A criminal court can recall a witness who has already been examined, but it is not automatic and it is not a second chance to fix a weak case. In May 2026 the Supreme Court drew a firm line: Section 311 of the Criminal Procedure Code lets a court recall a witness only to reach a just decision, never to fill gaps in one side's case or to drag a victim back into the box again and again.
The short version: recall is allowed when the court genuinely needs the evidence to decide rightly. It is refused when it is really an attempt at a retrial or harassment.
Section 311 gives a court wide power to summon or recall any witness at any stage. The 2026 Supreme Court ruling explains how that power must actually be used.
| Recall is usually ALLOWED when | Recall is usually REFUSED when |
|---|---|
| The witness's evidence is essential to a just decision | The real aim is to fill a gap (a lacuna) in one side's case |
| A genuine point was left out and the truth needs it | It works as a disguised retrial or reopens a closed case |
| The application is bona fide and made in good faith | It changes the very nature of the case midway |
| The court itself sees a need to clarify the evidence | It would force a victim of a serious crime to be cross-examined yet again |
The test is purpose. A court asks why the recall is sought. If it is to discover the truth, it can allow it. If it is to repair a damaged case or to wear down a witness, it must refuse.
Section 311 of the Criminal Procedure Code allows a criminal court, at any stage of an inquiry or trial, to summon a person as a witness, recall and re-examine a person already examined, if the court thinks their evidence is essential to a just decision of the case. The same power continues under the successor criminal code that has replaced the CrPC.
The power is deliberately wide because a judge must be able to fill a real evidentiary need to do justice. But width is not a licence. The Supreme Court has long said this power is to be used with care.
In State of Tripura v. Panna Ahmed, 2026 INSC 584 (decided 30 May 2026), the Supreme Court set out the limits clearly. The Bench of Justices Dipankar Datta and Satish Chandra Sharma made three points that matter to any litigant.
First, on caution: “This vast statutory power must be exercised sparingly, with great caution and circumspection, and never in an arbitrary or capricious manner.”
Second, on misuse: “An application under Section 311 must be bona fide and cannot be allowed to act as a disguise for a retrial, to alter the nature of the case, or to simply fill up lacunae.”
Third, on protecting witnesses: “Witnesses cannot be expected to face hardship of appearing in court repeatedly, particularly in sensitive cases. It can result in undue hardship for the victims, especially so, of heinous crimes.”
On the facts, the Supreme Court set aside the High Court order that had permitted the recall and restored the trial court's decision refusing it.
This ruling cuts both ways, and that is why so many people search it.
If you are an accused person, it means you cannot use Section 311 late in the trial to bring a witness back simply because the cross-examination did not go your way the first time. Courts will read that as filling a lacuna and refuse it.
If you are a complainant or a victim, especially in a serious or sensitive case, it is a shield. The ruling says you should not be summoned back repeatedly to relive the same ordeal. A recall that only serves to harass you should be rejected.
If you are a witness in any case, it confirms that your time and dignity matter. Recall is for genuine need, not for tactics.
Kashvi Pathak was a key prosecution witness in a serious criminal trial in her district. After she had been fully cross-examined, the defence applied months later to recall her for further questioning on the same events. The trial court refused, reading the move as an attempt to reopen settled testimony and to put her through the ordeal again. The approach matches the limits the Supreme Court restated in 2026. The names and details here are illustrative.
Not for the recall decision itself, which a court makes judicially. But an RTI to the police public authority can surface the status of the case diary, the action taken on your complaints, or delays in the investigation. That information will not decide a Section 311 application, but it can help you understand and follow your own case. You can draft one free with the AI RTI Drafter.
Yes, a court can recall a witness under Section 311 of the Criminal Procedure Code, but only where their further evidence is essential to a just decision and the request is genuine. The 2026 Supreme Court ruling stresses this power is used sparingly.
No. The Supreme Court in 2026 said Section 311 cannot be used to fill a lacuna in one side's case or to act as a disguised retrial. A recall sought only to repair a damaged cross-examination is liable to be refused.
The 2026 ruling discourages it. The Court said witnesses, especially victims of heinous crimes, should not face the hardship of appearing repeatedly. A recall that mainly serves to harass a victim should be rejected.
The prosecution or the defence can apply, and the court can also recall a witness on its own. Whoever moves it must show that the further evidence is essential to a just decision of the case.
Section 311 allows recall at any stage of the inquiry or trial, before the judgment. But the later and more tactical the request looks, the more carefully the court examines whether it is bona fide or just an attempt to delay or fill a gap.
Yes. The new criminal procedure code that has replaced the CrPC carries the same recall power, and the Supreme Court's reasoning on how to use it sparingly continues to guide courts.
It can be challenged before a higher court. In the 2026 case, the Supreme Court set aside a High Court order that had permitted a recall and restored the trial court's refusal, showing that a wrong recall order can be corrected.
For a plain-language overview of your rights as a citizen dealing with the police and the courts, see The RTI Playbook.