In the case of Sivaraman Nair and Others v. State of Kerala and Another (2026), the Supreme Court of India quashed criminal proceedings against the in-laws and sister-in-law of a complainant, ruling that vague and generalized allegations in matrimonial disputes are insufficient to sustain a criminal prosecution,.
Case Background
The case arose from a marriage in 2007 between the complainant (Respondent No. 2) and Syam Sivaraman Nair. In 2016, she filed an FIR alleging:
- Cruelty (Section 498A IPC): She claimed she was subjected to dowry harassment, physical assault, and mental torture from the inception of the marriage, primarily by her husband while living abroad and in Kerala,.
- Bigamy (Section 494 IPC): She discovered that her husband had allegedly married another woman in 2013 by suppressing the fact of his existing marriage.
- Role of the Appellants: The appellants (the husband’s father, mother, and sister) were implicated alongside the husband.
Supreme Court’s Reasoning
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s refusal to quash the proceedings, basing its decision on the following findings:
- Lack of Specificity in Cruelty Allegations: The Court noted that the “gravamen of the complaint” lay against the husband, with specific dates and incidents attributed to him. In contrast, the allegations against the in-laws and sister-in-law were “vague,” “general,” and lacked “active involvement”,.
- Presence vs. Participation: While the in-laws were allegedly present during some incidents or received money paid by the complainant’s brother, the FIR did not attribute to them any specific act of demand, threat, or physical assault on any identifiable occasion. The Court emphasized that sweeping accusations unsupported by concrete evidence cannot form the basis for criminal prosecution against family members.
- Threshold for Bigamy Liability: Regarding the charge of bigamy under Section 494 IPC, the Court clarified that liability cannot be extended to relatives solely based on familial relationships or “inferential knowledge” of a second marriage. To implicate the appellants, the prosecution needed to prove an overt act or omission in the second marriage ceremony, which it failed to do. Mere awareness that a crime is being committed by another does not establish the requisite “common intention”.
- Prevention of Abuse of Process: The Court reiterated that judicial experience shows a tendency to implicate all family members during matrimonial discord. Such proceedings, when based on unsubstantiated allegations, amount to an abuse of the legal process and must be “nipped in the bud” to avoid the harassment of innocent relatives.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and quashed the criminal proceedings arising out of the FIR specifically as they pertained to the father-in-law, mother-in-law, and sister-in-law.
2026 INSC 412
Sivaraman Nair And Others V. State of Kerala And Another (D.O.J.24.04.2026)



