Dinesh and Pushpakalashree married on 15 September 2013. Their relationship deteriorated, leading to allegations that Accused No. 1 to 6 (Dinesh’s relatives) and Accused No. 7 (his wife) abused and insulted Dinesh, including questioning his manhood and fertility. The prosecution alleged that Dinesh committed suicide between 10 November 2013 and 9 December 2013 due to continuous harassment from the accused4. Following Dinesh’s death, his mother presented torn pages of a diary, purportedly a suicide note, detailing the harassment. Police initially registered a case under Section 174 CrPC, which was later altered to Section 306 IPC (abetment of suicide), and a chargesheet was filed against the appellants (Accused No. 1 to 7). The appellants challenged the chargesheet by filing petitions under Section 482 CrPC with the Madras High Court, seeking to quash the proceedings, but their petitions were dismissed. This led to the present criminal appeals before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved:
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC): Section 482, which provides inherent power to the High Court to quash criminal proceedings.
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC):
Section 306, which deals with abetment of suicide.
Section 107, which defines “abetment” as instigating a person, engaging in conspiracy, or intentionally aiding an act or illegal omission .
CrPC Section 174: Pertains to police inquiry and report on suicide.
Judicial Precedent: The Supreme Court referred to several previous judgments, including Mahendra Singh, S.S. Chheena, Vijay Kumar Mahajan, Netai Dutta, Mohit Singhal, Amalendu Pal, M. Arjunana V. State represented by its inspector of Police, and Ude Singh and Others V. State of Haryana, to establish the legal parameters for abetment of suicide.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court scrutinised the elements required for an offence under Section 306 IPC, particularly emphasising the need for “abetment” as defined in Section 107 IPC3. The Court reasoned that mere harassment, abusive language, or a general deterioration of a relationship, without a direct positive act of instigation or aiding the commission of suicide, does not constitute abetment. The Court highlighted several points:
Lack of Temporal Proximity and Direct Inducement: The suicide incident occurred nearly a month after the alleged last contact and incidents of harassment. The language in the alleged suicide note did not suggest direct inducement or provocation for suicide, but rather reflected emotional sensitivity.
Absence of “Mens Rea” (Guilty Mind): The Court reiterated that a “mens rea” to instigate or aid the commission of suicide is essential. Without a positive act or mental process from the accused that directly incites the deceased to commit suicide, the offence is not made out.
No Active Instigation: For abetment, there must be a clear act of instigation, active engagement in a conspiracy, or intentionally aiding the commission of suicide. The Court found no such active or direct act by the appellants.
Abuse of Process: The Court concluded that the continuation of criminal proceedings against the appellants, based on the available evidence, would amount to an “abuse of the process of law” and “unjust prosecution”. The fundamental requirements for an offence under Section 306 IPC were “unfulfilled”.
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the criminal appeals. Consequently, the impugned judgment of the Madras High Court dated 13 April 2018, which dismissed the petitions for quashing the chargesheet, was quashed and set aside. The criminal proceedings in S.C. No. 9 of 2016, pending before the Assistant Sessions Judge, Kanchipuram, against the appellants, were also quashed and set aside.
Shenbagavalli And Others V. The Inspector Of Police, Kancheepuram District And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 607: (DoJ 30-04-2025)




