In the judgment of State of H.P. v. Yudhvir Singh, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh set aside a trial court’s acquittal and convicted a driver for rash and negligent driving. The Court ruled that driving on the wrong side of the road constitutes negligence per se and that minor contradictions in testimony due to the passage of time cannot be used to discard a credible prosecution case.
Case Background: The Collision
The incident occurred in December 2008 when the respondent, driving a Mahindra Bolero, hit a motorcyclist from the opposite direction near a factory in Kangra. The motorcyclist (informant) sustained grievous injuries. While the respondent admitted to being the driver, he claimed the accident was caused by the motorcyclist’s own negligence for not looking forward.
Trial Court’s Initial Acquittal
The Trial Court originally acquitted the driver based on three main factors:
- Witness Credibility: It found minor contradictions in the informant’s testimony regarding who took him to the hospital.
- Informant’s Attention: An eyewitness (PW3) admitted in cross-examination that the motorcyclist was looking toward the factory just before the hit.
- Non-examination of Witnesses: The prosecution failed to examine one person who was allegedly present at the scene.
High Court’s Grounds for Reversal
Justice Rakesh Kainthla found the Trial Court’s view to be perverse and contrary to the evidence based on the following legal principles:
- Wrong-Side Driving as Negligence: The site plan and photographs clearly established that the respondent was driving on the right (wrong) side of the road. The Court held that under Rule 2 of the Rules of the Road Regulations, 1989, a driver must stay to the left. Had the respondent stayed on his side, the accident would not have occurred regardless of where the motorcyclist was looking.
- Failure of Memory vs. Falsehood: The Court ruled that discrepancies in witness statements (e.g., who provided medical aid) are natural when testifying nearly four years after an incident and do not affect the “core” of the testimony.
- Procedural Error Regarding Evidence: The High Court noted that the Trial Court improperly used the informant’s previous police statement to discredit him without following the mandatory procedure under Section 145 of the Indian Evidence Act, which requires a witness to be confronted with the specific parts of a statement they are alleged to have contradicted.
- Adverse Inference: The Court clarified that an “adverse inference” for not examining a witness only applies if the existing evidence is insufficient; here, the site plan and photographs were enough to prove the case.
Final Verdict and Conviction
The High Court allowed the State’s appeal and convicted the respondent under:
- Section 279 of the IPC (Rash driving on a public way).
- Section 338 of the IPC (Causing grievous hurt by act endangering life or personal safety).
Separate convictions under Section 337 IPC and Section 184 of the Motor Vehicles Act were deemed unnecessary under Section 71 of the IPC. The respondent was ordered to appear for sentencing on May 12, 2026.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 165
State Of H.P. V. Yudhvir Singh(D.O.J. 27.04.2026)
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