Judgments
Judgments
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad
  4. /
  5. 1933
  6. /
  7. January

Emperor vs Gayan Singh And Ors.

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|22 May, 1933

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Kendall, J.
1. This is a reference made by the District Magistrate of Cawnpore asking the court to set aside an order passed by a Sub-Divisional Officer of that District by which he discharged certain persons who had been brought before him under Section 109, Criminal Procedure Code. The circumstances were briefly that the persons who were prosecuted before the Magistrate had been discovered by the Police travelling together by night in a motor lorry, and certain arms are said to have been in their possession at that time. The First Information Report was made on May 10,1932, at midnight under Section 399, Indian Penal Code, but a second report was made on July 4, in which the case under Section 399 appears to have been dropped and it was alleged against the persons arrested that they had been hiding themselves inside the lorry and had been in possession of arms in order to commit some offence. The Magistrate found that all these persons had given their correct names and addresses to the Police and that some of them were in possession of cultivatory holdings or zemindari. He considered that he could not call on them to provide bonds under Section 109, Criminal Procedure Code. The District Magistrate has agreed with him that Section 109, Clause (a) will not cover the case, but he had made the reference on the ground that the Sub-Divisional Officer should have proceeded under Clause (b) of Section 109, and he has quoted the Full Bench ruling of this Court reported in Emperor v. Phuchai 113 Ind. Cas 417 : 26 A.L.J 1257 : 10 A.I Cr. R 531 : A.I.RN 1929 All 33 : 30 Cr. L.J 145 : 50 A 909 (F.B). to show that Clause. (b) will cover the circumstances, in that the persons proceeded against did not give a satisfactory account of themselves in the sense in which those words have been interpreted by two at least of the Judges who formed the Full Bench on that occasion.
2. question before the Full Bench was rather of the interpretation of Clause (a) than Clause. (b) of Section 109, Criminal Procedure Code, but the District Magistrate is right in saying that the opinion of two at least of the Judges was that failure to give a satisfactory account of himself in suspicious circumstances brings the case of the person proceeded against within the scope of Section 109 (b). In the present case however, the Magistrate does not appear to have considered that the circumstances were suspicious. I do not think that I am called upon to decide whether, if he had held that the circumstances were suspicious, he could have relied for support on the decision of the Full Bench quoted above. The question of whether the circumstances are suspicious is mainly a question of fact, and if a Magistrate is satisfied that the circumstances in which a person who is brought before him under Section 109, Criminal Procedure Code, was found are not suspicious and that there is no need for him to call upon that person to provide security it is not the part of the High Court to reverse his order and to demand security a year later on the ground that the circumstances had been suspicious. Section 109, Criminal Procedure Code, is one of the preventive sections which are to be employed by Magistrates for the prevention of crimes, and it must be rarely, if ever, that a High Court will feel called upon to reverse an order of a Magistrate refusing to demand security under any of those sections. It sometimes happens that a Magistrate demands security when he is not entitled to do so by the law, and then no doubt there is occasion for the High Court to interfere on the ground that the Magistrate has exceeded his power. In the case which was before the Full Bench the question before the court was one of the interpretation of the section and the court pointed out that the Sessions Judge had been wrong in law in interfering with the order of the Magistrate. In the present case the Magistrate has not dealt at length with Clause (b) of Section 109, but as he clearly did not consider the circumstances justified him in demanding security under Clause (b) it is quite unnecessary to go into the matter further. The result is that the reference must be and is refused and the papers may be returned.
Disclaimer: Above Judgment displayed here are taken straight from the court; Vakilsearch has no ownership interest in, reservation over, or other connection to them.
Title

Emperor vs Gayan Singh And Ors.

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
22 May, 1933
Judges
  • Kendall