SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

 

Bholu Ram

 

Vs

 

State of Punjab

 

Crl.A.No.1366 of 2008

 

(C.K. Thakker and D.K. Jain JJ.)

 

29.08.2008

 

JUDGMENT

 

C.K. THAKKER, J.

 

1. Leave granted.

 

2. The present appeal is filed by the appellant-accused against the order passed by the Additional Sessions Judge, Barnala on March 5, 1998 in Criminal Revision Nos. 11 and 12 of 1997 and confirmed by the High Court of Punjab & Haryana on November 26, 2006 in Criminal Revision Nos. 401 and 402 of 1998.

 

3. To appreciate the issues raised in the present appeal, few relevant facts may be stated.

 

4. On August 21, 1986, First Information Report  (FIR) No. 87 was lodged    against  the appellant for commission of offences punishable under Sections 409, 420, 467, 468 and 471 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The allegation in the FIR was that the appellant was a Clerk in Government High School, Rurke   Kalan.    He   had forged signature of Sher Singh-respondent No. 2 herein who was the Head Master-cum-Drawing and Disbursing Officer and embezzled       substantial amount of more than Rs. one lakh between 1979 and 1986. As stated in the FIR, the said fact came to light when audit was carried out and report was submitted. Hence, the complaint.

 

5. According to the appellant, during the course of investigation, signatures  of respondent No. 2 were also taken and were sent for examination but the   report on the said examination was never filed by the prosecution in the proceedings. It was only in the course of recording  of  prosecution  evidence that certain witnesses deposed against respondent No. 2 alleging that it was respondent No. 2 who had withdrawn the amount and  signatures purported to have been forged by the appellant really tallied with the specimen signatures of respondent No. 2. In view of the said fact, the appellant on February 05, 1994 and on January 06, 1996, filed applications under Section 319 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter referred to as `the Code') in the Court of Judicial Magistrate praying therein to add respondent No. 2 as an accused and summon him being Head Master-cum-Drawing and Disbursing Officer who had prepared false and forged bills, misappropriated the amount and committed fraud on the Government.

 

6. The     learned   Magistrate, after considering the evidence on record, held that prima facie case had  been made out against respondent No. 2 and that he should also be joined as accused. The learned Magistrate allowed the applications of the appellant and issued summons to respondent No. 2 by joining him as accused.

 

7.         Though the order was passed on January 22, 1996, it was not challenged by respondent No. 2. The order, however, was challenged by the State by filing a Revision Petition in the Court of Additional Sessions Judge, Barnala. The learned Judge vide an order dated May 06, 1996, dismissed the petition filed by respondent No. 1-State.

 

8. After a gap of more than eight months from the order passed by the learned Magistrate summoning respondent No. 2, he filed an application on September 25, 1996 to review/recall summoning order dated January 22, 1996. He also contended in a separate petition that he could not be prosecuted in absence of sanction as required by Section 197 of the Code.  The learned Magistrate by an order dated March 12, 1997 dismissed the application of respondent No. 2 holding it to be not maintainable in view of dismissal of revision of the State by the Additional Sessions Judge

 

9. Being aggrieved by the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate, respondent No. 2 filed two Revision Petitions before the learned Additional Sessions Judge. The learned Judge allowed the revisions of respondent No. 2 and set aside the order dated January 22, 1996 passed by the Judicial  Magistrate addin respondent No. 2 as an accused and summoning him. The said order was passed on March 5, 1998.

 

10. The appellant challenged both the orders by approaching the High Court by instituting two revision petitions. The High Court, however, dismissed both the revisions and confirmed the order passed by the learned Additional Sessions Judge.  The said order is challenged in the present appeal.


11. On January 19, 2007, notice was issued by this Court. On February 15, 2007, further proceedings were stayed. Considering the controversy and issues involved, the Registry was   directed to place the matter for final hearing. Accordingly, the matter was placed before us.

 

12. We have heard the learned counsel for the parties.

 

13. The learned counsel for the appellant contended that once an order was passed and summons was issued by the Judicial Magistrate, he had no power, authority or jurisdiction to review the said order or recall the summons. On that ground alone, the orders passed by the courts below are liable to be set aside.  It was also submitted that the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate adding respondent No. 2 and summoning him was in consonance with Section 319   of   the   Code and should    not    have     been interfered with. It was urged that such an order could be passed on an application of any party   including      the    accused       and   the   matter ought to have been decided on merits and the said order could not have been disturbed by the revisional Court. It was further submitted that the Courts below were wrong in invoking Section 197 of the Code and in holding that sanction was necessary.

 

14. It was submitted that even on merits, the orders passed by the Judicial Magistrate was in consonance with law and called for no interference. It was, therefore, prayed that the order passed by the Additional Sessions Judge and confirmed by the High Court may be set aside and the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate be restored.

 

15. The learned counsel for the contesting respondent No. 2, on the other hand, supported the order passed by the Courts below. It was submitted that the Additional Sessions Judge was   satisfied   that the    order passed by   the Judicial Magistrate was not in consonance with law and it could be recalled. Such order was not an order of   review, but    recalling of earlier order which was not  found legal or lawful.  It  was    also   submitted that    FIR    was lodged as early as in 1986 and applications for adding respondent No. 2 as an accused were made by the appellant-accused in the year 1994 and 1996, i.e. after about 8 to 10 years. Such applications, therefore, could not have been entertained by the Court. Again, the respondent No. 2 was admittedly Head Master-cum-Drawing and Disbursing Officer and no prosecution could be launched against him without sanction from the Government as envisaged by Section 197 of the Code. Since no such sanction was obtained, no prosecution could be launched against him.

 

16. The counsel also submitted that no application under Section 319 could be filed by an accused and since the appellant herein was the   accused, applications by him were not maintainable. The counsel urged that when the Additional Sessions Judge allowed the revisions filed by respondent No. 2 and the said order was confirmed by the High Court, this Court may not interfere with  it  in exercise of discretionary jurisdiction under Article 136 of the Constitution.  It was, therefore, submitted that the appeal may be dismissed.

 

17. The learned Government pleader appearing for respondent No. 1 adopted the arguments of learned counsel for respondent No. 2 and submitted that the appeal deserves to be dismissed.

 

18. Having heard the learned counsel for the parties and in the light of the relevant provisions of law as also judicial pronouncements to which our attention has been invited by the learned counsel for the parties, in our opinion, the appeal deserves to be allowed.

 

19.         Section 319 of the Code empowers a Court to proceed against any person not shown to be an accused if  it appears from the evidence that such person has also committed an offence for which he can be tried together with the accused.

 

20. Section 319 of the Code reads thus;

 

319. Power to proceed against other persons appearing to be guilty of Offence.--(1) Where, in the course of any inquiry into, or trial of, an offence, it appears from the evidence that any person not being the accused had committed any offence for which such person could be tried together with the accused, the Court  may proceed against such person for the offence which he appears to have committed.

 

 (2) Where such person is not attending the Court he may be arrested or summoned, as the circumstances of the case may require, for the purpose aforesaid.

 

 (3) Any person attending the Court although not under arrest or upon a summons, may be detailed by such Court  for the purpose of the inquiry into, or trial of, the offence which he appears to have committed.

 

 (4) Where the Court proceeds against any person under sub-section (1) then—

 

(a) The proceedings in respect of such person shall be commenced afresh, and witnesses re-heard;

 

(b) Subject to the provisions of clause (a), the case may proceed as if such person had been an accused person when the Court took cognizance of the offence upon which the inquiry or trial was commenced.

 

21.        Sometimes a Magistrate while hearing a case against one or more accused finds from the evidence that some person other than the accused before him is also involved in that very offence. It is only proper that a Magistrate should have power to summon by joining such person as an accused in the case. The primary object underlying Section 319 is that the whole case against all the accused should be tried and disposed of not only expeditiously but also simultaneously. Justice and convenience both require that cognizance against the newly added accused should be taken in the same case and in the same manner as against the original accused. The power must be regarded and conceded as incidental and ancillary to the main power to take cognizance as part of normal process in the administration of criminal justice.

 

22.         It is also settled  law that  power under Section 319 can be exercised either on an application made to the Court or by the Court suo motu. It is in the discretion of the Court to take an action under the said section and the Court is expected to exercise the discretion judicially and judiciously having regard to the facts and circumstances of each case.

 

23.         In the instant case, an FIR was lodged against the appellant in August, 1986. But it was during the course of trial that it came to  light that signatures of respondent No. 2 were also taken and were sent for examination and a report was received showing that the signatures on the basis of  which amount was withdrawn tallied with the signatures of respondent No.2. The said report, however, was not filed by the prosecution. It was in these circumstances that the appellant made applications in 1994 and in1996 under Section 319 of the Code requesting the learned Magistrate to join respondent No. 2 as accused and to summon him.

 

24.        The contention of the learned counsel for respondent No. 2 is that the power under Section 319 of the Code cannot be exercised belatedly by the Court.  Again, such order can be made only on the application by the Public Prosecutor or by some person other than the accused.  In other words, an application under Section 319 cannot be filed by a person who is facing the trial.

 

25.        We are unable to uphold the contentions. We have quoted Section 319 of the Code.   It nowhere states that such an application can be filed by a person other than the accused. It also does not prescribe any time limit within which such application should be filed in the Court.

 

26.        Let us consider few leading decisions of this Court on interpretation and application of the said provision.

 

27.          Before three decades, in Joginder Singh & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Anr., (1979)1 SCC 345, a case was  registered against Joginder Singh, Ram Singh, Bhan Singh, Darshan Singh and Ranjit Singh for committing various offences punishable under the Indian Penal Code. During the   investigation he police found Joginder Singh and Ram Singh (appellants before this Court) to be innocent and, hence, a charge-sheet was submitted against the remaining accused only. The learned Magistrate after holding preliminary inquiry, committed three accused to the Sessions Court for trial.

 

28.   During trial, evidence of some of the witnesses was recorded who implicated the appellants. A Public Prosecutor, therefore, moved an application to summon the appellants and to try them along with other accused. The application was granted by the Sessions Court. The said order was challenged by the appellants.

                                                              

29.  It was, inter alia, contended on behalf of the appellants that Section 319 of the Code was not attracted inasmuch as the phrase "any person  not being the accused" occurring therein excluded from its operatio an accused who had been released by the police under Section 169 of the Code and against whom no sufficient material was found by the police during investigation.

 

30.   This Court considered the relevant provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (old Code), Forty-first Report of the Law Commission, the amendment made in the present Code and held that the Court could add any person, not an accused before it, as an accused and direct him to be tried along with the other accused for the offence or offences the added accused appears to have committed.

 

31.       The Court, after considering the scheme of the provision, observed;

 

"A plain reading of Section 319 (1), which occurs in Chapter XXIVdealing with general provisions as to inquiries and trials, clearly shows that it applies to all the Courts including a Sessions Court and as such a Sessions Court will have the power to add any person, not being the accused before it, but against whom  there appears during trial sufficient evidence indicating his involvement in the offence, as an accused and direct him to be tried along with the other accused,..."

 

32.       Interpreting the expression  "any person not being the accused", the Court stated;

 

"As regards the contention that the phrase "any person not being the accused" occurring in Section 319 excludes from its operation an accused who has been released by the police under Section 169 of the Code and has been shown in column No. 2 of the charge-sheet, the contention has merely to be stated to be rejected. The said expression clearly covers any person who is not being tried already by the Court and the very purpose of  enacting such a provision like Section      319(1) clearly shows that even persons who have been dropped by the police during investigation but against whom evidence showing their involvement in      the offence comes before the Criminal  Court are included in the said expression". (emphasis supplied)  (See also Rakesh v. State of Haryana, (2001) 6 SCC 248

 

33.        In Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ram Kishan Rohtagi & Ors., (1983) 1 SCC 1, the Food Inspector, noticing adulteration  in `Morton Toffees', filed a complaint against the Company, its Managing Director as well as Directors under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954. The Managing Director and    Directors approached the High Court by invoking Section 482 of the Code for quashing of proceedings which was granted and the proceedings against  them      were quashed. The question before this Court was whether Section 319 of the Code could be invoked once criminal proceedings against a person were quashed.

 

34.        Replying the question   in the affirmative and quoting with approval observations in  Joginder Singh, this Court said

 

"In these circumstances, therefore, if the prosecution can at any stage produce evidence which satisfies the court that the other accused or those who have not been arrayed as accused against whom proceedings have been quashed have also committed the offence the Court can take cognizance against them and try them along with the other accused. But, we would hasten to add that this is really an extraordinary power which is conferred on the Court and should be used very  sparingly   and  only   if  compelling reasons exist for taking cognizance against the other person against whom action has not been taken. More than this we would not like to say anything further at this stage. We leave the entire matter to the discretion of the court concerned so that it may act according to law. We would, however, make it plain that the mere fact that the proceedings have been quashed against respondent Nos. 2 to 5 will not prevent the court from exercising its discretion if it is fully satisfied that a case for taking cognizance against them has been made out on the additional evidence led before it".  (Emphasis supplied)

 

35.       In  Lok  Ram v. Nihal Singh& Anr., (2006) 10 SCC 192, again, a similar question  came up before this Court. In Lok Ram, one Saroj  Kumari  was   killed by her in-laws. A complaint was filed by the father of the deceased against the husband, brother in law and father in law of Saroj Kumari that all of   them killed the deceased. Police registered a case against the said persons for offences punishable under Sections 304-B,   498-A read with Section 34, IPC. The case of Lok Ram was that he was serving in a school and at the time of incident, he was not present. No charge- sheet was, therefore, filed against him.

 

36.       During the trial, however, depositions of witnesses were recorded which revealed that Saroj Kumari was killed by her husband. Her brother in law and father in law (Lok Ram) poured kerosene oil on her and she was set on fire. Father of the deceased, hence, made an application under Section 319 of the Code to add Lok Ram as accused which was rejected by the trial Court. Meanwhile, the trial proceeded further against the other accused and they were convicted. The High Court directed the trial Court to proceed against  Lok Ram. The said order was challenged by Lok Ram in this Court.

 

37.       Dismissing   the appeal, referring  to earlier decisions of this Court on the point and explaining the scope of Section 319 of the Code, the Court stated;

 

"On a careful reading of Section 319 of the Code as well as the aforesaid two decisions, it  becomes clear that the trial court   has undoubted jurisdiction to add any person not being the accused before it to face the trial along with other accused persons, if the Court is satisfied at any stage of the proceeding on the evidence adduced that the persons who have not been arrayed as accused should  face the trial. It is further evident that such person even though had initially been named in the F.I.R. as an accused, but not charge      sheeted, can also be added to face the trial. The trial court can take such a step to add such persons as accused only on the basis of evidence adduced before it and not on the basis of materials available in the charge-sheet or the case diary,  because such  materials contained in the charge sheet or the case diary do not constitute  evidence".

 

38.       Construing   the   provision   liberally, the Court proceeded to state;

 

"Power under Section 319 of the Code can be exercised by the Court suo motu or on an application by someone including accused already before it. If it is satisfied that any person other than accused has committed an offence he is to be tried together with the accused. The power is discretionary and such discretion must be exercised judicially having regard to the facts and circumstances of the case.  Undisputedly, it is an extraordinary power which is conferred on the Court and should be used very sparingly and only if compelling reasons exist for taking action against a person against whom action had not been taken earlier. The word      `evidence' in Section 319 contemplates that evidence of witnesses given in Court. Under sub-  section (4)(1)(b) of the aforesaid  provision, it is specifically made      clear that it will be presumed that  newly added person had been an accused person when the Court took cognizance of the offence upon which  the inquiry or trial was commenced. That would show that by virtue of sub-section (4)(1)(b) a legal fiction is created that cognizance  would be presumed to have been taken so far as newly added accused is concerned". (Emphasis supplied)

 

39.       In Shashikant  Singh v. Tarkeshwar Singh & Anr. (2002) 5 SCC 738, during the pendency of trial of an accused, another person was summoned by the trial Court under Section 319 of the Code. But by the time he could be brought before the Court, the trial against the accused was over. The question was whether such a person could be summoned and tried for the offence for which he was summoned.  This Court held that the words "should be tried together with the accused" were  merely directory and such a person could be tried even after conclusion of trial of the main accused.

 

The Court stated;

 

"The intention of the provision here is that where in the course of any enquiry into, or trial of, an offence, it appears to the court from the evidence that any person not being the accused has committed any offence, the Court may proceed against him for the offence which he appears to have committed. At the stage, the Court would consider that such a person could be fried together with the accused who is already before the Court facing the trial.  The safeguard provided in respect of such person is that, the proceedings right from the beginning have mandatory to be commenced afresh and the witnesses re-heard. In short, there has to be a de novo trial against him. The provision of de novo trial is mandatory.  It vitally affects the rights of a person so brought before the Court. It would not be sufficient to only tender the witnesses for the cross-examination of such a person. They have to be examined afresh. Fresh examination in   chief and not only their presentation for  the purpose of  the cross-  examination of the newly    added accused is the mandate of Section 319  (4).  The words 'could be tried together with the accused' in Section 319(1), appear to be only directory.  'Could be' cannot under these circumstances be held to be 'must be'. The provision  cannot be  interpreted to mean that since the  trial in respect of a person who was  before the Court has concluded with the result that the newly added  person cannot be tried together with the accused who was before the Court when order under Section 319(1) was  passed,  the order would become ineffective and inoperative, nullifying the opinion earlier formed by the Court on the basis of evidence before it that the newly added person appears to have committed the offence  resulting in an order for his being      brought before the Court".

 

40.       In our opinion, therefore, the learned Magistrate had power   and   jurisdiction    to entertain applications filed by the appellant-accused under Section 319 of the Code and to issue summons to respondent No. 2 by adding him as accused. The said order could not be said tobe illegal, unlawful or otherwise objectionable.

 

41.    The next question is whether an order passed by a Court could be recalled? Before the Courts below as also before us, the learned counsel       for   respondent   No. 2  urged  that  an order passed by a Magistrate could be recalled.

 

42.           In support of the submission, reliance was placed by the counsel on a two-Judge Bench decision of this Court in K.M. Mathew v. State of Kerala & Anr., (1992) 1 SCC 217. In that case, the appellant was the Editor-in-Chief o a daily newspaper. A complaint was filed against him and others alleging commission of offence punishable under Section 500 read with Section 34, IPC. The Magistrate examined the complainant on oath and issued summons to the accused. The Chief Editor appeared before the Court and prayed for dropping of proceedings against him by  recalling the order on  the ground that there was no allegation as to how he was responsible for publication of news item alleged to have caused  defamation  of the complainant. The Magistrate accepted the plea and dropped the proceedings so far as Chief Editor was concerned. The complainant challenged the said order by filing a revision in the High Court which was allowed. The Chief Editor questioned correctness of the order passed by the High Court.

 

43.        The issue before this Court was whether the Magistrate had power to recall an order of summoning the accused. Considering the relevant provisions of the Code, the Court held that an order of summoning an accused could be recalled by the Magistrate. Such order is merely an interim order and not a judgment and    recalling thereof would not amount to review.

 

44.        The Court stated;

 

"It is open to the accused to plead before the Magistrate that the process against him ought not to have been issued. The Magistrate may drop the proceedings if he is satisfied on reconsideration of the complaint that there is no offence for which the accused could be tried. It is his judicial discretion. No specific provision required for the Magistrate to drop the proceedings or rescind the process. The order issuing the process is an interim order and not a judgment. It can   be varied or recalled. The fact that the process has already been issued is no bar to drop the proceedings if the complaint on the very face of it does not disclose any offence   against    the      accused".  (Emphasis supplied)

 

45.           The correctness of K.M. Mathew again came up for consideration before a three-Judge Bench of this Court  in Adalat  Prasad   v. Rooplal Jindal & Ors., (2004) 7 SCC 338.  In Adalat Prasad, the accused, after issuance of summons against him by the trial Magistrate,filed an application under Section 203 of the Code for dismissal of complaint recalling the order of summons. After hearing the parties, the Magistrate granted the prayer and recalled the summons. The order of the Magistrate was challenged by the complainant in the High Court inter alia on the ground that the Magistrate had     no  jurisdiction  to recall    the   earlier order. The High Court allowed the petition. The accused approached this Court.

 

46.        When the matter was placed for preliminary hearing, the learned counsel for the accused relied on K.M. Mathew wherein it was held that it was open to the Court issuing summons to recall the order on being satisfied that the issuance of summons was   not    in accordance with law. The Court,  however, doubted the correctness of the view taken in K.M. Mathew in view of reference made by a two Judge Bench to a three Judge Bench in Nilamani Routray v. Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd., (1998) 8 SCC 594.

 

47.        The larger Bench considered various provisions of the Code and held that in absence of express provision in the Code, the Court has no    power    to    recall    the    process    issued. The larger Bench, therefore, concluded that K.M. Mathew was not correctly decided and overruled it.

 

48.  The Court concluded;

 

"But after taking cognizance of the complaint  and examining  the complainant and the witnesses if he is satisfied that there is sufficient ground to proceed  with the complaint he can issue process by way of summons under section  204 of   the Code. Therefore what is necessary or a condition  precedent   for     issuing process under section 204 is the satisfaction of the Magistrate either by examination of the complainant and the witnesses or   by   the  inquiry contemplated under section 202 that there is sufficient ground  for proceeding with the complaint hence issue the process under section 204 of the Code. In none of these stages the Code has provided for hearing the summoned accused, for obvious reasons because this is only a preliminary stage and the stage of hearing of the accused  would only arise at   a subsequent stage provided for in the latter provision in the Code. It is true as held by this Court in Mathew's case before issuance of summons the Magistrate should be satisfied that there  is sufficient ground for proceeding with the complaint but that satisfaction is to be arrived at by the  inquiry conducted    by   him   as contemplated under Sections 200 and 202, and the only stage of dismissal of the complaint arises under section 203 of the Code  at which stage the accused has no role to play therefore the question of the accused on receipt of summons approaching the court and making an application for dismissal of the complaint under section 203 of the Code for a reconsideration of the material available  on  record  is   impermissible because by then Section  203 is already over and the Magistrate has proceeded further to Section 204  stage". (Emphasis supplied)

 

49.        Dealing with the contention that an aggrieved party must have  a remedy  if  a Magistrate  takes cognizance of an  offence without there being any allegation against the accused, the Court stated;

 

"It is true that if a Magistrate takes cognizance of an offence, issues process without there being any  allegation against the accused or any  material implicating the accused or in  contravention of provision of Sections 200 & 202, the order of the Magistrate may be vitiated, but then the relief  an aggrieved accused can obtain at      that stage is not by invoking section 203 of the Code because the Criminal Procedure Code does not contemplate a review of an order. Hence in the absence of any review power or inherent power with the subordinate criminal courts, the remedy lies in  invoking Section 482 of Code".  (Emphasis supplied)

 

50.     The law laid down in Adalat Prasad was followed and reiterated by this Court in subsequent cases also [see Subramaniam Sethuraman v. State of Maharashtra, (2004) 13 SCC 324; N.K. Sharma v. Abhimanya, (2005) 13 SCC 213; Everest Advertisement  v. State Government of NCT of Delhi, (2007) 5 SCC 54].

 

51.      From the above discussion, it is clear and well settled that once an order is passed by a competent Court issuing summons or process, it cannot be recalled.

 

52.      In the instant case, the learned Magistrate ordered to join respondent No. 2 as an accused on applications  filed by the appellant and summons was issued to him. A revision filed by the State against that order was dismissed by the Additional Sessions Judge. The Judicial Magistrate, on the facts and in the      circumstances, was right  in dismissing recall application  filed by respondent No. 2.

 

53.    The  revisional  Court, however, held  that the Magistrate had power to recall the earlier order passed by him. For coming  to  that  conclusion, the  Court relied upon K.M. Mathew.  The learned Additional Sessions Judge ought to have considered the material fact in its proper perspective that the     order    passed     by    the learned Magistrate was legal and proper and

 because of that, the revision filed against that order by the State was also dismissed by the revisional Court.

 

54.   It  was, however, contended on behalf of respondent No.2 that even if this Court holds that the Judicial Magistrate  had no power to recall its earlier order and    dismissal of the application by the learned Magistrate was  legal  and  proper, and that a revision petition filed by the State against the said order was dismissed by the Additional Sessions Judge, the Court may   consider an   important  fact  that    the respondent  No. 2, who was really  an `aggrieved  party'  had  preferred two revisions in the Court of Sessions. Hence, even if it is assumed that the trial Court did not possess the power of recalling its order, it would not preclude the revisional Court  from exercising revisional jurisdiction and quashing and setting aside an order passed by a subordinate Court if it was not in accordance with law.

 

55.      Even that ground does not impress us. It is quite possible that in a given case, a Magistrate may take cognizance of an offence illegally or arbitrarily without there being any material whatsoever. Such illegal order should not deprive the accused from contending that the learned Magistrate was wrong and wholly unjustified in entertaining  the complaint or taking cognizance of an offence. In  such cases, however, the accused  is not without  legal remedy.  If  the act of  taking cognizance, issuance of process or joining of an innocent person as an accused is totally uncalled for or ex facie bad in law, it is open to  the  aggrieved  party  to     invke  inherent jurisdiction of the High Court under Section 482 of the Code. If the High Court is satisfied that the order passed by the Magistrate was illegal, improper or arbitrary, it can exercise inherent powers and quash criminal proceedings initiated against the party. But that power is independent and  has nothing        to do with recalling  of an earlier order by the Court which passed it.

 

56.    But in  the present case, even on merits, we are of the considered view that the order passed by the learned Magistrate issuing summons to respondent No.2 could not be said to be unlawful or even improper.

 

57.    When applications under Section 319 of the Code  were preferred by the appellant praying to join respondent No.2 as an accused and to issue summons, the learned Magistrate considered  the evidence of prosecution witnesses and he was satisfied that depositions of witnesses prima  facie  made out offence against respondent No.2.

 

58.    Considering the statements of  PW2- Treasury  Officer, PW14-Senior Assistant and PW11-Assistant Manager, State Bank of Patiala, the learned Magistrate stated;

 

"I have heard the learned counsel  for the accused and the Ld. APP for      the State and have also gone through      the file of this case carefully and  it appears that      Sher   Singh   who  appeared as a prosecution witness in this case was working as a Drawing & Disbursing Officer and Ex. DX audit report discloses that as per Rule 2.2  (II)    of  Punjab   Financial Rules  Volume-I, all transactions should be entered in the cash book as soon as they occur and attested by the head  of the office in token of check, further Rule 2.31(a) provides that with a view to enable the head of the office to see that all amounts drawn from the treasury have been entered in the cash book; he should obtain a list of all bills drawn by him during the previous month and trace all the amounts in the cash book. It was held that embezzlement pointed by the Audit was facilitated due to non- observance of procedure regarding the review of the bill book/bill transit register and reconciliation of the withdrawals    form   the    treasury. Moreover, the evidence led by the prosecution also makes it clear that there is prima-facie evidence against Sher Singh, Head Master as PW2 Satpal Mehta, Treasury Officer has deposed in his cross-examination that amounts from the accounts were withdrawn through Headmaster Rureke Kalan and in   their   register  signatures of Headmaster have been entered and his name is Sher Singh and they have passed the bills after comparing the signatures on the Bills with the specimen signatures of Sher Singh as the   same   are   in  their   record. Similarly, PW14 Prem Sagar, Senior Assistnat in Treasury Office has deposed that Drawing & Disbursing Officer/Authority was Head Master of Rureke Kalan High School and his name was Sher Singh and on the bills signatures of Sher Singh are present which tally   with   the   specimen signatures. Similarly, Prem Chand, Assistant Manager of State Bank of Patiala, PW11 has deposed in his cross-examination that DDO of High School, Rure Ke Kalan is Head Master and the amounts are withdrawn after comparison of specimen  signatures with the signatures on the bills of DDO. So, from the evidence on record, it is quite clear that prima facie      offence against Head Master Sher Singh is made out whose signatures were with the treasury office and the  Treasury Officers have passed the      bills after comparing the specimen signatures with the signatures on the bills and there is no evidence on the record to show that the bills which  are subject matter of embezzlement,  do not bear the signatures of Sher Singh who was DDO of Rureke Kalan High School, so, there is prima facie offence made out to summon Sher Singh, Head Master of Rureke Kalan  High School as accused u/s 319 of  Cr.P.C. is hereby allowed and Sher  Singh, Head Master of Government High School of Rure Ke Kalan is ordered to be summoning as an accused in this case for 1.3.1996. The application of the accused is hereby allowed and is disposed of accordingly".

 

59.        We may recall at this stage that a revision filed by the State (and not by respondent No.2) against the order of  the Magistrate  was dismissed  by the     Assistant Sessions Judge on May 6, 1996.

 

60.   The Revisional Court also considered the deposition of aforesaid witnesses and said;

 

"After going through the impugned order, I find that it was found by trial Magistrate that certain bills have been passed by Sher Singh who was disbursing officer, and PW 14 Prem Sagar, Assistant in the office of Treasury deposed that drawing disbursing officer was Headmaster of Rureke Kalan High School and his namewas Sher Singh who was appended his signatures on the bills which tally with   the   specimen   signatures.   A similar statement was suffered by Assistant anager of State Bank of Patiala examined as PW11 before Trial Magistrate and on account of this evidence read with the statement of PW2 Sat Pal Mehta, Treasury Officer the trial Magistrate found that prima facie offence is made out to summon Sher   Singh    as   an   accused   and accordingly he allowed  the  application. In view of this, we find that the Court has exercised his discretion supported by well reasoned order and the opinion was formed by the Court after recording evidence and in such like cases some times the real offender who has also committed the crime steps into the shoes of complainant in order to save himself and in the instant case also the evidence spells out that the head master of the school thought of a clever device by registering the case against    other    accused at   his instance".


61.       It was after the dismissal of revision filed by the State that respondent No.2 moved the Judicial Magistrate to recall the earlier order. The learned Magistrate held that in view of  dismissal  of  revision by  the Additional Sessions Judge, an application to recall the order was not maintainable. But the Court also stated;

     

"No doubt summoning order is on interim order and not a judgment and the same can be reviewed or recalled by the Magistrate. Proceedings against the accused can be dropped of the complaint on face of it does not disclose any offence against him. In the present case, my learned predecessor after going through the statements of examined prosecution witnesses found that there is prima facie offence made out against the accused Sher Singh.  Only thereafter accused/applicant      She Singh was summoned  vide summoning order dated 22.1.1996 passed by Sh. Varinder Aggarwal,  PCS, the then Judicial Magistrate,  1st Class, Barnala".

 

62. The Revisional court referred to K.K. Mathew and held that a summoning order, being interlocutory in nature, could not be termed as   `judgment' and there was no bar in recalling such order. The  Assistant Sessions Judge decided the revision in 1998. The law governing the field at that time was the law laid down in K.K. Mathew. Adalat Prasad had not seen the light of the day. We, therefore, see nothing wrong on the part of the Assistant Sessions Judge in considering, following and deciding

the case on the basis of K.K. Mathew.

 

63. To us, however, the Revisional Court was not right in interfering with the order passed by the trial Court. We have seen that the learned Magistrate issued summons taking into account evidence led by the prosecution, particularly, by PWs 2, 14 and 11. The Revisional Court was thus having depositions of those witnesses,   the order passed by the learned Magistrate, the order made by the Assistant Sessions Judge in revision instituted by the State and also the order passed by the Magistrate in an application to recall filed by respondent No.2.


64.  In spite of the above material, the Revisional Court interfered with the order ofthe   trial   Court   issuing   summons   by   enteringinto merits of the case.

 

65. The Court said;

 

"As stated above, as per  prosecution case during the period  from 1979 to 1986 accused Bholu Ram was the Clerk of Govt. High School,  Rureke  Kalan    while    Sher    Singh  revision/petitioner appeared to be the Head Master of the School during  the relevant period. It appears that  during that period accused Bholu Ram  had been drawing various payments from the Treasury by submitting false and bogus Mills to the Treasury, but did not appear to have disbursed the  amount of those bills to any person  and allegedly mis-appropriated the amount of those false and bogus bills for which 17 separate challans in  case FIR No.87/86    P.S.   Tappa appeared to have been filed against him and he appeared to be facing prosecution    in   all   those cases.  However, vide order dated 22.1.1996 of the Ld. Trial Magistrate in all those   cases    Sher   Singh    revision  petitioners appeared to have been  summoned as an accused in those cases  on the ground that various bills on the basis of which those payments were drawn appeared to have been      signed by Sher Singh as a Drawing and Disbursing    Officer    and    he   also      appeared to be liable in all those cases. It appears that Sher Singh  revision petitioners has already been examined as a prosecution witness in various   cases. Though  in  his statement recorded in the Court, he denied having signed various bills. It appears that those bills appeared to have been signed by him as a Drawing and Disbursing Officer. Being   a DO of the School, it was the duty   of Sher Singh to sign various bills for presentation in the treasury, but  it was nevertheless the duty Bholu Ram, Clerk to maintain the record  regarding the disbursement of those amounts. In case Bholu Ram, Clerk      allegedly prepared false and bogus bills and obtained the signatures of the DDO on the same, be alone appeared to be liable to account for the payment of those bills when those amounts did not appear to have been disbursed   to   various  persons as   mentioned n various Bills and Bholu  ram allegedly misappropriated those amounts. The mere fact that Sher  Singh signed those bills as Drawing and Disbursing Officer will not make  him   criminally liable when the  amounts of the  various bills, according to the prosecution case, were allegedly  misappropriated  by  Bholu Ram alone".

 

66.  In   our considered opinion, the Revisional Court was not justified in entering into correctness or otherwise of the evidence at  the  stage of  issuance of   summons   to respondent No.2. Admittedly, the Judicial Magistrate had considered a limited question whether on the basis of evidence of prosecution witnesses, prima facie offence had been made out against respondent No.2. He was, on the basis of such evidence, was satisfied that the case was required to be gone into and issued a summons. To us, the Revisional Court was not right in interfering with that order. Hence, even on  that ground, the order was not in  accordance with law.

 

67. The leaned counsel for respondent No.2, however, submitted that the Revisional Court was right in any case in allowing the revision and in quashing proceedings against the said respondent on the ground of absence of sanction      as    required       by    Section     197    of    the Code.

 

68.  We express our inability to agree with the learned counsel. It is settled law that offences punishable under Sections 409, 420, 467,    468,  471  etc.     can    by   no    stretch  of imagination by their very nature be regarded as having been committed by a public servant while `acting or purporting to act in discharge of official duty' [vide  Prakash    Singh   Badal    v. State of Punjab, (2007) 1 SCC 1].

 

69. The Revisional Court was aware of legal position. It was, however, held by the Court that at the most there was negligence on the part of respondent No.2 but there was no criminal intent and he cannot be held criminally liable. We have already held that mens rea can only be decided at the time of trial and not at the stage of issuing summons. Moreover, a point as to need or necessity of sanction can be taken during the conduct of trial or at any stage of  the proceedings. Hence, proceedings could not have been quashed on the ground of want of sanction in the present case. The order of the Revisional Court deserves to be set aside even on that ground.

 

70. It was also urged that no applications by the appellant could have been entertained by the trial Court after about 8 to 10 years from the date of filing of FIR. Now, an application under Section 319 of the Code can only be made to a Court and the Court may exercise the power under    the    said   Section   if   it    appears   from evidence that any person other than the accused had also committed an offence for which he can be tried together with the accused. It was the case of the appellant that it was during the course of prosecution evidence that he came to know that signatures of respondent No. 2 were sent for examination, some report was received by the prosecution which was not produced in Court and on the basis of such evidence, the case was made out against respondent No.2. If in these circumstances, applications were made and the prayer was granted, we see no infirmity therein.

 

71. In our opinion, the Revisional Court, i.e. the Court of Additional Sessions   Judge ought not to have interfered with the order passed by the trial court under Section 319 of the Code. As already noted earlier, the order of addition of respondent No. 2 as an accused and summoning him  was  not immediately challenged by respondent No. 2. The challenge was by the State and it failed. After a long time, the    respondent   No. 2 approached the Revisional Court. Since the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate was in consonance with law, the Additional  Sessions Judge should have refrained from exercising  revisional jurisdiction.

 

72. We may examine the role of the State also. We have already noted earlier that an order  passed by the Judicial Magistrate summoning respondent  No.2 as accused was challenged by the State by filing a revision in the Court of  Sessions, which  was dismissed. Even in this Court, the State supported respondent No.2. An affidavit in reply is filed by the State through Deputy Superintendent of Police in  March  2007,  even  before  counter affidavit was filed by contesting respondent  No.2.Though in the affidavit, it  is not necessary to deal  with  law  points   and/or decisions  rendered  by a Court of  law, the deponent refers to and relies on K.K. Mathew expressly overruled  by a  larger Bench in Adalat Prasad. No reference at all has been made to Adalat Prasad. It is respondent No.2 who,    in his counter, refers to both the decisions. In the totality of the facts and circumstances, the submission of the learned counsel  for the appellant that the State Authorities were helping  and assisting respondent No.2 cannot be said to be totally ill-founded or without substance. The State, in our opinion, could   have easily avoided such embarrassment.

 

73.  For the foregoing reasons, the appeal deserves to be allowed and  is  accordingly allowed.  The orders passed by the Additional Sessions Judge and the High Court are set aside and  the order passed by the  Judicial Magistrate, Barnala is restored. Since the matter pertains to FIR of 1986, the learned Magistrate is directed to conclude the trial expeditiously.

 

74. Before parting with the matter, we may clarify that we have not entered into allegations and counter-allegations. We have considered   the   facts     and   circumstanced to a limited extent to decide correctness of  the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate under Section 319 of the Code. We make it clear that we may not be understood to have expressed any opinion on the merits of the matter. As and when the case will come up for hearing, it will be decided strictly on its own merits without being inhibited or influenced by any observations made by the trial court, by the Additional Sessions Judge, by the High Court or by us.

 

75.              Ordered accordingly.