Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 222 of 2001
PETITIONER:
M/S JK INTERNATIONAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE, GOVT OF NCT OF DELHI AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/02/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas, R.P. Sethi & B.N. Agarwal
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
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The grievance of the appellant is simple and apparently
innocuous that he too may be heard by the court. But the
High Court rolled down the shutters before him saying he has
no right to be heard and the court has no power to permit
him to be heard. As his grievance was compounded by such
denial he has filed this appeal by special leave.
A person accused of certain offences moved the High
Court of Delhi for quashing the criminal proceedings pending
against him in a magistrates court. Appellant informed the
High Court that the criminal proceedings were initiated at
his behest and hence he too may be heard before the criminal
proceedings are to be quashed. A learned single judge of
the High Court of Delhi, while foreclosing the appellant
from doing so, observed that the Court is of the considered
opinion that the right of the complainant to be heard ceases
once cognizance is taken and he cannot thereafter continue
to participate in the proceedings as if he were the
aggrieved party who must have his say in proceedings.
The background is the following. Appellant filed a
complaint before the police alleging that respondents 2 & 3
committed offences of criminal breach of trust and cheating.
As he felt that no action was taken by the police on the
complaint he filed a writ petition before the high Court for
a direction to register FIR. However, before the writ
petition was disposed of, the police informed the court that
the FIR was already registered on the complaint filed by the
appellant. Respondents then moved the High Court in a writ
petition for quashing the FIR, and the appellant was also
allowed to be impleaded in that writ petition. For some
reasons the said writ petition was not followed up by the
respondents and it was subsequently withdrawn.
The police, after investigation, filed a charge sheet
against respondents for offences under Section 420, 406 and
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120B of the IPC and the court issued process to the
respondents requiring them to appear before the Court on
31.5.2000. At that stage respondents filed the present
petition before the High Court praying for quashing the
criminal proceedings pending before the magistrate court
pursuant to the aforesaid charge-sheet filed by the police.
In the writ petition the appellant was not made a party and
therefore a petition was filed in the High Court for
impleading the appellant as a party. The main plank of the
appellant before the High Court was the decision of this
court in Bhagwant Singh vs. Commissioner of Police [1985
(2) SCC 537]. The learned single judge of the High Court of
Delhi felt that the observations made by this Court in an
earlier decision (Thakur Ram vs. State of Bihar [AIR 1966
SC 911]) are more appropriate to the fact situation and
basing on those observations learned single judge rejected
the petition filed by the appellant before the High Court.
The observations of this court in Thakur Ram which
persuaded the learned single judge to shut the door before
the appellant are the following:
In a case which has proceeded on a police report a
private party has really no locus standi. No doubt the
terms of Section 435 (old Cr.P.C.) are very wide and he can
even take up the matter suo motu. The criminal law is not,
however, to be used as an instrument of wrecking private
vengeance by an aggrieved party against the person who,
according to that party, has caused injury to it. Barring a
few exceptions, in criminal matters the party who is treated
as aggrieved party is the State which is the custodian of
the social interests of the community at large and so it is
for the State to take all the steps necessary for bringing
the person who has acted against the social interests of the
community to book.
That was a case in which the Public Prosecutor filed an
application before a magistrate in a pending trial for
amending the charge by incorporating two more offences which
are exclusively triable by the court of sessions and prayed
for the case to be committed by the magistrate to the
sessions court. The magistrate dismissed the application,
but prosecution did not challenge the order passed by the
magistrate. However, the informant in that case filed a
revision before the sessions court under Section 435 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 (old Code). The sessions
judge directed the magistrate to commit the case to the
court of sessions. The said order of the sessions court was
challenged by the accused before the High Court, but that
challenge was unsuccessful. Then the accused moved this
court by special leave. In the above background a
three-judge bench of this court considered the scope of
Sections 435 and 437 of the old Code. In the said context
this Court made the observation which has been quoted by the
learned single judge as extracted above. When the Public
prosecutor is in management of the prosecution of a case a
private person trying to interject in the case to re-
channelise the course of the prosecution has been
disapproved by this Court.
But the situation here is different, as the accused
approached the High Court for quashing the criminal
proceedings initiated by the appellant. It may not be that
the complainant should have been made a party by the accused
himself in the petition for quashing the criminal
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proceedings, as the accused has no such obligation when the
case was charge-sheeted by the police. It is predominantly
the concern of the State to continue the prosecution. But
when the complainant wishes to be heard when the criminal
proceedings are sought to be quashed, it would be a negation
of justice to him if he is foreclosed from being heard even
after he makes a request to the court in that behalf. What
is the advantage of the court in telling him that he would
not be heard at all even at the risk of the criminal
proceedings initiated by him being quashed. It is no solace
to him to be told that if the criminal proceedings are
quashed he may have the right to challenge it before the
higher forums.
The scheme envisaged in the Code of Criminal procedure
(for short the Code) indicates that a person who is
aggrieved by the offence committed, is not altogether wiped
out from the scenario of the trial merely because the
investigation was taken over by the police and the charge
sheet was laid by them. Even the fact that the court had
taken cognizance of the offence is not sufficient to debar
him from reaching the court for ventilating his grievance.
Even in the sessions court, where the Public Prosecutor is
the only authority empowered to conduct the prosecution as
per Section 225 of the Code, a private person who is
aggrieved by the offence involved in the case is not
altogether debarred from participating in the trial. This
can be discerned from Section 301(2) of the Code which reads
thus:
If in any such case any private person instructs a
pleader to prosecute any person in any Court, the Public
Prosecutor or Assistant Public prosecutor in charge of the
case shall conduct the prosecution, and the pleader so
instructed shall act therein under the directions of the
public Prosecutor or Assistant Public prosecutor, and may,
with the permission of the Court, submit written arguments
after the evidence is closed in the case.
The said provision falls within the Chapter titled
General Provisions as to Inquiries and Trials. When such a
role is permitted to be played by a private person, though
it is a limited role, even in the sessions courts, that is
enough to show that the private person, if he is aggrieved,
is not wiped off from the proceedings in the criminal Court
merely because the case was charge sheeted by the police.
It has to be stated further, that the Court is given power
to permit even such private person to submit his written
arguments in the Court including the sessions court. If he
submits any such written arguments the Court has a duty to
consider such arguments before taking a decision.
In view of such a scheme as delineated above how can it
be said that the aggrieved private person must keep himself
outside the corridors of the Court when the case involving
his grievance regarding the offence alleged to have been
committed by the persons arrayed as accused is tried or
considered by the Court. In this context it is appropriate
to mention that when the trial is before a magistrate court
the scope of any other private person intending to
participate in the conduct of the prosecution is still
wider. This can be noticed from Section 302 of the Code
which reads thus:
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(1) Any Magistrate inquiring into or trying a case may
permit the prosecution to be conducted by any person other
than a police officer below the rank of Inspector; but no
person, other than the Advocate-General or Government
Advocate or a public prosecutor or Assistant Public
prosecutor, shall be entitled to do so without such
permission:
Provided that no police officer shall be permitted to
conduct the prosecution if he has taken part in the
investigation into the offence with respect to which the
accused is being prosecuted.
(2) Any person conducting the prosecution may do so
personally or by a pleader.
The private person who is permitted to conduct
prosecution in the magistrates court can engage a counsel
to do the needful in the Court in his behalf. It further
amplifies the position that if a private person is aggrieved
by the offence committed against him or against any one in
whom he is interested he can approach the magistrate and
seek permission to conduct the prosecution by himself. It
is open to the Court to consider his request. If the court
thinks that the cause of justice would be served better by
granting such permission the courts would generally grant
such permission. Of course, this wider amplitude is limited
to Magistrates courts, as the right of such private
individual to participate in the conduct of prosecution in
the sessions court is very much restricted and is made
subject to the control of the Public Prosecutor. The
limited role which a private person can be permitted to play
for prosecution in the Sessions Court has been adverted to
above. All these would show that an aggrieved private
person is not altogether to be eclipsed from the scenario
when the criminal court takes cognizance of the offences
based on the report submitted by the police. The reality
cannot be overlooked that the genesis in almost all such
cases is the grievance of one or more individual that they
were wronged by the accused by committing offences against
them.
We may now proceed to point out the usefulness of the
observations made by the three-judge bench in Bhagwant Singh
vs. Commissioner of Police (supra). Bhagwati J. (as he
then was) who spoke for the bench pointed out that the
informant having taken the initiative in lodging the First
Information Report with a view to initiate investigation by
the police for the purpose of ascertaining whether any
offence has been committed (if so by whom) is vitally
interested in the result of the investigation and hence the
law requires that the action taken by the officer-in- charge
of the police station on such FIR should be communicated to
him. The bench said this with reference to Section
173(2)(i) of the Code.
This Court further said in the decision that if the
magistrate finds that there is no sufficient ground for
proceeding further the informant would certainly be
prejudiced because the FIR was lodged by him. After
adverting to different clauses of Section 173 of the Code
learned judges laid down the legal proposition in paragraph
5 of the said judgment. The law so laid down is that though
there is no obligation on the magistrate to issue notice to
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the injured person or to a relative of the deceased in order
to provide him an opportunity to be heard at the time of
consideration of the final report of the police (except when
the final report is to the effect that no offence had been
made out in the case) the informant who lodged the FIR is
entitled to a notice from the magistrate. In other
instances, the injured or any relative of the accused can
appear before the magistrate at the time of consideration of
the police report if such person otherwise comes to know
that the magistrate is going to consider the report. If
such person appears before the magistrate it is the duty of
the magistrate to hear him. It is profitable to extract the
relevant portion of that ratio:
The injured person or any relative of the deceased,
though not entitled to notice from the Magistrate, has locus
to appear before the Magistrate at the time of consideration
of the report, if he otherwise comes to know that the report
is going to be considered by the Magistrate and if he wants
to make his submissions in regard to the report, the
Magistrate is bound to hear him. We may also observe that
even though the Magistrate is not bound to give notice of
the hearing fixed for consideration of the report to the
injured person or to any relative of the deceased, he may,
in the exercise of his discretion, if he so thinks fit, give
such notice to the injured person or to any particular
relative or relatives of the deceased, but not giving of
such notice will not have any invalidating effect on the
order which may be made by the Magistrate on a consideration
of the report.
In the above view of the matter learned single judge has
done wrong to the appellant when he closed the door of the
High Court before him by saying that the High Court is going
to consider whether the criminal proceedings initiated at
his behest should be quashed completely and that the
complainant would not be heard at all even if he wants to be
heard.
We, therefore, allow this appeal and set aside the
impugned order. The petition filed by the respondents for
quashing the criminal proceedings can now be disposed of by
the High Court after affording a reasonable opportunity to
this appellant also to be heard in the matter.
The appeal is accordingly disposed of.
K.T. Thomas
R.P. Sethi.
B.N. Agarwal
February 23, 2001.