Thursday, 12 March 2026

BNSS vs CrPC: 5 Critical Procedural Changes Every Lawyer Must Master in 2026

BNSS vs CrPC — 5 Critical Procedural Changes (Deep Dive Thread)

Published: March 12, 2026, 6:30 PM IST    |    Category: Comprehensive Guides | Criminal Procedure

Tags: BNSS 2023, CrPC 1973, Criminal Procedure, Bail, Arrest, Remand, Section 35 BNSS

BNSS vs CrPC: 5 Critical Procedural Changes Every Lawyer Must Master in 2026

The Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023, replaced the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973 with effect from July 1, 2024. More than a year into the transition, courts across India continue to see procedural errors by practitioners who have not fully internalised the new framework. This deep dive covers the five most critical changes that directly affect daily criminal practice.

Change 1: Arrest Procedure — Section 35 BNSS vs Section 41 CrPC

This is the most practically significant change for any criminal lawyer.

Aspect

CrPC Section 41

BNSS Section 35

Threshold

Offence punishable with up to 7 years

Offence punishable with up to 7 years — same

Notice Requirement

Arrest was default — notice was discretionary

Notice is MANDATORY before arrest

Conditions for Arrest

Police could arrest without conditions

Must satisfy: accused won't cooperate / tampering / flight risk / repeat offence risk

Written Reasons

Not mandatory

Mandatory — must be recorded in writing

Magistrate Oversight

Within 24 hours if arrested

If notice issued, no immediate magistrate oversight

Section 35 BNSS vs Section 41 CrPC — Arrest Procedure


The practical impact: In offences punishable up to 7 years, police CANNOT directly arrest without first issuing a notice and justifying why the conditions for arrest are met. This is a fundamental shift from arrest-first to notice-first.

Change 2: Remand Timelines — Section 187 BNSS vs Section 167 CrPC

Aspect

CrPC Section 167

BNSS Section 187

Police Custody (Total)

15 days maximum

15 days — but can be split across 40/60 day period

First 40 Days

Custody must be completed within 15 days

First 15 days police custody within first 40 days

Subsequent Custody

Not expressly allowed after 15 days

Additional police custody possible with fresh application

Default Bail

After 60 days (3-yr+) / 90 days (life/death)

After 60 days / 90 days — same threshold

Transit Remand

No specific provision

Section 56 — specific transit remand framework

Section 187 BNSS vs Section 167 CrPC — Remand


Change 3: Bail Conditions — Section 480 BNSS vs Section 436A CrPC

Section 480 BNSS introduces a significant change for undertrial prisoners. Where an undertrial has served half the maximum sentence for the offence (one-third for first-time offenders), they are entitled to bail — subject to the Court's discretion for serious offences. The critical difference is that the BNSS expressly adds a one-third rule for first-time offenders, which CrPC did not separately provide.

  • CrPC Section 436A: Half the maximum sentence = entitled to bail
  • BNSS Section 480: One-third for first-time offenders / half for repeat offenders
  • Exception: Offences punishable with death remain excluded from this entitlement

Change 4: Zero FIR — Section 173 BNSS (New Provision)

BNSS has codified the Zero FIR concept, which the Supreme Court had recognised in Lalita Kumari v. Government of UP. Under Section 173 BNSS, any police station must register an FIR for a cognisable offence regardless of territorial jurisdiction. The Zero FIR must then be transferred to the jurisdictionally competent police station within 15 days.

  • No police station can refuse to register an FIR on grounds of jurisdiction
  • Zero FIR must be transferred within 15 days to proper jurisdiction
  • Failure to register = contempt of the codified statutory duty (previously only judicial direction)

Change 5: Trial Timelines — Section 346 BNSS (New Mandate)

BNSS introduces mandatory trial timelines that CrPC did not prescribe. Section 346 BNSS requires that judgments in sessions trials be delivered within 45 days of completion of arguments, extendable to 90 days with written reasons. This statutory mandate addresses India's chronic problem of reserved judgments remaining undecided for years.

  • Judgment must be pronounced within 45 days of arguments
  • Extension to 90 days requires written reasons on record
  • This is a judicially enforceable mandate — parties can move the court for compliance

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SARFAESI Act 2026: Key DRAT Judgments — What Property Owners and Borrowers Must Know

 SARFAESI Act 2026 — DRAT Key Judgments & Property Owners' Rights

Published: March 12, 2026    |    Category: Property Law | Banking Law | SARFAESI Act

Tags: SARFAESI Act, DRAT 2026, Debt Recovery, Property Law India, Bank Enforcement, DRT

SARFAESI Act 2026: Key DRAT Judgments — What Property Owners and Borrowers Must Know

The Debt Recovery Appellate Tribunal (DRAT) has issued a series of important judgments in February 2026 that clarify the rights of both banks and borrowers under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (SARFAESI Act). These rulings have significant implications for property owners, borrowers, and financial institutions dealing with non-performing assets (NPAs) in India.

What Is the SARFAESI Act?

The SARFAESI Act, 2002 empowers banks and financial institutions to enforce security interests — such as mortgages and pledges — without court intervention when a borrower defaults. This means a bank can take possession of your mortgaged property, sell it through auction, and recover its dues without first obtaining a court decree.

The key enforcement mechanism works as follows:

  1. Bank issues Section 13(2) Notice — Demand notice to borrower to repay within 60 days
  2. Section 13(4) Action — If default continues, bank takes symbolic/physical possession of property
  3. Section 14 Application — Bank applies to District Magistrate for police assistance in taking possession
  4. Auction/Sale — Bank sells the secured asset to recover dues
  5. Borrower's Remedy — Challenge before Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) under Section 17

Key DRAT February 2026 Rulings

Ruling 1: Technical Defects Do Not Invalidate SARFAESI Proceedings

DRAT February 2026 has confirmed that technical defects in SARFAESI proceedings — such as minor procedural irregularities in notices — do not automatically render the entire enforcement action void. The borrower must demonstrate actual prejudice caused by the technical defect. Courts will not quash SARFAESI proceedings for mere technical violations where the borrower has had a fair opportunity to respond and contest.

Ruling 2: Mortgage Covers All Scheduled Properties

Where a mortgage deed lists multiple properties as security, DRAT has confirmed that the bank's enforcement action extends to all scheduled properties, not merely the primary mortgaged asset. Borrowers cannot argue that enforcement should be limited to one property when the mortgage expressly covers others.

Ruling 3: Burden of Proof on Borrower to Show Prejudice

DRAT has clarified that in appeals challenging SARFAESI action, the burden is on the borrower to substantiate their claims and demonstrate actual prejudice. Unverified allegations and bare denials are insufficient. This is a significant ruling that raises the standard of proof required for borrowers seeking to stay or reverse bank enforcement action.

Supreme Court Context: Civil Court Jurisdiction

A related Supreme Court ruling from 2025 remains critical reading for SARFAESI practitioners. The Supreme Court held that civil courts retain jurisdiction to adjudicate the validity of sale deeds and mortgage deeds even when related to SARFAESI enforcement action. Section 34 of the SARFAESI Act (which bars civil court jurisdiction) does not extend to challenges about the validity of documents executed before SARFAESI proceedings were invoked.

This means:

  • If you challenge the validity of the original mortgage deed itself — a borrower can approach a civil court
  • If you challenge the bank's enforcement action under SARFAESI — you must go to the DRT
  • The DRT's powers are limited to the enforcement action; they cannot determine whether the underlying mortgage was validly created

Practical Guide: If Your Property Is Under SARFAESI Action

Step

Action

Timeline

1

Receive Section 13(2) Notice — Read carefully, note the 60-day deadline

Day 0

2

Respond in writing to the bank with your representation under Section 13(3A)

Within 60 days

3

If bank proceeds, challenge before DRT under Section 17

Within 45 days of bank action

4

Apply for stay of auction before DRT simultaneously

Urgent — before auction date

5

If DRT dismisses, appeal to DRAT within 30 days

30 days of DRT order

6

If mortgage deed itself is invalid — file civil suit simultaneously

Any time

SARFAESI Challenge Timeline for Borrowers


Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Criminal Proceedings Cannot Be Used to Settle Civil Scores in Property Deals": P&H HC Quashes FIR — Full Analysis

 FIR Abuse in Property Disputes — P&H HC Quashes Criminal Case

Published: March 12, 2026  |    Category: High Court Judgments | Property Law | Criminal Procedure

Tags: P&H High Court, FIR Quash, Property Dispute, Criminal Proceedings Civil Scores, Section 482 BNSS

"Criminal Proceedings Cannot Be Used to Settle Civil Scores in Property Deals": P&H HC Quashes FIR — Full Analysis

In a strongly worded judgment that has significant implications for property litigation in India, the Punjab and Haryana High Court has quashed an FIR for cheating and forgery arising out of a land agreement dispute, holding that the criminal proceedings were instituted to escape civil liability and amounted to a gross abuse of the criminal process. Justice H.S. Grewal observed: "Criminal proceedings cannot be used to settle civil scores in property deals."

The Core Legal Problem: Criminalisation of Civil Disputes

One of the most persistent problems in Indian courts is the strategic filing of criminal FIRs in what are essentially civil disputes. A party who loses or fears losing a civil case — particularly in property transactions — will file a criminal complaint alleging cheating (Section 318 BNS / Section 420 IPC) or forgery (Section 336 BNS / Section 467 IPC) as a pressure tactic.

The purpose of such FIRs is almost never genuine criminal prosecution. It is to:

  • Harass the opposite party into settling on unfavourable civil terms
  • Create fear of arrest and custodial interrogation as leverage
  • Drain the opposite party's resources through prolonged criminal litigation
  • Obtain police investigation as a free discovery mechanism for the civil case
  • Prevent the opposite party from dealing with the property during investigation

Facts of the Case

The case before Justice H.S. Grewal involved a land agreement to sell. The complainant had entered into an agreement to sell with the petitioners but the civil transaction went sour — either the sale did not complete, or there was a dispute about its terms, or the parties disagreed about performance. Rather than filing a civil suit for specific performance or damages, the complainant filed a criminal complaint alleging that the agreement to sell was a forged document and that the petitioners had cheated him.

The petitioners filed a petition under Section 528 BNSS (equivalent to Section 482 CrPC) before the Punjab and Haryana High Court seeking quashing of the FIR.

The Court's Reasoning — Justice H.S. Grewal

1. Agreement to Sell Was a Genuine Document

The Court found that "prima facie the allegations against the petitioners are not made out as the agreement to sell in question is a genuine document." Where the document at the heart of the criminal complaint is genuine, the complaint of forgery collapses entirely. A genuine agreement to sell cannot be the basis of a forgery charge.

2. Dispute Is Essentially Civil in Nature

Justice Grewal applied the well-established principle that courts must look at the substance of the complaint, not its label. If the core of the dispute is about the enforceability of a civil contract — whether a sale should proceed, whether payment was made, whether terms were fulfilled — it is a civil matter. Dressing it in the language of criminal cheating or forgery does not change its essential character.

3. Criminal Process Is Being Abused

The Court held that the criminal case was lodged to escape civil liability and amounted to an abuse of the criminal process. This is a finding of bad faith — that the complainant was not genuinely aggrieved by any criminal act, but was using the FIR as a weapon to avoid performing his civil obligations or to extract a settlement.

The Legal Test: When Can an FIR in Property Disputes Be Quashed?

The Supreme Court and various High Courts have developed a clear legal test for quashing FIRs in property and commercial disputes. The Court will quash where:

  1. The dispute is essentially civil in nature — there is no independent criminal act beyond the breach of contract or property transaction
  2. The FIR is filed as an afterthought after the civil dispute has arisen — suggesting it is motivated by the civil conflict
  3. The allegations do not disclose a prima facie offence even if taken at face value
  4. The documents central to the criminal complaint are genuine, making forgery claims baseless
  5. There is evidence that the criminal process is being used as a pressure tactic

Practical Implications for Property Lawyers

This judgment provides important guidance for advocates handling property matters:

  • If your client receives an FIR arising from a property dispute, immediately evaluate whether a Section 528 BNSS petition for quashing is maintainable
  • Document the timeline of events — if the FIR follows the filing of civil proceedings, this supports the argument of abuse of process
  • Gather evidence of the genuineness of the transaction documents — a genuine agreement to sell destroys a forgery charge
  • Cite P&H HC (Justice H.S. Grewal) and the Supreme Court's landmark ruling in Bhajan Lal v. State of Haryana on categories of cases fit for quashing
  • Consider filing for anticipatory bail simultaneously with the quashing petition to protect your client from arrest during the pendency of the petition