Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHANLAL SONI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/07/2000
BENCH:
Shivaraj V. Patil, S.R.Babu
JUDGMENT:
Shivaraj V. Patil,J.
This petition is by the State of Madhya Pradesh
directed against the order dated 10.11.1998 passed by the
High Court of Madhya Pradesh in criminal Revision No.
274/98 by which the charges framed against the respondent
under Section 13(1)(e) read with Section 13(2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (for short the ’Act’)
were quashed.
The relevant and necessary facts to dispose of this
petition are:
The respondent was working as a Road Transport
Inspector in the Regional Office of the Road Transport
Corporation, Bhopal and is a public servant as such. A
complaint under Section 13(1)(e) read with Section 13(2) of
the Act for the check period 25.9.1982 to 27.3.1993 was
filed stating that he had acquired the property in excess of
the known source of his income. During the investigation
properties and assets belonging to his mother-in- law,
father, brother and nephew were shown as assets of the
respondent. The assets of his wife, who is an income-tax
payer and a self-earning member, were also connected with
the assets of the respondent. While submitting charge sheet
several important documents, which were collected during the
course of investigation, were withheld. According to the
respondent the said documents supported him. If those
documents were considered even prima facie there was no
scope to frame charges against him. At the time of framing
charges the respondent made an application seeking
production of these documents in court before proceeding to
frame charge. But the said application was rejected stating
that for the purpose of framing charges only the documents
forwarded to the court under Section 173(5) Cr.P.C. need to
be considered. Hence he filed Criminal Revision No. 337/97
in the High court. The said Revision Petition was disposed
of by the order dated 8.9.1997 in the following terms: -
"In the result the revision is allowed, the order
impugned is set-aside and it is directed that the documents
made available by the accused during investigation be
produced and may be taken into consideration by the court
below while framing the charge."
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Thereafter the trial court framed charges under
Section 13(1)(e) read with Section 13(2) of the Act.
Aggrieved by the order dated 4.4.1988 framing charges in the
Special Case No. 26/96 by the Special Judge, Indore, the
respondent filed Criminal Revision No. 274/98. The High
Court by order dated 10.11.1998 accepted the case of the
respondent, set aside the order of the learned Special
Judge, Indore, framing charges and discharged the
respondent. In these circumstances the State has come up in
this petition challenging the said order of the High Court.
The learned Senior Advocate for the petitioner
contended that at the stage of framing charges for offence
under section 13(1)(e) read with Section 13(2) of the Act
the Trial Judge was not required to consider documents like
income-tax return and income-tax orders and calculation
chart of the accounts; the documents like income-tax
assessment orders and calculation chart submitted by the
respondent ought not to have been accepted at the stage of
framing charges without proving them and that those
documents could be proved during trial by the author as per
the provisions of Evidence Act. He referred to and relied
on the decision of this Court in State of M.P. vs. S.B.
Johari and Others .
On the other hand, the learned senior counsel for the
respondent submitted that the order impugned in this
petitioner is unassailable; the trial court committed
manifest error in not considering the documents collected
during the course of investigation though produced late but
before framing charges, by the investigating agency itself
pursuant to the order dated 8.9.1997 passed by the High
court in criminal Revision No. 337/97 which prima facie
supported the respondent; and that the High Court having
considered all the material that was available at the time
of framing charges rightly set aside the order of the trial
court framing charges and discharged the respondent.
We have examined the rival submissions made by the
learned senior counsel for the parties. Our attention was
specifically drawn to the earlier order of the High court
dated 8.9.1997 passed in Criminal Revision No. 337/97 in
which the trial court was directed that the documents made
available by the accused during investigation be produced
and they be taken into consideration by the court while
framing charges. The said order became final, it having not
been challenged further. In this situation the parties and
the trial court were bound and governed by the said
direction. Since the trial court did not follow the said
direction, the High Court having considered all the material
including the documents produced by the prosecution itself,
which were collected during the course of investigation, and
on being prima facie satisfied taking the documents on their
face value held that no offence was made out and as such no
charge could be framed against the respondent. In this
view, the High Court set aside the order of the trial court
and passed the order discharging the respondent. The High
Court in the order under appeal has elaborately considered
the documents collected during the course of investigation
and produced by the prosecution itself which were available
at the time of framing charges. It may be added that most
of the documents relate to the income-tax returns or
income-tax assessment orders. All these documents pertain
to the period prior to 26.3.1993. Some of them even relate
to the year 1988. In the normal course the documents could
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not have been prepared in anticipation that the respondent
would have to face such charges on a future date. The
documents being the orders of assessment or return filed
with the income- tax authorities on their face value
supported the case of the respondent. The High Court in the
order dated 8.9.1997 passed in Criminal Revision No. 337/97
relied on the decision of this Court in Satish Mehra vs.
Delhi Administration and Another . In the said decision it
is held: -
"The object of providing such an opportunity as is
envisaged in Section 227 of the Code is to enable the Court
to decide whether it is necessary to proceed to conduct the
trial. If the case ends there it gains a lot of time of the
Court and saves much human efforts and cost. If the
materials produced by the accused even at that early stage
would clinch the issue, why should the Court shut it out
saying that such documents need be produced only after
wasting a lot more time in the name of trial proceedings.
Hence, we are of the view that sessions Judge would be
within his power to consider even materials which the
accused may produce at the stage contemplated in section 227
of the Code."
Be that it may, when the said order attained finality
as already noticed above, the trial court was bound to
follow the directions given therein. Its failure to follow
the directions resulted in framing charges against the
respondent ignoring the documents, which on their face value
supported the respondent.
The crystallized judicial view is that at the stage of
framing charge, the court has to prima facie consider
whether there is sufficient ground for proceeding against
the accused. The court is not required to appreciate
evidence to conclude whether the materials produced are
sufficient or not for convicting the accused.
In Anand Bezbaruah vs. Union of India the Gauhati
High Court was of the view that where accused was charged
with the offence of having resources and property
disproportionate to his income and trial court failed to
consider and evaluate the income tax return which clearly
established that the property included in the assets of
accused and shown to be disproportionate is the wife’s
property bought from her own resources and should have been
excluded from assets of the accused.
Yet in another decision of this Court in Niranjan
Singh Karam Singh Punjabi vs. Jitendra Bhimraj Bijjaya and
Others it is held that at the time of framing charges having
regard to Sections 227 and 228 of Cr.P.C. the court is
required to evaluate the material and documents on record
with a view of finding out if the facts emerging there from
taken at their face value disclose the existence of all the
ingredients constituting the alleged offence. The court may
for this limited purpose to sift the evidence, as it cannot
be expected even at the initial stage to accept all that the
prosecution states as gospel truth even if it is opposed to
common sense or broad probabilities of the case.
Further in Satish Mehra’s case (supra) this Court has
stated that the Sessions Judge was not expected to hold a
roving inquiry into the pros and cons of the case at the
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stage of framing charges by weighing the evidence as if he
was conducting the trial.
Decision in the case of State of M.P. vs. J.B.
Johari and Others (cited above), strongly relied on by the
learned counsel for the petitioner, in our view does not
advance or support the case of the petitioner. That was a
case where FIR was lodged at the Police Station, Bhopal to
the effect that there was criminal conspiracy in purchase of
medicines by the concerned hospital authorities including
Dean, Superintendent, Medical Officer In- charge and others.
It was alleged that aforesaid accused entered into criminal
conspiracy with some local businessmen of Indore by misusing
their posts and also by using some forged documents caused
wrongful loss to the Government. It was stated that though
many of items had not been purchased, amount was paid on
bogus vouchers. After considering the material on record,
learned Sessions Judge framed the charges against the
accused for the offence punishable under Section 5(1)(d) and
5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1948 read with
Section 120B IPC and in the alternative for the offence
punishable under Section 13(1)(d) read with Section 13(2) of
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988. The High Court in
revision quashed the charges accepting the contentions
raised by the accused after detailed consideration of
material produced on record. Having regard to the facts and
circumstances of the case and referring to earlier decisions
of this Court in paragraph 4 it is held thus:
"4. In our view, it is apparent that the entire
approach of the High Court is illegal and erroneous. From
the reasons recorded by the High Court, it appears that
instead of considering the prima facie case, the High Court
has appreciated and weighed the materials on record for
coming to the conclusion that charge against the respondents
could not have been framed. It is settled law that at the
stage of framing the charges, the Court has to prima facie
consider whether there is sufficient ground for proceeding
against the accused. The Court is not required to
appreciate the evidence and arrive at the conclusion that
the materials produced are sufficient or not for convicting
the accused. If the Court is satisfied that a prima facie
case is made out for proceeding further then a charge has to
be framed. The charge can be quashed if the evidence which
the prosecutor proposes to adduce to prove the guilt of the
accused, even if fully accepted before it is challenged by
cross examination or rebutted by the defence evidence, if
any, cannot show that accused committed the particular
offence. In such case, there would be no sufficient ground
for proceeding with the trial. In Niranjan Singh Karam
Singh Pubjabi etc. v. Jitendra Bhimraj Bijjayya and Others
etc. reported in (1990) 4 SCC 76, after considering the
provisions of Sections 227 and 228, Cr.P.C., Court posed a
question, whether at the stage of framing the charge, trial
court should marshal the materials on the record of the case
as he would do on the conclusion of the trial? The Court
held that at the stage of framing the charge inquiry must
necessarily be limited to deciding if the facts emerging
from such materials constitute the offence with which the
accused could be charged. The Court may peruse the records
for the limited purpose, but it is not required to marshal
it with a view to decide the reliability thereof. The Court
referred to earlier decisions in State of Bihar v. Ramesh
Singh (1977) 4 SCC 39, Union of India v. Prafulla Kumar
Samal (1979) 3 SCC 4 and Supdt. & Remembrancer of Legal
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Affairs, West Bengal v. Anil Kumar Bhunja (1979) 4 SCC 274,
and held thus:
"From the above discussion it seems well settled that
at the Sections 227-228 stage the court is required to
evaluate the material and documents on record with a view to
finding out if the facts emerging therefrom taken at their
face value disclose the existence of all the ingredients
constituting the alleged offence. The Court may for this
limited purpose shift the evidence as it cannot be expected
even at the initial stage to accept all that the prosecution
states as gospel truth even if it is opposed to common sense
or the broad probabilities of the case."
As is evident from the paragraph extracted above if
the Court is satisfied that a prima facie case is made out
for proceeding further then a charge has to be framed. Per
contra, if the evidence which the prosecution proposes to
produce to prove the guilt of the accused, even if fully
accepted before it is challenged by the cross-examination or
rebutted by the defence evidence, if any, cannot show that
accused committed the particular offence then the charge can
be quashed.
From the decisions referred to in the same paragraph
and the decisions already referred to above there was no bar
to consider the material on record in the case on hand,
which was collected during the course of investigation and
produced before the court and particularly in view of the
directions given earlier by the High Court.
In this view, the High Court looking to the material
and documents that were made available at the stage of
framing charges on their face value in the light of the
directions given earlier in Criminal Revision No. 337/97
and bearing in mind the position in law concluded that
charges could not be framed against the respondent,
consequently, set aside the order of trial court and
discharged the respondent.
On the facts and in the circumstances of the case and
having regard to the legal position stated above, we see no
good reason or valid ground to upset the impugned order.
Hence the petition is dismissed. No costs.