G. Mohandas vs The State of Kerala & Ors.- Criminal Appeal

In G. Mohandas vs The State of Kerala, the Supreme Court upheld the continuation of criminal proceedings against a private building owner accused of conspiring with municipal officials to construct a four-storey commercial building in a prohibited zone under the guise of renovation. Despite obtaining a renovation permit, Mohandas demolished the old building and constructed a new one in violation of rules. The Court held that the act was part of a calculated conspiracy involving misuse of permits and deliberate defiance of stop memos. It dismissed Mohandas’s appeal to quash proceedings and emphasized that regularisation does not erase criminality.

Download Supreme Court Judgment PDF: G. Mohandas vs The State of Kerala & Ors.


I. Case Identification & Vitals

1. Court: Supreme Court of India
2. Case Title: G. Mohandas vs The State of Kerala & Ors.
3. Document Type and Date of Judgment: Judgment, July 15, 2025
4. Case Number: Criminal Appeal No. ___ of 2025 [Arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 1694 of 2024]
5. SCR Citation: NA
6. Neutral Citation: 2025 INSC 854
7. Disposal Nature: Appeal Dismissed
8. Case Type: Criminal Appeal
9. Law Applicable: Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988; Indian Penal Code (Section 120B); Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973; Kerala Municipality Building Rules, 1999
10. Bench:

  1. Hon’ble Justice Vikram Nath
  2. Hon’ble Justice Sandeep Mehta

11. Judgment Authored by:

  • Hon’ble Justice Sandeep Mehta*

II. Summaries & Core Issues

12. Headnote: (Drafted)
In G. Mohandas vs The State of Kerala, the Supreme Court upheld the continuation of criminal proceedings against a private building owner accused of conspiring with municipal officials to construct a four-storey commercial building in a prohibited zone under the guise of renovation. Despite obtaining a renovation permit, Mohandas demolished the old building and constructed a new one in violation of rules. The Court held that the act was part of a calculated conspiracy involving misuse of permits and deliberate defiance of stop memos. It dismissed Mohandas’s appeal to quash proceedings and emphasized that regularisation does not erase criminality.

13. Short Summary:
The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal of a builder who constructed an illegal commercial building in a non-commercial zone under the garb of renovation and upheld prosecution under corruption and conspiracy laws.

14. Issue for Consideration:

  1. Was the FIR and chargesheet against the appellant liable to be quashed?
  2. Does regularisation of illegal construction erase the element of criminality?
  3. Was the accused acting in conspiracy with public officials to misuse renovation permits?

III. Procedural & Factual Background

15. Case Start Date: March 19, 2009 (Date of FIR)
16. Case Arising From:
Appeal against High Court’s refusal to quash FIR and proceedings for construction of a commercial building in violation of building rules.

17. Background and Facts:
G. Mohandas, building owner, was accused of conspiring with Municipal Corporation officials to secure a renovation permit, which was misused to build a four-storey commercial structure in a prohibited zone in Thiruvananthapuram. A vigilance probe revealed that permits were misused and building laws violated. The prosecution alleged conspiracy, forgery, and abuse of power. Mohandas claimed the old building collapsed due to rain and he was only reconstructing it in good faith.

18. Timeline:

  • Jan 5, 2007: Vigilance surprise inspection
  • Mar 19, 2009: FIR registered (VC No. 3/2009)
  • Jan 7, 2021: High Court quashes case against architect (A7)
  • Jan 16, 2024: High Court dismisses Mohandas’s petition to quash FIR
  • July 15, 2025: Supreme Court dismisses appeal and upholds charges

19. Parties Involved:

  • Appellant: G. Mohandas
  • Respondents: State of Kerala & Vigilance Bureau Officials

20. Procedural History:

  • FIR and charge sheet filed against officials, Mohandas (A6), and architect (A7)
  • Architect’s case quashed by High Court due to lack of criminal intent
  • Mohandas’s petition to quash dismissed by High Court
  • Supreme Court dismissed criminal appeal

IV. Legal Analysis & Arguments

21. Issues Framed: (a) Whether criminality persists after regularisation application
(b) Whether conspiracy existed between private party and public officials

22. Areas of Debate:

  1. Can illegal construction be excused by post-facto regularisation?
  2. Does the act of obtaining unnecessary permits indicate mens rea?

23. Cases Cited by Petitioner: NA

24. Cases Cited by Respondent: NA

25. Acts/Rules/Orders Referred:

  • Kerala Municipality Building Rules, 1999 (Rules 5(1), 11(3), 144(1))
  • Prevention of Corruption Act: Sections 13(1)(d), 13(2)
  • Indian Penal Code: Section 120B
  • Code of Criminal Procedure: Sections 173(2), 239, 482

26. Acts/Rules/Orders Governing the Case: Kerala Municipality Building Rules, Prevention of Corruption Act, IPC, CrPC

27. Literature Citation: NA

28. Appearances for Parties:

  • Appellant: Shri R. Basant, Senior Advocate
  • Respondents: Shri P.V. Dinesh, Senior Counsel for the State

29. Prayer: Appellant sought quashing of FIR and criminal proceedings

30. Evidence & Findings:

  1. Permit not required for renovations, yet was fraudulently obtained
  2. Appellant continued illegal construction after receiving stop memo
  3. Zone was non-commercial; permit misuse shown
  4. Attempted post-facto regularisation unsupported by law

31. Petitioner/Appellant Arguments:

  1. Building collapsed naturally and was rebuilt innocently
  2. No element of conspiracy; architect was let off
  3. Application for regularisation implies no mens rea

32. Respondent/Defendant Arguments:

  1. Conspiracy to misuse permit clearly proven
  2. Stop memo ignored; construction continued willfully
  3. Architect’s discharge irrelevant as he was not a conspirator

V. Judgment & Conclusion

33. Ratio Decidendi:

  1. Illegal acts done in connivance with public servants are prosecutable
  2. Regularisation cannot whitewash criminal conspiracy
  3. High Court rightly refused quashing under Section 482 CrPC

34. Final Decision: Appeal dismissed. Criminal proceedings against G. Mohandas to continue. Authorities to proceed against illegal construction uninfluenced by extraneous factors.

35. Legal Jargons and Maxims:

  • Mens rea: Guilty mind; essential to criminal liability
  • Regularisation: Process of approving unauthorized work post-construction, not a defence to criminality

36. Exhibits:

  • FIR VC No. 3/2009
  • Permit under Kerala Building Rules (Appendix C)
  • Stop Memo dated Nov 27, 2006

VI. Key Learnings for Law Students and Legal Professionals

  1. This case reinforces that no permit is required for renovations under the Rules, and misuse of such permits amounts to conspiracy when done with dishonest intent. It clarifies that regularisation does not absolve criminal liability, especially when acts are committed in defiance of stop orders.

Important Keywords for the Judgment of G. Mohandas vs The State of Kerala

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