HC raps police for not filing FIR against real estate firm
NEWDELHI: The Delhi High Court has pulled up the police for not lodging a case of cheating against a real estate firm for allegedly cheating several persons by inducing them to invest in its project to build a mall in north Delhi on a false promise of ownership of shops and has directed registration of an FIR.
Justice Vipin Sanghi said the reluctance shown by the Delhi Police in lodging a case despite disclosure of commission of serious offences, including criminal breach of trust and forgery, and its opposition to such an order in the lower courts and the high court “shakes the confidence” and raises doubts “as to whether the police is truly interested in performing its statutory obligations”.
The judge also said that nonregistration of an FIR has led to “serious miscarriage of justice” to the petitioners, represented by senior advocate Ravi Gupta and advocate Dhanesh Relan.
“The possibility of the accused, who are builders, having deep pockets, influencing the machinery cannot be ruled out,” the high court said and added that though it was inclined to transfer the probe to CBI, it was refraining to do so “in the hope that Delhi Police would make all endeavours to redeem themselves and restore the shaken confidence of the court”.
The court also imposed cost of ₹10,000 each on the firm, and its two officials and directed them to pay the amount within two weeks from August 23, the date of the order which also said that if the petitioners, the complainants who claimed to have been cheated, were not satisfied with the manner and pace of the investigation, they can move a plea for transferring the probe to another independent agency like the CBI.
The high court also quashed the magisterial and sessions courts orders rejecting the complainants petitions for registration of an FIR in the matter, saying “serious miscarriage of justice has taken place by denying to the petitioners plea.