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SECTION 340 CRPC

Section 340 lays down the procedure for courts to initiate criminal proceedings against a person who has:

  • Given false evidence in court (perjury), or
  • Forged / used forged documents in judicial proceedings, or
  • Committed any offence described in Sections 195(1)(b) IPC (like fabricating evidence).

 

  • To protect the sanctity of judicial proceedings.
  • To prevent misuse of the process by punishing those who intentionally lie or produce fake documents before the court.
  • To ensure that not every false statement automatically becomes a criminal case — only those where the court feels it is necessary in the interest of justice.
AspectExplanation
Who can initiateThe court where the false evidence or forgery is produced. Private individuals cannot directly file a criminal complaint.
HowThe court must conduct a preliminary inquiry to decide whether it is expedient in the interest of justice to file a complaint.
Complaint filingIf yes, the court files a written complaint to a Magistrate of the First Class having jurisdiction.
Which offencesMainly those under Sections 193 to 196, 199, 200, 205–211, and 228 IPC, plus forgery-related offences under Sections 463, 471, 475, 476 IPC, but only if they relate to documents produced in court.
No direct FIRPolice cannot register an FIR for these offences unless the court itself makes the complaint.
Discretionary powerThe court may or may not proceed — even if someone lied — unless it seriously affects justice.
  1. Suspicion of offence → Court notices false evidence or forged document.
  2. Preliminary Inquiry (not a full trial) → Court examines whether a case prima facie exists.
  3. Opinion on expediency → Court decides whether prosecution is necessary for justice.
  4. Filing of Complaint → Court drafts a written complaint.
  5. Sending to Magistrate → Complaint is forwarded to Magistrate of First Class for trial.
  6. Trial begins → Regular criminal proceedings start before the Magistrate.

Case Scenario:
In a civil property dispute, Mr. A produces a fake sale deed claiming he bought the land from Mr. B.
Later, during the trial, it is proven that the sale deed is forged — signatures are fake and no such transaction ever occurred.

What happens next:

  1. The civil court now knows a forged document was intentionally used.
  2. Under Section 340 CrPC, the court can initiate a preliminary inquiry.
  3. If the court finds it serious and affecting the outcome, it files a complaint to the jurisdictional Magistrate.
  4. The Magistrate then tries Mr. A for offences like forgery (Sec 467, 471 IPC) or giving false evidence (Sec 193 IPC).

Some key rulings:

  • Iqbal Singh Marwah v. Meenakshi Marwah (2005)
    The court clarified that it’s not mandatory to file a complaint whenever false evidence is found — the court must consider whether it is expedient in the interest of justice.
  • The complaint can be filed by a higher or subordinate court if the offence concerns that court’s proceedings.
  • Private parties must request the court to act — they cannot directly file a criminal case for perjury or forgery of court documents.

Section 340 CrPC gives courts the exclusive power to start criminal cases for perjury or forgery affecting court proceedings — but only when justice demands it.

CRPC340
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