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HomeHigh CourtPatna High CourtKulbansh Singh vs The State Of Bihar on 6 February, 2026

Kulbansh Singh vs The State Of Bihar on 6 February, 2026


Patna High Court

Kulbansh Singh vs The State Of Bihar on 6 February, 2026

         IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT PATNA
                      CRIMINAL APPEAL (SJ) No.377 of 2003

     ======================================================
1.    Kulbansh Singh S/O Ambika Singh R/O Vill.- Bahera, P.S.- Sonhan, Dist.-
      Kaimur
2.   Ramswarath Singh @ Arbind Singh S/O Ambika Singh R/O Vill.- Bahera,
     P.S.- Sonhan, Dist.- Kaimur


                                                               ... ... Appellants.
                                      Versus
     The State of Bihar.

                                               ... ... Respondent.
     ======================================================
     Appearance :
     For the Appellant/s    :     Ms. Surya Nilambari, Amicus Curiae
     For the Respondent/s   :     Mrs. Anita Kumari Singh, APP
     ======================================================
     CORAM: HONOURABLE JUSTICE SMT. SONI SHRIVASTAVA
                         ORAL JUDGMENT
      Date : 06-02-2026

                        The present appeal under Section 374 (2) of the

      Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter referred to as

      'Cr.P.C.') has been preferred against the judgment of conviction

      and order of sentence dated 30.07.2003 passed by the Court of

      learned 1stAdditional Sessions Judge, Bhabua in Sessions Trial

      No.166/97 of 1987/1998, arising out of Bhabua (Sonhan) P.S.

      Case No.29/87, whereby and whereunder the appellants have

      been convicted under Section 307 of the Indian Penal Code

      (hereinafter referred to as the 'IPC') and sentenced to undergo

      rigorous imprisonment for five years. The appellants have been

      further sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for three

      years for conviction under Section 27 of the Arms Act.
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                         2. From a perusal of the order-sheets, it appears that

         the appeal with regard to convict (appellant) Ambika Singh has

         already been abated vide order dated 24.11.2025 and now this

         appeal survives only as against appellants Kulbansh Singh and

         Ramswarath Singh, appellants no. 1 and 2 respectively.

                         3. The short facts of the case as per the First

         Information Report based on the fardbeyan of Bairister Singh

         (P.W.6), which was recorded by A.S.I., R.S. Pandey (P.W.11) of

         Bhabua P.S. on 01.02.1987 at about 5:30 pm was that on the

         same day i.e. on 01.02.1987 at around 2 pm, the goats of his co-

         villager, Ambika Singh were grazing his field and upon seeing

         the same, his father Guptnath Singh (P.W.5) brought the goats to

         his sitting place. In the meantime, the villagers Ram Pravesh

         Singh, Ram Swarath Singh alias Arbind Singh and Kulbansh

         Singh, armed with guns, while Ambika Singh armed with a

         Bhala, came to the door of the house of the informant and

         indulged in hurling abuses while enquiring as to why his goats

         were brought to the house of the informant. On such issue, a

         verbal embroil ensued between the parties and in course of such

         verbal altercation, Ambika Singh exhorted his son to kill

         everyone, whereupon his son, Ram Swarath Singh alias Arbind

         Singh fired at the father of the informant, Guptnath Singh with
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         his country made gun on account of which he sustained pellet

         injuries on the neck, face, chest and other places and fell down

         with the said injuries. It has further been alleged that when

         informant and his uncle Suraj Nath Singh (P.W.4) tried to

         intervene in the matter, Kulbansh Singh fired with his country

         made gun at Suraj Nath Singh, uncle of the informant, causing

         injury near his left eye and other places, while Ambika Singh

         inflicted a Bhala blow upon the informant due to which he

         sustained injury on his right hand. Upon hearing the sound of

         alarm, Dinanath Singh (P.W.1), Ramjee Singh (P.W.9) and the

         informant's younger brother, Shyamdeo Singh (P.W.3) along

         with several other co-villagers arrived at the place of occurrence

         but they ran away to their houses upon hearing the fact that the

         father of the informant was shot at. The injured Guptnath Singh

         was brought to the hospital in an unconscious condition and he

         was not in a position to give his statement.

                         4. On the basis of the above-mentioned fardbeyan

         of Bairister Singh (P.W.6) Bhabua P.S. Case No.29 of 1987 was

         instituted under Sections 447, 324 and 307/34 of the I.P.C. and

         Section 27 of the Arms Act. After investigation, chargesheet was

         submitted on 03.04.1987 in the Court of learned Additional

         Chief Judicial Magistrate under Sections 326, 324 and 307/34 of
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         the I.P.C. and Section 27 of the Arms Act against the accused

         persons including the present appellants, whereupon cognizance

         was taken and the case was committed to the Court of Sessions

         being numbered as Sessions Trial No.166/97 of 1987/1998,

         whereafter the charges were framed by the learned Trial Court

         against the appellants under Sections 326 and 307 of the I.P.C.

         as also under Section 27 of the Arms Act on 10.05.1989.

                         5. The prosecution, in order to substantiate its case,

         has examined altogether 12 witnesses out of whom, P.W.1-

         Dinanath Singh is the uncle of the informant, P.W.2-Jang

         Bahadur Singh is the son of P.W.9-Ramjee Singh, P.W.3-

         Syamdeo Singh younger brother of the informant, P.W.4-

         Suryanath Singh uncle of the informant, P.W.5-Guptnath Singh,

         father of the informant and P.W.6-Bairister Singh is the

         informant himself. All these witnesses have claimed themselves

         to be eye witnesses, while P.Ws.4, 5 and 6 are even said to be

         injured eye witnesses. P.W.7-Dr. R.N. Saran is the medical

         expert who examined the injuries of all the three injured persons

         i.e. P.Ws.4, 5 and 6, while P.W.8-Rup Narain Singh is a formal

         witness who has identified the handwriting on the formal F.I.R.

         and P.W.9-Ramjee Singh has been tendered for cross-

         examination. Gauri Shankar Singh, the Investigating Officer of
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         the case, has been examined as P.W.10, P.W.11-Ram Sideshwar

         Pandey recorded the fardbeyan of P.W.6 while P.W.12-Gauri

         Shankar Pandey another formal witness who identified the

         signature on the discharge slips marked as Exts.5 to 5/1 and

         prescriptions as Exts.6 and 6/1 respectively.

                         6. On behalf of the defence, three witnesses have

         been examined and they are all formal in nature and have proved

         certain documents with regard to indicate litigation between the

         parties.

                         7. After closing the prosecution witnesses, the

         learned Trial Court proceeded to record the statement of the

         appellants under Section 313 Cr.P.C. on 28.07.1998, enabling

         them to personally explain the circumstances appearing in the

         evidence against them, however they denied the said charges

         and circumstances.

                         8. The learned Trial Judge, upon appreciation,

         analysis and scrutiny of the evidence adduced during the trial,

         has found the appellants guilty of the offences under Section 307

         of the I.P.C. and Section 27 of the Arms Act, while acquitting

         the appellants under Section 326 of the I.P.C. and has sentenced

         them to imprisonment by the impugned judgment of conviction

         and order of sentence as narrated in the foregoing paragraph.
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                         9. I have heard the arguments of Ms. Surya

         Nilambari, learned Amicus Curiae for the appellants and Ms.

         Anita Kumari Singh, learned APP for the State at length.

                         10. It has been argued on behalf of the appellants

         that the prosecution has failed to establish its case beyond all

         reasonable doubts and despite witnesses having been examined

         on behalf of the prosecution, who have even been shown to be

         injured witnesses, their evidence are worth discarding on

         account of the fact that they have not come up with the true

         picture of the case and have left several questions unanswered

         leading to several loopholes in the prosecution case. Learned

         amicus has argued that the present case rests on the evidence of

         very closely related witnesses and the sheet-anchor of the entire

         prosecution is the medical evidence, which has been adduced in

         the form of the evidence of P.W.7, Dr. R.N. Saran, who has

         indicated the presence of several injuries on the person of the

         injured witness, Guptnath Singh. The doctor (P.W.-7) has noted

         the injuries numbering to several lacerated wounds, making it a

         total of as many as 19 lacerated injuries and he has opined that

         all the injuries mentioned in the said report were grievous and

         caused by firearms. In this regard, it has been argued that the

         said injury report is not worth believing and the medical expert
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         seems to have gone overboard in his enthusiasm, by indicating

         so many injuries and this has to be viewed in the background of

         the fact that although the injuries are said to have been caused

         by pellets, the X-ray plate showing that 13 pellets have been

         found in the skull and 17 pellets in the chest but, as a matter of

         fact, not a single pellet has been recovered from the body of the

         injured and produced before the Court.

                         11. Ms. Surya Nilambari has further argued that it is

         not the case of the prosecution that the pellets or traces of

         firearm shots were recovered at the place of occurrence in order

         to substantiate the fact that the injured persons have received

         such firearm injuries. The next glaring factor that has been

         submitted with regard to the genuineness of the injury report,

         which seriously questions the very existence of injury upon the

         injured person is the fact that neither any X-ray plate nor any X-

         ray report has been brought on record in order to lend any

         credence to the finding of the injury by the concerned doctor.

         The entire story of getting injured and the treatment undergone

         by the injured persons further gets shrouded in mystery on

         account of the fact that both P.Ws.4 and 5 have made clear

         statements in their depositions during trial that they had been

         taken to the Banaras Hindu University Hospital (B.H.U.) for
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         treatment. However, the statement of the injured witness,

         Guptnath Singh (P.W.5) was recorded at the Bhabua hospital on

         the third day of the occurrence while P.W.4-Suryanath Singh,

         uncle of the informant also an injured witness, has stated in his

         evidence that they were taken to B.H.U. at 8 pm on the date of

         occurrence and came back to Bhabua on the 2 nd morning from

         Banaras. It has been argued that there is no document

         whatsoever, indicating any such reference to Banaras or any

         treatment undertaken by the injured persons on record and the

         doctor has also negated the fact that he had referred the injured

         to any higher center for treatment by deposing that he does not

         remember that he had referred the patient to any higher center

         for treatment. The medical evidence further becomes doubtful in

         view of the fact that as to how the injured persons, after having

         received the number and kind of injury as indicated in the injury

         report, would have been in a position to travel to Banaras and

         come back to Bhabua in a day and if Banaras was a higher

         center, what could be the justifiable reason to come back to

         Bhabua hospital.

                         12. It has also been argued that the doctor (P.W.7)

         has failed to state anything about the treatment given to the

         injured by his hands for such grievous injury having been
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         suffered by them and has merely indicated the presence of the

         injuries and their nature and has completely abstained from

         disclosing the nature of the treatment given by him. In the

         background of such facts, it has been submitted that reasonable

         doubts arise with regard to the genuineness of the injury report

         with regard to the allegations of firing made by the appellants on

         account of which P.Ws.4 and 5 were said to have sustained

         grievous injury. A reference has been made in this regard to the

         case of State of Haryana vs Bhagirathi reported in 1995 (5)

         SCC 96 to contend that even the medical opinion can be tested

         on the ground of logic or objectivity whether it is consistent with

         the probability.

                         13. Learned amicus has posed serious challenge to

         the credibility of the prosecution witnesses in view of their

         statements with regard to the injuries received by them, which

         do not get adequately supported by the suspicious nature of the

         injury report and also in the background of the fact that they are

         inimically disposed towards the appellants as it is an admitted

         fact that there was animosity between the parties and also

         litigation pending between them and in support of the same the

         defence witnesses have also been examined who have led

         evidence, oral and documentary, to prove the strained relations
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         (Ext. A to G). Further, no independent witness has been

         examined on behalf of the prosecution although the occurrence

         is said to have taken place in an open place. In this context, it

         has also been argued that the place of occurrence has also not

         been established by the prosecution, as at some places, the

         witnesses have talked about the act of firing having been

         indulged from the roof of the house whereas the Investigating

         Officer, while describing it, has said that it was one storied

         house and did not mention of any terrace. Further, no other

         incriminating articles have been recovered from the place of

         occurrence in order to establish and fix the place of occurrence.

         It has further been argued that the very initiation of the case in

         the form of lodging of the First Information Report does not

         clarify as to what was the source of information to the police

         with regard to the said occurrence as neither the Investigating

         Officer nor the person who has lodged the fardbeyan has made

         any indication as to how the police came to know about the

         commission of the offence and as to how the injured person

         came to Bhabua hospital. It is further submitted that the entire

         case has been framed upon a very petty issue of goats of the

         appellants having grazed the fields of the informant, due to

         which the informant had brought the goats to his house. While
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         pointing towards all these factors coupled with the several

         inconsistencies and contradictions in the submissions of the

         prosecution witnesses, it has been argued that since the

         testimony of the witnesses are not credit worthy, their evidence

         ought not have been relied upon for reaching the finding of

         guilt. In this regard reference has been made to the case of

         Vadivelu Thevar vs State of Madras reported in AIR 1957 SC

         614 wherein the three categories of witnesses have been

         discussed and it has been held that in case of witnesses falling in

         the third category, who are neither wholly reliable nor wholly

         unreliable, the Court has to be circumspect and look for

         corroboration in material particulars by reliable testimony. In

         absence of reliable testimony, it has been argued that the

         impugned judgment of conviction and order of sentence is fit to

         be set aside.

                         14. Per contra, Ms. Anita Kumari Singh, learned

         APP for the State has submitted that the First Information

         Report has been lodged with all promptness and, as such, there

         does not seem to be any reason to doubt the initiation of the case

         in the form of the First Information Report. Moreover, the

         prosecution witnesses have supported their case not only as eye-

         witnesses but also being the injured eye-witnesses whose
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         testimonies cannot be discarded unless very strong or

         compelling reasons exist for the same. She has also argued that

         only by virtue of the witnesses being related to each other would

         not take away the authenticity of their statements and the

         medical evidence is also corroborative of the oral testimony. As

         such, the prosecution through its witnesses, has been able to

         establish its case beyond all reasonable doubts and the impugned

         judgment of conviction and order of sentence does not warrant

         any interference.

                         ANALYSIS AND CONSIDERATION

                         15. I have minutely perused both the oral and

         documentary evidence, besides hearing the learned counsel for

         the parties. Before proceeding further, it would be necessary to

         cursorily discuss and analyze the relevant evidence on record.

                         16.      P.W.-1, Dinanath Singh, the uncle of the

         informant has stated before the police that he saw the occurrence

         but it remains an admitted position that he reached the place of

         occurrence after the alleged incident had already occurred. From

         his evidence, it can also be inferred that he did not disclose the

         names of the persons, who allegedly fired at the informant and

         other victim and he also did not state before the police as to on

         which body part both the P.W.-4 and P.W.-5 had sustained
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         injuries. This witness has also admitted that he was not present

         when the police was taking the statement of the informant (P.W.-

         6) at the hospital. P.W.2, Jang Bahadur Singh is the son of

         another prosecution witness PW-9 and although he has tried to

         portray himself as an eye-witness, his evidence would also

         indicate that when he reached the place of occurrence, he found

         Suryanath Singh (P.W.4) and Guptanath Singh (P.W.5) in

         standing condition but, in the same breath, it has been stated that

         it was they who disclosed the names of the assailants to the

         witnesses. If it is taken to understand that several gun shots had

         been fired on these witnesses P.W.-4 and P.W.-5 in the presence

         of P.W.-2, then it does not stand to reason as to how he has made

         such statement that he found both P.W.-4 and P.W.-5 in standing

         position and without any bleeding. However, the presence of this

         witness at the time when the occurrence took place is rendered

         doubtful, in view of the evidence of P.W.-1, Dinanath Singh,

         who claims to have reached the place of occurrence first and

         states that P.W.-2 and P.W.-3 both had reached after him and at

         the time when he had reached, the occurrence had already taken

         place. In view of the statement of P.W.-1, Dinanath Singh, the

         evidence of P.W.-2, Jung Bahadur Singh and P.W.-3, Shyamdeo

         Singh, who are claiming themselves to be eye-witnesses,
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         becomes doubtful.

                         17. It now becomes important to deal with the

         evidence of P.W.-4, Suryanath Singh, P.W.-5, Guptanath Singh

         and P.W.-6, Bairister Singh, who are all claiming to be injured

         witnesses. So far as the evidence of P.W.-4, Suryanath Singh is

         concerned, he also stated that at the instigation of appellant

         Ambika Singh, the appellants went on the roof and fired which

         proposition itself appears to be absurd as when the persons are

         armed with firearms there could have been nothing deterring

         them from opening fire had there been any intention to kill or

         cause serious injuries and there would be no reason for persons

         going up on the roof for the said purpose. He has made specific

         allegations on appellant, Kulbansh Singh of having fired at him

         and upon Ambika Singh of having assaulted the informant with

         spade on his hand. However, his evidence also discloses that

         after treatment from Bhabua hospital they went to B.H.U. and

         returned the next morning i.e. on 02.02.1987, but he has not

         disclosed any manner as to what was the treatment that was

         given to the injured persons at Banaras and what was the

         occasion of the injured persons out of whom one PW-5 had

         allegedly suffered several pellet injuries of being taken to

         Banaras and being brought back to Bhabhua.
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                         18. So far as the evidence of PW-5, the injured

         Guptanath Singh is concerned, he has claimed that he became

         unconscious upon the firing being made at him and he gained

         consciousness at the Banaras Hospital on the next day. After

         gaining consciousness, he disclosed the names of the assailants

         to Shyamdeo Singh (P.W.3) and Suryanath Singh (P.W.4) and

         has further stated that he had no knowledge about the injury

         report and that he also did not show the medical documents of

         the Banaras hospital or of Bhabhua hospital and he also did not

         have any idea whether anyone has shown such documents or

         not. This witness has also denied his awareness about the land

         dispute existing between the parties.

                         19. P.W.-6, Bairister Singh is the informant of this

         case as also the injured eye-witness, who has also reiterated the

         story of the appellants going on the roof for the purposes of

         firing, which stands contradicted from the evidence of the

         Investigating Officer (PW-10) as he has denied the fact that any

         such story had been stated before him. There are several

         statements made with regard to the X-ray plate etc. being given

         to the doctor, but the fact remains that there is no X-ray plate or

         X-ray report on record, which would lend credence to his

         statement that there was actually an X-ray report and an X-ray
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         plate based upon which the doctor had given his opinion with

         regard to the injuries. His further statement with regard to

         finding of pellets by the Investigating Officer at the place of

         occurrence also gets no support from the evidence of the

         Investigating Officer as he himself stated that he does not

         remember as to how many pellets were found and whether any

         document with regard to recovery of such pellet or blood found

         at the place of occurrence was prepared or not.

                         20. The thrust of the argument on behalf of the

         defence relates to extremely doubtful nature of medical evidence

         that has been brought on record by means of the injury reports

         and the evidence of the doctor (P.W.-7). Before analyzing the

         evidence of the doctor (P.W.-7), it would be imperative to note

         as to what were the injuries that the doctor found on the person

         of Guptanath Singh (P.W.-5), as such, the injuries are being

         noted hereunder:

                                I. Five lacerated wounds 1/4" x 1/4" muscle
                                deep on the front aspect of neck.
                                II. Four lacerated wounds 1/4" x 1/4" muscle
                                deep on the upper part of the front of chest.
                                III. Five lacerated wounds 1/4" x 1/4" muscle
                                deep on the forehead.
                                IV. One lacerated wound 1/4" x 1/4" muscle
                                deep on the left side of ace below left eye.
                                V. Three lacerated wounds 1/4" x 1/4" muscle
                                deep on the right side of face.
                                VI. One lacerated wound 1/4" x 1/4" muscle
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                                deep on the chest.
                         21. Upon looking at the injuries that have been

         noted in the injury report as also in the evidence of the doctor, it

         appears that as many as 15-19 pellets injuries have been

         reported to be present and all the injuries have been mentioned

         to be grievous in nature, but it seems strange as to how after

         sustaining the kind of injuries, as has been stated, the injured

         persons were in a position to go to Banaras and come back from

         there to the Bhabhua hospital. It also remains a fact that there is

         no document whatsoever with regard to any treatment having

         been done at Banaras and yet the prosecution has brought the

         case of going to Banaras by means of definite oral evidence,

         thereby rendering the circumstances suspicious.

                         22. So far as the injury report issued by the doctor

         (P.W.-7) is concerned, the same is based upon a view of the X-

         ray plate showing thirteen pellets to be found in the skull and

         eleven pellets to be found in chest as admitted by the doctor. In

         such a situation, it was extremely imperative to bring the X-ray

         plate/report on record as the entire narration of injuries and the

         opinion of the doctor is based upon the same. The failure of the

         prosecution to bring the X-ray plate on record has a devastating

         effect on the case of the prosecution with regard to actual

         injuries sustained and it goes to the very core question, as to
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         whether these witnesses were injured at all and whether injury

         report has been prepared on the basis of some fake and

         manufactured X-ray plates or completely manufactured injury

         report has been brought on record totally in absence of any X-

         ray report being in existence. This Court also finds that the

         medical evidence indicates only the existence of injuries, their

         basis and the nature of these injuries. The evidence is totally

         silent upon the nature of treatment, having been given to the

         patients, who are the eye witnesses and, thus, it raises a

         considerable amount of doubt in the mind of this Court, as to

         whether these witnesses were actually treated by the doctor as in

         case if the present doctor would have been the treating doctor of

         these witnesses, he would have thrown some light on the

         treatment having been given to the witnesses.

                         23. The other factor which further enhances the

         doubt on the existence of the injuries as alleged is that not a

         single pellet is said to have been recovered from the body of the

         injured, as admitted by the doctor, and the basis of his findings

         is only the X-ray plate, which is nowhere to be found. The

         defence giving a direct suggestion to the doctor that the injury

         reports have been prepared in collusion with the victims can not

         be said to be without any basis. At this stage, it would be apt to
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         refer to the case of Ram Singh Vs. State of Uttar Pradesh

         reported in (2024) 4 SCC 208, the relevant paragraph is being

         quoted hereunder:

                                  "25      .....................         There   is   no
                         explanation of the prosecution regarding the 55
                         pellets retrieved from the body of the deceased
                         during post-mortem; whether those could be
                         linked to to the 12 bore cartridge and the tikli.
                         Importantly, the country-made pistol was never
                         recovered. The prosecution has not said
                         anything in this regard. ...".

                         24. Further, In the case of Rajvir Singh Vs. State of

         Punjab neutral citation 2023:PHHC:080882-DB, the relevant

         paragraph is being quoted hereunder:

                                  "17. ...... In the absence of examination
                         of the doctor who had conducted radiological
                         examination of the victim and further in the
                         absence of specific X-ray reports and X-ray
                         films, no conclusion could obviously be drawn
                         that the injuries which were opined to be
                         grievous were in fact so in nature...."

                       25. Also, in the case of Ishtiyaq Ahmed Vs. State of

         Rajasthan, Through PP and others reported in 2025 SCC

         OnLine Raj 7118, wherein the importance of the X-ray plate

         and the X-ray report has been noticed for giving a finding and
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         an opinion upon the existence and of nature of injuries. For

         ready reference, para-18 of the said judgment is being quoted

         hereunder:

                                  "18. ................................... it is clear
                         that for the purpose of determining the nature of
                         injury, examination of the medical jurist,
                         simplicitor would not be sufficient and the
                         Radiologist, based upon whose X-ray report, the
                         medical jurist has given his evidence, will be
                         required to be examined and the X-rays will be
                         required to be exhibited for determining the
                         actual nature of injury. Thus, the examination of
                         Radiologist is essential when the offence
                         alleged is under Sections 326 and 307 IPC as it
                         is only post his examination that the details of
                         the X-ray and the nature of injury, based upon
                         the X-ray can be brought on record."

                         26. Upon discussing the entire medical evidence,

         this Court finds that the defence has succeeded in raising

         substantial doubt with regard to the genuineness and authenticity

         of the entire injury report as well as the medical evidence

         adduced in support of the same.

                           27. After having gone through the entire evidence

         both oral and documentary, this Court is convinced that there

         exists compelling reasons to doubt the evidence of the

         prosecution witnesses, who have even claimed to be injured in
 Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
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         the    alleged      incident.      Their     evidence   is   replete   with

         inconsistencies with regard to the very basic fact of treatment of

         their injuries and the entire story of going to Banaras and

         coming back to Bhabhua hospital. Prosecution witnesses have

         given varied statements and from the evidence of so called

         injured witness P.W.-4, it is gathered that from the Bhabua

         Hospital the injured were taken to Banaras at 8:00 p.m. on the

         date of occurrence and he has stated that only he and P.W. 5 had

         been admitted in the hospital for treatment, whereas P.W. 6 had

         been discharged on the same day. P.W.5, Guptnath Singh also

         admits to have gained consciousness only in Banaras, on the

         next day of occurrence, and his statement was recorded on the

         third day of the occurrence at Bhabua Hospital. It thus appears

         that both the witnesses P.W. 4 and P.W. 5 have supported the fact

         that they were taken to hospital in Banaras for treatment on

         01.02.1987

and brought back on 02.02.1987. However, there is

complete dearth of any documentary evidence in order to prove

that they received treatment at either of the two hospitals at

Bhabua or at Banaras. The injury report of the Bhabua hospital,

as stated earlier, merely refers to the existence of injuries and its

nature. No evidence has been adduced to shed any light on the

treatment that was given to the injured person. There is no iota
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
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of doubt on the proposition that the evidence of injured

witnesses are accorded special status and have to be kept at a

much higher pedestal as they have a greater evidentiary value.

It is also true that their testimony cannot be brushed aside or

discarded unless some very cogent or compelling circumstances

exist for doing so. This proposition has been clearly laid down in

the case of Abdul Sayed Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh reported

in (2010) 10 SCC 259. However, it has been held in the case of

Zainul Vs. State of Bihar reported in (2025) 6 BLJ 130 SC, that

before court accepts testimony of an injured witness, it has to be

satisfied that he is a truthful witness and had no reason to falsely

implicate accused persons. Reasonable doubt may also arise on

the truthfulness of such witnesses in cases where the parties are

at logger heads or are inimically disposed towards each other

and further gets aggravated in a situation when the case stands

supported only by related witnesses, being the family members

and no independent witness comes in support thereof. However,

the present case, strictly speaking, could be taken out of the

preview of considering the prosecution witnesses on a high

pedestal of being injured witnesses since the very existence of

injuries on the person of the prosecution witnesses is under

serious challenge and remains extremely shrouded in doubt.
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
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28. It is also to be considered that there are glaring

laches in investigation inasmuch as the Investigating Officer of

this case has not cared to collect any incriminating materials, the

pellets or trail of blood or blood stained clothes etc. which

would have been extremely essential to prove the prosecution

case. The absence of such incriminating materials, especially in

the background of the fact when the prosecution has tried to put-

forth a case of indiscriminate firing and several injuries being

caused to the injured persons with blood oozing out, would

definitely deal a fatal blow to the case of the prosecution. The

failure on the part of the Investigating Officer to collect any

objective evidence from the place of occurrence leads to the

further situation that the place of occurrence itself not being

proved. In the case of Munuwa vs State of U.P. reported in

(2023) 1 SCC 714 : 2022 SCC OnLine SC 1097, the

significance of collection of incriminating materials from the

place of occurrence, especially in a situation when several

rounds of firing have been made has been reiterated. For ready

reference, paras-24 and 25 of the said judgment is being quoted

hereunder:

“24. It is unnatural that not even
single drop of blood could be traced or
recovered from the chair or the floor where
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
24/29

the deceased and PW 6 were sitting,
casting a serious doubt about the veracity
of the prosecution’s story regarding the
place of the incident. It is common
knowledge that a place where a severe
bodily injury occurs, it naturally leaves a
trail of the incident [ In Meharaj Singh v.
State of U.P.
, (1994) 5 SCC 188 : 1994
SCC (Cri) 1391, this Court held : (SCC p.
197, para 13)”13. … The absence of any
blood in the field of Kirpal Singh as also
the absence of blood trail from the field of
Kirpal Singh to the place where the dead
body was found, as admitted by PW 8, also
suggests that the occurrence did not take
place in the manner suggested by the
prosecution and that the genesis of the
fight has been suppressed from the
court.“A similar view was taken in
Ramsewak v. State of M.P., (2004) 11 SCC
259, wherein it was held : (SCC pp. 265-
66, para 14)”14. … We also notice that
there is considerable doubt in regard to the
place of incident also. From the medical
evidence we notice that the deceased
suffered 3 major incised wounds leading to
the severance of the blood vessels and
amputation of his hand near the wrist and
the body in question was lying at the spot
till the police came which was nearly 4 to
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
25/29

5 hours later but still the investigating
agency was unable to find any blood on the
spot. Of course, the prosecution has given
an explanation that after the incident in
question it had rained but even then it is
difficult to believe that even traces of blood
could not have been found on the soil in
spite of the rain. The absence of any such
material also supports the prosecution
case that the incident in question might not
have happened at the place of
incident.”(emphasis supplied)] . It is also
common for the prosecution to collect
proof of bloodstained earth, clothes, or
other materials, from where the incident
would have occurred.

25. On this aspect there is only a
tangential observation in evidence of PW
6, who stated that the deceased’s “injured
body part had been wrapped with
tehmand”. This statement fails to explain
the lack of any bloodstains at the crime
scene. This does not explain why the said
cloth, tehmand, was not produced by the
prosecution. Accordingly, we find that the
prosecution’s failure to explain recovery of
blood on the chair or the place where the
deceased was sitting when he was fired at
seven times is fatal. The non-production of
bloodstained clothes is equally fatal.”

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29. The glaring inconsistencies in the prosecution

version have thus been magnified in the absence of material

evidence in the form of weapons of crime, pellets and blood

trail etc.

30. The genesis of the case also does not get

proved as the prosecution’s case of entire incident having taken

place on the petty issue of the goats of the appellants being

taken by the informant to his house as they were grazing his

field remains unsubstantiated as the Investigating Officer has

not investigated this aspect and in absence of any investigation

with regard to the same, genesis of the occurrence also does not

get established. The prosecution has thus failed to offer any

explanation regarding the fact as to non-production and non-

seizure of a single pellet either retrieved from the body of the

deceased during the course of treatment or from the place of

occurrence. It has been held in several cases that even in a

situation when the pellets are said to have been retrieved from

the body the non-production of the chemical examination report

or non-examination of the maker of such report has also been

held to have adverse impact on the case of the prosecution.

However, in the case at hand, there is no question whatsoever of

any chemical examination being done as the pellets simply seem
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
27/29

to have vanished and the prosecution has not been able to render

any explanation with regard to the same. In a case where there

are such serious lapses in investigation, the courts would have to

be circumspect in considering the other evidence available on

record. It is true that the defective investigation would not form

the basis to reject the prosecution evidence but in a case where

the evidence put forth by the prosecution is already of a weak

nature, investigational lapses become a vital consideration for

establishing the guilt of the accused as also establishing the

place and manner of occurrence. The point that is to be driven

home is that there can be no moral conviction on the basis of the

allegations made by the prosecution party if the same remains

unsupported by legally admissible evidence.

31. In the background of such facts and

circumstances, a reasonable doubt is raised in the mind of this

Court with respect to the genuineness of the entire prosecution

as against the appellants. It is the bounden duty of the Court to

ensure that the facts and evidence adduced by the prosecution

prove its case beyond all reasonable doubts. As submitted by the

learned amicus, the witnesses of the prosecution fall in the third

category of witnesses as carved out in the case of Vadivelu

Thevar (supra) being neither wholly reliable nor wholly
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
28/29

unreliable and as such, Court has to be extremely circumspect to

look for corroboration in material particulars by reliable

testimony. Moreover, there is a long mental distance which

needs to be traversed between the theory ‘may be true’ and

‘must be true,’ which is to be covered by way of clear, cogent

and unimpeachable evidence produced by the prosecution before

condemning an accused as a convict. In the present case, the

said path has not been treaded by way of clear and cogent

evidence.

32. Thus, taking into account the gaping loopholes

in the prosecution case, which cannot be overlooked and in the

background of infirmities of the prosecution case, the appellants

are entitled to benefit of doubt. Taking an overall perspective of

the entire case emerging out of the totality of facts and

circumstances, I find that the prosecution has failed to prove the

charges against the appellants beyond all reasonable doubts.

Hence, it is a fit case for extending the benefit of doubt to the

appellants. Accordingly, the finding of conviction recorded by

the learned Trial Court is found not sustainable and requires

interference. Therefore, the judgment of conviction and order of

sentence dated 30.07.2003 passed by the Court of learned

1stAdditional Sessions Judge, Bhabua in Sessions Trial
Patna High Court CR. APP (SJ) No.377 of 2003 dt.06-02-2026
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No.166/97 of 1987/1998, arising out of Bhabua (Sonhan) P.S.

Case No.29/87 is hereby set aside. As the appellants are already

on bail, hence they would be free from the liabilities of their bail

bonds.

33. Accordingly, the present appeal is allowed.

34. Before parting with the judgment, this Court

records its words of appreciation for Ms. Surya Nilambari for

ably assisting this Court as Amicus Curiae and the Patna High

Court Legal Services Committee is directed to pay remuneration

of Rs.12,000/- (Rupees Twelve Thousand) to her for her efforts

and the able assistance that she has provided for the proper

adjudication of the case.

(Soni Shrivastava, J)

Trivedi/-

AFR/NAFR                AFR
CAV DATE                N/A
Uploading Date          19.02.2026
Transmission Date       19.02.2026
 



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