The case of Roma Ahuja v. The State and Another (2026 INSC 336) addresses the critical legal question of which date is relevant for calculating the period of limitation for criminal offences under the Code of Criminal Procedure (Cr.PC).
Factual Background
- The Incident: On May 9, 2011, a physical altercation occurred involving the appellant and an advocate (Respondent No. 2) outside a Magistrate’s court.
- Legal Action: The appellant filed an FIR (No. 121 of 2011) the same day for offences including Section 323 (voluntarily causing hurt) and Section 341 (wrongful restraint) of the IPC.
- The Delay: The Investigating Officer filed the charge-sheet on May 29, 2012, which was one year and 20 days after the date of the incident.
- High Court Ruling: The High Court of Delhi quashed the proceedings, ruling that the prosecution was barred by limitation under Section 468 of the Cr.PC because the Magistrate took cognizance after the one-year limitation period prescribed for such offences had expired.
Legal Dispute: The Computing Point of Limitation
The central issue was whether the limitation period for taking cognizance of an offence is reckoned from:
- The date the complaint is filed (or FIR is lodged); or
- The date the Magistrate actually takes cognizance.
Supreme Court’s Reasoning
The Supreme Court set aside the High Court’s judgment, declaring it a “patent error” based on a misinterpretation of established law.
- Binding Precedent (Sarah Mathew): The Court relied heavily on the Constitution Bench judgment in Sarah Mathew v. Institute of Cardio Vascular Diseases. That landmark ruling settled that for the purpose of Section 468 Cr.PC, the relevant date is the date of filing of the complaint or the date of initiation of criminal proceedings, and not the date on which the Magistrate takes cognizance.
- Protection of Diligent Complainants: The Court reiterated that the act of taking cognizance is an act of the court over which a complainant has no control. It would be “unreasonable” and “unconstitutional” to penalize a diligent complainant for judicial or systemic delays.
- Applicability to FIRs: The Court rejected the argument that the Sarah Mathew principle only applies to “complaint cases” and not to cases initiated via a “police report” (FIR). It held that both a complaint to a Magistrate and an FIR lodged with the police serve as the starting point for initiating criminal proceedings.
- Professional Ethics and Precedent: The Court criticized the respondents’ attempt to re-argue a point of law that had been conclusively decided by a Constitution Bench. It emphasized that lawyers have a duty to respect and follow binding precedents rather than consuming court time with “worthless” submissions.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court allowed the appeals and set aside the High Court’s quashing order. Since the FIR was lodged on the very day of the incident, the proceedings were well within the period of limitation, regardless of when the final charge-sheet was filed or when cognizance was taken. The Court directed the trial to proceed expeditiously in accordance with the law.
2026 INSC 336
Roma Ahuja V. State And Another (D.O. J. 09.04.2026)



