Can a husband be forced to face a full criminal trial when the same dowry and cruelty allegations have already failed against his parents? The Andhra Pradesh High Court said such a trial would only waste court time and put him through an unnecessary legal ordeal.
FALSE 498A CASE: The Andhra Pradesh High Court has quashed a cruelty and dowry demand case against a husband, after noting that the same evidence had already been rejected in the trial against his parents. The Court held that making the husband face another trial on the same weak evidence would serve no real purpose and would only waste judicial time.
Justice K. Sreenivasa Reddy allowed the criminal petition filed by the husband and quashed the pending proceedings against him.
The Court observed:
“In the present case on hand also, the evidence of material prosecution witnesses recorded in split up case found untrustworthy and in that event, even if trial is to be proceeded with, same witnesses have to be examined and same evidence has to be let in, which is waste of time of the Court and there are no chances of conviction. When such is the case, there is no point in allowing the petitioner/A1 to face the entire ordeal of trial.In view of the aforesaid circumstances, this Court is convinced and quashes the proceedings in respect of petitioner/A1.”
In this case, criminal proceedings were originally started against the husband and his parents. Later, the case against the husband was separated. The trial against his parents continued, but they were acquitted after the trial court found the prosecution evidence unreliable.
The husband then approached the High Court and argued that the same allegations had already failed against the co-accused. He submitted that if a fresh trial was allowed against him, it would only give the complainant another chance to improve her version and fill the gaps in the evidence which had already been rejected by the trial court.
The High Court considered the legal principles under Section 482 CrPC. It referred to State of Haryana v. Ch. Bhajan Lal & Ors., AIR 1992 SC 604, where the Supreme Court explained that High Courts can use their inherent powers to stop abuse of legal process and to secure justice.
The Court also referred to Gautam Satnami v. State of Chhattisgarh, 2026, and Javed Shaukat Ali Qureshi v. State of Gujarat, 2023. These judgments say that when the evidence against accused persons is the same, similarly placed accused should normally be treated in the same manner.
The prosecution argued that the acquittal of co-accused does not automatically mean that the husband’s trial must also stop. It relied on judgments stating that evidence in one trial is not always binding in another trial against a different accused.
However, after checking the complainant’s earlier evidence, the High Court found that there was no specific allegation that the husband had demanded additional dowry. The Court also noted that the husband and wife had lived together only for a short period after marriage.
The Court further noticed that the complainant had admitted certain facts, including that she had sent an email thanking the husband for not demanding dowry. This became an important fact while examining whether the allegations could lead to conviction.
The Court also noted that the husband had applied for the complainant’s visa to Australia and had arranged her travel on more than one occasion. At the same time, the complainant herself had chosen not to use the visa.
The High Court also considered later proceedings filed by the complainant under the Domestic Violence Act, 2005. In those proceedings, the trial court had observed that she had suppressed the fact that permanent alimony had already been granted to her in matrimonial proceedings.
After going through the full prosecution evidence recorded in the earlier trial, the High Court found that the statements of material witnesses had already been held unreliable. If the husband’s trial continued, the same witnesses would again come to court and give the same evidence.
The Court held that there was no real possibility of conviction in such circumstances. It said that continuing the case would only force the husband to go through the hardship of a criminal trial without any useful result.
Accordingly, the Andhra Pradesh High Court quashed the criminal case pending against the husband.
EXPLANATORY TABLE – LAWS AND SECTIONS MENTIONED IN THE CASE
| LAW / SECTION | WHAT IT DEALS WITH | HOW IT CAME UP IN THIS CASE |
| Section 482 CrPC | Inherent powers of the High Court to prevent abuse of process, secure justice, and quash criminal proceedings in proper cases. | This was the main provision used by the husband to seek quashing of the criminal case. The High Court exercised this power to stop the trial against him. |
| Section 498A IPC | Punishes cruelty by husband or his relatives against a married woman. Cruelty includes serious physical/mental harassment and harassment linked to unlawful dowry demands. | The husband and his parents were charge-sheeted under this section. The High Court examined whether the evidence actually made out cruelty against the husband. |
| Section 3, Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 | Punishes giving or taking dowry. | The prosecution alleged dowry-related offences against the accused persons. The Court noted that proof of actual dowry exchange requires clear evidence. |
| Section 4, Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 | Punishes directly or indirectly demanding dowry. | The case included allegations of additional dowry demand. The High Court found there was no specific accusation against the husband showing such demand. |
| Section 248(1) CrPC | Provision under which a Magistrate can acquit an accused in a warrant case after trial. | The husband’s parents/A2 and A3 were acquitted under this provision in the earlier connected trial. |
| Section 156(1) CrPC | Power of police to investigate cognizable offences. | Referred to in the Bhajan Lal principles while explaining when quashing can be justified. |
| Section 155(2) CrPC | Magistrate’s order required for police investigation into non-cognizable offences. | Mentioned in the Bhajan Lal guidelines quoted by the High Court. |
| Sections 40 to 44, Indian Evidence Act | Deal with relevance of previous judgments in later proceedings. | These sections came up in the discussion on whether acquittal of co-accused can automatically help another accused in a split-up trial. The complainant relied on this line of law to oppose quashing. |
| Sections 19 and 22, Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Section 19 deals with residence orders; Section 22 deals with compensation/damages. | The Court noted that the complainant later filed D.V.C. No.6 of 2023 under these provisions, and that court observed suppression regarding permanent alimony already granted to her. |
| Section 528 BNSS | Saving / transition-related reference invoked along with the petition prayer in the cause-title page of the order. | It appears in the petition description on the first pages of the judgment record. It was not the substantive basis of the final reasoning, which mainly turned on Section 482 CrPC. |
| Sections 437 / 438 / 439 CrPC | Bail-related provisions: regular bail, anticipatory bail, and High Court/Sessions bail powers. | These sections are printed in the petition description on the first page format, but the operative case before the High Court was a quash petition under Section 482 CrPC. |
CASE DETAILS
| FIELD | DETAILS |
| Case Title | Dama Sudhir v. B. Sai Chaithanya and another |
| Court | High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Amaravati |
| Bench / Judge | Hon’ble Sri Justice K. Sreenivasa Reddy |
| Case Number | Criminal Petition No.1148 of 2023 |
| Date Reserved | 23.04.2026 |
| Date Pronounced | 17.06.2026 |
| Date Uploaded on HC Website | 17.06.2026 |
| Neutral Citation / Barcode Text | APHC010070292023 |
| Petitioner / Accused | Dama Sudhir |
| Respondent No.1 / Complainant | B. Sai Chaithanya |
| Respondent No.2 | State of Andhra Pradesh, represented by Public Prosecutor |
| Petitioner Counsel | Ms. Sodum Anvesha / SODUM ANVESHA |
| Respondents’ Counsels | VMR Legal and Public Prosecutor (AP) |
| Police Station / FIR | Crime No.39 of 2010, M.R.Palli / Mutyalareddipalli Police Station, Chittoor District |
| Trial Case Sought to be Quashed | C.C. No.249 of 2014 on the file of III Additional Judicial Magistrate of First Class, Tirupati |
| Original Case Number | Calendar Case No.267 of 2010 |
| Final Result | Criminal Petition allowed; proceedings in C.C. No.249 of 2014 against husband/A1 quashed |
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Same allegations had already failed against the in-laws.
- Court found no specific dowry demand by the husband.
- Wife’s own admissions weakened the prosecution case.
- Same witnesses and same evidence meant no real chance of conviction.
- High Court stopped the husband from facing a pointless criminal trial.
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