(1.) This Reference under Section 438, Cr. P. C. by the Sessions Judge of Oral illustrates the danger, of technical legalism perpetuating an injustice, in the instant case allowing a rank trespasser to make wrongful gain at the expense of the users of a State highway. Normally I would have disposed of it in a few lines, but since, despite the dictum of Bose, J. in State of U. P. v. Mohd. Nooh, AIR 1958 SC 86 that :
(2.) The facts as recited in the Sessions Judge's Order of Reference are these: The P.W.D. District Engineer made a report to the Magistrate that one Gulab Singh had made an encroachment to the extent of nine feet by nine feet on the Lucknow-Jhansi pucca road in the town of Orai by constructing a shop on it. The learned Magistrate made a conditional order under Clause (1), of Section 133 Cr. P. C. requiring Gulab Singh to remove the said encroachment within fifteen days or to show cause why the order should not be enforced. On the date fixed for hearing Gulab Singh moved an application in which he neither admitted nor denied that his shop stood on the highway; he only prayed for a local inspection. The learned Magistrate recorded the statements of the local Lekhpal and the P.W.D. Overseer. The former filed a map and stated that the shop stood on land forming part of the highway. The Overseer corroborated him. Gulab Singh adduced no evidence in rebuttal. The learned Magistrate thereupon made his earlier order absolute. Gulab Singh went up in revision to the Sessions Judge The main point he urged before the latter was that a breach of Clause (1) of Section 139A had been committed inasmuch as the Magistrate on Gulab Singh's appearance bad omitted to "question him as to whether he denies the existence of any public right in respect of the way". The argument found favour with the learned Judge, who thereupon proceeded to make the present Reference.
(3.) The learned Judge has fallen into more error than one. In the first place, the Magistrate had a right to assume that whatever Gulab Singh's defence Was he had embodied it in his written application, and in this application there was no denial of the encroached land being part of the highway. Hence no useful purpose would have been served by putting oral questions on the same subject. By the omission to put questions under Section 139A(1) no prejudice was caused to Gulab Singh. In the analogous case of the application of Section 342 Cr. P. C, the Supreme Court in Moseb Kaka v. State of West Bengal, AIR 1956 SC 536 held :