Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1508 of 2003
PETITIONER:
State of Maharashtra
RESPONDENT:
Salman Salim Khan & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/12/2003
BENCH:
N. Santosh Hegde & B.P. Singh
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
2 4615 2003
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
Heard learned counsel for the parties.
Leave granted.
The entire exercise which culminated in the impugned
judgment of the High Court, in our opinion, was an exercise in
futility and sheer waste of time and money.
The law governing the trial of criminal offences provides
for alteration of charges at any stage of the proceedings
depending upon the evidence adduced in the case. If the trial is
being held before a Court of Magistrate it is open to that court
at any stage of trial if it comes to the conclusion that the
material on record indicates the commission of an offence
which requires to be tried by a superior court, it can always do
so by committing such case for further trial to a superior court
as contemplated in the Code of Criminal Procedure (the Code).
On the contrary, if the trial is being conducted in a superior
court like the Sessions Court and if that court comes to the
conclusion that the evidence produced in the said trial makes
out a lesser offence than the one with which the accused is
charged, it is always open to that court based on evidence to
convict such accused for a lesser offence. Thus, arguments
regarding the framing of a proper charge are best left to be
decided by the trial court at an appropriate stage of the trial.
Otherwise as has happened in this case proceedings get
protracted by the intervention of the superior courts.
Now coming to the present appeal :
The respondent herein was originally charged of an
offence punishable under sections 304A, 279, 337, 338, 427
IPC and 134(a)(b) read with sections 181 and 185 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1998 as also under section 66(1)(b) of the
Bombay Prohibition Act. All these offences are triable by a
court of Magistrate of competent jurisdiction. These charges
against the respondents were registered based on a complaint
lodged by one Shri Ravindra Patil, a Police Constable attached
to the Security Department and posted with the respondent to
look after his security.
It is the case of the prosecution that on the night
intervening the 27th and 28th September, 2002, the respondent
drove his car under the influence of alcohol, in a rash manner
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and caused the death of one person and caused grievous injuries
to four others who happened to be sleeping on the footpath. A
few days later the chargesheet filed as above, came to be
modified based on the additional statement of the complainant,
and instead of section 304A IPC, section 304 Part II, IPC was
substituted which is an offence exclusively triable by a Court of
Sessions hence the learned Magistrate who took cognizance of
the offence, committed the said case to the Court of Sessions
for trial.
It is to be noted that the respondent was granted bail even
after the charge was modified to include section 304 Part II,
IPC. On the framing of the charge under section 304 Part II,
IPC, the respondent filed Criminal Application No.463 of 2003
in the Court of Sessions alleging that the facts as narrated in the
complaint did not constitute an offence punishable under
section 304 Part II, IPC and if at all, only a charge for an
offence punishable under section 304A could be framed against
him, apart from other offences triable by the court of
Magistrate. Said application came to be rejected by the Sessions
Court and the learned Sessions Judge then proceeded to frame
charges; one of which was for an offence punishable under
section 304 Part II, IPC.
Being aggrieved by the dismissal of his application and
the consequential framing of charge under section 304 Part II,
the respondent preferred a criminal application under section
482 of the Code before the Criminal Appellate Bench of the
High Court of Judicature at Bombay. The High Court by the
impugned order has allowed the said application and quashed
the order made by the learned Sessions Judge framing charge
under section 304 Part II, IPC against the respondent herein
while it maintained the other charges and directed the
appropriate Magistrate’s court to frame de novo charges under
various sections mentioned in the said impugned order of the
High Court including one under section 304A IPC.
It is against the said order of the High Court, the State of
Maharashtra has preferred this appeal. Mr. Ashwani Kumar,
learned senior counsel appearing for the State of Maharashtra
contended that a perusal of the original complaint as
supplemented by the additional statement of the complainant
clearly shows that the respondent drove his vehicle on the day
of the accident without holding a motor driving licence, under
the influence of alcohol, in a rash and negligent manner and
failed to contain the speed of the vehicle in spite of being
cautioned by the complainant, thus causing the death of one
person and grievous injuries to four others. Therefore, it is
clear, at this stage at least, that the respondent had the
knowledge that by such act of his, he would be causing death of
the victim if he meets with an accident. Such knowledge,
according to learned counsel, is evident from the conduct of the
respondent as could be seen from the averment in the complaint
itself. He also contended that the High Court in a petition under
section 482 of the Code could not have weighed the material
that was before the court nor could it have tested the veracity of
the statement of the complainant at this stage to come to the
conclusion that the principal offence would not fall under
section 304, Part II, IPC. He further contended that by doing so,
the High Court has pre-judged the issue and by giving a
conclusive finding in this regard has pre-empted the courts
below from assessing the evidence during the trial and if need
be, from properly altering the charges.
Mr. Harish N Salve, learned senior counsel representing
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the respondent-accused, per contra, contended that from a plain
reading of the complaint which is the only material available at
this stage for the purpose of framing charges, no reasonable
person could ever have come to the conclusion that the
respondent ever had any knowledge that by his act of driving
the motor vehicle, he would cause such an act which would lead
to the death of any person. He further submitted that from the
material on record itself it is clear that if at all any act of the
respondent is responsible for the death of the victim same
cannot be termed anything other than a rash and negligent act
punishable under section 304A. Learned senior counsel further
submitted that since the learned Sessions Judge while rejecting
the application of the petitioner filed before it in altering the
charge from section 304 Part II to 304A, IPC, had itself passed
a lengthy order which indicated that the said court had formed a
conclusive opinion as to the nature of offence which definitely
would have prejudiced the case of the respondent in the trial,
the High Court was left with no choice but to decide this
question as to the nature of offence if at all committed by the
respondent.
But for the fact that two courts below i.e. the Sessions
Court and the High Court having gone into this issue at length
and having expressed almost a conclusive opinion as to the
nature of offence, we would not have interfered with the
impugned order of the High Court because, as stated above,
neither of the sides would have been in any manner prejudiced
in the trial by framing of a charge either under section 304A or
section 304 Part II, IPC except for the fact that the forum trying
the charge might have been different, which by itself, in our
opinion, would not cause any prejudice. This is because at any
stage of the trial it would have been open to the concerned court
to have altered the charge appropriately depending on the
material that is brought before it in the form of evidence. But
now by virtue of the impugned judgment of the High Court
even if in the course of the trial the Magistrate were to come to
the conclusion that there is sufficient material to charge the
respondent for a more serious offence than the one punishable
under section 304A, it will not be possible for it to pass
appropriate order. To that extent the prosecution case gets pre-
empted.
We are of the opinion that though it is open to a High
Court entertaining a petition under section 482 of the Code to
quash charges framed by the trial court, same cannot be done by
weighing the correctness or sufficiency of evidence. In a case
praying for quashing of the charge, the principle to be adopted
by the High Court should be that if the entire evidence
produced by the prosecution is to be believed, would it
constitute an offence or not. The truthfulness, the sufficiency
and acceptability of the material produced at the time of
framing of charge can be done only at the stage of trial. By
relying upon the decisions of the apex Court most of which
were with reference to appeals arising out of convictions, we
think the High Court was not justified in this case in giving a
finding as to the non-existence of material to frame a charge for
an offence punishable under section 304 Part II, IPC, therefore,
so far as the finding given by the High Court is concerned, we
are satisfied that it is too premature a finding and ought not to
have been given at this stage. At the same time we are also in
agreement with the arguments of learned counsel for the
respondents that even the Sessions Court ought not to have
expressed its views in such certain terms which indicates that
the Sessions Court had taken a final decision in regard to the
material to establish a charge punishable under section 304 Part
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II, IPC.
Therefore, we think it appropriate that the findings in
regard to the sufficiency or otherwise of the material to frame a
charge punishable under section 304, Part II, IPC of both the
courts below should be set aside and it should be left to be
decided by the court trying the offence to alter or modify any
such charge at an appropriate stage based on material produced
by way of evidence.
The next question which then requires our consideration
is whether in view of our above finding, the charge framed by
the Sessions Judge for an offence punishable under section 304
Part II, IPC be sustained or one under section 304A as has been
done by the High Court, should be retained ?
We have been informed that pursuant to the judgment of
the High Court, the Metropolitan Magistrate, 12th Court,
Bandra, Mumbai, has already framed fresh charges under
section 304A and other provisions mentioned hereinabove and
the trial has commenced. Since any interference at this stage
would not further the cause of justice and would lead only to
delay the course of justice, we think it appropriate that the
proceedings before the said Magistrate’s Court should continue
and the trial should proceed on the basis of the charges framed
by it but we make it very clear that at any appropriate stage if
the Magistrate comes to the conclusion that there is sufficient
material to charge the respondent for a more serious offence
than the one punishable under section 304A, he shall proceed to
do so without in any manner being hindered or influenced by
the observations or findings of the High Court in the impugned
order or by the order of the Sessions Court which framed the
charge punishable under section 304 Part II, IPC. Such decision
of the Magistrate shall be purely based on the material brought
in evidence at the trial.
We make it clear that neither by sustaining the order of
the High Court in remitting the trial to the court of Magistrate,
nor by our observations in this judgment as to the acceptability
or otherwise of the material now on record, we have expressed
any opinion on the merits of the case. Whatever is observed by
us in this judgment is solely for the purpose of disposal of this
appeal.
With the above observations, this appeal is disposed of.