Can a State Government File an Appeal Against Acquittal When the CBI Takes Over Investigation Under Section 378 CrPC?

 

Summary

Category Data
Court Supreme Court of India
Case Number Crl.A. No.-001927-001927 – 2014
Diary Number 40465/2011
Judge Name HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE SANDEEP MEHTA
Bench HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE VIKRAM NATH, HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE SANDEEP MEHTA
Precedent Value Binding
Overrules / Affirms Affirms Lalu Prasad Yadav & Anr. v. State of Bihar & Anr. (2010) 5 SCC 1
Type of Law Criminal Procedure
Questions of Law
  • Maintainability of a State Government appeal under Section 378(1) when investigation was initially by State police and later by CBI
  • Retrospective application of proviso to Section 372
  • Condonation of delay by CBI in seeking leave to appeal
Ratio Decidendi (3–8 sentences)

The Court held that Sections 378(1) and 378(2) CrPC are mutually exclusive, so the State Government cannot file an appeal against acquittal in cases investigated by the CBI.

The proviso to Section 372 CrPC applies only to acquittals after 31 Dec 2009.

The High Court must consider a CBI application for leave to appeal on merits and may condone delay in grave cases rather than dismissing on technical grounds.

Judgments Relied Upon
  • Lalu Prasad Yadav & Anr. v. State of Bihar & Anr. (2010) 5 SCC 1
  • Mallikarjun Kodagali (Dead) represented through LRs v. State of Karnataka and Ors. (2019) 2 SCC 752
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon
  • Statutory interpretation of Sections 378(1) vs 378(2) CrPC—exception clause “save as otherwise provided in sub-section (2)” creates mutual exclusivity
  • Principle against rendering amendment words redundant
  • Prospective effect of proviso to Section 372
Facts as Summarised by the Court

FIR for murder and related offences was lodged by State police, investigation transferred to CBI at de-facto-complainant’s request.

Trial court convicted 28 accused but acquitted one respondent for insufficiency of evidence.

State, CBI, and victim filed failed appeals or condonation applications before the High Court.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Binding On All subordinate courts
Persuasive For High Courts
Follows Lalu Prasad Yadav & Anr. v. State of Bihar & Anr. (2010) 5 SCC 1

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • The bench reaffirms that Sections 378(1) and 378(2) CrPC are mutually exclusive: State Government cannot appeal acquittal in CBI-investigated cases.
  • Proviso to Section 372 CrPC (victim’s right to appeal acquittal) applies only prospectively to acquittals rendered after 31 Dec 2009.
  • High Courts should take a liberal approach to condoning delay in leave to appeal applications filed by central agencies in grave criminal matters.
  • An acquitted accused should be heard if delay is condoned in the agency’s leave application.
  • State and victim parties must ensure statutory timelines before invoking appellate rights under CrPC.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  1. Statutory Framework

    • Analyzed Sections 378(1)–(3) CrPC and Section 417 CrPC (1898).
    • Noted amendment adding “save as otherwise provided in sub-section (2)” to Section 378(1).
  2. Mutual Exclusivity of Sections 378(1) and 378(2)

    • The exception clause excludes CBI-investigated cases from State appeal under sub-section (1).
    • Central Government alone may appeal in those two classes of cases under sub-section (2).
  3. Precedent Analysis

    • Relied on Three-Judge Bench in Lalu Prasad Yadav & Anr. (2010).
    • Held that omission of exception would render the amendment redundant.
  4. Victim’s Appeal Under Section 372 CrPC

    • Held proviso effective only for acquittals post 31 Dec 2009 (Mallikarjun Kodagali (2019)).
  5. Condonation of Delay

    • While not endorsing CBI’s explanation, SC directed High Court to consider CBI’s leave application on merits and condone delay in grave offences.

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioner – State of Chhattisgarh

  • Lalu Prasad ratio inapplicable: initial state police FIR and chargesheet; CBI only supplemented.
  • State Government retained right to appeal under Section 378(1).

Petitioner – CBI

  • Delay in seeking leave bona fide: initial belief State Government would appeal.
  • High Court should exercise inherent power to condone delay.

Petitioner – De-facto-complainant

  • Victim’s appeal provision in proviso to Section 372 CrPC is socio-beneficial and should be retrospective.

Respondent – Acquitted Accused

  • High Court correctly held State, CBI, and victim appeals non-maintainable and time-barred.

Factual Background

A political leader’s murder on 4 June 2003 prompted an FIR by State police under Sections 307 and 427 IPC. After initial chargesheet, the victim’s son petitioned for CBI takeover, leading to a fresh chargesheet under Sections 302, 120-B, 324, 427, 193, and 218 IPC. The trial court convicted co-accused but acquitted one accused for insufficient evidence. The State, CBI, and victim all sought to challenge this acquittal before the High Court, which dismissed appeals as non-maintainable or time-barred.

Statutory Analysis

  • Section 378(1) CrPC: State Government’s right to appeal acquittal “save as otherwise provided in sub-section (2)”.
  • Section 378(2) CrPC: Central Government’s right in CBI or similar agency cases, subject to sub-section (3).
  • Section 378(3) CrPC: Leave to appeal requirement and time limit.
  • Proviso to Section 372 CrPC: Victim’s right to appeal acquittal, effective from 31 Dec 2009.

Procedural Innovations

  • Directs High Courts to adopt pragmatic approach in condoning delay for central agencies in leave to appeal applications.
  • Permits hearing of acquitted accused when delay is condoned.

Alert Indicators

  • ✔ Precedent Followed – Reaffirms Lalu Prasad Yadav & Anr. v. State of Bihar & Anr.

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