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In Re: Vanchalinga Devar

Type Court Judgment Court Chennai Decided Oct 14, 1960
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/810355

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Citation
Court
Chennai High Court
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

- - The section requires clearly that there should be reason to believe the property to be either stolen or to have been fraudulently obtained, before the person in possession can be called upon to account for his possession.

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

In Re: Vanchalinga Devar

Legal References

Reported In
(1962)2MLJ255

Excerpt

- - the section requires clearly that there should be reason to believe the property to be either stolen or to have been fraudulently obtained, before the person in possession can be called upon to account for his possession.ordersrinivasan, j.1. the conviction of the petitioner under section 65 of the city police act seems to be totally unwarranted on the facts of the record. according to the evidence of the sergeant (p.w.-1) he saw this petitioner standing near a cart containing certain bags of grain. without any substantial reason for embarking upon any investigation, this sergeant claimed to have questioned the petitioner. the petitioner's version appears to have been that he was taking the grain from one of his two shops to the other and that his cartman had just then left. apparently it was not a continuous or coherent narrative from the point of view of p.w. 1, the sergeant. solely for this reason, p.w. 1, seems to have imagined that the property in question had either been stolen or had been fraudulently obtained. proceedings were accordingly started with the result stated above.2. it seems fairly clear to me that section 65 of the city police act does not give any uncontrolled power to any police officer to stop and question any citizen and ask him to account for possession of any property. the section requires clearly that there should be reason to believe the property to be either stolen or to have been fraudulently obtained, before the person in possession can be called upon to account for his possession. p.w. r's version was that a police informer told him that a person was standing near a cart containing bags of grain. there is nothing more in the evidence to show any reason leading to the belief that the property was either stolen or had been fraudulently obtained. on the other hand, the rest of the evidence available in this case fully establishes to my mind that the petitioner was probably conveying grain from one of his shops to the other. apparently he is a man of substance and the fact that he had no bills for the purchase of this grain seems to me to be wholly irrelevant. the foundation for the charge has no existence in fact.3. the conviction is wholly improper......

Full Judgment

ORDER

Srinivasan, J.

1. The conviction of the petitioner under Section 65 of the City Police Act seems to be totally unwarranted on the facts of the record. According to the evidence of the Sergeant (P.W.-1) he saw this petitioner standing near a cart containing certain bags of grain. Without any substantial reason for embarking upon any investigation, this Sergeant claimed to have questioned the petitioner. The petitioner's version appears to have been that he was taking the grain from one of his two shops to the other and that his cartman had just then left. Apparently it was not a continuous or coherent narrative from the point of view of P.W. 1, the Sergeant. Solely for this reason, P.W. 1, seems to have imagined that the property in question had either been stolen or had been fraudulently obtained. Proceedings were accordingly started with the result stated above.

2. It seems fairly clear to me that Section 65 of the City Police Act does not give any uncontrolled power to any Police Officer to stop and question any citizen and ask him to account for possession of any property. The section requires clearly that there should be reason to believe the property to be either stolen or to have been fraudulently obtained, before the person in possession can be called upon to account for his possession. P.W. r's version was that a police informer told him that a person was standing near a cart containing bags of grain. There is nothing more in the evidence to show any reason leading to the belief that the property was either stolen or had been fraudulently obtained. On the other hand, the rest of the evidence available in this case fully establishes to my mind that the petitioner was probably conveying grain from one of his shops to the other. Apparently he is a man of substance and the fact that he had no bills for the purchase of this grain seems to me to be wholly irrelevant. The foundation for the charge has no existence in fact.

3. The conviction is wholly improper. It is set aside. The material objects will be returned to the petitioner.

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