Trial Before Court of Session: Hidayatullah National Law University Criminal Procedure Code Project ON
Trial Before Court of Session: Hidayatullah National Law University Criminal Procedure Code Project ON
Trial Before Court of Session: Hidayatullah National Law University Criminal Procedure Code Project ON
VIKASH GOEL
SEMESTER VII
ROLL NO. 172
SUBMITTED ON
24TH AUGUST, 2015
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TABLE OF CONTENT
1. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
..2
2. RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY
...4
3. INTRODUCTION
6
4. SCHEME
OF
LAW.7
5. THE
OBJECT
OF
CRIMINAL
CRIMINAL
TRIAL...8
6. THE
PRESUMPTION
OF
INNOSENCE....10
7. BENEFIT
OF
DOUBT..11
8. RELEVANT
PROVISION
AS
TO
SESSION
TRIAL..12
9. CONCLUSION
...14
10.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
...15
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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Review of Literature
Sources of Data:
The following secondary sources of data have been used in the project1. Cases
2. Books
3. Journals
Questions Raised
1.
2.
3.
Chapterisation
1.
2.
3.
4.
Mode of Citation
Method of Research
INTRODUCTION
There are three stages of criminal cases; investigation, inquiry and trial. The first stage is
investigation and is reached when the police officer either by himself or under orders of
magistrate investigates into a case . when an imformation of a cognizable offence is received
or cognizable offence is suspected , a police officer in charge of a police station investigate
into the matter. If the information relates to non cognizable offence, the police officer can
investigate only after the order of a magistrate.
The second stage is enquiry or trial. If the magistrate is of the opinion that the case is triable
by him and also he is competent to impose adequate sentence on the accuse,he may himself
deal with the case and may discharge or acquit or convict the accused. If he is of the opinion
that the offence is serious one and exclusively triable by sessions court, he shall commit the
case to the court of sessions. Such committal is made only on the basis of inquiry conducted
by him finds that a prima facie case has been made out against the accused. They are known
as Committal proceedings.
The third and final stage of criminal proceeding is trial. Once investigation and inquiry ends
the trial begins, which ends in acquittal or in conviction.
Though the term trial is not defined in the code. The term trial is defined in various
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Criminal trial is meant for doing justice not only to the victim but also to the accused and the
Society at large3. Every criminal trial is a voyage of discovery in which truth is the quest. The
primary object of criminal trial is to ensure fair trial which is guaranteed under Art.21 of the
Constitution of India. A fair trial has, therefore, two objects in view. It must be fair to the
accused and must also be fair to the prosecution. The trial must be judged from this dual point
of view4. It is, therefore, necessary to remember that a judge does not preside over a criminal
trial merely to see that no innocent man is punished. A judge also presides to see that a guilty
man does not escape. One is as important as the other. Both are public duties which the judge
has to perform. The object of criminal trial is thus to render public justice by punishing the
criminal. It is also important to remember that the trial should be concluded expeditiously
before the memory of the witnesses fades out. The recent trend is to delay the trial and
threaten the witnesses or to win over the witnesses by promise or inducement. These
1 S.n bajpaie v state of U.P, 1990 Cri.L.J 1486(U.P)
2 State of M.P v Charandas Devangan, 1992Cri.L.J 711(M.P)
3 Ambika Pd. V. State (Delhi Administration)-2000 SCC Crl.522
4T .H.Hussain V. M.P.Modkakar-AIR 1958 SC 376
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The public interest demands that criminal justice is swift and sure, that the guilty is punished
while events are still fresh in the public mind and that the innocent is absolved as early as is
consistent with a fair and impartial trial. 6If unmerited acquittals become the general rule, they
tend to lead to a cynical disregard of the law. A miscarriage of justice may arise from the
acquittal of the guilty no less than from the conviction of the innocent7.
In getting the true fruits of the real object of criminal trial, it must always be kept in view that
a criminal trial is not like a fairy tale wherein one is free to give flight to ones imagination
and fantasy. It concerns itself with the question as to whether the accused arraigned at the
trial is guilty of the crime with which he is charged. Crime is an event in real life and is the
product of interplay of different human emotions. In arriving at the conclusion about the guilt
of the accused charged with the commission of a crime, the court has to judge the evidence
by the yardstick of probabilities, its intrinsic worth and the animus of the witnesses. Every
case in the final analysis would have to depend upon its own facts. 8 The Apex court had taken
judicial notice of certain distressing and unethical tendencies in Swaran Singh v. State of
Punjab- wherein it has been observed as follows9:
It is the game of unscrupulous lawyers to get adjournments for one excuse or the other till a
witness is won over or is tired. Not only that a witness is threatened; he is abducted; he is
maimed; he is done away with; or even bribed. There is no protection for him. In adjourning
the matter without any valid cause a court unwittingly becomes party to miscarriage of
5 VideKrishnan V. Krishnaveni-1997 SCC Crl.544 = AIR 1997 SC 987
6 M.S.Sherif v. State of Madras- 1954 Crl.L.J.1019
7 Vide Gangadhar Behera V. State of Orissa- 2000 (3) Crl.L.J.41 SC and Shivaji Sahebrao Bobade v.
State of Maharashtra- AIR 1988 SC 1998
8 State Punjab v. Jagir Singh AIR 1973 SC 2407.
The sole aim of the law is approximation of justice. A Judge is looked upon as an
embodiment of justice. Assurance of fair trial is the first imperative in the dispensation of
justice. It cannot be denied that one of the most valuable rights of our citizens is to get a fair
trial free from an atmosphere of prejudice. This right flows necessarily from Art.21 of the
Constitution of India which makes it obligatory upon the State not to deprive any person of
his life or personal liberty except according to the procedure established by law.10
One of the components of fair procedure in the administration of criminal justice is that the
accused has the opportunity of making his defence by a legal practitioner of his choice. This
is his constitutional right guaranteed under Art.22 of the Constitution. In order to give effect
to this constitutional right it has been embodied in the directive principles of State policy as
provided under Art.39 A of the Constitution of India that the State shall secure equal justice
and free legal aid by a suitable legislation or scheme or any other way to ensure that the
opportunities for securing justice are not denied to any citizen by reason of economic or other
disabilities. That right has also been statutorily accepted and incorporated in Sec. 303 Cr.P.C.
which provides that any person accused of an offence before a criminal court or against
10 Smt.Menaka Sanjay Gandhi v. Miss.Rani Jethmalani- 1979 S.C.468
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One of the cardinal principles which should always be kept in our system of administration of
justice in criminal cases is that a person arraigned as an accused is presumed to be innocent
unless and until proved otherwise. Another golden thread which runs through the web of
administration of justice in criminal cases is that if two views are possible on the evidence
adduced in the case- one pointing to the guilt of the accused and the other to his innocence,
the view which is favourable to the accused is to be accepted.11
Even in an appeal against acquittal, the presumption of innocence in favour of the accused is
not weakened and in considering an appeal against acquittal, the High Court has to keep this
presumption in mind.12 (, Ram Jog v. State of U.P.-AIR 1974 SC 606; Rajendra Rai v. State of
Bihar AIR 1974 SC 2145, Autar Singh v. State of Punjab- AIR 1979 SC 1188, State of A.P.
v. Anjaneulau AIR 1982 SC 1598, Babu v. State of U.P.- AIR 1983 SC 308, Ramji Surjiya
v. State of Maharashtra-AIR 1983 SC 810 and Chandra Kanta Deb v. State of Tripura- AIR
1986 SC 606). In paragraph 40 of the Constitution Bench decision of the Apex Court in
B.R.Kapur v. State of T.N. 2001 (7) SCC 231.
It has been observed that when a lower court convicts an accused and sentences him, the
presumption that he is innocent comes to an end.
BENEFIT OF DOUBT
Chapter XVIII of Cr.P.C. starting with Sec.225 and ending with section 237 deals with
provisions governing the trial before a Court of Session. Sec.225 Cr.P.C. enjoins that in every
trial before a Court of Session the prosecution shall be conducted by a Public Prosecutor.
Sec.193 Cr.P.C. provides that except as otherwise expressly provided by the Cr.P.C. or any
other law, no Court of Session shall take cognizance of any offence as a court of original
jurisdiction unless the case has been committed to it by a Magistrate under the Cr.P.C. There
are statutes like the N.D.P.S.Act, 1985, wherein it is provided that the special court manned
13 State of U.P. v.Ram Sevak and others-2003 (1) Crimes 461 (SC).
14 Shivaji v. State of Maharashtra ( AIR1973 SC 2622).
15 AIR 1988 SC 2154 State of U.P. v. Krishna Gopal.
16 State of Kerala v. Narayanan Bhaskaran 1991 Crl.L.J.238 = 1991 (2) KLT 217)
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CONCLUSION
In my concluding part, I would like to conclude that trial is one of the important step in
criminal proceeding. There are various types of trial but in the cases of warrant case there are
two types of trial is prescribed
1) Trial by magistrate
2) Trial by Court of session
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS:
Dr. N.V Paranjape, The Code Of Criminal Procedure, 2nd ed. , Central Law Agency,
Allahabad, 2010
M.D Chaturvedy, Code Of Criminal Procedure, 4th ed., Allahabad Law Agency,
Faridabad, 2009
R.V Kelkar, Criminal Procedure, 5th ed. , Eastern Book Company, Lucknow, 2012
Ratanlal And Dhirajlal, Code Of Criminal Procedure, 17th ed. ,Lexisnexis
Butterworths Wadhwa & Co., Nagpur, 2008
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DICTIONARIES REFERRED:
REPORTS:
Law Commission of India, 41st report, 1969
Law Commission of india, 69th report, 1977
Justice Malimath Committee Report, 2003
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