Skip to content
How to use Judgment tools
  1. Click Tools to open PDF, Print, Tag, Note, Favourite, and CiteSignal.
  2. Use Brief & Ask in the toolbar for the AI Brief and case chat.
  3. Jump to sections with the pills below the help bar.

In Re: Sadashiv Narayan Valkar

Type Court Judgment Court Mumbai Decided Nov 30, 1908
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/343261

For advocates & juniors · 7-day free trial

Brief this judgment before chambers

Stop skimming 50 pages - get an 18-section AI Brief on this case, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial, no card required.

  • 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
  • Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
  • Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
  • Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases

No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account

Citation
Court
Mumbai
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

Criminal Procedure Code (Act V of 1898), Section 517 - Order for disposal of property--Discretion. -

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

In Re: Sadashiv Narayan Valkar

Legal References

Reported In
1Ind.Cas.103

Excerpt

criminal procedure code (act v of 1898), section 517 - order for disposal of property--discretion. - 1. section 517 of the criminal procedure code invests the magistrate with a discretionary power and it is a rule of law that such power must be exercised judicially, i.e., according to sound principles of law and not in an arbitrary manner. but what that means is not that the order is in the opinion of the higher tribunal of revision an improper one which it would not have passed, but that having regard to the materials before the court exercising the discretion that discretion was exercised in a legal manner. now, if there were no materials whatever before him, the magistrate ought to have returned the property to the person from whom it was produced. but if there were some materials then the magistrate's discretion came into operation and it was for him to say what order ought to be passed having regard to all the facts in the case.2. here there was a quarrel amongst the members of a joint hindu family, and the magistrate, although he held that no offence was committed, ordered that the property should be handed over to the complainant under the circumstances of the case. we cannot say that the discretion was illegally exercised. we must, therefore, decline to interfere and the rule must be discharged.

Full Judgment

1. Section 517 of the Criminal Procedure Code invests the Magistrate with a discretionary power and it is a rule of law that such power must be exercised judicially, i.e., according to sound principles of law and not in an arbitrary manner. But what that means is not that the order is in the opinion of the higher tribunal of revision an improper one which it would not have passed, but that having regard to the materials before the Court exercising the discretion that discretion was exercised in a legal manner. Now, if there were no materials whatever before him, the Magistrate ought to have returned the property to the person from whom it was produced. But if there were some materials then the Magistrate's discretion came into operation and it was for him to say what order ought to be passed having regard to all the facts in the case.

2. Here there was a quarrel amongst the members of a joint Hindu family, and the Magistrate, although he held that no offence was committed, ordered that the property should be handed over to the complainant under the circumstances of the case. We cannot say that the discretion was illegally exercised. We must, therefore, decline to interfere and the rule must be discharged.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial