Post is based on the Punjab & Haryana High Court judgment wherein HighCourt Criminal petition is preferred When Magistrate Refuse FIR under Section 175(3) BNSS application.
When a Magistrate rejects an application under Section 175(3) BNSS, your primary legal remedies are filing a Private Complaint under Chapter XVII (Sections 223–232) of the BNSS, or invoking the inherent powers of the High Court under Section 528 BNSS to challenge the rejection.
When FIR Under Section 175(3) BNSS gets Rejected?
Here Punjab & Haryana High Court Refuses FIR Registration Under Section 175(3) BNSS in Property Dispute
In a significant judgment dated 20 March 2026, the Punjab & Haryana High Court reiterated that:
Mere allegations in a property dispute do not automatically justify registration of an FIR under Section 175(3) BNSS (earlier Section 156(3) CrPC).
The Court upheld the Magistrate’s refusal to direct registration of FIR where title and possession over the disputed property were unclear.
📄 Sumeet Sofat vs State of Punjab
Punjab & Haryana High Court – Decision dated 20.03.2026
📌 Background of the Case
The petitioner approached the High Court challenging the order of the Magistrate dismissing his application under:
- Section 175(3) BNSS
(Earlier Section 156(3) CrPC)
The petitioner alleged that:
- Certain persons had illegally trespassed into his plot at Ludhiana
- Construction activity was being carried out during night hours
- Labourers were apprehended by police but later released
- Police failed to register FIR despite repeated complaints
The petitioner sought:
- Directions for registration of FIR under various provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
⚖️ Why the Magistrate Refused FIR Registration
The Magistrate called for a status report from the SHO.
The police report revealed:
- A civil/property dispute was already pending between parties
- Another FIR relating to forged property documents had already been registered
- Ownership and possession over the plot were disputed
- Labourers present at the site had no criminal role
Therefore, the Magistrate held that:
- No clear cognizable offence was made out at that stage.
🏛 High Court’s Key Findings
The High Court agreed with the Magistrate and observed:
🔹 Property Title & Possession Were Disputed
The Court noted:
- Petitioner failed to place clear ownership documents on record
- Civil litigation regarding the same property was already pending
Thus:
Criminal machinery cannot be invoked merely to strengthen a civil dispute.
🔹 Magistrate Must Apply Judicial Mind
The Court reiterated that while dealing with applications under Section 175(3) BNSS:
✔ Magistrate is not bound to mechanically order FIR registration
✔ Judicial application of mind is mandatory
✔ Court must verify whether basic ingredients of cognizable offences exist
📖 Supreme Court Judgments Relied Upon
The Court referred to several landmark judgments including:
🔹 Priyanka Srivastava vs State of U.P.
- Section 156(3)/175(3) powers cannot be invoked casually
- Courts must guard against misuse of criminal process
🔹 Anil Kumar vs M.K. Aiyappa
- Judicial satisfaction must reflect in the order
🔹 Usha Chakraborty vs State of West Bengal
- FIR directions cannot be issued on vague allegations lacking essential ingredients
⚖️ Important Legal Principle Clarified
The High Court emphasized:
A Magistrate has discretion either:
- to order FIR registration, OR
- treat the matter as a private complaint.
There is no automatic right to FIR registration merely because allegations are made.
❌ Final Outcome
The High Court found no illegality in the Magistrate’s order and:
- Dismissed the petition
- Refused to direct registration of FIR
📌 Key Legal Takeaways
✔ Section 175(3) BNSS is discretionary, not automatic
✔ Criminal law cannot be used to settle civil/property disputes
✔ Courts must examine whether cognizable offence is truly made out
✔ Magistrate can refuse FIR registration after applying judicial mind
✔ Vague allegations are insufficient for criminal investigation
🧑⚖️ Why This Judgment Matters
This ruling is important in preventing misuse of criminal proceedings in:
- Property disputes
- Civil ownership conflicts
- Pressure tactics through criminal complaints
It reinforces the principle that:
“Criminal law should not become a shortcut in civil litigation.”
🔍 Know more on Below Topics on my website:
Section 175(3) BNSS explained
156(3) CrPC latest judgment
FIR refusal property dispute case
Punjab Haryana High Court FIR registration
Magistrate power under BNSS
Civil dispute criminal complaint law
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Read AI Responses from Google here.
- Procedure: The Magistrate will take cognizance of the offence and conduct an inquiry by examining you and your witnesses under oath.
- Outcome: If the Magistrate finds sufficient grounds to proceed, they will issue process (summon) the accused directly. You can read more about this procedural pathway in this SCC Online Blog detailing investigations ordered under BNSS. [3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
- Basis: Section 528 preserves the inherent powers of the High Court to prevent abuse of the process of any court or to secure the ends of justice.
- When to use: Use this if the rejection failed to consider mandatory affidavits or overlooked substantial evidence. For deeper analysis on the High Court’s stance on rejecting police reports, refer to insights on Live Law. [2, 8, 9]
- Actionable Step: If the rejection order is vague or lacks reasoning, you can request a detailed, reasoned order.
- Legal Precedent: Review legal discussions on LinkedIn regarding remedies for denied FIRs under Section 175(3) to understand how courts require magistrates to apply judicial minds to such rejections. [2, 8, 12]