Code of Criminal Procedure (Madhya Pradesh
Amendment) Act 2007: First Schedule to Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 -
Amendment - Offences punishable u/ss 467, 468 and 471
made triable by Court of Session in State of Madhya Pradesh
- Offence committed prior to amendment but charge-sheet filed after the amendment came into force - Held: Magistrate
on receipt of a charge-sheet which was tantamount to
institution of a case against the appellant was duty bound to
commit the case to the Court of Session as three of the
offences with which he was charged were triable only by Court of Session - Apart from the fact that as on the date the
amendment came into force no case had been instituted
against the appellant nor the Magistrate had taken
cognizance against the appellant, any amendment shifting
the forum of the trial had to be on principle retrospective in nature in the absence of any indication in the Amendment Act
to the contrary - Appellant could not claim a vested right of
forum for his trial for, no such right is recognised - Judgment
of Full Bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court overruled -
Prospective overruling of judgment - Retrospective operation
of amendment shifting the forum - Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 - First Schedule as amended in State of
Madhya Pradesh.
By the Code of Criminal Procedure (Madhya Pradesh Amendment) Act of 2007, the first Schedule to the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 was amended w.e.f.
22.2.2008 and, among others, offences punishable u/ss
467, 468 and 471 IPC were made triable by the Court of
Session in State of Madhya Pradesh instead of a Court of Magistrate of First Class. Consequently, the Judicial
Magistrates, First Class committed to the Court of
Session all cases involving the relevant offences. On
reference made by a Sessions Judge, a full Bench of the
High Court held that all cases pending before the Court of Judicial Magistrate First Class as on 22.2.2008
remained unaffected by the amendment and were triable
by the Judicial Magistrate First Class. The Court further
held that all such cases as were pending before the
Judicial Magistrate First Class and had been committed to the Court of Session would be sent back to the
Judicial Magistrate First Class in accordance with law.
Relying upon the said decision the appellant, against
whom a case for offences punishable u/ss 408, 420, 467,
468 and 471 IPC was registered, filed an application
before the trial court seeking a similar direction for remission of the case for trial by a Judicial Magistrate.
The case of the appellant was that though the police had
not filed a charge-sheet against the appellant and the
investigation in the case was pending as on the date the
amendment came into force, the appellant had acquired the right of trial by a forum specified in Schedule I of the
1973 Code and any amendment shifting the forum of trial
to the Court of Session was not attracted. The trial court
held that since no charge-sheet had been filed before the
Magistrate as on the date the amendment came into force, the case was exclusively triable by the Court of Session.
The High Court dismissed the revision petition filed by
the appellant.
In the instant appeal filed by the accused the question for consideration before the Court was:
"whether the amendment is prospective and will be
applicable only to offences committed after the date the
amendment was notified or would govern cases that were
pending on the date of the amendment or may have been filed after the same had become operative".