Police Refusing to Register Complaint India

Police refusing to register complaint India SP Magistrate High Court remedy - 19 Law Chambers Visakhapatnam

Police Refusing to Register Complaint India: What You Can Do

By Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran | 19 Law Chambers, Visakhapatnam | Criminal Law

Police refusal to register complaints particularly for FIRs in cognizable offences is one of the most common grievances of citizens across Andhra Pradesh. Furthermore, police often refuse to register complaints in cases involving: powerful accused persons, land mafia, domestic violence, and online fraud precisely the cases where action is most needed. However, Indian law provides multiple escalating remedies against non-cooperative police. Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran at 19 Law Chambers has successfully compelled FIR registration for clients across Andhra Pradesh through every available legal mechanism.

Your Legal Right to FIR Registration — Absolute and Non-Negotiable

Section 154 CrPC (now Section 173 BNSS 2023) places an absolute obligation on police to register an FIR for every cognizable offence reported to them. Specifically, the Supreme Court in Lalita Kumari v. Government of UP (2013) settled this definitively holding that registration of FIR is mandatory upon receipt of information about a cognizable offence. Furthermore, the Court specifically directed that no preliminary inquiry is required before registering FIR for cognizable offences. Consequently, any police officer who refuses to register your FIR for a cognizable offence is acting illegally — and is personally liable for the refusal.

Why Police Refuse Complaints — And Why It Is Illegal

Police refuse complaints for several reasons. Specifically: the accused is influential or well-connected, the matter seems complex, they believe it is a civil dispute, jurisdictional concerns claiming the crime occurred elsewhere, political influence, and corruption. However, all of these reasons are legally invalid. Moreover, the Supreme Court specifically addressed each of these excuses in Lalita Kumari none justify FIR refusal for cognizable offences. Consequently, police inaction for any of these reasons is challengeable through multiple legal mechanisms.

Five Escalating Remedies — Use Them Systematically

Remedy 1 — Written Complaint to Station House Officer (SHO): If the duty officer refuses to register the complaint escalate to the Station House Officer immediately. Specifically, write a formal application addressed to the SHO requesting FIR registration and get it acknowledged with date and time. Furthermore, this creates a written record of the refusal that is essential for all subsequent escalation. Consequently, the SHO who refuses to register a cognizable offence FIR is personally violating Section 154 CrPC.

Remedy 2 — Send Complaint to Superintendent of Police (SP) by RPAD: Under Section 154(3) CrPC if the officer in charge refuses to register the FIR — the complainant can send the substance of the information to the Superintendent of Police in writing. Specifically, send by Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due. Furthermore, the SP must either investigate the case personally or direct a subordinate officer to investigate and register FIR. Moreover, the SP who ignores this written complaint faces departmental and legal action. Consequently, SP complaints with documented police refusal have a high success rate.

Remedy 3 — Private Complaint Before Judicial Magistrate Under Section 156(3) CrPC: File a private complaint before the Judicial Magistrate under Section 156(3) CrPC — specifically requesting the Magistrate to direct police to register FIR and investigate. Furthermore, the Magistrate can review the complaint and if satisfied that it discloses a cognizable offence issue a specific order to police to register the FIR. Moreover, the Magistrate’s order is binding on police. Consequently, Section 156(3) complaints are among the most effective mechanisms because Magistrate orders carry immediate legal compulsion.

Remedy 4 — Writ Petition Before High Court of Andhra Pradesh: For serious cases where police continue to refuse despite SP and Magistrate approaches file a Writ Petition before the High Court of AP seeking: a mandamus directing police to register the FIR, protection from police retaliation for filing complaints, and any other consequential relief. Furthermore, High Court intervention brings the highest legal pressure — police almost never refuse FIR registration after a High Court direction. Read: Writ Petition High Court AP.

Remedy 5 — AP Human Rights Commission Complaint: File a complaint with the Andhra Pradesh Human Rights Commission specifically citing the police refusal as a violation of your fundamental rights under Articles 19 and 21 of the Constitution. Furthermore, the APHRC has powers to investigate, direct action, and recommend prosecution of delinquent officers. Consequently, APHRC complaints create additional public accountability pressure on the police department.

How to File an Effective Section 156(3) Complaint

A well-drafted Section 156(3) complaint significantly increases chances of success. Specifically, the complaint should: clearly describe the cognizable offence alleged — the specific IPC/BNS section and the facts constituting the offence, attach evidence supporting the offence photographs, videos, WhatsApp messages, bank records, and state specifically that you reported to the police station on a specific date and time, and were refused FIR registration. Furthermore, attach the written acknowledgement of your police station visit as exhibit. Consequently, the Magistrate can immediately assess both the offence disclosed and the police refusal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Police told me this is a civil dispute and they cannot register an FIR. Is this correct?
Only partially — police cannot refuse FIR if the facts disclose a cognizable offence, even if the dispute also has civil dimensions. Specifically, property fraud, breach of trust, and cheating all have both civil and criminal dimensions — but the criminal dimension requires FIR registration. Furthermore, approach the Magistrate with a Section 156(3) complaint specifically articulating the criminal offence clearly. Consequently, most “civil matter” refusals are overturned by Magistrate directions. Read: Cheating Case India Section 420.

Q: Police registered a complaint but are not investigating for 6 months. What can I do?
File a private complaint before the Magistrate under Section 156(3) specifically for directing investigation, not just FIR registration. Furthermore, apply for a court-supervised investigation. Moreover, file a Writ Petition before the High Court if the investigation inaction continues. Consequently, court supervision of police investigation creates regular accountability reporting requirements. Read: Police Harassment Complaint India.

Q: I am an SC/ST community member and police refused my SC/ST Act complaint. What are the specific consequences for the officer?
Specifically for SC/ST Act complaints refusal to register is punishable under Section 4 of the SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act which makes it an offence for public servants to fail to perform their duty towards SC/ST persons. Furthermore, the officer faces personal prosecution. Read: Caste Discrimination Complaint India. Free legal aid: NALSA — nalsa.gov.in | Free Legal Aid in AP.

Also read: How to File FIR India | Police Arrest Rights India | Best Criminal Lawyers Vizag


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