Criminal appeal before the Supreme Court concerning disproportionate assets held by a public servant. The Supreme Court is reviewing a High Court decision that quashed criminal proceedings against the respondent, G. Easwaran, who was accused of possessing assets beyond his known income under the Prevention of Corruption Act. The High Court’s decision to quash was based on grounds that were largely identical to those previously dismissed in a discharge application by a Special Court and a subsequent revision petition by the High Court itself. The Supreme Court highlights that the High Court exceeded its jurisdiction by re-evaluating evidence and prematurely questioning the validity of the prosecution sanction, which should be addressed during the trial. Consequently, the Supreme Court overturned the High Court’s judgment, reinstating the criminal case for continuation of the trial.
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 482 – Quashing of criminal proceedings – Corruption – Prima facie Case – FIR under Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(e) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 – Not in dispute that the Special Court, while dismissing the discharge application, as well as the High Court while dismissing the revision petition, arrived at clear findings that there was a prima facie case, and this conclusion was drawn after examining the allegations as they stand – The impugned order operates against the established law that while the bar under section 397(3) of the CrPC does not curtail the remedy under Section 482, it is trite that inherent powers must be exercised sparingly – Inherent power under Section 482 Cr.P.C. for quashing the criminal proceedings was invoked after the dismissal of the discharge application and the consequent revision petition – Held that the High Court committed an error in quashing the prosecution on the ground that the sanction to prosecute is illegal and invalid – Objections raised in the revision petition against the Special Court’s order dismissing the discharge application were identical to the grounds raised in the petition under Section 482 Cr.P.C. from which the present appeal arises – Apart from being congruent and overlapping, the respondent could not demonstrate any material change in facts and circumstances between the dismissal of the revision petition by the High Court and the filing of the quashing petition under Section 482 Cr.P.C. – Validity of the sanction can always be examined during the course of the trial and the problems due to the typographical error as alleged by the State could have been explained by producing the file at the time of trial – It is settled that a mere delay in the grant of sanction for prosecuting a public authority is not a ground to quash a criminal case – The reasoning adopted by the High Court for interdicting the criminal proceedings held to be contrary to the well-established principles laid down by this Court and the judgment liable to be set aside – C.C. No. 30/2013 restored to the record of the Court of the Special Judge, Prevention of Corruption Act Cases, for the continuation of the trial from the stage the trial was interdicted.
(Para 7, 9, 10, 14 to 16)
State Rep. By The Deputy Superintendent Of Police, Vigilance And Anti Corruption Chennai City-I Department V. G. Easwaran
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 397: (DoJ 26-03-2025)




