Kerala High Court
Raju Puzhankara vs State Of Kerala on 4 April, 2008
Author: V.Ramkumar
Bench: V.Ramkumar
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM
Crl Rev Pet No. 884 of 2008()
1. RAJU PUZHANKARA,
... Petitioner
Vs
1. STATE OF KERALA, REPRESENTED BY THE
... Respondent
2. P.NARAYANAN,
3. P.K.SUMATHIKUTTY AMMA,
For Petitioner :SRI.RENJITH B.MARAR
For Respondent :PUBLIC PROSECUTOR
The Hon'ble MR. Justice V.RAMKUMAR
Dated :04/04/2008
O R D E R
V. RAMKUMAR, J.
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Crl.R.P. NO. 884 of 2008
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Dated: 04-04-2008
ORDER
The petitioner who claims to be a social activist preferred a complaint before the Enquiry Commissioner and Special Judge, Thiruvananthapuram, alleging offences punishable under Section 13 (2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 for the alleged infraction of Section 13 (1) (d) of the said Act and Sec. 409 I.P.C. against two members of the Travancore Devaswom Board. One of the allegations made by the petitioner was that there was large scale corruption in the appointment of 2400 temporary employees at Sabarimala Temple as revealed by the letter given by the Minister for Devasowm to the Minister for Home and Vigilance. Another allegation was that certain poojaries who were appointed by the Devaswom Board had unauthorisedly sold the worship threads and offerings received in the temple and had misappropriated and converted such offerings for their personal use causing wrongful loss to the Devaswom Board. The petitioner did not choose to produce the letter which was relied on by him to buttress the said contention. He was contented with newspaper clippings. There was no material produced to show -:2:- that the persons arrayed as accused in the private complaint were in any way involved in the alleged sale of worship threads and offerings by the poojaries. No poojari was also arrayed as an accused. The Enquiry Commissioner and Special Judge found that there was no case made out for taking cognizance of the alleged offences since the complaint was deficient in the ingredients which constitute the offences alleged and also that the petitioner did not produce any relevant material to substantiate his bald allegations. The Special Judge, therefore, dropped the proceedings and turned down the request of the petitioner to forward the complaint for investigation by the Vigilance Police under Sec. 156 (3) Cr.P.C. It is the said order passed by the Special Judge on 25-2-2008 which is assailed in this Revision.
2. The learned counsel appearing for the revision petitioner made the following submissions before me:-
The only power available to a Magistrate to dismiss a private complaint is to be located under Sec. 203 Cr.P.C. and as per the said provision the Magistrate can dismiss the complaint only after considering the statements on oath of the complainant and all his witnesses and also the result of the enquiry under Sec. 202 Cr.P.C.. But here , the complaint was dismissed without even recording the -:3:- sworn statement of the complainant. If the complaint was deficient in materials to substantiate the alleged offences the Special Judge ought to have acceded to the request of the petitioner to forward the complaint to the Vigilance Police under Section 156 (3) Cr.P.C. in which the case a proper investigation would have brought to light the necessary materials.
3. I am afraid that I cannot agree with the above submissions fully. No doubt, under Sec. 203 Cr.P.C. the Magistrate can dismiss the complaint only after taking cognizance of the offence. This much is clear from Section 203 itself which reads as follows:-
203. Dismissal of complaint - If, after considering the statements on oath (if any) of the complainant and of the witnesses and the result of the inquiry or investigation (if any) under section 202, the Magistrate is of opinion that there is no sufficient ground for proceeding, he shall dismiss the complaint, and in every such case he shall briefly record his reasons for so doing".
Thus, dismissal of a complaint under Section 283 Cr.P.C. can only be at the post-cognizance stage. (See also Mohammed v. State of Kerala - 2001 (2) KLT (SN) 48). But there is a power in every Magistrate to reject the complaint even at the pre-cognizance stage if the complaint on the face of it does not make out the offence alleged -:4:- in the complaint. In such a case, the law does not oblige the Magistrate to proceed to Sec. 200 Cr.P.C. or the subsequent sections in Chapter XV of Cr.P.C. and thereby take cognizance of the alleged offence the ingredients of which are not even averred in the complaint. In such a case, the Magistrate undoubtedly has the power to reject the complaint at the threshold. The decisions in Cref Finance Limited v. Sree Shanthi Homes (P) Ltd. 2005 (7) SCC 467, Govind Mehta v. State of Bihar - AIR 1971 SC 1708 and Nagraj v. State of Mysore - AIR 1964 SC 269 would go to reinforce the said view . Although complaints are being dismissed by the Magistrates at the pre-cognizance stage those dismissals are without noticing the real distinction between a dismissal of the complaint under Sec. 203 Cr.P.C. at the post-cognizance stage and a rejection of the complaint under the pre-cognizance stage. Hence such dismissals at the pre-cognizance stage can only be treated as rejection of the complaint.
4. The request to forward the complaint under Sec. 156 (3) Cr.P.C. was also rightly turned down by the Special Judge since the complainant had not even prima facie convinced the Special Judge with reference to any materials justifying a forwarding of the complaint to the police for the purpose of investigation. I, therefore, do not -:5:- find any good ground to interfere with the discretion exercised by the Enquiry Commissioner and Special Judge. This Revision is accordingly dismissed. However, it is made clear that the dismissal of this Crl.R.P. shall not preclude the petitioner /complainant from preferring a more comprehensible complaint with adequate materials to substantiate his case in view of the decision in Arul V. Nair v. State of Kerala - 2007 (4) KHC 597. As and when such a complaint is filed, I am sure that the Special Judge will judicially and judiciously apply his mind and do the needful according to law.
V. Ramkumar, Judge.