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Bhagat Raj vs Mt. Gurai Dulaiya And Anr.

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|21 September, 1937

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Allsop, J.
1. This is a second appeal arising out of a suit for damages for malicious prosecution. The suit was dismissed by the Court which tried it. There was an appeal to the lower Appellate Court which went only into the preliminary question whether the suit was barred by limitation. It held that the suit was so barred and dismissed the appeal under the provisions of Order 41, Rule 11, Civil P.C. In order to understand the question at issue it is necessary to know that the suit was instituted because a complaint had been made against the plaintiff under Section 107, Criminal P.C., on 20th August 1932. The learned Magistrate made an inquiry and came to the conclusion that there was no sufficient ground to bind the plaintiff over. He therefore passed an order on 12th November 1932 that the accused should be "acquitted". The person making the complaint then filed an application in revision in the Court of the Sessions Judge and this was dismissed on 9th January 1933. The suit which has given rise to this appeal was instituted on 8th January 1934. It is obvious that the suit was barred by limitation if the period of limitation began to run from 12th November 1932, but that it was not so barred if the period began to run from 9th January 1933. The rule of limitation is to be found in Article 23 of Schedule 1, Lim. Act. It is there said that the period of limitation for suits for compensation for malicious prosecution shall be one year from the date when the plaintiff is acquitted or the prosecution is otherwise terminated.
2. The argument of the learned Judge of the lower Appellate Court was that the plaintiff had been acquitted and therefore the period of limitation began to run from the date of acquittal, i.e. from 12th November 1932. He was influenced by some expressions used in Madan Mohan Singh v. Ram Sunder Singh (1930) 17 A.I.R. All. 326. The decision in that case was that the period of limitation for a suit for malicious prosecution ran from the date when the prosecution was terminated and in that case the prosecution finally terminated when the application in revision was dismissed. It was a case where there had been a complaint under Section 500, I.P.C., where there had been a discharge and an application before the Sessions Judge that be should direct a further inquiry under the provisions of Section 436, Criminal P.C. Toe decision in Narayan v. Seshayya (1900) 23 Mad. 24 was quoted in the course of argument. The learned Judges in deciding the case pointed out that the judgment in Narayan v. Seshayya (1900) 23 Mad. 24 was very brief and that no detailed reasons were given. They also went on to say that that case might possibly be distinguished upon two grounds, one that the District Magistrate himself had no right to order a further inquiry in that case and the other that it was a case where there was an acquittal and not a discharge. There is the following passage in the judgment:
Moreover in a case where the prosecution ended in acquittal, the language of Article 23 leaves no room for argument, as it provides specifically that limitation is to run from the date of acquittal. It is not therefore necessary to consider whether the prosecution 'terminated'.
3. It must be remembered that these remarks were made merely as a suggestion that the case in Narayan v. Seshayya (1900) 23 Mad. 24 might be distinguishable. The question 'whether the provisions of Article 23 of Schedule 1, Lim. Act, were to the effect that the period of limitation for a suit for damages for malicious prosecution should begin on the date of the acquittal and at no later date when the plaintiff bad been acquitted, did not really arise. It is possible that the proper interpretation to be placed on the provision of Article 23 is that the period of limitation begins to run when the plaintiff is acquitted or the prosecution is otherwise terminated whichever date may be later. In the very case in Madan Mohan Singh v. Ram Sunder Singh (1930) 17 A.I.R. All 326 the ease of a Government appeal from an acquittal as an illustration was mentioned.
It was said that:
The order of acquittal terminates the prosecution for the time being. The filing of an appeal does not ipso facto vacate that order: and yet while the appeal is pending it can hardly be said that the prosecution has terminated.
4. One of us was a party to the decision in Madan Mohan Singh v. Ram Sunder Singh (1930) 17 A.I.R. All 326 and we have no doubt that that ruling is not to be taken as an absolute authority for the proposition that the period of limitation for a suit for compensation for malicious prosecution must begin to run from the date of an acquittal when the plaintiff has been acquitted. The point did not arise in that case and does not really arise in the case before us. Although the learned Magistrate made use of this term "acquitted" when he passed his order on 12th November 1932, it is obvious that the term was not properly used, Under the Provisions of Section 119, Criminal P.C., after an inquiry has been made whether an order binding a person over to keep the peace should be passed, and it has been found that no such order is necessary, the proper course is to discharge) the person concerned. The use of the term "acquitted" is quite inappropriate to a proceeding of this nature. It appears to us that there is no reason why the plaintiff's suit should have been considered to have been barred by limitation. He had to assert in his plaint that the proceedings in the Criminal Court had terminated in his favour. An application in revision had been made to the Sessions Judge and although it is probable that the Sessions Judge himself could not have ordered a furthur inquiry, still he could have made a report to this Court which then could have interfered and ordered further inquiry. In these circumstances, it cannot be said that the proceedings in the Criminal Court had finally terminated in favour of the plaintiff on 12th November 1932. The plaintiff might have incurred further expenses in the Court of the Sessions Judge in opposing the application that further inquiry should be made and he might also have incurred further expenses in this Court if the Sessions Judge had made a report to this Court.
5. In these circumstances we do not see why the plaintiff should not have been allowed to claim compensation for these expenses in his suit for malicious prosecution and he could not so have claimed them if he had been compelled by law to institute his suit before the proceedings came to an end. In any case, as we have held that the order of 12th November, 1932 does not amount to an order of acquittal, the ruling of this Court which; we have already quoted is direct authority for the proposition that the suit was not barred by limitation. There is a connected appeal, S.A. No. 1521 of 1934, in which the facts are the same as the facts in this appeal. The two plaintiffs were persons against whom a joint complaint had been made on 20th August 1932. The so-called order of acquittal and the order dismissing the application in revision were passed against them jointly and they both instituted suits on 8th January 1934. This judgment will therefore govern both the appeals. As we have held that the suits were not barred by limitation, and as the learned Judge of the lower Appellate Court has gone only into that question, we set aside his decrees and direct that the appeals shall be returned to him to be decided according to law. The court-fees paid on appeal will be refunded. The costs of these appeals will abide the result.
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Title

Bhagat Raj vs Mt. Gurai Dulaiya And Anr.

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
21 September, 1937