(1.) The petitioners herein filed the present petition under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure for setting aside the order impugned dated 5.10.2004 passed by Sub-divisional Judicial Magistrate, Bokaro in C.P. Case No. 143 of 2004 whereby and whereunder cognizance of the offence has been taken under Section 420 of the Indian Penal Code against the petitioner No. l and under Section 3/4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act against remaining four petitioners.
(2.) There is allegation and counter allegation in the present petition against the parties. The case of the complainant/ opposite party No. 2 Eshaque Ansari is that he had negotiated the marriage of his daughter with the petitioner No. 5, Manjoor Alam Ansari, who is son of the petitioner No. l, Azij Ansari and in this connection he had presented gifts as well as cash. It is alleged that he had supplied 30 trucks of bricks from his kiln worth Rs. 96,000/- to the petitioner No. l, Azij Ansari and against that, petitioner No. l had paid Rs. 25,000/- with an assurance that the remaining amount shall be adjusted on the expenditure incurred during the marriage. As per assurance, when the complainant/opposite party No. 2 with the witnesses visited the house of the petitioner No. l on 12.3.2004, Rs. 1,00,000/- as well as Hero Honda Motor Cycle, gold worth Rs. 30,000, Fridge and a colour Television was demanded by petitioners No. 2 to 5 respectively and it was assured by the opposite party No. 2 that he would pay Rs. 60,000/- in cash after 15 20 days and the remaining items shall be delivered at the time of marriage. In first instalment, complainant paid Rs. 40,000/- with the assurance that the remaining amount of Rs. 20,000/- shall be given within a couple of days. Pursuant to that, when he visited the house of petitioner No. 1 on 9.4.2004 with the witnesses for payment of the balance amount of Rs. 20,000/-, the marriage was refused by the petitioner No. l on the pretext that another party had offered him dowry at the higher rate including Rs. 2,00,000/- in cash, Maruti Car, Television, Fridge, Jewellaries and the cost of the movement of Barat. The complainant expressed his inability to fulfil such demand and when the offer was flatly refused, the complainant demanded his balance amount of Rs. 71,000/- being the cost of his bricks as well as Rs. 40,000/- which was paid in cash on the last occasion, it is alleged that petitioner No. l refused to pay any amount to him, hence the case.
(3.) The petitioners herein have given altogether different case that, as a matter of fact, opposite party No. 2 had cheated him and he solemnized the marriage of his daughter with another person, though he had assured to marry his daughter with the petitioner No. 5. Petitioner No. 5 was employed in the brick kiln of opposite party No. 2 since he was unemployed and in this connection petitioner No. l after obtaining loan of Rs. 50,000/- on 10.11.2002 from the Co-operative Bank, paid the said amount to the opposite party No. 2 in cash for the investment of capital in the brick kiln business as the share of his son against the profit to be incurred in future from the said brick kiln business. He further paid Rs. 50,000/- by two cheques of the denomination of Rs. 25,000/- each to the opposite party No. 2 which were encashed. The said amount was invested in the said business. As a matter of fact, assurance was given by the opposite party No. 2 for the marriage of her daughter with the petitioner No. 5 and when the petitioner No. 1 approached the complainant for the marriage, it was subterfused on one pretest or the other and lastly complainant married his daughter to one Warish Ansari, who was working as Munshi in the brick kiln.