Emperor vs Rama And Ors. on 2 January, 1913

0
68
Allahabad High Court
Emperor vs Rama And Ors. on 2 January, 1913
Equivalent citations: (1913) ILR 35 All 136
Author: Tudball
Bench: Tudball


JUDGMENT

Tudball, J.

1. Certain persons have been convicted by a Magistrate of an offence under Section 188, Indian Penal Code, and have been sentenced to pay certain fines. The case has been referred to this Court by the Sessions Judge with the recommendation that the convictions and sentences be set aside and the fines refunded. As far as it is possible to do so from the record I gather the facts to be more or less as follows: Some officer or other has published an older forbidding the accused, who are pandas, from going on the railway station at Bindhachal except for bond fide purposes of travelling. The record does not show by whom that order was issued and whether he had power to issue it. There is nothing to show that was issued to the accused personally: apparently it was generally proclaimed. The record shows that the accused went on to the platform and importuned certain pilgrims. The Magistrate has therefore held them guilty under Section 188, Indian Penal Code; That section runs as follows:

Whoever knowing that, by an order promulgated by a public servant lawfully empowered to promulgate such order, he is directed to abstain from a certain act, or to take certain order with certain property in his possession or under his management, disobeys such direction, shall, if such disobedience causes or tends to cause obstruction, annoyance or injury, to any person lawfully employed, be punished with simple imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month, or with fine which may extend to two hundred rupees, or with both.

2. There is nothing on the record to show that any order was promulgated by a public servant lawfully empowered to promulgate such order. It is true that the case was tried summarily, and in a summary trial the evidence need not be recorded, but the record shows that no evidence whatsoever was taken to prove the order that was promulgated or to prove that the person who issued the order was authorized to issue it. Moreover, if the order be, as described in the opening clause of the judgment, forbidding persons to enter railway quarters except for bond fide purposes of travelling, such an order is far from being legal. The public have a right to go to the railway premises for many other purposes than travelling and orders forbidding persons to enter railway premises except for travelling purposes could not legally be issued. It would indeed defeat many other purposes for which railways are intended. For this reason the order must be set aside.

3. There are other grounds, as pointed out by the learned Sessions Judge, on which it is open to this Court to set aside these convictions, but I do not think it necessary to discuss them. It is incumbent on the prosecution to prove the necessary ingredients which go to constitute an offence. Unless the proof is before the court it cannot be said that the offence has been established. I therefore set aside the convictions and sentences and direct that the fines if paid be refunded.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

* Copy This Password *

* Type Or Paste Password Here *