Appeal against the dismissal of a petition to quash criminal proceedings. The core dispute revolves around dishonoured cheques and allegations of cheating, stemming from business dealings between Ruchira Papers Ltd. (represented by S.C. Garg) and ID Packaging (represented by R.N. Tyagi). The court examined whether a prior finding in Negotiable Instruments Act proceedings, which cleared Garg of the claims central to the current cheating charge, should be binding in the new criminal case, thereby applying the principle of res judicata. Additionally, the ruling addressed the critical legal point that a company must be arrayed as an accused for its directors or officers to face vicarious liability, particularly in cases under the Indian Penal Code, when no direct allegations against them exist.
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 482 – Quashing of FIR – Res judicata – Offences punishable under Section 420 IPC – Appellant-Garg had instituted a suit for recovery of the amount involved under the 07 dishonoured cheques in which ex-parte decree was passed and that too has been compromised upon payment of Rs. 3,20,385/- by Tyagi to Garg – When 138 NI Act proceedings were pending between the parties, Tyagi moved an application under Section 156 (3) Cr.P.C. seeking registration of an FIR against Garg and company inter alia alleging that despite payment of amount involved in 07 dishonoured cheques, by way of separate demand drafts, Garg again presented 11 cheques and fraudulently realised the amount from 04 out of 11 cheques thereby cheating Tyagi – FIR came to be registered against Garg based upon the above allegations – However, the company was not made an accused in this FIR – The chargesheet filed against Garg on account of being the Managing Director of the Company and Mukesh Kumar Behal, director of M/s. M.V. Agency is again without joining the company –
The learned Magistrate took cognizance of the alleged offence and summoned the accused persons including the appellant – Garg preferred a petition under Section 482 Cr.P.C. for quashing of the chargesheet and the summoning order which has been dismissed by the High Court under the impugned judgment and order – Contention on behalf of the appellant that the appellant cannot be prosecuted for an offence allegedly committed by the company without arraying it as an accused that too without making any specific allegation against Garg – Impugned prosecution has been instituted as a counterblast to the concluded proceedings under Section 138 of the NI Act in which Tyagi was convicted and it eventually concluded by way of compromise before the High Court.
In 138 NI Act proceedings against Tyagi, he raised a specific defence that there is no outstanding debt qua 07 cheques as the amount involved therein has already been paid by separate demand drafts – Learned Magistrate in its order dated 25.10.2002 rejected the said defence by recording a finding that no request was made by Tyagi to the complainant company to return the bounded cheques to the accused company when the demand drafts were allegedly sent by the accused persons to the complainant company – The above finding of the Trial Magistrate was affirmed by the Sessions Court – Held that the finding recorded by the jurisdictional criminal court in 138 NI Act proceedings between the parties would be binding to both the parties in any subsequent proceedings involving the same issue – Present is a fit case for allowing the appeal to quash the impugned criminal proceedings instituted against the appellant for offences under Section 420 of the IPC.
(Para 5 to 12)
S.C. Garg V. State Of Uttar Pradesh & Anr.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 493: (DoJ 16-04-2025)




