Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 851 of 2001
PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHOORAJI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/08/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & K.G. Balakrishnan
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
Even after noticing that the trial proceedings in the
case had already undergone a very protracted career,
ranging over a period of 9 years to reach its finale, a
Division Bench of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh has now
ordered that the whole exercise should be repeated over
again and then reach a fresh conclusion. It seems learned
Judges of the High Court felt helpless to do otherwise. In
the prologue of the impugned judgment the Division Bench
bewailed like this: This case has sluggished for nearly 9
years and the end is not in sight as directions for a
retrial seems inevitable. Was it such a helpless
situation that by no means repetition of the whole hog is
un-preventable?
We shall now briefly sketch the background of this
appeal. On 26.8.1991 an incident happened in which one
Undaria was murdered and three others were wounded. The
police, after investigation, charge-sheeted eleven persons
in respect of the said incident for various offences
including Section 302 read with Section 149 IPC and Section
3(2) of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act (for short the SC/ST Act).
The case started in January 1992 before the court of the
Additional Sessions Judge, Dhar (M.P.) which was the
specified court as per Section 14 of the said Act. The
court framed charges against all the eleven persons for the
aforementioned offences and proceeded with the trial. In
the words of the Division Bench of the High Court after a
protracted trial for about five years the eleven persons
were convicted under Sections 148, 323, 302/149 of the IPC
and sentenced to various punishments including imprisonment
for life, as per the judgment pronounced on 23.8.1996.
All the eleven convicted persons filed appeal before
the High Court of Madhya Pradesh. It was during the
pendency of the said appeal that Supreme Court decided the
case in Gangula Ashok vs. State of A.P. {2000 (2) SCC 504}
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in which it was held that committal proceedings are
necessary for a specified court under the SC/ST Act to take
cognizance of the offences to be tried. But the legal
position which held the field in the State of Madhya
Pradesh till then was the same on account of a judgment
pronounced by a Division Bench of the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh in Meerabhai vs. Bhujbal Singh {1995 Criminal Law
Journal 2376 (MP)}. But the said legal position was
changed in the said State when a Full Bench of the High
Court of Madhya Pradesh overruled the aforesaid dictum by a
judgment reported in Anand Swaroop vs. Ram Ratan (1996 M.P.
Law Journal 141). The Full Bench held that Section 193 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure does not apply to
proceedings under the SC/ST Act and committal orders are
not required. The Full Bench, in order to prevent
repetition of trials already held or started, took the
precautionary measure of directing that when cognizance
has already been taken on the basis of committal orders it
is not necessary for the courts to retrace their steps or
to take cognizance afresh. The said judgment of the Full
Court was delivered on 23.8.1995.
When this Court pronounced judgment in Gangula Ashok
(supra) the legal position adopted by the Division Bench of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Meerabhai (supra) got
revived and the Full Bench decision (supra) got eclipsed.
Taking advantage of the decision of this Court all the
convicted persons filed I.A. 288 of 2000 before the High
Court seeking quashment of the trial proceedings on the
ground that the trial was without jurisdiction inasmuch
as the specified Court of Sessions did not acquire
jurisdiction to take cognizance of and try the case, in the
absence of it being committed by a magistrate. By the
impugned judgment the Division Bench of the High Court
upheld the said contention and ordered the entire trial
held by the court below shall stand quashed and the trial
court is directed to return the charge-sheet and the
connected papers to the prosecution for re-submission to
the magistrate for further proceedings in accordance with
law. The State of Madhya Pradesh has hence filed the
appeal by special leave.
It is true, this Court held in Gangula Ashok (supra)
that neither in the Code nor in the Act is there any
provision whatsoever, nor even by implication, that the
specified Court of Sessions (Special Court) can take
cognizance of the offences under the Act as a court of
original jurisdiction without the case being committed to
it by a magistrate. This Court expressed the view that
the Special Court under the SC/ST Act is essentially a
Court of Sessions which can take cognizance of offence in
accordance with provisions of the Code. In other words the
complaint or charge-sheet cannot be laid directly before
the Special Court under the Act. It must be remembered
that in the afore-cited case the accused moved the High
Court for quashing the charge on the ground that charge-
sheet was laid directly before the specified court. Such
motion was made before the trial started in that case. The
High Court accepted his contention and directed the charge-
sheet and connected papers to be returned to the police who
was to present the same before a magistrate for the purpose
of committal to the Special Court. The said view of the
High Court was upheld as legally correct by this Court in
Gangula Ashok (supra).
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The present is a case where accused did not raise any
question, when they were heard at the time of framing the
charge, that the court cannot proceed without committal
made by a magistrate. Nor did they raise such a plea at
any stage either before or after the evidence was recorded
by the trial court. The convicted persons thought of
raising such a contention only when they found the decision
of this Court in Gangula Ashok (supra) as useful to them.
The real question is whether the High Court
necessarily should have quashed the trial proceedings to be
repeated again only on account of the declaration of the
legal position made by Supreme Court concerning the
procedural aspect about the cases involving offences under
the SC/ST Act. A de novo trial should be the last resort
and that too only when such a course becomes so desperately
indispensable. It should be limited to the extreme exigency
to avert a failure of justice. Any omission or even the
illegality in the procedure which does not affect the core
of the case is not a ground for ordering a de novo trial.
This is because the appellate court has plenary powers for
re-evaluating or re-appraising the evidence and even to
take additional evidence by the appellate court itself or
to direct such additional evidence to be collected by the
trial court. But to replay the whole laborious exercise
after erasing the bulky records relating to the earlier
proceedings, by bringing down all the persons to the court
once again for repeating the whole depositions would be a
sheer waste of time, energy and costs unless there is
miscarriage of justice otherwise. Hence the said course
can be resorted to when it becomes unpreventable for the
purpose of averting a failure of justice. The superior
court which orders a de novo trial cannot afford to
overlook the realities and the serious impact on the
pending cases in trial courts which are crammed with
dockets, and how much that order would inflict hardship on
many innocent persons who once took all the troubles to
reach the court and deposed their versions in the very same
case. To them and the public the re-enactment of the whole
labour might give the impression that law is more pedantic
than pragmatic. Law is not an instrument to be used for
inflicting sufferings on the people but for the process of
justice dispensation.
Learned counsel for the appellant cited the decision
of this Court in State of H.P. vs. Gita Ram {2000 (7) SCC
452} when this Court had to consider an order passed by a
single Judge of the High Court directing retrial of a
sessions case. The following is what this Court observed
then:
We are distressed to note that learned
Single Judge was not told by the government
advocate of the fall out of such a view, if
taken by the Single Judge, that it means all
the witnesses once examined in full should
be called back again, and the whole chief-
examination, cross-examination, re-
examination and questioning of the accused
under section 313 of the Code, hearing
arguments, then examination of defence
witnesses further, again final arguments to
be heard and preparation of judgment once
again. The very object underlined in
Section 465 of the Code is that if on any
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technical ground any party to the criminal
proceedings is aggrieved he must raise the
objection thereof at the earliest stage. If
he did not raise it at the earliest stage he
cannot be heard on that aspect after the
whole trial is over.
Shri Sushil Kumar Jain, learned counsel for the
respondents/accused submitted that the said decision, on
the facts, cannot be applied because in that case the
specified court under the SC/St Act had taken cognizance of
the offence of Section 376 IPC along with Section 3 of the
said Act only after the said case was committed to that
court. But while framing the charge the court dropped the
offence under the SC/ST Act and the IPC offence alone was
included in the charge and finally the court convicted the
accused of that offence. The view taken by the High Court
in that case (that the specified court has no jurisdiction
to try an IPC offence without any offence under the SC/ST
Act also being tagged therewith) was found to be wrong. Of
course there is difference between that case and this case.
Nonetheless, the aforesaid distinction on the facts of this
case is hardly sufficient to side-step the legal principle
adumbrated therein.
The counsel for the State made an endeavour before the
High Court in this case to sustain the trial court
proceedings on the strength of Section 465 of the Code.
Though the said contention has been minuted by the learned
judges in the impugned judgment they did not advert to the
said contention at any stage of the judgment for a
consideration. We may point out that learned counsel for
the appellant - State while arguing in this Court banked
mainly on Section 465 of the Code for averting a repetition
of the protracted trial proceedings once again.
Section 465 of the Code falls within Chapter XXXV
under the caption Irregular Proceedings. The chapter
consists of seven sections starting with Section 460
containing a catalogue of irregularities which the
legislature thought not enough to axe down concluded
proceedings in trials or enquiries. Section 461 of the Code
contains another catalogue of irregularities which in the
legislative perception would render the entire proceedings
null and void. It is pertinent to point out that among the
former catalogue contains the instance of a magistrate, who
is not empowered to take cognizance of offence, taking
cognizance erroneously and in good faith. The provision
says that the proceedings adopted in such a case, though
based on such erroneous order, shall not be set aside
merely on the ground of his not being so empowered.
It is useful to refer to Section 462 of the Code which
says that even proceedings conducted in a wrong sessions
division are not liable to be set at naught merely on that
ground. However an exception is provided in that section
that if the court is satisfied that proceedings conducted
erroneously in a wrong sessions division has in fact
occasioned a failure of justice it is open to the higher
court to interfere. While it is provided that all the
instances enumerated in Section 461 would render the
proceedings void, no other proceedings would get vitiated
ipso facto merely on the ground that the proceedings were
erroneous. The court of appeal or revision has to examine
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specifically whether such erroneous steps had in fact
occasioned failure of justice. Then alone the proceedings
can be set aside. Thus the entire purport of the provisions
subsumed in Chapter XXXV is to save the proceedings linked
with such erroneous steps, unless the error is of such a
nature that it had occasioned failure of justice.
We have to examine Section 465(1) of the Code in the
above context. It is extracted below:
Subject to the provisions hereinbefore
contained, no finding, sentence or order
passed by a Court of competent jurisdiction
shall be reversed or altered by a court of
appeal, confirmation or revision on account
of any error, omission or irregularity in
the complaint, summons, warrant,
proclamation, order, judgment or other
proceedings before or during trial or in any
inquiry or other proceedings under this
Code, or any error, or irregularity in any
sanction for the prosecution, unless in the
opinion of that court, a failure of justice
has in fact been occasioned thereby.
A reading of the section makes it clear that the
error, omission or irregularity in the proceedings held
before or during the trial or in any enquiry were reckoned
by the legislature as possible occurrences in criminal
courts. Yet the legislature disfavoured axing down the
proceedings or to direct repetition of the whole
proceedings afresh. Hence, the legislature imposed a
prohibition that unless such error, omission or
irregularity has occasioned a failure of justice the
superior court shall not quash the proceedings merely on
the ground of such error, omission or irregularity.
What is meant by a failure of justice occasioned on
account of such error, omission or irregularity? This
Court has observed in Shamnsaheb M. Multtani vs. State of
Karnataka {2001 (2) SCC 577} thus:
We often hear about failure of justice
and quite often the submission in a criminal
court is accentuated with the said
expression. Perhaps it is too pliable or
facile an expression which could be fitted
in any situation of a case. The expression
failure of justice would appear,
sometimes, as an etymological chameleon (the
simile is borrowed from Lord Diplock in Town
Investments Ltd. v. Deptt. of the
Environment, 1977 (1) All E.R. 813). The
criminal court, particularly the superior
court should make a close examination to
ascertain whether there was really a failure
of justice or whether it is only a
camouflage.
It is an uphill task for the accused in this case to
show that failure of justice had in fact occasioned merely
because the specified sessions court took cognizance of the
offences without the case being committed to it. The
normal and correct procedure, of course, is that the case
should have been committed to the special court because
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that court being essentially a court of sessions can take
cognizance of any offence only then. But if a specified
sessions court, on the basis of the legal position then
felt to be correct on account of a decision adopted by the
High Court, had chosen to take cognizance without a
committal order, what is the disadvantage of the accused in
following the said course?
It is apposite to remember that during the period
prior to the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973, the committal
court, in police charge-sheeted cases, could examine
material witnesses, and such records also had to be sent
over to the court of sessions along with the committal
order. But after 1973, the committal court, in police
charge-sheeted cases cannot examine any witness at all.
The magistrate in such cases has only to commit the cases
involving offences exclusively triable by the court of
sessions. Perhaps it would have been possible for an
accused to raise a contention before 1973 that skipping
committal proceedings had deprived him of the opportunity
to cross-examine witnesses in the committal court and that
had caused prejudice to his defence. But even that is not
available to an accused after 1973 in cases charge-sheeted
by the police. We repeatedly asked the learned counsel for
the accused to tell us what advantage the accused would
secure if the case is sent back to the magistrate court
merely for the purpose of retransmission of the records to
the sessions court through a committal order. We did not
get any satisfactory answer to the above query put to the
counsel.
Shri Sushil Kumar Jain made his last attempt by
contending that Section 465 is restricted to any findings,
sentence or order passed by a court of competent
jurisdiction and that a special court under the SC/ST Act
which is essentially a sessions court would have remained
incompetent until the case is committed to it. In support
of the said contention learned counsel invited the
following observation of this Court in H.N. Rishbud and
anr. vs. State of Delhi (AIR 1955 SC 196):
Section 190 of the Code is one out of a
group of sections under the heading
Conditions requisite for initiation of
proceedings; and the language of the said
section is in marked contrast with that of
the other sections of the group under the
same heading i.e. Sections 193 and 195 to
199. These latter sections regulate the
competence of the court and bar its
jurisdiction in certain cases excepting in
compliance therewith.
The question considered in that decision was whether
an investigation conducted by a police officer, who is not
competent to do it, vitiate the entire trial held on the
basis of the report of such investigation. Their Lordships
held that a defect or illegality in investigation, however
serious, has no direct bearing on the competence or
procedure relating to cognizance or trial. The
observations extracted above were therefore meant to apply
to the said context and it is obviously not meant for
holding that a court of competent jurisdiction otherwise
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would cease to be so for the simple reason that the case
was not committed to it. Learned counsel also cited the
decision in Ballabhdas Agarwala vs. J.C. Chakravarty (AIR
1960 SC 576) which dealt with the impact of Section 79 of
the Calcutta Municipal Act regarding the competence of
maintaining a criminal complaint. That did not involve any
question regarding a court of competent jurisdiction.
The expression a court of competent jurisdiction
envisaged in Section 465 is to denote a validly constituted
court conferred with jurisdiction to try the offence of
offences. Such a court will not get denuded of its
competence to try the case on account of any procedural
lapse and the competence would remain unaffected by the
non-compliance of the procedural requirement. The inability
to take cognizance of an offence without a committal order
does not mean that a duly constituted court became an
incompetent court for all purposes. If objection was raised
in that court at the earliest occasion on the ground that
the case should have been committed by a magistrate, the
same specified court has to exercise a jurisdiction either
for sending the records to a magistrate for adopting
committal proceedings or return the police report to the
Public Prosecutor or the police for presentation before the
magistrate. Even this could be done only because the court
has competence to deal with the case. Sometimes that court
may have to hear arguments to decide that preliminary
issue. Hence the argument advanced by the learned counsel
on the strength of the aforesaid decisions is of no avail.
The bar against taking cognizance of certain offences
or by certain courts cannot govern the question whether the
Court concerned is a a Court of competent jurisdiction,
e.g. Courts are debarred from taking cognizance of certain
offences without sanction of certain authorities. If a
Court took cognizance of such offences, which later found
to be without valid sanction, it would not become the test
or standard for deciding whether that court was a Court of
competent jurisdiction. It is now well settled that if
the question of sanction was not raised at the earliest
opportunity the proceedings would remain unaffected on
account of want of sanction. This is another example to
show that the condition precedent for taking cognizance is
not the standard to determine whether the Court concerned
is a Court of competent jurisdiction.
We conclude that the trial held by the sessions court
reaching the judgment impugned before the High Court in
appeal was conducted by a court of competent jurisdiction
and the same cannot be erased merely on account of a
procedural lapse, particularly when the same happened at a
time when the law which held the field in the State of
Madhya Pradesh was governed by the decision of the Full
Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court (supra). The High
Court should have dealt with the appeal on merits and on
the basis of the evidence already on record. To facilitate
the said course we set aside the judgment of the High Court
impugned in this appeal. We remit the case back to the
High Court for disposal of the appeal afresh on merits in
accordance with law and subject to the observations made
above.
J
[ K.T. Thomas ]
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J
[ K.G. Balakrishnan ]
August 24, 2001.