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Dipen Parikh S/O Vasant Lal Himmat ... vs The State Of U.P. Through ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|03 November, 2004

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT M.C. Jain, J.
1. Petitioners No. 1 and 2 are Directors and petitioner No. 3 is Manager of a company called M/s Metco Marketing (India) Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai, who have come up for quashing the F.I.R. of case crime No. 223 of 2004, under Sections 285, 287, 304A I.P.C. and 3/5 Explosive Substances Act, P.S. Link Road, District Ghaziabad and for staying their arrest in consequence of the said F.I.R. A copy of the F.I.R. is Annexure 11 to the writ petition lodged by respondent No. 2 consequent upon a fatal explosion erupting from metal scrap in Bhushan Steel and Scrap Ltd., Ghaziabad, imported by it from Dubai through the petitioners. The blast killed and injured several labourers working there. The informant was one of the injured.
2. The averments made in the writ petition are that the petitioners only worked as commission agents between the buyers and sellers for supply of industrial raw materials to various steel plants throughout the country on behalf of suppliers/producers around the world and had been providing their services to Bhushan Group of company also for the last about eight years. In the month of July 2004, the petitioners' company, as agents, negotiated between Bhushan Industries (hereinafter referred to as "the buyer") and M/s Lucky Metals FZE with its registered office at Jebel Ali Free Zone, Dubai, (UAE)-hereinafter referred to as "the seller", for sale/purchase of metal scraps. An agreement was arrived at between the buyer and seller on 10.7.2004, a copy of which is annexed as Annexure 1 to the writ petition, whereby 1000MT Heavy Melting Scraps (HMS) 1 & 2 @ US $ 239/ MT CIF basis was to be sold by the seller to the buyer. The petitioners were only to get commission from the seller After the finalisation of the contract, the petitioners' company was now here involved with physical movement of the goods from the seller to the buyer, Petitioners' company was only involved upto the stage of negotiations and fixing the rate between the two. The quantity, quality, transportation, handling, payment of dues including the instalments, sales tax, etc. were settled between the buyer and seller directly. Transportation/shipment of the said scrap material was directly done and arranged by the seller from the load port to the discharge port and as such they are in no way concerned with the complained explosion.
3. We have heard Sri Viresh Misra, learned Sr. Advocate for the petitioners at length and Sri Surendra Singh learned A.G.A. from the side of the State in opposition. Laying stress on the aforesaid averments and referring to the various annexures annexed with the writ petition, Sri Misra has urged that by any stretch of imagination the petitioners were not involved in the commission of any offence emerging from the alleged explosion from imported cargo. It has also been urged by him that they are not named in the F.I.R. either. Another submission of Sri Misra is that in Criminal Misc. Writ Petition No. 8303 of 2004 filed by two other petitioners (Executive Director of K.M.S. Cargo Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi and an employee & authorised representative of the said company) another Bench of this Court comprising of Hon'ble A.K. Yog and Hon'ble M.P. Singh, JJ partly allowed the writ petition and stayed the arrest of the said petitioners till the filing of the chargesheet. He submitted that the present petitioners also deserve to be treated in the like manner as the matter is common arising out of the same F.I.R. Yet another argument of Sri Misra is that this petition earlier came up before a Division Bench comprising of Hon'ble Sushil Harkauli and Hon'ble Sabhajeet Yadav, JJ. on 15.10.2004 and it was directed to be put up on 26.10.2004 to enable the learned A.G.A. to obtain instructions as regards the material available against the petitioners and their arrest was stayed till 26.10.2004. The Sri Misra has reasoned that the prosecution has not put forth any material showing involvement of the petitioners in this crime He has, thus, urged that it is a Fit ease for the stay of the arrest of the petitioners till the conclusion of the investigation in the case.
4. On the other hand, learned A.G.A. has argued that the F.I.R. discloses commission of cognizable offence of serious magnitude and it is immaterial that the petitioners are not named in the F.I.R. The offence has wide ramifications and investigation would naturally take some time to examine all the angles of the matter. According to him, there is no ground whatsoever to stay the arrest of the petitioners, as prayed by them.
5. We have considered the respective arguments of the two sides in the light of the material on record and have given our thoughtful consideration to the same. The legal position is well nigh settled that an F.I.R. is simply required to disclose known facts and details relating to the offence reported. An informant may lodge a report about the commission of an offence, though he may not know the name of the victim or the accused. What is of significance is that the information given must disclose the commission of a cognizable offence and the information so lodged must provide a basis for investigation. Even if the information does not furnish all the details, the same have to be found out during the course of investigation with the collection of necessary evidence. The information given disclosing the commission of a cognizable offence only sets in motion the investigative machinery, with a view to collect all necessary evidence and to take action in accordance with law.
6. Examining the present case on the above touchstone, it is not at all material that the petitioners are not named in the F.I.R. It also deserves mention in this regard that they are not strangers. It is admitted to them that they were commission agents and were middlemen in settlement of negotiations for the import of metal scraps by the buyer. So. the factum of not naming the petitioners in the F.I.R. cannot be a ground to slay their arrest in this serious ease.
7. Coming to the question of parity claimed by the petitioners with the petitioners of writ petition No. 8303 of 2004 decided by another bench comprising of Hon'ble A.K. Yog and Hon'ble M.P. Singh, JJ, referred to above, we are clearly of the opinion that the case of the present petitioners stands wholly on different footing. The petitioners of writ petition No. 8203 of 2004 were not concerned with the shipment of the disputed consignment or the import of the same. They were looking after the clearance work of the imported goods having been given licence in tins behalf. They had nothing to do with the settlement of the deal Negligence or carelessness could be attributed to them in discharge of their clearance work but the present petitioners forming a direct link for the import of the metal cargo cannot claim to be equated with them. It is, therefore, not possible to accept the argument of learned counsel for the petitioners to grant stay against their arrest on the premise of alleged parity with the petitioners of criminal writ petition No. 9303 of 2004.
8. Further, non-production of material by learned A.G.A. at this stage showing the involvement of the petitioners in the crime also does not go in their favour. The point is that the averments made in the petition and the material placed in the form of annexures do not justify the grant of stay of arrest. It, prima facie, appears that the petitioners were the marketing arm of Dubai based Lucky Metals (seller). Paragraph No. 8 of the petition says that it was agreed by the seller to pay to the petitioners commission of US $ 3/MT. It prima facie indicates that the petitioners were the agents of the seller. At this stage, they cannot plead innocence by advancing the bogey that they had nothing to do with the physical handling of the cargo. Annexure 2 to the writ petition is the confirmation letter issued by the petitioners to the buyer wherein also they referred to the seller as their 'Principal' and the item agreed to be sold by the seller to the buyer has been described as 1000 MT Heavy Melting Steel Scrap No. 1 & 2. It is, however, a fact that the imported cargo contained hidden explosives and live ammunitions in the form of bomb shells, missiles, rocket shells etc. resulting in an incident killing and injuring a number of persons. It appears from annexure 3 also sent by the seller to the petitioners that they had confirmed the payment of commission to them for the metal scrap sold to the buyer. True, in a crime like the present one, the prosecution cannot possibly collect all the material evidence at a hurricane speed in computer-like manner, it is a ground reality that the present incident is one of the series of hidden explosives found in metal scraps imported from gulf countries. Such cases have surfaced with alarming frequency in different parts of the country, endangering national security, human lives and other living beings. The matter has to be investigated from all the possible angles, shades and aspects. It may be relevant to find out whether the petitioners have a permanent representative at Dubai (UAE) wherefrom the shipment was made. It is also relevant to find out whether anyone from the petitioners' company had visited Dubai during the course of negotiations/settlement for the import of metal scraps in question and its shipment. It may be necessary to examine their account books whether any expenditure has been debited for someone's travel to Dubai during the relevant period . It is for the investigating agency to look into all such and other important aspects of the matter from each and every angle so as to find out the real role of the petitioners. The offence, of course, has serious ramifications and cannot be viewed lightly, the presence of hidden explosives in imported cargo seemingly being part of a design and sinister scheme to jeopardize this country's security and posing major risk.
9. In our opinion, the law must take its own course. It is not necessary for us to say anything more at this stage to save the expression of opinion on ultimate merits.
10. In view of the discussion made hereinabove, we see no ground to accede to the prayer made by the petitioners. The writ petition is hereby dismissed.
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Title

Dipen Parikh S/O Vasant Lal Himmat ... vs The State Of U.P. Through ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
03 November, 2004
Judges
  • M Jain
  • K Misra