Planting Witnesses and Broken Chains: MP High Court Mandates Departmental Enquiry for Investigative Misconduct in Circumstantial-Evidence Prosecutions
1. Introduction
Nein Singh Dhurve v. State of Madhya Pradesh (2025 MPHC-JBP 35161) concerns an appeal by Nein Singh Dhurve and co-accused Sandeep against their conviction for the murder (Section 302 read with Section 34 IPC) and destruction of evidence (Section 201 IPC) of one Rajendra Pandhre. Tried on wholly circumstantial evidence, the appellants were sentenced to life imprisonment by the Ist Additional Sessions Judge, Mandla. The High Court of Madhya Pradesh (Double Bench: Vivek Agarwal & Avanindra Kumar Singh, JJ) not only acquitted the appellants but, for the first time in a reported decision from the State, directed the Director General of Police to institute a departmental enquiry against the investigating officer for “planting false witnesses” and issued broader guidelines for ensuring fair investigation. The case therefore sets a fresh precedent on judicial oversight of investigative misconduct in circumstantial-evidence prosecutions.
2. Summary of the Judgment
After re-evaluating the entire record, the High Court concluded that:
- The prosecution failed to establish an unbroken chain of circumstances as required by Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra (1984) 4 SCC 116.
- Call Detail Records (CDRs) purportedly showing communication between the deceased and the accused’s daughter were uncorroborated and contradicted by the post-mortem timeline.
- Star witness Chain Singh was a “planted witness,” revealed by his own cross-examination and unsupported travel narrative.
- Key items (mobile phone, knife, gamchha) were recovered from open, public places—rendering Section 27 evidence infirm.
- Absence of DNA testing, failure to examine material witnesses (the daughter Sonkali), and discrepancies in seizure memos destroyed the prosecution’s theory of motive.
Accordingly, the conviction was set aside and the appellants were ordered to be released forthwith. Importantly, paragraph 25 of the judgment directed:
3. Analysis
3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra, (1984) 4 SCC 116 – The Court quoted the five-pronged test for conviction on circumstantial evidence. Each prong was individually examined, and the failure to satisfy them compelled acquittal.
- Shivaji Sahabrao Bobade v. State of Maharashtra, (1973) 2 SCC 793 – Cited to emphasise the gulf between “may be guilty” and “must be guilty.”
- While no other authorities are expressly referred to, the Bench implicitly relied on jurisprudence governing Section 27 recoveries (Pulukuri Kottaya) and electronic evidence under Section 65-B of the Evidence Act (Anvar P.V.).
3.2 Legal Reasoning
The Court’s reasoning unfolded in three concentric layers:
- Forensic & Medical Contradictions
– Post-mortem fixed death within 4–6 days before 25-09-2021, but prosecution alleged telephonic contact between the deceased and accused’s daughter up to 25-09-2021. This contradiction alone shattered the “motive” narrative. - Evidentiary Gaps in the Circumstantial Chain
– No last-seen evidence: the sole eye-witness (Chain Singh) admitted learning of events only after police briefings.
– Section 27 recoveries from open jungles, not the possession of the accused, had minimal probative value.
– Mobile CDRs produced without proof of “who used the SIMs” or compliance with Section 65-B formalities. - Investigative Misconduct
– Continuous harassment of villagers, detention of suspects for months, and the eventual “planting” of Chain Singh violated constitutional fair-trial guarantees.
– The Bench, invoking its inherent jurisdiction, ordered a departmental enquiry, thereby converting judicial disapproval into an enforceable administrative mandate.
3.3 Impact of the Judgment
The ruling’s impact is twofold:
- Substantive Criminal Law
It re-affirms the primacy of the Sharad Sarda test and warns trial courts against extrapolating guilt merely from “motive-plus-recovery.” - Police Procedure & Oversight
– Introduces a mandatory departmental enquiry mechanism when a High Court identifies investigative wrongdoing.
– Compels the DGP to frame fresh guidelines for evidence collection, witness handling, and electronic data authentication.
– Creates persuasive authority for other High Courts (and potentially the Supreme Court) to adopt similar institutional responses.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Circumstantial Evidence – Proof of facts from which guilt is inferred (e.g., motive, last seen, recoveries). Must form an unbroken chain leading exclusively to the accused.
- Section 34 IPC – Fixes joint liability when a criminal act is done by several persons “in furtherance of common intention.”
- Section 27 of the Evidence Act – Makes admissible only that portion
of an accused’s disclosure statement that directly leads to the
discovery of a fact.
Key point from this case: discovery must be from the “exclusive possession” of the accused or a place “known only to him” to carry weight. - Section 65-B Certificate – Mandatory certificate vouching for the authenticity of electronic records (CDRs). Without it, digital evidence is inadmissible.
- Planting of Witnesses – Fabrication of testimony by coaching or introducing individuals who never observed the events. Undermines Article 21 (fair trial) and can attract disciplinary as well as penal consequences.
- Departmental Enquiry – Internal disciplinary proceedings within the police department, distinct from criminal prosecution, to assess misconduct and impose service penalties.
5. Conclusion
Nein Singh Dhurve marks a watershed moment in Madhya Pradesh criminal jurisprudence. Beyond protecting two citizens from wrongful conviction, the Bench has articulated a procedural safeguard: whenever investigative misconduct surfaces, courts should not stop at acquittal but trigger institutional accountability mechanisms. The precedent:
- Strengthens the standard for accepting circumstantial evidence.
- Elevates compliance with Section 65-B and forensic protocols from procedural niceties to decisive factors.
- Signals zero tolerance for the planting of witnesses, aligning with constitutional imperatives of fairness and due process.
Future prosecutions in Madhya Pradesh—and potentially across India—must now contend with rigorous judicial scrutiny of investigative methods. The case thus acts as both shield and compass: a shield for the innocent against manufactured guilt, and a compass guiding law-enforcement towards lawful, transparent investigation.
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