Did the husband’s relatives know about the second marriage? Is that enough to send them to trial? The Supreme Court has now clarified when in-laws can, and cannot, face criminal prosecution in such cases.
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court ruled that merely knowing about a husband’s second marriage is not enough to prosecute his relatives under Section 494 IPC. The Court held that there must be clear material showing that the relatives actively participated in, facilitated, or encouraged the second marriage.
A Bench of Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Augustine George Masih set aside a Kerala High Court order and quashed criminal proceedings against the in-laws of a woman who had accused her husband and his family members of cruelty, dowry harassment, and bigamy.
The case arose from an FIR registered in 2016 under Sections 494 and 498A read with Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code. The Kerala High Court had earlier refused to quash the FIR and had observed that the records did not support the contention of the accused relatives that no case of cruelty was made out against them.
Before the Supreme Court, the appellants argued that they were elderly persons who were not living with the complainant during the relevant period and had no role in her married life. They submitted that the complaint contained only general and vague allegations without any independent evidence. According to them, they were implicated only because they were related to the husband and not because of any specific act committed by them.
The appellants also highlighted a significant delay in filing the complaint. While the alleged incidents were said to have occurred between 2007 and 2010, the FIR was registered only on August 24, 2016. They argued that this unexplained delay raised serious doubts regarding the allegations and indicated that the complaint was an afterthought.
They further relied on the Supreme Court’s earlier decision in S Nitheen and Others v. State of Kerala and Another (2024) to argue that criminal liability for bigamy cannot automatically be extended to relatives unless there is evidence showing their direct participation or facilitation.
The complainant, however, argued that the appellants had lived with her in the matrimonial home in Kerala and were not strangers to her marital life. She alleged that they contributed to the physical and mental cruelty she suffered and continuously encouraged the husband’s conduct.
While examining the allegations, the Supreme Court noted that the primary accusations related to the husband and concerned physical assault, dowry demands, and mental harassment. The allegations against the in-laws were largely limited to claims that they were present during certain incidents or had encouraged the husband’s behaviour.
The Court found that no specific incident of dowry demand, threat, or assault had been attributed to the appellants.
“The FIR does not attribute to them any specific act of demand, threat, or physical assault on any identifiable occasion,” the Court observed.
The Bench held that the allegations against the relatives were general in nature and did not describe any specific acts that could independently amount to cruelty under Section 498A IPC.
On the allegation relating to the husband’s second marriage, the Supreme Court found that the High Court had relied on a witness statement to conclude that the appellants were aware of the second marriage. However, the Supreme Court held that mere awareness was not sufficient to establish criminal liability.
The Court explained that the law requires evidence of an overt act or omission and that common intention cannot be presumed merely because a person knew about an act.
“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. Even proceeding on the basis that the accused-appellants were aware of the second marriage, there is no allegation, let alone any material, to suggest that they actively participated in, facilitated, or encouraged the solemnisation of that marriage,” the Court held.
Finding that the allegations lacked specific details and were unsupported by material evidence, the Supreme Court quashed the criminal proceedings against the in-laws.
The ruling once again reinforces that criminal law cannot be invoked against family members merely because of their relationship with the accused. Courts have repeatedly cautioned that relatives cannot be made to face prosecution based on omnibus allegations unless there is clear evidence showing their direct involvement in the alleged offence.
Explanatory Table Of All Laws And Sections Mentioned
| LAW / SECTION | PURPOSE | HOW IT APPLIED IN THIS CASE |
| Section 494 IPC | Punishes bigamy (marrying again during subsistence of first marriage) | Wife alleged husband contracted a second marriage while first marriage was valid. |
| Section 498A IPC | Punishes cruelty by husband or relatives of husband | Allegations of dowry demands, mental harassment and physical cruelty were made. |
| Section 34 IPC | Common intention among multiple accused persons | Prosecution attempted to attribute common intention to in-laws along with husband. |
| Section 482 CrPC | Inherent powers of High Court to prevent abuse of process and secure justice | In-laws sought quashing of criminal proceedings under this provision. |
| Section 156(1) CrPC | Police power to investigate cognizable offences | Discussed through Bhajan Lal principles. |
| Section 155(2) CrPC | Magistrate’s permission for investigation of non-cognizable offences | Referred to in Bhajan Lal guidelines. |
| Article 226 Constitution of India | High Court’s extraordinary jurisdiction | Mentioned while discussing quashing principles. |
| Section 82(1) BNS | Corresponding provision to Section 494 IPC | Mentioned as the BNS equivalent of bigamy. |
| Section 85 BNS | Corresponding provision to Section 498A IPC | Mentioned as the BNS equivalent of cruelty by husband or relatives. |
| Section 3(5) BNS | Corresponding provision to Section 34 IPC | Mentioned as the BNS equivalent of common intention. |
Case Details
- Case Title: Sivaraman Nair and Others v. State of Kerala and Another
- Court: Supreme Court of India
- Case Number: Criminal Appeal No. ____ of 2026 (Arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 9195 of 2025)
- Neutral Citation: 2026 INSC 412
- Date of Judgment: 24 April 2026
- Bench: Justice Sanjay Karol & Justice Augustine George Masih
- Impugned Order Challenged: Judgment dated 25.11.2024 passed by the Kerala High Court in Crl.M.C. No. 5826 of 2023.
- FIR Details: FIR No. 1318 of 2016, Museum Police Station, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala.
- Sections Invoked: Sections 494, 498A read with Section 34 IPC.
- Appellants: Father-in-law, Mother-in-law and Sister-in-law of the complainant.
- Respondents: State of Kerala & Wife/Complainant
- Final Result: Appeal Allowed. Proceedings arising from FIR No.1318/2016 quashed against the accused in-laws.
Key Takeaways
- Mere relationship with the husband is not evidence of guilt; specific acts must be alleged and supported by material evidence.
- Family members cannot be prosecuted simply because their names are included in a complaint.
- Knowledge of a husband’s second marriage does not automatically make parents or siblings criminally liable.
- Courts must scrutinize vague and omnibus allegations instead of allowing entire families to undergo years of criminal litigation.
- This judgment reinforces that criminal law is meant to punish actual offenders, not become a tool for implicating every relative connected to a matrimonial dispute.
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