⚖ Part 1: FIR – Zero FIR – Cognizable – Non-Cognizable (Comparative Table)
| Particular | FIR | Zero FIR | Cognizable Offence | Non-Cognizable Offence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meaning | First Information Report recorded under Section 154 CrPC (now Section 173 BNSS) | FIR registered at any police station irrespective of territorial jurisdiction | Offence where police can arrest without warrant and start investigation without court order | Offence where police cannot arrest without warrant and cannot investigate without Magistrate’s order |
| Purpose | Sets criminal law in motion | Immediate registration in urgent cases | Ensures prompt investigation of serious crimes | Protects individuals from arbitrary police action in minor offences |
| Police Power to Arrest | Depends on nature of offence | Same as cognizable offence | Yes, without warrant | No, without warrant |
| Need of Magistrate’s Permission | No (if cognizable) | No (if cognizable) | Not required to investigate | Required under Section 155(2) CrPC |
| Territorial Jurisdiction | Must have jurisdiction | Jurisdiction not required initially | Relevant for investigation | Relevant for investigation |
| Transfer of Case | Not applicable | Transferred to appropriate police station | Not required | Required after court order |
| Examples | Murder FIR, Theft FIR | Rape complaint in any city | Murder, Rape, Robbery | Defamation, Simple hurt (in some cases) |
| Legal Consequence of Refusal to Register | Can approach SP under Section 154(3) CrPC | Same remedy | Writ jurisdiction available | Magistrate complaint under Section 156(3) |
📜 Part 2: FIR – Legal Principles with Supreme Court Judgments
| Issue | Legal Position | Landmark Judgment |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory Registration of FIR | Police must register FIR if information discloses cognizable offence | Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh |
| Preliminary Inquiry | Permissible only in limited cases (matrimonial, commercial etc.) | Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh |
| Zero FIR Validity | FIR can be registered at any police station | State of Andhra Pradesh v. Punati Ramulu |
| Delay in FIR | Delay not fatal if properly explained | State of Himachal Pradesh v. Gian Chand |
| Second FIR | Not permissible for same occurrence | T.T. Antony v. State of Kerala |
| Counter FIR | Permissible in cross versions | Upkar Singh v. Ved Prakash |
⚖ Part 3: Cognizable vs Non-Cognizable (Detailed Legal Table)
| Criteria | Cognizable | Non-Cognizable |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Definition | Section 2(c) CrPC | Section 2(l) CrPC |
| Gravity | Serious offences | Minor offences |
| Arrest Power | Without warrant | Only with warrant |
| Investigation | Without Magistrate order | With Magistrate order |
| FIR Registration | Mandatory | NCR (Non-cognizable report) |
| Court Involvement | After charge sheet | Before investigation begins |
📘 Supreme Court Judgments on Cognizable Offences
| Principle | Case |
|---|---|
| Police must apply mind before arrest | Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar |
| Arrest not automatic | Joginder Kumar v. State of Uttar Pradesh |
| Guidelines during arrest | D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal |
| Magistrate duty in remand | Manubhai Ratilal Patel v. State of Gujarat |
⚖ Part 4: Important Differences (Judiciary Interview Ready)
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Can police refuse FIR in cognizable case? | No, as per Lalita Kumari |
| Is preliminary inquiry mandatory? | No, only exceptional categories |
| Can there be multiple FIRs? | Not for same incident (T.T. Antony) |
| What if police refuse FIR? | Remedy under Section 154(3) or 156(3) |
| Can Magistrate order investigation in non-cognizable case? | Yes |
🧠 Concept Flow Chart
Information Received
↓
Does it disclose cognizable offence?
→ YES → Register FIR → Investigate → Arrest possible
→ NO → Register NCR → Seek Magistrate order
🎯 Judiciary Viva Quick Answer Model
What is FIR?
FIR is the first information given to police regarding commission of a cognizable offence, recorded under Section 154 CrPC.
What is Zero FIR?
Zero FIR is an FIR registered irrespective of territorial jurisdiction and later transferred.
Difference between cognizable and non-cognizable?
In cognizable offences, police can arrest without warrant and investigate without court order. In non-cognizable offences, court permission is required.
🔹 3. Addition of Section in FIR / Charge
| Issue | Case | Principle |
|---|---|---|
| Magistrate must give reasons | Bhanubhai Mafatbhai Bharwad v. State of Gujarat | Magistrate must record brief reasons while accepting addition of graver offence. “Kept with FIR” is not sufficient. |
| Same principle reiterated | Sureshkumar Taraji Marwadi v. State of Gujarat | Mechanical acceptance of addition report impermissible. |
🔹 4. Re-Arrest After Addition of Graver Offence
| Issue | Case | Principle |
|---|---|---|
| Re-arrest after addition | Pradeep Ram v. State of Jharkhand | Police cannot automatically arrest accused already on bail. Must seek cancellation under Sec 437(5)/439(2) CrPC. |
🔹 5. Deletion of Section
| Issue | Case | Principle |
|---|---|---|
| Deletion procedure | Jagdish Nathabhai Solanki v. State of Gujarat | IO cannot simply “delete” section and keep report with FIR. Must file charge-sheet or summary report; complainant must be heard. |
🔹 6. Section 156(3) CrPC / 175(3) BNSS
| Issue | Case | Principle |
|---|---|---|
| Affidavit mandatory | Priyanka Srivastava v. State of U.P. | 156(3) application must be supported by affidavit. |
| BNSS 175(3) safeguards | Om Prakash Ambedkar v. State of Maharashtra | Magistrate must consider SP representation + conduct inquiry before directing investigation. |
| Odisha view | Swarnalata Jena v. State of Odisha | Reasoned order mandatory before directing investigation. |
📊 PART 1: FIR to Charge Sheet – Complete Procedural Chart
🔹 Stepwise Criminal Procedure Flow (CrPC → BNSS equivalent in brackets)
| Stage | Provision | What Happens | Magistrate’s Role | Key SC Judgment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1️⃣ Information to Police | Sec 154 CrPC (Sec 173 BNSS) | FIR registered if cognizable offence disclosed | No role initially | Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh |
| 2️⃣ Preliminary Inquiry (Limited) | As per Lalita Kumari | Only in specific categories | — | Lalita Kumari |
| 3️⃣ Investigation Begins | Sec 156 CrPC | Police collect evidence | Magistrate can monitor | Sakiri Vasu v. State of Uttar Pradesh |
| 4️⃣ Arrest (if required) | Sec 41 CrPC | Arrest without warrant (cognizable) | Must scrutinize legality | Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar |
| 5️⃣ Production before Magistrate | Sec 57 & 167 CrPC | Within 24 hours | Authorise remand | Manubhai Ratilal Patel v. State of Gujarat |
| 6️⃣ Police / Judicial Custody | Sec 167 CrPC | Max 15 days police custody; 60/90 days total | Apply judicial mind | CBI v. Anupam J. Kulkarni |
| 7️⃣ Default Bail (if delay) | Sec 167(2) CrPC | Accused entitled after 60/90 days | Must grant if applied | Rakesh Kumar Paul v. State of Assam |
| 8️⃣ Completion of Investigation | Sec 173 CrPC | Police file charge sheet | Takes cognizance | Hardeep Singh v. State of Punjab |
| 9️⃣ Cognizance | Sec 190 CrPC | Magistrate applies mind | Judicial act | Hardeep Singh |
| 🔟 Process Issued | Sec 204 CrPC | Summons/warrant issued | — | — |
🔹 Visual Flow (Exam-Ready)
Information → FIR → Investigation → Arrest (if needed) → Remand → Evidence Collection → Final Report (Charge Sheet) → Cognizance → Trial
⚖ PART 2: Second FIR vs Supplementary Charge Sheet (Deep Analysis)
| Issue | Second FIR | Supplementary Charge Sheet |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Basis | Generally barred | Permitted under Sec 173(8) CrPC |
| Same Incident? | Not allowed | Allowed for further evidence |
| Purpose | Fresh investigation | Continuation of earlier investigation |
| Court Permission | Not valid for same occurrence | No prior permission mandatory but court informed |
| Leading Case | T.T. Antony v. State of Kerala | Vinay Tyagi v. Irshad Ali |
🔎 Legal Position
🔹 Second FIR
-
Not permissible for same incident.
-
Only one FIR per occurrence.
Confirmed in:
-
T.T. Antony case
-
Babubhai v. State of Gujarat
🔹 Exception:
Counter FIR allowed (cross version case):
-
Upkar Singh v. Ved Prakash
🔹 Supplementary Charge Sheet
Allowed when:
-
New evidence found
-
New accused discovered
-
Further investigation conducted
Court considers both original + supplementary report.
🧠 PART 3: FIR Quashing under Section 482 CrPC (Inherent Powers)
🔹 Legal Basis
High Court has inherent power to:
-
Prevent abuse of process
-
Secure ends of justice
⚖ Landmark Case – Bhajan Lal Principles
State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal
7 Categories for Quashing (Important for Interview)
-
FIR does not disclose offence.
-
Allegations absurd or improbable.
-
Civil dispute given criminal colour.
-
No legal evidence.
-
Bar under law.
-
Mala fide intention.
-
Abuse of process.
Other Important Judgments
| Principle | Case |
|---|---|
| Civil dispute cannot be criminalised | G. Sagar Suri v. State of Uttar Pradesh |
| Quashing power to be exercised sparingly | Neeharika Infrastructure v. State of Maharashtra |
| Compromise quashing | Gian Singh v. State of Punjab |
⚖ When High Court Should NOT Quash
As per Neeharika Infrastructure:
-
Court should not conduct mini-trial.
-
FIR must be read as whole.
-
Investigation should not be stalled routinely.
📘 PART 4: BNSS Changes in FIR & Investigation
| Topic | CrPC | BNSS Change |
|---|---|---|
| FIR Provision | Sec 154 | Sec 173 BNSS |
| Zero FIR | Judicial recognition | Express recognition |
| e-FIR | Not detailed | Digital FIR allowed |
| Investigation Timeline | 60/90 days | Time-bound investigation emphasis |
| Forensic Mandatory | Not mandatory | Mandatory in serious offences |
| Audio-Video Recording | Limited | Expanded use |
| Cognizance | Sec 190 | Similar structure retained |
🔹 Major Reform Under BNSS
✔ Digital recording
✔ Online FIR system
✔ Forensic team involvement in serious crimes
✔ Faster timeline monitoring
🎯 Judiciary Viva Master Answers
Q: Can there be two FIRs for same incident?
No, as held in T.T. Antony case. However, counter FIR for cross version is permissible.
Q: What is difference between further investigation and fresh investigation?
Further investigation supplements earlier investigation (Sec 173(8)). Fresh investigation requires court order.
Q: When can High Court quash FIR?
As per Bhajan Lal categories, to prevent abuse of process.
📊 FIR to Charge Sheet – Complete Procedural Chart
(CrPC vs BNSS Comparative Table)
| Stage | Procedure | CrPC Provision | BNSS Provision | Magistrate’s Role | Landmark SC Judgment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1️⃣ | Information of Cognizable Offence | Sec 154 | Sec 173 BNSS | No initial role | Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh |
| 2️⃣ | Preliminary Inquiry (Limited cases) | As per Lalita Kumari (Judicially evolved) | Recognized in framework | No direct role | Lalita Kumari |
| 3️⃣ | Registration of FIR (Written / Electronic) | Sec 154(1) | Sec 173(1) | — | Lalita Kumari |
| 4️⃣ | Remedy if FIR not registered | Sec 154(3), Sec 156(3) | Equivalent retained | Magistrate may order investigation | Sakiri Vasu v. State of Uttar Pradesh |
| 5️⃣ | Investigation begins | Sec 156 | Sec 175 BNSS | Can monitor investigation | Sakiri Vasu v. State of Uttar Pradesh |
| 6️⃣ | Arrest without warrant (Cognizable) | Sec 41 | Sec 35 BNSS | Must examine legality at remand | Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar |
| 7️⃣ | Safeguards during Arrest | Sec 41A, 50, 57 | Sec 35, 47 BNSS | Check compliance | D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal |
| 8️⃣ | Production before Magistrate (Within 24 hrs) | Sec 57 | Sec 58 BNSS | Mandatory production | Joginder Kumar v. State of Uttar Pradesh |
| 9️⃣ | Police / Judicial Custody (Remand) | Sec 167 | Sec 187 BNSS | Apply judicial mind | CBI v. Anupam J. Kulkarni |
| 🔟 | Maximum Police Custody | 15 days | Structured custody under 60/90 day framework | Scrutiny required | Anupam Kulkarni |
| 1️⃣1️⃣ | Default Bail (60/90 days) | Sec 167(2) | Sec 187(3) BNSS | Must grant if applied | Rakesh Kumar Paul v. State of Assam |
| 1️⃣2️⃣ | Further Investigation | Sec 173(8) | Sec 193(9) BNSS | Court informed | Vinay Tyagi v. Irshad Ali |
| 1️⃣3️⃣ | Filing of Final Report (Charge Sheet) | Sec 173(2) | Sec 193 BNSS | Takes cognizance | Hardeep Singh v. State of Punjab |
| 1️⃣4️⃣ | Cognizance by Magistrate | Sec 190 | Sec 210 BNSS | Judicial act | Hardeep Singh |
| 1️⃣5️⃣ | Issue of Process (Summons/Warrant) | Sec 204 | Sec 227 BNSS | Issue summons | — |
📘 Key Structural Differences: CrPC vs BNSS
| Topic | CrPC Position | BNSS Reform |
|---|---|---|
| FIR | Traditional written FIR | e-FIR expressly recognized |
| Investigation | Police-driven | Technology integration & forensic emphasis |
| Custody | 15 days police custody max | Structured distribution within total 60/90 days |
| Forensic Role | Not mandatory | Mandatory in serious offences (7+ years) |
| Digital Evidence | Limited structure | Express procedural recognition |
📊 Complete Procedural Flow (Visual for Exams)
Information Received
↓
FIR Registered (Sec 154 CrPC / Sec 173 BNSS)
↓
Investigation Begins (Sec 156 / Sec 175 BNSS)
↓
Arrest if Necessary (Sec 41 / Sec 35 BNSS)
↓
Production within 24 Hours
↓
Remand (Sec 167 / Sec 187 BNSS)
↓
Evidence Collection
↓
Final Report / Charge Sheet (Sec 173 / Sec 193 BNSS)
↓
Cognizance (Sec 190 / Sec 210 BNSS)
↓
Process Issued
⚖ Multiple FIR Doctrine – Complete Supreme Court Case Law Chart
This chart is extremely useful for Magistrates while dealing with FIR, further investigation, cross cases, and second FIR challenges.
| No. | Issue | Case Law | Court | Ratio / Legal Principle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Second FIR for same incident | T.T. Antony v. State of Kerala | Supreme Court | Second FIR for the same occurrence is not permissible. Subsequent information must be treated as part of the same investigation. |
| 2 | Counter FIR allowed | Upkar Singh v. Ved Prakash | Supreme Court | The bar on second FIR does not apply to cross-cases or counter complaints by the opposite party. |
| 3 | Test of same transaction | Babubhai v. State of Gujarat | Supreme Court | Court must examine whether both FIRs relate to the same transaction; if yes, second FIR is barred. |
| 4 | Distinct offences – multiple FIR possible | Anju Chaudhary v. State of Uttar Pradesh | Supreme Court | Different incidents or separate conspiracies may justify separate FIRs. |
| 5 | Further investigation permitted | K. Chandrashekhar v. State of Kerala | Supreme Court | Police may conduct further investigation after chargesheet under Section 173(8) CrPC. |
| 6 | Magistrate power to order further investigation | Vinubhai Haribhai Malaviya v. State of Gujarat | Supreme Court | Magistrate has power to order further investigation even after cognizance but before trial conclusion. |
| 7 | Fresh investigation vs further investigation | Ramachandran v. R. Udhayakumar | Supreme Court | Fresh / de-novo investigation requires court permission, whereas further investigation is continuation of earlier investigation. |
| 8 | Supplementary charge sheet allowed | Hasanbhai Valibhai Qureshi v. State of Gujarat | Supreme Court | Investigating agency can file supplementary report if new evidence is discovered. |
| 9 | Separate FIR in larger conspiracy | Nirmal Singh Kahlon v. State of Punjab | Supreme Court | If subsequent FIR reveals a wider conspiracy, separate FIR may be justified. |
| 10 | Multiple FIRs in terrorism / complex crimes | Amitbhai Anilchandra Shah v. Central Bureau of Investigation | Supreme Court | Multiple FIRs cannot be used to investigate the same offence repeatedly. |
| 11 | Second FIR quashed | Amitbhai Anilchandra Shah v. CBI | Supreme Court | Once FIR registered and investigation started, subsequent FIR for same offence is abuse of process. |
| 12 | Multiple victims – separate FIR allowed | Surender Kaushik v. State of Uttar Pradesh | Supreme Court | Separate FIR permissible where different victims file complaints of separate occurrences. |
⚖ Judicial Test to Determine Validity of Second FIR
Courts apply the “Same Transaction Test”
| Factor | Question |
|---|---|
| Time | Did both FIRs arise from same time period? |
| Place | Did both incidents occur at same place? |
| Facts | Are allegations based on same set of facts? |
| Offence | Is the offence essentially the same? |
✔ If YES → Second FIR invalid
✔ If NO → Separate FIR valid
⚖ Practical Magistrate Situations
| Situation | Legal Position |
|---|---|
| New witness statement | Further investigation |
| Discovery of new evidence | Supplementary charge sheet |
| Same incident but different version | Not second FIR |
| Cross fight between parties | Cross FIR allowed |
| Larger conspiracy discovered later | Separate FIR possible |
🧠 5-Word Memory Ratios (Judicial Rapid Recall)
| Case | 5 Word Ratio |
|---|---|
| T.T. Antony | Second FIR barred |
| Upkar Singh | Counter FIR allowed |
| Babubhai | Same transaction test |
| Anju Chaudhary | Distinct offence separate FIR |
| Vinubhai Malaviya | Magistrate can order further investigation |
| Chandrashekhar | Further investigation permissible |
| Hasanbhai Qureshi | Supplementary chargesheet allowed |
| Surender Kaushik | Separate victim separate FIR |
⚖ Ready-to-Use Judicial Paragraph (For Orders)
“It is well settled that for one occurrence there cannot be multiple FIRs. The Supreme Court in T.T. Antony v. State of Kerala held that subsequent information relating to the same occurrence must be treated as part of the same investigation and not as a fresh FIR. However, cross complaints or counter versions are permissible as clarified in Upkar Singh v. Ved Prakash.”