
Supreme Court quashes FIR against Imran Pratapgadhi, ruling no prima facie offence. High Courts can invoke Section 482 CrPC to prevent abuse of the legal process.
SUPREME COURT ALLOWS FIR QUASHING AT NASCENT STAGE
Case in News
The Supreme Court stated that Section 482 CrPC can be invoked to quash an FIR even at the initial investigation stage.
Case Overview
Case Name: Imran Pratapgadhi vs. State of Gujarat
A bench of Justice Abhay S Oka and Justice Ujjal Bhuyan quashed an FIR against Imran Pratapgarhi, a Congress MP for an Instagram post relating to a controversial poem. The Gujarat High Court had refused relief but the Supreme Court stated that no prima facie case was made out and interfered under Section 482 CrPC.
Key Aspects
- No absolute bar on quashing FIRs at the early stage of investigation if no offence is prima facie made out .
- FIR against Imran Pratapgarhi was registered under Sections 196, 197, 299, 302, 57 of BNSS but lacked criminal intent.
- The Supreme Court stated that the FIR was a mechanical exercise and an abuse of law.
- The High Court relied on Neeharika Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra but the Supreme Court stated that this was not an absolute precedent.
Legal Insights
- Section 482 CrPC / Section 528 BNSS – deals with Inherent power of High Courts to quash FIRs.
- Article 19(1)(a) of Indian Constitution – Right to freedom of speech and expression.
- State of Haryana vs. Bhajan Lal – Lays down grounds for FIR quashing.
- Mens rea needed under Section 196 BNSS – No criminal intent found in this case.
Court’s Verdict
The Supreme Court of India quashed the FIR against Imran Pratapgarhi who had set aside the judgment of Gujarat High Court and reaffirmed that Section 482 CrPC can be used to stop abuse of legal process.
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