Punjab-Haryana High Court
Hakim Rai vs The State on 23 January, 1957
Equivalent citations: AIR1957P&H134, 1957CRILJ790, AIR 1957 PUNJAB 134, 59 PUN LR 223
ORDER Passey, J.
1. The Sub-Judge 2nd Class Kapurthala has filed a complaint against Hakim Rai petitioner under Ss. 193 and 471, I. P. C. Against that complaint and incidentally the order whereby it was decided to prosecute him, the petitioner, as permitted by Section 476, Criminal P. C., took an appeal to the District Judge, Kapurthala, who rejected the same on 9-7-1955. Hakim Rai has now come up in revision under Section 439, Criminal P. C., against which a preliminary objection is raised by the Assistant Advocate General that against an order made by the District Judge, whose Court is a Civil Court, a revision can, if at all, lie under Section 115, C. P. C. and not under Section 439, Criminal P. C. His contention is that although the sub-Judge had in deciding the application of the opponent of Hakim Rai that he (Hakim Rai) be prosecuted for perjury and forgery, to resort to the procedure laid down in Section 476, Criminal P. C., he was not for that reason converted into a Criminal Court. According to tbe learned Assistant Advocate General the Sub-Judge continued to be a Civil Court against whose act of filing the complaint an appeal lay to the District Judge and not to a Sessions Judge. (See Section 476-B, Criminal P. C.) Shri Onkar Dass has stressed that it is the kind of the Court initiating proceedings Under Section 476, Criminal P. C., that would determine the revisional jurisdiction of the High Court and not the way or procedure following which he has disposed of certain proceedings. He has cited -- 'Deonandan Singh v. Ramlakhan Singh', AIR 1948 Pat 225 (FB) (A); -- 'Emperor v. Har Prasad Das', ILR 40 Cal 477 (PB) (B); -- 'Emperor v. Venkanna', 17 Cri LJ 515: (AIR 1017 Mad 971) (FB) (C); --'Abdul Haq v. Sheo Ram', 28 Cri LJ 296: (AIR 1927 All 324) (D); -- 'Bholanath v. Achheram', AIR 1937 Nag 91 (E) and -- 'Purna Chandra Dutta v. Sheikh Dhalu', AIR 1930 Cal 731 (2) (P).
On the other hand, Shri Anant Ram has cited certain authorities taking the opposite view that as ths Civil Court in such cases moves and holds enquiry under the provisions of an enactment regulating procedure in Criminal cases, it should be the Criminal Law under which action against a person is taken that should decide the revisional jurisdiction of the High Court. In the cases on Which he relies, viz., -- 'Hari Ram v. Emperor", AIR 1929 Lah 676 (G); -- Dhanpat Rai v. Balak Ram', AIR 1931 Lah 761 (FB) (H); -- 'Emperor v. Bhatu Sadu', AIR 1938 Bom 225 (PB) (I); --'Valiram v. Govindram', AJR 1941 Sind 217 (J); -- 'Abdul Hussein v. Mohamed Ibrahim', AIR 1937 Rang 526 (K); and -- 'D. S. Raju Gupta In re', AIR 1939 Mad 473 (L), it has been held that in such cases the High Court when moved in revision is moved under Section 439, Criminal P. C. There is no ruling of this Court on the point and the pronouncements of the High Courts in India are in conflict. The question raised is of great importance and is likely to arise in other cases. I would, therefore, refer it to a Full Bench of this Court. The question to be decided would be-
"Where a Civil Court of original jurisdiction has taken proceedings against a person under Section 476, Criminal P. C., and filed a complaint against him and an appeal against that complaint has been dismissed by the Court to which such original Court was subordinate, as contemplated by Section 476-B. Criminal P. C., would a revision against the order of the appellate Court be a revision in a Civil case under Section 115, Civil P. C., or a revision on the Criminal side under Section 439, Criminal P. C."?
JUDGMENT Falshaw, J.
The question which has been referred to the Full Bench by my learned brother Kesho Ram Passey J., at the time then he was Chief Justice in Pepsu High Court, is-
"Where a civil Court of original jurisdiction has taken proceedings against a person under Section 476, Criminal P. C., and filed a complaint against him and an appeal against that complaint has been dismissed by the Court to which such original Court was subordinate, as contemplated by Section 476-E, Criminal P. C., would a revision against the order of the appellate Court be a revision in a civil case under Section 115, Criminal P. C., or a revision on the criminal side under Section 439, Criminal P. C.?"
2. The case has arisen out of the fact that Hakim Ral petitioner was ordered to be prosecuted under Section 193, Indian Penal Code, by a Sub-judge of Kapurthala and his appeal against that order has been dismissed by the District Judge at Kapurthala.
3. The relevant provisions of law relating to these matters are as follows. Sub-section (1) of Section 195 of the Criminal Procedure Code, reads-
"No Court shall take cognizance-
(a) .....
(b) of any offence punishable under any of the following sections of the same Code (i. e.. Indian Penal Code), namely, Sections 193, 194, 195, 196, 199, 200, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211 and 228, when such offence is alleged to have been committed in, or in relation to, any proceeding in any Court, except on the complaint in writing of such Court or of some other Court to which such Court is subordinate; or
(c) ....."
Sub-section (3) reads-
"For the purposes of this section, a Court shall be deemed to be subordinate to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the appealable decrees or sentences of such former Court, or in the case of a Civil Court from whose decrees no appeal ordinarily lies to the principal Court having ordinary original civil Jurisdiction within the local limits of whose jurisdiction such Civil Court is situate.
Provided that-
(a) Where appeals lie to more than one Court, the Appellate Court of inferior jurisdiction shall be the Court to which such Court shall be deemed to be subordinate, and
(b) where appeals lie to a Civil and also to a Revenue Court, such Court shall be deemed to be subordinate to the Civil or Revenue Court according to the nature of the case or proceeding in connection with which the offence is alleged to have been committed." Section 476 (1) reads-
"When any civil Revenue or criminal Court is, whether on application made to it in this behalf or otherwise, of opinion that it is expedient in the interests of justice that an enquiry should be made into any offence referred to in Section 195, Sub-section (1), Clause (b) or Clause (c) which appears to have been committed in or in relation to a proceeding in that Court, such Court may, after such preliminary inquiry, if any, as it thinks necessary, record a findng to that effect and make a complaint thereof in writing signed by the presiding officer of the Court, and shall forward the same to a Magistrate of the first class having Jurisdiction, and may take sufficient security for the appearance of the accused before such Magistrate or if the alleged offence is non-bailable may, if it thinks necessary so to do, send the accused in custody to such Magistrate, and may bind over any person to appear and give evidence before such Magistrate.
(2) Such Magistrate shall thereupon proceed according to law and as if upon complaint made under Section 200.
........."
We are not concerned with Section 476A, but Section 476B reads-
"Any person on whose application any Civil, Revenue or Criminal Court has refused to "make a complaint under Section 476 or Section 476A, or against whom such a complaint has been made, may appeal to the Court to which such former Court is subordinate within the meaning of Section 195, Sub-section (3), and the superior Court may thereupon, after notice to the parties concerned, direct the withdrawal of the complaint or, as the case may be, itself make the complaint which the subordinate Court might have made under Section 476, and if it makes such complaint the provisions of that section shall apply accordingly."
4. The relevant provisions regarding the revisional powers of the High Court under the Criminal Procedure Code are Section 435 (1) and Section 439 (1). The first of these reads-
"The High Court or any Sessions Judge or District Magistrate, or any Sub-Divisional Magistrate empowered by the Provincial Government in this behalf, may call for and examine the record of any proceedings before any inferior Criminal Court situate within the local limits of its or his Jurisdiction for the purpose of satisfying itself or himself as to the correctness, legality or propriety of any finding, sentence or order recorded or passed, and as to the. regularity of any proceedings of such inferior Court and may, when calling for such record, direct that the execution of any sentence or order be suspended and, if the accused is in confinement, that he be released on bail or on his own bond pending the examination of the record." The latter sub-section reads-
"In the case of any proceeding the record of which has been called for by itself or which has been reported for orders, or which otherwise comes to its knowledge, the High Court may, in its discretion, exercise any of the powers conferred on a Court of Appeal toy Sections 423, 426, 427 and 423 or on a Court by Section 333, and may enhance the sentence; and, when the Judges composing the Court of Revision are equally divided in opinion, the case shall be disposed of in manner provided by Section 429."
5. The revisional powers of the High Court on the civil side are contained in Section 115 of the Civil Procedure Code as follows-
"The High Court may call for the record of any case which has been decided by any Court subordinate to such High Court and in which no appeal lies thereto, and if such subordinate Court appears-
(a) to have exercised a jurisdiction not vested in it by law, or
(b) to have failed to exercise a Jurisdiction so vested, or
(c) to have acted in the exercise of its jurisdiction illegally or with material irregularity, the High Court may make such order in the case as it thinks fit".
6. It will be seen that the revisional powers Of the High Court under the Civil Code are very much more restricted than its revisional powers under the Criminal Code, under which it can review the correctness, legality or propriety of any order, whereas under the Civil Code it is almost precluded from going into the merits of the case, and in many cases is even precluded from correct-ing legal errors.
It seems in the present case that it is the State, which was the respondent in Kamin Rai's appeal in the Court of the District Judge against the 'Order for his prosecution under Section 193, and which is again the respondent in this Court, which has raised the objection that the Court must treat the revision petition as one under Section 115, C. P. C. and is therefore, to all intents and purposes, precluded from going into the merits of the challenged order.
7. There is no doubt that there has been a sharp cleavage of opinion among the High Courts on this matter. The old Punjab Chief Court and later the Lahore High Court have taken the view that even when the criminal orders have been passed by Civil Courts the revision petition in the High Court is governed by Criminal Procedure Code.
The point came before a Full Bench consisting of, Sir William Clark C. J., and Chatterji and Rattigan JJ., in -- 'Bishen Singh v. Amritsaria', 5 Pun Re (Cri) 1903) (M), in which it was held unanimously that the Chief Court as a Court of revision is competent under Section 439 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to revise an order passed under the provisions of Section 195 by a Divisional Judge revoking the sanction for prosecution granted by a District Judge.
It seems that after there was some amendment made in the Criminal procedure Code, a similar matter was again referred to a Full Bench in MR 1931 Lah 761 (II), and it was held by Tek Chand, Dalip Singh and Abdul Qadir JJ., that where a Court refuses to make a complaint and the appellate Court accepts the appeal, revision lies to the High Court under Section 430, Criminal Procedure Code, in all cases whether the Court be civil, criminal or revenue.
It is, however, to be noted in this case that Dalip Singh J., who delivered one of the judgments, seems to have been influenced by the principle of stare decisis and the long practice of the Court rather than because he was convinced by the argument, and he has indicated that if the matter had been res Integra he would have been inclined to accept the view expressed by other High Courts.
8. The other High Court which has taken the same view is the High Court of Bombay in the case AIR 1938 Bom 225 (FB) (I). In this case Beaumont C. J., Broomfield and Wassoodew JJ., have expressed the following view-
"Applications in revision from an order under Section 476B, Criminal P. C., by a Civil Court to High Court, should be heard and decided by the High Court in accordance with the provisions of Section 439, Criminal P. C. An order made by a civil Judge under Section 476B is an order made by a Court exercising criminal powers and as such, power to revise such order arises under Section 439. Criminal P. C., and not under Section 115, Civil P. C. Not only does the procedure relating to criminal appeals apply to proceeding under Section 476B, but any order made under that section can be revised by the High Court under Section 439 and the provisions of Section 115, Civil P. C., do not apply to such a case.
Once the matter has been brought to the attention of the High Court, the High Court can act in revision under Section 439, Criminal p. C., whatever the method adopted in bringing the matter to its attention."
9. On the other hand a contrary view has been taken by the High Court of Allahabad in the petition of -- 'Bhup Kunwar In the matter of, ILR 26 All 249 (N), with Sir John Stanley C. J., and Blair J., on one side and Banerji J., dissenting. A similar view is expressed in ILR 40 Cal 477 (PB) (B), by Harington C. J., Stephen, Mookerjee and Holmwood JJ., in. -- 'Kuniaravel Nadar v. Shanmuga Nadar', AIR 1940 Mad 465 (PB) (O), by Leach C. J. and Krishnaswami Ayyangar and King JJ., and finally in 'AIR 1948 Pat 225 (PB) (A), by Agarwala C. J., and Manohar Lall and Ramaswami JJ.
10. Although a number of arguments have been used in support of this view, the basic argument underlying all these decisions, and one which is elaborated upon in all the above mentioned Judgments, is that the words used in the opening of Section 439 of the Criminal Code "In the case of any proceeding the record of which has been called for" must be strictly construed with reference to the opening words of Section 435 "The High Court ..... may call for and examine the record of any proceeding before any Inferior criminal Court ....."
In other words, the only records which can be scrutinised for action under Section 439 are those which have been sent for in exercise of the Court's powers under Section 435, and these are the only records of inferior criminal Courts, and neither civil nor revenue Courts subordinate to the High Court are inferior criminal Courts. It cannot be denied that there is a great deal to be said for this view.
11. At the same time it seems to me that there is also a great deal to be said for the views of the Lahore and Bombay Courts. In the first place it seems to me that the offence of perjury, or forging documents or using forged documents is of the same nature, and equally serious, whether it is committed in the course of or in relation to a criminal case or a case tried by a civii or revenue Court, and indeed the only distinction which seems to be drawn regarding any of these offences in the I. P. C., itself under which such offences are punishable is in Section 194, Indian Penal Code, which permits the imposing of a heavier sentence for the offence of giving or fabricating false evidence with intent to cause any person to be convicted of a capital charge.
The position of a person whose prosecution has been ordered by a Court under one of the offences mentioned in Section 195 (b) or (c) of the Criminal P. C., appears to me to be the same whether the Court which has ordered his prosecution is a criminal, civil or revenue Court.
It would thus appear prima facie to be unfair and unjust that the cases of such persons should be treated differently when they come to the High Court in revision, and indeed it would seem that one class out of these persons would have no remedy at all in the High Court if the views of Allahabad, Madras, Calcutta and Patna High Courts are correct, since according to this view n person whose prosecution has been ordered by a Criminal Court can come to the High Court and have his case dealt with under Section 439 of the Criminal Procedure Code, while a person whose prosecution has been ordered by a Civil Court can at least come to the High Court under Section 115, Civil P. C., whereas a person whose prosecution has been ordered by a revenue Court has no remedy at all in the High Court, but can only go to the Commissioner or Financial Commissioner who, in my opinion, would not entertain any such applications if they arose on the ground that they were criminal matters.
Indeed I venture to think that if any case of this kind had never arisen in a revenue Court and been brought in some way or other to the notice of the High Court, the view of these High Courts would have been found to require reconsideration.
12. Such a situation indeed would seem to me to be a contravention of the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution, which provides that the State shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India. As I have said once a person has been ordered to be prosecuted for one of the offences in question, his position would be the same whatever the kind of Court which has ordered his prosecution, and it would seem to me to be a denial of equal rights under the law if a person whose prosecution has been ordered by a criminal Court is entitled to ask the High Court is review the correctness, legality and propriety of the order, while a man whose prosecution has 'been ordered by a Civil Court can only have the or del reviewed within the narrow limits of Section 115, Civil Procedure Code, and finally a man whose prosecution has been ordered by a revenue Court has apparently no remedy at all in the High court.
Such a discrimination could not in my opinion be regarded as reasonable, but at the same time it must be pointed out that it is not possible to lay one's finger on any particular provision of any of the statutes involved and say that that particular provision offends against Art. 14. It is in fact clear that the whole matter depends on the interpretation placed on the relevant statutes by the High Courts, between which there is a division of opinion.
In such a matter I am very strongly of the opinion that the statutes ought to be interpreted by the High Courts in such a way as not to offend against the equality of treatment guaranteed by Art. 14 of the Constitution.
13. It is in my opinion possible to do this without placing any undue strain on the lang-uage of the relevant provisions of law. The way to this conclusion is pointed by the judgment of the Bombay High Court referred to above and also by a decision of the Patna High Court subsequent to the Full Bench decision cited above. The foundation is the view that an appeal under Section 476B of the Criminal Code is a criminal appeal whatever the nature of the Court which decides it. The matter is discussed by Beaumont C. J-, in the following passage-
"The expression 'the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie' must I think mean the Court to which an appeal would lie in an Ordinary case from the Civil Revenue or Criminal Court in question. Clearly it cannot mean the Court to which an appeal ordinarily lies under Section 476 because no appeal does lie under that section except under Section 478-B. The view which has prevailed in the High Courts of Calcutta, Madras and Allahabad in that the character of the Court which hears the appeal under Section 476B is governed by the character of the Court which lodges the complaint, that is to say. If the complaint is lodged as here by a Civil Court, the Court hearing the appeal must be regarded as a Civil Court. That is not ex-pressly provided by Section 476-B. The reference to Section 195 (3) only determines the forum to which the appeal lies, and does not in terms determine the character of such Court. The High Court of Calcutta in -- 'Surendra Nath v. Susil Kumar', ILR 59 Cal 68: (AIR 1931 Cal 604) (P), and the High Court of Madras in -- 'Janardana Rao v. Prattipati Lakshmi', ILR 57 Mad 177: (AIR 1934 Mad 52) (FB) (Q), appear to hold that although the Court which hears the appeal under Section 476-B is a Civil Court, nevertheless its procedure in dealing with the appeal is governed by the Criminal Procedure Code, and both those Courts have held that the powers conferred on a Criminal Court of appeal by Section 423, Criminal P. C., can be exercised in an appeal under Section 476-B. With all respect to those Courts, that seems to me to be somewhat illogical. If the Court hearing the appeal is a Civil Court it seems to me that its procedure must be governed by the Civil P. C., and if the Court holds that the procedure is governed by the Criminal P. C., that must be on the basis that the Court is acting as a Criminal Court, and if it is acting as a Criminal Court, I do not see why the powers of revision should not be those conferred by Section 439, Criminal P. C., and not those conferred by Section 115, Civil P. C. There is 110 provision in Section 476-B. such as we find in Section 486, Criminal P. C., enacting that the provisions of Chapter 31 are to be acted upon. Chapter 31 deals with the appellate powers. If one has got such a provision as that, it would bo possible to hold that the powers conferred upon an appellate Court by Chapter 31, Criminal P. C., apply, but the powers in revision conferred by Chapter 33 do not apply.
But in the absence of any such provision, I fail to see why the provisions of one Chapter more than the other should apply to a case arising under Section 476-B, if the Court hearing the appeal is a Civil Court."
14. In 'Dhup Naraln Singh v. The State', AIR 1954 Pat 7G (FB) (R), a complaint had been filed by the District Judge under Section 476. Criminal P. C., against Dhup Narain Singh under Sections 197, 199 and 471, Indian Penal Code, for offences alleged to have been committed in connection with a Probate Case. The Court of appeal under Section 476-B was thus the High Court itself, and the question arose in the High Court as to whether the appeal was a civil appeal or a criminal appeal.
A Full Bench consisting of Imam, Rai and Choudhary JJ. held that an appeal under Section 476-B from an order passed under Section 476 by a Civil Court must be deemed to be a criminal appeal, and the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, so far as they are applicable relating to appeals under the said Code, apply to such an appeal. In a paragraph occurring towards the end of this judgment it is stated that this opinion is not in any way inconsistent with the decision of the Full Bench in AIR 1948 Pat 225 CA), but with the utmost respect I am of the opinion that the decision that an appeal under Section 476-B is a criminal appeal and not a civil appeal virtually removed the basis of the earlier decision.
15. As was rightly pointed out an appeal under Section 476-B of the Criminal Code is entirely a creature of, and governed by, the provisions of that Code, and has nothing to do with any provisions of the Civil Procedure Code, and if the decision is correct that such an appeal is a criminal appeal and not a civil appeal, although decided by a civil Court, and I am of the opinion that this is the correct view, it does not seem to me that it makes any difference whether the appeal comes to the High Court from an order of the District Judge or whether it goes to the District Judge from the order of a subordinate civil Court.
I am therefore of the opinion that a Court deciding such an appeal, whether it is a criminal, civil or revenue Court, is acting as a criminal Court under the provisions of the Criminal P. C., and it does not seem to me possible that there can be any revision under Section 115 of the Civil P. C., against the decision in a Criminal appeal, which must logically be governed by the Provisions of Section 439 of the Criminal P. C. I therefore consider that any Court subordinate to the High Court whether it is criminal, civil or revenue Court, when it is deciding an appeal under Section 476-B, must be deemed to be an inferior criminal Court within the meaning of the opening words of Section 435.
16. For these reasons I am of the opinion that the answer to the question referred to the Full Bench should be that where a civil Court of original jurisdiction has taken proceedings against a person under Section 476, Criminal P. C., and filed a complaint against him and an appeal against that complaint has been dismissed by the Court to which such original Court was subordinate, as contemplated by Section 476-B, Criminal P. C., a revision against the order of the appellate Court is a revision on the criminal side under Section 439, Criminal Procedure Code and not a revision in a civil case under Section 115. Civil P. C. Passey, J.
17. I concur.
Mehr Singh, J.
18. I agree.
(The case was then sent back to be decided in single Bench on merits and the following order was passed by Passey J. on 23rd January 1957).
ORDER
19. This is a revision by Hakim Rai under Section 439, Criminal P. C. He had brought a suit for the recovery of Rs. 500/- against the firm Harnam Das Lagga Mal of Kapurthala on 10-8-1948 in the Court of the Sub-Judge 1st Class, Hoshiarpur and along with the plaint he had produced a letter, Ex. DK, alleged to have been written to him at Hoshiarpur by the defendant.
The defendant resisted the suit and contended inter alia that the Court had no jurisdiction to try it. That objection found favour with the trial Sub Judge and on 28-12-1950 the plaint was returned to the plaintiff to be filed in a Court of competent jurisdiction. On 23-1-1951, Hakim Rai filed that plaint in the Court of the Subordinate Judge 2nd Class, Kapurthala, on the request of the defendant Exhibit DK was sent for from the Sub Judge's Court at Hoshiarpur.
The plaintiff appeared as his own witness and stated that Biru Ram was not a partner of his firm and with regard to a letter, Exhibit DA, he said that it had not been written by him to the defendant. His suit was dismissed on 29-12-1952 and his appeal was dismissed in default by the District Judge on 6-6-1953. His application to have the appeal revived failed on 29-10-1853.
20. On 2-12-1953 the defendant submitted an application under Section 476. Cr. P. C., to the Subordinate Judge 2nd Class, Kapurthala, alleging that the plaintiff had deliberately given false evidence with regard to Exhibit DA and had used in Court the forged letter Ex. DK knowing it to be forged and prayed that he should be prosecuted for offences under Sections 193 and 471, I.P.C.
The learned Subordinate Judge (Sardar Raghbir Singh) formed the opinion that it was expedient in the interest of justice to enquire into those allegations and started an enquiry and on its conclusion recorded that finding on 30-6-1954 that the two offences appeared to have been committed and consequently made an order that a complaint under those sections be laid against Hakim Rai. After that order had been made Section Raghbir Singh was transferred and was succeeded by S. Joginder Singh.
At this stage it is necessary to mention that in addition to being a Subordinate Judge of the 2nd Class S. Raghbir Singh was a Magistrate of the 1st Class for the Kapurthala District. His successor S. Joginder Singh also exercised those civil and criminal powers. On 10-8-1954 S. Joginder Singh filed the complaint as contemplated by S. Raghbir Singh's order of 30-6-1054, in the Court of the Additional District Magistrate, Kapurthala, describing himself as Magistrate 1st Class, Kapurthala.
It was argued on behalf of the defence that the Magistrate 1st Class had no locus standi to file the complaint which could only be done by the Sub Judge 2nd Class as the proceedings under Section 476, Cr. P. C., had been taken for offences committed in relation to a civil suit decided by the Sub Judge. The objection succeeded and on that technical ground alone the complaint was dismissed by the A.D.M. on 28-3-1855. Before the complaint had been dismissed, Hakim Rai had preferred an appeal in the Court of the District Judge, Kapurthala, against that portion of the order of S. Raghbir Singh made on 30-6-1954 which said that offences under Sections 471 and 193, I.P.C., appeared to have been committed.
The District Judge held the appeal to be statute barred and dismissed it on 5-2-1955. It would look that Hakim Rai did not come to the High Court further because the complaint itself filed on 10-8-1954 had been dismissed on 28-3-1955. The second phase of Hakim Rai's prosecution started on 11-5-1955 when S. Joginder Singh now describing himself as Subordinate Judge 2nd Class, Kapurthala brought a fresh complaint against him under Sections 471 and 193, I.P.C., Hakim Rai as permitted by Section 476-B filed an appeal against that complaint in the Court of the District Judge but the same was dismissed in limine on two grounds first that it was time barred and the second that the appellant had not appended to the memorandum of appeal a copy of the order of S. Raghbir Singh dated 30-6-1954.
The appeal was held to be time barred because it had not been presented within the prescribed time to be computed from the first complaint filed by S. Joginder Singh on 10-8-1954.
21. On the point of limitation the learned District Julge fell into an obvious error. He failed to consider that the complaint dated 10-8-1954 had been dismissed by the Additional District Magistrate on 28-3-1955. It was evidently the filing of the second complaint on 11-5-1955 that was attacked in appeal by Hakim Rai and therefore by no stretch of imagination or reasoning could it be said that the time for appealing had begun to run from the filing of the first complaint that had stood dismissed on 28-3-1955.
As said above the second complaint had been filed on 11-5-1955 and the accused informed of it on 14-6-1955. Hakim Rai applied for a copy of that complaint on 22-6-1955 and the same was ready and delivered to him on 23-6-1955. He filed the appeal in the District Judge's Court on 23-8-1955, within about a week of his knowledge that the complaint had been filed he preferred his appeal and there was no rule or law that he was to be presumed to have known that the complaint had been filed in the trial Court on the date it was filed.
It was an appeal before the District Judge arising out of a criminal proceeding for filing which the Criminal Procedure Code or the Indian Limitation Act do not clearly or specifically prescribe any period. In consonance with the principles of natural justice therefore time in a case like the present would be taken to start from the day of the appellant's knowledge of the filing of the complaint.
In every case he would be entitled to extension of time on the score of sufficient cause for his inability to file the appeal in time if any specific period is to be supposed to govern the appeal. I would consequently hold that the appeal of Hakim Rai had been wrongly thrown out as barred by limitation.
22. The second ground of dismissal is equally unsustainable. Section 419, Cr. P. C., no doubt requires that every appeal shall unless the Court to which it is presented otherwise directs be accompanied by a copy of the judgment or order appealed against. Hakim Rai had stated in the memorandum of appeal that he had not yet received the copy of the order of S. Raghbir Singh dated 30-6-1954 and that he would file it when received. That showed that the necessary copy had been applied for.
With a note of the office with regard to the ground for not filing the copy, the memorandum was put up for orders of the District Judge on 9-7-1955. The learned District Judge dismissed the appeal on that date without giving the appellant time to produce the required copy that had been applied for and for producing which time had not yet run out. It was represented to the learned District Judge that an application for the copy had been submitted to the Sub Judge 2nd Class Kapurthala and that was not disbelieved but taking that application to have been made to a wrong authority the request for time was discarded.
The learned District Judge appeared to think that the application for the copy must have been made to the officer incharge of the Record Room and not to the Sub Judge. He should have allow ed the appellant to produce the copy irrespective of the quarter he had approached for it as the statutory time for producing it had not run out.
I consequently accept the revision, quash the order of the learned District Judge dated 9-7-1355 and direct that the copy of the order of S. Raghbir Singh dated 30-6-195-4, be allowed to be produced by Hakim Rai and his appeal decided on merits.