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.

Narainji and ors. Vs. the State

Narainji and ors. vs The State

Type Court Judgment Court Rajasthan Decided Aug 05, 1950
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/755101

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
Rajasthan High Court
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

- - The allegation of the prosecution is clearly to the effect that all the co-accused were aware as to what was being done.

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Narainji and ors.

Respondent

The State

Legal References

Reported In
1951CriLJ76

Excerpt

- - the allegation of the prosecution is clearly to the effect that all the co-accused were aware as to what was being done.orderatma charan, j.c.1. heard the parties.2. this is an accused's application la revision refusing them to compound an offence punishable under section 420, penal code under the provisions of the law as laid down under section 345, criminal p.c. it appears that a charge-sheet was submitted against the accused-applicants on the ground that instead of supplying cocoanut oil to the complainant they cheated him and supplied water and thus put him in the aggregate to a loss of rs. 5516-6 6. the two courts below refused to give permission for the compounding of the offence mainly on three grounds-firstly, that the value of the property involved was large, secondly, that the investigation of the case involved great pains and time and, thirdly, the matter was of great public importance. the counsel for the accused-applicants has not been able to point out as to why in a case of this nature permission be given to compound the offence. the allegation of the prosecution is clearly to the effect that all the co-accused were aware as to what was being done. the nature of the case is certainly such wherein no question of granting permission for compounding the offence arises.3. the application in revision is accordingly dismissed.

Full Judgment

ORDER

Atma Charan, J.C.

1. Heard the parties.

2. This is an accused's application la revision refusing them to compound an offence punishable under Section 420, Penal Code under the provisions of the law as laid down under Section 345, Criminal P.C. It appears that a charge-sheet was submitted against the accused-applicants on the ground that instead of supplying cocoanut oil to the complainant they cheated him and supplied water and thus put him in the aggregate to a loss of Rs. 5516-6 6. The two Courts below refused to give permission for the compounding of the offence mainly on three grounds-firstly, that the value of the property involved was large, secondly, that the investigation of the case involved great pains and time and, thirdly, the matter was of great public importance. The counsel for the accused-applicants has not been able to point out as to why in a case of this nature permission be given to compound the offence. The allegation of the prosecution is clearly to the effect that all the co-accused were aware as to what was being done. The nature of the case is certainly such wherein no question of granting permission for compounding the offence arises.

3. The application in revision is accordingly dismissed.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial