Uttarakhand High Court
Mohan Lal &Another ……Applicants vs State Of Uttarakhand And Anr on 29 July, 2025
2025:UHC:7271 IN THE HIGH COURT OF UTTARAKHAND AT NAINITAL Criminal Misc.Application No.1483 of 2019 Mohan Lal &Another ......Applicants Vs. State of Uttarakhand and Anr. .....Respondent Presence: Mr. Arvind Vashishtha, learned Senior Counsel assisted by Mr. Lalit Sharma, learned counsel for the Applicants. Mr. G.C. Joshi, learned A.G.A. for the State of Uttarakhand. Mr. Vipul Sharma, learned Counsel, for Respondent No. 2. Hon'ble Ashish Naithani, J. 1. The present criminal miscellaneous application under Section 482 CrPC has been filed by the Applicants challenging the order dated 31.07.2019 passed by the learned 3rd Additional Sessions Judge, Udham Singh Nagar, in Criminal Revision No. 268 of 2013 (Harish Kumar v. State & Others), whereby the revision preferred by Respondent No. 2 was allowed and the matter was remitted for consideration. 2. The dispute pertains to agricultural land situated at Village Pattharkui, Tehsil Gadarpur, District Udham Singh Nagar, recorded in Khata No. 255 Kha measuring 0.110 hectare and Khata No. 259 measuring 1.885 hectare, total 1.995 hectare. The Applicants claim ownership of the property on the basis of a memorandum of family settlement dated 18.01.2000, followed by mutation in their names vide order dated 30.09.2002 passed by the Peshkar, Tehsil Gadarpur, in Mutation Case No. 30/42 of 2001-02. 3. The record indicates that Respondent No. 2 and others challenged the said mutation order by moving an application under Section 201 of the U.P. Land Revenue Act, which was dismissed on 30.07.2008. Subsequent appeal 1 Criminal Misc. Application No. 1483 of 2019, Mohan Lal and Anr.Vs State of Uttarakhand and Anr Ashish Naithani J. 2025:UHC:7271 under Section 210 of the said Act was dismissed by the Additional District Magistrate (Nazul) on 08.12.2010. Revision before the Commissioner, Kumaon Mandal, Nainital, was dismissed on 22.01.2016. 4. Apart from revenue proceedings, Respondent No. 2 lodged a complaint alleging forgery of the family settlement and suppression of facts, which led to Case No. 52106 of 2012-13 before the Additional District Magistrate (Finance & Revenue), wherein adverse findings were recorded regarding the genuineness of the settlement document. 5. An application under Section 156(3) CrPC moved by Respondent No. 2 before the Judicial Magistrate, Rudrapur, was dismissed on 27.07.2013. Criminal Revision No. 172 of 2013 preferred thereagainst was dismissed on 17.11.2014. However, in Criminal Revision No. 268 of 2013, the learned revisional court, by the impugned order dated 31.07.2019, set aside the Magistrate's order and remitted the matter for reconsideration. 6. Learned counsel for the Applicants submitted that the property dispute has already attained finality in the revenue hierarchy, with findings up to the level of the Commissioner, Kumaon Mandal, against Respondent No. 2. It is contended that the initiation of criminal proceedings amounts to abuse of process, as no adverse finding regarding forgery has been recorded by any competent forum. 7. It was urged that the family settlement was duly acted upon and mutation was validly entered in the names of the Applicants. The complaint by Respondent No. 2 is alleged to be motivated, filed to reopen concluded revenue disputes. Reliance has been placed on judicial precedents emphasising that civil disputes should not be given the colour of criminal offences in absence of clear allegations constituting ingredients thereof. 8. Learned counsel for Respondent No. 2 opposed the application, submitting that the family settlement dated 18.01.2000 is a forged and fabricated document. It is alleged that the signatures of co-sharers, including 2 Criminal Misc. Application No. 1483 of 2019, Mohan Lal and Anr.Vs State of Uttarakhand and Anr Ashish Naithani J. 2025:UHC:7271 Satish Kumar and Mahendra Pal, as well as the thumb impression of their mother, late Smt. Kailash Rani, are forged. 9. It is pointed out that Smt. Kailash Rani had expired on 08.06.2000, yet she was impleaded as a party in the mutation proceedings, and the order dated 30.09.2002 was passed against a deceased person. It is further submitted that Satish Kumar was abroad from 15.05.2002 to September 2007, thereby rendering his purported participation in the settlement impossible. 10. Learned counsel submitted that the Additional District Magistrate (Finance & Revenue), in order dated 30.07.2014, recorded that the signatures on the family settlement did not tally with the admitted signatures on the passport, and held the document to be forged. It is urged that such findings cannot be ignored in criminal proceedings. 11. Heard learned counsel for the Parties and perused the records. 12. The law with respect to the exercise of inherent jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is firmly settled by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal, 1992 Supp (1) SCC 335, wherein it was observed that such jurisdiction should be exercised sparingly and with circumspection, and only when the complaint or FIR does not disclose any offence, is frivolous or vexatious, or where the proceedings manifestly amount to abuse of the process of the Court. The Court laid down illustrative categories wherein interference may be justified, but cautioned that the power is not to be invoked to short-circuit legitimate prosecutions merely on disputed questions of fact. 13. In the present case, the gravamen of the complaint made by Respondent No. 2 is that the Applicants, on the basis of a forged memorandum of family settlement dated 18.01.2000, procured mutation of the disputed property in their names. The specific allegations are that the signatures of Satish Kumar and Mahendra Pal, as well as the thumb impression of their mother, late Smt. Kailash Rani, were forged; that the said 3 Criminal Misc. Application No. 1483 of 2019, Mohan Lal and Anr.Vs State of Uttarakhand and Anr Ashish Naithani J. 2025:UHC:7271 Smt. Kailash Rani had passed away on 08.06.2000, yet she was impleaded in the mutation proceedings; and that Satish Kumar was residing abroad between 15.05.2002 and September 2007, rendering his participation in the alleged settlement impossible. 14. These allegations, taken at face value, squarely attract the ingredients of the offences punishable under Sections 420, 467, 468 and 471 IPC. Whether the signatures and thumb impression are actually forged, and whether the Applicants knowingly used such document in judicial proceedings, are questions of fact requiring appreciation of evidence during trial. 15. The contention of the Applicants that the dispute has already been adjudicated upon in the revenue hierarchy up to the level of the Commissioner does not advance their case in the present context. The findings in mutation proceedings and revenue appeals primarily turned on procedural issues such as delay in seeking recall of the ex parte order, and did not involve adjudication on the veracity of signatures or thumb impressions from the standpoint of criminal liability. The absence of a conclusive finding on forgery in revenue proceedings does not preclude a criminal court from examining the same issue on the basis of evidence adduced before it. 16. Significantly, in proceedings under the Stamp Act, the Additional District Magistrate (Finance & Revenue), by order dated 30.07.2014, held that the signatures on the family settlement did not tally with the admitted signatures on the passport of Satish Kumar, and recorded a finding that the document appeared to be forged and fabricated. This is a relevant piece of material that supports the complainant's version and cannot be ignored at the threshold stage. 17. The impugned order dated 31.07.2019 passed by the learned revisional court remits the matter to the Magistrate for reconsideration of the application under Section 156(3) CrPC. The said order neither suffers from perversity nor reflects any jurisdictional error. The learned revisional court 4 Criminal Misc. Application No. 1483 of 2019, Mohan Lal and Anr.Vs State of Uttarakhand and Anr Ashish Naithani J. 2025:UHC:7271 has exercised its powers within the statutory framework under Sections 397 and 399 CrPC. 18. Furthermore, the material relied upon by the Applicants in the present case is not of such unimpeachable nature as would justify quashing of proceedings. The allegations require detailed scrutiny at the stage of evidence. ORDER
In view of the above, this Court finds that the present case does not
fall within any of the exceptional categories warranting interference under
Section 482 CrPC. The allegations are specific, supported by material, and
prima facie disclose the commission of cognizable offences. The
continuation of the proceedings cannot, at this stage, be said to be an abuse
of the process of the Court.
Present Criminal Miscellaneous Application fails and is hereby
dismissed.
No order as to costs.
(Ashish Naithani J.)
29.07.2025
SB
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Date: 2025.08.20 10:24:39 +05’30’
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Criminal Misc. Application No. 1483 of 2019, Mohan Lal and Anr.Vs State of Uttarakhand and Anr
Ashish Naithani J.