The Compliance Shield: Why Automatic Revocation Barred a Doctor’s Prosecution
In the case of Amit Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Another, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed whether a conditional administrative suspension of a medical clinic remains in force until a formal revocation order is issued, or if it terminates immediately upon the fulfillment of the condition.
Case Overview
The petitioner, an MBBS doctor running an ultrasound clinic in Kullu, faced criminal prosecution under the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PC&PNDT) Act, 1994, and various sections of the IPC. A complainant alleged that the petitioner conducted an ultrasound on March 11, 2014, while his clinic’s registration was under suspension, and failed to maintain mandatory Form-F records.
The Legal Dispute
The core of the dispute centered on a suspension notice issued on March 4, 2014, which directed the petitioner to stop conducting ultrasounds “temporary till you submit the required registration” with the State Medical Council.
- The petitioner submitted the required registration on March 7, 2014.
- The formal revocation of the suspension was not issued by the Chief Medical Officer until March 29, 2014.
- The prosecution argued that any ultrasound performed between March 4 and March 29 was illegal.
The Court’s Ruling
Justice Sandeep Sharma exercised the court’s inherent powers under Section 482 Cr.PC to quash the proceedings, based on the following findings:
- Principle of Automatic Revocation: The Court held that since the suspension was specifically conditioned to last only “till” the submission of the registration, the suspension stood automatically revoked the moment the petitioner complied on March 7, 2014. Consequently, the ultrasound conducted on March 11 was not illegal.
- Documentary Evidence of Compliance: Regarding the alleged record-keeping failures, the Court found that the petitioner had submitted the necessary Form-F details well before the complaints were actually filed. The Court described this as “documentary evidence of sterling quality” that displaced the complainant’s assertions.
- Prevention of Harassment: The Court emphasized that criminal law should not be permitted to degenerate into a “weapon of harassment or persecution”. It ruled that continuing a trial that is bound to result in acquittal would be a “manifest abuse of the process of law”.
Conclusion
The High Court concluded that no offense was made out against the doctor. The petitions were allowed, the criminal complaints were quashed and set aside, and the petitioner was acquitted of the charges.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 74
AMIT KUMAR V. MANEESH SRIVASTAVA (D.O.J.10-03-2026)





