14 September 1960
Supreme Court
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NARAIN DAS Vs THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH


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PETITIONER: NARAIN DAS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/09/1960

BENCH:

ACT: Appeal-Forum--Single  Judge of High Court  exercising  civil jurisdiction  refusing to file complaint-Appeal, if lies  to Supreme Court-Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (V of  1898), ss.  195 and 476-B.

HEADNOTE: During  the  pendency  of  a  civil  writ  petition  in  the Allahabad  High Court, one N moved an application  under  s. 476,  Code  of criminal Procedure, for  making  a  complaint under  s. 93, Indian Penal Code, against T. A  single  judge who  was  seized  of  the  case  rejected  the  application. Thereupon  N  presented  an  appeal  against  the  order  of rejection of his application before the Supreme Court  under S. 476-B, Code of Criminal Procedure. Held,  that the appeal did not lie to the Supreme Court  but that  it lay to the Appellate Bench of the High Court.   The decrees of a single judge of the High Court exercising civil jurisdiction  were ordinarily appealable to the  High  Court under  cl.  1o of the Letters Patent of the  Allahabad  High Court   read  with  cl.  13  of  the  U.  P.   High   Courts (Amalgamation)   Order,   1948,  and  as  such   the   Court constituted  by the single judge was a court subordinate  to the Appellate Bench of the High Court within the meaning  of s. 195(3) of the Code. M.   S. Sheriff v. The State of Madras, [1954] S.C.R.  1144, distinguished.                             677

JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL   APPELLATE   JURISDICTION:  In   the   matter   of maintainability of appeal in the Supreme Court of India. Mohan Lal Agarwala, for the petitioner. G.   C. Mathur and C. P. Lal, for the respondent No. 1. 1960.   September  14.   The  Judgment  of  the  Court   was delivered by RAGHUBAR  DAYAL  J.-Narain Das filed a civil  writ  petition under  Art.  226 of the Constitution in the  High  Court  of Judicature   at   Allahabad.   He  subsequently   moved   an application  under s. 476 of the Code of Criminal  Procedure (hereinafter  called the Code) for making a complaint  under s. 193, Indian Penal Code, against Phanish Tripathi alleging that a certain statement in an affidavit filed by the latter was  false.  The learned Judge who heard  this  application, holding that the appellant had not succeeded in showing that any  portion of the affidavit of Tripathi filed on  May  14, 1959,  was  false, dismissed the same.  It is  against  this

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order of the learned Judge of the High Court that Narain Das has  filed  this memorandum of appeal under s. 476B  of  the Code.   The Registry has submitted the memorandum of  appeal with  a  report  for determining the  question  whether  the appeal is competent in this Court. Section 476 of the Code is to be found in Ch.  XXXV which is headed  ’Proceedings in case of certain  Offences  Affecting the  Administration of Justice’.  Section 476  empowers  any Civil, Revenue or Criminal Court, when it is of the  opinion that  it  is expedient in the interests of justice  that  an inquiry  should be made into any offence referred to  in  s. 195(1) (b) or (c) which appears to have been committed in or in relation to a proceeding before it, to file a  complaint, after  such  inquiry  as  it  thinks  necessary,  before   a Magistrate  of   Class  having jurisdiction.   It  is  clear therefore that where an offence referred to in s. 195(1) (b) or  (c) is committed in or in relation to a proceeding in  a Civil Court, an inquiry under s. 476 and. the action taken 678 on that inquiry by the Civil Court, are in relation to  that proceeding itself. Any person aggrieved by an order of a Court under s. 476. of ’the  Code  may appeal in view of s. 476B to  the  Court  to which the former Court is subordinate within the, meaning of s.  195(3),  which  provides that for the  purposes  of  the section  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  the  local  limits  of   whose jurisdiction such Civil Court is situate.  The decrees of  a single Judge of the High Court exercising civil jurisdiction are ordinarily appealable to the High Court under el. 10  of the Letters Patent of the Allahabad High Court read with el. 13 of the United Provinces High Courts (Amalgamation) Order, 1948.  It is true that the decision of a single Judge of the High  Court is as much a decision of the High Court  as  the decision of the appellate Bench hearing appeals against  his decrees.  But the Court constituted, by the single Judge  is a Court subordinate to the appellate Bench of the High Court in view of the artificial judicial subordination created  by the  provisions of s. 195(3) to the effect’ ’ a Court  shall be  deemed to be subordinate to the Court to  which  appeals ordinarily  lie  from the appeal. able decrees...’.  In  the case of a Civil Court which passes appealable decrees,  that Court  is  deemed to be subordinate to the  Court  to  which appeals ordinarily lie from its decrees.  In’ the case of  a Civil  Court from whose decrees no appeal  ordinarily  lies, that  Court  is deemed subordinate to  the  principal  Court having ordinary original civil jurisdiction within the local limits  of whose jurisdiction the former Court  is  situate, even though normally such a Court will not be subordinate to the   principal   Court  having  ordinary   original   civil jurisdiction within whose local limits it is situate. It was urged by the learned Advocate for Narain Das that the order of the learned single Judge under                             679 s.476  did  not amount to a decree and  that  therefore  the provisions  of  s. 195(3) were not applicable.   It  is  not necessary  for  us  to express an opinion  on  the  question whether  the order of the learned single Judge under s.  476 is appealable under cl. 10 of the Letters Patent or not.   A right  of  appeal  against  that  order  is  given  by-  the provisions  of  s.  476  B. The  forum  of  appeal  is  also

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determined by the provisions of s. 476B read with s. 195(3), and the only relevant consideration to determine the  proper forum  for  an appeal against such an order  of  the  single Judge  is as to which Court the appeals  against  appealable decrees  of the single Judge ordinarily lie.   Such  appeals lie to the High Court under cl. 10 of the Letters Patent  of the Allahabad High Court, and therefore this appeal lies to’ the High Court. Learned counsel for the appellant relied on the decision  of this  Court in M. S. Sheriff v. The State of Madras  (1)  in support  of his contention that an appeal under s. 476B  lay to this Court from the decision of a single Judge of a  High Court refusing to file a complaint under s. 476 of the Code. That  case is distinguishable as the question considered  in that  case was whether an appeal lay to this Court under  s. 476B of the Code from an order of a Division Bench of a High Court.  It did not deal with the question whether an  appeal lay to this Court under s. 476B of the Code from an order of a  single  Judge of the High Court.  No appeal lies  to  the High  Court against the decision of a Division Bench of  the High  Court  and therefore an appeal under s. 476B  from  an order  of the Division Bench of the High Court must  lie  to this Court. The fact that an appeal lies to this Court from the order of a  single  Judge  of the High Court  where  the  High  Court certifies, under Art. 132 of the Constitution, that the case involves   a   substantial  question  of  law  as   to   the interpretation  of the Constitution, is of no assistance  to the appellant’s contention ’that this appeal is competent in this  Court.   It cannot be said that an  appeal  ordinarily lies to this Court from the (1)  [1954] S.C.R. 1144. 87 680 judgment  of a single Judge of a High Court because such  an appeal lies with a certificate granted under Art. 132. We  therefore hold that the present appeal does not  lie  to this Court and that it lies to the High Court of  Judicature at  Allahabad.  We therefore direct that the  memorandum  of appeal be returned for presentation. to the proper Court. Appeal incompetent.