Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NARAYAN RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/07/1957
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 737 1957 SCR 283
ACT:
Sessions Trial-Proceeding on Police Report-Omission of
Police Officer to furnish necessary copies to the accused-
Duty of inquiring Magistrate-Validity of Proceeding and
trial-Code of Criminal Procedure (Act V of 1898), as amended
by the amending Act of 1955 (26 of 955), ss. 173(4), 207A
(3), 537.
HEADNOTE:
The word ’shall’ occurring in sub-s. (4) Of s. 173 and sub-
s. (3) Of S. 207A of the Code of Criminal Procedure is not
mandatory but directory and a non-compliance with the
provisions of those subsections, unless it can be shown to
have prejudiced the accused person in his defence, cannot
invalidate the commitment proceedings or the subsequent
trial.
Magistrates holding inquiries under s. 207A(3) Of the Code
of Criminal Procedure must, however, be circumspect and see
that an accused person is not handicapped in his defence by
any omission on the part of the Police Officer to furnish
him with necessary copies.
Where such non-compliance is found to cause any prejudice to
the accused, the Court should in the interest of justice
reopen the proceedings and insist on a full compliance with
the provisions. When it causes no prejudice, it is a mere
irregularity curable under S. 537 Of the Code.
Abdul Rahman v. The King-Emperor, (1929) L.R. 55 I.A. 96,
Pulukuri Kolayya v. King-Emperor, (1947) L.R. 74 I.A. 65 and
Gurbachan Singh v. The State of Punjab, Cr. A. NO. 48 of
1957 applied.
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Consequently, in a case where an accused person was com-
mitted to the Court of Session on a charge under s. 302 of
the Indian Penal Code and found guilty thereunder by the
Sessions judge and awarded the capital sentence and the
order of conviction and sentence was unassailable on merits,
but the Police Officer had omitted to furnish him copies as
required by s. 173(4) and the inquiring Magistrate to cause
such copies to be furnished to him under S. 207A(3) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure and such omission could not be
shown to have in any way prejudiced the accused person in
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his defence, it was a mere irregularity that did not vitiate
either the commitment proceedings or the trial and was cured
by S. 537 Of the Code.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 97 of
1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 20,1956, of the Andhra Pradesh High Court at
Hyderabad in Criminal Confirmation Case No. 18 of 1956 and
Criminal Appeal No. 240 of 1956 arising out of the judgment
and order dated April 25, 1956, of the Court of the Sessions
Judge at Karimnagar in Criminal Case No. 9/8 of 1956.
R. C. Prasad, for the appellant.
R. H. Dhebar and T. M. Sen, for the respondent.
1957. July 15. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SINHA J.-The main question for determination in this appeal
by special leave is whether and, if so, how far non-
compliance with the provisions of ss. 173(4) and 207A(3) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, has affected the legality of
the proceedings and the trial resulting in the conviction of
the appellant. The appellant was tried by the learned
Sessions Judge of Karimnagar in what used to be the State of
Hyderabad (now part of the State of Andhra Pradesh), under
s. 302 of the Indian Penal Code, for the murder of his
brother Baga Rao, and sentenced to death. The conviction
and the sentence were affirmed by the High Court of
Judicature of Andhra Pradesh, at Hyderabad, on appeal and on
a reference by the learned Sessions Judge. Along with the
appellant, three other persons, named Lingarao, the
appellant’s brother, Narsingrao, the nephew of the appellant
and son of Lingarao
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aforesaid, and Mahboob Ali, said to be a close friend of the
other accused, were also tried under s. 302, read with ss.
34 and 109 of the Indian Penal Code, and convicted and
sentenced to imprisonment for life. Their appeals also were
heard along with the appeal preferred by the appellant and
by a common judgment, the High Court dismissed all the
appeals and confirmed the convictions and sentences passed
against all the four accused persons. This appeal concerns
only Narayan Rao who has been sentenced to death by the
courts below.
The facts of the case are short and simple. The murdered
man Baga Rao, who was an excise contractor, had separated
from his other brothers aforesaid, and had partitioned the
family lands. There were differences amongst the brothers
which had led to arbitration proceedings a few months
earlier, which did not satisfy Baga Rao. On the Saturday
previous to the Monday, December 26, 1955, which was the day
of the occurrence, there was a quarrel between Baga Rao on
one side and Lingarao and Narsingrao on the other in the
field said to belong to Baga Rao. The parties reside in
village Kollamaddi taluk Sircilla, district Karimnagar. At
about 7 a.m. "on the morning of December 26, 1955, Baga Rao
had been proceeding from his village towards Nirmal side.
The accused, who appears to have been lying in wait for Baga
Rao, came running from behind and the appellant fell upon
Baga Rao with his knife. The other accused persons caught
hold of Baga Rao and the appellant inflicted several
injuries on his person with his knife (M.O. 13). At first,
Baga Rao got himself released from the grip of Narsingrao
but the latter chased him and overtook him. All the accused
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overpowered him by catching hold of the different parts of
his body, and the appellant stabbed him in the regions of
the neck, abdomen, thigh and other parts of his body, the
fatal injuries being in the neck and the abdomen. At the
time of the occurrence, P.W. 1, father’s brother of the
appellant, who also was proceeding towards Nirmal, saw most
of the occurrence and then, out of fear, hid himself in a
hut nearby. P.W. 2-a boy of about 12
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years-a student of 4th standard in a Government school, was
also proceeding in that direction that morning, and saw the
whole occurrence from beginning to end from a short distance
of a few yards. This young boy claimed the murdered Baga
Rao as his maternal uncle, stating that his mother is the
sister of Baga Rao. But the wife of the murdered man, P.W.
6, stated in cross-examination that P.W. 2-Ramchander Rao-is
distantly related to her husband and that he is not the son
of her husband’s sister. The father of the murdered man,
Chatriah, aged about 85 years, who has been examined as
defence witness No. 1, disclaimed all relationship with the
said P.W. 2, but stated that he is related to Dharmiah, P.W.
1, who is no other than his full brother. Chatriah, the
father, had been examined to support the defence suggestion
that it was P.W. 1, Dharmiah Rao and his son who got Baga
Rao murdered and falsely implicated the accused persons.
That evidence has naturally not been accepted by the courts
below because such a case was never sought to be made out at
any previous stage of the proceedings until his examination
in court. D.W. 2 who claims to be the son-in-law of P.W. 1,
was examined only to prove that there had been a rivalry
between P.W. I and the accused persons for the purchase of
some land. His evidence was rejected as vague and of no
relevance.
The case against the appellant, as also against other
accused persons not before this Court, rested mainly on the
evidence of Dharmiah P.W. I and Ramchander Rao, P.W. 2, who
figure as the eye-witnesses. Besides their testimony, there
is the evidence of the recovery of the blood-stained
garments from the houses of the accused persons and the
blood-stained knife found near the dead body, and identified
in court as belonging to the appellant, which were all found
by the chemical examiner, to have stains of human blood.
The courts below have relied upon the evidence of the eye-
witnesses, corroborated by the incriminating circumstances
aforesaid, and have agreed in convicting and sentencing the
accused as stated above.
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We have been taken through the evidence in this case and
after having heard counsel for the appellant, we do not see
any reasons to differ from the courts below in their
estimate of the evidence adduced by the prosecution in
support of the case against the appellant. Hence, in our
opinion, there is no ground for interference with the
conclusions of the courts below on the merits of the case.
It now remains to consider the question of law which has
been seriously pressed upon us. It has been argued, as was
admitted by the learned Government Advocate before the High
Court, that the provisions of ss. 173(4) and 207A(3) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, have not been complied with, and
that, as a necessary consequence of those omissions, the
entire proceedings and the trial are vitiated. It is
convenient at this stage to set out the course, in some
respects rather unusual, of the proceedings before the
police and the committing magistrate as also at the trial
before the learned Sessions Judge. When P. W. 1 aforesaid
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informed Gopal Rao (P. W. 8)-Police Patel-about the
occurrence, he drew up the first information report at about
11 a.m., on December 26. All the four accused were named as
the culprits in the first information report. He issued
that report to the station house, Gambhiraopet, about 5
miles from the place of occurrence. The Sub-Inspector of
police, P.W. 11, proceeded to the spot and prepared the
inquest report. He found the throat of the deceased cut,
besides other injuries on the left side of the stomach and
right thigh and three wounds on the left hand. Two panchas,
Lachmayya and Ramayya (P.W. 10), were called by the police
officer and in their presence and under their signatures, he
entered a long note as to what the panchas saw on the spot,
and then follows the substance of the statements of the eye-
witnesses, P.Ws. 1 and 2, aforesaid. This record of the
statements of the two eye-witnesses, aforesaid, made the
same day when the occurrence took place, has been made to
serve the double purpose of what the police officer and the
panchas aforesaid saw and heard at the spot, as also the
record of the substance of the
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two main witnesses for the prosecution before the
investigating police officer. The post mortem report, made
the next day, December 27, corroborated the nature of the
injuries stated above, and added that the incised wound
across the lower part of the neck, had cut the vital organs
like trachea, oesophagus and the jugular vein. The
prosecution also proved, as exhibit P-5, the panchnama
prepared the same day and signed not only by the panchas but
purporting to have been signed also by the accused persons.
This document is a record which is a complete confession of
the crime from the beginning to the end by all the accused
persons. This was highly irregular, but fortunately, it was
not a jury trial and has not, therefore, done much harm to
the accused persons, but certainly the provisions of the
Evidence Act and of the-Code of Criminal Procedure have not
been observed. On January 10 and 11, 1956, the learned
Munsiff-Magistrate recorded the full length statements of
Ramchander Rao as P.W. 1, and of Dharmiah Rao, P.W. 2, under
s. 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Apparently, the
police, apprehending that those two persons were related to
three out of the four accused, took the precaution of having
their statement so recorded. The police report under s. 173
of Criminal Procedure Code was made by the investigating
police officer on January 11, 1956, and was placed before
the Munsiff-Magistrate on January 12. It gives a very
complete statement of the prosecution case and the names and
full description ’of the witnesses to be examined in support
of the prosecution case. The learned Munsiff-Magistrate
appears to have examined the investigating police officer as
P.W. 1, and the two eye-witnesses, Dharmiah and Ramchander
Rao, as P.Ws. 2 and 3, and the medical officer as P.W. 4, on
or about February 15, 1956. The record of the statement of
the medical officer appears in the paper book, but the
evidence of the other three witnesses does not appear in the
paper book. On February 16,1956, the learned Munsiff-
Magistrate put very detailed questions to each one of the
accused persons and placed the evidence of all the witnesses
examined by him in detail, to the
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accused persons who have denied their complicity in the
crime and who alleged enmity with the two eyewitnesses
aforesaid. The committal order, if any, is not before us.
The learned Munsiff-Magistrate framed a charge for murder
under s. 302, against the appellant, and’ for participation
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in the crime, against the other three accused, under s. 302,
read with ss. 34 and 109 of Indian Penal Code. He again put
a number of questions to each one of the accused persons as
to what they had to say against the charges framed and as to
what they had to say in their defence.
It does not appear that before the learned Munsiff-
Magistrate who was holding his inquiries under s. 207A(3)
and (4), any grievance was made that the provisions of s.
173(4) had not been complied with by the police officer in-
charge of the investigation. Nor does it appear that any
request was made, to call upon the police officer concerned,
to furnish to the accused, copies referred to in sub-s. (4)
of s. 173 of the Code. There is no indication in the record
that even when the accused persons were placed on their
trial before the learned Sessions Judge, any such grievance
or any such request was made to that court. The cross-
examination of the eye-witnesses aforesaid has been done at
some length, and there are also references to the record
made by the police officer during the investigation. It was
only after the conviction and sentences of the accused
persons by the learned Sessions Judge, when the appeals were
preferred to the High Court, that the ground is raised, for
the first time, in the memoranda of appeal in these terms:
"The lower court has lost sight of the fact that the
mandatory provisions of ss. 173, 207A and other sections of
the Code of Criminal Procedure have not been complied with,
and this fact has caused a complete failure of justice."
The High Court, while dealing with this ground of appeal,
has observed that the learned Government Advocate, while
conceding that the committing court had not complied with
the provisions of those sections, had urged that the
omission was not sufficient to
37
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vitiate the trial unless the accused succeeded in showing
that they had been prejudiced in their defence. They
further observed that when the accused got the copies in the
Sessions Court before the recording of the statement of the
witnesses, it could not be said that the accused had been so
prejudiced. The High Court finds, as a fact, that the
accused got the necessary copies of the depositions of the
witnesses in the Sessions Court before the statements of the
prosecution witnesses were recorded by that court. The High
Court also remarked that it was not denied that the copies
were supplied a day earlier, but that there was nothing to
show that the accused made any grievance that the time at
their disposal was too short to enable them to cross-examine
the prosecution witnesses, or that they prayed for an
adjournment of the case in order to enable them to
effectively cross-examine those witnesses. In view of these
considerations, the High Court held that the accused had
failed to show any prejudice.
Before us, no attempt was made to show that the non-
compliance with the provisions of ss. 173(4) and 207A(3) had
caused any prejudice to the accused. The learned counsel
for the appellant sought to argue that the omission had the
effect of vitiating the entire proceedings ending in the
trial of the accused, and that, therefore, ipso facto, a
fresh trial became necessary irrespective of whether or not
the accused had shown any prejudice. In other words, he
contended that these illegalities rendered the proceedings
null and void and that the Court need not stop to consider
the question of prejudice. Section 173, sub-s. (4), of the
Code of Criminal Procedure was amended by the Code of
Criminal Procedure Amendment Act, 26 of 1955, by adding the
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following:
"(4) After forwarding a report under this section, the
officer in charge of the police station shall, before the
commencement of the inquiry or trial, furnish or cause to be
furnished to the accused, free of cost, a copy of the report
forwarded under sub-section (1) and of the first information
report recorded under section 154 and of all other documents
or relevant extracts
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thereof, on which the prosecution proposes to rely,
including the statements and confessions, if any, recorded
under section 164 and the statements recorded under sub-
section (3) of section 161 of all the persons whom the
prosecution proposes to examine as its witnesses.
(5)Notwithstanding anything contained in subsection (4), if
the police officer is of opinion that any part of any
statement recorded under sub-section (3) of section 161 is
not relevant to the subject-matter of the inquiry or trial
or that its disclosure to the accused is not essential in
the interests of justice and is inexpedient in the public
interests, he shall exclude such part from the copy of the
statement furnished to the accused and, in such a, case, he
shall make a report to the Magistrate starting his reasons
for excluding such part :
Provided that at the commencement of the inquiry or trial,
the Magistrate shall, after perusing the part so excluded
and considering the report of the police, officer, pass such
orders as he thinks fit and if he so directs, a copy of the
part so excluded or such portion thereof, as he thinks
proper, shall be furnished to the accused."
In order to simplify commitment proceedings preceding the
trial of accused persons by a court of Session,s. 207A was
added by way of amendment of the Code at the same time.
In the added s. 207A, sub-ss. 3 and 4, which are material
portions of that section, are in these terms :
" (3) At the commencement of the inquiry, the Magistrate
shall, when the accused appears or is brought before him,
satisfy himself that the documents referred to in section
173 have been furnished to the accused and if he finds that
the accused has not been furnished with such documents or
any of them, he shall cause the same to be so furnished.
(4)The Magistrate shall then proceed to take the evidence of
such persons, if any, as may be produced by the prosecution
as witnesses to the actual commission of the offence
alleged; and if the Magistrate is of opinion that it is
necessary in the interests of justice
292
to take the evidence of any one or more of the other
witnesses for the prosecution, he may take such evidence
also."
It will thus appear that in cases exclusively triable by a
court of Session, it is the duty of the magistrate, while
holding a preliminary inquiry, to satisfy himself that the
documents referred in s.173 have been furnished to the
accused and if he found that the police officer concerned
had not carried out his duty in that behalf, the magistrate
should see to it that is done. After the accused have been
furnished with the necessary documents, it is now required
to record evidence of only such witnesses for the
prosecution as had witnessed the actual commission of the
offence charged against the accused and of such other
witnesses as he may consider necessary in the interests of
justice. From what has been said above, it is clear that
the Munsiff-Magistrate did record the evidence as required
by sub-s. (4) of s. 207A. But it has been found by the High
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Court, on the admission of the Government Advocate, that the
provisions of sub-s. 3 of s. 207A had not been complied
with. It is not clear as to whether all the documents
contemplated by s. 173(4), quoted above, had not been
furnished to the accused or documents other than the
statements of witnesses had not been so supplied. The
judgment of the High Court would appear to indicate the
latter, but we shall proceed on the assumption that there
was, an entire omission to carry out the provisions of subs.
(4) of s. 173, read with sub-s. 3 of s. 207A. Does such an
omission necessarily render the entire proceedings and the
trial null and void; or is it only an irregularity curable
with reference of the provisions of s. 537 (a) of the Code ?
In other words, are the provisions of S. 173(4), read with
s. 207A(3) mandatory or only directory ? There is no doubt
that those provisions have been introduced by the amending
Act of 1955, in order to simplify the procedure in respect
of inquiries leading upto a Sessions trial, and at the same
time to safeguard the interests of accused persons by
enjoining upon police officers concerned and magistrates,
before whom such proceedings are brought, to
293
see that all the documents, necessary to give the accused
persons all the information for the proper conduct of their
defence, are furnished. It has rightly been contended on
behalf of the appellant that it was the duty of the
magistrate to see that the provisions aforesaid of the Code
have been fully complied with. Magistrates, therefore, have
to be circumspect, while conducting such proceedings, to see
to it that accused persons are not handicapped in their
defence by any omission on the part of police officers
concerned, to supply the necessary copies. But we are not
prepared to hold that non-compliance with those provisions
has, necessarily, the result of vitiating those proceedings
and subsequent trial. The word "shall" occurring both in
sub-s. (4) of s. 173 and sub-s. (3) of s. 207A is not
mandatory but only directory, because an omission by a
police officer, to fully comply with the provisions of s.
173, should not be allowed to have such a far-reaching
effect as to render the proceedings including the trial
before the court of Session wholly ineffective. Instead of
simplifying the procedure, as was intended by the amending
Act, as indicated above, the result contended for on behalf
of the appellant, will, necessarily, result in re-opening
the proceedings and trials which may have been concluded
long ago. Such a result will be neither conducive to
expeditious justice nor in the interest of accused persons
themselves. Certainly, if it is shown, in a particular
case, on behalf of the accused persons that the omission on
the part of police officers concerned or of the magistrate
before whom the committal proceedings had fended, has caused
prejudice to the accused, in the interest of justice, the
court may reopen the proceedings by insisting upon full
compliance with the provisions of the Code. In our opinion,
the omission complained of in the instant case should not
have a more farreaching effect than the omission to carry
out the provisions of s. 162 or s. 360 of the Code. Courts
in India, before such matters were taken to their Lord.
ships of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, had
taken conflicting views on the scope of section 537 of the
Code in curing such omissions as aforesaid. In the
294
case of Abdul Rahman v. The King-Emperor(1), their Lordships
of the Judicial Committee had to consider the effect of non-
compliance with the provisions of s. 360 of the Code. After
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considering the relevant provisions of the Code, their
Lordships came to the conclusion that it was a mere
irregularity which could be cured by the provisions of s.
537. In the case of Pulukuri Kotayya and others v. King-
Emperor (2), the Judicial Committee had to consider the
effect of breach of the statutory provisions of s. 162 of
the Code. The following observations of their Lordships, at
pages 75-76, are a complete answer to the arguments advanced
on behalf of the appellant before us, and we respectfully
adopt them:
" When a trial is conducted in a, manner different from that
prescribed by the Code (as in N. A. Subramania Iyer’s case
(3)), the trial is bad, and no question of curing an
irregularity arises; but if the trial is conducted
substantially in the manner prescribed by the Code, but some
irregularity occurs in the course of such conduct, the
irregularity can be cured under s. 537, and none the less so
because the irregularity involves, as must nearly always be
the case, a breach of one or more of the very comprehensive
provisions of the Code. The distinction drawn in many of
the cases in India between an illegality and an irregularity
is one of degree rather than of kind. This view finds
support in the decision of their Lordships’ Board in Abdul
Rahman v. The King-Emperor (1), where failure to comply with
s. 360 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was held to be
cured by ss. 535 and 537. The present case falls under s.
537, and their Lordships hold the trial valid notwithstand-
ing the breach of s. 162."
In the instant case, the facts as stated above are extremely
simple. It was a case of a day-light murder by four persons
acting in concert and way-laying the deceased when lie was
out on business that morning. Two persons, more or less
related to three of the accused
(1)(1929) L.R. 55 I.A. 96.
(2)(1947) L.R. 74 I.A. 65, 75-76.
(3) (1901) L.R. 28 I.A. 257.
295
persons, gave evidence as eye-witnesses to the occurrence.
Their statements were recorded by the police in some detail
in the inquest report itself on the very day of the
occurrence. There was not much scope for variations in
their statements during police investigation and those
before the court. It was a simple case of either believing
or disbelieving those two eye-witnesses. As already
indicated, all the four accused persons including the
appellant were named at the earliest opportunity in the
first information report which was lodged without any
avoidable delay within a few hours after the occurrence.
Both the courts below have preferred to rely upon the
testimony of the two eye-witnesses, corroborated by the
circumstantial evidence referred to above. They have
rejected the defence suggestions supported as they are by
the two defence witnesses, one of whom is a common ancestor
of three of the four accused persons. It has not been
argued, and there is no scope for the argument, that the
accused persons have been prejudiced in any way in their
defence. They had to meet a straightforward case which they
failed to do.
After carefully considering the arguments advanced on behalf
of the appellant, we have come to the conclusion that the
proceedings and the trial have not been vitiated by the
admitted non-compliance with the provisions aforesaid of the
Code, and that the irregularity is curable by reference to
s. 537 of the Code, as no case of prejudice has been made
out. This Court, in the case of Gurbachan Singh v. The
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State of Punjab (1), was inclined to take a similar view of
the provisions aforesaid of the Code, though it ultimately
held that those provisions did not apply to the case then
before them. The appeal is accordingly dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) Criminal Appeal No. 48 of 1957, decided on April 24,
1957.
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