In the case of Roopa Devi vs. Ram Kumar Verma and Ors. (2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed the limitations of the court’s power to take additional documents on record during criminal proceedings.
Case Background
The petitioner (Roopa Devi) challenged an order passed by a Judicial Magistrate in a criminal case involving allegations under Sections 500 and 501 of the IPC. The lower court had allowed an application filed by the accused under Section 311 of the CrPC, permitting them to place on record a copy of a challan, FIR, and other investigation proceedings against the petitioner before the trial had effectively commenced.
Key Legal Issues and Findings
The High Court quashed the lower court’s order based on the following legal principles:
- Misuse of Section 311 CrPC: The Court clarified that Section 311 of the CrPC is specifically designed to empower a court to summon, recall, or re-examine witnesses. It does not grant the court the power to take additional documentary evidence on record.
- Proper Procedure (Section 91 CrPC): The Court noted that the appropriate remedy for summoning or producing documents is Section 91 of the CrPC.
- Timing for Defense Evidence: Importantly, the Court held that an accused cannot invoke Section 91 to produce material before the prosecution’s evidence has closed. The law does not grant the accused a right to file documents at the stage of framing charges or taking cognizance; such evidence can only be led later during the defense evidence stage.
- No “Mini-Trial” at Framing of Charge: Citing Supreme Court precedents, the Court emphasized that at the stage of framing charges, the trial judge must only examine the material provided by the prosecution to determine if there are sufficient grounds to proceed. The court should not conduct a “mini-trial” by evaluating the accused’s defense material at that threshold.
Conclusion
The High Court found that the trial court erred in allowing the accused to place documents on record under Section 311 CrPC, especially since the petitioner’s evidence had not yet commenced. Consequently, the High Court allowed the petition and quashed the order dated November 25, 2023.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 220
Roopa Devi V. Sh. Ram Kumar Verma And Ors. (D.O.J. 04.05.2026)
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