The Supreme Court held that the failure of a Children’s Court to pass a reasoned order under Section 19(1) of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 (JJ Act) regarding whether a child in conflict with law (CICL) should be tried as an adult is a fatal procedural lapse that vitiates the trial. While the Juvenile Justice Board had performed the preliminary assessment required by Section 15, the subsequent trial by the Children’s Court without a formal determination under Section 19(1) rendered the conviction and sentence unsustainable. Consequently, the Court set aside the conviction and acquitted the appellant.
1. Background and Facts
- The appellant, who was 16 years and 6 months old at the time of the alleged offense, was accused of involvement in a quarrel resulting in the death of Mandeep Kumar.
- The Juvenile Justice Board (JJ Board) conducted a preliminary assessment under Section 15 of the JJ Act and committed the case to the Children’s Court to be tried as an adult.
- The Children’s Court convicted the appellant for murder (Section 302 IPC) and sentenced him to 14 years of rigorous imprisonment, an order later affirmed by the High Court.
- The appellant challenged this before the Supreme Court, arguing that the Children’s Court failed to pass an order under Section 19(1) of the JJ Act before commencing the trial.
2. Legal Analysis
- Mandatory Nature of Section 19(1): The Court emphasized that Section 19(1) is a substantive, mandatory provision. Upon receiving a case from the JJ Board, the Children’s Court must apply its mind to determine whether there is a need to try the child as an adult.
- Procedural Consequences:
- If the court decides to try the child as an adult, it must follow the procedure for a Sessions trial.
- If it decides not to try the child as an adult, it must conduct an inquiry as a Board, following the procedure for summons cases.
- Vitiation of Trial: The Court noted that in the absence of a Section 19(1) order, the Children’s Court bypasses the statutory safeguards designed to protect children, rendering the trial legally invalid. The court underscored that a child should not be subjected to an adult trial without the court recording its reasons for such a decision.
3. Conclusion and Directions
- The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the judgment of conviction and the sentence imposed by the Children’s Court and the High Court.
- The appellant was acquitted, and his bail bonds were discharged.
- The Court issued a formal directive to all Children’s Courts across India: upon receiving records from the JJ Board, the first duty of the Children’s Court is to pass a reasoned order under Section 19(1) of the JJ Act before proceeding further.
2026 INSC 692
Sagar vs. The State of Haryana (D.O.J. 13.07.2026)




