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Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Criminal appeal; circumstantial evidence — requirement of complete chain. Where conviction is founded entirely on circumstantial evidence, prosecution must establish a complete chain of circumstances which is consistent only with guilt and excludes every other reasonable hypothesis; if proven circumstances permit an inference consistent with innocence, accused gets benefit of doubt. (Sharad Sarda principles applied.) Omission in FIR — evidentiary significance. Omission of accused’s names (Nazim and Aftab) in the FIR, despite complainant’s familiarity with them, is a material omission that weakens prosecution case and may indicate afterthought/false implication; such omissions are relevant under Section 11, Indian Evidence Act. Overheard ‘conspiracy’ at public feast — credibility of witness (PW-2). Testimony of witness who claimed to have overheard an open exhortation to murder at a public feast but did not disclose it in FIR or immediately thereafter, and who treated it as “loose talk”, is inherently improbable and of limited evidentiary value where it first appears at trial. Last-seen evidence and dock identification without TIP. Last-seen theory is weak evidence unless time-gap between sighting and death is so narrow as to exclude third-party intervention. Dock identification by witnesses who had not known accused earlier, without a Test Identification Parade (TIP), must be treated with caution and is of limited probative value. Forensic/inconclusive scientific evidence — weight to be given. Delay/failure in early forensic examination of weapon and exhibits, and an ultimately inconclusive FSL report (no complete DNA profile obtained), yields neutral scientific evidence which cannot be ignored; where scientific evidence is neutral/exculpatory, courts must accord it due weight and cannot sustain conviction on doubtful ocular testimony alone. Recovery procedure and independent witnesses. Recovery of rope/axe at scene without independent public witnesses called to testify undermines credibility of recovery; procedural defects in seizure diminish evidentiary value. Motive and its probative value. Alleged motive (revenge for insult to sister) was speculative and not established in a manner that strengthens circumstantial case; absence of a clear motive in a circumstantial case may tilt balance towards accused when other links are weak. Juvenility plea — procedural note. Although school records and medical board report were relied on to claim juvenility, Juvenile Justice Board rejected the claim on electoral roll; Court did not finally decide juvenility because appeal allowed on merits — note on Rule 12 JJ Act procedure (matriculation/birth cert/medical opinion hierarchy). Conclusion / Order. Convictions under Sections 302, 201 and 120-B IPC set aside; appellants (Nazim, Aftab, Arman Ali) acquitted; bail bonds/sureties discharged; appeal allowed; no costs.

Criminal appeal; circumstantial evidence — requirement of complete chain.

Where conviction is founded entirely on circumstantial evidence, prosecution must establish a complete chain of circumstances which is consistent only with guilt and excludes every other reasonable hypothesis; if proven circumstances permit an inference consistent with innocence, accused gets benefit of doubt. (Sharad Sarda principles applied.)

Omission in FIR — evidentiary significance.

Omission of accused’s names (Nazim and Aftab) in the FIR, despite complainant’s familiarity with them, is a material omission that weakens prosecution case and may indicate afterthought/false implication; such omissions are relevant under Section 11, Indian Evidence Act.

Overheard ‘conspiracy’ at public feast — credibility of witness (PW-2).

Testimony of witness who claimed to have overheard an open exhortation to murder at a public feast but did not disclose it in FIR or immediately thereafter, and who treated it as “loose talk”, is inherently improbable and of limited evidentiary value where it first appears at trial.

Last-seen evidence and dock identification without TIP.

Last-seen theory is weak evidence unless time-gap between sighting and death is so narrow as to exclude third-party intervention. Dock identification by witnesses who had not known accused earlier, without a Test Identification Parade (TIP), must be treated with caution and is of limited probative value.

Forensic/inconclusive scientific evidence — weight to be given.

Delay/failure in early forensic examination of weapon and exhibits, and an ultimately inconclusive FSL report (no complete DNA profile obtained), yields neutral scientific evidence which cannot be ignored; where scientific evidence is neutral/exculpatory, courts must accord it due weight and cannot sustain conviction on doubtful ocular testimony alone.

Recovery procedure and independent witnesses.

Recovery of rope/axe at scene without independent public witnesses called to testify undermines credibility of recovery; procedural defects in seizure diminish evidentiary value.

Motive and its probative value.

Alleged motive (revenge for insult to sister) was speculative and not established in a manner that strengthens circumstantial case; absence of a clear motive in a circumstantial case may tilt balance towards accused when other links are weak.

Juvenility plea — procedural note.

Although school records and medical board report were relied on to claim juvenility, Juvenile Justice Board rejected the claim on electoral roll; Court did not finally decide juvenility because appeal allowed on merits — note on Rule 12 JJ Act procedure (matriculation/birth cert/medical opinion hierarchy).

Conclusion / Order.

Convictions under Sections 302, 201 and 120-B IPC set aside; appellants (Nazim, Aftab, Arman Ali) acquitted; bail bonds/sureties discharged; appeal allowed; no costs.

2025 INSC 1184

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 1 of 33

REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 715 OF 2018

NAZIM & ORS. …APPELLANT(S)

VERSUS

THE STATE OF UTTARAKHAND …RESPONDENT(S)

J U D G M E N T

SATISH CHANDRA SHARMA, J.

1. The present case has its genesis in the tragic and unnatural

death of a young boy, Muntiyaz Ali, aged merely ten years. On

the morning of 5th June 2007, he went to the family’s mango

orchard near Kishanpur to stand guard, but he did not return

home. By late evening, his prolonged absence caused alarm and

his father, Nanhe Khan (PW-1), organised a search with family

members and co‑villagers. Their efforts proved fruitless. At first

light on 6th June 2007, PW‑1 resumed the search and discovered

Muntiyaz’s lifeless body beneath a mulberry tree near a pit on 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 2 of 33

the family’s land. A rope was found tightened around his neck,

his hands tied behind his back with a rope, and an axe drenched

in blood lying close by.

2. PW-1 immediately lodged a written complaint at Police

Station Jaspur. In his complaint, he expressed suspicion against

six co-villagers with whom he had a long-standing enmity,

namely Wahid, Muslim, Arman, Jahangir, Zahid and Babu.

Notably, two of the three present Appellants, namely Nazim and

Aftab, were not named in the initial First Information Report

(hereinafter referred as “FIR”). The police registered FIR No.

966 of 2007 under Section 302 of Indian Penal Code, 1860

(hereinafter referred as “IPC”) on 06.06.2007 at about 10 in the

morning. Subsequently, during the investigation, Nazim and

Aftab were also implicated, and a charge‑sheet was filed against

all the accused persons under Sections 302, 201, 377 and 120-B

IPC.

3. The case was committed for trial before the Court of the

Ld. Additional Sessions Judge, Kashipur, District Udham Singh

Nagar (hereinafter referred as “Trial Court”) where it was

registered as Sessions Trial Nos. 40 of 2008 and 40A of 2008.

After a full-fledged trial, the Ld. Trial Court vide its judgment

dated 05.04.2014, acquitted five of the accused, namely Wahid,

Muslim, Jahangir, Zahid and Babu of all charges. The present

Appellants namely, Nazim, Aftab and Arman Ali, were convicted 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 3 of 33

under Sections 302, 201 and 120-B IPC and acquitted under

Section 377 of IPC. The Ld. Trial Court sentenced each of them

to undergo life imprisonment under Section 302 of IPC, along

with a fine of Rs. 5,000/- each and in default thereof, to further

undergo rigorous imprisonment for one year. For the offence

under Section 201 of IPC, they were sentenced to undergo

rigorous imprisonment for a period of seven years and a fine of

Rs.3,000/- each and in default thereof, to undergo rigorous

imprisonment for a period of 6 months. Additionally, they were

also convicted for the commission of an offence under Section

120(B) of IPC read with Section 302 of IPC and sentenced to life

imprisonment and fine of Rs.5,000/- each and in default thereof,

to further undergo rigorous imprisonment for one year. The Ld.

Trial Court directed that all the sentences were to run

concurrently.

4. The conviction rested largely on the testimony of three

prosecution witnesses. PW-2, the scribe of the FIR, who claimed

that on the night of 04.06.2007, he had overheard the accused

persons conspiring to avenge an affront to their family’s honour.

PW-3, Om Prakash, was presented as a ‘last seen’ witness who

claimed to have seen the deceased in the company of the

Appellants Nazim and Aftab shortly before the incident. PW-4,

Mohammed Rafi, was relied upon for corroborating these

circumstances. The Ld. Trial Court placed reliance on these 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 4 of 33

testimonies and concluded that the Appellants, in furtherance of

a conspiracy, had committed the murder of the young boy.

5. Aggrieved by the order, the Appellants preferred Criminal

Appeal No. 122 of 2014, while the Complainant filed Criminal

Appeal No. 129 of 2014, before the High Court of Uttarakhand

at Nainital (hereinafter referred as “High Court”). By its

judgment dated 15.11.2017, the High Court dismissed the

appeals (hereinafter referred as “Impugned Judgement”). The

High Court observed that the Trial Court had correctly analysed

the evidence on record and found no infirmity in its findings. It

affirmed that the testimonies of PW-2, PW-3 and PW-4 were

credible and that the chain of circumstances was sufficient to

bring home the guilt of the Appellants. The present appeal assails

the said Impugned Judgment dated 15.11.2017.

IMPUGNED JUDGMENT

6. While upholding the conviction of the Appellants, the

High Court appreciated the testimonies of the prosecution

witnesses and acknowledged that the case is based on

circumstantial evidence. After examining the testimonies of the

prosecution witnesses, the High Court accepted the testimonies

of PW-2, PW-3 and PW-4 as credible and summarised what it

considered to be a complete chain of circumstantial evidence. It

observed:

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 5 of 33

“18. What emerges from the statements of

witnesses, as discussed hereinabove, is that PW-1

Nanhe Khan's son Muntiyaz Ali was missing on

05.06.2007. He had gone to look after the mango

orchard. He did not come back till late night. The

dead body was recovered on 06.06.2007. It was the

case of strangulation. The axe was also seen by PW1 Nanhe Khan near the dead body. It was soaked

with blood. PW2 Tauhid Ali is the important

witness. He has heard Appellants being told by

Wahid, Jahid, Hussain, Jahangir, Muslim and Babu

to take revenge from the family of Nanhe Khan,

since his nephew has teased their sister. He has

heard their conversation on 04.06.2007. Nanhe

Khan's son went missing on 05.06.2007. He has

also signed the recovery memo of rope as well as of

axe. The Appellants - Nazim and Aftab were seen by

PW3 Om Prakash Singh on 05.06.2007. PW4

Mohd. Rafi has seen Nazim, Arman and Aftab

together in the evening of 05.06.2007. It is the case

of the circumstantial evidence. In order to prove the

case based on circumstantial evidence, it is

necessary to complete the chain. All the

circumstances must exclusively point towards the

guilt of the accused. In the present case, the

prosecution has completed the chain, as far as the

Appellants are concerned. They were seen on the

date of occurrence by PW3 Om Prakash Singh and

PW4 Mohd. Rafi. The conversation was heard by

PW2 Tauhid Ali, whereby the co‑accused exhorted

the Appellants to take revenge from the family of

Shamshad, who was the relative of

Nanhe Khan. The cause of death, as per the

statement of PW8 Dr. T.K. Pant was strangulation

and injury no. 1 could be caused with an axe. The

rope was recovered at the instance of Arman Ali.”

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 6 of 33

7. The High Court thereafter adverted to certain medical and

investigative aspects, noting that:

“19. It has come in the statement of

PW8 Dr. T.K. Pant that some blunt object was

inserted in the anus of the deceased.

20. Learned counsel for the Appellants-accused has

argued that the axe was not sent for FSL

examination. It is a case of defective

investigation. However, there is overwhelming

evidence that the cause of death of deceased was

due to strangulation and injury from axe.”

8. On a careful perusal of the Impugned Judgment, it could

be seen that the High Court has heavily relied upon the

testimonies of the prosecution witnesses – PW-1 and PW-2.

Therefore, with regards to the submission that upon overhearing

the conspiracy, PW-2 should have informed PW-1, the High

Court reasoned as under:

“21. Learned Senior Advocate for the Appellants in

CRLA No. 122 of 2014 has argued that if

PW2 Tauhid Ali has heard the conversation, he

should have told it to Nanhe Khan. The fact of the

matter is that he has overheard the

conversation. The co-accused were exhorting the

Appellants to take revenge from the family of

Shamshad. Shamshad happens to be the relative of

Nanhe Khan. It has come in the statement of

PW2 Tauhid Ali that he did not take the issue very 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 7 of 33

seriously, since there was enmity between the family

of the accused and Nanhe Khan. He was under the

impression that it was of loose talk. The statement

of PW2 Tauhid Ali does inspire confidence. He has

no animosity with the accused.”

9. The Court next dealt with the defence contention that the

feast at which the conspiracy was allegedly hatched had occurred

on 3rd June 2007 rather than 4th June 2007. It observed:

“23. DW1 Shafiq Ahmad has deposed that the feast

was on 03.06.2007. He has admitted that all the

accused were called in the feast by him. The

statement of DW2 Shamim Ahmad does not inspire

confidence, since he has not produced the original

receipt and register. The fact of the matter is that

the feast was thrown by DW1 Shafiq Ahmad on

04.06.2007. The accused namely Arman, Nazim

and Aftab were recognised by PW3 Om Prakash

and PW4 Mohd. Rafi. PW3 Om Prakash and

PW4 Mohd. Rafi are also natural witnesses. Their

statements inspire confidence.”

10. Finally, the High Court endorsed the findings of the Trial

Court and dismissed the appeal in the following terms:

“24. Learned Trial Court has correctly appreciated

the evidence, whereby the Appellants have been

convicted and sentenced, as noticed

hereinabove. There is no evidence against the other

co-accused, who have rightly been acquitted by

learned Trial Court. The prosecution has failed to 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 8 of 33

prove that the unnatural offence has been

committed by the Appellants and co-accused.”

THE CHALLENGE

11. Taking exception to the Impugned Judgement, Ld.

Counsel on behalf of the Appellants submitted that the High

Court did not examine the grounds taken by the Appellants and

has assailed the concurrent findings of the courts below on

multiple grounds. It is submitted that the prosecution’s case is

founded solely on circumstantial evidence and has failed to

establish an unbroken chain of circumstances pointing only

towards the guilt of the Appellants. In his submission, several

vital links necessary to establish their guilt are missing.

12. First and foremost, it is contentiously submitted that the

Appellants, namely Nazim and Aftab, were not named in the FIR.

PW-1, who lodged the report, suspected six other villagers with

whom he had long-standing enmity, but did not mention the

names of the present Appellants. Counsel contended that this

omission in the earliest version of events raises serious doubt

about subsequent attempts to implicate the present Appellants.

13. Ld. Counsel for the Appellants assailed the credibility of

PW-2, Tauhid Ali, the scribe of the FIR, who later claimed to

have overheard a conspiracy meeting on the night of 04.06.2007.

Counsel submitted that his testimony cannot be relied upon for 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 9 of 33

several reasons. First, although PW-2 scribed the FIR at the

dictation of PW-1, he did not mention any conspiracy in that

document, nor did he inform PW-1 about such an incident when

they met. Instead, PW-2 surfaced with this allegation for the first

time before the Court during trial. Secondly, when questioned,

PW-2 explained that he had treated the conversation as “loose

talk” and therefore refrained from disclosing it earlier. Counsel

submitted that such an explanation is implausible. PW-2 himself

admitted that he did not treat the matter seriously because of the

pre-existing enmity between the families. Thirdly, conspiracies

are not ordinarily conducted loudly in social gatherings so as to

be overheard by passers-by. The claim that the accused would

openly plot murder during a feast, within earshot of others seems

improbable. Fourthly, the defence highlighted that DW-1 Shafiq

Ahmad, in whose house the alleged meeting occurred,

categorically denied that any feast took place on 04.06.2007,

stating instead that his son’s marriage was solemnised on

03.06.2007.

14. The next limb of submission relates to the ‘last seen’

theory. PW-3, Om Prakash, claimed to have seen the deceased

with the Appellants, namely Nazim and Aftab, on 05.06.2007.

Learned counsel submitted that PW-3 admitted in crossexamination that he did not know the Appellants earlier. Despite

this, no test identification parade (hereinafter referred as “TIP”) 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 10 of 33

was conducted. Counsel submitted that when a witness is a

stranger to the accused, a TIP becomes essential to test the

capacity of the witness to identify the accused. Identification for

the first time in court, without the safeguard of a prior TIP, carries

little probative value and cannot be treated as reliable evidence

of identity. Counsel further pointed out that PW-3’s wife,

Mithilesh, and his son, Pintu, were allegedly present with him at

the time of the sighting. Yet, the prosecution chose not to

examine them, though they were the most natural witnesses to

corroborate PW-3’s account. Their non-examination, according

to counsel, strikes at the root of the prosecution’s case and creates

a serious lacuna in the evidence.

15. Similarly, PW-4, Mohd. Rafi, claimed to have seen the

Appellants together on the evening of 05.06.2007. However, his

statement finds no mention in the FIR and, upon scrutiny, suffers

from internal contradictions. Counsel submitted that this

omission in the earliest version, coupled with inconsistencies in

his deposition, undermines his credibility.

16. On these grounds, the Counsel contended that the High

Court’s assertion that PW-3 and PW-4 were “natural witnesses”

and their statements “inspire confidence” ignores these

deficiencies.

17. Ld. Counsel for the Appellants also challenged the

evidentiary value of the rope and axe. He pointed out that the 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 11 of 33

recovery was at the instance of the co-accused Arman Ali. It was

only during the pendency of the appeal before the High Court,

and at its direction, that the rope, axe, and clothes were forwarded

to the Forensic Science Laboratory for examination. The FSL

categorically reported that no complete DNA profile could be

generated from the exhibits and, therefore, no match with the

Appellants could be established. Counsel stressed that this was

the only scientific evidence available in the case and, far from

supporting the prosecution, it failed to implicate the Appellants

in any manner. He submitted that both the Trial Court and the

High Court ignored this crucial finding, even though it directly

undercut the prosecution’s case. By treating the inconclusive

DNA report as insignificant, the courts below overlooked the

settled principle that when scientific evidence tilts in favour of

the accused, it cannot be brushed aside. Counsel further

underscored that the axe was not initially sent for forensic

examination at all. This lapse, according to him, revealed a

serious flaw in the investigation. He submitted that the failure to

subject a key alleged weapon of offence to scientific analysis at

the appropriate stage amounted to defective investigation and

deprived the prosecution’s case of the corroborative support it

ought to have provided.

18. Counsel also referred to the testimony of PW-8, Dr.

T.K. Pant, who conducted the postmortem. The doctor opined 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 12 of 33

that the cause of death was strangulation and that the injury could

have been caused by an axe. However, he also noted that a blunt

object had been inserted in the anus. The Appellants were

acquitted of the unnatural offence, and counsel argued that the

medical evidence does not, by itself, link the Appellants to the

murder. He contended that the alleged motive, i.e. revenge for an

insult to the sister of one of the co-accused is vague and

unproven. In a case involving circumstantial evidence, the

absence of motive weighs in favour of the accused.

19. It was further submitted that both the Appellants, Nazim

and Aftab were juveniles on the date of the incident, as evidenced

by their school records and the report of a medical board. The

Juvenile Justice Board rejected this claim based on an electoral

roll. Appellants submit that this contravenes Rule 12 of the

Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Rules, 2007

(hereinafter referred as “JJ Act”).

20. Even apart from juvenility, Counsel submitted that the

High Court failed to re-appreciate the evidence independently, as

it merely echoed the Trial Court’s reasoning and dismissed the

appeal without addressing the serious deficiencies pointed out by

the defence. He emphasized that the chain of circumstances is

incomplete and that the Appellants are entitled to acquittal.

21. Opposing the appeal, Ld. Counsel for the State supported

the concurrent findings of the courts below. He submitted that the 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 13 of 33

testimonies of PW-2, PW-3, and PW-4 are cogent, trustworthy,

and mutually corroborative, and that together they establish a

complete chain of circumstances pointing only to the Appellants’

guilt. Counsel emphasised that the case rests on circumstantial

evidence and submits that prosecution has successfully proved

unbroken chain of circumstances pointing only towards the guilt

of the Appellants. He pointed out that PW-2 overheard the coaccused exhorting the Appellants to take revenge, PW-3 saw the

deceased in the company of Nazim and Aftab on the evening of

05.06.2007, and PW-4 also identified the Appellants later that

evening. According to the State, these witnesses were natural

witnesses, situated at the relevant time and place, and their

testimonies inspire confidence.

22. Counsel for the State further highlighted that the rope and

axe were recovered from the spot itself, and the post-mortem

report established that the cause of death was strangulation and

that one of the injuries could have been inflicted by an axe. He

argued that these facts provide corroborative support to the

ocular testimony.

23. Addressing the inconclusive DNA findings, Counsel

submitted that failure to obtain a complete profile does not

absolve the Appellants. He explained that forensic results often

turn inconclusive due to the degradation of biological samples

over time. Therefore, such reports cannot automatically 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 14 of 33

exonerate an accused when other evidence firmly establishes

guilt.

24. On the issue of non-mention of the Appellants’ names in

the FIR, Counsel submitted that PW-1 initially suspected other

villagers due to prior enmity. But subsequent investigation

revealed the involvement of Nazim and Aftab. In his submission,

the omission is not fatal when credible witnesses later identified

the Appellants and linked them to the occurrence.

25. Lastly, Counsel contended that the plea of juvenility was

rightly rejected by the Juvenile Justice Board and the High Court.

He further submitted that the absence of motive is not decisive

when the prosecution has otherwise succeeded in proving a

consistent chain of circumstances sufficient to sustain a

conviction.

DISCUSSION

26. Having heard learned counsel for both parties and perused

the record, the principal issue for consideration is whether the

prosecution has succeeded in establishing, beyond a reasonable

doubt, a complete chain of circumstances leading only to the

conclusion of guilt of the Appellants, or whether the

circumstances leave room for reasonable doubt warranting

acquittal.

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 15 of 33

27. The present case rests entirely on circumstantial evidence.

Therefore, before entering the discussion about the case of the

Appellant and the submissions of the respective counsel, it will

be worthwhile to briefly state the principles relating to any

conviction to be imposed based on circumstantial evidence,

which this Court has repeatedly laid down in various decisions.

It will be essential to extricate these principles in order to

appreciate the approach made by the Trial Court, as well as the

High Court while convicting the Appellant based on such

circumstantial evidence.

28. It is trite that in such cases, the prosecution must establish

a complete chain of circumstances consistent only with the guilt

of the accused and inconsistent with any other hypothesis. This

Court in its decision in Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of

Maharashtra,

1 held that before a conviction can be sustained on

circumstantial evidence, five conditions must be fulfilled: (i) the

circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is drawn

should be fully established; (ii) the facts so established should be

consistent only with the hypothesis of guilt; (iii) they should be

of a conclusive nature; (iv) they should exclude every possible

hypothesis except that of guilt; and (v) there must be a chain of

evidence so complete that it leaves no reasonable ground for a

conclusion consistent with innocence. These “five golden

1

(1984) 4 SCC 116

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 16 of 33

principles” constitute the panchsheel of circumstantial evidence.

This Court has repeatedly reiterated that if the circumstances

proved are consistent either with innocence or guilt, the accused

is entitled to the benefit of doubt, and that where two views are

possible, the one favourable to the accused must be adopted.

29. Tested against these principles, in the present case, the

evidence on record can in no fathomable circumstance complete

the chain of circumstances pointing to the guilt of the accused

persons. The prosecution case reveals substantial gaps. The first

and most glaring circumstance is the omission of the names of

Nazim and Aftab in the FIR. PW-1, the complainant and the

father of the deceased, expressly named six persons with whom

he admittedly had long-standing enmity, yet he did not attribute

any role to the present Appellants, Nazim and Aftab. This Court

in Ram Kumar Pandey v. State of Madhya Pradesh2

, has

emphasised that when important facts are omitted in the FIR,

such omissions are relevant under Section 11 of the Indian

Evidence Act, 1872, in judging the veracity of the prosecution

case. The Court observed:

“9. No doubt, an FIR is a previous statement which

can, strictly speaking, be only used to corroborate

or contradict the maker of it [….] but omissions of

such important facts, affecting the probabilities of

the case, are relevant under Section 11 of the

2

(1975) 3 SCC 815

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 17 of 33

Evidence Act in judging the veracity of the

prosecution case.”

30. In the present case, both PW-1 and PW-2 were admittedly

familiar with Nazim and Aftab. Despite this, their names were

not mentioned in the FIR, nor was any contemporaneous

explanation offered for their absence. The High Court

acknowledged the omission but brushed it aside as

inconsequential. This approach is untenable. In a case based

solely on circumstantial evidence, every circumstance must

withstand rigorous scrutiny. The failure to name two of the three

Appellants in the FIR, despite the complainant’s familiarity with

them, casts a serious shadow on the subsequent attempt to

implicate them. It raises a legitimate inference that their names

were introduced at a later stage, thereby suggesting the

possibility of false implication. If PW-1 and PW-2 genuinely

believed that Nazim and Aftab were responsible, there is no

plausible reason for their omission in the FIR. This significant

omission strikes at the root of the prosecution narrative,

undermines its credibility, and constitutes a material fact that

must weigh heavily in favour of the accused.

31. Now, coming to the first link in the chain of circumstances

relied upon by the subordinate courts to convict the Appellants is

the deposition of PW-2, Tauhid Ali. He deposed that on the night

of 04.06.2007, while returning from his fields around 10:00 p.m., 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 18 of 33

he passed in front of the house of Shafiq Ahmad, where a

marriage reception was underway. According to him, he noticed

several co-villagers, including Wahid, Jahid Hussain, Muslim,

Babu, Arman Ali, Nazim and Aftab, sitting on charpai near the

entrance. He claimed that Wahid, Jahid, Jahangir, Muslim and

Babu exhorted Arman, Nazim and Aftab to avenge the alleged

insult caused when Shamshad, nephew of the complainant,

teased their sister. They allegedly told the Appellants that they

should not tolerate such humiliation and that they would only be

respected if they “finished” a male member of Shamshad’s

family. PW-2 further stated that the Appellants responded by

declaring that within one or two days they would act accordingly.

PW-2 admitted that he treated these remarks as mere “loose talk”,

gave them no weightage, and walked on without reporting the

matter to anyone. Even when the boy went missing the next day,

he maintained silence, and when the body was found on

06.06.2007, he still did not disclose this alleged conspiracy.

Significantly, on that very morning, he scribed the FIR at the

dictation of PW-1, yet he omitted this crucial fact. His

explanation that he did not take the conversation seriously

because of pre-existing enmity between Wahid Ali and Nanhe

Khan’s families, and therefore assumed it was “loose talk” is

unconvincing. If indeed he had overheard an open and

categorical threat to commit murder, it is inexplicable that he 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 19 of 33

suppressed it from the complainant, from the police, and even

from the FIR that he himself scribed.

32. Furthermore, PW-2’s testimony that he overheard such a

grave conspiracy being discussed in a marriage feast, with

several villagers and guests present, appears inherently

improbable and lacks plausibility. Conspiracies to commit

homicide are rarely, if ever, hatched so loudly and publicly as to

be overheard by passers-by. The defence witnesses, DW-1 Shafiq

Ahmad and DW-2 Shamim Ahmad, also testified that the

marriage feast had taken place on 03.06.2007 for DW-1’s son and

not on 04.06.2007, thereby casting additional doubt on PW-2’s

timeline. Added to this is the fact that PW-2 not only remained

with PW-1 during the search for the missing boy but also attested

the seizure memos for the rope and axe on 06.06.2007, yet still

kept silent about the alleged conspiracy. This belated revelation,

for the first time during the trial, bears all the hallmarks of an

afterthought.

33. The High Court brushed aside these serious contradictions

and omissions on the ground that PW-2 bore no animosity against

the Appellants and that his testimony “inspires confidence”. Be

that as it may, such an approach fails to recognise that in a case

founded solely on circumstantial evidence, every link in the

chain must be firmly established and wholly credible. The

improbabilities in PW-2’s testimony, coupled with his 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 20 of 33

unexplained silence at crucial stages, render this circumstance

unreliable and incapable of forming part of the chain of proof.

34. The prosecution next relied on the testimonies of PW-3,

Om Prakash and PW-4, Mohd. Rafi to establish the last-seen

circumstance. The Trial Court and the High Court both accepted

these witnesses as “natural witnesses” and treated their accounts

as reliable. Upon closer scrutiny, however, serious infirmities

emerge that make their evidence less reliable.

35. PW-3 deposed that on 05.06.2007, he, along with his wife

Mithilesh and son Pintu, was harvesting sugarcane in the fields

of Sardar Harjeet Singh. Around 9:00 a.m., a boy approached

them and enquired whether they could sell him milk. PW-3

testified that upon asking, the boy disclosed that he was a resident

of Rajpur. PW-3 directed him to Sardar Harjeet Singh for milk.

According to PW-3, later in the forenoon, when they were

returning from the fields around 11:00 a.m., he saw Nazim

conversing with the deceased, under a mango tree on PW-1’s

land. He added that when he returned around 5:00 p.m. to the

sugarcane fields, he noticed a charpai lying unattended under the

same tree, but did not see any persons there.

36. In cross-examination, however, PW-3 made admissions

that significantly weaken his testimony. He candidly admitted

that he did not know either Nazim or Aftab previously. His

identification of them in court was, therefore, the first occasion 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 21 of 33

on which he claimed to recognise them. He also admitted that the

mango trees were situated 150–200 metres away from where he

was working. The sugarcane crop he was harvesting was about

three feet high, and while cutting, he and his family members

were bending forward, facing the western side, whereas Nanhe

Khan’s orchard lay to the east. By his own admission, therefore,

his line of sight was obstructed, and he could not see what lay

ahead while engaged in harvesting.

37. Equally significant is the fact that although PW-3 claimed

his wife and son were with him at the time of the alleged sighting,

the prosecution did not examine them. Both would have been

natural witnesses capable of corroborating or contradicting his

account. Their non-examination is a glaring omission. PW-3 also

admitted that he could not say what transpired between 11:00

a.m. and 5:00 p.m., nor could he explain the presence of the

charpai he saw in the evening.

38. PW-4, Mohd. Rafi, a labourer by occupation, deposed that

on the evening of 05.06.2007, he was returning from work with

his friend, Noor Mohammed, after loading soil onto a trolley.

They stopped at Kishanpur dhaba to have tea. PW-4 stated that

as they were about to leave, he saw the Appellants Nazim and

Aftab, along with co-accused Arman, walking together from the

northern side of the chak road. According to him, on seeing PW4 and his companion, the three appeared shocked and quickly 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 22 of 33

changed direction, walking away towards the other side. PW-4

further deposed that after witnessing this, he returned to his

village and informed PW-1, Nanhe Khan, that he had seen these

three persons.

39. In cross-examination, however, PW-4 admitted that

although he claimed to have conveyed this information to PW-1,

he could not recall when exactly he had told him. He further

acknowledged that he did not have any conversation with the

accused at the Dhaba, nor did he know from where they had come

or where they had gone after he saw them. His statement provides

no detail linking their presence on the road to the crime.

Importantly, this alleged sighting did not find mention in the FIR,

which PW-2 had scribed the very next morning at the dictation

of PW-1. The omission of such a material fact in the earliest

version of the incident severely weakens its reliability.

40. PW-4 also conceded that he joined the search party on the

night of 05.06.2007 after the child went missing, but he did not

disclose to anyone in that large gathering that he had seen the

accused earlier in the evening. This silence, despite an obvious

occasion to speak, casts further doubt on his version. It was only

during trial that PW-4 articulated these facts in detail, thereby

lending his account the character of an afterthought.

41. Both PW-3 and PW-4 thus identified the Appellants for the

first time in court. No TIP was conducted, even though PW-3 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 23 of 33

admitted he had never known the accused earlier. It is well settled

that dock identification without a prior TIP has little evidentiary

value where the witness had no prior familiarity with the

accused. In P. Sasikumar v. State3

, this Court acquitted the

accused on precisely this ground, holding:

“17. The admitted position in this case is that the

test identification parade was not conducted. All the

prosecution witnesses who identified the accused in

the Court […] were not known to the present

Appellant. They had not seen the present Appellant

prior to the said incident. He was a stranger to both

of them….

18. […] Under these circumstances, TIP had

become necessary particularly when both the

accused, who are alleged to have committed this

murder were arrested within two days.

19. […] No explanation whatsoever has been given

by the prosecution as to why TIP was not conducted

in this case before a Magistrate as it ought to have

been done.”

42. The Court further explained that TIP is only part of the

investigative process and that the substantive evidence is dock

identification; however, where the accused is a stranger to the

witness and no TIP is held, courts must exercise extreme caution

3

(2024) 8 SCC 600

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 24 of 33

in accepting such identification. The following paragraph of

P. Sasikumar (supra) is indicative of the same:

“21. It is well settled that TIP is only a part of police

investigation. The identification in TIP of an

accused is not a substantive piece of evidence. The

substantive piece of evidence, is only dock

identification that is identification made by witness

in court during trial.

23. […] In cases where an accused is a stranger to

a witness and there has been no TIP, the trial court

should be very cautious while accepting dock

identification by such a witness.

24. […] We are of the opinion that not conducting

a TIP in this case was a fatal flaw in the police

investigation and in the absence of TIP the dock

identification of the present appellant will always

remain doubtful. Doubt always belongs to the

accused.”

43. In the present case, it is clear that the identification of the

appellants by PW-3 and PW-4 cannot be accepted with

confidence. PW-3 himself admitted he had never known Nazim

or Aftab previously, yet no TIP was conducted. His alleged

sighting was from a considerable distance while engaged in

harvesting work, with his line of sight obstructed, and the natural

witnesses present with him were not examined. PW-4, though a

co-villager, failed to mention his alleged sighting either in the

FIR or during the search for the missing child, and could not even

recall the timing of him informing PW-1 about it. Both witnesses 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 25 of 33

identified the Appellants for the first time in court, which, in the

absence of a TIP, renders their dock identification less credible.

Their testimonies, therefore, cannot constitute reliable evidence

of identification.

44. Even apart from the deficiencies in identification, the

‘last‑seen’ theory is itself a weak link unless the prosecution

establishes a narrow time gap between when the accused and the

deceased were seen together and the recovery of the body, such

that the possibility of intervention by a third person is excluded.

At this juncture, it is relevant to refer to the following decisions:

a. This Court has consistently cautioned against

treating the last-seen circumstance as conclusive proof of

guilt. In State of U.P. v. Satish4

, it was observed:

“22. The last-seen theory comes into play

where the time gap between the point of time

when the accused and the deceased were last

seen alive and when the deceased is found

dead is so small that the possibility of any

person other than the accused being the

author of the crime becomes impossible. It

would be difficult in some cases to positively

establish that the deceased was last seen with

the accused when there is a long gap and

possibility of other persons coming in

between exists. In the absence of any other

positive evidence to conclude that the

accused and the deceased were last seen

4

(2005) 3 SCC 114

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 26 of 33

together, it would be hazardous to come to a

conclusion of guilt in those cases….”

b. The same principle was reiterated in Hatti Singh v.

State of Haryana5

, where this Court held:

“28. There cannot be any doubt that

conviction can be based on circumstantial

evidence, but therefor the prosecution must

establish that the chain of circumstances only

consistently points to the guilt of the accused

and is inconsistent with his innocence.

Circumstances, as is well known, from which

an inference of guilt is sought to be drawn are

required to be cogently and firmly

established. They have to be taken into

consideration cumulatively. They must be

able to conclude that within all human

probability the accused committed the

crime.”

c. In the subsequent decision in Chattar Singh & Anr.

v. State of Haryana6

, this Court warned against drawing

hasty inferences from such evidence. It observed that the

last-seen theory is a weak kind of evidence. It would be

unsafe to base conviction solely on this circumstance

unless it is corroborated by some other strong and

clinching material.

5

(2007) 12 SCC 471

6

(2008) 14 SCC 667

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 27 of 33

d. Most recently, in Krishan Kumar & Anr. v. State

of Haryana7

, this Court reiterated the dangers of indirect

or presumptive application of the last-seen theory stating

that the theory cannot be applied in the absence of clear

and positive testimony placing the deceased in the

company of the accused at a proximate time before the

occurrence. The doctrine cannot be stretched to presume

such presence indirectly, nor can conjectures substitute

proof. Any indirect application of the last-seen theory is

impermissible.

45. In the present case, the prosecution’s reliance on the lastseen theory is misplaced. PW-3 stated that he saw the deceased

conversing with Nazim around 11:00 a.m. on 05.06.2007,

whereas PW-4 claimed to have seen Nazim, Aftab, and Arman

walking together in the evening. The body, however, was

recovered only the next morning. The interval between the

alleged sightings and the discovery of the corpse is too wide to

exclude the possibility of intervention by others. As held

in Satish (supra), the last seen theory applies only when the time

gap is so narrow that the hypothesis of another’s involvement is

eliminated. That condition is absent here.

7 2023 SCC OnLine SC 1180

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 28 of 33

46. Equally, the circumstances narrated by PW-3 and PW-4 do

not furnish corroboration of each other. PW-3 spoke only of a

morning sighting from a distance whereas PW-4 described an

evening encounter near a dhaba with no link to the deceased.

Neither account establishes continuity of presence or proximity

to the time of death. As cautioned in Hatti Singh and Chattar

Singh (supra), last-seen theory alone is weak evidence and

requires corroboration, which is absent in this case.

47. In this respect, as emphasised in Krishan Kumar (supra),

courts cannot presume the presence of the deceased with the

accused indirectly or through conjecture. Here, to accept the lastseen circumstance would require precisely such inference,

stretching two vague and temporally separated sightings into a

conclusion of guilt. The law does not permit such an approach.

The last-seen evidence in this case, therefore, fails to meet the

threshold laid down by this Court. It neither rules out alternative

hypotheses nor completes the chain of circumstances, and

instead leaves wide gaps inconsistent with conviction.

48. Thus, the prosecution’s reliance on PW-3 and PW-4 falters

on two counts: firstly, the absence of TIP renders their

identification unreliable and secondly, even if their testimony is

accepted, ‘last-seen’ theory alone is insufficient to sustain the

conviction in the circumstances of the present case. The High 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 29 of 33

Court’s reliance on PW-3 and PW-4 overlooks this cautionary

principle.

49. Beside the testimonies of prosecution witnesses, the High

Court placed weight on the medical opinion of PW-8, Dr. T.K.

Pant, who conducted the post-mortem. He deposed that the cause

of death was shock and haemorrhage due to an ante-mortem stab

injury and suffocation by strangulation. He noted a deep stab

wound in the throat consistent with a sharp-edged weapon, bluish

ligature marks on the wrists, and multiple abrasions. He also

observed injuries consistent with a blunt object inserted into the

anus and opined that the stab wound could be caused by an axe

but equally by a sword or knife and the wrist marks were

consistent with a rope. While his testimony confirms homicide,

it does not link the injuries to any particular weapon or to the

appellants.

50. However, the manner in which the rope and axe were dealt

with by the investigating agency, and later by the courts below,

is deeply unsatisfactory. During the course of the hearing of the

criminal appeal, the High Court itself observed that these

material exhibits had not been properly examined. It directed that

the axe, rope, and certain items of clothing be sent for DNA and

fingerprint testing, and further directed that the blood samples of

the Appellants be collected and matched with the exhibits. Upon

examining the same, the Forensic Science Laboratory reported 

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 30 of 33

that no complete autosomal DNA profiles could be generated

from the exhibits. Consequently, no opinion could be given on a

match with the blood samples of the Appellants. In effect, the

only scientific evidence available was neutral as it neither

connected the Appellants to the crime nor corroborated the oral

testimony. This is akin to the situation in Padman Bibhar v. State

of Odisha8

, where the Supreme Court noted that the chemical

examination report was inconclusive because the blood group

could not be matched and, therefore, the last seen evidence alone

could not sustain a conviction.

51. Despite the inconclusive forensic report, the High Court

dismissed the absence of DNA evidence as inconsequential and

affirmed the conviction solely on ocular testimony. Such an

approach is untenable in a case based entirely on circumstantial

evidence. Where scientific evidence is neutral or exculpatory,

courts must give it due weight. To convict on doubtful testimony

while ignoring scientific tests is to substitute suspicion for proof.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly cautioned that suspicion,

however strong, cannot replace evidence.

52. There are further doubts about the recovery of the rope.

The prosecution claimed it was recovered from the scene in

broad daylight, yet no independent public witnesses were

8 2025 SCC OnLine SC 1190

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 31 of 33

examined to corroborate this. The investigating officer admitted

that villagers were present during the seizure of soil samples, but

none were called to testify. Such lapses diminish the credibility

of the recovery and, by extension, the evidentiary value of the

rope.

53. In a nutshell, the medical evidence proves the fact of

homicidal death but does not implicate the Appellants. The

forensic report is neutral, the recovery is procedurally suspect,

and the High Court failed to grapple with these deficiencies.

When the only scientific evidence available neither supports the

prosecution’s narrative nor connects the accused to the crime, it

is impermissible to uphold a conviction solely on doubtful

eyewitness testimony.

54. The case of the prosecution with respect to motive is also

tenuous. The motive alleged by the prosecution is only that the

Appellants sought revenge for an insult to their sister. However,

no concrete evidence of animus was led. In Kali Ram v. State of

Himachal Pradesh9

, this Court observed that where the evidence

admits two possibilities, i.e. one pointing to guilt and the other to

innocence then the accused must receive the benefit of doubt.

Absence of motive in a circumstantial case assumes significance

and tilts the balance in favour of the accused. Here, the supposed

9

(1973) 2 SCC 808

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 32 of 33

motive is speculative and there is no evidence that the Appellants

bore any grudge against a ten-year-old child.

55. Another aspect that deserves careful consideration is

juvenility. The Appellants placed reliance on school records and

a medical board report indicating that Nazim and Aftab were

minors at the time of the incident. The Juvenile Justice Board

dismissed this claim based on an electoral roll. Rule 12 of the JJ

Act gives primacy to matriculation or equivalent school

certificate, or in its absence a birth certificate or medical opinion.

We certainly do not find it necessary to decide this issue in view

of our conclusion on merits, however, the summary rejection of

the juvenility plea reinforces the overall perception that the High

Court did not fully re-appreciate the evidence.

CONCLUSION

56. In light of the foregoing discussion, we are of the

considered view that the prosecution has failed to establish a

complete and unbroken chain of circumstances. The

circumstances on record are not consistent with the hypothesis of

the guilt of the accused and fail to exclude every other reasonable

hypothesis, including their innocence. As is well-settled,

suspicion, however strong, cannot take the place of proof.

Accordingly, the Appellants are entitled to the benefit of the

doubt.

Crl. A. No. 715 of 2018 Page 33 of 33

57. Hence, the conviction and sentence of the Appellants

Nazim, Aftab and Arman Ali under Sections 302, 201 and 120-B

IPC, as affirmed by the High Court in its judgment dated

15.11.2017, cannot be sustained. The appeal is accordingly

allowed.

58. In view thereof, the Impugned Judgment dated 15.11.2017

passed by the High Court of Uttarakhand at Nainital and the

judgment dated 05.04.2014 passed by the Ld. Additional

Sessions Judge, Kashipur, are set aside to the extent that the

Appellants are acquitted of charges under Sections 302, 201 and

120-B IPC. Since the appellants are on bail, their bail bonds and

sureties shall stand discharged.

59. The captioned appeal stands disposed of in the aforesaid

terms. Application(s), if any, shall also stand disposed of. No

costs.

……………………………………J.

 [M. M. SUNDRESH]

……………………………………J.

 [SATISH CHANDRA SHARMA]

NEW DELHI

October 06, 2025