Whether criminal charges can be sustained under Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act and Section 506 read with Section 34 of the IPC when the alleged caste-based slurs and threats occurred inside a private residential home among family members, lacking the statutory prerequisite of happening in “a place within public view.”
Appeal allowed. The Supreme Court set aside the judgments of the High Court and the trial court, officially quashing the First Information Report (FIR) and the charge-sheet against the appellants. The Court ruled that the strict statutory ingredients of the offenses were not satisfied.
Details
1. Factual Background
- The Parties and Property Dispute: The dispute arose within a family over properties left behind by their late father, Nand Kishore. The Respondent No. 2 (complainant) and Appellant Nos. 2 and 3 are real brothers belonging to a Scheduled Caste. Appellant Nos. 1 and 4 are the legally wedded wives of the brothers, hailing from non-SC/ST background communities.
- The Incident and FIR: On January 30, 2021, FIR No. 42 of 2021 was registered at Kirti Nagar Police Station on a complaint asserting that on January 28, 2021, the appellants attempted to break open the lock of a house. The complainant alleged that during this altercation, Appellant No. 1 hurled derogatory caste-based slurs (using words like chura, chamar, harijan) to insult the complainant and his wife in front of two friends, while the other appellants extended threats.
- General Accusations: The complainant added that Appellant No. 1 was in the habit of shouting similar derogatory words from her balcony or the ground floor over the preceding year whenever guests visited.
2. Procedural History
- Trial Court & High Court Rulings: Upon completion of the investigation, the trial court (Additional Sessions Judge, Tis Hazari Court) issued orders on November 26 and 30, 2022, framing charges under Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act against Appellant No. 1, and under Section 506 read with Section 34 IPC against all appellants.
- High Court Revision: The appellants moved the Delhi High Court via a Criminal Revision Petition. The High Court dismissed the petition on August 22, 2024, maintaining that a evaluation of evidence or a “mini-trial” was impermissible at the stage of framing charges, and that statements from a witness under Section 161 Cr.PC prima facie supported the prosecution. The appellants subsequently appealed to the Supreme Court.
3. Key Legal Issues & Findings of the Supreme Court
A. The Mandatory Threshold of “A Place Within Public View”
The Supreme Court closely parsed the words of Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act. It observed that a person can only be penalized if the intentional insult, intimidation, or caste-name abuse occurs “in any place within public view.”
- Public Place vs. Place Within Public View: Drawing upon precedents such as Swaran Singh, Hitesh Verma, and Karuppudayar, the Apex Court reinforced that a clear legal boundary separates a “public place” from a “place within public view.”
- The Definition: A private place (like a yard or lawn) can become a “place within public view” if it is open to the public gaze and can be seen or heard by an outsider from a road or boundary. However, if an incident takes place inside a residential building within its “four corners” where members of the public are entirely absent, it fails the statutory requirement of being within public view.
B. Application of the Principle to the Present Facts
- The Court noted that the specific confrontation on January 28, 2021, occurred at the residential address of the parties (“7/38, Ramesh Nagar”).
- The FIR and the subsequent charge-sheet explicitly established that the place of occurrence was a private residential home shared among family members.
- Although the complainant cited two friends, their Section 161 Cr.PC statements revealed that one merely went to take a picture of a locked lock, and the other noted that the accused interjected when opening a lock. Nothing in the evidence showed that independent members of the public were present or that the private house was exposed to the public eye during the alleged utterances. Thus, the mandatory element of a “place within public view” was missing.
- The general allegations regarding past behavior from the balcony lacked specific dates or instances and were too vague to substantiate a criminal charge.
C. Testing the Defect in the FIR (State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal)
The Court invoked the “acid test” established in State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal, which mandates that if the contents of an FIR, taken at their face value, fail to establish the essential ingredients of the alleged offense, the criminal proceedings are legally unsustainable and must be quashed.
- Referencing Amar Nath Jha and Ramesh Chandra Vaishya, the Court ruled that while an FIR does not need to be an encyclopedia of the crime, the complete omission of foundational facts—such as the scene of the crime being open to public view—renders the prosecution defective from its inception. The mere act of abusing someone does not warrant forcing a citizen to face a criminal trial if the explicit statutory ingredients of that specific act are absent.
D. Analysis of Criminal Intimidation (Section 506 read with Section 34 IPC)
The Court then turned to the residual charges under the Indian Penal Code.
- Intent to Cause Alarm: To establish the offense of criminal intimidation under Section 503 (punishable under Section 506 IPC), the prosecution must prove that the accused threatened a person with an “intent to cause alarm” to that person.
- The Court found that even a close reading of the complaint did not indicate that the appellants acted with the intent to cause “alarm” to the complainant, noting that this core element was conspicuously absent.
- No Common Intention: Furthermore, regarding Section 34 IPC, the record and attendant circumstances offered no evidence to suggest that the family members shared a pre-planned common intention to execute a criminal act. The Court observed that the Section 506 charge was merely appended to conjunct the main SC/ST Act allegations. Forcing the appellants to undergo a trial under these provisions would constitute an abuse of the judicial process.
4. Final Order
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s judgment dated August 22, 2024, along with the trial court’s orders on framing charges dated November 26 and 30, 2022. FIR No. 42 of 2021 registered at Kirti Nagar Police Station and the corresponding charge-sheet filed against the appellants were completely quashed. All connected interlocutory applications were disposed of.
2026 INSC 468
Gunjan @ Girija Kumari And Others V. State (NCT Of Delhi) And Another (D.O.J.11.05.2026)



