In the case of Rahul Gupta v. Station House Officer and Others (2026), the Supreme Court of India dismissed a petition by a husband seeking to register a criminal case against his wife and her family for “giving” dowry, ruling that victims who report dowry demands are protected from prosecution under the law,.
The following is a summary of the judgment:
Case Background
The case arose from a matrimonial dispute between Rahul Gupta (the petitioner) and his wife, Radhika Gupta. In 2023, the wife filed an FIR against the husband and his family for cruelty and dowry demands under Section 498A of the IPC and Section 3 of the Dowry Prohibition (DP) Act,. In her police statements, the wife and her family admitted to giving dowry before and during the marriage.
The husband subsequently filed a complaint seeking a separate FIR against his wife and her parents. He argued that because Section 3 of the DP Act criminalizes both the “taking” and “giving” of dowry, their own statements amounted to an admission of guilt that required criminal prosecution,.
The Legal Issue
The central question was whether the statements made by a wife and her family regarding the payment of dowry (made during an investigation into their own harassment) could be used as the sole basis to prosecute them for the offense of “giving” dowry,.
Key Findings of the Court
The Supreme Court rejected the husband’s plea based on the following legal principles:
- Statutory Immunity under Section 7(3): The Court emphasized Section 7(3) of the Dowry Prohibition Act, which specifically states that a statement made by the “person aggrieved” by a dowry offense shall not subject that person to prosecution under the Act,.
- Protection of Victims: The Court noted that the DP Act was designed to address a social evil where the parents of a bride are often compelled by customary norms or coercion to give dowry. Penalizing them for reporting these demands would discourage victims from coming forward, as they would face the threat of being prosecuted themselves.
- Rejection of the “Neera Singh” Precedent: The petitioner relied on a Delhi High Court decision (Neera Singh v. State) which suggested that police should register cases against parents who give dowry,. The Supreme Court ruled that this observation had no precedential value because it was made in “ignorance” of the mandatory protection offered by Section 7(3), .
- Lack of Independent Evidence: The Court found that the husband’s complaint relied solely on the statements recorded by the wife and her family during the investigation of his own alleged crimes,. Without independent evidence of a voluntary offer of dowry—unrelated to the demands made by the husband’s family—no cognizable offense was made out against the wife,.
- Second FIR Principles: While a “counter-claim” or a rival version of facts can sometimes justify a second FIR, the Court held that it cannot be used to bypass the “shield of immunity” raised by Section 7(3) for aggrieved persons,, .
Conclusion
The Supreme Court concluded that the husband’s attempt to prosecute his wife was “bereft of merit”. The Court affirmed that the wife and her family, as the “persons aggrieved,” were fully covered by the statutory protection of the law and could not be prosecuted based on their own reports of dowry harassment, . The Special Leave Petition was accordingly dismissed.
2026 INSC 374
Rahul Gupta V. Station House Officer And Others (D.O.J. 16.04.2026)




