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2004 DIGILAW 2008 (ALL)

Baij Nath Anant Ram v. State of Uttar Pradesh

2004-10-05

AMAR SARAN

body2004
AMAR SARAN, J. ( 1 ) HEARD Shri L. P. Nathani, learned Senior Advocate on behalf of the applicants, Shri Nikhil kumar, learned counsel for the opposite party No. 3 and learned Additional Government advocate representing the State. ( 2 ) THIS application has been filed under Section 482 Cr. P. C. by Shri Baij Nath, Chief Manager (Personnel and Administration) Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (hereinafter referred to as ONCG) and the ONCG, Dehradun for quashing a criminal complaint filed by opposite party no. 3, who has retired as Assistant Executive Engineer from the ONGC and who has settled in saharanpur. ( 3 ) THE allegations in the complaint were that on different dates the complainant had submitted medicals bills totalling Rs. 56, 403/- for reimbursement after his retirement, but the applicants unlawfully and in pursuance of a conspiracy for drawing undue advantage, held the payments on the medical bills to be inadmissible. The complainant examined himself under Section 200 cr. P. C. and filed certain documents. Thereafter the impugned order summoning the applicant under Section 406 IPC was passed by the Judicial Magistrate-III, Saharanpur on 8. 8. 2000. The case was numbered as Criminal Complaint Case No. 306/2000, J. P. Sharma v. A. S. Soni. ( 4 ) IT is interesting to note that the summoning order was passed by the learned Judicial magistrate even without requiring the complainant to examine any witness under Section 202 cr. P. C. The does suggest an over-anxiety on part of the Magistrate to summon the applicants at any cost for unexplained reasons. ( 5 ) ON a bare perusal of the complaint and the surrounding circumstance, it is apparent that this complaint has been filed in a completely mala fide manner and allowing this criminal proceedings against the applicants to continue would amount to the grossest abuse of the process of the court. The applicants have filed the relevant rules, which clearly show that the complainant was only eligible for reimbursement of his medical bills provided he was medically treated in the ONGC hospital or in a Government hospital after his retirement and not in a private hospital. This fact has not been denied by the complainant, whose claim is that he was not aware of these rules, which were kept away form him. In any view of the matter, there is no question of the case. This fact has not been denied by the complainant, whose claim is that he was not aware of these rules, which were kept away form him. In any view of the matter, there is no question of the case. If the senior authority refuse to pass ineligible medical bills, then where is the question of his having committed criminal breach of trust in respect of any money or property entrusted to him. ( 6 ) SIGNIFICANTLY, he apposite party No. 3 has been filing cases before the Consumer Forum for realisation of his medical bills and he has even filed a writ petition before this Court bearing No. 27660 of 2003 (J. P. Sharma v. Union of India and Ors.), which has been dismissed by this Court on 10. 9. 2004 holding the wit petition to be not maintainable. ( 7 ) IT does therefore appear that this complaint has been filed in a wholly mala fide manner only to exert illegal pressure and to black mail the applicants into passing the bills which have been submitted by the complainant. Applying pressure for vindicating ones civil claims should never be allowed to become the object of a criminal prosecution. ( 8 ) IT may be noted that the Apex Court in the case of G. Sagar Suri and Anr. v. State of U. P. and ors. , AIR2000 SC 754 , [2000 ]100 Compcas613 (SC ), 2000 Crilj824 , 2000 (2 )CTC107 , JT2000 (1 )SC 360 , 2000 (1 )SCALE271 , (2000 )2 SCC636 , [2000 ]1 scr417 , in paragraph 8 has observed: "jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code has to be exercised with a great care. In exercise of its jurisdiction High Court is not to examine the matter superfically. It is to be seen if a matter, which is essentially of civil nature, has been given a cloak of criminal offence. Criminal proceedings are not a short cut of other remedies available in law. Before issuing process a criminal court has to exercise a great deal of caution. For the accused it is a serious matter. " ( 9 ) THE observations of the Supreme Court in the beginning of the decision in Chandrapal Singh and Ors. v. Maharaj Singh and Anr. Before issuing process a criminal court has to exercise a great deal of caution. For the accused it is a serious matter. " ( 9 ) THE observations of the Supreme Court in the beginning of the decision in Chandrapal Singh and Ors. v. Maharaj Singh and Anr. AIR1982 SC 1238 , 1982 crilj1731 , 1982 (1 )SCALE73 , (1982 )1 SCC466 , 1982 (14 )UJ517 (SC ) are also relevant in the connection: "a frustrated landlord after met his waterloo in the hierarchy of civil courts, has further enmeshed the tenant in a frivolous criminal prosecution which prima facie appears to be an abuse of process of law. The facts when stated are so telling that further discussion may appear to be superfluous. " ( 10 ) IN this view of the matter this application succeeds and is allowed. Criminal proceedings in criminal complaint case No. 306 of 2000 J. P. Sharma v. A. S. Soni, under Section 406 IPC pending in the court of Judicial Magistrate-III, Saharanpur are quashed. . .