AP High Court Quashes Atrocity FIR, Says Private Monetary Dispute Can't Be Camouflaged As Caste‑Based Offences In Absence Of Ingredients
The Andhra Pradesh High Court has quashed criminal proceedings against a man accused of caste-based abuse under the SC/ST Act and insulting a woman's modesty, holding that the allegations did not disclose the essential ingredients of the offences alleged.
The Court noted that the complaint did not allege that the purported caste-based insults were made "within public view" as required under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989, and observed that the dispute appeared to arise from private monetary transactions between the parties.
Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 apply when a caste-based insult or humiliation is intentionally made in a place within public view. A private dispute or mere reference to a person's caste is insufficient to attract these provisions.
Justice Y. Lakshmana Rao observed that continuation of the prosecution would amount to an abuse of the process of law, as the foundational requirements for invoking the penal provisions were absent.
"Upon a meticulous appraisal of the record, this Court is constrained to hold that the allegations, even if taken at their face value, are omnibus, bereft of particulars, and conspicuously silent on the indispensable statutory ingredient of occurrence “within public view,” which is the sine qua non for invocation of Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of 'the SCs/STs (POA) Act'. The complainant has not demonstrated the presence of any independent witnesses or public visibility, and the statements of supporting witnesses are but verbatim reiterations of the complainant's version, lacking substantive corroboration. Furthermore, the Petitioner has placed on record that he was employed in Melbourne, Australia at the relevant time, a plea of alibi which, though ordinarily a matter for trial, in the present factual matrix renders the prosecution case inherently improbable.
In light of the authoritative pronouncements in Hitesh Verma supra, B. Venkateswaran supra, and Swaran Singh v. State, it is manifest that private monetary disputes camouflaged as caste‑based offences, absent the foundational ingredients of intentional humiliation in public view, amount to a colourable exercise of criminal law and constitute an abuse of process. Continuation of proceedings in such circumstances would occasion grave prejudice and miscarriage of justice, warranting interdiction in exercise of inherent jurisdiction under Section 482 of 'the Cr.P.C.,'/Section 528 of 'the BNSS.”
The Court said that the complaint was "conspicuously bereft of any averment" over public presence or independent witnesses, rendering the alleged caste-based slurs a purely private altercation, indistinguishable from quotidian acrimony, and thus wholly extraneous to the statutory ambit designed to safeguard vulnerable communities from public indignities.
It further said that there was absence of alleged sexual innuendo or modesty-outraging context in the alleged slurs and thus Section 354 IPC was inapplicable.
The case arose from a complaint lodged by a woman belonging to a Scheduled Caste community, who alleged that the petitioner had borrowed substantial amounts of money, partially repaid them, and later abused her with caste-based remarks while refusing to repay the balance. She further alleged that another accused visited her residence, took away certain documents and hurled caste-based slurs. Based on these allegations, a case was registered under Section 509 IPC (now Section 79 of the BNS) and Sections 3(1)(r), 3(1)(s) and 3(2)(va) of the SC/ST Act.
The petitioner sought quashing of the proceedings, contending that the allegations were false and motivated, that he was residing in Melbourne, Australia at the relevant time, and that the dispute was essentially civil in nature concerning alleged monetary transactions. He argued that the complaint lacked particulars regarding any incident occurring in public view and that the investigation failed to verify his plea of alibi or collect electronic evidence regarding his whereabouts.
The complainant and the State opposed the petition, arguing that the allegations disclosed caste-based insults and humiliation attracting the provisions of the SC/ST Act and that questions relating to the petitioner's alibi could only be examined during trial.
After examining the record, the Court found that the complaint did not indicate that the alleged caste-based abuse occurred in public view or in the presence of independent witnesses. The statements of supporting witnesses were found to be mere verbatim reiterations of the complainant's version without substantive corroboration. The Court further noted that the petitioner's claim of being employed abroad had not been properly investigated.
The High Court also found that the allegations under Section 509 IPC/ Section 79 BNS could not be sustained, observing that the offence requires a deliberate intention to insult the modesty of a woman, and that such intent was not borne out from the material placed on record.
Accordingly, the Court allowed the criminal petition and quashed the proceedings against the petitioner.
Case Title: Pasupuleti Chinachennaiah v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Anr.
Case No.: Criminal Petition No. 12317 of 2025
Counsel for the Petitioner : Sri N. Ashwani Kumar
Counsel for the Respondents : Sri G. Sai Narayana Rao