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HomeC528/580/2026 on 2 April, 2026

C528/580/2026 on 2 April, 2026

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Uttarakhand High Court

C528/580/2026 on 2 April, 2026

                                                                       2026:UHC:2368
             Office Notes, reports,
             orders or proceedings
SL.
No.
      Date     or directions and                COURT'S OR JUDGE'S ORDERS
             Registrar's order with
                   Signatures
                                      C528/580/2026


                                      Hon'ble Alok Mahra, J.

Mr. Nalin Saun, learned counsel for
the applicants.

2. Mr. V.S. Pal, learned A.G.A. for the
State.

SPONSORED

3. Mr. Gaurav Paliwal, learned counsel
for respondent no.2/complainant.

4. Present C-528 application has been
filed seeking quashing of the impugned
chargesheet, cognizance/summoning order
dated 22.04.2025 passed by the learned 1st
Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate,
Dehradun in Criminal Case No.2600 of
2025, arising out of offences under Sections
323
, 498-A I.P.C. and Section 3/4 of the
Dowry Prohibition Act, along with the entire
proceedings of the said criminal case.

5. Learned counsel for the applicants
would submit that the dispute in question
emanates from matrimonial discord
between applicant no.1 (husband) and
respondent no.2 (wife). Applicant nos.2 and
3 are father-in-law and mother-in-law of
respondent no.2. It is contended that due to
certain matrimonial differences, respondent
no.2 lodged an F.I.R. under Sections 498-A,
323 I.P.C., and Section 3/4 of the Dowry
Prohibition Act; that, Investigating Officer
after completion of investigation has
submitted chargesheet, upon which,
learned trial court has taken cognizance.

6. It is further submitted that with the
intervention of respectable persons and
family members, the parties have amicably
2026:UHC:2368
resolved all their disputes. They have
decided to dissolve their marriage by
mutual consent and have filed the first
motion petition under Section 27 of the
Uniform Civil Code, Uttarakhand. As per
the settlement, applicant no.1 has agreed to
pay a total sum of ₹6,50,000/- to
respondent no.2 towards full and final
settlement, and the parties have also agreed
to withdraw all the cases pending against
each other. Out of the aforesaid settled
amount, a sum of ₹3,00,000/- has already
been paid to respondent no.2 at the time of
first motion, and the remaining amount
shall be paid at the time of filing of
evidence.

7. The applicants and respondent no.2
are present through Video Conferencing
before the Court and have been duly
identified by their respective counsel. On
being interacted with, respondent no.2 has
categorically stated that the compromise
has been entered into voluntarily, without
any coercion or undue influence; that she
has received ₹3,00,000/-; and that she has
no objection if the criminal proceedings in
question are quashed.

8. This Court has considered the
submissions of learned counsel for the
parties and perused the material available
on record. The offences alleged are under
Sections 498-A, 323 I.P.C. and Section 3/4
of the Dowry Prohibition Act. Though
certain offences are non-compoundable
under Section 320 Cr.P.C., the dispute
admittedly arises out of a matrimonial
relationship and is personal in nature,
without any element of public interest or
societal impact.

2026:UHC:2368

9. The legal position with regard to
quashing of criminal proceedings on the
basis of compromise is no longer res
integra. In Gian Singh v. State of Punjab,
the Hon’ble Supreme Court authoritatively
held that the High Court, in exercise of its
inherent powers under Section 482 Cr.P.C.,
can quash criminal proceedings even in
respect of non-compoundable offences,
where the dispute is essentially private and
personal in nature and the parties have
amicably settled the matter, provided that
the offences do not have serious impact on
society.

10. In Narinder Singh v. State of Punjab,
the Hon’ble Supreme Court laid down broad
guidelines for quashing on the basis of
compromise and observed that criminal
cases having overwhelmingly and
predominantly civil character, particularly
those arising out of matrimonial or family
disputes, should be quashed when the
parties have resolved their entire dispute,
so as to secure the ends of justice.

11. Further, in State of Madhya Pradesh
v. Laxmi Narayan
, the Hon’ble Supreme
Court reiterated that criminal proceedings
arising out of matrimonial disputes and
family matters, which have been amicably
settled, can be quashed in exercise of
inherent jurisdiction, unless the offences
are heinous and of serious mental
depravity.
More recently, in Parbatbhai
Aahir v. State of Gujarat
, the Hon’ble
Supreme Court summarized the principles
governing exercise of power under Section
482
Cr.P.C., holding that the High Court
must evaluate whether continuation of
proceedings would amount to abuse of the
2026:UHC:2368
process of law and whether quashing would
secure the ends of justice.

12. In the present case, the allegations
stem purely from matrimonial discord
between the husband and wife. The parties
have amicably settled their dispute; the first
motion for mutual divorce has been filed;
substantial part of the settled amount has
already been paid; and respondent no.2 has
unequivocally stated that she has no
objection to quashing of the proceedings.
There is no allegation of any heinous
offence, nor is there any element affecting
society at large. Continuation of criminal
proceedings, in such circumstances, would
serve no fruitful purpose.

13. In view of the settlement arrived at
between the parties and in light of the law
laid down by the Hon’ble Supreme Court in
the aforesaid judgments, the compounding
application is allowed. Consequently, the
present C-528 application stands allowed.

The           impugned           chargsheet,
cognizance/summoning         order    dated

22.04.2025 passed by the learned 1st
Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate,
Dehradun in Criminal Case No.2600 of
2025, arising out of offences under Sections
323
, 498-A I.P.C. and Section 3/4 of the
Dowry Prohibition Act as well as the entire
criminal proceedings are hereby quashed
the applicants in terms of the compromise
arrived at between the parties.

14. Pending applications, if any, shall
stand disposed of accordingly.

Digitally signed by MAMTA RANI
DN: c=IN, o=HIGH COURT OF

MAMT
UTTARAKHAND, ou=HIGH COURT
OF UTTARAKHAND,
2.5.4.20=6a812005bebfcf46f244f3
e584af1449e430ef900bf09a6d67e
bbd642671329b,

A RANI (Alok Mahra, J.)
postalCode=263001,
st=Uttarakhand,
serialNumber=5de1751a4f1d9cab
fd54852c9e68911ca8b66dd26690
a191648ab5d8dd004ef0,
cn=MAMTA RANI 02.04.2026
Mamta Date: 2026.04.06 17:14:35 +05’30’
2026:UHC:2368



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