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Emperor Vs. Gansa

Emperor vs Gansa

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Apr 24, 1914
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/457649

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Citation
Court
Allahabad
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

Criminal Procedure Code, Section 438 - Enhancement of sentence--Reference made by District Magistrate after the Sessions Judge has destined to refer--High Cour--Practice. - - , in the judgment in the latter case apply equally well to the present case. In the present case it seems that the District Magistrate havin...

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Emperor

Respondent

Gansa

Legal References

Reported In
(1914)ILR36All378

Excerpt

criminal procedure code, section 438 - enhancement of sentence--reference made by district magistrate after the sessions judge has destined to refer--high cour--practice. - - , in the judgment in the latter case apply equally well to the present case. in the present case it seems that the district magistrate having failed to induce the sessions judge to send the case to this court asked the commissioner of the division to send the case up to the local government with a view to having the case brought to the notice of this court by the government advocate, but the commissioner declined to do so......in the two reported cases queen empress v. zor singh (1887) i. l. r. 10 all. 146. and emperor v. jamna bai (1905) i. l. r. 28 all. 91. this court observed that as a general rule it would not entertain a reference from a district magistrate which had for its object the enhancement of a sentence passed by a sessions judge as a court of appeal. the remarks made by banerji and richards, jj., in the judgment in the latter case apply equally well to the present case. they said: ' we do not think that the legislature by using the words. ' or otherwise ' in section 438 intended to confer upon a magistrate the power to question the propriety of an order of a sessions court and make a reference to this court upon that ground.' the bombay high court seems to take the same view in the matter. [see emperor v. krishnaji shyam rao (1904) 6 bom. l. r. 1099. in which the order passed by the sessions judge was an appellate order], i doubt very much whether the district magistrate is entitled as a matter of law to make this reference, but, assuming that he is so entitled, i think it is extremely inconvenient that a district magistrate should criticize an order of a court superior to him in this.....

Full Judgment

Chamier, J.

1. This is a reference by the District Magistrate of Moradabad in which he recommends that the sentence of five years' rigorous imprisonment, with ninety days in solitary confinement, passed on Ganga Ahir should be enhanced. The case was tried by the Assistant Sessions Judge, to whom it was transferred by the Sessions Judge. The District Magistrate in the first instance in accordance with the procedure followed in cases tried by Subordinate Magistrates, sent the record to the Sessions Judge asking that the case might be forwarded to the High Court with a recommendation that the sentence should be enhanced. The Sessions Judge declined to send the case to the High Court The District Magistrate has accordingly submitted the case direct to this Court. The question whether this can be done has arisen on several occasions. It arose in a case which was in my hands as Government Advocate several years ago. This Court while declining to hold that the District Magistrate was not entitled as a matter of law to submit the case to the High Court, observed that the procedure adopted was inconvenient and declined to interfere. In the two reported cases Queen Empress v. Zor Singh (1887) I. L. R. 10 All. 146. and Emperor v. Jamna Bai (1905) I. L. R. 28 All. 91. this Court observed that as a general rule it would not entertain a reference from a District Magistrate which had for its object the enhancement of a sentence passed by a Sessions Judge as a court of appeal. The remarks made by Banerji and Richards, JJ., in the judgment in the latter case apply equally well to the present case. They said: ' We do not think that the Legislature by using the words. ' or otherwise ' in Section 438 intended to confer upon a Magistrate the power to question the propriety of an order of a Sessions Court and make a reference to this Court upon that ground.' The Bombay High Court seems to take the same view in the matter. [See Emperor v. Krishnaji Shyam Rao (1904) 6 Bom. L. R. 1099. in which the order passed by the Sessions Judge was an appellate order], I doubt very much whether the District Magistrate is entitled as a matter of law to make this reference, but, assuming that he is so entitled, I think it is extremely inconvenient that a District Magistrate should criticize an order of a court superior to him in this way. In the present case it seems that the District Magistrate having failed to induce the Sessions Judge to send the case to this Court asked the Commissioner of the Division to send the case up to the Local Government with a view to having the case brought to the notice of this Court by the Government Advocate, but the Commissioner declined to do so. It is quite clear that this Court ought not to interfere in a case of this kind except for special reasons. There appear to be no special reasons in the present case. All that can be said is that the sentence inflicted is some what lighter than is generally inflicted in a case of this kind. In the circumstances I decline to interfere. Let the papers be returned.

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