Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (crl.) 1102 of 2007
PETITIONER:
State of H.P
RESPONDENT:
Mushtaq Ahmad
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/03/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & LOKESHWAR SINGH PANTA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Challenge in this special leave petition is to the order
passed by a Division Bench of the Himachal Pradesh High
Court dismissing the application filed by the petitioner-
State under Section 378(3) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (in short the ’Code’).
Grievance of the petitioner is that the application was
dismissed summarily without indicating any reason. It is
stated by learned counsel for the petitioner that this Court
has in many cases deprecated the practice of such
dismissal.
The High Court has not given any reasons for
refusing to grant leave to file appeal against acquittal, and
seems to have been completely oblivious to the fact that by
such refusal, a close scrutiny of the order of acquittal, by
the appellate forum, has been lost once and for all. The
manner in which appeal against acquittal has been dealt
with by the High Court leaves much to be desired.
Reasons introduce clarity in an order. On plainest
consideration of justice, the High Court ought to have set
forth its reasons, howsoever brief, in its order indicative of
an application of its mind, all the more when its order is
amenable to further avenue of challenge. The absence of
reasons has rendered the High Court order not
sustainable. Similar view was expressed in State of U.P. v.
Battan and Ors (2001 (10) SCC 607). About two decades
back in State of Maharashtra v. Vithal Rao Pritirao
Chawan (AIR 1982 SC 1215) the desirability of a speaking
order while dealing with an application for grant of leave
was highlighted. The requirement of indicating reasons in
such cases has been judicially recognized as imperative.
The view was re-iterated in Jawahar Lal Singh v. Naresh
Singh and Ors. (1987 (2) SCC 222). Judicial discipline to
abide by declaration of law by this Court, cannot be
forsaken, under any pretext by any authority or Court, be
it even the Highest Court in a State, oblivious to Article
141 of the Constitution of India, 1950 (in short the
’Constitution’).
Even in respect of administrative orders Lord
Denning M.R. in Breen v. Amalgamated Engineering
Union (1971 (1) All E.R. 1148) observed "The giving of
reasons is one of the fundamentals of good
administration". In Alexander Machinery (Dudley) Ltd. v.
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Crabtree (1974 LCR 120) it was observed: "Failure to give
reasons amounts to denial of justice". Reasons are live
links between the mind of the decision taker to the
controversy in question and the decision or conclusion
arrived at". Reasons substitute subjectivity by objectivity.
The emphasis on recording reasons is that if the decision
reveals the "inscrutable face of the sphinx", it can, by its
silence, render it virtually impossible for the Courts to
perform their appellate function or exercise the power of
judicial review in adjudging the validity of the decision.
Right to reason is an indispensable part of a sound
judicial system, reasons at least sufficient to indicate an
application of mind to the matter before Court. Another
rationale is that the affected party can know why the
decision has gone against him. One of the salutary
requirements of natural justice is spelling out reasons for
the order made, in other words, a speaking out. The
"inscrutable face of a sphinx" is ordinarily incongruous
with a judicial or quasi-judicial performance. (See State of
Punjab v. Bhag Singh (2004 (1) SCC 547).
In the background of what has been stated in Bhag
Singh’s case (supra) the grievance of learned counsel for
the petitioner-State about the manner in which the
petition has been dismissed is unexceptionable. But we
have perused the judgment of the trial Court. Considering
the nature of the findings recorded we do not consider this
to be a fit case where exercise of jurisdiction under Article
136 of the Constitution is called for. The petition is
accordingly dismissed.