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DARSHAN SINGH versus STATE OF PUNJAB

Citation: [2024] 1 S.C.R. 248 · Decided: 04-01-2024 · Supreme Court of India · Bench: BHUSHAN RAMKRISHNA GAVAI · Disposal: Appeal(s) allowed

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Judgment (excerpt)

* Author
[2024] 1 S.C.R. 248 : 2024 INSC 19
Case Details
Darshan Singh
v.
State of Punjab
(Criminal Appeal No. 163 of 2010)
04 January 2024
[B. R. Gavai, Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and  
Aravind Kumar*, JJ.]
Issue for Consideration
Whether the prosecution had proved beyond reasonable doubt, 
the entire chain of circumstances, not leaving any link missing for 
the appellant to escape from the clutches of law.
Headnotes
Penal Code, 1860 – s. 302 rw s. 34 – Murder – Prosecution 
case that the appellant along with the lady with whom he 
had illicit relations, administered poison to the appellant’s 
wife, with the motive to eliminate her and caused her death 
– Conviction u/s.302/34 and sentenced to life imprisonment 
– High Court upheld the order of conviction and sentence 
against the appellant while acquitted the lady – Correctness:
Held: There was no eye-witness to the incident – Prosecution case 
rested on circumstantial evidence – Presence of the appellant and 
the lady in the appellant’s house in the intervening night not firmly 
and cogently established – Several omissions and improvements 
in the cross examination of the prosecution witnesses – There 
was a strong hypothesis that the deceased had committed suicide, 
which explanation was led by the appellant in his statement u/s.313 
CrPC and is sufficient to create doubt – Furthermore, evidence of 
prosecution witnesses not sufficient to prove presence of the lady at 
the appellant’s house, as a natural corollary, such evidence cannot 
be relied on to conclude that the appellant was present in the house 
– Also the manner in which the High Court sought to distinguish 
the case of the appellant from the lady is perverse – When the 
conviction is to be based on circumstantial evidence solely, then 
there should not be any snap in the chain of circumstances – Failure 
[2024] 1 S.C.R. 
249
DARSHAN SINGH v. STATE OF PUNJAB
to prove a single circumstance cogently can cause a snap in the 
chain of circumstances and make the accused entitled to benefit 
of doubt – In view thereof, the concurrent findings of conviction 
set aside – Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 – Evidence. [Paras 
25, 30, 33, 36-38]
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 – s. 161 – Examination of 
witnesses by the police – Failure of the prosecution witnesses 
to mention in their statements u/s 161 about the involvement 
of an accused – However, their subsequent statement before 
court during trial regarding involvement of that particular 
accused – Reliance upon:
Held: It cannot be relied upon – Prosecution cannot seek to prove 
a fact during trial through a witness which such witness had not 
stated to police during investigation – Evidence of that witness 
regarding the said improved fact is of no significance. [Para 26]
Evidence – Circumstantial evidence – Evidentiary value:
Held: Circumstances from which an inference of guilt is sought 
to be drawn must be cogently and firmly established – Those 
circumstances should be of a definite tendency unerringly pointing 
towards the guilt of the accused – Circumstances taken cumulatively 
should form a chain so complete that there is no escape from 
the conclusion, that within all human probability, the crime was 
committed by the accused and they should be incapable of 
explanation on any hypothesis other than that of the guilt of the 
accused and inconsistent with his innocence. [Para 9]
Evidence – Rustic/illiterate witness – Evidentiary value:
Held: Appreciation of evidence led by such a witness has to be 
treated differently from other kinds of witnesses – It cannot be 
subjected to a hyper-technical inquiry – Evidence of a rustic/
illiterate witness must not be disregarded if there were to be 
certain minor contradictions or inconsistencies in the deposition 
– Witness. [Para 27]
List of Citations and Other References
Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra 
[1985] 1 SCR 88: (1984) 4 SCC 116; Rohtash Vs. State 
of Haryana [2012] 6 SCR 62: (2012) 6 SCC 589; Sunil 
250
[2024] 1 S.C.R.
DIGITAL SUPREME COURT REPORTS
Kumar Shambhu Dayal Gupta Vs. State of Maharashtra 
2011 (72) ACC 699 (SC); Rudrappa Ramappa Jainpur 
Vs. State of Karnataka (2004) 7 SCC 422; Vimal Suresh 
Kamble Vs. Chaluverapinake, (2003) 3 SCC 175; 
Pramila vs State of Uttar Pradesh 2021 SCC OnLine 
SC 711; Periasami Vs. State of Tamil Nadu [1996] 6 
Suppl. SCR 757: (1996) 6 SCC 457; Bhimsingh Vs. 
State of Uttarakhand (2015) 4 SCC 281 – relied on.
Jaipal V. State of Haryana [2002

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