LAWS(JHAR)-2006-5-164

SARITA DEVI Vs. STATE OF JHARKHAND

Decided On May 19, 2006
SARITA DEVI Appellant
V/S
STATE OF JHARKHAND Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) THE petitioners herein 7 in number have preferred the petition under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure for quashing the complaint petition arising out of C.P. Case No. 547 of 2005 along with the order taking cognizance dated 29.8.2005 passed by the learned Sub -Divisional Judicial Magistrate, Dhanbad.

(2.) THE brief fact of the case, as contained in Complaint Case No. 547 of 2005 (Annexure 1), is that complainant -opposite party No. 2 Mrs. Nisha Sahu was married to the petitioner No. 3 herein Kumar Prasant on 6.5.2001 according to Hindu rituals and on the eve of marriage, Rs. 10 lakh in cash and one Maruti car was given. The bidai was executed only after assurance against demand to pay Rs. 5 lakh more in cash within one month and only thereafter she was taken to her matrimonial home. When the demand of Rs. 5 lakh could not be fulfilled within the stipulated period of one month, she was assaulted by the accused persons including the petitioners and was brought to Dhanbad by her husband petitioner No. 3 to her parental home with the threatening that he would not take her away back to Nalanda or Begusarai where he was posted, failing to pay the promised amount. In the meantime, she conceived but the accused persons though wanted to abort her but could not succeed. Again they started perpetrating torture to her by assaulting with fists and blows and her hair was cut shorten and she was threatened to be burnt alive. Observing the miseries of her torture, the father of the complainant came and took her away with him to Dhanbad where she delivered a male child. With the intervention of respectable persons and after great persuasion, husband -petitioner No. 3 took the opposite party No. 2 with her son to Nalanda and from there to Begusarai. She was variously tortured by the accused persons from November, 2004 to December, 2004 at Barauni by binding her hands and legs, as a result of which, she lost her senses. On receiving such information, her father came to Barauni and brought the complainant -opposite party No. 2 to Ranchi, got her admitted in the Institute of Neuro -psychiatry at Ranchi where she remained admitted from 28.12.2004 to 17.1.2005. On the advice of the Doctor, she was brought to Dhanbad. It is further alleged that on 29.3.2005 petitioner -husband came to Dhanbad, behaved brutally and attempted to assault opposite party No. 2 in presence of her parents by threatening that he would divorce her and shall marry to another girl with whom he had already settled his marriage, hence the case. The complaint case aforesaid was filed in the Court of Chief Judicial Magistrate, Dhanbad.

(3.) RELIANCE has been placed upon the decision of the Apex Court. In Y. Abraham Ajith and Ors. v. Inspector of Police, Chennai and Anr. reported in : 2004CriLJ4180 , the Apex Court held as under: In Halsbury's Laws of England (4th Edn.) it has been stated as follows: 'Cause of action' has been defined as meaning simply a factual situation, the existence of which entitles one person to obtain from the Court a remedy against another person. The phrase has been held from earliest time to include every fact which is material to be proved to entitle the plaintiff to succeed, and every fact which a defendant would have a right to traverse. 'Cause of action' has also been taken to mean that a particular act on the part of the defendant which gives the plaintiff his cause of complaint, or the subject matter of grievance founding the action, not merely the technical cause of action. When the aforesaid legal principles are applied, to the factual scenario disclosed by the complainant in the complaint petition, the inevitable conclusion is that no part of cause of action arose in Chennai and, therefore, the Magistrate concerned had no jurisdiction to deal with the matter. The proceedings are quashed. The complaint be returned to respondent No. 2, who if she so chooses, may file the same in the appropriate Court to be dealt with in accordance with law. The appeal is, accordingly, allowed.