In Sanjeev Kumar Sharma vs. State of H.P. & Others (decided alongside Abhay Bahadur Singh &Anr. vs. State of HP and Sangram Singh vs. State of HP), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh quashed an FIR and a Magistrate’s order for the registration of a criminal case, ruling that exhausting the two-tier remedy under Section 154 of the Cr.P.C. (or the corresponding BNSS) is a mandatory, non-negotiable statutory pre-requisite. The Court held that a complainant cannot invoke a Magistrate’s jurisdiction to order an FIR under Section 156(3) by bypassing the local Station House Officer (SHO) to directly email high-ranking officials like the Director General of Police. While the Court quashed the proceedings on this technical threshold ground, it clarified that the complainant retains the legal liberty to re-approach the judicial forum after correctly following the mandated procedural workflows.
- Factual Background and Procedural History
The dispute arose from a 2004 land transaction involving 232 bighas of land. The complainant, Sanjeev Kumar Sharma, alleged that despite paying significant consideration and taking possession, the accused refused to execute the sale deed for the remaining portion of the land and later threatened him and his laborers. While a civil suit was already pending, the complainant emailed a complaint to the Director General of Police (DGP), which was forwarded to the local Superintendent of Police for inquiry, but no FIR was initially registered. Consequently, the complainant moved an application under Section 156(3) of the Cr.P.C. before the Chief Judicial Magistrate (CJM), Nahan.
- The Trial Court’s Direction
On June 10, 2025, the CJM held that the mere pendency of a civil suit was not a bar to criminal proceedings if the allegations disclosed cognizable offenses. Finding that the complaint prima facie suggested offenses such as trespass, criminal intimidation, and assault, the CJM forwarded the application to the SHO for the registration of an FIR and investigation.
- Mandatory Exhaustion of Section 154 Remedies
The High Court emphasized that setting criminal law in motion requires strict adherence to the procedural ladder:
- Step 1 (Section 154(1)): Information regarding a cognizable offense must first be formally furnished to the Officer-in-Charge of the specific Police Station (the SHO).
- Step 2 (Section 154(3)): Only if the SHO refuses or neglects to register the FIR can the complainant escalate the matter to the Superintendent of Police.
- Non-Compliance: In this case, the complainant bypassed the local SHO and directly approached the DGP via email. The Court ruled that this did not constitute valid compliance with the law, rendering the subsequent application to the Magistrate incompetent.
- Judicial Precedent and “Technical Quashing”
Relying on binding Supreme Court precedents such as Priyanka Srivastava and Ranjit Singh Bath, the High Court held that a Magistrate cannot ignore these statutory defaults. Under its inherent powers (Section 528 BNSS / 482 Cr.P.C.), the High Court determined that:
- Abuse of Process: Orders and FIRs structured upon a failure to satisfy entry-level prerequisites represent an abuse of process.
- Narrow Scope of Review: When a proceeding is terminated at the threshold on a technical point of non-compliance, it is unnecessary for the Court to delve into the substantive merits of the case, such as whether the underlying dispute is purely civil in nature.
- Final Outcome
The High Court allowed the petitions of the accused and issued the following orders:
- Quashing of FIR and Order: The CJM’s order dated June 10, 2025, and the resulting FIR No. 97 of 2025 were quashed and set aside.
- Liberty to Re-approach: The quashing was done on technical grounds, meaning the complainant is free to re-approach the Magistrate after documenting proper compliance with Sections 154(1) and 154(3).
Confined Observations: The Court noted that its observations were limited to the disposal of these petitions and would not bear upon the ultimate merits of the case if re-filed correctly.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 307
Sanjeev Kumar Sharma V. State of Hp &Ors. (D.O.J. 03.06.2026)
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