Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UMARSAHEB BURANSAHEB INAMDA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/01/1962
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
DAS, S.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1153 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 711
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1982 SC 20 (7)
ACT:
Criminal Procedure Code-Offences committed in
pursuance of Criminial conspiracy-One trial, if
permissible-Defect in framing the charge, if
curable-Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 (Act V of
1898), ss.222 (2), 235, 537.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents were charged and tried at the
same trial with the offences of Criminal
conspiracy and breach of trust committed in
pursuance thereof during a period of more than one
year. The question arising for decision was
whether, in the framing of the charge,
contravention of the provisions of sub-s.(2) of
s.222 which allowed a combined charge with respect
to the amount embezzled within a period of one
year, vitiated the trial.
^
Held, that the defect in the charge did not
lead to any prejudice to the accused and therefore
did not vitiate the trial in view of the provision
of s. 537 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
When all the offences committed in pursuance
of a conspiracy are committed in course of the
same transaction this can be tried together at one
trial in view of s. 235(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure which provides that if in one
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series of acts so connected together as to form
the same transaction, more offences than one are
committed by the same person, he may be charged
with and tried at one trial for every such
offence.
Kadiri Kanhahammad v. The State of Madrs,
A.I. R. 1960 S. C. 661, followed.
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 237 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated
February 10 and 11 of 1959, of the Bombay High
Court in Criminal Appeal No. 1023/59 with Crinal
Appeals Nos. 1048 and 1048 of 1958.
H. R. Khanna and P. D. Menon, for the
appellant.
S. G. Patwardhan. J.B. Dadachanji O.C. Mathur
and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent No. 1.
1962. January 23. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
RAGHUAR DAYAL, J.-This appeal, on a
certificate granted by the High Court of Bombay,
raises the question whether the contravention of
the provisions of sub-s. (2) of s. 222 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, hereinafter called the
Code, in the framing of the charge against an
accused, vitiates the trial.
The facts leading to the appeal, in brief,
are as follows. The respondents were charged and
tried at the same trial of the offences under s.
120B read with s. 406, I.P.C., and of an offence
under s. 406, I.P.C. and committed in pursuance of
the criminal conspiracy they had entered into.
They were also tried, but acquitted of other
offences charged with. They appealed against their
conviction of the offence under s. 120-B read with
s. 406, I.P.C., and of the offence under s. 406,
I.P.C. The charge under s. 406, I.P.C, was with
respect to the commission of trust of trust of a
sum of Rs. 2,18,369/- between the period March 6.
1949, and June 30, 1950. It was contended before
the High Court that the charge framed contravened
the provisions of sub
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s. (2) of s. 222 of the Code which allowed a
combined charge with respect to the amount
embezzled within a period of a year. The High
Court agreed with this contention and, holding the
trial void, set aside the conviction of the
respondents and acquitted them of the offences.
The High Court, however, maintained the order of
acquittal is respect of the other offences. The
State of Bombay (now Maharashtra) has filed this
appeal against the order setting aside the
conviction of the respondents.
It is not necessary for us to determine in
this appeal the general question whether the
contravention of the provisions of sub-R. (2) of
s. 222 of the Code, in the framing of the charge,
will always make the trial void, as, in this
particular case, the offence under s. 406, I.P.C.,
charged against the respondents was said to have
been committed in pursuance of a criminal
conspiracy entered into by them. It will therefore
suffice, for the purpose of this case, to consider
whether such a defect in the charge vitiates the
present trial.
Section 222 of the Code is one of the
sections in Chapter XIX, which deals with Form of
Charges. Sections 221, 222 and 223 deal with what
should be mentioned in the charge. The whole
object of the charge is inform both the
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prosecution, and the accused particularly, of the
accusation the prosecution has to establish and
the accused has to meet. So long as the accused
knows fully what accusation he has to meet any
error in the narrative of the charge need not be
fatal to the trial. Sections 225, 232, 535 and 537
save the trial from being vitiated unless of
course the accused has been prejudiced and failure
of justice has taken place.
Sections 233 to 239 deal with the joinder of
charger, and they speak not only of an accused
being charged with offences, but of such charges
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being tried separately or jointly. Section 233
states that for every distinct offence of which
any person is accused, there shall be a separate
charge and every such charge shall be tried
separately, except in the cases mentioned in ss.
234, 235, 236 and 239. It is clear that the
general rule is theat there should be a separate
trial for each distinct offence of which a person
is accused. It follows that each item of property
of which an accused is alleged to have committed
breach of trust, constitutes one distance offence
and that, in general, it would be necessary to
have as many trials as there be distinct offences
of criminal breach of trust committed by the
accused. But s. 222(2) provides that when the
accused is charged with criminal breach of trust,
the charge may be with respect to the gross sum
embezzled within a period of one year and that the
charged so framed shall be deemed to be a charge
of one offence within the meaning of s. 234. The
charge framed in the present case was with respect
to the gross sum embezzled within a period of more
than twelve months, the period being between March
6, 1949 and June 30, 1950. The charge therefore
was in contravention of the provisions of s.
222(2). This defect in the charge, however, did
not lead to any prejudice to the accused in the
trial and therefore did not vitiate the trial, in
view of the provisions of s. 537 of the Code.
The charge could have been split up into two
charges, one with respect to the offence of
criminal breach of trust committed with respect to
the amount embezzled between March 6, 1949 and
March 5, 1950 and the other with respect to the
amount embezzled between March 6, 1950 and June
30, 1950. The two offences of criminal breach of
trust could have been tried together in the
present case, as the offences were said to have
been committed in pursuance of the criminal
conspiracy entered into by the accused, All the
offences
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committed in pursuance of the conspiracy are
committed in the course of the same transaction
and therefore can be tried together at one trial,
in view of sub s. (1) of s. 235 of the Code which
provides that if in one series of acts so
connected together as to form the same
transaction, more offences than one are committed
by the same person, he may be charged with and
tried at one trial for every such offence. It is
therefore clear that no prejudice was caused to
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the accused by the defect in the charge.
A similar view has been taken by this Court
in Kadiri Kundahammad v. The State of Madras (1).
We may further point out that the High Court
should not have expressed its opinion or passed
any order with respect to the acquittal of the
respondents for the other offences when the order
of acquittal was not before it for consideration
and when it had held the entire trial to be void,
on account of the contravention of the provisions
of sub-s. (2) of s. 222.
We therefore hold that the trial of the
respondents was legal and therefore allow the
appeal and set aside the order of the High Court.
Their appeal against their conviction has not been
heard on merits and therefore we remand the case
to the High Court for further hearing according to
law.
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