Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (crl.) 182 of 2004
PETITIONER:
K. Vidya Sagar
RESPONDENT:
State of Uttar Pradesh and others
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/07/2005
BENCH:
R.C. Lahoti,H.K. Sema & G.P. Mathur
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
G.P. Mathur, J.
This petition under Article 32 of the Constitution has been filed
praying for a writ of mandamus or any other appropriate writ or other
directions be issued to: -
"a) Conduct an inquiry by any Hon’ble Judge of the
Hon’ble High Court or an independent and impartial
Authority regarding the FIR 521 dt. 9.7.98 lodged at
Sector 20 P.S. NOIDA and the harassment caused to
the petitioner for the last six years and grant
compensation to the petitioner for rehabilitation at
Delhi.
b) grant compensation to the petitioner for a further
period of two years for restoration of his earlier
practice and for settling in Delhi with his family.
c) Conduct an inquiry into the loss caused to Y.
Pitchaiah the client of the petitioner whose original
record was stolen by the accused after he fought the
litigation for 15 years in the courts below.
d) Conduct an inquiry by any Hon’ble Judge of the
Hon’ble High Court or an independent and impartial
Authority regarding six years of delay in prosecuting
the accused especially with reference to the
proceedings in Crl. Revision No. 33/2002 at
Dehradun in the State of Uttaranchal.
e) Direct the Special Magistrate, C.B.I. Cases,
Karkardooma, Delhi, to file status report for every 3
months.
f) Pass any other Writ/order/direction as this Hon’ble
Court may deem fit and proper in the facts and
circumstances of the present case.
2. The case of the petitioner, in brief, is that Smt. Tara Bhatt
(respondent No. 4) gave on rent the ground floor of flat bearing No. B-
99, Sector 15, NOIDA, to him in September, 1995 on a rent of Rs.3,000/-
per month. Initially a lease agreement was executed for eleven months,
which contained a stipulation that the rent would be increased by 10%
every year. The respondent No. 4 demanded an increase of 30% at the
time of renewal of lease in March, 1997 and threatened that in case he
failed to pay the enhanced rent, he would be evicted from the premises
by use of force. The petitioner then filed Civil Suit No. 411 of 1997 in
the Court of Civil Judge (SD), Ghaziabad seeking a relief of prohibitory
injunction for restraining the respondent No. 4 from evicting him wherein
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an ex-parte interim injunction was granted in his favour on 28.3.1997,
which was confirmed on 31.1.1998. The petitioner along with his family
left for his native place in Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh on 15.5.1998
after locking his residential premises, which contained household items
like furniture, refrigerator, TV, files of his clients and library books, etc.
The respondent No. 4, however, lodged an FIR on 18.5.1998 at Police
Station Sector 20, NOIDA alleging that on 15.5.1998 she along with her
family had gone to attend a marriage from where she came back late in
the night. In the morning of 16.5.1998 she found that the doors of the
residential premises, which was in the occupation of the petitioner, were
wide open and that the petitioner had left the place and had also removed
his goods. In the FIR a request was made that the premises may be
inspected. The petitioner returned from his native place on 9.7.1998 and
found that the respondent No. 4 had illegally taken possession of the
premises, which was under his occupation. He then lodged an FIR about
the incident at the concerned police station on 9.7.1998. The plea of the
petitioner further is that by virtue of an order passed by this Court on
5.2.1999 the CBI was entrusted the job of investigating the criminal case,
which had been registered on the basis of the FIR lodged by him. The
CBI was able to recover his goods worth more than Rupees one lakh but
the court files could not be found. After completing the investigation the
CBI filed a charge-sheet for prosecution of respondent No. 4 under
Sections 380 and 454 I.P.C. in the Court of Special Magistrate, CBI,
Dehradun wherein the charges have been framed on 5.2.2002. The
respondent No. 4 preferred criminal revision against the aforesaid order
before the Sessions Judge, Dehradun, in which the record of the trial
court was summoned and a large number of dates had been fixed.
Subsequently, the petitioner moved a transfer application before this
Court, which was allowed on 22.1.2004 and the criminal case and also
the criminal revision were transferred to Delhi.
3. The record shows that the petitioner K. Vidya Sagar had earlier
filed a Writ Petition under Article 226 of the Constitution before the
Allahabad High Court bearing number 24940 of 1998. In the said writ
petition (1) State of U.P., (2) The Director General of Police, U.P.,
(3) SSP (NOIDA), (4) SP (NOIDA), (5) Shri Rajbir Singh, ASI, Gole
Chakkar Police Chowky, Sector 15, NOIDA and (6) Smt. Tara Bhatt
(respondent No. 4 in the present petition) were impleaded as respondents.
The writ petition was filed on the same facts on which the present
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution has been filed. The prayer
made in the writ petition filed before the High Court reads as under: -
"i) issue an appropriate writ, order or direction directing
the respondents to restore the possession of premises
No. B-99, Ground Floor, Sector 15, NOIDA in
possession of the petitioner forthwith and further
direct the respondent No. 6 not to interfere with the
peaceful possession of the petitioner and further not to
dispossess the petitioner without following the
procedure established by law.
ii) issue an appropriate writ, order or direction directing
the respondents to restore the petitioner with all his
movable property which the petitioner has left in the
premises in question on 15.5.1998.
iii) issue an appropriate writ, order or direction to
investigate into the whole matter by an independent
investigating agency preferably by CBI.
iv) Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction awarding
heavy financial compensation against the respondent
No. 3 to 5 as this Hon’ble Court may deem fit in facts
and circumstances of the case.
v) Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, directing
the respondent No. 1 and 2 to initiate disciplinary
actions against the respondent Nos. 3 to 5 for their
collusion with the respondent No. 6 in indulging an
un-lawful activity, unbecoming of a police official
who has to protect and enforce the law.
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vi) Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, directing
the respondent No. 3 to 5 to charge-sheet the
respondent No. 6 for the criminal activities done by
her and further direct the respondent No. 6 to pay
compensation to the petitioner for the inconvenience
caused to him because of her unlawful activities.
vii) And/or to pass any further order or direction which
this Hon’ble Court may deem fit and proper under the
facts and circumstances of the case."
After exchange of affidavits the writ petition was dismissed by the High
Court by the judgment and order dated 22.9.1998 and the relevant portion
of the order reads as under: -
"Sri P.K. Bisaria, learned standing counsel, informs us that
the police authorities have filed their counter affidavits.
According to the assertion made by him even the petitioner
was interrogated in order to ascertain the truth of his
allegations made in the first information report. Initially, the
petitioner in person, denied to have been interrogated by the
police, but later on he comes up with a claim that the police
had interrogated him under Section 161 Cr. P.C. on one day
alone and had desired that he should file affidavits of at least
two persons of the locality who had actually seen his goods
being taken away by the landlady and her henchmen, on
which he asked for some time.
Sri Namwar Singh, learned counsel appearing on
behalf of the landlady, alleged that the petitioner has not
paid a single farthing since February, 1997 and that the lease
was only for 11 months period, which had expired on
30.8.1996. She has also raised the rent of the premises as
per the terms of the lease by 10% but the increased rent was
also never paid by the petitioner. The petitioner in reply
contends that he had made certain payments. The petitioner
also submitted that the fact that he along with his wife and
child had left Noida on 15th May, 1998 was accepted by the
Investigating Officer and thereby we should draw an
assumption in his favour that he was the tenant and that after
he had left Noida his goods which he had kept in the leased
premises have been looted away by the landlady.
To this Mr. Namwar Singh, learned counsel for the
landlady contended that the landlady had already left Noida
along with her family members in the morning of 15th May,
1998 for attending marriage ceremony of her relation, and
that the petitioner had already shifted his goods.
Having heard the learned counsel for the parties
including the petitioner in person we are of the view that
since disputed questions of facts are involved in this writ
petition it will not be desirable for this Court to adjudicate
them in exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India. If the petitioner
thinks that he has got a valid case either before any civil
court and/or criminal court or any authority, he may avail
that forum.
Land-lady will also be at liberty to approach any
forum to claim for recovery of alleged difference of rent
and/or compensation.
With these observation this writ petition is dismissed.
No costs."
4. Feeling aggrieved by the aforesaid judgment and order of the High
Court, the petitioner filed special leave petition (C) No. 16237 of 1998 in
this Court. In response to the notice issued the landlady Smt. Tara Bhatt
(respondent No. 4) filed a counter affidavit. It was averred therein that
the petitioner is an advocate and taking advantage of his position, had
driven a poor house-wife, who had been staying alone in her house with
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two young daughters and a son, to several untenable and false litigations
right from the inception he was inducted in the ground floor of her flat
No. B-99, Sector 15, NOIDA. The petitioner had been given the ground
floor of the flat on licence for a period of eleven months on Rs.3,000/-
per month with effect from 10.5.1995 and a licence deed in that regard
was executed. In terms of the deed the licence could be extended with
mutual consent with an increase of 10% in licence fee. The petitioner
continued to occupy the premises without increasing the licence fee and
as such no fresh licence deed was executed. He paid rent/licence fee
only up to February, 1997 and thereafter he sent four cheques for
Rs.1500/-, Rs.1500/-, Rs.1675/- and Rs.2000/- for the months of March,
April, May and June, 1997, which were not got encashed by her. During
this period the petitioner K. Vidya Sagar tried to break the seal of the
electric meter and when she objected to it he abused her in filthy
language and also gave her a beating. The respondent No. 4 sent a legal
notice dated 23.3.1998 terminating the licence and demanding the arrears
of licence fee for the period from March 1997 to March 1998. The
petitioner left the premises surreptitiously on 15.5.1998 without making
payment of arrears of licence fee, which amounted to more than
Rs.90,000/-. The respondent No. 4 had gone to attend a marriage on
15.5.1998 and when she returned she found that the petitioner had
vacated the premises and thereafter she lodged a report at the concerned
police station on 18.5.1998 and also sent applications to SHO of the
concerned police station, SSP and other authorities of NOIDA for taking
appropriate action. The police inspected the premises and found the
same to be vacant and empty. It was further stated in the affidavit that
the petitioner had lodged a false criminal complaint against respondent
No. 4, who was a helpless housewife. In para 4(j) of the counter affidavit
it was stated that the petitioner had earlier filed a writ petition under
Article 32 of the Constitution in the Supreme Court, which was
dismissed on 27.7.1998 and thereafter he filed writ petition No. 24940 of
1998 under Article 226 of the Constitution before the Allahabad High
Court on the same cause of action.
5. The special leave petition (C) No. 16237 of 1998 was finally
disposed of on 13.8.1999 by a Three Judge Bench of this Court and the
order passed therein reads as under: -
"In this special leave petition arising out of an order passed
in a writ petition by the High Court of Allahabad, by an
interim order, the Central Bureau of Investigation was
directed to investigate into the grievances of the petitioner
and pursuant to the said investigation, a report dated
7.5.1999 has been filed. In view of this report, the main
grievance of the petitioner for taking criminal action against
the respondents stand redressed. The other grievance of the
petitioner is alleged forcible possession of the premises in
question by the ex-landlady. So far as that grievance is
concerned, in view of above diverse cases put forward in
these proceedings arising out of a writ petition under Article
226 of the Constitution, in our view, it is not appropriate for
us to examine the rival contentions which raised disputed
questions of facts. We, therefore, leave that question open.
We are not inclined to entertain the S.L.P. arising out of the
writ petition, in the peculiar facts and circumstances of this
case. Whatever other grievances remain in spite of the
report of the C.B.I. so far as the petitioner is concerned, he
may ventilate the same in accordance with law. The special
leave petition is, therefore, disposed of."
6. The petitioner also filed Transfer Petition (Crl.) No. 176 of 2003
(K. Vidya Sagar vs. Director, C.B.I. and Anr.) in this Court seeking
transfer of the criminal cases. In the said transfer petition he moved
CRLMP No. 8961/2003 in which an order was passed on 16.12.2003,
which reads as under: -
"CRLMP 8961/2003
This is an application seeking direction to C.B.I. to
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investigate further and to file a report in this Court and to
seize all documents relating to the application for passport
of the petitioner.
These prayers lie within the jurisdiction of the trial
court. The petitioner is at liberty to make that prayer to the
Court where the matter is pending now or to the transferee
court in the event of the transfer petition being allowed.
While hearing a transfer petition this court cannot like
exercising original jurisdiction make such orders.
The Criminal Miscellaneous Petition is rejected.
During the course of hearing the petitioner pointed
out that his valuable articles relating to the present case are
lying in the custody of C.B.I. and are getting spoiled. Let
the learned counsel for the C.B.I. seek instructions in this
regard."
7. The specific case of the petitioner is that he was a tenant of the
ground floor in flat No. B-99, Sector 15, NOIDA, which is owned by
Smt. Tara Bhatt and he had taken the same on rent in September, 1995 on
a monthly rent of Rs.3,000/-. It is also pleaded by him that a lease deed
was executed for eleven months, which contained a stipulation that the
rent would be increased by 10% every year. The case of the petitioner
further is that he left for his hometown Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh on
15.5.1998 after locking the premises and during his absence the landlady
illegally took possession of the premises. In paragraph 2(x) of the writ
petition it is averred that after the petitioner returned from his home town
and found that the respondent No. 4 had taken possession of the
premises, he lodged an FIR at the concerned police station on 9.7.1998.
In the same paragraph it is averred that when the accused/respondent No.
4 did not accept the rent, the arrears of rent amounting to Rs.40,000/-
were deposited in the bank by the petitioner. This statement is very
vague, as no details of any kind have been given like the account number
or the name of the bank. It is nowhere averred by the petitioner that he
had either paid up-to-date rent to respondent No. 4 or that he had
deposited the aforesaid amount of Rs.40,000/- in the account of
respondent No. 4. The case of the respondent No. 4, as disclosed from
the counter affidavit filed by her in special leave petition (C) No. 16237
of 1998, is that the petitioner had not paid any rent from February, 1997
and he had surreptitiously vacated the premises on 15.5.1998 and had
removed his goods. It may be mentioned here that the UP Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972 is not
applicable to buildings for a period of 40 years from the date of their
construction and, therefore, the said Act is currently is not applicable to
buildings in NOIDA as the Authority itself has been established some
time after 1976. The questions raised by the petitioner in this writ
petition are all disputed questions of facts. For resolving the factual
controversy oral and documentary evidence would have to be examined
which is not feasible for this Court in a writ petition under Article 32 of
the Constitution.
8. As mentioned earlier the petitioner had filed a writ petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution before the Allahabad High Court seeking
virtually the same reliefs, which have been sought in the present writ
petition. The High Court dismissed the writ petition on the ground that
the questions raised were all disputed questions of facts, which could not
be adjudicated in a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution.
The High Court further observed that the petitioner could approach the
civil or criminal court or any other authority for this purpose. In the
special leave petition preferred against the decision of the High Court it
was observed in the order dated 13.8.1999 that it was not appropriate for
this Court to examine the rival contentions which raised disputed
questions of fact and the said questions were left open. It was further
observed that whatever other grievances remain in spite of the report of
the CBI, so far as the petitioner is concerned, he may ventilate the same
in accordance with law.
9. In Virudhunagar Steel Rolling Mills Ltd. vs. The Government
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of Madras 1968 (2) SCR 740 it was held that where a writ petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution is disposed of on merits and the order of
dismissal of the petition is a speaking order that would amount to res
judicata and would bar a petition under Article 32 of the Constitution on
the same facts irrespective of whether notice was issued to the other side
or not before such a decision was given. In T.P. Moideen Koya vs.
Government of Kerala and others JT 2004 (8) SC 383, the entire law
regarding bar of res judicata was reviewed and it was held that a decision
rendered by this Court in proceedings under Article 136 of the
Constitution, which has attained finality would bind the parties and the
same issue cannot be re-agitated or re-opened in a subsequent petition
under Article 32 of the Constitution.
10. This being the settled position of law, the reliefs claimed by the
petitioner in the present petition under Article 32 of the Constitution
cannot be granted as he had claimed the same reliefs in the writ petition,
which was filed under Article 226 of the Constitution in the Allahabad
High Court, which was dismissed and the special leave petition preferred
against the said decision was disposed of by this Court with a direction
that he may ventilate the same in accordance with law.
11. After hearing the petitioner in person the Court by order dated
6.8.2004 had requested Mr. K.K. Venugopal, Senior Advocate to assist
the Court as Amicus Curiae. Thereafter the petition was heard on
23.8.2004 and after hearing the petitioner and Mr. K.K. Venugopal
following order was passed: -
"The only grievance which we find worth being taken care
of and as highlighted by the learned Amicus Curiae is the
remissness on the part of the concerned police officials in
investigating the F.I.R. No. 521/98 lodged on 9.7.1998 at
2.50 p.m. at P.S. Sector 20, NOIDA, Uttar Pradesh."
Thereafter, notice was issued to I.G. Police, Meerut Zone, Meerut (U.P.)
to show cause why an inquiry into the conduct of the police officials
concerned regarding the investigation of the case be not directed. At the
direction of the I.G. Police, Meerut an inquiry was conducted by the S.P.,
Gautam Budh Nagar and his report has been placed on record.
According to the report the conduct of Shri Ajay Joshi, the then Circle
Officer-I, NOIDA did not show that he had committed any irregularity or
carelessness in discharge of his duty. However, Shri Balram Singh, ASI,
Police Station, Sector 20, NOIDA, did not properly investigate case
crime No. 521of 1998 which had been registered under Sections 447, 457
and 380 IPC and had shown carelessness in discharge of his duty. Since
the matter is subjudice before the criminal court at Karkardooma, Delhi,
the Inquiry Officer was of the opinion that at this stage no action is called
for. In case the Court arrived at a finding that the investigation had not
been properly conducted, appropriate departmental action would be taken
against the concerned police officials.
12. We are also of the opinion that having regard to the fact that
diametrically opposite versions have been given by the petitioner and
landlady Smt. Tara Bhatt (respondent No. 4) and the matter being already
before the criminal court it will not be proper for us to make any
observations at this stage, lest it may prejudice the accused in their trial
in the criminal case. After the trial is over, where the parties will get
opportunity to adduce oral and documentary evidence, and if the criminal
court comes to a finding that there was any remissness on the part of the
concerned ASI of Sector 20 Police Station, NOIDA, who investigated the
alleged offence, the authorities of the State Government may take
appropriate departmental action.
13. It may be mentioned here that the CBI has already filed charge-
sheet against respondent No. 4 for her prosecution under Sections 454
and 380 IPC and in the said criminal case charges have been framed by
the learned Magistrate. The criminal case and the criminal revision
preferred by the accused against the order framing of charge have already
been transferred to Delhi by this Court. The petitioner has submitted that
the trial of the criminal case is not proceeding and the learned Magistrate
has been giving long dates. For an expeditious hearing of the case every
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party must cooperate. It will not be proper for us to give any direction to
the learned Magistrate regarding fixation of dates in the said criminal
case as it depends upon the docket of the Court. Any direction for an out
of turn hearing of a case has the effect of pushing some other case
behind. However, it is directed that the learned Magistrate shall make all
possible endeavour to decide the criminal case expeditiously.
14. Subject to the observations made above, the writ petition is
dismissed.
15. We are grateful to Mr. K.K. Venugopal, senior advocate for
rendering valuable assistance.