On 01.04.2013, a complaint led to an FIR being registered under Section 420 and 120B of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). It was alleged that a person impersonated ‘Brij Mohan Gagrani’ and purchased 1 lakh shares of ‘Ashutosh Paper Mills Ltd.’. After the purchase, the real Brij Mohan Gagrani denied any such call or purchase. An agent of the appellant company was said to have connived with the seller to defraud the appellant.
Funds Withheld: Following the FIR and investigation, around 72,000 shares worth Rs. 15.90 lakhs were sold by respondent no. 2, and this payout was being withheld by the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) subject to a guarantee.
Procedural History:
The charge sheet named Amit Jain (the person who made the alleged phone call) as the main accused, but respondent no. 2 was revealed as the main beneficiary. Amit Jain is currently absconding, and the role of respondent no. 2 is under investigation.
Respondent no. 2’s application for release of funds (Rs. 15.90 lakhs) was dismissed by the Magistrate Court on 16.09.2016, stating funds should not be released until investigation is finalised.
A revision petition by respondent no. 2 was also dismissed on 08.12.2016 by the Revisional Court, noting that releasing funds would impact the appellant’s rights and directed expedition of the investigation.
Aggrieved, respondent no. 2 filed a Section 482 CrPC petition before the High Court.
The High Court allowed this petition on 25.02.2025, directing the release of the sale value of the shares in favour of respondent no. 25. The appellant challenged this High Court order before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved
Section 482 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC): Deals with the inherent powers of the High Court to make orders necessary to give effect to any order under the Code, or to prevent abuse of the process of any Court, or otherwise to secure the ends of justice.
Section 420 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC): Pertains to cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of property.
Section 120B of the Indian Penal Code (IPC): Relates to punishment for criminal conspiracy.
Precedents: The Supreme Court cited Aryan Singh & Ors. v. Central Bureau of Investigation (2023) 18 SCC 399 and Dharambeer Kumar Singh v. The State of Jharkhand & Anr. (2025) 1 SCC 392 to reiterate that while exercising inherent jurisdiction under Section 482 CrPC, the High Court is not supposed to conduct a mini-trial .
Reasoning
The Supreme Court provided the following reasoning for its decision:
High Court’s Error: The High Court, while allowing respondent no. 2’s Section 482 petition, observed that respondent no. 2’s role in the fraud could not be ascertained “as of now” and that the sale value of shares could not be denied merely due to the fraud5. The Supreme Court held that the High Court travelled beyond its inherent jurisdiction by making observations regarding the absence of any role played by respondent no. 2, especially when the investigation is still incomplete.
Ongoing Investigation: The charge sheet states that Amit Jain is absconding, and the role of respondent no. 2 is still under investigation and yet to be completed. A clear picture of respondent no. 2’s involvement would only emerge after the investigation.
Main Beneficiary & Irreparable Loss: Respondent no. 2 was the main beneficiary of the alleged fraudulent transaction4. The release of the sale value of the shares at this premature stage would cause irreparable loss to the appellant and vitiate the entire investigation.
Market Value and Funds: The market value of the shares sold by investigation is negligible.
Correctness of Lower Courts: The Supreme Court affirmed the findings of the Magistrate Court and Revisional Court, which rightly held that the funds in question should not be released at this stage.
Holding
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, thereby setting aside the impugned order of the High Court dated 25.02.2025.
The Court directed the Trial Court to proceed with the trial expeditiously. Importantly, the sale value of the shares (amounting to Rs. 15.90 lakhs) held by the BSE shall be kept pending the trial, meanwhile.
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