6 June vs State Of Uttarakhand & Anr on 16 June, 2025

0
2

Uttarakhand High Court

6 June vs State Of Uttarakhand & Anr on 16 June, 2025

                                                                           2025:UHC:5286



 HIGH COURT OF UTTARAKHAND AT
                                   NAINITAL

Criminal Misc. Application U/s 482 No. 1908 of 2018


                                   16 June, 2025


Ajay Rana                                                                   --Applicant
                                         Versus

State of Uttarakhand & Anr.                                           --Respondents

----------------------------------------------------------------------
Presence:-
Mr. Arvind Vashishtha, learned Senior Counsel assisted by
Mr. Vivek Pathak.
Mr. G. C. Joshi, learned A.G.A. for the State.
Mr. Gaurav Singh, learned counsel for the respondent no.2.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Hon'ble Ashish Naithani, J.

                 The present application under Section 482

Cr.P.C has been filed by the Applicant, Ajay Rana,

seeking quashing of the order dated 30.11.2017 passed

by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Rishikesh, District

Dehradun in Case No. 436 of 2016 (arising out of FIR No.

222 of 2012), P.S. Kotwali Laksar, District Haridwar and

the revisional order dated 06.09.2018 passed by the 2nd

Additional Sessions Judge, Rishikesh, District Dehradun



                                                                                          1
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
in Criminal Revision No.318 of 2017.


2.               The FIR, lodged by Respondent No.2 on

15.08.2012, alleges that a fraudulent transaction was

entered into between M/s Barnawa Agro Industries Ltd.

and the complainant, wherein an MoU was executed for

the transfer of 135 acres of land and shares in exchange

for over `7.6 crores. Arguably, forged company records

were used to induce the complainant and he was later

removed as Director without notice.


3.               The Applicant, a Chartered Accountant by

profession, allegedly uploaded and certified Form 32 and

other documents used in the transaction. A charge sheet

was filed against him under Sections 420, 467, 468, 471,

506, and 120-B IPC. Cognizance was taken and charges

were framed. A prior 482 petition challenging the charge

sheet was dismissed in 2015, and a subsequent revision

against framing of charges was dismissed on 06.09.2018.


4.               Learned Counsel for the Applicant submits

that the dispute between the parties is, in essence, civil

in nature, arising from a commercial transaction relating

to the sale of land and the transfer of company shares. It




                                                                                          2
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
is argued that the criminal proceedings are a pressure

tactic       to      compel          performance              of     a      contractual

understanding.


5.                It is contended that the                          Applicant is a

Chartered           Accountant             who       merely         discharged            his

professional obligations by uploading company filings,

including Form 32 and Form 20B, on the ROC portal.

The      company's            Director,         Karanveer           Singh,        digitally

signed and authorized these filings. The Applicant neither

fabricated documents nor made any misrepresentations

himself.


6.                Learned Counsel argues that the Applicant had

no financial stake in the transaction. He was not a

signatory or witness to the MoU dated 23.08.2011, and

all payments were made to Karanveer Singh or the

Company, not to the Applicant. The Applicant's name

does not appear on any transactional instrument.


7.                It is further submitted that no incriminating

material has been collected during the investigation to

demonstrate the Applicant's participation in the alleged

conspiracy. The only basis for implicating him is that he




                                                                                           3
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
filed certain statutory forms in his professional capacity,

which, under the Companies Act, is a routine function.


8.               It is contended on behalf of the Applicant that

the ROC documents in question are public records,

verifiable through the MCA portal, and there is no

allegation that these filings were not duly recorded or

that the Applicant fabricated their content. Thus, the

core ingredients of the alleged offences are not attributed

to him.


9.               Learned Counsel highlights that an earlier

Section 482 petition challenging the charge sheet and

summoning order was dismissed in 2015. The present

petition is confined to the framing of charges, and the

threshold for interference is whether the materials

disclose a prima facie offence. The Applicant submits that

in his case, they do not.


10.              Finally,       it    is    urged        that      continuation           of

proceedings would amount to misuse of criminal law for

what is, at best, a contractual dispute between private

parties, and that the Applicant's continued prosecution

would result in unwarranted hardship and abuse of




                                                                                          4
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
process


11.              Learned            State          Counsel            opposes             the

application,           submitting           that       the      investigation             has

revealed          a     well-orchestrated                 conspiracy            involving

multiple accused, including the present Applicant, to

induce the complainant into parting with a large sum of

money          based          on       forged         company             filings         and

misrepresented shareholding.


12.              It is submitted that the Form 32 and other

ROC filings, uploaded and certified by the Applicant,

were pivotal to the scheme, as they were used to falsely

project the complainant and his son as inducted

Directors of the Company, creating a façade of ownership

and control which was later undone without notice.


13.              Learned State Counsel relies on the statements

of witnesses under Section 161 CrPC, including Mohan

Lal Agarwal, Sher Singh, Narendra Verma, and others, to

assert that the Applicant was not a passive professional

but knowingly aided the main accused by legitimizing

manipulated filings.


14.              It is argued that the material collected during



                                                                                            5
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
the investigation is sufficient to disclose a prima facie

case against the Applicant under Sections 420, 467, 468,

471 and 120-B IPC, and the learned Magistrate rightly

took cognizance and framed charges.


15.              Learned State Counsel also submits that both

the trial and revisional courts have already dealt with the

Applicant's contentions and rejected his pleas, finding no

illegality in framing charges. This Court had also refused

to quash the charge sheet on similar grounds.


16.              It is emphasized that the mere availability of a

civil remedy does not preclude criminal prosecution,

particularly where fraudulent intent and use of forged

documents are alleged. The proceedings cannot be stifled

merely because the Applicant claims to be a professional.


17.              Lastly, the State points out that the trial is

advanced, with seventeen prosecution witnesses already

examined. Entertaining the petition at this stage would

delay and disrupt the judicial process.


18.              Heard learned counsel for the parties and

perused the records.


19.              At the outset, it is settled law that the power


                                                                                          6
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
under Section 482 CrPC is to be exercised sparingly and

with great caution. The jurisdiction is not to be invoked

to stifle legitimate prosecution unless the complaint or

charge sheet does not disclose the commission of any

offence, or the prosecution is manifestly attended with

mala fide or is otherwise an abuse of the process of law.


20.              The Hon'ble Supreme Court in 'Amit Kapoor v.

Ramesh Chander', (2012) 9 SCC 460, has laid down that

at the stage of framing of charge, the Court is only

required to see whether a prima facie case is made out

against the accused and not to evaluate the sufficiency of

evidence. A detailed analysis of the probative value of

documents or defence contentions is impermissible at

this stage. The test is whether the uncontroverted

allegations, as supported by material on record, disclose

the commission of an offence.


21.              In the present case, it is not disputed that the

Applicant           is     a     Chartered            Accountant              and         had

professional dealings with M/s Barnawa Agro Industries

Ltd. The           allegation is not merely one of passive

professional association, but that the Applicant actively

facilitated the uploading and certification of statutory


                                                                                            7
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
ROC         filings         (Form        32,       Form         20B,        etc.)         that

misrepresented the shareholding and directorship of the

complainant and his son. These filings were allegedly

instrumental in giving effect to a scheme that induced

the complainant to part with substantial sums of money,

exceeding `7 crores.


22.              The prosecution has relied on statements

recorded under Section 161 CrPC, including those of

Sher Singh, Narendra Verma, and the complainant,

which attribute a role to the Applicant in certifying

documents later found to be inconsistent with the

complainant's version. These witnesses have alleged that

the digital filings were manipulated to create a false

appearance             of      transfer          of     control,          which           was

subsequently reversed without notice. Whether the

Applicant's actions were knowingly fraudulent or merely

negligent are questions that can only be examined during

trial.


23.              The Applicant's contention that he merely

acted under instructions and filed documents digitally

signed by a company Director is a matter of defence and

would require an appreciation of the full evidentiary


                                                                                            8
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
record. Similarly, the argument that the filings were

public documents and that their content was not

fabricated by the Applicant himself is not sufficient, at

this stage, to override the consistent statements of

witnesses alleging conspiracy and misrepresentation.


24.              The assertion that the Applicant was neither a

signatory nor a beneficiary under the MoU, and that the

matter is essentially civil, also does not persuade this

Court to exercise jurisdiction under Section 482. The

Supreme Court in 'Rajesh Bajaj v. State NCT of Delhi',

(1999) 3 SCC 259, has clarified that mere availability of a

civil remedy does not preclude criminal prosecution

where the allegations disclose dishonest or fraudulent

inducement.


25.              Furthermore,              this      Court        finds        that       the

Applicant has already availed multiple remedies--earlier

Section 482 proceedings were dismissed in 2015; the

discharge application was rejected by the Magistrate on

07.03.2017; and the revisional challenge to the framing

of charges was also dismissed on 06.09.2018. Though

formally confined to the framing of charges, the present

petition        seeks       to     reopen         issues        already         judicially


                                                                                            9
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

                                                                         Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                            2025:UHC:5286
considered.


26.              The       trial      is     underway,             with        seventeen

prosecution             witnesses           examined.             At      this       stage,

interference by this Court would not only amount to pre-

trial evaluation of evidence but may also cause undue

disruption to the proceedings.


27.              This Court is mindful of the caution reiterated

in 'State of Orissa v. Debendra Nath Padhi', (2005) 1 SCC

568, that defence materials cannot be considered at the

stage of framing of charge, and that the High Court, while

exercising jurisdiction under Section 482 CrPC, should

refrain from acting as a trial court.


                                         ORDER

In view of the above discussion, this Court is of

the considered opinion that neither the order passed by

the learned Magistrate in framing charges, nor the

revisional order affirming the same suffers from any

illegality, perversity, or manifest injustice. The material

available on record does not warrant the exercise of the

inherent jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code of

Criminal Procedure at this stage.

10
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

Ashish Naithani J.

2025:UHC:5286
The present application under Section 482

CrPC lacks merit and is, accordingly, dismissed.

(Ashish Naithani, J.)
16.06.2025
Akash

11
Criminal Misc. Application No.1908 of 2018, Ajay Rana vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr.

Ashish Naithani J.



Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here