2017 School Headmistress Rape-Murder : Supreme Court Dismisses Assam Govt Appeal Against Acquittal
The Supreme Court recently dismissed the appeal filed by the State of Assam against the Gauhati High Court's judgment which acquitted the accused in the 2017 rape and murder case of a school headmistress,
A bench comprising Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta upheld the Gauhati High Court's judgment which upheld the acquittal of accused Moinul Haque for the offences of murder and rape. The bench also set aside the High Court's conviction of the accused for causing the disappearance of evidence.
Lapses in recovery and identification
The case arose from the gruesome murder of a school headmistress in Assam, whose body was discovered concealed in a bag. The prosecution alleged that the accused, Respondent, was involved in the crime.
The Trial Court had convicted the accused for the offences of murder(302 IPC) and rape (S.376A IPC) and awarded the death penalty, which was later set aside by the Gauhati High Court. However, the High Court sustained a conviction under Section 201 IPC (causing disappearance of evidence), albeit with a reduced sentence. The State appealed before the Supreme Court.
The case against the accused was built entirely on circumstantial evidence, with the sole incriminating link being the recovery of a black umbrella allegedly belonging to the deceased. This recovery was claimed to have been made pursuant to a disclosure statement under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
The Supreme Court noted that there were serious lapses in the alleged recovery of the umbrella from the accused.
The Court observed that the recovery of the alleged incriminating material, said to be made in furtherance of disclosure under Section 27 of the Evidence Act, cannot be relied upon if the article was not kept sealed and there was no proper identification.
“The identification procedure conducted by the Investigating Officer, i.e., by simply calling the family members of the deceased to the police station and asking them to identify the umbrella as belonging to the deceased, is in clear contravention of the established procedure for identification of articles. Ordinarily, the recovered article ought to have been sealed, and the test identification proceedings should have been conducted in the presence of a Magistrate so as to make the procedure of identification unimpeachable.”, observed a bench of Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta.
Dismissing the appeal, the judgment authored by Justice Mehta held that it is incumbent upon the investigating agency to seal any recovered article that is alleged to be incriminating. The Court observed that, instead of sealing the article and conducting a test identification parade before a Magistrate, the courts below erred in treating the recovery as a valid one under Section 27 of the Evidence Act.
“we are of the firm opinion that neither was the recovery of the umbrella proved as per law nor does the identification thereof inspire confidence so as to link the same either to the accused respondent or to the crime.”, the court said.
Further, the Court noted that the umbrella was recovered 14 days after the incident, which constituted another significant factor weakening the prosecution's case, particularly since it rested entirely on circumstantial evidence.
“the significant gap of 14 days in effecting the recovery creates a doubt on the sanctity of the procedure of recovery.”, the court said.
Rejecting the State's reliance on the testimony of a co-accused implicating the respondent, the Court reiterated that a confession of a co-accused has weak evidentiary value and cannot form the sole basis of conviction without strong corroboration.
The Bench relied on settled principles governing cases based on circumstantial evidence, emphasizing that the chain of circumstances must be complete and must exclude every hypothesis consistent with innocence before a conviction can be sustained.
Significantly, the Court also set aside the conviction of the accused under Section 201 IPC (causing disappearance of evidence), even though the accused had not filed an appeal against that conviction.
The Bench clarified that the absence of an appeal by the accused does not restrict the appellate court's jurisdiction to correct an erroneous conviction in the interests of justice.
Cause Title: THE STATE OF ASSAM VERSUS MOINUL HAQUE @ MONU
Citation : 2026 LiveLaw (SC) 410
Appearance:
For Petitioner(s) :Mr. Chinmoy Pradip Sharma, Sr. A.A.G. Mr. Irfan Hasieb, Adv. Mr. Vijay Deora, Adv. Mr. Aditya Agarwal, Adv. Mr. Ankit Roy, AOR Ms. Mrinalini Ramesh, Adv.
For Respondent(s) :Mr. P V Dinesh, Sr. Adv(amicus), Ms. Sana Hashmi, AOR Mr. Salman Hashmi, Adv. Ms. Anna Oommen, Adv.