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Manna and ors. Vs. Emperor

Manna and ors. vs Emperor

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Aug 15, 1917
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/477011

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Citation
Court
Allahabad
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Miscellaneous

Case Summary

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

Criminal Procedure Code (Act V of 1898), Section 110, 112, 122 - Surety, fitness of--Judicial inquiry, necessity of. - - 1. The applicants were ordered to furnish security for good behaviour.

Key legal issue
Miscellaneous

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Manna and ors.

Respondent

Emperor

Legal References

Cases Referred
Empress v. Rahim Bakhsh
Reported In
42Ind.Cas.783

Excerpt

criminal procedure code (act v of 1898), section 110, 112, 122 - surety, fitness of--judicial inquiry, necessity of. - - 1. the applicants were ordered to furnish security for good behaviour.p. c. banerjee, j.1. the applicants were ordered to furnish security for good behaviour. they produced two sureties, but the sureties have been rejected by the learned magistrate on the ground that they live at a distance from the village of the applicants. the magistrate does not appear to have made any judicial enquiry as to the fitness of the sureties. the mere fact that they live at a distance is not by itself sufficient to disqualify the sureties. of course, as remarked in the case of queen-empress v. rahim bakhsh 20 a. 206: a. w. n. (1898) 21: 9 ind. dce. (n. s.) 494, it is reasonable 'to expect and require that the sureties to be tendered should not be sureties from such a distance as would make it unlikely that-they could exercise any control over the man for whom they were willing to stand surety.' in the present case the magistrate does not express any opinion on the point noticed above and he has made no enquiry. i accordingly allow the application, set aside the order of the magistrate, rejecting the security offered and send back the case to him, with the direction that if after judicial enquiry he be of opinion that the two sureties offered are not, men who ought to be accepted as sureties, he should afford to the applicants reasonable opportunity to furnish other and suitable sureties. the record will be returned.

Full Judgment

P. C. Banerjee, J.

1. The applicants were ordered to furnish security for good behaviour. They produced two sureties, but the sureties have been rejected by the learned Magistrate on the ground that they live at a distance from the village of the applicants. The Magistrate does not appear to have made any judicial enquiry as to the fitness of the sureties. The mere fact that they live at a distance is not by itself sufficient to disqualify the sureties. Of course, as remarked in the case of Queen-Empress v. Rahim Bakhsh 20 A. 206: A. W. N. (1898) 21: 9 Ind. Dce. (N. S.) 494, it is reasonable 'to expect and require that the sureties to be tendered should not be sureties from such a distance as would make it unlikely that-they could exercise any control over the man for whom they were willing to stand surety.' In the present case the Magistrate does not express any opinion on the point noticed above and he has made no enquiry. I accordingly allow the application, set aside the order of the Magistrate, rejecting the security offered and send back the case to him, with the direction that if after judicial enquiry he be of opinion that the two sureties offered are not, men who ought to be accepted as sureties, he should afford to the applicants reasonable opportunity to furnish other and suitable sureties. The record will be returned.

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