CODE OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, 1973 | SECTION 1 TO 320
CODE
OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, 1973 NO.2
OF 1974 [25th
January, 1974.]
An
Act to consolidate and amend the law relating to Criminal Procedure.
BE
it enacted by Parliament in the Twenty-fourth Year of the Republic of India as
follows:-
CHAPTER
I
PRELIMINARY
1.Short
title, extent and commencement.-
(1)
This Act may be called the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
(2) It extends to the whole of India except the State of Jammu and Kashmir:
Provided
that the provisions of this Code, other than those relating to Chapters VIII, X
and XI thereof, shall not apply-
(a)to
the State of Nagaland,
(b)to
the tribal areas,
but
the concerned State Government may, by notification, apply such provisions or
any of them to the whole or part of the State of Nagaland or such tribal areas,
as the case may be, with such supplemental, incidental or consequential
modifications, as may be specified in the notification.
Explanation.-
In this section, "tribal areas" means the territories which
immediately before the 21st day of January, 1972, were included in the tribal
areas of Assam, as referred to in paragraph 20 of the Sixth Schedule to the
Constitution, other than those within the local limits of the municipality of
Shillong.
(3)
It shall come into force on the 1st day of April, 1974.
2.Definitions.-
In this Code, unless the context otherwise requires, -
(a)"bailable
offence" means an offence which is shown as bailable in the First
Schedule, or which is made bailable by any other law for the time being in
force; and "non-bailable offence" means any other offence;
(b)"charge"
includes any head of charge when the charge contains more heads than one;
(c)"cognizable
offence" means an offence for which, and "cognizable case" means
a case in which, a police officer may, in accordance with the First Schedule or
under any other law for the time being in force, arrest without warrant;
(d)"complaint"
means any allegation made orally or in writing to a Magistrate, with a view to
his taking action under this Code, that some person, whether known or unknown,
has committed an offence, but does not include a police report.
Explanation.-
A report made by a police officer in a case which discloses, after
investigation, the commission of a non-cognizable offence shall be deemed to be
a complaint; and the police officer by whom such report is made shall be deemed
to be the complainant;
(e)"High
Court" means, -
(i)
in relation to any State, the High Court for that State;
(ii)
in relation to a Union territory to which the jurisdiction of the High Court
for a State has been extended by law, that High Court;
(iii)
in relation to any other Union territory, the highest Court of criminal appeal
for that territory other than the Supreme Court of India;
(f)"Indian"
means the territories to which this Code extends;
(g)"inquiry"
means every inquiry, other than a trial, conducted under this Code by a
Magistrate or Court;
(h)"investigation"
includes all the proceedings under this Code for the collection of evidence
conducted by a police officer or by any person (other than a Magistrate) who is
authorised by a Magistrate in this behalf;
(i)"
judicial proceeding" includes any proceeding in the course of which
evidence is or may be legally taken on oath;
(j)"local
jurisdiction", in relation to a Court or Magistrate, means the local area
within which the Court or Magistrate may exercise all or any of its or his
powers under this Code;
(k)"metropolitan
area" means the area declared, or deemed to be declared, under section 8,
to be a metropolitan area;
(l)"non-cognizable
offence" means an offence for which, and "non-cognizable case"
means a case in which, a police officer has no authority to arrest without
warrant;
(m)"notification"
means a notification published in the Official Gazette;
(n)"offence"
means any act or omission made punishable by any law for the time being
in
force and includes any act in respect of which a complaint may be made under
section 20 of the Cattle-trespass Act, 1871( 1 of 1871);
(o)"officer
in charge of a police station" includes, when the officer in charge of the
police station is absent from the station-house or unable from illness or other
cause to perform his duties, the police officer present at the station-house who
is next in rank to such officer and is above the rank of constable or, when the
State Government so directs, any other police officer so present;
(p)"place"
includes a house, building, tent, vehicle and vessel;
(q)"pleader",
when used with reference to any proceeding in any Court, means a person
authorised by or under any law for the time being in force, to practise in such
Court, and includes any other person appointed with the permission of the Court
to act in such proceeding;
(
r ) " police report" means a report forwarded by a police officer to
a Magistrate under sub-section
(2) of section 173;
(s)"police
report" means a report forwarded by a police officer or specially by the
State
Government,
to be a police station, and includes any local area specified by the State
Government in this behalf;
(t)"prescribed"
means prescribed by rules made under this Code;
(u)"Public
Prosecutor" means any person appointed under section 24, and includes any
person acting under the directions of a Public Prosecutor;
(v)"sub-division"
means a sub-division of a district;
(w)"summons-case"
means a case relating to an offence, and not being a warrant-case;
(x)"warrant-case"
means a case relating to an offence punishable with death, imprisonment for
life or imprisonment for a term exceeding two years;
(y)words
and expressions used herein and not defined but defined in the Indian Penal
Code (45 of 1860) have the meanings respectively assigned to them in that Code.
3.Construction
of references.-
(1)
In this Code, -
(a)
any reference, without any qualifying words, to a Magistrate, shall be
construed, unless the context otherwise requires, -
(i)in
relation to an area outside a metropolitan area, as a reference to a Judicial
Magistrate;
(ii)in
relation to a metropolitan area, as a reference to a Metropolitan Magistrate;
(b)
any reference to a Magistrate of the second class shall, in relation to an area
outside a metropolitan area, be construed as a reference to a Judicial
Magistrate of the second class, and, in relation to a metropolitan area, as a
reference to a Metropolitan Magistrate;
(c)
any reference to a Magistrate of the first class shall, -
(i)in
relation to a metropolitan area, be construed as a reference to a Metropolitan
Magistrate exercising jurisdiction in that area,
(ii)in
relation to any other area, be construed as a reference to a Judicial
Magistrate of the first class exercising jurisdiction in that area;
(d)
any reference to the Chief Judicial Magistrate shall, in relation to a
metropolitan area, be construed as a reference to the Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate exercising jurisdiction in that area.
(2)
In this Code, unless the context otherwise requires, any reference to the Court
of a Judicial Magistrate shall, in relation to a metropolitan area, be
construed as a reference to the Court of the Metropolitan Magistrate for that
area.
(3)
Unless the context otherwise requires, any reference in any enactment passed
before the commencement of this Code, -
(a)
to a Magistrate of the first class, shall be construed as a reference to a
Judicial Magistrate of the first class;
(b)
to a Magistrate of the second class or of the third class, shall be construed
as a reference to a Judicial Magistrate of the second class;
(c)
to a Presidency Magistrate or Chief Presidency Magistrate, shall be construed
as a reference, respectively, to a Metropolitan Magistrate or the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate;
(d)
to any area which is included in a metropolitan area, as a reference to such
metropolitan area, and any reference to a Magistrate of the first class or of
the second class in relation to such area, shall be construed as reference to
the Metropolitan Magistrate exercising jurisdiction in such area.
(4)
Where, under any law, other than this Code, the function exercisable by a
Magistrate relate to matters-
(a)
which involve the appreciation or sifting of evidence or the formulation of any
decision which exposes any person to any punishment or penalty or detention in
custody pending investigation, inquiry or trial or would have the effect of
sending him for trial before any Court,they shall, subject to the provisions of
this Code, be exercisable by a Judicial Magistrate; or
(b)
which are administrative or executive in nature, such as, the granting of a
licence, the suspension or cancellation of a licence, sanctioning a prosecution
or withdrawing from a prosecution, they shall, subject as aforesaid, be
exercisable by an Executive Magistrate.
4.Trial
of offences under the Indian Penal Code and other laws.-
(1)
All offences under the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) shall be investigated,
inquired into, tried, and otherwise dealt with according to the provisions
hereinafter contained.
(2)
All offences under any other law shall be investigated, inquired into, tried,
and otherwise dealt
with
according to the same provisions, but subject to any enactment for the time
being in force
regulating
the manner or place of investigating, inquiring into, trying or otherwise
dealing with
such
offences.
5.Saving.-
Nothing contained in this Code shall, in the absence of a specific provision to
the contrary, affect any special or local law for the time being in force, or
any special jurisdiction or power conferred, or any special form of procedure
prescribed, by any other law for the time being in force.
CHAPTER II
CONSTITUTION
OF CRIMINAL COURTS AND OFFICES
6.Classes
of Criminal Courts.-
Besides
the High Courts and the Courts constituted under any law, other than this Code,
there shall be, in every State, the following classes of Criminal Courts,
namely:-
(i)
Courts of Session;
(ii)
Judicial Magistrates of the first class and, in any metropolitan area,
Metropolitan Magistrates;
(iii)
Judicial Magistrates of the second class; and
(iv)
Executive Magistrates.
7.Territorial
divisions.-
(1)
Every State shall be a sessions division or shall consist of sessions
divisions; and every sessions division shall, for the purposes of this Code, be
a district or consist of districts:
Provided
that every metropolitan area shall, for the said purposes, be a separate
sessions division and district.
(2)
The State Government may, after consultation with the High Court, alter the
limits or the number of such divisions and districts.
(3)
The State Government may, after consultation with the High Court, divide any
district into sub-divisions and may alter the limits or the number of such
sub-divisions.
(4)
The sessions divisions, districts and sub-divisions existing in a State at the
commencement of this Code, shall be deemed to have been formed under this
section.
8.Metropolitan areas.-
(1)
The State Government may, by notification, declare that , as from such date as
may be specified in the notification, any area in the State comprising a city
or town whose population exceeds one million shall be a metropolitan area for
the purposes of this Code.
(2)
As from the commencement of this Code, each of the Presidency-towns of Bombay,
Calcutta and Madras and the city of Ahmedabad shall be deemed to be declared
under sub-section (1) to be a metropolitan area.
(3)
The State Government may, by notification, extend, reduce or alter the limits
of a metropolitan area but the reduction or alteration shall not be so made as
to reduce the population of such area to less than one million.
(4)
Where, after an area has been declared, or deemed to have been declared to be,
a metropolitan area, the population of such area falls below one million, such
area shall, on and from such date as the State Government may, by notification,
specify in this behalf, cease to be a metropolitan area; but notwithstanding
such cesser, any inquiry, trial or appeal pending immediately before such
cesser before any Court or Magistrate in such area shall continue to be dealt
with under this Code, as if such cesser had not taken place.
(5)
Where the State Government reduces or alters, under sub-section (3), the limits
of any metropolitan area, such reduction or alteration shall not affect any
inquiry, trial or appeal pending immediately before such reduction or
alteration before any Court or Magistrate, and every such inquiry, trial or
appeal shall continue to be dealt with under this Code as if such reduction or
alteration had not taken place.
Explanation.-
In this section, the expression "population" means the population as
ascertained at the last preceding census of which the relevant figures have
been published.
9.Court
of Session.-
(1)The
State Government shall establish a Court of Session for every sessions
division.
(2)
Every Court of Session shall be presided over by a Judge, to be appointed by
the High Court.
(3)
The High Court may also appoint Additional Sessions Judges and Assistant
Sessions Judges to exercise jurisdiction in a Court of Session.
(4)
The Sessions Judge of one sessions division may be appointed by the High Court
to be also an Additional Sessions Judge of another division, and in such case
he may sit for the disposal of cases at such place or places in the other
division as the High Court may direct.
(5)
Where the office of the Sessions Judge is vacant, the High Court may make
arrangements for the disposal of any urgent application which is, or may be,
made or pending before such Court of Session by an Additional or Assistant
Sessions Judge, or, if there be no Additional or Assistant Sessions Judge, by a
Chief Judicial Magistrate, in the sessions division; and every such Judge or
Magistrate shall have jurisdiction to deal with any such application.
(6)
The Court of Session shall ordinarily hold its sitting at such place or places
as the High Court may, by notification, specify; but, if, in any particular
case, the Court of Session is of opinion that it will tend to the general
convenience of the parties and witnesses to hold its sittings at any other
place in the sessions division, it may, with the consent of the prosecution and
the accused, sit at that place for the disposal of the case or the examination
of any witness or witnesses therein.
Explanation.-
For the purposes of this Code, "appointment" does not include the
first appointment, posting or promotion of a person by the Government to any
Service, or post in connection with the affairs of the Union or of a State,
where under any law, such appointment, posting or promotion is required to be
made by Government.
10.Subordination
of Assistant Sessions Judges.-
(1)
All Assistant Sessions Judges shall be subordinate to the Sessions Judge in
whose Court they exercise jurisdiction.
(2)
The Sessions Judge may, from time to time, make rules consistent with this
Code, as to the distribution of business among such Assistant Sessions Judges.
(3)
The Sessions Judge may also make provision for the disposal of any urgent
application, in the event of his absence or inability to act, by an Additional
or Assistant Sessions Judge, or, if there be no Additional or Assistant
Sessions Judge, by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, and every such Judge or
Magistrate shall be deemed to have jurisdiction to deal with any such
application.
11.Courts
of Judicial Magistrates.-
(1)
In every district (not being a metropolitan area), there shall be established
as many Courts of Judicial Magistrates of the first class and of the second
class, and at such places, as the State Government may, after consultation with
the High Court, by notification, specify.
(2)
The presiding officers of such Courts shall be appointed by the High Court.
(3)
The High Court may, whenever it appears to it to be expedient or necessary,
confer the powers of a Judicial Magistrate of the first class or of the second
class on any member of the Judicial Service of the State, functioning as a
Judge in a Civil Court.
12.Chief
Judicial Magistrate and Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, etc.-
(1)
In every district (not being a metropolitan area), the High Court shall appoint
a Judicial Magistrate of the first class to be the Chief Judicial Magistrate.
(2)
The High Court may appoint any Judicial Magistrate of the first class to be an
Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, and such Magistrate shall have all or any
of the powers of a Chief Judicial Magistrate under this Code or under any other
law for the time being in force as the High Court may direct.
(3)
(a) The High Court may designate any Judicial Magistrate of the first class in
any sub-division as the Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate and relieve him of
the responsibilities specified in this section as occasion requires.
(b)
Subject to the general control of the Chief Judicial Magistrate, every
Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate shall also have and exercise, such powers of
supervision and control over the work of the Judicial Magistrates (other than
Additional Chief Judicial Magistrates) in the sub-division as the High Court
may, by general or special order, specify in this behalf.
13.Special
Judicial Magistrates.-
(1)
The High Court may, if requested by the Central or State Government so to do,
confer upon any person who holds or has held any post under the Government, all
or any of the powers conferred or conferrable by or under this Code on a
Judicial Magistrate of the second class, in respect to particular cases or to
particular classes of cases or to cases generally, in any district, not being a
metropolitan area:
Provided
that no such power shall be conferred on a person unless he possesses such
qualification
or
experience in relation to legal affairs as the High Court may, by rules,
specify.
(2)
Such Magistrates shall be called Special Judicial Magistrates and shall be
appointed for such
term,
not exceeding one year at a time, as the High Court may, by general or special
order, direct.
14.Local
jurisdiction of Judicial Magistrates.-
(1)
Subject to the control of the High Court, the Chief Judicial Magistrate may,
from time to time, define the local limits of the areas within which the
Magistrates appointed under section 11 or under section 13 may exercise all or
any of the powers with which they may respectively be invested under this Code.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided by such definition, the jurisdiction and powers of
every such
Magistrate
shall extend throughout the district.
15.Subordination
of Judicial Magistrates.-
(1)
Every Chief Judicial Magistrate shall be subordinate to the Sessions Judge; and
every other Judicial Magistrate shall, subject to the general control of the
Sessions Judge, be subordinate to the Chief Judicial Magistrate.
(2)
The Chief Judicial Magistrate may, from time to time, make rules or give
special orders, consistent with this Code, as to the distribution of business
among the Judicial Magistrates subordinate to him.
16.Courts
of Metropolitan Magistrates.-
(1)
In every metropolitan area, there shall be established as many Courts of
Metropolitan Magistrates,
and at such places, as the State Government may, after consultation with the
High Court, by notification, specify.
(2)
The presiding officers of such Courts shall be appointed by the High Court.
(3)
The jurisdiction and powers of every Metropolitan Magistrate shall extend
throughout the metropolitan
area.
17.Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate and Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrates.-
(1)
The High Court shall, in relation to every metropolitan area within its local
jurisdiction, appoint a Metropolitan Magistrate to be the Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate for such metropolitan area.
(2)
The High Court may appoint any Metropolitan Magistrate to be an Additional
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, and such Magistrate shall have all or any of the
powers of a Chief Metropolitan Magistrate under this Code or under any other
law for the time being in force as the High Court may direct.
18.Special
Metropolitan Magistrates.-
(1)
The High Court may, if requested by the Central or State Government so to do,
confer upon any person who holds or has held any post under the Government, all
or any of the powers conferred or conferrable by or under this Code on a
Metropolitan Magistrate, in respect to particular cases or to particular
classes of cases or to cases generally, in any metropolitan area within its
local jurisdiction:
Provided
that no such power shall be conferred on a person unless he possesses such
qualification or experience in relation to legal affairs as the High Court may,
by rules, specify.
(2)
Such Magistrates shall be called Special Metropolitan Magistrates and shall be
appointed for such term, not exceeding one year at a time, as the High Court
may, by general or special order, direct.
(3)
Notwithstanding anything contained elsewhere in this Code, a Special
Metropolitan Magistrate shall not impose a sentence which a Judicial Magistrate
of the second class is not competent to impose outside the Metropolitan area.
19.Subordination
of Metropolitan Magistrates.-
(1)
The Chief Metropolitan Magistrate and every Additional Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate shall be subordinate to the Sessions Judge; and every other
Metropolitan Magistrate shall, subject to the general control of the Sessions
Judge, be subordinate to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate.
(2)
The High Court may, for the purposes of this Code, define the extent of the
subordination, if any, of the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrates to the
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate.
(3)
The Chief Metropolitan Magistrate may, from time to time, make rules or give
special orders, consistent with this Code, as to the distribution of business among
the Metropolitan Magistrates and as to the allocation of business to an
Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate.
20.Executive
Magistrates.-
(1)
In every district and in every metropolitan area, the State Government may
appoint as many persons as it thinks fit to be Executive Magistrates and shall
appoint one of them to be the District Magistrate.
(2)
The State Government may appoint any Executive Magistrate to be an Additional
district Magistrate, and such Magistrate shall have all or any of the powers of
a District Magistrate under this Code or under any other law for the time being
in force.
(3)
Whenever, in consequence of the office of a District Magistrate becoming
vacant, any officer succeeds temporarily to the executive administration of the
district, such officer shall, pending the orders of the State Government,
exercise all the powers and perform all the duties respectively conferred and
imposed by this Code on the District Magistrate.
(4)
The State Government may place an Executive Magistrate in charge of a
sub-division and may relieve him of the charge as occasion requires; and the
Magistrate so placed in charge of a sub-division shall be called the
Sub-divisional Magistrate.
(5)
Nothing in this section shall preclude the State Government from conferring,
under any law for the time being in force, on a Commissioner of Police, all or
any of the powers of an Executive Magistrate in relation to a metropolitan
area.
21.Special
Executive Magistrates.-
The
State Government may appoint, for such term as it may think fit, Executive
Magistrates, to be known as Special Executive Magistrates for particular areas
or for the performance of particular functions and confer on such Special
Executive Magistrates such of the powers as are conferrable under this Code on
Executive Magistrates, as it may deem fit.
22.Local
jurisdiction of Executive Magistrates.-
(1)
Subject to the control of the State Government, the District Magistrate may,
from time to time, define the local limits of the areas within which the
Executive Magistrates may exercise all or any of the powers with which they may
be invested under this Code.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided by such definition, the jurisdiction and powers of
every such Magistrate shall extend throughout the district.
23.Subordination of Executive Magistrates.-
(1)
All Executive Magistrates, other than the Additional District Magistrate, shall
be subordinate to the District Magistrate, and every Executive Magistrate
(other than the Sub-divisional Magistrate) exercising powers in a sub-division
shall also be subordinate to the Sub-divisional Magistrate, subject, however,
to the general control of the District Magistrate.
(2)
The District Magistrate may, from time to time, make rules or give special
orders, consistent with this Code, as to the distribution of business among the
Executive Magistrates subordinate to him and as to the allocation of business
to an Additional District Magistrate.
24.Public
Prosecutors.-
(1)For
every High Court, the Central Government or the State Government shall, after
consultation with the High Court, appoint a Public Prosecutor for conducting,
in such Court, any prosecution, appeal or other proceeding on behalf of the
Central or State Government, as the case may be.
(2)
For every district the State Government shall appoint a Public Prosecutor and
may also appoint one or more Additional Public Prosecutors for the district.
(3)
The District Magistrate shall, in consultation with the Sessions Judge, prepare
a panel of names of persons who are, in his opinion, fit to be appointed as the
Public Prosecutor or Additional Public Prosecutor for the district.
(4)
No person shall be appointed by the State Government as the Public Prosecutor
or Additional Public Prosecutor for the district unless his name appears on the
panel of names prepared by the District Magistrate under sub-section (3).
(5)
A person shall only be eligible to be appointed as a Public Prosecutor or an
Additional Public Prosecutor under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2), if he
has been in practice as an advocate for not less than seven years.
(6)
The Central Government or the State Government may appoint, for the purposes of
any case or class of cases, an advocate who has been in practice for not less
than ten years, as a Special Public Prosecutor.
25.Assistant
Public Prosecutors.-
(1)
The State Government shall appoint in every district one or more Assistant
Public Prosecutors for conducting prosecutions in the Courts of Magistrates.
(2)
Save as otherwise provided in sub-section (3), no police officer shall be
eligible to be appointed as an Assistant Public Prosecutor.
(3)
Where no Assistant Public Prosecutor is available for the purposes of any
particular case, the
District Magistrate may appoint any other person to be the Assistant Public
Prosecutor in charge of that case:
Provided
that a police officer shall not be so appointed-
(a)
if he has taken any part in the investigation into the offence with respect to
which the accused is being prosecuted; or
(b)
if he is below the rank of Inspector.
CHAPTER III
POWER
OF COURTS
26.Courts
by which offences are triable.-
Subject
to the other provisions of this Code.-
(a)
any offence under the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) may be tried by -
(i) the High Court, or
(ii)
the Court of Session, or
(iii)
any other Court by which such offence is shown in the First Schedule to be
triable;
(b)
any offence under any other law shall, when any Court is mentioned in this
behalf in such law, be tried by such Court and when no Court is so mentioned,
may be tried by-
(i)
the High Court, or
(ii)
any other Court by which such offence is shown in the First Schedule to be
triable.
27.Jurisdiction
in the case of juveniles.-
Any
offence not punishable with death or imprisonment for life, committed by any
person who at the date when he appears or is brought before the Court is under
the age of sixteen years, may be tried by the Court of a Chief Judicial
Magistrate, or by any Court specially empowered under the Children Act,
1960,(60 of 1960) or any other law for the time being in force providing for
the treatment, training and rehabilitation of youthful offenders.
28.Sentences
which High Courts and Sessions Judges may pass.-
(1)
A High Court may pass any sentence authorised by law.
(2)
A Sessions Judge or Additional Sessions Judge may pass any sentence authorised
by law; but any sentence of death passed by any such Judge shall be subject to
confirmation by the High Court.
(3)
An Assistant Sessions Judge may pass any sentence authorised by law except a
sentence of death or of imprisonment for life or of imprisonment for a term
exceeding ten years.
29.Sentences
which Magistrates may pass.-
(1)
The Court of a Chief Judicial Magistrate may pass any sentence authorised by
law except a sentence of death or of imprisonment for life or of imprisonment
for a term exceeding seven years.
(2)
The Court of a Magistrate of the first class may pass a sentence of
imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years, or of fine not exceeding
five thousand rupees, or of both.
(3)
The Court of a Magistrate of the second class may pass a sentence of imprisonment
for a term not exceeding one year, or of fine not exceeding one thousand
rupees, or of both.
(4)
The Court of a Chief Metropolitan Magistrate shall have the powers of the Court
of a Chief Judicial Magistrate and that of a Metropolitan Magistrate, the
powers of the Court of a Magistrate of the first class.
30.Sentence
of imprisonment in default of fine.-
(1)
The Court of a Magistrate may award such term of imprisonment in default of
payment of fine as is authorised by law:
Provided
that the term-
(a)
is not in excess of the powers of the Magistrate under section 29;
(b)
shall not, where imprisonment has been awarded as part of the substantive
sentence, exceed one-fourth of the term of imprisonment which the Magistrate is
competent to inflict as punishment for the offence otherwise than as
imprisonment in default of payment of the fine.
(2)
The imprisonment awarded under this section may be in addition to a substantive
sentence of imprisonment for the maximum term awardable by the Magistrate under
section 29.
31.Sentence
in cases of conviction of several offences at one trial.-
(1)
When a person is convicted at one trial of two or more offences, the Court may,
subject to the provisions of section 71 of the Indian Penal Code,(45 of 1860)
sentence him for such offences, to the several punishments prescribed therefor
which such Court is competent to inflict; such punishments when consisting of
imprisonment to commence the one after the expiration of the other in such
order as the Court may direct, unless the Court directs that such punishments
shall run concurrently.
(2)
In the case of consecutive sentences, it shall not be necessary for the Court
by reason only of the aggregate punishment for the several offences being in
excess of the punishment which it is competent to inflict on conviction of a
single offence, to send the offender for trial before a higher Court:
Provided
that-
(a)
in no case shall such person be sentenced to imprisonment for a longer period
than fourteen years;
(b)
the aggregate punishment shall not exceed twice the amount of punishment which
the Court is competent to inflict for a single offence.
(3)
For the purpose of appeal by a convicted person, the aggregate of the
consecutive sentences passed
against him under this section shall be deemed to be a single sentence.
32.Mode
of conferring powers.-
(1)
In conferring powers under this Code, the High Court or the State Government,
as the case may be, may, by order, empower persons specially by name or in
virtue of their offices or classes of officials generally by their official
titles.
(2)
Every such order shall take effect from the date on which it is communicated to
the person so empowered.
33.Powers
of officers appointed.-
Whenever
any person holding an office in the service of Government who has been invested
by the High Court or the State Government with any powers under this Code
throughout any local area is appointed to an equal or higher office of the same
nature, within a like local area under the same State Government, he shall,
unless the High Court or the State Government, as the case may be, otherwise
directs, or has otherwise directed, exercise the same powers in the local area
in which he is so appointed.
34.Withdrawal of powers.-
(1)
The High Court or the State Government, as the case may be, may withdraw all or
any of the powers conferred by it under this Code on any person or by any
officer subordinate to it.
(2)
Any powers conferred by the Chief Judicial Magistrate or by the District
Magistrate may be withdrawn
by the respective Magistrate by whom such powers were conferred.
35.Powers
of Judges and Magistrates exercisable by their successors-in-office.-
(1)
Subject to the other provisions of this Code, the powers and duties of a Judge
or Magistrate may be exercised or performed by his successor-in-office.
(2)
When there is any doubt as to who is the successor-in-office of any Additional
or Assistant Sessions Judge, the Sessions Judge shall determine by order in
writing the Judge who shall, for the purposes of this Code or of any
proceedings or order thereunder, be deemed to be the successor-in-office of
such Additional or Assistant Sessions Judge.
(3)
When there is any doubt as to who is the successor-in-office of any Magistrate,
the Chief Judicial Magistrate, or the District Magistrate, as the case may be,
shall determine by order in writing the Magistrate who shall, for the purpose
of this Code or of any proceedings or order thereunder, be deemed to be the
successor-in-office of such Magistrate.
CHAPTER IV
A.- POWERS OF SUPERIOR OFFICERS OF POLICE
36.Powers
of superior officers of police.-
Police
officers superior in rank to an officer in charge of a police station may
exercise the same powers, throughout the local area to which they are
appointed, as may be exercised by such officer within the limits of his
station.
B.-AID
TO THE MAGISTRATES AND THE POLICE
37.Public
when to assist Magistrates and police.-
Every
person is bound to assist a Magistrate or police officer reasonably demanding
his aid-
(a)
in the taking or preventing the escape of any other person whom such Magistrate
or police officer is authorised to arrest; or
(b)
in the prevention or suppression of a breach of the peace; or
(c)
in the prevention of any injury attempted to be committed to any railway,
canal, telegraph or public property.
38.Aid
to person, other than police officer, executing warrant.-
When
a warrant is directed to a person other than a police officer, any other person
may aid in the execution of such warrant, if the person to whom the warrant is
directed be near at hand and acting in the execution of the warrant.
39.Public
to give information of certain offences.-
(1)
Every person, aware of the commission of , or of the intention of any other
person to
commit, any offence punishable under any of the following sections of the
Indian Penal Code,(45
of 1860) namely:-
(i)
sections 121 to 126, both inclusive, and section 130 (that is to say, offences
against the State specified in Chapter VI of the said Code);
(ii)
sections 143, 144, 145, 147 and 148 (that is to say, offences against the
public tranquillity specified in Chapter VIII of the said Code);
(iii)
sections 161 to 165A, both inclusive (that is to say, offences relating to
illegal gratification);
(iv)
sections 272 to 278, both inclusive (that is to say, offences relating to
adulteration of food and drugs, etc.);
(v)
sections 302, 303 and 304 (that is to say, offences affecting life);
(vi)
section 382 (that is to say, offence of theft after preparation made for
causing death, hurt or restraint in order to the committing of the theft);
(vii)
sections 392 to 399, both inclusive, and section 402 (that is to say, offences
of robbery and dacoity);
(viii)
section 409 (that is to say, offence relating to criminal breach of trust by
public servant, etc.);
(ix)
sections 431 to 439, both inclusive (that is to say, offences of mischief
against property);
(x)
sections 449 and 450 (that is to say, offence of house-trespass);
(xi)
sections 456 to 460, both inclusive (that is to say, offences of lurking
house-trespass); and
(xii)
sections 489A to 489E, both inclusive (that is to say, offences relating to
currency notes and bank notes),
shall, in the absence of any reasonable excuse, the burden of proving which excuse shall lie upon the person so aware, forthwith give information to the nearest Magistrate or police officer of such commission or intention.
shall, in the absence of any reasonable excuse, the burden of proving which excuse shall lie upon the person so aware, forthwith give information to the nearest Magistrate or police officer of such commission or intention.
(2)
For the purposes of this section, the term "offence" includes any act
committed at any place out of India which would constitute an offence if
committed in India.
40.Duty
of officers employed in connection with the affairs of a village to make
certain report.-
(1)
Every officer employed in connection with the affairs of a village and every
person residing in a village shall forthwith communicate to the nearest
Magistrate or to the officer in charge of the nearest police station, whichever
is nearer, any information which he may possess respecting-
(a)
the permanent or temporary residence of any notorious receiver or vendor of
stolen property in or near such village;
(b)
the resort to any place within, or the passage through, such village of any
person whom he knows, or reasonably suspects, to be a thug, robber, escaped
convict or proclaimed offender;
(c)
the commission of, or intention to commit, in or near such village any
non-bailable offence or any offence punishable under section 143, section 144,
section 145, section 147, or section 148 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860);
(d)
the occurrence in or near such village of any sudden or unnatural death or of
any death under suspicious circumstances or the discovery in or near such
village of any corpse or part of a corpse, in circumstances which lead to a
reasonable suspicion that such a death has occurred or the disappearance from
such village of any person in circumstances which lead to a reasonable
suspicion that a non-bailable offence has been committed in respect of such
person;
(e)
the commission of, or intention to commit, at any place out of India near such
village any act which, if committed in India, would be an offence punishable
under any of the following sections of the Indian Penal Code,(45 of 1860)
namely, 231 to 238 (both inclusive), 302, 304, 382, 392 to 399 (both
inclusive), 402, 435, 436, 449, 450, 457 to 460 (both inclusive), 489A, 489B,
489C and 489D;
(f)
any matter likely to affect the maintenance of order or the prevention of crime
or the safety of person or property respecting which the District Magistrate,
by general or special order made with the previous sanction of the State
Government, has directed him to communicate information.
(2)
In this section, -
(i)
"village" includes village-lands;
(ii)
the expression "proclaimed offender" includes any person proclaimed
as an offender by any Court or authority in any territory in India to which
this Code does not extend, in respect of any act which if committed in the
territories to which this Code extends, would be an offence punishable under
any of the following sections of the Indian Penal Code,(45 of 1860) namely,
302, 304, 382, 392 to 399 (both inclusive), 402, 435, 436, 449, 450 and 457 to
460 (both inclusive);
(iii)
the words "officer employed in connection with the affairs of the
village" means a member of the panchayat of the village and includes the
headman and every officer or other person appointed to perform any function
connected with the administration of the village.
CHAPTER
V
ARREST
OF PERSONS
41.When
police may arrest without warrant
(1)
Any police officer may without an order from a Magistrate and without a
warrant, arrest any person-
(a)
who has been concerned in any cognizable offence, or against whom a reasonable
complaint has been made, or credible information has been received, or a
reasonable suspicion exists, of his having been so concerned; or
(b)
who has in his possession without lawful excuse, the burden of proving which
excuse shall lie on such person, any implement of house-breaking; or
(c)
who has been proclaimed as an offender either under this Code or by order of
the State Government; or
(d)
in whose possession anything is found which may reasonably be suspected to be
stolen property and who may reasonably be suspected of having committed an
offence with reference to such thing; or
(e)
who obstructs a police officer while in the execution of his duty, or who has
escaped, or attempts to escape, from lawful custody; or
(f)
who is reasonably suspected of being a deserter from any of the Armed Forces of
the Union; or
(g)
who has been concerned in, or against whom a reasonable complaint has been
made, or credible information has been received, or a reasonable suspicion
exists, of his having been concerned in, any act committed at any place out of
India which, if committed in India, would have been punishable as an offence,
and for which he is, under any law relating to extradition, or otherwise,
liable to be apprehended or detained in custody in India; or
(h)
who, being a released convict, commits a breach of any rule made under
sub-section (5) of section 356; or
(I)
for whose arrest any requisition, whether written or oral, has been received
from another police officer, provided that the requisition specifies the person
to be arrested and the offence or other cause for which the arrest is to be
made and it appears therefrom that the person might lawfully be arrested without
a warrant by the officer who issued the requisition.
(2)
Any officer in charge of a police station may, in like manner, arrest or cause
to be arrested any person, belonging to one or more of the categories of
persons specified in section 109 or section 110.
42.Arrest
on refusal to give name and residence.-
(1)
When any person who, in the presence of a police officer, has committed or has
been accused of committing a non-cognizable offence refuses, on demand of such
officer, to give his name and residence or gives a name or residence which such
officer has reason to believe to be false, he may be arrested by such officer
in order that his name or residence may be ascertained.
(2)
When the true name and residence of such person have been ascertained, he shall
be released on his executing a bond, with or without sureties, to appear before
a Magistrate if so required:
Provided
that, if such person is not resident in India, the bond shall be secured by a
surety or sureties resident in India.
(3) Should the true name and residence of such person not be ascertained within
twenty-four hours from the time of arrest or should he fail to execute the
bond, or, if so required, to furnish sufficient sureties, he shall forthwith be
forwarded to the nearest Magistrate having jurisdiction.
43.Arrest
by Private person and procedure on such arrest.-
(1)
Any private person may arrest or cause to be arrested any person who in his
presence commits a non-bailable and cognizable offence, or any proclaimed offender,
and, without unnecessary delay, shall make over or cause to be made over any
person so arrested to a police officer, or, in the absence of a police officer,
take such person or cause him to be taken in custody to the nearest police
station.
(2)
If there is reason to believe that such person comes under the provisions of
section 41, a police officer shall re-arrest him.
(3)
If there is reason to believe that he has committed a non-cognizable offence,
and he refuses on the demand of a police officer to give his name and
residence, or gives a name or residence which such officer has reason to
believe to be false, he shall be dealt with under the provisions of section 42;
but if there is no sufficient reason to believe that he has committed any offence,
he shall be at once released.
44.Arrest
by Magistrate.-
(1)
When any offence is committed in the presence of a Magistrate, whether
Executive or Judicial, within his local jurisdiction, he may himself arrest or
order any person to arrest the offender, and may thereupon, subject to the
provisions herein contained as to bail, commit the offender to custody.
(2)
Any Magistrate, whether Executive or Judicial, may at any time arrest or direct
the arrest, in his presence, within his local jurisdiction, of any person for
whose arrest he is competent at the time and in the circumstances to issue a
warrant.
45.Protection
of members of the Armed Forces from arrest.-
(1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sections 41 to 44 (both inclusive), no
member of the Armed Forces of the Union shall be arrested for anything done or
purported to be done by him in the discharge of his official duties except
after obtaining the consent of the Central Government.
(2)
The State Government may, by notification, direct that the provisions of
sub-section (1) shall apply to such class or category of the members of the
Force charged with the maintenance of public order as may be specified therein,
wherever they may be serving, and thereupon the provisions of that sub-section
shall apply as if for the expression "Central Government" occurring
therein, the expression "State Government" were substituted.
46.Arrest how made.-
(1)
In making an arrest the police officer or other person making the same shall
actually touch or confine the body of the person to be arrested, unless there
be a submission to the custody by word or action.
(2)
If such person forcibly resists the endeavour to arrest him, or attempts to
evade the arrest, such police officer or other person may use all means necessary
to effect the arrest.
(3)
Nothing in this section gives a right to cause the death of a person who is not
accused of an offence punishable with death or with imprisonment for life.
47.Search
of place entered by person sought to be arrested.-
(1)
If any person acting under a warrant of arrest, or any police officer having
authority to arrest, has reason to believe that the person to be arrested has
entered into, or is within, any place, any person residing in, or being in
charge of, such place shall, on demand of such person acting as aforesaid or
such police officer, allow him free ingress thereto, and afford all reasonable
facilities for a search therein.
(2)
If ingress to such place cannot be obtained under sub-section (1), it shall be
lawful in any case for a person acting under a warrant and in any case in which
a warrant may issue, but cannot be obtained without affording the person to be
arrested an opportunity of escape, for a police officer to enter such place and
search therein, and in order to effect an entrance into such place, to break
open any outer or inner door or window of any house or place, whether that of
the person to be arrested or of any other person, if after notification of his
authority and purpose, and demand of admittance duly made, he cannot otherwise
obtain admittance;
Provided
that, if any such place is an apartment in the actual occupancy of a female
(not being the person to be arrested) who, according to custom, does not appear
in public, such person or police officer shall, before entering such apartment,
give notice to such female that she is at liberty to withdraw and shall afford
her every reasonable facility for withdrawing, and may then break open the
apartment and enter it.
(3)
Any police officer or other person authorised to make an arrest may break open
any outer or inner door or window of any house or place in order to liberate
himself or any other person who, having lawfully entered for the purpose of
making an arrest, is detained therein.
48.Pursuit
of offenders into other jurisdictions.-
A
police officer may, for the purpose of arresting without warrant any person
whom he is authorised to arrest, pursue such person into any place in India.
49.No unnecessary restraint.-
The
Person arrested shall not be subjected to more restraint than is necessary to
prevent his escape.
50.Person
arrested to be informed of grounds of arrest and of right to bail.-
(1)
Every police officer or other person arresting any person without warrant shall
forthwith communicate to him full particulars of the offence for which he is
arrested or other grounds for such arrest.
(2)
Where a police officer arrests without warrant any person other than a person
accused of a non-bailable offence, he shall inform the person arrested that he
is entitled to be released on bail and that he may arrange for sureties on his
behalf.
51.Search
of arrested person.-
(1)
Whenever a person is arrested by a police officer under a warrant which does
not provide for the taking of bail, or under a warrant which provides for the
taking of bail but the person arrested cannot furnish bail, and whenever
a person is arrested without warrant, or by a private person under a warrant,
and cannot legally be admitted to bail, or is unable to furnish bail, the
officer making the arrest or, when the arrest is made by a private person, the
police officer to whom he makes over the person arrested, may search such
person, and place in safe custody all articles, other, than necessary
wearing-apparel, found upon him and where any article is seized from the
arrested person, a receipt showing the articles taken in possession by the
police officer shall be given to such person.
(2)
Whenever it is necessary to cause a female to be searched, the search shall be
made by another female with strict regard to decency.
52.Power
to seize offensive weapons.-
The
officer or other person making any arrest under this Code may take from the
person arrested any offensive weapons which he has about his person, and shall
deliver all weapons so taken to the Court or officer before which or whom the
officer or person making the arrest is required by this Code to produce the
person arrested.
53.Examination
of accused by medical practitioner at the request of police officer.-
(1)
When a person is arrested on a charge of committing an offence of such a nature
and alleged to have been committed under such circumstances that there are
reasonable grounds for believing that an examination of his person will afford
evidence as to the commission of an offence, it shall be lawful for a
registered medical practitioner, acting at the request of a police officer not
below the rank of sub-inspector, and for any person acting in good faith in his
aid and under his direction, to make such an examination of the person arrested
as is reasonably necessary in order to ascertain the facts which may afford
such evidence, and to use such force as is reasonably necessary for that
purpose.
(2)
Whenever the person of a female is to be examined under this section, the
examination shall be made only by, or under the supervision of, a female
registered medical practitioner.
Explanation.-
In this section and in section 54, "registered medical practitioner"
means a medical practitioner who possesses any recognized medical qualification
as defined in clause (h) of section 2 of the Indian Medical Council Act,
1956,(102 of 1956) and whose name has been entered in a State Medical Register.
54.Examination
of arrested person by medical practitioner at the request of the arrested
person.-
When
a person who is arrested, whether on a charge or otherwise, alleges, at the
time when he is produced before a Magistrate or at any time during the period
of his detention in custody that the examination of his body will afford
evidence which will disprove the commission by him of any offence or which will
establish the commission by any other person of any offence against his body,
the Magistrate shall, if requested by the arrested person so to do direct the
examination of the body of such person by a registered medical practitioner
unless the Magistrate considers that the request is made for the purpose of vexation
or delay or for defeating the ends of justice.
55.Procedure
when police officer deputes subordinate to arrest without warrant.-
(1)
When any officer in charge of a police station or any police officer making an
investigation under Chapter XII requires any officer subordinate to him to
arrest without a warrant (otherwise than in his presence) any person who may
lawfully be arrested without a warrant, he shall deliver to the officer
required to make the arrest an order in writing, specifying the person to be
arrested and the offence or other cause for which the arrest is to be made and
the officer so required shall, before making the arrest, notify to the person
to be arrested the substance of the order and, if so required by such person,
shall show him the order.
(2)
Nothing in sub-section (1) shall affect the power of a police officer to arrest
a person under section 41.
56.Person
arrested to be taken before Magistrate or officer in charge of police station.-
A
police officer making an arrest without warrant shall, without unnecessary
delay and subject to the provisions herein contained as to bail, take or send
the person arrested before a Magistrate having jurisdiction in the case, or
before the officer in charge of a police station.
57.Person
arrested not to be detained more than twenty-four hours.-
No
police officer shall detail in custody a person arrested without warrant for a
longer period than under all the circumstances of the case is reasonable, and such
period shall not, in the absence of a special order of a Magistrate under
section 167, exceed twenty-four hours exclusive of the time necessary for the
journey from the place of arrest to the Magistrate's Court.
58.Police
to report apprehensions.-
Officers
in charge of police stations shall report to the District Magistrate, or, if he
so directs, to the Sub-divisional Magistrate, the cases of all persons arrested
without warrant, within the limits of their respective stations, whether such
persons have been admitted to bail or otherwise.
59.Discharge
of person apprehended.-
No
person who has been arrested by a police officer shall be discharged except on
his own bond, or on bail, or under the special order of a Magistrate.
60.Power,
on escape, to pursue and retake.
(1)
If a person in lawful custody escapes or is rescued, the person from whose
custody he escaped or was rescued may immediately pursue and arrest him in any
place in India.
(2)
The provisions of section 47 shall apply to arrests under sub-section (1)
although the person making any such arrest is not acting under a warrant and is
not a police officer having authority to arrest.
CHAPTER
VI
PROCESSES
TO COMPEL APPEARANCE
A.-
Summons
61.Form
of summons.-
Every
summons issued by a Court under this Code shall be in writing, in duplicate,
signed by the presiding officer of such Court or by such other officer as the
High Court may, from time to time, by rule direct, and shall bear the seal of
the Court.
62.Summons
how served.-
(1)
Every summons shall be served by a police officer, or subject to such rules as
the State Government may make in this behalf, by an officer of the Court
issuing it or other public servant.
(2)
The summons shall, if practicable, be served personally on the person summoned,
by delivering or tendering to him one of the duplicates of the summons.
(3)
Every person on whom a summons is so served shall, if so required by the
serving officer, sign a receipt therefor on the back of the other duplicate.
63.Service
of summons on corporate bodies and societies.-
Service
of a summons on a corporation may be effected by serving it on the secretary,
local manager or other principle officer of the corporation, or by letter sent
by registered post, addressed to the chief officer of the corporation in India,
in which case the service shall be deemed to have been effected when the letter
would arrive in ordinary course of post.
Explanation.-
In this section, "corporation" means an incorporated company or other
body corporate and includes a society registered under the Societies
Registration Act, 1860.
64.Service
when persons summoned cannot be found.-
Where
the person summoned cannot, by the exercise of due diligence, be found, the
summons may be served by leaving one of the duplicates for him with some adult
male member of his family residing with him, and the person with whom the
summons is so left shall, if so required by the serving officer, sign a receipt
therefor on the back of the other duplicate.
Explanation.-
A servant is not a member of the family within the meaning of this section.
65.Procedure when service cannot be effected
as before provided.-
If
service cannot by the exercise of due diligence be effected as provided in
section 62, section 63 or section 64, the serving officer shall affix one of
the duplicates of the summons to some conspicuous part of the house or
homestead in which the person summoned ordinarily resides; and thereupon the
Court, after making such inquiries as it thinks fit, may either declare that
the summons has been duly served or order fresh service in such manner as it
considers proper.
66.Service
on Government.-
(1)
Where the person summoned is in the active service of the Government, the Court
issuing the summons shall ordinarily sent it in duplicate to the head of the
office in which such person is employed; and such head shall thereupon cause
the summons to be served in the manner provided by section 62, and shall return
it to the Court under his signature with the endorsement required by that
section.
(2)
Such signature shall be evidence of due service.
67.Service
of summons outside local limits.-
When
a Court desires that a summons issued by it shall be served at any place
outside its local jurisdiction, it shall ordinarily send such summons in
duplicate to a Magistrate within whose local jurisdiction the person summoned
resides, or is, to be there served.
68.Proof
of service in such cases and when serving officer not present.-
(1)
When a summons issued by a Court is served outside its local jurisdiction, and
in any case where the officer who has served a summons is not present at the
hearing of the case, an affidavit, purporting to be made before a Magistrate,
that such summons has been served, and a duplicate of the summons purporting to
be endorsed (in the manner provided by section 62 or section 64) by the person
to whom it was delivered or tendered or with whom it was left, shall be
admissible in evidence, and the statements made therein shall be deemed to be
correct unless and until the contrary is proved.
(2)
The affidavit mentioned in this section may be attached to the duplicate of the
summons are returned to the Court.
69.Service
of summons on witness by post.-
(1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in the preceding sections of this Chapter, a
Court issuing a summons to a witness may, in addition to and simultaneously
with the issue of such summons, direct a copy of the summons to be served by
registered post addressed to the witness at the place where he ordinarily
resides or carries on business or personally works for gain.
(2)
When an acknowledgment purporting to be signed by the witness or an endorsement
purporting to be made by a postal employee that the witness refused to take
delivery of the summons has been received, the Court issuing the summons may
declare that the summons has been duly served.
B.-
Warrant of arrest
70.Form
of warrant of arrest and duration.-
(1)
Every warrant of arrest issued by a Court under this Code shall be in writing,
signed by the presiding officer of such Court and shall bear the seal of the
Court.
(2)
Every such warrant shall remain in force until it is cancelled by the Court
which issued it, or until it is executed.
71.Power
to direct security to be taken.-
(1)
Any Court issuing a warrant for the arrest of any person may in its discretion
direct by endorsement on the warrant that, if such person executes a bond with
sufficient sureties for his attendance before the Court at a specified time and
thereafter until otherwise directed by the Court, the officer to whom the
warrant is directed shall take such security and shall release such person from
custody.
(2)
The endorsement shall state-
(a)
the number of sureties;
(b)
the amount in which they and the person for whose arrest the warrant is issued,
are be respectively bound;
(c)
the time at which he is to attend before the Court.
(3)
Whenever security is taken under this section, the officer to whom the warrant
is directed shall forward the bond to the Court.
72.Warrants
to whom directed.-
(1)
A warrant of arrest shall ordinarily be directed to one or more police
officers; but the Court issuing such a warrant may, if its immediate execution
is necessary and no police officer is immediately available, direct it to any
other person or persons, and such person or persons shall execute the same.
(2)
When a warrant is directed to more officers or persons than one, it may be
executed by all, or by any one or more of them.
73.Warrant
may be directed to any person.-
(1)
The Chief Judicial Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first class may direct a
warrant to any person within his local jurisdiction for the arrest of any
escaped convict, proclaimed offender or of any person who is accused of a
non-bailable offence and is evading arrest.
(2)
Such person shall acknowledge in writing the receipt of the warrant, and shall
execute it if the person for whose arrest it was issued, is in, or enters on,
any land or other property under his charge.
(3)
When the person against whom such warrant is issued is arrested, he shall be
made over with the warrant to the nearest police officer, who shall cause him
to be taken before a Magistrate having jurisdiction in the case, unless
security is taken under section 71.
74.Warrant
directed to police officer.-
A
warrant directed to any police officer may also be executed by any other police
officer whose name is endorsed upon the warrant by the officer to whom it is
directed or endorsed.
75.Notification
of substance of warrant.-
The
police officer or other person executing a warrant of arrest shall notify the
substance thereof to the person to be arrested, and, if so required, shall show
him the warrant.
76.Person
arrested to be brought before Court without delay.-
The
police officer or other person executing a warrant of arrest shall (subject to
the provisions of section 71 as to security) without unnecessary delay bring
the person arrested before the Court before which he is required by law to
produce such person:
Provided
that such delay shall not, in any case, exceed twenty-four hours exclusive of
the time necessary for the journey from the place of arrest to the Magistrate's
Court.
77.Where
warrant may be executed.-
A
warrant of arrest may be executed at any place in India.
78.Warrant
forwarded for execution outside jurisdiction.-
(1)
When a warrant is to be executed outside the local jurisdiction of the Court
issuing it, such Court may, instead of directing the warrant to a police
officer within its jurisdiction, forward it by post or otherwise to any
Executive Magistrate or District Superintendent of Police or Commissioner of
Police within the local limits of whose jurisdiction it is to be executed; and
the Executive Magistrate or District Superintendent or Commissioner shall
endorse his name thereon, and if practicable, cause it to be executed in the
manner herein before provided.
(2)
The Court issuing a warrant under sub-section (1) shall forward, along with the
warrant, the substance of the information against the person to be arrested
together with such documents, if any, as may be sufficient to enable the Court
acting under section 81 to decide whether bail should or should not be granted
to the person.
79.Warrant
directed to police officer for execution outside jurisdiction.-
(1)
When a warrant directed to a police officer is to be executed beyond the local
jurisdiction of the Court issuing the same, he shall ordinarily take it for
endorsement either to an Executive Magistrate or to a police officer not below
the rank of an officer in charge of a police station, within the local limits
of whose jurisdiction the warrant is to be executed.
(2)
Such Magistrate or police officer shall endorse his name thereon and such
endorsement shall be sufficient authority to the police officer to whom the
warrant is directed to execute the same, and the local police shall, if so
required, assist such officer in executing such warrant.
(3)Whenever
there is reason to believe that the delay occasioned by obtaining the
endorsement of the Magistrate or police officer within whose local jurisdiction
the warrant is to be executed will prevent such execution, the police officer
to whom it is directed may execute the same without such endorsement in any
place beyond the local jurisdiction of the Court which issued it.
80.Procedure
on arrest of person against whom warrant issued.-
When
a warrant of arrest is executed outside the district in which it was issued,
the person arrested shall, unless the Court which issued the warrant is within
thirty kilometres of the place of arrest or is nearer than the Executive
Magistrate or District Superintendent of Police or Commissioner of Police
within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the arrest was made, or unless
security is taken under section 71, be taken before such Magistrate or District
Superintendent or Commissioner.
81.Procedure
by Magistrate before whom such person arrested is brought.-
(1)
The Executive Magistrate or District Superintendent of Police or Commissioner
of Police shall, if the person arrested appears to be the person intended by
the Court which issued the warrant, direct his removal in custody to such
Court:
Provided
that, if the offence is bailable, and such person is already and willing to
give bail to the satisfaction of such Magistrate, District Superintendent or
Commissioner, or a direction has been endorsed under section 71 on the warrant
and such person is ready and willing to give the security required by such
direction, the Magistrate, District Superintendent or Commissioner shall take
such bail or security, as the case may be, and forward the bond, to the Court
which issued the warrant:
Provided
further that if the offence is a non-bailable one, it shall be lawful for the
Chief Judicial Magistrate (subject to the provisions of section 437), or the
Sessions Judge, of the district in which the arrest is made on consideration of
the information and the documents referred to in sub-section (2) of section 78,
to release such person on bail.
(2)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prevent a police officer from taking
security under section 71.
C.-
Proclamation and attachment
82.Proclamation
for person absconding.-
(1)
If any Court has reason to believe (whether after taking evidence or not) that
any person against whom a warrant has been issued by it has absconded or is
concealing himself so that such warrant cannot be executed, such Court may
public a written proclamation requiring him to appear at a specified place and
at a specified time not less than thirty days from the date of publishing such
proclamation.
(2)
The proclamation shall be published as follows:-
(i)
(a) it shall be publicly read in some conspicuous place of the town or village
in which such person ordinarily resides;
(b)
it shall be affixed to some conspicuous part of the house or homestead in which
such person
ordinarily resides or to some conspicuous place of such town or village;
(c)
a copy thereof shall be affixed to some conspicuous part of the Court-house;
(ii)
the Court may also, if it thinks fit, direct a copy of the proclamation to be
published in a daily newspaper circulating in the place in which such person
ordinarily resides.
(3)
A statement in writing by the Court issuing the proclamation to the effect that
the proclamation was duly published on a specified day, in the manner specified
in clause (I) of sub-section (2), shall be conclusive evidence that the
requirements of this section have been complied with, and that the proclamation
was published on such day.
83.Attachment
of property of person absconding.-
(1)
The Court issuing a proclamation under section 82 may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, at any time after the issue of the proclamation, order the
attachment of any property, movable or immovable, or both, belonging to the
proclaimed person:
Provided
that where at the time of the issue of the proclamation the Court is satisfied,
by affidavit or otherwise that the person in relation to whom the proclamation
is to be issued, -
(a)
is about to dispose of the whole or any part of his property, or
(b)
is about to remove the whole or any part of his property from the local
jurisdiction of
the Court,
it
may order the attachment simultaneously with the issue of the proclamation.
(2)
Such order shall authorise the attachment of any property belonging to such
person within the district in which it is made; and it shall authorise the
attachment of any property belonging to such person without such district when
endorsed by the District Magistrate within whose district such property is
situate.
(3)
If the property ordered to be attached is a debt or other movable property, the
attachment under this section shall be made-
(a)
by seizure; or
(b)
by the appointment of a receiver; or
(c)
by an order in writing prohibiting the delivery of such property to the
proclaimed person or to any one on his behalf; on
(d)
by all or any two of such methods, as the Court thinks fit.
(4)
If the property ordered to be attached is immovable, the attachment under this
section shall, in the case of land paying revenue to the State Government, be
made through the Collector of the district in which the land is situate, and in
all other cases-
(a)
by taking possession; or
(b)
by the appointment of a receiver; or
(c)
by an order in writing prohibiting the payment of rent on delivery of property
to the
proclaimed person or to any one on his behalf; or
(d)
by all or any two of such methods, as the Court thinks fit.
(5)
If the property ordered to be attached consists of live-stock or is of a
perishable nature, the Court may, if it thinks it expedient, order immediate
sale thereof, and in such case the proceeds of the sale shall abide the order
of the Court.
(6)
The powers, duties and liabilities of a receiver appointed under this section
shall be the same as those of a receiver appointed under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908(5 of 1908).
84.Claims
and objections to attachment.-
(1)
If any claim is preferred to, or objection made to the attachment of, any
property attached under section 83, within six months from the date of such
attachment, by any person other than the proclaimed person, on the ground that
the claimant or objector has an interest in such property, and that such
interest is not liable to attachment under section 83, the claim or objection
shall be inquired into, and may be allowed or disallowed in whole or in part:
Provided
that any claim preferred or objection made within the period allowed by this
sub-section may, in the event of the death of the claimant or objector, be
continued by his legal representative.
(2)
Claims or objections under sub-section (1) may be preferred or made in the
Court by which the order of attachment is issued, or, if the claim or objection
is in respect of property attached under an order endorsed under sub-section
(2) of section 83, in the Court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate of the
district in which the attachment is made.
(3)
Every such claim or objection shall be inquired into by the Court in which it
is preferred or made:
Provided
that, if it is preferred or made in the Court of a Chief Judicial Magistrate,
he may make it over for disposal to any Magistrate subordinate to him.
(4)
Any person whose claim or objection has been disallowed in whole or in part by
an order under sub-section (1) may, within a period of one year from the date
of such order, institute a suit to establish the right which he claims in
respect of the property in dispute; but subject to the result of such suit, if
any, the order shall be conclusive.
85.Release,
sale and restoration of attached property.-
(1)
If the proclaimed person appears within the time specified in the proclamation,
the Court shall make an order releasing the property from the attachment.
(2)
If the proclaimed person does not appear within the time specified in the
proclamation, the property under the attachment shall be at the disposal of the
State Government; but it shall not be sold until the expiration of six months
from the date of the attachment and until any claim preferred or objection made
under section 84 has been disposed of under that section, unless it is subject
to speedy and natural decay, or the Court considers that the sale would be for
the benefit of the owner; in either of which cases the Court may cause it to be
sold whenever it thinks fit.
(3)
If, within two years from the date of the attachment, any person whose property
is or has been at the disposal of the State Government, under sub-section (2),
appears voluntarily or is apprehended and brought before the Court by whose
order the property was attached, or the Court to which such Court is
subordinate, and proves to the satisfaction of such Court that he did not abscond
or conceal himself for the purpose of avoiding execution of the warrant, and
that he had not such notice of the proclamation as to enable him to attend
within the time specified therein such property, or, if the same has been sold,
the net proceeds of the sale, or, if part only thereof has been sold, the net
proceeds of the sale, and the residue of the property, shall, after satisfying
therefrom all costs incurred in consequence of the attachment, be delivered to
him.
86.Appeal
from order rejecting application for restoration of attached property.-
Any
person referred to in sub-section (3) of section 85, who is aggrieved by any
refusal to deliver property or the proceeds of the sale thereof may appeal to
the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the sentences of the
first-mentioned Court.
D.- Other rules regarding processes
87.Issue
of warrant in lieu of, or in addition to, summons.-
A
Court may, in any case in which it is empowered by this Code to issue a summons
for the appearance of any person, issue, after recording its reasons in
writing, a warrant for his arrest-
(a)
if, either before the issue of such summons, or after the issue of the same but
before the time fixed for his appearance, the Court sees reason to believe that
he has absconded or will not obey the summons; or
(b)
if at such time he fails to appear and the summons is proved to have been duly
served in time to admit of his appearing in accordance therewith and no
reasonable excuse is offered for such failure.
88.Power
to take bond for appearance.-
When
any person for whose appearance or arrest the officer presiding in any Court is
empowered to issue a summons or warrant, is present in such Court, such officer
may require such person to execute a bond, with or without sureties, for his
appearance in such Court, or any other Court to which the case may be
transferred for trial.
89.Arrest on breach of bond for appearance.-
When
any person who is bound by any bond taken under this Code to appear before a
Court, does not appear, the officer presiding in such Court may issue a warrant
directing that such person be arrested and produced before him.
90.Provisions
of this Chapter generally applicable to summonses and warrants of arrest.-
The
provisions contained in this Chapter relating to a summons and warrant, and
their issue, service and execution, shall, so far as may be, apply to every
summons and every warrant of arrest issued under this Code.
CHAPTER
VII
PROCESSES
TO COMPEL THE PRODUCTION OF THINGS
A.-
Summons to produce
91.Summons
to produce document or other thing.-
(1)
Whenever any Court or any officer in charge of a police station considers that
the production of any document or other thing is necessary or desirable for the
purposes of any investigation, inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this
Code by or before such Court or officer, such Court may issue a summons, or
such officer a written order, to the person in whose possession or power such
document or thing is believed to be, requiring him to attend and produce it, or
to produce it, at the time and place stated in the summons or order.
(2)
Any person required under this section merely to produce a document or other
thing shall be deemed to have complied with the requisition if he causes such
document or thing to be produced instead of attending personally to produce the
same.
(3)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed-
(a)
to affect sections 123 and 124 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872,(1 of 1872) or
the Bankers' Books Evidence Act, 1891,(13 of 1891) or
(b)
to apply to a letter, postcard, telegram, or other document or any parcel or
thing in the custody of the postal or telegraph authority.
92.Procedure
as to letters and telegrams.-
(1)
If any document, parcel or thing in the custody of a postal or telegraph
authority is, in the opinion of the District Magistrate, Chief Judicial
Magistrate, Court of Session or High Court wanted for the purpose of any investigation,
inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this Code, such Magistrate or Court
may require the postal or telegraph authority, as the case may be, to deliver
the document, parcel or thing to such person as the Magistrate or Court
directs.
(2)
If any such document, parcel or thing is, in the opinion of any other
Magistrate, whether Executive or Judicial, or of any Commissioner of Police or
District Superintendent of Police, wanted for any such purpose, he may require
the postal or telegraph authority, as the case may be, to cause search to be
made for and to detain such document, parcel or thing pending the order of a
District Magistrate, Chief Judicial Magistrate or Court under sub-section (1).
B.-
Search-warrants
93.When
search warrant may be issued.-
(1)
(a) Where any Court has reason to believe that a person to whom a summons or
order under section 91 or a requisition under sub-section (1) of section 92 has
been, or might be, addressed, will not or would not produce the document or
thing as required by such summons or requisition, or
(b)
where such document or thing is not known to the Court to be in the possession
of any person, or
(c)
where the Court considers that the purposes of any inquiry, trial or other
proceeding under this Code will be served by a general search or inspection, it
may issue a search-warrant; and the person to whom such warrant is directed,
may search or inspect in accordance therewith and the provisions hereinafter
contained.
(2)
The Court may, if it thinks fit, specify in the warrant the particular place or
part thereof to which only the search or inspection shall extend; and the
person charged with the execution of such warrant shall then search or inspect
only the place or part so specified.
(3)
Nothing contained in this section shall authorise any Magistrate other than a
District Magistrate or Chief Judicial Magistrate to grant a warrant to search
for a document, parcel or other thing in the custody of the postal or telegraph
authority.
94.Search
of place suspected to contain stolen property forged documents etc.-
(1)
If a 'District Magistrate, Sub-divisional Magistrate or Magistrate of the first
class, upon information and after such inquiry as he thinks necessary, has
reason to believe that any place is used for the deposit or sale of stolen
property, or for the deposit, sale or production of any objectionable article
to which this section applies, or that any such objectionable article is
deposited in any place, he may by warrant authorise any police officer above
the rank of a constable-
(a)
to enter, with such assistance as may be required, such place,
(b)
to search the same in the manner specified in the warrant,
(c)
to take possession of any property or article therein found which he reasonably suspects
to be stolen property or objectionable article to which this section applies,
(d)
to convey such property or article before a Magistrate, or to guard the same on
the spot
until the offender is taken before a Magistrate, or otherwise to dispose of it
in some
place of safety,
(e)
to take into custody and carry before a Magistrate every person found in such place
who appears to have been privy to the deposit, sale or production of any such property
or article knowing or having reasonable cause to suspect it to be stolen property
or, as the case may be, objectionable article to which this section applies.
(2)
The objectionable articles to which this section applies are -
(a)
counterfeit coin;
(b)
pieces of metal made in contravention of the Metal Tokens Act, 1889,(1 of 1899)
or brought into India in contravention of any notification for the time being
in force under section 11 of the Customs Act, 1962(52 of 1962);
(c)
counterfeit currency note; counterfeit stamps;
(d)
forged documents;
(e)
false seals;
(f)
obscene objects referred to in section 292 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of
1860);
(g)
instruments or materials used for the production of any of the articles mentioned in
clauses (a) to (f).
95.Power
to declare certain publications forfeited and to issue search-warrants for the
same.-
(1)
Where -
(a)
any newspaper, or book, or
(b)
any document,
wherever
printed, appears to the State Government to contain any matter the publication
of which is punishable under section 124A or section 153A or section 153B or
section 292 or section 293 or section 295A of the Indian Penal Code, the State
Government may, by notification, stating the grounds of its opinion, declare
every copy of the issue of the newspaper containing such matter, and every copy
of such book or other document to be forfeited to Government, and thereupon any
police officer may seize the same wherever found in India and any Magistrate
may by warrant authorise any police officer not below the rank of sub-inspector
to enter upon and search for the same in any premises where any copy of such
issue or any such book or other document may be or may be reasonably suspected
to be.
(2)
In this section and in section 96, -
(a)
"newspaper" and "book" have the same meaning as in the
Press and Registration of Books
Act, 1867(25 of 1867);
(b)
"document" includes any painting, drawing or photograph, or other
visible
representation.
(3)
No order passed or action taken under this section shall be called in question
in any Court otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of section 96.
96.Application
to High Court to set aside declaration of forfeiture.-
(1)
Any person having any interest in any newspaper, book or other document, in
respect of which a declaration of forfeiture has been made under section 95,
may, within two months from the date of publication in the Official Gazette of
such declaration, apply to the High Court to set aside such declaration on the
ground that the issue of the newspaper, or the book or other document, in
respect of which the declaration was made, did not contain any such matter as
is referred to in sub-section (1) of section 95.
(2)
Every such application shall, where the High Court consists of three or more
Judges, be heard and determined by a Special Bench of the High Court composed
of three Judges and where the High Court consists of less than three Judges,
such Special Bench shall be composed of all the Judges of that High Court.
(3)
On the hearing of any such application with reference to any newspaper, any
copy of such newspaper may be given in evidence in aid of the proof of the
nature or tendency of the words, signs or visible representations contained in
such newspaper, in respect of which the declaration of forfeiture was made.
(4)
The High Court shall, if it is not satisfied that the issue of the newspaper,
or the book or other document, in respect of which the application has been
made, contained any such matter as is referred to in sub-section (1) of section
95, set aside the declaration of forfeiture.
(5)
Where there is a difference of opinion among the Judges forming the Special
Bench, the decision shall be in accordance with the opinion of the majority of
those Judges.
97.Search
for persons wrongfully confined.-
If
any District Magistrate, Sub-divisional Magistrate or Magistrate of the first
class has reason to believe that any person is confined under such
circumstances that the confinement amounts to an offence, he may issue la
search-warrant, and the person to whom such warrant is directed may search for
the person so confined; and such search shall be made in accordance therewith,
and the person, if found, shall be immediately taken before a Magistrate, who
shall make such order as in the circumstances of the case seems proper.
98.Power
to compel restoration of abducted females.-
Upon
complaint made on oath of the abduction or unlawful detention of a woman, or a
female child under the age of eighteen years, for any unlawful purpose, a
District Magistrate, Sub-divisional Magistrate or Magistrate of the first class
may make an order for the immediate restoration of such woman to her liberty,
or of such female child to her husband, present, guardian or other person
having the lawful charge of such child, and may compel compliance with such
order, using such force as may be necessary.
C.General
provisions relating to searches
99.Direction,
etc., of search-warrants.-
The
provisions of sections 38, 70, 72, 74, 77, 78 and 79 shall, so far as may be,
apply to all search-warrants issued under section 93, section 94, section 95 or
section 97.
100.Persons
in charge of closed place to allow search.-
(1)
Whenever any place liable to search or inspection under this Chapter is closed,
any person residing in, or being in charge of, such place, shall, on demand of
the officer or other person executing the warrant, and on production of the
warrant, allow his free ingress thereto, and afford all reasonable facilities
for a search therein.
(2)
If ingress into such place cannot be so obtained, the officer or other person
executing the warrant may proceed in the manner provided by sub-section (2) of
section 47.
(3)
Where any person in or about such place is reasonably suspected of concealing
about his person any article for which search should be made, such person may
be searched and if such person is a woman, the search shall be made by another
woman with strict regard to decency.
(4)
Before making a search under this Chapter, the officer or other person about to
make it shall call upon two or more independent and respectable inhabitants of
the locality in which the place to be searched is situate or of any other
locality if no such inhabitant of the said locality is available or is willing
to be a witness to the search, to attend and witness the search and may issue
an order in writing to them or any of them so to do.
(5)
The search shall be made in their presence, and a list of all things seized in
the course of such search and of the places in which they are respectively
found shall be prepared by such officer or other person and signed by such
witnesses; but no person witnessing a search under this section shall be
required to attend the Court as a witness of the search unless specially
summoned by it.
(6)
The occupant of the place searched, or some person in his behalf, shall, in
every instance, be permitted to attend during the search, and a copy of the
list prepared under this section, signed by the said witnesses, shall be
delivered to such occupant or person.
(7)
When any person is searched under sub-section (3), a list of all things taken
possession of shall be prepared, and a copy thereof shall be delivered to such
person.
(8)
Any person who, without reasonable cause, refuses or neglects to attend and
witness a search under this section, when called upon to do so by an order in
writing delivered or tendered to him, shall be deemed to have committed an
offence under section 187 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
101.Disposal of things found in search beyond jurisdiction.-
When,
in the execution of a search-warrant at any place beyond the local jurisdiction
of the Court which issued the same, any of the things for which search is made,
are found, such things, together with the list of the same prepared under the
provisions hereinafter contained, shall be immediately taken before the Court
issuing the warrant, unless such place is nearer to the Magistrate having
jurisdiction therein than to such Court, in which case the list and things
shall be immediately taken before such Magistrate; and, unless there be good
cause to the contrary, such Magistrate shall make an order authorising them to
be taken to such Court.
D.-
Miscellaneous
102.Power
of police officer to seize certain property.-
(1)
Any police officer may seize any property which may be alleged or suspected to
have been stolen, or which may be found under circumstances which create
suspicion of the commission of any offence.
(2)
Such police officer, if subordinate to the officer in charge of a police
station, shall forthwith report the seizure to that officer.
103.Magistrate may direct search in his presence.-
Any
Magistrate may direct a search to be made in his presence of any place for the
search of which he is competent to issue a search-warrant.
104.Power
to impound document, etc., produced.- Any Court may, if it thinks fit, impound
any document or thing produced before it under this Code.
105.Reciprocal
arrangements regarding processes.-
(1)
Where a Court in the territories to which this Code extends (hereafter in this
section referred to as the said territories) desires that -
(a)
a summons to an accused person, or
(b)
a warrant for the arrest of an accused person, or
(c)
a summons to any person requiring him to attend and produce a document or other thing,
or to produce it, or
(d)
a search-warrant,
issued
by it shall be served or executed at any place within the local jurisdiction of
a Court in any State or area in India outside the said territories, it may send
such summons or warrant in duplicate by post or otherwise, to the presiding
officer of that Court to be served or executed; and where any summons referred
to in clause (a) or clause (c) has been so served, the provisions of section 68
shall apply in relation to such summons as if the presiding officer of the
Court to whom it is sent were a Magistrate in the said territories.
(2)
Where a Court in the said territories has received for service or execution-
(a)
a summons to an accused person, or
(b)
a warrant for the arrest of an accused person, or
(c)
a summons to any person requiring him to attend and produce a document or other
thing or to produce it, or
(d)
a search-warrant,
issued
by a Court in any State or area in India outside the said territories, it shall
cause the same to be served or executed as if it were a summons or warrant
received by it from another Court in the said territories for service or
execution within its local jurisdiction: and where-
(i)
a warrant of arrest has been executed, the person arrested shall, so far as
possible, be dealt with in accordance with the procedure prescribed by sections
80 and 81.
(ii)
a search-warrant has been executed, the things found in the search shall, so far
as possible, be dealt with in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
section
101.CHAPTER
VIII
SECURITY
FOR KEEPING THE PEACE AND FOR GOOD BEHAVIOUR
106.Security
for keeping the peace on conviction.-
(1)
When a Court of Session or Court of a Magistrate of the first class convicts a
person of any of the offences specified in sub-section (2) or of abetting any
such offence and is of opinion that it is necessary to take security from such
person for keeping the peace, the Court may, at the time of passing sentence on
such person, order him to execute a bond, with or without sureties, for keeping
the peace for such period, not exceeding three years, as it thinks fit.
(2)
The offences referred to in sub-section (1) are-
(a)
any offence punishable under Chapter VIII of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of
1860)
other
than an offence punishable under section 153A or section 153B or section 154
thereof;
(b)
any offence which consists of, or includes, assault or using criminal force or
committing mischief;
(c)
any offence of criminal intimidation;
(d)
any other offence which caused, or was intended or known to be likely to cause,
a
breach
of the peace.
(3)
If the conviction is set aside on appeal or otherwise, the bond so executed
shall become void.
(4)
An order under this section may also be made by an Appellate Court or by a
Court when exercising its powers of revision.
107.Security
for keeping the peace in other cases.-
(1)
When an Executive Magistrate receives information that any person is likely to
commit a breach of the peace or disturb the public tranquillity or to do any
wrongful act that may probably occasion a breach of the peace or disturb the
public tranquillity and is of opinion that there is sufficient ground for
proceeding, he may, in the manner hereinafter provided, require such person to
show cause why he should not be ordered to execute a bond, for keeping the
peace for such period, not exceeding one year, as the Magistrate thinks fit.
(2)
Proceeding under this section may be taken before any Executive Magistrate when
either the place where the breach of the peace or disturbance is apprehended is
within his local jurisdiction or there is within such jurisdiction a person who
is likely to commit a breach of the peace or disturb the public tranquillity or
to do any wrongful act as aforesaid beyond such jurisdiction.
108.Security
for good behaviour from persons disseminating seditious matters.-
(1)
When a Judicial Magistrate of the first class receives information that there
is within his local jurisdiction any person who, within or without such
jurisdiction, -
(i)
either orally or in writing or in any other manner, intentionally disseminates
or attempts to disseminate or abets the dissemination of, -
(a)
any matter the publication of which is punishable under section 124A or section
153A or section 153B or section 295A of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) or
(b)
any matter concerning a Judge acting or purporting to act in the discharge of
his official duties which amounts to criminal intimidation or defamation under
the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860).
(ii)makes,
produces, publishes or keeps for sale, imports, exports, conveys, sells, lets to
hire, distributes, publicly exhibits or in any other manner puts into
circulation any obscene matter such as is referred to in section 292 of the
Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860)
(ii)
and the Magistrate is of opinion that there is sufficient ground for proceeding,
the Magistrate may, in the manner hereinafter provided, require such person to
show cause why he should not be ordered to execute a bond, with or without
sureties, for his good behaviour for such period, not exceeding one year, as
the Magistrate thinks fit.
(2)
No proceedings shall be taken under this section against the editor,
proprietor, printer or publisher of any publication registered under, and
edited, printed and published in conformity with, the rules laid down in the
Press and Registration of Books Act, 1867, (25 of 1867) with reference to any
matter contained in such publication except by the order or under the authority
of the State Government or some officer empowered by the State Government in
this behalf.
109.Security
for good behaviour from suspected persons.-
When
a Judicial Magistrate of the first class receives information that there is
within his local jurisdiction a person taking precautions to conceal his
presence and that there is reason to believe that he is doing so with a view to
committing a cognizable offence, the Magistrate may, in the manner hereinafter
provided, require such person to show cause why he should no the ordered to
execute a bond, with or without sureties, for his good behaviour for such
period, not exceeding one year, as the Magistrate thinks fit.
110.Security
for good behaviour from habitual offenders.-
When
a Judicial Magistrate of the first class receives information that there is
within his local jurisdiction a person who -
(a)
is by habit a robber, house-breaker, thief, or forger, or
(b)
is by habit a receiver of stolen property knowing the same to have been stolen,
or
(c)
habitually protects or harbours thieves, or aids in the concealment or disposal
of stolen property, or
(d)
habitually commits, or attempts to commit, or abets the commission of, the
offence of kidnapping, abduction, extortion, cheating or mischief, or any
offence punishable under Chapter XII of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) or
under section 489A, section 489B, section 489C or section 489D of that Code, or
(e)
habitually commits, or attempts to commit, or abets the commission of,
offences, involving a breach of the peace, or
(f)
habitually commits, or attempts to commit, or abets the commission of -
(i)
any offence under one or more of the following Acts, namely:-
(a)
the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 (23 of 1940);
(b)
the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1973 (7 of 1973);
(c)
the Employees' Provident Funds and Family Pension Fund Act, 1952 (19 of 1952);
(d)
the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 (37 of 1954);
(e)
the Essential Commodities Act, 1955(10 of 1955);
(f)
the Untouchability (Offences ) Act, 1955 (22 of 1955);
(g)
the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962); or
(ii)
any offence punishable under any other law providing for the prevention of
hoarding or profiteering or of adulteration of food or drugs or of corruption,
or
(g)
is so desperate and dangerous as to render his being at large without security
hazardous to the community,
such
Magistrate may, in the manner hereinafter provided, require such person to show
cause why he should not be ordered to execute a bond, with sureties, for his
good behaviour for such period, not exceeding three years, as the Magistrate
thinks fit.
111.Order
to be made.-
When
a Magistrate acting under section 107, section 108, section 109 or section 110,
deems it necessary to require any person to show cause under such section, he
shall make an order in writing, setting forth the substance of the information received,
the amount of the bond to be executed, the term for which it is to be in force,
and the number, character and class of sureties (if any) required.
112.Procedure
in respect of person in Court.-
If
the person in respect of whom such order is made is present in Court, it shall
be read over to him, or, if he so desires, the substance thereof shall be
explained to him.
113.Summons
or warrant in case of person not so present.-
If
such person is not present in Court, the Magistrate shall issue a summons
requiring him to appear, or, when such person is in custody, a warrant
directing the officer in whose custody he is to bring him before the Court;
Provided
that whenever it appears to such Magistrate, upon the report of a police
officer or upon other information (the substance of which report or information
shall be recorded by the Magistrate), that there is reason to fear the
commission of a breach of the peace, and that such breach of the peace cannot
be prevented otherwise than by the immediate arrest of such person, the
Magistrate may at any time issue a warrant for his arrest.
114.Copy
of order to accompany summons or warrant.-
Every
summons or warrant issued under section 113, shall be accompanied by a copy of
the order made under section 111, and such copy shall be delivered by the
officer serving or executing such summons or warrant to the person served with,
or arrested under, the same.
115.Power
to dispense with personal attendance.-
The
Magistrate may, if he sees sufficient cause, dispense with the personal
attendance of any person called upon to show cause why he should not be ordered
to execute a bond for keeping the peace or for good behaviour and may permit
him to appear by a pleader.
116.Inquiry
as to truth of information.-
(1)
When an order under section 111 has been read or explained under section 112 to
a person present in Court, or when any person appears or is brought before a
Magistrate in compliance with, or in execution of, a summons or warrant, issued
under section 113, the Magistrate shall proceed to inquire into the truth of
the information upon which action has been taken, and to take such further
evidence as may appear necessary.
(2)
Such inquiry shall be made, as nearly as may be practicable, in the manner
hereinafter prescribed for conducting trial and recording evidence in
summons-cases.
(3)
After the commencement, and before the completion, of the inquiry under
sub-section (1), the Magistrate, if he considers that immediate measures are
necessary for the prevention of a breach of the peace or disturbance of the
public tranquillity or the commission of any offence or for the public safety,
may, for reasons to be recorded in writing, direct the person in respect of whom
the order under section 111 has been made to execute a bond, with or without
sureties, for keeping the peace or maintaining good behaviour until the
conclusion of the inquiry, and may detail him in custody until such bond is
executed or, in default of execution, until the inquiry is concluded:
Provided
that-
(a)
no person against whom proceedings are not being taken under section 108,
section 109, or section 110 shall be directed to execute a bond for maintaining
good behaviour;
(b)
the conditions of such bond, whether as to the amount thereof or as to the
provision of sureties or the number thereof or the pecuniary extent of their
liability, shall not be more onerous than those specified in the order under
section 111.
(4)
For the purpose of this section the fact that a person is an habitual offender
or is so desperate and dangerous as to render his being at large without
security hazardous to the community may be proved by evidence of general repute
or otherwise.
(5)
Where two or more persons have been associated together in the matter under
inquiry, they may be dealt with in the same or separate inquiries as the
Magistrate shall think just.
(6)
The inquiry under this section shall be completed within a period of six months
from the date of its commencement, and if such inquiry is not so completed, the
proceedings under this Chapter shall on the expiry of the said period, stand
terminated unless, for special reasons to be recorded in writing, the
Magistrate otherwise directs:
Provided
that where any person has been kept in detention pending such inquiry, the
proceeding against that person, unless terminated earlier, shall stand
terminated on the expiry of a period of six months of such detention.
(7)
Where any direction is made under sub-section (6) permitting the continuance of
proceedings, the Sessions Judge may, on an application made to him by the
aggrieved party, vacate such direction if he is satisfied that it was not based
on any special reason or was perverse.
117.Order
to give security.-
If,
upon such inquiry, it is proved that it is necessary for keeping the peace or
maintaining good behaviour, as the case may be, that the person in respect of
whom the inquiry is made should execute a bond, with or without sureties, the
Magistrate shall make an order accordingly:
Provided
that-
(a)
no person shall be ordered to give security of a nature different from, or of
an amount large than, or for a period longer than, that specified in the order
made under section 111;
(b)
the amount of every bond shall be fixed with due regard to the circumstances of
the case and shall not be excessive;
(c)
when the person in respect of whom the inquiry is made is a minor, the bond
shall be executed only by his sureties.
118.Discharge
of person informed against.-
If,
on an inquiry under section 116, it is not proved that it is necessary for
keeping the peace or maintaining good behaviour, as the case may be, that the
person in respect of whom the inquiry is made, should execute a bond, the
Magistrate shall make an entry on the record to that effect, and if such person
is in custody only for the purposes of the inquiry, shall release him, or, if
such person is not in custody, shall discharge him.
119.Commencement
of period for which security is required.-
(1)
If any person, in respect of whom an order requiring security is made under
section 106 or section 117, is, at the time such order is made, sentenced to,
or undergoing a sentence of, imprisonment, the period for which such security
is required shall commence on the expiration of such sentence.
(2)
In other cases such period shall commence on the date of such order unless the
Magistrate, for sufficient reason, fixes a later date.
120.Contents
of bond.-
The
bond to be executed by any such person shall bind him to keep the peace or to
be of good behaviour, as the case may be, and in the latter case the commission
or attempt to commit, or the abetment of, any offence punishable with
imprisonment, wherever it may be committed, is a breach of the bond.
121.Power
to reject sureties.-
(1)
A Magistrate may refuse to accept any surety offered, or may reject any surety
previously accepted by him or his predecessor under this Chapter on the ground
that such surety is an unfit person for the purposes of the bond:
Provided
that, before so refusing to accept or rejecting any such surety, he shall
either himself hold an inquiry on oath into the fitness of the surety, or cause
such inquiry to be held and a report to be made thereon by a Magistrate
subordinate to him.
(2)
Such Magistrate shall, before holding the inquiry, give reasonable notice to
the surety and to the person by whom the surety was offered and shall, in
making the inquiry, record the substance of the evidence adduced before him.
(3)
If the Magistrate is satisfied, after considering the evidence so adduced
either before him or before a Magistrate deputed under sub-section (1), and the
report of such Magistrate (if any), that the surety is an unfit person for the
purposes of the bond, he shall make an order refusing to accept or rejecting,
as the case may be, such surety and recording his reasons for so doing:
Provided
that, before making an order rejecting any surety who has previously been accepted,
the Magistrate shall issue his summons or warrant, as he thinks fit, and cause
the person for whom the surety is bound to appear or to be brought before him.
122.Imprisonment
in default of security.
-(1)
(a) If any person ordered to give security under section 106 or section 117
does not give such security on or before the date on which the period for which
such security is to be given commences, he shall, except in the case next
hereinafter mentioned, be committed to prison, or, if he is already in prison,
be detained in prison until such period expires or until within such period he
gives the security to the Court or Magistrate who made the order requiring it.
(b)
If any person after having executed a bond without sureties for keeping the
peace in pursuance of an order of a Magistrate under section 117, is proved, to
the satisfaction of such Magistrate or his successor-in-office, to have
committed breach of the bond, such Magistrate or successor-in-office may, after
recording the grounds of such proof, order that the person be arrested and
detained in prison until the expiry of the period of the bond and such order
shall be without prejudice to any other punishment or forfeiture to which the
said person may be liable in accordance with law.
(2)
When such person has been ordered by a Magistrate to give security for a period
exceeding one year, such Magistrate shall, if such person does not give such
security as aforesaid, issue a warrant directing him to be detained in prison
pending the orders of the Sessions Judge and the proceedings shall be laid, as
soon as conveniently may be, before such Court.
(3)
Such Court, after examining such proceedings and requiring from the Magistrate
any further information or evidence which it thinks necessary, and after giving
the concerned person a reasonable opportunity of being heard, may pass such
order on the case as it thinks fit:
Provided
that the period (if any) for which any person is imprisoned for failure to give
security shall not exceed three years.
(4)
If security has been required in the course of the same proceeding from two or
more persons in respect of any one of whom the proceedings are referred to the
Sessions Judge under sub-section (2), such reference shall also include the
case of any other of such persons who has been ordered to give security, and
the provisions of sub-sections (2) and (3) shall, in that event, apply to the
case of such other person also, except that the period (if any) for which he
may be imprisoned shall not exceed the period for which he was ordered to give
security.
(5)
A Sessions Judge may in his discretion transfer any proceedings laid before him
under sub-section (2) or sub-section (4) to an Additional Sessions Judge or
Assistant Sessions Judge and upon such transfer, such Additional Sessions Judge
or Assistant Sessions Judge may exercise the powers of a Sessions Judge under
this section in respect of such proceedings.
(6)
If the security is tendered to the officer in charge of the jail, he shall
forthwith refer the matter to the Court or Magistrate who made the order, and
shall await the orders of such Court or Magistrate.
(7)
Imprisonment for failure to give security for keeping the peace shall be
simple.
(8)
Imprisonment for failure to give security for good behaviour shall, where the
proceedings have been taken under section 108, be simple, and, where the
proceedings have been taken under section 109 or section 110, be rigorous or
simple as the Court or Magistrate in each case directs.
123.Power
to release persons imprisoned for failing to give security.-
(1)
Whenever the Chief Judicial Magistrate is of opinion that any person imprisoned
for failing to give security under this Chapter may be released without hazard
to the community or to any other person, he may order such person to be
discharged.
(2)
Whenever any person has been imprisoned for failing to give security under this
Chapter, the High Court or Court of Session, or, where the order was made by
any other Court, the Chief Judicial Magistrate, may make an order reducing the
amount of the security or the number of sureties or the time for which security
has been required.
(3)
An order under sub-section (1) may direct the discharge of such person either
without conditions or upon any conditions which such person accepts:
Provided
that any condition imposed shall cease to be operative when the period for
which such person was ordered to give security has expired.
(4)
The State Government may prescribe the conditions upon which a conditional
discharge may be made.
(5)
If any condition upon which any person has been discharged it, in the opinion
of the Chief Judicial Magistrate by whom the order of discharge was made or of
his successor, not fulfilled, he may cancel the same.
(6)
When a conditional order of discharge has been cancelled under sub-section (5),
such person may be arrested by any police officer without warrant, and shall
thereupon be produced before the Chief Judicial Magistrate.
(7)
Unless such person gives security in accordance with the terms of the original
order for the unexpired portion of the term for which he was in the first
instance committed or ordered to be detained (such portion being deemed to be a
period equal to the period between the date of the breach of the conditions of
discharge and the date on which, except for such conditional discharge, he
would have been entitled to release), the Chief Judicial Magistrate may remand
such person to prison to undergo such unexpired portion.
(8)
A person remanded to prison under sub-section (7) shall, subject to the
provisions of section 122, be released at any time on giving security in
accordance with the terms of the original order for the unexpired portion
aforesaid to the Court or Magistrate by whom such order was made, or to its or
his successor.
(9)
The High Court or Court of Session may at any time, for sufficient reasons to
be recorded in writing, cancel any bond for keeping the peace or for good
behaviour executed under this Chapter by any order made by it, and the Chief
Judicial Magistrate may make such cancellation where such bond was executed
under his order or under the order of any other Court in his direct.
(10)
Any surety for the peaceable conduct or good behaviour of another person
ordered to execute a bond under this Chapter may at any time apply to the Court
making such order to cancel the bond and on such application being made, the
Court shall issue a summons or warrant, as it thinks fit, requiring the person
for whom such surety is bound to appear or to be brought before it.
124.Security
for unexpired period of bond.
-(1)
When a person for whose appearance a summons or warrant has been issued under
the proviso to sub-section (3) of section 121 or under sub-section (10) of
section 123, appears or is brought before the Magistrate or Court, the
Magistrate or Court shall cancel the bond executed by such person and shall
order such person to give, for the unexpired portion of the term of such bond,
fresh security of the same description as the original security.
(2)
Every such order shall, for the purposes of sections 120 to 123 (both
inclusive), be deemed to be an order made under section 106 or section 117, as
the case may be.
CHAPTER IX
ORDER
FOR MAINTENANCE OF WIVES, CHILDREN AND PARENTS
125.Order
for maintenance of wives, children and parents.-
(1)
If any person having sufficient means neglects or refuses to maintain-
(a)
his wife, unable to maintain herself, or
(b)
his legitimate or illegitimate minor child, whether married or not, unable to
maintain itself, or
(c)
his legitimate or illegitimate child (not being a married daughter) who has
attained majority, where such child is by reason of any physical or mental
abnormality or injury unable to maintain itself, or
(d)
his father or mother, unable to maintain himself or herself,
a
Magistrate of the first class may, upon proof of such neglect or refusal, order
such person to make a monthly allowance for the maintenance of his wife or such
child, father or mother, at such monthly rate not exceeding five hundred rupees
in the whole, as such Magistrate thinks fit, and to pay the same to such person
as the Magistrate may from time to time direct:
Provided
that the Magistrate may order the father of a minor female child referred to in
clause (b) to make such allowance, until she attains her majority, if the
Magistrate is satisfied that the husband of such minor female child, if
married, is not possessed of sufficient means.
Explanation.-
For the purposes of this Chapter, -
(a)
"minor" means a person who, under the provisions of the Indian
Majority Act, 1875( 9 of 1875) is deemed not to have attained his majority;
(b)
"wife" includes a woman who has been divorced by, or has obtained a
divorce from, her husband and has not remarried.
(2)
Such allowance shall be payable from the date of the order, or, if so ordered,
from the date of the application for maintenance.
(3)
If any person so ordered fails without sufficient cause to comply with the
order, any such Magistrate may, for every breach of the order, issue a warrant
for levying the amount due in the manner provided for levying fines, and may
sentence such person, for the whole or any part of each month's allowance
remaining unpaid after the execution of the warrant, to imprisonment for a term
which may extend to one month or until payment if sooner made:
Provided
that no warrant shall be issued for the recovery of any amount due under this
section unless application be made to the Court to levy such amount within a
period of one year from the date on which it became due:
Provided
further that if such person offers to maintain his wife on condition of her
living with him, and she refuses to live with him, such Magistrate may consider
any grounds of refusal stated by her, and may make an order under this section
notwithstanding such offer, if he is satisfied that there is a just ground for
so doing.
Explanation.-
If a husband has contracted marriage with another woman or keeps a mistress, it
shall be considered to be just ground for his wife's refusal to live with him.
(4)
No wife shall be entitled to receive an allowance from her husband under this
section if she is living in adultery, or if, without any sufficient reason, she
refuses to live with her husband, or if they are living separately by mutual
consent.
(5)
On proof that any wife in whose favour an order has been made under this
section is living in adultery, or that without sufficient reason she refuses to
live with her husband, or that they are living separately by mutual consent,
the Magistrate shall cancel the order.
126.Procedure.-
(1) Proceedings under section 125 may be taken against any person in any
district-
(a)
where he is, or
(b)
where he or his wife resides, or
(c)
where he last resided with his wife, or as the case may be, with the mother of
the
illegitimate
child.
(2)
All evidence in such proceedings shall be taken in the presence of the person
against whom an order for payment of maintenance is proposed to be made, or,
when his personal attendance is dispensed with in the presence of his pleader,
and shall be recorded in the manner prescribed for summons-cases:
Provided
that if the Magistrate is satisfied that the person against whom an order for
payment of maintenance is proposed to be made is wilfully avoiding service, or
wilfully neglecting to attend the Court, the Magistrate may proceed to hear and
determine the case ex parte and any order so made may be set aside for good
cause shown on an application made within three months from the date thereof
subject to such terms including terms as to payment of costs to the opposite
party as the Magistrate may think just and proper.
(3)
The Court in dealing with applications under section 125 shall have power to make
such order as to costs as may be just.
127.Alteration
in allowance.-
(1)
On proof of a change in the circumstances of any person, receiving, under
section 125 a monthly allowance, or ordered under the same section to pay a
monthly allowance to his wife, child, father or mother, as the case may be, the
Magistrate may make such alteration in the allowance as he thinks fit:
Provided
that if he increase the allowance, the monthly rate of five hundred rupees in
the whole shall not be exceeded.
(2)
Where it appears to the Magistrate that, in consequence of any decision of a
competent Civil Court, any order made under section 125 should be cancelled or
varied, he shall cancel the order or, as the case may be, vary the same
accordingly.
(3)
Where any order has been made under section 125 in favour of a woman who has
been divorced by, or has obtained a divorce from, her husband, the Magistrate
shall, if he is satisfied that -
(a)
the woman has, after the date of such divorce, remarried, cancel such order as
from the date of her remarriage;
(b)
the woman has been divorced by her husband and that she has received, whether
before or after the date of the said order, the whole of the sum which, under
any customary or personal law applicable to the parties, was payable on such
divorce, cancel such order, -
(i)
in the case where such sum was paid before such order from the date on which
such order was made,
(ii)
in any other case, from the date of expiry of the period, if any, for which
maintenance has been actually paid by the husband to the woman;
(c)
the woman has obtained a divorce from her husband and that she had voluntarily
surrendered her rights to maintenance after her divorce, cancel the order from
the date thereof.
(4)
At the time of making any decree for the recovery of any maintenance or dowry
by any person, to whom a monthly allowance has been ordered to be paid under
section 125, the Civil Court shall take into account the sum which has been
paid to, or recovered by, such person as monthly allowance in pursuance of the
said order.
128.Enforcement
of order of maintenance.-
A
copy of the order of maintenance shall be given without payment to the person
in whose favour it is made, or to his guardian, if any, or to the person to
whom the allowance is to be paid; and such order may be enforced by any
Magistrate in any place where the person against whom it is made may be, on
such Magistrate being satisfied as to the identity of the parties and the
non-payment of the allowance due.
CHAPTER
X
MAINTENANCE
OF PUBLIC ORDER AND TRANQUILLITY
A.-
Unlawful assemblies
129.Dispersal
of assembly by use of civil force.-
(1)
Any Executive Magistrate or officer incharge of a police station or, in the
absence of such officer incharge, any police officer, not below the rank of a
sub-inspector, may command any unlawful assembly, or any assembly of five or
more persons likely to cause a disturbance of the public peace, to disperse;
and it shall thereupon be the duty of the members of such assembly to disperse
accordingly.
(2)
If, upon being so commanded, any such assembly does not disperse, or if,
without being so commanded, it conducts itself in such a manner as to show a
determination not to disperse, any Executive Magistrate or police officer
referred to in sub-section (1), may proceed to disperse such assembly by force,
and may require the assistance of any male person, not being an officer or
member of the armed forces and acting as such, for the purpose of dispersing
such assembly, and, if necessary, arresting and confining the persons who form
part of it, in order to disperse such assembly or that they may be punished
according to law.
130.Use
of armed forces to disperse assembly.-
(1)
If any such assembly cannot be otherwise dispersed, and if it is necessary for
the public security that it should be dispersed, the Executive Magistrate of
the highest rank who is present may cause it to be dispersed by the armed
forces.
(2)
Such Magistrate may require any officer in command of any group of persons
belonging to the armed forces to disperse the assembly with the help of the
armed forces under his command, and to arrest and confine such persons forming
part of it as the Magistrate may direct, or as it may be necessary to arrest
and confine in order to disperse the assembly or to have them punished
according to law.
(3)
Every such officer of the armed forces shall obey such requisition in such
manner as he thinks fit, but in so doing he shall use as little force, and do
as little injury to person and property, as may be consistent with dispersing
the assembly and arresting and detaining such persons.
131.Power
of certain armed force officers to disperse assembly.-
When
the public security is manifestly endangered by any such assembly and no
Executive Magistrate can be communicated with, any commissioned or gazetted
officer of the armed forces may disperse such assembly with the help of the
armed forces under his command, and may arrest and confine any persons forming
part of it, in order to disperse such assembly or that they may be punished
according to law; but if, while he is acting under this section, it becomes
practicable for him to communicate with an Executive Magistrate, he shall do
so, and shall thenceforward obey the instructions of the Magistrate, as to
whether he shall or shall not continue such action.
132.Protection
against prosecution for acts done under preceding sections.-
(1)No
prosecution against any person for any act purporting to be done under section
129, section 130 or section 131 shall be instituted in any Criminal Court
except -
(a)
with the sanction of the Central Government where such person is an officer or
member of the armed forces;
(b)
with the sanction of the State Government in any other case.
(2)
(a) No Executive Magistrate or police officer acting under any of the said
sections in good faith;
(b)
no person doing any act in good faith in compliance with a requisition under
section 129 or section 130;
(c)
no officer of the armed forces acting under section 131 in good faith;
(d)
no member of the armed forces doing any act in obedience to any order which he
was bound to obey,
shall
be deed to have thereby committed an offence.
(3)
In this section and in the preceding sections of this Chapter, -
(a)
the expression "armed forces" means the military, naval and air
forces, operating as land forces and includes any other Armed Forces of the
Union so operating;
(b)"officer",
in relation to the armed forces, means a person commissioned, gazetted or in
pay as an officer of the armed forces and includes a junior commissioned
officer, a warrant officer, a petty officer, a non-commissioned officer and a
non-gazetted officer;
(c)"member",
in relation to the armed forces, means a person in the armed forces other than
an officer.
B.-
Public nuisances
133.Conditional
order for removal of nuisance.-
(1)
Whenever a District Magistrate or a Sub-divisional Magistrate or any other
Executive Magistrate specially empowered in this behalf by the State
Government, on receiving the report of a police officer or other information
and on taking such evidence (if any) as he thinks fit, considers -
(a)
that any unlawful obstruction or nuisance should be removed from any public
place or from any way, river or channel which is or may be lawfully used by the
public; or
(b)
that the conduct of any trade or occupation, or the keeping of any goods or
merchandise, is injurious to the health or physical comfort of the community ,
and that in consequence such trade or occupation should be prohibited or
regulated or such goods or merchandise should be removed or the keeping thereof
regulated; or
(c)
that the construction of any building, or, the disposal of any substance , as
is likely to occasion conflagration or explosion, should be prevented or
stopped; or
(d)
that any building, tent or structure, or any tree is in such a condition that
it is likely to fall and thereby cause injury to persons living or carrying on
business in the neighbourhood or passing by, and that in consequence the
removal, repair or support of such building, tent or structure, or the removal
or support of such tree, is necessary; or
(e)
that any tank, well or excavation adjacent to any such way or public place
should be fenced in such manner as to prevent danger arising to the public; or
(f)
that any dangerous animal should be destroyed, confined or otherwise disposed
of,
such
Magistrate may make a conditional order requiring the person causing such
obstruction or nuisance, or carrying on such trade or occupation, or keeping
any such goods or merchandise, or owning, possessing or controlling such building,
tent, structure, substance, tank, well or excavation, or owning or possessing
such animal or tree, within a time to be fixed in the order-
(i)
to remove such obstruction or nuisance; or
(ii)
to desist from carrying on, or to remove or regulate in such manner as may be
directed, such trade or occupation, or to remove such goods or merchandise, or
to regulate the keeping thereof in such manner as may be directed; or
(iii)
to prevent or stop the construction of such building, or to alter the disposal
of such substance; or
(iv)
to remove, repair or support such building, tent or structure, or to remove or
support such trees; or
(v)
to fence such tank, well or excavation; or
(vi)
to destroy, confine or dispose of such dangerous animal in the manner provided
in the said order;
or,
if he objects so to do, to appear before himself or some other Executive
Magistrate subordinate to him at a time and place to be fixed by the order, and
show cause, in the manner hereinafter provided, why the order should not be
made absolute.
(2)
No order duly made by a Magistrate under this section shall be called in
question in any Civil Court.
Explanation.-
A "public place" includes also property belonging to the State,
camping grounds and left unoccupied for sanitary or recreative purposes.
134.Service
or notification of order.-
(1)The
order shall, if practicable, be served on the person against whom it is made,
in the manner herein provided for service of a summons.
(2)
If such order cannot be so served, it shall be notified by proclamation,
published in such manner as the State Government may, by rules, direct, and a
copy thereof shall be stuck up at such place or places as may be fittest for
conveying the information to such person.
135.Person
to whom order is addressed to obey or show cause.-
The
person against whom such order is made shall -
(a)
perform, within the time and in the manner specified in the order, the act
directed thereby; or
(b)
appear in accordance with such order and show cause against the same.
136.Consequences
of his failing to do so.-
If
such person does not perform such act or appear and show cause, he shall be
liable to the penalty prescribed in that behalf in section 188 of the Indian
Penal Code, (45 of 1860)and the order shall be made absolute.
137.Procedure
where existence of public right is denied.-
(1)
Where an order is made under section 133 for the purpose of preventing
obstruction, nuisance or danger to the public in the use of any way, river,
channel or place, the Magistrate shall, on the appearance before him of the
person against whom the order was made, question him as to whether he denies
the existence of any public right in respect of the way, river, channel or
place, and if he does so, the Magistrate shall, before proceeding under section
138, inquire into the matter.
(2)
If in such inquiry the Magistrate finds that there is any reliable evidence in
support of such denial, he shall stay the proceedings until the matter of the
existence of such right has been decided by a competent Court; and, if he finds
that there is no such evidence, he shall proceed as laid down in section 138.
(3)
A person who has, on being questioned by the Magistrate under sub-section (1),
failed to deny the existence of a public right of the nature therein referred
to, or who, having made such denial, has failed to adduce reliable evidence in
support thereof, shall not in the subsequent proceedings be permitted to make
any such denial.
138.Procedure
where he appears to show cause.-
(1)
If the person against whom an order under section 133 is made appears and shows
cause against the order, the Magistrate shall take evidence in the matter as in
a summons-case.
(2)
If the Magistrate is satisfied that the order, either as originally made or
subject to such modification as he considers necessary, is reasonable and
proper, the order shall be made absolute without modification or, as the case
may be, with such modification.
(3)
If the Magistrate is not so satisfied, no further proceedings shall be taken in
the case.
139.Power
of Magistrate to direct local investigation and examination of an expert.-
The
Magistrate may, for the purposes of an inquiry under section 137 or section
138-
(a)
direct a local investigation to be made by such person as he thinks fit; or
(b)
summon and examine an expert.
140.Power
of Magistrate to furnish written instructions, etc.-
(1)
Where the Magistrate directs a local investigation by any person under section
139, the Magistrate may -
(a)
furnish such person with such written instructions as may seem necessary for
his guidance;
(b)
declare by whom the whole or any part of the necessary expenses of the local
investigation shall be paid.
(2)
The report of such person may be read as evidence in the case.
(3)
Where the Magistrate summons and examines an expert under section 139, the
Magistrate may direct by whom the costs of such summoning and examination shall
be paid.
141.Procedure
on order being made absolute and consequences of disobedience.-
(1)
When an order has been made absolute under section 136 or section 138, the
Magistrate shall give notice of the same to the person against whom the order
was made, and shall further require him to perform the act directed by the
order within a time to be fixed in the notice, and inform him that, in case of
disobedience, he will be liable to the penalty provided by section 188 of the
Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860).
(2)
If such act is not performed within the time fixed, the Magistrate may cause it
to be performed, and may recover the costs of performing it, either by the sale
of any building, goods or other property removed by his order, or by the
distress and sale of any other movable property of such person within or
without such Magistrate's local jurisdiction and if such other property is
without such jurisdiction, the order shall authorise its attachment and sale
when endorsed by the Magistrate within whose local jurisdiction the property to
be attached is found.
(3)
No suit shall lie in respect of anything done in good faith under this section.
142.Injunction
pending inquiry.
-
(1) If a Magistrate making an order under section 133 considers that immediate
measures should be taken to prevent imminent danger or injury of a serious kind
to the public, he may issue such an injunction to the person against whom the
order was made, as is required to obviate or prevent such danger or injury
pending the determination of the matter.
(2)
In default of such person forthwith obeying such injunction, the Magistrate may
himself use, or cause to be used, such means as he thinks fit to obviate such
danger or to prevent such injury.
(3)
No suit shall lie in respect of anything done in good faith by a Magistrate
under this section.
143.Magistrate
may prohibit repetition or continuance of public nuisance.-
A
District Magistrate or Sub-divisional Magistrate, or any other Executive
Magistrate empowered by the State Government or the District Magistrate in this
behalf, may order any person not to repeat or continue a public nuisance, as
defined in the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) or any special or local law.
C.-
Urgent cases of nuisance or apprehended danger
144.Power
to issue order in urgent cases of nuisance or apprehended danger.-
(1)
In cases where, in the opinion of a District Magistrate, a Sub-divisional
Magistrate or any other Executive Magistrate specially empowered by the State
Government in this behalf, there is sufficient ground for proceeding under this
section and immediate prevention or speedy remedy is desirable, such Magistrate
may, by a written order stating the material facts of the case and served in
the manner provided by section 134, direct any person to abstain from a certain
act or to take certain order with respect to certain property in his possession
or under his management, if such Magistrate considers that such direction is
likely to prevent, or tends to prevent, obstruction, annoyance or injury to any
person lawfully employed, or danger to human life, health or safety, or a
disturbance of the public tranquillity, or a riot, or an affray.
(2)
An order under this section may, in cases of emergency or in cases where the
circumstances do not admit of the serving in due time of a notice upon the
person against whom the order is directed, be passed ex parte.
(3)
An order under this section may be directed to a particular individual, or to
persons residing in a particular place or area, or to the public generally when
frequenting or visiting a particular place or area.
(4)
No order under this section shall remain in force for more than two months from
the making thereof:
Provided
that, if the State Government considers it necessary so to do for preventing
danger to human life, health or safety or for preventing a riot or any affray,
it may, by notification, direct that an order made by a Magistrate under this
section shall remain in force for such further period not exceeding six months
from the date on which the order made by the Magistrate would have, but for such
order, expired, as it may specify in the said notification.
(5)
Any Magistrate may, either on his own motion or on the application of any
person aggrieved, rescind or alter any order made under this section, by
himself or any Magistrate subordinate to him or by his predecessor-in-office.
(6)
The State Government may, either on its own motion or on the application of any
person aggrieved, rescind or alter any order made by it under the proviso to
sub-section (4).
(7)
Where an application under sub-section (5) or sub-section (6) is received, the
Magistrate, or the State Government, as the case may be, shall afford to the
applicant an early opportunity of appearing before him or it, either in person
or by pleader and showing cause against the order; and if the Magistrate or the
State Government, as the case may be, rejects the application wholly or in
part, he or it shall record in writing the reasons for so doing.
D.-
Disputes as to immovable property
145.Procedure
where dispute concerning land or water is likely to cause breach of peace.-
(1)
Whenever an Executive Magistrate is satisfied from a report of a police or upon
other information that a dispute likely to cause a breach of the peace exists
concerning any land or water or the boundaries thereof, within his local
jurisdiction, he shall make an order in writing, stating the grounds of his
being so satisfied, and requiring the parties concerned in such dispute to
attend his Court in person or by pleader on a specified date and time, and to
put in written statements of their respective claims as respects the fact of
actual possession of the subject of dispute.
(2)
For the purposes of this section, the expression "land or water"
includes buildings, markets, fisheries, crops or other produce of land, and the
rents or profits of any such property.
(3)
A copy of the order shall be served in the manner provided by this Code for the
service of a summons upon such person or persons as the Magistrate may direct,
and at least one copy shall be published by being affixed to some conspicuous
place at or near the subject of dispute.
(4)
The Magistrate shall then, without reference to the merits or the claims of any
of the parties to a right to possess the subject of dispute, peruse the
statements so put in, hear the parties, receive all such evidence as may be
produced by them, take such further evidence, if any, as he thinks necessary,
and, if possible, decide whether any and which of the parties was, at the date
of the order made by him under sub-section (1), in possession of the subject of
dispute:
Provided
that if it appears to the Magistrate that any party has been forcibly and
wrongfully dispossessed within two months next before the date on which the
report of a police officer or other information was received by the Magistrate,
or after that date and before the date of his order under sub-section (1), he
may treat the party so dispossessed as if that party had been in possession on
the date of his order under sub-section (1).
(5)
Nothing in this section shall preclude any party so required to attend, or any
other person interested, from showing that no such dispute as aforesaid exists
or has existed; and in such case the Magistrate shall cancel his said order,
and all further proceedings thereon shall be stayed, but, subject to such
cancellation, the order of the Magistrate under sub-section (1) shall be final.
(6)
(a) If the Magistrate decides that one of the parties was, or should under the
proviso to sub-section (4) be treated as being, in such possession of the said
subject, he shall issue an order declaring such party to be entitled to
possession thereof until evicted therefrom in due course of law, and forbidding
all disturbance of such possession until such eviction; and when he proceeds
under the proviso to sub-section (4), may restore to possession the party
forcibly and wrongfully dispossessed.
(b)
The order made under this sub-section shall be served and published in the
manner laid down in sub-section (3).
(7)
When any party to any such proceeding dies, the Magistrate may cause the legal
representative of the deceased party to be made a party to the proceeding and
shall thereupon continue the inquiry, and if any question arises as to who the
legal representative of a deceased party for the purposes of such proceeding
is, all persons claiming to be representatives of the deceased party shall be
made parties thereto.
(8)
If the Magistrate is of opinion that any crop or other produce of the property,
the subject of dispute in a proceeding under this section pending before him,
is subject to speedy and natural decay, he may make an order for the proper
custody or sale of such property, and, upon the completion of the inquiry,
shall make such order for the disposal of such property, or the sale-proceeds
thereof, as he thinks fit.
(9)
The Magistrate may, if he thinks fit, at any stage of the proceedings under
this section, on the application of either party, issue a summons to any
witness directing him to attend or to produce any document or thing.
(10)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to be in derogation of the powers of
the Magistrate to proceed under section 107.
146.Power
to attach subject of dispute and to appoint receiver.-
(1)
If the Magistrate at any time after making the order under sub-section (1) of
section 145 considers the case to be one of emergency, or if he decides that
none of the parties was then in such possession as is referred to in section
145, or if he is unable to satisfy himself as to which of them was then in such
possession of the subject of dispute, he may attach the subject of dispute
until a competent Court has determined the rights of the parties thereto with
regard to the person entitled to the possession thereof:
Provided
that such Magistrate may withdraw the attachment at any time if he is satisfied
that there is no longer any likelihood of breach of the peace with regard to
the subject of dispute.
(2)
When the Magistrate attaches the subject of dispute, he may, if no receiver in
relation to such subject of dispute has been appointed by any Civil Court, make
such arrangements as he considers proper for looking after the property or if
he thinks fit, appoint a receiver thereof, who shall have, subject to the
control of the Magistrate, all the powers of a receiver appointed under the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908:
Provided
that in the event of a receiver being subsequently appointed in relation to the
subject of dispute by any Civil Court, the Magistrate-
(a)
shall order the receiver appointed by him to hand over the possession of the
subject of dispute to the receiver appointed by the Civil Court and shall
thereafter discharge the receiver appointed by him;
(b)
may make such other incidental or consequential orders as may be just.
147.Dispute
concerning right of use of land or water.-
(1)
Whenever an Executive Magistrate is satisfied from the report of a police
officer or upon other information, that a dispute likely to cause a breach of
the peace exists regarding any alleged right of user of any land or water
within his local jurisdiction, whether such right be claimed as an easement or
otherwise, he shall make an order in writing, stating the grounds of his being
so satisfied and requiring the parties concerned in such dispute to attend his
Court in person or by pleader on a specified date and time and to put in
written statements of their respective claims.
Explanation.-
The expression "land or water" has the meaning given to it in
sub-section (2) of section 145.
(2)
The Magistrate shall then peruse the statements so put in, hear the parties,
receive all such evidence as may be produced by them respectively, consider the
effect of such evidence, take such further evidence, if any, as he thinks
necessary and, if possible, decide whether such right exists; and the
provisions of section 145 shall, so far as may be, apply in the case of such
inquiry.
(3)
If it appears to such Magistrate that such rights exist, he may make an order
prohibiting any interference with the exercise of such right, including, in a
proper case, an order for the removal of any obstruction in the exercise of any
such right:
Provided
that no such order shall be made where the right is exercisable at all times of
the year, unless such right has been exercised within three months next before
the receipt under sub-section (1) of the report of a police officer or other
information leading to the institution of the inquiry, or where the right is
exercisable only at particular seasons or on particular occasions, unless the
right has been exercised during the last of such seasons or on the last of such
occasions before such receipt.
(4)
When in any proceedings commenced under sub-section (1) of section 145 the
Magistrate finds that the dispute is as regards an alleged right of user of
land or water, he may, after recording his reasons, continue with the
proceedings as if they had been commenced under sub-section (1);
and
when in any proceedings commenced under sub-section (1) the magistrate finds
that the dispute should be dealt with under section 145, he may, after
recording his reasons, continue with the proceedings as if they had been
commenced under sub-section (1) of section 145.
148.Local
inquiry.-
(1)
Whenever a local inquiry is necessary for the purposes of section 145, section
146 or section 147, a District Magistrate or Sub-divisional Magistrate may
depute any Magistrate subordinate to him to make the inquiry, and may furnish
him with such written instructions as may seem necessary for his guidance, and
may declare by whom the whole or any part of the necessary expenses of the
inquiry shall be paid.
(2)
The report of the person so deputed may be read as evidence in the case.
(3)
When any costs have been incurred by any party to a proceeding under section
145, section 146 or section 147, the Magistrate passing a decision may direct
by whom such costs shall be paid, whether by such party or by any other party
to the proceeding, and whether in whole or in part or proportion and such costs
may include any expenses incurred in respect of witnesses and of pleaders'
fees, which the Court may consider reasonable.
CHAPTER
XI
PREVENTIVE
ACTION OF THE POLICE
149.Police
to prevent cognizable offences.-
Every
police officer may interpose for the purpose of preventing, and shall, to the
best of his ability, prevent, the commission of any cognizable offence.
150.Information
of design to commit cognizable offences.-
Every
police officer receiving information of a design to commit any cognizable
offence shall communicate such information to the police officer to whom he is
subordinate, and to any other officer whose duty it is to prevent or take
cognizance of the commission of any such offence.
151.Arrest
to prevent the commission of cognizable offences.-
(1)
A police officer knowing of a design to commit any cognizable offence may
arrest, without orders from a Magistrate and without a warrant, the person so
designing, if it appears to such officer that the commission of the offence
cannot be otherwise prevented.
(2)
No person arrested under sub-section (1) shall be detained in custody for a
period exceeding twenty-four hours from the time of his arrest unless his
further detention is required or authorised under any other provisions of this
Code or of any other law for the time being in force.
152.Prevention
of injury to public property.-
A
police officer may of his own authority interpose to prevent any injury
attempted to be committed in his view to any public property, movable or
immovable, or the removal of injury of any public landmark or buoy or other
mark used for navigation.
153.Inspection
of weights and measures.-
(1)
Any officer in charge of a police station may, without a warrant, enter any place
within the limits of such station for the purpose of inspecting or searching
for any weights or measures or instruments for weighing, used or kept therein,
whenever he has reason to believe that there are in such place any weights,
measures or instruments for weighing which are false.
(2)
If he finds in such place any weights, measures or instruments for weighing
which are false, he may seize the same, and shall forthwith give information of
such seizure to a Magistrate having jurisdiction.
CHAPTER
XII
INFORMATION
TO THE POLICE AND THEIR POWERS TO INVESTIGATE
154.Information
in cognizable cases.-
(1)
Every information relating to the commission of a cognizable offence, if given
orally to an officer in charge of a police station, shall be reduced to writing
by him or under his direction, and be read over to the informant; and every
such information, whether given in writing or reduced to writing as aforesaid,
shall be signed by the person giving it, and the substance thereof shall be
entered in a book to be kept by such officer in such form as the State
Government may prescribe in this behalf.
(2)
A copy of the information as recorded under sub-section (1) shall be given
forthwith, free of cost, to the informant.
(3)
Any person aggrieved by a refusal on the part of an officer in charge of a
police station to record the information referred to in sub-section (1) may
send the substance of such information, in writing and by post, to the
Superintendent of Police concerned who, if satisfied that such information
discloses the commission of a cognizable offence, shall either investigate the
case himself or direct an investigation to be made by any police officer
subordinate to him, in the manner provided by this Code, and such officer shall
have all the powers of an officer in charge of the police station in relation
to that offence.
155.Information
as to non-cognizable cases and investigation of such cases.-
(1)
When information is given to an officer in charge of a police station of the
commission within the limits of such station of a non-cognizable offence, he
shall enter or cause to be entered the substance of the information in a book
to be kept by such officer in such form as the State Government may prescribe in
this behalf, and refer the informant to the Magistrate.
(2)
No police officer shall investigate a non-cognizable case without the order of
a Magistrate having power to try such case or commit the case for trial.
(3)
Any police officer receiving such order may exercise the same powers in respect
of the investigation (except the power to arrest without warrant) as an officer
in charge of a police station may exercise in a cognizable case.
(4)
Where a case relates to two or more offences of which at least one is
cognizable, the case shall be deemed to be a cognizable case, not-withstanding
that the other offences are non-cognizable.
156.Police
officers power to investigate cognizable case.-
(1)
Any officer in charge of a police station may, without the order of a
Magistrate, investigate any cognizable case which a Court having jurisdiction
over the local area within the limits of such station would have power to
inquire into or try under the provisions of Chapter XIII.
(2)
No proceeding of a police officer in any such case shall at any stage be called
in question on the ground that the case was one which such officer was not
empowered under this section to investigate.
(3)
Any Magistrate empowered under section 190 may order such an investigation as
above-mentioned.
157.Procedure
for investigation.-
(1)
If, from information received or otherwise, an officer in charge of a police
station has reason to suspect the commission of an offence which he is
empowered under section 156 to investigate, he shall forthwith send a report of
the same to a Magistrate empowered to take cognizance of such offence upon a
police report and shall proceed in person, or shall depute one of his
subordinate officers not being below such rank as the State Government may, by
general or special order, prescribe in this behalf, to proceed, to the spot, to
investigate the facts and circumstances of the case, and, if necessary, to take
measures for the discovery and arrest of the offender:
Provided
that-
(a)
when information as to the commission of any such offence is given against any
person by name and the case is not of a serious nature, the officer in charge
of a police station need not proceed in person or depute a subordinate officer
to make an investigation on the spot;
(b)
if it appears to the officer in charge of a police station that there is no
sufficient ground for entering on an investigation, he shall not investigate
the case.
(2)
In each of the cases mentioned in clauses (a) and (b) of the proviso to
sub-section (1), the officer in charge of the police station shall state in his
report his reasons for not fully complying with the requirements of that
sub-section, and, in the case mentioned in clause (b) of the said proviso, the
officer shall also forthwith notify to the informant, if any, in such manner as
may be prescribed by the State Government, the fact that he will not
investigate the case or cause it to be investigated.
158.Report
how submitted.-
(1)
Every report sent to a Magistrate under section 157 shall, if the State
Government so directs, be submitted through such superior officer of police as
the State Government, by general or special order, appoints in that behalf.
(2)
Such superior officer may give such instructions to the officer in charge of
the police station as he thinks fit, and shall, after recording such
instructions on such report, transmit the same without delay to the Magistrate.
159.Power
to hold investigation or preliminary inquiry.-
Such
Magistrate, on receiving such report, may direct an investigation, or, if he
thinks fit, at once proceed, or depute any Magistrate subordinate to him to
proceed, to hold a preliminary inquiry into, or otherwise to dispose of, the
case in the manner provided in this Code.
160.Police
officers power to require attendance of witnesses.-
(1)
Any police officer making an investigation under this Chapter may, by order in
writing, require the attendance before himself of any person being within the
limits of his own or any adjoining station who, from the information given or
otherwise, appears to be acquainted with the facts and circumstances of the
case; and such person shall attend as so required:
Provided
that no male person under the age of fifteen years or woman shall be required to
attend at any place other than the place in which such male person or woman
resides.
(2)
The State Government may, by rules made in this behalf, provide for the payment
by the police officer of the reasonable expenses of every person, attending
under sub-section (1) at any place other than his residence.
161.Examination
of witnesses by police.-
(1)
Any police officer making an investigation under this Chapter, or any police
officer not below such rank as the State Government may, by general or special order,
prescribe in this behalf, acting on the requisition of such officer, may
examine orally any person supposed to be acquainted with the facts and
circumstances of the case.
(2)
Such person shall be bound to answer truly all questions relating to such case
put to him by such officer, other than questions the answers to which would
have a tendency to expose him to a criminal charge or to a penalty or
forfeiture.
(3)
The police officer may reduce into writing any statement made to him in the
course of an examination under this section; and if he does so, he shall make a
separate and true record of the statement of each such person whose statement
he records.
162.Statements
to police not to be signed:
Use
of statements in evidence.- (1) No statement made by any person to a police
officer in the course of an investigation under this Chapter, shall, if reduced
to writing, be signed by the person making it; nor shall any such statement or
any record thereof, whether in a police diary or otherwise, or any part of such
statement or record, be used for any purpose, save as hereinafter provided, at
any inquiry or trial in respect of any offence under investigation at the time
when such statement was made:
Provided
that when any witness is called for the prosecution in such inquiry or trial
whose statement has been reduced into writing as aforesaid, any part of his
statement, if duly proved, may be used by the accused, and with the permission
of the Court, by the prosecution, to contradict such witness in the manner
provided by section 145 of the Indian Evidence Act , 1872; (1 of 1872) and when
any part of such statement is so used, any part thereof may also be used in the
re-examination of such witness, but for the purpose only of explaining any
matter referred to in his cross-examination.
(2)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to apply to any statement falling
within the provisions of clause (1) of section 32 of the Indian Evidence Act,
1872, (1 of 1872) or to affect the provisions of section 27 of that Act.
Explanation.-
An omission to state a fact or circumstance in the statement referred to in
sub-section (1) may amount to contradiction if the same appears to be significant
and otherwise relevant having regard to the context in which such omission
occurs and whether any omission amounts to a contradiction in the particular
context shall be a question of fact.
163.No
inducement to be offered.-
(1)
No police officer or other person in authority shall offer or make, or cause to
be offered or made, any such inducement, threat or promise as is mentioned in
section 24 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872(1 of 1872).
(2)
But no police officer or other person shall prevent, by any caution or
otherwise, any person from making in the course of any investigation under this
Chapter any statement which he may be disposed to make of his own free will:
Provided
that nothing in this sub-section shall affect the provisions of sub-section (4)
of section 164.
164.Recording
of confessions and statements.-
(1)
Any Metropolitan Magistrate or Judicial Magistrate may, whether or not he has
jurisdiction in the case, record any confession or statement made to him in the
course of an investigation under this Chapter or under any other law for the
time being in force, or at any time afterwards before the commencement of the
inquiry or trial:
Provided
that no confession shall be recorded by a police officer on whom any power of a
Magistrate has been conferred under any law for the time being in force.
(2)
The Magistrate shall, before recording any such confession, explain to the
person making it that he is not bound to make a confession and that, if he does
so, it may be used as evidence against him; and the Magistrate shall not record
any such confession unless, upon questioning the person making it, he has
reason to believe that it is being made voluntarily.
(3)
If at any time before the confession is recorded, the person appearing before
the Magistrate states that he is not willing to make the confession, the
Magistrate shall not authorise the detention of such person in police custody.
(4)
Any such confession shall be recorded in the manner provided in section 281 for
recording the examination of an accused person and shall be signed by the
person making the confession; and the Magistrate shall make a memorandum at the
foot of such record to the following effect:-
"I
have explained to (name) that he is not bound to make a confession and that, if
he does so, any confession he may make may be used as evidence against him and
I believe that this confession was voluntarily made.It was taken in my presence
and hearing, and was read over to the person making it and admitted by him to
be correct, and it contains a full and true account of the statement made by
him.
(Signed)
A. B.
Magistrate".
(5)
Any statement (other than a confession) made under sub-section (1) shall be
recorded in such manner hereinafter provided for the recording of evidence as
is, in the opinion of the Magistrate, best fitted to the circumstances of the
case; and the Magistrate shall have power to administer oath to the person
whose statement is so recorded.
(6)
The Magistrate recording a confession or statement under this section shall
forward it to the Magistrate by whom the case is to be inquired into or tried.
165.Search
by police officer
(1)
Whenever an officer in charge of a police station or a police officer making an
investigation has reasonable grounds for believing that anything necessary for
the purposes of an investigation into any offence which he is authorised to
investigate may be found in any place within the limits of the police station
of which he is in charge, or to which he is attached, and that such thing
cannot in his opinion be otherwise obtained without undue delay, such officer
may, after recording in writing the grounds of his belief and specifying in
such writing, so far as possible, the thing for which search is to be made,
search, or cause search to be made, for such thing in any place within the
limits of such station.
(2)
A police officer proceeding under sub-section (1), shall, if practicable,
conduct the search in person.
(3)
If he is unable to conduct the search in person, and there is no other person
competent to make the search present at the time, he may, after recording in
writing his reasons for so doing, require any officer subordinate to him to
make the search, and he shall deliver to such subordinate officer an order in
writing, specifying the place to be searched, and so far as possible, the thing
for which search is to be made; and such subordinate officer may thereupon
search for such thing in such place.
(4)
The provisions of this Code as to search-warrants and the general provisions as
to searches contained in section 100 shall, so far as may be, apply to a search
made under this section.
(5)
Copies of any record made under sub-section (1) or sub-section (3) shall
forthwith be sent to the nearest Magistrate empowered to take cognizance of the
offence, and the owner or occupier of the place searched shall, on application,
be furnished, free of cost, with a copy of the same by the Magistrate.
166.When
officer in charge of police station may require another to issue search
warrant.-
(1)
An officer in charge of a police station or a police officer not being below
the rank of sub-inspector making an investigation may require an officer in
charge of another police station, whether in the same or a different district,
to cause a search to be made in any place, in any case in which the former
officer might cause such search to be made, within the limits of his own
station.
(2)
Such officer, on being so required, shall proceed according to the provisions
of section 165, and shall forward the thing found, if any, to the officer at
whose request the search was made.
(3)
Whenever there is reason to believe that the delay occasioned by requiring an
officer in-charge of another police station to cause a search to be made under
sub-section (1) might result in evidence of the commission of an offence being
concealed or destroyed, it shall be lawful for an officer in-charge of a police
station or a police officer making any investigation under this Chapter to
search, or cause to be searched, any place in the limits of another police
station in accordance with the provisions of section 165, as if such place were
within the limits of his own police station.
(4)
Any officer conducting a search under sub-section (3) shall forthwith send
notice of the search to the officer in charge of the police station within the
limits of which such place is situate, and shall also send with such notice a
copy of the list (if any) prepared under section 100, and shall also send to
the nearest Magistrate empowered to take cognizance of the offence, copies of
the records referred to in sub-sections (1) and (3) of section 165.
(5)
The owner or occupier of the place searched shall, on application, be furnished
free of cost with a copy of any record sent to the Magistrate under sub-section
(4).
167.Procedure
when investigation cannot be completed in twenty four hours.-
(1)
Whenever any person is arrested and detained in custody, and it appears that
the investigation cannot be completed within the period of twenty-four hours
fixed by section 57, and there are grounds for believing that the accusation or
information is well-founded, the officer in charge of the police station or the
police officer making the investigation, if he is not below the rank of
sub-inspector, shall forthwith transmit to the nearest Judicial Magistrate a
copy of the entries in the diary hereinafter prescribed relating to the case,
and shall at the same time forward the accused to such Magistrate.
(2)
The Magistrate to whom an accused person is forwarded under this section may,
whether he has or has not jurisdiction to try the case, from time to time,
authorise the detention of the accused in such custody as such Magistrate
thinks fit, for a term not exceeding fifteen days in the whole; and if he has
no jurisdiction to try the case or commit it for trial, and considers further detention
unnecessary, he may order the accused to be forwarded to a Magistrate having
such jurisdiction:
Provided
that-
(a)
the Magistrate may authorise detention of the accused person, otherwise than in
custody of the police, beyond the period of fifteen days if he is satisfied
that adequate grounds exist for doing so, but no Magistrate shall authorise the
detention of the accused person in custody under this section for a total
period exceeding sixty days, and on the expiry of the said period of sixty days,
the accused person shall be released on bail if he is prepared to and does
furnish bail; and every person released on bail under this section shall be
deemed to be so released under the provisions of Chapter XXXIII for the
purposes of that Chapter;
(b)
no Magistrate shall authorise detention in any custody under this section
unless the accused is produced before him;
(c)
no Magistrate of the second class, not specially empowered in this behalf by
the High Court, shall authorise detention in the custody of the police.
Explanation.-
If any question arises whether an accused person was produced before the
Magistrate as required under paragraph (b), the production of the accused
person may be proved by his signature on the order authorising detention.
(3)
A Magistrate authorising under this section detention in the custody of the
police shall record his reasons for so doing.
(4)
Any Magistrate other than the Chief Judicial Magistrate making such order shall
forward a copy of his order, with his reasons for making it, to the Chief
Judicial Magistrate.
(5)
If in any case triable by a Magistrate as a summons-case, the investigation is
not concluded within a period of six months from the date on which the accused
was arrested, the Magistrate shall make an order stopping further investigation
into the offence unless the officer making the investigation satisfies the
Magistrate that for special reasons and in the interests of justice the
continuation of the investigation beyond the period of six months is necessary.
(6)
Where any order stopping further investigation into an offence has been made
under sub-section (5), the Sessions Judge may, if he is satisfied, on an
application made to him or otherwise, that further investigation into the
offence ought to be made, vacate the order made under sub-section (5) and
direct further investigation to be made into the offence subject to such
directions with regard to bail and other matters as he may specify.
168.Report
of investigation by subordinate police officer.-
When
any subordinate police officer has made any investigation under this Chapter,
he shall report the result of such investigation to the officer in charge of
the police station.
169.Release
of accused when evidence deficient.-
If,
upon an investigation under this Chapter, it appears to the officer in charge
of the police station that there is not sufficient evidence or reasonable
ground of suspicion to justify the forwarding of the accused to a Magistrate,
such officer shall, if such person is in custody, release him on his executing
a bond, with or without sureties, as such officer may direct, to appear, if and
when so required, before a Magistrate empowered to take cognizance of the
offence on a police report, and to try the accused or commit him for trial.
170.Cases
to be sent to Magistrate when evidence is sufficient.-
(1)
If, upon an investigation under this Chapter, it appears to the officer in
charge of the police station that there is sufficient evidence or reasonable
ground as aforesaid, such officer shall forward the accused under custody to a
Magistrate empowered to take cognizance of the offence upon a police report and
to try the accused or commit him for trial, or, if the offence is bailable and
the accused is able to give security, shall take security from him for his
appearance before such Magistrate on a day fixed and for his attendance from
day to day before such Magistrate until otherwise directed.
(2)
When the officer in charge of a police station forwards an accused person to a
Magistrate or takes security for his appearance before such Magistrate under
this section, he shall send to such Magistrate any weapon or other article
which it may be necessary to produce before him, and shall require the
complainant (if any) and so many of the persons who appear to such officer to
be acquainted with the facts and circumstances of the case as he may think
necessary, to execute a bond to appear before the Magistrate as thereby
directed and prosecute or give evidence (as the case may be) in the matter of
the charge against the accused.
(3)
If the Court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate is mentioned in the bond, such
Court shall be held to include any Court to which such Magistrate may refer the
case for inquiry or trial, provided reasonable notice of such reference is
given to such complainant or persons.
(4)
The officer in whose presence the bond is executed shall deliver a copy thereof
to one of the persons who executed it, and shall then send to the Magistrate
the original with his report.
171.Complainant
and witnesses not to be required to accompany police officer and not to be
subjected to restraint.-
No
complainant or witness on his way to any Court shall be required to accompany a
police officer, or shall be subjected to unnecessary restraint or
inconvenience, or required to give any security for his appearance other than
his own bond:
Provided
that, if any complainant or witness refuses to attend or to execute a bond as
directed in section 170, the officer in charge of the police station may
forward him in custody to the Magistrate, who may detain him in custody until
he executes such bond, or until the hearing of the case is completed.
172.Diary
of proceedings in investigation.-
(1)
Every police officer making an investigation under this Chapter shall day by
day enter his proceedings in the investigation in a diary, setting forth the
time at which the information reached him, the time at which he began and
closed his investigation, the place or places visited by him, and a statement of
the circumstances ascertained through his investigation.
(2)
Any Criminal Court may send for the police diaries of a case under inquiry or
trial in such Court, and may use such diaries, not as evidence in the case, but
to aid it in such inquiry or trial.
(3)
Neither the accused nor his agents shall be entitled to call for such diaries,
nor shall he or they be entitled to see them merely because they are referred
to by the Court; but, if they are used by the police officer who made them to
refresh his memory, or if the Court uses them for the purpose of contradicting
such police officer, the provisions of section 161 or section 145 as the case
may be, of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, (1 of 1872) shall apply.
173.Report
of police officer on completion of investigation.-
(1)
Every investigation under this Chapter shall be completed without unnecessary
delay.
(2)
(i) As soon as it is completed, the officer in charge of the police station
shall forward to a Magistrate empowered to take cognizance of the offence on a
police report, a report in the form prescribed by the State Government, stating
-
(a)
the names of the parties;
(b)
the nature of the information;
(c)
the names of the persons who appear to be acquainted with the circumstances of
the case;
(d)
whether any offence appears to have been committed and, if so, by whom;
(e)
whether the accused has been arrested;
(f)
whether he has been released on his bond and, if so, whether with or without
sureties;
(g)
whether he has been forwarded in custody under section 170.
(ii)
The officer shall also communicate, in such manner as may be prescribed by the
State Government, the action taken by him, to the person, if any, by whom the
information relating to the commission of the offence was first given.
(3)
Where a superior officer of police has been appointed under section 158, the
report shall, in any case in which the State Government by general or special
order so directs, be submitted through that officer, and he may, pending the
orders of the Magistrate, direct the officer in charge of the police station to
make further investigation.
(4)
Whenever it appears from a report forwarded under this section that the accused
has been released on his bond, the Magistrate shall make such order for the
discharge of such bond or otherwise as he thinks fit.
(5)
When such report is in respect of a case to which section 170 applies, the
police officer shall forward to the Magistrate along with the report-
(a)
all documents or relevant extracts thereof on which the prosecution proposes to
rely other than those already sent to the Magistrate during investigation;
(b)
the statements recorded under section 161 of all the persons whom the
prosecution proposes to examine as its witnesses.
(6)
If the police officer is of opinion that any part of any such statement is not
relevant to the subject-matter of the proceedings or that its disclosure to the
accused is not essential in the interest of justice and is inexpedient in the
public interest, he shall indicate that part of the statement and append a note
requesting the Magistrate to exclude that part from the copies to be granted to
the accused and stating his reasons for making such request.
(7)
Where the police officer investigating the case finds it convenient so to do,
he may furnish to the accused copies of all or any of the documents referred to
in sub-section (5).
(8)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to preclude further investigation in
respect of an offence after a report under sub-section (2) has been forwarded
to the Magistrate and, where upon such investigation, the officer in charge of
the police station obtains further evidence, oral or documentary, he shall
forward to the Magistrate a further report or reports regarding such evidence
in the form prescribed; and the provisions of sub-sections (2) to (6) shall, as
far as may be, apply in relation to such report or reports as they apply in
relation to a report forwarded under sub-section (2).
174.Police
to enquire and report on suicide, etc.-
(1)
When the officer in charge of a police station or some other police officer
specially empowered by the State Government in that behalf receives information
that a person has committed suicide, or has been killed by another or by an
animal or by machinery or by an accident, or has died under circumstances
raising a reasonable suspicion that some other person has committed an offence,
he shall immediately give intimation thereof to the nearest Executive Magistrate
empowered to hold inquests, and, unless otherwise directed by any rule
prescribed by the State Government, or by any general or special order of the
District or Sub-divisional Magistrate, shall proceed to the place where the
body of such deceased person is, and there, in the presence of two or more
respectable inhabitants of the neighbourhood, shall make an investigation, and
draw up a report of the apparent cause of death, describing such wounds,
fractures, bruises, and other marks of injury as may be found on the body, and
stating in what manner, or by what weapon or instrument (if any); such marks
appear to have been inflicted.
(2)
The report shall be signed by such police officer and other persons, or by so
many of them as concur therein, and shall be forthwith forwarded to the
District Magistrate or the Sub-divisional Magistrate.
(3)
When there is any doubt regarding the cause of death, or when for any other
reason the police officer considers it expedient so to do, he shall, subject to
such rules as the State Government may prescribe in this behalf, forward the
body, with a view to its being examined, to the nearest Civil Surgeon, or other
qualified medical man appointed in this behalf by the State Government, if the
state of the weather and the distance admit of its being so forwarded without
risk of such putrefaction on the road as would render such examination useless.
(4)
The following Magistrates are empowered to hold inquests, namely, any District
Magistrate or Sub-divisional Magistrate and any other Executive Magistrate
specially empowered in this behalf by the State Government or the District
Magistrate.
175.Power
to summon persons.-
(1)
A police officer proceeding under section 174 may, by order in writing, summon
two or more persons as aforesaid for the purpose of the said investigation, and
any other person who appears to be acquainted with the facts of the case and
every person so summoned shall be bound to attend and to answer truly all
questions other than questions the answers to which would have a tendency to
expose him to a criminal charge or to a penalty or forfeiture.
(2)
If the facts do not disclose a cognizable offence to which section 170 applies,
such persons shall not be required by the police officer to attend a Magistrate's
Court.
176.Inquiry
by Magistrate into cause of death.-
(1)
When any person dies while in the custody of the police, the nearest Magistrate
empowered to hold inquests shall, and in any other case mentioned in
sub-section (1) of section 174, any Magistrate so empowered may hold an inquiry
into the cause of death either instead of, or in addition to, the investigation
held by the police officer; and if he does so, he shall have all the powers in
conducting it which he would have in holding an inquiry into an offence.
(2)
The Magistrate holding such an inquiry shall record the evidence taken by him
in connection therewith in any manner hereinafter prescribed according to the
circumstances of the case.
(3)
Whenever such Magistrate considers it expedient to make an examination of the
dead body of any person who has been already interred, in order to discover the
cause of his death, the Magistrate may cause the body to be disinterested and
examined.
(4)
Where an inquiry is to be held under this section, the Magistrate shall,
wherever practicable, inform the relatives of the deceased whose names and
addresses are known, and shall allow them to remain present at the inquiry.
Explanation.-
In this section, the expression "relative" means parents, children,
brothers, sisters and spouse.
CHAPTER
XIII
JURISDICTION
OF THE CRIMINAL COURTS IN INQUIRIES AND TRIALS
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.
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 a continuing one, and continues 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.
179.Offence
triable where act is done or consequence ensues.-
When
an act is an offence by reason of anything which has been done and of a
consequence which has ensued, the offence may be inquired into or tried by a
Court within whose local jurisdiction such thing has been done or such
consequence has ensued.
180.Place
of trial where act is an offence by reason of relation to other offence.-
When
an act is an offence by reason of its relation to any other act which is also
an offence or which would be an offence if the doer were capable of committing
an offence, the first-mentioned offence may be inquired into or tried by a
Court within whose local jurisdiction either act was done.
181.Place
of trial in case of certain offences.-
(1)
Any offence of being a thug, or murder committed by a thug , of dacoity, of
dacoity with murder, of belonging to a gang of dacoits, or of escaping from
custody, may be inquired into or tried by a Court within whose local
jurisdiction the offence was committed or the accused person is found.
(2)
Any offence of kidnapping or abduction of a person may be inquired into or
tried by a Court within whose local jurisdiction the person was kidnapped or
abducted or was conveyed or concealed or detained.
(3)
Any offence of theft, extortion or robbery may be inquired into or tried by a
Court within whose local jurisdiction the offence was committed or the stolen
property which is the subject of the offence was possessed by any person
committing it or by any person who received or retained such property knowing
or having reason to believe it to be stolen property.
(4)
Any offence of criminal misappropriation or of criminal breach of trust may be
inquired into or tried by a Court within whose local jurisdiction the offence
was committed or any part of the property which is the subject of the offence was
received or retained, or was required to be returned or accounted for, by the
accused person.
(5)
Any offence which includes the possession of stolen property may be inquired
into or tried by a Court within whose local jurisdiction the offence was committed
or the stolen property was possessed by any person who received or retained it
knowing or having reason to believe it to be stolen property.
182.Offences
committed by letters, etc.-
(1)
Any offence which includes cheating may, if the deception is practised by means
of letters or telecommunication messages, be inquired into or tried by any
Court within whose local jurisdiction such letters or messages were sent or
were received; and any offence of cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of
property may be inquired into or tried by a Court within whose local
jurisdiction the property was delivered by the person deceived or was received
by the accused person.
(2)
Any offence punishable under section 494 or section 495 of the Indian Penal
Code(45 of 1860) may be inquired into or tried by a Court within whose local
jurisdiction the offence was committed or the offender last resided with his or
her spouse by the first marriage.
183.Offence
committed on journey or voyage.-
When
an offence is committed whilst the person by or against whom, or the thing in
respect of which, the offence is committed is in the course of performing a
journey or voyage, the offence may be inquired into or tried by a Court through
or into whose local jurisdiction that person or thing passed in the course of
that journey or voyage.
184.Place
of trial for offences triable together.-
Where-
(a)
the offences committed by any person are such that he may be charged with, and
tried at one trial for, each such offence by virtue of the provisions of
section 219, section 220 or section 221, or
(b)
the offence or offences committed by several persons are such that they may be
charged with and tried together by virtue of the provisions of section 223,
the
offences may be inquired into or tried by any Court competent to inquire into
or try and of the offences.
185.Power
to order cases to be tried in different sessions divisions.-
Notwithstanding
anything contained in the preceding provisions of this Chapter, the State
Government may direct that any cases or class of cases committed for trial in
any district may be tried in any sessions division:
Provided
that such direction is not repugnant to any direction previously issued by the
High Court or the Supreme Court under the Constitution, or under this Code or
any other law for the time being in force.
186.High
Court to decide, in case of doubt, district where inquiry or trial shall take
place.-
Where
two or more Courts have taken cognizance of the same offence and a question
arises as to which of them ought to inquire into or try that offence, the
question shall be decided -
(a)
if the Courts are subordinate to the same High Court, by that High Court;
(b)
if the Courts are not subordinate to the same High Court, by the High Court
within the local limits of whose appellate criminal jurisdiction the
proceedings were first commenced,
and
thereupon all other proceedings in respect of that offence shall be
discontinued.
187.Power
to issue summons or warrant for offence committed beyond local jurisdiction.-
(1)
When a Magistrate of the first class sees reason to believe that any person
within his local jurisdiction has committed outside such jurisdiction (whether
within or outside India) an offence which cannot, under the provisions of
sections 177 to 185 (both inclusive), or any other law for the time being in
force, be inquired into or tried within such jurisdiction but is under some law
for the time being in force triable in India, such Magistrate may inquire into
the offence as if it had been committed within such local jurisdiction and
compel such person in the manner hereinbefore provided to appear before him,
and send such person to the Magistrate having jurisdiction to inquire into or
try such offence, or, if such offence is not punishable with death or
imprisonment for life and such person is ready and willing to give bail to the
satisfaction of the Magistrate acting under this section, take a bond with or
without sureties for his appearance before the Magistrate having such
jurisdiction.
(2)
When there are more Magistrates than one having such jurisdiction and the
Magistrate acting under this section cannot satisfy himself as to the
Magistrate to or before whom such person should be sent or bound to appear, the
case shall be reported for the orders of the High Court.
188.Offence
committed outside India.- When an offence is committed outside India -
(a)
by a citizen of India, whether on the high seas or elsewhere; or
(b)
by a person, not being such citizen, on any ship or aircraft registered in
India,
he
may be dealt with in respect of such offence as if it had been committed at any
place within India at which he may be found:
Provided
that, notwithstanding anything in any of the preceding sections of this
Chapter, no such offence shall be inquired into or tried in India except with
the previous sanction of the Central Government.
189.Receipt
of evidence relating to offences committed outside India.-
When
any offence alleged to have been committed in a territory outside India is
being inquired into or tried under the provisions of section 188, the Central
Government may, if it thinks fit, direct that copies of depositions made or
exhibits produced before a Judicial officer in or for that territory or before
a diplomatic or consular representative of India in or for that territory shall
be received as evidence by the Court holding such inquiry or trial in any case
in which such Court might issue a commission for taking evidence as to the
matters to which such depositions or exhibits relate.
CHAPTER
XIV
CONDITIONS
REQUISITE FOR INITIATION OF PROCEEDING
190.Cognizance
of offences by Magistrates.-
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Chapter, any Magistrate of the first class,
and any Magistrate of the second class specially empowered in this behalf under
sub-section (2), may take cognizance of any offence -
(a)
upon receiving a complaint of facts which constitute such offence;
(b)
upon a police report of such facts;
(c)
upon information received from any person other than a police officer, or upon
his own knowledge, that such offence has been committed.
(2)
The Chief Judicial Magistrate may empower any Magistrate of the second class to
take cognizance under sub-section (1) of such offences as are within his
competence to inquire into or try.
191.Transfer
on application of the accused.-
When
a Magistrate takes cognizance of an offence under clause (c) of sub-section (1)
of section 190, the accused shall, before any evidence is taken, be informed
that he is entitled to have the case inquired into or tried by another
Magistrate, and if the accused or any of the accused, if there be more than one,
objects to further proceedings before the Magistrate taking cognizance, the
case shall be transferred to such other Magistrate as may be specified by the
Chief Judicial Magistrate in this behalf.
192.Making
over of cases to Magistrates.-
(1)
Any Chief Judicial Magistrate may, after taking cognizance of an offence, make
over the case for inquiry or trial to any competent Magistrate subordinate to
him.
(2)
Any Magistrate of the first class empowered in this behalf by the Chief
Judicial Magistrate may, after taking cognizance of an offence, make over the
case for inquiry or trial to such other competent Magistrate as the Chief
Judicial Magistrate may, by general or special order, specify, and thereupon
such Magistrate may hold the inquiry or trial.
193.Cognizance
of offences by Courts of Session.-
Except
as otherwise expressly provided by this Code or by any other law for the time
being in force, no Court of Session shall take cognizance of any offence as a
Court of original jurisdiction unless the case has been committed to it by a
Magistrate under this Code.
194.Additional
and Assistant Sessions Judges to try cases made over to them.
As
Additional Sessions Judge or Assistant Sessions Judge shall try such cases as
the Sessions Judge of the division may, by general or special order, make over
to him for trial or as the High Court may, by special order, direct him to try.
195.Prosecution
for contempt of lawful authority of public servants, for offences against
public justice and for offences relating to documents given in evidence.-
(1)
No Court shall take cognizance-
(a)
(I) of any offence punishable under sections 172 to 188 (both inclusive) of the
Indian Penal Code,(45 of 1860) or
(ii)
of any abetment of, or attempt to commit, such offence, or
(iii)
of any criminal conspiracy to commit such offence,
except
on the complaint in writing of the public servant concerned or of some other
public servant to whom he is administratively subordinate;
(b)
(I) of any offence punishable under any of the following sections of the Indian
Penal Code,(45 of 1860) namely, sections 193 to 196 (both inclusive), 199, 200,
205 to 211 (both inclusive) and 228, when such offence is alleged to have been
committed in, or in relation to, any proceeding in any Court, or
(ii)
of any offence described in section 463, or punishable under section 471,
section 475 or section 476, of the said Code, when such offence is alleged to
have been committed in respect of a document produced or given in evidence in a
proceeding in any Court, or
(iii)
of any criminal conspiracy to commit, or attempt to commit, or the abetment of,
any offence specified in sub-clause (I) or sub-clause (ii),
except
on the complaint in writing of that Court, or of some other Court to which that
Court is subordinate.
(2)
Where a complaint has been made by a public servant under clause (a) of
sub-section (1) any authority to which he is administratively subordinate may
order the withdrawal of the complaint and send a copy of such order to the
Court; and upon its receipt by the Court, no further proceedings shall be taken
on the complaint:
Provided
that no such withdrawal shall be ordered if the trial in the Court of first
instance has been concluded.
(3)
In clause (b) of sub-section (1), the term "Court" means a Civil,
Revenue or Criminal Court, and includes a tribunal constituted by or under a
Central, Provincial or State Act if declared by that Act to be a Court for the
purposes of this section.
(4)
For the purposes of clause (b) of sub-section (1), 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 whose local 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;
(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.
196.Prosecution
for offences against the State and for criminal conspiracy to commit such
offence.- (1) No Court shall take cognizance of -
(a)
any offence punishable under Chapter VI or under section 153A, section 153B,
section 295A or section 505 of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) or
(b)
a criminal conspiracy to commit such offence, or
(c)any
such abetment, as is described in section 108A of the Indian Penal Code,
(45
of 1860)
except
with the previous sanction of the Central Government or of the State
Government.
(2)
No Court shall take cognizance of the offence of any criminal conspiracy
punishable under section 120B of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) other than
a criminal conspiracy to commit a cognizable offence punishable with death,
imprisonment for life or rigorous imprisonment for a term of two years or
upwards, unless the State Government or the District Magistrate has consented
in writing to the initiation of the proceedings:
Provided
that where the criminal conspiracy is one to which the provisions of section
195 apply, no such consent shall be necessary.
(3)
The Central Government or the State Government may, before according sanction
under sub-section (1) and the State Government or the District Magistrate may,
before giving consent under sub-section (2), order a preliminary investigation
by a police officer not being below the rank of Inspector, in which case such
police officer shall have the powers referred to in sub-section (3) of section
155.
197.Prosecution
of Judges and public servants.
-
(1) When any person who is or was a Judge or Magistrate or a public servant not
removable from his office save by or with the sanction of the Government is
accused of any offence alleged to have been committed by him while acting or
purporting to act in the discharge of his official duty, no Court shall take
cognizance of such offence except with the previous sanction-
(a)
in the case of a person who is employed or, as the case may be, was at the time
of commission of the alleged offence employed, in connection with the affairs
of the Union, of the Central Government;
(b)
in the case of a person who is employed or, as the case may be, was at the time
of commission of the alleged offence employed, in connection with the affairs
of a State, of the State Government.
(2)
No Court shall take cognizance of any offence alleged to have been committed by
any member of the Armed Forces of the Union while acting or purporting to act
in the discharge of his official duty, except with the previous sanction of the
Central Government.
(3)
The State Government may, by notification, direct that the provisions of
sub-section (2) shall apply to such class or category of the members of the
Forces charged with the maintenance of public order as may be specified
therein, wherever they may be serving, and thereupon the provisions of that
sub-section will apply as if for the expression "Central Government"
occurring therein, the expression "State Government" were
substituted.
(4)
The Central Government or the State Government, as the case may be, may
determine the person by whom, the manner in which, and the offence or offences
for which, the prosecution of such Judge, Magistrate or public servant is to be
conducted, and may specify the Court before which the trial is to be held.
198.Prosecution
for offences against marriage.-
(1)
No Court shall take cognizance of an offence punishable under Chapter XX of the
Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) except upon a complaint made by some person
aggrieved by the offence:
Provided
that-
(a)
where such person is under the age of eighteen years, or is an idiot or a
lunatic, or is from sickness or infirmity unable to make a complaint, or is a
woman who, according to the local customs and manners, ought not to be
compelled to appear in public, some other person may, with the leave of the
Court, make a complaint on his or her behalf;
(b)
where such person is the husband and he is serving in any of the Armed Forces
of the Union under conditions which are certified by his Commanding Officer as
precluding him from obtaining leave of absence to enable him to make a
complaint in person, some other person authorised by the husband in accordance
with the provisions of sub-section (4) may make a complaint on his behalf;
(c)
where the person aggrieved by an offence punishable under section 494 of the
Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) is the wife, complaint may be made on her behalf
by her father, mother, brother, sister, son or daughter or by her father's or
mother's brother or sister.
(2)
For the purposes of sub-section (1), no person other than the husband of the
woman shall be deemed to be aggrieved by any offence punishable under section
497 or section 498 of the said Code:
Provided
that in the absence of the husband, some person who had care of the woman on
his behalf at the time when such offence was committed may, with the leave of
the Court, make a complaint on his behalf.
(3)
When in any case falling under clause (a) of the proviso to sub-section (1),
the complaint is sought to be made on behalf of a person under the age of
eighteen years or of a lunatic by a person who has not been appointed or
declared by a competent authority to be the guardian of the person of the minor
or lunatic, and the Court is satisfied that there is a guardian so appointed or
declared, the Court shall, before granting the application for leave, cause
notice to be given to such guardian and give him a reasonable opportunity of
being heard.
(4)
The authorisation referred to in clause (b) of the proviso to sub-section (1),
shall be in writing, shall be signed or otherwise attested by the husband,
shall contain a statement to the effect that he has been informed of the
allegations upon which the complaint is to be founded, shall be countersigned
by his Commanding Officer, and shall be accompanied by a certificate signed by
that Officer to the effect that leave of absence for the purpose of making a
complaint in person cannot for the time being be granted to the husband.
(5)
Any document purporting to be such an authorisation and complying with the
provisions of sub-section (4), and any document purporting to be a certificate
required by that sub-section shall, unless the contrary is proved, be presumed
to be genuine and shall be received in evidence.
(6)
No Court shall take cognizance of an offence under section 376 of the Indian
Penal Code, (45 of 1860) where such offence consists of sexual inter-course by
a man with his own wife, the wife being under fifteen years of age, if more
than one year has elapsed from the date of the commission of the offence.
(7)
The provisions of this section apply to the abetment of, or attempt to commit,
an offence as they apply to the offence.
199.Prosecution
for defamation.-
(1)
No Court shall take cognizance of an offence punishable under Chapter XXI of
the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) except upon a complaint made by some person
aggrieved by the offence:
Provided
that where such person is under the age of eighteen years, or is an idiot or a
lunatic, or is from sickness or infirmity unable to make a complaint, or is a
woman who, according to the local customs and manners, ought not to be
compelled to appear in public, some other person may, with the leave of the
Court, make a complaint on his or her behalf.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Code, when any offence falling under
Chapter XXI of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) is alleged to have been
committed against a person who, at the time of such commission, is the
President of India, the Vice-President of India, the Governor of a State, the
Administrator of a Union territory or a Minister of the Union or of a State or
of a Union territory, or any other public servant employed in connection with
the affairs of the Union or of a State in respect of his conduct in the
discharge of his public functions a Court of Session may take cognizance of
such offence, without the case being committed to it, upon a complaint in
writing made by the Public Prosecutor.
(3)
Every complaint referred to in sub-section (2) shall set forth the facts which
constitute the offence alleged, the nature of such offence and such other
particulars as are reasonably sufficient to give notice to the accused of the
offence alleged to have been committed by him.
(4)
No complaint under sub-section (2) shall be made by the Public Prosecutor
except with the previous sanction-
(a)
of the State Government, in the case of a person who is or has been the
Governor of that State or a Minister of that Government;
(b)
of the State Government, in the case of any other public servant employed in
connection with the affairs of the State;
(c)
of the Central Government, in any other case.
(5)
No Court of Session shall take cognizance of an offence under sub-section (2)
unless the complaint is made within six months from the date on which the
offence is alleged to have been committed.
(6)
Nothing in this section shall affect the right of the person against whom the
offence is alleged to have been committed, to make a complaint in respect of
that offence before a Magistrate having jurisdiction or the power of such
Magistrate to take cognizance of the offence upon such complaint.
CHAPTER
XV
COMPLAINTS
TO MAGISTRATES
200.Examination
of complainant.-
A
Magistrate taking cognizance of an offence on complaint shall examine upon oath
the complainant and the witnesses present, if any, and the substance of such
examination shall be reduced to writing and shall be signed by the complainant
and the witnesses, and also by the Magistrate:
Provided
that, when the complaint is made in writing, the Magistrate need not examine
the complainant and the witnesses-
(a)
if a public servant acting or purporting to act in the discharge of his
official duties or a Court has made the complainant; or
(b)
if the Magistrate makes over the case for inquiry or trial to another
Magistrate under section 192:
Provided
further that if the Magistrate makes over the case to another Magistrate under
section 192 after examining the complainant and the witnesses, the latter
Magistrate need not re-examine them.
201.Procedure
by Magistrate not competent to take cognizance of the case.-
If
the complaint is made to a Magistrate who is not competent to take cognizance
of the offence, he shall, -
(a)
if the complaint is in writing, return it for presentation to the proper Court
with an endorsement to that effect;
(b)
if the complaint is not in writing, direct the complainant to the proper Court.
202.Postponement
of issue of process.-
(1)
Any Magistrate , on receipt of a complaint of an offence of which he is
authorised to take cognizance or which has been made over to him under section
192, may, if he thinks fit, postpone the issue of process against the accused,
and either inquire into the case himself or direct an investigation to be made
by a police officer or by such other person as he thinks fit, for the purpose
of deciding whether or not there is sufficient ground for proceeding:
Provided
that no such direction for investigation shall be made, -
(a)
where it appears to the Magistrate that the offence complained of is triable
exclusively by the Court of Session; or
(b)
where the complaint has not been made by a Court, unless the complainant and
the witnesses present (if any) have been examined on oath under section 200.
(2)
In an inquiry under sub-section (1), the Magistrate may, if he thinks fit, take
evidence of witnesses on oath:
Provided
that if it appears to the Magistrate that the offence complained of is triable
exclusively by the Court of Session, he shall call upon the complainant to
produce all his witnesses and examine them on oath.
(3)
If an investigation under sub-section (1) is made by a person not being a
police officer, he shall have for that investigation all the powers conferred
by this Code on an officer in charge of a police station except the power to
arrest without warrant.
203.Dismissal
of complaint.-
If,
after considering the statements on oath (if any) of the complainant and of the
witnesses and the result of the inquiry or investigation (if any) under section
202, the Magistrate is of opinion that there is no sufficient ground for
proceeding, he shall dismiss the complaint, and in every such case he shall
briefly record his reasons for so doing.
CHAPTER
XVI
COMMENCEMENT
OF PROCEEDINGS BEFORE MAGISTRATES
204.Issue
of process.-
(1)
If in the opinion of a Magistrate taking cognizance of an offence there is sufficient
ground for proceeding, and the case appears to be -
(a)
a summons-case, he shall issue his summons for the attendance of the accused,
or
(b)
a warrant-case, he may issue a warrant, or, if he thinks fit, a summons, for
causing the accused to be brought or to appear at a certain time before such
Magistrate or (if he has no jurisdiction himself) some other Magistrate having
jurisdiction.
(2)
No summons or warrant shall be issued against the accused under sub-section (1)
until a list of the prosecution witnesses has been filed.
(3)
In a proceeding instituted upon a complaint made in writing, every summons or
warrant issued under sub-section (1) shall be accompanied by a copy of such
complaint.
(4)
When by any law for the time being in force any process-fees or other fees are
payable, no process shall be issued until the fees are paid and, if such fees
are not paid within a reasonable time, the Magistrate may dismiss the
complaint.
(5)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to affect the provisions of section 87.
205.Magistrate
may dispense with personal attendance of accused.- (1) Whenever a Magistrate
issues a summons, he may, if he sees reason so to do, dispense with the personal
attendance of the accused and permit him to appear by his pleader.
(2)
But the Magistrate inquiring into or trying the case may, in his discretion, at
any stage of the proceedings, direct the personal attendance of the accused,
and, if necessary, enforce such attendance in the manner hereinbefore provided.
206.Special
summons in cases of petty offence.-
(1)
If, in the opinion of a Magistrate taking cognizance of a petty offence, the
case may be summarily disposed of under section 260, the Magistrate shall,
except where he is, for reasons to be recorded in writing of a contrary
opinion, issue summons to the accused requiring him either to appear in person
or by pleader before the Magistrate on a specified date, or if he desires to
plead guilty to the charge without appearing before the Magistrate, to transmit
before the specified date, by post or by messenger to the Magistrate, the said
plea in writing and the amount of fine specified in the summons or if he
desires to appear by pleader and to plead guilty to the charge through such
pleader, to authorise, in writing, the pleader to plead guilty to the charge on
his behalf and to pay the fine through such pleader:
Provided
that the amount of the fine specified in such summons shall not exceed one
hundred rupees.
(2)
For the purposes of this section, "petty offence" means any offence
punishable only with fine not exceeding one thousand rupees, but does not
include any offence so punishable under the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, (4 of
1939) or under any other law which provides for convicting the accused person
in his absence on a plea of guilty.
207.Supply
to the accused of copy of police report and other documents.-
In
any case where the proceeding has been instituted on a police report, the
Magistrate shall without delay furnish to the accused, free of cost, a copy of
each of the following:-
(I)
the police report;
(ii)
the first information report recorded under section 154;
(iii)
the statements recorded under sub-section (3) of section 161 of all persons whom
the prosecution proposes to examine as its witnesses, excluding therefrom any
part in regard to which a request for such exclusion has been made by the
police officer under sub-section (6) of section 173;
(iv)
the confessions and statements, if any, recorded under section 164;
(v)
any other document or relevant extract thereof forwarded to the Magistrate with
the police report under sub-section (5) of section 173:
Provided
that the Magistrate may, after perusing any such part of a statement as is referred
to in clause (iii) and considering the reasons given by the police officer for
the request, direct that a copy of that part of the statement or of such
portion thereof as the Magistrate thinks proper, shall be furnished to the
accused:
Provided
further that if the Magistrate is satisfied that any document referred to in
clause (v) is voluminous, he shall, instead of furnishing the accused with a
copy thereof, direct that he will only be allowed to inspect it either
personally or through pleader in Court.
208.Supply
of copies of statements and documents to accused in other cases triable by
Court of Session.-
Where,
in a case instituted otherwise than on a police report, it appears to the
Magistrate issuing process under section 204 that the offence is triable
exclusively by the Court of Session, the Magistrate shall without delay furnish
to the accused, free of cost, a copy of each of the following:-
(i)
the statements recorded under section 200 or section 202, of all persons
examined by the Magistrate;
(ii)
the statements and confessions, if any, recorded under section 161 or section
164;
(iii)
any documents produced before the Magistrate on which the prosecution proposes
to rely:
Provided
that if the Magistrate is satisfied that any such document is voluminous, he
shall, instead of furnishing the accused with a copy thereof, direct that he
will only be allowed to inspect it either personally or through pleader in
Court.
209.Commitment
of case to Court of Session when offence is triable exclusively by it.-
When
in a case instituted on a police report or otherwise, the accused appears or is
brought before the Magistrate and it appears to the Magistrate that the offence
is triable exclusively by the Court of Session, he shall-
(a)
commit the case to the Court of Session;
(b)
subject to the provisions of this Code relating to bail, remand the accused to
custody during, and until the conclusion of, the trial;
(c)
send to that Court the record of the case and the documents and articles, if
any, which are to be produced in evidence;
(d)
notify the Public Prosecutor of the commitment of the case to the Court of
Session.
210.Procedure
to be followed when there is a complaint case and police investigation in
respect of the same offence.-
(1)
When in a case instituted otherwise than on a police report (hereinafter
referred to as a complaint case), it is made to appear to the Magistrate,
during the course of the inquiry or trial held by him, that an investigation by
the police is in progress in relation to the offence which is the
subject-matter of the inquiry or trial held by him, the Magistrate shall stay
the proceedings of such inquiry or trial and call for a report on the matter
from the police officer conducting the investigation.
(2)
If a report is made by the investigating police officer under section 173 and
on such report cognizance of any offence is taken by the Magistrate against any
person who is an accused in the complaint case, the Magistrate shall inquire
into or try together the complaint case and the case arising out of the police
report as if both the cases were instituted on a police report.
(3)
If the police report does not relate to any accused in the complaint case or if
the Magistrate does not take cognizance of any offence on the police report, he
shall proceed with the inquiry or trial, which was stayed by him, in accordance
with the provisions of this Code.
CHAPTER XVII
THE
CHARGE
A.-
Form of charges
211.Contents of charge.-
(1)
Every charge under this Code shall state the offence with which the accused is
charged.
(2)
If the law which creates the offence gives it any specific name, the offence
may be described in the charge by that name only.
(3)
If the law which creates the offence does not give it any specific name, so
much of the definition of the offence must be stated as to give the accused
notice of the matter with which he is charged.
(4)
The law and section of the law against which the offence is said to have been
committed shall be mentioned in the charge.
(5)
The fact that the charge is made is equivalent to a statement that every legal
condition required by law to constitute the offence charged was fulfilled in
the particular case.
(6)
The charge shall be written in the language of the Court.
(7)
If the accused, having been previously convicted of any offence, is liable, by
reason of such previous conviction, to enhanced punishment, or to punishment of
a different kind, for a subsequent offence, and it is intended to prove such
previous conviction for the purpose of affecting the punishment which the Court
may think fit to award for the subsequent offence, the fact, date and place of
the previous conviction shall be stated in the charge; and if such statement
has been omitted, the Court may add it at any time before sentence is passed.
Illustrations
(a)
A is charged with the murder of B.This is equivalent to a statement that A's
act fell within the definition of murder given in section 299 and 300 of the
Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860); that it did not fall within any of the general
exceptions of the said Code; and that it did not fall within any of the five
exceptions to section 300, or that, if it did fall within Exception 1, one or
other of the three provisos to that exception applied to it.
(b)
A is charged under section 326 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) with
voluntarily causing grievous hurt to B by means of an instrument for
shooting.This is equivalent to a statement that the case was not provided for
by section 335 of the said Code, and that the general exceptions did not apply
to it.
(c)
A is accused of murder, cheating, theft, extortion, adultery or criminal
intimidation, or using a false property-mark.The charge may state that A
committed murder, or cheating, or theft, or
extortion,
or adultery, or criminal intimidation, or that he used a false property-mark,
without reference to the definitions of those crime contained in the Indian
Penal Code(45 of 1860); but the sections under which the offence is punishable
must, in each instance, be referred to in the charge.
(d)
A is charged under section 184 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) with
intentionally obstructing a sale of property offered for sale by the lawful
authority of a public servant.The charge should be in those words.
212.Particulars
as to time, place and person.-
(1)
The charge shall contain such particulars as to the time and place of the
alleged offence, and the person (if any) against whom, or the thing (if any) in
respect of which, it was committed, as are reasonably sufficient to give the
accused notice of the matter with which he is charged.
(2)
When the accused is charged with criminal breach of trust or dishonest
misappropriation of money or other movable property, it shall be sufficient to
specify the gross sum or, as the case may be, describe the movable property in
respect of which the offence is alleged to have been committed, and the dates
between which the offence is alleged to have been committed, without specifying
particular items or exact dates, and the charge so framed shall be deemed to be
a charge of one offence within the meaning of section 219:
Provided
that the time included between the first and last of such dates shall not
exceed one year.
213.When
manner of committing offence must be stated.-
When
the nature of the case is such that the particulars mentioned in sections 211
and 212 do not give the accused sufficient notice of the matter with which he
is charged, the charge shall also contain such particulars of the manner in
which the alleged offence was committed as will be sufficient for that purpose.
Illustrations
(a)
A is accused of the theft of a certain article at a certain time and place.The
charge need not set out the manner in which the theft was effected.
(b)
A is accused of cheating B at a given time and place.The charge must set out the
manner in which A cheated B.
(c)
A is accused of giving false evidence at a given time and place.The charge must
set out that portion of the evidence given by A which is alleged to be false.
(d)
A is accused of obstructing B, a public servant, in the discharge of his public
functions at a given time and place.The charge must set out the manner in which
A obstructed B in the discharge of his functions.
(e)
A is accused of the murder B at a given time and place.The charge need not
state the manner in which A murdered B.
(f)
A is accused of disobeying a direction of the law with intent to save B from
punishment.The charge must set out the disobedience charged and the law
infringed.
214.Words
in charge taken in sense of law under which offence is punishable.-
In
every charge words used in describing an offence shall be deemed to have been
used in the sense attached to them respectively by the law under which such
offence is punishable.
215.Effect
of errors.-
No
error in stating either the offence or the particulars required to be stated in
the charge, and no omission to state the offence or those particulars, shall be
regarded at any stage of the case as material, unless the accused was in fact
misled by such error or omission, and it has occasioned a failure of justice.
(a)
A is charged under section 242 of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860.) with
"having been in possession of counterfeit coin, having known at the time
when he became possessed thereof that such coin was counterfeit", the word
"fraudulently" being omitted in the charge.Unless it appears that A
was in fact misled by this omission, the error shall not be regarded as material.
(b)
A is charged with cheating B, and the manner in which he cheated B is not set
out in the charge, or is set out incorrectly.A defends himself, calls witnesses
and gives his own account of the transaction.The Court may infer from this that
the omission to set out the manner of the cheating is not material.
(c)
A is charged with cheating B, and the manner in which he cheated B is not set
out in the charge.There were many transactions between A and B, and A had no
means of knowing to which of them the charge referred, and offered no
defence.The Court may infer from such facts that the omission to set out the
manner of the cheating was, in the case, a material error.
(d)
A is charged with the murder of Khoda Baksh on the 21st January, 1882.In fact,
the murdered person's name was Haidar Baksh, and the date of the murder was the
20th January, 1882.A was never charged with any murder but one, and had heard
the inquiry before the Magistrate, which referred exclusively to the case of
Haidar Baksh.The Court may infer from these facts that A was not misled, and
that the error in the charge was immaterial.
(e)
A was charged with murdering Haidar Baksh on the 20th January, 1882, and Khoda
Baksh (who tried to arrest him for that murder) on the 21st January, 1882.When
charged for the murder of Haidar Baksh, he was tried for the murder of Khoda
Baksh.The witnesses present in his defence were witnesses in the case of Haidar
Baksh.The Court may infer from this that A was misled, and that the error was
material.
216.Court
may alter charge.-
(1)
Any Court may alter or add to any charge at any time before judgment is
pronounced.
(2)
Every such alteration or addition shall be read and explained to the accused.
(3)
If the alteration or addition to a charge is such that proceeding immediately
with the trial is not likely, in the opinion of the Court, to prejudice the
accused in his defence or the prosecutor in the conduct of the case, the Court
may, in its discretion, after such alteration or addition has been made,
proceed with the trial as if the altered or added charge had been the original
charge.
(4)
If the alteration or addition is such that proceeding immediately with the
trial is likely, in the opinion of the Court, to prejudice the accused or the
prosecutor as aforesaid, the Court may either direct a new trial or adjourn the
trial for such period as may be necessary.
(5)
If the offence stated in the altered or added charge is one for the prosecution
of which previous sanction is necessary, the case shall not be proceeded with
until such sanction is obtained, unless sanction has been already obtained for
a prosecution on the same facts as those on which the altered or added charge
is founded.
217.Recall
of witnesses when charge altered.-
Whenever
a charge is altered or added to by the Court after the commencement of the
trial, the prosecutor and the accused shall be allowed –
(a)
to recall or re-summon, and examine with reference to such alteration or addition,
any witness who may have been examined, unless the Court, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, considers that the prosecutor or the accused, as the case
may be, desires to recall or re-examine such witness for the purpose of
vexation or delay or for defeating the ends of justice;
(b)
also to call any further witness whom the Court may think to be material.
B.-
Joinder of charges
218.Separate
charges for distinct offences.-
(1)
For every distinct offence of which any person is accused there shall be a
separate charge, and every such charge shall be tried separately:
Provided
that where the accused person, by an application in writing, so desires and the
Magistrate is of opinion that such person is not likely to be prejudiced
thereby, the Magistrate may try together all or any number of the charges
framed against such person.
(2)
Nothing in sub-section (1) shall affect the operation of the provisions of
sections 219, 220, 221 and 223.
Illustration
A
is accused of a theft on one occasion, and of causing grievous hurt on another
occasion.A must be separately charged and separately tried for the theft and
causing grievous hurt.
219.Three
offences of same kind within year may be charged together.-
(1)
When a person is accused of more offences than one of the same kind committed
within the space of twelve months from the first to the last of such offences,
whether in respect of the same person or not, he may be charged with, and tried
at one trial for, any number of them not exceeding three.
(2)
Offences are of the same kind when they are punishable with the same amount of
punishment under the same section of the Indian Penal Code or of any special or
local law:
Provided
that, for the purposes of this section, an offence punishable under section 379
of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) shall be deemed to be an offence of the
same kind as an offence punishable under section 380 of the said Code,(45 of
1860) and that an offence punishable under any section of the said Code, or of
any special or local law, shall be deemed to be an offence of the same kind as
an attempt to commit such offence, when such an attempt is an offence.
220.Trial
for more than one offence.-
(1)
If, in one series of acts so connected together as to form the same
transaction, more offences than one are committed by the same person, he may be
charged with, and tried at one trial for, every such offence.
(2)
When a person charged with one or more offences of criminal breach of trust or
dishonest misappropriation of property as provided in sub-section (2) of
section 212 or in sub-section (1) of section 219, is accused of committing, for
the purpose of facilitating or concealing the commission of that offence or
those offences, one or more offences of falsification of accounts, he may be
charged with, and tried at one trial for, every such offence.
(3)
If the acts alleged constitute an offence falling within two or more separate
definitions of any law in force for the time being by which offences are
defined or punished, the person accused of them may be charged with, and tried
at one trial for, each of such offences.
(4)
If several acts, of which one or more than one would by itself or themselves
constitute an offence, constitute when combined a different offence, the person
accused of them may be charged with, and tried at one trial for the offence
constituted by such acts when combined, and for any offence constituted by any
one, or more, of such acts.
(5)
Nothing contained in this section shall affect section 71 of the Indian Penal
Code(45 of 1860).
Illustrations
to sub-section (1)
(a)
A rescues B, a person in lawful custody, and in so doing causes grievous hurt
to C, a constable in whose custody B was.A may be charged with, and convicted
of, offences under sections 225 and 333 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860).
(b)
A commits house-breaking by day with intent to commit adultery, and commits, in
the house so entered, adultery with B's wife.A may be separately charged with,
and convicted of, offences under sections 454 and 497 of the Indian Penal Code
(45 of 1860).
(c)
A entices B, the wife of C, away from C, with intent to commit adultery with B,
and then commits adultery with her.A may be separately charged with , and
convicted of, offences under sections 498 and 497 of the Indian Penal Code(45
of 1860).
(d)
A has in his possession several seals, knowing them to be counterfeit and
intending to use them for the purpose of committing several forgeries
punishable under section 466 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860).A may be
separately charged with, and convicted of, the possession of each seal under
section 473 of the Indian Penal Code.
(e)
With intent to cause injury to B, A institutes a criminal proceeding against
him, knowing that there is no just or lawful ground for such proceeding, and
also falsely accuses B of having committed an offence, knowing that there is no
just or lawful ground for such charge.A may be separately charged with, and
convicted of, two offences under section 211 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of
1860).
(f)
A, with intent to cause injury to B, falsely accuses him of having committed an
offence, knowing that there is no just or lawful ground for such charge.On the
trial, A gives false evidence against B, intending thereby to cause B to be
convicted of a capital offence.A may be separately charged with, and convicted
of, offences under sections 211 and 194 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860).
(g)
A, with six others, commits the offences of rioting, grievous hurt and
assaulting a public servant endeavouring in the discharge of his duty as such
to suppress the riot.A may be separately charged with, and convicted of
offences under sections 147, 325 and 152 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860).
(h)
A threatens B, C and D at the same time with injury to their persons with
intent to cause alarm to them.A may be separately charged with, and convicted
of, each of the three offences under section 506 of the Indian Penal Code (45
of 1860).
The
separate charges referred to in Illustrations (a) to (h), respectively, may be
tried at the same time.
(I)
Where it is doubtful what offence has been committed.- A wrongfully strikes B
with a cane.A may be separately charged with and convicted of, offences under
sections 352 and 323 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
(j)
Several stolen sacks of corn are made over to A and B, who knew they are stolen
property, for the purpose of concealing them.A and B thereupon voluntarily
assist each other to conceal the sacks at the bottom of a grain-pit.A and B may
be separately charged with, and convicted of, offences under sections 41 and
414 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
(k)
A exposes her child with the knowledge that she is thereby likely to cause its
death.The child dies in consequence of such exposure.A may be separately
charged with and convicted of, offences under sections 317 and 304 of the
Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
(l)
A dishonestly uses a forged document as genuine evidence, in order to convict
B, a public servant, of an offence under section 167 of the Indian Penal
Code(45 of 1860).A may be separately charged with, and convicted of, offences
under sections 471 (read with section 466) and 196 of that Code.
Illustration
to sub-section (4)
(m)
A commits robbery on B, and in doing so voluntarily causes hurt to him.A may be
separately charged with, and convicted of, offences under sections 323, 392 and
394 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
221.(1)
If a single act or series of acts is of such a nature that it is doubtful which
of several offences the facts which can be proved will constitute, the accused
may be charged with having committed all or any of such offences , and any
number of such charges may be tried at once; or he may be charged in the
alternative with having committed some one of the said offences.
(2)
If in such a case the accused is charged with one offence, and it appears in
evidence that he committed a different offence for which he might have been
charged under the provisions of sub-section (1), he may be convicted of the
offence which he is shown to have committed, although he was not charged with
it.
Illustrations
(a)
A is accused of an act which may amount to theft, or receiving stolen property,
or criminal breach of trust or cheating.He may be charged with theft, receiving
stolen property, criminal breach of trust and cheating, or he may be charged
with having committed theft, or receiving stolen property, or criminal breach
of trust or cheating.
(b)
In the case mentioned, A is only charged with theft.It appears that he
committed the offence of criminal breach of trust, or that of receiving stolen
goods.He may be convicted of criminal breach of trust or of receiving stolen
goods (as the case may be), though he was not charged with such offence.
(c)
A states on oath before the Magistrate that he saw B hit C with a club.Before
the Sessions Court A states on oath that B never hit C.A may be charged in the
alternative and convicted of
intentionally
giving false evidence, although it cannot be proved which of these
contradictory statements was false.
222.When
offence proved included in offence charged.-
1)
When a person is charged with an offence consisting of several particulars, a
combination of some only of which constitutes a complete minor offence, and
such combination is proved, but the remaining particulars are not proved, he
may be convicted of the minor offence, though he was not charged with it.
(2)
When a person is charged with an offence and facts are proved which reduce it
to a minor offence, he may be convicted of the minor offence, although he is
not charged with it.
(3)
When a person is charged with an offence, he may be convicted of an attempt to
commit such offence although the attempt is not separately charged.
(4)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to authorise a conviction of any minor
offence where the conditions requisite for the initiation of proceedings in
respect of that minor offence have not been satisfied.
Illustrations
(a)
A is charged, under section 407 of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) with
criminal breach of trust in respect of property entrusted to him as a
carrier.It appears, that he did commit criminal breach of trust under section
406 of that Code in respect of the property, but that it was not entrusted to
him as a carrier.He may be convicted of criminal breach of trust under the said
section 406.
(b)
A is charged, under section 325 of the Indian Penal Code, with causing grievous
hurt.He proves that he acted on grave and sudden provocation.he may be
convicted under section 335 of that Code (45 of 1860).
223.What
persons may be charged jointly.-
The
following persons may be charged and tried together, namely:-
(a)
persons accused of the same offence committed in the course of the same
transaction;
(b)
persons accused of an offence and persons accused of abetment of, or attempt to
commit, such offence;
(c)
persons accused of more than one offence of the same kind, within the meaning
of section 219 committed by them jointly within the period of twelve months;
(d)
persons accused of different offences committed in the course of the same
transaction;
(e)
persons accused of an offence which includes theft, extortion, cheating, or
criminal misappropriation, and persons accused of receiving or retaining, or
assisting in the disposal or concealment of, property possession of which is
alleged to have been transferred by any such offence committed by the
first-named persons, or of abetment of or attempting to commit any such
last-named offence;
(f)
persons accused of offences under sections 411 and 414 of the Indian Penal
Code(45 of 1860) or either of those sections in respect of stolen property the
possession of which has been transferred by one offence;
(g)
Persons accused of any offence under Chapter XII of the Indian Penal Code(45
of1860) relating to counterfeit coin and persons accused of any other offence under
the said Chapter relating to the same coin, or of abetment of or attempting to
commit any such offence; and the provisions contained in the former part of
this Chapter shall, so far as may be, apply to all such charges:
Provided
that where a number of persons are charged with separate offences and such
persons do not fall within any of the categories specified in this section, the
Magistrate may, if such persons by an application in writing, so desire, and if
he is satisfied that such persons would not be prejudicially affected thereby,
and it is expedient so to do, try all such persons together.
224.Withdrawal
of remaining charges on conviction on one of several charges.-
When
a charge containing more heads than one is framed against the same person, and
when a conviction has been had on one or more of them, the complainant, or the
officer conducting the prosecution, may, with the consent of the Court,
withdraw the remaining charge or charges, or the Court of its own accord may
stay the inquiry into, or trial of, such charge or charges and such withdrawal
shall have the effect of an acquittal on such charge or charges, unless the
conviction be set aside, in which case the said Court (subject to the order of
the Court setting aside the conviction) may proceed with the inquiry into, or
trial of, the charge of charges so withdrawn.
CHAPTER
XVIII
TRIAL
BEFORE A COURT OF SESSION
225.Trial
to be conducted by Public Prosecutor.-
In
every trial before a Court of Session, the prosecution shall be conducted by a
Public Prosecutor.
226.Opening
case for prosecution.- When the accused appears or is brought before the Court
in pursuance of a commitment of the case under section 209, the prosecutor
shall open his case by describing the charge brought against the accused and
stating by what evidence he proposes to prove the guilt of the accused.
227.Discharge.-
If,
upon consideration of the record of the case and the documents submitted
therewith, and after hearing the submissions of the accused and the prosecution
in this behalf, the Judge considers that there is not sufficient ground for
proceeding against the accused, he shall discharge the accused and record his
reasons for so doing.
228.Framing
of charge.-
(1)
If, after such consideration and hearing as aforesaid, the Judge, is of opinion
that there is ground for presuming that the accused has committed an offence
which -
(a)
is not exclusively triable by the Court of Session, he may, frame a charge
against the accused and, by order, transfer the case for trial to the Chief
Judicial Magistrate, and thereupon the Chief Judicial Magistrate shall try the
offence in accordance with the procedure for the trial of warrant-cases
instituted on a police report;
(b)
is exclusively triable by the Court, he shall frame in writing a charge against
the accused.
(2)
Where the Judge frames any charge under clause (b) of sub-section (1), the
charge shall be read and explained to the accused and the accused shall be
asked whether he pleads guilty of the offence charged or claims to be tried.
229.Conviction
on plea of guilty.-
If
the accused pleads guilty, the Judge shall record the plea and may, in his
discretion, convict him thereon.
230.Date
for prosecution evidence.-
If
the accused refuses to plead, or does not plead, or claims to be tried or is
not convicted under section 229, the Judge shall fix a date for the examination
of witnesses, and may, on the application of the prosecution, issue any process
for compelling the attendance of any witness or the production of any document
or other thing.
231.Evidence
for prosecution.-
(1)
On the date so fixed, the Judge shall proceed to take all such evidence as may
be produced in support of the prosecution.
(2)
The Judge may, in his discretion, permit the cross-examination of any witness
to be deferred until any other witness or witnesses have been examined or
recall any witness for further cross-examination.
232.Acquittal.-
If,
after taking the evidence for the prosecution, examining the accused and
hearing the prosecution and the defence on the point, the Judge considers that
there is no evidence that the accused committed the offence, the Judge shall
record an order of acquittal.
233.Entering
upon defence.-
(1)
Where the accused is not acquitted under section 232, he shall be called upon
to enter on his defence and adduce any evidence he may have in support thereof.
(2)
If the accused puts in any written statement, the Judge shall file it with the
record.
(3)
If the accused applies for the issue of any process for compelling the
attendance of any witness or the production of any document or thing, the Judge
shall issue such process unless he considers, for reasons to be recorded, that
such application should be refused on the ground that it is made for the
purpose of vexation or delay or for defeating the ends of justice.
234.Arguments.-
When
the examination of the witnesses (if any) for the defence is complete, the prosecutor
shall sum up his case and the accused or his pleader shall be entitled to
reply:
Provided
that where any point of law is raised by the accused or his pleader, the
prosecution may, with the permission of the Judge, make his submissions with
regard to such point of law.
235.Judgment
of acquittal of conviction.-
(1)
After hearing arguments and points of law (if any), the Judge shall give a
judgment in the case.
(2)
If the accused is convicted, the Judge shall, unless he proceeds in accordance
with the provisions of section 360, hear the accused on the questions of
sentence, and then pass sentence on him according to law.
236.Previous
conviction.-
In
a case where a previous conviction is charged under the provisions of
sub-section (7) of section 211, and the accused does not admit that he has been
previously convicted as alleged in the charge, the Judge may, after he has
convicted the said accused under section 229 or section 235, take evidence in
respect of the alleged previous conviction, and shall record a finding thereon:
Provided
that no such charge shall be read out by the Judge nor shall the accused be
asked to plead thereto nor shall the previous conviction be referred to by the
prosecution or in any evidence adduced by it, unless and until the accused has
been convicted under section 229 or section 235.
237.Procedure
in cases instituted under section 199(2).-
(1)
A Court of Session taking cognizance of an offence under sub-section (2) of
section 199 shall try the case in accordance with the procedure for the trial
of warrant-cases instituted otherwise than on a police report before a Court of
Magistrate:
Provided
that the person against whom the offence is alleged to have been committed
shall, unless the Court of Session, for reasons to be recorded, otherwise
directs, be examined as a witness for the prosecution.
(2)
Every trial under this section shall be held in camera if either party thereto
so desires or if the Court thinks fit so to do.
(3)
If, in any such case, the Court discharges or acquits all or any of the accused
and is of opinion that there was no reasonable cause for making the accusation
against them or any of them, it may, by its order of discharge or acquittal,
direct the person against whom the offence was alleged to have been committed
(other than the President, Vice-President or the Governor of a State or the
Administrator of a Union territory) to show cause why he should not pay
compensation to such accused or to each or any of such accused, when there are
more than one.
(4)
The Court shall record and consider any cause which may be shown by the person
so directed, and if it is satisfied that there was no reasonable cause for
making the accusation, it may, for reasons to be recorded , make an order that
compensation to such amount not exceeding one thousand rupees, as it may
determine, be paid by such person to the accused or to each or any of them.
(5)
Compensation awarded under sub-section (4) shall be recovered as if it were a
fine imposed by a Magistrate.
(6)
No person who has been directed to pay compensation under sub-section (4)
shall, by reason of such order, be exempted from any civil or criminal
liability in respect of the complaint made under this section:
Provided
that any amount paid to an accused person under this section shall be taken
into account in awarding compensation to such person in any subsequent civil
suit relating to the same matter.
(7)
The person who has been ordered under sub-section (4) to pay compensation may
appeal from the order, in so far as it relates to the payment of compensation,
to the High Court.
(8)
When an order for payment of compensation to an accused person is made, the
compensation shall not be paid to him before the period allowed for the
presentation of the appeal has elapsed, or, if an appeal is presented, before
the appeal has been decided.
CHAPTER XIX
TRIAL
OF WARRANT-CASES BY MAGISTRATES
A.-
Cases instituted on a police report
238.Compliance
with section 207.-
When,
in any warrant-case instituted on a police report, the accused appears or is
brought before a Magistrate at the commencement of the trial, the Magistrate
shall satisfy himself that he has complied with the provisions of section 207.
239.When
accused shall be discharged.-
If,
upon considering the police report and the documents sent with it under section
173 and making such examination, if any, of the accused as the Magistrate
thinks necessary and after giving the prosecution and the accused an
opportunity of being heard, the Magistrate considers the charge against the
accused to be groundless, he shall discharge the accused, and record his
reasons for so doing.
240.Framing
of charge
(1)
If, upon such consideration, examination, if any, and hearing, the Magistrate
is of opinion that there is ground for presuming that the accused has committed
an offence triable under this Chapter, which such Magistrate is competent to
try and which, in his opinion, could be adequately punished by him, he shall
frame in writing a charge against the accused.
(2)
The charge shall then be read and explained to the accused, and he shall be
asked whether he pleads guilty of the offence charged or claims to be tried.
241.Conviction
on plea of guilty.-
If
the accused pleads guilty, the Magistrate shall record the plea and may, in his
discretion, convict him thereon.
242.Evidence
for prosecution.-
(1)
If the accused refuses to plead or does not plead, or claims to be tried or the
Magistrate does not convict the accused under section 241, the Magistrate shall
fix a date for the examination of witnesses.
(2)
The Magistrate may, on the application of the prosecution, issue a summons to
any of its witnesses directing him to attend or to produce any document or
other thing.
(3)
On the date so fixed, the Magistrate shall proceed to take all such evidence as
may be produced in support of the prosecution:
Provided
that the Magistrate may permit the cross-examination of any witness to be
deferred until any other witness or witnesses have been examined or recall any
witness for further cross-examination.
243.Evidence
for defence.-
(1)
The accused shall then be called upon to enter upon his defence and produce his
evidence; and if the accused puts in any written statement, the Magistrate
shall file it with the record.
(2)
If the accused, after he has entered upon his defence, applies to the
Magistrate to issue any process for compelling the attendance of any witness
for the purpose of examination or cross-examination, or the production of any
document or other thing, the Magistrate shall issue such process unless he
considers that such application should be refused on the ground that it is made
for the purpose of vexation or delay or for defeating the ends of justice and
such ground shall be recorded by him in writing:
Provided
that, when the accused has cross-examined or had the opportunity of
cross-examining any witness before entering on his defence, the attendance of
such witness shall not be compelled under this section, unless the Magistrate
is satisfied that it is necessary for the ends of justice.
(3)
The Magistrate may, before summoning any witness on an application under
sub-section (2), require that the reasonable incurred by the witness in
attending for the purposes of the trial be deposited in Court.
B.-
Cases instituted otherwise than on police report
244.Evidence
for prosecution.-
(1)
When, in any warrant-case instituted otherwise than on a police report, the
accused appears or is brought before a Magistrate, the Magistrate shall proceed
to hear the prosecution and take all such evidence as may be produced in
support of the prosecution.
(2)
The Magistrate may, on the application of the prosecution, issue a summons to
any of its witnesses directing him to attend or to produce any document or
other thing.
245.When
accused shall be discharged.-
(1)
If, upon taking all the evidence referred to in section 244, the Magistrate
considers, for reasons to be recorded, that no case against the accused has
been made out which, if unrebutted, would warrant his conviction, the
Magistrate shall discharge him.
(2)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prevent a Magistrate from
discharging the accused at any previous stage of the case if, for reasons to be
recorded by such Magistrate, he considers the charge to be groundless.
246.Procedure
where accused is not discharged.
-
(1) If, when such evidence has been taken, or at any previous stage of the
case, the Magistrate is of opinion that there is ground for presuming that the
accused has committed an offence triable under this Chapter, which such
Magistrate is competent to try and which, in his opinion, could be adequately
punished by him, he shall frame in writing a charge against the accused.
(2)
The charge shall then be read and explained to the accused, and he shall be
asked whether he pleads guilty or has any defence to make.
(3)
If the accused pleads guilty, the Magistrate shall record the plea, and may, in
his discretion, convict him thereon.
(4)
If the accused refuses to plead, or does not plead or claims to be tried or if
the accused is not convicted under sub-section (3), he shall be required to
state, at the commencement of the next hearing of the case, or, if the
Magistrate for reasons to be recorded in writing so thinks fit, forthwith,
whether he wishes to cross-examine any, and, if so, which, of the witnesses for
the prosecution whose evidence has been taken.
(5)
If he says he does so wish, the witnesses named by him shall be recalled and,
after cross-examination and re-examination (if any), they shall be discharged.
(6)
The evidence of any remaining witnesses for the prosecution shall next be
taken, and after cross-examination and re-examination (if any), they shall also
be discharged.
247.Evidence
for defence.-
The
accused shall then be called upon to enter upon his defence and produce his
evidence; and the provisions of section 243 shall apply to the case.
C.-
Conclusion of trial
248.Acquittal
or conviction.-
(1)
If, in any case under this Chapter in which a charge has been framed, the
Magistrate finds the accused not guilty, he shall record an order of acquittal.
(2)
Where, in any case under this Chapter, the Magistrate finds the accused guilty,
but does not proceed in accordance with the provisions of section 325 or
section 360, he shall, after hearing the accused on the question of sentence,
pass sentence upon him according to law.
(3)
Where, in any case under this Chapter, a previous conviction is charged under
the provisions of sub-section (7) of section 211 and the accused does not admit
that he has been previously convicted as alleged in the charge, the Magistrate
may, after he has convicted the said accused, take evidence in respect of the
alleged previous conviction, and shall record a finding thereon:
Provided
that no such charge shall be read out by the Magistrate no shall the accused be
asked to plead thereto no shall the previous conviction be referred to by the
prosecution or in any evidence adduced by it, unless and until the accused has
been convicted under sub-section (2).
249.Absence
of complainant.-
When
the proceedings have been instituted upon complaint, and on any day fixed for
the hearing of the case, the complainant is absent, and the offence may be
lawfully compounded or is not a cognizable offence, the Magistrate may, in his
discretion, notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, at any time before
the charge has been framed, discharge the accused.
250.Compensation
for accusation without reasonable cause.-
(1)
If, in any case instituted upon complaint or upon information given to a police
officer or to a Magistrate, one or more persons is or are accused before a
Magistrate of any offence triable by a Magistrate, and the Magistrate by whom
the case is heard discharges or acquits all or any of the accused, and is of
opinion that there was no reasonable ground for making the accusation against
them or any of them, the Magistrate may, by his order of discharge or
acquittal, if the person upon whose complaint or information the accusation was
made is present, call upon him forthwith to show cause why he should not pay
compensation to such accused or to each or any of such accused when there are
more than one; or, if such person is not present, direct the issue of a summons
to him to appear and show cause as aforesaid.
(2)
The Magistrate shall record and consider any cause which such complainant or
informant may show, and if he is satisfied that there was no reasonable ground
for making the accusation, may, for reasons to be recorded, make an order that
compensation to such amount, not exceeding the amount of fine he is empowered
to impose, as he may determine, be paid by such complainant or informant to the
accused or to each or any of them.
(3)
The Magistrate may, by the order directing payment of the compensation under
sub-section (2), further order that, in default of payment, the person ordered
to pay such compensation shall undergo simple imprisonment for a period not
exceeding thirty days.
(4)
When any person is imprisoned under sub-section (3), the provisions of sections
68 and 69 of the Indian Penal Code shall, so far as may be, apply.
(5)
No person who has been directed to pay compensation under this section shall,
by reason of such order, be exempted from any civil or criminal liability in
respect of the complaint made or information given by him:
Provided
that any amount paid to an accused person under this section shall be taken
into account in awarding compensation to such person in any subsequent civil
suit relating to the same matter.
(6)
A complainant or informant who has been ordered under sub-section (2) by a
Magistrate of the second class to pay compensation exceeding one hundred
rupees, may appeal from the order, as if such complainant or informant had been
convicted on a trial held by such Magistrate.
(7)
When an order for payment of compensation to an accused person is made in a
case which is subject to appeal under sub-section (6), the compensation shall
not be paid to him before the period allowed for the presentation of the appeal
has elapsed, or, if an appeal is presented, before the appeal has been decided;
and where such order is made in a case which is not so subject to appeal the
compensation shall not be paid before the expiration of one month from the date
of the order.
(8)
The provisions of this section apply to summons-cases as well as to
warrant-cases.
CHAPTER
XX
TRIAL
OF SUMMONS-CASES BY MAGISTRATES
251.Substance
of accusation to be stated.-
When
in a summons-case the accused appears or is brought before the Magistrate, the
particulars of the offence of which he is accused shall be stated to him, and
he shall be asked whether he pleads guilty or has any defence to make, but it
shall not be necessary to frame a formal charge.
252.Conviction
on plea of guilty.
-
If the accused pleads guilty, the Magistrate shall record the plea as nearly as
possible in the words used by the accused and may, in his discretion, convict
him thereon.
253.Conviction
on plea of guilty in absence of accused in petty cases.-
(1)
Where a summons has been issued under section 206 and the accused desires to
plead guilty to the charge without appearing before the Magistrate, he shall
transmit to the Magistrate, by post or by messenger, a letter containing his
plea and also the amount of fine specified in the summons.
(2)
The Magistrate may, in his discretion, convict the accused in his absence, on
his plea of guilty and sentence him to pay the fine specified in the summons,
and the amount transmitted by the accused shall be adjusted towards that fine,
or where a pleader authorised by the accused in this behalf pleads guilty on
behalf of the accused, the Magistrate shall record the plea as nearly as
possible in the words used by the pleader and may, in his discretion, convict
the accused on such plea and sentence him as aforesaid.
254.Procedure
when not convicted.-
(1)
If the Magistrate does not convict the accused under section 252 or section
253, the Magistrate shall proceed to hear the prosecution and take all such
evidence as may be produced in support of the prosecution, and also to hear the
accused and take all such evidence as he produces in his defence.
(2)
The Magistrate may, if he thinks fit, on the application of the prosecution or
the accused, issue a summons to any witness directing him to attend or to
produce any document or other thing.
(3)
The Magistrate may, before summoning any witness on such application, require
that the reasonable expenses of the witness incurred in attending for the
purposes of the trial be deposited in Court.
255.Acquittal
or conviction.-
(1)
If the Magistrate, upon taking the evidence referred to in section 254 and such
further evidence, if any, as he may, of his own motion, cause to be produced,
finds the accused not guilty, he shall record an order of acquittal.
(2)
Where the Magistrate does not proceed in accordance with the provisions of
section 325 or section 360, he shall, if he finds the accused guilty, pass
sentence upon him according to law.
(3)
A Magistrate may, under section 252 or section 255, convict the accused of any
offence triable under this Chapter, which from the facts admitted or proved he
appears to have committed, whatever may be the nature of the complaint or
summons, if the Magistrate is satisfied that the accused would not be
prejudiced thereby.
256.Non-appearance
or death of complainant.-
(1)
If the summons has been issued on complaint, and on the day appointed for the
appearance of the accused, or any day subsequent thereto to which the hearing
may be adjourned, the complainant does not appear, the Magistrate shall,
notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, acquit the accused, unless for
some reason he thinks it proper to adjourn the hearing of the case to some
other day:
Provided
that where the complainant is represented by a pleader or by the officer
conducting the prosecution or where the Magistrate is of opinion that the
personal attendance of the complainant is not necessary, the Magistrate may
dispense with his attendance and proceed with the case.
(2)
The provisions of sub-section (1) shall, so far as may be, apply also to cases
where the non-appearance of the complainant is due to his death.
257.Withdrawal
of complaint.-
If
a complainant, at any time before a final order is passed in any case under
this Chapter, satisfies the Magistrate that there are sufficient grounds for
permitting him to withdraw his complaint against the accused, or if there be
more than one accused, against all or any of them, the Magistrate may permit
him to withdraw the same, and shall thereupon acquit the accused against whom
the complaint is so withdrawn.
258.Power
to stop proceedings in certain cases.-
In
any summons-case instituted otherwise than upon complaint, a Magistrate of the
first class or, with the previous sanction of the Chief Judicial Magistrate,
any other Judicial Magistrate, may, for reasons to be recorded by him, stop the
proceedings at any stage without pronouncing any judgment and where such
stoppage of proceedings is made after the evidence of the principal witnesses
has been recorded, pronounce a judgment of acquittal, and in any other case,
release the accused, and such release shall have the effect of discharge.
259.Power
of Court to convert summons-cases into warrant-cases.-
When
in the course of the trial of a summons-case relating to an offence punishable
with imprisonment for a term exceeding six months, it appears to the Magistrate
that in the interests of justice, the offence should be tried in accordance
with the procedure for the trial of warrant-cases, such Magistrate may proceed
to re-hear the case in the manner provided by this Code for the trial of
warrant-cases and may re-call any witness who may have been examined.
CHAPTER
XXI
SUMMARY
TRIALS
260.Power
to try summarily.-
(1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Code-
(a)
any Chief Judicial Magistrate;
(b)
any Metropolitan Magistrate;
(c)
any Magistrate of the first class specially empowered in this behalf by the
High Court,
may,
if he thinks fit, try in a summary way all or any of the following offences:
(I)
offences not punishable with death, imprisonment for life or imprisonment for a
term exceeding two years;
(ii)
theft, under section 379, section 380 or section 381 of the Indian Penal Code,
(45 of 1860) where the value of the property stolen does not exceed two hundred
rupees;
(iii)
receiving or retaining stolen property, under section 411 of the Indian Penal
Code, (45 of 1860) where the value of the property does not exceed two hundred
rupees;
(iv)
assisting in the concealment or disposal of stolen property, under section 414
of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) where the value of such property does
not exceed two hundred rupees;
(v)
offences under sections 454 and 456 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860);
(vi)
insult with intent to provoke a breach of the peace, under section 504, and
criminal intimidation, under section 506 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860);
(vii)
abetment of any of the foregoing offences;
(viii)
an attempt to commit any of the foregoing offences, when such attempt is an
offence;
(ix)
any offence constituted by an act in respect of which a complaint may be made
under section 20 of the Cattle-trespass Act, 1871(1 of 1871).
(2)
When, in the course of a summary trial it appears to the Magistrate that the
nature of the case is such that it is undesirable to try it summarily, the
Magistrate shall recall any witnesses who may have been examined and proceed to
re-hear the case in the manner provided by this Code.
261.Summary
trial by Magistrate of the second class.-
The
High Court may confer on any Magistrate invested with the powers of a
Magistrate of the second class power to try summarily any offence which is
punishable only with fine or with imprisonment for a term not exceeding six
months with or without fine, and any abetment of or attempt to commit any such
offence.
262.Procedure
for summary trials.-
(1)
In trials under this Chapter, the procedure specified in this Code for the
trial of summons-case shall be followed except as hereinafter mentioned.
(2)
No sentence of imprisonment for a term exceeding three months shall be passed
in the case of any conviction under this Chapter.
263.Record
in summary trials.-
In
every case tried summarily, the Magistrate shall enter, in such form as the
State Government may direct, the following particulars, namely:-
(a)
the serial number of the case:
(b)
the date of the commission of the offence;
(c)
the date of the report or complaint;
(d)
the name of the complainant (if any);
(e)
the name, parentage and residence of the accused;
(f)
the offence complained of and the offence (if any) proved, and in cases coming
under clause (ii), clause (iii) or clause (iv) of sub-section (1) of section
260, the value of the property in respect of which the offence has been
committed;
(g)
the plea of the accused and his examination (if any);
(h)
the finding;
(i)
the sentence or other final order
(j)
the date on which proceedings terminated.
264.Judgment
in cases tried summarily.-
In
every case tried summarily in which the accused does not plead guilty, the
Magistrate shall record the substance of the evidence and a judgment containing
a brief statement of the reasons for the finding.
265.Language
of record and judgment.-
(1)
Every such record and judgment shall be written in the language of the Court.
(2)
The High Court may authorise any Magistrate empowered to try offences summarily
to prepare the aforesaid record or judgment or both by means of an officer
appointed in this behalf by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, and the record or
judgment so prepared shall be signed by such Magistrate
CHAPTER
XXII : ATTENDANCE OF PERSONS CONFINED OR DETAINED IN PRISONS
266.
Definition :- In this chapter-,
(a)
"detained" includes detained under any law providing for preventive
detention;
(b)
'prison " includes -
(i)
any place which has been declared by the Government, by general or special
order, a subsidiary jail;
(ii)
any reformatory, Borstal institution or institution of a like nature.
267.
Power to require attendance of prisoner:-(1) Whenever, in the course of an
inquiry, trial or proceeding under this Code, it appears to a Criminal Court,-
(a)
that a person confined or detained in a prison should be brought before the
Court for answer to a charge of an offence, or for the purpose any proceedings
against him, or
(b)
that it is necessary for the ends of justice to examine such person as a
witness,
the
Court may make an order requiring the officer in charge of the prison to
produce such person before the Court answering to the charge or for the purpose
of such proceed or, as the case may be, for giving evidence.
(2)
Where an order under sub-section (1) is made by a Magistrate of the second
class, it shall not be forwarded to, or acted upon by, the officer in charge of
the prison unless it is countersigned by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, to whom
such Magistrate is subordinate.
(3)
Every order submitted for countersigning under sub-section (2) shall be
accompanied by astatement of the facts which, in the opinion of the Magistrate,
render the order necessary, and the Chief Judicial Magistrate to whom it is
submitted may, after considering such statement, decline to countersign the
order.
268.
Power of State Government to exclude certain persons from operation of Section
267 -(1) The State Government may, at any time, having regard to the matter
specified in sub-section (2), by general or special order, direct that any
person or class of persons shall not be removed from the prison in which he or
they may be confined or detained, and thereupon, so long as the order remains
in force, no order made under Section 267, whether before or after the order of
the State Government, shall have effect in respect of such person or class of
persons.
(2)
Before making an order under sub-section (1), the State Government shall have
regard to the following matters, namely :--
(a)
the nature of the offence for which, or the grounds on which, the person or
class of persons has been ordered to be confined or detained in prison;
(b)
the likelihood of the disturbance of public order if the person or class of
persons is allowed to be removed from the prison;
(c)
the public interest, generally.
269.
Officer in charge of prison to abstain from carrying out order in certain
contingencies :- Where the person in respect of whom an order is made under
Section 267 -
(a)
is by reason of sickness or infirmity unfit to be removed from the prison; or
(b)
is under committalfor trial or under remand pending trial or pending a
preliminary investigation; or
(c)
is in custody for a period which would expire before the expiration of the time
required for complying with the order and for taking him back to the prison in
which he is confined or detained; or
(d)
is a person to whom an order made by the State Government under Section 268
applies,
the
officer in charge of the prison shall abstain from carrying out the Court's
order and shall send to the Court a statement of reasons for so abstaining:
Provided
that where the attendance of such person required for giving evidence at a
place not more than twenty five kilometres distant from the prison, the officer
in charge of the prison shall not so abstain for the reason mentioned in Clause
(b).
270.
Prisoner to be brought to Court in custody:- Subject to the provisions of
Section 269, the offices. charge of the prison shall, upon delivery of an order
m under sub-section (1) of Section 267 and duly countersign where necessary,
under sub-section (2) thereof, cause the person named in the order to be taken
to the Court in which his attendance is required, so as to be present there at
the time mentioned in the order, and shall cause him to be kept in custody in
or near the Court until he has been examined or until the Court authorises him
to be taken back to the prison in which he was confined or detained.
271.
Power to issue commission for examination of witness in prison :- The
provisions of this Chapter shall be without prejudice to the power of the Court
to issue, under Section 284, a commission for the examination, as witness, of
any person confined or detained in a prison; an the provisions of Part B of
Chapter XXIII shall apply in relation to the examination on commission of any
such person in the prison as they apply in relation to the examination on
commission of any other person.
CHAPTER
XXIII : EVIDENCE IN INQUIRIES AND TRIALS
A
- Mode of Taking and Recording Evidence
272.
Language of Courts :- The State Government may determine what shall be, for
purposes of this Code, the language of each Court within the State other than
the High Court.
273.
Evidence to be taken in presence of accused:- Except as otherwise expressly
provided, all evidence taken in the course of the trial or other proceeding
shall be taken in the presence of the accused, or, when his personal attendance
is dispensed with, in presence of his pleader.
Explanation
- In this Section, "accused" includes a person in relation to whom
any proceeding under Chapter VIII has been commenced under this Code.
274.
Record in summons-cases and inquiries:-(1) In all summons-cases tried before a
Magistrate, in all inquiries under Sections 145 to 148 (both inclusive), and in
all proceedings under Section 446 otherwise than in the course of a trial, the
Magistrate shall, as the examination of each witness proceeds, make a
memorandum of the substance of his evidence in the language of the Court:
Provided
that if the Magistrate is unable to make such memorandum himself, he shall,
after recording the reason of his inability, cause such memorandum to be made
in writing or from his dictation in open Court.
(2)
Such memorandum shall be signed by the Magistrate and shall form part of the
record.
275.
Record in warrant-cases:-(1) In all warrant-cases tried before a Magistrate,
the evidence of each witness shall, as his examination proceeds, be taken down
in writing either by the Magistrate himself or by his dictation in open Court
or, where he is unable to do so owing to a physical or other incapacity, under
his direction and superintendence, by an officer of the Court appointed by him
in this behalf.
(2)
Where the Magistrate causes the evidence to he taken down, he shall record a
certificate that the evidence could not be taken down by himself for the
reasons referred to in sub-section (1).
(3)
Such evidence shall ordinarily be taken down in the form of a narrative; but
the Magistrate may, in his discretion take down or cause to be taken down, any
part of such evidence in the form of question and answer.
(4)
The evidence so taken down shall be signed by the Magistrate and shall form
part of the record.
276.
Record in trial before Court of Session:-(1) In all trials before a Court of
Session, the evidence of each witness shall, as his examination proceeds, be
taken down in writing either by the presiding Judge himself or by his dictation
in open Court, or under his direction and superintendence, by an officer of the
Court appointed by him in this behalf.
(2)
Such evidence shall ordinarily be taken down in the form of a narrative, but
the presiding Judge may, in his discretion, take down, or cause to be taken
down, any part of such evidence in the form of question and answer.
(3)
The evidence so taken down shall be signed by the presiding Judge and shall
form part of the record.
277.
Language of record of evidence:- In every case where evidence is taken down
under Sections 275 and 276:-
(a)
if the witness gives evidence in the language of the Court, it shall be taken
down in that language;
(b)
if he gives evidence in any other language, it may, if practicable, be taken
down in that language, and if it is not practicable to do so, a true
translation of the evidence in the language of the Court shall be prepared as
the examination of the witness proceeds, signed by the Magistrate or presiding
Judge, and shall form part of the record;
(c)
where under Clause (b) evidence is taken down in a language other than the
language of the Court, a true transaction thereof in the language of the Court
shall be prepared as soon as practicable, signed by the Magistrate or presiding
Judge, and shall form part of the record:
Provided
that when under clause (b) evidence is taken down in English and a translation
thereof in the language of the Court is not required by any of the parties, the
Court maydispense with such translation.
278.
Procedure in regard to such evidence when completed.--(1)As the evidence of
each witness taken under Section 275 or Section 276 is completed, it shall be
read over to him in the presence of the accused, if in attendance, or of his
pleader, if he appears by pleader, and shall, if necessary, be corrected.
(2)
If the witness denies the correctness of any part of the evidence when the same
is read over to him, the Magistrate or presiding Judge may, instead of
correcting the evidence, make a memorandum thereon of the objection made to it
by the witness, and shall add such remarks as he thinks necessary.
(3)
If the record of the evidence is in a language different from that in which it
has been given and the witness does not understand that language, the record
shall be interpreted to him in the language in which it was given, or in a
language which he understands.
279.
Interpretation of evidence to accused or his pleader :-(1) Whenever any
evidence is given in a language not understood by the accused, and he is
present in Court in person, it shall be interpreted to him in open Court in a
language understood by him.
(2)
If he appears by pleader and the evidence is given in a language other than the
language of the Court, and not understood by the pleader, it shall be
interpreted to such pleader in that language.
(3)
When documents are put for the purpose of formal proof, it shall be in the
discretion of the Court to interpret as much thereof as appears necessary.
280.
Remarks respecting demeanour of witness:-When a presiding Judge or Magistrate
has recorded the evidence of a witness, he shall also record such remarks (if
any) as he thinks material respecting the demeanour of such witness whilst
under examination.
281.
Record of examination of accused :--(1) Whenever the accused is examined by a
Metropolitan Magistrate, the Magistrate shall make a memorandum of the
substance of the examination of the accused in the language of the Court and
such memorandum shall be signed by the Magistrate and shall form part of the
record.
(2)
Whenever the accused is examined by any Magistrate other than a Metropolitan
Magistrate, or by a Court of Session, the whole of such examination, including
every question put to him and every answer given by him, shall be recorded in
full by the presiding Judge or Magistrate himself or where he is unable to do
so owing to a physical or other incapacity, under his direction and
superintendence by an officer of the Court appointed by him in this behalf.
(3)
The record shall, if practicable, be in the language in which the accused is
examined, or if that is not practicable, in the language of the Court.
(4)
The record shall be shown or read to the accused, or, if he does not understand
the language in which it is written, shall be interpreted to him in a language
which he understands, and he shall be at liberty to explain or add to his
answers.
(5)
It shall thereafter be signed by the accused and by the Magistrate or presiding
Judge, who shall certify under his own hand that the examination was taken in
his presence and hearing and that the record contains a full and true account
of the statement made by the accused.
(6)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to apply to the examination of an accused
person in the course of a summary trial.
282.
Interpreter to be bound to interpret truthfully:- When the services of an
interpreter are required by any Criminal Court for the interpretation of any
evidence or statement, he shall be bound to state the true interpretation of
such evidence or statement.
283.
Record in High Court:- Every High Court may, by general rule, prescribe the
manner in which the evidence of witnesses and the examination of the accused
shall be taken down in cases coming before it, and such evidence and
examination shall be taken down in accordance with such rule.
284.
When attendance of witness may be dispensed with and commission issued
:-(1)Whenever, in the course of any inquiry, trial or other proceeding under
this Code, it appears to a Court or Magistrate that the examination of a
witness is necessary for the ends of justice, and that the attendance of such
witness cannot be procured without an amount of delay, expense or inconvenience
which, under the circumstances of the case, would be unreasonable, the Court or
Magistrate may dispense with such attendance and may issue a commission for the
examination of the witness in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter:
Provided
that where the examination of the President or the Vice-President of India or
the Governor of a State; or the Administrator of a Union Territory as a witness
is necessary for the ends of Justice, a commission shall be issued for the
examination of such a witness.
(2)
The Court may, when issuing a commission for, the examination of a witness for
the prosecution, direct that such amount as the Court considers reasonable to
meet the expenses of the accused, including the pleader's fees, be paid by the
prosecution.
B
- Commissions for Examination of Witnesses
285.
Commission to whom to be issued :-(1) If witness is within the territories to
which this Code extend the commission shall be directed to the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate or the Chief Judicial Magistrate, as the case may be,
within whose local jurisdiction the witness is to be found.
(2)
If the witness is in India, but in a State or an area to which this Code does
not extend, the commission, shall be directed to such Court or officer as the
Central Government may, by notification, specify in this behalf.
(3)
If the witness is in a country or place outside India and arrangements have
been made by the Central Government with the Government of such country or
place for taking the evidence of witnesses in relation to criminal matters, the
commission shall be issued in such form, directed to such Court or officer, and
sent to such authority for transmission as the Central Government may, by
notification, prescribed in this behalf.
286.
Execution of commissions :- Upon receipt of the Commission, the Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate, or Chief Judicial Magistrate, or such Metropolitan or Judicial
Magistrate as he may appoint in this behalf, shall summon the witness before
him or proceed to the place where the witness is, and shall take down his
evidence in the same manner, and may for this purpose exercise the same powers,
as in trials or warrant cases under this Code.
287.
Parties may examine witnesses :-(1) The parties to any proceeding under this
Code in which a commission is issued may respectively forward any
interrogatories in writing which the Court or Magistrate directing the
commission may think relevant to the issue, and it shall be lawful for the
Magistrate, Court or officer to whom the commission, is directed, or to whom
the duty of executing it is delegated, to examine the witness upon such
interrogatories.
(2)
Any such party may appear before such magistrate, Court or Officer by Pleader,
or if not in custody, in person, and may examine, cross-examine and re-examine
(as the case may be) the said witness.
288.
Return of Commission:- (1) After any commission issued under Section 284 has
been duly executed, it shall be returned, together with the deposition of the
witness examined thereunder, to the Court or Magistrate issuing the commission,
and the commission, the return thereto and the deposition shall be open at all
reasonable times to inspection of the parties, and may, subject to all just
exceptions, be read in evidence in the case by either party, and shall form
part of the record.
(2)
Any deposition so taken, if it satisfies the conditions prescribed by Section
33 of the Indian Evidence Act,, 1872 (1 of 1872), may also be received in
evidence at any subsequent stage of the case before another Court.
289.
Adjournment of proceeding:- In every case in which a commission is issued under
Section 284, the inquiry, trial or other proceeding may be adjourned for a
specified time reasonably sufficient for the execution and return of the
commission.
290.
Execution of foreign commissions:- (1) The Provisions of Section 286 and so
much of Section 287 and Section 288 as relate to the execution of a commission
and its return shall apply in respect of commissions issued by any of the
Courts, Judges or Magistrates hereinafter mentioned as they apply to commissions
issued under Section 284.
(2)
The Courts, Judges and Magistrates referred to in sub-section (1) are-
(a)
any such Court, Judge or Magistrate exercising jurisdiction within an area in
India to which this Code does not extent, as the Central Government may, by
notification, specify in this behalf;
(b)
any Court, Judge or Magistrate exercising jurisdiction in any such country or
place outside India, as the Central Government may, by notification, specify in
this behalf, and having authority, under the law in force in that country or
place, to issue commissions for the examination of witnesses in relation to
criminal matters.
291.
Deposition of medical witness:- (1) The deposition of a civil surgeon or other
medical witness, taken and attested by a Magistrate in the presence of the
accused, or taken on commission under this chapter, may be given in evidence in
any inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this code, although the deponent
is not called as witness.
(2)
The Court may, if it thinks fit, and shall, on the application of the
prosecution or the accused, summon and examine any such deponent as to the
subject-matter of his deposition.
292.
Evidence of Officers of the Mint : - (1) Any document purporting to be a report
under the hand of any such Gazetted Officer of the Mint or of the Indian Security
Press (including the Officer of the Controller of Stamps and stationery) as the
Central Government may, by notification, specify in this behalf, upon any
matter or thing duly submitted to him for examination and report in the course
of any proceeding under this Code, may be used as evidence in any inquiry,
trial or other proceeding under this Code, although such officer is not called
as a witness.
(2)
The court may, if it thinks fit, summon and examine any such officer as to be
the subject-matter of his report:
Provided
that no such officer shall be summoned to produce any records on which the
report is based.
(3)
Without prejudice to the provisions of Sections 123 and 124 of the Indian
Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), no such officer shall, except with the
permission of the Master of the Mint or the Indian Security Press or the
Controller of Stamps and Stationery, as the case may be, permitted,
(a)
to give any evidence derived from any unpublished official records on which the
report is based ; or
(b)
to disclose the nature or particulars of any test applied by him in the course
of the examination of the matter or thing.
293.
Reports of certain Government scientific experts-:-(1) Any document purporting
to be a report under the hand of a Government scientific expert to whom this
Section applies, upon any matter or thing duly submitted to him for examination
or analysis and report in the course of any proceeding under this Code, may be
used as evidence in any, inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this Code.
(2)
The Court may, if it thinks fit, summon and examine any such expert as to the
subject-matter of his report.
(3)
Where any such expert is summoned by a Court, and he is unable to attend
personally, he may, unless the Court has expressly directed him to appear
personally depute any responsible officer working with him to attend the Court,
if such officer is conversant with the facts of the case and can satisfactorily
depose in Court on his behalf.
(4)
This Section applies to the following Government scientific experts, namely:-
(a)
any Chemical Examiner or Assistant Chemical Examiner to Government
(b)
the Chief Inspector of Explosives;
(c)
the Director of the Finger Print Bureau;
(d)
the Director Haffkeine Institute, Bombay ;
(e)
the Director, Deputy Director or Assistant Director of a Central Forensic
Science Laboratory or a State
Forensic
Science Laboratory;
(f)
the Serologist to the Government.
294.
No formal proof of certain documents:-Where any document is filed before any
Court by the prosecution or the accused, the particulars of every such document
shall be included in a list and the prosecution or the accused, as the case may
be, or the pleader for the prosecution or the accused, if any, shall be called
upon to admit or deny the genuineness of each such document.
(2)
The list of documents shall be in such form as be prescribed by the State
Government.
(3)
Where the genuineness of any document is not disputed, such document may be
read in evidence in inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this Code without
proof of the signature of the person to whom it purports to be signed :
Provided
that the Court may, in its discretion, require such signature to be proved.
295.
Affidavit in proof of conduct of public servant:- When any application is made
to any Court in the course of any inquiry, trial or other proceedings under
this Code, and allegations are made therein respecting any public servant the
applicant may give evidence of the facts alleged in the application by affidavit,
and the Court may, if it thinks fit, order that evidence relating to such facts
to be given.
296.
Evidence of formal character on affidavit:- (1) The evidence of any person
whose evidence is of a formal character may be given by affidavit and may,
subject to all just exceptions, be read in evidence in any inquiry, trial or
other proceeding under this Code.
(2)
The Court may, if it thinks fit, and shall, on the application of the
prosecution or the accused, summons and examine any such person as to the facts
contained in his affidavit.
297.
Authorities before whom affidavits may be sworn:- (1) Affidavits to be used
before any Court under this Code may be sworn or affirmed before,-
(a)
any Judge or Judicial or Executive Magistrate, or
(b)
any commissioner of Oaths appointed by a High Court or Court of Session, or
(c)
any notary appointed under the Notaries Act, 1952 (53 of 1952).
(2)
Affidavits shall be confined to, and shall state separately, such facts as the
deponent is able to prove from his own knowledge and such facts as he has
reasonable ground to believe to be true, and in the latter case, the deponent
shall clearly state the grounds of such belief.
(3)
The Court may order any scandalous and irrelevant matter in the affidavit to be
struck out or amended.
298.
Previous conviction or acquittal how proved:- In any inquiry, trial or other
proceeding under this Code, a previous conviction or acquittal may be proved,
in addition to any other mode provided by any law for the time being in force,-
(a)
by an extract certified under the hand of the officer having the custody, of
the records of the Court in which such conviction or acquittal was held, to be
a copy of the sentence or order; or
(b)
in case of a conviction, either by a certificate signed by the officer in
charge of the Jail in which the punishment or any part thereof was undergone,
or by production of the warrant of commitment under which the punishment was
suffered, together with, in each of such cases, evidence as to the identity of
the accused person with the person so convicted or acquitted.
299.
Record of evidence in absence of accused:- (1) If it is proved that an accused
person has absconded, and that there is no immediate prospect of arresting him,
the Court competent to try or commit for trial, such person for the offence
complained of, may, in his absence, examine the witnesses (if any) produced on
behalf of the prosecution, and record their depositions and any such deposition
may, on the arrest of such person, be given in evidence against him on the
inquiry into, or trial for, the offence with which he is charged, if the
deponent is dead or incapable of giving evidence or cannot be found or his
presence cannot be procured without an amount of delay, expense or inconvenience
which, under the circumstances of the case, would be unreasonable.
(2)
If it appears that an offence punishable with death or imprisonment for life
has been committed by some person or persons unknown, the High Court or the
Sessions Judge may direct that any Magistrate of the first class shall hold an
inquiry and examine any witnesses who can give evidence concerning the offence
and any depositions so taken may be given in evidence against any person who is
subsequently accused of the offence, if the deponent is dead or incapable of
giving evidence or beyond the limits of India.
STATE
AMENDMENT
Uttar
Pradesh - In sub-sec. (1), for the words "competent to try such
person", the Words "competent to try such person or to commit him for
trial", shall be substituted - U.P. Act 16 of 1976, w.e.f. 1-5-1976.
CHAPTER
XXIV : GENERAL PROVISIONS AS TO INQUIRIES AND TRIALS
300.
Person once convicted or acquitted not to be tried for same offence:-(1) A
person who has once been tried by a Court of competent jurisdiction for an
offence and convicted or acquitted of such offence shall, while such conviction
or acquittal remains in force, not be liable to be tried again for the same
offence, nor on the same facts for any Other Offence for which a different charge
from the one made against him might have been made under sub-section (1) of
Section 221, or for which he might have been convicted under sub-section (2)
thereof.
(2)
A person acquitted or convicted of any offence, may be afterwards tried, with
the consent of the State Government, for any distinct offence for which a
separate charge might have been made against him at the former trial under
sub-section (1) of Section 220.
(3)
A person convicted of any offence constituted by any act causing consequences
which, together with such act, constituted a different offence from that of
which he was convicted, may be afterwards tried for such last mentioned
offence, if the consequences had not happened,
(4)
A person acquitted convicted of any offence constituted by any acts may,
notwithstanding such acquittal or conviction, be subsequently charged with, and
tried for, any other offence constituted by the same acts which he may have
committed if the Court by which he was first tried was not competent to try the
offence with which he is subsequently charged.
(5)
A Person discharged under Section 258 shall not be tried again for the same
offence except with the consent of the Court by which he was discharged or of
any other Court to which the first mentioned Court is subordinate.
(6)
Nothing in this Section shall affect the provisions ,of Section 26 of the
General Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897) or of Section 188 of this Code.
Explanation:-
The dismissal of a complaint, or the discharge of the accused, is not an
acquittal for the purpose of this Section.
CHAPTER
XXIV : GENERAL PROVISIONS AS TO INQUIRIES AND TRIALS
301.
Appearance by Public Prosecutors:- (1) The Public Prosecutor or Assistant
Public Prosecutor in charge of a case may appear and plead without any written
authority before any Court in which that case is under inquiry, trial or
appeal.
(2)
If in any such case any private person instructs a pleader to prosecute any
person in any Court, the Public Prosecutor or Assistant Public Prosecutor in
charge of the case shall conduct the prosecution, and the pleader so instructed
shall act therein under the directions of the Public Prosecutor or Assistant
Public Prosecutor, and may, with the permission of the Court, submit written
arguments after the evidence is closed in the case.
STATE
AMENDMENT
West
Bengal:- Substitute the following for sub-sec. 301 (I)
(1)(a)
The Public Prosecutor in charge of a case may appear and plead without any
written authority before any Court in which that case is under inquiry, trial
or appeal.
(b)
The Assistant Public Prosecutor in charge of a case may appear and plead
without any written authority before any Court in which that case is under
inquiry or trial."
W.B.
Act No. 26 of 1990, enforcement date not yet notified.
302.
Permission to conduct prosecution :-(1) Any Magistrate inquiring into or trying
a case may permit the prosecution to be conducted by any person other than a
police officer below the rank of inspector, but no person, other than the
Advocate-General, or Government Advocate or a Public Prosecutor or Assistant
Public Prosecutor, shall be entitled to do so without such permission:
Provided
that no police officer shall be permitted to conduct the prosecution if he has
taken part in the investigation into the offence with respect to which the
accused is being prosecuted.
(2)
Any person conducting the prosecution may do so personally or by a pleader.
303.
Right of person against whom proceedings instituted to be defended :- Any
person accused of offence before a Criminal Court or against whom proceedings
are instituted under this Code, may of right be defended by a pleader of his
choice.
304.
Legal aid to accused at State expense in certain cases :-(1) Where, in a trial
before the Court of Session, the accused is not represented by a pleader, and
where appears to the Court that the accused has not sufficient means to engage
a pleader, the Court shall assign a pleader for his defence at the expense of
the State.
(2)
The High Court may, with the previous approval of the State Government, make
rules providing for,--
(a)
the mode of selecting pleaders for defence under sub-section (1) ;
(b)
the facilities to be allowed to such pleaders by the Courts;
(c)
the fees payable to such pleaders by the Government and generally, for carrying
out the purposes of sub-section (1).
(3)
The State Government may, by notification, direct that, as from such date as
may be specified in the notification the provisions of sub-sections (1) and (2)
shall apply it relation to any class of trials before other Courts in the State
as they apply in relation to trials before Courts of Session.
305.
Procedure when corporation or registered society is an accused:--(1)In this
section, "corporation " means an incorporated company or other body
corporate, and includes a society registered under the Societies Registration
Act, 1860 (21 of 1860).
(2)
Where a corporation is the accused person or one of the accused persons in an
inquiry or trial, it may appoint a representative for the purpose of the
inquiry or trial and such appointment need not be under the seal of the
corporation.
(3)
Where a representative of a corporation appears, any requirement of this code
that anything shall be done in the presence of the accused or shall be read or
stated or explained to the accused, shall be construed as a requirement that
the thing shall be done in the presence of the representative, and any
requirement that the accused shall be examined shall be construed as a
requirement that the representative shall be examined.
(4)
Where a representative of a corporation does not appear, any such requirement
as is referred to in sub-section (3) shall not apply.
(5)
Where a statement in writing purporting to be signed by the managing director
of the corporation or by any person (by whatever name called) having, or being
one of the persons having the management of the affairs of the Corporation to
the effect that the person named in the statement has been appointed as the
representative of the corporation for the purposes of this Section, is filed,
the Court shall, unless the contrary is proved, presume that such person has
been so appointed.
(6)
If a question arises as to whether any person, appearing as the representative
of a corporation in an inquiry or trial before a Court is or is not such
representative, the question shall be determined by the Court.
306.
Tender of pardon to accomplice :-(1) With a view to obtaining the evidence of
any person supposed to have been directly or indirectly concerned in or privy
to an offence to which this Section applies, the Chief Judicial Magistrate or a
Metropolitan Magistrate at any stage of the investigation or inquiry into, or
the trial of, the offence, and the Magistrate of the first class inquiring
into, or trying the offence, at any stage of the inquiry or trial, may tender
pardon to such person on condition of his making a full and true disclosure of
the whole of the circumstances within his knowledge relative to the offence and
to every other person concerned, whether as principle or abettor, in the
commission thereof.
(2)
This Section applies to--
(a)
any offence triable exclusively by the Court of Session or by the Court of a
Special Judge appointed under the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952 (46 of
1952);
(b)
any offence punishable with imprisonment which may extend to seven years or
with a more severe sentence.
(3)
Every Magistrate who tenders a pardon under sub- section (1) shall record-
(a)
his reasons for so doing
(b)
whether the tender was or was not accepted by the person to whom it was made;
and
shall, on application made by the accused, furnish him with a copy of such
record free of cost.
(4)
Every person accepting a tender of pardon made under sub-section (1)-
(a)
shall be examined as a witness in the Court of the Magistrate taking cognizance
of the offence and in the subsequent trial, if any;
(b)
shall, unless he is already on bail, be detained in custody until the
termination of the trial.
(5)
Where a person has accepted a tender of pardon made under sub-section (1) and
has been examined under sub-section (4), the Magistrate taking cognizance of
the offence shall, without making any further inquiry in the case-
(a)
commit it for trial-
(i)
to the Court of Session if the offence is triable exclusively by that Court or
if the Magistrate taking cognizance is the Chief Judicial Magistrate ;
(ii)
to a Court of Special Judge appointed under the Criminal Law Amendment Act,
1952, (46 of 1952), if the offence is triable exclusively by that Court ;
(b)
in any other case, make over the case to the Chief Judicial Magistrate who
shall try the case himself.
307.
Power to direct tender of pardon :- At any time after commitment of a case but
before judgement is passed, the Court to which the commitment is made may, with
a view to obtaining at the trial the evidence of any person supposed to have
been directly or indirectly concerned in, or privy to, any such offence, tender
a pardon on the same condition to such person.
308.
Trial of person not complying with conditions of pardon :-(1)Where, in regard
to a person who has accepted a tender of pardon made under Section 306 or
Section 307 the Public Prosecutor certifies that in his opinion such person
has, either by wilfully concealing anything essential or by giving false
evidence, not complied with the condition on which the tender was made, such
person may be tried for the offence in respect of which the pardon was so
tendered, or for any other offence of which he appears to have been guilty in
connection with the same matter, and also for the offence of giving false
evidence:
Provided
that such person shall not be tried jointly with any of the other accused :
Provided
further that such person shall not be tried for the offence of giving false
evidence except with the sanction of the High Court, and nothing contained in
Section 195 Section 340 shall apply to that offence.
(2)
Any statement made by such person accepting tender of pardon and recorded by a
Magistrate under Sec 164 or by a Court under sub-section (4) of Section 306 may
be given in evidence against him at such trial.
(3)
At such trial, the accused shall be entitled to plead that he has complied with
the condition upon which such tender was made ; in which case it shall be for
the prosecution to prove that such condition has not been complied with.
(4)
At such trial, the Court shall-
(a)
if it is a Court of Session, before the charge is read out and explained to the
accused ;
(b)
if it is the Court of a Magistrate, before the evident of the witnesses for the
prosecution is taken,
ask
the accused whether he pleads that he has complied with the conditions on which
the tender of pardon
was
made.
(5)
If the accused does so plead, the Court shall record, the plea and proceed with
the trial and it shall, before passing judgement in the case, find whether or
not the accused has complied with the conditions of the pardon, and, if it
finds that he has so complied, it shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
this Code, pass judgement of acquittal.
09.
Power to postpone or adjourn proceedings:- (1)In every inquiry or trial, the
proceedings shall be held as expeditiously as possible, and in particular, when
the examination of witnesses has once begun, the same shall be continued from
day to day until all the witnesses in attendance have been examined, unless the
Court finds the adjournment of the same beyond the following day to be
necessary for reasons to be recorded.
If
the Court after taking cognizance of an offence, or commencement of trial,
finds it necessary or advisable to postpone the commencement of, or adjourn,
any inquiry or trial, it may, from time to time, for reasons to be recorded, postpone
or adjourn the same on such terms as it thinks fit, for such time as it
considers reasonable and may by a warrant remand the accused if in custody:
Provided
that no Magistrate shall remand an accused person to custody under this Section
for a term exceeding fifteen days at a time :
Provided
further that when witnesses are in attendance, no adjournment or postponement
shall be granted, without examining them, except for special reasons to be
recorded in writing.
Explanation
1:- If sufficient evidence has been obtained to raise a suspicion that the
accused may have committed an offence, and it appears likely that further
evidence may be obtained by a remand, this is a reasonable cause for a remand.
Explanation
2 :- The terms on which an adjournment or postponement may be granted include,
in appropriate cases, the payment of costs by the prosecution or the accused.
CODE
OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, 1973
CHAPTER
XXIV : GENERAL PROVISIONS AS TO INQUIRIES AND TRIALS
310.
Local Inspection:- (1) Any judge or Magistrate may, at any stage of any
inquiry, trial or other proceeding, after due notice to the parties, visit and
inspect any place in which an offence is alleged to have been committed, or any
other place which it is in his opinion necessary to view for the purpose of
properly appreciating the evidence given at such inquiry or trial, and shall
without unnecessary delay record a memorandum of any relevant facts observed at
such inspection.
(2)
Such memorandum shall form part of the record of the case and if the
prosecutor, complainant or accused or any other party to the case, so desires,
a copy of the memorandum shall be furnished to him free of cost.
311.
Power to summon material witness, or examine Person Present:- Any Court may, at
any stage of any inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this Code, summon any
person as a witness, or examine any person in attendance, though not summoned,
as a witness, or recall and re-examine any person already examined ; and the
Court shall summon and examine or recall and re-examine any such person if his
evidence appears to it to be essential to the just decision of the case.
312.
Expenses of complainants and witnesses:- Subject to any rules made by the State
Government, any Criminal Court may, if it thinks fit, order payment, on the
part of the Government, of the reasonable expenses of any complainant or
witness attending for the purposes of any inquiry trial or other proceeding
before such Court under this Code.
313.
Power to examine the accused :--(1) In every inquiry or trial, for the purpose
of enabling the accused personally to explain any circumstances appearing in
the evidence against him, the Court -
(a)
may, at any stage, without previously warning the accused, put such questions
to him as the Court considers necessary;
(b)
shall, after the witnesses for the prosecution have been examined and before he
is called on for his defence, question him generally on the case:
Provided
that in a summons-case, where the Court has dispensed with the personal
attendance of the accused, it may also dispense with his examination under
Clause (b).
(2)
No oath shall be administered to the accused when he is examined under
sub-section (1).
(3)
The accused shall not render himself liable to punishment by refusing to answer
such questions, or by giving false answers to them.
(4)
The answers given by the accused may be taken into consideration in such
inquiry or trial, and put in evidence for, or against him in any other inquiry
into, or trial for, any other offence which such answers may tend to show he
has committed.
314.
Oral arguments and memorandum of arguments:- (1) Any party to a proceeding may,
as soon as may be, after the close of his evidence, address concise oral
arguments; and may, before he concludes the oral arguments, if any, submit a
memorandum to the Court setting forth concisely and under distinct headings,
the arguments in support of his case and every such memorandum shall form part
of the record.
(2)
A copy of every such memorandum shall be simultaneously furnished to the
opposite party.
(3)
No adjournment of the proceedings shall be granted for the purpose of filing
the written arguments unless the Court, for reasons to be recorded in writing,
considers it necessary to grant such adjournment.
(4)
The Court may, if it is of opinion that the arguments are not concise or
relevant, regulate arguments.
315.
Accused person to be competent witness:- (1) Any person accused of an offence
before a Criminal Court shall be a competent witness for the defence and may,
evidence on oath in disproof of the charges made against him or any person
charged together with him at the same trial :
Provided
that-
(a)
he shall not be called as a witness except on own request in writing :
(b)
his failure to give evidence shall not be made subject of any comment by any of
the parties the Court or give rise to any presumption ago himself or any person
charged together with that the same trial.
(2)
Any person against whom proceedings are instituted in any Criminal Court under
Section 98, or Section 107, Section 108, or Section 109, or Section 110, or
under Chapter IX or under Part B, Part C or Part D or Chapter X, may offer
himself as a witness in such proceedings:
Provided
that in proceedings under Section 108, Section 109, or Section 110, the failure
of such person to give evidence shall not be made the subject of any comment by
any of the parties or the Court or give rise to any presumption against him or
any other person proceeded against together with him at the same inquiry.
316.
No Influence to be used to induce disclosure:- Except as provided in Section
306 and 307, no influence, by means of any promise or threat or otherwise,
shall be used to an accused person to induce him to disclose or withhold any
matter within his knowledge.
317.
Provision for inquiries and trial being held in the absence of accused in
certain cases:- (1) At any stage of an inquiry or trial under this code, if the
Judge or Magistrate is satisfied, for reasons to be recorded, that the personal
attendance of the accused before the Court is not necessary in the interests of
justice, or that the accused persistently disturbs the proceedings in court,
the Judge or Magistrate may, if the accused is represented by a pleader,
dispense with his attendance and proceed with such inquiry or trial in his
absence, and may, at any subsequent stage of the proceedings, direct the
personal attendance of such accused.
(2)
If the accused in any such case is not represented by a pleader, or if the
Judge or Magistrate considers his personal attendance necessary, he may, if he
thinks fit and for reasons to be recorded by him, either adjourn such inquiry
to trial, or order that the case of such accused be taken up or tried
separately.
318.
Procedure where accused does not understand proceedings:- If the accused,
though not of unsound mind, cannot be made to understand the proceedings, the
court may proceed with the inquiry or trial; and, in the case of Court other
than a High Court, if such proceedings result in a conviction, the proceedings
shall be forwarded to the High court with a report of the circumstances of the
case, and the High Court shall pass thereon such order as it thinks fit.
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 has 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 detained by such Court for the purpose of the inquiry into, or trial or,
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 the
witnesses reheard;
(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.
CHAPTER
XXIV : GENERAL PROVISIONS AS TO INQUIRIES AND TRIALS
320.
Compounding of offence:- (1) The offences punishable under the Sections of the
Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) specified in the first two columns of the Table
next following may be compounded by the persons mentioned in the third column
of that Table:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offences
Section of the Person by whom offence may be compounded
Indian
Penal
applicable
Code
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
(2) (3)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Uttering
words etc., with deliberate 298 The person whose religious feelings are
intended to
intent
to wound the religious be wounded
feelings
of any person
causing
hurt 323, 334 The person to whom the hurt is caused
Wrongfully
restraining or confining 341, 342 The person restrained or confined
any
person
Assault
or use of criminal force 352, 355, 358 The person assaulted or to whom criminal
force is used.
Mischief,
when the only loss or 426, 427 The person to whom the loss or damage is caused
damage
caused is loss or damage to
a
private person
Criminal
trespass 447 The person in possession of the property trespassed upon.
House-trespass
448 -do-
Criminal
breach of contract of service 491 The person with whom the offender has
contracted
Adultery
497 The husband of the woman
Enticing
or taking away or detaining 498 -do-
with
criminal intent of a married woman
Defamation,
except such cases as are 500 The person defamed
specified
against section 500 of the IPC
(45
of 1860 in column 1 of the Table under
sub-section
(2).
Printing
or engraving matter, knowing 501 -do-
it
to be defamatory
Sale
of printed or engraved substance 502 -do-
containing
defamatory matter, knowing
it
to contain such matter
Insult
intended to provoke a breach 504 The person insulted
of
the peace
Criminal
intimidation except when the 506 The person intimidated
offence
is punishable with imprisonment
for
seven years
Acts
caused by making a person believe 508 The person against whom the offence was
committed.
that
he will be an object of divine displeasure.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2)
The offences punishable under the sections of the Indian Penal Code (45 of
1860) specified in the first two columns of the table next following may, with
the permission of the Court before which any prosecution for such offence is
pending, be compounded by the persons mentioned in the third column of that
Table.--
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offence
Section of Person by whom offence may be compounded
Indian
Penal
Code
applicable
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
(2) (3)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Voluntarily
causing hurt by dangerous 324 The person to whom is caused
weapons
or means
Voluntarily
causing grievous hurt 325 -do-
Voluntarily
causing grievous hurt 335 -do-
on
grave and sudden provocation
Causing
hurt by doing an act so 337 -do-
rashly
and negligently as to endanger
human
life or the personal safety of
others
Causing
grievous hurt by doing an 338 -do-
act
so rashly and negligently as to
endanger
human life or the personal
safety
of others
Wrongfully
confining a person for 343 The person confined
three
days or more
Wrongfully
confining for ten or more 344 -do-
days
Wrongfully
confining a person in 346 -do-
secret
Assault
or criminal force to woman 354 The woman assaulted to whom the criminal force
was used.
with
intent to outrage her modesty
Assault
or criminal force in attempting 357 The person assaulted or to whom the force
was used.
wrongfully
to confine a person
Theft,
where the value of property 379 The owner of the property stolen
stolen
does not exceed two hundred
and
fifty rupees
Theft
by clerk or servant of property 381 -do-
in
possession of master, where the
value
of the property stolen does not
exceed
two hundred and fifty rupees
Dishonest
misappropriation of property 403 The owner of the property misappropriated.
Criminal
breach of trust, where the value 406 The owner of the property in respect of
which the breach of
of
the property does not exceed two trust has been committed.
hundred
and fifty rupees
Criminal
breach of trust by a carrier, 407 The owner of the property in respect of which
the breach of
wharfinger,
etc. where the value of the trust has been committed
property
does not exceed two hundred
and
fifty rupees
Criminal
breach of trust by a clerk or 408 The owner of the property in respect of which
the breach of
servant,
where the value of the property trust has been committed
does
not exceed two hundred and fifty
rupees
Dishonestly
receiving stolen property 411 The owner of the property stolen
knowing
it to be stolen, when the value
of
the stolen property does not exceed
two
hundred and fifty rupees
Assisting
in the concealment or disposal 414 -do-
of
stolen property, knowing it to be stolen,
where
the value of the stolen property does
not
exceed two hundred and fifty rupees
Cheating
417 The person cheated
Cheating
a person whose interest 418 -do-
the
offender was bound, either by law or by
legal
contract, to protect
Cheating
by personation 419 -do-
Cheating
and dishonestly inducing delivery 420 -do-
of
property or the making, alteration or
destruction
of a valuable security
Fraudulent
removal or concealment of 421 The Creditors who are affected thereby
property
etc. to prevent distribution
among
creditors
Fraudulently
preventing from 422 -do-
being
made available for his creditors
a
debt or demand due to the offender
Fraudulent
execution of deed of transfer 423 The person affected thereby
containing
false statement of consideration
Fraudulent
removal or concealment of 424 -do-
property
Mischief
by killing or maiming animal of 428 The owner of the animal
the
value of ten rupees or upwards
Mischief
by killing or maiming cattle, etc., 429 The owner of the cattle or animal
of
any value or any other animal of the
value
of fifty rupees or upwards
Mischief
by injury to work of irrigation by 430 The person to whom the loss or damage is
caused
wrongfully
diverting water when the only
loss
or damage caused is loss or damage
to
a private person
House
trespass to commit an offence 451 The person in possession of the house
trespassed upon
(other
than theft) punishable with
imprisonment
Using
a false trade or property mark 482 The person to whom loss or injury is caused
by such use
Counterfeiting
a trade or property mark 483 The person whose trade or property mark is
counterfeited
used
by another
Knowingly
selling, or exposing or 486 -do-
possessing
for sale or for manufacturing
purpose,
goods marked with a counterfeit
property
mark
Marrying
again during the life time of 494 The husband or wife of the person so marrying
a
husband or wife
Defamation
against the President or the 500 The person defamed
Vice-President
or the Governor of a State
or
the Administrator of a Union Territory
or
a Minister in respect of his conduct in
the
discharge of his public functions when
instituted
upon a complaint made by the
Public
Prosecutor
Uttering
words or sounds or making gestures 509 The woman whom it was intended to insult
or whose
or
exhibiting any object intending to insult the privacy was intruded upon
modesty
of a woman or intruding upon the
privacy
of a woman.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3)
When any offence is compoundable under this section, the abatement of such
offence or an attempt to Commit such offence (when such attempt is itself an
offence) may be compounded in like manner.
(4)(a)
When the person who would otherwise be competent to compound an offence under
this section is under the age of eighteen years or is an idiot or a lunatic,
any person competent to contract on his behalf may, with the permission of the
Court, compound such offence.
(b)
When the person who would otherwise be competent to compound an offence under
this section is dead, the legal representative, as defined in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) of such person may, with the consent of the Court,
compound such offence.
(5)
When the accused has been committed for trial or when he has been convicted and
an appeal is pending, no composition for the offence shall be allowed without
the leave of the Court to which he is committed, or, as the case may be, before
which the appeal is to be heard.
(6)
A High Court or Court of Session acting in the exercise of its powers of
revision under Section 401 may allow any person to compound any offence which
such person is competent to compound under this Section.
(7)
No offence shall be compounded if the accused is, by reason of a previous
conviction, liable either to enhanced punishment or to a punishment of a
different kind for such offence.
(8)
The composition of an offence under this Section shall have the effect of an
acquittal of the accused with whom the offence has been compounded.
(9)
No offence shall be compounded except as provided by this Section.
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