The case involves the suicide of Ranjeet Chauhan, who left a suicide note and audio recordings indicating harassment by Awase over a loan repayment issue. The Court examines the legal definitions of abetment and instigation, citing previous judgments that emphasize the need for clear intent and direct acts causing a person to have no other option but to commit suicide. Ultimately, the Court concludes that the interactions between Awase and the deceased, while potentially heated, did not meet the high legal threshold for instigation required for a charge under Section 306 and highlights concerns about the casual application of this law by authorities.
(A) Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 227, 228 – Penal Code, 1860, Section 306 – Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, Section 108 read with Section 45 – Framing of charge – Abetment of suicide – In order to bring a case within the purview of Section 306 IPC there must be a case of suicide and in the commission of the said offence, the person who is said to have abetted the commission of suicide must have played an active role by an act of instigation or by doing certain act to facilitate the commission of suicide – Therefore, the act of abetment by the person charged with the said offence must be proved and established by the prosecution before he could be convicted under Section 306 IPC – Held that there are no grounds to frame charges under Section 306 IPC against the appellant – This is so even if we take the prosecution’s case on a demurrer and at its highest – A reading of the suicide note reveals that the appellant was asking the deceased to repay the loan guaranteed by the deceased and advanced to ‘R’ – It could not be said that the appellant by performing his duty of realising outstanding loans at the behest of his employer can be said to have instigated the deceased to commit suicide – Equally so, with the transcripts, including the portions emphasised hereinabove – Even taken literally, it could not be said that the appellant intended to instigate the commission of suicide – It could certainly not be said that the appellant by his acts created circumstances which left the deceased with no other option except to commit suicide – Viewed from the armchair of the appellant, the exchanges with the deceased, albeit heated, are not with intent to leave the deceased with no other option but to commit suicide – FIR has also been lodged after a delay of two months and twenty days – Held that case against the appellant is groundless for framing of a charge under Section 306 – Appellant liable to be discharged from proceedings in Sessions Case and the proceedings liable to be quash and set aside.
(Para 18, 19 and 21)
(B) Penal Code, 1860, Section 306 – Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, Section 108 read with Section 45 – Framing of charge – Abetment of suicide – Held that this Court has, over the last several decades, repeatedly reiterated the higher threshold, mandated by law for Section 306 IPC [Now Section 108 read with Section 45 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023] to be attracted – They however seem to have followed more in the breach – Section 306 IPC appears to be casually and too readily resorted to by the police – While the persons involved in genuine cases where the threshold is met should not be spared, the provision should not be deployed against individuals, only to assuage the immediate feelings of the distraught family of the deceased – The conduct of the proposed accused and the deceased, their interactions and conversations preceding the unfortunate death of the deceased should be approached from a practical point of view and not divorced from day-to-day realities of life – Hyperboles employed in exchanges should not, without anything more, be glorified as an instigation to commit suicide – It is time the investigating agencies are sensitised to the law laid down by this Court under Section 306 so that persons are not subjected to the abuse of process of a totally untenable prosecution – The trial courts also should exercise great caution and circumspection and should not adopt a play it safe syndrome by mechanically framing charges, even if the investigating agencies in a given case have shown utter disregard for the ingredients of Section 306.
(Para 20)
Mahendra Awase V. State Of Madhya Pradesh
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 76: (DoJ 17-01-2025)



