In Amit Katyal & Anr. v. State of Haryana & Anr. (2026 INSC 509), the Supreme Court addressed a petition seeking the clubbing and transfer of multiple First Information Reports (FIRs) registered in different states (Delhi and Haryana) regarding the same real estate project. Invoking the established legal principle that there cannot be multiple FIRs or parallel investigations for the same set of transactions, the Court ordered the transfer of a subsequent Haryana FIR to Delhi to be investigated alongside a pre-existing clubbed FIR . The ruling reinforces that allowing overlapping investigations into the same occurrence causes “manifest prejudice” to the accused and risks conflicting judicial findings .
Summary of the Case
- Factual Background
- The Project: The petitioners were directors of a real estate company that launched the “Brahma City” (also known as “Krrish World”) project. Due to delays in delivery, multiple home buyers filed complaints alleging cheating, non-delivery of plots, and misappropriation of funds.
- Existing Clubbing: In Delhi, the Economic Offence Wing (EOW) had already clubbed complaints from 83 home buyers into a single investigation under FIR No. 30/2019.
- New Litigation: Despite the ongoing Delhi investigation, a new FIR (No. 439/2024) was registered in Gurugram, Haryana, based on identical allegations of siphoning money and failing to deliver plots in the same project.
- Legal Conflict: Multiplicity of Proceedings
- Petitioner’s Argument: The petitioners contended that multiple FIRs across different states for the same transaction constituted “double jeopardy” and created a “consistent hanging sword” of coercive action.
- State’s Opposition: The State of Haryana argued that the alleged misdeeds were not limited to one state and involved a massive number of victims, necessitating a thorough separate investigation. However, the Delhi Police stated they had no objection to a single agency conducting the investigation .
- Judicial Reasoning and Precedent
- The T.T. Antony Principle: The Court relied on the landmark case T.T. Antony v. State of Kerala, which stipulates that the first information regarding a cognizable offense satisfies the requirements of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC). There can be no second FIR and no fresh investigation into the same occurrence or transaction.
- Avoiding Conflict: The Court noted that the “common thread” of grievances across all FIRs was the failure to hand over possession and the alleged transfer of buyer funds. Permitting parallel investigations would not only be contrary to law but would also result in an avoidable multiplicity of proceedings and conflicting findings .
- Final Directions
- Transfer and Clubbing: The Court directed that FIR No. 439/2024 (Gurugram, Haryana) be transferred to and clubbed with FIR No. 30/2019 (EOW Delhi) to be investigated together .
- Future FIRs: While the Court allowed the clubbing of the specific existing FIR, it declined to grant a blanket stay against the registration of any future FIRs, noting that petitioners could seek remedies in law if new cases were registered based on the same transactions .
2026 INSC 509
Amit Katyal & Anr. V. State of Haryana & Anr. (D.O.J. 18.05.2026)



