Sunday, February 23, 2014

Courts can try a person not booked by police, rules Bombay High Court

Source: The Times of India dated 24.02.2014

Courts can try a person not booked by police, rules HC

Shibu Thomas TNN 


Mumbai: A trial court can use powers under the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) to initiate criminal proceedings against a person who may not have been booked by police in a case, the Bombay high court has said. Justice Revati Dere ruled that even if a person is not named as an accused in the police chargesheet, a court can launch prosecution against him at any stage of the trial. But it added that this power has to be used sparingly. The court’s order comes as a relief to Malabar Hill resident Mani Narayan in a 17-year-old case of assault and outraging her modesty (see box). 

    “It is well settled that once amagistrate takes cognizance of an offence, he can proceed 
against those offenders also who have not been sent up by the police and that absence of chargesheet is not a bar. The power of Section 319 of CrPC is not controlled by the result of investigation,” said Justice Dere. The court set aside as “premature” a sessions court order which while accepting that such powers were available to the magistrate had held that since it was an old case it would amount to abuse of the process of law. 

    The HC held that the delay in the case was not Narayan;s fault, but due to the fact that the accused were absconding for over a decade.


HOPE FOR COMPLAINANT AFTER 16 YRS n 1997, Mani Narayan alleged that watchmen of her Malabar Hill building obstructed her on the instructions of her society’s secretary, assaulted her and outraged her modesty. The FIR was lodged against two watchmen. Narayan, however, claimed that the police had not recorded her complaint properly and had not named as accused the secretary and other watchmen. In 1998, she moved a magistrate’s court to order further investigations. The two absconding accused were arrested only in 2008. In 2011, the magistrate rejected her plea. The sessions court too rejected her application and held that the trial court’s powers were not tenable as the case was old. Narayan then moved the HC

HC: Apply Section 319 sparingly 
    Merely on the ground that the case is an old one cannot justify holding that invoking of Section 319 of the CrPC will amount to abuse of the process of the law,” said the judge. 


    The HC however cautioned that the power under section 319 had to be used properly and only when the court was convinced that there was enough material available to convict the accused. “The court has to use the said power sparingly and primarily to advance the cause of criminal justice and not as a tool at the hands of the court to cause harassment to persons who are not involved in the commission of the crime,” said the judge adding that the provision should be invoked when from the evidence it appears that a person who has not been named by the police had committed the offence. The court said that the provision should be used “only on the existence of compelling reasons and should not be exercised where the possibilities of the summoned persons, being convicted are remote”. 


    Under Section 319, the court can initiate prosecution of a person who is not booked but against whom there is evidence that he has committed the crime. The court can summon such a person, order his arrest or detain him for the purpose of inquiry or trial.

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