
Supreme Court clarifies Article 226 cannot quash charge-sheet after cognizance; remedy lies under Section 528 BNSS for quashing FIRs, charge-sheets, and cognizance orders.
Case in NewsArticle 226 Cannot Quash Chargesheet After Cognizance, Supreme Court clarifies remedy lies under Section 528 BNSS . |
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Case Overview
Case Name: Prajnya Pranjal Kulkarni vs. State Of Maharashtra & Anr
In Prajnya Pranjal Kulkarni Versus State Of Maharashtra & Anr., a Bench of Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra held that once a Magistrate has taken cognizance, a charge-sheet or FIR cannot be quashed through Article 226 jurisdiction . Instead, the appropriate remedy is under Section 528 BNSS (akin to Section 482 CrPC) . The ruling came while setting aside a Bombay High Court order which wrongly dismissed a writ petition as infructuous after a charge-sheet was filed .
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Key Aspects
The Supreme Court examined facts and legal errors made by the High Court . Major issues included :
- The writ petition was filed under Article 226 along with Section 528 BNSS .
- The High Court dismissed it as infructuous once the charge-sheet was filed .
- Petitioners sought quashing of FIR, charge-sheet and cognizance order .
- The High Court misunderstood the precedent in Neeta Singh v. State of UP (2024) .
Legal Insights
The Court clarified the applicable legal provisions in this matter :
- Article 226, Constitution of India – power of High Courts to issue writs; not applicable once cognizance is taken .
- Section 528 BNSS – provides inherent power of High Court to quash FIRs, charge-sheets and even cognizance orders .
- Neeta Singh Case – held judicial orders not amenable under Article 226, but distinguished in present case .
- High Court roster benches have jurisdiction to decide such petitions under both provisions .
Court’s Verdict
The Supreme Court restored the writ petition and held that the Bombay High Court misapplied Neeta Singh . It directed that the matter be heard afresh under Section 528 BNSS keeping the petitioner’s grievance alive regarding quashing of FIR and charge-sheet .
Source – Supreme Court of India
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