Full Judgment Text
1
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL No. 1452 OF 2023
( @ SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO.2480 OF 2021 )
SRI GULAM MUSTAFA
… APPELLANT
VERSUS
THE STATE OF KARNATAKA & ANR.
… RESPONDENTS
R1: THE STATE OF KARNATAKA
R2: SMT. JAYAMMA
J U D G M E N T
AHSANUDDIN AMANULLAH, J.
Heard learned counsel for the appellant,
Signature Not Verified
respondent no.1 and respondent no.2.
Digitally signed by
Nidhi Ahuja
Date: 2023.05.10
17:06:48 IST
Reason:
2. Leave granted.
2
3. The present criminal appeal is directed against
the Final Judgment and Order dated 23.02.2021 (herein-
after referred to as the “Impugned Judgment”) rendered
by the High Court of Karnataka (hereinafter referred to
as the “High Court”) at Bengaluru, whereby the High
Court was pleased to reject Criminal Petition No. 3788
of 2019 preferred by the appellant.
FACTUAL PRISM:
4. The Appellant is the Managing Director of GM
Infinite Dwelling (India) Private Limited (hereinafter
referred to as “GMID”). The company is said to be
engaged in developing residential properties. The said
company and the owners (heirs of one Mr A. Hafeez Khan)
of land bearing Survey Number 83 in Jodi Mallasandra
Village, District Bengaluru entered into a Joint
Development Agreement (hereinafter referred to as the
“JDA”) on 17.08.2009. In the year 2017, the apartment
project, as contemplated under the JDA, was completed
and sale deeds were executed in favour of the
allottees.
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5. The original owners of the land claimed title on
the basis of possessing the sale deed with regard to
the said land; order of the Special Deputy
Commissioner, Inams Abolition, Bangalore in Case No.
86/1959-60 dated 09.07.1961; Revenue records recording
the property mutated in the names of the heirs of Mr.
A. Hafeez Khan and given Survey Numbers 83/1 and 83/2
[(old Survey Number 8) new Survey Number 83]. Pursuant
to the JDA, the land-owners got the land-use changed
from agriculture to non-agriculture and after getting
the necessary No-Objection Certificate from various
departments involved, obtained the sanctioned map and
Building License from the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagar
Palike (hereinafter referred to as the “BBMP”), before
construction commenced.
6. It transpires that one Venkatesh, son of Late
Bylappa, was the owner of old Survey Number 83 and his
property had been assigned new Survey Numbers 80/1 and
80/3, and due to such change, with the new survey
numbers with regard to the land in question being
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Survey Number 83, the said Venkatesh claimed title over
land under the new Survey Number 83. This resulted in
prolonged civil litigation which included an
application before the Special Tehsildar; appeal before
the Assistant Commissioner, Bangalore, North Sub-
Division, and; Appeal before the Special Deputy
Commissioner – all of which went against Venkatesh.
7.
But that is not all. There were also two suits –
one filed by the legitimate land-owners, which was a
suit for injunction, and one (which we have no
hesitation in terming so) a frivolous suit filed by
Venkatesh. Since Venkatesh’s suit did not yield any
relief, he, along with others, approached the High
Court with an appeal, which was also dismissed. In
addition to this, Venkatesh also made an application
before the Additional Director, Town Planning, BBMP and
got the sanctioned plan cancelled. GMID impugned the
cancellation before the High Court by way of a writ
petition, which was disposed of directing GMID and the
owners to approach the BBMP’s Appeal Committee. Upon so
5
doing, BBMP’s Appeal Committee set aside the order of
the Commissioner and restored the sanctioned plan.
8. The construction commenced and after GMID having
entered into sale agreement(s) with prospective
purchasers of the apartments, Venkatesh initiated
criminal proceedings against the appellants and others
and through his proxies, one of whom, namely, Parvathy
Reddy had even been impleaded in the civil suit filed
by Venkatesh. Another civil suit being O.S. No.
8163/2016 has also been filed against the land-owners
and the builders by other person(s), which, as on date,
is still pending. While these civil litigations were
being defended by GMID and the original landlords in
various courts, a criminal complaint was lodged by the
mother of the plaintiff in O.S. No. 8163/2016, under
Sections 120B, 406, 419, 468, 471, 420, 448, 427 read
with Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860
(hereinafter referred to as the “IPC”). The same
metamorphosed into First Information Report in Crime
No. 317/2017 at Bagalgunte Police Station, Bangalore
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City (hereinafter referred to as the “FIR”) under
Section 3(1)(15) of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989
(hereinafter referred to as the “SC/ST Act”) and
Sections 427, 420, 419, 406, 471, 468, 448 and 120B of
the IPC. The Managing Director of GMID, namely Gulam
Mustafa, the appellant before us is arrayed as Accused
No. 18 in the FIR.
9. Insofar as the development on the land is
concerned, learned counsel for the appellant has stated
that in 2017, the construction of the apartments was
completed, sale deeds executed in favour of the
respective allottees, and these allottees are residing
in their apartments thereafter.
10. The appellant moved a petition under Section 482
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter
referred to as the “Code”) on 28.05.2019 before the
High Court for quashing the FIR. The said petition was
numbered Criminal Petition No. 3788 of 2019, and the
High Court, by order dated 07.08.2019, while issuing
7
notice, granted ad-interim direction staying further
proceedings in the FIR as far as the appellant was
concerned. However, Criminal Petition No. 3788 of 2019
was ultimately dismissed on 23.02.2021, leading to the
institution of the instant appeal.
SUBMISSIONS BY THE APPELLANT:
11. Learned senior counsel for the appellant submitted
that firstly, the matter is purely civil in nature as
it raises questions relating to title of the land on
which GMID had entered into a JDA and constructed
apartments after following the due procedure in law.
12. It was submitted that not one but multiple
authorities, including revenue authorities, the BBMP,
etc. had given requisite permission/s for construction.
Moreover, it was submitted that initial civil
litigation was also decided in favour of the original
land-owners, with whom GMID had signed the JDA.
13. The complaint resulting into the FIR, submitted
learned counsel, was at the behest of Venkatesh, who,
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mischievously, taking advantage of the similarity in
the old survey number of his land with the new survey
number of the land involved herein, had blatantly
abused the process of the court. It was submitted that
even when the initial written complaint was filed
before the police, GMID was arrayed as Accused No. 19,
but in the consequent FIR, the appellant was made party
thereto, by naming him as the Accused No.18.
14. It was submitted that the FIR is a complete abuse
of process as it has been filed by a family member of
the person, who was unsuccessful in various proceedings
against the original land-owners and the builder
(GMID), where they could not succeed and that is the
reason why Venkatesh had put up his illiterate mother
to file a false and frivolous complaint levelling false
allegations. It was submitted that the issue of title
of the property has attained finality in terms of the
decree passed by the Civil Court and no appeal has been
filed against the same. It was submitted that even the
9
allegations to bring in the SC/ST Act were deliberate,
and with malafide intention.
15. Learned counsel submitted that this Court has
repeatedly deprecated the practice of filing false
criminal cases in order to apply pressure and settle
civil disputes. By way of illustration, he relied upon
Govind Prasad Kejriwal v State of Bihar , (2020) 16 SCC
714 ; Commissioner of Police v Devender Anand , 2019 SCC
OnLine SC 966 ; Binod Kumar v State of Bihar , (2014) 10
SCC 663 ; Indian Oil Corporation v NEPC India Ltd. ,
(2006) 6 SCC 736 and G Sagar Suri v State of Uttar
.
Pradesh , (2000) 2 SCC 636
16. It was submitted that till date chargesheet has
not been filed. It was further submitted that GMID had
developed residential apartment complexes of more than
400 units on the self-same land, whereon the
complainant’s family unsuccessfully attempted to claim
title on multiple occasions, and the FIR is nothing but
a vexatious proceeding employed as a tool by the
complainant to coerce the appellant to agree to
10
unjustified attempts. It was canvassed that in 2010,
the relatives of the complainant had instituted a civil
suit seeking declaration of the title of the suit
property, which was dismissed in 2016. Subsequently,
the sons of the complainant instituted a fresh suit in
2016 and also sought an order to, inter alia , restrain
the appellant from entering upon the land in question.
The said suit, it is stated, is pending without any
interim order in operation.
17. Learned counsel also drew the attention of the
Court to the fact that the complainant’s relatives
initially tried to interfere with the suit property in
2006 due to which the original land-owners had
initiated a civil suit in 2008, which was, in fact,
decreed against the complainant’s family members.
18. It was also submitted that the person(s), with
whom the appellant had inked the JDA, had purchased the
subject-property in 1954-1955 and thereafter, they got
occupancy rights of the land on 09.07.1961, and only in
2017, the present criminal dispute had been engineered
11
by the complainant and/or her family members, noted
hereinabove.
SUBMISSIONS OF RESPONDENT NO. 2/COMPLAINANT:
19. Learned counsel for the complainant/respondent no.
2 submitted that the appeal is misconceived as the
police was in the midst of investigation which should
be allowed to be completed. It was submitted that the
complainant belongs to the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled
Tribes category and is protected thereunder. Learned
counsel supported the invocation of the provisions of
the SC/ST Act in the FIR. It was submitted that the
additional documents, sought to be made part of the
present record, were not part of the pleadings before
the High Court and thus, may not be looked into. It was
contended that it would amount to introduction of new
fact(s) in this case. It was contended that Section 482
of the Code requires the court only to see, whether
from the complaint, any cognizable offence is made out,
which in the present case is made out.
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20. It was submitted that as the specific allegations
pertain to cheating, criminal conspiracy and trespass,
being cognizable offences under the IPC, and the same
relating to the property belonging to the Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes community would attract
provisions of the SC/ST Act. It was reiterated that the
property in question belongs to the respondent no. 2
and her family members, and any construction raised on
the subject-land is by creating forged documents.
21. It was then contended that the Court is to be
highly circumspect in interfering with investigation
and quashing of FIRs. In support of his contentions,
learned counsel relied upon the following judgments,
and the paragraphs indicated alongside:
i. State of Madhya Pradesh v Surendra Kori ,
(2012) 10 SCC 155 @ Paras 14 and 16.
ii. Dineshbhai Chandubhai Patel v State of
Gujarat , (2018) 3 SCC 104 @ Paras 30-31
iii. Satvinder Kaur v State (Govt. of NCT of
Delhi) , (1999) 8 SCC 728 @ Para 16
13
iv. P Chidambaram v Directorate of
Enforcement, (2019) 9 SCC 24 @ Paras 61,
64-67
v. Skoda Auto Volkswagen India Private
Limited v State of Uttar Pradesh, (2021) 5
SCC 795 @ Para 41
vi.
Union of India v Prakash P Hinduja , (2003)
@ Para 20
6 SCC 195
22. Further, advancing that the FIR was not required
to be an encyclopaedia, which must disclose all facts
and details of the offence(s) alleged or complained of,
learned counsel relied upon Superintendent of Police,
CBI v Tapan Kumar Singh , (2003) 6 SCC 175 (at Para 20)
and State of Uttar Pradesh v Naresh , (2011) 4 SCC 324
(at Para 32).
SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT NO.1/THE STATE:
23. Learned counsel for the State submitted that the
matter involves disputed questions of fact which this
Court would not go into. It was the submission that the
case be left to be investigated into by the police.
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Further, it was submitted that Dineshbhai Chandubhai
Patel ( supra ) has held that it is the duty of the
Investigating Officer to probe the crime, and that the
High Court is not to act as an Investigating Officer.
ANALYSIS, REASONING AND CONCLUSION:
24. Having considered the matter, this Court finds
that a case for interference is made out. The basic
facts to be noticed are: (a) that the land-owners with
whom GMID had entered into the JDA, had purchased the
land in 1954-1955, and; (b) the occupancy rights were
also created in the original land-owners’ favour on
09.07.1961. From then onwards, no dispute was raised by
any person before any authority and only after the GMID
entered into the JDA with the original land-owners in
the year 2009, obtained all clearances from the
authorities in their favour, started the construction
work and built apartments numbering more than 400, sold
them to the buyers/allottees in the year 2017, did the
present dispute arise. This itself indicates a lack of
bonafide . We have mused as to why the complainant and
15
her family members, if the land was theirs, would sit
by and watch on as fence-sitters for a long period of
time.
25. Moreover, when one civil litigation had attained
finality with no relief granted to the relatives of the
complainant, another civil suit was filed in the year
2016 and therein as well, when no interim order could
be secured by the complainant/her family members, the
present complaint has been registered, resulting in the
FIR. We are constrained to state that the malafide
appears writ large from the aforenoted sequence of
events.
26. Although we are not for verbosity in our
judgments, a slightly detailed survey of the judicial
precedents is in order. In State of Haryana v Bhajan
Lal , 1992 Supp (1) SCC 335 , this Court held:
“102. In the backdrop of the interpretation of
the various relevant provisions of the Code under
Chapter XIV and of the principles of law
enunciated by this Court in a series of decisions
relating to the exercise of the extraordinary
power under Article 226 or the inherent powers
under Section 482 of the Code which we have
16
extracted and reproduced above, we give the
following categories of cases by way of
illustration wherein such power could be exercised
either to prevent abuse of the process of any
court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice,
though it may not be possible to lay down any
precise, clearly defined and sufficiently
channelised and inflexible guidelines or rigid
formulae and to give an exhaustive list of myriad
kinds of cases wherein such power should be
exercised.
(1) Where the allegations made in the first
information report or the complaint, even if they
are taken at their face value and accepted in
their entirety do not prima facie constitute any
offence or make out a case against the accused.
(2) Where the allegations in the first
information report and other materials, if any,
accompanying the FIR do not disclose a cognizable
offence, justifying an investigation by police
officers under Section 156(1) of the Code except
under an order of a Magistrate within the purview
of Section 155(2) of the Code.
(3) Where the uncontroverted allegations made in
the FIR or complaint and the evidence collected in
support of the same do not disclose the commission
of any offence and make out a case against the
accused.
(4) Where, the allegations in the FIR do not
constitute a cognizable offence but constitute
only a non-cognizable offence, no investigation is
permitted by a police officer without an order of
a Magistrate as contemplated under Section 155(2)
of the Code.
(5) Where the allegations made in the FIR or
complaint are so absurd and inherently improbable
on the basis of which no prudent person can ever
reach a just conclusion that there is sufficient
ground for proceeding against the accused.
(6) Where there is an express legal bar
engrafted in any of the provisions of the Code or
17
the concerned Act (under which a criminal
proceeding is instituted) to the institution and
continuance of the proceedings and/or where there
is a specific provision in the Code or the
concerned Act, providing efficacious redress for
the grievance of the aggrieved party.
(7) Where a criminal proceeding is manifestly
attended with mala fide and/or where the
proceeding is maliciously instituted with an
ulterior motive for wreaking vengeance on the
accused and with a view to spite him due to
private and personal grudge.
103. We also give a note of caution to the
effect that the power of quashing a criminal
proceeding should be exercised very sparingly and
with circumspection and that too in the rarest of
rare cases; that the court will not be justified
in embarking upon an enquiry as to the reliability
or genuineness or otherwise of the allegations
made in the FIR or the complaint and that the
extraordinary or inherent powers do not confer an
arbitrary jurisdiction on the court to act
according to its whim or caprice
.”
(emphasis supplied)
27. This Court, in
S W Palanitkar v State of Bihar ,
, held:
(2002) 1 SCC 24
“… whereas while exercising power under Section
482 CrPC the High Court has to look at the object
and purpose for which such power is conferred on
it under the said provision. Exercise of inherent
power is available to the High Court to give
effect to any order under CrPC, or to prevent
abuse of the process of any court or otherwise to
secure the ends of justice. This being the
position, exercise of power under Section 482 CrPC
should be consistent with the scope and ambit of
18
the same in the light of the decisions
aforementioned. In appropriate cases, to prevent
judicial process from being an instrument of
oppression or harassment in the hands of
frustrated or vindictive litigants, exercise of
inherent power is not only desirable but necessary
also, so that the judicial forum of court may not
be allowed to be utilized for any oblique motive.
When a person approaches the High Court under
Section 482 CrPC to quash the very issue of
process, the High Court on the facts and
circumstances of a case has to exercise the powers
with circumspection as stated above to really
serve the purpose and object for which they are
conferred
.”
(emphasis supplied)
28. In State of Karnataka v M Devendrappa , (2002) 3
SCC 89 , it was decided:
“6. Exercise of power under Section 482 of the
Code in a case of this nature is the exception and
not the rule. The section does not confer any new
powers on the High Court. It only saves the
inherent power which the Court possessed before
the enactment of the Code. It envisages three
circumstances under which the inherent
jurisdiction may be exercised, namely, (i) to give
effect to an order under the Code, (ii) to prevent
abuse of the process of court, and (iii) to
otherwise secure the ends of justice. It is
neither possible nor desirable to lay down any
inflexible rule which would govern the exercise of
inherent jurisdiction. No legislative enactment
dealing with procedure can provide for all cases
that may possibly arise. Courts, therefore, have
inherent powers apart from express provisions of
law which are necessary for proper discharge of
functions and duties imposed upon them by law.
That is the doctrine which finds expression in the
section which merely recognizes and preserves
19
inherent powers of the High Courts. All courts,
whether civil or criminal possess, in the absence
of any express provision, as inherent in their
constitution, all such powers as are necessary to
do the right and to undo a wrong in course of
administration of justice on the principle quando
lex aliquid alicui concedit, concedere videtur et
id sine quo res ipsae esse non potest (when the
law gives a person anything it gives him that
without which it cannot exist). While exercising
powers under the section, the court does not
function as a court of appeal or revision.
Inherent jurisdiction under the section though
wide has to be exercised sparingly, carefully and
with caution and only when such exercise is
justified by the tests specifically laid down in
the section itself. It is to be exercised ex
debito justitiae to do real and substantial
justice for the administration of which alone
courts exist. Authority of the court exists for
advancement of justice and if any attempt is made
to abuse that authority so as to produce
injustice, the court has power to prevent abuse.
It would be an abuse of process of the court to
allow any action which would result in injustice
and prevent promotion of justice. In exercise of
the powers court would be justified to quash any
proceeding if it finds that initiation/continuance
of it amounts to abuse of the process of court or
quashing of these proceedings would otherwise
serve the ends of justice. When no offence is
disclosed by the complaint, the court may examine
the question of fact. When a complaint is sought
to be quashed, it is permissible to look into the
materials to assess what the complainant has
alleged and whether any offence is made out even
if the allegations are accepted in toto
.”
(emphasis supplied)
29. In Uma Shankar Gopalika v State of Bihar , (2005)
10 SCC 336 , at Para 7 thereof, it was held that when
20
the complaint fails to disclose any criminal offence,
the proceeding is liable to be quashed under Section
482 of the Code:
“In our view petition of complaint does not
disclose any criminal offence at all much less any
offence either under Section 420 or Section 120-B
IPC and the present case is a case of purely civil
dispute between the parties for which remedy lies
before a civil court by filing a properly
constituted suit. In our opinion, in view of these
facts allowing the police investigation to
continue would amount to an abuse of the process
of court and to prevent the same it was just and
expedient for the High Court to quash the same by
exercising the powers under Section 482 Code which
it has erroneously refused
.”
(emphasis supplied)
30. The law on the subject was also examined in
.
Parbatbhai Aahir v State of Gujarat , (2017) 9 SCC 641
In , it was
Habib Abdullah Jeelani , (2017) 2 SCC 779
opined:
“inherent power in a matter of quashment of FIR
has to be exercised sparingly and with caution and
when and only when such exercise is justified by
the test specifically laid down in the provision
itself There is no denial of the fact that the
power under Section 482 CrPC is very wide but it
needs no special emphasis to state that conferment
of wide power requires the Court to be more
cautious. It casts an onerous and more diligent
duty on the Court
.”
(emphasis supplied)
21
31. In Vinod Natesan v State of Kerala , (2019) 2 SCC
, this Court took the position outlined hereunder:
401
| “11. … Even otherwise, as observed | ||
|---|---|---|
| hereinabove, we are more than satisfied that there | ||
| was no criminality on part of the accused and a | ||
| civil dispute is tried to be converted into a | ||
| criminal dispute. Thus to continue the criminal | ||
| proceedings against the accused would be an abuse | ||
| of the process of law. Therefore, the High Court | ||
| has rightly exercised the powers under Section 482 | ||
| CrPC and has rightly quashed the criminal | ||
| proceedings. In view of the aforesaid and for the | ||
| reasons stated above, the present appeal fails and | ||
| deserves to be dismissed and is accordingly | ||
| dismissed.” | ||
| (emphasis supplied) |
32. The legal position was also considered in Kamal
Shivaji Pokarnekar v State of Maharashtra , (2019) 14
SCC 350 . In Mahendra K C v State of Karnataka , 2021 SCC
OnLine SC 1021 , this Court stated:
“23. … the High Court while exercising its power
under Section 482 of the CrPC to quash the FIR
instituted against the second respondent-accused
should have applied the following two tests : i)
whether the allegations made in the complaint,
prima facie constitute an offence; and ii) whether
the allegations are so improbable that a prudent
man would not arrive at the conclusion that there
is sufficient ground to proceed with the
complaint.”
22
33. We are equally mindful of Arnab Manoranjan Goswami
v State of Maharashtra , (2021) 2 SCC 427 , where at
… The other end of
Paragraph 68, it was stated that “
the spectrum is equally important: the recognition by
Section 482 of the power inhering in the High Court to
prevent the abuse of process or to secure the ends of
justice is a valuable safeguard for protecting
liberty.
” We are at one with this comment. A detailed
exposition of the law is also forthcoming in Neeharika
Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd. v State of Maharashtra , 2021
SCC OnLine SC 315 , which we have factored into, while
adjudicating the instant lis .
34. Insofar and inasmuch as interference in cases
involving the SC/ST Act is concerned, we may only point
out that a 3-Judge Bench of this Court, in Ramawatar v
State of Madhya Pradesh , 2021 SCC OnLine SC 966 , has
held that the mere fact that the offence is covered
special statute
under a ‘ ’ would not inhibit this Court
or the High Court from exercising their respective
23
powers under Article 142 of the Constitution or Section
482 of the Code, in the terms below:
“15. Ordinarily, when dealing with offences
arising out of special statutes such as the SC/ST
Act, the Court will be extremely circumspect in
its approach. The SC/ST Act has been specifically
enacted to deter acts of indignity, humiliation
and harassment against members of Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes. The SC/ST Act is also a
recognition of the depressing reality that despite
undertaking several measures, the Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes continue to be subjected
to various atrocities at the hands of upper-
castes. The Courts have to be mindful of the fact
that the SC/ST Act has been enacted keeping in
view the express constitutional safeguards
enumerated in Articles 15, 17 and 21 of the
Constitution, with a twin-fold objective of
protecting the members of these vulnerable
communities as well as to provide relief and
rehabilitation to the victims of caste-based
atrocities.
16. On the other hand, where it appears to
the Court that the offence in question, although
covered under the SC/ST Act, is primarily civil or
private where the alleged offence has not been
committed on account of the caste of the victim,
or where the continuation of the legal proceedings
would be an abuse of the process of law, the Court
can exercise its powers to quash the proceedings.
On similar lines, when considering a prayer for
quashing on the basis of a compromise/settlement,
if the Court is satisfied that the underlying
objective of the SC/ST Act would not be
contravened or diminished even if the felony in
question goes unpunished, the mere fact that the
offence is covered under a ‘special statute’ would
not refrain this Court or the High Court, from
24
exercising their respective powers under Article
142 of the Constitution or Section 482 Cr.P.C
.”
(emphasis supplied)
35. We have bestowed anxious consideration to the
precedents cited by learned counsel for the respondents
and are of the view that the same are inapposite to the
factual scenario herein. Suffice it would be to state
that while the propositions laid down therein are not
disputed, they do not prejudice the version of the
present appellant. Tapan Kumar Singh ( supra ) and Naresh
( supra ) indicate that the FIR need not be a detailed
one, as it is only to initiate the investigative
process and the police should ordinarily be allowed to
investigate. This is the general rule, but not a fetter
on this Court or the High Court in an appropriate case.
36. What is evincible from the extant case-law is that
this Court has been consistent in interfering in such
matters where purely civil disputes, more often than
not, relating to land and/or money are given the colour
of criminality, only for the purposes of exerting
extra-judicial pressure on the party concerned, which,
25
we reiterate, is nothing but abuse of the process of
the court. In the present case, there is a huge, and
quite frankly, unexplained delay of over 60 years in
initiating dispute with regard to the ownership of the
land in question, and the criminal case has been lodged
only after failure to obtain relief in the civil suits,
coupled with denial of relief in the interim therein to
the respondent no.2/her family members. It is evident
that resort was now being had to criminal proceedings
which, in the considered opinion of this Court, is with
ulterior motives, for oblique reasons and is a clear
case of vengeance.
37. The Court would also note that even if the
allegations are taken to be true on their face value,
it is not discernible that any offence can be said to
have been made out under the SC/ST Act against the
appellant. The complaint and FIR are frivolous,
vexatious and oppressive.
38. This Court would indicate that the officers, who
institute an FIR, based on any complaint, are duty-
26
bound to be vigilant before invoking any provision of a
very stringent statute, like the SC/ST Act, which
imposes serious penal consequences on the concerned
accused. The officer has to be satisfied that the
provisions he seeks to invoke prima facie apply to the
case at hand. We clarify that our remarks, in no
manner, are to dilute the applicability of
special/stringent statutes, but only to remind the
police not to mechanically apply the law, dehors
reference to the factual position.
39. For the reasons aforesaid, the Court finds that
the High Court fell in error in not invoking its
wholesome power under Section 482 of the Code to quash
the FIR. Accordingly, the Impugned Judgment, being
untenable in law, is set aside. Consequent thereupon,
the FIR, as also any proceedings emanating therefrom,
insofar as they relate to the appellant, are quashed
and set aside.
27
40. Accordingly, this appeal stands allowed, without
any order towards costs. Pending applications are
consigned to records.
.......................J.
[ ]
DINESH MAHESHWARI
.......................J.
[ AHSANUDDIN AMANULLAH ]
NEW DELHI
MAY 10, 2023