M. Wahajuddin, J.@mdashA private complaint has been filed by opposite party No. 2 against the applicants under Sections 420, 466, 467, 468 and 471, IPC.
2. The averments in the application laying down the allegations on which the complaint is based, itself, indicate that the stand of the complainant is that the accused persons 1 to 5 figuring in the complaint have got a forged gift-deed prepared and registered by impersonation and accused persons 6 and 7 figured as marginal witnesses. It is also conceeded that, a civil suit No. 568 of 1979 has also been filed by the complainant for the cancellation of the gift-deed in question.
3. The first point urged is that the provisions of Section 195, Code of Criminal Procedure are attracted and any cognizance in respect of the aforesaid offences could not be taken on a private complaint. The counter-affidavit filed in this case shows that actually the gift-deed in question has not been produced in the civil court. That position is also conceded during the arguments. Section 195(1)(b)(ii) runs as follows:
195 (1) No Court shall take cognizance --
(b)(ii) of any offence described in Section 463, or punishable u/s 471, Section 475 or Section 476, of the said Code, when such offence is alleged to have been committed in respect of a document produced or given in evidence in a proceeding in any Court, or
Cognizance of only such offences are barred, which are alleged to have been committed in respect of a document produced or given in evidence in a proceeding in: any Court. In the present case, the document, which is said to have been forged, has not been produced before the civil court. When that is the position, bar of Section 195 Code of Criminal Procedure, will not be attracted.
4. The next point that is urged is that as a civil suit is pending, the criminal proceedings should be stayed. In support of such submission reliance has been placed upon the case of Satendra Kumar Gupta v. A.B. Shorewala 1979 ACR 21 , decided by Hon''ble Mr. Justice M. Murtaza Hussain. In that case expediency of the staying of civil proceedings was stressed. It would, however, appear that there is a Supreme Court pronouncement in the case of
5. The application is, accordingly, rejected.