In Sanyogita Devi vs. Nirmal Singh and Another, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh restored a Magistrate’s order for the registration of an FIR, ruling that a complainant’s failure to exhaust remedies under Section 154(1) and (3) of the CrPC before approaching the court under Section 156(3) is a mere procedural lapse rather than a jurisdictional error. The Court established that an application under Section 156(3) is maintainable when filed by a General Power of Attorney (GPA), and an affidavit provided by the GPA sufficiently satisfies the legal mandate to prevent frivolous litigation. Furthermore, the Court clarified that while a Revisional Court has the power to interfere with a Section 156(3) order even after an FIR is registered, such interference is limited to cases of jurisdictional irregularity and cannot quash a resulting prosecution once a chargesheet has been filed or cognizance has been taken by the trial court.
- Factual Background and Allegations of Fraud
The case involved a matrimonial dispute where the complainant, residing in the USA, filed a complaint through her sister (holding a General Power of Attorney) against her husband. It was alleged that the husband admitted another woman to a hospital for medical treatment by falsely identifying her as his wife to avail benefits under the Ex-servicemen Contributory Health Scheme (ECHS). The Magistrate directed the police to register an FIR under Section 420 of the IPC, finding that the allegations disclosed a cognizable offense.
- Procedural Lapse vs. Jurisdictional Error
The primary legal challenge concerned whether the Magistrate could entertain the application since the complainant had not strictly followed the sequence of reporting to the Police Station and then the Superintendent of Police under Section 154.
- Non-Fatal Omission: The High Court held that while Magistrates should ordinarily ensure these remedies are exhausted, the failure to do so does not strip the Magistrate of their statutory competence to order an investigation.
- Validation of Magistrate’s Power: Because the complaint disclosed a clear cognizable offense, the Magistrate’s decision to bypass the procedural requirement of Section 154 was deemed a rectifiable irregularity that did not vitiate the proceedings.
- Validity of GPA and Affidavit Requirements
The respondents argued that the complaint was invalid because it was filed by a Power of Attorney and lacked a personal affidavit from the complainant. The Court rejected these arguments:
- GPA Competence: Relying on Supreme Court precedents, the Court ruled that a GPA is fully competent to initiate criminal proceedings on behalf of an aggrieved person.
- Compliance with Priyanka Srivastava: The requirement for an affidavit (intended to deter false and casual litigation) is met when the GPA swears to the truth of the allegations. The Court found that an affidavit by the GPA serves the same legal purpose of ensuring accountability.
- Limits of Revisional Interference Post-FIR
The High Court addressed the “moot question” of when a Revisional Court can set aside a Section 156(3) order after an FIR has already been registered.
- Stage of Investigation: A Revisional Court may stay or interfere with such an order if the matter is still under investigation and a patent jurisdictional error is identified.
- Effect of Chargesheet/Cognizance: If the investigation has already culminated in a chargesheet or the jurisdictional court has taken cognizance, setting aside the original Section 156(3) order cannot quash the resultant prosecution.
- Application to the Case: In this instance, although the Revisional Court had the authority to hear the case, it erred by treating a “procedural” irregularity (the Section 154 lapse) as a “jurisdictional” one to quash the FIR.
- Evidence of Prima Facie Offense
The Court noted that the department concerned had already found the accused guilty of fraud, revoked his ECHS card, and recovered the embezzled amount. Given this prima facie evidence of cheating and representation of a stranger as his wife, the High Court determined that the interests of justice required the investigation and prosecution to proceed.
Final Outcome
The High Court allowed the petition, quashing the Revisional Court’s order and restoring the Magistrate’s order. The discharge of the accused was set aside, and the trial court was directed to proceed with the matter from the stage where the discharge had been improperly ordered.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 365
Sanyogita Devi V. Nirmal Singh And Another (D.O.J. 03.07.2026)
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