Raj Kumar @ Bheema v. State of NCT of Delhi; 2025 INSC 1322 -Ss. 144,145 Evidence Act

Indian Evidence Act 1872 - Section 144,145 [Section 147,148 BSA] -Wherever questions are required to be put as to the matters in writing/previous statements in writing, the attention of the witness must be drawn to the document/statement itself- None of the parties should be put to a dis-advantage merely because the witness is not in attendance before the Court, and the document/previous statement in writing with which such witness is sought to be confronted, cannot be shown/put to him -In every case where, it is proposed to record the statement of a witness over video conferencing and any previous written statement of such witness or a matter in writing is available and the party concerned is desirous of confronting the witness with such previous statement/matter in writing, the trial Court shall ensure that a copy of the statement/document is transmitted to the witness through electronic transmission mode and the procedure provided under Section 147 and Section 148 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (corresponding Section 144 and Section 145 of the Evidence Act) is followed in the letter and spirit, so as to safeguard the fairness and integrity of the trial.  (Para 46-48)

Criminal Trial - Test Identification Parade - While the refusal of the accused to participate in the TIP may, prima facie, invite an adverse inference, mere such inference cannot support the theory of identification when the very authenticity of the TIP is under a serious cloud of doubt. When it stands established from the record that the TIP attempted by the prosecution was fundamentally flawed, and a doubt is created that the identifying witness herself may not even have been present to participate therein, the very foundation of the identification proceedings falls flat to the ground. (Para 65) Where the witnesses have had an opportunity to see the accused prior to the holding of the TIP, the evidentiary worth of such proceedings stands considerably diminished. It is the duty of the prosecution to establish beyond doubt that right from the time of arrest, the accused was kept baparda to rule out the possibility of his face being seen before the identification proceedings are conducted. If the witnesses have had any opportunity to see the accused before the TIP – whether physically or through photographs – the credibility and sanctity of the identification proceedings would stand seriously compromised. (Para 62)

Criminal Trial - Eye Witness - The evidence of an eye-witness must be of sterling quality and unimpeachable character. It should not only inspire the confidence of the Court but must also be of such a nature that is acceptable at its face value (Para 51)-In assessing the credibility of a witness, the testimony must inspire confidence in the judicial mind, and omissions, improvements, or contradictions touching the core of the prosecution version inevitably undermine such assurance -Minor discrepancies are not fatal, but material improvements that go to the root of the matter essentially erode the credibility of the witness. (Para 55)

Criminal Trial - The mere availability of human blood on an article is not sufficient unless it is further corroborated by a matching blood group with that of the deceased. (Para 68)

Case Info


Case Details

  • Case name: Raj Kumar @ Bheema v. State of NCT of Delhi.
  • Neutral citation: 2025 INSC 1322.
  • Coram: Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Sandeep Mehta.
  • Judgment date: November 17, 2025.

Caselaws and Citations

  • Mekala Sivaiah v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (2022) 8 SCC 253.
  • Koppula Jagdish v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (2005) 12 SCC 425.

Statutes / Laws Referred

  • Indian Penal Code, 1860: Sections 302394397307412, read with Section 34.
  • Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act, 1999 (MCOCA): Sections 33(1)(i)3(1)(ii)3(2)3(4).
  • Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC): Sections 8283207313.
  • Indian Evidence Act, 1872 / Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023: Sections 144/147 and 145/148 (cross-examination on prior statements; matters in writing).
  • Forensic Science references: Serology and FSL reports noted in evidence.
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