Alok Yadav@Aalok Yadev vs State Of Nct Of Delhi on 25 May, 2026

    0
    21
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Delhi High Court

    Alok Yadav@Aalok Yadev vs State Of Nct Of Delhi on 25 May, 2026

    Author: Swarana Kanta Sharma

    Bench: Swarana Kanta Sharma

                              $~
                              *      IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
                              %                                 Judgment reserved on: 06.05.2026
                                                             Judgment pronounced on: 25.05.2026
                                                               Judgment uploaded on: 26.05.2026
                              +      CRL.A. 576/2025 & CRL.M.(BAIL) 953/2025
                                     ALOK YADAV@ AALOK YADEV                          .....Appellant
                                                        Through:    Mr. Durga Prasad Shukla,
                                                                    Advocate.
                                                   versus
                                     STATE OF NCT OF DELHI                          .....Respondent
                                                        Through:    Mr. Manoj Pant, APP for
                                                                    State.
                                                                    Ms. Sanya Kumar (DHCLSC),
                                                                    with Mr. Harsh Jain & Mr.
                                                                    Chiranjeev Singh, Advocates
                                                                    for the victim.
                              CORAM:
                              HON'BLE DR. JUSTICE SWARANA KANTA SHARMA
                                                          JUDGMENT
    

    DR. SWARANA KANTA SHARMA, J

    1. The appellant has, by way of this appeal, assailed the judgment
    dated 15.02.2025 [hereafter ‗impugned judgment’] and order on
    sentence dated 27.02.2025 [hereafter ‗impugned order on sentence’],
    passed by the learned Additional Sessions Special Judge (FTSC)
    (POCSO), South-East District, Saket Courts, Delhi [hereafter ‗Trial
    Court’], whereby he has been convicted in SC No. 119/2020, arising

    SPONSORED

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 1 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    out of FIR No. 21/2020, registered at Police Station Sarita Vihar,
    Delhi, for the commission of offence punishable under Sections
    376
    /506/34 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 [hereafter ‗IPC‘] and
    Section 6 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act,
    2012 [hereafter ‗POCSO Act‘].

    FACTUAL BACKDROP

    2. The FIR in the present case was registered on the basis of a
    written complaint lodged by the father of the victim child, alleging
    therein that in August 2017, he had come to Delhi along with his wife
    ‗K’ and their minor daughter ‗S’ (victim) in search of employment. In
    Delhi, he had become acquainted with one Alok Yadav (the appellant
    herein) who had arranged private jobs for him and his wife, and
    thereafter they had started residing in a house at Jasola, Sarita Vihar.
    It was alleged that in October 2018, when the victim child expressed
    her wish to return to her native place, the complainant had requested
    his father to take her back to the village. After the victim had been
    sent home, the co-accused ‗K’ and the appellant Alok insisted on
    bringing her back. When the complainant asked his mother (the
    victim’s grandmother) to send the child back to Delhi, the victim
    refused and, while tearfully narrating to her grandmother, disclosed
    the acts committed by the appellant and her mother ‗K’. She revealed
    that whenever her father was away on night duty, the appellant and
    co-accused ‗K’ would sleep together on the same bed and made her
    sleep beside them. They would then engage in indecent acts (gande

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 2 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    kaam) in her presence, and the appellant herein would also commit
    such indecent acts (gande kaam) with her. She further stated that
    whenever she resisted, her mother would beat her and compel her to
    submit to the appellant, saying that he was the one running the
    household. She also narrated that when she threatened to disclose the
    incident to her father, both the appellant and her mother assaulted her
    and threatened to kill her father. It was alleged that after learning of
    these disclosures, the complainant and his parents were devastated,
    while the victim child was deeply shocked and became fearful at the
    very sight of men. It was alleged that the appellant, with the active
    assistance of the mother ‗K’, had repeatedly subjected victim ‗S’ to
    sexual assault. On these allegations, the present FIR was registered
    on 18.01.2020.

    3. During the course of investigation, the victim was medically
    examined at AIIMS Hospital, Delhi, her statement under Section 164
    of the Cr.P.C. was recorded before the learned Magistrate, and the
    accused persons were arrested. After completion of investigation,
    charge sheet was filed before the concerned Court, pursuant to which
    charges were framed against the accused persons.

    4. During the trial, the prosecution examined 10 witnesses to
    prove its case. Thereafter, statements of accused persons were
    recorded under Section 313 of Cr.P.C. but no defense evidence was
    led by them. After hearing final arguments, the learned Trial Court
    was pleased to convict the appellant for commission of offence

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 3 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    punishable under Section 6 of POCSO Act and Section 376AB of
    IPC, whereas the co-accused ‗K’ was convicted for commission of
    offence under Section 6 read with Section 17 as well as Section 21 of
    the POCSO Act, vide impugned judgment dated 15.02.2025.

    5. By way of order on sentence dated 27.02.2025, the learned
    Trial Court sentenced the appellant herein to undergo rigorous
    imprisonment for a period of 25 years and fine of Rs. 50,000/- for
    offence under Section 6 of POCSO Act.

    6. Aggrieved therefrom, the appellant has preferred the present
    appeal.

    7. It is also pertinent to note, at this stage, that the appeal against
    conviction preferred by the co-accused ‗K’ (mother of the victim)
    was dismissed by this Court vide judgment dated 18.09.2025 passed
    in Crl.Appeal No. 829/2025.

    SUBMISSIONS BEFORE THE COURT

    8. The learned counsel appearing for the appellant has argued
    that the prosecution case suffers from an inordinate and unexplained
    delay in reporting the matter to the police for registration of the FIR.
    It is submitted that the alleged incidents pertain to the period 2017-
    2018, whereas the FIR was lodged only on 18.01.2020. It is
    contended that the victim had been residing with her grandparents
    since October 2018 and, therefore, there was no plausible reason for
    the delay of more than one year in reporting the matter to the police.

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 4 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43

    It is further argued that the medical evidence does not support the
    prosecution case. The learned counsel submits that the medical
    examination of the victim was conducted nearly two years after the
    alleged incidents and, therefore, the MLC has no evidentiary value
    insofar as the alleged sexual assault is concerned. It is pointed out
    that despite allegations of repeated sexual assault over a prolonged
    period, the medical examination did not reveal any hymenal rupture,
    old injuries, scars, or signs of force. It is also contended that there is
    complete absence of any forensic or DNA evidence connecting the
    appellant with the alleged offence. The learned counsel has also
    assailed the testimony of PW-1 by contending that there are material
    contradictions in her version regarding the first disclosure of the
    incident. It is argued that at different stages of investigation, the
    victim has claimed to have first informed different family members,
    which makes the prosecution story doubtful and suggests that the
    witness had been tutored. It is further submitted that the victim had
    initially described the bed on which the alleged acts took place as a
    single bed, whereas later she stated that it was a double bed in a room
    measuring 9×9 feet, which is a material improvement affecting the
    credibility of her testimony. It is next argued that PW-2, the
    grandmother of the victim, is not an eyewitness to the incident in
    question and her testimony is entirely hearsay in nature. He further
    argues that, while the victim has disclosed the incidents in the year
    2018, PW-2 testified that she was informed only in November 2019

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 5 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    about the offence, which creates inconsistency in the prosecution
    story. The learned counsel has further contended that PW-4, the
    father of the victim has admitted to having strained matrimonial
    relations with co-accused ‗K’, and this demonstrates that the present
    case is a result of family and matrimonial disputes. It is argued that
    despite the victim allegedly being in the custody of her grandparents
    since 2018, PW-4 did not immediately approach the police, which is
    unnatural conduct. Lastly, it is argued that the prosecution case is
    improbable and unreliable inasmuch as the alleged acts are stated to
    have occurred in a small shared room occupied by multiple persons.
    It is submitted that the delay in lodging the FIR, absence of medical
    and forensic evidence, contradictions in testimonies of the witnesses
    and the prosecutrix herself, in the background of admitted family
    disputes cumulatively create serious doubt regarding the prosecution
    case. On these grounds, it is prayed that the appellant be acquitted as
    the prosecution has failed to prove the charges beyond reasonable
    doubt.

    9. The learned APP for the State, along with the learned counsel
    appearing for the victim child, has argued that the offence in question
    is extremely grave and serious in nature, considering that the victim
    was merely about 10-11 years old at the relevant time and was
    repeatedly subjected to aggravated penetrative sexual assault by the
    present appellant. It is submitted that the appellant had committed the
    said acts with the active assistance of co-accused ‗K’ i.e. the mother

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 6 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    of the victim child, who already stands convicted vide judgment of
    this Court dated 18.09.2025. It is further argued that the testimony of
    the victim is wholly reliable, categorical, and consistent on all
    material particulars. The victim has consistently narrated the
    incidents of sexual assaults in her statements recorded under Section
    161
    of Cr.P.C., Section 164 of Cr.P.C., as well as in her deposition
    before the learned Trial Court. It is contended that despite detailed
    and lengthy cross-examination, the defence could not elicit any
    material contradiction going to the root of the prosecution case. It is
    also argued that the appellant, in his statement recorded under
    Section 313 of Cr.P.C., has merely denied the allegations by taking a
    plea that he has been falsely implicated by the father of the victim as
    he was aware of the consensual relationship between him and co-
    accused ‗K’. It is further argued that the testimony of the victim child
    is credible and trustworthy and, therefore, does not require
    independent corroboration for sustaining conviction. It is argued that
    the absence of medical or forensic evidence is not fatal once the
    ocular testimony of the prosecutrix inspires confidence. In any event,
    it is contended that the testimony of the victim stands duly
    corroborated by the testimonies of PW-2 (paternal grandmother),
    PW-4 (father), and PW-6 (paternal grandfather). Particular emphasis
    has been laid upon the testimony of PW-2, who categorically deposed
    that when she had asked the victim why she was unwilling to return
    to Delhi, the victim had disclosed that the appellant had repeatedly

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 7 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    established physical relations with her and had threatened her not to
    reveal the incidents to anyone. The said version stands corroborated
    by PW-4 (biological father of the prosecutrix) and PW-6 (paternal
    grandfather of the prosecutrix). It is also contended that the
    discrepancies pointed out by the defence counsel, such as regarding
    the nature of the bed or the person to whom the victim first disclosed
    the incidents, are minor in nature and do not affect the core of the
    prosecution case. It is argued that a child witness recounting
    traumatic incidents after lapse of time cannot be expected to narrate
    every minute detail with photographic precision, and such minor
    inconsistencies are natural and inconsequential. As regards the delay
    in registration of the FIR, it is contended that the same stands
    sufficiently explained from the evidence on record. It is argued that
    the victim had disclosed the incidents only when she was being asked
    to return to Delhi and reside again with the appellant and co-accused
    ‗K’, whereafter she broke down and narrated the incidents to her
    grandmother. It is further submitted that the tender age of the victim,
    coupled with the surrounding family circumstances and the illness of
    PW-2, adequately explain the delay, and therefore, the same cannot
    be treated as fatal to the prosecution case. Lastly, it is argued that
    once the foundational facts constituting the offences under the
    POCSO Act stand established, the statutory presumptions under
    Section 29 and 30 of the POCSO Act are attracted against the
    appellant, which he clearly has failed to rebut. Therefore, it is prayed

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 8 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    that the present appeal be dismissed.

    10. This Court has heard arguments addressed by the learned
    counsel for the appellant as well as the learned APP for the State and
    the learned counsel for the victim, and has perused the material
    available on record.

    ANALYSIS & FINDINGS

    11. The facts of this case are stark, wherein a 10-11 year old girl
    was subjected to repeated sexual assault by the appellant, which was
    allowed and facilitated by her own mother (co-accused ‗K’). Before
    examining the case set up by the prosecution, it is apposite to first
    take note of the relevant legal provisions under the POCSO Act.

    Relevant Legal Provisions

    12. The offences for which the appellant has been convicted by the
    learned Trial Court are Section 376AB of the IPC and Section 6 of
    the POCSO Act. Section 376AB of the IPC prescribes punishment
    for the offence of rape committed upon a girl below twelve years of
    age, and the provision reads as follows:

    ―376AB. Punishment for rape on woman under twelve
    years of age.–

    Whoever, commits rape on a woman under twelve years of age
    shall be punished with rigorous imprisonment for a term which
    shall not be less than twenty years, but which may extend to
    imprisonment for life, which shall mean imprisonment for the
    remainder of that person’s natural life, and with fine or with
    death:

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 9 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43

    Provided that such fine shall be just and reasonable to meet the
    medical expenses and rehabilitation of the victim:
    Provided further that any fine imposed under this section shall
    be paid to the victim.‖

    13. Further, Section 6 of the POCSO Act prescribes punishment
    for aggravated penetrative sexual assault committed upon a child.
    The said provision reads as follows:

    ―6. Punishment for aggravated penetrative sexual
    assault.–

    (1) Whoever commits aggravated penetrative sexual assault
    shall be punished with rigorous imprisonment for a term which
    shall not be less than twenty years, but which may extend to
    imprisonment for life, which shall mean imprisonment for the
    remainder of natural life of that person and shall also be liable
    to fine, or with death.

    (2) The fine imposed under sub-section (1) shall be just and
    reasonable and paid to the victim to meet the medical expenses
    and rehabilitation of such victim.‖

    14. Lastly, Sections 29 and 30 of the POCSO Act, being the
    presumptive provisions relevant to the adjudication of the present
    case, are also required to be considered. The said provisions read as
    under:

    ―29. Presumption as to certain offences.

    Where a person is prosecuted for committing or abetting or
    attempting to commit any offence under sections 3, 5, 7 and
    section 9 of this Act, the Special Court shall presume, that such
    person has committed or abetted or attempted to commit the
    offence, as the case may be unless the contrary is proved.‖

    ―30. Presumption of culpable mental state.

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 10 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43

    (1) In any prosecution for any offence under this Act which
    requires a culpable mental state on the part of the accused, the
    Special Court shall presume the existence of such mental state
    but it shall be a defence for the accused to prove the fact that he
    had no such mental state with respect to the act charged as an
    offence in that prosecution.

    (2) For the purposes of this section, a fact is said to be proved
    only when the Special Court believes it to exist beyond
    reasonable doubt and not merely when its existence is
    established by a preponderance of probability.

    Explanation.- In this section, ―culpable mental state‖ includes
    intention, motive, knowledge of a fact and the belief in, or
    reason to believe, a fact.‖

    Age of the Victim

    15. Firstly, insofar as the age of the victim is concerned, this Court
    notes that the prosecution has led evidence to establish that the victim
    was a minor at the relevant time. PW-3, Dr. Pramod Kumar Mishra,
    Principal/In-charge, Composite Ucch Prathmic Vidyalya, Bairi,
    Ganesh Pur, Shiksha Chhetra Jahangir Ganj, had produced the school
    admission register and proved the entry relating to the victim’s date
    of birth as 30.11.2007. The learned Trial Court has rightly recorded
    that on the basis of the said testimony, the date of birth of the victim
    stands proved, and that the offence in question was committed during
    the period 2017 to 2018, and therefore, the victim was only about 10
    to 11 years of age at the relevant time. Significantly, the testimony
    of PW-3 has remained unchallenged, since the accused persons did
    not cross-examine the said witness on any aspect, despite opportunity
    given nor was any argument was raised to dispute either the
    authenticity of the school records or the fact of the victim being a

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 11 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    minor at the time of alleged incident.

    16. Accordingly, this Court is of the opinion that the prosecution
    has duly proved that the victim was a child within the meaning of
    Section 2(1)(d) of the POCSO Act at the time of the commission of
    the offences. Thus, the provisions of the POCSO Act stand fully
    attracted in the present case. Therefore, in this regard the findings of
    the learned Trial Court does not suffer from any infirmity or
    illegality.

    Appreciation of Prosecution Evidence

    17. In the above backdrop, this Court finds that it has been a
    consistent case of the prosecution, as evident from the testimonies of
    the prosecution witnesses, that in August 2017, the victim child,
    along with the co-accused/mother ‗K’, her father (PW-4), and her
    other siblings, had come to Delhi and had started living in a rented
    accommodation at Jasola, Sarita Vihar. The biological father of the
    prosecutrix had started working as security guard while the co-
    accused/mother ‗K’ had joined Apollo Hospital, Delhi. Further, as
    alleged, the accused/appellant Alok had played an instrumental role
    in securing employment for both of them in Delhi, and he used to
    reside in the same building in Delhi as that of the family of the
    victim.

    18. PW-1, the victim child, who was examined by the learned
    Trial Court, has deposed that the appellant Alok used to often visit

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 12 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    the house of the victim, both when her father (PW-4) used to be
    present in the house and in his absence. However, insofar as the
    alleged incidents are concerned, the victim child has deposed that the
    same used to take place in the absence of her father, when he used to
    be at his place of work. She has specifically deposed that the
    appellant used to remove her clothes, touch her private parts and
    insert his penis into her vagina. She has also deposed that upon her
    protesting to such acts, the appellant used to threaten her by saying
    that her father and brother would be killed if she disclosed about
    these incidents to anyone. Pertinently, she has also highlighted the
    role of the co-accused/mother ‗K’, in facilitating the commission of
    the said offence. In her testimony, she has categorically stated that
    the co-accused ‗K’ used to silence her voice whenever she raised an
    alarm, beat her and instead asked her to let the the appellant do
    whatever he was doing, saying that ―ye sab nahi hoga to ghar ka
    kharch kaise chalega‖. She has further deposed that the appellant
    used to rape her during the day time as well as in the night, regardless
    of whether her mother was awake or asleep. She also testified that the
    co-accused ‗K’ used to sleep beside the appellant, and the appellant
    used to sleep between her and the co-accused ‗K’. She also stated that
    she had disclosed these incidents to her grandmother, bua and chacha
    and thereafter, she was brought to Delhi for lodging the FIR. In her
    cross-examination, she has clarified that on the said bed, four people
    used to sleep and the sequence of the same was – the victim,

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 13 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    appellant Alok, co-accused ‗K’, and the victim’s brother. She also
    clarified that her father had taken her to his village in October 2018.

    19. Having considered the testimony of PW-1, the testimony of
    PW-2, i.e. the victim’s grandmother, reflects that she was the first
    person who had been informed of the alleged incidents by the victim.
    She has deposed that her son (PW-4), along with his wife (co-accused
    ‗K’) and two children including the victim, had shifted to Delhi in
    August 2017. PW-2 has stated that she was seriously ill since
    November 2017 and was diagnosed with cancer in February 2019,
    whereafter she remained continuously ill and had to be operated upon
    twice. In the meantime, in October 2018, the victim had been sent to
    her maternal grandmother’s home first, after which she was brought
    to the home of PW-2 i.e. her paternal grandmother. PW-2 has
    deposed that her medical situation remained critical till November-
    December 2019, as she was undergoing chemotherapy; and
    thereafter, when she had asked the victim child to return to Delhi at
    the residence of her parents, the victim had informed her of the
    alleged incidents of commission of sexual assault upon her by the
    appellant Alok and co-accused ‗K’. Thereafter, PW-2 had called the
    victim’s father and informed him about the details disclosed by the
    victim. As deposed by PW-2, it was pursuant thereto that she along
    with her husband (PW-6), the victim (PW-1), and the victim’s father
    (PW-4), had reached Delhi on 18.01.2020 and reported the incident
    to the police.

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 14 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43

    20. At this stage, it would be material to take note of the testimony
    of the grandfather of the victim, who was examined as PW-6 before
    the Trial Court. In his testimony, he has narrated the sequence of
    events, which corroborates the version of his wife, i.e. the victim’s
    grandmother. He has specifically deposed that he had brought the
    victim child from the house of her maternal grandmother, to his
    home, and that his wife i.e. PW-2 had been informed by the victim of
    the acts committed by the appellant Alok as well as the co-accused
    ‗K’s role therein. Furthermore, as deposed by him, they had informed
    the victim’s father about the facts disclosed by the victim child and
    thereafter, four of them had come to Delhi to lodge the FIR in
    question.

    21. Now, the fourth material witness, whose testimony is to be
    considered, is PW-4 i.e. the father of the victim child. He is also the
    complainant in the case, at whose instance the FIR was registered. He
    has supported the prosecution’s case and has deposed that he was
    informed by his mother (i.e. PW-2) that the victim child had
    disclosed to her that she had been sexually abused by the appellant, in
    the presence of the co-accused ‗K’. Thereafter, he had come to Delhi
    along with his parents and the victim child and had got the FIR
    registered.

    22. Thus, the broad facts and allegations, as clearly emerging from
    the testimonies of PW-1, PW-2, PW-4 and PW-6 are that:

    ● The appellant was closely associated with the family of the

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 15 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    victim who had won their trust as he had been instrumental in
    getting employment to the parents of the victim, lived in the
    same building, and frequently visited the house of the victim.

    ● The appellant was having consensual sexual relations with the
    victim’s mother (co-accused ‗K’), and that the victim’s mother
    and the appellant used to sleep beside her on the same bed,
    with the appellant sleeping between the victim and co-accused
    ‗K’.

    ● The victim (PW-1) has categorically alleged that the appellant
    repeatedly committed penetrative sexual assault on her, at her
    home in Delhi, whenever her father was away for work.

    ● The victim has further deposed that her mother (co-accused
    ‗K’), facilitated the commission of offence by silencing her,
    beating her when she resisted, and telling her to let the
    appellant do as he wished since otherwise, they would not be
    able to meet household expenses.

    ● The victim left Delhi in October 2018; first stayed with her
    maternal grandmother, and thereafter was brought to the house
    of her paternal grandparents.

    ● During this period, her grandmother (PW-2) was seriously ill
    and was undergoing treatment for cancer; later, when the
    grandmother asked the victim to return to her parents’ house in
    Delhi, the victim disclosed the incidents of sexual assault

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 16 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    committed upon her by the accused persons.

    ● The victim’s grandmother (PW-2) subsequently disclosed the
    incidents to her husband i.e. victim’s grandfather (PW-6), who
    corroborated in his testimony that PW-2 had informed him of
    the disclosures made by the victim.

    ● Both grandparents thereafter informed the victim’s father (PW-

    4), following which all three of them brought the victim to
    Delhi on 18.01.2020 and got the FIR registered.

    23. The above-noted prosecution witnesses were cross-examined
    at length, and several questions were put to them to impeach their
    testimony. However, despite some minor contradictions, their
    testimonies have remained firm and consistent on the material aspects
    of the prosecution’s case.

    24. The victim, both in her statement recorded under Section 164
    of Cr.P.C. as well as in her testimony recorded before the learned
    Trial Court, which is considerably detailed, has remained categorical
    and consistent that she was subjected to repeated sexual abuse over a
    period of time by the appellant Alok. She has also consistently
    alleged that her mother ‗K’, was fully aware of such acts being
    committed by the present appellant, yet instead of intervening, she
    chose to scold and beat her whenever she protested.

    25. Thus, in view of the testimonies discussed above, a prima facie
    case stands established by the prosecution. Consequently, the

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 17 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    statutory presumption under Section 29 of the POCSO Act would be
    attracted against the appellant herein, shifting the burden upon him to
    rebut the same with cogent material/evidence.

    Defense of Accused

    26. The accused persons, in their statements recorded under
    Section 313 of Cr.P.C., denied the allegations levelled against them.
    Co-accused ‗K’, in her statement recorded under Section 313 of
    Cr.P.C., alleged that PW-6, i.e. the victim’s grandfather, had been
    insisting that she enter into sexual relations with him and that, upon
    her refusal, she had been falsely implicated in the present case. In
    contrast, the present appellant Alok stated in his statement recorded
    under Section 313 of Cr.P.C. that he was in a consensual sexual
    relationship with co-accused ‗K’, and that her husband (PW-4) was
    aware of the same, owing to which he had falsely implicated him.

    27. However, this Court notes that during the cross-examination of
    PW-4 (victim’s father), he had categorically denied the suggestion
    put to him by the defense counsel that the appellant Alok had been
    falsely implicated on account of any alleged intimate relationship
    between him and co-accused ‗K’. Further, insofar as the allegations
    levelled by co-accused ‗K’ against PW-6 are concerned, this Court
    also notes that no such suggestion was ever put to PW-6 during his
    cross-examination. Thus, the defence sought to be raised by the
    accused persons is clearly unsupported by any material brought on

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 18 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    record. This Court also notes that the accused persons had adopted
    mutually contradictory stands before the learned Trial Court. While
    co-accused ‗K’ attempted to attribute false implication in the present
    case to the conduct of PW-6, the present appellant attributed the same
    to the alleged matrimonial discord arising out of his purported
    relationship with co-accused ‗K’. In this Court’s opinion, these
    inconsistent defences, taken by the accused persons inter se,
    materially weaken the credibility of their case. It is also pertinent to
    note that the appellant Alok did not lead any defence evidence in
    support of his case.

    28. In contrast, the statements of the victim have remained
    consistent on all material particulars/aspects throughout the
    proceedings and are also corroborated by the testimonies of PW-2,
    PW-4, and PW-6 regarding the details of the incidents of the sexual
    assault, disclosed by the victim and the surrounding circumstances.
    No cogent evidence was led by the appellant to rebut the statutory
    presumption under Section 29 of the POCSO Act. Apart from bare
    denial, no substantive defence was raised, nor was any defence
    witness examined in support of the case set up by the appellant.

    29. The learned counsel for the appellant herein has contended that
    the victim child had failed to disclose the alleged incidents at the
    earliest possible opportunity. However, in the opinion of this Court,
    the delay in this disclosure does not affect the credibility of the
    prosecution’s case. At the relevant time, the victim was barely around

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 19 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    10-11 years of age, living in an environment where the very person
    expected to protect her i.e. her own mother was instead facilitating
    the appellant in committing the offence in question. In such
    circumstances, it would be wholly unrealistic to expect a child of
    such tender age to muster the courage to promptly disclose the
    repeated sexual abuse she was subjected to. Her eventual disclosure
    to her grandmother and thereafter to other family members, when she
    found a safe environment away from the accused persons, appears to
    be both natural and credible. Thus, the delayed disclosure of incidents
    of sexual assault made by the victim child cannot be treated as an
    infirmity in the prosecution’s case.

    30. In addition, it has been argued on behalf of the appellant that
    the delay of more than a year in registration of FIR makes the
    prosecution’s case doubtful. This Court however finds that the delay
    has been satisfactorily explained in the evidence of prosecution
    witnesses. It stands established that PW-2, the grandmother of the
    victim, to whom the victim first disclosed the incidents, was herself
    seriously ill, suffering from cancer, and undergoing surgeries and
    chemotherapy during the relevant period. PW-6, the grandfather of
    the victim, was primarily occupied in taking care of her. The
    complainant PW-4 (victim’s father) was wholly unaware of the
    incidents of sexual assault until he was informed by PW-2. PW-2 was
    informed about the incidents by the victim child as soon as her
    medical condition had improved, and especially when the victim was

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 20 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    asked to return to her parents’ house in Delhi. Thereafter, the present
    FIR came to be registered.

    31. The Hon’ble Supreme Court has consistently emphasized that
    delay in disclosure and delay in registration of FIR, particularly in
    cases of sexual assault upon children, must be considered in the light
    of the sensitivities involved. In State of Himachal Pradesh v. Sanjay
    Kumar
    : (2017) 2 SCC 51, the Hon’ble Supreme Court has observed
    as under:

    ―30…..At the same time, after taking all due precautions which
    are necessary, when it is found that the prosecution version is
    worth believing, the case is to be dealt with all sensitivity that
    is needed in such cases. In such a situation one has to take
    stock of the realities of life as well. Various studies show that
    in more than 80% cases of such abuses, perpetrators have
    acquaintance with the victims who are not strangers. The
    danger is more within than outside. Most of the time,
    acquaintance rapes, when the culprit is a family member, are
    not even reported for various reasons, not difficult to fathom.
    The strongest among those is the fear of attracting social
    stigma. Another deterring factor which many times prevents
    such victims or their families to lodge a complaint is that they
    find whole process of criminal justice system extremely
    intimidating coupled with absence of victim protection
    mechanism…‖

    32. Thus, in the facts and circumstances of the present case, and
    considering the family dynamics, fear and trauma which the victim
    must have endured, and her vulnerable age, this Court finds that the
    delay in registration of the FIR is fully explained and does not in any
    way corrode the credibility of the prosecution case.

    33. Another contention raised on behalf of the appellant is that the

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 21 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    victim had materially improved her statement regarding the bed on
    which she used to sleep with the appellant and co-accused ‗K’. It has
    been argued that she had initially described it as a single bed and had
    later clarified it to be a double bed. This Court finds that such a
    discrepancy is minor and insignificant in nature. The testimony of a
    child witness cannot be expected to be accurate in such minute
    details, especially when she was recounting traumatic events from an
    impressionable age. At that age, it is highly probable that she would
    not have known or understood the distinction between a single and a
    double bed. What is material is that she has consistently deposed that
    she used to sleep on the same bed with the appellant and co-accused
    mother ‗K’, when the appellant used to commit sexual assault upon
    her. When weighed against the consistent, cogent, and categorical
    testimony of the victim, coupled with the corroborative statements of
    the grandparents and father, such minor discrepancies pale into
    insignificance. The learned Trial Court has, therefore, rightly rejected
    this contention of the appellant, and this Court finds no reason to take
    a different view.

    34. Furthermore, it has been contended on behalf of the appellant
    that there is no medical evidence in this case to support the
    allegations of sexual assault. However, it is material to note that the
    absence of any medical evidence, such as injuries on the private parts
    of the victim, is explained by the fact that the victim had disclosed
    the incidents much later, i.e. more than a year after they had taken

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 22 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    place, for the reasons already noted above, to her grandmother, and
    the FIR was eventually registered in January 2020. By that stage, it
    was neither possible nor reasonable to expect any medical evidence
    of injuries etc. to be present. This Court is also of the view that when
    consistent ocular testimony of the victim child is available, lack of
    medical evidence can be no ground to discredit her version [Ref:

    Deepak Kumar Sahu v. State of Chhattisgarh: 2025 SCC OnLine
    SC 1610].

    35. Equally relevant is the settled legal principle that conviction on
    the sole testimony of the victim is sustainable, provided her evidence
    is of sterling quality, free from material inconsistencies or inherent
    improbabilities [Ref: State NCT of Delhi v. Pankaj Chaudhary:

    (2019) 11 SCC 575]. It is also trite law that minor inconsistencies,
    especially in the testimony of a child victim of sexual assault, do not
    affect the substratum of the prosecution’s case. [Ref: State of Punjab
    v. Gurmit Singh
    : (1996) 2 SCC 384; Pappu v. State of Uttar
    Pradesh
    : 2022 SCC OnLine SC 176].

    Conclusion : Case Proven Beyond Reasonable Doubt

    36. In light of the discussion made above, this Court is of the
    opinion that the evidence, both oral and documentary, clearly
    establishes that the victim was a child of tender age at the relevant
    time and that she was repeatedly subjected to penetrative sexual
    assault by the present appellant Alok over a considerable period of

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 23 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    time. To reiterate, the victim child has consistently deposed that
    whenever her father used to leave for work, the appellant would
    commit penetrative sexual assault upon her against her wishes, and
    would threaten her with dire consequences if she disclosed the
    incidents to anyone. Her testimony on material particulars has
    remained clear, cogent, and unshaken throughout the course of trial.
    The co-accused ‗K’, mother of the victim child, who was expected to
    protect and care for the child, instead facilitated the commission of
    the offences by the appellant. Her conviction has already been upheld
    by this Court.

    37. Therefore, the consistent version of the victim regarding the
    acts committed by the appellant, coupled with the surrounding
    circumstances and the testimonies of PW-2, PW-4, and PW-6, clearly
    establishes that the victim child was subjected to repeated aggravated
    penetrative sexual assault while she was only about 10-11 years of
    age.

    38. It is pertinent to note that once the prosecution had laid the
    foundational facts by proving the age of the victim, the commission
    of the sexual acts, and the involvement of the appellant, the statutory
    presumptions under Sections 29 and 30 of the POCSO Act
    necessarily came into operation, as already discussed hereinabove.
    The burden thus shifted upon the appellant to rebut the said
    presumptions by leading cogent evidence or furnishing a credible
    explanation. However, no material was brought on record by the

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 24 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    appellant to probabilise his defence or to weaken the prosecution
    case. No defence evidence was led, nor was any circumstance
    established which could rebut the statutory presumptions operating
    against him.

    39. In this backdrop, this Court is of the considered view that the
    essential ingredients of the offences alleged stand duly established
    beyond reasonable doubt. The testimony of the victim inspires
    confidence, is natural and trustworthy, and finds adequate
    corroboration from the surrounding circumstances as well as the
    testimonies of the other prosecution witnesses. The minor
    discrepancies pointed out by the defence are insignificant in nature
    and do not affect the core of the prosecution’s case. Thus, this Court
    finds that the charges for offence under Section 6 of POCSO Act and
    Section 376AB of IPC are proved beyond reasonable doubt against
    the appellant.

    40. As regards the quantum of sentence, this Court notes that while
    the minimum prescribed punishment for the offence under Section 6
    of the POCSO Act is twenty years and the maximum is imprisonment
    for life, the learned Trial Court has awarded a sentence of twenty-five
    years’ of rigorous imprisonment to the appellant as well as to the co-
    accused ‗K’. While doing so, the learned Trial Court has observed
    that the gravity of the acts committed had caused deep alarm in
    society and irreparable trauma to the victim; and that, in the interest
    of justice, a balance has to be maintained between the reformative

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 25 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43
    and deterrent theories of punishment. The learned Trial Court has
    also emphasized that the extent of punishment must depend on the
    atrocity of the crime, the conduct of the offenders, and the helpless
    state of the victim, and that appropriate punishment should reflect not
    only the rights of the accused but also the rights of the victim and
    society at large, thereby conveying the community’s abhorrence of
    such crimes.

    41. This Court is in agreement with the aforesaid observations.
    Considering the nature of the allegations and the fact that the minor
    victim child was subjected to repeated sexual assault within the
    supposed safety of her own home, with the active participation of her
    mother, no leniency is warranted in the matter while considering the
    quantum of sentence. The punishment awarded by the learned Trial
    Court is therefore just, appropriate, and commensurate with the
    gravity of the offences proved against the appellant.

    42. In view of the foregoing observations, the impugned judgment
    of conviction as well as order on sentence is upheld.

    43. The appeal is accordingly dismissed. Pending application, if
    any, also stands disposed of.

    44. The judgment be uploaded on the website forthwith.

    DR. SWARANA KANTA SHARMA, J
    MAY 25, 2026/TD/RB

    CRL.A. 576/2025 Page 26 of 26
    Signature Not Verified
    Digitally Signed
    By:ZEENAT PRAVEEN
    Signing Date:26.05.2026
    15:01:43



    Source link

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here