Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 359 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Netai Dutta
RESPONDENT:
State of West Bengal
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/02/2005
BENCH:
K.G. Balakrikshnan & Tarun Chatterjee
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
[Arising out of S.L.P. (Criminal) No. 3254 of 2004]
Leave granted.
Heard appellant’s counsel and counsel for the respondent.
Appellant herein is an accused in a crime registered for the
offence under Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code. The appellant
filed a petition under Section 482 of the Criminal Procedure Code to
quash the criminal proceedings initiated against him. The learned
Single Judge declined to quash the proceedings and hence this appeal.
One Pranab Kumar Nag was an employee of M/s M.L. Dalmiya &
Co. Ltd. During the course of his employment, he had been posted at
various work sites of the company and on 11.9.1999 he was
transferred to the work site of the company’s stores located at 160,
B.L. Saha Road, Kolkata. It seems that pursuant to the transfer
order, Pranab Kumar Nag did not join duty and after a period of
about two years he sent in a letter of resignation written in his own
hand wherein he expressed his grievance of stagnancy of salary and
also alleged that he was a victim of unfortunate circumstances. The
company accepted his resignation with immediate effect. On
16.2.2001, a dead body was found at the railway tracks near
Ballygunge railway station and it was revealed that it was the body of
Pranab Kumar Nag. His brother went to the office where Pranab
Kumar Nag had worked and made enquires. The dead body of Pranab
Kumar Nag was released to his brother after the post-mortem
examination on 19.2.2001. After a period of two months, a
complaint was lodged before the police post on the basis of a suicide
note allegedly recovered from the dead body of Pranab Kumar Nag.
Based on the complaint, a case was registered against the appellant
and some others. A translated copy of the suicide note is produced
before us by the appellant. We have carefully read the alleged suicide
note. The substance of this suicide note is that deceased Pranab
Kumar Nag alleged that appellant Netai Dutta and one Paramesh
Chatterjee engaged him in several wrong-doings (he has shown as a
type of torture) and at the end of the letter, a reference is also made
to Paramesh Chatterjee and Netai Dutta alleging that he reported
certain incidents to them. A reading of the letter would show that
deceased Pranab Kumar Nag was not very much satisfied with the
working conditions in the office. In the letter he has stated that he
had to be at the work place sometimes throughout the day and night
and he had to remain in the company of some drivers who had been
sometimes in drunken condition at about one o’ clock or two o’ clock
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in the night. It is also alleged that the drivers who had been
present at the work place had been having non-vegetarian food. He
also complained that he had to work even on Sundays. He further
stated that one day he could leave the work place at 8 o’ clock in the
evening and all the restaurants were closed and that he reported the
matter to the present appellant.
There is absolutely no averment in the alleged suicide note that
the present appellant had caused any harm to him or was in any way
responsible for delay in paying salary to deceased Pranab Kumar Nag.
It seems that the deceased was very much dissatisfied with the
working conditions at the work place. But, it may also be noticed
that the deceased after his transfer in 1999 had never joined the office
at 160 B.L. Saha Road, Kolkata and had absented himself for a period
of two years and that the suicide took place on 16.2.2001. It cannot
be said that the present appellant had in any way instigated the
deceased to commit suicide or he was responsible for the suicide of
Pranab Kumar Nag. An offence under Section 306 IPC would stand
only if there is an abetment for the commission of the crime. The
parameters of the "abetment" have been stated in Section 107 of the
Indian Penal Code. Section 107 says that a person abets the doing of
a thing, who instigates any person to do that thing; or engages with
one or more other person or persons in any conspiracy for the doing of
that thing, if an act or illegal omission takes place in pursuance of that
conspiracy, or the person should have intentionally aided any act or
illegal omission. The explanation to Section 107 says that any willful
misrepresentation or willful concealment of a material fact which he is
bound to disclose, may also come within the contours of "abetment".
In the suicide note, except referring to the name of the appellant
at two places, there is no reference of any act or incidence whereby
the appellant herein is alleged to have committed any willful act or
omission or intentionally aided or instigated the deceased Pranab
Kumar Nag in committing the act of suicide. There is no case that the
appellant has played any part or any role in any conspiracy, which
ultimately instigated or resulted in the commission of suicide by
deceased Pranab Kumar Nag.
Apart from the suicide note, there is no allegation made by the
complainant that the appellant herein in any way was harassing his
brother, Pranab Kumar Nag. The case registered against the
appellant is without any factual foundation. The contents of the
alleged suicide note do not in any way make out the offence against
the appellant. The prosecution initiated against the appellant would
only result in sheer harassment to the appellant without any fruitful
result. In our opinion, the learned Single Judge seriously erred in
holding that the First Information Report against the appellant
disclosed the elements of a cognizable offence. There was absolutely
no ground to proceed against the appellant herein. We find that this
is a fit case where the extraordinary power under Section 482 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure is to be invoked. We quash the criminal
proceedings initiated against the appellant and accordingly allow the
appeal.