Case Law
Subject : Legal - Criminal Law
New Delhi:
The Delhi High Court has declined to stay the proceedings in a private criminal complaint alleging defamation against politician
The ruling was delivered by the bench of Hon'ble Ms. Justice Swarana KantaSharma on January 24, 2024, on an application seeking an ad-interim stay in a petition challenging the summoning order issued by a Magistrate and a subsequent revisional order upholding the summons.
Background of the Case
The case originates from a private complaint filed by
Petitioner's Arguments for Stay
Senior Counsel for the petitioner, Mr.
Respondent's Counter-Arguments
Senior Counsel for the respondent/complainant, Mr.
Court's Reasoning and Decision
Justice Sharma considered the arguments and the material on record, including the detailed order of the ASJ.
On the issue of limitation , the High Court found, prima facie, that the complaint included allegations of defamation spanning from 2020 to 2023, citing specific instances mentioned in paragraph 16 of the complaint from January 2023 and a press conference from 2022. The court noted the complainant's argument that defamatory content remained available online. Based on this, the court did not find the complaint to be prima facie time-barred or the ASJ's observations on this point infirm.
Regarding Section 210 Cr.P.C. , the court upheld the ASJ's reasoning. It noted that the FIR was registered for offences under Sections 420/468/471/120B IPC (cheating, forgery, etc.), while the private complaint was for defamation (Sections 499/500 IPC). The court emphasized that Section 210 applies when the police investigation is for the same offence as the subject matter of the private complaint. Since the offences were different, and cognizance for defamation can only be taken on a complaint, Section 210 was inapplicable. The court also noted that the defamation complaint was not solely based on the allegations related to the 2016 letter but on several statements made between 2020 and 2023.
Consequently, the High Court concluded that, at this stage and without delving deep into the merits of the main petition, there were no sufficient grounds to stay the proceedings before the Trial Court.
The application for stay (CRL.M.A. 1201/2024) was accordingly dismissed. The court clarified that these observations are only prima facie and will not prejudice either party during the hearing of the main petition or the trial. Notice has already been issued in the main petition (CRL.M.C. 316/2024), which remains pending.
The judgment reinforces the distinction between different criminal proceedings and the specific requirements for applying Section 210 of the Cr.P.C., particularly concerning offences that can only be initiated through a private complaint, such as defamation.
#DefamationLaw #CriminalProcedure #DelhiHighCourt #DelhiHighCourt
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