Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
BASIR-UL-HUQ AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL.NUR-UL-HUDAV.THE STATE OF WEST BENG
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1953
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BOSE, VIVIAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 293 1953 SCR 836
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1958 SC 124 (5)
R 1962 SC 876 (15)
R 1966 SC 523 (5)
APR 1966 SC1775 (5)
RF 1971 SC1708 (13)
RF 1971 SC1935 (8)
ACT:
Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, ss. 190,195-Indian Penal
Code, 1860, ss. 182, 297, 500-Report to police alleging X
had killed his mother - Trespass with police on cremation
ground-Report found false-Complaint by X for trespass and
defamation-Maintainability-Jurisdiction to take cognizance
of offence-Whether barred by s. 195, Criminal Procedure
Code.
837
HEADNOTE:
The accused lodged information at a police station that X
had beaten and throttled his mother to death and when the
funeral pyre was in flames he entered the cremation ground
with the police. The dead body was examined and the
complaint was found to be false. On the complaint of X, the
accused was charged with offences under section 297, Indian
Penal Code (trespass to wound religious feelings) and
section 500 Indian Penal Code (defamation). It was
contended that, as the complaint disclosed offences under
sections 182 and 211, Indian Penal Code, the Court could not
take cognizance of the case except on a complaint by the
proper authority under section 195, Criminal Procedure Code:
Held, (i) that the facts which constituted the offence
tinder section 297 were distinct from those which
constituted an offence under section 182, as the act of
trespass was alleged to have been committed after the making
of the false report, so section 195 was no bar to the trial
of the charge under section 297.
(ii)As regards the charge under section 500, where the
allegations made in a false report disclose two distinct
offences, one against a public servant and the other against
a private individual, the latter is not debarred by the
provisions of section 195, Criminal Procedure Code, from
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
seeking redress for the offence committed against him.
Satish Chandra Chakravarti v. Ram Dayal De (24 C.W.N. 982);
Hori Ram Singh v. The Crown [1939] F.C.R. 139 referred to.
Section 195 cannot however be evaded by the device of charg-
ing a person with an offence to which that section does not
apply and then convicting him of an offence to which it
does, on the ground that the latter offence is a minor one
of the same character, or by describing the offence as one
punishable under some other section of the Indian Penal
Code, though in truth and substance the offence falls in the
category of sections mentioned in section 195, Criminal
Procedure Code.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 26
and 27 of 1952. Appeals under Article 134 (1) (c) of the
Constitution of India from the Order dated 4th February,
1952, of the Calcutta High Court (CHAKRAVARTTI and SINHA
JJ.) in Criminal Revision Nos. 102 and 103 of 1952.
S.C. Das Gupta and A.K. Dutt for the appellants.
B. Sen for the respondent.
Arun Kumar Datta for the complainant.
1953, April 10.The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MAHAJAN J.
838
MAHAJAN J.--These two appeals arise in the following
circumstances: One Mokshadamoyee Dassi, mother of Dhirendra
Nath Bera, died some time in the evening of the 3rd
September, 1949. At the moment of her death Dhirendra Nath
was not present at the house. On his return at, about 8-30
p.m. he along with some other persons took the dead body to
the cremation ground. It appears that Nurul Huda, the
appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 27 of, 1952, had lodged
information at the police station to the effect that
Dhirendra Nath had beaten and throttled his mother to death.
When the funeral pyre was in flames, Nurul Ruda along with
the appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 26 of 1952 and
accompanied by the sub-inspector of police arrived at the
cremation ground. The appellants pointed out the dead body
and told the sub-inspector that the complainant had killed
his mother by throttling her and that there were marks of
injury on the body which they could show to the sub-
Inspector if he caused the body to be brought down from the
pyre. At their suggestion the fire was extinguished and the
dead body was taken down from the pyre in spite of the
protests from the complainant. On an examination of the
dead body it was found that there were no marks of injury
on. it and the appellants were unable to point out any such
marks. The body was however sent for postmortem examination
which was held on 5th September, 1949, but no injury was
found on the person of the deceased. The sub-inspector
after investigation reached the conclusion that a false
complaint had been made against Dhirendra Nath.
On the 24th September, 1949, Dhirendra Nath filed a petition
of complaint in the Court of the Sub-Divisional Officer of
Uluberia in the district of Howrali against the appellants
in both the cases and one Sanwaral Huq. It was alleged in
the complaint that the information given by Nurul Huda to
the police was false, that Nurul Huda and the other
appellants had made imputations mala fide out of enmity
against him with the intention of harming his reputation and
that to wound his religious feelings they had trespassed on
839
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
the cremation ground and caused the dead body to be taken
out by making false imputations.
The appellants were tried before Shri R. Ray Choudhury,
Magistrate 1st class, Uluberia, on charges under sections
297 and 500, Indian Penal Code. The charges fraimed against
them were in these terms :-
"(1) That you on or about the 17th day of Bhadra, 1356 B.S.
at Panshila, P. S. Shyampur, with the intention of wounding
the religious feelings of P. W. 1, Dhirendra Nath Bera, the
complainant, committed trespass upon the cremation ground
where the funeral rites of the mother of the complainant
were being performed and thereby committed an offence
punishable under section 297, Indian Penal Code, and within
my cognizance;
(2) That you oil or about the 17th day of Bhadra, 1356 B.
S. at Panshila, P. S. Shyampur, defamed P. W. 1, Dhirendra
Nath Bera, the complainant, by making imputation to the
effect that he had killed his mother intending to harm, or
knowing or having reason to believe that such imputation
would harm the reputation of the complainant and thereby
committed an offence punishable under section 500, Indian
Penal Code, and within my cognizance."
None of these charges relates to the falsity of the report
made to the police or contains facts or allegations which
disclose an offence under section 182, Indian Penal Code.
The charge under section 297, Indian Penal Code, was a
distinct one and concerned an act of the accused committed
after the giving of the report. The charge under section
500 related to defamatory and libellous allegations
contained in the report itself.
It was contended on behalf of the defence that Nurul Huda
had lodged information with the police tinder a bona fide
belief created in his mind on the statement of one Asiram
Bibi and that none of the accused persons had entered the
cremation ground as alleged by the complainant,
840
The magistrate held the charges proved against all the
appellants and convicted each of them under sections 7 and
500, Indian Penal Code. Each of the appellants was awarded
three months’ rigorous imprisonment on the charge under
section 297 and each of them was sentenced to a fine of Rs.
100 on the charge under section 500.
The appellants went up in appeal to the Sessions Judge of
Howrah who by his order dated 31st July, 1,950, set aside
the convictions and sentences and acquitted them. He held
that on the facts stated in the complaint the only offence
that could be said to have been committed by the appellants
was one under section 182 or section 21 1, Indian Penal
Code, and that a court was not competent to take cognizance
of those offences except on a complaint by a proper
authority under the provisions of section 195, Criminal
Procedure Code. Against the acquittal order an application
in revision was preferred to the High Court. This petition
came up for hearing before a Bench of the High Court (K. C.
Das Gupta and P. N. Mookerjee JJ.). The learned judges
reached the conclusion that on the facts alleged in the
petition of complaint distinct offences under sections 182,
297 and 500, Indian Penal Code, had been disclosed. They
however referred for the decision of the Full Bench the
following question:-
"If the facts alleged in a petition of complaint, or in an
information received by the magistrate, on which a
magistrate can ordinarily take cognizance of an offence
under section 190, Criminal Procedure Code, disclose an
offence of which cognizance cannot be taken by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
magistrate because of the special provisions of section 195,
or 196, or 196-A, or 197, or 199, Criminal Procedure Code,
is the magistrate also debarred because of this from taking
cognizance of other offences disclosed by the facts alleged,
which are not in any way affected by the provisions of
section 195, or 1.96, or 196-A or 197 or 199, Criminal
Procedure Code."
The Full Bench answered the question referred in the
negative. In respect of the conviction under
841
section 297, Indian Penal Code, the learned Judges said that
there as nothing in sections 195 to 199, Criminal Procedure
Code, which could in any way bar the prosecution of the
appellants under that section, as it could in no way be said
that it arose out of the facts which would constitute an
offence under section 182, or section 211, Indian Penal
Code. On the other hand, it arose from an entirely
different set of facts, namely, the trespass by the opposite
parties in the burial ground and the removal of the corpse
from the lighted funeral pyre. With regard to the offence
under section 500, it was observed that though the
prosecution for defamation was based on the false
information given to a public officer, that circumstance,
however, was no bar for the prosecution of the appellants
under that section. In the result the application in
revision was allowed, the order of acquittal was set aside
and the sessions judge was directed to re-hear the appeal on
the merits.
After remand the appeal was heard on the merits and was
dismissed. The convictions and sentences passed by the
magistrate were confirmed. Against the order of the
sessions judge the appellants went up in revision to the
High Court but these applications were summarily dismissed.
The appellants thereupon applied to the High Court for a
certificate under article 134 (1) (c) of the Constitution
for leave to appeal to this Court. In the application the
order of the Full Bench dated 22nd June, 1951, was
challenged. This application was opposed on behalf of the
complainant on the ground that the interim order of the Pull
Bench not having, been appealed against could not be
challenged at that stage. Thus two substantial questions
were argued in the leave application, namely,
1.whether it was open to the accused to question the
correctness of the Full Bench decision, it not having been
appealed from when it was passed, and,
2.whether the point decided by the Full Bench in itself was
of sufficient importance to justify the granting of a
certificate under article 134(1)(c).
109
842
As the judgment of the Full Bench did not terminate the
proceedings but merely directed the appeal to be reheard, it
was held that the petitioners could not appeal from it at
that time and it was open to them to raise the point at this
stage. The second question was considered of sufficient
importance to justify the grant of leave and leave was
accordingly granted.
The learned counsel for the respondent raised a preliminary
objection in order to canvass the first question mentioned
above, while the learned counsel for the appellants
canvassed the question of the correctness of the decision of
the Full Bench on its merits. He contended that the
magistrate had no jurisdiction to take cognizance of the
complaint under section 500 and section 297, Indian Penal
Code, as the facts disclosed constituted an offence under
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
section 182 which offence could not be tried except on a
complaint by a public servant.
Section 195, Criminal Procedure Code, on which the question
raised is grounded, provides, inter alia, that no court
shall take cognizance of an offence punishable under
sections 172 to 188, Indian Penal Code, except on the
complaint in writing of the public servant concerned, or
some other public servant to whom he is subordinate. The
statute thus requires that without a complaint in writing of
the public servant concerned no prosecution for an of-fence
under section 182 can be taken cognizance of. It does not
further provide that if in the course of the commission of
that offence other distinct offences are committed, the
magistrate is debarred from taking cognizance in respect of
those offences as well. The allegations made in a complaint
may have a double aspect, that is, on the one hand these may
constitute an offence against the authority of the public
servant or public justice, and on the other hand, they may
also constitute the offence of defamation or some other
distinct offence. The section does not per se bar the
cognizance by the magistrate of that offence, even if no
action is taken by the public servant to whom the false
report has been made. It was however argued that if on the
same facts an
843
offence of which no cognizance can be taken under the
provisions of section 195 is disclosed and the same facts
disclose another offence as well which is outside the
purview of the section and prosecution for that other
offence is taken cognizance of without the requirements of
section 195 having been fulfilled, then the provisions of
that section would become nugatory and if such a course was
permitted those provisions will stand defeated. It was
further said that it is not permissible for the prosecution
to ignore the provisions of this section by describing the
offence as being punishable under some other section of the
Penal Code.
In our judgment, the contention raised by the learned
counsel for the appellants is without any substance so far
as the present case is concerned. The charge for the
offence under section 297, Indian Penal Code, could in no
circumstance, as pointed out by the High Court, be described
as falling within the purview of section 195, Criminal
Procedure Code. The act of trespass was alleged to have
been committed subsequent to the making of the false report
and all the ingredients of the offence that have been held
to have been established on the evidence concern the conduct
of the appellants during the post-report period. In these
circumstances, no serious contention could be raised that
the provisions of section 195 would stand defeated by the
magistrate having taken cognizance of the offence under that
section.
As regards the charge under section 500, Indian Penal Code,
it seems fairly clear both on principle and authority that
where the allegations made in a false report disclose two
distinct offences, one against the public servant and the
other against a private individual, that other is not
debarred by the provisions of section 195 from seeking
redress for the offence committed against him. Section 499,
Indian Penal Code, which mentions the ingredients of the
offence of defamation gives within defined limits immunity
to persons making depositions in court, but it is now well
settled that immunity is a qualified one and is not absolute
as it is in English law. Under section 198,
844
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
Criminal Procedure Code, a complaint in respect of an
offence under section 499, Indian Penal Code, can only be
initiated at the instance of the person defamed, in like
manner as cognizance for an offence under section 182 cannot
be taken except at the complaint of the public -servant
concerned. In view of these provisions there does not seem
in principle any warrant for the proposition that a
complaint under section 499 in such a situation cannot be
taken cognizance of unless two persons join in making it,
i.e., it can only be considered if both the public servant
and the person defamed join in making it, otherwise the
person defamed is without any redress. The statute has
prescribed distinct procedure for the making of the
complaints under these two provisions of the Indian Penal
Code and when the prescribed procedure has been followed,
the court is bound to take cognizance of the offence
complained of
The decided cases fully support this view and our attention
has not been drawn to any case which has taken a contrary
view as regards offences under section 500, Indian Penal
Code. In Satish Chandra Chakravarti v. Ram Dayal De (1),
five judges of the Calcutta High Court considered this
question and held that where the maker of a single statement
is guilty of two distinct offences, one under section 21 1,
Indian Penal Code, which is an offence against public
justice, and the other an offence under section 499, wherein
the personal element largely predominates, the offence under
the latter section can be taken cognizance of without the
sanction of the court concerned, as the Criminal Procedure
Code has not provided for sanction of court for taking
cognizance of that offence. It was said that the two
offences being fundamentally distinct in nature, could be
separately taken cognizance of. That they are distinct in
character is patent from the fact that the former is made
non-compoundable, while the latter remains compoundable; in
one for the the initiation of the proceedings the
legislature requires the sanction of the court under section
195,
(1) (1920) 24 C.W.N. 982.
845
Criminal Procedure Code, while in the other, Cognizance can
be taken of the offence on the complaint of the person
defamed. It could not be denied that the accused could be
tried of charges under sections 182 and 500, Indian Penal
Code, separately on the same facts provided the public
servant as well as the person defamed made complaints. If
that is so, there is no reason why one cannot be tried
independently of the other so long as the requirements of
each are satisfied. Harries C. J. while delivering the Full
Bench decision in question examined all the earlier cases of
the Calcutta High Court and observed that where upon the
facts the commission of several offences is disclosed some
of which require sanction and others do not, it is open to
the complainant to proceed in respect of those only which do
not require sanction; because to hold otherwise would amount
to legislating and adding very materially to the provisions
of section-is 195 to 199 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
Sections 195 to 199 deal with the requisites for the
prosecution of certain specified offences and the provisions
of those sections must be limited to prosecutions for the
offences actually indicated. If it was the intention of the
legislature to make sanctions or complaints in a certain
form necessary for the prosecution of all offences disclosed
by facts which would give rise to any of the offences
specifically indicated in these sections, the legislature
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
could have said so but it did not.
Recently this matter was canvassed before a Full Bench of
the Madras High Court and it was held that in such cases it
was open to the party defamed to take proceedings under
section 499, Indian Penal Code, without the court filing a
complaint in accordance with the provisions laid down in
section 195. There the question was whether the alleged
defamer who had given false evidence in a court could be
prosecuted under section 499, Indian Penal Code, without a
complaint by the court before whom fie gave evidenice and
the question was answered in the affirmative after an
exhaustive review of the decided cases of the different High
Courts in India. It was said that if the offence of
846
giving false evidence in a judicial proceeding and
defamation do not belong to the same genus but are distinct
and separate in their characteryistics and ingredients, it
was difficult to perceive any serious inhibition by the
Criminal Procedure Code for initiation and trial of one of
these offences independently of anterior resort to
fulfillinig the conditions necessary to comnience a
prosecution for the other. These observations have apt
application to the present case. The ingredients of the
offence under section 182 cannot be said to be the
ingredients for the offence under section 500. Nor can it
be said that the offence relating to giving false
information relates to the same group of offences as that of
defamation.
Though, in our judgment, section 195 does not bar the trial
of an accused person for a distinct offence disclosed by the
same facts and which is not included within the ambit of
that section, it has also to be borne in mind that the
provisions of that section cannot be evaded by resorting to
devices or camouflages. The test whether there is evasion
of the section or not is whether the facts disclose
primarily and essentially an offence for which a complaint
of the court or of the public servant is required. In other
words, the provisions of the section cannot be evaded by the
device of charging a person with ail offence to which that
section does not apply and then convicting him of an offence
to which it does, upon the ground that such latter offence
is a minor offence of the same character, or by describing
the offence as being one punishable under some other section
of the Indian penal Code,, though in truth and substance the
offence falls in the category of sections mentioned in
section 195, Criminal Procedure Code. Merely by changing
the garb or label of an offence which is essentially all
offence covered by the provisions of section 195 prosecution
for such an offence cannot be taken cognizance of by mis-
describing it or by putting a wrong label on it.
Before concluding, reference nay also be made to the
decision of the Federal Court in Hori Ram Singh v. The
Crown(1). The appellant in that case was charged
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 159.
847
with offences under sections 409 and 477-A, Indian Penal
Code. The offence under section 477-A could not be taken
cognizance of without the previous consent of the Governor
under section 270(1) of the Constitution Act, while the
consent of the Governor was not required for the institution
of the proceedings under section 409, Indian Penal Code.
The charge was that the accused dishonestly misappropriated
or converted to his own certain medicines entrusted to him
in his official capacity as a sub-assistant surgeon in the
Punjab Provincial Subordinate Medical Service. He was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
further charged that being a public servant, be wilfully and
with intent to defraud omitted to record certain entries in
a stock book of medicines belonging to the hospital where he
was employed and in his possession. The proceedings under
section 477-A were quashed by the Federal Court for want of
jurisdiction, the consent of the Governor not having been
obtained, but the case was sent back to the sessions judge
for hearing oil the merits as regards the charge under
section 409, Indian Penal Code, and the order of acquittal
passed by the sessions judge under that charge was set
aside. Two distinct offences having been committed in the
same transaction, one an offence of misappropriation under
section 409 and the other an offence under section 477-A
which required the sanction of the Governor, the cir-
cumstance that cognizance could not be taken of the latter
offence without such consent was not considered a bar to the
trial of the appellant with respect to the offence under
section 409.
Leave to appeal under article 134 (1) (c) of the
Constitution was limited to the question of law referred to
the Full Bench in this case, and it was distinctly said in
the order disposing of the leave petition that leave would
not have been granted had the scope of the appeal been
limited to the merits of the case. It was observed that
having regard to the findings recorded by the final court of
fact, as also the evidence in the case the elements of both
the offences had been fully established. The learned
counsel for the appellants attempted to argue that on the
facts found no
848
offence under section 297 could be said to have been made
out. This point, in our opinion, is not open at this stage,
it having been hold that all the ingredients of the offence
had been established on the record. Even otherwise there is
no substance in the contention because the prosecution
evidence is sufficient to hold the offence proved against
all the appellants.
For the reasons given above we hold that there is no
substance in these appeals and they are accordingly
dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.
Agent for the appellants: Sukumar Ghose.
Agent for the respondent: P. K. Bose.
Agent for the complainant: S. C. Bannerjee.