UPLOAD PENDING - Delhi High Court: Can a Magistrate or Special Court Question an FIR's Validity or Quash It During an Investigation? Affirms That Magistrates and Special Courts Are Limited to Ensuring Procedural Fairness and Must Not Interfere with FIR Validity
UPLOAD PENDING - Delhi High Court: Can a Magistrate or Special Court Question an FIR's Validity or Quash It During an Investigation? Affirms That Magistrates and Special Courts Are Limited to Ensuring Procedural Fairness and Must Not Interfere with FIR Validity

Delhi High Court: Can a Magistrate or Special Court Question an FIR’s Validity or Quash It During an Investigation? Affirms That Magistrates and Special Courts Are Limited to Ensuring Procedural Fairness and Must Not Interfere with FIR Validity

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Court’s Decision

The High Court emphasized the following principles:

  • Investigative Authority: Magistrates and Special Courts do not have the authority to interfere with ongoing investigations or question the validity of FIRs during their preliminary stages.
  • Judicial Assistance: Courts should limit their role to providing procedural assistance, such as issuing search warrants or letters rogatory, when approached by investigative agencies.
  • Validity of FIR: If there is a challenge to the FIR, it must be done under Section 482 CrPC (inherent powers) or Articles 226/227 of the Constitution. Lower courts cannot initiate quashing or supervision.

The court also restored the application by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for a letter rogatory (judicial assistance to collect evidence from another country).


Facts

  • Allegations of Corruption: Rolls Royce, between 2007-2011, allegedly paid illegal commissions of 10-11.3% of contract values to intermediaries, violating terms of purchase orders with Indian Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) like HAL, ONGC, and GAIL.
  • Preliminary Enquiry: A CBI source informed that commissions paid by Rolls Royce to intermediary companies (M/s Aashmore Pvt. Ltd. and M/s Infinity) were kickbacks to unknown officials of these PSUs.
  • CBI Findings:
    • Rolls Royce concealed these payments during subsequent tenders.
    • Payments were made to accounts in Singapore, violating anti-corruption protocols.
  • CBI Action:
    • Registered a First Information Report (FIR) in 2019.
    • Sought judicial assistance (letter rogatory) to collect evidence from Singapore-based banks and investigate their officials.

The Special Judge:

  • Declined the CBI’s application for a letter rogatory.
  • Questioned the FIR’s validity, claiming it lacked evidence of a cognizable offense.
  • Referred legal questions to the High Court under Section 395(2) of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC).

Issues

The High Court addressed the following legal questions:

  1. Can a Magistrate or Special Court question an FIR’s validity or quash it during an investigation?
  2. Should CBI approach the High Court or Supreme Court to investigate in cases of doubtful offenses?
  3. Is a Section 395(2) CrPC reference maintainable before filing a chargesheet?
  4. What is the permissible scope of judicial supervision during investigations?

Petitioner’s Arguments

  • CBI’s Stand:
    • The FIR was registered after sufficient evidence of a cognizable offense was found.
    • Magistrates or Special Courts cannot interfere with the investigative process.
    • The application for a letter rogatory was essential to advance the investigation.
    • The reference made by the Special Judge was procedurally flawed.

Respondent’s Arguments

  • The FIR was based on vague and speculative information.
  • The CBI should seek prior judicial approval when evidence for an FIR is weak.
  • The Special Judge acted within their powers in declining the letter rogatory and referring legal queries.

Analysis of the Law

  • Registration of FIRs:
    • Mandatory: If reasonable suspicion exists of a cognizable offense (as per Lalita Kumari v. State of Uttar Pradesh).
    • A police officer or investigative agency need not verify the truthfulness of the information before registering the FIR (CBI v. Tapan Kumar Singh).
    • An FIR serves as the starting point for an investigation, not a conclusive document.
  • Judicial Role During Investigations:
    • Courts cannot interfere with investigations unless extraordinary circumstances arise (Union of India v. Prakash P. Hinduja).
    • The power to quash an FIR lies only with High Courts or the Supreme Court under Section 482 CrPC or Articles 226/227.
  • Validity of Section 395(2) Reference:
    • A reference to the High Court is valid only if a case is pending and the referred questions arise directly from it.
    • In this case, the application for a letter rogatory was dismissed before the reference, rendering it moot.

Precedent Analysis

  1. State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal:
    • FIRs must disclose a cognizable offense for investigation. Otherwise, procedures under Section 155 CrPC apply for non-cognizable offenses.
  2. Adalat Prasad v. Rooplal Jindal:
    • Lower courts lack inherent powers to review or quash their orders.
  3. Neeharika Infrastructure v. State of Maharashtra:
    • Courts should allow investigations to proceed without interference and avoid premature assessments of an FIR’s merit.

Court’s Reasoning

  • Role of Magistrates:
    • Magistrates and Special Courts are limited to ensuring procedural fairness (e.g., authorizing search warrants).
    • They must not question FIR validity during an investigation (Privy Council in Nazir Ahmad v. King-Emperor).
  • CBI’s Discretion:
    • The CBI, as an investigative agency, may register FIRs if prima facie evidence supports reasonable suspicion of a cognizable offense. Judicial permission is not required.
  • Reference Validity:
    • The Special Court’s reference was invalid as the case from which it arose (application for letter rogatory) was dismissed. Section 395(2) CrPC references must pertain to pending cases.

Conclusion

  1. The Special Judge’s order questioning the FIR and rejecting the letter rogatory application was procedurally flawed and set aside.
  2. The application for letter rogatory was restored to enable further investigation.
  3. The High Court provided concise answers to the referred legal questions, emphasizing the established principles of non-interference during investigations.

Implications

  • For Investigative Agencies:
    • Reinforces their autonomy to conduct investigations without judicial interference.
    • Reiterates the importance of adhering to procedural requirements under CrPC.
  • For Courts:
    • Clarifies their limited role during investigations to procedural oversight and assistance.
    • Emphasizes that FIR validity can only be challenged through designated legal provisions.

Also Read – Calcutta High Court: Adverse Possession Requires Trial to Prove Essential Conditions; Rejection of Plaint Under Order 7 Rule 11 Must Be Based Solely on Plaint’s Averments

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