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Raj Kumar Vs. State of Rajasthan

Raj Kumar vs State of Rajasthan

Disposition Appeal allowed Court Rajasthan Decided Feb 10, 1986
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/768392

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Citation
Court
Rajasthan High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
S.B. Criminal Misc. Petition No. 212 of 1985
Subject
Motor Vehicles;Criminal
Disposition
Appeal allowed

Case Summary

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

MOTOR VEHICLES ACT, 1939 - Sections 42 and 123 and CRIMINAL PROCEDURE CODE--Section 446--Cancellation of bond--Vehicle not produced being out of order--Affidavit not filed--Necessity of production of vehicle is not explained--Held, order of forfeiture is not justified.;Petition Allowed -

Key legal issue
Motor Vehicles;Criminal
Outcome / disposition
Appeal allowed

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Raj Kumar

Respondent

State of Rajasthan

Legal References

Reported In
1986WLN(UC)250

Excerpt

motor vehicles act, 1939 - sections 42 and 123 and criminal procedure code--section 446--cancellation of bond--vehicle not produced being out of order--affidavit not filed--necessity of production of vehicle is not explained--held, order of forfeiture is not justified.;petition allowed - milap chand jain, j.1. heard learned counsel for the parties.2. this petition is directed against the order dated 15-7-1985 whereby the learned magistrate rejected the application for granting time to produce the vehicle in question. consequently, the bond & surety bond were cancelled and proceedings under section 446 were ordered to be opened. the learned magistrate also ordered for the forfeiture of the vehicle.3. a complaint was made under section 42 and 123 of the motor vehicles act and in that case on account of non-production of the vehicle, the above order was passed. it may be stated that the law did not warrant the forfeiture of the vehicle. at the most, the vehicle could be ordered to be seized and produced before the court but vehicle could not be confiscated or forfeited. it is true that the application was not accompanied with an affidavit and it was also not stated as to why the vehicle was out of order but still the learned magistrate should have afforded one opportunity for the production of the vehicle. what for the vehicle was needed is nowhere stated by the learned magistrate in the impugned order. in any case, the order passed can, in no circumstances, be found justified.4. accordingly this petition is allowed and the impugned order is set aside however, it would be open to the learned magistrate to order for production of the vehicle, if production is at all necessary.

Full Judgment

Milap Chand Jain, J.

1. Heard learned Counsel for the parties.

2. This petition is directed against the order dated 15-7-1985 whereby the learned Magistrate rejected the application for granting time to produce the vehicle in question. Consequently, the bond & surety bond were cancelled and proceedings under Section 446 were ordered to be opened. The learned Magistrate also ordered for the forfeiture of the vehicle.

3. A complaint was made under Section 42 and 123 of the Motor Vehicles Act and in that case on account of non-production of the vehicle, the above order was passed. It may be stated that the law did not warrant the forfeiture of the vehicle. At the most, the vehicle could be ordered to be seized and produced before the court but vehicle could not be confiscated or forfeited. It is true that the application was not accompanied with an affidavit and it was also not stated as to why the vehicle was out of order but still the learned Magistrate should have afforded one opportunity for the production of the vehicle. What for the vehicle was needed is nowhere stated by the learned Magistrate in the impugned order. In any case, the order passed can, in no circumstances, be found justified.

4. Accordingly this petition is allowed and the impugned order is set aside However, it would be open to the learned Magistrate to order for production of the vehicle, if production is at all necessary.

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