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1919 DIGILAW 219 (ALL)

Emperor v. Nurul Hasan

1919-07-03

RYVES

body1919
JUDGMENT Ryves, J. - Nurul Hasan, Police con-stable, failed to return to duty on the expiry of casual leave and was in consequence prosecuted u/s 29 of the Police Act and, on conviction, was fined Rs. 30. This was on the 17th January 1919. Pending that trial he had been suspended, but on the 1st February 1919 the Superintendent of Police passed an order reinstating him and called upon him to return to duty. Orders were repeatedly sent to him to this effect, and it is admitted that in spite of these orders he failed to return to duty, in consequence he was prosecuted u/s 29 of the Police Act for his failure to comply with the order of the Superintendent of Police dated the 10th March 1919, directing him to appear in the Police lines and there give a two months' notice as required u/s 9 of the Act. This order was so worded because Nurul Hasan had in the meantime sent in an application for leave to resign. This order was received by Nurul Hasan on the 13th March 1919. He failed to comply with it and in consequence he was prosecuted again u/s 29 of the Act. The accused admitted the facts, but pleaded that as he had already been fined Rs. 30 for failure to return to duty, he was justified in disobeying subsequent orders calling him back to duty. The learned Magistrate convicted him and sentenced him to rigorous imprisonment for two months. The learned Sessions Judge of Saharanpur has referred the case to this Court, with a recommendation that the conviction and sentence be set aside on the ground that his failure to return to duty was one single offence. The Judge says: "He withdrew from his duties without giving two months' notice and he has been punished," and suggests that, therefore, he could not legally be again convicted, merely because he still failed to return to duty. It seems to me that the accused has not been punished again for the same offence but for another similar offence. Section 9 of the Act provides that no Police Officer shall be at liberty to withdraw himself from the duties of his office except as provided in that section. At the first trial Nurul Hasan was punished for failure to return to duty after casual leave. Section 9 of the Act provides that no Police Officer shall be at liberty to withdraw himself from the duties of his office except as provided in that section. At the first trial Nurul Hasan was punished for failure to return to duty after casual leave. On the second occasion he was prosecuted for failure to return to duty after he had been reinstated. These were two distinct and separate offences, though similar in character. It seems to me, therefore, that legally the conviction is right. At the same time I think under the circumstances of the case, a sentence of rigorous imprisonment for two months is perhaps unnecessarily severe. I reduce the sentence to one of one month's rigorous imprisonment from the date of his original sentence. 2. Let the record be returned.