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1954 DIGILAW 86 (MAD)

Untitled judgment

1954-02-28

GOVINDA MENON, RAJAGOPALAN

body1954
Govinda Menon, J.- The first accused in Case No.14 of the Fourth Criminal Sessions of 1953 was charged with two offences. The first was under section 332 of the Indian Penal Code in that he voluntarily caused hurt to a public servant, viz., police constable Masilamani, by injuring him with fingernails while the accused was in his custody. The second charge was under section 333 of the Indian Penal Code that in the course of the same transaction the accused caused grievous hurt to one Govindaswami, another police constable, while in the discharge of his duties as such public servant by twisting and breaking his left ring finger. So far as the second charge was concerned the jury unanimously found him not guilty. With regard to the first charge, i.e., of an offence under section 332, Indian Penal Code, for voluntarily causing hurt to Masilamani, the jury were divided in their opinion and as many as six members of the jury were unable to agree in their conclusions. Such being the case under section 305, clause (4) of the Criminal Procedure Code the learned Judge directed that the jury be discharged and the accused be tried afresh at the First Criminal Sessions of 1954. Against this order directing a retrial, the first accused has sought to prefer a Criminal Revision Case to this Court under sections 435 and 439 of the Criminal Procedure Code. The matter was posted before Court for preliminary arguments as regards the maintainability of the revision before the same was numbered since the learned counsel for the petitioner argued that with the introduction of section 411-A in the Criminal Procedure Code the High Court, exercising its ordinary criminal jurisdiction and trying an offender at the Sessions, is subordinate to the appellate side in that an appeal lies from the original trial either when the accused is acquitted or when he is convicted, the revisional jurisdiction conferred under section 435 and section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, is also attracted and therefore it is open to the petitioner to canvas the correctness of the order of retrial by showing that the verdict of the jury was the result of misdirections and non-directions contained in the learned Judge’s charge to the jury. It was further argued that it was not incumbent upon the learned Judge to order a retrial but that he has the power to make an entry under section 308, Criminal Procedure Code, that the accused need not be tried again. According to the learned counsel these are questions of law which can be successfully urged in revision. We have heard elaborate arguments regarding the maintainability from Mr. Chinnappa Reddi, the learned counsel for the petitioner and Mr. N. Koteswara Rao, who appeared for the State Prosecutor. Our prima facie impression that no revision can lie has been confirmed after the matter has been discussed threadbare at the hearing, and we therefore give our reasons for holding that sections 435 and 439, Criminal Procedure Code, would not enable the appellate side to interfere with non-appealable orders of the learned Judge presiding over the Sessions or correct or rectify mistake or error if any committed during the trial at the sessions. The revisional powers of the High Court conferred under section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, can be exercised in the case of any proceeding, the record of which has been called for by itself or which has been reported for orders or which otherwise comes to its knowledge. This contemplates three contingencies of which the first is the calling for the records of a case by the High Court; the second is that some Court has reported to the High Court and solicited its orders and the third which is practically ejusdem generis with the earlier one, that the matter comes to the knowledge of the High Court otherwise, i.e., by a party putting an application or the High Court suo motu acting. So far as the power to call for the records is concerned, the same is laid down in section 435, Criminal Procedure Code, which is to the effect that the High Court and other Courts mentioned therein with which we are not now concerned, may call for and examine the record of any proceeding before an inferior criminal Court situate within the local limits of its jurisdiction for the purpose of satisfying itself, etc. That is the High Court can call for the records of a proceeding before an inferior criminal Court. That is the High Court can call for the records of a proceeding before an inferior criminal Court. Reading therefore sections 435 and 439, Criminal Procedure Code, together in the case of a High Court, before it exercises jurisdiction, in the first of the contingencies mentioned above, the record has to be called for from an inferior criminal Court. It is argued by the learned counsel for the accused, that the Judge sitting on the original criminal Sessions of the High Court is an “inferior” Court to; the appellate side which hears the appeal and therefore it is competent for the appellate side to call for the record of the sessions when approached by a party for that, purpose or suo motu by the appellate side itself. We would have had no difficulty in repelling this argument had it not been for two decisions which have been brought to our notice by the learned counsel. The first of them is the judgment of Chagla, C.J. and Bhagwati, J., in Krishnaji Vithal v. Emperor1, where the learned Judges in similar circumstances have held that the High Court in Sessions is an inferior Court; to the High Court on the appellate side, and therefore a revision lies from the order of the High Court in sessions to the appellate side. The learned Judges conceded that the High Court acting in its original criminal jurisdiction is not a Court subordinate to the appellate side of the High Court, but they say that to equate a subordinate Court with an inferior Court is wrong in principle and such being the case the expression “inferior Court” in section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, does not carry with it any stigma or suggestion that the Court is under the administrative orders of the superior Court. The learned Judges give expression to their conclusion in the following passage:- “In our opinion inferior criminal Court only means judicially inferior to the High Court.: Now, if one turns to section 6, the first class of criminal Courts are Courts of session, and Courts of session are undoubtedly judicially inferior to the High Court. The learned Judges give expression to their conclusion in the following passage:- “In our opinion inferior criminal Court only means judicially inferior to the High Court.: Now, if one turns to section 6, the first class of criminal Courts are Courts of session, and Courts of session are undoubtedly judicially inferior to the High Court. The result of the amendment by Act XXVI of 1943 is really to put the High Court acting in its original criminal jurisdiction practically in the same category as the Court of session, or, perhaps a different criminal Court was constituted, which was the High Court acting in its original criminal jurisdiction and an appeal was permitted from that Court to the High Court, just as appeals are permitted from the different Courts enumerated in section 6, Criminal Procedure Code. A Court is inferior to another Court, when an, appeal lies from the former to the latter, and same is the view taken of this expression, by the Calcutta High Court in Nobin Krishna Mookerjee v. Russick Lall2, where the Bench consisting of McDonnel and Field, JJ., held that inferior criminal Court must be construed to mean ‘judicially inferior’, that is, a Court over which the Court or Magistrate proceeding under section 435 of the Code has appellate jurisdiction.” From the above passage, it is clear that what impelled the learned Judges to come, to the conclusion was that by the amendment by Act XXVI of 1943, a new Court is created which is a different criminal Court and an appeal was permitted from that Court to the High Court, and secondly when an appeal lies from one to another the original Court is an inferior Court to the appellate Court. Neither of the two reasons relied upon by the learned Judges commends itself to us. For one thing, a reading of section 411-A of the Criminal Procedure Code itself shows that there is no creation of such an inferior Court. The section begins by saying that any person convicted on trial held by a High Court in the exercise of its original criminal jurisdiction may appeal to the High Court. This surely means that there is only one Court and an appeal lies from one section of it to another. It is impossible to give a different connotation to the words “High Court” when the same occur in different portions of the same paragraph. This surely means that there is only one Court and an appeal lies from one section of it to another. It is impossible to give a different connotation to the words “High Court” when the same occur in different portions of the same paragraph. The definition of the term “High Court” in section 4, sub-section (1), clause (1) of the Criminal Procedure Code does not allow any other interpretation to be put upon these words. It is an inclusive definition and is not explanatory. In relation to any local area, except the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, High Court means the highest criminal Court for that area other than the Supreme Court, and where no such Court is established under any law for the time being in force, such officer as the State Government may appoint in that behalf. We cannot therefore read two different meanings to the term “High Court” occurring in different parts of the same sub-paragraph of section 411-A. No doubt in section 411-A (1)(b) the words used are “appellate Court” and from this the learned counsel contends that the Bench hearing the appeal is a different Court from that exercising original criminal jurisdiction in Sessions. But the intention is made clear in sub-section (3) where mention is made of a Division Court of the High Court, equating that Division Court with the appellate Court in sub-section (1)(b). In sub-section (4) also it is stated that an appeal lies to the Supreme Court from any order made on appeal by a Division Court of the High Court in respect of which order the High Court certifies that it is a fit case for such appeal. Note the contiguity of the words “Division Court of the High Court” and “High Court”. The Legislature does not certainly intend by using the two expressions in collocation or practically in juxtaposition to lay down two different institutions. In this connection we may usefully refer to sections 266 and 267, Criminal Procedure Code, where in relation to the original criminal Sessions of the High Court, the expression used is High Court, and is separately defined for that purpose. In this connection we may usefully refer to sections 266 and 267, Criminal Procedure Code, where in relation to the original criminal Sessions of the High Court, the expression used is High Court, and is separately defined for that purpose. Sub-section (2) of section 411-A clarifies the position still further when the State Government is given the authority to direct the Public Prosecutor to present an appeal to the High Court from any order of acquittal passed by the High Court in the exercise of its original criminal jurisdiction. How could there be an appeal to the High Court from an order of acquittal passed by the High Court in the exercise of its original criminal jurisdiction unless the two Courts are the same, because in so far as the Court exercising original criminal jurisdiction is concerned, the expression used is “the High Court”? Therefore what is contemplated is a Court functioning in two divisions an original division from whose judgments an appeal may lie to an appellate Bench. The two constitute one and the same Court, without any inferiority or superiority. Further light is thrown on this aspect by the use of the words in section 411-A(1)(b) “the Judge who tried the case.” If the sessions Court is a different Court, we would not have the description “the Judge who tried the case.” It is, therefore, clear that a correct interpretation of the section itself shows that the original side of the High Court in exercising criminal jurisdiction is not an inferior Court to the appellate side when hearing an appeal. Powers of the appellate Court in disposing of appeals are contained in section’ 423, Criminal Procedure Code, which has not undergone any serious transformation since the enactment of section 411-A except by the addition to it in paragraph I of the following expression:“Section 411-A, sub-section (2) or section 417” and in dealing with the powers of the appellate Court sub-section (1), clause (b) of that section lays down that in an appeal from a conviction, the appellate Court can order the accused person to be retried by a Court of competent jurisdiction subordinate to such appellate Court. It is nobody’s case that the original side is a Court subordinate to the appellate Court and such being the case it would be difficult to hold that a remand for a fresh trial by the appellate Bench to the Original Court is competent. But the matter does not arise here and we express no opinion on that. From the Statement of Objects and Reasons published in the Gazette of India, Parts IV and V, relating to Bill No.1 of 1943, which eventually became Act XXVI of 1943 it is clear that the intention was only to give a restricted right of appeal by the enactment of section 411-A. Paragraph 1 of the Statement of Objects and Reasons reads as follows: "At the instance of the Bombay High Court the Bombay Government proposed to the Central Government in May, 1941, that legislation should be undertaken to provide for a restricted right of appeal in criminal cases against the decisions of a High Court exercising its original jurisdiction on the lines contained in the Criminal Appeal Act, (1907) 7 Edw. VII, C.23." Reasons were given why such a restricted right of appeal should be given. If as a matter of fact, the Legislature intended that the appellate Bench should exercise revisional jurisdiction, it would certainly have made it clear in the Statement of Objects and Reasons, itself. For one thing it is provided by clause 15 of the Letters Patent that an appeal lies from the decision of a single Judge either in the exercise of the original jurisdiction, or sitting on the appellate side, to a Bench of the High Court in certain matters. But by that restricted right of appeal, nobody has so far thought of arguing that all the provisions of section 115, Code of Civil Procedure, are attracted by which an appellate Bench can exercise revisional jurisdiction in civil matters over cases decided by a single Judge either sitting on the original side or on the appellate side. The Legislature at the time it enacted Act XXVI of 1943 was fully aware of the fact that in civil matters there is no right of revision against orders passed on the original side and that there can be a right of appeal only if an order passed by a original side Judge is a judgment. The Legislature at the time it enacted Act XXVI of 1943 was fully aware of the fact that in civil matters there is no right of revision against orders passed on the original side and that there can be a right of appeal only if an order passed by a original side Judge is a judgment. With that knowledge if the Legislature really wanted to provide for a right of revision it could easily have made the matter clear and explicit in case a revision is contemplated. That by the conferment of an appellate power to a Bench no new Court is created is clear from certain observations contained in the Full Bench judgment in Nathanial, In re1. In that case the question that was debated was whether Act XXVI of 1943 was invalid as being ultra vires the central Legislature, and the Full Bench held that it is not. The following observation of the learned Chief Justice at page 753 of the report is worth quoting: "But the learned Advocate-General tried to maintain that by section 411-A a new Court was being constituted, and therefore, it was only the Provincial Legislature which had the power to pass a law providing for such constitution, as that subject has specially been assigned to it by entry I in list 11. He referred us to the Act of Parliament contained in 7 Edward VII, C. 23, by which a Court of Criminal Appeal was established in England, consisting of some of the Judges of the Court of King’s Bench. That Act is not relevant here because it cannot be said that the High Court as such did not have appellate criminal jurisdiction before Act XXVI of 1943. Clause 27 of the Letters Patent constitutes the High Court as a Court of Criminal Appeal and clause 26 gives the High Court appellate jurisdiction even in respect of sentences and orders passed or made in a criminal trial before the Courts of original criminal jurisdiction which may be constituted by one or more Judges of the High Court. In my opinion, the power and jurisdiction conferred by clause 26 is really in the nature of appellate jurisdiction and power. It has already been mentioned that under section 449 of the Code the High Court was already a Court exercising appellate criminal jurisdiction in certain cases. In my opinion, the power and jurisdiction conferred by clause 26 is really in the nature of appellate jurisdiction and power. It has already been mentioned that under section 449 of the Code the High Court was already a Court exercising appellate criminal jurisdiction in certain cases. The fact that further jurisdiction was superadded to the jurisdiction already possessed by the High Court does not amount to the constitution of a new Court. I also consider that it would be an undue straining of the language to construe ‘ organization ‘ as comprising, providing a right of appeal." These observations are binding on us as having emanated from a Full Bench and as such we cannot now brush it aside and agree with the observations of a Divisional Bench of the Bombay High Court when it stated that Act XXVI of 1943 constituted a new Court. Even earlier, nearly 29 years ago, it was sought to be argued in a case reported in Kalyanji v. Ram Deen Lala2, that the original side of the High Court was a separate Court from the appellate side, relying on certain observations in Munisamy Mudaliar v. Rajaratnam Pillai3. The learned Judges who took part in that judgment, Wallace and Madhavan Nayar, JJ., did not accept the contention and held that the original side and the appellate side constitute one undivided Court. At page 399 Wallace, J., observes as follows:- "The difficulties that would follow in holding that the High Court is not one Court but is as many Courts as there are varieties original and appellate jurisdictions comprised in it are much greater than the difficulty of reconciling the language of section 195(3) with Munisamy Mudaliar v. Rajaratnam Pillai1. I am not prepared to sustain either of these preliminary objections and they both fail." Madhavan Nayar, J., also at page 405 quoting from Jamna Doss v. Sabapathi Chetty2, held that the original side of the High Court is not a different Court from the appellate side. Under these circumstances, even after the enactment of section 411-A one ought to pause before coming to the conclusion that the two sides of the High Court are different Courts. Under these circumstances, even after the enactment of section 411-A one ought to pause before coming to the conclusion that the two sides of the High Court are different Courts. The second reason given by the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court relying upon certain observations contained in Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3, is that a Court is inferior to another Court when an appeal lies from the former to the latter and therefore when an appeal is provided from a Judge or Judges trying a sessions case on the original criminal jurisdiction of the High Court, that is an inferior Court to the appellate Bench hearing an appeal from it. The word inferior is synonymous with the word subordinate. See pages 1104 and 2069 of Webster’s Dictionary. Therefore if the original side is an inferior Court it also is a subordinate Court but that is not the contention advanced by the learned counsel as he concedes that the original side is not subordinate to the appellate side. Except citing the decision in Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3, the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court did not advance any other reason for holding that if an appeal lay from one Court to another, then the former Court is inferior to the latter. Apparently, the attention of the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court was not invited to the fact that Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3has been, held to be not good law by a Full Bench of five Judges of the same High Court in Opendro Nath Ghose v. Dikhini Bewa4, Field, J., who was one of the Judges constituting the Full Bench and who was also a member of the Division Bench which decided Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3, revised his view and agreed with the four other Judges who were of opinion that the better view was that expressed in In the matter of the petition of Padmanabha5and Queen-Empress v. Pirya Gopal6 which took completely an opposite view. It is clear from the judgment in Opendro Nath Ghose v. Dikhini Bewa4that Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3were no longer held to be good law even in Calcutta. It is clear from the judgment in Opendro Nath Ghose v. Dikhini Bewa4that Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3were no longer held to be good law even in Calcutta. In In re Padmanabha5, a Full Bench of four Judges of our High Court entirely dissented from Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3and this dissent has been accepted as proper and correct by the latter Full Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Opendro Nath Ghose v. Dikhini Bewa4. Under these circumstances in our opinion if the attention of the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court had been invited to the later decisions of Madras, Bombay and Calcutta High Courts, which have completely differed from the earlier view of the Calcutta High Court, probably the learned Judges would not have followed Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3, as embodying the correct principle. We regret our inability to accept the opinion of the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court which mainly relied upon a decision of the Calcutta High Court, which had not been accepted as good law in subsequent rulings. In In re Padmanabha5, this Court has held that a District Magistrate has power to call for, and examine, the record of a proceeding before a Sub-Divisional Magistrate of the first class even though no appeal lay from the latter to the former. The learned Judges clarified the position by making a distinction as to the meaning of the words "subordinate" and "inferior" when used in sections 435, 436 and 437. They say that the term "inferior" had to be used in sections 435 and 436 because in both the sections the Court of Session and the District Magistrate are combined and the other Magistrates, though subordinate to the District Magistrate, are not so generally to the Court of Session. It was therefore necessary in sections 435 and 436 to employ a term applicable to the relations of the magistracy both to the supervising authority and the appellate tribunal, so say the learned Judges. But when they came to section 437 in which the District Magistrate is dealt with separately from the Court of Session, they held the use of the term ‘inferior was no longer necessary and accordingly they found that the term used is “subordinate”. Inferiority does not therefore denote subordination. But when they came to section 437 in which the District Magistrate is dealt with separately from the Court of Session, they held the use of the term ‘inferior was no longer necessary and accordingly they found that the term used is “subordinate”. Inferiority does not therefore denote subordination. For example Provincial Court of Small Causes may be a Court inferior to the District Court, but is certainly not subordinate to it, because under the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act a District Judge has no supervising or revising authority over the Court of Small Causes. Therefore though in common parlance, as has already been shown by reference to Webster’s Dictionary, the terms “inferior” and “subordinate” may have the same meaning, still under certain conditions, it cannot be said that they are equal, one thing is therefore clear that the decisions in In re Padmanabha1and Opendro Nath Ghose v. Dikhini Bewa2which have dissented from Nobin Kristo Mookerjee v. Russick Lall Laha3do not lend support to the view that because an appeal lay from one Court to another, the original Court is an inferior Court to the appellate Court. With all respect we find ourselves unable to follow the reasoning of the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court in Krishnaji Vithal v. Emperor4. Mr. Chinnappa Reddi next invited our attention to a Full Bench decision of the Lahore High Court reported in Wahid-ud-din v. Makhan Lal5. There the learned Judges had to consider the import of section no of the Code of Civil Procedure and they held that for the purpose of that section a Judge sitting singly, not on the original side but on the appellate side, cannot be considered to be a Court immediately below the Bench hearing the Letters Patent Appeal. In the discussion, Din Mohammad, J., at page 247 of the report tries to make a distinction between a Judge sitting on the original side of the High Court and a Bench of appellate Judges and was inclined to take the view that a Judge on the original side may be considered to be a Judge immediately below the Bench. We do not think that for the purpose of our present discussion any help can be derived from this decision at all. We do not think that for the purpose of our present discussion any help can be derived from this decision at all. What the learned Judge says is that a Judge sitting on the original side is merely discharging the functions of a trial Court and to all intents and purposes therefore, he is a Court of first instance and when an appeal is lodged against his order, as a Court he is immediately below the Court which hears the appeal. Observations of the Privy Council in Tulsi Persad Bhakt v. Benayek Misser6, were referred to. For the purpose of sections 109 and 110 of the Code of Civil Procedure it might be conceded that a Judge who decides a suit on the original side may be a Court immediately below but what we have to decide here is whether such a Judge constitutes an “inferior” Court. No light is thrown upon that expression by the Full Bench judgment quoted above; nor can we say that the observations of their Lordships of the Judicial Committee in Tulsi Persad Bhakt v. Benayek Misser6, would be of any guide in deciding this question. If at all there are observations which would show that such a Court is not an “inferior” Court at all. A third contention advanced by the learned counsel is with reference to the first part of sub-section (4) of section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, which is to the effect that nothing in the rest of section 439 would apply to an entry made under section 273. Section 273(1), Criminal Procedure Code, says that in trials before the High Court when it appears to the High Court, at any time before the commencement of the trial of the person charged, that any charge or any portion thereof is clearly unsustainable, the Judge may make on the charge an entry to that effect. The procedure contemplated here is that after a case has been committed for trial before the High Court and when it comes up before the Judge, before the commencement of the proceedings, if the Judge is clearly of opinion that any charge or any portion thereof is clearly unsustainable, he may make on the charge an entry to that effect. The effect of making such an entry is that of staying those proceedings upon the charge or portion of the charge sine die. What is urged by Mr. The effect of making such an entry is that of staying those proceedings upon the charge or portion of the charge sine die. What is urged by Mr. Chinnappa Reddi is that if the High Court, in its revisional side, has no jurisdiction to interfere with orders passed by a High Court Judge trying Sessions case there was no necessity for the insertion of the first part of sub-section (4) of section 439. The answer to this argument is contained in the observations of Oldfield, J., in Kunhammad Haji, In re1, where the learned Judge says that notwithstanding the reference in section 439 to section 273 which deals with a question of procedure ordinarily peculiar to trials in the High Court, it does not empower a High Court to revise the judgment of one or more of its own Judges. The learned Judge also referred to the observations of Mitter, J., In the matter of Gibbons2, to the effect that this clause was inserted ex abundanti cautela to prevent any possible conflict with the Letters Patent or other legislation by which the High Courts are affected. It is therefore impossible to consider that at any time there existed a revisional jurisdiction in a Bench of Judges over orders passed by a single Judge of the same Court. That one Judge of a High Court cannot be said to be subordinate to a Bench has been recently held by a Divisional Bench of this Court in Sahaba Reddy v. Venkata Reddy3. It is not necessary for us to expatiate upon this self-evident proposition. Yet another decision which we have to consider is that of the Calcutta High Court reported in Parbati Devi v. State4. Though there are observations in that judgment to the effect that the appellate Bench may exercise powers under section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, still the actual decision turned upon the application of the inherent power contained in section 561-A. The learned Judges do not definitely lay down that there is any revisional jurisdiction in the appellate Bench. In fact the decision in Krishnaji Vithal v. Emperor5, was referred to by the learned Judges but they did not agree with the observations contained therein. Furthermore what is stated is that when an appeal under section 411-A is being heard by the High Court, it can exercise jurisdiction under the revisional powers. In fact the decision in Krishnaji Vithal v. Emperor5, was referred to by the learned Judges but they did not agree with the observations contained therein. Furthermore what is stated is that when an appeal under section 411-A is being heard by the High Court, it can exercise jurisdiction under the revisional powers. Ex debito justiciae at the hearing of the appeal, if the Court is satisfied that certain matters have to be set right then it can exercise its revisional jurisdiction is what has been held by the Calcutta Judges. But as a metter of fact, they are not quite definite on the point, and they have also invoked powers under section 561-A. R.P. Mookerjee, J., at page 836 in Parbati Devi v. State4, refers to the anomalous situation created by the interpretation of the sections of the Criminal Procedure Code in holding that an appellate Bench can have revisional jurisdiction over a single Judge, but still the learned Judge not without hesitation, has expressed the opinion that it has such power. The basis of the reasoning of the learned Judges, as we understand it is the fact that section 411-A is mentioned in section 423 and therefore while hearing the appeal from the original side, the appellate Court has got jurisdiction, in certain respects over the original Court, which a superior Court has over subordinate Court. We do not think that this by itself would show that the appellate Court, without an appeal before it can exercise any revisional jurisdiction under section 439 by calling for the records at the request of a party or suo motu. For the reasons given above, we are not inclined to hold that the decision in Parbati Devi v. State4, can be of any material help to the contentions put forward by Mr. Chinnappa Reddi. On behalf of the State our attention was invited to the observations contained in In the matter of Gibbons2, where the opening words of section 439 have been construed by the Calcutta High Court. Chinnappa Reddi. On behalf of the State our attention was invited to the observations contained in In the matter of Gibbons2, where the opening words of section 439 have been construed by the Calcutta High Court. What the Full Bench says is that for exercising the powers of revision conferred by that section one of the three conditions mentioned there is necessary and they are: (1) the record of any proceeding should have been called for by the High Court; (2) the record of any proceeding has been reported for orders of the High Court; (3) the record of any proceeding which otherwise comes to the knowledge of the High Court. It is only in these three instances that the High Court can exercise its revisional jurisdiction. At pages 47 and 48 of the report in the above case, Petheram, C.J., in considering section 439 lays down the following:- The only other section relied upon is section 439. That section opens in this way: In the case of any proceeding the record of which has been called for by itself, or which has been reported for orders, or which otherwise comes to its knowledge, the High Court may’, etc. In my opinion, the first four lines of that section show beyond all possibility of doubt, that the record which is referred to in that section is the record of some Court other than that of the High Court, because it is obvious that what is meant is, the record of the case which has been called up and brought before the High Court, and not the record of the case which is in the High Court itself, and which it therefore has in its possession and has no need to call for." The three other Judges who took part in the Full Bench decision agreed with the. learned Chief Justice. Therefore, in the present case, if, as a necessary prerequisite to the application of section 439 the record must be the record of some Court other than the High Court, as we are of opinion that the original side of the High Court is not a separate Court, section 439 cannot be invoked for the purpose of revising the order made by a Judge sitting in Sessions. Therefore it seems to us that we have no revisional powers over the order passed by Ramaswami, J., and the contemplated revision should be summarily rejected. Rajagopalan, J.-I had the advantage of reading in advance the judgment which my learned brother has just delivered. I respectfully agree with the reasoning and conclusions of my learned brother. In view however of the importance of the subject I should like to place on record some of my reasons for reaching the same conclusion. Before the enactment of section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, by the amending Act (XXVI of 1943) it was well settled that a Division Bench of a High Court could exercise no revisional jurisdiction under section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, over the orders or judgments of a Judge or Judges of that Court, see In the matter of Gibbons1. A Divisional Bench of a High Court had no appellate jurisdiction either until section 411-A provided for an appeal either against conviction or against acquittal after trial held by the High Court in the exercise of its original criminal jurisdiction. The revisional jurisdiction of the High Court was left untouched by this amendment, in the sense that it was not enlarged in express terms: As pointed out by my learned brother, Act XXVI of 1943 was designed only to create a limited right of appeal against decisions in trials held by the High Court in the exercise of its original criminal jurisdiction. The real question for determination in the proceedings before us now is whether the result of section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, is to make the High Court exercising its original criminal jurisdiction an inferior Court within the meaning of section 435, Criminal Procedure Code, that is a Court inferior to the Division Court of the High Court referred to in clause 3 of section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code. The scheme of the Criminal Procedure Code is to treat revisional jurisdiction as different from and independent of appellate jurisdiction. The distinction is stressed even with reference to the High Court in the definition of the High Court in section 4(j) of the Criminal Procedure Code. "High Court means the highest Court of criminal appeal or revision for any local area......" Appellate jurisdiction does not necessarily carry with it revisional jurisdiction also. The distinction is stressed even with reference to the High Court in the definition of the High Court in section 4(j) of the Criminal Procedure Code. "High Court means the highest Court of criminal appeal or revision for any local area......" Appellate jurisdiction does not necessarily carry with it revisional jurisdiction also. Absence of appellate jurisdiction in no way affects the exercise of revisional jurisdiction if that has been specifically conferred on a Court. The High Court exercises no appellate jurisdiction over Magistrates other than the Presidency Magistrates but it has been expressly invested with revisional jurisdiction over Magistrates. The District Magistrate exercises no appellate jurisdiction over First Class Magistrates including Sub-Divisional Magistrates. But as they are Magistrates subordinate to him he has revisional jurisdiction. See In re Padmanabha2. A Sub-Divisional Magistrate may have appellate jurisdiction over the Magistrates within his sub-division but it is only a limited revisional jurisdiction that is conferred on the Sub-Divisional Magistrate and even that only where he is specially empowered by the Government to exercise powers under section 435, Criminal Procedure Code. Even so he has only power to call for records under section 435, Criminal Procedure Code. He cannot exercise any of the powers enumerated in section 436, Criminal Procedure Code. A First Class Magistrate may be empowered to hear appeals but he cannot be empowered under section 435, Criminal Procedure Code, to exercise revisional jurisdiction. Appellate jurisdiction with a total absence of revisional jurisdiction does not therefore appear to be unintelligible or inconsistent with the scheme of the Criminal Procedure Code. This does not of course answer the question whether the High Court exercising its original criminal jurisdiction is an inferior Court in relation to the Division Court of a High Court exercising appellate jurisdiction under section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code. The language of sub-sections (1) and (2) of section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, should suffice to answer the question in the negative. The appeal provided for by section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, is from the High Court exercising its original criminal jurisdiction to the High Court that is, from the High Court to the same High Court. As pointed out by the Full Bench in In re Nathaniel1, no new Court was established when section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code was enacted, the appellate jurisdiction the High Court already had was enlarged. As pointed out by the Full Bench in In re Nathaniel1, no new Court was established when section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code was enacted, the appellate jurisdiction the High Court already had was enlarged. I am not concerned in this case with the question whether when a new appellate Court or tribunal is created, the Court whose decisions can be appealed from to the appellate Court so established is a Court inferior within the meaning of section 435, Criminal Procedure Code, in relation to that appellate Court. The question before me is very much more limited and has to be answered primarily with reference to the language of section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, which in essence provides for an appeal from the High Court to the same High Court. The Judge or Judges exercising original criminal jurisdiction are not thereby constituted an inferior Court in relation to the Judges constituting a division Court of the same High Court exercising appellate jurisdiction. Neither expressly nor by necessary intendment does section 411-A constitute the High Court exercising its original criminal jurisdiction inferior to itself when it exercises the special appellate jurisdiction conferred upon it by section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code. The Illustration given by Erle, C.J., in Ex parte Fernandez2, fully explains the position of the High Court even after the enactment of section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code. The learned Chief Justice observed at page 368: “Now can it be suggested that the Chief Justice sitting at nisi prius is a Judge of an inferior Court, merely because one puisne Judge or more constituting the Court in bane might grant and make absolute’a rule for a new trial in a case tried before the Chief Justice? This reduces the argument for the applicant to an absurdity. There never has been any doubt, there can be none that the Chief Justice or any other Judge sitting at nisi prius possesses for the purpose of the trial all the powers of the Court in bane necessary for the effectual trial of a cause, including of course, the power to compel witnesses to give evidence, and to deal with them according to law for improperly refusing to do so. The Court held for that purpose is the superior Court itself, sitting usually, but not necessarily by one of its ordinary members with a jurisdiction limited for the time ‘to certain special matters’, but with all powers of a superior Court of record as to matters and their incidents.” To adopt the words of Erle, C.J., the High Court for the purpose of exercising its original criminal jurisdiction is the superior Court itself sitting usually but not necessarily, by one of its oridinary members with a jurisdiction limited for the time to certain special matters but with all the powers of a superior Court of record in the High Court, as to such matters and their incidents. In denying any revisional jurisdiction to the High Court under section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, over the judgment of a division Bench of the same High Court, the Full Bench of the Colcutta High Court pointed out In the matter of Gibbons3, that the requirement of that section (which is also that of section 435) to call for the record, etc., could not be satisfied because the first four lines of that section (section 439) show beyond all possibility of doubt that the record which is referred to in that section is the record of some Court other than that of the High Court because it is obvious that what is meant is the record of the case which has been called up and brought before the High Court, and not the record of the case which is in the High Court itself, and which therefore has in its possession, and has no need to call for. That statutory requirement is still there and the observations of Petheram, C.J., apply with equal force to the orders passed by the High Court in the exercise of its original criminal jurisdiction. No doubt in dealing with the exercise of appellate powers section 423(1), Criminal Procedure Code, requires that the appellate Court shall then send for the record of the case if such record is not already in Court. No doubt in dealing with the exercise of appellate powers section 423(1), Criminal Procedure Code, requires that the appellate Court shall then send for the record of the case if such record is not already in Court. “If such record is not already in Court,” in section 423(1), Criminal Procedure Code, is not obviously identical with the requirements of section 439(1), Criminal Procedure Code, the relevant portion of which runs: “In the case of any proceedings record of which has been called for by itself or which has been reported for orders or which otherwise comes to its knowledge.” Further appeal powers have been expressly conferred on the High Court under section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, and they can be exercised independent of the fact, whether every power conferred by section 423, Criminal Procedure Code, can be exercised or not by the High Court in the exercise of its special appellate Jurisdiction under section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code. I agree with my learned brother that the question whether the High Court exercising its original criminal jurisdiction is a Court “subordinate” within the meaning of section 423(1)(b), Criminal Procedure Code, to the Division Court of the High Court exercising the appellate jurisdiction conferred upon it by section 411-A, Criminal Procedure Code, does not arise for consideration in these proceedings before us; and I refrain from expressing any opinion on that question. In my opinion the question whether the “division Court” in the exercise of such appellate powers can send for or is bound to send for the record of the case as required by section 423(1), Criminal Procedure Code, does not arise either for consideration in a case, where we are concerned only with the revisional jurisdiction and not appellate jurisdiction. It is enough for the purposes of this case to point out that the power under section 439, Criminal Procedure Code, as explained in In the matter of Gibbons1, are still the same even after the enactment of section 411-A. Criminal Procedure Code, by the Amending Act (XXVI of 1943). R.M. ----- Contemplated Revision summarily rejected.