In the judgment of State of Himachal Pradesh v. Deepak Bhupal alias Nandu, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh upheld the acquittal of an individual accused of possessing 4.5 kg of poppy husk. The Court ruled that major discrepancies in the description of seals and “irreconcilable” contradictions in the timing of the investigation broke the chain of custody and rendered the prosecution’s case doubtful.
The Alleged Incident
The prosecution claimed that on the night of November 9, 2010, police patrolling in Mehatpur Bazar apprehended the respondent, who was carrying a black polythene bag. Upon search, five packets containing 900 grams of poppy husk each were allegedly recovered. The police stated that an independent witness was present during this process and that the contraband was sealed with seven seals of impression ‘K’ and later resealed by the SHO with five seals of impression ‘A’.
Key Legal Findings and Failures
- Seal Discrepancies: The Court found a “material contradiction” regarding the seals on the case property. While the official records claimed 7 ‘K’ and 5 ‘A’ seals, the parcel produced in court at different times was found to have varying counts, such as 4 ‘K’ and 2 ‘A’ seals, or even 12 mixed seals with some being “uprooted”. There were also conflicting descriptions of whether the forensic seals were marked “FSL-II,” “SFSL,” or “FSL”.
- Broken Chain of Custody: Due to these discrepancies, the Court held that the prosecution failed to prove that the contraband produced in the trial was the same material allegedly seized from the respondent.
- Timeline Contradictions: A prosecution witness (PW-9) testified that he left the scene with the Ruqua (initial report) at 1:15 PM, which was nearly seven hours before the police claim to have even noticed the respondent at 8:00 PM. The Court found it “irreconcilable” that the FIR appeared to be registered before the Ruqua arrived at the station.
- Hostile Independent Witness: The sole independent witness denied the entire prosecution story, claiming he was not at the scene and only signed documents at the police station because he was in a hurry.
- Inadmissible Digital Evidence: The defense attempted to use mobile call records to disprove the timing of the arrest notification, but the Court noted this could not be considered because it lacked the mandatory certificate required under Section 65(b) of the Indian Evidence Act.
Final Ruling: Benefit of Doubt
The High Court emphasized that the “shaky character of evidence” failed to rebut the respondent’s presumption of innocence. Concluding that the evidence linking the contraband to the respondent was highly doubtful, the Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the acquittal.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 110
State of Himachal Pradesh V. Deepak Bhupal Alias Nandu (D.O.J. 24-03-2026)
Loading Viewer...






