β Sureshkumar Taraji Marwadi v. State of Gujarat
π Citation
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2012 SCC OnLine Guj 3710
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Court: Gujarat High Court
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Jurisdiction: Criminal Miscellaneous Application under Section 482 CrPC
π§Ύ Facts of the Case
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An FIR was registered alleging criminal offences against the accused persons.
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During investigation, the police added additional offences in the FIR based on new material collected.
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The accused challenged the investigation and argued that police cannot add new offences after registration of FIR.
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The matter reached the High Court for quashing of the FIR.
β Legal Issue
Whether police can add or alter sections of law during investigation after the FIR is registered?
π§ββ Judgment / Holding
The Gujarat High Court held:
β Police can add or delete penal sections during investigation if evidence justifies it.
β FIR is not an encyclopedia of all offences.
β Investigation is a dynamic process, and legal sections may change as facts emerge.
Therefore, mere addition of offences during investigation is not illegal.
π Key Legal Principles (Ratio)
1οΈβ£ FIR is not a final document
The FIR only sets the criminal law in motion; it does not determine the final offences.
2οΈβ£ Investigating officer has power to modify sections
During investigation, if evidence reveals different or additional offences, police may add those sections.
3οΈβ£ Court should not interfere in investigation prematurely
High Courts should exercise Section 482 CrPC powers sparingly and avoid interfering in ongoing investigation.
β Relevant Legal Provisions
| Provision | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Sec 154 CrPC | Registration of FIR |
| Sec 156 CrPC | Police power to investigate |
| Sec 173 CrPC | Final report / charge sheet |
| Sec 482 CrPC | Inherent powers of High Court |
π Important Judicial Observation
The court observed:
“The Investigating Officer is empowered to add appropriate sections of law if the material collected during investigation discloses commission of additional offences.”
β Practical Use for Magistrates
This judgment is helpful when:
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Accused argues that police wrongly added sections later
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Applications seeking quashing of FIR due to change of offences
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Objections raised during remand or charge stage
Correct approach:
β Addition or alteration of sections is legally permissible
β Court should examine evidence at charge stage, not during investigation.
π§ Viva One-Line Ratio
Police can add or alter penal sections during investigation if evidence justifies it.
β Related Investigation Law Cases
| Case | Legal Principle |
|---|---|
| Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh | FIR registration mandatory |
| T.T. Antony v. State of Kerala | Second FIR barred |
| Upkar Singh v. Ved Prakash | Counter FIR allowed |
| D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal | Arrest safeguards |
| Sureshkumar Taraji Marwadi v. State of Gujarat | Police may add sections during investigation |