Judgment Nagendra Rai, J. 1. In Criminal Misc. No. 1003 of 1993, the petitioners have challenged the order, dated 5.12.1992 passed by the Special Judge, EC Act, Madhubani, in G.R. No. 1116 of 1990 taking cognizance under Sections 7 and 8 of the Essential Commodities Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act) for violation of the provisions of the Bihar Motor Spirit and High Speed Diesel Oil Dealers Licensing Order, 1966 (hereinafter referred to as "the Control Older"). 2. In Cr. Misc. 5359 of 1995, the petitioners have challenged the order, dated 29.11.1988 passed by the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, Buxar, in G.R. Case No. 1387 of 1988 taking cognizance under Sections 147, 148, 149, 323, 307, 337, 355, 332, 341, 504, 224 and 225 of the Indian Penal Code (for short IPC). 3. Both the cases were placed for hearing before a learned single Judge and during the course of hearing, it was submitted in both the cases that the orders of cognizance are vitiated on account of the investigations having been conducted by the informants of the cases themselves. The petitioners in both the cases relied upon a judgment of a learned single Judge of this Court in the case of Gholtu Modi V/s. State of Bihar, 1986 Criminal Law Journal 1031 : 1985 East Cr C 805 (Pat), in support of their submission, wherein a learned single Judge has taken a view that the investigation by the informant is improper. The learned single Judge having doubted correctness of the aforesaid judgment in Gholtu Modis case (supra) referred the matter to the Division Bench by Order, dated 1.10.1999 passed in Cr. Misc. No. 5359 of 1995 and by order, dated 6.10.1999 passed in Cr. Misc. No. 1003 of 1993. This is how the matter has been placed before us. 4. Both the matters were heard together and as the points involved in both the cases are one and the same, the same are being disposed of by this common judgment. 5. Before proceeding to consider the points, it is relevant to state succinctly the facts of both the cases, which are relevant to the points in controversy. Cr. Misc.
4. Both the matters were heard together and as the points involved in both the cases are one and the same, the same are being disposed of by this common judgment. 5. Before proceeding to consider the points, it is relevant to state succinctly the facts of both the cases, which are relevant to the points in controversy. Cr. Misc. No. 1003 of 1993 On 19.6.1990 at 9.30 p.m. Ganesh Paswan, Body-guard of an MLA Shri Billat Paswan Bihangam, came at the Sakri Police Station and informed the officer-in-charge Shri R.K. Sinha of the said Police Station that the aforesaid MLA had called him at the Gauri Shankar Badri Narayan Petrol Pump, situated at Sakri. Thereafter, the officer-in-charge proceeded to the said Petrol Pump and found the said MLA Shri Billat Paswan Bihangam and another MLA Shri Deo Narayan Yadav standing at the Petrol Pump. Both the MLAs informed the officer-in-charge that the owner of the Petrol Pump Prabhas Kumar Ladia, Manager Satya Narayan Purwe and Salesman Sachindra Narayan were not supplying the petrol to them and were indulged in selling the petrol in black-market. They further informed that when the body-guard was sent to inform the Police, the owner and other employees of the Petrol Pump fled away with the relevant papers, leaving only one employee at the Petrol Pump. Thereafter, the officer-in-charge R.K. Sinha found that the petrol and diesel were being sold in black-market to different persons, who were at the Petrol Pump and he ordered the said employee to supply petrol to the said MLAs and on the basis of his own statement, he recorded afardbeyan on the same date and forwarded it to the officer-in-charge, Pandaul PS for instituting a case and, thereafter, Sakri PS Case No. 173 of 1990, dated 20.6.1990 was registered under Section 7 of the Act and investigation was entrusted to aforesaid Shri R.K. Sinha, who investigated the case and submitted charge-sheet for violation of the Control Order and, thereafter, on 5.12.1992, cognizance was taken, which has been challenged in this case. Cr. Misc. No. 5359 of 1995.
Cr. Misc. No. 5359 of 1995. One Rama Kant Pandey, SI of Nawanagar PS, along with other Police personnel had gone to village Mahadeoganj to execute processes under Sections 82 and 83 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (for short the Code) against the absconding accused in Nawanagar PS Case No. 55 of 1998 under Sections 307, 379, 323 and other Sections of the IPC at 9.30 a.m. When the Police party reached the village and went to the house of the absconding accused Bishwanath Singh and Awadh Behari Singh; after seeing the Police party, the aforesaid persons wanted to flee away, but they were apprehended by the Police party and, thereafter, they proceeded to the house of other absconding accused Suresh Singh and when they reached near the house of the said accused Suresh Singh, all of a sudden petitioner No. 1 Sidha Nath Singh, petitioner No. 5 Gorakh Singh and petitioner No. 4 Arun Kumar Singh, armed with deadly weapons, attacked the Police party. Thereafter, they said that they indulged in assaulting the Police party. They threw brick-bats on the Police party also. Some of the Police party received lathi injuries as well as injuries due to throwing of brick-bats. Thereafter, he prepared a written report with regard to the said happening in the village itself and sent the same to the officer-in-charge of Nawanagar Police Station for instituting a case, on the basis of which the latter registered the said case under the aforementioned Sections of the IPC and having noticed that the investigation had already taken up by said Rama Kant Pandey, he directed him (Shri Pandey) to investigate the case. SI, R.K. Pandey investigated the case and submitted charge-sheet on 9.11.1988 and, thereafter, cognizance was taken by order, dated 29.11.1988 under the aforesaid Sections of the IPC, which has been challenged in this case after about 7 years by the petitioners. 6. In both the cases, learned counsel for the petitioners submitted two points, firstly, that in both the cases investigation has been conducted by the informants (Police Officers) themselves and as such investigation is partial and tempted one and cognizance taken on the basis of such investigation is bad in law and secondly, that the allegations and the materials collected during the course of investigation do not make out a case against the petitioners. 7.
7. Learned counsel appearing for the State, on the other hand, submitted that, even though, in both the cases, the Police Officers, who have investigated the cases, were informants but on that Account, the cognizance is not vitiated. He also submitted that the allegations and the materials collected make out a prima facie case against the petitioners. 8. The word investigation has been defined under the Code, which includes all the proceedings under the Code for the collection of evidence, conduct of investigation by the Police Officers or by any other person authorised by the Magistrate on his behalf. During investigation, the concerned Police Officer has to proceed to the spot to ascertain the facts and circumstances of the case; to Collect the evidence relating to the commission of the offence; to arrest the accused; to record the statements of the Witnesses as well as of the accused and reduce the same into writing, search of places and seizure of things necessary for investigation and which are to be produced at the trial and, thereafter, to form an opinion as to whether on the materials collected, there is a case to put the accused on trial and on coming to the Said conclusion to file a report under Section 173 before the Court. 9. The first question to be determined is as to whether the cognizance taken against the petitioners is vitiated On account of the cases having been investigated by the informants themselves. Under the Code, the Police has statutory right to investigate the case and its right is unfettered unless its acts are improper, illegal or in excess of the circumscribed limit. So long as the investigation is in accordance with the provisions dealing with the investigation, the Court has no power to stop it or issue direction as to the manner in which the investigation is to be carried out.
So long as the investigation is in accordance with the provisions dealing with the investigation, the Court has no power to stop it or issue direction as to the manner in which the investigation is to be carried out. The Privy Council in the case of Emperor V/s. Khwaja Nazir Ahmad, AIR 1945 PC 18, held as follows : "The functions of the judiciary and the police are complementary not overlapping and the combination of individual liberty with a due observance of law and order is only to be obtained by leaving each to exercise its own function, always, of course, subject to the right of the Court to intervene in an appropriate case when moved under Section 491, Criminal PC, to give directions in the nature of habeas corpus. In such case as the present one, however, the Courts functions begin when a charge is preferred before it and not until then. It has sometimes been thought that Section 561-A has given increased powers to the Court, which it did not possess before that Section was enacted But, this is not so. The Sections give no new power, it only provides that those which the Court already inherently possess shall be preserved and is inserted, as their Lordships think, least it should be considered that the only powers conferred by the Criminal Procedure Code, and that no inherent power had survived the passing of that Act." 10. The aforesaid view of the Privy Council has been followed in a catena of decisions by the Apex Court. It is not necessary to refer all the cases. Suffice it to say that the apex Court in the case of State of Haryana V/s. Bhajan Lal, AIR 1992 Supreme Court 604, at paragraph 62 held as follows : "The investigation of a cognizable offence is the field exclusively reserved for the police officers whose powers in that field are unfettered so long as the power to investigate into the cognizable offences is legitimately exercised in strict compliance with the provisions falling under Chapter XII of the Code and the Courts are not justified in obliterating the track of investigation when the Investigating Agencies are well within their legal bounds as aforementioned.
Indeed, a noticeable feature of the scheme under Chapter XIV of the Code is that a Magistrate is kept in the picture at all stages of the police investigation but he is not authorised to interfere with the actual investigation or to direct the police how that investigation is to be conducted. But, if a police officer transgresses the circumscribed limits and improperly and illegally exercises his investigatory powers in breach of any statutory provision causing serious prejudice to the personal liberty and also property of a citizen, then the Court on being approached by the person aggrieved for the redress of any grievance, as to consider the nature and extent of the breach and pass appropriate orders as may be called for without leaving the citizens to the mercy of police echelons since human dignity is a dear value of Constitution. It needs no emphasis that no one can demand absolute immunity even if he is wrong and claims unquestionable right and unlimited powers exercisable up to unfathomable cosmos. Any recognition of such power will be tantamount to recognition of "Divine Power" which no authority on each can enjoy." 11. Thus, it is settled law that the power of investigation is exclusively reserved in the Police officers and their power is unfettered so long they are acing within the bound of statutory provision. However, when they are acting mala fide or have exceeded the circumscribed limits and improperly and illegally exercised the power of investigation in breach of any statutory provision causing serious prejudice to the personal liberty and property of a citizen,then the Court on being approached by the aggrieved party may pass an appropriate order as the situation demands. 12. The apex Court in the case of Union of India V/s. W.N. Chandha, AIR 1993 Supreme Court 1082. held that during the investigation when the Investigating Officer is not deciding any matter except collecting the materials for ascertaining whether a prima facie case is made out or not and a full enquiry in case of filing a report under Section 173(2) follows in a trial before the Court or Tribunal, pursuant to the filing of the report, it cannot be said that at that stage rule of audi alteram partem superimposes an obligation to issue a prior notice and hear the accused which the Statute does not expressly recognise.
The Apex Court also held that in that case the accused has no right to say with regard to manner and method of investigation. 13. The same view has been reiterated by the Apex Court in the case of Central Bureau of Investigation V/s. Rajesh Gandhi, 1997 Cr LJ 63 : 1997 (2) East Cr C 270 (SC), wherein it has been held that the decision to investigate or decision on agency which should investigate the case, does not attract the principles of natural justice. 14. Thus, the Police during investigation, has only to collect the material to find out as to whether the accused be put on trial or not and this function of the Police is purely administrative one and it is for the Court to decide as to whether the case should proceed or not against the accused or in case it proceeds then to arrive at a final conclusion about the guilt and innocence of the accused. 15. The illegality committed in course of an investigation does not affect the competence of the Court to take cognizance and its jurisdiction for trial. This question was considered by the Apex Court in the case of H.N. Rishbud V/s. The State of Delhi, AIR 1955 SC 196 . There the question for consideration was as to whether the defect or illegality in the investigation will vitiate the cognizance or trial. In the case, the investigation was conducted by an officer, other than a designated Police Officer as provided under the provisions of the Prevention of Corruption Act. Dealing with the said matter, the Apex Court held as follows : "The question then requires to be considered whether and to what extent the trial which follows such investigation is vitiated. Now, trial follows cognizance is preceded by investigation. This is undoubtedly the basic scheme of the Code in respect of cognizance cases. But, it does not necessarily follow that an invalid investigation nullify the cognizance of trial based thereon. Here, we are not concerned with the effect of the breach of a mandatory provision regulating the competence or procedure of the Court as regards cognizance or trial. It is only with reference to such a breach that the question was to whether it constitutes an illegality vitiating the proceedings or a mere irregularity arises.
Here, we are not concerned with the effect of the breach of a mandatory provision regulating the competence or procedure of the Court as regards cognizance or trial. It is only with reference to such a breach that the question was to whether it constitutes an illegality vitiating the proceedings or a mere irregularity arises. A defect or illegality in investigation, however, serious, has no direct bearing on the competent or the procedure relating to cognizance or trial. No doubt a police report which results from an investigation is provided in Section 190, Cr PC as the material on which cognizance is taken. But, it cannot be maintained that a valid and legal police report is the foundation of the jurisdiction of the Court to take cognizance. Section 190, Cr PC is one out of a group of Sections under the heading "Conditions requisite for initiation of proceedings". The language of this section is in marked contrast with that of the other Sections of the group under the same heading, i.e., Sections 193 and 195 to 199. These latter Sections regulate the competence of the Court and bar its jurisdiction in certain cases excepting in compliance therewith. But, Section 190 does not. While no doubt, in one sense, clauses (a), (b) and (c) of Section 190(1) are conditions requisite for taking pf cognizance, it is not possible to say that cognizance on an invalid police report is prohibited and is, therefore, a nullity. Such an invalid report may still fall either under clause (a) or (b) of Section 190(1) (whether it is the one or the other we need not pause to consider) and in any case cognizance so taken is only in the nature of error in a proceeding and antecedent to the trial.
Such an invalid report may still fall either under clause (a) or (b) of Section 190(1) (whether it is the one or the other we need not pause to consider) and in any case cognizance so taken is only in the nature of error in a proceeding and antecedent to the trial. To such a situation Section 537, Cr PC which is in the following terms is attracted: "Subject to the provisions hereinbefore contained no finding sentence or order passed by a Court of competent jurisdiction shall be reversed or altered on appeal or revision on account of any error omission or irregularity in the complaint, summons, warrant, charge, proclamation, order, judgment or other proceedings before or during trial or in any enquiry or other proceedings under this Code, unless such error, omission or irregularity has in fact occasioned a failure of justice." If, therefore, cognizance is in fact taken, on a police report vitiated by the breach of a mandatory provision relating to investigation, there can be no doubt that the result of the trial which follows it cannot be set aside unless the illegality in the investigation can be shown to have brought about a miscarriage of justice. That an illegality committed in the course of investigation does not affect the competence and jurisdiction of the Court for trial is well-settled as appears from the cases in Prabhu V/s. Emperor, AIR 1944 PC 73 (C) and Lumbhardar Zutshi V/s. The King AIR 1950 PC 26 (D). These no doubt relate to the illegality of arrest in the course of investigation while we are concerned in the present cases with the illegality with reference to the machinery for the collection of the evidence. This distinction may have a bearing on the question of prejudice or miscarriage of justice, but both the cases clearly show that invalidity of the investigation has no relation to the competent of the Court.
This distinction may have a bearing on the question of prejudice or miscarriage of justice, but both the cases clearly show that invalidity of the investigation has no relation to the competent of the Court. We are, therefore, clearly, also, of the opinion that where the cognizance of the case has, in fact, been taken and the case has proceeded to termination, the invalidity of the precedent investigation does not vitiate the result unless miscarriage of justice has been caused thereby." 16 The same view has been reiterated in the Apex Court in the case of State of Uttar Pradesh V/s. Bhagwant Kishore Joshi, 1964 SCR 71 , wherein it was also held that unless the illegality or infirmity in investigation has caused serious prejudice to the accused, the same will not vitiate the order of cognizance or the trial. 17. In the case of Gholtu Modi (supra), it appears that the case was under Sections 399 and 402 of the IPC and the informant Police Officer investigated the case. The learned single Judge disbelieved the prosecution case and at one place observed that the informant should not have taken investigation in his own hand as he may not be impartial. It was not held by the learned single Judge that on that ground the cognizance or trial is vitiated. Similarly, this question was also considered by the Allahabad High Court in the case of Gopal Krishna V/s. State, AIR 1964 All 481 , wherein it was held that it is improper on the part of the informant to take an investigation of the case. However, the same will not vitiate the trial. Again in the case of Bhagwan Dayal V/s. State, AIR 1968 All 290 , it was held that the practice of investigation being conducted by the same officer, who happens to be an ocular witness is looked with disfavour and his evidence has got to be looked with great caution. In the case of Bhagwan Singh V/s. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1976 SC 985 , this question also fell for consideration and there the Head Constable, who was alleged to have been offered bribe, lodged a First Information Report and he himself investigated the case. The Apex Court held that the said infirmity was bound to reflect on the credibility of the prosecution case. 18.
The Apex Court held that the said infirmity was bound to reflect on the credibility of the prosecution case. 18. Thus, it cannot be held that if the Police Officer being the informant, in the case has investigated it, the same would vitiate cognizance and trial. The fact that the Police Officer-informant is himself investigating the case, is no ground to hold that he will not hold a fair investigation. There are many Special Acts where a complaint is made by the person, who finds violation of the statutory provisions but on that ground the cognizance or trial is not held to be invalid in the eye of law. Thus, it cannot be held that the cognizance or trial will be vitiated only on account of the informant being an Investigating Officer unless it is proved that prejudice has been caused to the accused. However, I may clarify that if it is shown in a particular case that the informant has any personal or pecuniary interest or he is biased or acting in a mala fide manner, then the Court may in appropriate cases when the matter is brought to its notice at the earliest, pass an appropriate order entrusting the investigation to some other agency. But, if the matter has not been challenged earlier at any time and the cognizance has been taken and trial has proceeded then in that case the prosecution cannot be quashed on the ground of the aforesaid infirmity unless it is shown that prejudice has been caused to the accused. 19. Thus, the first ground urged on behalf of the petitioners is without any substance. 20. Coming to the second point, I find that there are allegations that the petitioners of Cr. Misc. No. 1003 of 1993, were indulged in black-marketing. They are alleged to have violated the provisions of the Control Order. Their assertion that they have not violated the Control Order cannot be gone into at this stage as the same is to be considered at the time of trial. 21. So far as the case of the petitioners in Cr. Misc. No. 5359 of 1995 is concerned, there are allegations against them of having rescued the apprehended accused and assaulted the police party and as such there are materials to make out a prima facie case against them. The correctness of the same cannot be judged at this stage. 22.
So far as the case of the petitioners in Cr. Misc. No. 5359 of 1995 is concerned, there are allegations against them of having rescued the apprehended accused and assaulted the police party and as such there are materials to make out a prima facie case against them. The correctness of the same cannot be judged at this stage. 22. In the result, there is no merit in both these applications and, accordingly, the same are dismissed. S.K.Chattopadhyaya, J. 23 I agree.