S. 19 JJ Act | Children's Court Must Pass Reasoned Order Before Trying Child As Adult: Supreme Court
Yash Mittal
13 July 2026 7:18 PM IST

In an important direction for the Children Courts across the country, the Supreme Court on Monday (July 13) has held that a Children's Court cannot proceed to try a child in conflict with law as an adult without first passing a reasoned order under Section 19(1) of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015.
Holding that this requirement is mandatory, a bench of Justice Aravind Kumar and Justice Prasanna B Varale set aside the murder conviction of a man who was 16½ years old at the time of the alleged offence, observing that the entire trial stood vitiated due to non-compliance with the statutory procedure.
“…we deem it appropriate to issue a word of caution and a direction to Children's Courts across the country that upon receipt of records pursuant to transfer/committal under Section 18(3) of the Act by the Juvenile Justice Board, the first duty of the Children's Court, after taking cognizance of the matter, is to pass a reasoned order under Section 19(1) of the Act upon due assessment of the 'child in conflict with law' before it proceeds further in the matter.”, the Court observed.
The case arose from an incident in October 2018 in Haryana in which the appellant, then aged 16 years and six months, was accused of participating in an assault that resulted in the death of a man.
Since the appellant was above 16 years of age and was accused of a heinous offence, the Juvenile Justice Board conducted a preliminary assessment under Section 15 of the Juvenile Justice Act. The Board concluded that he possessed the mental and physical capacity to commit the offence and transferred the matter to the Children's Court under Section 18(3) for trial as an adult.
However, after receiving the case, the Children's Court directly proceeded with the sessions trial and ultimately convicted the appellant under Section 302 IPC, sentencing him to 14 years' rigorous imprisonment. The High Court upheld the conviction.
Before the Supreme Court, the appellant contended that the Children's Court had failed to comply with the mandatory requirement under Section 19(1) of the Act before commencing the trial.
Setting aside the conviction, the judgment authored by Justice Aravind Kumar, relying on Thirumoorthy v. State, 2024 LiveLaw (SC) 262, where the conviction was also set aside due to non-compliance of mandatory provisions of the Act, including Section 19, observed:
“In the absence of compliance with Section 19(1), which is determinative of the procedure to be followed by the Court, whether a Sessions trial or a summons case, the entire trial stands vitiated. We are, therefore, left with no option but to follow the course adopted in Thirumoorthy.”
“…the conviction recorded by the Children's Court, having been rendered in non-compliance with the mandate of Section 19(1) of the Act, cannot be sustained.”, the Court held.
In terms of the aforesaid, the appeal was allowed, acquitting the Appellant-accused.
Cause Title: SAGAR VERSUS THE STATE OF HARYANA
Citation : 2026 LiveLaw (SC) 666
Click here to download judgment
Appearance:
For Petitioner(s) :Mr. Ranbir Singh Kundu, Adv. Ms. Kirti Aggarwal, Adv. Mr. Akash, Adv. Mr. Shitanshu Saklani, Adv. Mr. Shubham Mavi, Adv. Mr. Ashish Pandey, AOR Mr. Lakshya Singh, Adv. Mr. Ali Mohammed Khan, Adv.
For Respondent(s) :Mr. Keshav Mittal, Adv. Mr. Samar Vijay Singh, AOR Ms. Sabarni Som, Adv. Mr. Gaj Singh, Adv. Mr. Anuj Sehrawat, Adv. Mr. Sahil Gandass, Adv. Mr. Gaurav Dhull, Adv. Mr. Aman Dev Sharma, Adv.


