The Supreme Court on Thursday said a sexual
harassment case cannot be closed after a compromise is reached between the
rival parties as such offences have serious impact on the society.
The observation came while setting aside an order of
the Rajasthan High Court which had quashed the FIR against a teacher who was
accused of sexually molesting a 16-year-old girl at school in Rajasthan's Sawai
Madhopur district.
A bench of justices C T Ravikumar and Sanjay Kumar
said the high court has misread and misapplied the law laid down to quash the
subject FIR and all further proceedings.
"The commission of such offences against the
children should be viewed as heinous and serious. Needless to say, that
commission of such offences cannot be taken lightly as offences of private
nature and in fact, such offences are bound to be taken as offences against the
society...
"We are at a loss to understand how the High
Court arrived at the conclusion that in the case on hand a dispute to be
resolved exists between the parties and further that to maintain harmony the
FIR and all further proceedings thereto should be quashed even without
adverting to the allegations raised against the 3rd respondent in the subject
FIR," the bench said.
The apex court also rejected the submission of the
teacher and the father of the victim who challenged the locus standi of the PIL
petitioner in the case "When by quashing the FIR by invoking the
power under Section 482, CrPC, the accused was relieved of the liability to
face the trial coupled with the aforesaid circumstances and the position of law
qua locus standi of third party to maintain a petition under Article 136 of the
Constitution of India, as revealed from the decisions referred above, we have
no hesitation to hold that the challenge based on the appellants' locus standi
got no merit at all," the bench said.
The top court said when an incident of this nature
and gravity allegedly occurred in a higher secondary school, that too from a
teacher, it cannot be simply described as an offence purely private and has no
serious impact on society.
"We have no hesitation to hold that in cases of
this nature, the fact that in view of compromise entered into between the
parties, the chance of a conviction is remote and bleak also cannot be a ground
to abruptly terminate the investigation, by quashing FIR and all further
proceedings pursuant thereto, by invoking the power under Section 482,
CrPC," the bench said.
The bench said the act committed by the accused
would constitute an offence of 'sexual assault' under Section 7 of the POCSO
Act, which is punishable with imprisonment of either description for a term
which shall not be less than three years and may extend to five years and also fine.
"They would reveal that the commission of such
offences against the children should be viewed as heinous and serious. Needless
to say, the commission of such offences cannot be taken lightly as offences of
a private nature. In fact, such offences are bound to be taken as offences
against society," the bench said.
The apex court said the FIR, investigation and
criminal proceedings against the teacher be proceeded in accordance with law.
"We make it clear that we shall not be
understood to have made any observations on the merits of the case," it
said.
In 2022, a PIL was filed by Ramjilal Bairwa, a
native of Gangapur city in Rajasthan, challenging the closure of a serious
non-compoundable criminal case by the high court in which the accused never got
arrested.
On December 2, 2022, the top court had converted the
PIL into Special Leave Petition under Article 136 of the Constitution.
According to the plea, the teacher, named in the
FIR, was never arrested and a compromise was allegedly executed between the family
members of the girl and the accused.
Taking note of the compromise, which was presented
before the high court, the high court allowed the petition filed by the accused
and quashed the proceedings.
It was alleged that though the high court observed that
there was opposition on the part of the public prosecutor, it closed the case
relying upon a judgement of the apex court which said that even the
non-compoundable offence cases can be closed based on a compromise between the
parties.