This judgment addresses a crucial legal point concerning the initiation of criminal proceedings, particularly for offenses related to the obstruction of public servants.
The case originated from a writ petition and connected application filed in the High Court of Delhi. Respondent No. 2, a Process Server, alleged misconduct by the petitioner, Devendra Kumar, on October 3, 2013. The petitioner allegedly misbehaved with the process server when summons were to be received and was detained at the police station until 4:30 PM.
A complaint was assigned to the Administrative Civil Judge, who then assigned it to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Karkardooma Courts, Delhi. The Chief Metropolitan Magistrate directed the registration of an FIR under Sections 186 and 341 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC).
The previous orders from the Metropolitan Magistrate, District and Sessions Judge, and High Court affirmed the registration of the FIR, despite arguments regarding the non-compliance with Section 195 of the Cr.P.C..
The petitioner challenged these orders, seeking to quash the FIR.
Law Involved:
Indian Penal Code (IPC):
Section 186 IPC: Voluntarily obstructing any public servant in the discharge of his public functions.
Section 341 IPC: Punishment for wrongful restraint.
Code of Criminal Procedure (Cr.P.C.):
Section 195 Cr.P.C. (specifically Section 195(1)(a)(i)): Deals with “Prosecution for contempt of lawful authority of public servant, for offences against public justice and for offences relating to documents given in evidence”. It mandates that no court shall take cognizance of any offense punishable under Sections 172 to 188 IPC unless there is a complaint in writing by the public servant concerned or some other public servant to whom he is administratively subordinate, or by the court itself.Section 156(3) Cr.P.C.: Power of a Magistrate to direct investigation.
Section 340 Cr.P.C.: Procedure for cases mentioned in Section 195.
Reasoning:
The Supreme Court extensively analyzed the interplay between Section 186 IPC and Section 195 Cr.P.C., drawing upon numerous precedents.
The core principle is that Section 195 Cr.P.C. acts as a specific bar to the general power of police to register an FIR and for the Magistrate to take cognizance under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. for certain offenses.
The purpose of Section 195 Cr.P.C. is to protect public servants from frivolous or vexatious prosecution in the discharge of their public duties. It ensures that criminal proceedings for offenses against public justice or the lawful authority of public servants are initiated only with the sanction of the concerned public authority.
For an offense under Section 186 IPC, the law explicitly requires a written complaint from the concerned public servant or their administrative superior, not merely a police report or an FIR. The term “complaint” has a specific meaning under the Cr.P.C., distinct from a police report.
The Court clarified that if the “true and substance” of the offense is the obstruction of a public servant (as contemplated by Section 186 IPC), then the procedural bar of Section 195 Cr.P.C. applies. In such cases, the court cannot bypass this requirement by allowing the police to register an FIR.
The Court also addressed the concept of “splitting of offenses.” If an accused is alleged to have committed offenses, and some fall under the purview of Section 195 Cr.P.C. while others do not, the courts must determine if the offenses are intrinsically connected and form part of the same transaction. If they are so connected that the other offenses cannot be separated from the one requiring a Section 195 complaint, then the bar extends to all such offenses. In this case, the allegations of Section 341 IPC were directly linked to the alleged obstruction of the process server.
Holding:
The Supreme Court reiterated that Section 195(1)(a)(i) of the Cr.P.C. bars courts from taking cognizance of offenses under Sections 172 to 188 of the IPC, including Section 186 IPC, unless a written complaint is filed by the concerned public servant or their administrative superior.
The Court noted that if the true nature of the offense falls under Section 195(1)(a)(i), the court cannot proceed by “splitting up” other offenses arising from the same facts if they are intrinsically connected.
Consequently, the Special Leave Petition was disposed of, leaving it open for the petitioner to raise the contention regarding the bar of Section 195 of the Cr.P.C. before the trial court if a chargesheet is filed for the offenses enumerated in the FIR . This effectively clarifies that for the alleged offense under Section 186 IPC, and implicitly Section 341 IPC which is intertwined with it, the existing FIR and any subsequent cognizance based on it without a proper Section 195 complaint would be legally unsustainable. The Court’s detailed reasoning provides a strong legal basis for the petitioner to challenge the validity of the proceedings for these specific offenses in the lower court.
DEVENDRA KUMAR V. THE STATE (NCT OF DELHI) & ANR.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1009 (DoJ 20-08-2025)