Can an adult be prosecuted under Section 377 without proof of lack of consent? A Bengaluru trial court has now given one of the clearest answers after Navtej Johar landmark case. In a major acquittal, the court also stressed that serious criminal allegations require stricter scrutiny and stronger evidence.
KARNATAKA: In a significant judgment with nationwide legal impact, the XXIX Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate Court, Bengaluru, has laid down a clear four-ingredient legal test for prosecutions under Section 377 IPC involving consenting adults.
The 134-page judgment was delivered on May 15, 2026, in State by CEN Police Station & Ors. v Dr. Vikram Vincent (CC 57405/2019). The court acquitted the accused of all charges under Sections 377, 498A and 201 IPC, along with Sections 66E and 67 of the Information Technology Act.
The court clarified that after the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India, prosecutions under Section 377 involving adults can survive only if absence of consent is proved beyond reasonable doubt.
The judgment observed that Section 377 “is not a general morality clause” and “cannot be examined in abstraction from the constitutional transformation it underwent.”
Calling consent the central issue in such cases, the court stated that the “determinative inquiry” under Section 377 is whether the alleged act was non-consensual.
To secure conviction in cases involving adults, the Bengaluru court ruled that the prosecution must establish four essential ingredients:
- Carnal intercourse under Section 377
- Penetration
- Voluntary commission of the act by the accused
- Absence of consent by the complainant
The court further held,:
“Failure to prove even one of the above ingredients would be fatal to the charge. To sustain a conviction, the prosecution must establish… that the act was non-consensual so as to fall within the constitutionally permissible field of criminalisation.”
Apart from clarifying the legal position under Section 377, the court also made important observations on evidentiary standards in criminal trials.
Relying on the Supreme Court’s “sterling witness” doctrine from Rai Sandeep @ Deepu v. State (NCT of Delhi), the court reiterated that conviction solely based on a complainant’s statement is possible only when such testimony is of “unimpeachable quality.”
Importantly, the court rejected the idea that evidentiary standards should be relaxed merely because allegations are serious in nature.
The judgment stated:
“The more serious the offence alleged, there should be strict scrutiny of the evidentiary value.”
During trial, the court found material inconsistencies in the complainant’s FIR, revised complaint, statements recorded under Sections 161 and 164 CrPC, and oral testimony before the court.
The court also noted lack of corroborative medical evidence. Medical examination reportedly recorded “No injury seen in anus. No bleeding. No discharge,” and did not provide any conclusive opinion regarding anal sex.
While observing that absence of injury alone cannot automatically defeat a prosecution, the court held that where allegations involve repeated painful penetrative acts, medical evidence gains “particular evidentiary significance.”
The judgment added that absence of such supporting evidence “strengthens the reasonable doubt already arising from the record.”
After the acquittal, Dr. Vikram Vincent stated:
“Trial courts are the first, last, and often only line of justice for the majority of the population. After 63 police attendances, 11 courts, and nearly a decade, I hope this verdict contributes to a broader reckoning with how criminal law is misused in matrimonial disputes — and how delayed justice and premature media coverage destroy lives long before any verdict is reached.”
Counsel for the accused, Advocate Sanjay Sugumaran of Arcadia Legal, said:
“This judgment does something important that had remained undone since Navtej Johar: it takes a constitutional declaration and converts it into a practical prosecutorial standard. The four-ingredient framework the Court has laid down gives both the accused and the prosecution clarity on what Section 377 now means when adults are involved. Equally significant is the Court’s refusal to dilute evidentiary standards in serious cases — it correctly held that gravity of charge calls for greater scrutiny, not less.”
The judgment is now being viewed as an important precedent in understanding how Section 377 prosecutions involving adults may be examined by courts in future cases, especially where issues of consent, evidentiary inconsistencies and misuse of criminal proceedings are raised.
Explanatory Table Of Laws And Sections Mentioned In The Case
| SECTION / LAW | LEGAL PROVISION | MEANING IN SIMPLE ENGLISH | PUNISHMENT / LEGAL IMPACT |
| Section 377 IPC | Unnatural offences | Earlier used to criminalise certain sexual acts. After Navtej Johar, consensual acts between adults are not criminal. Only non-consensual acts involving adults can attract prosecution. | Can lead to imprisonment depending on facts proved |
| Section 498A IPC | Cruelty by husband or relatives | Deals with allegations of cruelty, harassment or dowry-related abuse against husband and his family | Up to 3 years imprisonment and fine |
| Section 201 IPC | Causing disappearance of evidence | Applies when a person allegedly destroys evidence or gives false information to protect an accused | Punishment depends on seriousness of main offence |
| Section 66E IT Act | Violation of privacy | Relates to capturing, publishing or transmitting private images without consent | Up to 3 years imprisonment or fine |
| Section 67 IT Act | Publishing obscene material electronically | Covers electronic transmission/publication of obscene content | Up to 3 years imprisonment and fine for first conviction |
| Section 161 CrPC | Police statement during investigation | Statement recorded by police during investigation phase | Used during investigation and contradiction in trial |
| Section 164 CrPC | Magistrate-recorded statement/confession | Statement recorded before Magistrate for stronger evidentiary value | Important corroborative evidence during trial |
| Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India (2018) | Supreme Court constitutional judgment | Decriminalised consensual same-sex relations between adults under Section 377 | Landmark constitutional ruling |
| Rai Sandeep @ Deepu v. State (NCT of Delhi) | Supreme Court precedent | Introduced “sterling witness” doctrine requiring testimony of unimpeachable quality for conviction based solely on complainant testimony | Important evidentiary safeguard in criminal law |
Case Details
| PARTICULARS | DETAILS |
| Case Title | State by CEN Police Station & Ors. v Dr. Vikram Vincent |
| Case Number | CC 57405/2019 |
| Court | Court of the XXIX Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, Mayohall Unit, Bengaluru |
| Date of Judgment | 15 May 2026 |
| Press Release Date | 16 May 2026 |
| Nature of Judgment | Acquittal |
| Accused | Dr. Vikram Vincent |
| Counsel for Accused | Sanjay Sugumaran, Abhinand Erubothu & Kushal Kumar |
| Law Firm | Arcadia Legal |
| Key Legal Issue | Applicability of Section 377 IPC involving consenting adults after Navtej Singh Johar judgment |
| Core Finding | Consent is the determinative factor under Section 377 involving adults |
| Final Outcome | Accused acquitted of all charges under Sections 377, 498A, 201 IPC and Sections 66E & 67 IT Act |
| Important Observation | “The more serious the offence alleged, there should be strict scrutiny of the evidentiary value.” |
| Four-Ingredient Test Under Section 377 | Carnal intercourse, penetration, voluntary commission, and absence of consent |
| Supreme Court Judgment Relied Upon | Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India |
| Evidentiary Principle Applied | “Sterling Witness” doctrine from Rai Sandeep @ Deepu v. State (NCT of Delhi) |
| Medical Findings Mentioned | “No injury seen in anus. No bleeding. No discharge.” |
| Proceedings Mentioned by Accused | 63 police attendances, 11 courts, nearly a decade of litigation |
Key Takeaways
- Bengaluru court clearly held that Section 377 cases involving adults cannot survive without proof of absence of consent.
- The court rejected blind acceptance of allegations and stressed that “serious allegations require stricter scrutiny, not weaker evidence.”
- Major contradictions in FIR, statements and testimony destroyed the prosecution’s case, exposing how criminal trials can be weaponised in matrimonial disputes.
- After 63 police attendances, 11 courts and nearly a decade of litigation, the accused was acquitted of every single charge — showing how process itself becomes punishment for men.
- The judgment reinforces that constitutional rights, due process and evidentiary standards cannot be sacrificed merely because allegations are emotionally charged.
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