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12/04/2026
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Surupa Guha Murder Case 1976: w/o Indranath Guha (ex-Principal South Point School & Friend of Aparna Sen)

The Surupa Guha murder case revolves around the tragic death of Surupa, a 28-year-old chemistry student, on May 4, 1976, due to cardiorespiratory failure attributed to poisoning. Suspicions arose against her husband Indra Nath Guha, his parents, and their servant Jhantu after Surupa showed symptoms post-breakfast. Indra was accused of tampering with evidence and attempting to conceal his wife's murder. Following various legal proceedings, the Calcutta High Court quashed charges against Indra's parents. Ultimately, Indra was acquitted of murder but convicted of evidence tampering, highlighting unanswered questions regarding third-party involvement in the crime.
advtanmoy 07/05/2020 13 minutes read

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Surupa Guha Murder Case

Home » Law Library Updates » Sarvarthapedia » Surupa Guha Murder Case 1976: w/o Indranath Guha (ex-Principal South Point School & Friend of Aparna Sen)

Surupa Guha Murder Case

Table of contents
  1. Surupa Guha Murder Case
    1. The Unsolved Surupa Guha Murder Mystery
    2. Prosecution case
    3. Ballygunge P. S. (sec. S) case no. 188/1976
    4. Postscript
  2. Trial of Surupa Guha Murder Case 1976
  3. Conceptual Cluster: Surupa Guha Murder Case (1976)
    1. Core Node: Case Identity and Context
    2. Primary Connected Concepts
    3. Institutional and Spatial Nodes
    4. Legal Process Network
    5. Forensic and Evidentiary Nodes
    6. Social and Cultural Context
    7. Political and Administrative Context
    8. Interpersonal Network
    9. Narrative Tensions and Open Questions
    10. Cross-Linked Conceptual Themes
  4. Extended Knowledge Web Connections

Actress Aparna Sen was very close to Indranath Guha. Her husband Sanjoy ended up taking his own life.  Lal Bazar Detective Department had interrogated Aparna in connection with the Surupa Guha case. Rumour was rampant in the media that Surupa threatened Indra to disclose his illicit relationship with Aparna and to expose his ‘Educated’ family to the world. Chief Minister Siddhartha Sankar Roy assured of a fair investigation.  

The Unsolved Surupa Guha Murder Mystery

4th May 1976

Death Certificate:  Surupa Guha died on 4-5-1977 at about 11. 30 P.M night. The death certificate granted by the SSKM hospital showed that Surupa’s death was due to Cardiorespiratory failure due to unknown poisoning.

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Sukumar Naik and Subodh Das were the laboratory staff of the science department of South Point School. They were called by CID Police Lal Bazar. On interrogation, they stated that the  South Point School lab had Mercuric Chloride and it was accessible to Indra along with the chemistry teacher.

The case: Indra Nath Guha was accused in sessions trial no. 2 (1) /1978 which was pending before Shri R. Mahapatra, additional sessions judge, 6th court, Alipore.

Prosecution case

Complainant: Ramendra Mohan Mukherjee(Father)

Police action(CID): Indra Nath, his parents Satikanta and Pritilata as well as two other persons, named Ramendra Nath Lahiri and Jhantu Charan Dutta were arrested. They were, however, subsequently released on bail.

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After the CID investigation police submitted a charge sheet against Indranath and the four others on July 10, 1976, under section 120B/328/201 IPC.

The sessions judge Shri A. P. Bhattacharyya, additional sessions judge, 11th court, Alipore, however, by order dated the 3rd June 1977 framed charges against Indranath, Satikanta, and Pritilata under sections 120b/302/109/201 IPC. He also framed a charge under sections 120b/302/201 IPC against the accused Jhatu Charan Dutta. The learned Additional Sessions Judge on consideration of the materials on record found no sufficient ground for proceeding against Ramendranath Lahiri a driver of Indra and discharged him Under Section 227 of the Cr. P. C.

Calcutta High Court (R. Bhattacharyya, J. And R. K. Sharma, J) by an Order delivered on the 25th of July 1977 in a Revision, quashed charges against Satikanta Guha and Pritilata Guha framed by Session Judge.

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TRIAL TRANSFER: The High Court transferred the case to Additional District and Sessions Judge Ranabir Mahapatra(6th Court, Alipore)

Read the Order: Sati Kanta Guha And Anr. vs State Of West Bengal-25/07/1977

Ballygunge P. S. (sec. S) case no. 188/1976

Surupa Guha(28) a Rajabajar Science College (Chemistry) student was married to the accused Indranath Guha in 1966. After about a year of the marriage, there had been continued ill-treatment towards Surupa from her husband Indranath(Principal-Secretary of South Point High School), her father-in-law Satikanta Guha(died on January 8, 1991) and her mother-in-law Pritilata Guha(Trustee of the South Point Education Society) and such ill-treatment at times became unbearable to her.

On 4-5-1976 at about 10 or 10.15 AM Surupa came back home at 10, Hindusthan Road, Calcutta from the Science College Laboratory(she was there at night) where she used to go for her research work. Thereafter she was given breakfast viz., cucumber and lassi by the servant of her house Jhantu, one accused. She took the food and within 20 minutes she started vomiting and became seriously unwell.

At about 11 AM(Morning) the family physician came and as the condition of the patient was precarious, he advised her immediate hospitalisation. At about 11-30 AM the patient was admitted to the S. S. K. M. Hospital ( P. G. Hospital). The patient was at once taken charge of and her treatment started. Before the doctors, she stated at their request that she did not take any poison but took only cucumber and lassi.

At about 1 PM (Afternoon), Ramendra Mohan Mukherjee, the father of Surupa got a telephonic message that his daughter had become very sick and had been removed to the hospital. Parents and relatives of Surupa came to the hospital. Parents-in-law of Surupa, Indranath, Jhantu, and others also came. Satikanta produced one bottle of Horlicks at the hospital and wanted to get it examined at the hospital.

Indranath visited (by his own) the Science College Laboratory to ascertain if poison was there and got information that Mercuric Chloride Solution was there. He also took the bedsheets and the wearing apparel of Surupa from the hospital to his house (by his own). These clothing contained the matters vomited by Surupa. At night Indranath informed the Ballygunge Police Station that his wife, as he apprehended, might have by mistake taken some deleterious substance at the Science College or at home. The patient, however, died at the hospital on 4-5-1977 at about 11-30 P.M.

The death certificate granted by the hospital showed that Surupa’s death wag due to cardiorespiratory failure due to unknown poisoning. The next morning Ramendra Mohan Mukherji, the father of the deceased lodged a written complaint with the Officer-in-charge of the Ballygunge Police Station for an investigation into the case as he felt, considering the bad attitude of the mother-in-law and husband of Surupa, that “some kind of poison was mixed either in the cucumber or in the lassi” offered to his daughter.

The police after investigation submitted a charge sheet against Indra, his parents, and Ors and one Ramendranath Lahiri Under Sections 120-B, 328 and 201, I. P. C. The Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate, Alipore committed the said accused persons to the Court of Session Under Section 209 of the new Cr. P. C. for trial. The case was transferred to the learned 11th Additional Sessions Judge, Alipore for disposal. The learned Additional Sessions Judge on consideration of the materials on record found no sufficient ground for proceeding against Ramendranath Lahiri and discharged him Under Section 227 of the Cr. P. C. He framed the Charge against the accused U/S 120b/302/109/201 of IPC. For some unknown reason, he never continued with the Trial as the case was transferred from him to Judge Mahapatra as stated above.

Surupa`s statement before Death: “I did not take any poison by my own and I had taken only cucumber and lassi at my house at Hindusthan Park as breakfast after coming from college;”

Defense to the Surupas statement: “in the hospital premises the petitioner’s(Indra) father Satikanta Guha pointed to a bottle of Horlicks held by Mrs. Vincent (an employee of the South Point school) and told the complainant(Surupa`s father) and his brother that only Horlicks from that bottle was offered to Surupa during her breakfast; that the statement of Satikanta did not fit in with the dying statement of Surupa that she took cucumber and lassi.

Media Speculation: Actress Aparna Sen was very close to Indranath Guha. Her husband Sanjoy ended up taking his own life.  Lal Bazar Detective Department had interrogated Aparna in connection with the Surupa Guha case. Rumour was rampant in the media that Surupa threatened Indra to disclose his illicit relationship with Aparna and to expose his ‘Educated’ family to the world. Chief Minister Siddhartha Sankar Roy assured of a fair investigation.


Postscript

Mr. Satikanta Guha(then 65) the winner of the Rabindra Prize, is a brilliant man who has created one of Calcutta’s largest schools(1954) purely through his genius.  His family belongs to “Calcutta’s life known as high society”. Satikanta died in 1991 and his wife died in 2005. His school was taken over by Birla Group. Surupa had a daughter, Haimanti, we do not know anything about her. As reported in Dainik Basumati, Satikanta desired that his son should marry Aparna Sen. After coming out of Jail Indra married a teacher of South Point School and both run Garden High School in Kolkata.

Trial of Surupa Guha Murder Case 1976

Amiya Mukherjee the mother of Surupa, who was P. W. 4,  stated in her evidence that Surupa, “objected, to the disagreement between her and Indranath. Surupa said to the witness(Amiya) that Indranath used to come back daily in a drunken condition and oppress Surupa (atyachar korto).

Q. 46. What kind of married life did Surupa have? A. Initially, it was a happy married life.

Q. 47. By saying ‘initially’ what did you mean to say? A. By ‘initially’ meant ‘after marriage’.

Q. 48. What happened thereafter? A. Thereafter the nature of Indranath did not agree with the nature of Dola.

Q. 49. Did Surupa put up with this disagreement or did she object? (objected to). A. She objected.

Q. 50. What was the objection? (objected to). A. He used to come back daily in drunken condition to oppress her (attachyar karto). (objected to). (objection is raised on behalf of the accused Indranath u/s. 54 of the Indian Evidence Act).

Q. 51. For how long did it continue? A. Till the last day of Surupa’s life. (objected).

Q. 62. In March/April 1976 did anything, in particular, happen in the matter of the relationship between Indranath and Surupa? A. On 12th April 1976 Dola(Surupa) came and told me that Indranath would go to Gauhati on 14th April next. (objected to) (objection overruled).

Q. 64. Was Indranath going alone? a. No. He was going there with a lady.

The Sentence:  By a peculiar judgment by Additional District and Sessions Judge Ranabir Mahapatra(6th Court, Alipore), Indranath was acquitted u/s 302 IPC (murder charge) but found guilty U/S 201of IPC (tampering with evidence) and sentenced to two year’s imprisonment.

The question which never answered by the trial judge that there was a third person apart from Indranath and his servant Jhantu who had given poison to  Surupa. Then why Indra was interested to remove culpable evidence and to save whom Indra did it. What was the nature of that evidence? All surprisingly the judgment came into the conclusion that there was a criminal conspiracy to eliminate Surupa with some ulterior motive but the prosecution failed to establish that Indra and Jhantu were involved in the murder of Surupa.

Surupa died due to Mercuric Chloride in her stomach (Post mortem Report).  


Source: Dainik Basumati, Indra Nath Guha Vs State of West Bengal-28/11/1978 and Sati Kanta Guha And Anr. vs State Of West Bengal-25/07/1977


Conceptual Cluster: Surupa Guha Murder Case (1976)

Core Node: Case Identity and Context

Surupa Guha Murder Case (1976)
A criminal case centered on the death of Surupa Guha, involving allegations of poisoning, domestic conflict, and conspiracy within an influential educational family in Kolkata.

Primary Connected Concepts

Unnatural Death by Poisoning
Linked to toxicology, forensic uncertainty, and evidentiary ambiguity. The cause—mercuric chloride ingestion—connects the case to scientific access and institutional environments.

Domestic Conflict and Marital Abuse
Testimonies suggest prolonged ill-treatment, linking the case to patterns of domestic violence, coercion, and psychological distress within upper-middle-class households.

Criminal Conspiracy (IPC 120B)
The prosecution framed the case within conspiracy law, connecting multiple accused and raising questions of coordinated intent versus individual culpability.

Evidence Tampering (IPC 201)
Central to the final conviction. Removal of clothing and potential destruction of forensic traces connects to broader legal themes of obstruction of justice.

Institutional and Spatial Nodes

South Point School Ecosystem
Acts as a critical institutional node where access to chemicals (mercuric chloride) becomes possible. Links education institutions with unintended forensic implications.

Science College Laboratory Access
Represents a parallel site of possible poisoning origin, introducing dual-location ambiguity in crime reconstruction.

SSKM Hospital (Medical Authority)
A site of dying declaration and medical interpretation. Connects to medico-legal frameworks and reliability of patient testimony.

Ballygunge Police Station & Lalbazar CID
Law enforcement nodes reflecting investigative procedures, interrogation practices, and charge-sheet formation in 1970s Kolkata.

Legal Process Network

Charge Framing and Judicial Review
Sessions Court and High Court interventions demonstrate layered judicial scrutiny, including discharge under CrPC 227 and revision jurisdiction.

Trial Transfer Mechanism
Movement of the case between judges reflects procedural complexity and possible administrative or strategic influences.

Acquittal vs Partial Conviction
The paradox of acquittal under murder (IPC 302) but conviction under evidence tampering creates a jurisprudential tension between proof of act and proof of intent.

Forensic and Evidentiary Nodes

Dying Declaration
Surupa’s statement denying self-poisoning becomes a crucial evidentiary anchor, linked to Indian Evidence Act principles.

Contradictory Food Narratives
Cucumber and lassi vs Horlicks introduces inconsistency, connecting to witness reliability and narrative manipulation.

Post-Mortem Toxicology
Mercuric chloride detection ties the case to chemical lethality, dosage ambiguity, and access pathways.

Social and Cultural Context

Elite Bengali Society (1970s Kolkata)
The Guha family’s status situates the case within power, reputation, and social shielding dynamics.

Gender and Silence
Surupa’s position reflects broader themes of women’s vulnerability, limited agency, and delayed recognition of abuse.

Media Speculation and Public Narrative
Rumours involving Aparna Sen introduce a media-driven parallel narrative, linking celebrity culture with criminal investigation.

Political and Administrative Context

State Assurance of Fair Investigation
Public assurance by Siddhartha Shankar Roy connects the case to political oversight and public pressure.

Police–Political Interface
Raises questions about influence, neutrality, and institutional independence in high-profile cases.

Interpersonal Network

Indranath Guha (Accused Husband)
Central figure linking marital conflict, institutional access, and post-incident behavior (evidence removal).

Satikanta Guha (Father-in-law)
An intellectual and institutional authority figure, linking family hierarchy with possible influence on narrative construction.

Jhantu Charan Dutta (Domestic Help)
Represents the subaltern actor within conspiracy framing, often positioned ambiguously in criminal trials.

Ramendra Mohan Mukherjee (Complainant Father)
Embodies victim advocacy and initiates formal legal action, linking private grief to public prosecution.

Narrative Tensions and Open Questions

Third Person Hypothesis
Judicial acknowledgment of a possible unknown actor introduces unresolved multiplicity in agency.

Motive Ambiguity
Speculated motives—marital discord, extramarital relationships, social reputation—remain unproven yet structurally influential.

Knowledge vs Proof Gap
The case exemplifies the divide between suspicion, circumstantial inference, and legally admissible proof.

Cross-Linked Conceptual Themes

Forensic Uncertainty ↔ Legal Outcome
Incomplete forensic clarity contributes to partial conviction rather than full culpability.

Social Status ↔ Investigative Trajectory
Elite positioning potentially shapes both investigation depth and public discourse.

Gendered Violence ↔ Legal Recognition
Domestic abuse narratives struggle to translate into decisive legal outcomes in absence of direct evidence.

Media Narrative ↔ Judicial Process
Parallel storytelling influences public perception but remains formally excluded from evidentiary consideration.

Extended Knowledge Web Connections

Indian Penal Code Framework (BNS)
Sections 302, 201, 120B, 328, 109 interlink homicide, conspiracy, poisoning, and evidence destruction.

Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC)
Sections 209 and 227 connect committal proceedings and discharge standards.

Indian Evidence Act
Relevance of dying declarations, witness testimony, and admissibility standards.

Toxicology and Chemical Access Ethics
Raises broader questions about regulation of hazardous substances in educational institutions.

Unsolved/Partially Resolved Crimes in India
Positions the case within a larger corpus of ambiguous judicial outcomes.

This network positions the Surupa Guha case not as an isolated incident but as an intersectional node connecting law, society, gender, institutional power, and forensic ambiguity within modern Indian legal history.


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Tags: 1976CE Criminal Investigation MURDER Murder Mystery Sarvarthapedia Volume-VII

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