In the case of Ishan Khan v. Devi Singh and Others (2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh upheld the dismissal of a complaint against police officers, ruling that the failure to register an FIR for cheating or forgery does not constitute a criminal offense under Section 166A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).
The following is a summary of the judgment:
Case Background
The petitioner, Ishan Khan, alleged that his grandmother’s Will was ignored through a forged report and false mutation entries regarding a property. When the police failed to take action on his complaint for forgery and cheating, he filed a criminal complaint before the Trial Court against the police officers under Section 166A(b) of the IPC, asserting they had disobeyed legal directions by not registering an FIR as mandated by the Supreme Court in Lalita Kumari v. Govt of UP. The Trial Court dismissed the complaint, leading to this revision petition.
Key Findings of the Court
The High Court affirmed the lower court’s decision based on the following legal principles:
- Strict Construction of Penal Statutes: The Court emphasized that criminal statutes must be interpreted strictly based on the literal meaning of the words used. It is impermissible for a court to “add words” to a statute or expand its scope through implication or equitable considerations.
- Limited Scope of Section 166A IPC: Section 166A(c) specifically lists the offenses for which a public servant can be punished for failing to record information. These are primarily crimes against women (such as Sections 354, 376, and 509). Since cheating and forgery are not mentioned in this list, the penal provisions of Section 166A do not apply to them.
- FIR vs. Investigation: The petitioner specifically invoked Section 166A(b), which punishes a public servant for disobeying directions regarding the manner of investigation. However, the Court clarified that the registration of an FIR is not technically part of the investigation; rather, the investigation only begins after the FIR is registered. Therefore, Section 166A(b) cannot be used to punish a failure to register an FIR.
- Legislative Intent: Relying on the Lalita Kumari precedent, the Court noted that the legislature inserted Section 166A following a rise in crimes against women to provide enhanced safeguards. The legislature intentionally limited the punishment for failing to register FIRs to those specific, serious offenses.
- Narrow Revisional Jurisdiction: The Court reiterated that its power in a criminal revision is supervisory and narrow, intended only to correct patent defects or errors of law, not to re-evaluate facts like an appellate court.
Legal Conclusion
The High Court concluded that there was no legal infirmity in the Trial Court’s order. Because forgery and cheating are not covered by the narrow scope of Section 166A, the revision petition was dismissed.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 136
Ishan Khan V. Devi Singh And Others (D.O.J. 22-04-2026)
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