04/12/2025
Early Acquittal as a Judicial Necessity: Powers of Magistrates and Courts to Terminate Baseless Prosecutions at Any Stage !
By: Zulfikar Khan Nasir
Former Judge | Amicus Curiae | Forensic Criminologist | Criminal Defence Mentor | Honorary Researcher, International Federation of Neurolegal Sciences
📧 Email: [email protected] | 📱 WhatsApp: 03432077675
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Introduction
Across the criminal justice system, a troubling pattern persists: police challans are filed and charges framed even in cases where prospects of conviction are either remote or nonexistent. This practice clogs dockets, consumes judicial time, and subjects accused persons to needless hardship. The law, however, has never intended that every allegation must travel the full distance of a trial.
Recognising this, the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 empowers the Magistracy and the Sessions Courts to acquit an accused at any stage if the charge is groundless or there is no probability of conviction. These provisions—Sections 249-A and 265-K—act as a judicial safety valve, preventing the abuse of process and ensuring that justice remains prompt, fair, and rational.
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1. The Statutory Foundation
Section 249-A Cr.P.C. – Power of Magistrate
A Magistrate may acquit at any stage if, after hearing both sides and recording reasons, (i) the charge appears groundless; or (ii) no probability of conviction exists.
The language is broad and unambiguous. It is not conditional upon evidence having been recorded. The stage may be immediately after cognizance, during pre-charge scrutiny, or mid-trial.
Section 265-K Cr.P.C. – Power of Sessions Court
This section extends similar authority to Sessions Courts conducting trials under Chapter XXII-A. A Sessions Judge may terminate proceedings at any stage if continuation is unwarranted.
Section 561-A Cr.P.C. – Inherent Power of High Court
The High Court continues to retain the inherent authority to prevent abuse of process and secure the ends of justice. Sections 249-A and 265-K operate at the trial level; Section 561-A supervises the system from above.
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2. Purpose: Why Early Acquittal Exists
Several judgments have emphasised that the objective of these sections is to prevent the rigours of a prolonged trial where conviction is inherently improbable.
• 1991 MLD 2198 noted that these powers exist to save individuals from harassment where prosecution is bound to fail.
• 2014 PCr.LJ 1318 reiterated that the purpose of an FIR is merely to set the law in motion. If, during investigation or trial, falsity or impossibility of conviction appears, discharge or acquittal must follow.
Simply put: The law does not compel a useless trial.
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3. “At Any Stage”: Judicial Meaning and Scope
The phrase “at any stage” is deliberate and expansive. Courts have given it pragmatic interpretation:
• PLD 1997 SC 275 and 1993 SCMR 523—Acquittal may occur at the very outset, after cognizance, mid-trial, or at a later stage.
• 2004 PCr.LJ 1071—Even on the first date of appearance, the court may acquit if the record shows the charge is groundless.
This flexibility allows trial courts to respond fairly and efficiently to the realities of each case.
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4. What Makes a Charge “Groundless”?
The term “groundless” has been judicially interpreted to mean without legal or factual foundation.
• 1992 PCr.LJ 110 — A charge is groundless when there is “no good ground” to proceed, even assuming the prosecution narrative to be true.
Similarly, “no probability of conviction” means that even if the entire prosecution evidence materialises as stated, conviction is still impossible due to contradictions, absence of ingredients of offence, legal bars, or inherent improbabilities.
Thus, the courts must not put accused persons through the formality of a trial where success is implausible.
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5. Conditions Precedent (1994 SCMR 798)
Before acquitting at any stage, the court must ensure:
1. Hearing of both prosecutor and accused;
2. Objective evaluation of record, FIR, challan, and surrounding circumstances;
3. Reasoned and speaking order demonstrating why continuation is unjustified.
A non-speaking or mechanical order cannot sustain, as reaffirmed in later jurisprudence.
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6. Key Case Study: Fayyaz Khan v. Wasim Khadim (2013 PCr.LJ 1037, SC AJ&K)
This important judgment clarified the contours of Sections 249-A and 265-K:
• Magistrates, Sessions Courts, and High Courts have concurrent authority to terminate baseless proceedings.
• Courts must apply judicious mind, hear parties, and record reasons.
• If evidence on record indicates no likelihood of conviction, acquittal must follow.
• However, where the trial court fails to record reasons or ignores material against the principal accused, its order may be set aside—as happened against respondent No.1 in this case.
• Yet, aged co-accused (70 and 80 years old), against whom no evidence existed, were rightly acquitted.
The case is a classic illustration of how these provisions operate to prevent abuse while ensuring accountability.
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7. Balancing the Rights of Society and the Individual
Sections 249-A and 265-K reflect a jurisprudential compromise:
• Society has a legitimate interest in prosecuting offenders.
• The individual has a right not to suffer a meaningless prosecution.
The objective is not to protect the guilty, but to relieve the innocent from unnecessary trial trauma, professionally and personally, and to preserve the court’s finite resources for genuine cases.
In the words of an old maxim of criminal justice:
“Where there is no evidence, there is no case; where there is no case, there must be no trial.”
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8. When Early Acquittal Is Most Appropriate
Courts commonly invoke 249-A/265-K where:
• Essential elements of the offence are absent even on admitted facts.
• Allegations are vague, omnibus, or driven by mala fide.
• Investigation yields no supporting evidence.
• Case is civil in nature, given criminal colour.
• Continuation would amount to abuse of process.
These situations are precisely what the legislature intended to address.
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Conclusion
The power to acquit at any stage is neither extraordinary nor exceptional—it is a central part of the criminal trial architecture. It ensures fairness, guards against arbitrary prosecutions, and prevents courts from being overburdened by futile trials.
For the Magistracy and the Sessions Courts, these provisions are not optional luxuries but indispensable tools to:
• protect liberty,
• reduce backlog,
• uphold due process, and
• preserve the integrity of criminal justice.
The real test of judicial prudence lies not only in convicting the guilty but equally in relieving the innocent from the ordeal of an unwarranted trial.