultimately, the court found the confessions in this case lacked credibility due to the appellant’s “confused state of mind” and material omissions/contradictions in witness testimonies, leading to the setting aside of the conviction and the appellant’s release.
(A) Penal Code, 1860, Section 302 – Murder – Circumstantial evidence – Death caused of wife – Extra judicial confession – Confession made by the accused before PW-1, PW-3, PW-4 and PW-6 – PW-3 in his cross- examination was quite categorical in deposing that he found the accused to be in a confused state of mind – This factum has also come on record in the testimony of the other witnesses before whom such confession was made -Thus, the accused was not in a fit state of mind when he made the extra-judicial confession before PW-3 – That apart, there were no blood stains on the clothes worn by the accused; not to speak of any such blood samples matching with the blood of the deceased – While various articles were seized from the place of occurrence, there was no recovery of any blood-stained clothes – There is no evidence on record that the grinding stone was recovered or that there were any blood stains on the recovered stick, not to speak of such blood stains matching the blood of the deceased – Find the conduct of the accused to be quite strange; instead of confessing his guilt before the police or any other authority, he first goes to PW-1, the landlord, and tells him about the death of ‘M’; further telling him that he was on his way to the residence of the brother of ‘M’ (PW-3) to inform him about the development – He goes to the residence of PW-3 alongwith his son in a rickshaw and tells PW-3 about the death of ‘M’ following assault on her by him – This he stated to PW-3 before PW-4 and PW-6 – What is more strange is the reaction or non-reaction of PW-3 when the accused confessed before him that he had killed his sister ‘M’ – This is not at all a normal behaviour of a brother – He would have certainly reacted strongly when he heard the accused saying that he had killed his sister – Instead of any such reaction, as per the prosecution case, PW-3 accompanied the accused back to his residence – Further, PW-4 stated in her cross-examination that she did not talk with the accused directly but came to know about the incident – This clearly puts her testimony under a cloud – There is a clear material omission in the cross-examination of PW-3 – According to the testimony of PW-3, he had stated before the police that the accused had told him that he had assaulted ‘M’ with a grinding stone and had killed her but the same was not recorded by the police in his statement under Section 161 Cr.P.C. – Similarly, PW-6 in his deposition stated that he had told the police that the accused had told (PW-3) in his presence that he had a quarrel with ‘M’ in the night but the police did not record in his statement under Section 161 Cr.P.C. – Held that not only the extra- judicial confession of the accused lacks credibility as PW-3 is clearly on record stating that the accused was in a confused state of mind when he confessed before him, the testimonies of PW-3 and PW-6 suffer from material omission – Their statements made under Section 161 Cr.P.C. are at variance with their evidence in court regarding the confession made by the accused before PW-3 – It would be wholly unsafe to sustain the conviction of the appellant based on such weak circumstantial evidence which on the top of it lack credibility – Appellant must get the benefit of doubt – Conviction and sentence of the appellant passed by the Sessions Judge as affirmed by the High Court liable to be set aside and quashed.
(Para 20, 21, 24 and 25)
(B) Evidence Act, 1872, Section 24 and 27 – Evidence – Extra judicial confession – Admissibility in evidence – Evidentiary value – Principles which would make an extra-judicial confession an admissible piece of evidence capable of forming the basis of conviction of an accused summed up as follow:
(i) The extra-judicial confession is a weak evidence by itself. It has to be examined by the court with greater care and caution.
(ii) It should be made voluntarily and should be truthful.
(iii) It should inspire confidence.
(iv) An extra-judicial confession attains greater credibility and evidentiary value if it is supported by a chain of cogent circumstances and is further corroborated by other prosecution evidence.
(v) For an extra-judicial confession to be the basis of conviction, it should not suffer from any material discrepancies and inherent improbabilities.
(vi) Such statement essentially has to be proved like any other fact and in accordance with law.
(Para 19.2)
Ramu Appa Mahapatar V. State Of Maharashtra
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 147: (DoJ 04-02-2025)




