Naresh Kumar vs State Of Uttarakhand on 8 August, 2025

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Uttarakhand High Court

Naresh Kumar vs State Of Uttarakhand on 8 August, 2025

                                                                                      2025:UHC:7627


          IN THE HIGH COURT OF UTTARAKHAND
                      AT NAINITAL
                         Criminal Misc.Application No.321 of 2025

    Naresh Kumar                                                                     ......Applicant

                                                      Vs.

    State of Uttarakhand                                                          .....Respondent



    Presence:

    Mr. Deepak Pethsali, learned counsel for the Applicant.
    Mr. Rakesh Negi, learned Brief Holder, for the State.


    Hon'ble Ashish Naithani, J.
    1.          The present Criminal Miscellaneous Application under Section
         528 BNSS has been moved by the Applicant Naresh Kumar seeking
         quashing of Charge Sheet No. 01 dated 22.10.2020, the cognizance and
         summoning order dated 13.12.2021 passed in Criminal Case No. 2506
         of 2021, and all subsequent proceedings in Criminal Case No. 1821 of
         2022, pending before the Court of the learned Judicial Magistrate, Ist
         Class, Haridwar.

    2.          The case arises out of FIR No. 93 of 2018, Police Station
         Ranipur, District Haridwar, wherein allegations were made of large-
         scale financial irregularities and embezzlement in a cooperative society,
         involving amounts exceeding ₹2.88 crores. The Applicant, who was
         serving as Secretary/Deputy Director in the Mini Bank Society, was
         named along with other officials.

    3.          During the investigation, a charge-sheet was filed against the
         Applicant under Sections 409, 420, 467, 468, and 471 of the IPC. The



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Criminal Misc. Application No. 321 of 2025, Naresh KumarVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                  Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                       2025:UHC:7627

         learned Magistrate thereafter took cognizance and summoned the
         Applicant. Non-bailable warrants and proclamation proceedings under
         Section 82 CrPC were subsequently issued against him.

    4.          It is not in dispute that the Applicant had earlier filed Criminal
         Misc. Application No. 1148 of 2023 under Section 528 BNSS, which
         was dismissed as withdrawn, and thereafter Criminal Misc. Application
         No. 150 of 2024, which was dismissed by this Court vide order dated
         04.03.2025, holding that the earlier petition having been withdrawn
         without liberty, a subsequent petition was not maintainable.

    5.          Learned Counsel for the Applicant submitted that the entire
         criminal proceedings are unwarranted, as the Applicant had no
         financial dealings in the cooperative society which could bring him
         within the ambit of Sections 409 or 420 of the IPC.

    6. It was urged that the Applicant, serving as Secretary/Deputy Director,
         was entrusted only with administrative functions. He neither received
         deposits from members nor disbursed payments. All transactional
         duties were performed by the clerks-cum-cashiers who maintained day-
         to-day records.

    7.          Applicant's learned counsel emphasised that the gravamen of the
         allegations in the FIR is the non-deposit of amounts collected from
         members by the local in charge, one Nitin Kumar, and others. The
         Applicant was implicated only because of his supervisory designation.
         It was argued that entrustment of funds is a sine qua non for the offence
         of criminal breach of trust under Section 409 of the IPC, and in the
         absence of any direct entrustment or handling of funds, the very
         foundation of the charge collapses.

    8.          To support this submission, the learned Counsel placed reliance
         on State of Punjab v. Kesari Chand (Punjab & Haryana High Court),


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         where it was held that the President and Secretary of a cooperative
         society are not "public servants" for the purpose of Section 409 of the
         IPC, as such societies are not statutory corporations established by a
         State Act. It was contended that by parity of reasoning, the Applicant
         cannot be fastened with liability under Section 409 of the IPC.

    9.            As regards Section 420 of the IPC, Counsel argued that the
         ingredients of cheating are absent. It was submitted that to constitute
         cheating, there must be :

            (i)      deception of a person,
            (ii)     fraudulent or dishonest inducement to deliver property, and
            (iii)    existence of mens rea at the inception.

            In the present case, there is no allegation that the Applicant made
            any false representation to members or that he induced them to part
            with money. At the highest, the matter may amount to breach of
            trust by the clerks, but it cannot be said to involve dishonest
            inducement by the Applicant.

    10.           It was further argued that there is no material collected during the
         investigation to show that the Applicant prepared or forged any
         documents so as to attract Sections 467, 468, or 471 of the IPC. Given
         his supervisory role, there is no evidence of his direct involvement in
         the preparation or use of forged instruments.

    11.           The learned Counsel contended that the FIR itself suffers from
         procedural irregularity, as it was lodged prior to any departmental
         inquiry under the service rules governing the Applicant. It was pointed
         out that while a show-cause notice was issued to him in March 2019,
         the FIR had already been registered in March 2018. According to
         learned Counsel, this sequence vitiates the proceedings, as they were




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                                                                                  Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                       2025:UHC:7627

        initiated without adherence to the mandatory disciplinary framework
        applicable to employees of the cooperative society.

    12.         The learned Counsel also highlighted that the Applicant's service
        career has otherwise been unblemished, spanning several decades, and
        that the present allegations are a result of a conspiracy by certain
        colleagues against whom the Applicant had taken action for
        irregularities. It was submitted that such mala fides undermine the
        credibility of the prosecution case.

    13.         Lastly, the issue of maintainability was addressed by the learned
        Counsel for the Applicant. It was contended that although earlier
        applications under Section 528 BNSS had been filed, the principle of
        res judicata has no application in criminal law. Reliance was placed on
        Muskan Enterprises v. State of Punjab, 2024 SCC Online SC 4107,
        wherein the Supreme Court held that the rule of res judicata under
        Section 11 CPC is inapplicable to criminal proceedings, and that there
        is no provision akin to Order XXIII Rule 1(3) CPC barring a
        subsequent petition. The learned Counsel, therefore, urged that the
        present application, even if successive, merits consideration in order to
        prevent miscarriage of justice.

    14.         The learned Brief Holder appearing for the State opposed the
        application. It was submitted that the allegations are grave, involving
        embezzlement of ₹2.88 crores from the funds of members of the
        cooperative society. According to the learned Brief Holder, such
        offences, by their very nature, undermine public trust and cannot be
        quashed at the threshold.

    15.         The learned State Counsel argued that the Applicant, by virtue of
        his post as Secretary/Deputy Director, was in a position of overall
        responsibility and control in the society. Even if he was not the cashier



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Criminal Misc. Application No. 321 of 2025, Naresh KumarVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                  Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                       2025:UHC:7627

        directly handling funds, he was responsible for supervising and
        preventing such embezzlement. His administrative role cannot absolve
        him of accountability when such large-scale irregularities occurred
        during his tenure.

    16.         It was further contended that the investigating officer, after due
        inquiry, filed a charge sheet against the Applicant, and the Magistrate,
        upon satisfaction, took cognizance and issued summons. These are
        judicial acts which cannot be lightly interfered with in a petition under
        Section 528 BNSS, particularly when disputed questions of fact are
        involved.

    17.         With respect to the earlier applications, it was submitted that the
        Applicant is attempting to invoke the extraordinary jurisdiction of this
        Court repeatedly. The second application, having already been
        dismissed on 04.03.2025, the present petition is barred by the principles
        of judicial discipline and propriety. Though res judicata per se may not
        apply, the High Court cannot permit endless re-litigation of the same
        cause of action.

    18.         Heard learned counsel for the Parties and perused the records.

    19.         The jurisdiction under Section 528 of the Bharatiya Nagarik
        Suraksha Sanhita is extraordinary in nature. Its exercise is confined to
        situations where intervention is necessary to prevent abuse of the
        process of the Court or to secure the ends of justice. At this stage, the
        Court is not required to undertake a meticulous appreciation of
        evidence or to conduct a mini-trial. Interference is justified only when,
        taking the allegations as they are and accepting the prosecution material
        at face value, no offence is disclosed, or the proceedings are
        demonstrably tainted by mala fides or legal infirmity.




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Criminal Misc. Application No. 321 of 2025, Naresh KumarVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                  Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                       2025:UHC:7627

    20.         A preliminary issue arises with respect to maintainability. The
        Applicant acknowledges that his first application under Section 528 of
        the BNSS was withdrawn without liberty to file afresh, and that the
        second application was dismissed on 04.03.2025 on the ground of non-
        maintainability in view of the earlier withdrawal without liberty.

    21.         The present application is the third petition seeking substantially
        the same relief. No change in circumstances or discovery of fresh
        material subsequent to the earlier dismissal has been shown. Principles
        of judicial discipline and finality preclude the Court from entertaining
        successive petitions for identical relief in the absence of supervening
        events or new grounds. The clarification that the doctrine of strict res
        judicata does not apply to criminal proceedings cannot be construed as
        a licence for endless re-litigation. On this ground alone, the application
        is liable to dismissal.

    22.         Even on merits, no case for quashing is made out. The FIR, read
        in conjunction with the accompanying materials, alleges large-scale
        financial irregularities and embezzlement in a cooperative society to the
        tune of approximately ₹2.88 crores, specifically naming the Applicant
        along with others. The investigation culminated in Charge Sheet No. 01
        dated 22.10.2020 under Sections 409, 420, 467, 468, and 471 of the
        IPC, whereafter the learned Magistrate took cognizance and issued
        process in Criminal Case No. 2506 of 2021.

    23.         These are not bald allegations; rather, they are allegations which
        have crossed the investigative threshold and persuaded the learned
        Magistrate to take cognizance and proceed. Whether such allegations
        are ultimately proved is a matter for trial, and not for summary
        interdiction under Section 528 of the BNSS.




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Criminal Misc. Application No. 321 of 2025, Naresh KumarVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                  Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                       2025:UHC:7627

    24.         The principal defence urged is that the Applicant, as Secretary or
        Deputy Director, was entrusted only with administrative duties, that
        day-to-day handling of cash and deposit of members' money fell to the
        clerks-cum-cashiers, and that there was no entrustment to the Applicant
        so as to attract Section 409 of the IPC. Entrustment, however, is a
        matter of fact, often provable by circumstantial and documentary
        material.

    25.         The question whether, in the context of the society's bye-laws
        and actual practice, dominion or control over property can be attributed
        to the Applicant cannot be conclusively determined at this stage. Such
        issues are best left to be tested at trial.

    26.         The reliance placed on the proposition that an office-bearer of a
        cooperative society is not a public servant for the purpose of Section
        409 of the IPC does not, at this stage, advance the Applicant's case to
        the extent of warranting quashing of the proceedings.

    27.         Two considerations arise in this context. First, the question
        whether Section 409 of the IPC is attracted depends upon the nature of
        the entity, the source of funds, the character of duties, and the nature of
        entrustment, all of which are mixed questions of fact and law. Second,
        even if there is some debate as to the appropriate penal provision, the
        invocation of other offences, including Sections 420, 467, 468, and 471
        of the IPC, is sufficient to sustain the proceedings so long as the
        allegations, on a prima facie reading, disclose the essential ingredients.

    28.         As to Section 420 of the IPC, the learned Counsel for the
        Applicant submitted that there was neither deception nor dishonest
        inducement by the Applicant at the inception. The FIR narrative,
        however, alleges non-deposit and irregularities in the handling of
        members' funds within the society. Whether dishonest intention at



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                                                                                  Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                       2025:UHC:7627

        inception can be inferred in relation to the acts attributed to the accused
        persons, including the Applicant, is a matter of evidence. At this stage,
        while exercising inherent jurisdiction, the Court does not weigh
        competing inferences. If the allegations, accepted at face value, are
        capable of satisfying the essential ingredients of the offence, the matter
        must proceed to trial.

    29.         The contention that the FIR is vitiated for want of a prior
        departmental inquiry is untenable. A departmental inquiry is not a
        condition precedent to the registration of a cognizable offence or to the
        conduct of a criminal investigation. The fact that a show-cause notice
        under service rules was issued in March 2019 after the FIR of March
        2018 does not, by itself, render the criminal process illegal or abusive.
        The criminal law operates independently of internal disciplinary
        mechanisms.

    30.         The Applicant also stresses an unblemished service record and
        alleges motive on the part of colleagues. These are defences that are
        going to be credible and motive-based and may be urged before the
        trial court. They do not, in themselves, demonstrate that the prosecution
        is inherently improbable or legally unsustainable so as to warrant
        quashing.

    31.         For these reasons, this Court declines to exercise jurisdiction
        under Section 528 BNSS. It is clarified that these observations are
        confined to the adjudication of this application and shall not prejudice
        the trial on the merits.

                                                    ORDER

In view of the discussion made hereinabove, the present Criminal
Miscellaneous Application under Section 528 of the Bharatiya Nagarik
Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, is hereby dismissed.

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Criminal Misc. Application No. 321 of 2025, Naresh KumarVs State of Uttarakhand

Ashish Naithani J.

2025:UHC:7627

It is clarified that the observations made in this order are confined
to the adjudication of the present application and shall not prejudice the
proceedings pending before the learned trial court, which shall be
decided independently on its own merits and in accordance with law.

(Ashish Naithani J.)

Dated:08.08.2025
NR/

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Criminal Misc. Application No. 321 of 2025, Naresh KumarVs State of Uttarakhand

Ashish Naithani J.

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