The appeals arose from a dispute over an agreement to sell land entered into in May 2013 and a subsequent Memorandum of Understanding.
Various disputes led to the registration of FIR No. 432 of 201414. This FIR was initially quashed by the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in March 2016.
Subsequently, the complainant, Krishan Kumar Gandhi, filed an application in September 2016 seeking the revival of the FIRs, which the High Court ultimately ordered in October 20185. A review petition against this recall was also dismissed in April 2019.
The appellants, Raghunath Sharma & Ors., were aggrieved by the High Court’s decision to restore the previously quashed FIR and challenged these orders before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved
Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Cr.P.C.): Pertains to the inherent powers of the High Court to make orders necessary to give effect to any Cr.P.C. order, prevent abuse of process, or secure the ends of justice. The judgment clarifies that this power is not for altering or reviewing a judgment.
Section 362 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Cr.P.C.): States that “no court, when it has signed its judgment or final order disposing of a case, shall alter or review the same except to correct a clerical or arithmetical error”. This provision is considered “almost absolute”10.
Chapter XXVII of the Cr.P.C.: Deals with ‘judgment’.
Principle of Res Integra: The law is settled on the non-alteration of judgments, making it not a novel issue.
Reasoning
The Supreme Court highlighted that the High Court had originally quashed the FIR using its powers under Section 482 Cr.P.C..
The subsequent act of the High Court in recalling its own order of quashment through a review was deemed legally unsustainable.
The Court strongly emphasised the mandatory nature of Section 362 Cr.P.C., which prohibits a court from altering or reviewing its signed judgment or final order, except for clerical or arithmetical errors.
It clarified that the inherent powers under Section 482 Cr.P.C. do not permit alteration or review of a judgmen. Such powers are for securing justice and preventing abuse of process, not for bypassing statutory prohibitions.
The Supreme Court observed that the High Court’s impugned judgment was passed “without any authority or basis”.
The Court expressed “surprise” that the High Court adopted a course of action that deviated from the “well-established position of law”.* It clarified that the inherent powers under Section 48 Cr.P.C. do not permit alteration or review of a judgment. Such powers are for securing justice and preventing abuse of process, not for bypassing statutory prohibitions.
The Supreme Court observed that the High Court’s impugned judgment was passed “without any authority or basis”.
The Court expressed “surprise” that the High Court adopted a course of action that deviated from the “well-established position of law”.
Several precedents were cited to reinforce that an order cannot be altered or reviewed to the extent of correcting a “glaring omission” or “substantive error”.
Holding
The Supreme Court allowed the appeals.
The impugned judgment and orders of the High Court, which restored the previously quashed FIR, are set aside and quashed.
Consequently, any proceedings or consequences flowing from the revival of the FIR shall also stand set aside and quashed.
The Supreme Court directed its Registry to circulate a copy of this judgment to all High Courts for necessary dissemination, aiming to prevent similar misjudgments .
Raghunath Sharma And Others V. State Of Haryana And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 723: (DoJ 16-05-2025)