The Supreme Court of India partially allowed the appeal, setting aside the conviction of the appellant under Sections 294(b) (obscene acts/words) and 506(ii) (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), while maintaining the conviction under Section 326 (voluntarily causing grievous hurt) with a modified sentence. The Court clarified that mere use of abusive, vulgar, or profane language does not equate to “obscenity” under Section 294(b) IPC unless the words are shown to be lascivious, appealing to prurient interests, and tending to deprave or corrupt. Furthermore, the Court emphasized that for criminal intimidation under Section 506 IPC, there must be clear intent to cause alarm or compel an act, which was not established in this instance.
- Background: The appellant was convicted by the Trial Court for offences including caste-based atrocities, causing grievous hurt with a dangerous weapon, using obscene words, and criminal intimidation following a land dispute altercation. The High Court subsequently acquitted him of charges under the SC/ST Act but maintained his conviction for Sections 294(b), 326, and 506(ii) of the IPC, while reducing the sentences.
- Obscenity under Section 294(b) IPC:
- The Court held that obscenity is not synonymous with vulgarity, abuse, or profanity.
- Legally, obscenity requires proving that the words were lascivious, appealed to prurient interests, and had the tendency to deprave or corrupt.
- Since the prosecution failed to prove these essential ingredients and failed to demonstrate that the appellant’s abusive language caused annoyance in a public place, the conviction under Section 294(b) was set aside.
- Criminal Intimidation under Section 506(ii) IPC:
- The Court found that the prosecution relied on a bald assertion of a threat made during a heated altercation.
- To satisfy Section 506 IPC, it must be proved that the threat was intended to cause alarm or force the victim to do or omit an act.
- Because the evidence did not indicate such specific intent, the conviction under Section 506(ii) was set aside.
- Grievous Hurt under Section 326 IPC:
- The Court upheld the conviction for grievous hurt, as medical evidence (a nasal bone fracture) confirmed the injuries were “grievous” under Section 320 IPC and were caused by a dangerous weapon (a billhook).
Given the appellant’s age (70 years) and poor health, the Court exercised its discretion to modify the sentence to imprisonment “till the rising of the Court” and imposed a fine of Rs. 50,000.
2026 INSC 719
Mani @ Subramaniyam v. State rep by the Deputy Superintendent of Police (D.O.J. 16.07.2026)



