The case involved a marriage solemnised in 2019. The appellant (husband) filed for divorce. Subsequently, the complainant (wife/Respondent No. 2) lodged multiple criminal complaints against the appellant.
The initial FIR was filed in 2019 at Kadugodi Police Station, Bengaluru, alleging cruelty (Section 498-A IPC), criminal intimidation (Section 506 IPC), and dowry demands (Sections 3, 4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act). The complainant claimed harassment and physical abuse for dowry after their marriage and her move to the appellant’s house in Hyderabad.
A second FIR was filed in 2020 at S.R. Nagar Police Station, Hyderabad, later forwarded to Kadugodi, making similar allegations of cruelty, dowry demands, and sexual assault, particularly during the appellant’s brief visit to India from the USA in May-June 2020.
The appellant approached the High Court under Section 482 Cr.P.C. to quash these FIRs, but the High Court refused, stating the allegations required thorough investigation.
Crucially, during the proceedings, the complainant admitted to being “manipulative” and stated her intention to “trap the next one” to achieve a “Green Card”. She also mentioned not wanting to “waste time” and needing to “invest on the next victim”.
Furthermore, it was revealed that the complainant had a history of filing similar complaints; in a previous case (FIR 180 of 2017), the High Court had found she had “misused the process of law” and “harassed” the accused by threatening suicide if he didn’t marry her, leading to the quashing of those proceedings.
Law Involved The core legal provisions and principles in this judgment include:
Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Cr.P.C.): This inherent power of the High Court allows it to quash criminal proceedings to prevent abuse of the process of any court or to secure the ends of justice.
Sections 498-A (Cruelty by husband or relatives of husband), 506 (Criminal intimidation), 34 (Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860.
Sections 3 (Giving or taking dowry) and 4 (Demand of dowry) of the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961.
The judicial precedents governing the quashing of FIRs when there is clear evidence of malicious prosecution or abuse of legal process. The appellant’s counsel specifically referred to M. Ravindran v. State (2022).
Reasoning The Supreme Court critically assessed the High Court’s decision to not quash the FIRs, finding it erroneous.
The Court laid significant emphasis on the complainant’s history of similar litigation. It noted that in a previous FIR (180 of 2017) involving the same complainant, the High Court had explicitly observed that she had “misused the process of law” and was “harassing” the accused. This established a pattern of alleged abuse of legal remedies.
The Court found the complainant’s own admissions highly problematic and telling. Her statements about being “manipulative,” aiming to “trap the next one” for a “Green Card,” and her readiness to “invest on the next victim” strongly indicated ulterior motives and a clear abuse of the judicial process. These admissions were considered to “go to the root of the matter” and should have been considered by the High Court.
The Supreme Court also expressed perplexion over the filing of multiple complaints containing largely similar allegations, especially regarding sexual assault, across different FIRs (2019 and 2020), which further raised doubts about the veracity and motive behind the complaints.
The High Court’s failure to account for these crucial facts and the complainant’s past conduct was deemed a significant oversight that led to an incorrect refusal to quash the proceedings.
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, overturning the High Court’s judgment.
The Court quashed the FIRs (the 2019 Kadugodi FIR and the 2020 S.R. Nagar/Kadugodi FIR) and all consequential criminal proceedings arising from them [Implied by the allowing of the appeal to quash].
The Court concluded that allowing these proceedings to continue, given the complainant’s proven past conduct and her own admissions of manipulative intent, would constitute a clear abuse of the process of law and an injustice [Implied by the quashing based on the reasoning].
Batlanki Keshav (Kesava) Kumar Anurag V. State Of Telangana And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 790: (DoJ 29-05-2025)