Supreme Court Acquits Husband In Dowry Death Case, Criticises Mechanical Trial Of 17 In-Laws
Yash Mittal
14 July 2026 10:43 AM IST

The Court also warned appellate courts against causally ordering the remand of trials.
The Supreme Court on Monday (July 13) described as a "clear travesty of justice" the prosecution of 17 members of a family in a dowry death case, observing that they appeared to have been arraigned merely because they were related to the deceased by marriage, even though the evidence suggested that she had, in all probability, suffered fatal burn injuries in an accidental fire.
“Before leaving the matter, we are constrained to notice the clear travesty of justice which has occurred in the above case, putting on the dock seventeen persons for reason only of having marital ties with the victim who, in all probability, sustained burn injuries in an accidental fire at her matrimonial home.", observed a bench of Justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice K Vinod Chandran, while acquitting a husband in connection with an offence of dowry death of his deceased wife in the year 2000.
Offences under Sections 498A, 304B read with Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 and Sections 3/4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 (DP Act) were invoked in the case.
The Court expressed dissatisfaction with the manner in which the trial proceeded, as the in-laws of the deceased were arrayed as accused merely because of their relationship with the deceased, as the prosecution failed to prove the allegations against them beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Court found fault with the Patna High Court's decision because of its casual approach in the matter, for remanding the matter to the trial court, merely because of the lack of cross-examination of certain witnesses, whose testimony remained inconsequential.
“The High Court also should have bestowed better care in disposing of a criminal appeal from a conviction for an offence alleged to have been committed a quarter century back. The casual approach is evident from the remand order made for reason only of lack of opportunity to cross-examine certain witnesses, which testimonies were inconsequential and the impugned order of the Sessions Court having considered only those witnesses led in the trial of the accused, appellant herein.”, the Court observed.
The appellant's wife sustained about 40% burn injuries at her matrimonial home in Mirzapur, Uttar Pradesh in 2000, and succumbed to her injuries. Nearly a month after the incident, the deceased's father lodged an FIR alleging that the husband and his family had subjected her to cruelty over a demand for Rs. 50,000 as dowry, ultimately causing her dowry death.
The FIR named 17 members of the matrimonial family, including the husband, his parents, siblings, and other relatives. During the investigation, the police initially found offences made out against all the accused, but, acting on the Superintendent of Police's directions, filed the first charge sheet only against the parents-in-law while continuing the investigation against the remaining fifteen accused.
Eventually, two separate trials were conducted. The father-in-law and mother-in-law were acquitted, while in the second trial the husband alone was convicted and fourteen other relatives were acquitted. The High Court later remanded the matter on a limited procedural ground relating to cross-examination of certain witnesses.
Setting aside the impugned ruling, the judgment authored by Justice Chandran noted that despite allegations against all 17 family members, the prosecution ultimately failed to establish the charges. Earlier, the father-in-law and mother-in-law had already been acquitted, while fourteen other relatives were also acquitted during trial. The husband alone had remained convicted until the Supreme Court overturned the conviction.
“A serious procedural deviation, resulting in a graver travesty of justice is alleged; of two trials, from two final reports on the same First Information Report, having been proceeded with against seventeen persons leading to conviction of only one of them in the second trial, despite the further investigation having unearthed no evidence against the fifteen accused.”, the Court observed.
Appellate Courts Must Exercise Caution While Remanding Matter That Prolongs Litigation
The Court emphasised that where a criminal prosecution has remained pending for nearly twenty-six years, appellate courts must exercise greater caution before ordering remands that unnecessarily prolong litigation.
After independently examining the record, the Supreme Court found that the prosecution had failed to prove the alleged dowry demand or cruelty beyond a reasonable doubt. It also relied on the defence evidence, including an exculpatory dying declaration, medical records, and other contemporaneous documents indicating that the deceased had suffered accidental burn injuries while cooking.
Holding that the prosecution had failed to establish its case beyond a reasonable doubt, the Court allowed the appeal, acquitted the husband, and set aside his conviction.
Cause Title: Brajesh Kumar @ Birjesh Kumar Singh Versus The State of Bihar
Citation : 2026 LiveLaw (SC) 670
Click here to download judgment
Appearance:
For Petitioner(s) : Mr. Neeraj Shekhar, AOR Mrs. Kshama Sharma, Adv. Mr. Rajesh Maurya, Adv. Mr. Ritwik Prasad, Adv. Mr. Rajat Singh Chandel, Adv. Mr. Ujjwal Ashutosh, Adv. Ms. Avi Sahai, Adv.
For Respondent(s) : Mr. Manish Kumar, AOR Mr. Divyansh Mishra, Adv. Mr. Kumar Saurav, Adv.


