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  1. Home/
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  3. High Court Of Jharkhand/
  4. 2024/
  5. January

Jay Prakash Singh and Ors vs. the State of Jharkhand

Decided on 31 January 2024• Citation: Cr.M.P./1646/2016• High Court of Jharkhand
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                      IN THE HIGH  COURT  OF JHARKHAND,  RANCHI                     
                                          ----                                      
                                  Cr.M.P. No. 1646 of 2016                          
                                          ----                                      
                  1.Jay Prakash Singh                                               
                  2.Uchit Mahto                                                     
                  3.Ramlal Oraon @ Bir Bhagat       .... Petitioners                
                                     --  Versus --                                  
                  The State of Jharkhand            .... Opposite Party             
                                          ----                                      
                CORAM:   HON’BLE  MR. JUSTICE  SANJAY  KUMAR   DWIVEDI              
                                          ---                                       
                  For the Petitioners :-  Mr. Abhay Kumar Chaturvedi, Advocate      
                  For the State      :-   Mrs.Ruby Pandey, Advocate                 
                                          ----                                      
          7/31.01.2024     Heard Mr. Abhay Kumar Chaturvedi, the learned counsel    
                appearing on behalf of the petitioners and Mrs. Ruby Pandey, the learned
                counsel appearing on behalf of the respondent State.                
                 2.        This petition is filed for quashing of the entire criminal
                proceeding including the order taking cognizance dated 28.03.2014 in
                connection with U.C. Case No.234 of 2013, pending in the court of learned
                Chief Judicial Magistrate, Chatra.                                  
                3.         On the basis of the written report, the offence has been 
                registered alleging therein that the accused persons illegally cut the small
                trees and bushes in reserve forest and they are illegally erecting boundary
                wall for Kashturba Gandhi Residential Girls School and photographs of the
                spot was also taken and also the information was given to the senior officials.
                It is stated that the accused persons have violated provisions of section 26 of
                the Indian Forest Act and section 27 and 29 of Wild Life (Protection) Act and
                section 2 (iv) of Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980.                  
                4.         Mr. Chaturvedi, the learned counsel appearing on behalf of
                the petitioners submits that the petitioner no.1 is contractor of the school

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                building and petitioner nos.2 and 3 are the employees. He submits that the
                contract was provided to M/s Pooja Enterprises for construction of the
                building of Kashturba Gandhi Girls School at Lawalong Block and for this, the
                work order was also given to start the work. The total value of construction
                work was Rs.3,10,58,431/- of Sarv Shiksha Abhiyan. He submits that the
                Deputy Commissioner, Chatra addressed the letter to District Superintendent
                of Education cum District Programme Officer, Jharkhand Education    
                Programme, Chatra providing no objection by the district administration for
                transfer of land of Jharkhand Government for construction of Kashturba
                Gandhi Residential Girls School. He submits that plot number in the offence
                report is 373 and the Deputy Commissioner by letter contained in running
                page no.18 has informed that plot was gair majurwa land. He submits that
                the building has been constructed and in view of that it was also   
                inaugurated. He submits that on this background no case is made out 
                against the petitioners.                                            
                5.         Learned counsel for the respondent State submits that the
                said land is forest land and in view of that forest department has also wrote
                to the Deputy Commissioner, Chatra for stopping the construction work. She
                submits that the said construction is unauthorized.                 
                6.         It is an admitted position that the subject matter of the
                prosecution report as well as the letter of the Deputy Commissioner is plot
                no.373. In the letter of Deputy Commissioner, it has been disclosed that the
                said plot is gair majurwa land meaning thereby it was a government land and
                by the said letter, the Deputy Commissioner has given clearance for 
                construction of the building of Kashturba Gandhi Residential Girls School. The
                work order contained in Annexure-2 is there which clearly suggest that the
                work was allotted to M/s Pooja Enterprises. Further in the counter affidavit it
                has not been disclosed that the land has been notified in the Gazette. In light
                of section 29 and 30 of the Indian Forest Act, any notification with regard to

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                forest land remained in force for 30 years only. Reference may be made to
                the case of Ram Narayan Rai @ R.N. Rai @ R.N. Roy & Ors. Versus     
                State of Jharkhand & Anr., reported in 2015 (4) JBCJ 475 (HC). Para-6
                and 7 of the said judgment is quoted hereinbelow:-                  
                                                   r both the sides and             
                         “6. Having heard learned counsels fo                       
                         upon going through the record, I find that from the        
                         prosecution report or from the counter affidavit, it is not
                         at all apparent that whether the notification dated        
                         26.8.1955 was issued under Section 29 of the Indian        
                         Forest Act or under Section 30 of the Indian Forest Act. If
                         there is no notification under Section 30 of the Indian    
                         Forest Act, no offence can be said to be committed under   
                         Section 33 of the said Act. If the said notification was   
                         issued under Section 30 of the Act, it certainly had lost its
                         life on the expiry of the period of 30 years. There is     
                         nothing either in the prosecution report or in the counter 
                         affidavit to show that fresh notification was issued or the
                         said notification was revived by the State Government      
                         declaring the forest to be the protected forest. The law is
                         well settled in this regard by catena of decisions of this 
                         Court, such as, Jagdish Mehta Vs. State of Jharkhand &     
                         Ors., reported in 2003 (2) JCR 525 (Jhr), Anup Kumar Vs.   
                         State of Jharkhand, reported in 2012 (2) East Cr C 21 (Jhr),
                         Daso Ram & Ors., Vs. State of Jharkhand, reported in 2013  
                         (1) East Cr C 247 (Jhr), wherein it has been held that upon
                         expiry of notification issued under Section 30 of the Indian
                         Forest Act, the land in question cannot be termed to be a  
                         protected forest, consequently no offence can be said to   
                         be made out under Section 33 of the Indian Forest Act. I   
                         also find force in the submission of the learned counsel for
                         the petitioners that Section 2 of the Forest (Conservation)
                         Act is not a penal provision and accordingly, the order    
                         taking cognizance under Section 2 of the Forest            
                         (Conservation) Act clearly shows complete non-             
                         application of the judicial mind.                          
                         7. For the aforementioned reasons, I find that the         
                         impugned order taking cognizance against the petitioners   

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                         cannot be sustained in the eyes of law. Accordingly, the   
                         impugned order dated 30.11.2004 passed by the learned      
                         SubDivisional Judicial Magistrate, Madhupur at Deoghar,    
                         in GOCR Case No.61 of 2004, as also the entire criminal    
                         proceeding against the petitioners in the said case, are   
                         hereby, quashed. This application is accordingly, allowed. 
                 7 .       Further what was done it was on the instruction of the   
                  government and the construction of the school building was going on and
                  if such a government order is being executed by the petitioners and the
                  said work was going on pursuant to the work order granted by the  
                  Government with permission of the Deputy Commissioner, and in view of
                  that, no liability can be fastened upon the petitioners as it was on the
                  direction of the Government.                                      
                 8.        In view above, entire criminal proceeding including the  
                  order taking cognizance dated 28.03.2014 in connection with U.C. Case
                  No.234 of 2013, pending in the court of learned Chief Judicial Magistrate,
                  Chatra are quashed.                                               
                 9.        This petition is allowed and disposed of.                
                 10.       Pending petition if any also stands disposed of accordingly.
                                           ( Sanjay Kumar  Dwivedi, J.)             
                SI/,