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Bombay High Court Upholds Conviction for Murder of Wife by Husband in Bride Burning Case. Dying Declaration Found Reliable and Corroborated by Medical Evidence Under Section 302 IPC.

The appellant, Dadarao Shankar Baghav, was convicted by the IV Additional Sessions Judge, Pandharpur, for the murder of his wife Varsharani under Sect...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Accused in Murder Case Due to Inconsistent Dying Declarations. Conviction for Murder Under Section 302 IPC Set Aside as Dying Declarations Contradict Each Other and Lack Corroboration.

The appellant, Pradeep Ramchandra Pawar, was convicted by the Sessions Judge, Satara for the murder of his wife Sunita by pouring kerosene and setting...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Husband in Dowry Death Case Due to Unreliable Dying Declarations and Incomplete Circumstantial Evidence. Conviction under Sections 302 and 498-A IPC Set Aside as Prosecution Failed to Prove Guilt Beyond Reasonable Doubt.

The appellant, Shrikrishna Pralhad Mahakal, was convicted by the trial court for the murder of his wife Deepa under Section 302 IPC and for cruelty un...

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Madras High Court Dismisses Appeal Against Acquittal in Murder Case Due to Unreliable Dying Declaration and Hostile Witnesses. The deceased's dying declaration was not recorded by a Magistrate and lacked medical certification, making it insufficient to overturn the Trial Court's acquittal.

The case arises from a criminal appeal filed by the defacto complainant (father of the deceased) under Section 372 CrPC against the judgment of acquit...

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Supreme Court Upholds Murder Conviction in Bride Burning Case — Act Falls Under Section 300 Fourthly IPC, Not Exception 4. Pouring kerosene and setting a pregnant wife on fire constitutes murder despite subsequent attempt to pour water.

The appellant, Suraj Jagannath Jadhav, was convicted under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) for the murder of his wife by pouring kerosene o...

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Bombay High Court Upholds Conviction for Murder Based on Dying Declaration in Bride Burning Case. Dying declaration found credible and reliable despite minor inconsistencies, leading to confirmation of life sentence under Section 302 IPC.

The appellant, Macchidra Namdeo Shelar, was convicted by the Ad-Hoc Additional Sessions Judge, Pune, for the murder of his wife Vijaya under Section 3...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Accused in Murder Case Due to Inconsistent Evidence and Lack of Reliable Witnesses. Conviction under Section 302 IPC Set Aside as Prosecution Failed to Prove Guilt Beyond Reasonable Doubt.

The appellant, Gajanan Shivram Karve, was convicted by the Sessions Court, Bombay in S.C. Case No.707 of 2001 for the murder of a victim under Section...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Appellant in Murder Case Due to Inconsistent Evidence and Unreliable Dying Declaration. Conviction under Section 302 IPC Set Aside as Prosecution Failed to Prove Guilt Beyond Reasonable Doubt.

The appellant, Abdul Riyaz Abdul Bashir, was convicted by the 2nd Adhoc Additional Sessions Judge, Achalpur in Sessions Case No. 57/2005 for the murde...

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Bombay High Court Upholds Life Conviction for Murder by Burning in Kerosene Incident. Dying Declaration and Circumstantial Evidence Sufficient to Prove Guilt Under Section 302 IPC.

The appellant, Santosh @ Sonu Balram Jadhav, was convicted by the Additional Sessions Judge, Mumbai, for the murder of Rekha Raju Rathod under Section...

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Bombay High Court Alters Murder Conviction to Culpable Homicide in Domestic Violence Case — Lack of Intent to Kill Leads to Reduction of Sentence. Accused's Act of Setting Wife on Fire During Sudden Quarrel Held Not Murder Under Section 302 IPC but Culpable Homicide Under Section 304(ii) IPC.

The appellant, Rakesh Rajan Nayar, was convicted by the Additional Sessions Judge, Pune, for the murder of his wife Rohini under Section 302 IPC and s...