The appellant-wife challenged a High Court order dated 03.02.2021, which quashed proceedings in CC No. 163 of 2021 against her respondent-husband. The complaint, lodged by the appellant-wife, alleged that her marriage to the respondent took place in 2012, and they had two children. She claimed her husband developed an illicit relationship and, along with another woman, abused her verbally. Furthermore, she alleged that her respondent-husband and other in-laws physically and mentally harassed her, demanding a dowry of two lakhs. Due to this ill-treatment, she started residing at her parental home. On 27.10.2020, her respondent-husband and other in-laws reportedly came to her parental home, threw chilli powder in her eyes, abused her, assaulted her with slippers and stones, and were rescued by neighbours. Police recovered slippers and stones during the investigation, and witness statements were recorded.
The High Court had partly allowed a petition to quash proceedings against the septuagenarian parents-in-law but permitted proceedings against other in-laws. Subsequently, a co-ordinate single bench of the High Court quashed the proceedings against the respondent-husband, finding the medical certificate inconsistent with the complaint’s allegations regarding the injuries and that the wound certificate did not show injuries caused by a blunt weapon.
Law Involved:
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC): Sections 498-A (cruelty by husband or relatives of husband), 324 (voluntarily causing hurt by dangerous weapons or means), 355 (assault or criminal force with intent to dishonour person), 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of the peace), 506 (punishment for criminal intimidation) read with Section 149 (every member of unlawful assembly guilty of offence committed in prosecution of common object).
Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC): Section 561-A (High Court’s inherent powers to quash criminal proceedings).
Principles of Quashing Criminal Proceedings: As established in R.P. Kapur v. State of Punjab, inherent powers to quash should be invoked sparingly, primarily where there is no legal evidence or where the allegations are manifestly false and cannot lead to a conviction.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court found that the High Court erred in quashing the proceedings against the respondent-husband. The key reasons were:
“Mini-Trial” Embarked by High Court: The High Court conducted a “mini-trial” by evaluating the credibility of the FIR/Chargesheet allegations against the wound certificate, concluding the allegations were untrue. The Supreme Court reiterated that embarking on such an enquiry or conducting a “mini-trial” to quash proceedings under inherent jurisdiction is impermissible in law.
Inconsistency with Ocular Evidence: The Supreme Court noted that the allegation of throwing chilli powder and assault by slippers and stones was not solely supported by the wound certificate; ocular evidence (witness statements) and physical evidence (slippers and stones) were also available. The absence of injuries in the wound certificate did not render the assault allegations “patently absurd or inherently improbable,” as the ocular version versus medical evidence is a matter for trial, not a ground to terminate prosecution at the initial stage .
Matrimonial Dispute Not a Ground for Quashing: The High Court also observed that the prosecution was pending during a matrimonial suit, implying it was an abuse of process . The Supreme Court held that offences involving cruelty on the wife may invariably arise from matrimonial disputes, but the mere pendency of matrimonial proceedings does not, per se, lead to an inference that criminal proceedings supported by medical and independent witness evidence are a product of malice or abuse of court .
Inconsistent Judicial Outcomes: The High Court had earlier permitted proceedings against other in-laws, including the brother-in-law and sisters-in-law. The Supreme Court found it inexplicable why the High Court quashed the proceeding against the respondent-husband without referring to the earlier co-ordinate bench’s decision, leading to inconsistent outcomes that shake public trust and encourage “forum shopping”. The High Court failed to appreciate the uncontroverted allegations in the chargesheet which unequivocally implicated the respondent-husband in the assault, placing him on the same footing as other in-laws against whom proceedings were allowed to continue .
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeals. It set aside the High Court’s order dated 16.02.2024 (presumably a typo in the source for 03.02.2021) and revived the criminal proceedings against the respondent-husband (R2)67. The case will now continue in accordance with law.
Renuka V. State Of Karnataka And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 596: (DoJ 29-04-2025)




