09 November 1994
Supreme Court
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NISAR AND ANOTHER Vs STATE OF U.P.


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PETITIONER: NISAR AND ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P.

DATE OF JUDGMENT09/11/1994

BENCH: MUKHERJEE M.K. (J) BENCH: MUKHERJEE M.K. (J) ANAND, A.S. (J)

CITATION:  1995 SCC  (2)  23        JT 1995 (1)   135  1994 SCALE  (4)890

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT: The Judgment of the Court was delivered by M.K. MUKHERJEE, J.- Special leave granted. 2.Appellant 1 is the brother-in-law of Shakyin who met  with an  unnatural  death in her matrimonial home  on  22-6-1991. Appellant 2 is his wife.  On the following day i.e. on 23-6- 1991  Noor Mohammad, father of the deceased, lodged a  first information    report    alleging    that    her    husband, grandmother-in-law  and the two appellants were  responsible for  her death.  On that information a case  was  registered under Sections 304-B and 306 of the Indian Penal Code (’IPC’ for  short)  against  all  of  them  and  on  completion  of investigation   the  police  submitted  charge-sheet   under Section  306  IPC only against the  deceased’s  husband  and grandmother-in-law.  In due course the case was committed to the Court of Session by the Chief Judicial Magistrate,  Orai (’Magistrate’  for short) in accordance with Section 209  of the Criminal Procedure Code (’Code’ for short). 3.When  the matter came up for hearing before an  Additional Sessions  Judge of Orai, an application was moved on  behalf of  Noor Mohammad alleging that though during  investigation sufficient  materials were furnished to prove that  the  two appellants  had  also  demanded  a  scooter  as  dowry   and physically   tortured  and  ill-treated  the  deceased   the investigating  agency  did not submit  charge-sheet  against them and praying for invoking the provisions of Section  193 of the Code to summon them.  The application was opposed  on behalf  of the appellants on the ground that in  absence  of any order of their committal in accordance with Section  209 of  the Code the Court of Session could not summon  them  in exercise of power under Section 193 of the Code. 4.After hearing the parties and going through the statements recorded under Section  161  of the Code the  learned  Judge summoned  the  two appellants as, according to  the  learned Judge,  a  prima facie case was made out  against  them  and

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Section 193 of the Code empowered him to summon them. 5.Aggrieved by the above order the appellants moved the High Court  in  revision which was rejected  with  the  following order:               "Learned   counsel  for  the  applicants   has               submitted that the learned Judge has exercised               his power under Section 193 CrPC and not under               Section 319 CrPC which could not be  exercised               as no evidence has yet led in the case.               In my opinion, the submission is not  correct.               Under  Section 319 CrPC even on the  basis  of               existing  material  person  appearing  to   be               guilty may be summoned.  The learned  Sessions               Judge  has perused the material and has  found               that   there  are  allegations   against   the               applicants.   Merely because Section  193  has               been mentioned by the court below, it will not               invalidate the order." 6.   Hence this appeal. 7.   It  was  submitted  on behalf of  the  appellants  that neither  the provisions of Section 193 nor those of  319  of the Code empowered the Court of Session 25 to  pass  the  impugned order.   According  to  the  learned counsel   for  the  appellants  in  absence  of  any   order committing  the  appellants  to the Court  of  Session,  the learned  Judge  could not have issued  process  against  the appellants  to  stand trial by invoking Section 193  of  the Code.  The learned counsel next submitted that having regard to  the fact that Section 319 of the Code could  be  invoked only  at a stage when evidence was led, the High  Court  was not  justified in upholding the order of the  learned  Judge relying upon the said section, as admittedly that stage  was yet to be reached. 8.   As  regards the second contention of the appellants  it must  be  said  that in view of the  plain  and  unambiguous language  of  Section 319 of the Code,  the  earlier  quoted reason  which weighed with the High Court in sustaining  the order of the learned Judge is patently incorrect.  The power under  Section 319(1) can be exercised only in  those  cases where  involvement of persons other than those arraigned  in the  charge-sheet comes to light in the course  of  evidence recorded during the enquiry or trial.  As that stage has not yet  reached  the appellants could not  have  been  summoned invoking Section 319 of the Code. 9.   As  regards the other contention of the  appellants  we may mention that this Court has in Kishun Singh v. State  of Bihar1 categorically rejected a similar contention with  the following observations: (SCC p. 30, para 16)               "Thus,  on a plain reading of Section 193,  as               it presently stands once the case is committed               to the Court of Session by a Magistrate  under               the Code, the restriction placed on the  power               of the Court of Session to take cognizance  of               an offence as a court of original jurisdiction               gets lifted.  On the Magistrate committing the               case under Section 209 to the Court of Session               the  bar  of  Section 193  is  lifted  thereby               investing  the Court of Session  complete  and               unfettered   jurisdiction  of  the  court   of               original  jurisdiction to take  cognizance  of               the offence which would include the  summoning               of  the person or persons whose complicity  in               the commission of the crime can prima facie be               gathered   from  the  material  available   on

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             record." 10.Since  we are in respectful agreement with the  principle so  laid  down,  the contention of the  appellants  in  this regard   must  be  rejected.   The  appeal  is,   therefore, dismissed. 26