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Emperor Vs. Umed Raja

Emperor vs Umed Raja

Type Court Judgment Court Mumbai Decided Mar 01, 1914
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/328666

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Citation
Court
Mumbai
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Criminal Application for Revision No. 1 of 1914
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Practice-Witness for prosecution-District Magistrate-Order to make the witness into co-accused in the trial.;In a criminal trial, two persons wore examined as witnesses for the pro secution. At the end of their examination, the accused applied to the Magistrate to turn those witnesses into co-accused with them. The ...

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Emperor

Respondent

Umed Raja

Legal References

Reported In
(1914)16BOMLR259

Excerpt

.....scheduled tribes, de-notified tribes (vimukta jatis), nomadic tribes, other backward classes and special backward category (regulation of issuance and verification of) caste certificate act (23 of 2001), sections 6 & 10: [s.b. mhase, a.p. deshpande & p.b. varale, jj] caste certificate petitioner seeking appointment against the post reserved for member of schedule tribe his caste certificate was invalidated subsequently held, his appointment would not be protected. the observations/directions issued by supreme court in para 36 of judgment in the case of state v millind reported in 2001 91) mah. lj sc 1 is not the law declared by supreme court under article 141 of the constitution of india. said observations/directions are issued in exercise of powers under article 142 of the constitution and also have no application to the cases relating to appointments and are restricted to the cases relating to admissions. the protection, if any, to be granted in the fact and circumstances of case would depend upon exercise of discretion by supreme court under article 142 of the constitution. said powers under article 142 of constitution is not available to the high court. hence no protection can be granted by high court even in cases relating to admissions. .....however, he did interfere and this is the order he made:--' if the case was sent up by the police (it does not seem that it was) they should be directed to send up a complaint against the, two witnesses also.' i pause here, because i see no objection to this part of the order if it was made by the district magistrate acting as a police officer. but i do see an objection to it if it was made by him as a magistrate. the order then goes on : ' if it was taken up on complaint, the magistrate should cause a complaint to be laid against the two witnesses, preferably by the present complainant, and if he refuses, by any clerk.' this order, if it means anything, means that the magistrate trying a case is directed by a superior court, whatever his own view of the case may be, to make a complaint against a witness in the case he is trying or to order some -clerk to do the same thing. i do not understand on what power conferred on him as a magistrate the district magistrate was then relying, nor do i understand the reasonableness of such an order. on general principles, unless there be something very unusual, a magistrate trying a case should be left to try it in his own way, and should not be interfered with during the course of the trial. if it transpires in the course of the case that criminal proceedings ought to be taken against any who have given evidence, those proceedings ought ordinarily to await the conclusion of the case, and certainly they ought to be instituted ordinarily by the order of, or an application to, the magistrate, who has. tried the case and who is conversant with all the circumstances. the emperor order, which the district magistrate has made, seems to me to offend against those principles. moreover, it is, as i have already indicated, an order which he has no authority whatever to make under any provision of the code of criminal procedure.3. therefore, i think, it should be set aside.shah, j.4. i entirely concur.

Full Judgment

Heaton J.

1. It appears that two accused persons, who have been tried by the Second Class Magistrate of Hansot, asked that Magistrate during the course of the trial to make two witnesses, who had given evidence in the case, into co-accused persons with them. The Magistrate declined to do so whereupon they (the accused persons) appealed or applied to the District Magistrate.

2. To begin with, I do not know of any power given to a District Magistrate by the Code of the Criminal Procedure which would enable him to interfere in the matter (by way of appeal or revision). However, he did interfere and this is the order he made:--' If the case was sent up by the police (it does not seem that it was) they should be directed to send up a complaint against the, two witnesses also.' I pause here, because I see no objection to this part of the order if it was made by the District Magistrate acting as a police officer. But I do see an objection to it if it was made by him as a Magistrate. The order then goes on : ' If it was taken up on complaint, the Magistrate should cause a complaint to be laid against the two witnesses, preferably by the present complainant, and if he refuses, by any clerk.' This order, if it means anything, means that the Magistrate trying a case is directed by a superior Court, whatever his own view of the case may be, to make a complaint against a witness in the case he is trying or to order some -clerk to do the same thing. I do not understand on what power conferred on him as a Magistrate the District Magistrate was then relying, nor do I understand the reasonableness of such an order. On general principles, unless there be something very unusual, a Magistrate trying a case should be left to try it in his own way, and should not be interfered with during the course of the trial. If it transpires in the course of the case that criminal proceedings ought to be taken against any who have given evidence, those proceedings ought ordinarily to await the conclusion of the case, and certainly they ought to be instituted ordinarily by the order of, or an application to, the Magistrate, who has. tried the case and who is conversant with all the circumstances. The Emperor order, which the District Magistrate has made, seems to me to offend against those principles. Moreover, it is, as I have already indicated, an order which he has no authority whatever to make under any provision of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

3. Therefore, I think, it should be set aside.

Shah, J.

4. I entirely concur.

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