Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PRAMATHA NATH TALUQDAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SAROJ RANJAN SARKAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/12/1961
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 876 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 297
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC2372 (11)
F 1977 SC2432 (4)
RF 1983 SC 595 (10)
R 1986 SC1440 (9,11)
R 1988 SC1883 (257)
F 1992 SC1894 (11)
ACT:
Criminal Complaint-Scope of enquiry-Second
complaint on same facts but fresh evidence-When
can be entertained-Exceptional circumstances-
Manifest error-Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898
(Act 5 of 1898) ss. 200, 202, 203, 204-Criminal
Matter-Special Bench-Validity of Constitution-
Calcutta High Court (Appellate) Rules-Sanction-
Abetment by conspiracy-Code of Criminal Procedure
1891 (Act 5 of 1898), s. 196A-Indian Penal Code,
1860 (XLV of 1860), ss. 107, 109, 120A, 120B.
HEADNOTE:
On March 17, 1954, Promode Ranjan a brother
of N. R. Sarkar filed a complaint under s. 200
Code of Criminal Procedure against Pramathanath
and S. M. Basu alleging offences punishable under
ss. 467, 471 and 109 of the Indian Penal Code,
before the Chief Presidency Magistrate in respect
of a document appointing Pramathanath as the
Managing Director of N. R. Sarkar & Co. and the
minutes of the Board meeting resolving the same.
It was alleged therein that the signatures of N.
R. Sarkar on those documents were forgeries. After
considering the evidence of the Handwriting Expert
the Magistrate dismissed the complaint. Promode
Ranjan preferred a revision petition to the High
Court. The High Court dismissed the revision
Petition. By an application dated January 6, 1956,
when the revision petition was pending, attention
of the High Court was drawn to the fact that the
minutes dated January 16, 1948, had been typed on
a letter bearing at the top in print "Telephone
City 6091" where as the City Exchange had not come
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into existence till December 1948. The Supreme
Court granted special leave against the dismissal
of the revision petition by the High Court but the
appeal was withdrawn.
On April 3, 1959, Saroj Ranjan, another
brother of N.R. Sarkar, laid a complaint on the
same facts and allegations
298
against the appellants, in addition alleging the
further fact about the City Exchange in support of
the allegation that the minutes were forged
dishonestly and fraudulently and used as genuine.
Neither in this complaint nor before the High
Court had it been stated as to when it came to be
known that on the purported date of the minutes
the City Exchange was not in existence. The
Presidency Magistrate issued process against the
appellants. The appellants went up in revision to
the High Court. The matter was first heard by a
Division Bench and was later referred to a larger
Bench of three Judges which dismissed the revision
petition. In these appeals on special leave it was
contended by the appellants that the second
complaint ought not to have been entertained, that
the constitution of the special Bench was illegal
and that as the complaint alleged criminal
conspiracy sanction under s. 196A of the Code of
Criminal Procedure was required.
^
Held, that the enquiry contemplated by ss.
200 to 204 Code of Criminal Procedure is for the
purpose of enabling the Magistrate to find out if
sufficient grounds exist for issuing process.
Vadilal Panchal v. Daltaraja Dulaji
Chandigaonkar, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 1, Gulab Khan v.
Gulab Mohammad Khan A.I.R. 1927 Lah. 30 and Ram
Gopal Ganpat Ruia v. State of Bombay, (1958)
S.C.R. 688 referred to.
Per S. K. Das, J.-The law does not prohibit
altogether the entertainment of a second complaint
when a previous complaint on the same allegations
has been dismissed under s. 203 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. But a second complaint
containing more or less the same allegations can
be entertained only in exceptional circumstances.
It is not possible nor desirable that the
exceptional circumstances must be stated with
particularity or precision. Generally speaking,
the exceptional circumstances may be classified
under three categories: (1) manifest error in the
earlier proceeding, (2) resulting miscarriage of
justice, and (3) new facts which the complainant
had no knowledge of or could not with reasonable
diligence have brought forward in the previous
proceedings. Where the previous order of dismissal
was passed on an incomplete record or on a
misunderstanding of the nature of the complaint, a
second complaint may be entertained. Where a
Magistrate misdirects himself as to the scope of
an enquiry under s 202, Code of Criminal
Procedure, and the mistake, made gives a wrong
direction to the whole proceeding on the first
complaint, the order of dismissal passed thereon
would be due. to a manifest error resulting in a
miscarriage of justice. In such a case, a second
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complaint is entertainable.
299
Per Kapur and Hidayatullah, JJ.-There is no
legal bar to the entertainability of a second
complaint. It is only when the Magistrate had
misdirected himself, with regard to the scope of
the enquiry under s. 203, Code of Criminal
Procedure, or has passed an order misunderstanding
the nature of the complaint or the order is
manifestly unjust or absurd or the order is based
on an incomplete record can it be said that there
is such a manifest error or a manifest miscarriage
of justice that a second complaint on the same
allegations may be entertained. The other
exceptional circumstances in which a second
complaint may be entertained is when it is
supported by fresh and further evidence.
Case-law referred to.
In the case of fresh evidence it must be such
as could not have been with due diligence on the
part of the complaint adduced on the earlier
occasion.
Queen Empress v. Dole Gobinda Das I.L.R 28
Cal. 211, Dwarkanath Mandal v. Daniradha banerjee,
I.L.R. 28 Cal. 692 (F.B.) disapproved.
Allah Ditta v. Karam Bakshi, 12 Lah, 9 Ram,
Narain Chowdhary v. Punachand Jain, AIR 1949 Pat.
255, Hansabai v. Ananda, A.I.R. 1949 Bom. 384 and
Doraiswami v. Subramania, A I. R. 1918 Mad. 484,
approved.
In the present case permitting the second
complaint to proceed would be a gross abuse of
process.
Held, further, concurring with S.K. Das, J.,
that the Special Bench was properly constituted.
Per S. K. Das, J.-On the first complaint the
Presidency Magistrate had misdirected himself
regarding the scope of the enquiry under ss. 203
and 204 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and it
was a manifest error. The facts about the City
Exchange urged and fresh evidence were decisive of
a prima facie case for issuing process and it was
an exceptional circumstance justifying
entertaining the second complaint and not to
permit the trial of the case in such circumstances
would be a denial of justice.
Kumariah v. C. Naicker, A.I.R. 1946 Mad, 167
and Ramanand v. Sheri, I.L.R. 1. 56 All 425,
referred to.
Though Chapter II of the Rules of the High
Court (Appellate Side) in terms applies to Civil
cases, their substance could be applied to
criminal cases by the Chief Justice in
constituting a larger bench.
The substance of the allegations in the
complaint amounted to an offence of abetment by
conspiracy under
300
s. 107 Indian Penal Code and not the offence of
Criminal Conspiracy as defined by s. 120A and
therefore sanction under s. 196A of the Code of
Criminal Procedure was not necessary. The
distinction between the two offences lies in that
the first requires an overt act in pursuance of
the agreement whereas the second makes the
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agreement to do the unlawful act itself
punishable.
Basirul Hag v. State of West Bengal [1953]
S.C.R. 826 and Mulachy v. The Queen, (1868) L.R. 3
H.L. 306, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeals Nos. 75 and 77 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated December 22-23, 1960, and from the
order dated March 17, 1961 of the Calcutta High
Court in Cr. Revision Nos. 1019 and 681 of 1959.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor General of India,
and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant (in Cr. A. No.
75/61).
Purushottam Trikamdas, Prasunchandra Ghosh,
S.C. Mitter and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant
(in Cr. A. No. 77 of 1961).
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney General of India,
Alak Gupta, S.N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath and P.L.
Vohra for the respondents.
1961. December 21. The judgment was delivered
by
S.K. Das, J.-I regret that I have come to a
conclusion different from that of my learned
brethren in these appeals. I proceed now to state
the necessary facts, the arguments advanced before
us and my conclusions on the various questions
urged.
By an order dated April 10, 1961 this Court
granted special leave asked for by the two
appellants herein, Pramatha Nath Talukdar and
Saurindra Mohan Basu, to appeal to this Court from
two orders made by the High Court of Calcutta, one
dated December 22/23, 1960 and the other dated
March 17, 1961. By the first order a Special
301
Bench of the Calcutta High Court dismissed two
applications in revision which the appellants had
made to the said High Court against an order of
the Chief Presidency Magistrate of Calcutta dated
April 11, 1959 by which the said Magistrate issued
processes against the two appellants for offences
alleged to have been committed by them under ss.
467 and 471 read with s. 109 of the Indian penal
Code on a complaint made by Saroj Ranjan Sarkar,
respondent herein. By the second order a Division
Bench of the said High Court refused the prayer of
the appellants for a certificate under Art.
134(1)(c) of the Constitution of India that the
case was a fit one for appeal to this Court. This
refusal was based primarily on the ground that the
order sought to be appealed from was not a final
order within the meaning of the Article aforesaid.
In pursuance of the special leave granted by
this Court four appeals were filed, two against
the order dated December 22/23, 1960 and the other
two against the order dated March 17, 1961. The
two appeals numbered 76 and 78 of 1961 from the
order dated March 17, 1961 were withdrawn on the
ground that special leave having been granted
against the order of the Special Bench dated
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December 22/23, 1960, the appellants did not wish
to press the appeals from the later order dated
March, 17, 1961. Therefore, the present judgment
relates to the two appeals numbered 75 and 77 of
1961 which are from the judgment and order of the
Special Bench dated December 22/23, 1960.
The principal question which arises for
decision in these two appeals is whether a second
complaint can be entertained by a Magistrate who
or whose predecessor had, on the same or similar
allegation, dismissed a previous complaint, and if
so in what circumstances should such a second
complaint be entertained. The question is one of
302
general importance and has given rise to some
divergence of opinion in the High Courts.
Let me first state the facts which have led
to the filing of the second complaint in the
present case. Saroj Ranjan Sarkar, who is the
youngest brother of the late Nalini Ranjan Sakar-a
well-known public man, financier and industrialist
of Bengal-filed a petition of complaint in the
court of the Chief Presidency Magistrate,
Calcutta. On April 3, 1959, I do not pause here to
state the allegations made in that petition, a
shall have occasion to refer to them in detail
later on. The complaint was filed against four
persons-the appellants herein and two other
persons, Narendra Nath Law and Amiya Chakravarty.
A previous complaint on more or less the same
allegations was made by Promode Ranjan Sarkar,
second brother of the late Nalini Ranjan Sarkar.
That complaint was made on March 17, 1954 and was
dismissed under s. 203 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure by the then Chief Presidency Magistrate,
Shri N. C. Chakravarti, on August 6, 1954.
Thereafter, an application in revision was made by
Promode Ranjan Sarkar to the High Court of
Calcutta, which gave rise to Revision Case No.
1059 of 1954. This application in revision was
dismissed on July 8, 1955 by Debabrata Mookerjee,
J. Promode Ranjan Sarkar then applied for a
certificate under Art. 134(1)(c) of the
Constitution, but such a certificate was refused
by a Bench of the Calcutta High Court on September
1, 1955. Promode Ranjan Sarkar applied for special
leave from this Court and obtained such leave on
February 13, 1956. An appeal was filed in
pursuance of that special leave, but ultimately
Promode Ranjan Sarkar withdrew his appeal by
filing a petition on February 3, 1959. In that
petition he stated that at the intervention of
Common friends and well-wishers of the parties, he
had settled his disputes with the respondents
therein and did not want to proceed with the
appeal
303
The appeal was accordingly withdrawn on March 12,
1959. Then, within about 22 days of that order,
Saroj Ranjan Sarkar filed the complaint which has
given rise to the present proceedings. For
convenience and brevity, I shall refer to Promode
Ranjan Sarkar’s complaint as the first complaint
and Saroj Ranjan Sarkar’s as the second complaint.
It is necessary here to give a little more of
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the background history of the second complaint. As
stated earlier, the late Nalini Ranjan Sarkar was
a well-known person in Bengal. He was the
Governing or Managing Director of N. R. Sarkar &
Co. Ltd., which managed several public limited
companies, such as, Hindustan Development
Corporation Ltd., Hindustan Heavy Chemicals Ltd.,
and Hindusthan Pilkington Glass Works Ltd. He was
also closely connected with the Hindusthan Co-
operative Insurance Society Ltd., of which he held
a large number of shares. On January 4, 1948 he
obtained leave of absence from the Directors of N.
R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. for a period of one year with
a view to joining the Ministry in West Bengal and
he assumed office as Finance Minister of the West
Bengal Government on January 23, 1948. Later, the
leave granted to him for one year was extended. He
owned 4649 shares of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd.
Pramatha Nath Talukdar, who was a paid employee of
the Hindusthan Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd.
up to the end of July, 1953 was also a Director of
N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. He held 299 shares of the
said company. Promode Rajan Sarkar held 50 shares.
Santi Ranjan Sarkar; son of a deceased brother of
Nalini Ranjan Sarkar, held one share. Thus, it
would appear that Nalini Ranjan Sarkar was the
owner of the largest number of shares of N. R.
Sarkar & Co., Ltd., and for all practical purposes
he controlled the affairs of that company. On July
31, 1951 Nalini Ranjan Sarkar executed a deed of
trust in respect of 3649 shares out of the
304
shares held by him in N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. By
the said trust-deed he appointed Promode Ranjan
Sarkar, Pramatha Nath Talukdar and Narendra Nath
Law as the trustees; but the beneficiaries under
the trust-deed were his four brothers, namely,
Promode Ranjan Sarkar, Pabitra Ranjan Sarkar,
Prafulla Ranjan Sarkar and Saroj Ranjan Sarkar, as
also Santi Ranjan Sarkar, the son of a deceased
brother. It was alleged that the balance of 1000
shares held by Nalini Ranjan Sarkar was kept in
custody with Pramatha Nath Talukdar and according
to the case of the complainant these shares were
kept in deposit with Pramatha Nath Talukdar for
the benefit of the complainant and this brothers.
Nalini Ranjan Sarkar died on January 25, 1953. It
was alleged that a few days after the funeral
ceremony had been performed, Saurindra Mohan Basu
casually informed Promode Ranjan Sarkar that his
brother Nalini Ranjan Sarkar had executed two
documents to wit, an unregistered deed of
agreement dated January 19, 1948 by which Pramatha
Nath Talukdar was appointed Managing Director of
N.R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. and a deed of transfer of
1000 shares dated February 5, 1951 in favour of
Pramatha Nath Talukdar. Promode Ranjan Sarkar and
his brothers did not give credence to the
information conveyed, and wanted to see the
documents. It was alleged that this request was
not complied with. On July 31, 1953, i.e. about
six months after the death of Nalini Ranjan Sarkar
Pramatha Nath Talukdar resigned from his salaried
post under the Hindusthan Co-operative Insurance
Society Ltd. and sought to assume control of N. R.
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Sarkar & Co. Ltd. as its Managing Director. This
led to some trouble between Promode Ranjan Sarkar
and the appellants and also to some correspondence
between Promode Ranjan Sarkar on one side and N.
R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. on the other, details whereof
are not necessary for our purpose.
305
On September 22, 1953 a meeting of the Board of
Directors of N.R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. was held. It
was alleged that the meeting was held irregularly
without any agenda and a resolution was adopted,
despite Promode Ranjan Sarkar’s protest, by which
the appointment of Pramatha Nath Talukdar as
Managing Director of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. was
renewed for seven years. In September, 1953
Promode Ranjan Sarkar formally wrote to N.R.
Sarkar & Co. Ltd. for inspection of the alleged
deeds of agreement and transfer. On October 1,
1953 an inspection was taken, and on October 13,
1953 Promode Ranjan Sarkar was allowed to take
photographs of the relevant portions of the
documents. On this occasion Promode Ranjan Sarkar
also inspected the minutes of the proceedings of
N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. and it was alleged that
the proceedings dated January 16, 1948 purporting
to bear the signature of Nalini Ranjan Sarkar were
forged. The main allegations in the first and
second complaints related to three documents and
were to the effect "that in order to assume
complete control over N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. and
the concerns under its managing agency, the
accused persons entered into a criminal conspiracy
with one another and others unknown, to
dishonestly and fraudulently forge a deed of
agreement, a deed of transfer and make a false
document, to wit, minute book of N. R. Sarkar &
Co. Ltd. and in pursuance thereof dishonestly and
fraudulently forged and or caused to be forged and
used as genuine the said documents". It will be
noticed that three documents were stated to have
been forged, and they were-
(1) An unregistered deed of agreement
purporting to have been executed by the late
Nalini Ranjan Sarkar as Governing Director of N.
R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. on January 19, 1948
appointing Pramatha Nath Talukdar as the Managing
Director of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. on a
remuneration of Rs. 1500-100-2000 per month. This
document bore
306
the signature of Saurindra Mohan Basu as a witness
attesting the signature of Nalini Ranjan Sarkar,
which signature was stated to have been forged.
(2) A transfer deed in respect of 1000 shares
of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. which were said to have
been entrusted to Pramatha Nath Talukdar,
transfering them to the latter for and alleged
consideration of rupees one lac purporting to have
been executed by the late Nalini Ranjan Sarkar on
February 5, 1951 with Saurindra Mohan Basu as the
attesting witness both for the transferor and the
transferee.
(3) Minutes of the proceedings of the Board
meeting of N.R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. dated January
16, 1948 purporting to bear the signature of the
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late Nalini Ranjan Sarkar and containing a
resolution to the effect that the Governing
Director approved of a draft agreement of
appointment between the Company and Pramatha Nath
Talukdar for appointing the latter as Managing
Director of the Company and that the Board of
Directors approved of the said draft agreement.
Of the aforesaid three documents the one
relating to the alleged transfer of 1000 shares
referred to as (2) above, is the subject of a
separate suit stated to be now pending in the
Calcutta High Court. That document is not,
therefore, directly the subject matter of the
second complaint. As to the unregistered deed of
agreement referred to as (1) above, it may be
stated that the original document could not be
later found, and on behalf of the appellants and
other accused persons it was stated that the
document was not in their possession or control.
As stated earlier, Promode Ranjan Sarkar had
obtained a photostatic copy of the relevant
portions of the document. As to this document the
main allegation of the complainant was that it was
engrossed on a rupee stamp-paper which had been
issued, on renewal, in the name of P.D.
Himatsinghka & Co., a firm of solicitors in
Calcutta
307
and evidence was led at the enquiry into the first
complaint that the paper was stolen from that firm
and furthermore that the signature on the document
purporting to be that of Nalini Ranjan Sarkar was
not his signature at all. With regard to the
minutes of the proceedings dated January 16, 1948
the allegation was that the minutes were typed on
a sheet of paper bearing the letter-head N.R.
Sarkar & Co. Ltd. with telephone number "City
6091" printed thereon; but the City Exchange did
not come into existence until December, 1948 and
the telephone connection relating to number "City
6091" was obtained for the first time by the
Hindusthan Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd. on
or about March 18, 1949; and therefore the paper
with the letter-head N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. with
telephone number "City 6091" printed thereon could
not have been in existence on the alleged date of
the proceeding of the Board of Directors, namely
January 16, 1948. In the second complaint certain
other circumstances were also alleged in support
of the allegation that the unregistered deed of
agreement dated January 19, 1948 and the minutes
of the proceedings dated January, 16, 1948 were
forged. It is, however, unnecessary to refer to
those circumstances in detail here.
The learned Chief Presidency Magistrate, Shri
Bijayesh Mukherjee, who dealt with the second
complaint considered all the relevant materials
and came to the following conclusions:
(1) there was no delay in making the second
complaint, if one had regard to the circumstances
which led to the first complaint and the
withdrawal of the appeal in the Supreme Court on
March 12, 1959 arising out of the order made on
the first complaint;
(2) the dismissal of the first complaint and
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the application in revision arising therefrom by
Debabrata Mookerjee, J. did not, as a matter of
law,
308
operate as a bar to the entertainment of the
second complaint.
(3) the second complaint was not an attempt
at blackmail; and
(4) the relevant materials in the record
showed prima facie that the minutes of the
proceedings dated January 16, 1948 were forged and
so also the unregistered deed of agreement dated
January, 19, 1948.
The learned Chief Presidency Magistrate then
said:
"Prima facie, I am satisfied about the
truth of the allegations the complaint makes.
That apart, the complaint is for an offence
triable by a Court of sessions. And the
materials I see before me are such as in my
opinion may lead a reasonable body of men to
believe the truth thereof. Judged so, there
is in my opinion sufficient ground for
proceeding within the meaning of section 204
of the procedure Code.
On the question as to which of the four accused
persons against whom process should issue, the
learned Chief Presidency Magistrate came to the
conclusion that there was a prima facie case
against two of the accused persons only, namely,
Pramatha Nath Talukdar and Saurindra Mohan Basu.
Saurindra Mohan Basu, it may be stated here, was a
solicitor of N.R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. and had
attested the signature of Nalini Ranjan Sarkar on
the unregistered deed of agreement. The learned
Chief Presidency Magistrate held that there was no
sufficient ground for proceedings against the
other two accused persons, namely, Narendra Nath
Law and Amiya Chakravarty.
Against the aforesaid order of the Chief
Presidency Magistrate two applications in revision
were filed by the appellants herein. These
applications
309
in revision were first heard by a division Bench
of two Judges of the Calcutta High Court, P. B.
Mukherjee and H. K. Bose, JJ. In view of the
importance of the questions raised in the two
applications in revision and some earlier
decisions of the Calcutta High Court bearing on
those questions to which I shall presently refer,
P.B. Mukherjee, J. came to the conclusion that the
applications should be referred to a larger Bench
to be constituted by the Chief Justice under the
rules of the Court. H.K. Bose. J. (as he then was)
was inclined to take the view that the
applications in revision must fail, but in
deference to the views expressed by P.B.
Mukherjee, J. agreed that the applications should
be referred to the Chief Justice for constituting
a larger Bench. The matter was then referred to
the learned Chief Justice, who constituted a
Special Bench of three Judges to hear the two
applications in revision. This Special Bench heard
the two applications in revision and dismissed
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them by its order dated December 22/23, 1960.
Three questions were agitated before the
Special Bench. The first was whether the Special
Bench was lawfully in seizin of the case and was
competent to deal with the applications in
revision. The second was whether the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate had jurisdiction to take
cognizance of the offences alleged, in the absence
of a sanction under s. 196A of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. The third and the principal
question was whether it was open to the learned
Chief Presidency Magistrate to entertain a second
complaint on the same allegations when his
predecessor had dismissed the first complaint; and
if it was open to him to entertain the second
complaint should he have entertained it in the
circumstances of the present case ? The Special
Bench unanimously decided these three questions
against the appellants and further came to the
conclusion that there was no undue delay in making
the second
310
complaint; neither was it frivolous nor made in
bad faith. It further expressed the view that it
saw no reasons to differ from the finding of the
learned Chief Presidency Magistrate that there was
a prima facie case against the two appellants.
Now, as to the first question. Chapter II of
Rules of the High Court at Calcutta (Appellate
Side) deals with the constitution and powers of
the Benches of the Court. Rule 1 of the said
chapter says in effect that a Division Bench for
the hearing of appeals from decrees or orders of
the Subordinate Civil Courts shall consist of two
or more Judges as the Chief Justice may think fit;
there is a proviso [proviso (ii)] to the rule
which says that on the requisition of any Division
Bench, or whenever he thinks fit, the Chief
Justice may appoint a special Division Bench to
consist of three or more Judges for the hearing of
any particular appeal, or any particular question
of law arising in an appeal, or of the any other
matter. It is clear that the rule and the proviso
deal with the hearing of appeals from decrees or
orders of the Subordinate Civil Courts; in other
words, they deal with civil matters. Rule 9 of the
same chapter deals with criminal matter and sub-r.
(1) of the said rule says that a Division Bench
for the hearing of cases on appeal, reference, or
revision in respect of the sentence or order of
any Criminal Court shall consist of two or more
Judges. There is no proviso to this rule similar
to the proviso to r. 1, referred to earlier, and
the argument is that in the absence of such a
proviso it was not open to the Division Bench
consisting of Mukherjee and Bose, JJ. to refer the
case back to the Chief Justice for the
constitution of a larger Bench (though it was open
to the Chief Justice to constitute originally a
Division Bench of three Judges to hear the case),
and if the Judges were equally divided in opinion,
s. 429 of the Code of Criminal procedure would
apply and the case had to be laid before another
Judge and judgment given according to the
311
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opinion of the third Judge. I am unable to accept
this argument as correct. It is clear from the
rules in Chapter II that the constitution of
Benches is a matter for the Chief Justice and r.
13 in Chapter II says that a Full Bench appointed
for any of the purposes mentioned in Chapter VII,
rr. 1 to 5, shall consist of five Judges or three
Judges as the Chief Justice may appoint. Now, r. 1
in Ch. VII says inter alia that whenever one
Division Bench shall differ from any other
Division Bench upon a point of law or usage having
the force of law, the case shall be referred for
decision by a Full Bench and r. 5 says that if any
such question arises in any case coming before a
Division Bench as Court of Criminal Appeal,
Reference or Revision, the Court referring the
case shall state the point or points on which they
differ from the decision of a former Division
Bench, and shall refer the case to a Full Bench,
for such orders as to such Bench seem fit. In his
judgment P.B. Mukherjee, J. referred to two
earlier decisions of the Calcutta High Court,
Nilratan Sen v. Jogesh Chandra Bhattacharia(1) and
Kamal Chandra Pal v. Gourchand Adhikary (2) and
observed that the question as to whether those
decisions were good law arose in the case and he
gave that as a reason for referring the case to
the Chief Justice for the constitution of a larger
Bench. Even if rr. 1 and 5 in Chapter VII may not,
strictly speaking, apply to the present case
because the Division Bench consisting of Mukerjee
and Bose JJ. did not formulate the point or points
on which they differed from the earlier Division
Bench decisions referred to by Mukherjee, J., I
think that the principle of those rules would
apply and it was open to the Chief Justice, on a
reference by the Division Bench, to constitute a
larger Bench to consider the case. I am also in
agreement with the view expressed by the Special
Bench that the absence of a proviso to r. 9 in
Chapter II correspon-
312
ding to the proviso to r. I does not take away the
inherent power of the Chief Justice to refer any
matter to Bench of three Judges. Sub-rule(1) of r.
9 itself provides that a Division Bench for the
hearing of cases on appeal, reference, or revision
in respect of the sentence or order of any
Criminal Court shall consist of two or more
Judges. Therefore, it was open to the Chief
Justice to constituted Bench of three Judges for
the hearing of the case and in my view it made no
difference whether he constituted such a Bench
originally or on a reference back by the Division
Bench. I further think that the Chief Justice must
have the inherent power to constitute a larger
Bench in special circumstances. Take, for
instance, a case where one Judge of the Division
Bench feels, for a sufficient and good reason,
that he should not hear the case. It is obvious
that in such a case the matter must be referred
back to the Chief Justice for the constitution of
another Bench. The Chief Justice, I think, must
possess such an inherent power in the matter of
constitution of Benches and in the exercise
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thereof he can surely constitute a larger Bench in
a case of importance where the Division Bench
hearing it considers that a question of the
correctness or Otherwise of earlier Division Bench
decisions of the same Court will fall for
consideration in the case. Section 229 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure does not apply to such a
case because it is not a case where the Judges
composing the Court are equally divided in
opinion. Rather it is a case where the Judges
composing the Division Bench consider that the
case is one of such importance that it should be
heard by a larger Bench.
My conclusion, therefore, is that there was
nothing illegal in the Division Bench consisting
of Mukherjee and Bose. JJ. referring the case back
to the Chief Justice; nor was there anything
illegal in the Chief Justice constituting a
special Bench of
313
three Judges to hear the applications in revision.
The special Bench constituted by the Chief Justice
was lawfully in seizin of the case and was
competent to deal with it. The objection as to the
jurisdiction of the special Bench to hear the case
was, in my opinion, rightly overruled by it.
Now, as to section. Section 196A of the Code
of Criminal Procedure may be read first. That
section is in these terms:
"196A. No Court shall take cognizance of
the offence of criminal conspiracy punishable
under section 120B of the Indian Penal Code.
(1) in a case where the object of the
conspiracy is to commit either an
illegal act other than an offence, or a
legal act by illegal means, or an
offence to which the provisions of
section 196 apply, unless authority from
the "State Govern upon complaint made by
order or under authority from the "State
Government" or some officer empowered by
the "State Government" in this behalf,
or
(2) in a case where the object of the
conspiracy is to commit any non-
cognizable offence, or a cognizable
offence not punishable with death,
imprisonment for life or rigorous
imprisonment for a term of two years or
upwards, unless the "State Government",
or a Chief Presidency Magistrate or
District Magistrate empowered in this
behalf by the "State Government", has,
by order in writing, consented to the
initiation of the proceedings:
Provided that where the criminal
conspiracy is one to which the provisions of
subsection (4) of section 195 apply no such
consent shall be necessary."
314
The argument before us on behalf of the appellants
has proceeded on the footing that in para 5 of the
second complaint Saroj Ranjan Sarkar had alleged
that the accused persons had entered into a
criminal conspiracy with one another and other
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persons unknown, to dishonestly and fraudulently
forge certain documents and in pursuance thereof
either forged or caused to be forged those
documents and used them as genuine. This
allegation, it is argued attracted cl. (2) of s.
196A inasmuch as the object of the conspiracy was
to commit non-cognizable offences under ss. 467
and 471 of the Indian Penal Code; therefore, it
was necessary to obtain, by order in writing, the
consent of the State Government or of the Chief
Presidency Magistrate to the initiation of the
proceedings and such consent not having been
obtained, the issue of processes by the Chief
Presidency Magistrate violated the provisions of
s. 196A of the Code of Criminal procedure. The
special Bench repelled this argument on the
following grounds. It pointed out the distinction
between the offence of criminal conspiracy as
defined in s. 120A and punishable by s. 120B and
the offence of abetment by conspiracy as defined
in the clause, secondly, in s. 107 of the Indian
Penal Code. It then pointed out that the Chief
Presidency Magistrate did not take cognizance of
the offence of criminal conspiracy to commit
forgery which would be punishable under s. 120B
read with s. 467 of the Indian Penal Code, but he
took cognizance of the offence of abetment of
forgery punishable under s. 467 read with s. 109
of the Indian Penal Code and for this offence no
sanction under s. 196A of the Code of Criminal
Procedure was necessary. The special Bench further
expressed the view that the primary offences which
the second complaint disclosed where the offence
of forgery, of using forged documents as genuine,
and of abetment of the said offences and as
cognizance of these offences did not require
sanction or
315
prior consent of the authorities mentioned in s.
196A, the order of the Chief Presidency Magistrate
could not be said to have violated the provisions
of that section.
The correctness of these views of the special
Bench has been very seriously contested. I may
make it clear at the very outset that the
mandatory provisions of s. 196A of the Code of
Criminal Procedure cannot be evaded by resorting
to a mere device or camouflage.
The test whether sanction is or is not necessary
does not depend on mere astuteness of drafting the
petition of complaint. For example, in the second
petition of complaint under consideration before
us the heading indicated that the offences in
respect of which the petition of complaint was
filed were offences under ss. 467, 471 and 109 of
the Indian Penal Code; but in para. 5 of the
petition the allegation was that the accused
persons had entered into a criminal conspiracy
with one another and others unknown, to forge
certain documents. It would not be proper to
decide the question of sanction merely by taking
into consideration the offences mentioned in the
heading or the use of the expression "criminal
conspiracy" in para. 5. The proper test should be
whether the allegations made in the petition of
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complaint disclosed primarily and essentially an
offence or offences for which a consent in writing
would be necessary to the initiation of the
proceedings within the meaning of s. 196A(2) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure. It is from that
point of view that the petition of complaint must
be examined. There is another principle laid down
by this Court which should be kept in mind. The
allegations made in the complaint may have more
than one aspect; and may disclose more than one
offence. What would be the position when some of
the offences disclosed do not require any sanction
while others require sanction ? This question was
considered by this Court in
316
Basir-ul-huq v. State of West Bengal(1). That was
case in which the accused person lodged
information at a police station that X had beaten
and throttled his mother to death and when the
funeral pyre was in flames, he entered the
cremation ground with police; the dead body was
examined and the complaint was found to be false.
On the complaint of X the accused person was
charged with offences under s. 297, Indian Penal
Code (trespass to wound religious feelings) and s.
500, Indian Penal Code (defamation). It was
contended that as the complaint disclosed offences
under s. 182 and 211, Indian Penal Code, the Court
could not take cognizance of the case except on a
complaint by the proper authority under s. 195 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure. It was held that
the facts which constituted the offence under s.
297 where distinct from those which constituted an
offences under s. 182, as the act of trespass was
alleged to have been committed after the making of
the false report, so s. 195 was no bar to the
trial of the charge under s. 297. It was further
held that as regards the charge under s. 500 where
the allegations made in a false report disclose
two distinct offences, one against a public
servant and the other against a private
individual, the latter is not debarred by
provisions of s. 195 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure from seeking redress for the offence
committed against him. Referring to s. 195 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure Mahajan, J. who
delivered the judgment of the Court said:
"The statute thus requires that without
a complaint in writing of the public servant
concerned no prosecution for an offence under
section 182 can be taken cognizance of. It
does not further provide that if in the
course of the commission of that offence
other distinct offences are committed, the
magistrate is debarred from taking cognizance
in respect of those offences as well. The
allegation made
317
in a complaint may have a double aspect, that
is on the one hand these may constitute an
offence against the authority of the public
servant or public justice, and on the other
hand, they may also constitute the offence of
defamation or some other distinct offence.
The section does not per se bar the
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cognizance by the magistrate of that offence,
even if no action is taken by the public
servant to whom the false report has been
made. x x x x
As regards the charge under section 500,
Indian Penal Code, it seems fairly clear both
on principle and authority that where the
allegations made in a false report disclose
two distinct offences, one against the public
servant and the other against a private
individual, that other is not debarred by the
provisions of section 195 from seeking
redress for the offence committed against
him."
Keeping the aforesaid two principles in mind
let me examine the second complaint in this case
in order to find out what essential offences the
allegations made therein disclosed. Paragraph 5 of
the petition of complaint on which much reliance
has been placed on behalf of the appellant alleges
(1) that the accused persons entered into a
criminal conspiracy with one another and others
unknown, to forge certain documents; (2) that in
pursuance of the conspiracy those documents were
forged; or caused to be forged; and (3) that the
documents so forged were used as genuine. The
paragraph then recited three documents which were
said to have been forged. It is thus clear that
apart from the conspiracy, the second complaint
alleged that offences under ss. 467 and 471 of the
Indian Penal Code had also been committed. The
special Bench rightly pointed out that the
offences under ss. 467 and 471 of the Indian Penal
Code were distinct from the offence of criminal
conspiracy and did not require any prior consent
for the initiation of
318
Proceedings therefor under s. 196A(2) of the Code
of Criminal Procedure. The question, of therefore,
boils down to this: in view of the allegation that
there was a criminal conspiracy, was the chief
Presidency Magistrate debarred from taking
cognizance of the case even though certain other
distinct offences were alleged which did not
require sanction ? I am in agreement with the
special Bench that the answer to the question must
be in the negative. Furthermore, it appears to me
that though the expression "criminal conspiracy"
occurs in para. 5 of the complaint, the facts
alleged in the petition of complaint essentially
disclose an offence of abetment by conspiracy.
This brings us to the distinction between the
offence of criminal conspiracy as defined in s.
120A and the offence of abetment by conspiracy as
defined in s. 107 of the Indian Penal Code.
Section 120A which defines the offence of criminal
conspiracy and s. 120B which punishes the offence
are in Ch. VA of the Indian Penal Code. This
Chapter introduced into the criminal law of India
a new offence, namely, the offence of criminal
conspiracy. It was introduced by the criminal Law
Amendment Act, 1913 (VIII of 1913). Before that,
the sections of the Indian Penal Code which
directly dealt with the subject of conspiracy were
these contained in Ch. V and s. 121 (Ch. VI) of
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the Code. The present case is not concerned with
the kind of conspiracy referred to in s. 121A. The
point before us is the distinction between the
offence of abetment as defined in s. 107 (Ch. V)
and the offence of criminal conspiracy as defined
in s. 120A (Ch. VA). Under s. 107, second clause,
a person abets the doing of a thing, who 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, and an order to the doing of that
thing. Therefore, in order to constitute the
offence of abetment by conspiracy, there
319
must first be a combining together of two or more
persons in the conspiracy; secondly, an act or
illegal omission must take place in pursuance of
that conspiracy, and in order to the doing of that
thing. It is not necessary that the abettor should
concert the offence with the person who commits
it. It is sufficient if he engages in the
conspiracy in pursuance of which the offence is
committed. It is worthy of note that a mere
conspiracy or a combination of persons for the
doing of a thing does not amount to an abetment.
Something more is necessary, namely, an act or
illegal omission must take place in pursuance of
the conspiracy and in order to the doing of the
thing for which the conspiracy was made. Before
the introduction of Ch. VA conspiracy, except in
cases provided by ss. 121A, 311, 400, 401 and 402
of the Indian Penal Code, was a mere species of
abetment where an act or an illegal omission took
place in pursuance of that conspiracy, and
amounted to a distinct offence. Chapter VA,
however, introduced a new offence defined by s.
120A. That offence is called the offence of
criminal conspiracy and consists in a mere
agreement by two or more persons to do or cause to
be done an illegal act or an act which is not
illegal by illegal means; there is a proviso to
the section which says that no agreement except an
agreement to commit an offence shall amount to a
criminal conspiracy unless some act besides the
agreement is done by one or more parties to such
agreement in pursuance thereof. The position,
therefore comes to this. The gist of the offence
of criminal conspiracy is in the agreement to do
an illegal act or an act which is not illegal by
illegal means. When the agreement is to commit an
offence, the agreement itself becomes the offence
of criminal conspiracy. Where, however, the
agreement is to do an illegal act which is not an
offence or an act which is not illegal by illegal
means, some act besides the agreement is
necessary.
320
Therefore, the distinction between the offence of
abetment by conspiracy and the offence of criminal
conspiracy, so far as the agreement to commit an
offence is concerned, lies in this. For abetment
by conspiracy mere agreement is not enough. An act
or illegal omission must take place in pursuance
of the conspiracy and in order to the doing of the
thing conspired for. But in the offence of
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criminal conspiracy the very agreement or plot is
an act in itself and is the gist of the offence.
Willes, J. observed in Mulcahy v. The Queen (1):
"When to agree to carry it into effect,
the very plot is an act in itself, and the
act of each of the parties, promise against
promise, actus contra actum, capable of being
enforced, if lawful, punishable if for a
criminal object or for the use of criminal
means."
Put very briefly, the distinction between the
offence of abetment under the second clause of s.
107 and that of criminal conspiracy under s. 120A
is this. In the former offence a mere combination
of persons or agreement between them is not
enough. An act or illegal omission must take place
in pursuance of the conspiracy and in order to the
doing of the thing conspired for; in the latter
offence the mere agreement is enough, if the
agreement is to commit an offence.
So far as abetment by conspiracy is concerned
the abettor will be liable to punishment under
varying circumstances detailed in ss. 108 to 117.
It is unnecessary to detail those circumstances
for the present case. For the offence of criminal
conspiracy it is punishable under s. 120B.
Having regard to the distinction pointed out
above, I am of the opinion that para. 5 of the
second complaint, though it used the expression
"criminal conspiracy" really disclosed an offence
of abetment by conspiracy. It made no allegation
321
of any agreement between the several persons at a
particular place or time. It said that the accused
persons complained against entered into a
conspiracy to forge certain documents were forged
or caused to be forged. In other words, an illegal
act was done in pursuance of the conspiracy and
furthermore the documents so forged were used as
genuine. Having regard to these allegations in
para. 5 of the second complaint, I am unable to
hold that the learned ’Chief Presidency Magistrate
was wrong in taking cognizance of the offence of
abetment by conspiracy, for which offence no
consent or sanction under s. 196A of the Code of
Criminal Procedure was necessary. Therefore, there
was violation of the provisions of that section.
In this view of the matter it is unnecessary
to consider the correctness or otherwise of the
further view expressed in some of the decisions
(see, for example, State of Bihar v. Srilal
Kejriwal (1) to which the special Bench has
referred) that there the matter has gone beyond a
mere conspiracy and substantive offences are
alleged to have been actually committed in
pursuance thereof, ss. 120A and 120B are wholly
irrelevant. That view has not been accepted as
correct by some of the other High Courts. In the
State of Andhra Pradesh v. Kandimalla Subbaiah (2)
this Court held that offences created by ss. 109
and 120B, Indian Penal Code were distinct
offences, though for a reason stated somewhat
differently from what I have stated. It further
held that where a number of offences were
committed by several persons in pursuance of a
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conspiracy, it was not illegal to charge them with
those offences as well as with the offence of
conspiracy to commit those offences, though it was
not desirable to charge the accused persons with
conspiracy with the ulterior object of letting in
evidence which would otherwise be inadmissible and
furthermore, it was undesirable to complicate a
322
trial by introducing a large number of charges
spread over a long period. The question was
treated as one of propriety rather than of
legality. The question of sanction was also
considered in that case, but in view of the order
of remand passed, no opinion was expressed
thereon.
The special Bench expressed the view that it
was not necessary to go to the extent of saying
that in a case of this nature ss. 120A and 120B
became wholly irrelevant. The special Bench
proceeded on the footing that irrespective of
whether ss. 120A and 120B became wholly irrelevant
or not the second complaint undoubtedly disclosed
an offence of abetment by conspiracy and it was
open to the Chief Presidency Magistrate to take
cognizance of that offence. I think that there are
no good reasons for holding that the view taken by
the special Bench is not correct. In my opinion,
the special Bench rightly overruled the objection
as to the alleged violation of the provisions of
s. 196A of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
Now, I come to the third and principal
question agitated in these appeals. On behalf of
one of the appellants, Saurindra Mohan Basu, Mr.
Purushottam Trikumdas has argued before us that
when the first complaint containing more or less
the same allegations was dismissed under s. 203 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure by the Chief
Presidency Magistrate, it was not at all open to
his successor to entertain the second complaint.
He has put the matter as one of law and has argued
that the only way of getting rid of an order of
dismissal under s. 203 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure known to the Code of Criminal Procedure
is to have it act aside in accordance with the
procedure laid down in ss. 436 and 439 of the
Code. He has further argued that, as a matter of
law, a second complaint is not entertainable as
long as the order of dismissal under s. 203 of the
Code
323
of Criminal Procedure is not set aside by a
competent authority. His argument is that the two
decisions in Nilratan Sen v. Jogesh Chandra
Bhattacharjee(1) and Kamal Chandra Pal v.
Gourchand Adhikary (2) should be held as good law.
Section 403 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is
relevant to this argument. It embodies the well-
established rule of common law that a man may not
be put twice in peril for the same offence and
that no man should be vexed with several trials
for offences arising out of identical acts. An
Explanation appended to the section says inter
alia that the dismissal of complaint or the
discharge of accused person is not an acquittal
for the purposes of the section. If the
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Legislature had intended that the dismissal of
complaint or the discharge of an accused person
would be a bar to fresh proceeding on the same
allegations unless the order of dismissal or
discharge were set aside by a higher court, it
would have said so either explicitly or by
omitting the Explanation altogether. Therefore,
the effect of the Explanation is that under s. 403
a fresh trial is barred only in cases of acquittal
or conviction by a court of competent
jurisdiction, coming within the purview of sub-s.
(1) thereof. This aspect of the question was
considered in Queen Empress v. Dolegobind Dass
(3), which was a case dealing with a previous
order of discharge of the accused person. In that
case, Maclean, C. J. referred to the decision in
Nilratan Sen’s case and said:
"There is no express provision in the
Code to the effect that the dismissal of a
complaint shall be a bar to a fresh complaint
being entertained so long as the order of
dismissal remains unreversed’ (see per
Benerjee, J. in Nilratan Sens’ v. Jogesh
Chandra Bhattacharjee (supra). I agree in
that. If, then there be no express provision
324
in the Code, what is there to warrant us in
implying or in effect introducing into the
Code a provision of such serious import x x
x? In the absence of any other provision in
the Code to justify such an implication x x x
x I can appreciate no sound ground for the
Court so acting; were it to do so it would go
perilously near to legislating, instead of
confining itself to construing the Acts of
the Legislature."
The question was then considered by a Full
Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Dwarka Nath
Mondul v. Beni Madhab Banerjee (1) and it was held
by the Full Bench (Ghose, J. dissenting) that a
Presidency Magistrate was competent to rehear a
warrant case triable under Ch. XXI of the Code of
Criminal Procedure in which he had earlier
discharged the accused person. Nilratan Sen’s
case(2) and Kamal Chandra Pal’s case(3) were
referred to in the arguments as summarised in the
report, but the view expressed therein was not
accepted. Dealing with the question Princep, J.
said:
"There is no bar to further proceedings
under the law, and, therefore, a Magistrate
to whom a complaint has been made under such
circumstances, is bound to proceed in the
manner set out in s. 200, that is, to examine
the complaint, and, unless he has reason to
distrust the truth of the complaint, or for
some other reason expressly recognised by
law, such as, if he finds that no offence had
been committed, he is bound to take
cognizance of the offence on a complaint,
and, unless he has good reason to doubt the
truth of the complaint, he is bound to do
justice to the complainant, to summon his
witness and to hear them in the presence of
the accused."
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325
The same view was expressed by the Madras
High Court in In re. Koyassan Kutty (1) and it was
observed that there was nothing in law against the
entertainment of a second complaint on the same
facts on which a person had already been
discharged, inasmuch as a discharge was not
equivalent to an acquittal. This view was
reiterated in Kumariah v. Chinna Naicker (2),
where it was held that the fact that a previous
complaint had been dismissed under s. 203 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure was no bar to the
entertainment of a second complaint. In Hansabai
Sayaji v. Ananda Ganuji (3) the question was
examined with reference to a large number of
earlier decisions of several High Courts on the
subject and it was held that there was nothing in
law against the entertainment of a second
complaint on the same facts. The same view was
also expressed in Ram Narain v. Panachand Jain
(4), Ramanand v. Sheri (5), and Allah Ditta v.
Karam Baksh (6). In all these decisions it was
recognised further that though there was nothing
in law to bar the entertainment of a second
complaint on the same facts, exceptional
circumstances must exist for entertainment of a
second complaint when on the same allegations a
previous complaint had been dismissed. The
question of the existence of exceptional
circumstances for the entertainment of a second
complaint is a question to which I shall come
later. At the present moment, I am considering the
argument of Mr. Purshottam Tricumdas that the law
prohibits altogether the entertainment of a second
complaint when a previous complaint on the same
allegations had been dismissed under s. 203 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. On this question the
High Courts appear to me to be almost unanimously
against the contention of Mr. Purshottam
Tricumdas, and for the reasons given in the
decisions to which I have earlier referred, I
326
am unable to accept his contention. I accept the
view expressed by the High Courts that there is
nothing in law which prohibits the entertainment
of a second complaint on the same allegations when
a previous complaint had been dismissed under s.
203 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. I also
accept the view that as a rule of necessary
caution and of proper exercise of the discretion
given to a Magistrate under s. 204(1) of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, exceptional circumstances
must exist for the entertainment of a second
complaint on the same allegations; in other words,
there must be good reasons why the Magistrate
thinks that there is "sufficient ground for
proceeding" with the second complaint, when a
previous complaint on the same allegations was
dismissed under s. 203 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure.
The question now is, what should be those
exceptional circumstances ? In Queen Empress v.
Dolagobind Dass (1), Maclean, C. J. said:
"I only desire to add that no Presidency
Magistrate ought, in my opinion, to rehear a
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case previously dealt with by a Magistrate of
coordinate jurisdiction upon the same
evidence only, unless he is plainly satisfied
that there has been some manifest error or
manifest miscarriage of justice."
Thus, according to this decision, the
exceptional circumstance must be such as would
lead the Magistrate to think that the previous
order of dismissal was due to a manifest error or
resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice. In
re. Koyassan Kutty (2) Sadasiva Aiyar, J.
formulated the test of exceptional circumstances
in the following words:
"Taking it then that the discharge was
proper and legal, there is no doubt nothing
in law against the entertainment of a second
327
complaint on the same facts as a discharge is
not equivalent to an acquittal; but I think
that unless very strong grounds are shown a
person who has been charged once and
discharged ought not to be harassed again on
the same charge. It is not alleged that new
facts have been discovered which the police
did not know when they brought the first
charge."
In this decision the test formulated was the
discovery of new facts which were not known when
the first charge of complaint was made. In
Kumariah v. Chinna Naicker(1) the same test was
again applied when it was observed:
"There is nothing to indicate that there
was no proper investigation on the previous
complaint or that there was any necessity for
investigating the second complaint. x x x No
additional witness had been cited in the
second complaint, nor, as pointed out by the
Additional Magistrate, was it alleged that
any other kind of evidence had been
discovered or was likely to be forthcoming."
It is worthy of note, however, that
Kuppuswami Aiyar, J. did not say that the
discovery of a new fact or new evidence must be of
such a character that it was not known to the
complainant when the prior complaint was brought
and dismissed. In Hansabai Sayaji v. Ananda Ganuji
(2) it was pointed out that the circumstance that
the second complaint was filed by a person other
than the one who made the first complaint made no
difference and the test laid down in some early
Rangoon High Court decisions [Ma The Kin v. Nga E
Tha (3) and U Shwe v. Ma Sein Bwin (4) ], was
accepted as the correct test. In Ma The Kin’s case
(supra) the test was thus expressed:
328
"It is the duty of a Magistrate,
therefore, who receives a complaint in a case
where there has been a previous order of
dismissal or discharge, not to issue process,
unless he is plainly satisfied that there has
been some manifest error or manifest
miscarriage of justice, or unless new facts
are adduced which the complainant had not
knowledge of or could not with reasonable
diligence have brought forward in the
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previous proceedings."
It will be noticed that in the test thus laid
down the exceptional circumstances are brought
under three categories; (1) manifest error, (2)
manifest miscarriage of justice, and (3) new facts
which the complainant had no knowledge of or could
not with reasonable diligence have brought forward
in the previous proceedings. Any exceptional
circumstances coming within any one or more of the
aforesaid three categories would fulfil the test.
In Ram Narain v. Panachand Jain (1) it was
observed that an exhaustive list of the
exceptional circumstances could not be given
though some of the categories were mentioned. One
new category mentioned was where the previous
order of dismissal was passed on an incomplete
record or a misunderstanding of the nature of the
complaint. This new category would perhaps fall
within the category of manifest error or
miscarriage of justice.
It appears to me that the test laid down in
the earliest of the aforesaid decisions. Queen
Empress v. Dolegobind Dass (2), is really wide
enough to cover the other categories mentioned in
the later decisions. Whenever a Magistrate is
satisfied that the previous order of dismissal was
due to a manifest error or has resulted in a
miscarriage of justice, he can entertain a second
complaint on the same allegations even though an
earlier complaint was dismissed under s. 203
329
of the Code of Criminal Procedure. I do not think
that in a matter of this kind it is either
possible or even desirable that the exceptional
circumstances must be stated with any more
particularity or precision. The learned Advocate
for the respondent argued before us that a new
category should be added and he called it
"frustration of justice". I am of the view that
apart from any question of felicity of this new
expression, this new category does not give any
more assistance towards explaining the exceptional
circumstances which must exist before a second
complaint on the same allegations can be
entertained. I am content in this case to proceed
on the footing that, the Magistrate must be
satisfied that there was a manifest error or a
miscarriage of justice before he can entertain a
second complaint on the same facts.
In this case, two exceptional circumstances
were adverted to before us. One is that the
learned Chief Presidency Magistrate who dealt with
the first complaint completely misdirected himself
as to the true scope and effect of ss. 203 and 204
of the Code of Criminal Procedure and this, it is
contended, resulted in a manifest miscarriage of
justice when he dismissed the first complaint
under s. 203 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. I
am of the view that there is substance in this
contention. Section 203 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure states that the Magistrate may dismiss
the complaint, if, after considering the statement
on oath, if any, of the complainant and the
witnesses and the result of the investigation or
enquiry, if any, under s. 202, there is in his
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judgment no sufficient ground for proceeding.
Section 204 lays down that if in the opinion of
the Magistrate taking cognizance of an offence
there is sufficient ground for proceeding, he
shall issue a summon or a warrant, as the case may
require. What is the true scope and effect of the
expression
330
"sufficient ground for proceeding" occurring in
the aforesaid two sections ? This was considered
by this Court in Vadilal Panchal v. Dattatraya
Dulaji Ghadigaonker (1). With reference to ss.
200, 202 and 203 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
it was there observed:
"The inquiry is for the purpose of
ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the
complaint; that is, for ascertaining whether
there is evidence in support of the complaint
so as to justify the issue of process and
commencement of proceedings against the
person concerned. The section does not any
that a regular trial for adjudging the guilt
or otherwise of the person complained against
should take place at that stage; for the
person complained against can be legally
called upon to answer the accusation made
against him only when a process has issued
and he is put on trial."
It was further observed that if the Magistrate had
not misdirected himself as to the scope of an
enquiry under s. 202 and had applied his mind
judicially to the materials before him, it would
be erroneous in law to hold that a plea based on
an exception could not be accepted by in arriving
at his judgment. In another decisions of this
Court Ramgopal Genapatria Ruia v. State of Bombay
(2) the expression "sufficient grounds" occurring
in ss. 209, 210 and 213 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure was considered and it was held that the
expression did not mean sufficient grounds for the
purpose of conviction but meant such evidence as
would be sufficient to put the accused upon trial
by the jury dealing with the first complaint the
learned Chief Presidency Magistrate proceeded to
consider not whether there was
331
sufficient ground for proceeding within the
meaning of ss. 203 and 204 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure but whether there was sufficient
evidence for conviction of the accused persons. In
my opinion, this approach was completely wrong and
resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice. The
learned Chief President Magistrate said:
"In cases depending on circumstantial
evidence in order to justify any inference
that an offence has been committed the
incriminating facts must be incompatible with
innocence of the person accused and incapable
of explanation upon any other reasonable
hypothesis than that of his guilt. If the
circumstances are found to be as consistent
with the guilt of the accused, no inference
of guilt can be drawn. In the present case
the circumstances above equally may lead to
the inference that the document was ante-
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dated and might or might not have been
forged. Therefore the circumstances are not
precise to be of any value as evidence."
These observations clearly show that the learned
Chief Presidency Magistrate misdirected himself as
to the true scope and effect of ss. 203 and 204 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure. He did not keep in
mind the true purpose of the enquiry before him
which was to ascertain whether there was evidence
in support of the complaint so as to justify the
issue of process and commencement of proceedings
against the accused persons. He further failed to
keep in mind that ss. 203 and 204 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure did not say that a regular
trial for judging the guilt or otherwise of the
person complained against should take place at
that stage. It was not for learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate to apply the test whether
the circumstances were or were not incompatible
with the, innocence of the accused persons. The
332
purpose of the enquiry before him was merely to
ascertain prime facie the truth or falsehood of
the complaint. Instead of holding an enquiry into
the complaint, the learned Chief Presidency
Magistrate proceeded as though he was trying the
ease itself on merits. I consider that this
mistake on the part of the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate gave a wrong direction to
the whole proceedings on the first complaint and
the order of dismissal passed by him was due to a
manifest error and resulted in miscarriage of
justice.
The second exceptional circumstance is as to
the presence of the telephone number "City 6091"
printed on the sheet of paper on which were typed
the minutes of the proceedings dated January 16,
1948. When the first complaint was dealt with by
the Chief Presidency Magistrate no evidence was
led to show that the City Exchange did not come
into existence until December, 1948 and that the
telephone connection relating to that particular
number was obtained for the first time by the
Hindusthan Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd. on
or about March 18, 1949. This I think, would be a
new matter which was not considered when the first
complaint was dismissed under s. 203 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure. There was a good deal of
argument as to whether this matter relating to the
City Exchange was known to the complainant and his
brothers from before, and if so, why they did not
bring it to the notice of the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate who dealt with the first
complaint. it appears that an application dated
June 7, 1955 was made before Debabrata Mookerjee
J. who heard the application in revision with
regard to the first complaint. In that application
certain statements were made with regard to the
City Exchange. Those statements did not, however,
include any averment as to the knowledge of the
complainant, Promode Ranjan Sarkar, about
333
the facts relating to the City Exchange and
telephone number "City 6091". The application
merely stated that the facts stated therein were
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matters of public history and it was essential in
the ends of justice to take judicial notice
thereof. Debabrata Mookerji, J. apparently
rejected this application but did not record any
formal orders on that date. He recorded formal
orders after he had dismissed the application in
revision. He said therein that he was not prepared
to take into consideration the facts alleged in
the application dated June 7, 1955 as they related
to new matters. The argument on behalf of the
appellants before us is that the facts relating to
the City Exchange were not new matters, because
the complainant, Saroj Ranjan Sarkar, nowhere said
that he did not know them before. The argument,
therefore is that it does not fulfil the test of
"new facts which the complainant have no knowledge
of or could not with reasonable diligence have
brought forward in the previous proceedings". The
learned Advocate for the respondent has, in my
opinion, rightly submitted that it is somewhat
illogical to say at one stage of the proceedings
that the matter was a new matter and could not,
therefore, be taken into consideration and at a
later stage to say that it is not a new matter and
therefore could not be taken into consideration.
This much, however, is clear that the matter
relating to the City Exchange and in particular
telephone number "City 6091" was not at all
considered when the first complaint was dismissed
under s. 203 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
This matter is of some importance because if there
was no such telephone number on January 16, 1948,
the minutes of the proceedings purporting to be of
that date must have come into existence on a later
date. This would have great relevance and bearing
on the allegation of forgery made with regard to
the minutes of the proceedings dated January 16,
1948.
334
On behalf of Saurindra Mohan Basu it was
further contended that there was not even prima
facie evidence against him and the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate was wrong in issuing process
against him. It is only necessary to point out
that the learned Chief Presidency Magistrate found
that there was a prima facie case against
Saurindra Mohan Basu. He had attested the
signature of the late Nalini Ranjan Sarkar and if
that signature was forged, then that would be
prima facie evidence against Saurindra Mohan Basu
also.
My learned brethren have taken the view that
the entertaining of the second complaint in the
circumstances of this case is a gross abuse of the
processes of the Court. I find myself unable to
subscribe to that view. My conclusion is just the
opposite, namely, that the entertaining of the
second complaint fully serves the interests of
justice. I am further of the opinion that its
dismissal would defeat the ends of justice. In
this connection, I have already referred to the
two exceptional circumstances which exist: one is
that the learned Chief Presidency Magistrate who
dealt with the first complaint completely
misdirected himself as to the true scope and
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effect of ss. 203 and 204 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure; the second is that Debabrata Mookerjee,
J. wrongly refused to take into consideration the
circumstances relating to the installation of the
City Exchange and telephone number "City 6091",
circumstances which had a decisive bearing on the
allegation of forgery made with regard to the
minutes of the proceedings dated January 16, 1948.
Even a cursory perusal of the order of the Chief
President Magistrate (Shri N. C. Chakravarti)
dated August 6, 1954 with regard to the first
complaint shows that the learned Chief Presidency
Magistrate proceeded on the footing as though he
was trying a case based entirely on circumstantial
evidence; he formulated
335
the tests for drawing conclusions from
circumstantial evidence and applying those tests,
he came to the conclusion that the complaint was
not true. He rejected the evidence of the hand-
writing expert as though it was his function to
try the case. He rejected the enquiry report of
Shri A. B. Syam (who held that there was a prima
facie case for the issue of process) on very
insufficient grounds. He even went to the length
of judging for himself the peculiar
characteristics of Nalini Ranjan Sarkar’s hand-
writing depending on the personality of the
writer. In my view, in all these matters the
learned Chief Presidency Magistrate misdirected
himself as to the true scope of the enquiry before
him and he forgot that what he had to find was
whether prima facie there was believable evidence
in support of the allegations made in the
complaint. This does not necessarily mean that a
Magistrate dealing with a complaint is obliged "to
bind himself to a mere mechanical or a wholly
uncritical acceptance of the complainant’s story".
Indeed, it is the duty of the Magistrate to judge
the materials on which he has to make up his mind
as to the sufficiency or otherwise of the ground
for proceeding further with the complaint and in
judging the materials he must sift them and submit
them to a critical examination. This aspect of the
question was argued before Debabrata Mookerjee, J.
and he referred to it in his judgment. I say this
without meaning any disrespect to the learned
Judge, but it appears to me that he missed the
distinction which was pointed out by this Court in
Ramgopal Ganpatrai Ruia v. The State of Bombay(1)
namely that the expression "sufficient grounds"
occuring in ss. 209, 210 and 213 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure does not mean sufficient
grounds for the purpose of conviction, but means
such evidence as is sufficient to put the accused
person upon trial by the jury. In ss. 203 and 204,
Criminal Procedure Code, the expres-
336
sion is "sufficient ground for proceeding" which
really means sufficient ground for proceeding with
the complaint. Sufficient ground for proceeding
with the complaint is one matter and sufficient
ground for convicting an accused person is quite a
different matter. It is this distinction which has
to be kept in mind and the failure to keep such a
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distinction in mind in the present case has
resulted in a manifest error. Debabrata Mookerjee,
J. detailed seven circumstances as those on which
the complainant relied in support of the
allegation of forgery. He then went on to deal
those circumstances as though the function of the
Court then was to find out whether there was
sufficient ground for convicting the accused
person. I refer particularly to the view expressed
by the learned Chief Presidency Magistrate to the
effect that one of the documents in question might
have been ante-dated by Nalini Ranjan Sarkar
himself. This was a suggestion made on behalf of
the accused persons as a possible defence to the
charge of forgery and it was not the function of
the Chief Presidency Magistrate to consider the
defence at that stage. Debabrata Mookerjee, J.
himself said:
"If, on the other hand, the Magistrate
has met the facts alleged by the complainant
by anticipating possible defences to the
charge, thus travelling beyond the facts
themselves and the inferences and the
probabilities legitimately raised by them, he
must be held to have exceeded the allowable
limits of an initial test of the
complainant’s story."
Yet, the possible defence that Nalini Ranjan
Sarkar might have himself ante-dated the document
was not only considered by the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate but was accepted by
Debabrate Mookerjee J.. This, in my opinion,
clearly demonstrates the manifest error or
injustice which has taken place in this case,
though in the concluding part of his
337
judgment Debabrata Mookerjee, J. expressed the
view that he did not consider that the learned
Chief Presidency Magistrate had over-stepped the
permissible limits of a preliminary probe into the
truth or otherwise of the complainant’s story. He
further said that in his view the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate in sifting the materials
offered did not dispose of them by anticipating a
possible defence of the parties; yet the one
possible defence to the charge of forgery was that
Nalini Ranjan Sarkar might himself have antedated
the document in question and that very defence was
considered and accepted not only by the learned
Chief Presidency Magistrate but by Debabrata
Mookarjee, J. also.
The second mistake which led to a manifest
injustice was the refusal to take into
consideration the circumstances relating to the
installation of the City Exchange and the
telephone number "City 6091". Debabrata Mookerjee,
J. made no orders on the application dated June 7,
1955. In his final order he said:
"The application speaks for itself. I
was not prepared on that date to take any
notice of the new matters mentioned in that
application and I adhere to my decision."
In my view Debabrata Mookerjee, J. was grievously
in error in rejecting the application. As I have
said earlier, the circumstances relating to the
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installation of the City Exchange and telephone
number "City 6091" had a decisive bearing on the
truth or otherwise of the allegation of forgery
and to reject the application to take those
circumstances into consideration really amounted
to a denial of justice. Debabrata Mookerjee, J.
took the view that it was a new matter which could
not be taken into consideration and, pradoxically
enough, the argument before us is that not being a
new matter, it should not have been taken into
consideration
338
in connection with the second complaint. This
paradox clearly demonstrates the injustice that
will result from a failure to take into
consideration circumstances which are decisive of
the allegations made in the complaint. When the
complainant made an application for a certificate
for appeal to the Supreme Court against the order
passed by Dababrata Mookerjee. J., he forcefully
contended that the refusal to take notice of the
circumstances relating to the installation of the
City Exchange amounted to a denial of justice.
This application was dealt with by a Bench of two
Judges of the Calcutta High Court (Das Gupta and
Bachawat, JJ.). The learned Judges expressed the
view that if they were dealing with the matter,
they would have thought it right to refer to the
appropriate books for ascertaining the date on
which the City Exchange came into existence. They,
however, felt that the matter was within the
discretion of Debarata Mookerjee, J. and they were
not prepared to give a certificate in a matter of
discretion. Another point which was urged before
that Bench was this. The complaint was for
offences triable by the Court of sessions and the
question which the learned Chief Presidency
Magistrate had to put himself was not whether he,
for himself, believed the allegations to be true
but whether the materials before him were such
that thereupon a reasonable body of men might
believe the allegations to be true. The learned
Judge said:
"In our judgment there is considerable
force in this argument, but at the same time
we have to take notice of the fact that this
question does not appear to have been decided
by the courts."
Since those observations were made, a decision has
been given by this Court and that decision
supports the contention urged on behalf of the
complainant. The matter then came to this Court on
an applica-
339
tion for special leave, and special leave was
granted by this Court on February 13, 1956. An
appeal was filed in pursuance of that special
leave, but ultimately Promode Ranjan Sarkar
withdrew his appeal by filing a petition on
February 3, 1959. In that petition he stated that
at the intervention of common friends and well
wishers of the parties, he had settled his
disputes with the respondents therein and did not
want to proceed with the appeal a statement which,
in the circumstances of this case, amounts almost
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to compounding a felony. The appeal was
accordingly withdrawn on March 12, 1959. The
present complaint, Saroj Ranjan Sarkar, alleged in
his petition of complaint that the withdrawal of
the appeal filed in this Court in the
circumstances stated above was due to undue
influence exercised by the accused persons.
Whether that allegation is correct or not can only
be determined after evidence has been led. There
are, however, circumstances which seem to me
indicate that the withdrawal of the appeal in this
Court was for the purpose of defeating the ends of
justice. The accused persons must have realised
that if the evidence relating to the installation
of the City Exchange and telephone No. "City 6091"
was available and considered, then there would be
no escape from the position that the minutes of
the proceedings of the Board meeting of N.R.
Sarkar and Co. Ltd., dated January 16, 1948 must
have been forged and this aspect of the matter was
very rightly emphasised by the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate (Shri Bijayesh Mukherjee)
who dealt with the second complaint as also by the
Special Bench of three Judges who dealt with the
matter on the revision applications made against
the order of the learned Chief Presidency
Magistrate on the second complaint. It is also
worthy of note that this Court must have granted
special leave in respect of the order passed on
the first complaint, because it felt that there
were arguable points in support of the
340
application for special leave, one of such points
apparently being the refusal to consider the
circumstances relating to the installation of the
City Exchange. On the second complaint the learned
Chief Presidency Magistrate, as also the High
Court, took those circumstances into consideration
and rightly held that those circumstances clearly
indicated that the allegations made in the
complaint were prima facie true. The learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate further held that having
regard to the antecedent circumstances, there was
no undue delay in filing the second complaint. He
further held that there was no intention to
blackmail, in the sense that one brother having
failed on the first complaint, another brother was
fraudulently trying to start afresh the criminal
law in motion. These findings of the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate were accepted by a Special
Bench of three Judges of the Calcutta High Court.
I have heard nothing in the course of the
arguments addressed before us which would justify
me to go behind those findings, particularly in an
appeal filed by special leave under Art. 136 of
the Constitution. The learned Chief Presidency
Magistrate and a Bench of three Judges of the
Calcutta High Court held specifically on the
second complaint that there was a prima facie case
and the dismissal of the first complaint resulted
in manifest injustice. I see no reasons to differ
from the view thus expressed by the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate and the High Court.
For these reasons I have come to the
conclusion that there are no good grounds for
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interfering with the judgment and order of the
Special Bench dated December 22/33, 1960. I would
accordingly dismiss the two appeals.
The Judgment of Kapur and Hidayatullah, JJ.,
was delivered by
KAPUR, J.-There are two appeals against the
judgment and order of the High Court of
341
Calcutta which raise the question of competency of
a second complaint in regard to the same matter
after the first complaint has been dismissed under
s. 203 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The
respective appellants in the two appeals are P. N.
Taluqdar and Sourindra Mohan Basu an attorney of
Calcutta against whom process has been issued by
the Chief Presidency Magistrate Calcutta on a
complaint filed by the respondent Saroj Ranjan
Sarkar.
The facts of these appeals are these: In 1944
a private limited company-N. R. Sarkar & Co.,
Ltd.-was formed by the late Mr. N. R. Sarkar, who
was a well known financier and industrialist and a
public man of Bengal. This company was the
Managing Agent of several public limited companies
such as Hindusthan Development Corporation Ltd.,
Hindusthan Chemicals Limited, Hindusthan
Pilkington Glass Works Limited etc. Mr. N. R
Sarkar was the Managing Director of N. R. Sarkar &
Co., Ltd. Out of the share capital of this company
he held 4649 shares. His younger brother Promode
Ranjan Sarkar held 50 shares. Appellant P. N.
Taluqdar who was a paid employee of the Hindusthan
Cooperative Insurance Co., Ltd. held 300 shares
and was a director of the Company and Shanti
Ranjan Sarkar, a son of N. R. Sarkar’s deceased
brother, held one share. As Mr. N. R. Sarkar
became the Finance Minister in the West Bengal
Government, he obtained leave of absence on
January 4, 1948, from the directors of N. R.
Sarkar & Co. Ltd. for a period of one year which
was subsequently extended for another year. This
was by a resolution passed on March 10, 1948. Mr.
N. R. Sarkar joined the Government on January 23,
1948 and in August 1948 Dr. N. N. Law became a
director of N. R. Sarkar & Co., Ltd.
On July 31, 1951 Mr. N. R. Sarkar executed a
deed of trust in respect of 2920 shares out of his
342
holding in Hindusthan Cooperative Society Ltd. and
3649 shares out of the shares held by him in N. R.
Sarkar & Co. Ltd. By this deed he appointed as
trustees his younger brother Promode Ranjan
Sarkar, appellant P. N. Taluqdar and Dr. N. N. Law
and the beneficiaries under the trust deed were
his four younger brothers including the
complainant and Shanti Ranjan Sarkar, his nephew.
It is alleged that the balance of 1,000 shares was
to be kept in trust by the appellant P. N.
Taluqdar for the benefit of his brothers and
nephew. N. R. Sarkar died on January 25, 1953.
It is alleged that a few days after the death
of Mr. N. R. Sarkar, the appellant, Sourindra
Mohan Basu in a casual manner informed Promode
Ranjan Sarkar that his brother N. R. Sarkar had
executed two documents one an unregistered deed of
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agreement dated January 19, 1948, appointing the
appellant P. N. Taluqdar as the Managing Director
of N. R. Sarkar & Co., Ltd. and a deed of transfer
dated February 5, 1951, transferring 1,000 shares
in N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd., in his P. N.
Taluqdar’s) favour. Promode Ranjan Sarkar and his
brothers without giving much credence to this
information wanted to see the documents but they
were not allowed to do so. On July 31, 1953,
appellant P. N. Taluqdar resigned from the
Hindusthan Cooperative Insurance Society Ltd., in
order to take control of N. R. Sarkar & Co Ltd.,
as it Managing Director. This led to trouble
between Promode Ranjan Sarkar and the appellant P.
N. Taluqdar and there was some correspondence
between Promode Ranjan Sarkar and the appellant P.
N. Taluqdar which it is unnecessary to refer to.
At a meeting of the Board of Directors of N. R.
Sarkar & Co., held on September 22, 1953, the
appointment of appellant P. N. Taluqdar as
Managing Director of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd., was
renewed for a period of seven years. This in spite
of the
343
protest of Promode Ranjan Sarkar and in spite of
the fact that that item was not on the agenda of
the meeting.
On October 1,1953, Promode Ranjan Sarkar took
inspection of the agreement. On October 13, 1953,
he took inspection of the Minute book and took
photostat copies of some of the documents but not
of the resolution of January 16, 1948. It is
alleged that the appellants and other entered into
a criminal conspiracy and fraudulently forged
certain documents which in the complaint are
described thus:
(a) "An unregistered deed of agreement
purporting to have been executed by
the late Sri Nalini Ranjan Sarkar
as Governing Director of N. R.
Sarkar & Company Limited on 19th
January 1948, (while he was on
leave as stated above) appointing
accused No. 1 (P. N. Taluqdar) as
the Managing Director of N. R.
Sarkar & Company Limited on a
remuneration of Rs. 1,500-100-
2,000/- per month and the deed
bears the signature of accused No.
2 (S. N. Basu) as the sole
attesting witness.
(b) A transfer deed in respect of 1000
shares of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd.,
which has been entrusted to accused
No. 1 as stated before,
transferring them to accused No. 1
for an alleged consideration of Rs.
1,00,000(Rupees One Lakh) also
purporting to have been executed by
the late Sri Nalini Ranjan Sarkar
on 5th February, 1951, with accused
No. 2 as attesting witness both for
the transferor and transferee.
344
(c) Minutes of the proceedings of the
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Board. Meetings of the said N. R.
Sarkar & Company Limited including
those of a meeting dated 16th
January, 1948, purporting to bear
the signature of the aforesaid late
Sri Nalini Ranjan Sarkar."
These documents, it is alleged, are forged
and have been used and by the use of these forged
documents a fraud has been perpetrated. On April
3, 1959, respondent filed in the Court of the
Chief Presidency Magistrate, Calcutta, a complaint
under sections 467, 471 read with s. 109 of the
Indian Panel Code against the two appellants, Dr.
N. N. Law and A. Chakravarti. Document No. (b)
above is not the subject matter of the complaint
because a suit in regard to it has been filed and
is pending in the Calcutta High Court. On May 7,
1959, process was issued against the appellants by
the Chief Presidency Magistrate. Before dealing
with the allegations in this complaint it is
necessary to give some further facts of the case.
On December 12, 1953 Pramode Rajan Sarkar
laid an information with the Commissioner of
Police, Calcutta, against the persons against whom
the above mentioned complaint was later filed. It
appears that the matter was investigated by the
police and by a letter dated February 16, 1954,
the Police Commissioner expressed the opinion that
there was no substance in the allegations which
were being made by Pramode Ranjan Sarkar against
the appellants and two others. He stated "....I
have given this matter very careful consideration
gone through various reports and papers and even
examined an important witness myself. My
examination has led me to conclusion that
allegations are false and vexations." On March 17,
1954, Pramode Ranjan Sarkar filed a complaint
under ss. 467, 471 and ss.457, 471 read with s.
109. After setting out the facts which have
345
been given above and after referring to the three
documents which were alleged to have been forged
it was stated that the deed of agreement was
engrossed on a stamp paper purchased in the name
of P.D. Himmatsinghka & Co., a firm of solicitors,
instead of in the name of the parties; that the
resolution of January 16, 1948, which purported to
bear the signature of the deceased was in fact not
signed by him; that during the lifetime of Nalini
Ranjan Sarkar and after a considerable period
after his death the appellant, P. N. Taluqdar,
never alleged that he had been appointed the
Managing Director of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd., nor
did even appear from any resolution of the Board
of N. R. Sarkar & Co., that he was appointed the
Managing Director until September, 1953. Certain
other allegations which need not be set out at
this stage were also made in this complaint for
the purpose of showing that the appellants had
been guilty of forgery and for using forged
documents and for conspiracy. The matter was heard
by the Chief Presidency Magistrate Mr. N. C.
Chakraborty who after examining all the witnesses
who were produced before him dismissed the
complaint by an order dated August 6, 1954. The
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learned Chief Presidency Magistrate examined the
handwriting expert and after taking all the facts
into consideration he held:
"that the evidence on handwriting
including the opinion of the Handwriting
Expert does not support the complainant’s
version."
Against this order the complainant Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar took a revision to the Calcutta High
Court which was heard by Debabrata Mookerjee, J.
Before him three contentions were raised (1) that
the Chief Presidency Magistrate erred in examining
the witnesses himself after he had received the
result of the enquiry held by Mr. A. B. Shyam,
346
another Magistrate, under s. 202, Code of Criminal
Procedure; (2) the learned Magistrate
misunderstood the scope of ss. 202 and 203 and
misdirected himself by insisting upon a standard
of proof which the law did not require at the
initial stage when the only question was whether
the process should issue or not and the third
contention related to the power of revision of
High Court under s. 439 when dealing with orders
of a Chief Presidency Magistrate. The learned
Judge held against the complainant, Pramode Ranjan
Sarkar on the points that were raised before him.
He held that it was open to the Chief Presidency
Magistrate to examine witnesses; (2) the learned
Magistrate had not misdirected himself in regard
to the scope of ss. 202 and 203 and that he could
dismiss the complaint if in his judgment there was
no sufficient ground for proceeding. He also held
that the order of Magistrate was liable to be
interfered with if it was made in disregard of the
rules of procedure or it was so grossly improper
or so palpably incorrect as to require a revision
in the interest of justice. The learned judge then
examined the evidence which had been produced
before the Magistrate and taking the various
circumstances into consideration discharged the
rule and dismissed the revision, holding that the
complainant Pramode Ranjan Sarkar was guilty of
undue delay in taking action against the
appellants, because he came to know on October 13,
1953, as to the forged nature of the documents and
did not take any action till he wrote to the
Police Commissioner to which he got reply on
February 16, 1954, and he did not file any
complaint or take any action till march 17, 1954,
and this delay was unexplained. He also held that
the complainant Pramode Ranjan Sarkar’s belief in
regard to forgery was not established by the
evidence which had been produced because (1) he
came to know about the agreement complained of in
February, 1953, but he discredited it and did
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not take any action; (2) that when the agreement
came up for renewal on September 22, 1953, for
another term of the 7 years he did not oppose it
on the ground that it was a forgery but on legal
grounds. The learned judge did not believe the
evidence of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar that up to
February, 1954, he considered it absurd that there
could be such a document. He referred to the
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correspondence which passed between the
complainant and the appellant P. N. Taluqdar. He
also considered the evidence relating to the
watermark and the circumstances in support of the
allegation of the theory of forgery and not being
satisfied with the evidence he dismissed the
revision petition and thus the order of the Chief
Presidency Magistrate Mr. Chakraborti was upheld.
It may be pointed out that on behalf of
complainant Pramode Ranjan Sarkar an application
was made on June 6, 1955, drawing the attention of
the Court to the fact that on the sheet of a paper
on which the minutes of the meeting held on
January 16, 1948, had been typed there was printed
Telephone "City 6091" and that Exchange had not
come into existence till December, 1948. It was
not stated when the complainant came to know of
this fact. The learned Judge did not pass any
separate order on this application and did not
take it into consideration in his judgment.
Against this order an application was made
for a certificate under Art. 134(1)(c) which was
dismissed but in that order this fact as to the
City Exchange coming into existence in December,
1948, has been taken note of. Pramode Ranjan
Sarkar then applied to this Court for Special
Leave which was granted on February 13, 1956, but
the appeal was withdrawn and was therefore
dismissed or March 2, 1959.
The present respondent Saroj Ranjan Sarkar
then brought a complaint under the same sections
348
on April 3, 1959, making the same allegations as
were made by his elder brother Pramode Ranjan
Sarkar but there is one further allegation as to
the Telephone City Exchange which did not find
place in the previous complaint, In this complaint
after referring to the facts which have been set
out above it was alleged in paragraph 5 as follows
:-
"That in order to assume complete
control over N. R. Sarkar & Co., Ltd. and the
concerns under its Managing Agency, the
accused, entered into a criminal conspiracy
with each other and others unknown, to
dishonestly and fraudulently forged a Deed of
Agreement, a Deed of Transfer and make a
false document, to wit, minute book of N. R.
Sarkar & Co. Ltd., and in pursuance thereof
dishonestly and fraudulently forged and/or
caused to be forged and used as genuine the
said documents."
The grounds for forgery were that the
unregistered deed dated January 19, 1948, was
engrossed on a stamp paper purchased in the name
of M/s. P. D. Himmatsinghka & Co; that the late N.
R. Sarkar was on leave granted by the company and
he never attended any meeting of the Board for
more than four years as long as he was a Finance
Minister; that the signature of Mr. N. R. Sarkar
on the resolution dated January 16, 1948, was
forged; that during the lifetime of N.R. Sarkar it
was never given out by the appellant P. N.
Taluqdar that he had been appointed a Managing
Director, that in none of the papers and
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correspondence and resolutions of the Board until
September, 1953, does it appear that the
appellant, P. N. Taluqdar, was its Managing
Director; that the appellant, P. N. Taluqdar
continued to hold his post in the Hindusthan
Cooperative Insurance Society Ltd. up to the end
of July, 1953; that the signature in the deed of
appointment was halting and appeared to be a
forgery even to the naked eyes; that the
resolution
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for renewal for seven years was passed in spite of
the protest of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar who was a
director of N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd., and
inspection of the deed of appointment was not
given to Pramode Ranjan Sarkar in spite of his
demands. It was further alleged that the
resolutions of the Board of Directors were all on
loose sheets of paper, that the signature on the
resolutions were forged; that there was internal
evidence to show that the genuine minutes book had
been dishonestly changed; that the minutes of the
proceeding of the Board of Directors said to have
been held on January 16, 1948, were on a typed
sheet; that the Telephone No. "City 6091" was
printed thereon and the City Exchange was not in
existence in January, 1948, but came into
existence in December, 1948. It was prayed that
the accused named therein which included the two
appellants be proceeded against under ss. 467, 471
read with s. 109 of the Indian Penal Code. It will
be noticed therefore that all the allegations made
by Saroj Ranjan Sarkar are the same as those made
by Pramode Ranjan Sarkar except in regard to the
City Exchange Telephone Number.
This complaint was accompanied by an
affidavit not of complainant Saroj Ranjan Sarkar
but of Shanti Ranjan Sarkar, his nephew. In
paragraphs 1 to 7 of this affidavit he stated that
the facts in regard to the Calcutta City Exchange
were matters of public history as they were duly
published in the columns of "statesman" dated
December 29, 1948, and he also stated "that I am
aware of the facts and circumstances stated
above," but he did not say as to when he came to
know about the City Exchange matter. It may also
be noted that in the application which was made by
the complainant Pramode Ranjan Sarkar in the High
Court before Debabrata Mookarjee J., it was
submitted that judicial notice be taken of the new
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telephone exchange under s. 57 but it was not
stated as to when that complainant came to know
about the new Telephone Exchange Number. That fact
has been stated in the affidavit of Shanti Ranjan
Sarkar in almost the same vague manner.
The learned Chief Presidency Magistrate, who
took cognizance of the second complaint, Mr.
Bijoyesh Mookerjee, after considering the whole
material placed before him issued process against
the appellants only. He held that there was no
delay on the part of the respondent in making the
complaint that the previous complaint and the
result thereof was no bar to the filing of the
second complaint; that the complaint was not
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brought with a view to blackmail the accused
including the appellants, that what the brother of
the respondent did, did not lay the respondent
open to the charge of blackmail. On the merits he
took into consideration the fact in regard to the
City Exchange of which according to the learned
Magistrate he could take judicial notice under s.
57 of the Evidence Act. He compared various
signatures of the late N. R. Sarkar and after
considering the elaborate order of his predecessor
he said :-
"I have read and re-read it and with
respect too due to one of his eminence, but
it is my misfortune that I have not been
persuaded. There are various other
considerations which point to the ineluctable
prima facie conclusion of forgery. But it is
not proper that I burden my order with all
that at this stage."
He held that he was satisfied about the truth of
the allegations and there was sufficient ground
for proceeding against the appellants under s.
204, Criminal Procedure Code and he therefore
issued process against them but did not issue any
process against Dr. N. N. Law and Amiya
Chakravarty who were accused Nos. 3 and 4.
351
Against this order a revision was taken by
the appellants to the High Court and rule was
issued against the Chief Presidency Magistrate to
show cause why his order should not be set aside.
He showed cause and the matter was heard by a
Division Bench consisting of P. B. Mukerjee and H.
K. Bose, JJ., and the matter was referred to a
larger Bench because of the importance of the
questions of law which arose in the case.
Three questions were raised before the
Special Bench, (1) whether under the appellate
side rules of the High Court it was competent for
a Division Bench consisting of two judges to refer
any matter to a larger bench for decision in a
criminal matter; (2) whether a second complaint
could be entertained on the same facts after a
previous complaint had been dismissed; and (3)
whether the complaint could be taken cognizance of
by the Magistrate in the absence of a sanction
under s. 196A of the Criminal Procedure Code. On
all these three points the finding of the Special
Bench was against the appellants. It held that the
attention of the Chief Justice having been drawn
to the fact that the case involved questions of
importance it was open to him in the exercise of
his inherent jurisdiction to refer the case to a
larger bench and therefore the reference was not
illegal. In regard to the filing of a second
complaint it held that a fresh complaint could be
entertained after the dismissal of previous
complaint under s. 203 Criminal Procedure Code
when there was manifest error or manifest
miscarriage of justice or when fresh evidence was
forthcoming. The Bench was of the opinion that the
fact in regard to the City Telephone Exchange was
a new matter and because Pramode Ranjan Sarkar was
not permitted to take a photostat copy of the
Minutes Book, it was possible that his attention
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was not drawn to the City Telephone Exchange which
was not in existence at the relevant time and that
there was sufficient reason for Pramode
352
Ranjan Sarkar for not mentioning the matter of
City Exchange in his complaint. It also held that
the previous Chief Presidency Magistrate Mr.
Chakraborty had altogether ignored the evidence of
a large number of witnesses who were competent to
prove the handwriting and signature of N. R.
Sarkar and he had no good reasons for not
accepting their evidence. It could not be said
therefore that there was a judicial enquiry of the
matter before the previous Chief Presidency
Magistrate; the decision was rather arbitrary and
so resulted in manifest miscarriage of justice.
The Court was of the opinion therefore that there
was no reason to differ from the finding of the
Chief Presidency Magistrate Mr. Bijoyesh Mukerjee
and that there was a prima facie case against the
appellants. The rules were therefore discharged.
It is against this judgment and that the
appellants have come in appeal to this court by
Special Leave.
Four appeals were filed by the two
appellants, two against the order of the High
Court of Calcutta dismissing the revision petition
and two against the order of the High Court
refusing a certificate under Art. 134 (1) (c) of
the Constitution. As this Court granted special
leave against the order of the High Court
dismissing the Revision Petition the two appeals
against the order refusing a certificate under
Art. 134 (1) (c) became infructuous and therefore
were not pressed. It is only the appeals against
the judgment and order of the High Court refusing
to quash the order of the learned Chief Presidency
Magistrate, Mr. Bijoyesh Mukerjee, which survive
for decision.
The first question to be decided and that is
the most vital question in the case is, whether
the second complaint filed by Saroj Ranjan Sarkar
respondent should have been entertained ? This
complaint was brought on April 3, 1959, the appeal
in this Court brought by Pramode Ranjan Sarkar
353
the complainant in the previous complaint, having
been withdrawn on March 2, 1959. The respondent
holds no shares in N. R. Sarkar & Co. Ltd. He is a
beneficiary under the deed of trust in trust in
regard to certain number of shares. In regard to
the unregistered deed of agreement appointing P.
N. Taluqdar as Managing Director of N.R. Sarkar &
Co. Ltd., he can have no interest. As regards the
transfer deed of 1,000 shares of N. R. Sarkar &
Co. Ltd., which it is claimed were entrusted to P.
N. Taluqdar appellant for the benefit of the
respondent and his brothers, a separate suit has
been brought and is not the subject matter of the
criminal complaint. There then remains the
resolution of the Board dated January 16, 1948,
which stands on the same footing as the
appointment to Managing Directorship and is
connected with that matter and relates to it.
Under the Code of Criminal Procedure the
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subject of "Complaints to Magistrates" is dealt
with in Chapter XVI of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. The provisions relevant for the purpose
of this case are ss.200, 202 and 203. Section 200
deals with examination of complainants and ss.
202, 203 and 204 with the powers of the Magistrate
in regard to the dismissal of complaint or the
issuing of process. The scope and extent of ss.
202 and 203 were laid down in Vadilal Panchal v.
Dattatraya Dulaji Chadigaonker(1). The scope of
enquiry under s. 202 is limited to finding out the
truth or otherwise of the complaint in order to
determine whether process should issue or not and
s. 203 lays down what materials are to be
considered for the purpose. Under s. 103 Criminal
Procedure Code the judgment which Magistrate has
to form must be based on the statements of the
complainant and of his witnesses and the result of
the investigation or enquiry if any. He must apply
his mind to materials and from his judgment
whether or
354
not there is sufficient ground for proceeding.
Therefore if he has not misdirected himself as to
the scope of the enquiry made under s. 202,
Criminal Procedure Code, and has judicially
applied him mind to the material before him and
then proceeds to make his order it cannot be said
that he has acted erroneously. An order of
dismissal under s. 203, Criminal Procedure Code,
is, however, no bar to the entertainment of a
second complaint on the same facts but it will be
entertained only in exceptional circumstances,
e.g, where the previous order was passed on an
incomplete record or on a misunderstanding of the
nature of the complaint or it was manifestly
absurd, unjust or foolish or where new facts which
could not, with reasonable diligence, have been
brought on the record in the previous proceedings
have been adduced. It cannot be said to be in the
interests of justice that after a decision has
been given against the complainant upon a full
consideration of his case, he or any other person
should be given another opportunity to have his
complaint enquired into Allah Ditta v. Karam
Baksh(1), Ram Narain Chaubey v. Panachand Jain(2),
Hansabai v. Ananda(3), Doraisami v. Subramania
(4). In regard to the adducing of new facts for
the bringing of a fresh complaint the Special
Bench in the judgment under appeal did not accept
the view of the Bombay High Court or the Patna
High Court in cases above quoted and adopted the
opinion of Macleam, C. J. in Queen Empress v.
Dolegobinda Das (5) affirmed by a full Bench in
Dwarka Nath Mandal v. Benimadhab Banerji (6). It
held therefore that a fresh complaint can be
entertained where there is manifest error, or
manifest miscarriage of justice in the previous
order or when fresh evidence is forthcoming.
The Chief Presidency Magistrate in the
complaint filed by respondent, held that the
second complaint was not unduly delayed; that s.
203 is not a bar to the second complaint and that
the
355
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complaint was not with a view to blackmail the
persons accused. On the merits he held that the
minutes of the proceedings of January 16, 1948
were typed on a sheet of paper with Telephone No.
"City 6091" and the City Exchange case into
existence later in the year and that on his
comparing the signatures of N. R. Sarkar it
appeared that the signature was a forgery. He
said:
"And governing myself by this test, I
held that forgery is there prima facie and
only prima facie."
These then were to facts on which the learned
Presidency Magistrate Mr. B. Mukherjee came to a
conclusion different from that of his predecessor
Mr. Chakravorti, who had inquired into the
complaint of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar, as to the
forged nature of the signatures of Mr. N. R.
Sarkar.
Taking first the question of fresh evidence,
the view of some of the High Courts that it should
be such that it could not with reasonable
diligence have been adduced is, in our opinion, a
correct view of the law. It cannot be the law that
the complainant may first place before the
Magistrate some of the facts and evidence in his
possession and if he fails he can then adduce some
more evidence and so on. That in our opinion, is
not a correct view of the law.
The next point to be considered is, was the
mention of the telephone number "City 6091" on the
note paper on which the resolution was typed a
matter of which the previous complainant Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar was unaware and was it a fact which
with reasonable diligence he could not place
before the Magistrate. In the complaint filed by
Pramode Ranjan Sarkar no reference was made to the
City Exchange. It is true that the question was
sought to be raised as a fresh piece of evidence
before Debabrata Mookerjee, J. and it was not
356
considered by him but it was not stated before him
when the then complainant came to know of this
fact. According to a copy of the Day Book entry by
Mr. Bimal Chandra Chakravarty, Solicitor for the
previous complainant Pramode Ranjan Sarkar, dated
October 13, 1953, photostat copies were taken of
the share transfer deed and portions of the
agreement dated January 19, 1948 and inspection of
the Minutes Book was also taken but the request of
the complainant to take photostat copies of
certain resolutions was refused, by the appellant
S. M. Basu. It is significant that according to
this entry, Santi Ranjan Sarkar was acting as the
agent of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar and was present at
the time of the inspection. After this inspection
was taken, Pramode Ranjan Sarkar discussed with
his Legal Advisers the peculiarities noted in the
impugned documents. This is what he (Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar) stated as a witness before the
Chief Presidency Magistrate. His evidence also
shows that he inspected the Minutes Book though
after much "recriminations." Witness Shibakali
Bagchi stated that Minutes Book of N. R. Sarkar &
Co. Ltd., was examined by him and that it appeared
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to him that the book was not genuine and Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar complained that some of the
signatures were forged. It appears from the
statement of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar that the
appellant S. N. Basu, did not let them take
photographs of some of the pages of the Minutes
Book. It is not stated by either Bagchi or Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar of what documents they wanted to
take photographs which were refused. In the
statement of Bimal Chandra Chakrabarty, the
Solicitor, the same statement is made i. e, they
wanted to take photographs of some documents which
were not allowed to be taken. The correspondence
produced by Pramode Ranjan Sarkar in his complaint
proceedings shows that the Minutes Book was
produced for his inspection and was inspected.
Debabrata Mookarjee, J., in dealing with the
357
resolution of January 16, 1948, said that it was
not possible on the materials available considered
prima facie that the Magistrate’s finding suffered
from such a grave impropriety as to require
interference by the Court. He was of the opinion
that the complainant could not have been unaware
of the resolution of January 16, 1948. This he
concluded from the following; that on his own case
Pramode Ranjan managed the affairs of the Company
along with the appellant P. N. Taluqdar; that
although the proceedings of the Board dated
September 22, 1953, referred to the resolution of
January 16, 1948 yet the only protest made against
it by Pramode Ranjan Sarkar was the alleged legal
difficulties consequent on renewal of the
appointment but its genuineness was not then
questioned and it was questioned for the first
time on March 17, 1954, when the complaint was
lodged.
Against the judgment and order of Debabrata
Mookerjee J., Special Leave to appeal to this
Court was obtained and one of the points taken in
the application was that the resolution was typed
on a sheet of paper bearing Telephone No. City
6091 although this Telephone Exchange did not come
into existence till December 28, 1948. It is
significant that Pramode Ranjan Sarkar did not
mention when he came to know about the existence
of this new fact. It was not, therefore, made
clear to the learned Judge at least upto that
stage as to when, before or after the filing of
the first complaint Pramode Ranjan Sarkar came to
know about the existence of this piece of evidence
to which so much importance is attached. Debabrata
Mookerjee, J., also said in his judgment that the
affairs of the Company were managed by Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar and the appellant P. N. Taluqdar and
that it was difficult to believe that he (Pramode
Ranjan) had no access to the Minutes Book which
showed that he himself
358
had presided over several meetings and also that
there was nothing extraordinary about the
proceedings being typed on separate sheets of
paper and the sheets of paper being pasted in that
Minutes Book because on some of them there were
his own signatures and it was, difficult to
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believe that tampering with the records went on
"systematically" for several months without
Pramode Ranjan Sarkar having seen the book or
detected the tampering. It was, therefore,
impossible to blame the previous Chief Presidency
Magistrate if he held in those circumstances that
there was no forgery in the Minutes Book or
tampering with it. The following passage from the
learned Judge’s judgment is significant:-
"Photographs of the impugned documents
were taken on the 13th October when the
Minutes Book was inspected. On the last
mentioned date the complainant was certain
about the entire book having been tampered
with; but nothing appears to have been said
about it, no challenge made, no protest
entered until full five months passed when at
last the silence was broken and the complaint
was lodged on the 17th March, 1954. It is of
course not known what was said about it in
the information to the police. These
circumstances are explicit in the
complainant’s case. That case has only to be
presented for these features to be seen, and
the Magistrate could not possible have
overlooked them. His clear finding is that
the Minute Book is genuine. I am not in a
position to say it is improper on a prima
facie consideration of the evidence offered."
Dealing with the question whether the
signatures of N. R. Sarkar were forged, the
learned Judge agreed after considering the whole
evidence that the signatures were not forged.
359
The complaint of the present complaint Saroj
Rajan Sarkar specifically mention the City
Exchange and that it came into existence later. He
also alleges that this fact was not known to the
previous complaint, Pramode Ranjan Sarkar, and in
support there is the affidavit of Santi Ranjan
Sarkar. Significantly enough in that affidavit
also it is not stated as to when the deponent came
to know about this alleged new fact of the
Telephone City Exchange. All that the affidavit
says is that it is a matter of history and was
published in the Statesman of December 29, 1948.
There is no evidence on the record to show as to
when the matter of "City Exchange" came to be
known to the persons who were then and two those
who are now prosecuting the criminal complaints.
The document which we have referred to above i.e.,
the letter written by the Solicitor dated October
13, 1953 shows that Santi Ranjan Sarkar was
present as agent of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar at the
time of the inspection. The complaint filed by
Saroj Ranjan Sarkar states:-
"That with great difficulty the
documents in question were inspected,
certified true copies of the alleged
resolutions of the Board meetings were
obtained and photostatic copies of material
portions including alleged signatures of late
Sri Sarkar on the said Deed of Agreement and
on the Deed of Transfer could be obtained, as
will appear from correspondence in this
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respect."
In the complaint filed by Pramode Ranjan
Sarkar exactly the same language was used in
paragraph 10 of the previous complaint. If
certified copies were obtained by the complainant
Pramode Ranjan Sarkar and inspection was taken by
Santi Ranjan Sarkar for Pramode Ranjan Sarkar and
by his Solicitor and the facts are as they are
360
stated above, it is difficult to hold that the
fact in regard to the City Exchange was not know
to the complainant in the first complaint and was
a new fact which could not, with reasonable
diligence, be adduced by him.
The next question which arises is whether the
order of the previous Chief Presidency Magistrate
who decided Pramode Ranjan’s complaint, was
manifestly absurd or unjust and resulted in a
manifestly unjust order. The Special Bench of the
High Court has held that it was so because (1) the
Magistrate ignored the evidence of a large number
of witnesses who were competent to prove the
handwriting and signature of the late Mr. N. R.
Sarkar; (2) he "set aside" the report of the
enquiring Magistrate, Mr. A.B. Syam for reasons
which cannot be held to be proper and judicial
reasons; (3) He said in his order that Mr. N. R.
Sarkar might himself have ante-dated the documents
thus accepting a possible defence for which there
was no basis before him; and (4) he relied upon
his own comparison of the disputed signatures of
Mr. N. R. Sarkar. On these grounds the Special
Bench was of the opinion that the decision of the
first Magistrate was rather arbitrary and so
resulted in manifest miscarriage of justice. The
question is whether Mr. N. C. Chakrabarti, the
previous Presidency Magistrate had applied his
mind to the evidence which was produced before him
and keeping in view his functions as a Magistrate,
he gave his decision. It is not necessary to refer
to the various findings given by him. Thy are set
out and considered in the judgment of Debabrata
Mookerjee, J. and he (that learned Judge) has
commented upon all the infirmities in that order
which were brought to his notice.
The previous Chief Presidency Magistrate
found that the Deed of Agreement dated January 19,
1948 was not a forged document. He referred
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to the evidence without analyzing it. He said that
the complainant examined persons who know the
signature of the late Nalini Ranjan Sarkar and
they deposed as to the manner in which Nalini
Ranjan Sarkar used to sign. After making a
reference to the gist of the evidence submitted
before him and to the report of Mr. A. B. Syam,
Presidency Magistrate, he (the learned Chief
Presidency Magistrate) came to the conclusion:
"For the reasons above, I find that the
evidence on handwriting including the opinion
of the Handwriting Expert does not support
the complainant’s version."
Again in a later part of his order he found
that the resolution of the Board of Directors
dated January 16, 1948 also was not forged and
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that the endorsement of the appellant S. M. Basu,
was nothing more or less then the authentication
of the common seal of the Co., and he, therefore,
agreed with the finding of Mr. A.B. Syam that
there was no case against S. M. Basu, appellant
but disagreed with him in regard to the other
appellant, P. N. Talukdar. When the matter went to
the High Court, Debabrata Mookerjee, J., first
considered as to when the revisional power of
Court to interfere should be exercised. Then he
discussed the seven circumstances which were
relied upon by the then complainant Promode Ranjan
Sarkar in support of the allegations of forgery.
After dealing with these various points raised he
held:-
"It may be that one or two items of
evidence were not specifically referred to in
the Order but that does not necessarily imply
that those items of evidence were not present
to the mind of the Magistrate. After all a
Magistrate is only required to record briefly
his reasons for dismissing
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a complaint. The Magistrate’s order, I think,
is fairly well."
The learned Judge then discussed the question
of delay and held that Pramode Ranjan Sarkar had
considerably delayed the bringing of the
complaint. He also held that the Deed of Agreement
which was alleged to be a forgery had not been so
proved and he gave various reasons, one of them
being that at the meeting of the Board of
Directors dated September 22, 1953, the then
complainant did not oppose the renewal on the
ground that the Agreement was forged or did not
exist, but on legal grounds. Then the learned
Judge referred to the correspondence which had
passed between the then complainant Pramode Ranjan
Sarkar and the appellant P.N. Talukdar and said:
"It is therefore clear that the evidence
which the complainant offered in support of
his case contained prima facie on the first
aspect sufficient materials for distrusting
the truth of the story and I cannot see how
the Magistrate’s order can be challenged in
revision on the ground of impropriety as
respects the Deed of Agreement.
The learned Judge then referred to other aspects
of the case i.e., the evidence of the Deputy
Controller of Stationery, P.W. 15. He also
referred to finding of the previous Chief
Presidency Magistrate that it was difficult to
believe that the complainant should have been
unaware of the resolution of January 16, 1948 and
after referring to all these various questions
raised, he dismissed the petition.
Can it be said in these circumstances that
there has been a manifest error resulting in the
passing of an unjust order ? That in our opinion,
has not been made out. The order of Debabrata
Mookerjee J., who reviewed the findings of the
previous Chief Presidency Magistrate, shows that
the criticism that that the learned Magistrate did
not
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consider the whole evidence is not justified.
Taking the evidence into consideration he came to
the conclusion that there was no ground to proceed
and, therefore, refused to issue process. In his
opinion the evidence was not worthy of credit and
he was not satisfied with the correctness of the
complaint and dismissed it as he was entitled to
do on those findings. See Gulab Khan v. Gulam
Mohammad Khan (1) which was approved in Vadilal
Panchal v Dattatraya Dulaji Chadigaonker(2). In
the circumstances the order made by the previous
Chief Presidency Magistrate was not any manner
manifestly absurd unjust or foolish, nor can it be
said that the Magistrate ignored in any principles
which were necessary to apply under ss. 202 and
203 of the Criminal Procedure Code nor is the
order contrary to what was said in Ramgopal
Ganpatrai Ruia v. State of Bombay (3). That was a
case in which the rule in regard to the commitment
proceedings and the power of the Committing
Magistrate to commit was discused and the
expression "sufficient grounds" in ss. 209, 210
and 213 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was
interpreted. That was not a case dealing with the
powers of the Magistrate under ss. 202 and 203
which was specifically raised and decided in
Vadilal Panchal’s case (3). In Ramgopal Ganpatrai
Ruia’s case (3) the following observations of
Sinha J., (as he then was) in regard to the
expression "sufficient grounds" are pertinent:
"The controversy has centred round
interpretation of the words "sufficient
ground", occurring in the relevant
sections of the Code, set out above. In
the earliest case of Lachman v. Juala
(1882) I.L.R 5 All. 161, decided by Mr.
Justice Mahmood in the Allahabad High
Court, governed by s. 195 of the
Criminal Procedure Code of
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1872 (Act No. X of 1872), the eminent
judge took the view that the expression
"sufficient grounds" has to be
understood in a wide sense including the
power of the magistrate to weigh
evidence. In that view of the matter, he
ruled that if in the opinion of the
magistrate, the evidence against the
accused "cannot possibly justify a
conviction" there was nothing in the
Code to prevent the Magistrate from
discharging the accused even though the
evidence consisted of statements of
witnesses. who claimed to be eye-
witnesses, but whom the magistrate
entirely discredited. He also held that
the High Court could interfere only if
it came to the conclusion that the
Magistrate had committed a material
error in discharging the accused or had
illegally or improperly underrated the
value of the evidence. Thus, he
overruled the contention raised on
behalf of the prosecution that the
powers of the committing Magistrate did
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not extent to weighing the evidence and
that the expression "sufficient ground"
did not include the power of
discrediting eye-witnesses. Though the
Code of Criminal Procedure was several
times substantially amended after the
date of that decision, the basic words
"sufficient grounds" have continued
throughout. That decision was approved
by a Division Bench of the Bombay High
Court In re Bai Parvati (1910) I.L.R 35
Bom. 163 and the observations aforesaid
in the Allahabad decision were held to
be an accurate statement of the law as
contained in s. 201 of the Code, as it
now stands. The High Court of Bombay
held in that case where the evidence
tendered for the prosecution is
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totally unworthy of credit, it is the
duty of the Magistrate to discharge the
accused. It also added that where the
magistrate entertains any doubt as to
the weight or quality of the evidence,
he should commit the case to the Court
of Session which is the proper authority
to resolve that doubt and to assess the
value of that evidence."
Debabrata Mookerjee J., in the revision
against the order of the previous Chief Presidency
Magistrate accepted the finding of that Magistrate
in regard to the delay. The present complaint out
of which this appeal has arisen was filed after
the appeal in this Court arising out of this
complaint was withdrawn by Pramode Ranjan Sarkar.
Can it be said that this is not an abuse of the
process of tho Court-one brother who was a
director of the Company and who would be
interested in the Managing Directorship of the
Company and the resolutions passed in regard to
that office, brought a complaint in 1954 which was
dismissed both by the Magistrate and the High
court. Appeal against the order of dismissal
brought in this court was withdrawn on March 12,
1959. It was alleged in his complaint by Pramode
Ranjan Sarkar that the present respondent was
celluding with appellant, P. N. Talukdar, who had
offered his some kind of monetary inducement and
that fact was deposed to by the present respondent
himself as a witness in the previous complaint. He
waited all this time although he knew about the
forged signatures of his late brother on various
documents and after at least the lapse of five
years he brought a fresh complaint on the same
facts. Neither he has disclosed as to when he came
to know about the City Exchange nor have Santi
Ranjan Sarkar and Pramode Ranjan Sarkar, which
cannot therefore be said to be a fact which could
not with reasonable diligence be adduced at the
time of the previous complaint.
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The argument that this Court gave Special Leave in
the case of Pramode Ranjan Sarkar and therefore
there were points of importance is, in the
circumstances of this case, a neutral circumstance
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and that fact cannot be used as a point in favour
of the respondent.
In these circumstances, we are of the opinion
that the bringing of the fresh complaint is a
gross abuse of the process of the Court and is not
with the object of furthering the interests of
justice.
In regard to the power of reference to a
larger Bench, we are in agreement with S. K. Das,
J, and in the circumstances it is unnecessary to
express an opinion as to the applicability of s.
196A Criminal Procedure code to the facts of this
case.
For these reasons we allow the appeals, set
aside the order of the High Court and of the
learned Chief Presidency Magistrate and dismiss
the complaint.
BY COURT: In accordance with the judgment of
the majority, the appeal is allowed.
Appeal allowed.