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Second 498A Case On Same Matrimonial Incident Is Illegal: Calcutta High Court Slams Woman For Absolute Abuse Of Law To Harass Husband

2nd 498A Case By Wife Is Illegal: HC Calls It Abuse of Law

2nd 498A Case By Wife Is Illegal: HC Calls It Abuse of Law

The Calcutta High Court quashed a second 498A and dowry case filed on the same matrimonial incident, holding it legally unsustainable. The Court warned that repetitive complaints with vague allegations amount to misuse of criminal law and harassment of the husband and his family.

KOLKATA: The Calcutta High Court, presided over by Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das, delivered a judgment addressing misuse of criminal law in matrimonial disputes. The Court quashed criminal proceedings filed under Sections 498A, 323, 307, 313, 406 IPC and Sections 3/4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act after finding that the case was based on duplicate complaints, vague accusations, and clear procedural violations.

The case arose from a long relationship of nearly 12 years between the woman and the man, which later resulted in a temple marriage. Soon after the marriage, disputes began. The woman alleged cruelty, assault, attempt to murder, dowry harassment, and even an attempt to burn her alive.

Based on these allegations, one complaint was filed at Sagar Police Station, and later another complaint was filed before a Magistrate under Section 156(3) CrPC for the very same incident and date.

The High Court noted that filing two criminal complaints for the same alleged incident is not permissible in law. It observed that the second complaint did not even disclose that an earlier FIR had already been registered. The Court found no reasonable explanation as to why two separate complaints were filed at different places within a short time for the same occurrence.

On examining the case diary and materials collected during investigation, the Court found that there was no concrete evidence supporting the serious allegations such as pouring kerosene or banging the complainant’s head against a wall.

There were no medical records or earlier complaints despite the claim of extreme brutality. The allegations were found to be vague and general.

There were no specific dates, times, or supporting materials for serious accusations like attempt to murder and forceful abortion. The Court also noted contradictions between the complaint, the statement under Section 164 CrPC, and the charge sheet.

The High Court relied on settled Supreme Court law regarding misuse of criminal process in matrimonial disputes and quoted important principles on how courts must act with caution.

The Court reiterated the settled position on inherent powers and observed:

“Inherent powers under section 482 Cr.P.C is very wide have to be exercised, sparingly, carefully and with great caution and only when such exercise is justified by the tests specified down in the section itself.”

Emphasising the real purpose of criminal justice, the Court stated:

“Ultimate object of justice is to find out the truth and punish the guilty and to protect the innocent.”

The judgment also acknowledged the growing problem of dragging entire families into criminal cases without evidence, noting:

“The tendency of implicating husband and all his immediate relations is also not uncommon.”

Referring to Supreme Court guidance on matrimonial disputes, the Court further quoted:

“Courts have to be extremely careful and cautious in dealing with these complaints and must take pragmatic realities into consideration.”

The High Court clearly stated that where complaints are found to be vexatious and frivolous, courts are duty-bound to look beyond mere allegations.

In this case, the Court found no material to support the charges and noted that mandatory legal requirements under Sections 154(1) and 154(3) CrPC were not followed before approaching the Magistrate.

In this case, the Court found no material to support the charges and noted that mandatory legal requirements under Sections 154(1) and 154(3) CrPC were not followed before approaching the Magistrate.

This judgment once again reinforces that criminal law cannot be used as a tool of pressure in matrimonial disputes and that courts will step in where the process of law is misused.

Explanatory Table: Laws & Sections Involved

Law / SectionPurposeHow Applied in This Case
Section 498A IPCCruelty by husband or relativesAllegations vague, omnibus, no material proof
Section 323 IPCVoluntarily causing hurtNo medical or independent evidence
Section 307 IPCAttempt to murderSerious allegation unsupported by case diary
Section 313 IPCCausing miscarriage without consentContradictory versions, no consistency
Section 406 IPCCriminal breach of trustNo proof of entrustment or misappropriation
Section 34 IPCCommon intentionUsed mechanically without specific acts
Sections 3/4 DP ActDowry demand and acceptanceNo concrete evidence of dowry demand
Section 156(3) CrPCMagistrate’s power to order investigationMandatory pre-conditions violated
Sections 154(1) & 154(3) CrPCFIR procedure before Magistrate approachNon-compliance noted by Court
Section 482 CrPCInherent powers of High CourtInvoked to prevent abuse of process

Case Details

Key Takeaways

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