PUNJAB AND HARYANA HIGH COURT
State of Punjab
Vs
Shamsher Singh
(S.S.Dewan, J.)
19.05.1983
JUDGEMENT
S.S.Dewan, J.
( 1. ) SHAMSHER Singh, Rup Singh and Kashmira Singh were being prosecuted in the Court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Faridkot, for the offence under Section 9 of the Punjab Security of State Act, 1953 and 3 of the Police (Incitement to Disaffection) Act, 1922. The learned Public Prosecutor, filed an application under Section 321 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (for short, the Code) on the grounds that the Government had decided to withdraw all the cases against the agitating police personnel and that to keep peace and security in the State and with a view to create a good-will between the Employers and the Employees, he may be allowed to withdraw from the prosecution. The learned Magistrate however, declined his consent to withdraw from the prosecution due to insufficient grounds for withdrawal. Feeling aggrieved the accused-petitioners have now come up in revision.
( 2. ) THE learned counsel for the petitioners had urged that the order of the
learned Chief Judicial Magistrate, Faridkot, cannot be sustained. It is
contended that Section 321 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 (For short,
the Code) invests the Public Prosecutor incharge of the case with the power to
exercise his discretion to withdraw from the prosecution with the consent of
the Court at any time before the judgment is pronounced. It is further urged
that on the facts and circumstances of this case, the ends of public justice
are better served by withdrawal rather than continuation of the prosecution
against the petitioners and that of the prosecution against the petitioners and
that it will also be in the interest of administration of Justice if the Public
Prosecutor is permitted to withdraw from the prosecution in the peculiar
circumstances of the case. As to under what circumstances, the Court
should grant consent and what would be the germane considerations for
exercising the jurisdiction under Section 321 of the Code, the law has been
declared by the Supreme Court in a number of cases. The question came up before
the Supreme Court in The State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey1, The
following principles emerged from the aforesaid decision :- (1) Inasmuch
as the granting of consent would result in discharge or acquittal and would be
subject to correction by the High Court under Section 435, 436 and 439 or
section 417 of the Criminal P.C. the function of the Court is a judicial
function. (2) The consent must be accorded or withheld in exercise of judicial
discretion. (3) It is not essential that in exercising the discretion, the
Court should be restricted by the material gathered by the Judicial method. (4)
The initiative is with the Public Prosecutor and the Court has only to consider
the question as to whether consent should be accorded or withheld. (5) The
Court has to satisfy itself that the executive function of the Public
Prosecutor has not been improperly exercised or that it is not an attempt to
interfere with the normal course of justice for illegitimate reasons or
purposes. (6) The functions of the Court are intended to prevent the abuse of
the process of law.
( 3. ) A similar question arose before the Supreme Court in M.N.
Sankaranarayanan Nair v. P.V Balakrishnan2, wherein the Court
had approved the principles laid down in The State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh
Pandey, (supra) and has further observed as under :- "The section
does not, however, indicate the reasons which should weigh with the Public
Prosecutor to move the Court nor the grounds on which the Court will grant or
refuse permission. Though the Section is in general terms and does not circumscribe
the powers of the Public Prosecutor to seek permission to withdraw from the
prosecution, the essential consideration which is implicit in the grant of the
power is that it should be in the interest of administration of justice which
may be either that it will not be able to produce sufficient evidence to
sustain the charge or that subsequent information before prosecuting agency
would falsify the prosecution evidence or any other similar circumstances which
it is difficult to predicate as they are dependent entirely on the facts and
circumstances of each case. Nonetheless it is the duty of the Court also to see
in furtherance of justice that the permission is not sought on grounds
extraneous to the interest of justice or that offences which are offences
against the State go unpunished merely because the government as a matter of
general policy or expediency unconnected with its duty to prosecute offenders
under the law, directs the Public Prosecutor to withdraw from the prosecution
and the Prosecutor merely does so at its behest." ;
Cases Referred.
1AIR 1957 S.C. 389
2AIR 1972 SC 496