JUDGMENT
1. The appellant in this case has been convicted under Section 211 of the Indian Penal Code of instituting false criminal proceedings before the Sub-Inspector of Fatehpur Police Station against one Fazl Hussain and others.
2. It appears that there was some dispute about the possession of the village Manhona and the zemindari Kutchery therein, between Karn Singh who is one of the ticcadars of the village and Amirul Hossein who is a lessee from Kali Singh another ticcadar. The accused Dilan Singh admittedly went to the thana and there lodged information before the Sub-Inspector, Rajendra Narain Sarma, that while he was sitting in the Kutchery, Fazal Miah and others came there, caught hold of him, beat him, shut him up in a room in the Kutchery and there set fire to the thatch of the Kutchery building: that he raised an alarm and the villagers came and rescued him. The Sub-Inspector on inquiry, did not believe this story. The words of his final report are: “I, therefore, submit the final report in the case and recommend that Dilan Singh and Karn Singh may be prosecuted under Sections 182 and 211.”
3. The prosecution of the accused was then directed by a Deputy Magistrate. A preliminary inquiry was made and the accused was committed to the Court of Session. The learned Sessions Judge, agreeing with both the assessors, has convicted the accused under Section 211 and has sentenced him to three years’ rigorous imprisonment.
4. The learned Counsel, who appears on behalf of the appellant, argues in the first place that the conviction is bad inasmuch as the first Deputy Magistrate had no jurisdiction to direct the prosecution of the accused under Section 476 of the Criminal Procedure Code, and reliance has been placed on the case of Haibat Khan v. Emperor 33 C. 30 : 10 C.W.N. 30 : 3 Cr. L.J. 125 and that of Abdul Rahman v. Emperor 7 C.L.J. 371 : 7 Cr. L.J. 388. The case of Haibat Khan v. Emperor 33 C. 30 : 10 C.W.N. 30 : 3 Cr. L.J. 125 seems to us to be quite distinguishable, because, in that case there had been no commitment nor was the accused convicted at the Sessions Court. It seems to us clear that this makes a very considerable difference. Even if there is any defect in the initiation of the proceedings in the original Court, still when the accused has been committed for trial to the Court of Session, a conviction by the Court of Session cannot, in our opinion, be set aside simply on the ground of some irregularity in the commitment proceedings, more specially when that point was not raised in the first Court. In circumstances which are not wholly dissimilar, the Bombay High Court held that Section 532 would cure such a defect see the case of Queen-Empress v. A. Morton and Morteza Ali 9 B. 288. In the case of Abdul Rahman v. Emperor 7 C.L.J. 371 : 7 Cr. L.J. 388 though the learned Judges purported to follow the case of Haibat Khan v. Emperor 33 C. 30 : 10 C.W.N. 30 : 3 Cr. L.J. 125 they went very considerably beyond the decision in the former case. That case, however, is distinguishable from the present case because of the circumstance that the Police Officer in this case has recommended the prosecution under Section 211. It has been argued that that cannot be regarded as a complaint because the complainant was not examined on oath. Certainly, it is not a complaint as defined in the Code inasmuch as that definition expressly excludes a report of a Police Officer. But it appears to us to come within the meaning of the word complaint as used in Section 195, as that section clearly contemplates prosecutions at the instance of the Police Officer. In any case when a Police Officer asks that a person should be prosecuted under Section 211 far information given to him, and gives evidence himself in support of that charge, we cannot see that any serious irregularity can arise in the conviction of the accused in proceedings initiated upon that report. The order of the first Deputy Magistrate purporting to be one under Section 476 might in that case be regarded as surplusage. We do not, therefore, think that effect can be given to the point of law raised by the learned Counsel. We are not prepared to say that there has been any real irregularity inasmuch as the accused has been prosecuted at the request of a person who was entitled to ask for a prosecution. But if there has been any irregularity, it certainly, in our opinion, is such an one as is cured by Section 532 or 537 of the Criminal Procedure Code. On the facts, the evidence is altogether one-sided. It is common ground that the Kutchery building was set on fire by one side or the other. The whole of the evidence is that it was not set on fire by Fazal Miah and indeed Fazal Miah had no apparent motive beyond the ties of friendship to burn the Kutchery and to attempt to burn Dilan Singh. There are small defects apparently in the story of the prosecution as there are in all such stories but the learned Judge has dealt with them in his judgment and his discussion of them and the conclusions that he has arrived at with respect to them appear to us to be reasonable. We, therefore, think that the conviction is right. The sentence is not excessive.
5. The appeal is accordingly dismissed.