In Sanjeev Kumar vs. State of Himachal Pradesh, the High Court quashed an FIR registered under Section 7A of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, ruling that the mere claim of having “links” to public officials or the recovery of money from a private individual is insufficient to constitute a criminal offense. The Court established that Section 7A requires a demonstrated attempt to actually contact, influence, or induce a public servant to perform a public duty improperly. Without evidence of such a nexus, communication, or transaction between the accused and the relevant public official, criminal proceedings against a private individual represent an abuse of the legal process and cannot be sustained.
- Factual Background and the “Trap” Incident
The petitioner, a private individual, was caught red-handed by the police in a trap while accepting a cheque for Rs. 2,40,000 and Rs. 10,000 in cash. The complainant, who ran a coaching academy for Army candidates, alleged that the petitioner had contacted him claiming to be a tout with “links” in the Indian Army who could secure candidate selections for a fee of Rs. 2,00,000 per person. Following the trap, an FIR was instituted under Section 7A of the Prevention of Corruption Act.
- Legal Standard for Quashing Proceedings
The Court examined its extraordinary inherent powers under Section 528 of the BharatiyaNagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS)—formerly Section 482 of the Cr.P.C.—to prevent the abuse of the court process. Relying on the Bhajan Lal guidelines, the Court noted that an FIR must be quashed if the uncontroverted allegations and evidence collected do not disclose the commission of any offense.
- Statutory Ingredients of Section 7A
The Court conducted a detailed analysis of Section 7A, which targets individuals who take undue advantage to influence public servants. It clarified several critical legal points:
- Demand as Sine Qua Non: The demand for illegal gratification to influence a public official is an essential condition (sine qua non) for the offense.
- Inadequacy of Recovery: The mere recovery of currency or cheques from a private person does not establish guilt under the Act.
- Proof of Inducement: The prosecution must prove that the accused actually attempted to induce a public servant through corrupt or illegal means or personal influence.
- The “Missing Link” and Failure of Investigation
The High Court found that the prosecution’s case suffered from a fundamental lack of evidence regarding the petitioner’s alleged “links”:
- No Contact with Officials: The investigative record yielded no evidence of prior acquaintance, communication, or transaction between the petitioner and the public officials responsible for Army recruitment.
- No Attempt to Influence: There was no material showing that the petitioner ever attempted to pass the money to a public servant or prevail upon one to perform a duty improperly.
- Absence of Complainant Public Servant: No public servant alleged being approached, contacted, or induced by the petitioner.
- Final Outcome
The Court concluded that even if the allegations were taken at face value, the basic statutory ingredients of Section 7A were missing. Continuing the trial would subject the petitioner to the “ordeal of a protracted trial” that was legally bound to fail. Therefore, the High Court allowed the petition, quashed the FIR and all consequential proceedings, and acquitted the petitioner.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 290
Sanjeev Kumar V. State of Himachal Pradesh & Another (D.O.J. 20.05.2026)
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