(1.) ONE Mohammad son of Hasan Refi, a Pakistani national, was arrested on the 21st March, 1958 under section 173 of the Sea Customs Act on the suspicion that he was a smuggler of gold. He was produced before Shri K. P. Gupta, Magistrate 1st Class, Delhi, on the next day, who ordered his release on his executing a bond in the sum of Rs. 10,000/- with two sureties in the like amount.
(2.) ON the 26th March, 1958, Mohammad executed the bond and Abdul Salam and mohd Idris Khan petitioner stood sureties for his appearance in court on every date as and when the case against him was taken up. On the 25th November, 1959 a complaint against Mohammad was lodged by the Collector under section 167 of the Act. Notices were issued to Mohammad on the 15th December 1959 and then again on the 30th December, 1959 by Shri H. D. Sharma, Magistrate 1st class, Delhi, to appear in his Court, but Mohammad did not do so and was said to have absconded. Notices were, therefore, issued to the sureties under section 514, criminal Procedure Code, as to why their bonds should not be forfeited. The magistrate, Shri H. D. Sharma, vide his order dated the 31st August, 1969, forfeited the surety-bonds and imposed a penalty of Rs. 10,000 on each of the two sureties. The sureties went up in appeal to the Court of Shri M. W. K. Yusafzai, additional District Magistrate, Delhi, who, vide his order dated the 19th December, 1960, reduced their penalty from Rs. 10,000/- to Rs. 5,000/- each. Out of the two sureties, only Mohd. Idris Khan petitioner went up in revision to the Court of session. The case came up before Shri D. R. Dhameja, Additional Sessions Judge, delhi, who, on the 14th June 1961, recommended that the order of the Additional district Magistrate he set aside and the petitioner be relieved of the penalty of Rs. 5,000/- imposed upon him.
(3.) THE learned Additional Sessions Judge after discussing the provisions of section 175 of the Sea Customs Act came to the conclusion that it was clear from the operative portion of this section that the time for which the Magistrate could keep the person arrested in jail or in police custody was limited to that time which was necessary to enable the Magistrate to communicate with the proper officers of customs, and from that it followed that the proviso to this section was also similarly limited in its scope, and that the surety for appearance was to ensure till the Magistrate was able to communicate with the Customs Officer concerned and, therefore, the proviso could not enlarge the scope of the section itself. The learned judge following State of Bihar v. M. Homi, AIR 1955 SC 478, held that as the provision was penal, it had to be strictly construed. In the Supreme Court case, the surety, who was to be liable in the sum of Rs. 50,000/- in the event of the default of the convict of surrender to the Deputy Commissioner concerned within three days of the receipt of the notice of the order or judgment of the Judicial committee in the event of the sentence being upheld, whether partially or wholly, was held not to be so liable because the appeal was ultimately rejected not by the judicial Committee but by the Supreme Court, as this did mot infringe the terms of the bail-bond and, therefore, the forfeiture was set aside.