IN THE SUPREME
COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO.
8989 OF 2010
Gian Singh ..............................................................Petitioner
Versus
State of Punjab & Another .....................................Respondents
WITH SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO. 6138 OF 2006 SPECIAL
LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO. 5203 OF 2011 SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO. 259 OF
2011 SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO. 5921 OF 2009 SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION
(CRL.) NO. 7148 OF 2009 SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO. 6324 OF 2009 CRIMINAL
APPEAL NOS. 2107-2125 OF 2011
JUDGEMENT
R.M. LODHA, J.
When the special leave petition in Gian Singh v. State of Punjab and another
came up for hearing, a two-Judge Bench (Markandey Katju and Gyan Sudha Misra,
JJ.) doubted the correctness of the decisions of this Court in B.S. Joshi and
others v. State of Haryana and another[1], Nikhil Merchant v. Central Bureau of
Investigation and another[2] and Manoj Sharma v. State and others[3] and
referred the matter to a larger Bench. The reference order reads as follows :
“Heard learned counsel for the petitioner.
The petitioner has been convicted under Section 420 and Section 120B, IPC by
the learned Magistrate. He filed an appeal challenging his conviction before the
learned Sessions Judge.
While his appeal was pending, he filed an application before the learned
Sessions Judge for compounding the offence, which, according to the learned
counsel, was directed to be taken up along with the main appeal. Thereafter, the
petitioner filed a petition under Section 482, Cr.P.C. for quashing of the FIR
on the ground of compounding the offence. That petition under Section 482
Cr.P.C. has been dismissed by the High Court by its impugned order. Hence, this
petition has been filed in this Court.
Learned counsel for the petitioner has relied on three decisions of this
Court, all by two Judge Benches. They are B.S.
Joshi vs. State of Haryana (2003) 4 SCC 675;
Nikhil Merchant vs.
Central Bureau of Investigation and Another (2008) 9 SCC 677;
and Manoj Sharma vs. State and Others (2008) 16 SCC 1. In
these decisions, this Court has indirectly permitted compounding of
non-compoundable offences. One of us, Hon’ble Mr. Justice Markandey Katju, was
a member to the last two decisions.
Section 320, Cr.P.C. mentions certain offences as compoundable, certain other
offences as compoundable with the permission of the Court, and the other
offences as non- compoundable vide Section 320(7).
Section 420, IPC, one of the counts on which the petitioner has been
convicted, no doubt, is a compoundable offence with permission of the Court in
view of Section 320, Cr.P.C. but Section 120B IPC, the other count on which the
petitioner has been convicted, is a non-compoundable offence.
Section 120B (Criminal conspiracy) is a separate offence and since it is a
non-compoundable offence, we cannot permit it to be compounded.
The Court cannot amend the statute and must maintain judicial restraint in
this connection. The Courts should not try to take over the function of the
Parliament or executive. It is the legislature alone which can amend Section 320
Cr.P.C.
We are of the opinion that the above three decisions require to be
re-considered as, in our opinion, something which cannot be done directly cannot
be done indirectly. In our, prima facie, opinion, non-compoundable offences
cannot be permitted to be compounded by the Court, whether directly or
indirectly.
Hence, the above three decisions do not appear to us to be correctly decided.
It is true that in the last two decisions, one of us, Hon’ble Mr. Justice
Markandey Katju, was a member but a Judge should always be open to correct his
mistakes. We feel that these decisions require re-consideration and hence we
direct that this matter be placed before a larger Bench to reconsider the
correctness of the aforesaid three decisions.
Let the papers of this case be placed before Hon’ble Chief Justice of India
for constituting a larger Bench.â€
2. This is how these matters have come up for consideration before us.
3. Two provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (for short,
‘Code’) which are vital for consideration of the issue referred to the
larger Bench are Sections 320 and 482. Section 320 of the Code provides for
compounding of certain offences punishable under the Indian Penal Code, 1860
(for short, ‘IPC’). It reads as follows :
“S. 320. Compounding of offences.—(1) The offences punishable under the
sections of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) specified in the first two
columns of the Table next following may be compounded by the persons mentioned
in the third column of that Table :
TABLE |Offenc|Section of |Person by whom offence | |e |the Indian |may be
compounded | | |Penal Code | | | |applicable | | |1 |2 |3 | (2) The offences
punishable under the sections of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) specified in
the first two columns of the table next following may, with the permission of
the Court before which any prosecution for such offence is pending, be
compounded by the persons mentioned in the third column of that Table:-- TABLE
|Offen|Section of |Person by whom | |ce |the Indian |offence may be | | |Penal
Code |compounded | | |applicable | | |1 |2 |3 | (3) When an offence is
compoundable under this section, the abatement of such offence or an attempt to
commit such offence (when such attempt is itself an offence) or where the
accused is liable under section 34 or 149 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860)
may be compounded in like manner.
(4) (a) When the person who would otherwise be competent to compound an
offence under this section is under the age of eighteen years or is an idiot or
a lunatic, any person competent to contract on his behalf, may, with the
permission of the Court, compound such offence.
(b) When the person who would otherwise be competent to compound an offence
under this section is dead, the legal representative, as defined in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 of such person may, with the consent of the Court,
compound such offence.
(5) When the accused has been committed for trial or when he has been
convicted and an appeal is pending, no composition for the offence shall be
allowed without the leave of the Court to which he is committed, or, as the case
may be, before which the appeal is to be heard.
(6) A High Court or Court of Session acting in the exercise of its powers of
revision under section 401 may allow any person to compound any offence which
such person is competent to compound under this section.
(7) No offence shall be compounded if the accused is, by reason of a previous
conviction, liable either to enhanced punishment or to a punishment of a
different kind for such offence.
(8) The composition of an offence under this section shall have the effect of
an acquittal of the accused with whom the offence has been compounded.
(9) No offence shall be compounded except as provided by this section.â€
4. Section 482 saves the inherent power of the High Court and it reads as
follows :
“S. 482. Saving of inherent power of High Court.—Nothing in this Code
shall be deemed to limit or affect the inherent powers of the High Court to make
such orders as may be necessary to give effect to any order under this Code, or
to prevent abuse of the process of any Court or otherwise to secure the ends of
justice.â€
5. In B.S. Joshi1 , the undisputed facts were these : the husband was one of
the appellants while the wife was respondent no. 2 in the appeal before this
Court. They were married on 21.7.1999 and were living separately since
15.7.2000. An FIR was registered under Sections 498-A/323 and 406, IPC at the
instance of the wife on 2.1.2002. When the criminal case registered at the
instance of the wife was pending, the dispute between the husband and wife and
their family members was settled.
It appears that the wife filed an affidavit that her disputes with the
husband and the other members of his family had been finally settled and she and
her husband had agreed for mutual divorce. Based on the said affidavit, the
matter was taken to the High Court by both the parties and they jointly prayed
for quashing the criminal proceedings launched against the husband and his
family members on the basis of the FIR registered at the wife’s instance under
Sections 498-A and 406 IPC. The High Court dismissed the petition for quashing
the FIR as in its view the offences under Sections 498-A and 406, IPC were
non-compoundable and the inherent powers under Section 482 of the Code could not
be invoked to by-pass Section 320 of the Code. It is from this order that the
matter reached this Court. This Court held that the High Court in exercise of
its inherent powers could quash criminal proceedings or FIR or complaint and
Section 320 of the Code did not limit or affect the powers under Section 482 of
the Code. The Court in paragraphs 14 and 15 (Pg. 682) of the Report held as
under :
“14. There is no doubt that the object of introducing Chapter XX- A
containing Section 498-A in the Indian Penal Code was to prevent torture to a
woman by her husband or by relatives of her husband. Section 498-A was added
with a view to punishing a husband and his relatives who harass or torture the
wife to coerce her or her relatives to satisfy unlawful demands of dowry. The
hypertechnical view would be counterproductive and would act against interests
of women and against the object for which this provision was added. There is
every likelihood that non-exercise of inherent power to quash the proceedings to
meet the ends of justice would prevent women from settling earlier.
That is not the object of Chapter XX-A of the Indian Penal Code.
15. In view of the above discussion, we hold that the High Court in exercise
of its inherent powers can quash criminal proceedings or FIR or complaint and
Section 320 of the Code does not limit or affect the powers under Section 482 of
the Code.â€
6. In Nikhil Merchant2, a company, M/s. Neemuch Emballage Ltd., Mumbai was
granted financial assistance by Andhra Bank under various facilities. On account
of default in repayment of loans, the bank filed a suit for recovery of the
amount payable by the borrower company. The bank also filed a complaint against
the company, its Managing Director and the officials of Andhra Bank for diverse
offences, namely, Section 120-B read with Sections 420, 467, 468, 471 of the IPC
read with Sections 5(2) and 5(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947
and Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1988. The suit for recovery filed by the bank against the company and the
Managing Director of the Company was compromised. The suit was compromised upon
the defendants agreeing to pay the amounts due as per the schedule mentioned in
the consent terms. Clause 11 of the consent terms read, “agreed that save as
aforesaid neither party has any claim against the other and parties do hereby
withdraw all the allegations and counter-allegations made against each otherâ€.
Based on clause 11 of the consent terms, the Managing Director of the Company,
the appellant who was accused no. 3 in charge sheet filed by CBI, made
application for discharge from the criminal complaint. The said application was
rejected by the Special Judge (CBI), Greater Bombay, which came to be challenged
before the Bombay High Court. The contention before the High Court was that
since the subject matter of the dispute had been settled between the appellant
and the bank, it would be unreasonable to continue with the criminal
proceedings. The High Court rejected the application for discharge from the
criminal cases. It is from this order that the matter reached this Court by way
of special leave. The Court having regard to the facts of the case and the
earlier decision of this Court in B.S. Joshi1, set aside the order of the High
Court and quashed the criminal proceedings by consideration of the matter thus:
“28. The basic intention of the accused in this case appears to have been
to misrepresent the financial status of the Company, M/s Neemuch Emballage Ltd.,
Mumbai, in order to avail of the credit facilities to an extent to which the
Company was not entitled. In other words, the main intention of the Company and
its officers was to cheat the Bank and induce it to part with additional amounts
of credit to which the Company was not otherwise entitled.
29. Despite the ingredients and the factual content of an offence of cheating
punishable under Section 420 IPC, the same has been made compoundable under
sub-section (2) of Section 320 CrPC with the leave of the court. Of course,
forgery has not been included as one of the compoundable offences, but it is in
such cases that the principle enunciated in B.S. Joshi case becomes relevant.
30. In the instant case, the disputes between the Company and the Bank have
been set at rest on the basis of the compromise arrived at by them whereunder
the dues of the Bank have been cleared and the Bank does not appear to have any
further claim against the Company. What, however, remains is the fact that
certain documents were alleged to have been created by the appellant herein in
order to avail of credit facilities beyond the limit to which the Company was
entitled. The dispute involved herein has overtones of a civil dispute with
certain criminal facets. The question which is required to be answered in this
case is whether the power which independently lies with this Court to quash the
criminal proceedings pursuant to the compromise arrived at, should at all be
exercised?
31. On an overall view of the facts as indicated hereinabove and keeping in
mind the decision of this Court in B.S. Joshi case and the compromise arrived at
between the Company and the Bank as also Clause 11 of the consent terms filed in
the suit filed by the Bank, we are satisfied that this is a fit case where
technicality should not be allowed to stand in the way in the quashing of the
criminal proceedings, since, in our view, the continuance of the same after the
compromise arrived at between the parties would be a futile exercise.â€
7. In Manoj Sharma3, the Court was concerned with the question whether an
F.I.R. under Sections 420/468/471/34/120-B IPC can be quashed either under
Section 482 of the Code or under Article 226 of the Constitution when the
accused and the complainant have compromised and settled the matter between
themselves. Altamas Kabir, J., who delivered the lead judgment referred to B.S.
Joshi1 and the submission made on behalf of the State that B.S. Joshi1 required
a second look and held that the Court was not inclined to accept the contention
made on behalf of the State that the decision in B.S. Joshi1 required
reconsideration, at least not in the facts of the case. It was held that what
was decided in B.S. Joshi1 was the power and authority of the High Court to
exercise jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code or under Article 226 of the
Constitution to quash offences which were not compoundable. The law stated in
B.S. Joshi1 simply indicated the powers of the High Court to quash any criminal
proceeding or first information report or complaint whether the offences were
compoundable or not. Altamas Kabir, J. further observed, “The ultimate
exercise of discretion under Section 482 CrPC or under Article 226 of the
Constitution is with the court which has to exercise such jurisdiction in the
facts of each case. It has been explained that the said power is in no way
limited by the provisions of Section 320 CrPC. We are unable to disagree with
such statement of law. In any event, in this case, we are only required to
consider whether the High Court had exercised its jurisdiction under Section 482
CrPC legally and correctly.†Then in paragraphs 8 and 9 (pg. 5) of the Report,
Altamas Kabir, J., inter alia, held as under :
“8. …..Once the complainant decided not to pursue the matter further, the
High Court could have taken a more pragmatic view of the matter. We do not
suggest that while exercising its powers under Article 226 of the Constitution
the High Court could not have refused to quash the first information report, but
what we do say is that the matter could have been considered by the High Court
with greater pragmatism in the facts of the case.
9. ……In the facts of this case we are of the view that continuing with
the criminal proceedings would be an exercise in futility………â€
8. Markandey Katju, J. although concurred with the view of Altamas Kabir, J.
that criminal proceedings in that case deserved to be quashed but observed that
question may have to be decided in some subsequent decision or decisions
(preferably by a larger Bench) as to which non-compoundable cases can be quashed
under Section 482 of the Code or Article 226 of the Constitution on the basis
that the parties have entered into compromise. In paragraphs 27 and 28 (pg. 10)
of the report he held as under:
“27. There can be no doubt that a case under Section 302 IPC or other
serious offences like those under Sections 395, 307 or 304- B cannot be
compounded and hence proceedings in those provisions cannot be quashed by the
High Court in exercise of its power under Section 482 CrPC or in writ
jurisdiction on the basis of compromise. However, in some other cases (like
those akin to a civil nature), the proceedings can be quashed by the High Court
if the parties have come to an amicable settlement even though the provisions
are not compoundable. Where a line is to be drawn will have to be decided in
some later decisions of this Court, preferably by a larger Bench (so as to make
it more authoritative). Some guidelines will have to be evolved in this
connection and the matter cannot be left at the sole unguided discretion of
Judges, otherwise there may be conflicting decisions and judicial anarchy. A
judicial discretion has to be exercised on some objective guiding principles and
criteria, and not on the whims and fancies of individual Judges. Discretion,
after all, cannot be the Chancellor's foot.
28. I am expressing this opinion because Shri B.B. Singh, learned counsel for
the respondent has rightly expressed his concern that the decision in B.S. Joshi
case should not be understood to have meant that Judges can quash any kind of
criminal case merely because there has been a compromise between the parties.
After all, a crime is an offence against society, and not merely against a
private individual.â€
9. Dr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi, learned senior counsel for the petitioner in
SLP(Crl.) No. 6324 of 2009 submitted that the inherent power of the High Court
to quash a non-compoundable offence was not circumscribed by any of the
provisions of the Code, including Section 320. Section 482 is a declaration of
the inherent power pre-existing in the High Court and so long as the exercise of
the inherent power falls within the parameters of Section 482, it shall have an
overriding effect over any of the provisions of the Code. He, thus, submitted
that in exercise of its inherent powers under Section 482, the High Court may
permit compounding of a non- compoundable offence provided that in doing so it
satisfies the conditions mentioned therein. Learned senior counsel would submit
that the power to quash the criminal proceedings under Section 482 of the Code
exists even in non-compoundable offence but its actual exercise will depend on
facts of a particular case. He submitted that some or all of the following tests
may be relevant to decide whether to quash or not to quash the criminal
proceedings in a given case; (a) the nature and gravity of case; (b) does the
dispute reflect overwhelming and pre-dominantly civil flavour; (c) would the
quashing involve settlement of entire or almost the entire dispute; (d) the
compromise/settlement between parties and/or other facts and the circumstances
render possibility of conviction remote and bleak;
(e) not to quash would cause extreme injustice and would not serve ends of
justice and (f) not to quash would result in abuse of process of court.
10. Shri P.P. Rao, learned senior counsel for the petitioner in Special Leave
Petition (Crl.) No. 5921 of 2009 submitted that Section 482 of the Code is
complete answer to the reference made to the larger Bench.
He analysed Section 482 and Section 320 of the Code and submitted that
Section 320 did not limit or affect the inherent powers of the High Court.
Notwithstanding Section 320, High Court can exercise its inherent power,
inter alia, to prevent abuse of the process of any court or otherwise to secure
the ends of justice. To secure the ends of justice is a wholesome and definite
guideline. It requires formation of opinion by High Court on the basis of
material on record as to whether the ends of justice would justify quashing of a
particular criminal complaint, FIR or a proceeding.
When the Court exercises its inherent power under Section 482 in respect of
offences which are not compoundable taking into account the fact that the
accused and the complainant have settled their differences amicably, it cannot
be viewed as permitting compounding of offence which is not compoundable.
11. Mr. P.P. Rao, learned senior counsel submitted that in cases of civil
wrongs which also constitute criminal offences, the High Court may pass order
under Section 482 once both parties jointly pray for dropping the criminal
proceeding initiated by one of them to put an end to the dispute and restore
peace between the parties.
12. Mr. V. Giri, learned senior counsel for the respondent (accused) in
Special Leave Petition (Crl.) No. 6138 of 2006 submitted that the real question
that needs to be considered by this Court in the reference is whether Section
320(9) of the Code creates a bar or limits or affects the inherent powers of the
High Court under Section 482 of the Code. It was submitted that Section 320(9)
does not create a bar or limit or affect the inherent powers of the High Court
in the matter of quashing any criminal proceedings. Relying upon various
decisions of this Court, it was submitted that it has been consistently held
that the High Court has unfettered powers under Section 482 of the Code to
secure the ends of justice and prevent abuse of the process of the Court. He
also submitted that on compromise between the parties, the High Court in
exercise of powers under Section 482 can quash the criminal proceedings, more so
the matters arising from matrimonial dispute, property dispute, dispute between
close relations, partners or business concerns which are predominantly of civil,
financial or commercial nature.
13. Learned counsel for the petitioner in Special Leave Petition (Crl.) No.
8989 of 2010 submitted that the court should have positive view to quash the
proceedings once the aggrieved party has compromised the matter with the wrong
doer. It was submitted that if the court did not allow the quashing of FIR or
complaint or criminal case where the parties settled their dispute amicably, it
would encourage the parties to speak lie in the court and witnesses would become
hostile and the criminal proceeding would not end in conviction. Learned counsel
submitted that the court could also consider the two questions (1) can there be
partial quashing of the FIR qua accused with whom the complainant/aggrieved
party enters into compromise. (2) can the court quash the proceedings in the
cases which have not arisen from the matrimonial or civil disputes but the
offences are personal in nature like grievous hurt (S.326), attempt to murder
(S.307), rape (S.376), trespassing (S.452) and kidnapping (S.364, 365) etc.
14. Mr. P. P. Malhotra, learned Additional Solicitor General referred to the
scheme of the Code. He submitted that in any criminal case investigated by
police on filing the report under Section 173 of the Code, the Magistrate, after
applying his mind to the chargesheet and the documents accompanying the same, if
takes cognizance of the offences and summons the accused and/or frames charges
and in certain grave and serious offences, commits the accused to be tried by a
court of Sessions and the Sessions Court after satisfying itself and after
hearing the accused frames charges for the offences alleged to have been
committed by him, the Code provides a remedy to accused to challenge the order
taking cognizance or of framing charges. Similar situation may follow in a
complaint case.
Learned Additional Solicitor General submitted that power under Section 482
of the Code cannot be invoked in the non-compoundable offences since Section
320(9) expressly prohibits the compounding of such offences.
Quashing of criminal proceedings of the offences which are non-compoundable
would negative the effect of the order of framing charges or taking cognizance
and therefore quashing would amount to taking away the order of cognizance
passed by the Magistrate.
15. Learned Additional Solicitor General would submit that when the Court
takes cognizance or frames charges, it is in accordance with the procedure
established by law. Once the court takes cognizance or frames charges, the
method to challenge such order is by way of appropriate application to the
superior court under the provisions of the Code.
16. If power under Section 482 is exercised, in relation to non- compoundable
offences, it will amount to what is prohibited by law and such cases cannot be
brought within the parameters ‘to secure ends of justice’.
Any order in violation and breach of statutory provisions, learned Additional
Solicitor General would submit, would be a case against the ends of justice. He
heavily relied upon a Constitution Bench decision of this Court in Central
Bureau of Investigation and others v. Keshub Mahindra and others[4] wherein this
Court held, ‘no decision by any court, this Court not excluded, can be read in
a manner as to nullify the express provisions of an Act or the Code.’ With
reference to B.S. Joshi1, learned Additional Solicitor General submitted that
that was a case where the dispute was between the husband and wife and the court
felt that if the proceedings were not quashed, it would prevent the woman from
settling in life and the wife had already filed an affidavit that there were
temperamental differences and she was not supporting continuation of criminal
proceedings. As regards, Nikhil Merchant2, learned Additional Solicitor General
submitted that this Court in State of Madhya Pradesh v. Rameshwar and others[5]
held that the said decision was a decision under Article 142 of the
Constitution. With regard to Manoj Sharma3, learned Additional Solicitor General
referred to the observations made by Markandey Katju, J.
in paragraphs 24 and 28 of the Report.
17. Learned Additional Solicitor General submitted that the High Court has no
power to quash criminal proceedings in regard to offences in which a cognizance
has been taken by the Magistrate merely because there has been settlement
between the victim and the offender because the criminal offence is against the
society.
18. More than 65 years back, in Emperor v. Khwaja Nazir Ahmed[6], it was
observed by the Privy Council that Section 561A (corresponding to Section 482 of
the Code) had not given increased powers to the Court which it did not possess
before that section was enacted. It was observed, `The section gives no new
powers, it only provides that those which the court already inherently possess
shall be preserved and is inserted lest, as their Lordships think, it should be
considered that the only powers possessed by the court are those expressly
conferred by the Criminal Procedure Code and that no inherent power had survived
the passing of the Code’.
19. In Khushi Ram v. Hashim and others[7], this Court held as under :
“It is unnecessary to emphasise that the inherent power of the High Court
under Section 561A cannot be invoked in regard to matters which are directly
covered by the specific provisions of the Code…â€
20. The above view of Privy Council in Khwaja Nazir Ahmed6 and another
decision in Lala Jairam Das & Ors. v. Emperor[8] was expressly accepted by
this Court in State of Uttar Pradesh. v. Mohammad Naim[9] .
The Court said :
“7. It is now well settled that the section confers no new powers on the
High Court. It merely safeguards all existing inherent powers possessed by a
High Court necessary (among other purposes) to secure the ends of justice. The
section provides that those powers which the court inherently possesses shall be
preserved lest it be considered that the only powers possessed by the court are
those expressly conferred by the Code and that no inherent powers had survived
the passing of the Code………..â€
21. In Pampathy v. State of Mysore[10], a three-Judge Bench of this Court
stated as follows :
“ The inherent power of the High Court mentioned in Section 561A, Criminal
Procedure Code can be exercised only for either of the three purposes
specifically mentioned in the section. The inherent power cannot be invoked in
respect of any matter covered by the specific provisions of the Code. It cannot
also be invoked if its exercise would be inconsistent with any of the specific
provisions of the Code. It is only if the matter in question is not covered by
any specific provisions of the Code that s. 561A can come into
operation…….â€
22. In State of Karnataka v. L. Muniswamy and others[11], a three- Judge
Bench of this Court referred to Section 482 of the Code and in paragraph 7 (pg.
703) of the Report held as under :
7. In the exercise of this wholesome power, the High Court is
entitled to quash a proceeding if it comes to the conclusion that allowing the
proceeding to continue would be an abuse of the process of the Court or that the
ends of justice require that the proceeding ought to be quashed. The saving of
the High Court's inherent powers, both in civil and criminal matters, is
designed to achieve a salutary public purpose which is that a court proceeding
ought not to be permitted to degenerate into a weapon of harassment or
persecution. In a criminal case, the veiled object behind a lame prosecution,
the very nature of the material on which the structure of the prosecution rests
and the like would justify the High Court in quashing the proceeding in the
interest of justice. The ends of justice are higher than the ends of mere law
though justice has got to be administered according to laws made by the
legislature. The compelling necessity for making these observations is that
without a proper realisation of the object and purpose of the provision which
seeks to save the inherent powers of the High Court to do justice between the
State and its subjects, it would be impossible to appreciate the width and
contours of that salient jurisdiction.â€
23. The Court then observed that the considerations justifying the exercise
of inherent powers for securing the ends of justice naturally vary from case to
case and a jurisdiction as wholesome as the one conferred by Section 482 ought
not to be encased within the straitjacket of a rigid formula.
24. A three-Judge Bench of this Court in Madhu Limaye v. The State of
Maharashtra[12], dealt with the invocation of inherent power under Section 482
for quashing interlocutory order even though revision under Section 397(2) of
the Code was prohibited. The Court noticed the principles in relation to the
exercise of the inherent power of the High Court as under :
“(1) That the power is not to be resorted to if there is a specific
provision in the Code for the redress of the grievance of the aggrieved party;
(2) That it should be exercised very sparingly to prevent abuse of process of
any Court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice;
(3) That it should not be exercised as against the express bar of law
engrafted in any other provision of the Code.â€
25. In Raj Kapoor and others v. State and others[13], the Court explained the
width and amplitude of the inherent power of the High Court under Section 482
vis-à-vis revisional power under Section 397 as follows:
“10. …….The opening words of Section 482 contradict this contention
because nothing of the Code, not even Section 397, can affect the amplitude of
the inherent power preserved in so many terms by the language of Section 482.
Even so, a general principle pervades this branch of law when a specific
provision is made: easy resort to inherent power is not right except under
compelling circumstances. Not that there is absence of jurisdiction but that
inherent power should not invade areas set apart for specific power under the
same Code. In Madhu Limaye’s case this Court has exhaustively and, if I may
say so with great respect, correctly discussed and delineated the law beyond
mistake. While it is true that Section 482 is pervasive it should not subvert
legal interdicts written into the same Code, such, for instance, in Section
397(2). Apparent conflict may arise in some situations between the two
provisions and a happy solution “would be to say that the bar provided in
sub-section (2) of Section 397 operates only in exercise of the revisional power
of the High Court, meaning thereby that the High Court will have no power of
revision in relation to any interlocutory order. Then in accordance with one or
the other principles enunciated above, the inherent power will come into play,
there being no other provision in the Code for the redress of the grievance of
the aggrieved party. But then, if the order assailed is purely of an
interlocutory character which could be corrected in exercise of the revisional
power of the High Court under the 1898 Code, the High Court will refuse to
exercise its inherent power. But in case the impugned order clearly brings about
a situation which is an abuse of the process of the Court or for the purpose of
securing the ends of justice interference by the High Court is absolutely
necessary, then nothing contained in Section 397(2) can limit or affect the
exercise of the inherent power by the High Court. But such cases would be few
and far between. The High Court must exercise the inherent power very sparingly.
One such case would be the desirability of the quashing of a criminal proceeding
initiated illegally, vexatiously or as being without jurisdictionâ€.
In short, there is no total ban on the exercise of inherent power where abuse
of the process of the court or other extraordinary situation excites the court's
jurisdiction. The limitation is self-restraint, nothing more. The policy of the
law is clear that interlocutory orders, pure and simple, should not be taken up
to the High Court resulting in unnecessary litigation and delay. At the other
extreme, final orders are clearly capable of being considered in exercise of
inherent power, if glaring injustice stares the court in the face. In between is
a tertium quid, as Untwalia, J. has pointed out as for example, where it is more
than a purely interlocutory order and less than a final disposal. The present
case falls under that category where the accused complain of harassment through
the court's process. Can we state that in this third category the inherent power
can be exercised? In the words of Untwalia, J.: (SCC p. 556, para 10) “The
answer is obvious that the bar will not operate to prevent the abuse of the
process of the Court and/or to secure the ends of justice. The label of the
petition filed by an aggrieved party is immaterial. The High Court can examine
the matter in an appropriate case under its inherent powers. The present case
undoubtedly falls for exercise of the power of the High Court in accordance with
Section 482 of the 1973 Code, even assuming, although not accepting, that
invoking the revisional power of the High Court is impermissible.†I am,
therefore clear in my mind that the inherent power is not rebuffed in the case
situation before us. Counsel on both sides, sensitively responding to our
allergy for legalistics, rightly agreed that the fanatical insistence on the
formal filing of a copy of the order under cessation need not take up this
court's time. Our conclusion concurs with the concession of counsel on both
sides that merely because a copy of the order has not been produced, despite its
presence in the records in the court, it is not possible for me to hold that the
entire revisory power stands frustrated and the inherent power stultified.â€
26. In Simrikhia v. Dolley Mukherjee and Chhabi Mukherjee and another[14],
the Court considered the scope of Section 482 of the Code in a case where on
dismissal of petition under Section 482, a second petition under Section 482 of
the Code was made. The contention before this Court was that the second petition
under Section 482 of the Code was not entertainable; the exercise of power under
Section 482 on a second petition by the same party on the same ground virtually
amounts to review of the earlier order and is contrary to the spirit of Section
362 of the Code and the High Court was in error in having quashed the
proceedings by adopting that course. While accepting this argument, this Court
held as follows :
“3. ……The inherent power under Section 482 is intended to prevent the
abuse of the process of the court and to secure ends of justice. Such power
cannot be exercised to do something which is expressly barred under the Code. If
any consideration of the facts by way of review is not permissible under the
Code and is expressly barred, it is not for the court to exercise its inherent
power to reconsider the matter and record a conflicting decision. If there had
been change in the circumstances of the case, it would be in order for the High
Court to exercise its inherent powers in the prevailing circumstances and pass
appropriate orders to secure the ends of justice or to prevent the abuse of the
process of the court. Where there is no such changed circumstances and the
decision has to be arrived at on the facts that existed as on the date of the
earlier order, the exercise of the power to reconsider the same materials to
arrive at different conclusion is in effect a review, which is expressly barred
under Section 362.
5. Section 362 of the Code expressly provides that no court when it has
signed its judgment or final order disposing of a case, shall alter or review
the same except to correct a clerical or arithmetical error save as otherwise
provided by the Code.
Section 482 enables the High Court to make such order as may be necessary to
give effect to any order under the Code or to prevent abuse of the process of
any court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice. The inherent powers,
however, as much are controlled by principle and precedent as are its express
powers by statute. If a matter is covered by an express letter of law, the court
cannot give a go-by to the statutory provisions and instead evolve a new
provision in the garb of inherent jurisdiction.
7. The inherent jurisdiction of the High Court cannot be invoked to override
bar of review under Section 362. It is clearly stated in Sooraj Devi v. Pyare
Lal, that the inherent power of the court cannot be exercised for doing that
which is specifically prohibited by the Code. The law is therefore clear that
the inherent power cannot be exercised for doing that which cannot be done on
account of the bar under other provisions of the Code. The court is not
empowered to review its own decision under the purported exercise of inherent
power. We find that the impugned order in this case is in effect one reviewing
the earlier order on a reconsideration of the same materials. The High Court has
grievously erred in doing so. Even on merits, we do not find any compelling
reasons to quash the proceedings at that stage.â€
27. In Dharampal & Ors. v. Ramshri (Smt.) and others[15], this Court
observed as follows :
“……It is now well settled that the inherent powers under Section 482 of
the Code cannot be utilized for exercising powers which are expressly barred by
the Code…….â€
28. In Arun Shankar Shukla v. State of Uttar Pradesh and ors.[16] , a
two-Judge Bench of this Court held as under :
“….It is true that under Section 482 of the Code, the High Court has
inherent powers to make such orders as may be necessary to give effect to any
order under the Code or to prevent the abuse of process of any court or
otherwise to secure the ends of justice. But the expressions “abuse of the
process of law†or “to secure the ends of justice†do not confer unlimited
jurisdiction on the High Court and the alleged abuse of the process of law or
the ends of justice could only be secured in accordance with law including
procedural law and not otherwise.
Further, inherent powers are in the nature of extraordinary powers to be used
sparingly for achieving the object mentioned in Section 482 of the Code in cases
where there is no express provision empowering the High Court to achieve the
said object.
It is well-neigh settled that inherent power is not to be invoked in respect
of any matter covered by specific provisions of the Code or if its exercise
would infringe any specific provision of the Code. In the present case, the High
Court overlooked the procedural law which empowered the convicted accused to
prefer statutory appeal against conviction of the offence. The High Court has
intervened at an uncalled for stage and soft-pedalled the course of justice at a
very crucial stage of the trial.â€
29. In G. Sagar Suri and another v. State of U.P. and others[17], the Court
was concerned with the order of the High Court whereby the application under
Section 482 of the Code for quashing the criminal proceedings under Sections 406
and 420 of the IPC pending in the Court of Chief Judicial Magistrate, Ghaziabad
was dismissed. In paragraph 8 (pg.
643) of the Report, the Court held as under:
“8. Jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code has to be exercised with
great care. In exercise of its jurisdiction the High Court is not to examine the
matter superficially. It is to be seen if a matter, which is essentially of a
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. This Court has laid certain principles on the basis of which the
High Court is to exercise its jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code.
Jurisdiction under this section has to be exercised to prevent abuse of the
process of any court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice.†30. A
three-Judge Bench of this Court in State of Karnataka v. M.
Devendrappa and another[18] restated what has been stated in earlier
decisions that Section 482 does not confer any new powers on the High Court, it
only saves the inherent power which the court possessed before the commencement
of the Code. The Court went on to explain the exercise of inherent power by the
High Court in paragraph 6 (Pg.94) of the Report as under :
“6. ………It envisages three circumstances under which the inherent
jurisdiction may be exercised, namely, (i) to give effect to an order under the
Code, (ii) to prevent abuse of the process of court, and (iii) to otherwise
secure the ends of justice. It is neither possible nor desirable to lay down any
inflexible rule which would govern the exercise of inherent jurisdiction. No
legislative enactment dealing with procedure can provide for all cases that may
possibly arise. Courts, therefore, have inherent powers apart from express
provisions of law which are necessary for proper discharge of functions and
duties imposed upon them by law. That is the doctrine which finds expression in
the section which merely recognizes and preserves inherent powers of the High
Courts. All courts, whether civil or criminal possess, in the absence of any
express provision, as inherent in their constitution, all such powers as are
necessary to do the right and to undo a wrong in course of administration of
justice on the principle quando lex aliquid alicui concedit, concedere videtur
et id sine quo res ipsae esse non potest (when the law gives a person anything
it gives him that without which it cannot exist). While exercising powers under
the section, the court does not function as a court of appeal or revision.
Inherent jurisdiction under the section though wide has to be exercised
sparingly, carefully and with caution and only when such exercise is justified
by the tests specifically laid down in the section itself. It is to be exercised
ex debito justitiae to do real and substantial justice for the administration of
which alone courts exist. Authority of the court exists for advancement of
justice and if any attempt is made to abuse that authority so as to produce
injustice, the court has power to prevent abuse. It would be an abuse of process
of the court to allow any action which would result in injustice and prevent
promotion of justice. In exercise of the powers court would be justified to
quash any proceeding if it finds that initiation/continuance of it amounts to
abuse of the process of court or quashing of these proceedings would otherwise
serve the ends of justice……..†The Court in paragraph 9 (Pg. 96) further
stated :
“9. ………the powers possessed by the High Court under Section 482 of
the Code are very wide and the very plenitude of the power requires great
caution in its exercise. Court must be careful to see that its decision in
exercise of this power is based on sound principles. The inherent power should
not be exercised to stifle a legitimate prosecution. The High Court being the
highest court of a State should normally refrain from giving a prima facie
decision in a case where the entire facts are incomplete and hazy, more so when
the evidence has not been collected and produced before the Court and the issues
involved, whether factual or legal, are of magnitude and cannot be seen in their
true perspective without sufficient material. Of course, no hard-and-fast rule
can be laid down in regard to cases in which the High Court will exercise its
extraordinary jurisdiction of quashing the proceeding at any stage……â€
31. In Central Bureau of Investigation v. A. Ravishankar Prasad and
others[19], the Court observed in paragraphs 17,19,20 and 39 (Pgs. 356, 357 and
363) of the Report as follows :
“17. Undoubtedly, the High Court possesses inherent powers under Section
482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. These inherent powers of the High Court
are meant to act ex debito justitiae to do real and substantial justice, for the
administration of which alone it exists, or to prevent abuse of the process of
the court.
19. This Court time and again has observed that the extraordinary power under
Section 482 CrPC should be exercised sparingly and with great care and caution.
The Court would be justified in exercising the power when it is imperative to
exercise the power in order to prevent injustice. In order to understand the
nature and scope of power under Section 482 CrPC it has become necessary to
recapitulate the ratio of the decided cases.
20. Reference to the following cases would reveal that the Courts have
consistently taken the view that they must use the court's extraordinary power
only to prevent injustice and secure the ends of justice. We have largely
inherited the provisions of inherent powers from the English jurisprudence,
therefore the principles decided by the English courts would be of relevance for
us. It is generally agreed that the Crown Court has inherent power to protect
its process from abuse. The English courts have also used inherent power to
achieve the same objective.
39. Careful analysis of all these judgments clearly reveals that the exercise
of inherent powers would entirely depend on the facts and circumstances of each
case. The object of incorporating inherent powers in the Code is to prevent
abuse of the process of the court or to secure ends of justice.†32 In
Devendra and others v. State of Uttar Pradesh and another[20], while dealing
with the question whether a pure civil dispute can be subject matter of a
criminal proceeding under Sections 420, 467, 468 and 469 IPC, a two-Judge Bench
of this Court observed that the High Court ordinarily would exercise its
jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code if the allegations made in the First
Information Report, even if given face value and taken to be correct in their
entirety, do not make out any offence.
33. In Sushil Suri v. Central Bureau of Investigation and another[21], the
Court considered the scope and ambit of the inherent jurisdiction of the High
Court and made the following observations in para 16 (pg. 715) of the Report:
“16. Section 482 CrPC itself envisages three circumstances under which the
inherent jurisdiction may be exercised by the High Court, namely, (i) to give
effect to an order under CrPC; (ii) to prevent an abuse of the process of court;
and (iii) to otherwise secure the ends of justice. It is trite that although the
power possessed by the High Court under the said provision is very wide but it
is not unbridled. It has to be exercised sparingly, carefully and cautiously, ex
debito justitiae to do real and substantial justice for which alone the Court
exists.
Nevertheless, it is neither feasible nor desirable to lay down any inflexible
rule which would govern the exercise of inherent jurisdiction of the Court. Yet,
in numerous cases, this Court has laid down certain broad principles which may
be borne in mind while exercising jurisdiction under Section 482 CrPC.
Though it is emphasised that exercise of inherent powers would depend on the
facts and circumstances of each case, but the common thread which runs through
all the decisions on the subject is that the Court would be justified in
invoking its inherent jurisdiction where the allegations made in the complaint
or charge-sheet, as the case may be, taken at their face value and accepted in
their entirety do not constitute the offence alleged.â€
34. Besides B.S. Joshi1, Nikhil Merchant2 and Manoj Sharma3, there are other
decisions of this Court where the scope of Section 320 vis-à-vis the inherent
power of the High Court under Section 482 of the Code has come up for
consideration.
35. In Madan Mohan Abbot v. State of Punjab[22], in the appeal before this
Court which arose from an order of the High Court refusing to quash the FIR
against the appellant lodged under Sections 379, 406, 409, 418, 506/34, IPC on
account of compromise entered into between the complainant and the accused, in
paragraphs 5 and 6 (pg. 584) of the Report, the Court held as under :
“5. It is on the basis of this compromise that the application was filed in
the High Court for quashing of proceedings which has been dismissed by the
impugned order. We notice from a reading of the FIR and the other documents on
record that the dispute was purely a personal one between two contesting parties
and that it arose out of extensive business dealings between them and that there
was absolutely no public policy involved in the nature of the allegations made
against the accused. We are, therefore, of the opinion that no useful purpose
would be served in continuing with the proceedings in the light of the
compromise and also in the light of the fact that the complainant has on
11-1-2004 passed away and the possibility of a conviction being recorded has
thus to be ruled out.
6. We need to emphasise that it is perhaps advisable that in disputes where
the question involved is of a purely personal nature, the court should
ordinarily accept the terms of the compromise even in criminal proceedings as
keeping the matter alive with no possibility of a result in favour of the
prosecution is a luxury which the courts, grossly overburdened as they are,
cannot afford and that the time so saved can be utilised in deciding more
effective and meaningful litigation.
This is a common sense approach to the matter based on ground of realities
and bereft of the technicalities of the law.â€
36. In Ishwar Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh[23], the Court was concerned
with a case where the accused – appellant was convicted and sentenced by the
Additional Sessions Judge for an offence punishable under Section 307, IPC. The
High Court dismissed the appeal from the judgment and conviction. In the appeal,
by special leave, the injured – complainant was ordered to be joined as party
as it was stated by the counsel for the appellant that mutual compromise has
been arrived at between the parties, i.e. accused on the one hand and the
complainant – victim on the other hand during the pendency of the proceedings
before this Court. It was prayed on behalf of the appellant that the appeal be
disposed of on the basis of compromise between the parties. In para 12 (pg. 670)
of the Report, the Court observed as follows :
“12. Now, it cannot be gainsaid that an offence punishable under Section
307 IPC is not a compoundable offence. Section 320 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 expressly states that no offence shall be compounded if it is
not compoundable under the Code. At the same time, however, while dealing with
such matters, this Court may take into account a relevant and important
consideration about compromise between the parties for the purpose of reduction
of sentence.â€
37. The Court also referred to the earlier decisions of this Court in Jetha
Ram v. State of Rajasthan[24], Murugesan v. Ganapathy Velar[25], Ishwarlal v.
State of M.P.[26] and Mahesh Chand & another v. State of Rajasthan[27] and
noted in paragraph 13 (pg. 670) of the Report as follows:
“13. In Jetha Ram v. State of Rajasthan, Murugesan v. Ganapathy Velar and
Ishwarlal v. State of M.P. this Court, while taking into account the fact of
compromise between the parties, reduced sentence imposed on the
appellant-accused to already undergone, though the offences were not
compoundable. But it was also stated that in Mahesh Chand v. State of Rajasthan
such offence was ordered to be compounded.†Then, in paragraphs 14 and 15 (pg.
670) the Court held as under :
“14. In our considered opinion, it would not be appropriate to order
compounding of an offence not compoundable under the Code ignoring and keeping
aside statutory provisions. In our judgment, however, limited submission of the
learned counsel for the appellant deserves consideration that while imposing
substantive sentence, the factum of compromise between the parties is indeed a
relevant circumstance which the Court may keep in mind.
15. In the instant case, the incident took place before more than fifteen
years; the parties are residing in one and the same village and they are also
relatives. The appellant was about 20 years of age at the time of commission of
crime. It was his first offence. After conviction, the petitioner was taken into
custody. During the pendency of appeal before the High Court, he was enlarged on
bail but, after the decision of the High Court, he again surrendered and is in
jail at present. Though he had applied for bail, the prayer was not granted and
he was not released on bail. Considering the totality of facts and
circumstances, in our opinion, the ends of justice would be met if the sentence
of imprisonment awarded to the appellant (Accused 1) is reduced to the period
already undergone.â€
38. In Rumi Dhar (Smt.) v. State of West Bengal and another[28] , the Court
was concerned with applicability of Section 320 of the Code where the accused
was being prosecuted for commission of offences under Sections
120-B/420/467/468/471 of the IPC along with the bank officers who were being
prosecuted under Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1988. The accused had paid the entire due amount as per the
settlement with the bank in the matter of recovery before the Debts Recovery
Tribunal. The accused prayed for her discharge on the grounds (i) having regard
to the settlement arrived at between her and the bank, no case for proceeding
against her has been made out; (ii) the amount having already been paid and the
title deeds having been returned, the criminal proceedings should be dropped on
the basis of the settlement and (iii) the dispute between the parties were
purely civil in nature and that she had not fabricated any document or cheated
the bank in any way whatsoever and charges could not have been framed against
her.
The CBI contested the application for discharge on the ground that mere
repayment to the bank could not exonerate the accused from the criminal
proceeding. The two-Judge Bench of this Court referred to Section 320 of the
Code and the earlier decisions of this Court in CBI v. Duncans Agro Industries
Limited[29], State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal[30], State of Bihar v. P.P.
Sharma[31], Janata Dal v. H.S. Chowdhary[32] and Nikhil Merchant2 which followed
the decision in B.S. Joshi1 and then with reference to Article 142 of the
Constitution and Section 482 of the Code refused to quash the charge against the
accused by holding as under:
“24. The jurisdiction of the Court under Article 142 of the Constitution of
India is not in dispute. Exercise of such power would, however, depend on the
facts and circumstances of each case. The High Court, in exercise of its
jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and this
Court, in terms of Article 142 of the Constitution of India, would not direct
quashing of a case involving crime against the society particularly when both
the learned Special Judge as also the High Court have found that a prima facie
case has been made out against the appellant herein for framing the charge.â€
39. In Shiji alias Pappu and others vs. Radhika and another[33] this Court
considered the exercise of inherent power by the High Court under Section 482 in
a matter where the offence was not compoundable as the accused was already
involved in commission of the offences punishable under Sections 354 and 394
IPC. The High Court rejected the prayer by holding that the offences with which
appellants were charged are not ‘personal in nature’ to justify quashing the
criminal proceedings on the basis of a compromise arrived at between the
complainant and the appellants. This Court considered earlier decisions of this
Court, the provisions contained in Sections 320 and 394 of the Code and in
paragraphs 17, 18 and 19 (pgs.
712 and 713) of the Report held as under:
“17. It is manifest that simply because an offence is not compoundable
under Section 320 CrPC is by itself no reason for the High Court to refuse
exercise of its power under Section 482 CrPC. That power can in our opinion be
exercised in cases where there is no chance of recording a conviction against
the accused and the entire exercise of a trial is destined to be an exercise in
futility. There is a subtle distinction between compounding of offences by the
parties before the trial court or in appeal on the one hand and the exercise of
power by the High Court to quash the prosecution under Section 482 CrPC on the
other. While a court trying an accused or hearing an appeal against conviction,
may not be competent to permit compounding of an offence based on a settlement
arrived at between the parties in cases where the offences are not compoundable
under Section 320, the High Court may quash the prosecution even in cases where
the offences with which the accused stand charged are non- compoundable. The
inherent powers of the High Court under Section 482 CrPC are not for that
purpose controlled by Section 320 CrPC.
18. Having said so, we must hasten to add that the plenitude of the power
under Section 482 CrPC by itself, makes it obligatory for the High Court to
exercise the same with utmost care and caution. The width and the nature of the
power itself demands that its exercise is sparing and only in cases where the
High Court is, for reasons to be recorded, of the clear view that continuance of
the prosecution would be nothing but an abuse of the process of law. It is
neither necessary nor proper for us to enumerate the situations in which the
exercise of power under Section 482 may be justified. All that we need to say is
that the exercise of power must be for securing the ends of justice and only in
cases where refusal to exercise that power may result in the abuse of the
process of law. The High Court may be justified in declining interference if it
is called upon to appreciate evidence for it cannot assume the role of an
appellate court while dealing with a petition under Section 482 of the Criminal
Procedure Code. Subject to the above, the High Court will have to consider the
facts and circumstances of each case to determine whether it is a fit case in
which the inherent powers may be invoked.
19. Coming to the case at hand, we are of the view that the incident in
question had its genesis in a dispute relating to the access to the two plots
which are adjacent to each other. It was not a case of broad daylight robbery
for gain. It was a case which has its origin in the civil dispute between the
parties, which dispute has, it appears, been resolved by them. That being so,
continuance of the prosecution where the complainant is not ready to support the
allegations which are now described by her as arising out of some
“misunderstanding and misconception†will be a futile exercise that will
serve no purpose. It is noteworthy that the two alleged eyewitnesses, who are
closely related to the complainant, are also no longer supportive of the
prosecution version. The continuance of the proceedings is thus nothing but an
empty formality. Section 482 CrPC could, in such circumstances, be justifiably
invoked by the High Court to prevent abuse of the process of law and thereby
preventing a wasteful exercise by the courts belowâ€.
40. In Ashok Sadarangani and Anr. vs. Union of India and others[34], the
issue under consideration was whether an offence which was not compoundable
under the provisions of the Code could be quashed. That was a case where a
criminal case was registered against the accused persons under Sections 120-B,
465, 467, 468 and 471 of IPC. The allegation was that accused secured the credit
facilities by submitting forged property documents as collaterals and utilized
such facilities in a dishonest and fraudulent manner by opening Letters of
Credit in respect of foreign supplies of goods, without actually bringing any
goods but inducing the Bank to negotiate the Letters of Credit in favour of
foreign suppliers and also by misusing the cash credit facility. The Court
considered the earlier decisions of this Court including B.S. Joshi1, Nikhil
Merchant2, Manoj Sharma3, Shiji alias Pappu33, Duncans Agro Industries
Limited29, Rumi Dhar (Smt.)28 and Sushil Suri21 and also referred to the order
of reference in one of the cases before us. In paragraphs 17, 18, 19 and 20 of
the Report it was held as under:- “17. Having carefully considered the facts
and circumstances of the case, as also the law relating to the continuance of
criminal cases where the complainant and the accused had settled their
differences and had arrived at an amicable arrangement, we see no reason to
differ with the views that had been taken in Nikhil Merchant's case or Manoj
Sharma's case (supra) or the several decisions that have come thereafter. It is,
however, no coincidence that the golden thread which runs through all the
decisions cited, indicates that continuance of a criminal proceeding after a
compromise has been arrived at between the complainant and the accused, would
amount to abuse of the process of court and an exercise in futility, since the
trial could be prolonged and ultimately, may conclude in a decision which may be
of any consequence to any of the other parties.
Even in Sushil Suri's case on which the learned Additional Solicitor General
had relied, the learned Judges who decided the said case, took note of the
decisions in various other cases, where it had been reiterated that the exercise
of inherent powers would depend entirely on the facts and circumstances of each
case. In other words, not that there is any restriction on the power or
authority vested in the Supreme Court in exercising powers under Article 142 of
the Constitution, but that in exercising such powers the Court has to be
circumspect, and has to exercise such power sparingly in the facts of each case.
Furthermore, the issue, which has been referred to a larger Bench in Gian
Singh's case (supra) in relation to the decisions of this Court in B.S. Joshi's
case, Nikhil Merchant's case, as also Manoj Sharma's case, deal with a situation
which is different from that of the present case. While in the cases referred to
hereinabove, the main question was whether offences which were not compoundable,
under Section 320 Cr.P.C. could be quashed under Section 482 Cr.P.C., in Gian
Singh's case the Court was of the view that a non-compoundable offence could not
be compounded and that the Courts should not try to take over the function of
the Parliament or executive. In fact, in none of the cases referred to in Gian
Singh's case, did this Court permit compounding of non-compoundable offences. On
the other hand, upon taking various factors into consideration, including the
futility of continuing with the criminal proceedings, this Court ultimately
quashed the same.
18. In addition to the above, even with regard to the decision of this Court
in Central Bureau of Investigation v. Ravi Shankar Prasad and Ors. : [(2009) 6
SCC 351], this Court observed that the High Court can exercise power under
Section 482 Cr.P.C. to do real and substantial justice and to prevent abuse of
the process of Court when exceptional circumstances warranted the exercise of
such power. Once the circumstances in a given case were held to be such as to
attract the provisions of Article 142 or Articles 32 and 226 of the
Constitution, it would be open to the Supreme Court to exercise its
extraordinary powers under Article 142 of the Constitution to quash the
proceedings, the continuance whereof would only amount to abuse of the process
of Court. In the instant case the dispute between the petitioners and the Banks
having been compromised, we have to examine whether the continuance of the
criminal proceeding could turn out to be an exercise in futility without
anything positive being ultimately achieved.
19. As was indicated in Harbhajan Singh's case (supra), the pendency of a
reference to a larger Bench, does not mean that all other proceedings involving
the same issue would remain stayed till a decision was rendered in the
reference. The reference made in Gian Singh's case (supra) need not, therefore,
detain us. Till such time as the decisions cited at the Bar are not modified or
altered in any way, they continue to hold the field.
20. In the present case, the fact situation is different from that in Nikhil
Merchant's case (supra). While in Nikhil Merchant's case the accused had
misrepresented the financial status of the company in question in order to avail
of credit facilities to an extent to which the company was not entitled, in the
instant case, the allegation is that as part of a larger conspiracy, property
acquired on lease from a person who had no title to the leased properties, was
offered as collateral security for loans obtained. Apart from the above, the
actual owner of the property has filed a criminal complaint against Shri Kersi
V. Mehta who had held himself out as the Attorney of the owner and his family
members. The ratio of the decisions in B.S. Joshi's case and in Nikhil
Merchant's case or for that matter, even in Manoj Sharma's case, does not help
the case of the writ petitioners. In Nikhil Merchant's case, this Court had in
the facts of the case observed that the dispute involved had overtures of a
civil dispute with criminal facets. This is not so in the instant case, where
the emphasis is more on the criminal intent of the Petitioners than on the civil
aspect involving the dues of the Bank in respect of which a compromise was
worked out.†The Court distinguished B.S. Joshi1 and Nikhil Merchant2 by
observing that those cases dealt with different fact situation.
41. In Rajiv Saxena and others v. State (NCT of Delhi) and another[35], this
Court allowed the quashment of criminal case under Sections 498-A and 496 read
with Section 34 IPC by a brief order. It was observed that since the parties had
settled their disputes and the complainant agreed that the criminal proceedings
need not be continued, the criminal proceedings could be quashed.
42. In a very recent judgment decided by this Court in the month of July,
2012 in Jayrajsinh Digvijaysinh Rana v. State of Gujarat and another[36], this
Court was again concerned with the question of quashment of an FIR alleging
offences punishable under Sections 467, 468, 471, 420 and 120-B IPC. The High
Court refused to quash the criminal case under Section 482 of the Code. The
question for consideration was that inasmuch as all those offences, except
Section 420 IPC, were non-compoundable offences under Section 320 of the Code,
whether it would be possible to quash the FIR by the High Court under Section
482 of the Code or by this Court under Article 136 of the Constitution of India.
The Bench elaborately considered the decision of this Court in Shiji alias
Pappu33 and by invoking Article 142 of the Constitution quashed the criminal
proceedings. It was held as under:- “10. In the light of the principles
mentioned above, inasmuch as Respondent No. 2 - the Complainant has filed an
affidavit highlighting the stand taken by the Appellant (Accused No. 3) during
the pendency of the appeal before this Court and the terms of settlement as
stated in the said affidavit, by applying the same analogy and in order to do
complete justice under Article 142 of the Constitution, we accept the terms of
settlement insofar as the Appellant herein (Accused No. 3) is concerned.
11. In view of the same, we quash and set aside the impugned FIR No. 45/2011
registered with Sanand Police Station, Ahmedabad for offences punishable Under
Sections 467, 468, 471, 420 and 120-B of IPC insofar as the Appellant (Accused
No. 3) is concerned. The appeal is allowed to the extent mentioned aboveâ€.
43. In Y. Suresh Babu v. State of A. P.[37] decided on April 29, 1987, this
Court allowed the compounding of an offence under Section 326 IPC even though
such compounding was not permitted by Section 320 of the Code. However, in Ram
Lal and Anr. v. State of J & K[38] , this Court observed that Y. Suresh
Babu37 was per incuriam. It was held that an offence which law declares to be
non-compoundable cannot be compounded at all even with the permission of the
Court.
44. Having surveyed the decisions of this Court which throw light on the
question raised before us, two decisions, one given by the Punjab and Haryana
High Court and the other by Bombay High Court deserve to be noticed.
45. A five-Judge Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Kulwinder
Singh and others v. State of Punjab and another[39] was called upon to
determine, inter alia, the question whether the High Court has the power under
Section 482 of the Code to quash the criminal proceedings or allow the
compounding of the offences in the cases which have been specified as
non-compoundable offences under the provisions of Section 320 of the Code. The
five-Judge Bench referred to quite a few decisions of this Court including the
decisions in Madhu Limaye12 , Bhajan Lal30 , L.
Muniswamy11 , Simrikhia14, B.S. Joshi1 and Ram Lal38 and framed the following
guidelines:
“a. Cases arising from matrimonial discord, even if other offences are
introduced for aggravation of the case.
b. Cases pertaining to property disputes between close relations, which are
predominantly civil in nature and they have a genuine or belaboured dimension of
criminal liability.
Notwithstanding a touch of criminal liability, the settlement would bring
lasting peace and harmony to larger number of people.
c. Cases of dispute between old partners or business concerns with dealings
over a long period which are predominantly civil and are given or acquire a
criminal dimension but the parties are essentially seeking a redressal of their
financial or commercial claim.
d. Minor offences as under Section 279, IPC may be permitted to be compounded
on the basis of legitimate settlement between the parties. Yet another offence
which remains non- compoundable is Section 506 (II), IPC, which is punishable
with 7 years imprisonment. It is the judicial experience that an offence under
Section 506 IPC in most cases is based on the oral declaration with different
shades of intention. Another set of offences, which ought to be liberally
compounded, are Sections 147 and 148, IPC, more particularly where other
offences are compoundable. It may be added here that the State of Madhya Pradesh
vide M.P. Act No. 17 of 1999 (Section 3) has made Sections 506(II) IPC, 147 IPC
and 148, IPC compoundable offences by amending the schedule under Section 320,
Cr.P.C.
e. The offences against human body other than murder and culpable homicide
where the victim dies in the course of transaction would fall in the category
where compounding may not be permitted. Heinous offences like highway robbery,
dacoity or a case involving clear-cut allegations of rape should also fall in
the prohibited category. Offences committed by Public Servants purporting to act
in that capacity as also offences against public servant while the victims are
acting in the discharge of their duty must remain non-compoundable. Offences
against the State enshrined in Chapter-VII (relating to army, navy and air
force) must remain non-compoundable.
f. That as a broad guideline the offences against human body other than
murder and culpable homicide may be permitted to be compounded when the court is
in the position to record a finding that the settlement between the parties is
voluntary and fair.
While parting with this part, it appears necessary to add that the settlement
or compromise must satisfy the conscience of the court. The settlement must be
just and fair besides being free from the undue pressure, the court must examine
the cases of weaker and vulnerable victims with necessary caution."
To conclude, it can safely be said that there can never be any hard and fast
category which can be prescribed to enable the Court to exercise its power under
Section 482 of the Cr.P.C. The only principle that can be laid down is the one
which has been incorporated in the Section itself, i.e., "to prevent abuse of
the process of any Court" or "to secure the ends of justice".
It was further held as under :
“23. No embargo, be in the shape of Section 320(9) of the Cr.P.C., or any
other such curtailment, can whittle down the power under Section 482 of the
Cr.P.C.
25. The only inevitable conclusion from the above discussion is that there is
no statutory bar under the Cr.P.C. which can affect the inherent power of this
Court under Section 482.
Further, the same cannot be limited to matrimonial cases alone and the Court
has the wide power to quash the proceedings even in non-compoundable offences
notwithstanding the bar under Section 320 of the Cr.P.C., in order to prevent
the abuse of law and to secure the ends of justice. The power under Section 482
of the Cr.P.C. is to be exercised ex-debito Justitiae to prevent an abuse of
process of Court. There can neither be an exhaustive list nor the defined
para-meters to enable a High Court to invoke or exercise its inherent powers. It
will always depend upon the facts and circumstances of each case. The power
under Section 482 of the Cr.P.C. has no limits. However, the High Court will
exercise it sparingly and with utmost care and caution. The exercise of power
has to be with circumspection and restraint. The Court is a vital and an
extra-ordinary effective instrument to maintain and control social order. The
Courts play role of paramount importance in achieving peace, harmony and
ever-lasting congeniality in society. Resolution of a dispute by way of a
compromise between two warring groups, therefore, should attract the immediate
and prompt attention of a Court which should endeavour to give full effect to
the same unless such compromise is abhorrent to lawful composition of the
society or would promote savagery.â€
46. A three-Judge Bench of the Bombay High Court in Abasaheb Yadav Honmane v.
State of Maharashtra[40] dealt with the inherent power of the High Court under
Section 482 of the Code vis-à-vis the express bar for compounding of the
non-compoundable offences in Section 320(9) of the Code.
The High Court referred to various decisions of this Court and also the
decisions of the various High Courts and then stated as follows :
“The power of compounding on one hand and quashing of criminal proceedings
in exercise of inherent powers on the other, are incapable of being treated as
synonymous or even inter- changeable in law. The conditions precedent and
satisfaction of criteria in each of these cases are distinct and different. May
be, the only aspect where they have any commonality is the result of exercise of
such power in favour of the accused, as acquittal is the end result in both
these cases. Both these powers are to be exercised for valid grounds and with
some element of objectivity. Particularly, the power of quashing the FIR or
criminal proceedings by the Court by taking recourse to inherent powers is
expected to be used sparingly and that too without losing sight of impact of
such order on the criminal justice delivery system. It may be obligatory upon
the Court to strike a balance between the nature of the offence and the need to
pass an order in exercise of inherent powers, as the object of criminal law is
protection of public by maintenance of law and order.â€
47. Section 320 of the Code articulates public policy with regard to the
compounding of offences. It catalogues the offences punishable under IPC which
may be compounded by the parties without permission of the Court and the
composition of certain offences with the permission of the court.
The offences punishable under the special statutes are not covered by Section
320. When an offence is compoundable under Section 320, abatement of such
offence or an attempt to commit such offence or where the accused is liable
under Section 34 or 149 of the IPC can also be compounded in the same manner. A
person who is under 18 years of age or is an idiot or a lunatic is not competent
to contract compounding of offence but the same can be done on his behalf with
the permission of the court. If a person is otherwise competent to compound an
offence is dead, his legal representatives may also compound the offence with
the permission of the court. Where the accused has been committed for trial or
he has been convicted and the appeal is pending, composition can only be done
with the leave of the court to which he has been committed or with the leave of
the appeal court, as the case may be. The revisional court is also competent to
allow any person to compound any offence who is competent to compound.
The consequence of the composition of an offence is acquittal of the accused.
Sub-section (9) of Section 320 mandates that no offence shall be compounded
except as provided by this Section. Obviously, in view thereof the composition
of an offence has to be in accord with Section 320 and in no other manner.
48. The question is with regard to the inherent power of the High Court in
quashing the criminal proceedings against an offender who has settled his
dispute with the victim of the crime but the crime in which he is allegedly
involved is not compoundable under Section 320 of the Code.
49. Section 482 of the Code, as its very language suggests, saves the
inherent power of the High Court which it has by virtue of it being a superior
court to prevent abuse of the process of any court or otherwise to secure the
ends of justice. It begins with the words, ‘nothing in this Code’ which
means that the provision is an overriding provision. These words leave no manner
of doubt that none of the provisions of the Code limits or restricts the
inherent power. The guideline for exercise of such power is provided in Section
482 itself i.e., to prevent abuse of the process of any court or otherwise to
secure the ends of justice. As has been repeatedly stated that Section 482
confers no new powers on High Court; it merely safeguards existing inherent
powers possessed by High Court necessary to prevent abuse of the process of any
Court or to secure the ends of justice. It is equally well settled that the
power is not to be resorted to if there is specific provision in the Code for
the redress of the grievance of an aggrieved party. It should be exercised very
sparingly and it should not be exercised as against the express bar of law
engrafted in any other provision of the Code.
50. In different situations, the inherent power may be exercised in different
ways to achieve its ultimate objective. Formation of opinion by the High Court
before it exercises inherent power under Section 482 on either of the twin
objectives, (i) to prevent abuse of the process of any court or (ii) to secure
the ends of justice, is a sine qua non.
51. In the very nature of its constitution, it is the judicial obligation of
the High Court to undo a wrong in course of administration of justice or to
prevent continuation of unnecessary judicial process. This is founded on the
legal maxim quando lex aliquid alicui concedit, conceditur et id sine qua res
ipsa esse non potest. The full import of which is whenever anything is
authorised, and especially if, as a matter of duty, required to be done by law,
it is found impossible to do that thing unless something else not authorised in
express terms be also done, may also be done, then that something else will be
supplied by necessary intendment.
Ex debito justitiae is inbuilt in such exercise; the whole idea is to do
real, complete and substantial justice for which it exists. The power possessed
by the High Court under Section 482 of the Code is of wide amplitude but
requires exercise with great caution and circumspection.
52. It needs no emphasis that exercise of inherent power by the High Court
would entirely depend on the facts and circumstances of each case. It is neither
permissible nor proper for the court to provide a straitjacket formula
regulating the exercise of inherent powers under Section 482. No precise and
inflexible guidelines can also be provided.
53. Quashing of offence or criminal proceedings on the ground of settlement
between an offender and victim is not the same thing as compounding of offence.
They are different and not interchangeable.
Strictly speaking, the power of compounding of offences given to a court
under Section 320 is materially different from the quashing of criminal
proceedings by the High Court in exercise of its inherent jurisdiction. In
compounding of offences, power of a criminal court is circumscribed by the
provisions contained in Section 320 and the court is guided solely and squarely
thereby while, on the other hand, the formation of opinion by the High Court for
quashing a criminal offence or criminal proceeding or criminal complaint is
guided by the material on record as to whether the ends of justice would justify
such exercise of power although the ultimate consequence may be acquittal or
dismissal of indictment.
54. Where High Court quashes a criminal proceeding having regard to the fact
that dispute between the offender and victim has been settled although offences
are not compoundable, it does so as in its opinion, continuation of criminal
proceedings will be an exercise in futility and justice in the case demands that
the dispute between the parties is put to an end and peace is restored; securing
the ends of justice being the ultimate guiding factor. No doubt, crimes are acts
which have harmful effect on the public and consist in wrong doing that
seriously endangers and threatens well-being of society and it is not safe to
leave the crime- doer only because he and the victim have settled the dispute
amicably or that the victim has been paid compensation, yet certain crimes have
been made compoundable in law, with or without permission of the Court. In
respect of serious offences like murder, rape, dacoity, etc; or other offences
of mental depravity under IPC or offences of moral turpitude under special
statutes, like Prevention of Corruption Act or the offences committed by public
servants while working in that capacity, the settlement between offender and
victim can have no legal sanction at all. However, certain offences which
overwhelmingly and predominantly bear civil flavour having arisen out of civil,
mercantile, commercial, financial, partnership or such like transactions or the
offences arising out of matrimony, particularly relating to dowry, etc. or the
family dispute, where the wrong is basically to victim and the offender and
victim have settled all disputes between them amicably, irrespective of the fact
that such offences have not been made compoundable, the High Court may within
the framework of its inherent power, quash the criminal proceeding or criminal
complaint or F.I.R if it is satisfied that on the face of such settlement, there
is hardly any likelihood of offender being convicted and by not quashing the
criminal proceedings, justice shall be casualty and ends of justice shall be
defeated. The above list is illustrative and not exhaustive. Each case will
depend on its own facts and no hard and fast category can be prescribed.
55. B.S. Joshi1, Nikhil Merchant2, Manoj Sharma3 and Shiji alias Pappu33 do
illustrate the principle that High Court may quash criminal proceedings or FIR
or complaint in exercise of its inherent power under Section 482 of the Code and
Section 320 does not limit or affect the powers of the High Court under Section
482. Can it be said that by quashing criminal proceedings in B.S. Joshi1, Nikhil
Merchant2, Manoj Sharma3 and Shiji alias Pappu33, this Court has compounded the
non-compoundable offences indirectly? We do not think so. There does exist the
distinction between compounding of an offence under Section 320 and quashing of
a criminal case by the High Court in exercise of inherent power under Section
482. The two powers are distinct and different although ultimate consequence may
be same viz., acquittal of the accused or dismissal of indictment.
56. We find no incongruity in the above principle of law and the decisions of
this Court in Simrikhia14, Dharampal15, Arun Shankar Shukla16, Ishwar Singh23,
Rumi Dhar (Smt.).28 and Ashok Sadarangani34. The principle propounded in
Simrikhia14 that the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court cannot be invoked
to override express bar provided in law is by now well settled. In Dharampal15,
the Court observed the same thing that the inherent powers under Section 482 of
the Code cannot be utilized for exercising powers which are expressly barred by
the Code. Similar statement of law is made in Arun Shankar Shukla16. In Ishwar
Singh23, the accused was alleged to have committed an offence punishable under
Section 307, IPC and with reference to Section 320 of the Code, it was held that
the offence punishable under Section 307 IPC was not compoundable offence and
there was express bar in Section 320 that no offence shall be compounded if it
is not compoundable under the Code. In Rumi Dhar (Smt.)28 although the accused
had paid the entire due amount as per the settlement with the bank in the matter
of recovery before the Debts Recovery Tribunal, the accused was being proceeded
with for commission of offences under Section 120-B/420/467/468/471 of the IPC
along with the bank officers who were being prosecuted under Section 13(2) read
with 13(1)(d) of Prevention of Corruption Act. The Court refused to quash the
charge against the accused by holding that the Court would not quash a case
involving a crime against the society when a prima facie case has been made out
against the accused for framing the charge. Ashok Sadarangani34 was again a case
where the accused persons were charged of having committed offences under
Sections 120-B, 465, 467, 468 and 471, IPC and the allegations were that the
accused secured the credit facilities by submitting forged property documents as
collaterals and utilized such facilities in a dishonest and fraudulent manner by
opening letters of credit in respect of foreign supplies of goods, without
actually bringing any goods but inducing the bank to negotiate the letters of
credit in favour of foreign suppliers and also by misusing the cash-credit
facility. The Court was alive to the reference made in one of the present
matters and also the decisions in B.S.
Joshi1, Nikhil Merchant2 and Manoj Sharma3 and it was held that B.S.
Joshi1, and Nikhil Merchant2 dealt with different factual situation as the
dispute involved had overtures of a civil dispute but the case under
consideration in Ashok Sadarangani34 was more on the criminal intent than on a
civil aspect. The decision in Ashok Sadarangani34 supports the view that the
criminal matters involving overtures of a civil dispute stand on a different
footing.
57. The position that emerges from the above discussion can be summarised
thus: the power of the High Court in quashing a criminal proceeding or FIR or
complaint in exercise of its inherent jurisdiction is distinct and different
from the power given to a criminal court for compounding the offences under
Section 320 of the Code. Inherent power is of wide plenitude with no statutory
limitation but it has to be exercised in accord with the guideline engrafted in
such power viz; (i) to secure the ends of justice or (ii) to prevent abuse of
the process of any Court. In what cases power to quash the criminal proceeding
or complaint or F.I.R may be exercised where the offender and victim have
settled their dispute would depend on the facts and circumstances of each case
and no category can be prescribed. However, before exercise of such power, the
High Court must have due regard to the nature and gravity of the crime. Heinous
and serious offences of mental depravity or offences like murder, rape, dacoity,
etc.
cannot be fittingly quashed even though the victim or victim’s family and
the offender have settled the dispute. Such offences are not private in nature
and have serious impact on society. Similarly, any compromise between the victim
and offender in relation to the offences under special statutes like Prevention
of Corruption Act or the offences committed by public servants while working in
that capacity etc; cannot provide for any basis for quashing criminal
proceedings involving such offences. But the criminal cases having
overwhelmingly and pre-dominatingly civil flavour stand on different footing for
the purposes of quashing, particularly the offences arising from commercial,
financial, mercantile, civil, partnership or such like transactions or the
offences arising out of matrimony relating to dowry, etc. or the family disputes
where the wrong is basically private or personal in nature and the parties have
resolved their entire dispute.
In this category of cases, High Court may quash criminal proceedings if in
its view, because of the compromise between the offender and victim, the
possibility of conviction is remote and bleak and continuation of criminal case
would put accused to great oppression and prejudice and extreme injustice would
be caused to him by not quashing the criminal case despite full and complete
settlement and compromise with the victim. In other words, the High Court must
consider whether it would be unfair or contrary to the interest of justice to
continue with the criminal proceeding or continuation of the criminal proceeding
would tantamount to abuse of process of law despite settlement and compromise
between the victim and wrongdoer and whether to secure the ends of justice, it
is appropriate that criminal case is put to an end and if the answer to the
above question(s) is in affirmative, the High Court shall be well within its
jurisdiction to quash the criminal proceeding.
58. In view of the above, it cannot be said that B.S. Joshi1, Nikhil
Merchant2 and Manoj Sharma3 were not correctly decided. We answer the reference
accordingly. Let these matters be now listed before the concerned Bench(es).
............................................................J.
(R.M. Lodha)
...........................................................J.
(Anil R. Dave) ....................................J.
(Sudhansu Jyoti
Mukhopadhaya) NEW DELHI.
SEPTEMBER 24, 2012.
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