Harjinder Singh, the father of the deceased Dharminder Singh, challenged a High Court judgment that had set aside a Trial Court order. Dharminder Singh was a victim of an acid attack on 13 March 2016 [3.1, 5.1]. On 10 May 2016, respondent no. 2 (Varinder Singh) and others allegedly taunted Dharminder Singh, telling him and his family they “should die of shame” for not acting against the acid attackers [3.2]. The deceased returned home distressed, locked himself in a room, and was found dead later that evening [3.3]. An FIR was registered under Sections 306/34 IPC (abetment to suicide) [3.3]. Despite police classifying respondent no. 2 as “innocent” based on an alibi for a different, earlier incident [3.4, 5.2, 5.5], the Trial Court, on 4 July 2022, summoned respondent no. 2 to face trial based on the appellant’s (PW-1) direct testimony [3.7]. The High Court subsequently quashed this summoning order on 21 November 2023, which is the subject of this appeal [1, 3.8].
Law Involved
Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC): Abetment of suicide [2, 3.3].
Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC): Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention [2, 3.3].
Section 319 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC): Empowers a criminal court to summon any person appearing to be guilty of an offence during an inquiry or trial, even if not initially charged12. This power is extraordinary and requires a prima-facie case, more than mere suspicion23.
Section 482 CrPC: Inherent powers of the High Court to quash proceedings [1, 3.8].
Reasoning The Supreme Court found that the High Court erred by prematurely evaluating the respondent’s alibi and disregarding the direct eyewitness testimony (PW-1’s statement). The High Court’s interference under Section 482 CrPC was deemed inappropriate as it acted like a pre-trial acquittal on disputed facts [5.6, 14]. The alibi presented by respondent no. 2 related to an earlier acid attack incident (10 March 2016), not the gravamen of the present FIR concerning the abetment to suicide on 10 May 2016 [5.1, 5.2, 5.5, 6.1]. The Court emphasized that a valid defence like alibi must be proven during trial, not pre-judged at the summoning stage. The Trial Court had correctly found a prima-facie case based on the appellant’s testimony, which was corroborated by another witness, linking the taunts directly to the deceased’s suicide [5.3, 12, 14]. The Supreme Court stressed that Section 319 CrPC ensures that genuine perpetrators do not escape justice.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, setting aside the High Court’s judgment dated 21 November 2023. The Trial Court’s order dated 4 July 2022, which summoned respondent no. 2 to stand trial for the offence under Section 306 IPC, was revived9. Respondent no. 2 is now required to appear before the Trial Court within four weeks . The Supreme Court clarified that its observations are limited to the summoning under Section 319 CrPC and will not influence the final appreciation of evidence during the trial .
Harjinder Singh V. The State Of Punjab And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 634: (DoJ 06-05-2025)




