KARNATAKA
POLICE ACT, 1963
Preamble 1 - KARNATAKA POLICE ACT, 1963
THE [1] [KARNATAKA] POLICE ACT, 1963.
[Act, No. 4 of 1964][2]
[18th January, 1964]
PREAMBLE
An Act
to provide for a uniform law for the regulation of the Police Force, the maintenance
of public order and other matters in the [3] [State of Karnataka].
WHEREAS
it is expedient to provide for a uniform law for the regulation of the Police
Force in the [4] [State of Karnataka],
for the exercise of powers and performance of functions by the State Government
and by the members of the said force, for the maintenance of public order, for
the prevention of gaming, and for certain other purposes hereinafter appearing;
BE it
enacted by the [5] [Karnataka]
State Legislature in the Fourteenth Year of the Republic of India as follows:--
Section 1 - Short title, extent and commencement
(1)
This Act may be called the[6]
[Karnataka] Police Act, 1963.
(2)
It extends to the whole of the[7]
[State of Karnataka].
(3)
It shall come into force on such[8]
[date] as the State Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette,
appoint.
Section 2 - Definitions
In
this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,--
(1)
"cattle" means cows, bullocks,
bulls, calves, buffaloes, elephants, camels, horses, mares, geldings, ponies,
colts, fillies, asses, mules, pigs, rams, ewes, sheep, lambs, goats and kids;
(2)
"City of Bangalore" means the area
within the limits of the City of Bangalore as defined for the time being in the
City of Bangalore Municipal Corporation Act, 1949 (Mysore Act LXIX of 1949) and
includes such other areas adjacent to such limits [9] [x
x x] as the Government may from time to time by notification in the Official
Gazette specify;
(3)
"common gaming-house" means a
building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place in which any
instruments of gaming are kept or used for the profit or gain of the person
owning, occupying, or keeping such building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle,
vessel or place, or of the person using such building, room, tent, enclosure,
vehicle, vessel or place, whether he has a right to use the same or not, such
profit or gain being either by way of a charge for the use of the instruments
of gaming or of the building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place,
or otherwise howsoever or as subscription or other payment for the use of
facilities along with the use of the instruments of gaming or of the building,
room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place for purposes of gaming;
Explanation.--In
this clause "person" includes a company, association, club or other
body of persons whether incorporated or not.
(4)
the expression "competent
authority" when used with reference to the exercise or performance of any
power, duty or function under the provisions of this Act, means,--
(a)
in relation to the City of Bangalore and
other areas for which a Commissioner of Police is appointed under section 7,
the Commissioner;
(b)
in relation to the areas other than those
referred to in clause (a), the District Magistrate or the Superintendent or the
Additional Superintendent, or, the Assistant or Deputy Superintendent when
specially empowered in that behalf by the Government;
[10] [(5) 'district' means any area which the Government
may by notification specify to be a district for the purpose of this Act and
where no such-area has been so specified, a territorial division constituting
the district for the purposes of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973, but does
not include the City of Bangalore or any area specified under sub-section (1) of
section 7;]
[11] [(6) x x x]
(7)? ?"gaming" does not include a lottery
but includes all forms of wagering or betting in connection with any game of
chance, except wagering or betting on a horse-race [12] [run
on any race course within or outside the State], when such wagering or betting
takes place,--
(i)?? ?on the day on which such race is run; and
[13] [(ii) in an enclosure set apart for the purpose in
a race course by the licensee of such race course under the terms of the
licence issued under section 4 of the Mysore Race Courses Licensing Act, 1952
(Mysore Act VIII of 1952); and]
(iii) ??between any
person being present in such enclosure, on the one hand and such licensee or
other person licensed by such licensee in terms of the aforesaid licence on the
other in such manner and by such contrivance as may be permitted by such
licence.
Explanation.--In
this clause,-
(i)??? ?'wagering or betting,' includes the collection
or soliciting of bets, the receipt or distribution of winnings or prizes, in money
or otherwise, in respect of any act which is intended to aid or facilitate
wagering or betting or such collection, soliciting, receipt or distribution;
(ii) ???'game of
chance' includes a game of chance and skill combined and a pretended game of
chance or of chance and skill combined, but does not include any athletic game
or sport;
(8) ???"Government"
means the State Government;
(9) ???"Head
Constable" means an officer of and above the rank of a Constable ?and a "Constable" means a Police
Officer of the lowest grade;
(10) ?"Inspector-General",
"Commissioner", "Deputy Inspector-General", "Deputy
Commissioner", "Assistant Commissioner",
"Superintendent", "Additional Superintendent",
"Assistant Superintendent", and "Deputy Superintendent"
mean respectively, the Inspector-General of Police, a Commissioner of Police, a
Deputy Inspector-General of Police, a Deputy Commissioner of Police, an
Assistant Commissioner of Police, a Superintendent of Police, an Additional
Superintendent of Police, an Assistant Superintendent of Police and a Deputy
Superintendent of Police appointed or deemed to be appointed under this Act;
(11) "instruments of gaming" includes any
article used or intended to be used as a subject, or means of gaming, any
document used or intended to be used as a register or record or evidence of any
gaming, the proceeds of any gaming and any winnings or prizes in money or
otherwise distributed or intended to be distributed in respect of any gaming;
[14] [(11-A) 'local authority' means a corporation established
or continued under the Karnataka Municipal Corporations Act, 1976 (Karnataka
Act 14 of 1977), a municipal council, or a notified area committee or a
sanitary board established or deemed to have been established or continued
under the Karnataka Municipalities Act, 1964 (Karnataka Act 22 of 1964) or
under any other law, the Bangalore Development Authority constituted under the
Bangalore Development Authority Act, 1976 (Karnataka Act 12 of 1976), the City
Improvement Board, Mysore constituted under the City of Mysore Improvement Act,
1903 (Mysore Act 3 of 1903), an Improvement Board constituted under the
Karnataka Improvement Boards Act, 1976 (Karnataka Act 11 of 1976), a planning
authority constituted under the Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act, 1961
(Karnataka Act 11 of 1963), the Karnataka Slum Clearance Board constituted
under the Karnataka Slum Area (Improvement and Clearance) Act, 1973 (Karnataka
Act 33 of 1974) and such other authority as the State Government may from time
to time by notification declare.]
(12) "municipality" means a municipality
constituted or deemed to be constituted under any law relating to
municipalities for the time being in force in the [15] [State
of Karnataka] or any part thereof;
(13) "place" includes a building, a tent, a
booth or other erection, whether permanent or temporary, or any area whether
enclosed or open;
(14) "place of public amusement" means any
place, where music, singing, dancing, or any diversion, or game, or the means
of carrying on the same is provided and to which the public are admitted and
includes a race course, circus, theatre, music hall, billiard room, bagatelle
room, gymnasium, fencing school, swimming pool or dancing hall;
(15) "place of public entertainment" means any
place to which the public are admitted and where any kind of food or drink is
supplied for consumption on the premises by any person owning or having an
interest in or managing such place and includes a refreshment room, eating
house, coffee house, liquor house, boarding house, lodging house, hotel,
tavern, or a shop where wine, beer, spirit, arrack, toddy, ganja, or other kind
of liquor or intoxicant or any kind of food or drink is supplied to the public
for consumption in or near such shop;
(16) "police officer" means any member of the
police force appointed or deemed to be appointed under this Act and includes a
special or an additional police officer appointed under section 19 or 20;
(17) "prescribed" means prescribed by rules;
(18) "public place" includes the foreshore, the
precincts of every public building or monument, and all places accessible to
the public for drawing water, washing or bathing or for the purpose of
recreation;
(19) "rules" means rules made under this Act;
(20) "street" includes any highway, bridge, way
over a causeway, viaduct, arch, quay or wharf or any road, lane, footway,
square, court, alley or passage accessible to the public, whether a
thoroughfare or not;
(21) "Subordinate Police" means members of the
Police Force of and below the rank of Inspector;
(22) "Superior Police" means members of the
Police Force above the rank of Inspector;
(23) "vehicle" means any carriage, cart, van,
dray, truck, hand-cart or other conveyance of any description and includes a
bicycle, tricycle, a rickshaw, an automatic car, a vessel or an aeroplane.
(24) Words and expressions not defined in this Act and
which are defined in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Central Act V of
1898), shall have the same meaning as in that Code.
Section 3 - One Police Force for the whole State
There shall be one Police
Force[16]
[including the State Reserve Police Force established under section 145] for
the whole of the State:
State Provided that the
members of the Police Forces constituted under any of the Acts mentioned in
Schedule I, immediately before coming into force of this Act, shall be deemed
to be the members of the said Police Force.
Section 4 - Superintendence of Police Force to vest in the Government
The
superintendence of the Police Force throughout the State vests in and is
exercisable by the Government and any control, direction or supervision
exercisable by any officer over any member of the Police Force shall be
exercisable subject to such superintendence.
Section 5 - Constitution of Police Force
Subject
to[17]
[x x x] the provisions of this Act,--
(a)
the Police Force shall consist of such number
in the several ranks and have such organisation and such powers, functions and
duties as the Government may by general or special order determine;
[18] [(b) and proviso x x x]
Section 6 - Inspector-General and Deputy Inspector-General
(1)
For the direction and supervision of the
Police Force, the Government shall appoint an Inspector-General of Police who
shall subject to the control of the State Government exercise such powers and
perform such functions and duties and shall have such responsibilities and such
authority as may be provided by or under this Act.
(2)
(a) The Government may appoint such number of
Deputy Inspectors-General as it may deem fit.
(b)
The Government may direct that any of the powers, functions, duties and
responsibilities and authority of the Inspector-General may be exercised,
performed or discharged, by a Deputy Inspector-General.
(c)
The Government may also by a general or special order direct that the Deputy
Inspector-General shall assist and aid the Inspector-General in the
performance, exercise and discharge of his powers, functions, duties,
responsibilities and authority in such manner and to such extent as may be
specified in the order.
Section 7 - Commissioner
(1)
The Government may appoint a Police Officer
not below the rank of a Deputy Inspector-General of Police to be the
Commissioner of Police for the City of Bangalore or any other area specified in
a notification issued by the Government in this behalf and published in the
official Gazette.
(2)
The Commissioner shall exercise such powers,
perform such functions and duties and shall have such responsibilities and
authority as are provided by or under this Act or as may otherwise be directed
by the Government by a general or special order:
Provided
that the Government may direct that any of the powers, functions, duties,
responsibilities or authority exercisable or to be performed or discharged by
the Commissioner shall be exercised, performed or discharged subject to the
control of the Inspector-General:
Provided
also that in any area for which a Commissioner is appointed and is empowered to
exercise any power or perform any function or duty under this Act, the District
Magistrate shall not exercise the same power or perform the same function or
duty notwithstanding the fact that such area forms part of a District within
the territorial jurisdiction of the District Magistrate:
Provided
further that the area for which a Commissioner has been appointed, under this
section shall not, unless otherwise provided by or under this Act, be under the
charge of a Superintendent for any of the purposes of this Act, notwithstanding
the fact that such, area forms part of a district within the territorial
jurisdiction for which a Superintendent may have been appointed.
Section 8 - Appointment of Superintendent, Additional, Assistant and Deputy Superintendents
(1)
The Government may appoint for each district
or for a part of a district or for one or more districts a Superintendent and
one or more Additional Superintendents and such Assistant and Deputy
Superintendents of Police, as it may think expedient.
(2)
The Government may, by a general or special
order, empower an Additional Superintendent to exercise and perform in the
district for which he is appointed or in any parts thereof, all or any of the
powers, functions or duties to be exercised or performed by a Superintendent
under this Act or under any law for the time being in force.
(3)
The Superintendent may, with the previous
sanction of the Government, delegate any of the powers and functions conferred
on him by or under this Act to an Assistant or Deputy Superintendent.
Section 9 - Appointment of Superintendents for wireless system and motor transport system or for any special duty
The
Government may appoint for the whole of the [19] [State
of Karnataka] or any part thereof one or more Superintendents of Police as it
may think fit,--
(1)
for the police wireless system;
(2)
for the police Motor Transport system; or
(3)
for the Railway Police; or
(4)
for the performance of such specific duties
as the Government may from time to time determine in this behalf, and the Superintendent so appointed shall
exercise such powers and perform such functions as the Government may from time
to time assign to him provided that such powers and functions shall be
exercised or performed subject to the control of the Inspector-General.
Section 10 - Principal, Police Training School or College
The
Government may appoint any Police Officer not below the rank of a
Superintendent to be the Principal of a Police Training School, or College, and
may assign to him such powers, functions and duties as it may think fit.
Section 11 - Deputies and Assistants to the Commissioner
(1)
The Government may appoint one or more Deputy
Commissioners not below the rank of a Superintendent and one or more Assistant
Commissioners of Police not below the rank of an Assistant Superintendent or
Deputy Superintendent in the City of Bangalore or in any area in which a
Commissioner has been appointed under sub-section (1) of section 7.
(2)
Every such Deputy or Assistant Commissioner
shall, under the orders of the Commissioner, exercise and perform any of the
powers, functions and duties of the Commissioner to be exercised or performed
by him under the provisions of this Act or any other law for the time being in
force, in accordance with the general or special orders of the Government made
in this behalf:
Provided
that the powers to be exercised by the Commissioner of making, altering or
rescinding rules under section 31 shall not be exercisable by a Deputy or
Assistant Commissioner.
Section 12 - Appointment of subordinate police
Subject
to such rules as the Government may from time to time make, the appointment of
Police Officers of and below the rank of Inspectors shall be made by the
prescribed authority.
Section 13 - Certificates of appointment
(1)
Every Police Officer of and below the grade
of Inspector shall, on appointment receive a certificate in the form provided
in Schedule I. The certificate shall be issued under the seal of such officer
as the Government may by general or special order direct.
(2)
A certificate of appointment shall become
null and void whenever the person named therein ceases to belong to the Police
Force or shall remain inoperative during the period within which such person is
suspended from such force.
Section 14 - Effect of suspension of Police Officer
The
powers, functions and privileges vested in a Police Officer shall remain
suspended whilst such Police Officer is under suspension from office:
Provided
that notwithstanding such suspension such person shall not cease to be a Police
Officer and shall continue to be subject to the control of the same authorities
to which he would have been, if he was not under suspension.
Section 15 - General powers of Commissioner and Superintendent
The
Commissioner, subject to the orders of the Inspector-General of Police and the
Superintendent, subject to the orders of the Inspector-General and the Deputy
Inspector-General of Police, shall within their respective spheres of
authority, direct and regulate all matters of arms, drill, exercise,
observation of persons and events, mutual relations, distribution of duties,
study of laws, orders and modes of proceedings and all matters of executive
detail or the fulfilment of their duties by the Police Force under him.
Section 16 - Superintendent of Police to be the head of the Police in the district, subject to the general control of the District Magistrate
(1)
The Superintendent of Police shall be the
head of the police in the district or part of the district for which he is
appointed as Superintendent.
(2)
The administration of the Police in a
district or part of a district by the Superintendent of Police shall be subject
to the general control of the District Magistrate of the District.
(3)
In exercising such control, the District
Magistrate shall be governed by such rules and orders as the Government may
make in this behalf.
Section 17 - Power of District Magistrate to require reports from Superintendent
The
District Magistrate may require from the Superintendent reports, either
particular or general, on any matter connected with the crimes, habitual
offenders, the prevention of disorder, the regulation of assemblies and
amusements, the distribution of the Police Force, the conduct and character of
any Police Officer subordinate to the Superintendent, the utilization of
auxiliary means and all other matters in furtherance of his control of the
Police Force and the maintenance of order.
Section 18 - Power of supervision by District Magistrates
If the
District Magistrate observes any marked incompetence or unfitness for the
locality or for his particular duties, in any Police Officer subordinate to the
Superintendent, he may require the Superintendent to substitute another officer
for any officer whom he has power to transfer and the Superintendent shall be
bound to comply with the requisition:
Provided
that if the Police Officer concerned is an officer of the grade not below that
of an Inspector, the District Magistrate may report his conduct to the
Inspector-General. The Inspector-General may, thereafter, determine the action
to be taken and pass such orders as he thinks fit, and shall communicate such
action or order to the District Magistrate.
Section 19 - Special Police Officers
(1)
Whenever it shall appear on an application of
any Police Officer not below the rank of Sub-Inspector, that any unlawful
assembly or riot or disturbance of the peace has taken place or may be
reasonably apprehended in any place and that the Police force ordinarily
employed in the place is not sufficient for its preservation and for the
protection of the inhabitants and the security of property in the place, the
Commissioner, the Superintendent or any First Class Magistrate, or any other
Magistrate specially empowered in this behalf by Government, may by a written
order signed by himself and sealed with his own seal appoint any able-bodied
male person, whom he considers fit and who is between the ages of eighteen and
fifty and resident in any neighbourhood to be a Special Police Officer to
assist the Police Force, during such time and within such limits as the
Commissioner, the Superintendent or Magistrate shall deem necessary.
(2)
Every Special Police Officer so appointed
shall on appointment,--
(a)
receive a certificate in a form approved by
the Government in this behalf.
(b)
have the same powers, privileges and
immunities and be liable to the same duties and responsibilities and subject to
the same authorities as an ordinary Police Officer.
Section 20 - Appointment of additional Police
(1)
Additional Police Officers of such rank or
grade for such time and on such pay as the authority specified by or under the
provisions of this Act in that behalf may determine may be employed or deputed
for the purpose stated in such provisions.
(2)
Every additional Police Officer appointed,
shall on appointment,--
(a)
receive a certificate in a form approved by
the Government in this behalf;
(b)
be vested with all or such of the powers,
privileges and duties of a Police Officer, as are specially mentioned in the
certificate; and
(c)
be subject to the orders of the Commissioner
or the Superintendent, as the case may be.
(3)
The employment or deputation of such
additional Police Officer may be made at the request of any person requiring
such Police and the cost of such employment shall be recovered in such manner
as is provided by or under this Act or under any other law for the time being
in force.
Section 21 - Framing of rules for administration of the Police
Subject
to the orders of the Government, the Inspector-General may make rules or orders
not inconsistent with this Act or with any other enactment for the time being
in force,--
(a)
regulating the inspection of the Police Force
by his subordinates;
(b)
determining the description and quantity of
arms, accoutrements, clothing and other necessaries to be furnished to the
Police;
(c)
prescribing the places of residence of
members of the Police Force;
(d)
for the institution, management and
regulation of any Police fund for any purpose connected with Police
administration;
(e)
regulating, subject to the provisions of
section 16, the distribution, movements and location of the Police;
(f)
assigning duties to Police Officers of all
ranks and grades and prescribing,--
(i)
the manner in which, and
(ii)
the conditions subject to which, they shall
exercise and perform their respective powers and duties;
(g)
regulating the collection and communication
by the Police of intelligence and information;
(h)
generally, for the purpose of rendering the
Police efficient and preventing abuse or neglect of their duties;
(i)
prescribing the books and registers to be
maintained and the returns to be submitted by the several Police Officers.
Section 22 - Inspector-General may call for returns
The
Inspector-General may, subject to the rules and orders of the Government, call
for such returns, reports and statements on subjects connected with the
suppression of crime, the maintenance of order and performance of their duties
as his subordinates may be able to furnish to him. The Inspector-General shall
communicate to the District Magistrate any general orders issued by him for the
purpose aforesaid or in consequence of the information furnished to him and
also any orders, which the Government may direct.
Section 23 - OMITTED
[20] [23. x x x]
Section 24 - OMITTED
[21] [24. x x x]
Section 25 - OMITTED
[22] [25. x x x]
Section 26 - Police Officers to be deemed to be on duty and to be liable to employment in any part of the State
(1)
Every Police Officer, not on leave or under
suspension, shall for all purposes of this Act, be deemed to be always on duty
and any Police Officer or any member or body of Police Officers allocated for
duty in one part of the State may, if the Government or the Inspector-General
so directs at any time, be employed on police duty in any other part of the
State, for so long as the services of the same may be there required.
(2)
Timely intimation shall, except in cases of
extreme urgency, be given to the Commissioner, the District Magistrate and the
Deputy Inspector-General by the Inspector-General of any proposed direction to
any number or body of Police Officers under sub-section (1) and except, where
secrecy is necessary, the reasons for such direction shall be explained;
whereupon the officers aforesaid and their subordinates shall give all
reasonable furtherance to such direction.
Section 27 - Under what conditions Police Officer may resign
(1)
Except with the written permission of the
Commissioner, the Deputy Inspector-General or of some other Police Officer
empowered by the Inspector-General in this behalf, no Police Officer of or
below the rank of Inspector shall resign his office or withdraw himself from the
duties thereof:
Provided
that subject to the provisions of sub-section (2) no such permission shall be
granted to any such Police Officer until he has fully discharged any debt due
by him as such Police Officer to Government or to any Police Fund.
(2)
If any such Police Officer produces a
certificate signed by the prescribed Medical Officer in the district declaring
him to be unfit by reason of disease, or mental or physical incapacity for
further service in the Police, the necessary written permission to resign shall
forthwith be granted to him on his discharging or giving satisfactory security
for the payment of any debt due by him as such Police Officer to the Government
or to any Police Fund.
(3)
If any such Police Officer, as aforesaid,
resigns or withdraws himself from the duties of his office in contravention of
this section, he shall be liable on the order of the Inspector-General of
Police or of the Commissioner to forfeit all arrears of pay then due to him.
This forfeiture shall be in addition to the penalty to which the said officer
is liable under section 118 of this Act, or any other law in force.
Section 28 - Police Officer not to engage in trade, etc
(1)
Without the permission of the Commissioner,
or the Inspector-General or Deputy Inspector-General or of Government, as the
case may be, no Police Officer shall engage in trade or be in any way concerned
either as principal or as agent in any dealing in land or in any commercial
transaction whatever or bid for property sold by order of a criminal court, or
have money transactions with any other Police Officer.
(2)
No Police Officer shall, unless with the
written permission of the Inspector-General, hold any office or practice in any
profession or engage in any employment whatever other than his office or duties
as such Police Officer.
Explanation.--The
prohibitions in sub-sections (1) and (2) shall apply when a Police Officer is
on leave or under suspension as well as when he is on duty.
Section 29 - Certificate, arms, etc., to be delivered up by person ceasing to be a Police Officer
(1)
Every person who for any reason ceases to be
a Police Officer shall forthwith deliver up to the officer empowered by the
Commissioner or the Deputy Inspector-General, or the Principal of the Police
Training School, or College, or the Superintendent, to whom such Police Officer
is subordinate, to receive the same, his certificate of appointment or of
office and the arms, accoutrements clothing and other necessaries which have
been furnished to him for the performance of duties and functions connected
with his office.
(2)
Any Magistrate, and, for special reasons,
which shall be recorded in writing at the time, the Commissioner or the Deputy
Inspector-General, or the Principal of the Police Training School, or College,
any Superintendent, Assistant Superintendent, or Deputy Superintendent may
issue a warrant to search for and seize, wherever they may be found, any
certificate, arms, accoutrements, clothing or other necessaries not so
delivered up. Every warrant issued shall be executed in accordance with the
provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, by a Police Officer, or if
the Magistrate, the Commissioner, the Deputy Inspector-General, the Principal
of the Police Training School, or College, the Superintendent, or the Assistant
Superintendent, or Deputy Superintendent, issuing the warrant so directs, by
any other person.
(3)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to
apply to any article, which, under the orders of the Inspector-General, or the
Commissioner, as the case may be, has become the property of the person to whom
the same was furnished.
Section 30 - Occupation of and liability to vacate premises provided for Police Officers
(1)
Any Police Officer occupying any premises
provided by the Government for his residence,--
(a)
shall occupy the same subject to such
conditions and terms as may, generally or in special cases, be specified by the
Government, and
(b)
shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
any law for the time being in force, vacate the same on his ceasing to be a Police
Officer, or whenever the Government in this behalf thinks it necessary and
expedient to require him to do so.
(2)
If any person who is bound or required under
sub-section (1), to vacate any premises fails to do so, the Government or any
officer authorised by it in this behalf may order such person to vacate the
premises and may direct any Police Officer with such assistance as may be
necessary to enter upon the premises and remove therefrom any person found
therein and to take possession of the premises and deliver the same to any
person specified in the direction.
Section 31 - Power to make orders for regulation of traffic and for preservation of order in public places, etc
(1)
The Commissioner and the District Magistrate,
in areas under their respective charges or any part thereof, may make, alter or
rescind orders not inconsistent with this Act, for,--
(a)
licensing and controlling persons offering
themselves for employment at quays, wharves and landing places, bus stands and
outside railway stations, for the carriage of passengers' baggages, and fixing
and providing for the enforcement of a scale of charges for the labour of such
persons so employed;
(b)
regulating the conditions under which
vehicles may remain standing in streets and public places, and the use of
streets as halting places for vehicles or cattle;
(c)
prescribing the number and position of lights
to be used on vehicles in streets and the hours between which such lights shall
be used;
(d)
licensing, controlling or prohibiting the
display of any pictures, advertisements, news boards, or public notices upon a
vessel or boat in territorial waters or on inland waterways other than national
waterways;
(e)
prescribing certain hours of the day during
which animals shall not be driven along the streets or along certain specified
streets, except subject to such regulations as he may prescribe in that behalf;
(f)
regulating the leading, driving, conducting
or conveying of any elephant or wild or dangerous animal through or in any
street or public place;
(g)
regulating and controlling the manner and
mode of conveying timber, scaffold poles, ladders, iron girders, beams or bars,
boilers or other unwieldy articles through the streets, and the route and hours
for such conveyance;
(h)
licensing, controlling or, in order to
prevent obstruction, inconvenience, annoyance, risk, danger or damage to the
residents or passengers in the vicinity, prohibiting the carrying in streets
and public places of gunpowder or any other explosive substance;
(i)
prohibiting, except along certain specified
streets and during specified hours and subject to such regulations as he may
prescribe in that behalf, the exposure or movement in any street of persons or
animals suffering from contagious or infectious diseases and the carcasses of animals
or parts thereof and the corpses of persons deceased;
(j)
prescribing certain hours of the day during
which ordure or offensive matter or objects shall not be taken from or into
houses or buildings in certain streets or conveyed through such streets except
subject to such rules as he may make in that behalf;
(k)
setting apart places for the slaughtering of
animals, the cleaning of carcases or hides, the deposit of noxious or offensive
matter and for obeying calls of nature;
(l)
in cases of existing or apprehended epidemic
or infectious diseases of men or animals or birds, the cleanliness and
disinfections of premises by the occupier thereof and residents therein and the
segregation and management of the persons or animals deceased or supposed to be
deceased, as may have been directed or approved by the Government with a view
to prevent the disease or to check the spreading thereof;
(m)
directing the closing or disuse, wholly or
for certain purposes, or limiting to certain purposes only the use of any
source, supply or receptacle of water, and providing against pollution of the
same or of the water therein;
(n)
licensing, controlling or, in order to
prevent obstruction, inconvenience, annoyance, risk, danger or damage to the
residents or passengers in the vicinity, prohibiting the playing of music, the
beating of drums, tom-toms or other instruments and blowing or sounding of
horns or other noisy instruments in or near streets or public places;
(o)
regulating the conduct of and behaviour or
action of persons, constituting assemblies and processions on or along the
streets and prescribing in the case of processions, the routes by which, the
order in which and the times at which the same may pass;
(p)
prohibiting the hanging or placing of any
cord or pole across a street or part thereof, or the making of a projection or
structure so as to obstruct the traffic or the free access of light and air;
(q)
prohibiting, except under such reasonable
rules as he may make, the placing of building materials or other articles or
the fastening or detention of any horse or other animals in any street or
public place;
(r)
licensing, controlling or, in order to
prevent obstruction, inconvenience, annoyance, risk, danger or damage to the
residents or passengers in the vicinity, prohibiting,--
(i) ???the
illumination of streets and public places and the exteriors of buildings
abutting thereon by persons other than servants of Government or Municipal
Officers duly authorised in that behalf;
(ii)?? ?the blasting of rock or making excavations in
or near streets or public places;
(iii) ??the using
of a loudspeaker in or near any public place or in any place of public
entertainment;
(s)
closing certain streets or places temporarily
in cases of danger from ruinous buildings or other cause, with such exceptions
as shall appear reasonable;
(t)
guarding against injury to person and
property in the construction, repair and demolition of buildings, platforms and
other structures from which danger may arise to passengers, neighbours or the
public;
(u)
prohibiting the setting fire to or burning
any straw or other matter, or lighting a bonfire or wantonly discharging a
fire-arm or air gun, or letting off, or throwing a fire-work, or sending up a
fire balloon or rocket in or upon or within fifty feet of a street or building
or the putting up of any post or other thing on the side of or across a street
for the purpose of affixing thereto lamps or other contrivances for
illumination, except subject to such reasonable rules, as he may make in that
behalf;
(v)
regulating the hours during which and the
manner in which any place for the disposal of the dead, any Dharmashala, or
village-gate or other place of public resort may be used so as to secure the
equal and appropriate application of its advantages and accommodation and to
maintain orderly conduct amongst those who resort thereto;
(w)
(i) licensing or controlling places of public
amusement or entertainment;
(ii)
prohibiting the keeping of places of public amusement or entertainment or
assembly, in order to prevent obstruction, inconvenience, annoyance, risk,
danger or damage to the residents or passengers in the vicinity;
(iii)
regulating the means of entrance and exit at places of public amusement or
entertainment or assembly and providing for the maintenance of public safety
and the prevention of disturbance thereat;
(x)
(i) licensing or controlling with such
exceptions as may be specified, the musical, dancing, mimetic, or theatrical or
other performances for public amusement, including melas and tamashas;
(ii)
regulating in the interest of public order, decency or morality or in the
interest of general public, the employment of artists, and the conduct of the
artists and the audience at such performances;
(iii)
prior scrutiny of such performance by a Board appointed by the Government or by
an Advisory Committee appointed by the Commissioner or the District Magistrate
in this behalf;
(iv)
regulating the hours during which and the places at which such performances may
be given;
(y)
regulating or prohibiting the sale of any ticket
or pass for admission, by whatever name called, to a place of public amusement;
(z)
prescribing the procedure in accordance with
which any licence or permission sought to be obtained or required under this
Act should be applied for, and fixing the fees to be charged for any such
licence or permission:
Provided
that any action taken under the orders made under this sub-section or the grant
of a licence under such orders shall be subject to the control and supervision
of the Government.
(2)
(i) The power of making, altering or
rescinding orders under clauses [23] [(a),
(b), (c), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j), (k), (l), (m), (n), (o), (p), (q), (r),
(s), (t) and (u) and in so far as it relates to any of the aforesaid matters
under clause (z)] of sub-section (1) shall be subject to the control of the
Government.
(ii)
The power of making, altering or rescinding orders under the remaining clauses
of sub-section (1) shall be subject to the previous sanction of the Government.
(3)
Every order made under clause (v) of sub-section
(1) with respect to the use of a place for the disposal of the dead shall be
framed with due regard to ordinary and established usages and to the
necessities of prompt disposal of the dead in individual cases.
(4)
Every order promulgated under the authority
of clause (l) of sub-section (1) shall be forthwith reported to the Government
or such authority as the Government may appoint in this behalf.
(5)
Any order made under this section in so far
as it relates to public health, convenience or safety of any locality, shall be
subject to the provisions of any law relating to municipalities or other local
authorities in force in such locality and any rule, regulation or bye-law made
under such law.
(6)
The power of making, altering or rescinding
orders under this section shall be subject to the condition of the orders being
made, altered or rescinded after previous publication, in accordance with the
provisions of section 23 of the [24] [Karnataka]
General clauses Act 1899 and every orders made or alteration or rescission of
an order made under this section shall be published in the Official Gazette and
in the locality affected thereby by affixing copies thereof in conspicuous
places near to the building, structure, work or place, as the case may be, to
which the same specifically relates or by proclaiming the same by the beating
of drums or by advertising the same in such local newspapers in English or in
the local language, as the authority making, altering or rescinding the order
rule may deem fit, or by any two or more of these means or by any other means
it may think suitable:
Provided
that any such orders may be made, altered or rescinded without previous
publication if the Commissioner or the District Magistrate, as the case may be,
is satisfied that circumstances exist which render it necessary that such
orders or alterations therein or rescission thereof should be brought into
force at once.
(7)
Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore
contained in this section or which may be contained in any order made
thereunder, it shall always be lawful for the competent authority to refuse a
licence for, or to prohibit, the keeping of any place of public amusement or
entertainment by a person of notoriously bad character.
Section 32 - Authorisation of erection of barriers on streets
The
Commissioner and the Superintendent in areas under their respective charges
may, wherever in his opinion such action is necessary, authorise such police
officer as he thinks fit, to erect barriers on any street for the purpose of
stopping temporarily vehicles driven on such street and satisfy himself that
the provisions of any law for the time being in force have not been contravened
in respect of any such vehicle or by the driver thereof, or the person in
charge of, such vehicle. The said authority may also make such orders as it
deems fit for regulating the use of such barriers.
Section 33 - Power to make rules prohibiting disposal of the dead except at places set apart
(1)
A competent authority may, from time to time
make rules prohibiting the disposal of the dead whether by cremation, burial or
otherwise at places other than those set apart for such purpose:
Provided
that no such rules shall be made in respect of any such town or place in which
places have not been so set apart:
Provided
further that the competent authority or any officer authorised by it in this
behalf may, on an application made to it or him by any person, and after
consultation with the Health Officer of the area concerned or other prescribed
officer of the Department of Public Health, grant to such person permission to
dispose of the corpse of any deceased person at any place other than a place so
set apart, if in its or his opinion such disposal is not likely to cause
obstruction to traffic or disturbance of the public peace or is not
objectionable for any other reason.
(2)
Any rules made under sub-section (1) shall
specify the places set apart for the disposal of the dead of different
communities or sections of communities.
(3)
All such rules shall be subject to the
condition of previous publication for a period of not less than two months and
shall be made after consultation with the Health Officer of the area concerned
or other prescribed officer of the Department of Public Health.
Explanation.--For
the purpose of this section, a place set apart for the disposal of the dead
means a place set apart for such purpose under any custom, usage or law for the
time being in force.
Section 34 - Power of Commissioner or the Superintendent and of other officers to give direction to the public
In
areas under their respective charges, the Commissioner and, subject to his
orders, every Police Officer not inferior in rank to a Sub-Inspector, and the
Superintendent and, subject to his orders, any Police Officer not lower than
such rank as may be specified by the Government in that behalf, may, from time
to time, as occasion may arise, but not so as to contravene any order made
under section 31 give all such orders either orally or in writing as may be
necessary to,--
(a)
direct the conduct of, and behaviour or
action of persons constituting processions or assemblies on or along the
streets;
(b)
prescribe the routes by which and the times
at which any such processions may or may not pass;
(c)
prevent obstructions on the occasion of all
processions and assemblies and in the neighborhood of all places of worship
during the time of worship and in all cases when any street or public place or
place of public resort may be thronged or liable to be obstructed;
(d)
keep order on and in all streets, quay,
wharves and at and within public bathing, washing and landing places, fairs,
temples and all other places of public resort;
(e)
regulate and control the playing of music or
singing, or the beating of drums, tom-toms and other instruments and the
blowing or sounding of horns or other noisy instruments in or near any street
or public place;
(f)
regulate and control the use of loudspeaker
in or near any public place or in any place of public entertainment;
(g)
make reasonable orders subordinate to and in
furtherance of any order made by a competent authority under sections 31, 33,
35 to 39, 41 and 43 of this Act.
Section 35 - Power to prohibit certain acts for prevention of disorder
(1)
The Commissioner and the District Magistrate
in areas under their respective charges may, whenever and for such time as he
shall consider necessary for the preservation of public peace or public safety,
by a notification publicly promulgated or addressed to individuals prohibit at
any city, town, village or place or in the vicinity of any such city, town,
village or place,--
(a)
the carrying of arms, cudgels, swords,
spears, bludgeons, guns, knives, sticks, or lathis, or any other article which
is capable of being used for causing physical violence,
(b)
the carrying of any corrosive substance or of
explosives,
(c)
the carrying, collection and preparation of
stones or other missiles or instruments or means of casting or impelling
missiles,
(d)
the exhibition of persons or the corpses or
figures or effigies thereof,
(e)
the public utterance of cries, singing of
songs, playing of music, delivery of harangues, the use of gestures or mimetic
representations, and the preparation, exhibition or dissemination of pictures,
symbols, placards or any other object or thing, which may in the opinion of
such authority offend against decency or morality or affect public order or
undermine the security of, or tend to overthrow, the State or incite to the
commission of an offence.
(2)
If any person goes armed with any such
article or carries any corrosive substance or explosive or missile in
contravention of such prohibition, he shall be liable to be disarmed or the
corrosive substance or explosive or missile shall be liable to be seized from
him by any Police Officer, and the article, corrosive substance, explosive or
missile so seized shall be forfeited to Government.
(3)
The authority empowered under sub-section
(1), may also by order in writing prohibit any assembly or procession whenever
and, for so long as it considers such prohibition to be necessary, for the
preservation of the public order:
Provided
that no such prohibition shall remain in force for more than fifteen days
without the sanction of the Government.
(4)
The authority empowered under sub-section (1)
may also by public notice temporarily reserve for any public purpose any street
or public place and prohibit persons from entering the area so reserved, except
under such conditions as may be prescribed by such authority.
Section 36 - Power to prohibit, etc., continuance of music, sound or noise
(1)
If the Commissioner, the Superintendent,
Assistant Superintendent or Deputy Superintendent or any magistrate of the
first class having jurisdiction in any area to which the Government has, by
notification in the official Gazette extended the provisions of this section,
is satisfied from the report of an officer in charge of a police station or
other information received by him that it is necessary to do so in order to
prevent annoyance, disturbance, discomfort or injury or risk to the public or
to any persons who dwell or occupy property in the vicinity, he may by a
written order issue such directions as he may consider necessary to any person
for preventing, prohibiting controlling or regulating,--
(a)
the incidence or continuance in or upon any
premises of,--
(i) ???any vocal or
instrumental music,
(ii)?? ?sounds caused by the playing, beating,
clashing, blowing or use in any manner whatsoever of any instrument, appliance
or apparatus or contrivance which is capable of producing or reproducing sound,
or
(b)
the carrying on, in or upon, any premises of
any trade, avocation or operation resulting in or attended with noise.
(2)
The authority empowered under sub-section (1)
may, either on its own motion or on the application of any person aggrieved by
an order made under sub-section (1), either rescind, modify or alter any such
order:
Provided
that before any such application is disposed of, the said authority shall
afford the applicant an opportunity of appearing before it either in person or
by legal practitioner and showing cause against the order and shall, if it
rejects any such application either wholly or in part record its reasons for
such rejection.
Section 37 - Licensing use of loudspeakers, etc
(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 36 and
of any orders made under section 31, no person shall use or operate,--
(i) ???in or upon
any premises any loudspeaker or other apparatus for amplifying any musical or
other sound, at such pitch or volume as to be audible beyond fifty feet from
such premises;
(ii) ??in any open
space any loudspeaker or other apparatus for amplifying any musical or other
sound, at such pitch or volume as to be audible beyond two hundred feet from
the place at which the musical or other sound is produced or reproduced, except
under and in accordance with the conditions of a licence granted by the
Superintendent or in such local area by such other officer as the State
Government, may, by notification in the official Gazette specify in this
behalf.
(2)
The provisions of sub-section (1) shall be
applicable to such area from such date as the Government may by notification in
the official Gazette specify. On the application of sub-section (1) to any
area, no local authority shall, notwithstanding anything contained in any other
law, be competent to grant a licence for the use of loudspeakers or other
apparatus for amplifying any musical or other sound.
Section 38 - Issue of orders for prevention of riot, etc
(1)
In order to prevent or suppress any riot or
grave disturbance of peace, the Commissioner or in his absence and subject to
his control the Deputy Commissioner of Police and the Superintendent, within
the areas under their respective charges, may temporarily close, or take
possession of any building or place, and may exclude all or any persons therefrom,
or may allow access thereto to such persons only and on such terms as he shall
deem expedient. All persons concerned shall be bound to conduct themselves in
accordance with such orders as the authority making orders may make and notify
in exercise of the authority hereby vested in it.
(2)
If the lawful occupier of such building or
place suffers substantial loss or injury by reason of the action taken under
sub-section (1), he shall be entitled, on application made to the authority
concerned within one month from the date of such action, to receive reasonable
compensation for such loss or injury, unless such action was in the opinion of
such authority rendered necessary either by the use to which such building or
place was put or intended to be put or by the misconduct of persons having
access thereto.
(3)
In the event of any dispute in any case under
sub-section (2), as to the amount (if any) to be paid, and as to the person to
whom it is to be paid such dispute shall be decided by the judicial officer
exercising powers and performing the functions of a Magistrate of the First
Class.
Section 39 - Issue of orders for maintenance of order at ceremonials, etc.
(1)
In any case of an actual or intended
religious or ceremonial or corporate display or exhibition or organised
assemblage in any street or public place, as to which or the conduct of or
participation in which it shall appear to a competent authority that a dispute
or contention exists which is likely to lead to grave disturbance of the peace,
such authority may give such orders as to the conduct of the persons concerned
towards each other and towards the public as it shall deem necessary and
reasonable under the circumstances regard being had to the apparent legal
rights and to any established practice of the parties and of the persons
interested. Every such order shall be published in the town or place wherein it
is to operate and all persons concerned shall be bound to conform to the same.
(2)
Any order under sub-section (1) shall be
subject to a decree, injunction or order made by a court having jurisdiction,
and shall be recalled or altered on its being made to appear to the authority
making the order that such order is inconsistent with a judgment, decree,
injunction or order of such Court, on the complaint, suit or an application of
any person interested, as to the rights and duties of any person affected by
the order aforesaid.
Section 40 - Police to provide against disorder, etc., at places of amusement and public meetings
(1)
For the purpose of preventing serious
disorder or breach of the law or manifest and imminent danger to the persons
assembled at any public place of amusement or at an assembly or meeting to
which the public are invited or which is open to the public, the senior Police
Officer of highest rank superior to that of constable, present at such place of
amusement or such assembly or meeting may, subject to such rules and orders as
may have been lawfully made, give such reasonable directions as to the mode of
admission of the public to, and for securing the peaceful and lawful conduct of
the proceedings and the maintenance of the public safety at such place of
amusement or such assembly or meeting, as he thinks necessary and all persons
shall be bound to conform to every such reasonable direction.
(2)
The Police shall have free access to every
such place of amusement, assembly or meeting for the purpose of giving effect
to the provisions of sub-section (1) and to any direction made thereunder.
Section 41 - Discontinuance of use of premises by disorderly persons
On
complaint being made to the Commissioner, District Magistrate or Sub-Divisional
Magistrate that any house in a city, town or village in his jurisdiction to
which the Government has by notification in the official Gazette extended this
section, is used as a common lodging house or place of resort for disorderly
persons of any description, to the annoyance of the inhabitants of the
vicinity, the said Commissioner or Magistrate may summon the owner or tenant of
the house to answer the complaint and on being satisfied that the house is so
used may order the owner or tenant of the house so used, within a reasonable
period, which shall be set forth in the order, to discontinue such use of it.
Section 42 - Special measures to prevent outbreak of epidemic disease at fair, etc
(1)
Whenever it shall appear to the Commissioner
or District Magistrate that any place in the areas under their respective
charges, at which, on account of pilgrimage, fair, or other such occurrence,
large bodies of persons have assembled or are likely to assemble is visited or
will probably be visited with an outbreak of any epidemic disease, he may take
such special measures and may, by public notice, and after consultation with
the Health Officer of the area concerned or other prescribed officer of the
Department of Public Health, prescribe such regulations to be observed by the
residents of the said place and by persons present thereat or repairing thereto
or returning therefrom, as he shall deem necessary to prevent the outbreak of
such disease or the spread thereof.
(2)
It shall be lawful for the District
Magistrate on the requisition of the Commissioner or Superintendent to assess
and levy such reasonable fees on persons falling under the provisions of
sub-section (1) as will provide for the expenses of the arrangements for
sanitation and the preservation of order at and about the place of assemblage.
(3)
When the place of assemblage is within the
limits of an area under the jurisdiction of a municipal body such sums as shall
be necessary for the purpose aforesaid may be recovered from the municipal
body.
Section 43 - Destruction of stray dogs
(1)
The Commissioner and the Superintendent in
areas under their respective charges may, from time to time by public notice,
and after consultation with the Health Officer of the area concerned or other
prescribed officer of the Department of Public Health, proclaim that any stray
dogs found during such period as may be specified in the said notice, wandering
in the streets or in any public place may be destroyed, and any dog so found
within such period may be destroyed accordingly.
(2)
The authority empowered under sub-section (1)
may, by public notice, require that every dog, while in any street or public
place and not led by some person, shall be muzzled in such a manner as
effectually to prevent it from biting, while not obstructing its breathing or
drinking and the Police may, so long as such notice remains in force, destroy,
or take possession of and detain, any dog found loose without muzzle in any
street or place beyond the premises of the owner thereof:
Provided
that any dog so found wearing a collar on which an apparently genuine name and
address of an owner is inscribed, shall not, unless it is rabid, be forthwith destroyed,
but information of the detention thereof shall forthwith be sent by post or
otherwise to such owner.
(3)
Any dog which has been detained under
sub-section (2) for a period of three clear days without the owner providing a
muzzle and paying all expenses connected with such detention, may be destroyed
or sold with the sanction and under the orders of the competent authority.
(4)
The proceeds of the sale of any dog under
sub-section (3) shall be applied, as far as may be, in discharge of the
expenses incurred in connection with its detention, and the balance, if any,
shall form part of the Consolidated Fund of the State.
(5)
Any expenses incurred in connection with the
destruction or detention of any dog under this section shall, subject to the
provisions of sub-section (4), be recoverable from the owner thereof upon a
warrant issued by the competent authority as if it were a warrant issued under
section 386 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898.
Section 44 - Destruction of suffering or unfit animals
(1)
Any Police Officer, who, in any street or
public place other than a place of worship, finds any animal other than a bull
or cow so diseased, or so severely injured, and in such a physical condition
that in his opinion it cannot without cruelty be removed, shall if the owner is
absent or refuses to consent to the destruction of the animal, at once summon
the Veterinary Officer in charge of the area in which the animal is found, and,
if the Veterinary Officer certifies that the animal is mortally injured or so severely
injured, or so diseased, or in such a physical condition that it is cruel to
keep it alive, the Police Officer, may without the consent of the owner,
destroy the animal or cause it to be destroyed:
Provided
that if in the opinion of the Veterinary Officer the animal can be removed from
the place where it is found without causing it great suffering and if the owner
or person in charge of the animal or in their absence any other person on the
spot is willing and offers to remove the animal to a Veterinary Hospital or
Pinjrapole within such time as the Veterinary Officer considers reasonable, the
Veterinary Officer shall allow the animal to be removed by such owner, person
in charge of the animal, or such other person; and if the owner or person in
charge of the animal or such other person is unwilling or fails so to remove
the animal, the Veterinary Officer may direct the Police Officer to remove the
animal before it is destroyed from the place where it is found to such other
place as he may think fit:
Provided
further that when the animal is destroyed in any street or public place it
shall, as far as possible, be screened from the public gaze while it is being
destroyed:
Provided
also that before destroying or causing to be destroyed any diseased animal in
any place, the Health Officer of the area concerned or other prescribed officer
of the Department of Public Health shall be consulted.
(2)
The Government may appoint such persons as it
thinks fit to be Veterinary Officers and may declare the areas of which they
shall be in charge for the purposes of this Act.
Section 45 - Powers under this Chapter to be exercised by Superintendent subject to the control of District Magistrate and by Commissioner and District Magistrate subject to the control of the State Government
Every
power conferred by this Chapter on a Superintendent not specially empowered by
the Government to exercise that power or any officer subordinate to him shall
be exercised by him subject to the orders of the District Magistrate and all
rules, regulations and orders made under this Chapter shall if made by the
Commissioner or the District Magistrate be governed by such rules and orders as
the Government may from time to time make in this behalf and if made by the
Superintendent specially empowered in that behalf, shall be subject to the
provisions of section 16.
Section 46 - Employment of additional Police on application of a person
(1)
The Commissioner or the Superintendent may,
on the application of any person, depute any additional number of Police to
keep the peace, to preserve order or to enforce any of the provisions of this
or any other Act in respect of any particular class or classes of offences or
to perform any other Police duties at any place in the area under his charge.
(2)
Such additional Police shall be employed at
the cost of the person making the application but shall be subject to the
orders of the Police authorities and shall be employed for such period as the
appointing authority thinks fit.
(3)
If the person upon whose application such
additional police are employed shall at any time make a written requisition to
the appointing authority to which the application for the employment of
additional Police was made, for the withdrawal of the said Police, he shall be
relieved from the cost thereof at the expiration of such period not exceeding
one month from the date of the delivery of such requisition, as the Government
or the appointing authority as the case may be, shall determine.
Section 47 - Employment of additional Police at large works and when apprehension regarding behaviour of employees exists
(1)
Whenever it appears to the Government or a
competent authority that,--
(a)
any large work which is being carried on or
any public amusement which is being conducted is likely to impede the traffic
or to attract a large number of people, or
(b)
that the behaviour or a reasonable
apprehension of the behaviour of the persons employed on any railway, canal, or
other public work, or in or upon any manufactory or other commercial concern
under construction or in operation at any place necessitates the employment of
additional Police at such place,the Government or the competent authority may
depute such additional police to the said place as it shall think fit and keep
the said Police employed at such place for so long as such necessity shall
appear to it to continue.
(2)
Such additional Police shall be employed at
the cost of the person by whom the work, amusement, manufactory or concern is
being constructed, conducted or carried on and the said person shall pay the
costs therefor at such rates and at such times as the Government or the
competent authority, as the case may be, shall from time to time, require.
Section 48 - Recovery of cost of additional Police employed under sections 46 and 47
In
case of any dispute under section 46 or 47, the decision of the District
Magistrate shall be conclusive as to the amount to be paid and as to the person
by whom it is to be paid and the sum so ascertained may, on the requisition of
the District Magistrate be recovered by the Deputy Commissioner of the Revenue
District as if it were an arrear of land revenue due by the person found to be
answerable therefor.
Section 49 - Employment of additional Police in cases of special danger to public peace
(1)
If in the opinion of the Government any area
is in a disturbed or dangerous condition or in which the conduct of the
inhabitants or of any particular section of the inhabitants renders it
expedient temporarily to employ additional Police, it may by notification, in
the official Gazette, specify,--
(a)
the area (hereinafter called "the
disturbance area") in which the additional Police is to be employed,
(b)
the period for which the additional Police is
to be employed:
Provided
that the period fixed under clause (b) may be extended by the Government from
time to time, if in its opinion, it is necessary to do so in the general
interest of the public. The cost of the additional Police shall be a tax
imposed under this section and shall be recovered in the manner prescribed in
the succeeding sub-sections.
(2)
The decision of the Government under clauses
(a) and (b) of sub-section (1) shall be final.
(3)
On the issue of such notification, the
Government may require,--
(a)
in any disturbance area which is within the
jurisdiction of a municipal body, the municipal body, the Deputy Commissioner
of the Revenue District or any other authority,
(b)
in any disturbance area which is outside the
area specified in clause (a), the Deputy Commissioner of the Revenue District
or any other authority, to
recover, whether in whole or in part, the cost of such additional Police
generally from all persons who are inhabitants of the disturbance area or
specially from any particular section or sections, or class or classes of such
persons, and in such proportion as the Government may direct:
Provided
that where the municipal body is directed to recover such cost, an additional
sum not exceeding three per cent of the amount of such cost shall also be
recoverable.
(4)
(i) The Government may require the municipal
body to recover such cost and the additional sum by an addition to the general
or property tax which shall be imposed and levied in all or such of the
municipal divisions, sub-divisions or sections thereof, as the Government may
direct. Every addition to the general or property tax imposed under this
sub-section shall be recovered by the municipal body from each person liable
therefor, in the same manner as the general or property tax due from him.
The
provisions of the relevant municipal Act shall apply to any such addition as if
it were part of the general or property tax levied under the said Act. Such
addition shall be a charge along with the general or property tax, on the
properties, in such municipal divisions or sub-divisions or sections.
(ii)
The Government may also require the municipal body to recover such cost and the
additional sum from each person liable therefor under sub-section (3) in such
manner as the Government may direct.
(iii)
Where the municipal body makes default in imposing and levying any such tax or
in making such recovery, the Government may direct the Deputy Commissioner of
the Revenue District to impose and levy such tax or to make such recovery.
(5)
Every amount recoverable by the Deputy
Commissioner of the Revenue District or other authority under this section
shall be recoverable as if it were an arrear of land revenue due by the person
liable therefor.
(6)
It shall be lawful for the Government by
order to exempt any person from liability to bear any portion of the cost of
such additional Police.
(7)
It shall be lawful for the Government to
extend the period for the payment of the cost imposed under this section, for
the term not exceeding five years beyond the period for which such additional
Police are actually employed.
(8)
Out of the total amount recovered by the
municipal body under sub-section (4) or (5) whether before or after the coming
into force of this Act, the amount of the cost shall be paid to the Government
and the balance, if any, shall be credited to the Municipal Fund constituted
under the relevant municipal Act. Such amount of cost shall be paid to the
Government every three months.
Explanation.--In
this section, the expression "inhabitants" when used with reference
to any area includes persons who themselves or by their agents or servants
occupy or hold land or other immovable property within such area and landlords
who themselves or by their agents or servants collect rent from holders or
occupiers of land in such area notwithstanding that they do not actually reside
therein.
Section 50 - Compensation for injury caused by unlawful assembly how recoverable
(1)
When any loss or damage is caused to any
property, or when death results or grievous hurt is caused to any person or
persons, by anything done in the prosecution of the common object of an
unlawful assembly, the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette,
specify,--
(a)
the area (hereinafter called "the
disturbance area") in which in its opinion such unlawful assembly was
held; and
(b)
the date on which or the period during which
such unlawful assembly was held.
(2)
The decision of the Government under clauses
(a) and (b) of sub-section (1) shall be final.
(3)
On the issue of a notification under
sub-section (1), the District Magistrate may, after such inquiry as he deems
necessary, determine the amount of the compensation which, in his opinion
should be paid to any person or persons in respect of the loss or damage or
death or grievous hurt aforesaid. The amount of compensation shall be a tax
imposed under this section and shall be recovered in the manner prescribed in
the succeeding sub-sections.
(4)
The District Magistrate may require,--
(a)
in any disturbance area, which is within the
jurisdiction of a municipal body, the municipal body, the Deputy Commissioner
of the Revenue District or any other authority;
(b)
in any disturbance area which is outside the
area specified in clause (a), the Deputy Commissioner of the Revenue District
or any other authority, to
recover the amount (hereinafter called "the compensation amount") as
determined under sub-section (3) either in whole or in part, and where the
municipal body is required to recover such amount, an additional sum not
exceeding three per cent of the compensation amount (hereinafter referred to as
"the municipal recovery cost") generally from all persons who were
inhabitants of the disturbance area or specially from any particular section or
sections, or class or classes of such persons in the said area, and in such
proportion as the District Magistrate may direct.
(5)
(i) The District Magistrate may require the
municipal body concerned to recover the compensation amount and the municipal
recovery cost by an addition to the general or property tax which shall be
imposed and levied in the disturbance area. Every addition to the general or
property tax imposed under this sub-section shall be recovered by the municipal
body concerned from each person liable therefor in the same manner as the
general or property tax due from him. The provisions of the relevant municipal
Act shall apply to any such addition as if it were part of the general or
property tax levied under the relevant municipal Act. Such addition shall be a
charge along with the general or property tax on the properties in the area
aforesaid.
(ii)
The District Magistrate may also require the municipal body concerned to
recover the compensation amount and the municipal recovery cost from each
person liable therefor under sub-section (4) in such manner as he may direct.
(6)
Where a municipal body makes a default in
imposing and levying any such tax or in making any such recovery, the
Government may direct the Deputy Commissioner of the Revenue District to impose
and levy such tax or to make such recovery.
(7)
Every amount recoverable by the Deputy
Commissioner of the Revenue District or other authority under this section,
shall be recoverable as if it were an arrear of land revenue.
(8)
Out of the total amount recovered by the
municipal body under sub-section (5) or (6), the proportionate amount of the
municipal recovery cost shall be deducted from and the amount not exceeding the
compensation amount determined by the District Magistrate under sub-section
(3), shall be paid to him for the payment of compensation to the persons
entitled thereto, and the balance, if any, shall be credited to the Municipal
Fund constituted under the relevant municipal Act. Such amount shall be paid to
the District Magistrate, every three months.
(9)
It shall be lawful for the District
Magistrate, by order to exempt any person from liability to pay any portion of
the compensation amount.
(10)
The Government may, (a) on its own motion, or
(b) on an application made by a person within a period of thirty days from the
date of the order of a District Magistrate, granting or refusing to grant an
exemption thereunder, set aside or modify such order.
Explanation.--In
this section the expression "inhabitants" when used with reference to
any disturbance area includes persons who themselves or by their agents or
servants occupy or hold land or other immovable property within such area and
landlords who themselves or by their agents or servants collect rent from
holders or occupiers of land in such area, notwithstanding that they do not
actually reside therein.
Section 51 - District Magistrate to award or to apportion compensation among persons
(1)
It shall be lawful for the District
Magistrate to award or apportion all or any moneys recovered as compensation
under sub-sections (3) to (8) of section 50, to any person or among all or any
persons whom he considers entitled to compensation in respect of the loss or
damage or death or grievous hurt aforesaid.
(2)
No compensation shall be awarded under this
section except upon a claim made within forty-five days from the date of the
notification issued by the Government under sub-section (1) of section 50 and
unless the District Magistrate is satisfied that the person claiming
compensation or where such claim is made in respect of the death of any person,
that person also has himself been free from blame in connection with the
occurrences which led to the loss, damage, death or grievous hurt as aforesaid.
(3)
The compensation payable to any person under
section 50 in respect of death or grievous hurt shall not in any way be capable
of being assigned or charged or be liable to attachment or to pass to any
person other than the person entitled to it by operation of law, nor shall any
claim be set off against the same.
(4)
Every direction and order made by the
District Magistrate under this or the preceding section shall be subject to
revision by the Government, but save as aforesaid shall be final.
(5)
No civil suit shall be maintainable against
the Government or any officer of the Government in respect of any loss or
injury for which compensation has been granted under this section.
Section 52 - District Magistrate to discharge functions under orders of Government
The
District Magistrate shall discharge his functions under sections 50 and 51
subject to any general or special orders of the Government in this behalf.
Section 53 - Proportionate recovery of the cost of additional Police and compensation for loss caused by unlawful assembly
(1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in any law
in force relating to house rent and accommodation control, where under the
provisions of section 49 or 50, the municipal body or the Deputy Commissioner
of the Revenue District, as the case may be, is required to recover the cost of
the additional Police, including the additional sum referred to in sub-section
(4) of section 49 (hereinafter called "the additional cost") or the
compensation amount and the municipal recovery cost (hereinafter called the
"riot tax") by an addition to the general or property tax, the
landlord from whom any portion of the additional cost or the riot tax is
recovered, in respect of any premises shall be entitled to recover seventy-five
per cent of such portion from the tenant in the occupation of the premises
during the period fixed under sub-section (1) of section 49 or on the date or
during the greater part of the period specified under clause (b) of sub-section
(1) of section 50, as the case may be, in the manner specified in sub-section
(2).
(2)
The amount referred to in sub-section (1) and
to be recovered from a tenant referred to therein shall bear the same proportion
as the rent payable by him in respect of the premises in his occupation bears
to the total amount of rent recoverable for the whole premises if let, and the
same shall be recoverable in not less than four equal instalments.
Section 54 - Dispersal of gangs and bodies of persons
Whenever
it shall appear in the City of Bangalore and other areas for which a
Commissioner is appointed under section 7 to the Commissioner, and in a
district to the District Magistrate, the Magistrate or the Superintendent
specially empowered by the Government in this behalf, that the movement by
encampment of any gang or body of persons in the area in his charge is causing
or is calculated to cause danger or alarm or reasonable suspicion that unlawful
designs are entertained by such gang or body or by members thereof, such
officer may, by notification, addressed to the persons appearing to be the
leaders or chief men of such gang or body and published by beat of drum or
otherwise as such officer thinks fit, direct the members of such gang or body
so to conduct themselves as shall seem necessary in order to prevent violence
and alarm or to disperse and each of them to remove himself outside the area
within the local limits of his jurisdiction or such area and any district or
districts, or any part thereof, contiguous thereto within such time as such
officer shall specify, and not to enter the area or the areas and such
contiguous districts, or part thereof, as the case may be, or return to the
place from which each of them was directed to remove himself.
Section 55 - Removal of persons about to commit offences
Whenever
it shall appear in the City of Bangalore and other areas for which a
Commissioner has been appointed under section 7 to the Commissioner, and in
other area or areas to which the Government may, by notification in the
official Gazette, extend the provision of this section, to the District
Magistrate, or the Sub-Divisional Magistrate having jurisdiction and specially
empowered by the Government in that behalf,--
(a)
that the movements or acts of any person are
causing or calculated to cause alarm, danger or harm to person or property, or
(b)
that there are reasonable grounds for
believing that such person is engaged or is about to be engaged in the
commission of an offence involving force or violence or an offence punishable
under Chapter XII, XVI or XVII of the Indian Penal Code, or in the abetment of
any such offence, and when in the opinion of such officer witnesses are not
willing to come forward to give evidence in public against such person by
reason of apprehension on their part as regards the safety of their person or
property, or
(c)
that an outbreak of epidemic disease is
likely to result from the continued residence of an immigrant, the said officer may, by an order in writing
duly served on him, or by beat of drum or otherwise as he thinks fit, direct
such person or immigrant so to conduct himself as shall seem necessary in order
to prevent violence and alarm or the outbreak or spread of such disease or to
remove himself outside the area within the local limits of his jurisdiction or
such area and any district or districts or any part thereof contiguous thereto
by such route and within such time as the said officer may specify and not to
enter, or return to the said place from which he was directed to remove
himself.
Section 56 - Removal of persons convicted of certain offences
[25] [56. Removal of persons convicted of certain
offences
If a
person has been convicted at any time either before or after the commencement
of this Act,--
(a)
of an offence under Chapter XII, XVI or XVII
of the Indian Penal Code (Central Act 45 of 1860); or
(b)
of an offence under section 6 of 13 of the
Mysore Mines Act, 1906 (Mysore Act 4 of 1906); or
(c)
of an offence under section 86 of the
Karnataka Forest Act, 1963 (Karnataka Act 5 of 1964); or
(d)
twice of an offence under section 19 of the
Mysore Prohibition of Beggary Act, 1944 (Mysore Act 33 of 1944) or any other
corresponding law in force in any area of the State; or
(e)
twice of an offence under the Suppression of
Immoral Traffic in Women and Girls Act, 1956 (Central Act 104 of 1956); or
(f)
twice of an offence under the Untouchability
(Offences) Act, 1955 (Central Act 22 of 1955); or
(g)
thrice of an offence within a period of three
years under section 78, 79 or 80 of this Act; or
(h)
thrice of an offence within a period of three
years under sections 32, 34, 37 or 38A of the Karnataka Excise Act 1965,
(Karnataka Act 21 of 1966), the Commissioner, the District Magistrate, or any
Sub-divisional Magistrate specially empowered by the Government in this behalf,
if he has reason to believe that such person is likely again to engage himself
in the commission of an offence similar to that for which he was convicted, may
direct such person to remove himself outside the area within the local limits
of his jurisdiction or such area or any district or districts or any part
thereof contiguous thereto, by such route and within such time as the said
officer may specify and not to enter or return to the place from which he was
directed to remove himself.
Explanation.--For
the purpose of this section "an offence similar to that for which a person
was convicted" shall mean,--
(i) ???in the case
of a person convicted of an offence mentioned in clause (a), an offence falling
under any of the Chapters of the Indian Penal Code mentioned in that clause;
and
(ii)?? in the case
of person convicted of an offence mentioned in clauses (e) and (f), an offence
falling under the provisions of the Acts mentioned respectively in the said
clauses.]
Section 57 - Period of operation of orders under section 54, 55 or 56
A
direction made under section 54, 55 or 56 not to enter any particular area or
such area and any district or districts or any part thereof, contiguous thereto
shall be for such period as may be specified therein and shall in no case
exceed a period of two years from the date on which it was made.
Section 58 - Hearing to be given before an order is passed under section 54, 55 or 56
(1)
Before an order under section 54, 55 or 56 is
passed against any person, the officer acting under any of the said sections or
any officer above the rank of an Inspector authorised by that officer shall
inform the person in writing of the general nature of the material allegations
against him and give him a reasonable opportunity of tendering an explanation
regarding them. If such person makes an application for the examination of any
witness, produced by him, the authority or officer concerned shall grant such
application and examine such witness, unless for reasons to be recorded in
writing the authority or officer is of opinion that such application is made
for the purpose of vexation or delay. Any written statement put in by such
person shall be filed with the record of the case. Such person shall be
entitled to appear before the officer proceeding under this section by a legal
practitioner for the purposes of tendering his explanation and examining the
witnesses produced by him.
(2)
The authority or officer proceeding under
sub-section (1) may, for the purpose of securing the attendance of any person
against whom any order is proposed to be made under section 54, 55 or 56
require such person to appear before him and to furnish a security bond with or
without sureties for such attendance during the inquiry. If the person fails to
furnish the security bond as required or fails to appear before the officer or
authority during the inquiry, it shall be lawful to the officer or authority to
proceed with the inquiry and thereupon such order as was proposed to be passed
against him may be passed.
Section 59 - Appeal
Any
person aggrieved by an order made under section 54, 55 or 56 may appeal to the
Government within thirty days from the date of such order.
Section 60 - Finality of orders
Any
order passed under section 54, 55 or 56 or by the Government under section 59
shall not be called in question in any court except on the ground that the
authority making the order or any officer authorised by it had not followed the
procedure laid down in sub-section (1) of section 58 or that there was no
material before the authority concerned upon which it could have based its
order or on the ground that the said authority was not of opinion that
witnesses were unwilling to come forward to give evidence in public against the
person in respect of whom an order was made under section 55.
Section 61 - Procedure on failure of person to leave the area and his entry therein after removal
If a
person to whom a direction has been issued under section 54, 55 or 56 to remove
himself from an area,--
(i) ???fails to
remove himself as directed;
(ii) ???having so
removed himself, except with the permission in writing of the authority making
the order enters the area within the period specified in the order, the authority concerned may cause him to be
arrested and removed in police custody to such place outside the area as the
said authority may in each case direct.
Section 62 - Temporary permission to enter or return to the area from which a person was directed to remove himself
(1)
The Government may, by order, permit any
person in respect of whom an order has been made under section 54, 55 or 56 to
enter or return for a temporary period to the area or such area and any
district or districts or any part thereof, contiguous thereto from which he was
directed to remove himself subject to such conditions as it may by general or
special order specify and which such person accepts, and may, at any time,
revoke any such permission.
(2)
In permitting a person under sub-section (1)
to enter or return to the area or such area and any district or districts or
any part thereof, contiguous thereto from which he was directed to remove
himself, the Government may require him to enter into a bond with or without
surety for the observance of the conditions imposed.
(3)
Any person permitted under sub-section (1) to
enter or return to the area or such area and any district or districts or any
part thereof contiguous thereto, from which he was directed to remove himself,
shall surrender himself at the time and place and to the authority specified in
the order or in the order revoking the said order, as the case may be.
Section 63 - Powers of Government or of officers specially empowered to extern
(1)
The Government or any officer specially
empowered by the Government in that behalf, may, in like circumstances and in
like manner, exercise the powers exercisable, in the City of Bangalore by the
Commissioner and in a district by the District Magistrate, Sub-divisional
Magistrate or Superintendent of Police specially empowered by the Government in
that behalf, as the case may be, under section 54, 55 or 56 with this
modification that it shall be lawful for the Government or the officer
specially empowered to direct the members of such gang or body or persons or
immigrants or persons convicted, as the case may be, to remove themselves from
and not to enter or return to, any local area, or any such area and any
districts or part thereof, whether contiguous thereto or not.
(2)
The provisions of sections 57, 58, 59, 60, 61
and 62 shall mutatis mutandis apply to the exercise of any powers under this
section, as they apply to the exercise of any powers under section 54, 55 or
56.
Section 64 - Control of camps, parades, etc., and banning use of uniforms, etc
III.
CONTROL OF CAMPS, PARADS, ETC., AND USE OF CERTAIN UNIFORMS
64.
Control of camps, parades, etc., and banning use of uniforms, etc.
(1)
If the Government is satisfied that it is
necessary in the interest of the maintenance of public order so to do, it may
by general or special order prohibit or restrict throughout the[26]
[State of Karnataka] or any part thereof all meetings and assemblies of persons
for the purpose of training or drilling themselves or being trained or drilled
to the use of arms, or for the purpose of practising military exercises,
movements or evolutions, or for the purpose aforesaid of attending or holding
or taking any part in any camp, parade or procession.
(2)
If the Government is satisfied that the
wearing in public by any member of the body or association or organisation to
be specified in the order to be issued hereunder of any dress or article of
apparel resembling any uniform or part of uniform required to be worn by a
member of the Armed Forces of the Union or by a member of the Police Force or
of any force constituted under any law for the time being in force, would be
likely to prejudice the security of the State or the maintenance of public
order, the Government may, by general or special order, prohibit or restrict
the wearing, or display in public, of any such dress or article of apparel by
any member of such body or association or organisation.
(3)
Every general or special order under
sub-sections (1) and (2) shall be published in the manner prescribed for the
publication of a public notice under section 172.
Explanation.--For the
purposes of sub-section (2), a dress or an article of apparel shall be deemed
to be worn or displayed in public, if it is worn or displayed in any place to
which the public have access.
Section 65 - Duties of a Police Officer
It
shall be the duty of every Police Officer,--
(a)
promptly to serve every summons and obey and
execute every warrant or other order lawfully issued to him by competent
authority, and to endeavour by all lawful means to give effect to the lawful
commands of his superior;
(b)
to the best of his ability to obtain
intelligence concerning the commission of cognizable offences or designs to
commit such offences;
(c)
to lay such information and to take such
other steps, consistent with law and with the orders of his superiors, as shall
be best calculated to bring offenders to justice;
(d)
to prevent the commission of offences;
[27] [(da) to prevent the breach of the public peace;]
(e)
to prevent to the best of his ability the
commission of public nuisances;
(f)
to apprehend without unreasonable delay all
persons whom he is legally authorised to apprehend and for whose apprehension
there is sufficient reason;
(g)
to aid another Police Officer when called on
by him or in case of need in the discharge of his duty, in such ways as would
be lawful and reasonable on the part of the officer aided;
(h)
to discharge such duties as are imposed upon
him by any law for the time being in force.
[28] [(i) to communicate without delay to the
appropriate officer of a local authority any information which he receives, of
the design to commit or of the commission of any offence under the relevant law
constituting such local authority or under any rule, bye-law or regulation made
under such law;
(j) ???to assist
any officer or servant of a local authority or any person to whom the powers of
such officer or servant has been lawfully delegated, reasonably demanding his
aid for the lawful exercise of any power vesting in such officer or servant of
the local authority, or such person, under the relevant law constituting such
local authority or under any rule, bye-law or regulation made under such law.]
Section 66 - Power to enter places of public resort
Every
Police Officer may, subject to the rules and orders made by the Government or
by a person lawfully authorised, enter for any of the purposes referred to in
section 65 without a warrant and inspect any place of public resort which he
has reason to believe is used as a shop for the sale of liquor or intoxicating
drugs or a place of resort of loose and disorderly characters.
Section 67 - Power to search suspected persons in a street
When in a street or a place
of public resort a person has possession or apparent possession of any article
which a Police Officer in good faith suspects to be stolen property, such
Police Officer may search or examine the same and may require an account
thereof, and, should the account given by the possessor be manifestly false or
suspicious, may seize such article and report the facts to a[29]
[Judicial Magistrate], who shall thereon proceed according to sections 523 and
525 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, or any other law in force.
Section 68 - Duties of Police Officers towards the public
It
shall be the duty of every Police Officer,--
(a)
to afford every assistance within his power
to disabled or helpless persons in the streets, and to take charge of
intoxicated persons and of lunatics at large who appear dangerous or incapable
of taking care of themselves;
(b)
to take prompt measures to procure necessary
help for any person under arrest or in custody, who is wounded or sick and
whilst guarding or conducting any such person, to have due regard to his
condition;
(c)
to arrange for the proper sustenance and
shelter of every person who is under arrest or in custody;
(d)
in conducting searches, to refrain from
needless rudeness and the causing of unnecessary annoyance;
(e)
in dealing with women and children to act
with strict regard to decency and with reasonable gentleness;
(f)
to use his best endeavors to prevent any loss
or damage by fire;
(g)
to use his best endeavor to avert any
accident or danger to the public.
Section 69 - Police to regulate traffic, etc., in streets
It shall
be the duty of a Police Officer,--
(a)
to regulate and control the traffic in the
streets, to prevent obstructions therein and, to the best of his ability, to
prevent infraction of any rule or order made under this Act, or any other law
in force for observance by the public in or near the streets;
(b)
to keep order in the streets and at and
within public bathing, washing and landing places, fairs, bazaars, temples and
all other places of public resort and in the neighborhood of places of public
worship during the time of public worship;
(c)
to regulate resort to public bathing, washing
and landing places, to prevent overcrowding thereat and in public ferry, boats
and, to the best of his ability, to prevent the infraction of any rule or order
lawfully made for observance by the public at any such place or on any such
boat.
Section 70 - Persons bound to conform to reasonable directions of Police
All
persons shall be bound to conform to the reasonable directions of a Police
Officer given in fulfillment of any of his duties under this Act.
Section 71 - Powers of Police Officer to restrain, remove, etc
A Police Officer may
restrain or remove any person resisting or refusing or omitting to conform to
any direction referred to in section 70 and may either take such person before
a[30]
[Judicial Magistrate] or, in trivial cases, may release him when the occasion
is past.
Section 72 - Enforcement of orders issued under section 35, 36 or 38
Whenever a notification has
been duly issued under section 35 or an order has been made under section 36 or
38 it shall be lawful for any Magistrate in a district or Police Officer to
require any person acting or about to act contrary thereto to desist or to
abstain from so doing, and, in case of refusal or disobedience, to arrest the
person offending. Such[31]
[Executive Magistrate] or Police Officer may also seize any object or thing
used or about to be used in contravention of such notification, or order as
aforesaid and the thing seized shall be disposed of according to the order of
any District Magistrate having jurisdiction at the place.
Section 73 - Duty of Police to see orders issued under sections 42, 54, 55, 56 or 63 are carried out
It
shall be the duty of the police to see that every regulation and direction made
by an authority under sections 42, 54, 55, 56 or 63 is duly obeyed, to warn
persons who from ignorance fail to obey the same and to arrest any person who
wilfully disobeys the same.
Section 74 - When Police Officer may arrest without warrant
A
Police Officer may arrest without warrant any person committing in his presence
in any street or public place any non-cognizable offence punishable under this
Act, or under any rule made thereunder and for which no express provision has
been made elsewhere, or under any other law for the time being in force, if
such person,--
(i) ???after being
warned by a Police Officer persists in committing such offence, or
(ii) ???refuses to
accompany the Police Officer to a police station on being required so to do.
Section 75 - Police to take charge of unclaimed property
[32] [(1)] The police shall take temporary charge,--
(a)
of all unclaimed property found by or made
over to them; and
(b)
of all property found lying in any public
street, if the owner or person in charge of such property on being directed to
remove the same, refuses or omits to do so.
[33] [(2) The taking of temporary charge of any property
under sub-section (1) shall be forthwith reported to a Judicial Magistrate and
the procedure laid down in sections 457, 458 and 459 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure 1973, shall be applicable in respect of the disposal of such property
as if it were property seized by a Police Officer under the said Code.]
Section 76 - Police Officer may take charge of stray cattle
A
Police Officer may take charge of any animal which may be found straying in a
street and may take or send the same to the nearest cattle pound and the owner
and other person concerned shall thereon become subject to the provisions of
the Cattle Trespass Act in force.
Section 77 - A superior Police Officer may himself perform duties imposed on his inferior, etc
A
Police Officer of rank superior to that of a constable may perform any duty
assigned by law or by a lawful order to any officer subordinate to him; and in
case of any duty imposed on such subordinate, a superior where it shall appear
to him necessary may aid, supplement, supersede or prevent any action of such
subordinate by his own action or that of any person lawfully acting under his
command or authority, whenever the same shall appear necessary or expedient for
giving more complete or convenient effect to the law or for avoiding an
infringement thereof.
Section 78 - Opening, etc., of certain forms of gaming
(1)
Whoever,--
(a)
being the owner or occupier or having the use
of any building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place, opens, keeps
or uses the same for the purpose of gaming,--
(i)??? ?on a horse-race, or
(ii)?? ?on the market price of cotton, bullion or
other commodity or on the digits of the number used in stating such price, or
(iii)? ?on the amount or variation in the market price
of any such commodity or on the digits of the number used in stating the amount
of such variation, or
(iv) ??on the
market price of any stock or share or on the digits of the number used in
stating such price, or
(v)? ?on the number of registration or on the digits
of the number of registration of any motor vehicle using a public place, or
(vi) ?on any
transaction or scheme of wagering or betting in which the ?receipt or distribution of winnings or prizes
in money or otherwise is made to depend on chance; or
(b)
being the owner or occupier of any such
building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place knowingly or wilfully
permits the same to be opened, occupied, kept or used by any other person for
the purpose of gaming on any of the objects aforesaid, or
(c)
has the care or management of, or in any
manner assists in, conducting the business of, any such building, room, tent,
enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place opened, occupied, kept or used for the
purpose of gaming on any of the objects aforesaid, or
(d)
advances or furnishes money for the purpose
of gaming on any of the objects aforesaid with persons frequenting any such
building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place, shall, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment which may extend to one year, or with fine which may extend to one
thousand rupees, or with both:
Provided
that in the absence of special reasons to be recorded in writing, the
punishment to be imposed on an offender on conviction for an offence under this
sub-section shall be imprisonment for not less than one month or fine of not
less than five hundred rupees or both.
(2)
Whoever is found in any building, room, tent,
enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place referred to in sub-section (1), gaming on
any of the objects specified in that sub-section, or present, for the purpose
of gaming on any such object shall, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment which may extend to one month or with fine which may extend to
five hundred rupees or with both.
Any
person found in any such building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or
place during any gaming therein on any of the objects specified in sub-section
(1) shall be presumed, until the contrary is proved, to have been there for the
purpose of gaming on such object.
(3)
Whoever is found gaming on any of the objects
specified in sub-section (1) in any public street or thoroughfare or in any
place to which the public have or are permitted to have access shall, on
conviction be punished with imprisonment which may extend to three months or
with fine which may extend to three hundred rupees, or with both.
Section 79 - Keeping common gaming house, etc
Any
person who,--
(a)
opens, keeps or uses any building, room,
tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel, or place for the purpose of a common
gaming-house;
(b)
being the owner or occupier of any such
building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel, or place knowingly or
wilfully permits the same to be opened, occupied, kept or used by any other
person for the purpose aforesaid;
(c)
has the care or management of, or in any
manner assists in conducting the business of, any such building, room, tent,
enclosure, vehicle, vessel, or place opened, occupied, kept or used for the
purpose aforesaid; or
(d)
advances or furnishes money for the purpose
of gaming with persons frequenting any such building, room, tent, enclosure,
vehicle, vessel, or place, shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment
which may extend to one year and with fine:
Provided
that,--
(a)
for a first offence, such imprisonment shall
not be less than three months and fine shall not be less than five hundred
rupees;
(b)
for a second offence, such imprisonment shall
not be less than six months and fine shall not be less than five hundred
rupees; and
(c)
for a third or subsequent offence, such
imprisonment shall not be less than nine months and fine shall not be less than
one thousand rupees.
Section 80 - Gaming in common gaming-house, etc
Whoever
is found in any common gaming-house gaming or present for the purpose of gaming
shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment which may extend to one
year and with fine:
Provided
that,--
(a)
for a first offence such imprisonment shall
not be less than one month and fine shall not be less than two hundred rupees;
(b)
for a second offence such imprisonment shall
not be less three months and fine shall not be less than two hundred rupees;
and
(c)
for a third or subsequent offence such
imprisonment shall not be less than six months and fine shall not be less than
five hundred rupees.
Section 81 - Entry, search, etc., by Police Officers in gaming-house
It
shall be lawful for a Police Officer,--
(i) ????in the City of Bangalore not below the rank of
a Sub-Inspector and either empowered by general order in writing or authorised
in each case by special warrant issued by the District Magistrate or
Sub-Divisional Magistrate, or Commissioner of Police or Superintendent of
Police; or Deputy Commissioner of Police, Assistant Superintendent of Police or
Deputy Superintendent of Police or Assistant Commissioner of Police, and
(ii) ???elsewhere
not below the rank of a Sub-Inspector of Police [34] [and
either empowered by general order in writing or authorised in each case by
special warrant issued] by a District Magistrate or Sub-Divisional Magistrate,
or by a Magistrate specially empowered by the State Government in this behalf
or by a Superintendent of Police or by an Assistant or Deputy Superintendent of
Police,--
(a)
to enter, with the assistance of such persons
as may be found necessary, by night or by day, and by force, if necessary, any
building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place, which he has reason
to suspect is used as a common gaming-house or for the purpose of gaming on any
of the objects referred to in sub-section (1) of section 78;
(b)
to search all parts of the building, room,
tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place which he shall have so entered, when
he shall have reason to suspect that any instruments of gaming are concealed
therein, and also the persons whom he shall find therein, whether such persons
are then actually gaming or not;
(c)
to take into custody and bring before a
Magistrate all such persons;
(d)
to seize all instruments of gaming and all
moneys and securities for money and articles of value which are reasonably
suspected to have been used or intended to be used for the purpose of gaming,
and which are found therein:
Provided
that no officer shall be authorised by special warrant unless the Commissioner
or Deputy Commissioner or Assistant Commissioner of Police or Magistrate or
Superintendent, Assistant or Deputy Superintendent of Police concerned is
satisfied, upon [35] [a
written complaint or report made to him] and upon making such inquiry as he may
think necessary, that there are good grounds to suspect the said building, room,
tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel, or place to be used as a common gaming-house.
Section 82 - Presumptive proof of keeping or gaming in common gaming-house
(1)
When any instrument of gaming has been seized
in any building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place entered or
searched under section 81 or on a person found therein, and in the case of any
other thing so seized, if the court is satisfied that the police officer who
entered such building, room, tent, or place, enclosure, vehicle, vessel, had
reasonable grounds for suspecting that the thing so seized was an instrument of
gaming, the seizure of such instrument or thing shall be evidence, until the
contrary is proved, that such building, room, tent, enclosure, vehicle, vessel
or place is used as a common gaming-house and the persons found therein were
then present for the purpose of gaming, although no gaming was actually seen by
the police officer or by any person acting under the authority of either of
them.
(2)
Any person found in any common gaming-house
during any gaming therein shall be presumed until the contrary is proved, to
have been there for the purpose of gaming.
Section 83 - On conviction under sections 78, 79 and 80 instruments of gaming may be destroyed
On
conviction of any person under sections 78, 79 or 80 the convicting Magistrate
may order all the instruments of gaming found in the building, room, tent,
enclosure, vehicle, vessel or place or on the persons of those who were found
therein, to be forthwith destroyed or forfeited to the Government, and may also
order all or any of the securities for money and other articles seized, not
being instruments of gaming, to be sold and the proceeds thereof, with all
moneys seized therein, to be forfeited to the Government.
Section 84 - Proof of playing for money not required for conviction
It
shall not be necessary, in order to convict a person of an offence under
sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) of section 78 or under section 80 to prove
that any person found gaming was playing for any money, wager, bet or stake.
Section 85 - Indemnification of persons concerned who are examined as witnesses
Every
person who shall have been concerned in any gaming contrary to this Act, and
who shall be examined as a witness by or before a Magistrate on the trial of
any charge against the owner, keeper or occupier or other person under
sub-section (1) of section 78 or under section 79 touching gaming, and who upon
such examination shall make true and faithful discovery to the best of his
knowledge of all things as to which he shall be so examined, and who shall
thereupon receive from the said Magistrate a certificate in writing to that
effect, shall be freed from all prosecutions under this Act for anything done
before that time in respect of such gaming.
Section 86 - Payment of portion of fine to informer
The
Magistrate trying any case under the provisions of sections 78, 79 and 80, may
award any portion, not exceeding one-half of any fine which may be levied under
any of the said sections, or any part of the proceeds of articles or money
seized and ordered to be forfeited under section 83, among the Police Officers
and other persons who may have given assistance in the detection or
investigation of the offence.
Section 87 - Gaming in public streets.
Whoever
is found gaming or reasonably suspected to be gaming in any public street, or
thoroughfare, or in any place to which the public have or permitted to have
access or in any race-course shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment
which may extend to three months or with fine which may extend to three hundred
rupees, or with both and where such gaming consists of wagering or betting, any
such person so found gaming shall, on conviction, be punishable in the manner
and to the extent referred to in section 80 and all moneys found on such person
shall be forfeited to the Government.
[36] [Any] police officer may seize all things reasonably
suspected to be instruments of gaming found in such public street,
thoroughfare, place or race-course or on or about the person of those whom he
shall so arrest, and the Magistrate may, on conviction of the offender, order
such instruments to be forthwith destroyed. When anything has been found on or
about any person and a court is satisfied that the police officer had
reasonable grounds for suspecting that such thing was an instrument of gaming,
such circumstance shall, until the contrary is proved, be evidence that such
thing was an instrument of gaming and that the person on or about whom the thing
was found was present for the purpose of gaming.
Section 88 - Power to arrest without warrant persons gaming in public places
A
police officer may arrest and search without warrant, any person gaming or
reasonably suspected to be gaming in contravention of sub-section (3) of
section 78 or section 87.
Section 89 - Assembling in streets for gaming
Whoever,--
(i)??? ?assembles with others in a street gathered for
the purpose of gaming or;
(ii) ???joins any
such assembly for the purpose of gaming;
shall,
on conviction, be punished with fine which may extend to fifty rupees.
Section 90 - Printing, publishing or distributing any news or information
(1)
No person shall print, publish, sell,
distribute or in any manner circulate any newspaper, news-sheet or other
document or any news or information with the intention of aiding or
facilitating gaming.
(2)
Any person who contravenes the provisions of
sub-section (1) shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment which may
extend to six months and with fine.
(3)
Any Police Officer may enter and search any
place for the purpose of seizing, and may seize all things reasonably suspected
to be used or to be intended to be used, for the purpose of committing an
offence under this section.
(4)
Any Police Officer may arrest without warrant
any person who contravenes the provisions of sub-section (1).
Section 91 - Offences by companies
(1)
If the person committing an offence under
section 78, 79 or 90 is a company, the company, as well as every person in
charge of, and responsible to the company for the conduct of its business at
the time of the commission of the offence shall be deemed to be guilty of the
offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly:
Provided
that, nothing contained in this sub-section shall render any such person liable
to any punishment if he proves that the offence was committed without his
knowledge or that he exercised all due diligence to prevent the commission of
such offence.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), where an offence under section 78, 79, or 90 has been
committed by a company and it is proved that the offence has been committed
with the consent or connivance of, or that the commission of the offence is
attributable to any neglect on the part of any director, manager, secretary or
other officer of the company, such director, manager, secretary or other
officer shall also be deemed to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable
to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(3)
For the purposes of sections 78, 79 and 90, a
'firm' shall be deemed to be a person.
Explanation.--For
the purposes of this section,-
(a)
"company" means a body corporate,
and includes a firm or other association of individuals; and
(b)
"director" in relation to a firm,
means a partner in the firm.
Section 92 - Punishment of certain street offences and nuisance
(1)
In any local area to which the Government by
notification in the official Gazette from time to time extends this sub-section
or any clause thereof, whoever, contrary thereto,--
(a)
without lawful excuse drives along, or keeps
standing in, any street a vehicle of any description or drags or pushes in any
street, a vehicle of any description other than a bicycle at any time between
half an hour after sunset and one hour before sunrise without a sufficient
light or lights;
(b)
without reasonable cause, drives, drags, or
pushes any vehicle otherwise than on the near or left side of the road or
passes any vehicle except on the right side of it and at any speed higher than
what may be prescribed by notification by Government;
(c)
leaves in any street insufficiently tended or
secured any animal or vehicle;
(d)
causes obstruction, injury, danger or alarm
in any street, or mischief, by any misbehavior, negligence or ill-usage in the
driving, management or care of any animal or vehicle, or drives any vehicle or
animal laden with timber, poles or other unwieldy articles through a street,
contrary to any regulation made in that behalf and published by a competent
authority;
(e)
exposes for hire or sale any animal or
vehicle, cleans any furniture or vehicle, or cleans, grooms, trains or breaks
in any horse or other animal or makes or repairs any vehicle or any part of a
vehicle in any street (unless when in the case of an accident repairing on the
spot is necessary) or carries on therein any manufacture or operation so as to
be a serious impediment to traffic or a serious annoyance to residents or to
the public;
(f)
(i) causes obstruction in any street by
allowing any animal or vehicle which has to be loaded or unloaded or has to
take up or set down passengers, to remain or stand therein longer than may be
necessary for such purpose; or by leaving any vehicle standing or by fastening
any cattle therein, or using any part of a street as a halting place for
vehicles or cattle, or by leaving any box, bale, package or other thing
whatsoever in or upon a street for an unreasonable length of time;
(ii)
or causes obstruction by exposing anything for sale or setting out anything for
sale or upon any stall, booth, board, cask, basket or in any other way
whatsoever contrary to any regulation made and published by the Commissioner,
or a District Magistrate;
(g)
causes obstruction on any foot-way, or
drives, rides or leaves any animal or drives, drags or pushes any vehicle
thereupon;
(h)
exhibits, contrary to any regulation made and
notified by the Commissioner or a District Magistrate, as the case may be, any
mimetic, musical or other performances of a nature to attract crowds or carries
or places bulky advertisements, pictures, figures, or emblems in any street
whereby an obstruction to passengers or annoyance to the inhabitants may be
occasioned;
(i)
uses or operates at any place any apparatus
for amplifying any musical or other sound, such as a megaphone or loudspeaker,
any time between ten o'clock in the night and six o'clock in the morning,
whereby any annoyance, disturbance, or discomfort is caused to the inhabitants
in the vicinity;
(j)
obeys a call of nature or permits a child to
do so or bathes or washes his person in or near to and within sight of a street
or public place (except in some place set apart for the purpose by order of a
competent authority) so as to cause annoyance to the neighbouring residents or
to passers by;
(k)
negligently lets loose any horse or other
animal, so as to cause danger, injury, alarm or annoyance to the public, or
suffers a ferocious dog to be at large without a muzzle, or sets on or urges a
dog or other animal to attack, worry or put in fear any person or animal;
(l)
bathes or washes in or by the side of a
public well, tank, or reservoir, not set apart for such purpose by order of a
competent authority or in or by the side of any pond, pool aqueduct, part of a
river, stream, nalla or other source or means of water supply in which such
bathing or washing is forbidden by order of the competent authority;
(m)
defiles or causes to be defiled, the water in
any public well, tank, reservoir, pond, pool, aqueduct or a part of a river,
stream, nalla or other source or means of water-supply, so as to render the
same less fit for any purpose for which it is set apart by the order of the
competent authority;
(n)
obstructs or incommodes a person bathing at a
place set apart for that purpose as aforesaid, by wilful intrusion or by using
such place for any purpose for which it is not so set apart;
(o)
wilfully and indecently exposes his person,
uses indecent language or behaves indecently or riotously or in a disorderly
manner in a street or place of public resort, or in any public office;
(p)
is drunk and incapable of taking care of
himself in a street or place of public resort;
(q)
wilfully pushes, presses, hustles or
obstructs any passenger in a street, or disturbs the public peace or order, by
violent movements, menacing gestures, wanton personal annoyance, screaming,
shouting, wilfully frightening horses or cattle, or otherwise;
(r)
uses in any street any threatening, abusive
or insulting words or behaviour or posts up or affixes or exhibits any
indecent, threatening, abusive or insulting paper or drawing with intent to
provoke a breach of the peace or whereby a breach of the peace may be
occasioned;
(s)
begs importunately for alms, or exposes or
exhibits, with the object of exacting charity, any deformity or disease or any
offensive sore or wound in or near to and within sight of any street;
(t)
throws or lays down any dirt, filth, rubbish
or any stones or building materials in any street, or causes any offensive
matter to run from any house, factory, dung-heap or the like into any street
(u)
neglects to fence in or duly to protect any
well, tank, or other dangerous place or structure;
(v)
without the consent of the owner or occupier,
affixes or causes to be affixed any bill, notice or other paper upon any
building, wall or fence, or writes upon or defaces or marks any such building,
wall or fence;
(w)
without the consent of the Government or the
public authority concerned, affixes or causes to be affixed any bill, notice or
other paper upon any lamp-post, tree, letter-box, transformer, street or any other
property belonging to Government or any public authority, or writes upon or
defaces or marks or causes to be written upon or defaced or marked, any such
lamp-post, tree, letter-box, transformer, street or other property;
(x)
spits or throws any dust, ashes, refuse or
rubbish in or near to any street, public place or place of public resort so as
to cause annoyance to any passerby;
(y)
[37] [xxx] or spits in any court, police station, public
office or building occupied by Government or any public body, in contravention
of a notice by a competent authority in charge of such place and affixed to
such court, station, office or building, shall be punished with fine which may extend to one
hundred rupees, provided that imprisonment in default of payment of such fine
shall not exceed eight days notwithstanding anything in section 67 of the
Indian Penal Code.
[38] [(2) (a) The provisions of sub-section (1) or any
clause or clauses thereof may be extended by the State Government by
notification,--
(i) ????to such local
area as may be specified in such notification; or
(ii)?? ?to such local area for such period as may be
specified in such notification.
(b)
The State Government may at any time rescind any notification issued under
sub-clause (i) or sub-clause (ii) of clause (a):
Provided
that the issue of a notification under this clause shall not preclude the issue
of notification from time to time under sub-clause (i) or sub-clause (ii) of
clause (a) in respect of the same local area.]
Section 93 - Punishment for cruelty to animals
Whoever
cruelly beats, goads, overworks, ill-treats, or tortures or causes or procures
to be cruelly beaten, goaded, overworked, ill-treated or tortured any animal
shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment which may extend to one
month or with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees, or with both.
Section 94 - Punishment for willful trespass
(1)
Whoever without satisfactory excuse willfully
enters or remains in or upon any dwelling house or premises or any land or
ground attached thereto, or on any ground, building, monument or structure
belonging to Government or appropriated to public purposes, or on any vehicle
or vessel, shall, on conviction, whether he causes any actual damage or not, be
punished with fine which may extend to twenty rupees.
(2)
Any Police Officer may, on the information of
any person in possession or in charge of any dwelling house, premises, or land
or ground attached thereto, or of any ground, building, monument or structure
belonging to Government, arrest without a warrant any person alleged to have
committed therein or thereon any offence punishable under sub-section (1) of
this section.
Section 95 - False alarm of fire or damage to fire alarm
Whoever
knowingly gives or causes to be given a false alarm of fire to the fire brigade
or to any officer or fireman thereof whether by means of a street fire,
alarm-statement, message or otherwise, or with intent to give such false alarm,
wilfully breaks the glass of, or otherwise damages a street fire-alarm, shall,
on conviction, be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
three months or with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees, or with both.
Section 96 - Being found under suspicious circumstances between sunset and sunrise
Whoever
is found between sunset and sunrise,--
(a)
armed with any dangerous instrument with
intent to commit an offence, or
(b)
having his face covered, or otherwise
disguised with intent to commit an offence, or
(c)
in any dwelling house or other building, or
boat, without being able satisfactorily to account for his presence there, or
(d)
lying or loitering in any street, yard or
other place, being a reputed thief and without being able to give satisfactory
account of himself, or
(e)
having in his possession without lawful
excuse (the burden of proving which excuse shall be on such person) any
implement of house breaking, shall, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months.
Section 97 - Carrying weapon without authority
Whoever
not being a member of the armed forces of the Union and acting as such or a
Police Officer, goes armed with sword, spear, bludgeon, gun or other offensive
weapon or with any explosive or corrosive substance in any street or public
place unless so authorised by lawful authority, shall be liable to be disarmed
by any Police Officer, and the weapon or substance so seized shall be forfeited
to the State Government, unless redeemed within two months by payment of such
fine not exceeding five hundred rupees as the Commissioner or the District
Magistrate in areas under his respective charges imposes.
Section 98 - Possession of property of which no satisfactory account can be given
Whoever
has in his possession or conveys in any manner, or offers for sale or pawn,
anything which there is reason to believe is stolen property, or property
fraudulently obtained, shall, if he fails to account for such possession or act
to the satisfaction of the Magistrate, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months or with fine which may
extend to one hundred rupees or with both.
Section 99 - Omission by pawnbroker, etc., to report to the Police the possession or tender of property suspected to be stolen
Whoever
being a pawnbroker, dealer in second hand property, or worker in metals or
reasonably believed by the Commissioner or the Superintendent in the area under
their respective charges to be such a person, and having received from a Police
Officer a written or printed information that the possession of any property
suspected to have been transferred by any offence mentioned in section 410 of
the Indian Penal Code or by any offence punishable under sections 417, 418, 419
or 420 of the said Code, is found in possession or thereafter comes into the
possession or has an offer either by way of sale, pawn, exchange or for
custody, alteration or otherwise, howsoever made to him of property answering
the description contained in such information shall, unless,--
(i) ????he
forthwith gives information to the Commissioner or the Superintendent, as the
case may be, or at a Police Station, of such possession or offer and takes all
reasonable means to ascertain, and to give information as aforesaid of the name
and address of the person from whom the possession or offer was received, or
(ii)?? the property
being, as an article of common wearing apparel or otherwise, incapable of
identification from the written or printed information given, has in no way
concealed after the receipt of such information, on conviction, be punished with fine which may extend to
fifty rupees in respect of each such article of property so in his possession
or offered to him.
Section 100 - Melting, etc., of such property
Whoever,
having received such information as is referred to in section 99, alters,
melts, defaces or puts away or causes or suffers to be altered, melted, defaced
or put away without the previous permission of the police, any such property,
shall, on proof that the same was stolen property within the meaning of section
410 of the Indian Penal Code, or property in respect of which an offence
punishable under sections 417, 418, 419 or 420 of the said Code has been
committed, be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three
years or with fine or with both.
Section 101 - Taking pledge from a child
Whoever
takes from any child not appearing to be above the age of fourteen years any
article whatsoever as a pawn, pledge or security for any sum of money lent,
advanced or delivered to such child, or without the knowledge and consent of
the owner of the article, buys from such child any article whatsoever, shall,
on conviction, be punished with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees.
Section 102 - Penalty for permitting disorderly conduct at places of public amusements, etc
Whoever,
being the keeper of any place of public amusement or entertainment, knowingly
permits drunkenness or other disorderly behaviour or any gaming whatever, in
such place shall, on conviction be punished with a fine which may extend to one
hundred rupees.
Section 103 - Penalty for contravention of orders under section 31
Save
as provided in section 105, whoever,-
(a)
contravenes any orders made under section 31
or any of the conditions of a licence issued under such order, or
(b)
abets the commission of any offence under
clause (a), shall, on conviction, be punished,--
(i)?? ?if the order under which the said licence was
issued was made under clauses(n) and (o) of sub-section (1) of section 31 with
fine which may extend to two hundred rupees;
(ii)?? ?if the order contravened was made under clause
(y) of sub-section (1) of section 31, with imprisonment which may extend to
three months or with fine which may extend to five hundred ?rupees or with both;
(iii)? ?if the order contravened or the order under
which the said licence was issued was made under any other clause, with fine which
may extend to fifty rupees or in default to simple imprisonment which may
extend to eight days.
Section 104 - Liability of licensee of place of public entertainment for acts of servants
The
holder of a licence granted under this Act in respect of a place of public
entertainment shall be responsible, as well as an actual offender for any
offence under section 103 committed by his servants or other agents acting with
his express or implied permission on his behalf, as if he himself had committed
the same unless he establishes that all due and reasonable precautions were
taken by him to prevent the commission of such an offence.
Section 105 - Penalty for not obtaining a licence or for not renewing the licence within the specified period in respect of public entertainment
(1)
Whoever fails to obtain a licence under this
Act in respect of a place of public entertainment or to renew a licence granted
under this Act in respect of such a place within the prescribed period, shall,
on conviction, be punished with fine which may extend to fifty rupees.
(2)
Any court trying such an offence shall, in
addition, direct that the person keeping a place of public entertainment in
respect of which an offence has been committed, shall close such place until he
obtains the licence, or a fresh licence, as the case may be, in respect thereof
and thereupon such person shall forthwith comply with such direction.
(3)
If a person fails to comply with any
direction under sub-section (2), he shall on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month or with fine which may
extend to two hundred rupees, or with both.
(4)
Without prejudice to any action taken under
sub-section (3), on failure of such a person to comply with the directions of
the court, any Police Officer authorised by the Commissioner or the District
Magistrate, as the case may be, by an order in writing, may take or cause to be
taken such steps and use or cause to be used such force as may, in the opinion
of such officer, be reasonably necessary for securing compliance with the
court's direction.
Section 106 - Penalty for disobedience to order under section 30
Whoever
contravenes, disobeys, opposes, or fails to conform to an order under section
30 requiring him to vacate any premises, shall, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment which may extend to three months or with fine which may extend to
five hundred rupees or with both.
Section 107 - Penalty for contravening rules, etc., under section 33 or 34
Whoever,--
(a)
contravenes any rule made under section 33,
or
(b)
contravenes, disobeys, opposes or fails to
conform to any order given by a Police Officer under section 34, shall, on
conviction, be punished with fine which may extend to[39]
[five hundred rupees]
Section 108 - Penalty for contravention of rules or directions under section 35, 38 or 39
Whoever
disobeys an order lawfully made under section 35, 38 or 39 or abets the
disobedience thereof, shall, on conviction, be punished,--
(i) ???if the order
disobeyed or of which the disobedience was abetted was made under sub-section
(1) of section 35, or under section 38 or section 39, with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to one year but shall not, except for reasons to be
recorded in writing, be less than four months and shall also be liable to fine;
(ii)?? ?if the said order was made under sub-section
(2) of section 35, with imprisonment which may extend to one month or with fine
which may extend to one hundred rupees; and
(iii)? ?if the said order was made under sub-section
(3) of section 35, with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees.
Section 109 - Penalty for contravening orders under section 36 or 37
Whoever
contravenes or disobeys any order or direction made under section 36 or section
37 or any conditions of a licence granted thereunder or abets the contravention
or disobedience thereof shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment for
a term which may extend to three months or with fine which may extend to five
hundred rupees or with both.
Section 110 - Penalty for contravening direction under section 40 or order under section 41
(1)
Whoever opposes or fails to conform to any
direction given by the Police under section 40, shall on conviction, be
punished with fine which may extend to two hundred rupees.
(2)
Whoever fails to comply with an order made
under section 41, shall, on conviction, be punished with fine which may extend
to twenty-five rupees for every day that order continues to be disobeyed by
him.
Section 111 - Penalty for contravention of a regulation made under section 42
Whoever
contravenes or abets the contravention of any regulation made under section 42,
shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment which may extend to three
months or with fine which may extend to two hundred rupees or with both.
Section 112 - Penalty for contravening directions under section 70
Whoever
opposes or fails to conform to any direction given by a police officer under
section 70 or abets the opposition or failure to do so, shall, on conviction,
be punished with fine which may extend to fifty rupees.
Section 113 - Penalty for contravention of directions under sections 54, 55, 56 or 63
Whoever
opposes or disobeys or fails to conform to any direction issued under sections
54, 55, 56 or 63 or abets opposition to or disobedience of any such direction
shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment which may extend to one
year, but shall not, except for reasons to be recorded in writing, be less than
four months, and shall also be liable to fine.
Section 114 - Penalty for entering area from which person has been directed to remove himself
Notwithstanding
anything contained in section 61, any person who, in contravention of a
direction issued to him under sections 54, 55, 56 or 63 enters the area from
which he was directed to remove himself, shall on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, but shall not, except
for reasons to be recorded in writing be less than six months, and shall also
be liable to fine.
Section 115 - Penalty for failure to surrender in accordance with sub-section (3) of section 62
Whoever
fails without sufficient cause to surrender in accordance with sub-section (3)
of section 62, shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment which may
extend to two years and shall also be liable to fine.
Section 116 - Penalty for contravention of orders under section 64
(1)
Whoever contravenes any order made under
sub-section (1) of section 64, shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment
for a term which may extend to one year or with fine or with both.
(2)
Whoever contravenes any order made under
sub-section (2) of section 64, shall, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years or with fine or with
both.
Section 117 - Neglect or refusal to serve as Special Police Officer
Any
person who having been appointed a Special Police Officer under section 19,
without sufficient cause, neglects or refuses to serve as such or to obey any
lawful order or direction that may be given to him for the performance of his
duties, shall, on conviction, be punished with fine which may extend to fifty
rupees.
Section 118 - Penalty for making false statement, etc., and for misconduct of Police Officer
(1)
(i) Any person who makes a false statement or
uses a false document for the purposes of obtaining employment or release from
employment as a Police Officer, or
(ii)
any Police Officer who,--
(a)
contravenes the provisions of section 28; or
(b)
is guilty of cowardice; or
(c)
resigns his office or withdraws himself from
the duties thereof in contravention of section 27; or
(d)
is guilty of any wilful breach, or neglect of
any provision of law or of any rule or order which, as such Police Officer, it
is his duty to observe or obey, or
(e)
is guilty of any violation of duty for which
no punishment is expressly provided by any other law in force, shall, on conviction be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months or with fine which may
extend to one hundred rupees, or with both.
(2)
A Police Officer who, being absent on leave,
fails, without reasonable cause, to report himself for duty on the expiration
of such leave, shall, for the purposes of sub-clause (c) of clause (ii) of
sub-section (1) be deemed to withdraw himself from the duties of his office
within the meaning of section 27.
Section 119 - Penalty for failure to deliver up certificate of appointment or of office or other article
Any
Police Officer, who wilfully neglects or refuses to deliver up his certificate
of appointment or of office or any other article, in accordance with the
provisions of sub-section (1) of section 29, shall, on conviction, be punished
with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month, or with fine which
may extend to two hundred rupees or with both.
Section 120 - Vexatious entry, search, arrest, etc., by a Police Officer
Any
Police Officer who,--
(a)
without lawful authority or reasonable cause
enters or searches, or causes to be entered or searched, any building, room,
enclosure, vehicle, vessel, tent or place; or
(b)
vexatiously and unnecessarily seizes the
property of any person; or
(c)
vexatiously and unnecessarily detains,
searches or arrests any person; or
(d)
offers any unnecessary personal violence to
any person in his custody; or
(e)
holds out any threat or promise not warranted
by law, shall for every such offence, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months or with fine which may
extend to five hundred rupees, or with both.
Section 121 - Penalty for vexatious delay in forwarding a person arrested
Any Police Officer who
veraciously and unnecessarily delays forwarding any person arrested to a[40]
[Judicial Magistrate] or to any other authority to whom he is legally bound to
forward such person, shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to six months or with fine which may extend to five
hundred rupees or with both.
Section 122 - Penalty for opposing or not complying with direction given under section 72
Whoever
opposes or fails forthwith to comply with any reasonable direction given by a
Magistrate or a Police Officer under section 72 or abets opposition thereto or
failure to comply therewith, shall, on conviction, be punished with imprisonment
for a term which may extend to one year, but shall not, except for reasons to
be recorded in writing, be less than four months and shall also be liable to
fine.
Section 123 - Penalty for causing disaffection, etc
(1)
Whoever intentionally causes or attempts to
cause, or does any act which he knows is likely to cause, disaffection towards
the Government established by law in India, among the members of the police
force, or induces or attempts to induce, or does any act which he knows is
likely to induce, any member of the police force to withhold his services or to
commit a breach of discipline shall be punished with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to six months, or with fine which may extend to two hundred rupees,
or with both.
Explanation.--Expressions
of disapprobation of the measures of the Government with a view to obtain their
alteration by lawful means, or of the disapprobation of the administrative or
other action of the Government, do not constitute an offence under this section
unless they cause or are made for the purpose of causing or likely to cause
disaffection.
(2)
Nothing shall be deemed to be an offence
under this section which is done in good faith,--
(a)
for the purpose of promoting the welfare or
interests of any member of the police force by inducing him to withhold his
services in any manner authorised by law; or
(b)
by or on behalf of any association formed for
the purpose of furthering the interests of members of the police force as such,
where the association has been authorised or recognised by the Government and
the act done is done under any rules or articles of the association which have
been approved by the Government.
(3)
No court shall take cognizance of any offence
under this section except with the previous sanction, or on the complaint, of
the District Magistrate.
(4)
No court inferior to that of a magistrate of
the first class shall try any offence under this section.
(5)
Notwithstanding anything contained in Chapter
XXII of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, no offence under this section
shall be triable summarily.
Section 124 - Jurisdiction when offender is a Police Officer above the rank of a constable
Offences
against this Act, when the accused person or any one of the accused persons is
a Police Officer above the rank of a constable, shall not be cognizable except
by a Magistrate not lower than a Magistrate of the second class.
Section 125 - Penalty for unauthorised use of police uniform
If any
person not being a member of the police force wears, without the permission of
the officer authorised by the Government in this behalf or by a general or
special order for any area in the State, the uniform of the police force or any
dress having the appearance or bearing any of the distinctive marks of that
uniform, he shall, on conviction be punished with fine which may extend to two
hundred rupees.
Section 126 - Prosecution for certain offences against the Act to be in the discretion of the police
It
will not except in obedience to a rule or order made by the Government or by
the competent authority, be incumbent on the Police to prosecute for an offence
punishable under sections 92, 93, 103, 106, 110, 111 or 117 when such offence
has not occasioned serious mischief and has been promptly desisted from on
warning given.
Section 127 - Summary disposal of certain cases
(1)
A court taking cognizance of an offence
punishable[41] [under sub-section (1) of
section 92 or] under clause (iii) of section 103, for contravention of an order
made under clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 31, may state upon the
summons to be served on the accused person that he may, by a specified date
prior to the hearing of the charge, plead guilty to the charge by registered
letter and remit to the Court such sum, not exceeding twenty-five rupees, as
the court may specify.
(2)
Where an accused person pleads guilty and
remits the sum specified, no further proceedings in respect of the offence
shall be taken against him.
Section 128 - Prosecution for offences under other enactments not affected
Nothing
in this Act shall be construed to prevent any person from being prosecuted and
punished under any other enactment for any offence made punishable by this Act
or from being prosecuted and punished under this Act for an offence punishable
under any other enactment:
Provided
that all such cases shall be subject to the provisions of section 403 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898.
Section 129 - Constitution of Village Police
The
village Police shall consist of a police patel and such village police officers
of such grades as may be prescribed.
Section 130 - Administration, control and direction of village police in whom vested
The
administration of the village police in each district shall, under the general
control and direction of the Government be exercised by the District
Magistrate.
Section 131 - Power to delegate
The
District Magistrate may with the sanction of the Government delegate any of his
powers under this Chapter to,--
(i) ???the
Superintendent; and
(ii)? ?any officer of the Revenue Department in the
district exercising the powers of a Magistrate.
Such
officer is hereinafter referred to in this Chapter as "the authorised
officer".
Section 132 - Village Police in village to be under charge of Police Patel
(1)
Subject to such rules which may be made by
the Government in this behalf, the village police in each village shall be
appointed by the District Magistrate and shall be under the charge of such
person as the District Magistrate shall appoint in writing as the Police Patel.
(2)
In any village or place, where the duties
cannot be efficiently performed by one police patel, the District Magistrate
may appoint one or more additional Police Patels and place them in charge of
different divisions into which the village or place may be divided for police
purposes.
(3)
The District Magistrate may also appoint a
Police Patel for more than one village.
Section 133 - Duties of Police Patel
The
Police Patel shall, subject to the orders of the District Magistrate,--
(i) ??act under the
orders of the authorised officer and within whose jurisdiction ?the village is situated;
(ii) ??furnish such
authorised officer with any returns or information called for and keep him
informed as to the state of crime and all matters connected with the Village
Police;
(iii)? ?afford all police officers every assistance in
his power when called upon by them for assistance in the performance of their
duties;
(iv)? ?obey and execute all orders issued to him by a
Magistrate or a Police Officer;
(v) ??collect and
communicate to the Police Officer information affecting the public peace;
(vi) ??detect and
bring offenders in the village to justice;
(vii) ?arrest
persons whom he has reason to believe to have committed ?cognizable offences; and
(viii) prevent within the limits of his village, as far
as possible, the commission of offences and public nuisances.
Section 134 - Authority over the village servants
The
Police Patel shall have authority to require all village servants, in whatever
capacity ordinarily employed, to aid him in performing the duties entrusted to
him; and it shall be the duty of the village revenue accountant, whether
hereditary or stipendiary, to help the Police Patel in the preparation of
returns and proceedings.
Section 135 - Precautions against robbery, etc
The
Police Patel shall arrange for the distribution of the village police in the
village so as to afford utmost possible security against robbery, breach of the
peace and acts injurious to the public and to the village community and shall
report to the Magistrate or officer in charge of the police station within
whose local jurisdiction the village is situated, all instances of misconduct
or neglect committed by any member of the village police.
Section 136 - Information received regarding commission of cognizable offences
The
Police Patel shall convey to the police officer in charge of a police station
within whose local jurisdiction the village is situated, immediate report of
the information which he may receive respecting the commission within the
limits of his village of murders, dacoities, robberies, thefts, mischiefs by
fire and other cognizable offence and shall take necessary measures to preserve
the evidence and protect properties connected with the offence, pending the
arrival of such police officer.
Section 137 - Penalties for neglect of duty and punishment
(1)
The District Magistrate or the authorised
officer may for misconduct, neglect of duty, or for any other sufficient cause,
impose on any police patel or member of the village police liable to be called
upon for the performance of police duties, any of the following punishments,
namely:--
(i)?? ?fine not exceeding one-fourth of the annual
emoluments of his office;
(ii) ???suspension
from office for a period not exceeding six months.
(2)
Subject to the provisions of Article 311 of
the Constitution, the District Magistrate may, for misconduct, neglect of duty
or other sufficient cause, impose on any Police Patel or member of the village
police liable to be called for the performance of police duties the punishment
of removal or dismissal from office.
(3)
Any person aggrieved by an order under
sub-section (1) or (2), may within sixty days from the date of receipt of such
order, appeal to the prescribed officer and the decision of the prescribed
officer on such appeal shall be final.
Section 138 - Liability to criminal prosecution not affected
Nothing
in the last preceding section shall affect the liability of any Police Patel or
other member of the village police to criminal prosecution for any offence with
which he may be charged.
Section 139 - Information to Officer in charge of Police Station, when a criminal in the village has escaped or is not known
If an
offence has been committed within the limits of the village and the offender
has escaped or is not known, the Police Patel shall forward immediate
information to the officer in charge of the police station within whose local
jurisdiction the village is situated.
Section 140 - Information regarding unnatural or sudden death or corpse found in the village
If any
unnatural or sudden death occurs or any corpse be found within the limits of
the village, the Police Patel shall send immediate written information to the
officer in charge of the police station within whose local jurisdiction the
village is situated and shall assist such Police Officer in any inquest,
inquiry or investigation which may be held in respect of such death.
Section 141 - Police Patel to arrest person whom he believes to have committed a cognizable offence, and forward him to the police station, etc
(1)
It shall be lawful for the Police Patel to
arrest any person within the limits of his village, who, he may have reason to
believe has committed an offence for which a Police Officer may arrest without
warrant and to forward such person within twenty-four hours of such arrest,
together with all articles likely to be useful as evidence to the officer in
charge of the police station within whose local jurisdiction the village is
situated.
(2)
The Police Patel shall have authority in
carrying out any pursuit of alleged criminals to enter and act within the
limits of other villages, provided that in such cases immediate information
shall be sent to the Police Patel of the village so entered who shall afford
all assistance in his power to continue the pursuit.
Section 142 - Unclaimed Property
It
shall be lawful for the Police Patel to take charge of all unclaimed property
found within the village limits or made over to him under the provisions of
this Act. He shall forthwith make a report to the District Magistrate or the
authorised officer and act thereafter as he may be directed by the said
Magistrate, or officer.
Section 143 - Provision in case of absence, sudden illness, etc., of Police Patel
When
the Police Patel is unable to attend to his duty on account of absence from the
village, sudden illness or other cause, he shall place a competent member of
the Village Police in charge of his office and make an immediate report to the
District Magistrate or authorised officer to whom he is subordinate. The person
so placed in charge shall, until receipt of orders to the contrary, be subject
to the rights and liabilities of a Police Patel under this Act.
Section 144 - Definitions
In
this Chapter, unless the context otherwise requires,--
(a)
"active duty" means,--
(i)?? ?the duty to investigate offences involving a
breach of peace or danger to life or property and to search for and apprehend
persons concerned in such offences or who are so desperate and dangerous as to
render their being at large hazardous to the community;
(ii) ??the duty to
take all adequate measures for the extinguishing of fires or to prevent damage
to person or property on the occasion of such occurrences as fires, floods,
earthquakes, enemy action or riots and to restore peace and preserve order on
such occasions;
(iii) ??such other
duty as may be specified to be active duty by the Government or the
Inspector-General in a direction issued under section 151;
(b)
'Commandant' and 'Assistant Commandant' mean
respectively persons appointed to be those officers by Government under section
146;
(c)
'follower' means any person appointed to do
the work of a cook, mess servant, washerman, cobbler, barber, tailor, sweeper
or an orderly in connection with the State Reserve Police Force;
(d)
'members of the subordinate ranks' means
members of the State Reserve Police of and below the rank of Subedar Major;
(e)
'Reserve Police Officer' means any member of
the State Reserve Police Force established under this Chapter;
(f)
'superior officer' means in relation to any
Reserve Police Officer, a Reserve Police Officer of a higher rank than, or of a
higher grade in the same class as, or of the same rank as, but senior to,
himself.
Section 145 - Constitution of the State Reserve Police Force
(1)
[42] [The Government may establish] and maintain an armed
reserve police force known as the State Reserve Police Force, in such manner as
may be prescribed.
(2)
The Government or any officer empowered by it
in this behalf may,--
(a)
divide the State Reserve Police Force into
battalions;
(b)
sub-divide each battalion into companies and
each company into platoons;
(c)
post any battalion, company or platoon at
such places as the Government or the officer empowered by it in this behalf may
deem fit.
Section 146 - Superintendence, control and administration of Force
(1)
The Government may appoint for each battalion
a Commandant who shall be a person of the rank of a Superintendent and
Assistant Commandments of the rank of Deputy Superintendents.
(2)
The Commandant, the Assistant Commandant, and
every such other officer so appointed shall have and may exercise such powers
and authority as may be provided by or under this Act.
(3)
Subject to the general or special orders of
the Government the Inspector-General of Police shall appoint the Subedar Majors
and Subedars.
Section 147 - Enrolment
(1)
Before any person appointed to be a Reserve
Police Officer joins his appointment a declaration in the form in Schedule II
shall be read out and, if he so desires, explained to him in the presence of a
Commandant or an Assistant Commandant or a Police Officer not lower in rank
than a Superintendent or a Deputy Commissioner of Police and shall be signed by
him in token of his having undertaken to abide by the conditions prescribed
therein. The declaration shall then be attested by such Commandant, Assistant
Commandant or Police Officer, as the case may be.
(2)
No Reserve Police Officer shall resign his
appointment except in accordance with the terms of the declaration signed by
him under sub-section (1).
(3)
If any Reserve Police Officer resigns in
contravention of this section, he shall be liable, without prejudice to any
other penalty imposed by this Act or any other law for the time being in force,
on the order of the Commandant to forfeit all arrears of pay due to him.
Section 148 - Transfers
(1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act, it shall be competent for the Government to transfer members of the Police
Force appointed under Chapter II, to the State Reserve Police Force established
under this Chapter and vice versa:
Provided
that the Government may delegate its power under sub-section (1) in so far as
it relates to the members of the subordinate ranks of the respective Police
Force to the Inspector-General.
(2)
On the transfer of a member of the Police
Force appointed under Chapter II to the State Reserve Police Force established
under this Chapter, or vice versa, he shall be deemed to be a member of the
Police Force to which he is transferred and in the performance of his
functions, he shall, subject to such orders as the Government may make, be
deemed to be vested with the powers and privileges and be subject to the
liabilities, of a member of such grade in the Police Force to which he has been
transferred, as may be specified in the orders.
Section 149 - Certificate of appointment
(1)
A Subedar Major and Subedar shall, on
appointment, receive from the Inspector-General a certificate of appointment
containing particulars of his name, age and his previous service, if any.
(2)
Every Reserve Police Officer below the rank
of a Subedar shall on appointment receive a certificate in the form of Schedule
III, which shall be issued under the seal of the Commandant.
(3)
Every person who for any reason ceases to be
a Reserve Police Officer, shall forthwith deliver up to an officer empowered by
the Commandant to receive the same, his certificate of appointment and the
arms, accoutrements, clothing and other necessaries which have been furnished
to him for the execution of his office.
Section 150 - General powers of Commandant
The Commandant
shall, subject to the orders of the Inspector-General of Police, direct and
regulate all matters of arms, drill, exercise, mutual relations, distribution
of duties, and all the matters of executive detail in the fulfilment of their
duties by the members of the battalion in his charge.
Section 151 - General duties of members of the State Reserve Police Force
(1)
Every Reserve Police Officer shall, for the purposes of
this Act, be deemed to be always on duty in the[43] [State
of Karnataka] and any Reserve Police Officer and any member or body of Reserve
Police Officers may, if the Government or the Inspector-General of Police so
directs, be employed on active duty for so long as and wherever the service of
the same may be required.
(2)
Every direction issued under sub-section (1) shall
specify that the duty on which any Reserve Police Officer or any member or body
of such officers is directed to be employed shall be deemed as active duty for
the purpose of this Act.
Explanation.--The
direction of the Government or of the Inspector-General of Police whether a
Reserve Police Officer is required or is on active duty shall be final.
(3)
A Reserve Police Officer employed on active duty under
sub-section (1), or when a member or body of Reserve Police Officers are so
employed, the officer in charge of such member or body shall be responsible for
the efficient performance of that duty and all police officers who but for the
employment of one or more reserve police officers or body of reserve police
officers would be responsible for the performance of that duty will, to the
best of their ability, assist and co-operate with the said reserve police
officer or officers in charge of a member or body of reserve police officers.
Section 152 - Reserve Police Officer to be deemed to be in charge of Police Station
(1)
When employed on active duty at any place under
sub-section (1) of section 151, the senior reserve police officer of the
highest rank not being lower than that of a Naik present shall be deemed to be
an officer in charge of the police station for the purposes of Chapter IX of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sections 100 and
103 of the Indian Penal Code, a Reserve Police Officer employed as aforesaid
may, when there is reasonable apprehension of assault on himself or any Reserve
Police Officer or of damage or harm to any property or person which or whom it
is his duty to protect, use such force to the wrong doer or assailant as may be
reasonably necessary even though the use of such force may involve risk of
death of the wrong doer or the assailant or any other person assisting such
wrong doer or assailant.
Section 153 - Offence in respect of resignation contrary to provisions
If any reserve
police officer resigns his appointment in contravention of section 147, he
shall be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year or
with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees or with both.
Section 154 - Offence in respect of refusal to deliver certificate of appointment, etc
Any reserve police
officer who wilfully neglects or refuses to deliver up his certificate of
appointment or any other article in accordance with sub-section (3) of section
149, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three
months or with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees or with both.
Section 155 - More heinous offences
Every Reserve
Police Officer who,--
(a)
begins, excites, causes, or conspires to cause or joins in
any mutiny, or being present at any mutiny, does not use his utmost endeavours
to suppress it by force of arms, if necessary, or knowing, or having reason to
believe in, the existence of any mutiny, or of any intention or conspiracy to
mutiny or of any conspiracy against the State does not, without delay, give
information thereof to his superior officer present at or near the place, or
(b)
uses, or attempts to use criminal force to, or commits an
assault on his superior officer, knowing or having reason to believe him to be
such, whether on or off duty; or
(c)
shamefully abandons or delivers up any post, guard,
building, fortification, or property which is committed to his charge, or which
it is his duty to defend; or
(d)
in the presence of any person in arms against whom it is
his duty to act, shamefully casts away his arms or his ammunition or
intentionally uses words of any other means to induce any reserve police
officer or any police officer to abstain from acting against any such person in
arms, or to discourage such officer from acting against any such person in arms
or who is otherwise guilty of cowardice or misbehavior in the presence of any
such person in arms; or
(e)
directly or indirectly holds correspondence with, or
communicates intelligence to, or assists, or relieves, any person in arms
against the State, or any person conspiring against Government or public
security or any person to be arrested, or omits to discover immediately to his
superior officer present, any such correspondence or communication coming to
his knowledge; or
(f)
directly or indirectly sells, gives away, or otherwise
disposes, or agrees to, or assists in, the sale, gift or disposal of any arms,
ammunition or equipment to any such person as aforesaid, or knowingly harbors
or protects any such person; or
(g)
while on active duty,--
(i)?? ?disobeys the lawful command of his superior
officer; or
(ii)? ?deserts his force or his post; or
(iii) ??being a sentry, or otherwise
detailed to remain alert, sleeps at his post or quits it without being
regularly relieved or without leave; or
(iv) ??without authority leaves his
commanding officer for any purpose ?whatsoever;
or
(v) ???uses criminal force to, or
commits an assault on, any person whom he has not any reason to believe to be
in arms against the State and against whom it is his duty to act, or without
authority breaks into any house or other place for plunder or any illegal
purpose, or wilfully and unnecessarily plunders, destroys or damages any
property of any kind; or
(vi)? ?intentionally causes or spreads a false alarm
in action or in camp, garrison or quarters, shall, on conviction, be punished with rigorous imprisonment for a term
which may extend to fourteen years and shall also be liable to fine.
Explanation.--A
Reserve Police Officer shall be deemed to desert the force if he leaves his
place of duty or posting without the permission of his superior officer and he
shall be deemed to desert his post if he leaves any sentry, beat, point,
building, vehicle, or other place at which or in which he is specifically
ordered by his superior officer to perform the duty assigned to him.
Section 156 - Less heinous offences
Every Reserve
Police Officer who,-
(a)
assaults or uses or attempts to use criminal force to any
sentry; or
(b)
being in command of a guard, piquet or patrol, refuses to
receive any prisoner lawfully made over to his charge, or whether in such
command or not, releases any prisoner or person without proper authority or
negligently suffers any prisoner or person to escape; or
(c)
being in command of a guard, piquet or patrol, permits
any person belonging to such guard, piquet or patrol to engage himself in
gambling or other behaviour prejudicial to good order and discipline; or
(d)
being under arrest or in confinement, leaves his arrest
or confinement before he is set at liberty by lawful authority; or
(e)
is grossly insubordinate to his superior officer in the
execution of his office; or
(f)
refuses to superintend or assist in making or carrying
out of any construction of any description ordered to be made either in
quarters or in the field; or
(g)
assaults or otherwise ill-uses any reserve police officer
with reference to whom he is a superior officer; or
(h)
designedly or through neglect damages or loses or
fraudulently or without due authority disposes of his arms, clothes, tools,
equipment, ammunition, accoutrements or other necessaries furnished to him for
the execution of his office or any such articles entrusted to him or to any
other person; or
(i)
malingers, feigns, or produces disease or infirmity in
himself or intentionally delays his cure or aggravates his disease or
infirmity; or
(j)
with intent to render himself or any other person unfit
for duty, voluntarily causes hurt to himself or any other person; or
(k)
commits extortion or without lawful authority extorts
from any person carriage, porterage or provisions; or
(l)
willfully or negligently ill-treats, injures or causes
the death of any animal or damages, loses, or makes away with any animal or
vehicle used in the public service, shall, on conviction, be punished with rigorous imprisonment for a term
which may extend to six months or with fine which may extend to five hundred
rupees or with both.
Section 157 - Reserve Police Officer in command to give information of offences committed under the Act by Reserve Police Officer under his charge
A Reserve Police
Officer who, being in command of any guard, piquet, party, patrol or detachment
and knowing of the commission or of a design to commit any offence punishable
under the preceding three sections, by or on the part of any reserve police
officer under his command, intentionally omits or without reasonable excuse,
the burden of proving which shall lie on him, fails to give information of such
commission or design to his superior officer shall, on conviction, be punished
with rigorous imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months or with
fine which may extend to five hundred rupees or with both.
Section 158 - Place of imprisonment and liability to dismissal on imprisonment
(1)
Every person sentenced under this Act to imprisonment may
be dismissed from the State Reserve Police Force, and his pay, allowance and
any other moneys due to him, as well as any medals and decorations received by
him shall further be liable to forfeiture.
(2)
Every such person shall, if he is so dismissed, be
imprisoned in the prescribed prison, but if he is also not dismissed from the
State Reserve Police Force, he may, if the Court so directs, be confined in the
quarter-guard or such other place as the Court may consider suitable.
Section 159 - Minor punishments
(1)
A Commandant, or subject to the control of the
Commandant, an Assistant Commandant or subject to the same control, an officer
not below the rank of Jamadar in independent command of a detachment or an outpost
or in temporary command of Group Headquarters during the absence of the
Commandant or Assistant Commandant may award to any reserve police officer not
higher in rank than a Battalion Havildar Major or to any follower subject to
his authority, any of the following punishments for the commission of any
offence against discipline which is not otherwise provided for in this Act, or
which in the opinion of the Commandant, Assistant Commandant or officer, as the
case may be, is not of sufficiently serious nature to call for the prosecution
before a criminal court, that is to say,--
(a)
punishment drill, extra guard, fatigue or any other duty
for a term which may extend when the order is passed by the Commandant to
fourteen days, and, when the order is passed by any other officer, to seven
days;
(b)
forfeiture of pay and allowance or such portion of pay
and allowance as he considers necessary for a period which may extend, when the
order is passed by the Commandant, to one month, and when the order is passed
by any other officer, to ten days;
(c)
fine to an amount not exceeding one month's pay:
Provided that,--
(i) ???no power under this
sub-section shall be exercised by a ?Commandant
or Assistant Commandant or other officer not below the rank of a Jamadar unless
the person to be awarded any of these punishments is under the command of such
officer at the time when the breach of discipline or misconduct occurred and
also when the power is exercised, and
(ii) ???when more than one officer
are competent under proviso (i) to exercise the power, the most senior of such
officers shall exercise the power.
(2)
Any of the punishments specified in sub-section (1) may
be awarded separately or with any one or more of the others:
Provided that fine
shall not be awarded in combination with forfeiture of pay or allowances.
(3)
No appeal shall lie from any order or punishment passed
under this section except from an order of punishment of fine as provided in
sub-section (4).
(4)
An appeal against any order awarding punishment of fine
shall lie to the Government or to such officer as the Government may by general
or special order specify in this behalf.
(5)
Whenever a Commandant or an Assistant Commandant or other
officer passes an order under sub-section (1), he shall enter in a book to be
kept for the purpose a brief description of the default, together with the
names of witnesses, explanation of the defaulter and the order of punishment
and shall sign and date each such order.
Section 160 - Protection for acts of members of Force
(1)
In any suit or proceeding against any member of the State
Reserve Police Force for any act done by him in pursuance of a warrant or order
of a competent authority, it shall be lawful for him to plead that such act was
done by him under the authority of such warrant or order.
(2)
Any such plea may be proved by the production of the
warrant or order directing the act, and if it is so proved, the member of the
said Force shall thereupon be discharged from liability in respect of the act
so done by him, notwithstanding any defect in the jurisdiction of the authority
which issued such warrant or order.
Section 161 - Reserve police officer to be a police officer
Except as
specifically provided in this Chapter, every Reserve Police Officer shall for
all purposes be deemed to be a police officer as defined in section 2, and the
provisions of this Act shall except in so far as they are inconsistent with the
provisions of this Chapter apply to every such Reserve Police Officer.
Section 162 - Disposal of fees, rewards, etc
All fees paid for
licences or written permissions issued under this Act, and all sums paid for
the service of processes by Police Officers, and all rewards, forfeiture and
penalties or shares thereof which are by law payable to Police Officers as
informers, shall save in so far as any such fees or sums belong under the
provisions of any enactment in force to any local authority, be credited to the
Government:
Provided that with
the sanction of the Government, or under any rule made by the Government in that
behalf the whole or any portion of such reward, forfeiture or penalty may, for
special services, be paid to a Police Officer, or be divided amongst two or
more Police Officers.
Section 163 - Power of Government to make rules
(1)
The Government may, after previous publication, by
notification in the official Gazette make rules for carrying out the purposes
of this Act.
(2)
In particular and without prejudice to generality of the
foregoing power, such rules may provide for all or any of the following matters,
namely:--
(i)?? ?organisation and regulation of the Village
Police such as (a) the relation of members of the Village Police Force to one
another and to the regular Police, (b) the power or duties of Village Police
Officers of different grades, (c) the manner of appointment of Police Patel and
other Village Police Officers and the procedure to be followed in making such
appointment;
(ii) ??for the registration,
surveillance, and control of gangs or classes or persons believed to be
addicted to the systematic commission of crime and for the recording of finger
impressions by the Police of any person who,--
(a)
is in custody for a non-bailable offence, or
(b)
has no settled abode and is suspected to
(c)
is a member of a gang or class of persons generally
addicted to crime;
(iii) ?(a) regulation of the number,
classes and grades of the State Reserve Police force and its administration and
inspection;
(b) recruitment,
organisation, classification, and discipline of the subordinate ranks of the
State Reserve Police; and
(c) description
and quantity of arms, accoutrements, clothing and other necessaries to be
furnished to the members of the Police.
(d) disposal of
property taken charge under section 75.
(3)
For every breach of any rule under clause (ii) of
sub-section (2), the offender shall, on conviction, be punished with
imprisonment not exceeding eight days or with fine not exceeding ten rupees.
(4)
All rules made by the Government under this Act, shall be
laid as soon as may be after they are made, before each House of the State Legislature
while it is in session, for a total period of thirty days, which may be
comprised in one session or in two successive sessions and if, before the
expiry of the session in which it is so laid or the session immediately
following, both Houses agree in making any modification in the rule or both
Houses agree that the rule should not be made, the rule shall thereafter have
effect only in such modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be; so
however that any such modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to
the validity of anything done under that rule.
(5)
All rules made under this Act shall, subject to any
modification made under sub-section (4), have effect as if enacted in this Act.
Section 164 - Method of proving orders and notifications
Any order or
notification published or issued by the Government or by a Magistrate or
Officer under any provision of this Act, and the due publication or issue
thereof, may be proved by production of a copy thereof, in the official Gazette
or of a copy thereof signed by such Magistrate or Officer, and by him certified
to be a true copy of the original published or issued according to the
provisions of the section of this Act applicable thereto.
Section 165 - Rules and order not invalidated by defect in form or irregularity in procedure
No rule, order,
direction, adjudication, inquiry or notification made or published, and no act
done under any provision of this Act or of any rule made under this Act, or in
substantial conformity to the same, shall be deemed illegal, void, invalid or
insufficient by reason of any defect of form or any irregularity of procedure.
Section 166 - Presumptions in prosecutions for contravention of directions issued under sections 54, 55, 56, or 63
Notwithstanding
anything contained in any law for the time being in force in a prosecution for
an offence for the contravention of a direction issued under sections 54, 55,
56, or 63 on the production of an authentic copy of the order, it shall, until
the contrary is proved and the burden of proving which shall lie on the
accused, be presumed,--
(a)
that the order was made by the authority competent under
this Act to make it;
(b)
that the authority making the order was satisfied that
the grounds on or the purpose for which it was made existed and that it was
necessary to make the same; and
(c)
that the order was otherwise valid and in conformity with
the provisions of this Act.
Section 167 - Officers holding charge of, or succeeding to, vacancies competent to exercise powers
Whenever in
consequence of the office of a Commissioner, or Police Officer becoming vacant,
any officer holds charge or additional charge of the post of such Commissioner,
or Police Officer or succeeds, either temporarily or permanently, to his
office, such officer shall be competent to exercise all the powers and perform
all the duties respectively conferred and imposed by this Act on such
Commissioner, or Police Officer, as the case may be.
Section 168 - Forfeiture of bond entered into by person permitted to enter or return to the area from which he was directed to remove himself
If any person
permitted under sub-section (1) of section 62 fails to observe any condition
imposed under the said sub-section or in the bond entered into by him under
sub-section (2) of the said section, his bond shall be forfeited and any person
bound thereby shall pay the penalty thereof or show cause to the satisfaction
of the court why such penalty should not be paid.
Section 169 - Protection of Magistrate, Police Officer or public servant
(1)
No Magistrate or Police Officer shall be liable to any
penalty or to payment of damage on account of any act done in good faith in
pursuance or intended pursuance of any duty imposed on any authority conferred
on him by any provision of this Act or of any other law for the time being in
force or any rule, order or direction made or given therein.
(2)
No public servant or person duly authorised or appointed
shall be liable to any penalty or to payment of any damages for giving effect
in good faith to any such order or direction issued with apparent authority by
the Government or by a person empowered in that behalf under this Act or any
rule or order or direction made or given thereunder.
Section 170 - Suits or prosecutions in respect of acts done under colour of duty as aforesaid not to be entertained without sanction of Government
(1)
In any case of alleged offence by the Commissioner, a
Magistrate, Police Officer or Reserve Police Officer or other person, or of a
wrong alleged to have been done by such Commissioner, Magistrate, Police
Officer or Reserve Police Officer or other person, by any act done under colour
or in excess of any such duty or authority as aforesaid, or wherein it shall
appear to the court that the offence or wrong if committed or done was of the
character aforesaid, the prosecution or suit shall not be entertained except
with the previous sanction of the Government.
(2)
In the case of an intended suit on account of such a
wrong as aforesaid, the person intending to sue shall be bound to give to the
alleged wrongdoer one month's notice at least of the intended suit with
sufficient description of the wrong complained of, failing which such suit
shall be dismissed.
(3)
The plaint shall set forth that a notice as aforesaid has
been served on the defendant and the date of such service, and shall state
whether any, and if so, what tender of amends has been made by the defendant. A
copy of the said notice shall be annexed to the plaint endorsed or accompanied
with a declaration by the plaintiff of the time and manner of service thereof.
Section 171 - Licences and permissions to specify conditions, etc. and to be signed
(1)
Any licence or written permission granted under the
provisions of this Act shall specify the period and locality for which, and the
conditions and restrictions subject to which, the same is granted, and shall be
given under the signature of the competent authority and such fee shall be
charged therefor as is prescribed by any rule under this Act in that behalf.
(2)
Any licence or written permission granted under this Act
may at any time be suspended or revoked by the competent authority if any of
its conditions or restrictions is infringed or evaded by the person to whom it
has been granted if such person is convicted of any offence in any matter to
which such licence or permission relates.
(3)
When any such licence or written permission is suspended
or revoked, or when the period for which the same was granted has expired, the
person to whom the same was granted, shall, for all purposes of this Act, be
deemed to be without a licence or written permission, until the order for
suspending or revoking the same is cancelled, or until the same is renewed, as
the case may be.
(4)
Every person to whom any such licence or written
permission has been granted shall, while the same remains in force, at all
reasonable times produce the same, if so required by a Police Officer.
Explanation.--For
the purpose of this section any such infringement or evasion by, or conviction
of, a servant or other agent acting on behalf of the person to whom the licence
or written permission has been granted shall be deemed to be infringement, or
evasion by or as the case may be, conviction of, the person to whom such
licence or written permission has been granted.
Section 172 - Public notices how to be given
Any public notice
required to be given under any of the provisions of this Act shall be in
writing under the signature of a competent authority and shall be published in
the locality to be affected thereby, affixing copies thereof in conspicuous
public places, or by proclaiming the same with beat of drums, or by advertising
the same in such local newspapers, as the said authority may deem fit, or by
any two or more of these means and by any other means it may think suitable.
Section 173 - Consent, etc., of a competent authority may be proved by writing under his signature
Whenever under
this Act, the doing or the omitting to do anything or the validity of anything
depends upon the consent, approval, declaration, opinion or satisfaction of a
competent authority a written document signed by a competent authority
purporting to convey or set forth such consent, approval, declaration, opinion
or satisfaction shall be sufficient evidence thereof.
Section 174 - Signature on notices, etc., may be stamped
Every licence,
written permission, notice or other document, not being a summons or warrant or
search warrant, required by this Act, or by any rule thereunder to bear the
signature of the Commissioner, shall be deemed to be properly signed if it
bears a facsimile of his signature stamped thereon.
Section 175 - Saving in respect of rescission of certain provisions
When,--
(i) ???any rule or order is made
under this Act for a limited period, or
(ii) ??any rule or order made under
this Act is rescinded, or
(iii) ??any provision of sub-section
(1) of section 92 is extended to any local area for a limited period, or
(iv) ??the extension of any provision
of sub-section (1) of section 92 to any local area is rescinded, the provisions
of section 6 of the[44] [Karnataka]
General Clauses Act, 1899, shall be applicable as if the rule, order or
provision in question were a permanent enactment and had been repealed
immediately before its expiry or recession, as the case may be.
Section 176 - Saving of games of skill
For the removal of
doubts it is hereby declared that the provisions of sections 79 and 80 shall
not be applicable to the playing of any pure game of skill and to wagering by
persons taking part in such game of skill.
Section 177 - Persons interested may apply to Government to annul, reverse or alter any order
(1)
In the case of any rule or order made by the Government
under an authority conferred by this Act and requiring the public or a
particular class of persons to perform some duty or act, or to conduct or order
themselves or those under their control in a manner therein described, it shall
be competent to any person interested to apply to the Government, to annul,
reverse or alter the rule or order aforesaid on the ground of its being
unlawful, oppressive or unreasonable.
(2)
After such an application as aforesaid and the rejection
thereof wholly or in part or after the lapse of six months without an answer to
such application or a decision thereon published by the Government, it shall be
competent to the person interested and deeming the rule or order contrary to
law to institute a suit against the State for a declaration that the rule or
order is unlawful either wholly or in part. The decision in such suit shall be
subject to appeal; and a rule or order finally adjudged to be unlawful shall by
the Government be annulled or reversed or so altered as to make it conformable
to law.
Section 178 - Repeal and saving
The enactments mentioned in Schedule IV
and any other laws or rules corresponding to any provision of this Act are
hereby repealed:
Provided that the provisions of section
6 of the[45]
[Karnataka] General Clauses Act, 1899, shall be applicable in respect of the
repeal of the said enactments and laws and sections 8 and 24 of the said Act
shall be applicable as if the said enactments and laws had been repealed and
re-enacted by this Act.
Section 179 - Power to remove difficulties
If any difficulty
arises in giving effect to the provisions of this Act in consequence of the
transition to the said provisions from the provisions of the Acts in force
immediately before the commencement of this Act, the Government may, by
notification in the official Gazette, make such provisions as appear to it to
be necessary or expedient for removing the difficulty.
Schedule I - SCHEDULE
SCHEDULE I
(See section 13).
Certificate of Appointment in the Police Force.
[46] [State of Karnataka] [State of
Karnataka]
No . . . . . . . . .
Certificate of appointment issued under |
Photograph to be affixed |
the [47] [Karnataka]
Police Act, 1963 . . . . . . |
in the case of Inspectors |
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
and Sub-Inspectors |
.
Shri . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . has been
appointed as . . . . . . . . . . . . . . and is invested with the powers,
functions and privileges of a Police Officer under the [48] [Karnataka]
Police Act, 1963 ([49] [Karnataka]
Act 4 of 1964).
On the . . . . . .
. . . day of . . . . . . .19 .
Seal Signature . .
. . . . . . . . .
Designation . . .
. . . . . .
Particulars-- |
|
1. Father's Name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
Photograph to be
affixed |
2. Native place . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
in the case of
Inspector |
3. Age . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
and
sub-Inspector. |
4. Length of previous service, if any . . . . . |
|
Schedule II - SCHEDULE
SCHEDULE II
(See section 147).
Form of
Declaration to be Signed Before Joining Appointment in the State Reserve Police
Force.
1.
(Name in full) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . (designation in the case of a member of a Police
Force/address in the case of direct recruit) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
declare that,--
(1)
I am willing to serve, wherever posted, in the State
Reserve Police Force.
(2)
I shall not be entitled to resign my appointment in the
State Reserve Police Force or to apply for a transfer to any other Police Force
until I have completed the prescribed period of service in the State Reserve
Force, and
(3)
I shall not be entitled to resign my appointment or to
apply for the transfer in the manner specified in (2) above even after the
completion of the prescribed period of service, if on the relevant date I am on
active duty or if my resignation or transfer as the case may be would cause the
vacancies in my Group to exceed such percentage of the sanctioned strength of
the Group as may for the time being have been prescribed by the State
Government.
Signature in token
of the above declaration having been read out and explained to the declarant
and of his having understood and accepted it.
Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Place . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Signed in my
presence after I had satisfied myself that (name in full) . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . (designation in the case of a member of a Police Force/full
address in the case of a direct recruit) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . has understood and accepted the declaration and signed it in my
presence.
Signature . . . . . . . . . . . .
Designation of the Officer before who the declaration is signed. |
Commandant or Assistant Commandant or Police |
Officer.
Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Place . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule III - SCHEDULE
SCHEDULE III
(See section 149).
Form of Certificate for a State Reserve Police Officer below the rank of a
Subedar.
Seal of the
Commandant
A B has been
appointed to the State Reserve Police Force in the [50] [State
of Karnataka] and is vested with the powers, functions and privileges of a
Reserve Police Officer under the [51] [Karnataka]
Police Act, 1963 ([52] [Karnataka]
Act 4 of 1964).
Signature. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Commandant,
State Reserve Police Force,
Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Schedule IV - SCHEDULE
SCHEDULE IV
(See section 178).
Year |
No. |
Short title |
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
1861 |
Central Act V |
The Police Act,
1861. |
1867 |
Central Act III |
The Public
Gambling Act, 1867. |
1922 |
Central Act XXII |
The Police
(Incitement to Disaffection) Act, 1922. |
1867 |
Bombay Act VIII |
The Bombay Village Police Act, 1867. |
1887 |
Bombay Act IV |
The Bombay
Prevention of Gambling Act, 1887. |
1951 |
Bombay Act XXII |
The Bombay
Police Act, 1951. |
1951 |
Bombay Act
XXXVIII |
The Bombay State
Reserve Police Act, 1951. |
1305 |
F Hyderabad Act
II |
The Hyderabad
Gambling Act, 1305 Fasli. |
1329 |
F Hyderabad Act X |
The Hyderabad District Police Act, 1329 Fasli. |
1951 |
Hyderabad Act
XXIX |
The Hyderabad
Public Security Measures Act, 1951. |
1816 |
Madras
Regulation XI |
The Madras
Village Police Regulation, 1816. |
1821 |
Madras
Regulation IV |
The Madras
Village Police Regulation, 1821. |
1859 |
Madras Act XXIV |
The Madras
District Police Act, 1859. |
1888 |
Madras Act II of
1888 |
Madras Places of
Public Resort Act, 1888. |
1930 |
Madras Act III |
The Madras
Gambling Act, 1930. |
1948 |
Madras Act III |
The Madras
Suppression of Disturbances Act, 1948. |
1948 |
Madras Act VIII |
The Police
(Madras Amendment) Act, 1948. |
1908 |
Mysore Act V |
The Mysore
Police Act, 1908. |
1952 |
Mysore Act XXVII
of 1952 |
The Mysore
Places of Public Resort Act, 1952. |
[1]
First published in the Karnataka Gazette on the
thirteenth day of febuary 1964.
[2]
First published in the Karnataka Gazette on the
thirteenth day of febuary 1964.
[3] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[4] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[5] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[6] Adapted
by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[7] Adapted
by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[8] Act
came into force w.e.f. 2.4.1965 vide Notification No. HD 21 PEG 65 dt. 1965
[9] Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f. 15.5.1975
[10] Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f. 15.5.1975
[11] Omitted by Act 18 of 1995 w.e.f. 15.5.1975
[12] Inserted by Act 7 of 1974 w.e.f. 29.11.1973
[13] Substituted by Act 7 of 1974 w.e.f. 29.11.1973
[14] Clause (11A) Inserted by Act 41 of 1981 w.e.f. 6.6.1981
[15] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[16] Inserted
by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f. 15.5.1975.
[17] Omitted
by Act 14 of 1990 w.e.f. 2.4.1992
[18] Omitted
by Act 14 of 1990 w.e.f. 2.4.1992
[19] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[20] Omitted
by Act 14 of 1990 w.e.f. 2.4.1992.
[21] Omitted
by Act 14 of 1990 w.e.f. 2.4.1992.
[22] Omitted
by Act 14 of 1990 w.e.f. 2.4.1992.
[23] Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f. 15.5.1975.
[24] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[25] Section 56 Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f.
15.5.1975.
[26] Adapted by the Kakrnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973
w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[27] Clause (da) inserted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f. 15.5.1975
[28] Clause (i) Inserted by Act 41 of 1981 w.e.f. 6.6.1981
[29] Substituted
by Act 13 of 1965 w.e.f . 1.10.1965.
[30] Substituted
by Act 13 of 1965 w.e.f 1.10.1965.
[31] Substituted
by Act 13 of 1965 w.e.f 1.10.1965.
[32] Re-numbered
by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975
[33] Sub-section
(2) Inserted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975
[34] Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975
[35] Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975
[36] Substituted
by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975
[37]
Omitted by Act 2 of 2003 w.e.f .....
[38]
Sub-section (2) Substituted by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f
2.4.1965.
[39] Substituted
by Act 6 of 1998 w.e.f. 25.10.1997
[40] Substituted by Act 13 of 1965 w.e.f 1.10.1965.
[41] Inserted
by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975.
[42] Substituted
by Act 18 of 1975 w.e.f 15.5.1975
[43] Adapted by the
Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[44] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[45] Adapted by the
Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[46] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[47] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[48] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[49] Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973.
[50]
Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[51]
Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973
[52]
Adapted by the Karnataka Adaptations of Laws Order 1973 w.e.f. 1.11.1973