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Bhajan Lal S/O Sri Nekshu Lal And ... vs State Of U.P. And Smt. Sushila W/O ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|28 April, 2006

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT K.N. Sinha, J.
1. Heard Sri U.C. Misra, learned Counsel for the petitioners and learned A.G.A.
2. The present writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution of India has been filed for issuing writ, order or direction in the nature of certiorari to quash the order dated 28.1.2003 (Annexure No. 5 to the writ petition) passed by Judicial Magistrate, 1st, Aonla, district Bareilly and order dated 23.3.2006 (Annexure No. 6 to the writ petition) passed by District/Sessions Judge Bareilly in case No. 547/2002 and Criminal Revision No. 199/2005, respectively. It was further prayed that the complaint case on the whole be quashed.
3. Smt. Sushila, opposite party No. 2 filed a complaint, which was registered as complaint case No. 547/2002 against the petitioners. On the said complaint, statement of witnesses were recorded under Section 202 Cr.P.C. and the Magistrate, after considering the evidence, summoned five petitioners under Section 498A I.P.C. and Section 3/4 Dowry Prohibition Act.
4. Against the said order, the petitioners filed a revision and the revisional court dismissed the said revision by order dated 23.3.2006, holding that in view of law laid down by Hon'ble The Apex Court, the revision is not maintainable.
5. The learned A.G.A. submitted that petitioners have prayed for quashing of the revisional order as well, where as the revisional order is based on the law laid down by Hon'ble The Apex Court. Any order can be quashed or set aside only when it is against the law.
6. A perusal of the order shows that the revisional court has cited few judgments of Hon'ble The Apex Court.
7. The case of Adalat Prasad v. Rooplal Jindal and Ors. 2004 (50) ACC page 924 : In this judgment, the validity of K.M. Mathew v. State of Kerala and Ors. was examined and the said judgment was reversed holding as under:
It is true that if a Magistrate takes cognizance of an offence, issues process without there being any allegation against the accused or any material implicating the accused or in contravention of provision of Sections 200 and 202, the order of the Magistrate may be vitiated, but then the relief an aggrieved accused can obtain at that stage is not by invoking Section 203 of the Code because the Criminal Procedure Code does not contemplate a review of an order. Hence in the absence of any review power or inherent power with the subordinate Criminal Courts, the remedy lies in invoking Section 482 of Code.
8. In the above judgment, Hon'ble The Apex Court, while holding that the remedy lie in invoking Section 482 Cr.P.C. did not express any opinion regarding this fact whether order issuing process amounts to an interim order or not. Paragraph 16 of the said judgment runs as follows:
In view of our above conclusion, it is not necessary for us to go into the question whether order issuing a process amounts to an interim order or not.
9. The judgement of in the case of Adalat Prasad (Supra) again came up for consideration before Hon'ble The Apex Court in the matter of Subramanium Sethuraman v. State of Maharashtra and Anr. 2005-Supreme Court Cases (Cri) 242 and the view was confirmed in spite of this fact that Adalat Prasad case (Supra) involved an offence triable in warrant case whereas K.M. Mathew's case (supra) involved a summon case. This plea was raised before Hon'ble The Supreme Court, but Hon'ble The Supreme Court rejected the said plea holding as follows:
Having considered the argument of the learned Counsel for the parties, we are of the opinion that the argument of the learned Counsel for the appellant that the decision of this Court in Adalat Prasad case requires reconsideration cannot be accepted. It is true that the case of Adalat Prasad pertained to a warrant case whereas Mathew case pertained to a summons case. To this extent, there is some difference in the two cases, but that does not, in any manner, make the law laid down by this Court in Adalat Prasad case a bad law.
10. Thus, Hon'ble the Apex Court in the two judgments quoted above, held that the only remedy available against the order issuing summon is to approach the High Court by way of petition under Section 482 Cr.P.C. hence the revisional court has rightly dismissed the revision holding that in view of the judgment of the Apex Court the revision was not maintainable.
11. The learned Counsel for the petitioners submitted that the order of the Magistrate summoning the accused was also challenged. Once the law is clear on the point that order could have been challenged invoking the provisions of Section 482 Cr.P.C., there is no question of maintainability of the revision. The Sessions Judge has rightly dismissed the revision as not maintainable.
12. The writ petition is devoid of any force and it is hereby dismissed.
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Title

Bhajan Lal S/O Sri Nekshu Lal And ... vs State Of U.P. And Smt. Sushila W/O ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
28 April, 2006
Judges
  • K Sinha