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: Mohideen Batcha Sahib

Type Court Judgment Court Chennai Decided Sep 25, 1913
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/783060

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
Chennai
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

-

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

In Re: Mohideen Batcha Sahib

Legal References

Cases Referred
and King Emperor v. Ayyan I.L.R.
Reported In
(1913)25MLJ484

Excerpt

- orderayling, j.1. the sub-divisional magistrate has set aside the conviction of the accused for an offence under sections 352, 379 and 426 of the indian penal code on the sole ground that the facts disclosed in the prosecution evidence amounted to an offence under section 392 of the indian penal code, which the original magistrate being only of the 2nd class, was not empowered to try. he has further proceeded to remand the case to the same magistrate for re-trial according to law presumably meaning that action should be taken under section 346, criminal procedure code. the sub-divisional magistrate is wrong in considering that the original court's proceedings are void. it has been held both by this court and by the. bombay high court that, provided the court had the power to try the offence of which it has convicted the accused, it is not necessary to quash the conviction merely because the facts disclose a more serious offence, which the court was not competent to try, unless the accused was prejudiced or the sentence was inadequate. vide queen empress v. gundya i.l.r. (1889) b. 502 and king emperor v. ayyan i.l.r. (1901) m. 675.2. in the present case the robbery, if robbery it were, was of the most technical and trivial description, the accused having simply slapped the complainant on the head and snatched away a basket of sweetmeats. the accused was in no way prejudiced and the sentence imposed was perfectly adequate there is no reason for subjecting the accused to a fresh trial.3. under these circumstances the order of the sub-divisional magistrate directing re-trial is set aside. he is directed to restore the appeal to his file and dispose of it according to law, in the light of the above remarks.

Full Judgment

ORDER

Ayling, J.

1. The Sub-divisional Magistrate has set aside the conviction of the accused for an offence under Sections 352, 379 and 426 of the Indian Penal Code on the sole ground that the facts disclosed in the Prosecution evidence amounted to an offence under Section 392 of the Indian Penal Code, which the original Magistrate being only of the 2nd class, was not empowered to try. He has further proceeded to remand the case to the same Magistrate for re-trial according to law presumably meaning that action should be taken under Section 346, Criminal Procedure Code. The Sub-Divisional Magistrate is wrong in considering that the Original Court's proceedings are void. It has been held both by this Court and by the. Bombay High Court that, provided the Court had the power to try the offence of which it has convicted the accused, it is not necessary to quash the conviction merely because the facts disclose a more serious offence, which the Court was not competent to try, unless the accused was prejudiced or the sentence was inadequate. Vide Queen Empress v. Gundya I.L.R. (1889) B. 502 and King Emperor v. Ayyan I.L.R. (1901) M. 675.

2. In the present case the robbery, if robbery it were, was of the most technical and trivial description, the accused having simply slapped the complainant on the head and snatched away a basket of sweetmeats. The accused was in no way prejudiced and the sentence imposed was perfectly adequate There is no reason for subjecting the accused to a fresh trial.

3. Under these circumstances the order of the Sub-Divisional Magistrate directing re-trial is set aside. He is directed to restore the appeal to his file and dispose of it according to law, in the light of the above remarks.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial