Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (crl.) 439 of 2001
PETITIONER:
HARIJINDER KAUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF JHARKHAND & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/08/2001
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
Shivaraj V. Patil J.
The order dated 31.10.2000 passed by the Patna
High Court, Ranchi Bench, Ranchi, in Criminal Revision
No. 101 of 2000(R) is assailed in this petition.
The petitioner filed a written complaint before
the Golmuri Police Station at Jamshedpur on 2.9.1994
against her husband (the respondent no. 2) and his
other relatives. On the said complaint, Golmuri P.S.
Case No. 172/94 was registered for offences under
sections 498-A, 313 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and
sections 3 & 4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1971.
After investigation, charge-sheet was filed. However,
Dr. (Mrs.) Snehlata Mukherjee was not sent for trial
against whom it was alleged by the complainant that she
was aborted at the nursing home of the said doctor.
The learned Chief Judicial Magistrate on 19.11.94 took
cognizance under sections 498-A, 313 of the IPC and
sections 3 & 4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1971 and
discharged the accused Dr. (Mrs.) Snehlata Mukherjee.
The remaining accused filed an application on 15.5.1995
to delete section 313 of the IPC from the charge-sheet
as no case was made out for the said offence. The
learned Magistrate, by his order dated 1.9.1995,
allowed the application and the charge against the
accused under section 313 of the IPC was deleted. The
petitioner did not challenge either the order dated
19.11.1994 discharging Dr. (Mrs.) Snehlata Mukherjee or
the order dated 1.9.1995 discharging the accused for
offence under section 313 of the IPC. On 12.2.1998, an
application was filed on behalf of the petitioner to
proceed for the trial of the accused under section 313
of the IPC. The said application was dismissed on
17.7.1998 against which order a Criminal Revision
Petition No. 303/98(R) was preferred by the petitioner
before the High Court. The High Court disposed the
said Revision Petition in the following terms:-
In the result, I find no reason to
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interfere with the impugned order except
that the previous order of the Chief
Judicial Magistrate discharging the
accused persons of the offence under
section 313 I.P.C. would be no bar to
the committal of the case in accordance
with the provisions of section 323 of
the Code. With this observation, this
application is dismissed. However, it
is made clear that if on examination of
the remaining witnesses and on looking
to the relevant documents brought on the
record in course of the trial, the
Subdivisional Judicial Magistrate finds
that the accused persons before him, or
any of them is shown to have committed
offence under section 313 of the Indian
Penal Code or for that matter, even of
its abetment, he may commit the case to
the court of Sessions either on
application made for the purpose by the
prosecution, or suo motu.
Thereafter, the learned Magistrate, having already
recorded evidence of two witnesses, continued the trial
and recorded the evidence of six more witnesses. In
compliance with the directions given by the High Court
as extracted above, he passed a detailed order on
16.3.2000 holding that it was not necessary to commit
the case to the court of Sessions and posted the case
for recording the statements of the accused. It is
this order, which was challenged before the High Court
and the High Court, by the impugned order dismissed the
Revision Petition filed by the petitioner. Hence, this
petition.
The main thrust of the argument of the learned
counsel for the petitioner was that the learned
Magistrate committed a manifest error in appreciating
the evidence produced by the prosecution as required
for final disposal of the case either to convict or
acquit the accused instead of considering only as to
whether there was prima facie material to constitute a
charge for offence under section 313 of the IPC. The
learned counsel for the respondent, while bringing to
our notice the previous order passed by the learned
Magistrate and the High Court, urged that in the facts
and circumstances of the case, the leaned Magistrate
was right in passing the order and as such the impugned
order of the High Court confirming the same is
perfectly justified.
Looking to the narration of the facts made above,
it is clear that the order dated 19.11.1994 discharging
Dr. (Mrs.) Snehlata Mukherjee for the offence under
section 313 of the IPC and the order dated 1.9.1995
discharging the remaining accused for the offence under
section 313 of the IPC were not challenged by the
petitioner. The order made by the High Court on
earlier occasion in Criminal Revision No. 303/98(R) was
also not challenged. The learned Magistrate complied
with the directions given by the High Court in the said
Revision Petition. No fault can be found with the
order of the learned Magistrate when he proceeded to
record the evidence of six more witnesses and
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thereafter passed the order holding that no case was
made out to commit the accused for trial under section
313 of the IPC by the Sessions Court. The learned
Magistrate was bound to follow the directions given by
the High Court in the aforementioned Revision Petition.
When the petitioner did not challenge the order of the
High Court, she cannot now say that the learned
Magistrate should not have taken into account the
evidence of 8 witnesses examined in passing the order
dated 16.3.2000.
Having regard to the facts and circumstances of
this case, declining to interfere with the impugned
order, we dismiss the petition. No costs.
.......................J.
[ D.P. MOHAPATRA ]
.......................J.
[ SHIVARAJ V. PATIL ]
August 28, 2001.