Courts should not go by the background of witness alone: Supreme Court

Bench frees man sentenced to life in murder case after learning that case against him was based on blind trust in the spotless reputation of star witness as a ‘literate and god-fearing’ person

Updated - October 28, 2023 01:05 am IST - NEW DELHI:

A view of the Supreme Court of India in New Delhi.

A view of the Supreme Court of India in New Delhi. | Photo Credit: Sushil Kumar Verma

The Supreme Court has released a man sentenced to life imprisonment in a murder case after learning that the entire case against him was based on the blind trust in the spotless reputation of the star witness as a “literate and god-fearing” person.

“A court of law cannot declare the reputation of a person based upon its own opinion merely because a person is educated and said to be God-fearing, that by itself will not create a positive reputation,” the Supreme Court said in a recent judgment.

The case was based on the death of a woman 20 years ago in Himachal Pradesh. The prime witness was her neighbour. He heard her cries for help and claimed to have seen two men, one of whom made a grab at him too. Later, the police found the body of the woman in her house.

But a Bench of Justices M.M. Sundresh and J.B. Pardiwala found the conduct of the witness strange in several instances.

Justice Sundresh noted that the man did not enter the house of his neighbour to check on her after the accused had left. Instead, he saw the school-going children of the woman and “advised” them to tell their mother to call the police.

“He just went away... Strangely, he undertook the unnecessary exercise of making further inquiries with the mother-in-law of the deceased,” Justice Sundresh wrote.

The apex court noted that the trial court had acquitted the accused of the crime. However, the Himachal Pradesh High Court had set aside the trial court judgment, blindly believing the evidence of the witness.

“Courts are not expected to get carried away by the mere background of a person, especially while acting as an appellate forum, when his conduct, being a relevant fact, creates serious doubt,” Justice Sundresh observed.

The judgment said the conduct of the witness was a relevant fact to decide, determine and prove his reputation.

“When the conduct indicates that it is unnatural from the perspective of normal human behaviour, the so-called reputation takes a back seat,” Justice Sundresh observed.

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