Can a husband use wife’s own dowry complaint to file criminal case against her family? Supreme Court has now given a clear answer. The ruling may impact many family disputes where cross-cases are filed after marriage breakdown.
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has ruled that a wife and her family cannot be prosecuted for allegedly “giving dowry” only because they mentioned it in a complaint filed against the husband and his family for taking dowry.
A bench of Justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice K. Vinod Chandran dismissed the appeal filed by a husband who wanted an FIR against his wife and her family.
The husband argued that his wife had admitted in her own complaint that dowry was given. According to him, this amounted to confession of an offence under Section 3 of the Dowry Prohibition Act, which punishes the giving of dowry.
However, the Supreme Court rejected this argument and said such statements cannot be used to start prosecution against the wife or her family.
The Court relied on Section 7(3) of the Dowry Prohibition Act, which gives protection to an aggrieved person who makes such statements in a complaint.
The Court said:
“Statements made by the wife and her family members, being the persons aggrieved, against the husband and his family with regard to the ‘taking’ of dowry cannot be the substratum for launching prosecution against the wife and her family members for the offence of ‘giving dowry’ under Section 3 of the DP Act.”
Earlier, the wife had filed an FIR against the husband and his family under Section 498A IPC and Section 3 of the Dowry Prohibition Act.
Later, the husband filed a complaint against the wife and her family, claiming that even if no dowry was taken by him, their own statements about giving dowry created an offence of dowry-giving.
The Magistrate refused to order FIR registration. That order has now been upheld by the Supreme Court.
The Court also explained when this protection would not apply.
Section 7(3) states:
“Notwithstanding anything contained in any law for the time being in force a statement made by the person aggrieved by the offence shall not subject such person to a prosecution under this Act.”
The Court clarified:
“Where independent evidence was presented with regard to the ‘giving’ of dowry and reliance was not placed only upon the complaint and statements made by the persons aggrieved, i.e., the wife and her family members, it would have been possible to register an FIR for the offence of ‘giving’ dowry under Section 3 of the DP Act as, in such a situation, the protection afforded to the ‘persons aggrieved’, under Section 7(3) of the DP Act, would not be available to them.”
This means if separate and strong evidence exists, then prosecution may still be possible.
But where the only material is the wife’s complaint and statements of her family, legal protection will remain.
The Court further said:
“If in a given case all that is projected to establish the offence of ‘giving’ dowry under Section 3 of the DP Act is the complaint and/or the statements made by the wife and her family members, it would invariably mean that they, being the ‘persons aggrieved’, would be fully covered by the shield of immunity raised under Section 7(3) of the DP Act and would not be liable to be prosecuted on the strength thereof.”
Finally, while dismissing the husband’s plea, the Court held:
“…the petitioner has no merit as his attack against his wife…and her family members was based only upon her complaint and the statements recorded by her and her family members, under Section 161 CrPC, and the statutory protection under Section 7(3) of the DP Act was, therefore, applicable to them.”
Explanatory Table Of Laws & Sections Mentioned
| Law / Section | Meaning | Role In This Case |
| Section 3, Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 | Punishes giving, taking, or abetting dowry | Husband wanted wife’s family booked under this section |
| Section 7(3), Dowry Prohibition Act | Statement by aggrieved person will not expose them to prosecution under this Act | Supreme Court gave protection to wife and family |
| Section 7(1)(b)(ii), Dowry Prohibition Act | Complaint can be by aggrieved person, parent, relative, welfare body | Discussed while interpreting rights of parents |
| Section 498A IPC | Cruelty by husband or relatives | Wife had earlier filed FIR under this section |
| Section 161 CrPC | Police statements during investigation | Husband relied on wife family statements |
| Section 156(3) CrPC | Magistrate can direct FIR/investigation | Husband used this provision seeking FIR |
| Section 397 CrPC | Revision jurisdiction | Husband challenged lower court order |
| Section 114 CPC | Review power in civil matters | Husband wrongly sought review before Magistrate |
| Section 528 BNSS, 2023 | High Court inherent powers / criminal remedy route | Husband approached High Court under this section |
Case Details
| Particulars | Details |
| Case Title | Rahul Gupta v. Station House Officer and others |
| Court | Supreme Court of India |
| Jurisdiction | Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction |
| Case Type | Special Leave Petition (Crl.) No. 13755 of 2025 |
| Neutral Citation | 2026 INSC 374 |
| Judgment Date | 16 April 2026 |
| Coram / Bench | Justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice K. Vinod Chandran |
| Judge Writing Judgment | Justice Sanjay Kumar |
| Petitioner | Rahul Gupta |
| Respondents | Station House Officer and others |
| Wife Mentioned As | Radhika Gupta (Respondent No. 7) |
| Final Result | SLP dismissed |
| Reportable | Yes |
Counsels Appearing
| Side | Counsel |
| Petitioner | Rahul Gupta (Party-in-person) |
| Contesting Respondents | Learned Senior Counsel |
| State of Chhattisgarh | Learned Counsel |
| Amicus Curiae Appointed by SC | Mr. Dhananjaya Mishra |
Key Takeaways
- Supreme Court refused automatic criminal action against wife’s side merely on statements made in dowry complaint.
- This exposes how one-sided matrimonial litigation often traps husbands first, while cross-examination of allegations comes much later.
- If real independent evidence exists, separate FIR can still be filed. Mere allegations are not proof.
- Men facing dowry and cruelty cases should understand that complaint narratives alone can shape years of harassment before truth is tested.
- The larger issue remains misuse of criminal family laws where husbands and elderly parents are dragged into litigation as pressure tactics.
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