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2005 Y L R 1037
[Lahore]
Before Sardar Muhammad Aslam, J
MUHAMMAD AKRAM—Petitioner
versus
ADDITIONAL SESSIONS JUDGE, RAWALPINDI and 6 others—Respondents
Writ Petition No.1129 of 2000, heard on 1st July, 2004.
(a) Criminal Procedure Code (V of 1898)—
—-S.249-A—Power of Magistrate to acquit accused at any stage—No power to dis-charge—Section 249-A, Cr.P.C. empowers the Magistrate to acquit the accused at any stage of the proceedings—Power to discharge the accused is not available under S.249-A, Cr.P.C.
(b) Criminal trial—
—-Discharge—Discharge is different from acquittal—Discharge can be on account of absence of the complainant and not on the merits of the case—Accused discharged on police report under S.173, Cr.P.C. or discharged on having been declared innocent by the police, are some of the instances.
(c) Criminal Procedure Code (V of 1898)—
—-Ss.249-A, 417(2-A) & 439(5)—Penal Code (XLV of 1860), S.427—Constitution of Pakistan (1973), Art.199—Constitutional petition—Sessions Court through the impugned judgment had dismissed the revision petition filed by the complainant against the acquittal of accused by the trial Court under S.249-A, Cr.P.C. on the ground of being not competent—Acquittal recorded by the competent Court on recording of evidence or without recording evidence would not determine the remedy of revision or appeal, the same being governed by the statutory provisions of law—Complainant aggrieved by the order of acquittal of accused by the Trial Court had the right to file an appeal under S.417(2-A), Cr.P.C. and in the presence of remedy by way of appeal, the revision petition filed by him was not competent under S.439(5), Cr.P.C.—The same had been rightly dismissed by the Sessions Court—Constitutional petition was dismissed accordingly—[ Muhammad Yasin v. Muhammad Hanif and others 1997 PCr.LJ 1626 dissented from].
Muhammad Yasin v. Muhammad Hanif and others 1997 PCr.LJ 1626 dissented from.
Liaqat Ali v. Muhammad Saleem Shahzad and others 2000 YLR 629; Faqir Muhammad v. State and others 2001 PCr.LJ 444; Pervez Muzammil Khan and 5 others v. Muhammad Anis and another 2002 PCr.LJ. 2072 and Ghulam Muhammad v. Additional Sessions Judge and 3 others 1998 MLD 1605 ref.
Sheikh Muhammad Suleman for Petitioner.
Ghulam Asghar Khokhar for Respondents Nos.3 to 6.
Syed Sajjad Hussain Shah, Assistant Advocate-General for the State.
Date of hearing: 1st July, 2004.
JUDGMENT
The petitioner through this Constitutional petition calls in question the orders dated 6-4-2000 and 5-10-1999 passed by the respondents Nos.1 and 2 respectively on an application filed by respondents Nos.3 to 6 under section 249-A, Cr.P.C. before the learned trial Court, who vide its order dated 5-10-1999 accepted the same and discharged the accused/respondents from the charge levelled against them in a Qalandra under section 427, P.P.C. recorded at Police Station, City, Rawalpindi on 5-2-1999. The petitioner challenged the said order before the learned Sessions Judge, Rawalpindi by way of revision petition which came up for hearing before a learned Additional Sessions Judge, Rawalpinid, who vide his order dated 6-4-2000 dismissed the revision on the ground that his remedy lay in an appeal under section 417, Cr.P.C.
9-A. In the instant case, the learned Judicial Magistrate though used the word discharge by accepting the application under section 249-A, of the Cr.P.C. it will be read as acquittal. As learned Single Judge of this Court, as he then was, in the case of Muhammad Yasin v. Muhammad Hanif and others 1997 PCr.LJ 1626, found remarkable difference between the acquittal recorded under section 245, Cr.P.C. and one under section 249-A, of the Cr.P.C. In his view, if evidence is not recorded and an order of acquittal is passed under section 249-A, Cr.P.C., it is amenable to the revisional jurisdiction of the Sessions Judge, but, in case acquittal is recorded after prosecution evidence and examining of the accused an appeal will lie under section 417, of the Cr.P.C. I have not been able to persuade myself with the view expressed by the learned Single Judge in the above case in view of the clear and unambiguous language used in section 249-A of the Cr.P.C. providing acquittal at any stage of the case, if the charge is groundless. Even otherwise, acquittal recorded by the competent Court of law on recording of evidence or without recording of evidence, will not determine the remedy of revision or appeal, but the same is governed by statutory provisions of law. After introduction of subsection (2-A) in section 417 of the Cr.P.C. any person aggrieved by an order of acquittal has been conferred a right to file an appeal against the acquittal. In presence of remedy by way of appeal, the revision is not competent under section 439(5) of the Cr.P.C.
N.H.Q./M-624/L Petition dismissed.