Uncover the Role of Courts in Ensuring Justice: Explore the balance between convicting the guilty and protecting the innocent, the powers of Sections 311 CrPC and 165 Evidence Act, and how flawed investigations and biased trials undermine justice in India.
The object of a criminal trial is to dispense justice by convicting the
guilty and protecting the innocent. Therefore, the trial should be a search for
the truth rather than a focus on technicalities. It must be conducted under
rules that ensure the innocent are protected while the guilty are punished.
Failure to provide a fair hearing to either the accused or the prosecution
violates the minimum standards of due process of law.
The State has a definite role in protecting witnesses, especially in sensitive
cases involving individuals in power who enjoy political patronage and wield
muscle and financial influence, which can derail and taint the trial, making it
a casualty of manipulation.
Courts exist to deliver justice to those affected. Trial or first appellate
courts cannot be swayed by abstract technicalities or ignore factors that must
be thoroughly examined.
The court is not merely a tape recorder, passively recording evidence. It must
remain focused on the primary objective of the trial—ascertaining the truth.
Courts must ensure that accused individuals are appropriately punished and that
neither the powerful nor State authorities shield themselves or their associates
from justice.
Sections 311 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and 165 of the Evidence Act
confer wide powers on presiding officers to gather all necessary material
evidence. These powers enable courts to actively engage in the
evidence-collection process. The authority under Section 165 of the Evidence Act
complements the power granted under Section 311 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure.
Furthermore, if an appellate court deems additional evidence necessary, Sections
386 and 391 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, must be harmoniously
applied to allow the appeal to be adjudicated in light of the additional
evidence. Thus, when a court inadvertently omits circumstances essential to the
elucidation of truth, invoking Section 391 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973, becomes necessary.
If the trial court acquits the accused and the High Court upholds the acquittal,
it is only valid if the acquittal is merited. However, when the acquittal is
based on tainted evidence, a biased investigation, an unprincipled prosecutor, a
perfunctory trial, or testimony from coerced witnesses, it holds no sanctity or
credibility in the eyes of the law.
In the present case, even a cursory glance at the records reveals that the
justice delivery system has been undermined, abused, and subverted. Several
glaring infirmities are evident, apparent even to an ordinary person. The High
Court conclusively found that the police investigation was dishonest and flawed.
This, by itself, should have justified directing a retrial. However, the High
Court unnecessarily ventured into baseless conclusions, such as declaring false
implications without concrete evidence, relying solely on conjecture. The High
Court even went so far as to assert that the FIR was manipulated, despite
lacking any solid basis for such presumptive remarks or arbitrary conclusions.
Written By: S Kundu & Associates
Email:
[email protected], Ph No: +9051244073
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