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[Cites 7, Cited by 7]

Supreme Court of India

State Of Mysore vs Fakrusab Babusab Karanandi on 17 December, 1976

Equivalent citations: 1977 AIR 1336, 1977 SCR (2) 544, AIR 1977 SUPREME COURT 1336, (1977) 1 SCC 666, 1977 CRI APP R (SC) 79, 1977 SCC(CRI) 137, (1977) 2 SCR 544, ILR (1977) KANT 799

Author: P.N. Bhagwati

Bench: P.N. Bhagwati, A.C. Gupta, Jaswant Singh

           PETITIONER:
STATE OF MYSORE

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
FAKRUSAB BABUSAB KARANANDI

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/12/1976

BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
GUPTA, A.C.
SINGH, JASWANT

CITATION:
 1977 AIR 1336		  1977 SCR  (2) 544
 1977 SCC  (1) 666


ACT:
	    Cognizance	of an offence under s. 60(b) of	 the  Mysore
	Excise Act, 1965 for an offence under s. 34  thereof--Mysore
	Ordinance No. 4 of 1970 amending s. 60(b) and introducing  a
	new  s.	 60B;  Mysore Amendment Act No	 1  of	1971  Effect
	of---Competency of the judicial magistrate in returning	 the
	complaint  filed  by a Police Officer and refusing  to	take
	cognizance  of	the  offence under s. 60(b)  as	 amended  by
	Mysore	Ordinance 4 of 1970 which represented the law as  it
	that stood.



HEADNOTE:
	     The  Mysore Ordinance 4 of 1970 which came	 into  effect
	from  7th  August 1970 omitted the words "or police"  in  s.
	60(b)  of  the Mysore Excise Act, 1965	which  provided	 for
	taking of cognizance by the Magistrate "on his own knowledge
	or  suspicion or on the complaint or report of an excise  or
	police	officer".  It  also inserted a new  s.	60B  whereby
	offence	 under s. 34 was made cognizable and the  provisions
	of the Criminal Procedure Code 1898 with respect to  cogniz.
	able offences made applicable to such offence.	The  earlier
	position  which	 obtained prior to the	said  Ordinance	 was
	restored  by  the Mysore Amendment Act No. 1 of	 1971  which
	received  the  President's assent on 20th January  1971	 but
	which was deemed to have come into force on 7th August 1970.
	Section 23 of the 1971 Act provided that the amendment to s.
	60  made by the Ordinance of 1970 shall be deemed  never  to
	have  been  made and the provisions of s. 60 as	 they  stood
	prior  to the said amendment shall be deemed to continue  to
	be in force.
	    The judicial Magistrate, Badami, on a complaint filed by
	a  police officer refused to take cognizance of	 an  offence
	for  the  illegal Possession of 41/2 tolas  of	ganja  under
	section	 34  of the Mysore Excise Act 1965 in  view  of	 the
	provisions if s. 60(b) ibid which represented the law as  it
	then  stood.  The revision application before  the  Sessions
	Court was dismissed on 15-1-1971.  A further revision  filed
	before	the  High Court on 14-6-1971 was also  dismissed  in
	limine.	 However after the dismissal of the revision by	 the
	High  Court  on	 a fresh complaint filed by  the  police  in
	respect	 of  the same offence as per the amending Act  I  of
	1971,  the  judicial Magistrate took cognizance of  the	 of-
	fence,	convicted  the accused and sentenced hun  to  simple
	imprisonment for three months and also to pay  a fine of Rs.
	100/-. Notwithstanding the conviction the State pressed	 its
	appeal	 by special leave against the judgment of  the	High
	Court dismissing the revision.
	Allowing the appeal, the Court,
	    HELD:  (1) The High Court as well as the court  of	Ses-
	sions  were clearly in error in affirming the order made  by
	the learned judicial Magistrate. [547A]
	    (2)	 The  charge  sheet was	 validly  filed	 before	 the
	learned	 judicial Magistrate by the Police and the  judicial
	Magistrate was entitled to take cognizance of the offence on
	the basis of such charge sheet. [547A-B]
	    (3) The result of the enactment of s. 23 by Mysore Act I
	of  1971 was that the amendment made in s. 60 clause (b)  by
	deleting the words "or police" by Mysore Ordinance No. 4  of
	1970 as oblitarated and wiped out with retrospective  effect
	so  that  in the eye of the law it was never  made  at	all.
	[546F]
	    (4) It is now well-settled law that when a legal fiction
	is enacted by the Legislature the court should not allow its
	imagination  to boggle but must carry the legal	 fiction  to
	its  logical extent and give full effect to it.	  The  clear
	effect	of the legal fiction enacted in s. 23 of Mysore	 Act
	No. 1 of 1971 was that the
	545
	words "or police" were always there in cl. (b) of s. 60 even
	at  the time when the charge sheet was presented before	 the
	learned Magistrate and if that be so, the learned Magistrate
	was in error in refusing to take cognizance of the complaint
	on  the	 ground that the charge sheet was not  filed  by  an
	excise officer but by the police.  [546G-H, 547A]
	    M.K.  Venkatachalam	 I.T.O. & Anr. v. Bombay   Dyeing  &
	Mfg. Co. Ltd. [1959] S.C.R. 703, applied.



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 16 of 1972.

Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated 14-6-1971 of the Mysore High Court in Criminal Revi- sion Petition No. 229 of 1971.

N. Nettar, for the Appellant.

K.R. Nataraja, for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BHAGWATI, J.--This appeal by special leave raises a short but interesting question of law. The facts giving rise to the appeal are few and briefly stated as follows:

On 1st October, 1970 the police filed a chargesheet against the respondent in the court of the Judicial Magis- trate, First Class, Badami, charging him with having commit- ted an offence punishable under Section 34 of the Mysore Excise Act, 1965. The learned Judicial MagiStrate by an order dated 3rd October, 1970 refused to take cognizance of the offence on this charge-sheet, since it was filed by the Police and not by an Excise official. The view taken by the learned Magistrate was that under Section 60 clause (b) as amended by Mysore Ordinance No. 4 of 1970 which represented the law as it then stood, it was not competent to him to take cognizance of an offence punishable under Section 34, except on the complaint or report of an Excise Officer and since the charge:sheet in the present case was filed by the police and not by an Excise Officer, he was precluded from taking cognizance of the offence. The learned Judicial Magistrate on this view directed that the charge-sheet be returned to the police and ordered release of the respond- ent. The State thereupon preferred a Revision Application to the Sessions Court, Bijapur. The learned Sessions Judge agreed with the view taken by the Judicial Magistrate and holding that the Judicial Magistrate was right in refusing to take cognizance of the offence on the charge-sheet filed by .the police, rejected the Revision Application summarily. This led to the filing of a Revision Application by the State before the High Court. The High Court too summarily rejected the Revision Application and hence the State pre- ferred the present appeal with special leave obtained from this Court.
Now in order to appreciate the contention that has been raised on behalf of the State in support of the appeal, it is necessary to notice the various changes which Section 60 of the Principal Act went 546 through from time to time during the relevant period. Section 60 clause (b) as it originally stood provided that no Magistrate shall take cognizance of an offence punishable under any Section of the Act other then Section 35 or 38 or 46 or 48 "except on his own knowledge or suspicion or on the complaint or report of an Excise or Police Officer". But before the charge,sheet in the present case came to be filed by the Police, an amendment was made in Section 60 clause
(b) by Mysore Ordinance No. 4 of 1970 which came into force on 7th August 1970. Section 18 of this amending ordinance omitted the words "or police" in clause (b) of Section 60.

The result was that cognizance of an offence punishable under Section 34 could not be taken by a Magistrate "except on his own knowledge or suspicion or on the complaint or report of an excise officer". Section 60 (B) was also added at the same time and by this new Section inter-alia offence under Section 34 was made cognizable and the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 with respect to cog- nizable offences were made applicable to such offence. It was on the basis of the amended clause (b) Section 60 that the learned Judicial Magistrate as well as the Sessions Judge held that cognizance of the offence under Section 34 charged against the respondent could not be taken, since the charge,sheet was filed by the police and not by an excise officer. The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the State contended before us that even on the language of the amended clause (b) of Section 60 without the words "or police", it was competent to the Judicial Magistrate by reason of the enactment of Section 60(B) to take cognizance of the offence, but it is necessary for us to examine this contention since we find that before the Revision Applica- tion came to be heard by the High Court, a further amendment was made in clause (b) of Section 60 by Mysore Act 1 of 1971 and that restored the position which obtained prior to the amendment made by Mysore Ordinance No. 4 of 1970. Mysore Act No. 1 of 1971 was deemed to have come into force on 7th August 1970 and Section 23 of this Act provided inter-alia that the amendment to Section 60 made by Mysore Ordinance No. 4 of 1971 shall be deemed never to have been made and the provisions of Section 60 as they stood prior to the said amendment shall be deemed to continue to be in force. The result of the enactment of this provision by Mysore Act 1 of 1971 was that the amendment made in Section 60 clause (b) by deleting the words "or police" by Mysore Ordinance 4 of 1970, was obliterated and wiped out with retrospective effect so that in the eye of the law it was never made at all. It is now settled law that when a legal fiction is enacted by the Legislature, the Court should not allow its imagination to boggle but must carry the legal fiction to its logical extent and give full effect in it. We must, therefore, proceed on the basis that the words "or police"

were always there in clause (b) of Section 60, even at the time when the learned Judicial Magistrate made his order dated 3rd October, 1970 refusing to take cognizance of the offence and returning the charge-sheet to the police. If these words were in clause (b) of Section 60 at that time, then obviously the learned Magistrate was in error in refus- ing to take cognizance of the complaint on the ground that the charge-sheet was not filed by an excise officer but by the police. That is the clear effect of the legal 547 fiction enacted in Section 23 of Mysore Act 1 of 1971 and that this would be so is amply supported by the decision of this Court in M.K. Venkatachalam I.T.O. and Another v. Bombay Dyeing and Mfg. Co. Ltd.(1) The High Court as well as the Court of Sessions, were therefore, clearly in error in affirming the order made by the learned Judicial Magis- trate and it must be held that the charge-sheet was validly filed before the learned Judicial Magistrate by the police and the Judicial Magistrate was entitled to take cognizance of the offence on the basis of such charge-sheet. We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the orders made by the learned Judicial Magistrate, Sessions Judge and the High Court and remand the case to the Judicial Magis- trate with a direction to him to deal with the charge-sheet filed by .the police in accordance with law in the light of the observations contained in this judgment. ORDER After we delivered the judgment in this case, our atten- tion was drawn to the fact that subsequent to the decision of the High Court, a fresh charge-sheet for .the same of- fence was filed by the police against the respondent and in view of the amendment made in section 60, clause (b) by Mysore Act I of 1971, the learned Judicial Magistrate took cognizance of the offence and tried the respondent and ultimately as a result of the trial, the respondent was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment and in fact by :the time the appeal came to be heard by us, he had already served out his sentence of imprisonment. In view of this fact, it is unnecessary to remand the case to the learned Judicial Magistrate for taking cognizance of the offence. We accordingly direct that the last part of the final order made by us which commences with the words "and remand the case" be deleted.
	S.R.					 Appeal allowed.
	 (1) [1959] S.C.R. 703.
	548