The appellant, Ashok Kumar Jain, is a director of “Maayu Import and Export Ltd.” in Sri Lanka. The second respondent runs “Ansh Prints” in Surat, involved in textile processing and saree sales. A business relationship commenced in March 2012 for the export of sarees from the second respondent to the appellant, facilitated by M/s. Oswal Overseas. The second respondent alleged that goods worth Rs. 39,18,108/- (or Rs. 34,71,344/- for exported goods) were sent between October 2013 and March 2014, with payment expected within 60-90 days. When the appellant allegedly stopped responding in March 2016, the second respondent filed an FIR (I-06 of 2017) on 03.01.2017, accusing the appellant of criminal breach of trust (Section 406 IPC) and cheating (Section 420 IPC) [1, 2, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 4.b, 5, 6]. The High Court of Gujarat had dismissed the appellant’s application to quash this FIR, finding the offences “substantiated” and stating that the distinction between mere breach of contract and cheating depends on the intention at the time of inducement.
Law Involved:
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1908 (Cr.P.C.): Section 482, which grants the High Court inherent power to quash criminal proceedings.
Indian Penal Code (IPC):
Section 406: Punishes criminal breach of trust, requiring “entrustment” and dishonest misappropriation [1, 4.b, 8, 9.1].
Section 420: Punishes cheating, requiring “deception” and “dishonest inducement” to deliver property, with intention present at the inception of the transaction [1, 4.b, 9.2, 9.3, 10].
Precedent Law: The Supreme Court referred to its previous judgments, including State of Odisha v. Pratima Mohanty, Kaptan Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh, and Pratibha v. Rameshwari Devi, to reiterate that the power under Section 482 Cr.P.C. to quash an FIR is exceptional and to be exercised sparingly, only when no prima facie case is made out [7.1, 7.2, 7.3]. It also cited Radheyshyam v. State of Rajasthan for Section 406 IPC ingredients, and Hridayan Rajan Prasad Verma v. State of Bihar and Prof. R.K. Vijayasarathy and Anr. v. Sudha Seetharam and Anr. for distinguishing mere breach of contract from cheating [8, 9.1, 9.2, 9.3, 10].
Reasoning: The Supreme Court examined whether the allegations in the FIR, even if taken at face value, constituted the criminal offences of cheating and criminal breach of trust. The Court noted that the High Court had correctly acknowledged the distinction between a civil dispute (mere breach of contract) and a criminal offence, emphasizing that a dishonest intention at the inception of the transaction is crucial for cheating [5, 9.2]. However, the Supreme Court found that the High Court erred in concluding that the offences were substantiated based on the available documents. The Court observed that the transaction primarily involved an “unpaid sale consideration” [4.d, 6]. The presence of M/s. Oswal Overseas as a third-party transporter/exporter, and the nature of the “bill of lading” which would indicate transfer of title, suggested a sale transaction rather than entrustment for criminal breach of trust. The Court found no “privity of contract or a shred of document establishing a tri-partite arrangement” to support the criminal charges [4.d]. Ultimately, the Supreme Court concluded that the ingredients for Sections 406 and 420 IPC were not attracted from the FIR or the respondent’s statements [4.e], and the non-payment of sale price in this context amounted to a civil dispute, not a criminal one6…. Continuing the FIR would be an “abuse of the process of law”.
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, set aside the impugned order of the High Court, and quashed FIR No. I-06 of 2017 registered at Salabatpura Police Station, Surat.
Ashok Kumar Jain V. State Of Gujarat And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 614: (DoJ 01-05-2025)




