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The Empress Vs. Dedar Sirkar

The Empress vs Dedar Sirkar

Type Court Judgment Court Kolkata Decided Jun 19, 1877
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/853720

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Citation
Court
Kolkata
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

Security for good behaviour - Criminal Procedure Code (Act X of 1872), Section 505. -

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

The Empress

Respondent

Dedar Sirkar

Legal References

Reported In
(1877)ILR2Cal384

Excerpt

security for good behaviour - criminal procedure code (act x of 1872), section 505. - ainslie, j.1. we think that, under the circumstances stated by the magistrate, it is not desirable that the court should interfere in the present ease. in the 4th paragraph of his letter the magistrate expresses a doubt whether the high court is competent to call upon him to state the grounds upon which he fixed the amount of security. with reference to this, we desire to call his attention to a ruling of the madras high court, at page 450 of mr. prinsep's edition of the code of criminal procedure (4 mad., h.c. rep., app. 47), an expression of opinion in which we entirely concur. it is there said: 'the imprisonment is provided as a protection to society against the perpetration of crime by the individual, and not as punishment for a crime committed, and being made conditional in default of finding security, it is only just and reasonable that the individual should be afforded a fair chance at least of complying with the required conditions of security.' if the magistrate declined to furnish a statement of the grounds upon which he fixed the amount of security, this court would have been unable to say that he had fixed it on just and reasonable grounds, and probably the result would have been that we should have felt bound to modify the order as prime facie unreasonable and unsupported by anything before us.

Full Judgment

Ainslie, J.

1. We think that, under the circumstances stated by the Magistrate, it is not desirable that the Court should interfere in the present ease. In the 4th paragraph of his letter the Magistrate expresses a doubt whether the High Court is competent to call upon him to state the grounds upon which he fixed the amount of security. With reference to this, we desire to call his attention to a ruling of the Madras High Court, at page 450 of Mr. Prinsep's edition of the Code of Criminal Procedure (4 Mad., H.C. Rep., App. 47), an expression of opinion in which we entirely concur. It is there said: 'The imprisonment is provided as a protection to society against the perpetration of crime by the individual, and not as punishment for a crime committed, and being made conditional in default of finding security, it is only just and reasonable that the individual should be afforded a fair chance at least of complying with the required conditions of security.' If the Magistrate declined to furnish a statement of the grounds upon which he fixed the amount of security, this Court would have been unable to say that he had fixed it on just and reasonable grounds, and probably the result would have been that we should have felt bound to modify the order as prime facie unreasonable and unsupported by anything before us.

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