Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
D. N. BHATTACHARJEE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/03/1972
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1607 1972 SCR (3) 973
1972 SCC (3) 414
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure (Act 5 of 1898), s.203--Power of
Magistrate to dismiss complaint.
HEADNOTE:
An order of dismissal of complaint under s. 203 Cr. P.C.,
has to be made on judicially sound grounds. It can only be
made where the reasons given disclose that the proceedings
cannot terminate successfully in a conviction. A Magistrate
is not debarred,. at this stage, from going into the merits
of the evidence produced by the complainant, but the, object
of such consideration could only be to whether There are
sufficient grounds for proceeding further. The mere
existence of some grounds which would be material in
deciding whether the accused should be convicted or
acquitted does not generally indicate that the case must
necessary fail. On the other hand, such grounds indicate
the need for proceeding further in order to discover the
truth after a full and proper investigation. If, however, a
bare perusal of a complaint or the evidence led in support
of it show that the essential ingredients of the offences
alleged are absent or that the dispute is only of a civil
nature or that there are such patent absurdities in the
evidence produced that it would be a waste of time to
proceed further the complaint could be properly dismissed
under the section. [9176 F-H]
Where, therefore, the Magistrate dismisses a complaint on a
misreading of the oral evidence and the evidence, in fact,
does not reveal,any absurdity so as to merit a forthright
dismissal of the complaint under the section, such an order
is. fit to be set aside by the High Court.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 156 of
1969.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 15, 1969 of the Calcutta High Court in Criminal
Revision No. 1114 of 1963.
C. K. Daphtary and D. N. Mukherjee, for the appellants.
P.K. Chatterjee and G. S. Chatterjee, for respondent No. 1.
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P. K. Mukherjee, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Beg, J. On 11-7-1963 Sunilakshva Choudhry a Director of the
Metropolitan Industrial Corporation Ltd., Calcuta, having
been authorised by its Board of Directors, filed a complaint
against the appellant Debendra Nath Bhattacharjee (or
Bhattacharya), a former Director, and Banamali Pathak,
Cashier of the Bengal
16-L1061SupCI/72
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Luxmi Cotton Mills Ltd., and- Hiran Roy, Chief. Accountant
of the Bengal Luxmi Cotton Mills Ltd., alleging offence
punishable under Sections 408/409/467/471/477A/109 Indian
Penal Code.
The complainant alleged that, when the Life Insurance
business was nationalised in 1956 the Metroplitan Insurance
Co. Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as ’the Company’) received
a sum of about Rs. 10,25,523/- as compensation, and the
Company was transformed into Metropolitan Industrial
Corporation (hereinafter referred to as ’the Corporation’).
The business of the Corporation was said to be confined to
making of loans, and dealings in stocks and shares. The
complainant was Director of the Company in 1957 and the
accused appellant D. N. Bhattacharjee was alleged to he its
Managing Diecor with absolute control over the funds of the
Company and the only person authorised to operate the
tanking account of the Company with. the Metropolitan Bank
Ltd. Roundabout October, 1958, alth ugh, the appellant
Bhattacharjee was said to have ceased to be the Managing
Director, yet, he is alleged to have continued to exercise
the powers he had possessed as Managing Director, After the
Company became the Corporation Certain activities of the
appellant D N. Bbattacha-jee are alleged to-,have come to
light and compelled his resignation on 28-2-1963 so that he
handed over some of the Books and records of the Court
oration to the complainant. The complainant after having,
examined the records handed over by D. N. Bhattacharjee
claimed to have found monthly pay sheets containing names of
certain employees who were not employees of the Corporation
at all and who were suspected to be fictitious as they could
not be traced. The complainant alleged that, on further
enquiry, he round that the Corporation had not employed
anybody at all but had taken occasional help from certain
employees of sister concerns which had their offices in the
same building. In other words, the complainant claimed to
have discovered that the pay-sheets of the Corporation were
totally false and fabricated. He also complained that
fictitious signatures of suport different persons appeared
to him to have been made by a single person so as to appear
as signatures of different actually existing individuals.
The complainant alleged that his suspicions were confirmed
by sending these alleged signatures to a Handwriting Expert
for opinion. Accordinq to the complainant, all this was
done at the instance of- or with the cornplicit of D. N.
Bhattacharjee and with the aid of the two other co-accused.
It was asserted that D. N. Bhattacharjee bid full knowledge
of what was taking place and had dishonestly misappropriated
and converted to his own use large sums of money belonging
to the Corporation. He and the two co-accused, who are said
to have actually made the entries, were alleged to have been
engaged in a conspiracy . The complainant gave a list of
five witnesses, including that of a Handwriting Expert, and
he relied
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upon a number of account books, documents, and records of
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the Company and the Corporation.
After an enquiry in to the allegation contained in the
complaint a Presidency Magistrate found prima facie evidence
of a conspiracy ,to commit breach of trust by forging,
receipts and us-- of forged receipts and falsification of
accounts. On 2-8-1963, the Presidency Magistrate, ordered
the case to be put up before the Chief Presidency Magistrate
for further orders.
On 10-8-1963, the Chief Presidency Magistrate, after giving
particulars of the prosecution case and the evidence
produced to support it, went on to observe "In assessing the
evidence adduced for the purpose of taking out a process,
certain broad facts and circumstances and probabilities
cannot, in my opinion, be overlooked". The Chief Presidency
Magistrate then mentioned the reasons which, in his opinion,
justified a dismissal of the complaint without issue of
process. He pointed out : firstly, that the Company, which
was admitted to be a going concern, must have had some of
its own employees,who must have been taken over, by the
Corporation in 1960-, second, that D., N. Bhattacharjee, at
the time of his resignation on 28-2-1963 had handed over the
records and account books of the Company to the complainant
which fact indicated that be "probably." did not know that
any of these were forged for fabricated; thirdly, that it
was "improbable" that the Corporation could carry on its
business without its own employees; fourthly, that evidence
had not, been led to show :what enquiries were made to
indicate that the, names oft the pay sheet were fictitious
fifthly, that the complainant had himself admitted that one
or two persons shown in the pay sheet might have been
employed by the Corporation and that this "demolished" the
whole prosecution case of fictitious entries; and, Sixthly,
that the opinion of the Handwriting Expert "does not appear
to be emphatic" and was also not supported by "sufficient
reasons". On these grounds, the Chief Presidency
Magistrate-, after holding that there were "really, no
sufficient grounds to proceed further" dismissed the
complaint under Sec. 203 Criminal Procedure Code.
The complainant then invoked the Revisional jurisdiction of
the Calcutta High Court. That Court, after an examination
of the complaint, the evidence produced for the purpose of
issuing process to the accused persons, and the order of the
Chief Presidency Magistrate, came to the conclusion that the
order of dismissal of the complaint under Sec. 203 Criminal
Procedure Code was improper. The High Court held that the
order contained ape-mature verdict on the merits of the
case. Furthermore, the High Court pointed out that the
Chief Presidency Magistrate had misread the oral evidence in
finding that the complainant said that one or two persons
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mentioned in the pay sheets might have been employed by the
Company sometimes. A correct reading of the evidence of the
complainant, which we have also examined, was that one or
two persons may have been employed by the Company, from-time
to time but none of the persons whose names appeared in the
pay sheets were any of those persons. Even if the
complainant had said that some of the entries in the account
books.,appeared to be, deliberately false, the complaint
would not have merited a forthright dismissal without
further enquiry. The High Court, in our opinion, rightly
considered the order pronouncing a judgment on the merits of
’the, case on bare Probabilities and surmises to be
Premature. .The High Court very rightly, did not express any
opinion on, merits of the prosecution case ’beyond saying
that the case called for further, enquiry. it, therefore,
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set aside the order of dismissal under Section 203 of the
Criminal Procedure Code and, sent back the case for further
enquiry in accordance with law.
The accused have come up to this Court by Special leave
against the above-mentioned Order of the High Court for
further enquiry into the case. It is urged that the High
Court should not have, in exercise of its revisional
jurisdiction, set aside the Chief Presidency Magistrate’s
order. We are unable to accept this contention because we
think-that the Presidency Magistrate had not correctly
understood the scope and purpose of the power to dismiss a
complaint under Section 203 Criminal Procedure Code.
It has to be remembered that an order of dismissal of a com-
plaint under Section 203 Criminal Procedure Code has to be,
made on judicially sound grounds. It can only be made where
the reasons given disclose that the proceedings cannot
terminate successfully in a conviction. It is true that the
Magistrate is not debarred, at this stage, from going into
the merits of the evidence produced by the complainant.
But, the object of such consideration of the merits of the
case, at this stage, could only be to determine whether
there are sufficient grounds for proceeding further or not.
Ile mere existence of some grounds which would ’be material
in deciding whether the accused should be convicted or
acquitted does not generally indicate that the case must
necessarily fail. On the other hand, such grounds. may
indicate the need for proceeding further in order to
discover the truth after a full and proper investigation.
If, however, a bare perusal of a complaint or the evidence
led in support of it show that essential ingredients of the
offences alleged are absent or that the dispute is only of a
civil nature or that there are such patent absurdities in
evidence produced that it would be a waste of time to
proceed further, the complaint could be properly dismissed
under Section 203 Criminal Procedure Code.
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In the case before us, the learned Magistrate was in error
in assuming that merely because the. names of one or two
former employees of the Company may be mentioned in the pay-
sheets the whole prosecution case was actually demolished.
Moreover, as the High Court had rightly pointed out, the
complainant’s actual evidence had fully supported and not
contradicted any part of the complaint. No such absurdity
was revealed by he complainant’s evidence as to merit a
forthright dismissal of the complaint under Section 203
Criminal Procedure Code. What the Magistrate had to
determine at the stage of issue of process was not the,
correctnes or the probability or improbability of individual
items of evidence on disputable grounds, but the existence
or otherwise of a prima facie, case on the assumption that
what was stated could be% true unless the prosecution
allegations were so fantastic that they could not reasonably
be held to be true.
As we, in agreement with the High Court, think that the
order of the Chief Presidency Magistrate in dismissing the
complaint was premature and was also based on obvious
’misconceptions, we dismiss this appeal.
V.P.S. Appeal dissmissed.
978