In Sivaraman Nair & Ors. v. State of Kerala & Anr., the Supreme Court examined whether criminal proceedings for offences under Sections 498A, 494 read with 34 IPC (now corresponding provisions under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS)) could be sustained against the husband’s relatives in the absence of specific allegations.
The case arose from an FIR alleging dowry harassment, cruelty, and bigamy. While detailed accusations were made against the husband, the allegations against the in-laws were largely general, vague, and based on their familial relationship.
The accused-appellants approached the High Court under Section 482 CrPC (now Section 528 BNSS) seeking quashing of proceedings, but the High Court refused. On appeal, the Supreme Court re-evaluated whether the continuation of proceedings amounted to abuse of process of law.
The Court ultimately held that mere presence, passive knowledge, or general allegations are insufficient to prosecute relatives in matrimonial disputes. Consequently, it quashed proceedings against the in-laws while allowing the case against the husband to continue.
“21. That the inherent powers of the Court under section 482 CrPC are to be exercised ‘to prevent the abuse of the process of any court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice.”
“24. The FIR does not attribute to them any specific act of demand, threat, or physical assault on any identifiable occasion.”
“25. Accused-appellant no. 3, the sister-in-law, is alleged to have received money for the purchase of a flat from the proceeds of the sale of gold, but no specific act of cruelty or coercion on her part has been alleged.”
“26….the complainant is required to prima facie prove the overt act or omission of the accused persons in the second marriage ceremony. The prosecution has failed to provide any cogent evidence to establish such overt act or intention on part of the accused-appellants.”
“27. However, such inferential knowledge, without more, is insufficient to satisfy the threshold established in S. Nitheen (supra), which requires evidence of an overt act or omission. While it has been alleged that the accused-appellants were aware of the second marriage, mere knowledge that an act is being or has been committed by another person does not, by itself, establish the requisite common intention.”
Decision
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and held that:
- Proceedings against the in-laws lacked specific, credible allegations necessary to constitute offences under Sections 498A and 494 IPC (read with Section 34 IPC) [BNS equivalents].
- The continuation of such proceedings would amount to abuse of process of law under Section 482 CrPC (Section 528 BNSS).
- Mere familial relationship, presence, or passive knowledge does not establish criminal liability.
- No material existed to show active participation in the alleged second marriage, a requirement for Section 494 IPC.
Accordingly, the Court quashed the criminal proceedings qua the accused-appellants (in-laws) while leaving the case against the husband unaffected.
Citation : 2026 INSC 412
Other Sources :
Index of Quash judgements is here.
Related Legal Concepts
Explore related remedies and procedural safeguards in criminal law:
- Abuse of Process of Law
- First Information Report (FIR)
- Quashing of FIR
- Inherent Powers of High Court
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