The Delhi High Court has held that sexual assault by a husband’s family members can amount to cruelty under Section 498A IPC. If such acts are closely linked, rape and cruelty can be tried together in one court.
NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court said that sexual assault committed on a married woman by her husband’s family members can also amount to cruelty under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, and may not require a separate trial if it forms part of the same chain of events. The Court explained that such acts, when connected with matrimonial cruelty, can be treated as one continuous transaction under criminal law.
Justice Amit Mahajan observed that when a wife makes allegations of sexual assault against in-laws, such acts can be treated as an aggravated form of physical cruelty. The Court explained that the law does not require a separate trial if the offences of cruelty and rape are closely connected and arise from the same series of acts.
The Court clarified that offences under Section 498A and Section 376 of the IPC must be linked in a manner that satisfies the legal requirement of being “a series of acts so connected together as to form the same transaction”.
“In the opinion of this Court, if the rape is committed by in-laws as an aggravated form of physical cruelty, the same cannot be deemed to be disjunct from the offence of cruelty so as to warrant a separate trial, especially since the psychological distress born out of the same would similarly persist,”
-the Court said.
The case before the High Court arose from a challenge to a trial court order which had discharged certain accused persons from the offence of rape on the ground of lack of territorial jurisdiction. The trial court had granted liberty to the State to pursue prosecution before the appropriate court. The wife challenged this decision, arguing that the allegations of rape were part of the same pattern of cruelty and harassment she faced in her matrimonial home.
It was noted that the wife had alleged that the sexual assault took place at her matrimonial home in Haryana, and there was no allegation of any such incident occurring within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court in Delhi. On this basis, the lower court had held that it lacked jurisdiction to try the offence of rape.
However, the High Court disagreed with this approach. After examining the legal provisions relating to territorial jurisdiction and joint trials under the Code of Criminal Procedure, the Court held that the allegations of rape and cruelty were deeply interconnected.
Setting aside the impugned order, the High Court held that the allegations fulfilled the requirements of Section 220 of the CrPC, which allows multiple offences to be tried together if they are part of the same transaction. The Court stated that when offences are so connected, they can be tried by any court competent to try any one of those offences.
“Therefore, on a combined reading of Section 184 and 220 of the CrPC, the alleged offences in the present case may be inquired into or tried by any Court competent to inquire into or try any of the offences,”
-the Court said.
The Court further observed that sexual assault in such circumstances cannot be separated from the larger pattern of matrimonial cruelty. The mental trauma caused by such acts does not end when the woman leaves her matrimonial home. Instead, the psychological distress continues at the place where she takes shelter, which supports the view that such offences form part of a continuous transaction.
It was held that the alleged offences of rape and cruelty were so closely connected that they formed part of the same transaction. As a result, the trial court did have the jurisdiction to consider the rape allegations along with the cruelty charges.
The High Court ultimately set aside both the impugned order and the subsequent order passed by the magistrate. The matter was remanded back to the trial court for fresh consideration of the case on merits, without expressing any opinion on whether charges should ultimately be framed.
The Court also clarified that its observations were limited strictly to the issue of territorial jurisdiction and joint trial, and that the trial court would independently examine the facts and evidence in accordance with law.
Explanatory Table of Laws and Sections Involved
| Law / Statute | Section | Simple Explanation |
| Indian Penal Code, 1860 | Section 498A | Deals with cruelty by husband or his relatives towards a married woman, including physical and mental cruelty |
| Indian Penal Code, 1860 | Section 376 | Punishment for rape |
| Indian Penal Code, 1860 | Section 406 | Criminal breach of trust, often applied in cases of misuse or non-return of stridhan |
| Indian Penal Code, 1860 | Section 323 | Punishment for voluntarily causing hurt |
| Indian Penal Code, 1860 | Section 506 | Punishment for criminal intimidation |
| Indian Penal Code, 1860 | Section 34 | Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention |
| Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 | Sections 3 & 4 | Punishment for giving, taking, or demanding dowry |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 177 | Ordinary place of inquiry and trial is where the offence is committed |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 178 | Trial can take place where offence is partly committed or is a continuing offence |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 179 | Trial can take place where consequences of the offence occur |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 184 | Court competent to try one offence can try all offences if they are triable together |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 220 | Allows joint trial when multiple offences form part of the same transaction |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Sections 397 / 401 | Revisional powers of the High Court |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 482 | Inherent powers of the High Court |
| Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 | Section 173(8) | Provision for further investigation |
Case Summary
- Case Title: XYZ vs State Govt of NCT of Delhi & Ors.
- Case Number: CRL.REV.P. 907/2023 with CRL.M.A. 30857/2023
- Court: High Court of Delhi at New Delhi
- Bench: Hon’ble Mr Justice Amit Mahajan
- Judgment Reserved On: 18 September 2025
- Judgment Delivered On: 19 December 2025
Counsels
- For the Petitioner: Mr Akhilesh Pandey, Advocate
- For the State: Mr Raj Kumar, APP
- Investigating Officer: SI Akash Kumar, PS Bhajanpura
- For Respondents: Mr Naveen Single, Mr Prashant Mahadev, Mr Yogesh Grover, Advocates
Key Takeaways
- This judgment widens the scope of Section 498A by legally merging multiple serious allegations into one continuous transaction, increasing exposure for the husband’s entire family.
- Territorial safeguards are weakened, as courts where the wife later resides can now also try grave offences allegedly committed elsewhere.
- Allegations alone can be enough to club rape and cruelty charges together, even before trial-level scrutiny of evidence.
- Joint trials under Sections 220 and 184 CrPC significantly raise legal risk, cost, and pressure on accused men and their relatives.
- The ruling reinforces the urgent need for safeguards against misuse, neutral investigation standards, and strict judicial filtering at the charge stage.
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