IN THE HIGH COURT OF GUJARAT AT AHMEDABAD
ILESH J. VORA, R. T. VACHHANI
State Of Gujarat – Appellant
Versus
Prakash Meghjibhai Dalwadi – Respondent
| Table of Content |
|---|
| 1. appeal by state against judgment of acquittal. (Para 1 , 2 , 4) |
| 2. insufficiency of evidence leads to acquittal. (Para 10 , 17) |
| 3. appellate courts should defer to trial court's discretion. (Para 15 , 18) |
JUDGMENT :
ILESH J. VORA, J.
1. Here is the Appeal by the State against the judgment and order of acquittal.
2. Being dissatisfied by the judgment and order passed by the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Bhavnagar, dated 09.04.2004 passed in Sessions Case No.174 of 1999, acquitting the respondents from the offence under Sections 498A, 306, 302, 323, 504 read with Section 114 of the IPC , State has preferred instant appeal under Section 378 of the Cr.P.C.
3. This Court has heard Mr. J. K. Shah, learned Additional Public Prosecutor.
4. Brief facts giving rise to file the present Appeal are that, the respondents accused being a husband, mother- in-law and sister-in-law were tried and prosecution by the Sessions Court, Bhavnagar for the offences as referred above. The marriage of the deceased Hansa was solemnized before one year of the incident with the respondent accused Prakash Dalwadi and family of him was joint family. After six months of the marriage, the deceased ca
The prosecution must prove its case beyond reasonable doubt; mere suspicion is insufficient for conviction.
The appellate court must respect the presumption of innocence and not interfere with acquittal unless the trial court's conclusion is unreasonable.
In acquittal appeals, the presumption of innocence is paramount, and the appellate court should not interfere unless the trial court's conclusions are unreasonable or perverse.
Conviction under Section 306 IPC requires direct evidence of intent or proximate acts by accused to abet suicide, with appellate courts deferring to trial findings unless clearly perverse.
The appellate court upheld the trial court's acquittal of respondents due to insufficient evidence of cruelty and abetment of suicide, emphasizing the presumption of innocence and the need for substa....
To convict under Section 306 IPC, there must be clear evidence of active instigation or facilitation of the suicide by the accused, which was not established in this case.
Prosecution must prove abetment under Section 306 IPC requires clear evidence of instigation; the trial court's acquittal upheld due to lack of such evidence.
Court emphasized the necessity of establishing clear evidence of cruelty to invoke presumption of abetment of suicide under Section 113A of the Evidence Act, reinforcing the presumption of innocence ....
Point of law : where the minimum punishment is prescribed for an offence and the Court proposes the impose the minimum punishment only, in that case the Court is not required to hear the accused on t....
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