In the case of Sujal Vishwas Attavar & Anr. v. The State of Maharashtra & Ors. (2026), the Supreme Court of India set aside a High Court’s interim order and quashed a resulting FIR, ruling that writ jurisdiction under Article 226 cannot be used to bypass established statutory remedies for registering a criminal complaint.
Case Background and Property Dispute
The dispute originated from a conflict over a real estate project involving villas and studio apartments. The complainant company alleged that while a statutory moratorium was in place due to insolvency proceedings, the appellants fraudulently executed a sub-lease deed and asserted unauthorized rights over the entire project. Specifically, it was alleged that the appellants submitted a property measurement application using forged documents and signatures, and that a woman impersonated a company director during a land survey in April 2025.
Procedural Error by the High Court
The complainant company directly invoked the writ jurisdiction of the High Court, seeking directions for the registration of an FIR. Without issuing notice to the appellants, the High Court passed an interim order directing the police to record the director’s statement and take action “in accordance with law,” which led to the registration of FIR No. 0194/2025 under various sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023.
Key Legal Findings of the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, emphasizing that the High Court had ignored settled principles regarding the exhaustion of alternative remedies:
- Statutory Remedy for FIR Registration: The Court clarified that the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS)—and formerly the CrPC—provides a specific, multi-tiered mechanism for those whose FIRs are not registered: first approaching the Superintendent of Police (Section 173(4) BNSS) and then the jurisdictional Magistrate (Section 175(3) BNSS).
- Writ Jurisdiction is Not a Panacea: The Court reaffirmed that while Article 226 powers are wide, the High Court should not ordinarily entertain a writ petition when an equally efficacious statutory remedy is available. Bypassing this scheme is only permissible in special circumstances, such as imminent danger to life or liberty, which were “conspicuously absent” in this case.
- Premature Litigation: The Court found the complainant’s decision to invoke writ jurisdiction “premature” because they had not even attempted to approach the Superintendent of Police or a Magistrate before rushing to the High Court.
Conclusion and Relief
The Supreme Court concluded that the High Court had effectively acted as a “forum of first instance” for a criminal complaint, which is legally impermissible. Consequently, the Court quashed the High Court’s interim order and the subsequent FIR. However, the Court reserved the liberty for the parties to pursue alternative legal remedies, which would then be considered on their own merits by the competent forum.
2026 INSC 442
Sujal Vishwas Attavar & Anr. V. State of Maharashtra & Ors. (D.O.J. 04.05.2026)




