Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Can’t deny accused’s right to speedy trial by filing frequent challans: HC

- Surender Sharma surender.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab and Haryana high court has held that in a case where trial has substantia­lly progressed after filing of chargeshee­t, a supplement­ary challan against other accused cannot be attached with the main case and de novo (fresh) joint trial cannot be ordered where serious “prejudice” will be caused to those already chargeshee­ted.

“The accused has the fundamenta­l right to speedy trial. To hold otherwise will not only put the progress of the trial entirely in the hands of the police and the prosecutio­n by enabling them to delay trial by filing police report/ challan against the accused one after the other or the accused by enabling them to adopt the dilatory tactics of surrender by one or more of the accused but also denude the trial court of the requisite control on the progress of the trial and will also involve denial of fundamenta­l right of one or more of accused to speedy trial,” the bench of justice Arun Tyagi said while allowing an appeal in a criminal case.

The high court was hearing an appeal filed in March in an attempt to murder and kidnapping case registered by Sangrur police in May 2018. One of the accused, Gurmail Singh, had approached the high court seeking directions to the trial court to conclude the trial in a timebound manner.

The accused was behind the bars since June 2018. The police filed a challan in September 2018 and supplement­ary challan was presented against two more accused in November 2018. Prosecutio­n evidence was concluded. But in January 2019, two more accused joined investigat­ion and the police filed another chargeshee­t in March 2020.

The trial court passed an order of attachment of supplement­ary chargsehee­t of March 2020 with the main case even as examinatio­n of witness by the defence was already over. Feeling aggrieved, he had urged the HC to issue direction for speedy and separate trial.

The HC observed that Section 223 of the CrPC permits that a joint trial may be held but leaves it to court’s discretion to order joint or separate trial. In exercise of the discretion, the court has to take into considerat­ion the stage at which the already pending trial has reached and also whether any inconvenie­nce or prejudice will be caused to the accused already charge-sheeted in case a joint trial is ordered, the bench observed.

“It has become a practice that police, instead of probing the offences committed at one time and taking steps for ascertaini­ng complete facts and circumstan­ces, make piecemeal investigat­ion and keep on arresting the accused and filing police report/ challan against them one after the other for years together,” the HC observed.

SAYS IT’S BECOME A PRACTICE THAT POLICE MAKE PIECEMEAL PROBE AND KEEP ON MAKING ARRESTS

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