Atul Sharma vs State Of Uttarakhand on 19 August, 2025

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Uttarakhand High Court

Atul Sharma vs State Of Uttarakhand on 19 August, 2025

                                                                                           2025:UHC:7314

                                                                               Reserved on : 14.07.2025

                                                                               Delivered on : 19.08.2025


               IN THE HIGH COURT OF UTTARAKHAND
                                           AT NAINITAL
                        Criminal Misc.Application No.2852 of 2019



    Atul Sharma                                                                       ......Applicant

                                                       Vs.

    State of Uttarakhand                                                             .....Respondent

                                                      with

                       Criminal Misc. Application No. 2847 of 2019



    Deepak Sharma                                                                    ......Applicant

                                                       Vs.

    State of Uttarakhand                                                             .....Respondent

    Presence:

    Mr. R.P. Nautiyal (Sr. Adv.) assisted by Mr. Pavan Km. Nath, learned
    counsel for the Applicant.

    Mr. Rakesh Negi, learned brief holder, for the State.

    Hon'ble Ashish Naithani, J.

    1.           The present criminal miscellaneous applications under Section
         482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure have been instituted by two co-
         accused persons, namely Deepak Sharma and Atul Sharma, assailing
         the orders passed by the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate, Chamoli,
         and affirmed in revision by the learned Sessions Judge, Chamoli,
         whereby their respective applications for discharge were rejected.


                                                                                                             1
Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                      Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                            2025:UHC:7314

    2.           Both Applicants seek quashing of the orders refusing discharge,
         as well as the entire proceedings arising out of Crime No. 211 of 2007
         registered at Police Station Joshimath, District Chamoli, under Sections
         166, 167, 218 and 420 of the Indian Penal Code.
    3.           The genesis of the criminal proceedings lies in the construction of
         a hospitality project"Cliff Top Club Resort"by M/s Ski and Snow
         Resorts Pvt. Ltd., a company engaged in the business of tourism and
         hospitality, and having one of its operational projects located in Auli,
         District Chamoli.
    4.           As per the facts, the land for the project was obtained lawfully
         from private parties through registered sale and lease deeds and had
         been converted to non-agricultural status under Section 143 of the U.P.
         Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act by a competent authority.
         The company had subsequently registered the resort under the Sarai Act
         and undertook construction work on the site.
    5.           During the relevant period, administrative action had been
         initiated against the resort for alleged violations under the U.P.
         Regulation of Building Operations Act. While the Prescribed Authority
         had initially directed demolition of certain constructions, the said order
         was reversed on appeal by the Controlling Authority on 28.07.1999.
    6.           Several years later, an FIR was lodged on 02.12.2007 by the then
         Assistant Collector, 1st Class, Joshimath, alleging that the Applicants, in
         their capacity as officers of the said company, had misused official
         processes and connived in obtaining approvals by suppressing material
         facts and submitting false representations, thereby attracting offences
         under Sections 166, 167, 218 and 420 IPC. A chargesheet was
         submitted on 06.09.2008, and cognizance was taken by the learned
         Magistrate on 11.11.2008 in Criminal Case No. 1172 of 2008, State v.
         Atul Sharma and others.


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Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                      Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                            2025:UHC:7314

    7.           Both Applicants moved discharge applications before the learned
         Chief Judicial Magistrate, Chamoli, which were dismissed by orders
         dated 18.09.2019. The revision petitions filed against these orders,
         namely Criminal Revision No. 28 of 2019 preferred by Deepak Sharma
         and Criminal Revision No. 27 of 2019 preferred by Atul Sharma, were
         also dismissed by the learned Sessions Judge, Chamoli, vide separate
         but similarly reasoned orders dated 28.11.2019. These orders are now
         under challenge in the present petitions filed under Section 482 CrPC.
    8.           Learned Senior counsel for the Applicantssubmits that the entire
         prosecution is vitiated by malice and administrative overreach. It is
         contended that the Applicants were functionaries of the company and
         acted solely in their official capacity without any personal benefit or
         ulterior intent. The land on which the resort was constructed was
         lawfully acquired and converted for non-agricultural use, and all
         permissions were either granted or were being pursued in the regular
         course of business. The allegation that they acted with mens rea to
         commit cheating or falsify official records is wholly unfounded.
    9.           It is further submitted that the construction activities that are now
         sought to be criminalized had already been adjudicated in a quasi-
         judicial forum under the Building Regulation Act, and the order of the
         Prescribed Authority directing demolition was set aside by the
         Controlling Authority. The Applicants cannot be prosecuted afresh for
         matters that have already been resolved under special enactments.
         Moreover, the ingredients of Sections 166 (public servant disobeying
         law with intent to cause injury), 167 (public servant framing incorrect
         documents), 218 (fabricating records to save a person from
         punishment), and 420 IPC (cheating) are not even remotely made out
         on the face of the FIR or the charge sheet.




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Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                      Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                            2025:UHC:7314

    10.          Learned counsel urge that no material has been brought on record
        by the investigating agency to show that the Applicants acted
        dishonestly, prepared false records, or had any personal gain from the
        project. It is also pointed out that the chargesheet is conspicuously
        silent on how the Applicants allegedly fabricated documents or misused
        official capacity. It is argued that in the absence of foundational facts
        establishing the statutory ingredients of the alleged offences,
        continuation of the trial would be nothing but an abuse of the process of
        law.
    11.                  Learned Brief Holder for the State vehemently opposed the
        present petitions. He submits that the FIR, the charge sheet, and the
        accompanying documents clearly disclose the commission of
        cognizable offences under Sections 166, 167, 218, and 420 IPC against
        the Applicants. It is argued that the Applicants, being responsible
        officers of M/s Ski and Snow Resorts Pvt. Ltd., had knowingly
        suppressed material facts and obtained approvals and benefits in
        violation of law, thereby attracting the penal provisions invoked.
    12.          It is contended that the land in question, though converted to non-
        agricultural use, was initially subject to restrictions under the U.P.
        Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, and the Applicants
        deliberately misused the process to benefit their company. By
        submitting misleading documents and false representations before the
        revenue and building regulation authorities, the Applicants induced the
        authorities to permit construction and to recognize the transfer of land
        in their favour. Such acts, according to the State, prima facie constitute
        the offence of cheating under Section 420 IPC and preparation of false
        records under Sections 167 and 218 IPC.
    13.          The learned Brief Holder further submits that the stage of
        discharge under Section 239 CrPC does not require a meticulous


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Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                      Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                            2025:UHC:7314

        evaluation of the evidence or a determination of guilt. The Court is only
        to consider whether the material on record, taken at face value,
        discloses the ingredients of the alleged offences. In the present case, the
        charge sheet supported by the FIR and official records provides
        sufficient prima facie material to justify the continuation of criminal
        proceedings. The delay in lodging the FIR has been explained as
        arising from the discovery of irregularities during official scrutiny and
        the necessity of departmental approvals for initiating prosecution.
    14.          It is also submitted that the Applicants cannot take shelter under
        the earlier quasi-judicial orders passed under the U.P. Regulation of
        Building Operations Act. Administrative or appellate findings under a
        special enactment do not bar the initiation of criminal proceedings if
        the ingredients of the offence are otherwise made out. The plea of
        parity with co-accused who were acquitted or discharged is also
        opposed on the ground that the Applicants held managerial and
        decision-making roles in the company, thereby bearing greater
        responsibility for the alleged illegalities.
    15.          The State thus prays that the petitions under Section 482 CrPC be
        dismissed, as the Applicants have failed to demonstrate that the
        proceedings are an abuse of the process of law or that the allegations,
        taken at their face value, do not constitute any offence.
    16.          Heard learned counsel for the Parties and perused the records.
    17.          The fundamental grievance of the Applicants revolves around the
        alleged absence of material disclosing the commission of any
        cognizable offence, and the mechanical manner in which the learned
        Magistrate proceeded to take cognizance and reject the discharge
        applications. It is settled law that at the stage of discharge, what is
        required is a prima facie evaluation of whether the allegations, even if
        taken at face value, disclose the ingredients of the offence alleged.


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Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                      Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                            2025:UHC:7314

    18.          The discharge order must reflect application of mind to the
        material in the chargesheet, and the rejection of such application must
        be based on cogent reasons. Similarly, in revision, the Sessions Court
        must test the legality and propriety of the Magistrate's decision, which
        in the present case appears to have been done routinely without
        addressing the core objections of the Applicants.
    19.          The charges levelled against the Applicants under Sections 166,
        167, 218, and 420 IPC require distinct and specific factual foundations.
    20.          Section 166 IPC contemplates a public servant who knowingly
        disobeys any direction of law with the intent to cause injury to any
        person. Section 167 penalises a public servant who, with the intent to
        cause injury, frames an incorrect document or record.
    21.          Section 218 relates to the preparation or framing of incorrect
        records by a public servant with intent to save a person from
        punishment or to conceal the commission of an offence.
    22.          Section 420 IPC, which deals with the offence of cheating and
        dishonestly inducing the delivery of property, requires a clear act of
        deception at the inception of a transaction, resulting in wrongful gain to
        one and corresponding loss to another.
    23.          From the contents of the FIR, chargesheet, and the documents
        enclosed, this Court finds no material particulars demonstrating that the
        present Applicants either exercised statutory or quasi-judicial functions
        at the relevant time or acted with an intent to injure, cheat, or defraud.
        The allegations appear vague and sweeping, and there is a conspicuous
        absence of specific overt acts attributable to either of the Applicants
        that would fall within the contours of the statutory offences cited.
    24.          The FIR essentially proceeds on the premise that the resort
        construction was carried out without appropriate sanction or in
        violation of zoning regulations. However, the record shows that the


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Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

                                                                                      Ashish Naithani J.
                                                                                            2025:UHC:7314

        matter had already been adjudicated under the U.P. Regulation of
        Building Operations Act by competent authorities.
    25.          The order of demolition passed by the Prescribed Authority was
        reversed by the Controlling Authority in an appeal dated 28.07.1999,
        thereby legitimizing the construction, at least from the standpoint of the
        said enactment.
    26.          What is more troubling is the inordinate delay in the lodging of
        the FIR, which was filed in December 2007, nearly a decade after the
        completion of the project and the relevant administrative proceedings.
        The State has furnished no explanation for this delay, nor is there any
        indication that new material surfaced that would have necessitated
        criminal prosecution at such a belated stage. The delay, coupled with
        the nature of the allegations, strongly suggests an administrative
        dispute being given a criminal colour.
    27.          It also bears mention that criminal proceedings against another
        co-accused in the same matter have already been quashed by a
        coordinate bench of this Court, on an identical set of allegations and
        factual backdrop. While such quashing does not, by itself, bind the
        present Court, it creates a legitimate expectation of parity of treatment
        unless distinguishing factors are shown. The Respondent-State has
        pointed out none.
    28.          In the cumulative circumstances, this Court is persuaded to hold
        that allowing the prosecution to continue against the present Applicants
        would serve no ends of justice and would instead amount to
        perpetuating an abuse of the criminal process.

                                                     ORDER

In view of the above discussion, both Criminal Miscellaneous
Applications under Section 482 CrPC are allowed.

7

Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

Ashish Naithani J.

2025:UHC:7314

The impugned orders dated 18.09.2019 passed by the learned
Chief Judicial Magistrate, Chamoli, rejecting the Applicants’ discharge
applications, and the revisional orders dated 28.11.2019 passed by the
learned Sessions Judge, Chamoli in Criminal Revision Nos. 27 and 28
of 2019, are hereby quashed.

No order as to costs.

(Ashish Naithani J.)

SHIKSHA
Digitally signed by SHIKSHA BINJOLA
DN: c=IN, o=HIGH COURT OF UTTARAKHAND,
ou=HIGH COURT OF UTTARAKHAND,

SB
2.5.4.20=3410ef86ae41ec9fbabcd5dba6b3a2c
24b5aa08b09c12f21822fbd40bf639b1c,

BINJOLA
postalCode=263001, st=UTTARAKHAND,
serialNumber=FD80A2D028949381C52796A5
42D7FF0A9BED00E67B5283D205F18FE29BDF
5DD9, cn=SHIKSHA BINJOLA
Date: 2025.08.19 16:45:45 +05’30’

8
Criminal Misc. Application No. 2852 of 2019, Atul SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand with Criminal Misc. Application
No. 2847 of 2019, Deepak SharmaVs State of Uttarakhand

Ashish Naithani J.

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