In Vibha Bansal vs. State of H.P. &Anr., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh refused to quash an FIR against a school principal accused of cruelty under Section 75 of the Juvenile Justice (JJ) Act, ruling that publicly shaming a student by calling them a “thief” in front of peers and threatening them with life imprisonment constitutes prima faciemental suffering. The Court established that its extraordinary power under Section 482 of the CrPC must be exercised sparingly and cannot be used to conduct a “mini-trial” to test the truthfulness or reliability of allegations. Furthermore, the Court held that the absence of trauma signs in a psychologist’s report does not invalidate a prosecution for mental cruelty, as such suffering can be proven through victim testimony or objective assessment.
- Restricted Scope of Inherent Powers under Section 482 CrPC
The High Court emphasized that the power to quash criminal proceedings at the threshold is limited and should only be invoked to prevent the abuse of the process of law or to secure the ends of justice.
- The “Face Value” Test: While exercising this jurisdiction, the Court must accept the allegations in the complaint as true and correct.
- Prohibition of Mini-Trials: The Court is not permitted to embark upon an inquiry into the genuineness of the allegations or the credibility of the evidence.
- Standard for Interference: Interference is only warranted if the uncontroverted allegations, even if taken in their entirety, do not prima facie constitute any offence.
- Liability for Mental Cruelty under Section 75 of the JJ Act
The judgment clarified the application of Section 75 of the JJ Act in an educational environment:
- Actual Charge or Control: As a school principal, the petitioner was deemed to have overall charge and control over the student.
- Definition of Abuse: Actions such as labeling a child a “thief” based on CCTV footage, displaying that footage to classmates, and threatening the child with police and expulsion fall under the ambit of willful neglect or abuse.
- Mental Suffering: The Court ruled that such public shaming and severe threats are, by their nature, likely to cause unnecessary mental suffering to a child, satisfying the statutory requirements for prosecution.
- Evidentiary Weight of Psychological and Administrative Reports
The petitioner argued that the clinical psychologist found the child “calm and friendly” and that an educational report found no “corporal punishment” occurred. The Court rejected these defenses:
- Limitations of Clinical Findings: A report finding no current signs of trauma does not preclude the prosecution from proving that the child suffered mentally at the time of the incident.
- Nature of Evidence: Mental suffering is a fact that can be established through the victim’s testimony or by applying an objective test of how such treatment would affect a child.
- Irrelevance of Physical Punishment: Since the charge pertained to mental suffering rather than physical abuse, a report stating that no corporal (physical) punishment was inflicted did not disprove the prosecution’s case.
- Primacy of Trial Court and the Remedy of Discharge
The High Court reaffirmed that once an investigation is complete and a charge sheet is filed, the appropriate forum for relief is the Trial Court.
- Section 227/239 CrPC: Instead of seeking quashing under Section 482, the accused should generally prefer an application for discharge before the Trial Court.
- Judicial Evaluation: The Trial Court is legally tasked with looking into the materials collected by the investigating officer to determine if there is sufficient material to proceed with a trial.
Final Outcome
Finding that the allegations disclosed the commission of cognizable offences and that sufficient material was available to proceed, the High Court dismissed the petition. The Court left the parties to pursue their remedies before the Trial Court, noting that the continuation of the proceedings was essential to uphold the ends of justice.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 373
Vibha Bansal V. State of H.P. &Anr.(D.O.J. 17.06.2026)
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