What the Court Decided
In a ruling that cuts straight to the text of the law, the Supreme Court quashed an FIR filed under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act1 — because the alleged caste-based abuse happened inside a private home, not anywhere the public could see or hear it. The Court held that without this “public view” element, there simply is no offence under Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the Act2. The FIR, on its own face, didn’t make this out. That was enough to end the case.
What Actually Happened
This case has an unusual twist — the complainant and two of the accused are real brothers. All of them belong to the same Scheduled Caste community. The wives of the accused, however, are from non-SC/ST backgrounds. What started as what appears to be a bitter family dispute over property eventually made its way to the highest court in the country.
According to the FIR filed in Delhi, the accused tried to forcibly break open the complainant’s house lock and hurled deeply offensive caste-based slurs — words like chura, chamar, harijan — at both the complainant and his wife. Strong words. The kind that, under the SC/ST Act, can land someone behind bars.
The Trial Court went ahead and framed charges under the SC/ST Act against one of the accused and criminal intimidation charges under IPC Section 506 read with Section 34 against all accused3. When the matter went to the Delhi High Court, it refused to step in. So the accused came to the Supreme Court.
The Core Legal Question
Here is where it gets interesting. The defence argued something fairly straightforward — that the FIR never actually says the incident happened where the public could see it. And that, under Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act, this “public view” requirement isn’t optional. It’s baked into the offence itself.
The Supreme Court agreed. A bench of Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra and Justice N.V. Anjaria — with the judgment authored by Justice Anjaria — went through the FIR carefully and found exactly what the appellants were pointing to: the alleged abuse happened inside a residential house, behind closed doors, with no indication that any member of the public could see or hear any of it4.
“…to make out the offence under Section 3(1)(r) and/or Section 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act, the occurrence of the incident and the act and conduct of hurling of caste-based abuses must take place at ‘a place within public view’. It must be a place within the public gaze. Even if it happens to be a private place, then in such eventuality a public-eye must have an access to be able to notice what happens there or what is taking place — that will only make the ‘place within public view’.”— Justice N.V. Anjaria, Supreme Court of India
Put simply — even a private space can technically qualify, but only if third parties or the general public could witness what was happening. A closed house with no such access? That doesn’t cut it.
“Once that is so, to suggest that the house place was not exposed to public eye or public gaze, a residential house in no way becomes ‘a place within public view’… For an offence to be made out under Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act, as is the question in the instant case, the requirement that the occurrence has to be ‘in a place within public view’ is not satisfied, is missing and absent.”— Supreme Court of India, 2026 LiveLaw (SC) 484
Understanding the Law Behind the Ruling
Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 were designed to protect SC/ST individuals from public humiliation — deliberate acts of insult, intimidation, or degradation carried out where others can witness the dehumanisation. The “within public view” clause isn’t a technicality or a loophole. It reflects the legislative intent: the law targets acts of social shaming, not private quarrels, however ugly those quarrels may be.
That said, this ruling does raise a question worth thinking about — what happens when abuse occurs in a semi-open space? A courtyard, an open verandah, a shared corridor in an apartment building? The Court’s reasoning suggests that if the public or even third parties have any line of sight or access to the space, the threshold could be met. Each case will turn on its facts.
Case Details at a Glance
| Case Title | Gunjan @ Girija Kumari and Others v. State (NCT of Delhi) and Another |
| Citation | 2026 (SC) 484 |
| Bench | Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra & Justice N.V. Anjaria |
| Date of Judgment | May 11, 2026 |
| Sections Involved | SC/ST Act — Sections 3(1)(r), 3(1)(s); IPC — Section 506 r/w Section 34 |
| Outcome | Appeal Allowed — FIR/Proceedings Quashed |
| For Appellants | Mr. Avadh Bihari Kaushik (AOR), Ms. Urvashi Bhatia, Mr. Pawan Kumar Veerma, Mr. Rishabh Kumar, Ms. Reeya |
| For Respondents | Ms. Archana Pathak Dave (ASG), Mr. Mukesh Kumar Maroria (AOR), and others |
| others |
📌 5 Things to Take Away From This Judgment
- The phrase “in a place within public view” in Sections 3(1)(r) and 3(1)(s) of the SC/ST Act is not mere description — it is an essential ingredient of the offence. Without it, there is no case.
- A private residence, by itself, does not become a place within public view just because something illegal happened there. The location must be accessible or at least visible to people outside the dispute.
- Even private spaces can qualify — but only if the facts show that members of the public or third parties had access to witness the incident. That access must be evident from the FIR or evidence, not assumed.
- If the FIR, read on its face, does not disclose this ingredient, the Court can and will quash the proceedings. Filing an FIR is not enough — it must actually describe a cognisable offence under the Act.
- This is not the Court weakening the SC/ST Act. It is the Court insisting that the Act be applied correctly — as Parliament intended — not stretched to cover every domestic altercation involving caste-based language.
Why This Judgment Matters
Let’s be direct: the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act is one of India’s most important pieces of social legislation. It exists because caste-based discrimination and violence are real, widespread, and often go unpunished. Any erosion of its protective reach would be deeply problematic.
But this ruling isn’t an erosion. What the Supreme Court has done here is insist on precision. The law draws a line — not between SC/ST and non-SC/ST, but between public degradation and private conflict. Casteist abuse in a public space, on a street, in a workplace, at a government office — all of that squarely falls within the Act’s scope. A heated, ugly family dispute inside a locked house is a different matter, and the law treats it differently.
For advocates and police officers drafting FIRs, the lesson is clear: always record where exactly the incident took place and who could have witnessed it. A missing line in an FIR — one that places the incident “within public view” — can unravel an entire case, as this one did.
- The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 ↩︎
- Section 3(1)(r), SC/ST Act ↩︎
- Section 506, Indian Penal Code, 1860 ↩︎
- Swaran Singh v. State (2008) — FIR must disclose essential ingredients ↩︎
