I. P. SINGH, J. ( 1 ) BHAGWAN Das and Durga Prasad applicants have filed this application under Section 482 Criminal Procedure Code praying for quashing the proceedings pending under Section 3/7, Essential Commodities Act, (hereinafter referred to as the Act) 1955, pending in the court of III Addi. Munsif, Fatehpur, State v. Bhagwan Das and another, case Crime No. 162 of 1980, P. 5. Chandpur, District Fatehpur. ( 2 ) THE brief relevant facts are that Bhagwan Das applicant No. 1 was agent to sell the food grains and other essential commodities at fair price shop in village Amoli, P. S. Chandpur. District Fatehpur. F. I. R. Dated 20. 10. 80, Annexure 4 to the application, was lodged by S. I. S. B. Singh, P. A. Chandpur against the applicants disclosing facts on the basis of which an offence under Section 3/7 of the Act was said to be committed by the applicants. On the basis of the investigation charge-sheet annexure 5, dated 17. 1280 was filed against the applicants. The case is pending in the above court. ( 3 ) IN the present application a few leg points have been raised. The first is that section 11 of the Act provides that a complaint in writing of the facts constituting offence made by a public servant is necessary before the Magistrate could take cognizance. Said section was quoted in para 18 of the application which reads as under: No court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under this Act except on a report in writing of the facts constituting such offence mage by a person who is a public Servant is defined in Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860 ). (Under living mine ). I must say that in the present case a deliberate twist has been given to the wordings of section 11 of the Act. Said section refers to a report in writing while in the application the wordings used are complaint in writing. In this way a confusion has been sought to be created that instead a report a complaint in writing was necessary. This is so because the word complaint is given a specific meaning under Section 2 (d), Criminal Procedure Code and it excludes a police report.
In this way a confusion has been sought to be created that instead a report a complaint in writing was necessary. This is so because the word complaint is given a specific meaning under Section 2 (d), Criminal Procedure Code and it excludes a police report. Consequently it was argued that he could not take cognizance under Section 11 of the Act because no complaint has been made. To my mind great fallacy is involved in this contention. Report in writingt is quite different from a complaint in writingt. What section 11 envisages is that there should be a report in writing by a public servant. There is no doubt that police officer is a public servant and his charge- sheet is nothing but a report under Section 173 Criminal Procedure Code. Thus if said Section 11, as quoted above is applicable, then the Magistrate can take cognizance on the police report i e. , charge-sheet under Section 190 (1) (b), Criminal Procedure Code. ( 4 ) BUT here, I may again point out that in the application said Section 11 (as amended in U. P. has, not been quoted. The amended Section 11 as applicable in U. P. runs as follows: TTN0 court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under this Act except on a report in writing of the facts constituting such offence made by order of, or under authority from the District Magistrate or such other officer as may be empowered by the State Government by general or special order in this behalf. In other words, there should be a sanction of the-District Magistrate or such other officer as may be empowered by the State Government in that behalf. In- the charge-sheet annexure 5 which is nothing but a report- of the police officer, it has been specifically mentioned that District Magistrate had already granted sanction or authority to prosecute the applicants. I therefore, see no force in the above point raised on behalf of the applicants.
In- the charge-sheet annexure 5 which is nothing but a report- of the police officer, it has been specifically mentioned that District Magistrate had already granted sanction or authority to prosecute the applicants. I therefore, see no force in the above point raised on behalf of the applicants. ( 5 ) IT is further pointed out that the F. I. R. annexure 4 would show that the search of the applicants shop was made by the said S. I. It is pointed out that the applicants were running the said shop under the provisions of the D. P. Food Grains and other Essential Articles Distribution Order 1977 and that under clause 25 of the said Order the powers of search, entry into the premises, requiring production of books of account and other documents and their examination and seizure etc. are given only to Food Officers, Dy. Town Rationing Officers, or Area Rationing Officers. It is therefore, argued that the S. I. of police had no authority to enter the shop of the applicants, or effect search etc. with the result that all these actions were illegal and vitiated the entire proceedings including lodging of the F. I. R. investigation and subsequent prosecution. ( 6 ) THE term Food Officer has been defined in clause 2 (f) of the said order as follows: Food Officer means the Regional Food Controller, the District Magistrate, District Supply Officer or other officers authorised by the State Government in this behalf. The learned A. G. A. was of the view that the State Government bad authorised, by a general order, all the S. Is. of police to be Food Officer within the above definition. Time to get the said order was granted to the learned A. G. A. from 5. 10. 83 to 1. 3. 84 but no such order could be produced. Therefore, it follows that the police S. I. has not been authorised by the State Government to act as, Food Officer under clause 25 of the Order. ( 7 ) THE question arises as to whether the action of the S. I. police in effecting searches, weighment of different articles in the said shop and taking registers etc. in his possession could have any effect on the subsequent investigation and prosecution for the offences revealed thereby under Section 3/7, Essential Commodities Act.
( 7 ) THE question arises as to whether the action of the S. I. police in effecting searches, weighment of different articles in the said shop and taking registers etc. in his possession could have any effect on the subsequent investigation and prosecution for the offences revealed thereby under Section 3/7, Essential Commodities Act. To my mind, even if the action of the S. I. concerned was not legal then it could only give a right to the applicants to resist him and not allow him to carryon the said search and allied actions. Lack of authority in the S. I. concerned would have been a complete answer to any prosecution started against him for resisting the said S. I. at the time of said search etc. But if the search was already effected and the weighment etc. was already made and registers etc, taken in possession and if any offence is disclosed thereby then the above lack of authority, or in other words illegal search, would not nullify the subsequent investigation or prosecution. I am fortified in this view by the observations made in A. I. R. 1963 S. C. 822 (at page 824) wherein it was observed as under: Illegality in the manner of discovery may have other effects such as not making a person resisting such a search subject to legal or criminal liability or rendering the person resorting to illegality liable for trespass. It has not the effect of rendering that which exists nonti Thus inspite of irregular or illegal search seizure of article is not vitiated. Similarly, it is also well- settled that any illegality during investigation does not effect the competence and jurisdiction of the court for trial. The so called search, may as well be, a part of the investigation. Any illegality at that stage, therefore, would not effect the jurisdiction of the court to hold trial for the offence revealed. ( 8 ) NO other point of substance is involved in this application. ( 9 ) IN the result, the application has no force and is hereby dismissed. .