Rajinder Singh Katoch
v.
Chandigarh Admin.
(Supreme Court Of India)
Criminal Appeal No. 1432 Of 2007 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) No. 3360 Of 2006) | 12-10-2007
1. Leave granted.
2. Appellant and respondent No.4 herein are brothers and co-sharers. They jointly possess some properties. Appellant herein allegedly came to Chandigarh to reside in the family house sometimes in 2001. He allegedly kept his belongings there and came back to Delhi.
3. In 2002, he, when came to Chandigarh, was allegedly restrained by his brother from entering into the house. His complaint to the Police Station went unheeded. First Information Report, according to him, was not registered despite the fact that it disclosed a cognizable offence.
4. He filed an application under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure before the Punjab and Haryana High Court. The said application was dismissed by reason of the impugned judgment, stating:
“The petitioner has filed this petition under Section 482 of the Cr.P.C. for issuing directions to respondents No.2 and 3 to register a case against respondent No.4 for house trespass and theft. Respondent No.4 is the real brother of the petitioner. The said house in question is a joint property of seven legal heirs. After the death of father of the petitioner, the same has been inherited by seven persons. In the reply, it has been stated that the petitioner was not residing in the aforesaid house and the allegations leveled by him found to be false being family dispute.”
5. Appellant, is, thus, before us.
6. Ms. Asha Jain Madan, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant, in support of this appeal, would submit that despite the fact that the property was a joint property, having regard to the provisions contained in Section 339 of the Indian Penal Code, the respondent could not have wrongfully restrained the appellant from occupying the first floor of the property and have access to his belongings. It was urged that in terms of Section 154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the Police Officers had a duty to register the first information report once the allegations disclosed commission of a cognizable offence.
7. Ms. Kamini Jaiswal, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the respondent and Mr. Ramesh Gautam, learned counsel appearing on behalf of respondent No.4, however, supported the judgment.
8. Although the officer in charge of a police station is legally bound to register a first information report in terms of Section 154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, if the allegations made by them gives rise to an offence which can be investigated without obtaining any permission from the Magistrate concerned; the same by itself, however, does not take away the right of the competent officer to make a preliminary enquiry, in a given case, in order to find out as to whether the first information sought to be lodged had any substance or not. In this case, the authorities had made investigations into the matter. In fact, the Superintendent of Police himself has, pursuant to the directions issued by the High Court, investigated into the matter and visited the spot in order to find out the truth in the complaint of the petitioner from the neighbours. It was found that the complaint made by the appellant was false and the same had been filed with an ulterior motive to take illegal possession of the first floor of the house. Ms. Madan contended that the right of the appellant to live in the joint family cannot be taken away. Right of a co-sharer to enjoy the joint family property is a civil right. Such a right, if denied by the other co-sharers for one reason or the other, must be enforced by taking recourse to the remedies available under the civil laws. Criminal proceedings, in our opinion, cannot be taken recourse to for enforcing such a civil right. In any event, in a case of this nature where the authorities bound by law have already investigated into the matter and found that the allegations made by the appellant against respondent No.4 were not correct, it would not be proper for us to issue any direction to the respondent Nos.1 to 3 to lodge a first information report. We are not oblivious to the decision of this Court in Ramesh Kumari v. State (NCT of Delhi) & Ors. [(2006) 2 SCC 677] [LQ/SC/2006/138] wherein such a statutory duty has been found in the Police Officer. But, as indicated hereinbefore, in an appropriate case, the Police Officers also have a duty to make a preliminary enquiry so as to find out as to whether allegations made had any substance or not. In Shashikant v. Central Bureau of Investigation & Ors. [2006 (11) SCALE 272 [LQ/SC/2006/1045] ], this Court stated:
“Only an anonymous complaint was made in June 2004. Evidently it was within the province of the first respondent to commence a preliminary inquiry. The procedure laid down in the CBI Manual and in particular when it was required to inquire into the allegation of the corruption on the part of some public servants, recourse to the provisions of the Manual cannot be said to be unfair. It did not find any reason to convert the preliminary inquiry into a regular case. Pursuant to or in furtherance of the recommendations made by the first respondent, which had received the imprimatur by the Central Vigilance Commission, departmental proceedings were initiated. The Central vigilance Commission advised the Railway Board to initiate minor penalty proceedings against the delinquent officers by a letter dated 04.08.2005.”
9. There is no merit in the appeal. It is dismissed accordingly.
Advocates List
For the Appellant Ms. Asha Jain Madan, Mukesh Jain and Dushyant Parashar, Advocates. For the Respondents Romesh Gautam, Ms. Geetanjali Shankar, Dr. Kailash Chand and Ms. Kamini Jaiswal, Advocates.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE S.B. SINHA
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE HARJIT SINGH BEDI
Eq Citation
(2007) 10 SCC 69
2008 (2) ACR 1629 (SC)
AIR 2008 SC 178
2008 CRILJ 356
2001 (1) CGLJ 501
2007 (4) RCR (CRIMINAL) 762
2007 (12) SCALE 288
2007 (4) KLT 877
AIR 2007 SCW 6453
2007 (3) ALT (CRL) 382
2007 (4) CRIMES 153
(2008) 1 MLJ (CRL) 488
2007 ALLMR (CRI) 3281
(2008) 1 SCC (CRI) 571
144 (2007) DLT 241
2008 2 AWC 1629
4 (2007) CCR 167
4 (2007) DLT (CRI) 330
JT 2007 (13) SC 534
LQ/SC/2007/1276
HeadNote
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 - Ss. 154 and 482 — FIR — Duty to register FIR if allegations made give rise to cognizable offence — Held, officer in charge of police station is legally bound to register FIR if allegations made give rise to offence which can be investigated without obtaining any permission from Magistrate concerned — However, this by itself does not take away right of competent officer to make a preliminary enquiry, in a given case, in order to find out as to whether first information sought to be lodged had any substance or not — In the instant case, authorities had made investigations into the matter and found that complaint made by appellant was false and the same had been filed with an ulterior motive to take illegal possession of first floor of house — Hence, it would not be proper to issue any direction to respondent Nos. 1 to 3 to lodge a first information report — Further held, right of a co-sharer to enjoy joint family property is a civil right — Such a right, if denied by other co-sharers for one reason or the other, must be enforced by taking recourse to remedies available under civil laws — Criminal proceedings, in our opinion, cannot be taken recourse to for enforcing such a civil right