Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJESH BAJAJ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE NCT OF DELHI AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/03/1999
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri
JUDGMENT:
Thomas J.
Leave granted.
Appellant lodged an FIR with the police for the offence under
Section 420, Indian Penal Code. A Division Bench of the Delhi
High Court quashed the FIR on the premise that the complaint did
not disclose the offence. The Division Bench reminded themselves
that jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution or
Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure should be
exercised sparingly and with circumspection for quashing
criminal proceedings. Nevertheless, learned judges found that
the case on hand could not pass the test laid down by this Court
in State of Haryana vs. Bhajan Lal [1992 Suppl.(1) SCC 335].
The appellant is obviously aggrieved by the aforesaid course of
action adopted by the High Court and hence he filed the special
leave petition. In the complaint filed by the appellant before
the police, on the strength of which the FIR was prepared, the
following averments, inter alia, were made. Appellant belongs to
a company (M/s Passion Apparel Private Limited) which
manufactures and exports Readymade garments. On 15.11.1994 fifth
respondent (Gagan Kishore Srivastava) Managing Director of M/s
Avren Junge Mode Gumbh Haus Der Model approached the complainant
for purchase of Readymade garments of various kinds and induced
the appellant to believe that 5th respondent would pay the price
of the said goods on receiving the invoice. Such payment was
promised to be made within fifteen days from the date of invoice
of the goods which complainant would despatch to Germany.
Appellant believed the aforesaid representation as true and on
that belief he despatched goods worth 4,46,597.25 D.M. (Deutsch
Marks). In March/April 1995 respondent on receipt of 37
different invoices got the goods released and sold them to
others. But the respondent paid only a sum of 1,15,194 D.M.
Appellant further alleged in the complaint that respondent
induced him to believe that he is a genuine dealer, but actually
his intentions were not clear.
Appellant also mentioned in the complaint that one of the
representatives of appellants company went to Germany in October
1995 for realising the amount on the strength of an understanding
reached between them that respondent would pay 2,00,000 D.M. in
lieu of the remaining part of the price. However, the respondent
did not honour even that subsequent understanding.
Appellant further mentioned in the complaint that he came to know
later about the modus operandi which respondent adopted in regard
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to certain other manufacturers who too were duped by the
respondent to the tune of rupees ten crores. Learned Judges of
the High Court have put forward three premises for quashing the
FIR. First is that the complaint did not disclose commission of
any offence of cheating punishable under Section 420 of the
Indian penal Code. Second is that there is nothing in the
complaint to suggest that the petitioner had dishonest or
fraudulent intention at the time the respondent exported goods
worth 4,46,597.25 D.M. by 37 different invoices. There is also
nothing to indicate that the respondent, by deceiving the
complainant, induced him to export goods worth 4,48,597.25 D.M.
The third is that on the face of the allegations contained in the
complaint it is purely a commercial transaction which in a
nut-shell is that the seller did not pay the balance amount of
the goods received by him as per his assurance.
After quoting Section 415 of IPC learned judges proceeded to
consider the main elements of the offence in the following lines:
"A bare reading of the definition of cheating would suggest that
there are two elements thereof, namely, deception and dishonest
intention to do or omit to do something. In order to bring a
case within the first part of Section 415, it is essential, in
the first place, that the person, who delivers the property
should have been deceived before he makes the delivery; and in
the second place that he should have been induced to do so
fraudulently or dishonestly. Where property is fraudulently or
dishonestly obtained, Section 415 would bring the said act within
the ambit of cheating provided the property is to be obtained by
deception."
It was thereafter that the High Court scanned the complaint and
found out that there is nothing in the complaint to suggest that
the accused had dishonest or fraudulent intention at the time of
export of goods.
It is not necessary that a complainant should verbatim reproduce
in the body of his complaint all the ingredients of the offence
he is alleging. Nor is it necessary that the complainant should
state in so many words that the intention of the accused was
dishonest or fraudulent. Splitting up of the definition into
different components of the offence to make a meticulous
scrutiny, whether all the ingredients have been precisely spelled
out in the complaint, is not the need at this stage. If factual
foundation for the offence has been laid in the complaint the
court should not hasten to quash criminal proceedings during
investigation stage merely on the premise that one or two
ingredients have not been stated with details. For quashing an
FIR (a step which is permitted only in extremely rare cases) the
information in the complaint must be so bereft of even the basic
facts which are absolutely necessary for making out the offence.
In State of Haryana vs. Bhajan Lal (supra) this Court laid down
the premise on which the FIR can be quashed in rare cases. The
following observations made in the aforesaid decisions are a
sound reminder:
"We also give a note of caution to the effect that the power of
quashing a criminal proceeding should be exercised very sparingly
and with circumspection and that too in the rarest of rare cases;
that the court will not be justified in embarking upon an enquiry
as to the reliability or genuineness or otherwise of the
allegations made in the FIR or the complaint and that the
extraordinary or inherent powers do not confer an arbitrary
jurisdiction on the court to act according to its whim or
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caprice."
It may be that the facts narrated in the present complaint would
as well reveal a commercial transaction or money transaction.
But that is hardly a reason for holding that the offence of
cheating would elude from such a transaction. In fact, many a
cheatings were committed in the course of commercial and also
money transactions. One of the illustrations set out under
Section 415 of the Indian Penal Code (illustrations f) is
worthy of notice now:
"(f) A intentionally deceives Z into a belief that A means to
repay any money that Z may lend to him and thereby dishonestly
induces Z to lend him money, A not intending to repay it. A
cheats."
The crux of the postulate is the intention of the person who
induces the victim of his representation and not the nature of
the transaction which would become decisive in discerning whether
there was commission of offence or not. The complainant has
stated in the body of the complaint that he was induced to
believe that respondent would honour payment on receipt of
invoices, and that the complainant realised later that the
intentions of the respondent were not clear. He also mentioned
that respondent after receiving the goods have sold them to
others and still he did not pay the money. Such averments would
prima facie make out a case for investigation by the authorities.
The High Court seems to have adopted a strictly hyper-technical
approach and sieved the complaint through a cullendar of finest
gauzes for testing the ingredients under Section 415 , IPC. Such
an endeavour may be justified during trial, but certainly not
during the stage of investigation. At any rate, it is too
premature a stage for the High Court to step in and stall the
investigation by declaring that it is a commercial transaction
simplicitor wherein no semblance of criminal offence is involved.
The appellant is, therefore, right in contending that the FIR
should not have been quashed in this case and the investigation
should have been allowed to proceed.
We, therefore, allow this appeal and set aside the impugned
order.