The Delhi High Court set aside the concurrent orders of the learned Magistrate and the Appellate Court that had deleted two respondents from an application filed under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (DV Act). The High Court held that the courts below erred by relying solely on the Domestic Incident Report (DIR) while ignoring detailed and specific allegations of domestic violence contained in the original complaint. The Court emphasized that a DIR is a supporting document and cannot override the substantive allegations made in the complaint.
- Background:
- The petitioner filed an application under Section 12 of the DV Act against her husband and other relatives, alleging domestic violence.
- The learned Magistrate initially issued summons only to certain respondents and ordered the deletion of the petitioner’s relatives (respondent nos. 1 and 2 in the petition), citing a lack of specific allegations against them in the DIR.
- The petitioner’s appeal against this deletion was dismissed by the Appellate Court, leading to the present revision before the High Court.
- Legal Reasoning:
- The Court clarified that the DV Act is a beneficial legislation, and the definition of “domestic violence” under Section 3 is wide, requiring an evaluation of the “overall factual matrix” of the case.
- The Court noted that while a DIR is a relevant document, it cannot substitute or supersede the original complaint filed under Section 12. Both documents must be read in conjunction.
- The Court observed that the lower courts treated the DIR in isolation, ignoring the “detailed and specific allegations” regarding physical, verbal, and emotional abuse leveled against the respondents in the petitioner’s original complaint.
- Findings and Conclusion:
- The Court found that the petitioner’s complaint contained sufficient prima facie allegations to constitute domestic violence under Section 3 of the DV Act.
- The absence of specific particulars in the DIR does not constitute a valid ground for refusing to issue summons to respondents when the complaint itself discloses specific acts of violence.
The High Court set aside the impugned orders to the extent they deleted the respondents and directed the Magistrate to issue summons to the concerned individuals upon the petitioner taking the requisite steps.
2026 DHC 5695
Vandana Aggarwal v. Pratik Goyal & Ors. (D.O.J. 17.07.2026)




