Full Judgment Text
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1545 OF 2023
( @ SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO.400 OF 2022 )
PRIYANKA MISHRA & ORS. … APPELLANTS
VERSUS
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ANR. … RESPONDENTS
A1: PRIYANKA MISHRA
A2: NISHA @ SURSAR DEVI
A3: PUSHPENDRA MISHRA
R1: THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
R2: NIKITA
O R D E R
AHSANUDDIN AMANULLAH, J.
Heard learned counsel for the parties.
2. Leave granted.
3. The present Appeal is directed against the Final
Signature Not Verified
Judgment and Order dated 30.04.2019 (hereinafter
Digitally signed by
ASHA SUNDRIYAL
Date: 2023.05.17
15:50:59 IST
Reason:
referred to as the “Impugned Judgment”) passed by the
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High Court of Madhya Pradesh, Bench at Gwalior
(hereinafter referred to as the “High Court”) in
Miscellaneous Criminal Case No. 6054 of 2019 by which
the petition filed by the appellants under Section 482
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter
referred to as the “Code”) praying to quash First
Information Report viz . Crime No. 139 of 2018
registered at P.S. Mahila Thana, District Gwalior,
Madhya Pradesh has been dismissed.
THE FACTUAL PRISM:
4. The Appellants before us, respectively, are the
sister-in-law, mother-in-law and father-in-law of the
Respondent No.2. As per the complaint filed by
Respondent no.2 before the police, the Appellants and
the husband of the Respondent No.2 were made accused
for offences punishable under Section 498-A and Section
34 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (hereinafter referred
to as the “IPC”) and Section 4 of the Dowry Prohibition
Act (hereinafter referred to as the “Act”). As per the
allegations, the accused including the appellants and
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other family members demanded INR 50,00,000/- (Rupees
Fifty Lakhs) cash and fifteen tolas gold ornaments. As
per the complaint, the Respondent No.2 was married to
the son of the Appellants No.2 & 3 on 03.02.2014 at
Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh. As per the demands of the
Accused-Appellants, Respondent No.2’s father gave about
INR 5,00,000/-(Rupees Five Lakhs) cash, fifteen tolas
gold jewellery, a diamond ring worth INR 50,000/-,
clothes worth INR 60,000/- for the husband, apart from
household articles and overall INR 30,00,000/- (Rupees
Thirty Lakhs) was spent in the marriage functions.
5. It is alleged that after marriage, the Appellants
started physically and mentally harassing Respondent
No.2 demanding dowry and started taunting her that her
husband would have fetched INR 1,00,00,000/- (Rupees
One Crore) as dowry. It is stated that in April, 2014
the Respondent No.2 got a job in Hyderabad, Telangana,
where her husband was employed and she became pregnant
there. It is further stated that the Appellants and
husband of Respondent No.2 started abusing her that if
a child was born, expenses would increase and the
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father of Respondent No.2 had already cheated them. It
is also alleged that the accused, inter alios , forcibly
got an abortion performed on Respondent No.2 at
Hyderabad. And when the Appellant No.1 was to be
engaged, the Appellants again started harassing her and
in March, 2016 she was taken by her father to her
parental home.
6. After moving to Hyderabad in April, 2014,
Respondent No.2 and her husband worked and lived at
Hyderabad between April-September, 2014 and after that
her husband left for London for an assignment, and she
followed suit to London, but in December, 2014 only.
Thereafter, the husband of Respondent No.2 got a job in
Sweden in March, 2015 and the wife/Respondent No.2
joined him in May, 2015.
7. The Respondent No.2 later filed a criminal case
against her husband and the appellants. This prompted
the Appellants to move before the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh through Miscellaneous Criminal Case No. 6054 of
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2019 for quashing the same under Section 482 of the
Code.
SUBMISSIONS BY THE APPELLANTS:
8. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that
already a divorce case has been instituted in Sweden.
It was submitted that Respondent No.2 hardly lived at
the matrimonial home as she was married on 03.02.2014
and in April, 2014 moved to Hyderabad and lived with
her husband and also worked there. In March, 2015
Respondent No.2’s husband moved to Sweden and in May,
2015, she too joined him in Sweden.
9. It was submitted that the Appellants No.2 & 3
hardly stayed at the matrimonial home at Rewa, Madhya
Pradesh, as Appellant No. 3 was working at Raigarh and
living in company accommodation there with his wife
(Appellant No. 2) and that the Appellant No.1 was
working in Pune being employed with Wipro Infotech
Limited.
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10. Learned counsel contended that there is no
specific allegation against any of the appellants.
Furthermore, it was canvassed that the Respondent No.2,
having lived with her husband at Hyderabad and becoming
pregnant, shows cordial relations between husband and
wife. It was submitted that the allegation of forced
abortion at Hyderabad is a complete falsehood for the
reason that if such a serious incident had actually
occurred, the Respondent No.2/her family members would
definitely have a complaint lodged before some
authority. It was also urged that moving of Respondent
No.2 alongwith her husband to Sweden after receiving
employment, and; living there also indicates that she
had no grievance against her husband and against the
appellants. It was submitted that the Appellants have,
at no point of time, tried to interfere in the personal
lives of the couple.
11. Learned counsel submitted that Respondent No.2 and
her husband had, in fact, filed an application seeking
divorce in Stockholm, Sweden on 09.07.2018. Respondent
No.2, upon her return to India from Sweden, started
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threatening her husband and the Appellants to withdraw
the divorce case afore-noted, else a criminal case
would be lodged against all the family members. It was
submitted that the same is borne out from the fact that
the husband of Respondent No.2 made a complaint to the
Superintendent of Police, Gwalior on 18.09.2018, and
only thereafter did the Respondent No.2 submitted her
complaint, 3 days later, on 22.09.2018.
12. Learned counsel drew the attention of the Court to
the discrepancy(ies) in the statements of Respondent
No.2, under Section 161 of the Code before the police
and under Section 164 of the Code before the learned
Magistrate inasmuch as in the complaint, she has stated
that her father brought her to the parental home,
whereas in the statement before the learned Magistrate,
she has stated that she was forcibly sent to her
parental home by the accused persons.
13. Learned counsel also drew the Court’s attention to
the order passed by the learned Sessions Judge, Gwalior
dated 26.11.2018, by which anticipatory bail was
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granted to the appellants in which it has been noted
that no documents had been appended with the case-diary
with regard to any injury(ies) suffered by the
complainant/Respondent No.2, and also that she was
living in Sweden.
14. Reliance was placed on Rajesh Sharma v State of
Uttar Pradesh , (2018) 10 SCC 472 , in which taking into
consideration the misuse of Section 498-A of the IPC,
the Court had issued certain directions. The
submissions urged was that the same were not followed
in the present case.
15. It was submitted that a perusal of the FIR and the
charge sheet along with the documents appended thereto,
revealed that no evidence/material was made out on its
face value and that the present criminal prosecution
was an abuse of the process of law.
SUBMISSIONS BY THE RESPONDENT NO.2
16. Learned counsel for Respondent No.2, who has also
filed a counter-affidavit, submitted that the
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allegations have been duly proved during investigation
and cognizance has been taken by the learned Magistrate
against all the accused, including the Appellants.
Reliance was placed on the decision by this Court in
State of Haryana v Bhajan Lal , 1992 Suppl. (1) SCC 335 ,
wherein, submitted learned counsel, it has been held
that if looking at the FIR, it cannot be said that
prima facie no case is made out against the applicants,
and that veracity of the allegations cannot be gone
into at the stage of investigation, which is to be
established by evidence to be produced before the
learned trial court.
17. The decision in Pawan Kumar v State of Haryana ,
(1998) 3 SCC 309 was also relied upon, where at
Paragraph 18 the Court noticed that on account of not
satisfying the demand of goods, right from the next
date of marriage, the wife was repeatedly taunted,
maltreated and mentally tortured by being called ugly
and thus, there cannot be greater mental torture and
harassment of any bride. Similar reliance was placed on
Mahendra K C v State of Karnataka , (2022) 2 SCC 129 ,
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where it was stated that under Section 482 of the Code,
the test to be applied by the High Court is as to
whether the allegation(s) in the complaint as they
stand, without adding or detracting thereto, prima
facie establish the ingredients of the offence(s)
alleged.
18. It was canvassed that the High Court neither tests
the veracity of the allegations nor proceeds as a judge
conducting a trial. Likewise, reference was made to the
judgment in Central Bureau of Investigation v A
Ravishankar Prasad , (2009) 6 SCC 351 , where though the
trial of the case was at an advanced stage, the High
Court had quashed the charges. This Court reversed the
decision of the High Court therein holding the same to
be an abuse of the process of court.
19. Learned counsel submitted that in S Mahaboob Basha
v State of Karnataka , (2014) 10 SCC 244 , where at
Paragraph 8 it had been held that in a case concerning
cruelty meted out to the wife, to bring home the guilt
of the accused, it was not essential to examine the
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independent witnesses, as such ill-treatment and
cruelty are committed in closed doors, where hardly any
witness can be expected, much less an independent
witness.
20. Turning to Rupali Devi v State of Uttar Pradesh ,
(2019) 5 SCC 384 [a 3-Judge Bench decision, where one
of us, Sanjay Kishan Kaul, J. also constituted the
coram ], reliance was placed on Paragraph 16, where this
Court was pleased to hold:
| “ | 16. | We, therefore, hold that the courts at the | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| place where the wife takes shelter after leaving | |||||
| or driven away from the matrimonial home on ac | - | ||||
| count of acts of cruelty committed by the husband | |||||
| or his relatives, would, dependent on the factual | |||||
| situation, also have jurisdiction to entertain a | |||||
| complaint alleging commission of offences under | |||||
| Section 498-A of the Penal Code. | ” |
ANALYSIS, REASONING AND CONCLUSION:
21. Having considered the matter in detail, this Court
finds that the FIR in question, as far as the
Appellants are concerned, is an abuse of the process of
the court. From a plain but careful reading of the
material brought on record, including the statements of
Respondent No.2 under Sections 161 and 164 of the Code
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and also of other witnesses, the allegations insofar as
they relate to the Appellants seem far-fetched and do
not inspire confidence. The facts in totality evince
that Respondent No.2 resided for less than three weeks
in the matrimonial home from the date the marriage was
solemnised, then lived with her husband at Hyderabad
for quite some time and, finally moved to London and
then Sweden. Subsequently, Respondent No.2 upon
returning to India, filed the criminal case in
question. We think the same is a retaliatory tactic,
inasmuch as the Appellants herein are concerned.
22. At this juncture, it would be relevant to note
that once in Sweden, where the Respondent No.2 was
living with her husband, a divorce petition had been
filed, there was no occasion per se , for Respondent
No.2 after coming from Sweden to visit the matrimonial
home, much less reside there.
23. Moreover, the husband of Respondent No.2 having e-
mailed a complaint, 3 days prior to the wife lodging
her complaint, to the Superintendent of Police,
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Gwalior, with regard to threat having been received
from Respondent No.2 to implicate the husband and his
family members, is clearly indicative that the charges,
at least, as against the instant appellants are an
afterthought. While the principles in the precedents
cited by the Respondent No.2 hold the field, what is
relevant is to see whether they come to her aid in the
present factual scenario. The answer is in the
negative.
24. In a decision of recent vintage, this Court in
Kahkashan Kausar alias Sonam v State of Bihar , (2022) 6
SCC 599 , after considering various precedents, held
that the rejection of the prayer for quashing the
criminal case against the in-laws of the complainant-
wife therein was unjustified. The appeal was allowed by
quashing the FIR against those appellants in the said
case. The Court, while granting relief, observed as
under:
“ 21. Therefore, upon consideration of the
relevant circumstances and in the absence of any
specific role attributed to the appellant-
accused, it would be unjust if the appellants are
forced to go through the tribulations of a trial
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i.e. general and omnibus allegations cannot
manifest in a situation where the relatives of
the complainant's husband are forced to undergo
trial. It has been highlighted by this Court in
varied instances, that a criminal trial leading
to an eventual acquittal also inflicts severe
scars upon the accused, and such an exercise
must, therefore, be discouraged .”
(emphasis supplied)
25. We are in agreement with the view aforesaid. In
the present case, the facts are akin to the position
that obtained in Kahkashan Kausar ( supra ). In light of
the discussions made hereinabove, this Court is of the
firm opinion that the Appellants are to be protected
against vexatious and unwarranted criminal prosecution,
and from unnecessarily being put through the rigours of
an eventual trial.
26. The appeal stands allowed. We nip this prosecution
in the bud. Accordingly, the Impugned Judgment deserves
to be, and hereby is, set aside. FIR Crime No. 139 of
2018 registered at Police Station Mahila Thana,
District Gwalior, stands quashed qua the Appellants.
Any consequential proceedings thereto pertaining to the
Appellants shall melt into oblivion in the eye of law.
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27. Pending applications, ergo , do not subsist for
consideration and are consigned to records. Costs made
easy.
28. Respondent No.2, by way of a subsequent affidavit,
sought to bring to our notice the later developments in
the Swedish proceedings. Without expressing any view
thereupon, we clarify that this judgment shall not
preclude Respondent No.2 from pursuing other lawful
remedies, if so available, against the husband in India
or Sweden, as the case may be.
.......................J.
[ SANJAY KISHAN KAUL ]
........................J.
[ AHSANUDDIN AMANULLAH ]
NEW DELHI
MAY 8, 2023
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ITEM NO.26 COURT NO.2 SECTION II-A
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
Petition(s) for Special Leave to Appeal (Crl.) No(s). 400/2022
(Arising out of impugned final judgment and order dated 30-04-2019
in MCRC No. 6054/2019 passed by the High Court Of M.P. At Gwalior)
PRIYANKA MISHRA & ORS. Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ANR. Respondent(s)
(FOR ADMISSION and I.R.
IA No. 177791/2022 - EXEMPTION FROM FILING O.T.)
Date : 08-05-2023 This petition was called on for hearing today.
CORAM :
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJAY KISHAN KAUL
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE AHSANUDDIN AMANULLAH
For Petitioner(s) Ms. Vibha Datta Makhija, Sr. Adv.
Mr. Karan Mamgain, Adv.
Mr. Praveen Gaur, Adv.
Ms. Banni Khanna, Adv.
Mr. Vikrant Singh Bais, AOR
Mr. Yogesh Tiwari, Adv.
Ms. Neema, Adv.
For Respondent(s) Mr. Gopal Jha, AOR
Mr. Akshay Sahay, Adv.
Mr. Rohil Bansal, Adv.
Mr. Lzafeer Ahmad B. F., AOR
UPON hearing the counsel the Court made the following
O R D E R
Leave granted.
The appeal stands allowed in terms of the signed
reportable order.
Pending application stands disposed of.
(ASHA SUNDRIYAL) (POONAM VAID)
ASTT. REGISTRAR-cum-PS COURT MASTER (NSH)
[Signed reportable order is placed on the file]