SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Y. Abraham Ajith
Vs.
Inspector of Police, Chennai
Crl.A.No.904 of 2004
(Arijit Pasayat and C.K.Thakker JJ.)
17.08.2004
JUDGMENT
Arijit Pasayat, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Appellants calls in question legality of the judgment rendered by a learned
Single Judge of the Madras High Court whereby the appellants' prayer for
quashing proceedings in CC 3532 of 2001 on the file of the Court of XVIII
Metropolitan Magistrate Saidapet, Chennai, by exercise of powers under Section
482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (in short the 'Code') was
rejected. Background facts sans unnecessary details are as follows:
3. Respondent no.2 as complainant filed complaint in the Court of the concerned
magistrate alleging commission of offences punishable under Sections 498A and
406 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short the 'IPC') and Section 4 of
the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 (in short the 'Dowry Act'). The
magistrate directed the police to investigate and after investigation charge-sheet
was filed by the police. When the matter stood thus, the appellants filed an
application under Section 482 of the Code before the High Court alleging that
the concerned magistrate has no jurisdiction even to entertain the complaint
even if the allegations contained therein are accepted in toto. According to
them, no part of the cause of action arose within the jurisdiction of the
concerned Court. The complaint itself disclosed that after 15.4.1997, the
respondent left Nagercoil and came to Chennai and was staying there. All the
allegations which are per se without any basis took place according to the
complainant at Nagercoil, and therefore, the Courts at Chennai did not have the
jurisdiction to deal with the matter. It was further submitted that earlier a
complaint was lodged by the complainant before the concerned police officials
having jurisdiction; but after inquiry no action was deemed necessary.
4. In response, learned counsel submitted that some of the offences were
continuing offences. The appellant no.1 had initiated proceedings for judicial
separation, the notice for which was received by her at Chennai and, therefore,
the cause of action existed.
5. The High Court unfortunately did not consider rival stands and even did not
record any finding on the question of law raised regarding lack of
jurisdiction. It felt that legal parameters were to be considered after a
thorough trial after due opportunity to the parties and, therefore, the factual
points raised by parties were not to be adjudicated under Section 484 of the
Code.
6. In support of the appeal Mr. T.L. Viswanatha Iyer, learned senior counsel,
submitted that the approach of the High Court is clearly erroneous. A bare
reading of the complaint would go to show that no part of the cause of action
arose within the jurisdiction of the Court where the complaint was filed.
Therefore, the entire proceedings had no foundation.
7. In response, learned counsel for respondent no.2 - complainant submitted
that the offences were continuing in terms of Section 178(c) of the Code, and
therefore, the Court had the jurisdiction to deal with the matter.
8. Section 177 of the Code deals with the ordinary place of inquiry and trial,
and reads as follows:
"Section 177: ORDINARY PLACE OF INQUIRY AND TRIAL:
Every offence shall ordinarily be inquired into and tried by a Court within
whose local jurisdiction it was committed."
9. Sections 177 to 186 deal with venue and place of trial. Section 117
reiterates the well-established common law rule referred to in Halsbury's Laws
of England (Vol. IX para 83) that the proper and ordinary venue for the trial
of a crime is the area of jurisdiction in which, on the evidence, the facts
occur and which alleged to constitute the crime. There are several exceptions to
this general rule and some of them are, so far as the present case is
concerned, indicated in Section 178 of the Code which read as follows:
"Section 178 PLACE OF INQUIRY OR TRIAL
(a) When it is uncertain in which of several local areas an offence was
committed, or
(b) Where an offence is committed partly in one local area and partly in
another, or
(c) Where an offence is continuing one, and continuous to be committed in more
local areas than one, or *
(d) Where it consists of several acts done in different local areas, it may be
inquired into or tried by a Court having jurisdiction over any of such local
areas."
"All crime is local, the jurisdiction over the crime belongs to the
country where the crime is committed", as observed by Blackstone. a
significant word used in Section 177 of the code is "ordinarily". Use
of the word indicates that the provision is a general one and must be read
subject to the special provisions contained in the code. As observed by the
Court in Purushottamdas Dalmia vs. State of West Bengal, L.N. Mukherjee vs.
State of Madras, Banwarilal Jhunjhunwalla and Ors. vs. Union of India and Anr.
and Mohan Baitha and Ors. vs. State of Bihar and Anr. exception implied by the
word "ordinarily" need not be limited to those specially provided for
by the law and exceptions may be provided by law on consideration or may be
implied from the provisions of law permitting joint trial of offence by the
same Court. No such exception is applicable to the case at hand.”
10. As observed by this Court in State of Bihar vs. Deokaran Nenshi and Anr.
continuing offence is one which is susceptible of continuance and is
distinguishable from the one which is committed once and for all, that it is
one of those offences which arises out of the failure to obey or comply with a
rule or its requirement and which involves a penalty, liability continues till
compliance, that on every occasion such disobedience or non-compliance occurs
or recurs, there is the offence committed.
11. A similar plea relating to continuance of the offence was examined by this
Court in Sujata Mukherjee (Smt.) vs. Prashant Kumar Mukherjee. There the
allegations related to commission of alleged offences punishable under Section
498A, 506 and 323 IPC. On the factual background, it was noted that though the
dowry demands were made earlier the husband of the complainant went to the
place where complainant was residing and had assaulted her. This Court held in
that factual background that clause (c) of Section 178 was attracted. But in
the present case the factual position is different and the complainant herself
left the house of the husband on 15.4.1997 on account of alleged dowry demands
by the husband and his relations. There is thereafter not even a whisper of allegations
about any demand of dowry or commission of any act constituting an offence much
less at Chennai. That being so, the logic of Section 178 (c) of the Code
relating to continuance of the offences cannot be applied.
12. The crucial question is whether any part of the cause of action arose
within the jurisdiction of the concerned Court. In terms of Section 177 of the
Code it is the place where the offence was committed. In essence it is the
cause of action for initiation of the proceedings against the accused.
13. While in civil cases, normally the expression "cause of action"
is used, in criminal cases as stated in Section 177 of the Code, reference is
to the local jurisdiction where the offence is committed. These variations in
etymological expression do not really make the position different. The
expression "cause of action" is therefore not a stranger to criminal
cases.
14. It is settled law that cause of action consists of bundle of facts, which
give cause to enforce the legal inquiry for redress in a court of law. In other
words, it is a bundle of facts, which taken with the law applicable to them,
gives the allegedly affected party a right to claim relief against the
opponent. It must include some act done by the latter since in the absence of
such an act no cause of action would possibly accrue or would arise.
15. The expression "cause of action" has acquired a judicially
settled meaning. In the restricted sense cause of action was means the
circumstances forming the infraction of the right or the immediate occasion for
the action. In the wider sense, it means the necessary conditions for the
maintenance of the proceeding including not only the alleged infraction, but
also the infraction coupled with the right itself. Compendiously the expression
means every fact, which it would be necessary for the complainant to prove, if
traversed, in order to support his right or grievance to the judgment of the
Court. Every fact, which is necessary to be proved, as distinguished from every
piece of evidence, which is necessary to prove such fact, comprises in
"cause of action".
16. The expression "cause of action" has sometimes been employed to
convey the restricted idea of facts or circumstances which constitute either
the infringement or the basis of a right and no more. In a wider and more
comprehensive sense, it has been used to denote the whole bundle of material
facts.
17. The expression "cause of action" is generally understood to mean
a situation or state of facts that entitles a party to maintain an action in a
court or a tribunal; a group of operative facts giving rise to one or more
bases for sitting; a factual situation that entitles one person to obtain a
remedy in court from another person. (Black's Law Dictionary a "cause of
action" is stated to be the entire set of facts that gives rise to an
enforceable claim; the phrase comprises every fact, which, if traversed, the
plaintiff must prove in order to obtain judgment. In "Words and
Phrases" (4th Edn.) the meaning attributed to the phrase "cause of
action" in common legal parlance is existence of those facts, which give a
party a right to judicial interference on his behalf.
18. In Halsbury Laws of England (Fourth Edition) it has been stated as follows:
"Cause of action" has been defined as meaning simply a factual
situation the existence of which entitles one person to obtain from the Court a
remedy against another person. The phrase has been held from earliest time to
include every fact which is material to be proved to entitle the plaintiff to
succeed, and every fact which a defendant would have a right to traverse.
"Cause of action" has also been taken to mean that particular act on
the part of the defendant which gives the plaintiff his cause of complaint, or
the subject matter of grievance founding the action, not merely the technical
cause of action".
19. When the aforesaid legal principles are applied, to the factual scenario
disclosed by the complainant in the complaint petition, the inevitable
conclusion is that no part of cause of action arose in Chennai and, therefore,
the concerned magistrate had no jurisdiction to deal with the matter. The
proceedings are quashed. The complaint be returned to respondent No. 2 who, if
she so chooses, may file the same in the appropriate Court to be dealt with in
accordance with law. The appeal is accordingly allowed.