The case of Dr.Dhriti Gupta v. State of Himachal Pradesh involves the quashing of criminal proceedings against a Medical Officer charged with failing to report an offense under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012,.
Factual Background
- The Allegation: The petitioner, a Medical Officer, was accused under Section 21 of the POCSO Act for failing to report that a 17-year-old victim she had examined was a victim of sexual assault,,.
- The Main Case: An FIR had been registered against several “principal offenders” for offenses including rape (Section 376 IPC), POCSO violations, and child marriage,.
- The Compromise: Before the petitioner’s case was decided, a Coordinate Bench of the High Court quashed the FIR against the principal offenders,. This was based on a compromise: the victim (after reaching the age of 18) had married the main accused, and the couple now had a child together,,.
The High Court’s Reasoning
Justice Sandeep Sharma quashed the FIR against the doctor, citing the following legal and practical grounds:
- Derivative Liability and Futility: The Court held that since the FIR against the principal offenders was quashed, the foundational offense ceased to exist. Consequently, continuing proceedings against the doctor for “failure to report” an offense that was no longer being prosecuted would be a “futile exercise”,.
- Remote Chances of Conviction: Given that the victim and the main accused were now happily married, the Court noted that the chances of the victim supporting the prosecution’s case were “remote and bleak”,,. Subjecting the petitioner to a trial bound to fail was deemed an “unnecessary ordeal” and an “abuse of the process of law”,.
- Lack of Cognizance: The Court found it significant that the lower court had not actually taken cognizance of Section 21 of the POCSO Act (the specific charge against the doctor) when processing the case, further weakening the legal standing for the trial,.
- Inherent Powers: Exercising its inherent powers under Section 528 of the BharatiyaNagrik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023, the Court determined that quashing the proceedings was necessary to meet the “ends of justice”,,.
Conclusion
The High Court quashed the FIR (No. 55 of 2024) and all consequential proceedings specifically regarding Dr.Dhriti Gupta. The petitioner was effectively acquitted of the charges.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 201
Dr.Dhriti Gupta V. State of H.P. And Others (D.O.J. 23.04.2026)
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