High Court Kerala High Court

R.Gopakumaran Nair vs R.Gopakumaran Nair on 20 January, 2010

Kerala High Court
R.Gopakumaran Nair vs R.Gopakumaran Nair on 20 January, 2010
       

  

  

 
 
  IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

Crl.Rev.Pet.No. 262 of 2010()


1. R.GOPAKUMARAN NAIR
                      ...  Petitioner
2. STATE OF KERALA, REPRESENTED BY

                        Vs


1. R.GOPAKUMARAN NAIR
                       ...       Respondent

                For Petitioner  :SRI.PIRAPPANCODE V.S.SUDHIR

                For Respondent  : No Appearance

The Hon'ble MR. Justice V.RAMKUMAR

 Dated :20/01/2010

 O R D E R
                          V.RAMKUMAR, J.

                  = = = = = = = = = = = = = == = =
                     Crl.R.P. No. 262    of 2010
                  = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
             Dated, this the 20th day of January,   2010

                              O R D E R

In this Revision Petition filed under Section 397 read with

Sec. 401 Cr.P.C. the petitioner who was the accused in S.T.No.179

of 2006 on the file of the J.F.C.M- VII, Thiruvananthapuram

challenges the conviction entered and the sentence passed

against him for an offence punishable under Sec. 138 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the

Act’).The cheque amount was Rs.1,75,000/-. The compensation

ordered by the lower appellate court is Rs.1,90,000/-.

2. I heard the learned counsel for the Revision Petitioner

and the learned Public Prosecutor.

3. The learned counsel appearing for the Revision

Petitioner re-iterated the contentions in support of the Revision.

4. The courts below have concurrently held that the

cheque in question was drawn by the petitioner in favour of the

complainant, that the complainant had validly complied with

clauses (a) and (b) of the proviso to Section 138 of the Act. and

that the Revision Petitioner/accused failed to make the payment

within 15 days of receipt of the statutory notice. Both the courts

have considered and rejected the defence set up by the revision

petitioner while entering the conviction. The said conviction has

been recorded after a careful evaluation of the oral and

documentary evidence. This Court sitting in the rarefied revisional

jurisdiction will be loath to interfere with the findings of fact

recorded by the courts below concurrently. I do not find any

Crl.R..P. No.262 /2010 -:2:-

error, illegality or impropriety in the conviction so recorded

concurrently by the courts below and the same is hereby

confirmed.

5. What now survives for consideration is the legality of

the sentence imposed on the revision petitioner. In the light of

the decision of the Supreme Court in Ettappadan

Ahammedkutty v. E.P. Abdullakoya – 2008 (1) KLT 851

default sentence cannot be imposed for the enforcement of an

order for compensation under Sec. 357 (3) Cr.P.C. I am,

therefore, inclined to modify the sentence to one of fine only.

Accordingly, for the conviction under Section 138 of the Act the

revision petitioner is sentenced to pay a fine of Rs.1,90,000/-

(Rupees One lakh ninety thousand only). The said fine shall

be paid as compensation under Section 357 (1) Cr.P.C. The

revision petitioner is permitted either to deposit the said fine

amount before the Court below or directly pay the compensation

to the complainant within 7 months from today and produce a

memo to that effect before the trial Court in case of direct

payment. If he fails to deposit or pay the said amount within the

aforementioned period he shall suffer simple imprisonment for

three months by way of default sentence.

In the result, this Revision is disposed of confirming the

conviction entered but modifying the sentence imposed on the

revision petitioner.

Dated this the 20h day of January, 2010.

V. RAMKUMAR, JUDGE.

sj