Tanuj Saluja vs State Of Chhattisgarh on 6 May, 2026

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    Chattisgarh High Court

    Tanuj Saluja vs State Of Chhattisgarh on 6 May, 2026

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                                                                                  2026:CGHC:21175
             Digitally
             signed by
             AKHILESH                                                                       NAFR
    AKHILESH BEOHAR
    BEOHAR   Date:
             2026.05.06
             17:37:22
             +0530                  HIGH COURT OF CHHATTISGARH AT BILASPUR
    
    
                                                  CRA No. 991 of 2026
    
                          1. Tanuj Saluja, S/o Ghanshyam Saluja, aged about 43 Years, R/o Bus
                              Stand Basna, Police Station and Tehsil Basna, District Mahasamund,
                              Chhattisgarh.
                          2. Ranbeer Singh Chhabda @ Vicky Chhabda, S/o Lal Singh Chhabda,
                              aged about 44 Years, R/o Jagdishpur Road, Basna, Police Station and
                              Tehsil Basna, District Mahasamund, Chhattisgarh.
                          3. Ghanshyam Singh Saluja, S/o Kartar Singh Saluja, aged about 69
                              Years, R/o Main Road Basna, Police Station and Tehsil Basna, District
                              Mahasamund, Chhattisgarh.
                          4. Dipesh Mishra, S/o Hemsagar, aged about 31 Years, R/o Village
                              Khemda, Police Station and Tehsil Basna, District Mahasamund,
                              Chhattisgarh.                                             ...Appellants
                                                          versus
                          •   State of Chhattisgarh, Through Police Station Basna, District
                              Mahasamund Chhattisgarh (Wrongly typed in the Cause Title of the
                              Impugned    Order   as    Deputy   Superintendent    of    Police   Ajak
                              Mahasamund, District Mahasamund, Chhattisgarh )
                                                                                     ... Respondent

    For Appellants : Mr. Manoj Paranjpe, Senior Advocate
    assisted by Mr. Sandeep Patel, Advocate.

    For Respondent/State : Ms. Laxmin Kashyap, Panel Lawyer.
    For Objector/Complainant Mr. Mohammad Sohail Khan, Advocate.

    SPONSORED

    (Hon’ble Shri Justice Radhakishan Agrawal)
    Order on Board
    06/05/2026
    2

    1. This appeal under Section 14-A(2) of the Scheduled Castes and

    Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 (for short, “the Act

    of 1989”) has been preferred by the appellants against the order dated

    28.03.2026 passed by the learned Special Judge, Scheduled Castes

    and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989,

    Mahasamund, District Mahasamund (C.G.), in Bail Application No.

    299/2026, whereby the application filed by the appellants under

    Section 482 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023,

    apprehending their arrest in connection with Crime No.198/2019

    registered at Police Station Basna, District Mahasamund (C.G.), for the

    offences punishable under Sections 294, 34 and 506 of the Indian

    Penal Code and Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the Act of 1989, has

    been rejected.

    2. Case of the prosecution, in brief, is that the complainant is the owner

    and in possession of diverted land bearing Khasra No.

    1406/1, admeasuring 1076 sq. ft., situated at Village Khemda, Basna,

    District Mahasamund and she had started construction of her

    residential house on the said land. It is alleged that on 21.04.2019 at

    about 08:00 a.m., the appellants, in furtherance of their common

    intention, came to the spot, abused the complainant in filthy language,

    intentionally insulted and intimidated her knowing her caste, and also

    threatened to demolish her house, thereby causing fear. Thereafter, the

    complainant lodged an FIR on 24.04.2019, on the basis of which,

    offences under Sections 294, 34 and 506 of IPC were registered

    against the appellants.

    3. Learned Senior Counsel appearing for the appellants submits that the

    appellants are innocent and have been falsely implicated in the present
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    case. He further submits that the alleged incident took place on

    21.04.2019; however, the FIR was lodged on 24.04.2019, i.e., after a

    delay of three days, without any satisfactory explanation. It is further

    submitted that, as per the FIR, offences under Sections 294, 34 and

    506 of the IPC have been registered against the appellants, and no

    offence under the Act, 1989 has been alleged therein. Thus, on the

    basis of the contents of the FIR lodged by the complainant, who is a

    highly educated government teacher, no offence under the Act of 1989

    is made out against the appellants. It is further contended that the

    complainant subsequently filed an application under Section 156(3) of

    the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 before the learned Special

    Judge on 19.07.2019, i.e., after a gap of nearly three months from the

    FIR dated 24.04.2019. Thereafter, her statement was recorded on

    15.01.2020, wherein, for the first time, she alleged that the appellants

    had abused her by referring to her caste. Learned Senior Counsel also

    submits that the police report dated 20.11.2019 (Annexure P-6)

    indicates that there was a land dispute between the complainant and

    the appellants. It is further submitted that the appellants were granted

    bail by the Court of learned JMFC, Basna, District Mahasamund (C.G.)

    on 13.08.2019. Thereafter, upon framing of charges under Sections

    294, 34 and 506-II of the IPC, the case was fixed for prosecution

    evidence; however, the complainant failed to appear, and consequently,

    non-bailable warrants were issued against the prosecution witnesses

    by the learned JMFC on 17.06.2025. Subsequently, the

    complainant/prosecution filed an application under Section 323 of the

    Cr.P.C., which was allowed on 14.08.2025, and the case was

    committed to the Court of the Special Judge. It is thus submitted that
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    the present case is a clear instance of misuse of the provisions of law,

    instituted with the intent to exert pressure upon the appellants in

    connection with an ongoing civil dispute between the complainant and

    appellant No. 3. Since no offence under the Act of 1989 is prima facie

    made out from the FIR, the appellants are entitled to the grant of

    anticipatory bail. In support of his submissions, learned Senior Counsel

    has placed reliance on the decisions of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in

    Prithvi Raj Chauhan vs. Union of India & Others1 and Kiran vs.

    Rajkumar2.

    4. On the other hand, learned counsel for the State as well as the objector

    oppose the prayer for anticipatory bail and submit that a prima facie

    case under the Act, 1989 is made out against the appellants. It is

    further submitted that, in view of the bar contained under Section 18 of

    the Act of 1989, the appellants are not entitled to the grant of

    anticipatory bail. Hence, the present appeal deserves to be dismissed.

    5. Having considered the submissions made by learned counsel for the

    parties and upon perusal of the record, it prima facie appears that the

    complainant is a well-educated lady and has been working as a teacher

    in a Government school since 2008. Being a literate person, she was

    expected to disclose all material facts relating to the alleged incident at

    the earliest point of time. However, the FIR, as initially lodged, does not

    disclose any allegation attracting the provisions of the Act, 1989. The

    allegation with regard to caste-based abuse appears to have been

    introduced subsequently at a belated stage. There is also a delay of

    three days in lodging the FIR, for which, no satisfactory explanation has

    1 (2020) 4 SCC 727
    2 2025 AIR (SC) 4083
    5

    been furnished. The material available on record further indicates that

    there exists a land dispute between the parties. It also appears that the

    allegation under the Act of 1989 has been made as an afterthought.

    6. In the matter of Kiran vs. Rajkumar (supra), the Hon’ble Supreme Court

    has held that in paras 6.1 & 602 which read as under:-

    “6.1 The absolute nature of bar, however, could be read and has
    to be applied with a rider. In a given case where on the face of it
    the offence under Section 3 of the Act is found to have not been
    made out and that the accusations relating to the commission of
    such offence are devoid of prima facie merits, the Court has a
    room to exercise the discretion to grant anticipatory bail to the
    accused under Section 438 of the Code.

    6.2 Non-making of prima facie case about the commission of
    offence is perceived to be such a situation where the Court can
    arrive at such a conclusion in the first blush itself or by way of the
    first impression upon very reading of the averments in the FIR.
    The contents and the allegations in the FIR would be decisive in
    this regard. Furthermore, in reaching a conclusion as to whether a
    prima facie offence is made out or not, it would not be permissible
    for the Court to travel into the evidentiary realm or to consider
    other materials, nor the Court could advert to conduct a mini trial.”

    7. Similarly, in the matter of Prithvi Raj Chauhan (supra), the Hon’ble

    Supreme Court has held in para 32, which reads as under:-

    “32. As far as the provision of Section 18-A and anticipatory bail
    is concerned, the judgment of Mishra, J. has stated that in cases
    where no prima facie materials exist warranting arrest in a
    complaint, the court has the inherent power to direct a pre-arrest
    bail.”

    8. In view of the aforesaid facts and circumstances of the case, and in the

    light of the law laid down by the Hon’ble Supreme Court, this Court is of

    the considered opinion that the FIR, as initially lodged, does not

    disclose any allegation of caste-based abuse nor does it invoke the

    provisions of the Act, 1989. Even the names of the appellants do not

    find mention therein with regard to the alleged offence. Consequently,

    the bar contained under Section 18 of the Act, 1989 is not attracted.
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    Further, considering that more than six years have elapsed since the

    alleged incident and the trial is likely to take considerable time, this

    Court finds it to be a fit case for grant of anticipatory bail to the

    appellants.

    9. Accordingly, the appeal is allowed and the impugned order dated

    28.03.2026 is set aside. It is directed that in the event of arrest of the

    appellants in connection with the aforesaid crime number, they shall be

    released on bail on their furnishing a personal bond in the sum of

    Rs.25,000/- each with one surety for the like sum to the satisfaction of

    the concerned arresting/investigating officer, with the following terms

    and conditions:

    (i) that the appellants shall make themselves available for
    interrogation/medical test etc. before the concerned
    investigating officer as and when required;

    (ii) that the appellants shall not, directly or indirectly, make
    any inducement, threat or promise to any person
    acquainted with the facts of the case as to dissuade
    him/her from disclosing such facts to the Court or to any
    police officer;

    (iii) that the appellants shall not act in any manner which
    will be prejudicial to fair and expeditious trial; and

    (iv) that the appellants shall appear before the concerned
    trial Court on each and every date given to them by the
    said Court till disposal of the trial.

    Sd/-

    (Radhakishan Agrawal)
    Judge

    Akhilesh
    7



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