Summary
| Category | Data |
|---|---|
| Court | Supreme Court of India |
| Case Number | Crl.A. No.-004629-004629 – 2025 |
| Diary Number | 8626/2025 |
| Judge Name | HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE DIPANKAR DATTA |
| Bench |
|
| Precedent Value | Binding |
| Overrules / Affirms | Affirms need to harmonize Sections 175(3) and (4); rejects standalone or proviso readings of Section 175(4) |
| Type of Law | Criminal procedure (Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023) |
| Questions of Law |
|
| Ratio Decidendi |
The Court held that Section 175(4) is neither standalone nor a proviso but must be read with Section 175(3). A complaint invoking Section 175(4) requires a written application supported by an affidavit (per Section 333) and triggers two safeguards—calling for a superior officer’s report and hearing the public servant—before ordering investigation. Magistrates retain discretion to dismiss manifestly untenable applications and, if no superior officer’s report is received within a reasonable time, may proceed under Section 175(3) after hearing the accused. This construction balances society’s interest in prosecution with protection of public servants from frivolous or vexatious allegations. |
| Judgments Relied Upon |
|
| Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by the Court |
|
| Facts as Summarised by the Court |
The appellant alleged three rapes by police officers during a property dispute (Jan & Aug 2022). A police preliminary enquiry in Oct 2022 dismissed her allegations. After fresh complaints in Sept 2024, she applied under Section 210 read with Section 173(4) BNSS; the JMFC called for a superior officer’s report under Section 175(4). Concurrently she filed a writ petition alleging unlawful non-registration of FIR and sought a declaration that Section 175(4) immunity did not apply. A Single Judge directed FIR registration; a Division Bench reversed without merit adjudication. |
Practical Impact
| Category | Impact |
|---|---|
| Binding On | All magistrates and subordinate courts: must follow the clarified procedure under Sections 175(3) and (4). |
| Persuasive For | High Courts and future Benches of the Supreme Court. |
| Overrules | None. |
| Distinguishes | Stand-alone/proviso readings of Section 175(4); confirms it as procedural adjunct to Section 175(3). |
| Follows |
|
What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note
- Section 175(4) must be read with Section 175(3); it cannot be invoked independently or as a mere proviso.
- Complaints under Section 175(4) require a written application supported by an affidavit (per Section 333 BNSS).
- Before ordering investigation, magistrates must:
- Call for a report from the public servant’s superior officer
- Afford the public servant an opportunity to be heard
- If no superior officer’s report arrives within a reasonable time, the magistrate may continue under Section 175(3) after hearing the accused.
- The term “complaint” in Section 175(4) excludes oral allegations in practice, aligning procedural safeguards with those in Section 175(3).
Summary of Legal Reasoning
- Sub-section (3) of Section 175 empowers magistrates to order investigation on an affidavit-supported application under Section 173(4).
- Sub-section (4) adds a special procedural layer for public servants accused of offences “in course of official duties,” requiring a superior officer’s report and hearing.
- A standalone or proviso reading of Section 175(4) would conflict with the hierarchy and affidavit safeguard of sub-section (3).
- Harmonious construction necessitates affidavit, Section 173(4) recourse, and Section 333 compliance.
- The term “complaint” in Section 175(4) must be confined to written, sworn allegations.
- A two-tier safeguard emerges: Section 175(4) at the investigation stage, Section 218 (sanction) at the cognizance stage.
- Magistrates retain discretion to dismiss manifestly untenable applications and to proceed under Section 175(3) if reports are unduly delayed.
Arguments by the Parties
Petitioner (appellant)
- Section 175(4) applies only to offences “in course of official duties,” not to private sexual offences.
- Affidavit requirement in Section 175(3) reflects intent to exclude protection for sexual offences; Section 175(4) must be similarly limited.
- No greater protection at investigation stage than at cognizance (Section 218 proviso excludes sexual offences).
- The magistrate should have ordered FIR registration under Section 175(3) without calling for a report.
- The preliminary police report violated Lalita Kumari’s limits on enquiry scope and lacked written reasons.
Respondents (State and police officers)
- Sections 173(4) and Sections 175(3)–(4) form an integrated escalation mechanism.
- Section 175(4) is an independent safeguard allowing oral complaints.
- BNSS introduces twin safeguards: report/hearing at investigation stage (Section 175(4)) and prior sanction at cognizance (Section 218).
- Preliminary enquiry exposed inconsistencies and possible conspiracy against the officers.
- The alleged rapes occurred during investigatory visits, qualifying as “official duties.”
Factual Background
The appellant, embroiled in a property dispute, alleged she was raped on three occasions by police officers at her home in January and August 2022. A DS P’s report (Oct 2022) found her allegations untrue. In September 2024 she filed complaints anew and an application under Section 210 read with Section 173(4) BNSS; the JMFC (11 Sept 2024) called for a superior officer’s report under Section 175(4). While that application was pending, she filed a writ petition alleging unlawful investigation and sought a declaration that Section 175(4) immunity did not apply. The Single Judge directed FIR registration; the Division Bench reversed.
Statutory Analysis
- Section 173(4) BNSS → Remedy before Superintendent of Police on non-registration of FIR; mandatory precursor to magistrate recourse.
- Section 175(3) BNSS → Magistrate may order investigation on an application supported by an affidavit under Section 173(4).
- Section 175(4) BNSS → Additional procedure for public servants: superior officer’s report + accused’s assertions before investigation.
- Section 218(1) proviso BNSS → Post-investigation safeguard: no sanction required for sexual offences at cognizance, but Section 175(4) protection remains at investigation stage.
- Section 333 BNSS → Affidavit must state facts within deponent’s knowledge or belief, and courts may strike irrelevant matter.
Procedural Innovations
- Two-tier protection: Section 175(4) (report/hearing) → Section 218 (sanction at cognizance).
- Mandatory affidavit under Sections 175(3) and (4), per Section 333 BNSS.
- Hierarchical escalation via Section 173(4) before magistrate intervention.
- Clear magistrate guidelines on rejecting untenable applications and proceeding if reports are delayed.