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HomeSukh Chand Ghosh & Ors vs The State Of West Bengal on...

Sukh Chand Ghosh & Ors vs The State Of West Bengal on 10 March, 2026

Calcutta High Court (Appellete Side)

Sukh Chand Ghosh & Ors vs The State Of West Bengal on 10 March, 2026

                                                                     2026:CHC-AS:386




               IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA
              CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                      APPELLATE SIDE

Present:

The Hon'ble Justice Prasenjit Biswas


                          C.R.A. 396 of 2005

                       Sukh Chand Ghosh & Ors.
                                  -Versus-
                       The State of West Bengal



For the Appellants                 :   Mr. Suman Biswas,


For the State                     :    Ms. Faria Hossain, Ld. APP,
                                       Ms. Sonali Bhar.


Hearing concluded on      :       27.02.2026

Judgment On                   :   10.03.2026

Prasenjit Biswas, J:-


1.

This appeal is directed against the impugned judgment and

order of conviction dated 21.05.2005 passed by the learned

Additional Sessions Judge, 5th Fast Track Court, Malda in

connection with Sessions Case No. 95/03 corresponding to

Sessions Trial No. 19(4)04 arising out of English Bazar P.S.

Case No. 68/93 dated 09.03.93 (G.R. Case No. 303/93).
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

2. By passing the impugned judgment these appellants were

found guilty for commission of offence punishable under

Section 186/34 of the Indian Penal Code and they were

sentenced to suffer simple imprisonment for three months

each along with a fine of Rs.200/- each and in default of

payment of fine to undergo further simple imprisonment for

five days each.

3. Being aggrieved and by dissatisfied with the said impugned

judgment and order of conviction the present appeal is

preferred at the instance of the appellants.

4. In short compass, the case of the prosecution, as unfolded

from the written complaint and the materials collected during

investigation, may be delineated herein below:

“According to the prosecution, the instant

criminal proceeding was set into motion on the basis

of a complaint lodged by the de-facto complainant

before the concerned police station. In the said

complaint it was, interalia, alleged that on 9th March,

1993 at about 17:30 hours, at a place known as

Piyasbari, all the accused persons, including the

present appellants and some other associates,

unlawfully assembled together and formed an
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unlawful assembly with a common object to commit

acts of violence and to obstruct the police officials in

the lawful discharge of their duties. It was

specifically alleged that the members of the said

unlawful assembly were variously armed with deadly

and dangerous weapons such as arrows, hasua (a

sharp cutting instrument), lathis and other

implements capable of causing serious bodily harm.

While being so armed, the accused persons allegedly

indulged in rioting and wrongfully restrained the

defacto complainant along with the accompanying

police force from discharging their lawful public

functions. The prosecution case further proceeds

that in the course of the said incident the accused

persons, acting in furtherance of their common

object, allegedly launched a violent attack upon the

police personnel present at the spot. In particular, it

was alleged that Sub-Inspector Bijoy Krishna Dey

and Assistant Sub-Inspector Ananda Kumar Mondal

were assaulted by the members of the unlawful

assembly with the aforesaid weapons with the

intention of causing their death or, at the very least,

with the knowledge that such acts were likely to
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

result in fatal consequences. As a result of the

alleged assault, both the aforesaid police officers

sustained injuries and were subsequently taken to

the hospital where they received medical treatment.

The incident was reported to the police and, on the

basis of the said written complaint, a formal police

case being English Bazar Police Station Case No. 68

of 1993 dated 09.03.1993 was registered.

Thereafter, the police authorities undertook

investigation into the allegations made in the

complaint. Upon completion of the investigation, the

Investigating Agency submitted a charge-sheet

against the present appellants and other accused

persons alleging commission of offences punishable

under Sections 147, 148, 149, 186, 353 and 307 of

the Indian Penal Code, thereby setting the criminal

law into motion against them for standing trial

before the learned Trial Court.”

5. The charge was framed against the accused persons by the

Trial Court under Section 148, 186/34, 353/34 and 307/34 of

the Indian Penal Code which was read over and explained to
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the accused persons and in reply they pleaded not guilty and

claimed to be tried.

6. In order to prove the case against the accused persons, the

prosecution had examined eighteen (18) witnesses and proved

some documents as exhibits. Neither any oral nor any

documentary evidence was adduced on the side of the

appellants.

7. Mr. Suman Biswas, learned Advocate appearing on behalf of

the appellants, has strenuously assailed the impugned

judgment and order of conviction passed by the learned Trial

Court. At the outset, the learned Advocate submitted that the

prosecution case suffers from serious infirmities and

inconsistencies which go to the root of the matter and render

the prosecution version highly doubtful.

8. It has been contended by Mr. Biswas, the learned Advocate

that there exist glaring discrepancies between the version

narrated in the First Information Report and the depositions of

the prosecution witnesses with regard to the nature and

extent of the injuries allegedly sustained in the course of the

incident. According to him, while the prosecution has

attempted to project a grave and violent assault upon the

police personnel, the oral testimonies of the witnesses do not

consistently support such allegations and materially deviate
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

from the version as recorded in the FIR. Such inconsistencies,

according to the learned Advocate, cast a serious doubt upon

the veracity and reliability of the prosecution case.

9. The learned Advocate further submitted that the statements of

the prosecution witnesses are replete with material

contradictions and omissions which have remained

unexplained by the prosecution. It has been argued that the

witnesses examined on behalf of the prosecution have not

given a consistent and coherent account of the alleged

occurrence and, in several material particulars, their

statements contradict each other. These contradictions and

omissions, according to the learned Advocate, materially affect

the credibility of the witnesses and weaken the prosecution’s

attempt to establish the guilt of the appellants. It has also

been vehemently argued that the prosecution has failed to

examine any independent witness in order to corroborate the

allegations made in the complaint. According to the learned

Advocate, the entire prosecution case rests primarily upon the

testimonies of police personnel who were themselves allegedly

involved in the incident. In the absence of any independent

and disinterested witness to support the prosecution version,

the evidentiary value of such interested testimonies ought to
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have been scrutinized with greater caution by the learned Trial

Court.

10. In this connection, the learned Advocate specifically referred

to the evidence of PW4, Lalu Rajak, and PW10, Sachindranath

Mondal, who were cited by the prosecution as witnesses to the

alleged seizure of certain articles. It has been pointed out that

neither of the said witnesses stated anything in their evidence

regarding the seizure allegedly effected by the police. Their

failure to support the prosecution in respect of the alleged

seizure, according to the learned Advocate, seriously

undermines the prosecution’s claim regarding the recovery of

the incriminating articles.

11. The learned Advocate further contended that the alleged

seized articles were neither produced before the learned Trial

Court nor marked as material exhibits during the course of

trial. Such omission, according to him, creates a serious

lacuna in the prosecution case and raises grave doubts

regarding the genuineness of the alleged seizure and the

overall narrative of the prosecution with regard to the

occurrence of the incident.

12. It has also been submitted that although the prosecution

claimed that PW18, Sub-Inspector Bijoy Krishna Dey, and

PW15, Constable/36 Jagabandhu Adhikari, had sustained
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injuries during the alleged incident and were admitted to the

hospital for treatment, no proper medical documents in

support of such injuries were brought on record. The learned

Advocate pointed out that apart from two medical admission

tickets indicating their admission to the hospital, no injury

report, medical certificate, or other relevant medical document

was produced before the Court to substantiate the claim that

they had in fact sustained injuries in the alleged assault.

According to the learned Advocate, no explanation whatsoever

has been offered either by the prosecution or by the

Investigating Officer as to why the injury reports of the

alleged injured persons were not collected during the course of

investigation and produced before the Court. The absence of

such crucial medical evidence, it is argued, creates a serious

doubt regarding the prosecution’s allegation that the said

police personnel had sustained injuries in the incident as

alleged.

13. The learned Advocate further argued that the learned Trial

Court, while passing the impugned judgment of conviction,

placed undue reliance upon the testimonies of the police

personnel who were examined as prosecution witnesses.

According to him, despite the existence of material

discrepancies and inconsistencies in their evidence, the
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

learned Trial Court accepted their statements without proper

scrutiny and proceeded to record the conviction of the

appellants.

14. It has also been emphasized that no independent witness

came forward to support the prosecution case, although there

was ample opportunity and scope for the prosecution to cite

and examine such witnesses. The failure of the prosecution to

examine independent witnesses, particularly in a case of this

nature where the incident allegedly took place in a populated

locality, according to the learned Advocate, further weakens

the prosecution case.

15. The learned Advocate further contended that the learned Trial

Court erred in relying solely upon the testimonies of the

alleged victims themselves to conclude that the appellants had

attacked them. According to him, such a finding, in the

absence of corroborative independent evidence and in the face

of material contradictions and deficiencies in the prosecution

case, cannot be sustained in the eye of law.

16. Lastly, the learned Advocate submitted that it is a well-settled

principle of criminal jurisprudence that the burden lies

squarely upon the prosecution to prove its case beyond all

reasonable doubt. In the present case, according to him, the

prosecution has failed to discharge that burden inasmuch as
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the evidence adduced is neither consistent nor credible and

suffers from serious lacunae.

17. On these grounds, the learned Advocate urged that the

prosecution has failed to establish the guilt of the appellants

beyond reasonable doubt and, therefore, the impugned

judgment and order of conviction passed by the learned Trial

Court is liable to be set aside. Accordingly, it has been prayed

that the present appeal be allowed and the appellants be

acquitted of the charges levelled against them.

18. Ms. Faria Hossain, learned Advocate appearing on behalf of

the State, has strongly defended the impugned judgment and

order of conviction, submitting that the prosecution has

successfully discharged its burden of proof beyond reasonable

doubt. The learned Advocate contended that there are no

materials on record which would render the evidence of the

key prosecution witnesses namely PW2, PW14, PW15, and

PW18 untrustworthy. She emphasized that all these witnesses

deposed consistently before the learned Trial Court in support

of the prosecution case and that their veracities were not

shaken during cross-examination. Consequently, their

testimonies, according to the learned Advocate, deserve full

credence and cannot be disbelieved.

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19. In particular, attention was drawn to the evidence of PW14,

Sub-Inspector of Police Ananda Kumar Mondal, who is also

one of the alleged injured witnesses. PW14 deposed that he,

along with PW18, Sub-Inspector Bijoy Krishna Dey, sustained

injuries as a result of the assault by a large crowd throwing

brickbats and stones at the police personnel. PW14 further

stated that the crowd was armed with weapons such as lathis,

hasua, and farse, and that he and the other injured police

personnel were subsequently treated at Malda Sadar Hospital.

The learned Advocate submitted that the medical tickets

produced and marked as Exhibit-7 corroborate the fact that

these witnesses received treatment for injuries sustained in

the incident, thereby lending credibility to their account.

20. Further, the learned Advocate emphasized the testimony of

PW15, Constable No. 36 Jagabandhu Adhikari, and another

alleged injured witness. PW15 deposed in alignment with

PW14, stating that prior to reaching Piyasbari, they were

attacked by the crowd, which threw brickbats at them. He

further alleged that the accused persons actively participated

in the assault by throwing hasua and farse towards the police

personnel. Importantly, PW15 identified the five accused

persons present at the scene during the incident. The learned

Advocate highlighted that the cross-examination conducted by
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the defence failed to shake the veracity of PW15’s testimony,

and therefore his statements remain reliable and admissible as

substantive evidence.

21. PW18, Sub-Inspector Bijoy Krishna Dey, also corroborated the

statements of PW14 and PW15. He deposed that upon

reaching Piyasbari, they were confronted by a mob of 300/400

people, armed with hasua, lathis, stones, arrows, and bows.

According to PW18, the crowd attacked not only the police

personnel but also their jeep with hasua and brickbats. As a

result, both PW14 and PW15 sustained injuries. PW18 further

testified that he himself received injuries in the attack and

that he, along with PW14 and PW15, was treated at Malda

Sadar Hospital.

22. The learned Advocate also relied on the medical evidence

provided by PW17, Dr. Ruchira Banerjee, who examined PW18

in the Emergency Department. The doctor stated that upon

examination, he found an abrasion on PW18’s right hand. This

emergency treatment ticket was marked as Exhibit-7 and

corroborates the occurrence of injuries resulting from the

incident.

23. In summation, the learned Advocate submitted that a

thorough appreciation of all the evidences including oral

testimony of PW2, PW14, PW15, and PW18, as well as the
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

documentary evidence such as Exhibit-7 demonstrates that

the prosecution successfully proved the occurrence of the

incident and the injuries sustained by the injured persons. The

learned Advocate argued that the learned Trial Court rightly

relied upon this consistent and unshaken evidence to convict

the appellants. She emphasized that there is no material

irregularity, illegality, or procedural defect in the impugned

judgment and order of conviction.

24. Accordingly, it was prayed by the learned Advocate that the

impugned judgment and order of conviction passed by the

learned Trial Court be upheld in its entirety and that the

present appeal preferred by the appellants be dismissed, as

there exists no valid ground to interfere with the lawful

conviction recorded against them.

25. I have anxiously considered the rival submissions advanced by

both the parties and have gone through all the materials on

record.

26. In the present case, the prosecution has examined several

witnesses in order to substantiate the allegations levelled

against the appellants. Among them, PW3 Mukul Mondal, PW4

Lalu Rajak, PW5 Jiten Das, PW6 Ratan Das, PW8 Niren Ghosh

and PW9 Sonatan Rajak were cited as independent witnesses

by the prosecution. PW7 was examined as the medical officer.
14

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Apart from these witnesses, the remaining witnesses

examined by the prosecution are police personnel who were

either members of the alleged police force present at the spot

or were otherwise connected with the investigation of the

case.

27. Thus, it is evident that the prosecution had the opportunity to

rely upon independent witnesses in order to lend corroboration

to the allegations made in the complaint and to strengthen the

credibility of the prosecution version. However, a careful

scrutiny of the evidence adduced during the trial reveals that

the testimony of such independent witnesses does not

substantially support the case of the prosecution.

28. In this connection, particular importance is attached to the

evidence of PW4 Lalu Rajak and PW10 Sachindranath Mondal,

who were cited by the prosecution as witnesses to the alleged

seizure of certain articles in connection with the case. The

prosecution sought to rely upon their testimony to prove that

incriminating articles were seized during the course of

investigation, thereby lending support to the allegation that

the accused persons had used weapons during the incident.

29. However, the evidence of PW4 Lalu Rajak does not support

the prosecution case in this regard. PW4 categorically stated

in his deposition that he did not put his left thumb impression
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

(L.T.I.) on the seizure list dated 09.03.1993. When the alleged

thumb impression appearing on the said seizure list was

shown to him during the course of his examination, he

virtually denied the same and did not admit that the said

thumb impression belonged to him. Moreover, PW4 further

stated that he knew nothing about the incident in question.

Thus, far from supporting the prosecution case, the testimony

of this witness casts serious doubt on the authenticity and

genuineness of the alleged seizure list.

30. Significantly, despite such statements made by PW4 which

were clearly inconsistent with the prosecution version, the

prosecution did not take steps to declare him hostile nor did it

cross-examine him with the permission of the Court in order

to confront him with his earlier statement or to elicit the truth.

The failure of the prosecution to adopt such a course assumes

considerable importance, as it indicates that the testimony of

the witness remained unchallenged and untested by the

prosecution itself.

31. Similarly, the evidence of PW10 Sachindranath Mondal, who

was also cited as a witness to the seizure, does not advance

the case of the prosecution. In his cross-examination, PW10

stated that he had signed the seizure list on a road which was

situated at a distance of about one and a half kilometres from
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Piyasbari, the alleged place of occurrence. He further stated

that he had put his signature on the seizure list at the instance

and direction of the police personnel. More importantly, PW10

clearly stated that he did not know what articles had been

seized in connection with the case.

32. The statements made by PW10 clearly indicate that he had no

personal knowledge about the alleged seizure and that his

signature was obtained merely at the instance of the police

without being aware of the contents or the articles mentioned

in the seizure list. Such evidence seriously undermines the

evidentiary value of the seizure list and casts doubt on the

manner in which the alleged seizure was conducted.

33. It is also noteworthy that, similar to PW4, this witness PW10

was also not declared hostile by the prosecution, despite the

fact that his testimony did not support the prosecution case

regarding the seizure of the alleged articles. Consequently, the

prosecution did not cross-examine him to clarify the

circumstances under which his signature was obtained or to

establish the authenticity of the seizure proceedings.

34. Therefore, from the evidence of both PW4 and PW10, it clearly

emerges that the witnesses cited by the prosecution to prove

the seizure have not supported the prosecution case in any

meaningful manner. On the contrary, their statements create
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

a serious doubt regarding the genuineness of the alleged

seizure and the manner in which the investigation was

conducted.

35. In such circumstances, when the very witnesses cited to prove

the seizure fail to support the prosecution case and the

prosecution does not even attempt to treat them as hostile or

challenge their testimony, the evidentiary value of the alleged

seizure becomes highly doubtful. This circumstance materially

weakens the prosecution case and creates a significant gap in

the chain of evidence sought to be established against the

appellants.

36. PW18, Sub-Inspector of Police Bijoy Krishna Dey, who is also

the defacto complainant in the present case, has been

examined by the prosecution as one of the principal witnesses

to establish the alleged occurrence. In his deposition before

the Court, PW18 stated that as soon as the police force

reached Piyasbari, a large mob consisting of about 300 to 400

persons suddenly attacked them. According to him, the said

mob was armed with various weapons such as hasua, lathi,

stones, arrows and bows, and they allegedly assaulted the

police personnel and even attacked the police jeep with hasua

and brickbats. However, a careful examination of the materials

on record reveals that the said version of PW18 is not
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satisfactorily supported by the investigation conducted in the

case. Although the witness alleged that the assailants were

armed with weapons like hasua and lathis and that those

weapons were used during the alleged attack, the

Investigating Agency did not seize any such weapons during

the course of investigation. The non-seizure of such allegedly

used weapons assumes considerable significance, particularly

when the prosecution case is that the accused persons were

armed with deadly and dangerous weapons and had used

them in the course of the incident. The failure on the part of

the Investigating Officer to recover or seize any of those

weapons creates a serious gap in the prosecution case and

casts doubt on the veracity of the allegations made regarding

the nature of the attack.

37. PW18 further stated in his evidence that during the course of

the alleged incident PW14, Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police

Ananda Kumar Mondal, was assaulted with brickbats and that

PW15, Constable No. 36 Jagabandhu Adhikari, also sustained

injuries as a result of the said attack. However, the statement

made by PW18 in this regard appears to be inconsistent with

the evidence of PW16, Sub-Inspector of Police Nepal Chandra

Sen. In his cross-examination, PW16 categorically stated that

PW15 did not suffer any injury from the throwing of stones.
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This contradiction between the testimonies of the prosecution

witnesses on the question of whether PW15 actually sustained

injuries during the alleged incident creates a serious doubt

regarding the truthfulness and reliability of the prosecution

version.

38. PW18 further stated that after the incident he went to Malda

Sadar Hospital along with PW14 and PW15 for treatment and

that they were treated there for the injuries sustained in the

alleged attack. However, despite such claim, no injury report

or medical certificate indicating the nature, extent or

seriousness of the injuries sustained by the alleged victims

was produced before the Court. In the present case, the

prosecution merely produced certain medical admission tickets

which were marked as Exhibit-7. These documents only

indicate that the persons concerned were admitted to the

hospital, but they do not disclose the nature of the injuries

allegedly sustained by them. The absence of any injury report

or medical opinion regarding the injuries significantly weakens

the prosecution case, particularly when the allegation is that

the police personnel were violently attacked by a large armed

mob.

39. Similarly, PW15, Constable No. 36 Jagabandhu Adhikari, who

was also projected as one of the injured witnesses, stated in
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his cross-examination that he sustained an injury on his leg

due to the throwing of stones and that he received treatment

at Malda Hospital for the said injury. However, quite

surprisingly, no injury report, medical certificate or treatment

record was brought on record by the prosecution in order to

substantiate his claim. In the absence of such medical

evidence, the assertion made by PW15 regarding the injury

allegedly sustained by him remains uncorroborated and

unsupported by any documentary proof.

40. Furthermore, PW15 stated in his cross-examination that the

Investigating Officer had seized a rifle and cartridges in

connection with the case. However, during the course of trial

those alleged seized articles were neither produced before the

Court nor shown to the witness. PW15 himself admitted during

his deposition that he did not find the said seized rifle and

cartridges in the Court at the time when he was giving his

evidence. The non-production of the alleged seized rifle and

cartridges before the Court creates a serious lacuna in the

prosecution case. When the prosecution asserts that certain

incriminating articles were seized during the investigation, it is

incumbent upon the prosecution to produce those articles

before the Court and have them marked as material exhibits

in order to establish the authenticity of the seizure. The failure
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to do so raises legitimate doubts regarding whether such

seizure was in fact made in the manner alleged by the

prosecution.

41. Thus, the absence of seizure of the alleged weapons used in

the attack, the contradictions in the testimonies of the

prosecution witnesses regarding the injuries sustained, the

failure to produce injury reports of the alleged injured

persons, and the non-production of the alleged seized rifle and

cartridges before the Court collectively create serious doubts

about the prosecution story. These deficiencies materially

weaken the prosecution case and undermine the reliability of

the evidence relied upon to establish the guilt of the

appellants.

42. PW14, Sub-Inspector of Police Ananda Kumar Mondal, who

has also been projected by the prosecution as one of the

injured witnesses in the alleged occurrence, stated in his

deposition that on 09.03.1993 he noticed about 200/250

persons belonging to the Ghosh community assembled at the

place of occurrence and that they were allegedly creating

disturbance among themselves while being armed with

weapons such as lathis, swords and similar articles. According

to him, the situation at the spot was tense and the persons

assembled there were equipped with such weapons.
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43. However, a careful examination of the record reveals that

none of the alleged weapons such as lathis or swords, which

according to this witness were present at the spot, were

seized by the Investigating Agency during the course of

investigation. Nor were any such articles produced before the

Court and marked as material exhibits during the trial in order

to substantiate the prosecution case. When the prosecution

alleges that a large number of persons were present at the

place of occurrence armed with weapons and that those

weapons were used in the course of the incident, it becomes

the duty of the Investigating Officer to seize such articles, if

available, and produce the same before the Court to

corroborate the oral testimony of the witnesses. The failure to

seize or produce such weapons in the present case creates a

significant gap in the prosecution case and raises doubt

regarding the veracity of the allegations made by the witness.

44. PW14 further stated that he, along with the other alleged

injured police personnel, was taken to Malda Hospital where

they were treated for the injuries sustained by them in the

course of the incident. However, despite such claim, no injury

report or medical certificate relating to the injuries allegedly

sustained by him was produced before the Court. The

prosecution has not brought on record any medical document
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which could indicate the nature, extent or seriousness of the

injury allegedly suffered by PW14. In the absence of any such

documentary medical evidence, the claim made by this

witness regarding the injuries sustained by him remains

unsubstantiated. Therefore, in the absence of any cogent and

reliable medical document, the assertion made by PW14

regarding the injuries allegedly suffered by him cannot be

accepted with certainty.

45. It is also noteworthy that several independent witnesses cited

by the prosecution, namely PW3 Mukul Mondal, PW5 Jiten

Das, PW6 Ratan Das, PW8 Niren Ghosh and PW9 Sonatan

Rajak, did not support the prosecution case during their

examination before the Court. As their testimony did not align

with the prosecution version, they were declared hostile by the

prosecution and were subjected to cross-examination by the

prosecution itself. However, even after such cross-

examination, nothing could be elicited from their testimony

which would lend support to the case of the prosecution or

corroborate the allegations made against the accused persons.

Consequently, the evidence of these witnesses does not

advance the prosecution case in any material manner.

46. PW7, Police Driver No. 112 Jiban Bhoumik, stated in his

evidence that when he arrived at the place of occurrence he
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noticed that both parties were attempting to create

disturbance with hasua and lathis and that upon seeing the

police personnel, the mob started attacking them with bricks.

In his cross-examination, this witness stated that the glasses

of the police jeep were broken due to the throwing of bricks.

However, he was unable to state whether Sub-Inspector Anil

Rai sustained any injury as a result of such brick throwing.

Significantly, this witness did not state anything in his

evidence regarding the injuries allegedly sustained by PW14,

PW15 or PW18. Thus, his testimony does not provide any

corroboration regarding the alleged injuries claimed by those

witnesses.

47. The medical evidence in the present case also does not

satisfactorily support the prosecution case. PW17, Dr. Ruchira

Banerjee, who examined PW18 in the Emergency Department,

stated that upon examination she found one abrasion on the

right hand of PW18. However, during her cross-examination

she admitted that she had not recorded the history of assault

in the medical ticket, nor had she mentioned the name of the

father of the said injured person in the medical record. She

further stated that if a person falls upon a blunt object or

surface, he or she may sustain an abrasion on the body.
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48. Thus, the medical evidence given by the doctor does not

conclusively establish that the abrasion found on PW18 was

the result of an assault by the accused persons as alleged by

the prosecution. The possibility of such injury being caused by

a fall on a blunt surface has not been ruled out by the medical

witness. Moreover, as already noted, no detailed injury report

or medical certificate was produced by the prosecution

showing the injuries allegedly sustained by PW14, PW15 and

PW18.

49. Therefore, when the alleged injured persons claim to have

sustained injuries in the course of a violent attack by a large

mob but the prosecution fails to produce proper medical

records showing the nature of such injuries, the evidentiary

value of their claim becomes doubtful. The absence of injury

reports, coupled with the inconclusive medical testimony and

the failure to produce alleged weapons, significantly weakens

the prosecution case and raises serious doubt regarding the

manner in which the alleged incident is said to have occurred.

50. A careful scrutiny of the evidence of the prosecution witnesses

in the instant case reveals substantial infirmities, omissions,

and contradictions which seriously undermine the prosecution

case. In particular, the testimony of PW1, H.G. 339 Faruq Sk.,

virtually demolishes the prosecution narrative regarding both
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the alleged injuries and the alleged firing by police personnel

during the incident.

51. PW1, in his examination-in-chief, candidly stated that he could

not say whether any police officer sustained injuries as a

result of the attack by the accused persons on the date of the

incident. The prosecution had alleged that one of the members

of the mob sustained injury due to firing by PW15, Constable

Jagabandhu Adhikari. PW1, although claiming presence at the

scene, admitted that he could not testify with certainty as to

whether any of the mob had been injured by the firing. He

merely stated that he “later came to learn” that someone from

the mob was allegedly injured. Such a vague assertion, made

without personal knowledge and based solely on hearsay,

considerably diminishes the credibility of the prosecution’s

claim regarding injuries caused by gunfire. Further, during

cross-examination, PW1 disclosed that he was never examined

by the Investigating Officer and that his statement was being

recorded for the first time in Court. The fact that this witness

did not provide any statement during the investigation makes

his testimony extremely weak and unreliable. Statements

made for the first time in Court without prior examination by

the Investigating Officer are generally accorded very limited
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C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

evidentiary value, particularly in cases involving allegations of

violence and injuries.

52. Similarly, PW2, Sub-Inspector of Police Anil Kumar Roy,

deposed that the mob threw bricks at the police personnel,

and that as a result PW18 (S.I. Bijoy Krishna Dey) and PW14

(A.S.I. Ananda Kumar Mondal) sustained injuries. However, as

already highlighted, no injury reports in respect of PW18 and

PW14 were ever produced before the Court. The absence of

any medical documentation renders the claims of PW2

regarding the injuries inherently doubtful. Moreover, PW2

failed to identify any of the alleged miscreants before the

Court, further weakening the prosecution’s assertion that the

accused persons specifically caused the injuries. Without

corroborative medical evidence and identification of the

perpetrators, the testimony of PW2 lacks credibility and

cannot be relied upon to establish the alleged assault.

53. PW16, Sub-Inspector Nepal Chandra Sen, the first

Investigating Officer, also revealed substantial deficiencies in

the prosecution case. PW16 stated that he had seized one rifle

and one cartridge through a seizure list dated 10.03.1993

(Exhibit-5/3), but admitted that these items were neither

produced in Court nor marked as material exhibits. This non-


      production   of   the    alleged   seized   articles   significantly
                                            28

                               C.R.A. 396 of 2005                                      2026:CHC-AS:386




undermines the authenticity of the seizure and raises serious

doubts regarding the prosecution’s claim of recovering

incriminating articles used in the incident. PW16 further stated

that he had sent a requisition to the hospital on 30.03.1993

for the collection of injury reports of the alleged injured

persons. Yet, no such injury reports were ever produced in

Court, and the Investigating Officer failed to provide any

explanation for this glaring omission. The absence of these

reports is particularly significant because it prevents

verification of the alleged injuries and undermines the

prosecution’s claim that police personnel sustained harm

during the incident.

54. In addition, PW16 acknowledged that he did not identify the

accused persons in Court at the time of his deposition. He also

recounted statements allegedly made to him by PW3, Mukul

Mondal, wherein PW3 claimed that on 09.03.1993 he

witnessed a dispute between the Ghosh and Mondal

communities at Piyasbari, that the police arrived around 5:30

P.M., and that about 300 persons surrounded the police party,

throwing brickbats at them, prompting the police to fire in

self-defense. However, at the time of giving evidence in Court,

PW3 had turned hostile and did not support his earlier

statement made before PW16. The same fate befell PW6 and
29

C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

PW9, who were also declared hostile and failed to corroborate

the narrative they had allegedly provided to the Investigating

Officer. This divergence between pre-trial statements and

courtroom testimony severely weakens the reliability of the

Investigating Officer’s account and raises questions regarding

the consistency and authenticity of the prosecution evidence.

55. PW16 further admitted that he did not collect the injury

reports in connection with the case and that he did not see the

seized articles in Court when giving his deposition.

Importantly, he also stated that PW15, Constable Jagabandhu

Adhikari, did not suffer any injury from the stones allegedly

thrown by the mob. This admission directly contradicts the

evidence of PW18, who claimed in his examination-in-chief

that PW15 sustained injury due to the attack. Such

contradictions between key prosecution witnesses significantly

erode the credibility of the prosecution’s narrative regarding

the injuries and the sequence of events during the alleged

attack.

56. In sum, the testimony of PW1, PW2, and PW16, taken

together, highlights multiple infirmities in the prosecution

case: the absence of injury reports for the alleged injured,

non-production of seized articles, hostile or uncorroborated

witnesses, failure to identify accused persons, and internal
30

C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

contradictions regarding injuries sustained by police

personnel. These factors collectively create serious doubt

about the reliability and veracity of the prosecution’s story and

seriously undermine the foundation upon which the conviction

of the appellants was based.

57. Upon a careful and holistic appreciation of the evidence

brought on record, it becomes manifest that the prosecution

has failed to establish the occurrence of the alleged incident

beyond reasonable doubt. Equally, the prosecution has not

been able to substantiate the claim regarding the injuries

allegedly sustained by the so-called injured persons, as no

proper medical documentation was placed before the Court to

corroborate their assertions. The absence of injury reports,

certificates, or any medical evidence severely undermines the

credibility of the claim that the police personnel sustained

injuries during the alleged attack.

58. A significant weakness in the prosecution case is the

conspicuous absence of independent witnesses to corroborate

the version of the prosecution. The learned Trial Judge, in the

impugned judgment, relied solely upon the testimonies of

witnesses who were police personnel involved in the incident.

However, these very witnesses’ statements are replete with

contradictions, omissions, and inconsistencies. Their
31

C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

testimonies do not form a coherent and consistent narrative of

the alleged events. In particular, discrepancies exist regarding

the number of persons present at the scene, the nature and

extent of the injuries sustained, and the sequence of the

alleged assault and firing. Such contradictions render their

testimony inherently unreliable, especially when the evidence

of disinterested witnesses is entirely absent.

59. Further, the prosecution has asserted that certain articles,

allegedly used as weapons during the incident, were seized in

the presence of independent witnesses. However, during their

depositions, PW4 and PW10, who were cited as witnesses to

the seizure, explicitly disavowed any knowledge of the alleged

seizure. PW4 denied putting his thumb impression on the

seizure list and stated that he knew nothing about the

incident, while PW10 admitted that he had merely signed the

seizure list at the instance of the police and had no knowledge

of the articles seized. Such evidence renders the prosecution’s

claim regarding the seizure of the offending weapons highly

doubtful and casts serious doubt on the authenticity of the

seizure proceedings.

60. Additionally, the prosecution repeatedly claimed that large

mobs, varying from 200 to 400 persons, were present at the

place of occurrence. Despite this, the prosecution failed to
32

C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

examine a single person from among such crowds as an

independent witness to corroborate their case. The absence of

testimony from any person who was allegedly present at the

scene further weakens the prosecution’s account and

underscores the lack of corroborative evidence to establish the

occurrence of the incident.

61. In light of these deficiencies, it is apparent that the learned

Trial Court placed undue reliance solely upon the testimony of

police personnel without any independent corroboration.

Convictions based solely on the statements of interested

witnesses, when such statements are fraught with

contradictions and omissions, cannot be sustained under the

principles of criminal law. The findings recorded by the learned

Trial Court are therefore replete with conjectures and

surmises, rather than being founded upon evidence beyond

reasonable doubt.

62. Moreover, the alleged offending weapons, which were claimed

to have been used by the accused, were never produced

before the Court nor marked as material exhibits. The non-

production of these critical articles amounts to a material

irregularity and demonstrates a failure on the part of the

prosecution to establish essential aspects of its case.
33

C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

63. In view of the foregoing discussions, it is evident that the

impugned judgment and order of conviction are vitiated by

material irregularities, illegality, and a failure to appreciate the

evidentiary lacunae in the prosecution case. The conviction

recorded by the learned Trial Court cannot be sustained under

the eyes of law and is, therefore, liable to be set aside, and

the appellants deserve to be acquitted of all charges levelled

against them.

64. So, the instant appeal be and the same is hereby allowed,

65. Accordingly, the impugned judgment and order of conviction

passed by the learned Trial Court dated 21.05.2005 passed by

the learned Additional Sessions Judge, 5th Fast Track Court,

Malda in connection with Sessions Case No. 95/03

corresponding to Sessions Trial No. 19(4)04 arising out of

English Bazar P.S. Case No. 68/93 dated 09.03.93 (G.R. Case

No. 303/93) is hereby set aside.

66. The appellants are on bail. They are to be discharged from

their respective bail bonds and be set at liberty if they are not

wanted in connection with other case.

67. In compliance with the mandate of Section 437A of the Code

of Criminal Procedure (corresponding to Section 483 of the

Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023), the appellant is

required to execute bail bonds with adequate sureties. Such
34

C.R.A. 396 of 2005 2026:CHC-AS:386

bonds, upon being furnished, shall remain operative and

binding for a period of six months, thereby ensuring the

availability of the appellant to appear before the higher forum,

if so required, and safeguarding the proper administration of

justice.

68. Let a copy of this judgment along with the Trial Court record

be sent down to the Trial Court immediately.

69. Urgent Photostat certified copy of this order, if applied for, be

given to the parties on payment of requisite fees.

(Prasenjit Biswas, J.)



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