Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DAULAT RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/01/1962
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
KAPUR, J.L.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1206 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 812
ACT:
Prosecution-Cognizance-Complaint in writing
by the Public Servant concerned-If incumbent-
Indian Penal Code, 1860 (Act XLV of 1860), s. 182-
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of 1898),
s. 195.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant a Patwari wrote a letter to the
Tehsildar under whom he was working that he had
been robbed of certain official papers and money.
The police reported that on investigation, the
allegations were found to be false. The Tehsildar
asked the police that a "calendar" be drawn up.
The police launched a prosecution under s. 182 of
the Indian Penal Code. No complaint in writing as
required by s. 195 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure was made by the Tehsildar
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as the public servant concerned in the case, but a
charge sheet was put in by the police attaching
the letter of the Tehsildar asking them to draw up
a "calendar" against the appellant.
^
Held, that in a prosecution to be launched
under s. 195 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, it
is incumbent that a complaint in writing should be
made by the public servant concerned for only on
such complaint can the court take cognizance of
the offence otherwise the trial is without
jurisdiction ab initio.
Held, further, that s. 182 does not require
that an action must always be taken on the report
made to the public servant, the offence is
complete as soon as the report is made and the
person who made the report believed that some
action would be taken.
JUDGMENT:
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CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 126 of 1960.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and
order dated November 23, 1959, of the Punjab High
Court in Criminal Revision No. 1445 of 1959.
V. D, Mahajan, for the appellant.
B. K. Khanna, D. Gupta and P. D. Menon, for
the respondent.
1962. January 25. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This is an appeal by one
Dault Ram who was prosecuted under s. 182 of the
Indian Penal Code and sentenced to imprisonment
for three months. His revision application in the
High Court of Punjab at Chandigarh was dismissed
in limini; but he obtained special leave from this
court and has filed this appeal.
The appellant was working as a Patwari and on
August 19, 1958, he wrote a letter to the
Tehsildar of Pathankot that on the previous day he
had been set upon by two persons Hans Raj and Kans
Raj who beat him severely and robbed him of
certain of his official papers and some money,
which was with him, partly belonging to
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him and partly to the Government. At the end of
the letter which he wrote to the Tehsildar, he
stated that the letter was written for his
information. The Tehsildar, however, forwarded the
letter to the Sub-Divisional Officer who in his
turn sent it on to the police. The police enquired
into the facts and reported that the allegations
in letter were false. Meanwhile, it appears that
the appellant entered into some sort of compromise
with Hans Raj and Kans Raj and wrote another
letter saying that as they were his relatives and
he had found the papers and money, the proceedings
if any be dropped and the papers be consigned to
the record room. The matter however was pursued
further and when the report of the police came
that the allegations in the original letter were
false, the Tehsildar asked the police that a
"calendar" be drawn up. The police however
launched a prosecution against the appellant under
s. 182 of the Indian Penal Code, and after due
trial, the appellant was found guilty of that
offence and was sentenced to three months’
rigorous imprisonment. His appeal and revision
failed and we have been informed that the
appellant has served out his entire sentence.
The only question in this case is whether a
complaint in writing as required by s. 195 had
been presented by the public servant concerned.
The public servant who was moved by the appellant
was undoubtedly the Tehsildar. Whether the
appellant wanted the Tehsildar to take action or
not, the fact remains that he moved the Tehsildar
on what is stated to be a false averment of facts.
He had charged Hans Raj and Kans Raj with offences
under the Penal Code and he had moved his superior
officer for action even though he might have
stated in the letter that it was only for his
information. We are prepared to assume that he
expected that
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some action would be taken. In fact his second
letter that he had compromised the matter and the
proceedings might be dropped clearly shows that he
anticipated some action on the part of his
superior officer. The question is therefore
whether under the provisions of s. 195, it was not
incumbent on the Tehsildar to present a complaint
in writing against the appellant and not leave the
court to be moved by the police by putting in a
charge sheet. The words of s. 195 of the Criminal
Procedure Code are explicit. The section reads as
follows:
"(1) No Court shall take cognizance-(a)
of any offence punishable under sections 172
to 188 of the Indian Penal Code, except on
the complaint in writing of the public
servant concerned, or of some other public
servant to whom he is subordinate;
The words of the section, namely, that the
complaint has to be in writing by the public
servant concerned and that no court shall take
cognizance except on such a complaint clearly show
that in every instance the court must be moved by
the appropriate public servant. We have to decide
therefore whether the Tehsildar can be said to be
the public servant concerned and if he had not
filed the complaint in writing, whether the police
officers in filing the charge sheet had satisfied
the requirements of s. 195. The words "no court
shall take cognizance" have been interpreted on
more than one occasion and they show that there is
an absolute bar against the court taking seisin of
the case except in the manner provided by the
section.
Now the offence under s. 182 of the Penal
Code, if any, was undoubtedly complete when the
appellant had moved the Tehsildar for action.
Section 182 does not require that action must
always be
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taken if the person who moves the public servant
knows or believes that action would be taken. In
making his report to the Tehsildar therefore, if
the appellant believed that some action would be
taken (and he had no reason to doubt that it would
not) the offence under that section was complete.
It was therefore incumbent, if the prosecution was
to be launched, that the complaint in writing
should be made by the Tehsildar as the public
servant concerned in this case. On the other hand
what we find is that a complaint by the Tehsildar
was not filed at all, but a charge sheet was put
in by the Station House Officer. The learned
counsel for the State Government tries to support
the action by submitting that s. 195 had been
complied with inasmuch as when the allegations had
been disproved, the letter of the Superintendent
of Police was forwarded to the Tehsildar and he
asked for "a calendar". This paper was flied along
with the charge sheet and it is stated that this
satisfies the requirements of s. 195. In our
opinion, this is not a due compliance with the
provisions of that section. What the section
comtemplates is that the complaint must be in
writing by the public servant concerned and there
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is no such compliance in the present case. The
cognizance of the case was therefore wrongly
assumed by the court without the complaint in
writing of the public servant namely the Tehsildar
in this case. The trial was thus without
jurisdiction ab inito and the conviction cannot be
maintained.
The appeal is therefore allowed and the
conviction of the appellant and the sentence
passed on him are set aside.
Appeal allowed.
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