Tag: Acquittal Reversed

Supreme Court Upholds Life Sentence in Dowry Death Case: The Importance of Dying Declarations
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Upholds Life Sentence in Dowry Death Case: The Importance of Dying Declarations

This Supreme Court judgment clarifies the legal principle regarding multiple dying declarations. The Supreme Court held that each declaration must be assessed independently for evidentiary value. It ruled that the first, corroborated dying declaration recorded by an independent witness (a doctor) was reliable, and minor discrepancies in subsequent versions did not invalidate it, justifying the High Court's reversal of the acquittal. Facts Of The Case: The prosecution's case was that the appellant, Jemaben, conspired with a co-accused to kill Leelaben and her son, Ganesh. On the intervening night of November 29-30, 2004, while the victims were sleeping in their hut, Jemaben poured kerosene on Leelaben and set her on fire. Leelaben suffered severe burns and succumbed to her injuries on...
Supreme Court Upholds Conviction in Karnataka Murder Case: Why Witness Testimony Beat Medical Evidence
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Upholds Conviction in Karnataka Murder Case: Why Witness Testimony Beat Medical Evidence

In an appeal against acquittal, the Supreme Court reiterated that ocular evidence prevails over medical opinion unless irreconcilable. It held that the Trial Court’s view was perverse for discarding the injured eyewitness's consistent testimony based on speculative defenses and minor contradictions, thus rightly upholding the High Court's conviction. Facts Of The Case: On March 16, 2003, at around 6:00 a.m., Mohan Kumar was assaulted by a group of sixteen accused persons when he was leaving his house in the village to deliver milk. The attackers, armed with dangerous weapons, inflicted fatal injuries on him. His wife, Smt. Annapurna (PW-1), who intervened to save him, also sustained grievous injuries. The accused fled upon the arrival of other villagers. The injured were first take...
Supreme Court Rejects “Cryptic” Acquittal, Orders Fresh Hearing in 2002 Murder Case
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Rejects “Cryptic” Acquittal, Orders Fresh Hearing in 2002 Murder Case

The Supreme Court set aside a High Court judgment of acquittal for being cryptic and lacking reasoning. It reiterated that a first appellate court must independently evaluate evidence and provide a reasoned order, demonstrating application of mind. The case was remanded for a fresh hearing on merits, without expressing any opinion on the case's substance. Facts Of The Case: The case originated from a Sessions Court judgment dated 04.06.2009 in Sessions Trial No. 50 of 2003, which convicted the accused persons for offenses stemming from an incident in 2002. The Sessions Court sentenced accused Nos. 1 and 2, Anil and Imran, to life imprisonment, while accused Nos. 3 and 4, Wasif and Pappu, were sentenced to one year of imprisonment along with a fine. The convicted accused appealed this dec...