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Army Major Gets Big Relief In False Rape Case: P&H High Court Refuses to Reopen Case After FIR Was Quashed, Says Relationship Was Consensual

Army Major Gets Big Relief In False Rape Case: HC

Army Major Gets Big Relief In False Rape Case: HC

Can a rape case be revived after a High Court has already quashed the FIR on merits?
The P&H High Court refused to reopen the case against an Army officer, raising larger questions about criminal cases emerging from failed relationships.

CHANDIGARH: In an important order that may have wider implications for cases arising from broken relationships, the Punjab and Haryana High Court has refused to reopen a rape case against an Army officer after the FIR had already been quashed earlier on merits.

The case involved Major Manpreet Singh, where the High Court had earlier examined the allegations and quashed the criminal proceedings registered under Sections 506, 376 and 328 of the Indian Penal Code. The FIR had been registered at Police Station Bhargo Camp, Jalandhar, based on allegations that the accused had established a physical relationship with the complainant on the promise of marriage.

Later, the complainant moved an application seeking recall of the High Court’s earlier order dated 29 February 2024, arguing that the accused had not complied with the terms of the compromise and had refused to marry her.

However, the Court noted that the FIR had not been quashed merely because of a compromise between the parties. Instead, the Court had earlier examined the facts of the case and the legal position relating to consent and promises of marriage. After analysing the material on record, the Court had concluded that even if the allegations in the FIR were taken at face value, the essential ingredients required to establish the alleged offences were not made out.

The Court had observed that both parties were adults and the relationship appeared to be consensual in nature. It also relied on settled legal principles laid down by the Supreme Court which clearly distinguish between a false promise to marry made with fraudulent intent and a relationship where a promise is later not fulfilled due to changing circumstances.

Justice Manisha Batra then noted the nature of the relationship:

“As such, their relationship can be considered to be purely of consensual nature.”

On the basis of these findings, the Court had earlier concluded that the allegations did not constitute a criminal offence.

In the earlier judgment, the High Court had concluded that the allegations did not establish a criminal offence. The Court had clearly recorded that even assuming the allegations to be correct, the essential ingredients of offences under Sections 506, 376 and 328 IPC were not prima facie established. As a result, the FIR and all consequential proceedings had been quashed.

When the recall application was filed, the Court examined whether it had the power to reopen a case after the final order had already been passed.

The Court made it clear that criminal courts do not have the power to review their final judgments once they are signed, except for minor clerical corrections. The judgment explained that once a final order has been passed, the Court becomes functus officio, meaning it no longer has the authority to alter or review the decision.

The Court also referred to the statutory bar contained in Section 403 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, which corresponds to Section 362 of the Criminal Procedure Code. This provision clearly prohibits courts from reviewing or altering their judgments after they have been pronounced.

The Court further relied on a recent Supreme Court ruling which held that once criminal proceedings are quashed by a High Court through a final order, the same proceedings cannot later be revived by recalling that order.

Importantly, the Court clarified that subsequent disputes between parties or alleged violation of compromise terms cannot be used as a ground to reopen criminal proceedings that have already been quashed on merits.

Applying these principles to the present case, the High Court held that the grievance raised by the complainant essentially related to the alleged breach of understanding regarding marriage. Even if such allegations were assumed to be correct, they could not legally justify recalling a final judicial order by which the criminal proceedings had already been quashed.

The Court therefore held that the application seeking recall of the earlier order was not maintainable.

With these observations, the High Court dismissed the recall application and reaffirmed that the FIR against Major Manpreet Singh would remain quashed.

The ruling highlights an important legal safeguard: criminal law cannot be repeatedly invoked once courts have already examined the allegations and concluded that no prima facie offence exists. In disputes arising from personal relationships, courts continue to emphasise that the criminal justice system cannot be used to reopen cases once they have been conclusively decided on legal merits.

Explanatory Table – Laws and Legal Sections

Law / SectionWhat It Means in Simple TermsRelevance in This Case
Section 376 IPCPunishment for rape under Indian criminal lawAllegation was that the relationship happened on promise of marriage
Section 375 IPCDefines what legally constitutes rape and consentCourt examined definition of consent while analysing allegations
Section 506 IPCCriminal intimidationIncluded in FIR but Court found no prima facie ingredients
Section 328 IPCCausing hurt by poison or intoxicating substanceAlleged in FIR but not supported by facts on record
Section 90 IPCConsent given under fear or misconception is not validCourt examined whether consent was obtained under misconception
Section 482 CrPCInherent powers of High Court to prevent abuse of process and secure justiceUsed earlier to quash the FIR
Section 362 CrPCCourt cannot review or alter its final judgment except for clerical errorsPrinciple relied upon while refusing recall
Section 403 BNSS, 2023Equivalent of Section 362 CrPC under the new criminal procedure lawBar on reviewing final criminal judgments
Supreme Court precedent: Pramod Suryabhan Pawar v. State of Maharashtra (2019)Clarifies difference between false promise of marriage and relationship that later failsRelied upon to analyse consent
Shambhu Kharwar v. State of Uttar Pradesh (2022)Quashing allowed where relationship was consensualUsed as supporting precedent
Ananda D.V. v. State (2021)FIR quashed where dispute arose from relationshipCited by Court
Vaibhav Bhalotia v. State of UT Chandigarh (2023)Quashing permitted after settlementReferred to in judgment
Sanjoy Bhattacharya v. State (Madras High Court)Continuation of criminal case can cause oppression where parties settledSupporting reasoning
Raghunath Sharma v. State of Haryana (2025)Supreme Court ruling on recall of quashing ordersCourt relied on this to reject recall

Case Details Extracted from the Order

ParticularDetails
Case TitleM.S vs State of Punjab and Another
Case NumberCRM-29714-2024 in CRM-M-1192-2024
CourtPunjab and Haryana High Court
BenchJustice Manisha Batra
Date of Order07 March 2026
PetitionerM.S
RespondentsState of Punjab and Another
Police StationBhargo Camp, District Jalandhar
FIR NumberFIR No. 89 dated 21.09.2023
Sections Invoked in FIRSections 506, 376 and 328 IPC
Nature of PetitionApplication seeking recall of earlier order quashing FIR
Final OutcomeRecall application dismissed; FIR remains quashed

Counsels Appearing in the Case

PartyCounsel
Petitioner / Non-ApplicantMr. Atul Goyal, Advocate – Tripaksha Litigation Partner
State of PunjabMs. Sakshi Bakshi, AAG, Punjab
Respondent No.2Mr. S. K. Kanojia, Advocate

Key Takeaways

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