Geddam Jhansi & Ors vs State of Telangana
Citation: 2025 SCC OnLine SC 263
Decided on: 07 February 2025
Bench: Justice B.V. Nagarathna & Justice N. Kotiswar Singh
🔹 1. Facts of the Case
- Complainant (wife) filed:
- FIR under Section 498A, 506 IPC + Dowry Prohibition Act
- Separate complaint under Domestic Violence Act
- Allegations:
- Dowry demand (₹30 lakh, partly paid)
- Mental and physical harassment by husband and in-laws
- Additional dowry demand of ₹10 lakh
- Appellants (relatives):
- Sister-in-law (mother-in-law’s sister)
- Her son
- Allegation against them:
- 👉 They “pressurized” complainant to obey husband and in-laws
🔹 2. Procedural History
- High Court refused to quash proceedings under Section 482 CrPC
- Matter reached Supreme Court via SLP
- Issue:
- 👉 Whether proceedings against these relatives should be quashed
🔹 3. Core Legal Issue
Can distant relatives be prosecuted in matrimonial disputes on the basis of vague and general allegations without specific role?
🔹 4. Supreme Court Analysis
(A) Law on Quashing (Bhajan Lal Principles)
Court reiterated principles from
State of Haryana v Bhajan Lal
- Proceedings can be quashed where:
- No prima facie offence made out
- Allegations are vague / improbable
- Abuse of process of law
📌 (Para 12)
(B) Power under Section 482 CrPC
- Even after charge-sheet, quashing is permissible
- Court can examine:
- FIR
- Charge-sheet
- Evidence
📌 (Paras 14–16)
(C) Evaluation of Evidence
1. Against Husband & Mother-in-law
✔ Specific allegations exist
✔ Trial justified
2. Against Appellants (Relatives)
❌ Only general allegations:
- “pressurised complainant”
- “supported husband”
❌ No:
- Specific incident
- Date/time
- Overt act
📌 (Paras 24–26)
3. Witness Evidence Weak
- Parents → hearsay (told by daughter)
- Panchayat witnesses → hearsay + vague
- Statements → identical / copied (no credibility)
📌 (Paras 22–23, 27)
4. No New Evidence in Charge-sheet
- Charge-sheet did not improve case
- Only repetition of complaint
📌 (Para 25)
5. Residence Factor
- Appellants lived separately (Hyderabad)
- Matrimonial home was elsewhere
📌 (Para 38)
(D) Key Observations by Supreme Court
⚖️ Important Principles:
1. General Allegations Not Enough
Mere vague allegations without specific acts cannot sustain prosecution
📌 (Paras 34–35)
2. Matrimonial Disputes → Risk of Over-Implication
- Tendency to implicate entire family
- Emotional exaggeration possible
📌 (Para 32)
3. Criminal Law Must Be Used Carefully
- Especially in family matters
- Must avoid “dragging all relatives”
📌 (Paras 31, 35)
4. Requirement of Specific Role
👉 Each accused must have:
- Clear act
- Active participation
- Prima facie evidence
🔹 5. Final Judgment
✅ Supreme Court allowed appeal
- Proceedings QUASHED against appellants (relatives)
- Proceedings continue against husband & main accused
📌 (Para 40)
🔥 6. Key Legal Ratio (Most Important)
👉 Relatives cannot be prosecuted in matrimonial cases unless:
- Specific overt acts are alleged
- Supported by credible evidence
👉 General statements like “they supported / pressurized” are insufficient
🎯 7. Practical Use (Very Important for Your Practice)
This judgment is extremely useful for:
✔ 482 CrPC Quashing
- Especially for:
- Bua, Fufa, Chacha, distant relatives
- Married sisters living separately
✔ Grounds You Can Use:
- Vague allegations
- No specific role
- Separate residence
- Hearsay evidence
- Mechanical charge-sheet
🧠 8. One-Line Court Argument (Powerful)
👉 “My Lords, there is not a single specific overt act attributed to the applicant—only omnibus and general allegations, which as per the law laid down in Geddam Jhansi (2025), cannot sustain criminal prosecution.”
Find PDF Judgement
https://t.me/sajjadhusainlaw/292
https://t.me/sajjadhusainlaw/293
