The High Court of Meghalaya has taken a strict view on evidence and procedure in a grave offence.
Can an accused be acquitted in a brutal family murder case just because the confession has technical defects and the chain of evidence is called incomplete?
SHILLONG: The High Court of Meghalaya, led by Chief Justice Revati Mohite Dere and Justice W. Diengdoh, delivered a crucial judgment acquitting a woman who had earlier been sentenced to life imprisonment in a murder case.
The court found that the prosecution failed to prove the case through reliable and legally admissible evidence.
The court made it clear from the beginning that this was a case fully based on circumstantial evidence, where the law requires a complete and unbroken chain of proof. However, after examining the record, the judges found that there was absolutely no clarity about what actually happened inside the house and no direct evidence to show who committed the crime.
The prosecution mainly depended on a confession recorded under Section 164 CrPC, but the High Court found that even this was unreliable because proper legal procedure was not followed. The accused was not given sufficient time to reflect, and basic safeguards required for a voluntary confession were missing. Because of these serious defects, the court refused to rely on the confession at all.
Once the confession was discarded, the entire case collapsed. The remaining evidence from witnesses only showed events after the incident and did not establish who caused the injuries or death. The court clearly noted that there was no evidence connecting the accused directly to the crime, and the chain of circumstances was incomplete.
The prosecution then tried to rely on Section 106 of the Evidence Act, arguing that the accused should explain what happened inside the house. The High Court firmly rejected this argument and clarified that the burden is always on the prosecution to prove its case first.
The Court said:
“When a case is resting on circumstantial evidence, if the accused fails to offer a reasonable explanation in discharge of burden placed on him by virtue of Section 106 of the Evidence Act, such a failure may provide an additional link to the chain of circumstances. In a case governed by circumstantial evidence, if the chain of circumstances which is required to be established by the prosecution is not established, the failure of the accused to discharge the burden under Section 106 of the Evidence Act is not relevant at all. When the chain is not complete, falsity of the defence is no ground to convict the accused”
The court emphasized that Section 106 cannot be used to fill gaps in a weak case or shift responsibility onto the accused.
The judges made it clear that a person cannot be convicted just because they fail to explain something, especially when the prosecution itself has failed to prove the basic facts. The law requires strong, clear, and complete evidence, not assumptions or shortcuts.
The court held that the prosecution had completely failed to prove the case beyond reasonable doubt. The evidence was insufficient, the investigation was weak, and the conviction was unsafe. As a result, the High Court set aside the earlier judgment and ordered the immediate release of the accused.
In this case, the court gave little weight to the fact that the accused failed to explain what happened inside the house, even though such facts were especially within her knowledge, and instead placed the entire burden only on the prosecution.
Explanatory Table: Laws & Sections Involved
| Law / Section | Purpose | How Applied In This Case |
| Section 302 IPC | Punishment for murder | Accused was convicted for killing husband |
| Section 326 IPC | Causing grievous hurt with dangerous weapon | Injury caused to minor daughter |
| Section 164 CrPC | Recording of confession before Magistrate | Main evidence relied upon by trial court, later rejected |
| Section 313 CrPC | Accused’s explanation during trial | No proper questioning about confession |
| Section 106 Evidence Act | Facts especially within knowledge of accused | State argued accused should explain incident |
| Section 80 Evidence Act | Presumption of correctness of judicial records | Used by State to defend confession validity |
Case Details
- Case Title: Smti. Porthmi Bthuh vs The State of Meghalaya
- Court: High Court of Meghalaya at Shillong
- Case Number: Crl. A. No. 14 of 2021
- Neutral Citation: 2026:MLHC:189-DB
- Dates:
- Judgment Reserved On: 12.03.2026
- Judgment Pronounced On: 18.03.2026
- Bench: Hon’ble Mrs. Chief Justice Revati Mohite Dere & Hon’ble Mr. Justice W. Diengdoh
- Counsels:
- For Appellant: Mr. S.P. Mahanta, Sr. Advocate, Ms. L.D.N. Thangkhiew, Advocate, Mr. D. Das, Advocate, Mr. K. Deb, Advocate, and Ms. D. Ray, Advocate
- For Respondent (State): Mr. K. Khan, AAG, Mr. S. Sengupta, Addl. PP, and Mr. A.H. Kharwanlang, Addl. PP
Key Takeaways
- Court ignored that the accused failed to explain what happened inside the house, even though those facts were within her exclusive knowledge.
- Excessive burden placed on prosecution while giving undue benefit to the accused, weakening accountability.
- Rejection of confession on technical grounds allowed serious allegations to collapse without full scrutiny.
- Over-reliance on “incomplete chain” theory diluted the gravity of circumstantial evidence present on record.
- Such rulings risk setting a precedent where procedural lapses override substantive truth, leaving victims—often men—without justice.
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