|
An Act to consolidate and amend
the law relating to Criminal Procedure. |
| Chapter |
Title |
Sections |
| Chapter I | PRELIMINARY | Sections 1-5 |
| Chapter II | CONSTITUTION OF CRIMINAL COURTS AND OFFICES | Sections 6-25 |
| Chapter III | POWER OF COURTS | Sections 26-35 |
| Chapter IV | POWERS OF SUPERIOR OFFICERS OF POLICE | Sections 36-40 |
| Chapter V | ARREST OF PERSONS | Sections 41-60 |
| Chapter VI | PROCESSES TO COMPEL APPEARANCE | Sections 61-90 |
| Chapter VII | PROCESSES TO COMPEL THE PRODUCTION OF THINGS | Sections 91-105 |
| Chapter VIII | SECURITY FOR KEEPING THE PEACE AND FOR GOOD BEHAVIOUR | Sections106-124 |
| Chapter IX | ORDER FOR MAINTENANCE OF WIVES, CHILDREN AND PARENTS | Sections125-128 |
| Chapter X | MAINTENANCE OF PUBLIC ORDER AND TRANQUILLITY | Sections129-148 |
| Chapter XI | PREVENTIVE ACTION OF THE POLICE | Section 149-153 |
| Chapter XII | INFORMATION TO THE POLICE AND THEIR POWERS TO INVESTIGATE | Section 154-176 |
| Chapter XIII | JURISDICTION OF THE CRIMINAL COURTS IN INQUIRIES AND TRIALS | Section 177-189 |
| Chapter XIV | CONDITIONS REQUISITE FOR INITIATION OF PROCEEDING | Section 190-199 |
| Chapter XV | COMPLAINTS TO MAGISTRATES | Section 200-203 |
| Chapter XVI | COMMENCEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS BEFORE MAGISTRATES | Section 204-210 |
| Chapter XVII | THE CHARGE | Section 211-224 |
| Chapter XVIII | TRIAL BEFORE A COURT OF SESSION | Section 225-237 |
| Chapter XIX | TRIAL OF WARRANT-CASES BY MAGISTRATES | Section 238-250 |
| Chapter XX | TRIAL OF SUMMONS-CASES BY MAGISTRATES | Section 251-259 |
| Chapter XXI | SUMMARY TRIALS | Section 260-265 |
| Chapter XXII | ATTENDANCE OF PERSONS CONFINED OR DETAINED IN PRISONS | Section 266-271 |
| Chapter XXIII | EVIDENCE IN INQUIRIES AND TRIALS | Section 272-299 |
| Chapter XXIV | GENERAL PROVISIONS AS TO INQUIRIES AND TRIALS | Section 300-327 |
| Chapter XXV | PROVISIONS AS TO ACCUSED PERSONS OF UNSOUND MIND | Section 328-339 |
| Chapter XXVI | PROVISIONS AS TO OFFENCES AFFECTING THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE | Section 340-352 |
| Chapter XXVII | THE JUDGEMENT | Section 353-365 |
| Chapter XXVIII | SUBMISSION OF DEATH SENTENCES FOR CONFIRMATION | Section 366-371 |
| Chapter XXIX | APPEALS | Section 372-394 |
| Chapter XXX | REFERENCE AND REVISION | Section 395-405 |
| Chapter XXXI | TRANSFER OF CRIMINAL CASES | Section 406-412 |
| Chapter XXXII | EXECUTION, SUSPENSION, REMISSION AND COMMUTATION OF SENTENCES | Section 413-435 |
| Chapter XXXIII | PROVISIONS AS TO BAIL AND BONDS | Section 436-450 |
| Chapter XXXIV | DISPOSAL OF PROPERTY | Section 451-459 |
| Chapter XXXV | IRREGULAR PROCEEDINGS | Section 460-466 |
| Chapter XXXVI | LIMITATION FOR TAKING COGNIZANCE OF CERTAIN OFFENCES | Section 461-473 |
| Chapter XXXVII | LIMITATION FOR TAKING COGNIZANCE OF CERTAIN OFFENCES | Section 474-484 |
CONSTITUTION OF CRIMINAL COURTS AND OFFICES
6.Classes of Criminal Courts.- Besides the High Courts
and the Courts constituted under any law, other than this Code, there shall be,
in every State, the following classes of Criminal Courts, namely:-
(i) Courts of Session;
(ii) Judicial Magistrates of the
first class and, in any metropolitan area, Metropolitan Magistrates;
(iii) Judicial Magistrates of the
second class; and
(iv)
Executive Magistrates.
7.Territorial divisions.- (1) Every State shall be a
sessions division or shall consist of sessions divisions; and every sessions
division shall, for the purposes of this Code, be a district or consist of
districts:
Provided that every
metropolitan area shall, for the said purposes, be a separate sessions division
and district.
(2) The State
Government may, after consultation with the High Court, alter the limits or the
number of such divisions and districts.
(3) The State Government may, after consultation with the
High Court, divide any district into sub-divisions and may alter the limits or
the number of such sub-divisions.
(4) The sessions divisions, districts and sub-divisions
existing in a State at the commencement of this Code, shall be deemed to have
been formed under this section.
8.Metropolitan areas.- (1) The
State Government may, by notification, declare that , as from such date as may
be specified in the notification, any area in the State comprising a city or
town whose population exceeds one million shall be a metropolitan area for the
purposes of this Code.
(2) As
from the commencement of this Code, each of the Presidency-towns of Bombay,
Calcutta and Madras and the city of Ahmedabad shall be deemed to be declared
under sub-section (1) to be a metropolitan area.
(3) The State Government may, by notification, extend,
reduce or alter the limits of a metropolitan area but the reduction or
alteration shall not be so made as to reduce the population of such area to less
than one million.
(4) Where,
after an area has been declared, or deemed to have been declared to be, a
metropolitan area, the population of such area falls below one million, such
area shall, on and from such date as the State Government may, by notification,
specify in this behalf, cease to be a metropolitan area; but notwithstanding
such cesser, any inquiry, trial or appeal pending immediately before such cesser
before any Court or Magistrate in such area shall continue to be dealt with
under this Code, as if such cesser had not taken place.
(5) Where the State Government
reduces or alters, under sub-section (3), the limits of any metropolitan area,
such reduction or alteration shall not affect any inquiry, trial or appeal
pending immediately before such reduction or alteration before any Court or
Magistrate, and every such inquiry, trial or appeal shall continue to be dealt
with under this Code as if such reduction or alteration had not taken
place.
Explanation.- In
this section, the expression "population" means the population as ascertained at
the last preceding census of which the relevant figures have been published.
9.Court of
Session.- (1)The State Government shall establish a Court of Session for
every sessions division.
(2)
Every Court of Session shall be presided over by a Judge, to be appointed by the
High Court.
(3) The High Court
may also appoint Additional Sessions Judges and Assistant Sessions Judges to
exercise jurisdiction in a Court of Session.
(4) The Sessions Judge of one sessions division may be
appointed by the High Court to be also an Additional Sessions Judge of another
division, and in such case he may sit for the disposal of cases at such place or
places in the other division as the High Court may direct.
(5) Where the office of the
Sessions Judge is vacant, the High Court may make arrangements for the disposal
of any urgent application which is, or may be, made or pending before such Court
of Session by an Additional or Assistant Sessions Judge, or, if there be no
Additional or Assistant Sessions Judge, by a Chief Judicial Magistrate, in the
sessions division; and every such Judge or Magistrate shall have jurisdiction to
deal with any such application.
(6) The Court of Session shall ordinarily hold its sitting
at such place or places as the High Court may, by notification, specify; but,
if, in any particular case, the Court of Session is of opinion that it will tend
to the general convenience of the parties and witnesses to hold its sittings at
any other place in the sessions division, it may, with the consent of the
prosecution and the accused, sit at that place for the disposal of the case or
the examination of any witness or witnesses therein.
Explanation.- For the purposes of this Code, "appointment"
does not include the first appointment, posting or promotion of a person by the
Government to any Service, or post in connection with the affairs of the Union
or of a State, where under any law, such appointment, posting or promotion is
required to be made by Government.
10.Subordination of Assistant
Sessions Judges.- (1) All Assistant Sessions Judges shall be subordinate to
the Sessions Judge in whose Court they exercise jurisdiction.
(2) The Sessions Judge may, from
time to time, make rules consistent with this Code, as to the distribution of
business among such Assistant Sessions Judges.
(3) The Sessions Judge may also make provision for the
disposal of any urgent application, in the event of his absence or inability to
act, by an Additional or Assistant Sessions Judge, or, if there be no Additional
or Assistant Sessions Judge, by the Chief Judicial Magistrate, and every such
Judge or Magistrate shall be deemed to have jurisdiction to deal with any such
application.
11.Courts of Judicial Magistrates.- (1) In every
district (not being a metropolitan area), there shall be established as many
Courts of Judicial Magistrates of the first class and of the second class, and
at such places, as the State Government may, after consultation with the High
Court, by notification, specify.
(2) The presiding officers of such Courts shall be
appointed by the High Court.
(3) The High Court may, whenever it appears to it to be
expedient or necessary, confer the powers of a Judicial Magistrate of the first
class or of the second class on any member of the Judicial Service of the State,
functioning as a Judge in a Civil Court.
12.Chief Judicial Magistrate and
Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, etc.- (1) In every district (not being
a metropolitan area), the High Court shall appoint a Judicial Magistrate of the
first class to be the Chief Judicial Magistrate.
(2) The High Court may appoint any Judicial Magistrate of
the first class to be an Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, and such
Magistrate shall have all or any of the powers of a Chief Judicial Magistrate
under this Code or under any other law for the time being in force as the High
Court may direct.
(3) (a) The
High Court may designate any Judicial Magistrate of the first class in any
sub-division as the Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate and relieve him of the
responsibilities specified in this section as occasion requires.
(b) Subject to the general control
of the Chief Judicial Magistrate, every Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate shall
also have and exercise, such powers of supervision and control over the work of
the Judicial Magistrates (other than Additional Chief Judicial Magistrates) in
the sub-division as the High Court may, by general or special order, specify in
this behalf.
13.Special Judicial Magistrates.- (1) The High Court
may, if requested by the Central or State Government so to do, confer upon any
person who holds or has held any post under the Government, all or any of the
powers conferred or conferrable by or under this Code on a Judicial Magistrate
of the second class, in respect to particular cases or to particular classes of
cases or to cases generally, in any district, not being a metropolitan area:
Provided that no such power shall
be conferred on a person unless he possesses such qualification
or experience in relation to legal affairs as the High
Court may, by rules, specify.
(2) Such Magistrates shall be called Special Judicial
Magistrates and shall be appointed for such
term, not
exceeding one year at a time, as the High Court may, by general or special
order, direct.
14.Local jurisdiction of Judicial Magistrates.- (1)
Subject to the control of the High Court, the Chief Judicial Magistrate may,
from time to time, define the local limits of the areas within which the
Magistrates appointed under section 11 or under section 13 may exercise all or
any of the powers with which they may respectively be invested under this
Code.
(2) Except as otherwise
provided by such definition, the jurisdiction and powers of every such
Magistrate shall extend throughout the district.
15.Subordination of Judicial Magistrates.- (1) Every
Chief Judicial Magistrate shall be subordinate to the Sessions Judge; and every
other Judicial Magistrate shall, subject to the general control of the Sessions
Judge, be subordinate to the Chief Judicial Magistrate.
(2) The Chief Judicial Magistrate
may, from time to time, make rules or give special orders, consistent with this
Code, as to the distribution of business among the Judicial Magistrates
subordinate to him.
16.Courts of Metropolitan Magistrates.- (1) In every
metropolitan area, there shall be established as many Courts of Metropolitan
Magistrates, and at such places, as the State Government
may, after consultation with the High Court, by notification, specify.
(2) The presiding officers of such
Courts shall be appointed by the High Court.
(3) The jurisdiction and powers of every Metropolitan
Magistrate shall extend throughout the
metropolitan
area.
17.Chief Metropolitan Magistrate and Additional Chief
Metropolitan Magistrates.- (1) The High Court shall, in relation to every
metropolitan area within its local jurisdiction, appoint a Metropolitan
Magistrate to be the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate for such metropolitan
area.
(2) The High Court may
appoint any Metropolitan Magistrate to be an Additional Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate, and such Magistrate shall have all or any of the powers of a Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate under this Code or under any other law for the time
being in force as the High Court may direct.
18.Special Metropolitan
Magistrates.- (1) The High Court may, if requested by the Central or State
Government so to do, confer upon any person who holds or has held any post under
the Government, all or any of the powers conferred or conferrable by or under
this Code on a Metropolitan Magistrate, in respect to particular cases or to
particular classes of cases or to cases generally, in any metropolitan area
within its local jurisdiction:
Provided that no such power shall be conferred on a person
unless he possesses such qualification or experience in relation to legal
affairs as the High Court may, by rules, specify.
(2) Such Magistrates shall be called Special Metropolitan
Magistrates and shall be appointed for such term, not exceeding one year at a
time, as the High Court may, by general or special order, direct.
(3) Notwithstanding anything
contained elsewhere in this Code, a Special Metropolitan Magistrate shall not
impose a sentence which a Judicial Magistrate of the second class is not
competent to impose outside the Metropolitan area.
19.Subordination of Metropolitan
Magistrates.- (1) The Chief Metropolitan Magistrate and every Additional
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate shall be subordinate to the Sessions Judge; and
every other Metropolitan Magistrate shall, subject to the general control of the
Sessions Judge, be subordinate to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate.
(2) The High Court may, for the
purposes of this Code, define the extent of the subordination, if any, of the
Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrates to the Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate.
(3) The Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate may, from time to time, make rules or give special
orders, consistent with this Code, as to the distribution of business among the
Metropolitan Magistrates and as to the allocation of business to an Additional
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate.
20.Executive Magistrates.-(1) In every district and in
every metropolitan area, the State Government may appoint as many persons as it
thinks fit to be Executive Magistrates and shall appoint one of them to be the
District Magistrate.
(2) The
State Government may appoint any Executive Magistrate to be an Additional
district Magistrate, and such Magistrate shall have all or any of the powers of
a District Magistrate under this Code or under any other law for the time being
in force.
(3) Whenever, in
consequence of the office of a District Magistrate becoming vacant, any officer
succeeds temporarily to the executive administration of the district, such
officer shall, pending the orders of the State Government, exercise all the
powers and perform all the duties respectively conferred and imposed by this
Code on the District Magistrate.
(4) The State Government may place an Executive Magistrate
in charge of a sub-division and may relieve him of the charge as occasion
requires; and the Magistrate so placed in charge of a sub-division shall be
called the Sub-divisional Magistrate.
(5) Nothing in this section shall preclude the State
Government from conferring, under any law for the time being in force, on a
Commissioner of Police, all or any of the powers of an Executive Magistrate in
relation to a metropolitan area.
21.Special Executive
Magistrates.- The State Government may appoint, for such term as it may
think fit, Executive Magistrates, to be known as Special Executive Magistrates
for particular areas or for the performance of particular functions and confer
on such Special Executive Magistrates such of the powers as are conferrable
under this Code on Executive Magistrates, as it may deem fit.
22.Local
jurisdiction of Executive Magistrates.- (1) Subject to the control of the
State Government, the District Magistrate may, from time to time, define the
local limits of the areas within which the Executive Magistrates may exercise
all or any of the powers with which they may be invested under this Code.
(2) Except as otherwise provided
by such definition, the jurisdiction and powers of every such Magistrate shall
extend throughout the district.
23.Subordination of Executive
Magistrates.- (1) All Executive Magistrates, other than the Additional
District Magistrate, shall be subordinate to the District Magistrate, and every
Executive Magistrate (other than the Sub-divisional Magistrate) exercising
powers in a sub-division shall also be subordinate to the Sub-divisional
Magistrate, subject, however, to the general control of the District
Magistrate.
(2) The District
Magistrate may, from time to time, make rules or give special orders, consistent
with this Code, as to the distribution of business among the Executive
Magistrates subordinate to him and as to the allocation of business to an
Additional District Magistrate.
24.Public Prosecutors.- (1)For
every High Court, the Central Government or the State Government shall, after
consultation with the High Court, appoint a Public Prosecutor for conducting, in
such Court, any prosecution, appeal or other proceeding on behalf of the Central
or State Government, as the case may be.
(2) For every district the State Government shall appoint a
Public Prosecutor and may also appoint one or more Additional Public Prosecutors
for the district.
(3) The
District Magistrate shall, in consultation with the Sessions Judge, prepare a
panel of names of persons who are, in his opinion, fit to be appointed as the
Public Prosecutor or Additional Public Prosecutor for the district.
(4) No person shall be appointed
by the State Government as the Public Prosecutor or Additional Public Prosecutor
for the district unless his name appears on the panel of names prepared by the
District Magistrate under sub-section (3).
(5) A person shall only be eligible to be appointed as a
Public Prosecutor or an Additional Public Prosecutor under sub-section (1) or
sub-section (2), if he has been in practice as an advocate for not less than
seven years.
(6) The Central
Government or the State Government may appoint, for the purposes of any case or
class of cases, an advocate who has been in practice for not less than ten
years, as a Special Public Prosecutor.
25.Assistant Public
Prosecutors.- (1) The State Government shall appoint in every district one
or more Assistant Public Prosecutors for conducting prosecutions in the Courts
of Magistrates.
(2) Save as
otherwise provided in sub-section (3), no police officer shall be eligible to be
appointed as an Assistant Public Prosecutor.
(3) Where no Assistant Public Prosecutor is available for
the purposes of any particular case,
the District
Magistrate may appoint any other person to be the Assistant Public Prosecutor in
charge of that case:
Provided
that a police officer shall not be so appointed-
(a) if he has taken any part in the investigation into the
offence with respect to which the accused is being prosecuted; or
(b) if he is below the rank of
Inspector.
CHAPTER III
POWER OF COURTS
26.Courts by which offences are triable.- Subject to
the other provisions of this Code.-
(a) any offence under the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860) may
be tried by -
(i) (i) the
High Court, or
(ii) the Court
of Session, or
(iii) any other
Court by which such offence is shown in the First Schedule to be triable;
(b) any offence under any other law shall, when any Court
is mentioned in this behalf in such law, be tried by such Court and when no
Court is so mentioned, may be tried by-
(i) the High Court, or
(ii) any other Court by which such offence is shown in the
First Schedule to be
triable.
27.Jurisdiction in the case of juveniles.- Any offence
not punishable with death or imprisonment for life, committed by any person who
at the date when he appears or is brought before the Court is under the age of
sixteen years, may be tried by the Court of a Chief Judicial Magistrate, or by
any Court specially empowered under the Children Act, 1960,(60 of 1960) or any
other law for the time being in force providing for the treatment, training and
rehabilitation of youthful offenders.
28.Sentences which High Courts and
Sessions Judges may pass.- (1) A High Court may pass any sentence authorised
by law.
(2) A Sessions Judge or
Additional Sessions Judge may pass any sentence authorised by law; but any
sentence of death passed by any such Judge shall be subject to confirmation by
the High Court.
(3) An
Assistant Sessions Judge may pass any sentence authorised by law except a
sentence of death or of imprisonment for life or of imprisonment for a term
exceeding ten years.
29.Sentences which Magistrates may pass.- (1) The Court
of a Chief Judicial Magistrate may pass any sentence authorised by law except a
sentence of death or of imprisonment for life or of imprisonment for a term
exceeding seven years.
(2) The
Court of a Magistrate of the first class may pass a sentence of imprisonment for
a term not exceeding three years, or of fine not exceeding five thousand rupees,
or of both.
(3) The Court of a
Magistrate of the second class may pass a sentence of imprisonment for a term
not exceeding one year, or of fine not exceeding one thousand rupees, or of
both.
(3) The Court of a Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate shall have the powers of the Court of a Chief Judicial
Magistrate and that of a Metropolitan Magistrate, the powers of the Court of a
Magistrate of the first class.
30.Sentence of imprisonment in
default of fine.- (1) The Court of a Magistrate may award such term of
imprisonment in default of payment of fine as is authorised by law:
Provided that the term-
(a) is not in excess of the powers
of the Magistrate under section 29;
(b) shall not, where imprisonment has been awarded as part
of the substantive sentence, exceed one-fourth of the term of imprisonment which
the Magistrate is competent to inflict as punishment for the offence otherwise
than as imprisonment in default of payment of the fine.
(2) The imprisonment awarded under
this section may be in addition to a substantive sentence of imprisonment for
the maximum term awardable by the Magistrate under section 29.
31.Sentence in cases of conviction of several offences at
one trial.- (1) When a person is convicted at one trial of two or more
offences, the Court may, subject to the provisions of section 71 of the Indian
Penal Code,(45 of 1860) sentence him for such offences, to the several
punishments prescribed therefor which such Court is competent to inflict; such
punishments when consisting of imprisonment to commence the one after the
expiration of the other in such order as the Court may direct, unless the Court
directs that such punishments shall run concurrently.
(2) In the case of consecutive
sentences, it shall not be necessary for the Court by reason only of the
aggregate punishment for the several offences being in excess of the punishment
which it is competent to inflict on conviction of a single offence, to send the
offender for trial before a higher Court:
Provided that-
(a) in no case shall such person be sentenced to
imprisonment for a longer period than fourteen years;
(b) the aggregate punishment shall
not exceed twice the amount of punishment which the Court is competent to
inflict for a single offence.
(3) For the purpose of appeal by a convicted person, the
aggregate of the consecutive sentences
passed against
him under this section shall be deemed to be a single sentence.
32.Mode of
conferring powers.- (1) In conferring powers under this Code, the High Court
or the State Government, as the case may be, may, by order, empower persons
specially by name or in virtue of their offices or classes of officials
generally by their official titles.
(2) Every such order shall take effect from the date on
which it is communicated to the person so
empowered.
33.Powers
of officers appointed.- Whenever any person holding an office in the service
of Government who has been invested by the High Court or the State Government
with any powers under this Code throughout any local area is appointed to an
equal or higher office of the same nature, within a like local area under the
same State Government, he shall, unless the High Court or the State Government,
as the case may be, otherwise directs, or has otherwise directed, exercise the
same powers in the local area in which he is so appointed.
34.Withdrawal of powers.- (1) The High Court or the
State Government, as the case may be, may withdraw all or any of the powers
conferred by it under this Code on any person or by any officer subordinate to
it.
(2) Any powers conferred by
the Chief Judicial Magistrate or by the District Magistrate may be
withdrawn by the respective Magistrate by whom such powers
were conferred.
35.Powers of Judges and Magistrates exercisable by their
successors-in-office.- (1) Subject to the other provisions of this Code, the
powers and duties of a Judge or Magistrate may be exercised or performed by his
successor-in-office.
(2) When
there is any doubt as to who is the successor-in-office of any Additional or
Assistant Sessions Judge, the Sessions Judge shall determine by order in writing
the Judge who shall, for the purposes of this Code or of any proceedings or
order thereunder, be deemed to be the successor-in-office of such Additional or
Assistant Sessions Judge.
(3)
When there is any doubt as to who is the successor-in-office of any Magistrate,
the Chief Judicial Magistrate, or the District Magistrate, as the case may be,
shall determine by order in writing the Magistrate who shall, for the purpose of
this Code or of any proceedings or order thereunder, be deemed to be the
successor-in-office of such Magistrate.
CHAPTER IV
A.- POWERS OF SUPERIOR OFFICERS OF POLICE
36.Powers of superior officers of police.- Police
officers superior in rank to an officer in charge of a police station may
exercise the same powers, throughout the local area to which they are appointed,
as may be exercised by such officer within the limits of his station.
B.-AID TO THE MAGISTRATES AND THE
POLICE
37.Public when to assist Magistrates and police.- Every
person is bound to assist a Magistrate or police officer reasonably demanding
his aid-
(a) in the taking or
preventing the escape of any other person whom such Magistrate or police officer
is authorised to arrest; or
(b)
in the prevention or suppression of a breach of the peace; or
(c) in the prevention of any
injury attempted to be committed to any railway, canal, telegraph or public
property.
38.Aid to person, other than police officer, executing
warrant.- When a warrant is directed to a person other than a police
officer, any other person may aid in the execution of such warrant, if the
person to whom the warrant is directed be near at hand and acting in the
execution of the warrant.
39.Public to give information of certain offences.- (1)
Every person, aware of the commission of , or of the intention of any other
person
to commit, any offence punishable under any of
the following sections of the Indian Penal
Code,(45 of 1860) namely:-
(i) sections 121 to 126, both inclusive, and section 130
(that is to say, offences against the State specified in Chapter VI of the said
Code);
(ii) sections 143, 144,
145, 147 and 148 (that is to say, offences against the public tranquillity
specified in Chapter VIII of the said Code);
(iii) sections 161 to 165A, both inclusive (that is to say,
offences relating to illegal gratification);
(iv) sections 272 to 278, both inclusive (that is to say,
offences relating to adulteration of food and drugs, etc.);
(v) sections 302, 303 and 304
(that is to say, offences affecting life);
(vi) section 382 (that is to say, offence of theft after
preparation made for causing death, hurt or restraint in order to the committing
of the theft);
(vii) sections
392 to 399, both inclusive, and section 402 (that is to say, offences of robbery
and dacoity);
(viii) section
409 (that is to say, offence relating to criminal breach of trust by public
servant, etc.);
(ix) sections
431 to 439, both inclusive (that is to say, offences of mischief against
property);
(x) sections 449 and
450 (that is to say, offence of house-trespass);
(xi) sections 456 to 460, both inclusive (that is to say,
offences of lurking house-trespass); and
(xii) sections 489A to 489E, both inclusive (that is to
say, offences relating to currency notes and bank notes),
shall, in the absence of any
reasonable excuse, the burden of proving which excuse shall lie upon the person
so aware, forthwith give information to the nearest Magistrate or police officer
of such commission or intention.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the term "offence"
includes any act committed at any place out of India which would constitute an
offence if committed in India.
40.Duty of officers employed in
connection with the affairs of a village to make certain report.- (1) Every
officer employed in connection with the affairs of a village and every person
residing in a village shall forthwith communicate to the nearest Magistrate or
to the officer in charge of the nearest police station, whichever is nearer, any
information which he may possess respecting-
(a) the permanent or temporary residence of any notorious
receiver or vendor of stolen property in or near such village;
(b) the resort to any place
within, or the passage through, such village of any person whom he knows, or
reasonably suspects, to be a thug, robber, escaped convict or proclaimed
offender;
(c) the commission
of, or intention to commit, in or near such village any non-bailable offence or
any offence punishable under section 143, section 144, section 145, section 147,
or section 148 of the Indian Penal Code(45 of 1860);
(d) the occurrence in or near such village of any sudden or
unnatural death or of any death under suspicious circumstances or the discovery
in or near such village of any corpse or part of a corpse, in circumstances
which lead to a reasonable suspicion that such a death has occurred or the
disappearance from such village of any person in circumstances which lead to a
reasonable suspicion that a non-bailable offence has been committed in respect
of such person;
(e) the
commission of, or intention to commit, at any place out of India near such
village any act which, if committed in India, would be an offence punishable
under any of the following sections of the Indian Penal Code,(45 of 1860)
namely, 231 to 238 (both inclusive), 302, 304, 382, 392 to 399 (both inclusive),
402, 435, 436, 449, 450, 457 to 460 (both inclusive), 489A, 489B, 489C and
489D;
(f) any matter likely to
affect the maintenance of order or the prevention of crime or the safety of
person or property respecting which the District Magistrate, by general or
special order made with the previous sanction of the State Government, has
directed him to communicate information.
(2) In this section, -
(i) "village" includes village-lands;
(ii) the expression "proclaimed
offender" includes any person proclaimed as an offender by any Court or
authority in any territory in India to which this Code does not extend, in
respect of any act which if committed in the territories to which this Code
extends, would be an offence punishable under any of the following sections of
the Indian Penal Code,(45 of 1860) namely, 302, 304, 382, 392 to 399 (both
inclusive), 402, 435, 436, 449, 450 and 457 to 460 (both inclusive);
(iii) the words "officer employed
in connection with the affairs of the village" means a member of the panchayat
of the village and includes the headman and every officer or other person
appointed to perform any function connected with the administration of the
village.
CHAPTER V
ARREST OF PERSONS
41.When police may arrest without warrant.- (1) Any
police officer may without an order from a Magistrate and without a warrant,
arrest any person-
(a) who has
been concerned in any cognizable offence, or against whom a reasonable complaint
has been made, or credible information has been received, or a reasonable
suspicion exists, of his having been so concerned; or
(b) who has in his possession
without lawful excuse, the burden of proving which excuse shall lie on such
person, any implement of house-breaking; or
(c) who has been proclaimed as an offender either under
this Code or by order of the State Government; or
(d) in whose possession anything is found which may
reasonably be suspected to be stolen property and who may reasonably be
suspected of having committed an offence with reference to such thing; or
(e) who obstructs a police officer
while in the execution of his duty, or who has escaped, or attempts to escape,
from lawful custody; or
(f) who
is reasonably suspected of being a deserter from any of the Armed Forces of the
Union; or
(g) who has been
concerned in, or against whom a reasonable complaint has been made, or credible
information has been received, or a reasonable suspicion exists, of his having
been concerned in, any act committed at any place out of India which, if
committed in India, would have been punishable as an offence, and for which he
is, under any law relating to extradition, or otherwise, liable to be
apprehended or detained in custody in India; or
(h) who, being a released convict, commits a breach of any
rule made under sub-section (5) of section 356; or
(I) for whose arrest any requisition, whether written or
oral, has been received from another police officer, provided that the
requisition specifies the person to be arrested and the offence or other cause
for which the arrest is to be made and it appears therefrom that the person
might lawfully be arrested without a warrant by the officer who issued the
requisition.
(2) Any officer in
charge of a police station may, in like manner, arrest or cause to be arrested
any person, belonging to one or more of the categories of persons specified in
section 109 or section 110.
42.Arrest on refusal to give name and residence.- (1)
When any person who, in the presence of a police officer, has committed or has
been accused of committing a non-cognizable offence refuses, on demand of such
officer, to give his name and residence or gives a name or residence which such
officer has reason to believe to be false, he may be arrested by such officer in
order that his name or residence may be ascertained.
(2) When the true name and residence of such person have
been ascertained, he shall be released on his executing a bond, with or without
sureties, to appear before a Magistrate if so required:
Provided that, if such person is
not resident in India, the bond shall be secured by a surety or sureties
resident in India.
(4) (3)
Should the true name and residence of such person not be ascertained within
twenty-four hours from the time of arrest or should he fail to execute the bond,
or, if so required, to furnish sufficient sureties, he shall forthwith be
forwarded to the nearest Magistrate having jurisdiction.
43.Arrest
by Private person and procedure on such arrest.- (1) Any private person may
arrest or cause to be arrested any person who in his presence commits a
non-bailable and cognizable offence, or any proclaimed offender, and, without
unnecessary delay, shall make over or cause to be made over any person so
arrested to a police officer, or, in the absence of a police officer, take such
person or cause him to be taken in custody to the nearest police station.
(2) If there is reason to believe
that such person comes under the provisions of section 41, a police officer
shall re-arrest him.
(3) If
there is reason to believe that he has committed a non-cognizable offence, and
he refuses on the demand of a police officer to give his name and residence, or
gives a name or residence which such officer has reason to believe to be false,
he shall be dealt with under the provisions of section 42; but if there is no
sufficient reason to believe that he has committed any offence, he shall be at
once released.
CHAPTER VI
PROCESSES TO COMPEL APPEARANCE
A.- Summons
61.Form of summons.- Every
summons issued by a Court under this Code shall be in writing, in duplicate,
signed by the presiding officer of such Court or by such other officer as the
High Court may, from time to time, by rule direct, and shall bear the seal of
the Court.
62.Summons how served.- (1) Every summons shall be
served by a police officer, or subject to such rules as the State Government may
make in this behalf, by an officer of the Court issuing it or other public
servant.
(2) The summons shall,
if practicable, be served personally on the person summoned, by delivering or
tendering to him one of the duplicates of the summons.
(3) Every person on whom a summons
is so served shall, if so required by the serving officer, sign a receipt
therefor on the back of the other duplicate.
63.Service
of summons on corporate bodies and societies.- Service of a summons on a
corporation may be effected by serving it on the secretary, local manager or
other principle officer of the corporation, or by letter sent by registered
post, addressed to the chief officer of the corporation in India, in which case
the service shall be deemed to have been effected when the letter would arrive
in ordinary course of post.
Explanation.- In this section, "corporation" means an
incorporated company or other body corporate and includes a society registered
under the Societies Registration Act, 1860.
64.Service when persons summoned
cannot be found.- Where the person summoned cannot, by the exercise of due
diligence, be found, the summons may be served by leaving one of the duplicates
for him with some adult male member of his family residing with him, and the
person with whom the summons is so left shall, if so required by the serving
officer, sign a receipt therefor on the back of the other duplicate.
Explanation.- A servant is not a
member of the family within the meaning of this section.
65.Procedure when service cannot be effected as before
provided.- If service cannot by the exercise of due diligence be effected as
provided in section 62, section 63 or section 64, the serving officer shall
affix one of the duplicates of the summons to some conspicuous part of the house
or homestead in which the person summoned ordinarily resides; and thereupon the
Court, after making such inquiries as it thinks fit, may either declare that the
summons has been duly served or order fresh service in such manner as it
considers proper.
66.Service on Government.- (1) Where the person
summoned is in the active service of the Government, the Court issuing the
summons shall ordinarily sent it in duplicate to the head of the office in which
such person is employed; and such head shall thereupon cause the summons to be
served in the manner provided by section 62, and shall return it to the Court
under his signature with the endorsement required by that section.
(2) Such signature shall be
evidence of due service.
67.Service of summons outside local limits.-When a
Court desires that a summons issued by it shall be served at any place outside
its local jurisdiction, it shall ordinarily send such summons in duplicate to a
Magistrate within whose local jurisdiction the person summoned resides, or is,
to be there served.
68.Proof of service in such cases and when serving officer
not present.-(1) When a summons issued by a Court is served outside its
local jurisdiction, and in any case where the officer who has served a summons
is not present at the hearing of the case, an affidavit, purporting to be made
before a Magistrate, that such summons has been served, and a duplicate of the
summons purporting to be endorsed (in the manner provided by section 62 or
section 64) by the person to whom it was delivered or tendered or with whom it
was left, shall be admissible in evidence, and the statements made therein shall
be deemed to be correct unless and until the contrary is proved.
(2) The affidavit mentioned in
this section may be attached to the duplicate of the summons are returned to the
Court.
69.Service of summons on witness by post.- (1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in the preceding sections of this Chapter, a
Court issuing a summons to a witness may, in addition to and simultaneously with
the issue of such summons, direct a copy of the summons to be served by
registered post addressed to the witness at the place where he ordinarily
resides or carries on business or personally works for gain.
(2) When an acknowledgment purporting to be signed by the
witness or an endorsement purporting to be made by a postal employee that the
witness refused to take delivery of the summons has been received, the Court
issuing the summons may declare that the summons has been duly served.
B.-
Warrant of arrest
70.Form of warrant of arrest and duration.- (1) Every
warrant of arrest issued by a Court under this Code shall be in writing, signed
by the presiding officer of such Court and shall bear the seal of the Court.
(2) Every such warrant shall
remain in force until it is cancelled by the Court which issued it, or until it
is executed.
71.Power to direct security to be taken.- (1) Any Court
issuing a warrant for the arrest of any person may in its discretion direct by
endorsement on the warrant that, if such person executes a bond with sufficient
sureties for his attendance before the Court at a specified time and thereafter
until otherwise directed by the Court, the officer to whom the warrant is
directed shall take such security and shall release such person from custody.
(2) The endorsement shall
state-
(a) the number of
sureties;
(b) the amount in
which they and the person for whose arrest the warrant is issued, are be
respectively bound;
(c) the
time at which he is to attend before the Court.
(3) Whenever security is taken under this section, the
officer to whom the warrant is directed shall forward the bond to the Court.
72.Warrants to whom directed.- (1) A warrant of arrest
shall ordinarily be directed to one or more police officers; but the Court
issuing such a warrant may, if its immediate execution is necessary and no
police officer is immediately available, direct it to any other person or
persons, and such person or persons shall execute the same.
(2) When a warrant is directed to
more officers or persons than one, it may be executed by all, or by any one or
more of them.
73.Warrant may be directed to any person.- (1) The
Chief Judicial Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first class may direct a
warrant to any person within his local jurisdiction for the arrest of any
escaped convict, proclaimed offender or of any person who is accused of a
non-bailable offence and is evading arrest.
(2) Such person shall acknowledge in writing the receipt of
the warrant, and shall execute it if the person for whose arrest it was issued,
is in, or enters on, any land or other property under his charge.
(3) When the person against whom
such warrant is issued is arrested, he shall be made over with the warrant to
the nearest police officer, who shall cause him to be taken before a Magistrate
having jurisdiction in the case, unless security is taken under section 71.
74.Warrant
directed to police officer.- A warrant directed to any police officer may
also be executed by any other police officer whose name is endorsed upon the
warrant by the officer to whom it is directed or endorsed.
75.Notification of substance of warrant.-The police
officer or other person executing a warrant of arrest shall notify the substance
thereof to the person to be arrested, and, if so required, shall show him the
warrant.
76.Person arrested to be brought before Court without
delay.- The police officer or other person executing a warrant of arrest
shall (subject to the provisions of section 71 as to security) without
unnecessary delay bring the person arrested before the Court before which he is
required by law to produce such person:
Provided that such delay shall not, in any case, exceed
twenty-four hours exclusive of the time necessary for the journey from the place
of arrest to the Magistrate's Court.
77.Where warrant may be
executed.- A warrant of arrest may be executed at any place in India.
78.Warrant
forwarded for execution outside jurisdiction.- (1) When a warrant is to be
executed outside the local jurisdiction of the Court issuing it, such Court may,
instead of directing the warrant to a police officer within its jurisdiction,
forward it by post or otherwise to any Executive Magistrate or District
Superintendent of Police or Commissioner of Police within the local limits of
whose jurisdiction it is to be executed; and the Executive Magistrate or
District Superintendent or Commissioner shall endorse his name thereon, and if
practicable, cause it to be executed in the manner herein before provided.
(2) The Court issuing a warrant under sub-section (1) shall
forward, along with the warrant, the substance of the information against the
person to be arrested together with such documents, if any, as may be sufficient
to enable the Court acting under section 81 to decide whether bail should or
should not be granted to the person.
79.Warrant directed to police
officer for execution outside jurisdiction.- (1) When a warrant directed to
a police officer is to be executed beyond the local jurisdiction of the Court
issuing the same, he shall ordinarily take it for endorsement either to an
Executive Magistrate or to a police officer not below the rank of an officer in
charge of a police station, within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the
warrant is to be executed.
(2)
Such Magistrate or police officer shall endorse his name thereon and such
endorsement shall be sufficient authority to the police officer to whom the
warrant is directed to execute the same, and the local police shall, if so
required, assist such officer in executing such warrant.
(3)Whenever there is reason to
believe that the delay occasioned by obtaining the endorsement of the Magistrate
or police officer within whose local jurisdiction the warrant is to be executed
will prevent such execution, the police officer to whom it is directed may
execute the same without such endorsement in any place beyond the local
jurisdiction of the Court which issued it.
80.Procedure on arrest of person
against whom warrant issued.- When a warrant of arrest is executed outside
the district in which it was issued, the person arrested shall, unless the Court
which issued the warrant is within thirty kilometres of the place of arrest or
is nearer than the Executive Magistrate or District Superintendent of Police or
Commissioner of Police within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the arrest
was made, or unless security is taken under section 71, be taken before such
Magistrate or District Superintendent or Commissioner.
81.Procedure by Magistrate before whom such person arrested
is brought.- (1) The Executive Magistrate or District Superintendent of
Police or Commissioner of Police shall, if the person arrested appears to be the
person intended by the Court which issued the warrant, direct his removal in
custody to such Court:
Provided
that, if the offence is bailable, and such person is already and willing to give
bail to the satisfaction of such Magistrate, District Superintendent or
Commissioner, or a direction has been endorsed under section 71 on the warrant
and such person is ready and willing to give the security required by such
direction, the Magistrate, District Superintendent or Commissioner shall take
such bail or security, as the case may be, and forward the bond, to the Court
which issued the warrant:
Provided further that if the offence is a non-bailable one,
it shall be lawful for the Chief Judicial Magistrate (subject to the provisions
of section 437), or the Sessions Judge, of the district in which the arrest is
made on consideration of the information and the documents referred to in
sub-section (2) of section 78, to release such person on bail.
(2) Nothing in this section shall
be deemed to prevent a police officer from taking security under section 71.
C.-
Proclamation and attachment
82.Proclamation for person
absconding.- (1) If any Court has reason to believe (whether after taking
evidence or not) that any person against whom a warrant has been issued by it
has absconded or is concealing himself so that such warrant cannot be executed,
such Court may public a written proclamation requiring him to appear at a
specified place and at a specified time not less than thirty days from the date
of publishing such proclamation.
(2) The proclamation shall be published as follows:-
(i) (a) it shall be publicly read
in some conspicuous place of the town or village in which such person ordinarily
resides;
(b) it shall be
affixed to some conspicuous part of the house or homestead in which such
person ordinarily resides or to some conspicuous place of
such town or village;
(c) a
copy thereof shall be affixed to some conspicuous part of the Court-house;
(ii) the Court may also, if it
thinks fit, direct a copy of the proclamation to be published in a daily
newspaper circulating in the place in which such person ordinarily resides.
(3) A statement in writing by the
Court issuing the proclamation to the effect that the proclamation was duly
published on a specified day, in the manner specified in clause (I) of
sub-section (2), shall be conclusive evidence that the requirements of this
section have been complied with, and that the proclamation was published on such
day.
83.Attachment of property of person absconding.- (1)
The Court issuing a proclamation under section 82 may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, at any time after the issue of the proclamation, order the
attachment of any property, movable or immovable, or both, belonging to the
proclaimed person:
Provided
that where at the time of the issue of the proclamation the Court is satisfied,
by affidavit or otherwise that the person in relation to whom the proclamation
is to be issued, -
(a) is about
to dispose of the whole or any part of his property, or
(b) is about to remove the whole
or any part of his property from the local jurisdiction
of the Court,
it may order the attachment simultaneously with the issue
of the proclamation.
(2) Such
order shall authorise the attachment of any property belonging to such person
within the district in which it is made; and it shall authorise the attachment
of any property belonging to such person without such district when endorsed by
the District Magistrate within whose district such property is situate.
(3) If the property ordered to be
attached is a debt or other movable property, the attachment under this section
shall be made-
(a) by seizure;
or
(b) by the appointment of a
receiver; or
(c) by an order in
writing prohibiting the delivery of such property to the proclaimed person or to
any one on his behalf; on
(d)
by all or any two of such methods, as the Court thinks fit.
(4) If the property ordered to be
attached is immovable, the attachment under this section shall, in the case of
land paying revenue to the State Government, be made through the Collector of
the district in which the land is situate, and in all other cases-
(a) by taking possession; or
(b) by the appointment of a
receiver; or
(c) by an order in
writing prohibiting the payment of rent on delivery of property to
the proclaimed person or to any one on his behalf; or
(d) by all or any two of such
methods, as the Court thinks fit.
(5) If the property ordered to be attached consists of
live-stock or is of a perishable nature, the Court may, if it thinks it
expedient, order immediate sale thereof, and in such case the proceeds of the
sale shall abide the order of the Court.
(6) The powers, duties and liabilities of a receiver
appointed under this section shall be the same as those of a receiver appointed
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908(5 of 1908).
84.Claims and objections to
attachment.- (1) If any claim is preferred to, or objection made to the
attachment of, any property attached under section 83, within six months from
the date of such attachment, by any person other than the proclaimed person, on
the ground that the claimant or objector has an interest in such property, and
that such interest is not liable to attachment under section 83, the claim or
objection shall be inquired into, and may be allowed or disallowed in whole or
in part:
Provided that any
claim preferred or objection made within the period allowed by this sub-section
may, in the event of the death of the claimant or objector, be continued by his
legal representative.
(2)
Claims or objections under sub-section (1) may be preferred or made in the Court
by which the order of attachment is issued, or, if the claim or objection is in
respect of property attached under an order endorsed under sub-section (2) of
section 83, in the Court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate of the district in
which the attachment is made.
(3) Every such claim or objection shall be inquired into by
the Court in which it is preferred or made:
Provided that, if it is preferred or made in the Court of a
Chief Judicial Magistrate, he may make it over for disposal to any Magistrate
subordinate to him.
(4) Any
person whose claim or objection has been disallowed in whole or in part by an
order under sub-section (1) may, within a period of one year from the date of
such order, institute a suit to establish the right which he claims in respect
of the property in dispute; but subject to the result of such suit, if any, the
order shall be conclusive.
85.Release, sale and restoration of attached
property.-(1) If the proclaimed person appears within the time specified in
the proclamation, the Court shall make an order releasing the property from the
attachment.
(2) If the
proclaimed person does not appear within the time specified in the proclamation,
the property under the attachment shall be at the disposal of the State
Government; but it shall not be sold until the expiration of six months from the
date of the attachment and until any claim preferred or objection made under
section 84 has been disposed of under that section, unless it is subject to
speedy and natural decay, or the Court considers that the sale would be for the
benefit of the owner; in either of which cases the Court may cause it to be sold
whenever it thinks fit.
(3) If,
within two years from the date of the attachment, any person whose property is
or has been at the disposal of the State Government, under sub-section (2),
appears voluntarily or is apprehended and brought before the Court by whose
order the property was attached, or the Court to which such Court is
subordinate, and proves to the satisfaction of such Court that he did not
abscond or conceal himself for the purpose of avoiding execution of the warrant,
and that he had not such notice of the proclamation as to enable him to attend
within the time specified therein such pr