✦ High Court of India · 14 Oct 2025

High Court · 2025

Case Details High Court of India · 14 Oct 2025
Court
High Court of India
Decided
14 Oct 2025
Length
1,136 words

Acts & Sections

Cited in this judgment

CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT MADRASDATED: 13-10-2025CORAMTHE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE N. SATHISH KUMARCRL OP No. 8453 of 2025andCRL MP NO.5549 OF 20251. NIRMALA2. KARUNAKARANPetitioner(s)Vs1. The State Rep.By, The Inspector Of Police,DCB-II, Chengalpattu, Cr.No.10 Of 2024.2.K. BalakrishnanRespondent(s)PRAYERThis Criminal Original Petition has been filed to call for the records relating to the FIR in Cr.No.10 of 2024, on the file of the first respondent and to quash the same.1/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025For PetitionersMr.R.RagavendranFor R1Mr.K.M.D.MuhilanAdditional Public ProsecutorFor R2Mr.P.VelmuruganORDERThis Criminal Original Petition has been filed to call for the records relating to the FIR in Cr.No.10 of 2024, on the file of the first respondent-Police and to quash the same.2. The second respondent lodged a complaint before the first respondent-Police as against the accused/petitioners herein, in Crime No.10 of 2024 for the offences under Sections 420, 465, 467, 468, 471 and 506(part ii) of the IPC. The crux of the allegations made in the FIR is that the subject property is owned by one Mrs.Annapoorani, the mother of the first petitioner, who had executed a Power of Attorney in favour of one Mr.Venkatesan, who is the brother of the defacto complainant. The defacto complainant is said to have purchased the property from the Power Agent on 18.07.2007. According to him, he is in possession of the property. When the matter stood thus, Mrs.Annapoorani, the original owner executed a settlement deed in favour of 2/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025her daughter. Therefore, according to the petitioners, they have not committed the offence. 3. Learned counsel for the petitioners submitted that, based on the complaint lodged by the second respondent/defacto complainant, the first respondent-Police registered a case against the petitioners for the offences under Sections 420, 465, 467, 468, 471 and 506(part ii) of IPC in Crime No.10 of 2024. The said F.I.R has been filed on 28.08.2024 after a civil suit has been filed by the defacto complainant in O.S.No.178 of 2019 on the file of the District Munsif Court, Maduranthakam on the same set of allegations. In the said suit, the first petitioner's mother has also raised a counter claim seeking to set aside the document executed in favour of the defacto complainant. Hence, only to avoid civil litigation, the F.I.R came to be registered. Further, from the entire allegation, even taken as such, no offence has been made out. According to the petitioners, Power of Attorney has been given to the defacto complainant's brother for developing the property, whereas he entered into sale agreements with the purchasers and no such sale consideration has been paid to the petitioners and the property is in possession of the petitioners.3/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025 4. The learned counsel for the second respondent submitted that though it is only a civil dispute between the Power agent and the original owner, the de facto complainant being a bonafide purchaser, lodged a complaint for taking action against the petitioners. Therefore, according to him, offences are made out.5. Heard the learned counsel appearing for the petitioners, the learned counsel for the private respondent and the learned Additional Public Prosecutor appearing for the respondent-Police and perused the materials available on record..6. The very complaint filed by the de facto complainant is not disputed. The entire allegations contained in the plaint in O.S.No.178 of 2019 and the allegation made in the F.I.R are similar in nature, whereas the petitioners took a stand that the Power of Attorney was given specifically for developing the property which has been misused.7. The entire facts clearly indicate that there is a civil dispute between the parties. Merely because the original owner is said to have executed a settlement deed in favour of her daughter/first petitioner herein, this Court is of the view that the same will not amount to mutation and creation of false records. To 4/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025attract the offence of forgery, creation of false records has to be established in this regard. 8. For better appreciation, this Court deems it fit to refer to the judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Mohd. Ibrahim v. State of Bihar, reported in (2009) 8 SCC 751, wherein, it is held as under:“There is a fundamental difference between a person executing a sale deed claiming that the property conveyed is his property, and a person executing a sale deed by impersonating the owner or falsely claiming to be authorised or empowered by the owner, to execute the deed on owner's behalf. When a person executes a document conveying a property describing it as his, there are two possibilities. The first is that he bona fide believes that the property actually belongs to him. The second is that he may be dishonestly or fraudulently claiming it to be his even though he knows that it is not his property. But to fall under first category of “false documents”, it is not sufficient that a document has been made or executed dishonestly or fraudulently. There is a further requirement that it should have been made with the intention of causing it to be believed that such document was made or executed by, or by the authority of a person, by whom or by whose authority he knows that it was not made or executed.When a document is executed by a person claiming a property which is not his, he is not claiming that he is someone else nor is he claiming that he is authorised by someone else. Therefore, execution of such document (purporting to convey some property of which he is not the owner) is not execution of a false document as defined under Section 464 of the Code. If what is executed is 5/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025not a false document, there is no forgery. If there is no forgery, then neither Section 467 nor Section 471 of the Code are attracted.”Emphasis supplied9. In the light of the above judgement, and considering the nature of the suit filed by the second respondent/defacto complainant, as early as in the year 2019 itself, the matter is still pending before the Civil Court, this Court is of the view that for the same grounds, the criminal prosecution cannot be maintained. Even if the entire F.I.R as such is taken as proof, the same will not constitute an offence. The parties are at liberty to agitate their rights before the civil Court. Thus, the FIR stands quashed. Accordingly, this Criminal Original Petition is Allowed. Consequently, connected miscellaneous petition is closed.13-10-2025mfaIndex:Yes/NoSpeaking/Non-speaking orderInternet:YesNeutral Citation:Yes/No6/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025To1. The Inspector Of Police,DCB-II, Chengalpattu2. The Public Prosecutor, High Court, Chennai.7/8 https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis CRL OP No. 8453 of 2025N.SATHISH KUMAR J.mfaCRL OP No. 8453 of 2025andCRL MP NO.5549 OF 2025 13-10-20258/8

This is the original judgment text as indexed from the source corpus. Always verify against the official court record before relying on it in a filing — you can do so on eCourts or the Supreme Court of India website. ← Search more judgments