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Smt. Durgesh Sharma W/O Rajbir ... vs State Of U.P. And Rajesh Kumar ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|14 July, 2006

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Vinod Prasad, J.
1. Smt. Durgesh has approached this Court in it's inherent jurisdiction under Section 482 Cr.P.C. with the prayer to quash the order dated 16.3.2005 passed by Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad who by the aforesaid order has rejected the application filed by the applicant for getting a report of action taken by the police of police station Modi Nagar District Ghaziabad, pursuant to the order dated 19.1.2005 passed by the said Chief Judicial Magistrate on the application of the applicant under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C., and has further ordered for consigning the record of the said application being Misc. Case No. 680 of 2004, Smt. Durgesh v. Rajesh Verma to the record room.
2. As agreed by counsel for the applicant as well as learned AGA this application is being disposed off finally at the admission stage itself since only the question of law is involved in it. The preceding facts which have culminated into this application are recapitulated thus. The applicant Smt. Durgesh Sharma invoked the power of Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. through Misc. Application No. 680 of 2004 Smt. Durgesh Sharma v. Rajesh Verma and Ors. with the narration of the incident that on 31.7.2004 at 8.30 pm SSI, Verma Ji along with police force of police station Modi Nagar District, Ghaziabad came to her residence and Verma Ji, SSI, pushed her from the roof through staircase which resulted in injury to her on head and then the police personnel took her to the police out post Niwari where she was assaulted severely in witnessing of public and women constables as a result of which the applicant Smt. Duregesh Sharma sustained grievous injuries on her head, both extremities and face.
3. The police personnel smashed colour T.V., Fridge, VCD, double bed, scooter and wooden almirah belonging to the applicant. It was further alleged in the said application that the family members of the applicant were implicated in a false case when in reality they had not committed any offence. Subsequently, finding the condition of the applicant to be serious, the above police personnel also implicated her as an accused in a false case and dispatched her to jail. The applicant expressed apprehensions of her and her husband's life from the police of police station Modi Nagar, District Ghaziabad. The cause of this incident was said to be the involvement of two Mangeres of Modi Group in an attempt to murder case of Indra Pal Singh who is the neighbour of the applicant but was having a criminal background history of serious cases including murder, land grabbing and Modi Nagar area was engulfed with his terror. Since the applicant failed to get her FIR registered through her application to the District Magistrate and Senior Superintendent of Police, Ghaziabad against the erring police personnel and which yielded no results hence she approached the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad, for wielding his power under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. through an application (Annexure No. 1 to the affidavit filed in support of this application) being Misc. Case No. 680 of 2005. The Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad, on her application being satisfied that cognizable offences were disclosed against the malefactors ordered for registration and investigation of the case against the accused on 19.1.2005 and further directed that the case be investigated by a higher police officer than a SSI vide annexure No. 2 to the affidavit filed in support of this application. The alleged accused SSI, Rajesh Kumar Verma, however, questioned the validity of the said order dated 19.1.2005 in Criminal revision No. 438 of 2005 filed in this Court which was heard and finally decided by Hon'ble V.K. Chaturvedi, J. on 2.2.2005 by passing the following order:
Heard Mr. S.P. Pandey counsel for the revisionist and learned A.G.A.
Having heard the submissions made by learned Counsel for the parties and perusing the entire material on record, this revision is finally disposed off with this observation that pursuant to the order dated 19.1.05 passed by the C.J.M., Ghaziabad on the application of Opposite Party No. 2, Smt. Durgesh Sharma, under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C., if any case has been registered against the revisionist in Police Station Modi Nagar, then investigation in matter may go on, but arrest of the revisionist shall remain stayed till submission of the report under Section 173(2) Cr.P.C.
4. Since this Court did not quash the order for registration and investigation of the case passed by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad on 19.1.2005, the applicant filed an application before The Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad with the prayer for calling for a report from the Police as to what action it had taken pursuant to the aforesaid order dated 19.1.2005. A perusal of the order sheet of the aforesaid Misc. Case No. 680 of 2005(Annexure 4), which contains the impugned order also, indicates that the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad heard the arguments on 9.3.2005 and fixed 16.3.2005 for orders. On the said date 16.3.2005 it rejected the said application filed by the applicant calling for an information from the Police and ordered for consigning the record of the case of Misc. Case No. 680 of 2005. Aggrieved by the aforesaid order of dismissal of application and consigning the record of his application under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. this application for quashing the said order has been filed.
5. I have heard Sri V.K. Jaiswal, advocate in support of this application and the learned AGA in opposition at a great length and have gone through the application, the affidavit and annexures appended therewith. Since at the stage of Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. the accused is not required to be heard, therefore, in agreement with both the sides, this application is being disposed of finally by this order.
6. Sri Jaiswal contended that the order dated 19.1.2005 under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. passed by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad was the final order, and hence the same could not have been reviewed by him nor he could have withdrawn the same. He contended that the Chief Judicial Magistrate committed a gross miscarriage of justice and patent illegality in rejecting the application filed by the present applicant by the impugned order dated 16.3.2005 and by ordering consigning of the record of Misc. Application No. 680 of 2005 to the record room. He further contended that this Court under its revisional jurisdiction had ordered that if the FIR has been registered, the investigation must go on and it never stopped the investigation. He contended that the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad acted wholly illegally and it seems that he passed the impugned order under the pressure and influence of the accused persons who are police personnels. The counsel ended his argument by submitting that the impugned order deserves to be quashed and the C.J.M., Ghaziabad be directed to proceed in accordance with law and to get his order 19.1.2005 complied with in its true spirit. Learned A.G.A. on his part also showed his inability to defend the said order and could not dispute the fact that the impugned order passed by the C.J.M., Ghaziabad was wholly illegal. He could not justify the passing of the impugned order by any hypothesis legal or factual on any reasoning whatsoever.
7. Cogitating over the submissions of the counsel for the applicant, it is clear that initially when the application under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C. was filed by the applicant, the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad was of the opinion that cognizable offences were disclosed through the said application and hence, he had passed an order for registration and investigation of the case on 19.1.2005. He had even made a direction to the Senior Superintendent of Police, Ghaziabad to get the matter investigated through some higher police official. The revision filed by S.S.I. Rajesh Kumar Verma in this Court being Criminal Revision No. 438 of 2005, even though was not maintainable at his instance, as he had no right to challenge the aforesaid order because he could not have been heard at that stage, however, was disposed of with a direction that he should not be arrested till submission of report under Section 173(2) Cr.P.C. The investigation was not stalled by this Court, which is apparent from the said order quoted above.
8. The subsequent application filed by the applicant was only for the purpose of seeking information from the police regarding the action taken by it in pursuance of the earlier order passed by the CJM on 19.1.2005. It was only an information seeking application. The question which now crops up is as to whether on such an information seeking application the CJM was empowered to withdraw his own final order and that too for what reasons? The legal analysis in an answer to such a question projects that the order dated 19.1.2005 was a final order and hence CJM, Ghaziabad had no power to review or recall the said order on any ground whatsoever. For him it had attained finality and he could not have pondered over the said order again. It was beyond the scope of his jurisdiction conferred by Cr.P.C. to review or recall the aforesaid order. The order dated 19.1.2005 directing the police to register and investigate the offence was "disposal of a case" as is contemplated under Section 362 Cr.P.C. No further proceeding was to be taken thereafter by CJM subsequent to the order for registration and investigation and consequently, the review or recall of the said order dated 19.1.2005 was barred by Section 362 Cr.P.C. Thus the residue of the discussion is that CJM, Ghaziabad had acted against the jurisdiction vested in him by law in passing the impugned order dated 16.3.2005 and consequently the said present impugned order dated 16.3.2005 cannot be sustained and has to the set aside.
9. There is another aspect of the matter, which cannot permit the impugned order to be sustained. CJM, Ghaziabad had ordered for registration and investigation of the case on 19.1.2005. The police of P.S. Modinagar, Ghaziabad disobeyed the said order by not registering the F.I.R. and conducting the investigation thereafter. Under such circumstance, it was the duty of CJM, Ghaziabad to get his order obeyed, otherwise, the concerned police personnel were guilty of contempt of Court for flouting the order passed by CJM, Ghaziabad himself. Why CJM, Ghaziabad did not get his order executed and why he did not proceed against the erring police personnels is a fact which has baffled me and is indicative of mal practice adopted by CJM, Ghaziabad, it seems, for ulterior motives. The matter does not end here. He, for the same reason ordered that since no case has been registered till that time (16.3.2005) and hence in view of the above quoted order by this Court there was no necessity to order the police of P.S. Modinagar to register the case. Where was the occasion for passing this order as an order for registration of F.I.R and investigation had already existed. It seems that concerned CJM Ghaziabad acted in a manner so that the guilty offenders, who are police personnel may not be arrested and proceeded with in pursuance of the registration of F.I.R. as ordered by him on 19.1.2005. The police of P.S. Modinagar had no power or authority to refuse registration of F.I.R. once ordered by CJM Ghaziabad. The entire gamut of factual matrix indicated above shows that concerned CJM, Ghaziabad has acted intentionally and deliberately to shield the alleged offenders because they were police personnels. The impugned order thus is not only illegal and without jurisdiction, but smacks of corrupt practice adopted by concerned CJM, Ghaziabad. In this view of the matter also the impugned order cannot be sustained and has to be set aside. Once this Court has ordered that the investigation will go on in case the F.I.R. is registered, there was no justification for C.J.M., Ghaziabad to pass an order against his own direction for registration of case on 19.1.2005 by passing the impugned order. It seems that after obtaining an order from this Court, the accused, who were police personnel exerted influence in getting the impugned order passed. The conduct of C.J.M., Ghaziabad is not that of a Judicial Officer and he has acted only to shield the alleged culprits.
10. Resultantly, the present Criminal Misc. Application is allowed. The impugned order dated 16.3.2005 passed by the then C.J.M., Ghaziabad in Misc. Case No. 680 of 2004, Smt. Durgesh Sharma v. Rajesh Kumar Verma and Ors. is set aside. C.J.M., Ghaziabad is directed to get the order dated 19.1.2005 passed by him in the aforesaid case executed in letter and spirit.
11. Let a copy of this order be sent to the Administrative Judge, Ghaziabad for his information and necessary action as his Lordship deems fit against the then CJM, Ghaziabad.
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Title

Smt. Durgesh Sharma W/O Rajbir ... vs State Of U.P. And Rajesh Kumar ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
14 July, 2006
Judges
  • V Prasad