A
Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court in Lalita
Kumari v. Govt. of U.P [W.P.(Crl) No; 68/2008] held that registration of
First Information Report is mandatory under Section 154 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure , if the information discloses commission of a cognizable offence and
no preliminary inquiry is permissible in such a situation. If the information
received does not disclose a cognizable offence but indicates the necessity for
an inquiry, a preliminary inquiry may be conducted only to ascertain whether the cognizable offence is disclosed or not. The Supreme Court issued the following
Guidelines regarding the registration of FIR.
(i)
Registration of FIR is mandatory under Section 154 of the Code, if the
information discloses commission of a cognizable offence and no preliminary
inquiry is permissible in such a situation.
(ii)
If the information received does not disclose a cognizable offence but
indicates the necessity for an inquiry, a preliminary inquiry may be conducted
only to ascertain whether cognizable offence is disclosed or not.
(iii)
If the inquiry discloses the commission of a cognizable offence, the FIR must
be registered. In cases where preliminary inquiry ends in closing the
complaint, a copy of the entry of such closure must be supplied to the first
informant forthwith and not later than one week. It must disclose reasons in
brief for closing the complaint and not proceeding further.
(iv)
The police officer cannot avoid his duty of registering offence if a cognizable
offence is disclosed. Action must be taken against erring officers who do not register the FIR if information received by him discloses a cognizable offence.
(v) The scope of preliminary inquiry is not to verify the veracity or otherwise of the information received but only to ascertain whether the information reveals any cognizable offence.
(vi)
As to what type and in which cases preliminary inquiry is to be conducted will
depend on the facts and circumstances of each case. The category of cases in
which preliminary inquiry may be made are as under:
(a)
Matrimonial disputes/ family disputes
(b)Commercial
offences
(c)
Medical negligence cases
(d)Corruption
cases
(e)
Cases where there is abnormal delay/laches in initiating criminal prosecution,
for example, over3 months delay in reporting the matter without satisfactorily
explaining the reasons for delay. The aforesaid are only illustrations and not
exhaustive of all conditions which may warrant preliminary inquiry.
(vii)
While ensuring and protecting the rights of the accused and the complainant, a
preliminary inquiry should be made time bound and in any case it should not
exceed 7 days. The fact of such delay and the causes of it must be reflected in
the General Diary entry.
[Note: Later the Supreme Court has
made the following changes in this directions as follows:
"(vii) While ensuring and
protecting the rights of the accused and the complainant, a preliminary inquiry
should be made time-bound and in any case, it should not exceed fifteen days
generally and in exceptional cases, by giving adequate reasons, six weeks time
is provided. The fact of such delay and the causes of it must be reflected in
the General Diary entry."
(viii)
Since the General Diary/Station Diary/Daily Diary is the record of all
information received in a police station, we direct that all information
relating to cognizable offences, whether resulting in registration of FIR or
leading to an inquiry must be mandatorily and meticulously reflected in the
said Diary and the decision to conduct a preliminary inquiry must also be
reflected, as mentioned above.
-----------------
For advertisement of
events, vacancy and seminar etc. please email us at legalbuddy@gmail.com
No comments:
Post a Comment