False 498A is now BNS 85 for new cases after 1 July 2024. Here is what to do immediately: arrest protection, BNSS notice rights, anticipatory bail, family defence, and the latest Supreme Court position.
NEW DELHI: Let me say this clearly. Section 498A has not vanished. For offences after 1 July 2024, the old IPC framework has moved into Section 85 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, and “cruelty” is defined in Section 86.
The offence still carries imprisonment of up to three years and fine. Under the First Schedule to the BNSS, the offence remains cognizable, non-bailable, and triable by a Magistrate of the First Class. But there is one critical legal reality many families still do not understand: non-bailable does not mean automatic arrest.
There is one more transition point that matters. The new criminal laws came into force on 1 July 2024. The IPC stands repealed prospectively, but the BNS repeal-and-savings clause preserves earlier liabilities and proceedings.
The BNSS savings clause also says pending appeals, trials, inquiries and investigations continue under the earlier CrPC framework if they were already pending when BNSS commenced. That is why even today you may still see some matrimonial prosecutions moving under IPC 498A/CrPC and others under BNS 85/BNSS, depending on timing.
So what should a husband or family do when a false case is threatened, a complaint is filed, or a police call comes?
First, stop behaving emotionally and start behaving evidentially. Save every WhatsApp chat, email, call record, bank transfer trail, travel record, medical document, rent record, and message around money demands, threats, separation, child access, or settlement pressure. In matrimonial criminal litigation, the first battle is not in court. It is over the factual record you either preserve or destroy in panic.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly warned against exaggerated, sweeping, or omnibus allegations against the husband’s relatives. In Kahkashan Kausar, the Court held that general allegations against in-laws should not be allowed to drag them into trial; in Geeta Mehrotra, it said mere casual reference to family members is not enough; and in Dara Lakshmi Narayana in December 2024, the Court again said that a mere reference to family members without specific active-role allegations should be “nipped in the bud.”
Second, understand the arrest law before the police use your fear against you. In Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar, the Supreme Court directed police “not to automatically arrest” in 498A cases and to test necessity for arrest under the statutory criteria.
Under Section 35 BNSS, where arrest is not required, the police must issue a notice to appear; and if the person complies and continues to comply, he shall not be arrested unless the officer records reasons for arrest. The same BNSS provision also requires reasons in writing when arrest is made for offences punishable below seven years. That means your first task is not blind surrender. Your first task is legal control of the arrest narrative.
Third, do not treat every police phone call as a formality. Ask for the complaint details, the police station, the sections invoked, whether an FIR has already been registered, and whether a formal appearance notice has been issued. If the matter is already an FIR, get the FIR copy immediately. If it is still at complaint stage, respond strategically, not theatrically.
In a post-1 July 2024 case, the police are operating within the BNS/BNSS structure; in an older matter, the savings clauses may keep the old IPC/CrPC framework alive. That distinction changes the paperwork, the citation, and sometimes the procedural route you take.
Fourth, if parents, sisters, or relatives have been casually named, do not assume that all of them need identical defence. Separate the case by role, residence, and documentary reality. The recent Supreme Court line remains consistent: where relatives live separately and there are only vague allegations, courts must be cautious.
In Dara Lakshmi Narayana the Court held that generalized accusations unsupported by concrete evidence cannot be the basis of prosecution and quashed proceedings against relatives who did not reside with the couple. In May 2025, the Supreme Court again reiterated that courts must be “doubly cautious and extremely careful” where matrimonial complaints rope in close and extended family.
Fifth, take anticipatory bail seriously and early. I am not saying every BNS 85 case automatically requires an anticipatory bail filing on day one. I am saying every false BNS 85 or old 498A matter requires an immediate anticipatory bail assessment. Why? Because arrest law is now structured around necessity, reasons, and compliance, but litigation on the ground still moves fast once an FIR is registered.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly linked non-compliance with arrest safeguards to bail consequences. In August 2024, the Court reiterated that arrest power is controlled by a twofold requirement: reasonable belief that the offence was committed, and a real need to arrest. It also recalled the Satender Kumar Antil position that non-observance of arrest safeguards can entitle the accused to bail.
Sixth, do not destroy your defence by making foolish “settlement” moves. Do not threaten. Do not abuse. Do not send revenge messages. Do not fabricate evidence. Do not coach relatives. Do not hide articles that genuinely belong to the wife. Do not give the police a secondary offence through your own conduct. If there are articles, stridhan, documents, or bank entries that may become a point of dispute, document them properly and deal with them through a lawful inventory-based process.
A false 498A/BNS 85 case is often followed by DV, maintenance, custody, and residence-right litigation. Your criminal strategy must therefore be designed with the parallel civil and quasi-criminal fallout in mind. That broader litigation pattern is also visible across your own current site content, where arrest protection, maintenance disclosure, DV residence rights, custody, and NRI consequences are all already part of the same search ecosystem.
Seventh, know what law actually punishes. Section 86 BNS defines cruelty in two compartments only: first, wilful conduct likely to drive the woman to suicide or cause grave injury or danger to life, limb, or health; second, harassment tied to coercing unlawful demand for property or valuable security. That means every ugly marital fight is not automatically cruelty within the penal definition.
Every allegation still has to be mapped to the statutory ingredients. This is exactly why older 498A case law remains highly relevant even after 1 July 2024: the BNS carries forward the same core cruelty structure, and post-2024 Supreme Court decisions continue to rely on the established 498A caution jurisprudence in matrimonial prosecutions. That is a legal inference from the statutory continuity and the recent judgments.
I will add one balance point because responsible legal writing requires it. The Supreme Court has also made it clear that these observations against misuse do not mean a genuinely aggrieved woman should remain silent.
In Dara Lakshmi Narayana, the Court expressly said that was not the intention of its observations. The correct legal position is not “all cases are false.” The correct legal position is this: false implication, over-implication, and casual roping-in of relatives are real judicial concerns, and a husband facing a false case must move immediately on evidence, arrest strategy, and role-specific defence.
WHAT TO DO IMMEDIATELY IF WIFE FILES FALSE 498A / BNS 85
- Preserve every digital and financial record from the marriage and separation period.
- Find out whether it is only a complaint, a counselling call, a Section 35 BNSS appearance notice, or a registered FIR.
- Do an immediate anticipatory-bail risk assessment for the husband and each separately named relative.
- Split defence by person, residence, and role; do not let one omnibus story swallow everyone.
- Prepare for linked litigation: DV, maintenance, child access, stridhan, and divorce.
- Do not make emotional admissions or amateur settlement offers over phone or WhatsApp.
- If the complaint is vague, retaliatory, or loaded with omnibus allegations, build the quashing/discharge record from day one.
THE LINE MOST MEN NEED TO UNDERSTAND
A false 498A/BNS 85 case is won earliest at the stage where most men behave worst:
the first police contact, the first family panic, the first bail decision, and the first evidence-preservation window.
Miss that stage, and you spend years repairing avoidable damage.
FAQs
No. For new offences after 1 July 2024, the equivalent offence sits in BNS 85, with cruelty defined in BNS 86.
No. Under the BNSS First Schedule, BNS 85 is non-bailable and triable by a Magistrate of the First Class.
Not automatically. Arnesh Kumar bars routine arrest, and BNSS 35 requires notice and recorded reasons in the relevant cases.
Yes, where allegations are vague, omnibus, or unsupported. The Supreme Court has repeatedly quashed such proceedings against relatives.
Preserve evidence and get immediate legal control over the arrest stage, notice stage, and anticipatory-bail strategy. That is where the case usually turns.