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HomeCriminal LawMuazzum Hussain Laskar vs The State Of Assam And Anr on 12...

Muazzum Hussain Laskar vs The State Of Assam And Anr on 12 February, 2026


Gauhati High Court

Muazzum Hussain Laskar vs The State Of Assam And Anr on 12 February, 2026

                                                                        Page No.# 1/9

GAHC010051222025




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                            THE GAUHATI HIGH COURT
   (HIGH COURT OF ASSAM, NAGALAND, MIZORAM AND ARUNACHAL PRADESH)

                             Case No. : Crl.Rev.P./80/2025

           MUAZZUM HUSSAIN LASKAR
           S/O JAMAL UDDIN LASKAR
           R/O VILL-APPIN KATLICHERRA, DIST. HAILAKANDI, ASSAM
           PIN-788161

           VERSUS

           THE STATE OF ASSAM AND ANR
           REP BY THE LEARNED PP, ASSAM

           2:AZIZUR RAHMAN LASKAR
            S/O ABDUL GOFUR LASKAR
           VILL-RONGPUR PART-I
            P.O.APPIN
            P.S.LALA.
           DIST. HAILAKANDI
           ASSAM
            PIN-78816

Advocate for the Petitioner : MR. S B LASKAR, A. H. AHMED,MS D DUTTA,MR. H A
LASKAR,MR. A S TAPADER

Advocate for the Respondent : PP, ASSAM,

BEFORE
HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE PRANJAL DAS

Date on which judgment is reserved : 10.02.2026
Date of pronouncement of judgment : 12.02.2026
Page No.# 2/9

Whether the pronouncement is of
the operative part of the judgment? : NA
Whether the full judgment has been Pronounced? : Yes

JUDGMENT & ORDER (CAV)

1. Heard Mr. H. A. Laskar, learned counsel for the petition. Also heard Mr. K.
Baishya, learned Additional Public Prosecutor for this case.

2. The instant revision has been filed invoking the powers under Section 438
BNSS, assailing the order dated 9-12-2024 passed by J. M. F. C. Hailakandi in
GR Case No. 978 of 2020 (PRC No. 888 of 2020) – whereby the petition filed by
the accused petitioner under Section 256 Cr.P.C. for closing the case and
acquitting him was rejected.

3. The accused sought the said relief relying upon a decision of the Hon’ble
Supreme Court rendered in the case of Raj Deo Sharma v. State of Bihar,
reported in 1998 (7) SCC 507. In that judgment, it was stated that for offences

punishable with imprisonment not exceeding 7 years, if the prosecution
evidence is not completed within a period 2 years from the date of recording the
plea of the accused or charges framed, the court shall close the prosecution
evidence. However, the learned Magistrate did not allow the prayer of the
petitioner holding that the concerned case was a warrant case and that Section
256
Cr.P.C. was not applicable.

4. Placing reliance on the principle laid down in Raj Deo Sharma (supra) the
learned counsel for the petitioner submits that in terms of this law, the
Page No.# 3/9

Magistrate was required to close the prosecution evidence and acquit the
petitioner. But as the same was not done, therefore, the impugned order is bad
in law and requires to be interfered with.

5. On the other hand, the learned Additional Public Prosecutor submits that
the case pending before the Learned Court below being a warrant case, the
Learned JMFC was right in refusing to invoke the powers under Section 256
Cr.P.C.

Before proceeding further, the contents of Section 256 Cr.P.C. may be
reproduced herein below:

Section 256 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973, empowers a
Magistrate to acquit an accused if the complainant fails to appear on the
date appointed for appearance in a summons case. This provision protects
the accused from unnecessary delays, but is not mandatory–the court
may adjourn the hearing instead.”

6. Further, the relevant para 16 of Raj Deo Sharma (supra) may also be
reproduced herein.

“16.After deep consideration of the matter, we proceed to supplement the
propositions laid down by the Constitution bench in Antulay’s case (supra)
with the following directions:-

(i) In cases where the trial is for an offence punishable with imprisonment
for a period not exceeding seven years, whether the accused is in jail or
not, the court shall close the prosecution evidence on completion of a
period of two years from the date of recording the plea of the accused on
the charges framed whether the prosecution has examined all the
witnesses or not, within the said period and the court can proceed to the
next step provided by law for the trial of the case.

(ii) In such cases as mentioned above, if the accused has been in jail for a
period of not less than one half of the maximum period of punishment
prescribed for the offence, the trial court shall release the accused on bail
forthwith on such conditions as it deems fit.

Page No.# 4/9

(iii) If the offence under trial is punishable with imprisonment for a period
exceeding 7 years, whether the accused is in jail or not, the court shall
close the prosecution evidence on completion of three years from the date
of recording the plea of the accused on the charge framed, whether the
prosection has examined all the witnesses or not within the said period
and the court can proceed to the next step provided by law for the trial of
the case, unless for very exceptional reasons to be recorded and in the
interest of justice the court considers it necessary to grant further time to
the prosecution to adduce evidence beyond the aforesaid time limit.

(iv) But if the inability for completing the prosecution within the aforesaid
period is attributable to the conduct of the accused in protracting the trial,
no court is obliged to close the prosecution evidence within the aforesaid
period in any of the cases covered by clauses (i) to (iii).

(v) Where the trial has been stayed by orders of court or by operation of
law such time during which the stay was in force shall be excluded from
the aforesaid period for closing prosecution evidence. The above
directions will be in addition to and without prejudice to the directions
issued by this Court in “Common Cause” Vs. Union of India (1996)(4) SCC

33) as modified by the same bench through the order reported in
“Common Cause” a registered Society Vs. Union of India (1996) (6) SCC

775).”

7. The learned Additional Public Prosecutor submitting a decision of the
Hon’ble Supreme Court rendered in the case of P. Ramachandra Rao v. State of
Karnataka
(2002) 4 SCC, 578 – submits that the proposition of law laid down in

Raj Deo Sharma (supra) and a few other cases were referred to a larger Bench
and in P. Ramachandra Rao (supra) the Constitution Bench of the Hon’ble
Supreme Court overruled those decisions and held inter alia that for cases
where the prosecution evidence is not complete after two years, the court is not
mandated to close prosecution evidence and that such time limits for completion
of prosecution evidence and trial would not be there.

8. It is submitted by the Prosecution that in the context of the law laid down
Page No.# 5/9

by the Constitution Bench overruling the decision of Raj Deo Sharma (supra) –
there would be no merit in this Revision Petition.

9. I have carefully perused the law laid down in P. Ramachandra Rao (supra)
The relevant para may be reproduced herein below:

“27. Prescribing periods of limitation at the end of which the trial court would
be obliged to terminate the proceedings and necessarily acquit or discharge the
accused, and further, making such directions applicable to all the cases in the
present and for the future amounts to legislation, which, in our opinion, cannot
be done by judicial directives and within the arena of the judicial law-making
power available to constitutional courts, howsoever liberally we may interpret
Article 32, 21, 141 and 142 of the Constitution. The dividing line is fine but
perceptible. Courts can declare the law, they can interpret the law, they can
remove obvious lacunae and fill the gaps but they cannot entrench upon in the
field of legislation properly meant for the legislature. Binding directions can be
issued for enforcing the law and appropriate direction may issue, including
laying down of time-limits or chalking out a calendar for proceedings to follow,
to redeem the injustice done or for taking care of rights violared, in a given
case of set of cases, depending on facts brought to the notice of the court. This
is permissible for a the judiciary to do. But it may not, like the legislature, enact
a provision akın to or on the lines of Chapter XXXVI of the Code of Criminal
Procedure
, 1973.

28. The other reason why the bars of limitation enacted in Common Cause (IP,
Common Cause (11) and Raj Deo Sharma (1) and Raj Deo Sharma (II) cannot
be sustained is that these decisions, though two or b three-Judge Bench
decisions, run counter to that extent to the dictum of the Constitution Bench in
A.R Antuday case and therefore cannot be said to be good law to the extent
they are in breach of the doctrine of precedents. The well-settled principle of
precedents which has crystallised into a rule of law is that a Bench of lesser
strength is bound by the view expressed by a Bench of larger strength and
cannot take a view in departure or in conflict e therefrom. We have in the
earlier part of this judgment extracted and reproduced passages from A.R.
Antulay case. The Constitution Bench turned down the fervent plea of
proponents of right to speedy trial for laying down time-limits as bar beyond
which a criminal proceeding or trial shall not proceed and expressly ruled that it
was neither advisable nor practicable (and hence not judicially feasible) to fix
any time-limit for trial of offences d Having placed on record the exposition of
law as to right to speedy trial flowing from Article 21 of the Constitution, this
Court held that it was necessary to leave the rule as elastic and not to fix it in
the frame of defined and rigid rules. It must be left to the judicious discretion of
Page No.# 6/9

the court seized of an individual case to find out from the totality of
circumstances of a given case if the quantum of time consumed up to a given
point of time amounted to violation of Article 21, and if so, then to terminate
the particular proceedings, and if not, then to proceed ahead. The test is
whether the proceedings or trial has remained pending for such a length of time
that the inordinate delay can legitimately be called oppressive and unwarranted,
as suggested in A.R. Antulay In Kartar Singh case the Constitution Bench while
recognising the principle that the denial of an accused’s right of speedy f trial
may result in a decision to dismiss the indictment or in reversing of a
conviction, went on to state.

“92. Of course, no length of time is per se too long to pass scrutiny
under this principle nor the accused is called upon to show the actual
prejudice by delay of disposal of cases. On the other hand, the court has
to adopt a balancing approach by taking note of the possible prejudices
9 and disadvantages to be suffered by the accused by avoidable delay
and to determine whether the accused in a criminal proceeding has been
deprived of his right of having speedy trial with unreasonable delay
which could be identified by the factors (1) length of delay. (2) the
justification for the delay, (3) the accused’s assertion of his right to
speedy trial, and (4) prejudice caused to the accused by such delay”

29. For the foregoing reasons, we are of the opinion that in Common Cause
case (I) 3 (as modified in Common Cause (11) and Raj Deo Sharma (I) 1 and
(H) 2 the Court could not have prescribed periods of limitation beyond which
the trial of a criminal case or a criminal proceeding cannot continue and must
mandatorily be closed followed by an order acquitting or discharging the
accused. In conclusion we hold:

(1) The dictum in A.R. Antulay case is correct and still holds the field.

(2) The propositions emerging from Auricle 21 of the Constitution and
expounding the right to speedy trial laid down as guidelines in A.R.
Antulay case adequately take care of right to speedy trial. We uphold and
reaffirm the said propositions:

(3) The guidelines laid down in A.R. Antulay case are not exhaustive but
only illustrative. They are not intended to operate as hard-and-fast rules
or to be applied like a straitjacket formula. Their applicability would
depend on the fact situation of each case. It is difficult to foresee all
situations and no generalization can be made

(4) It is neither advisable, nor feasible, nor judicially permissible to draw
or prescribe an outer limit for conclusion of all criminal proceedings. The
time-limits or bars of limitation prescribed in theseveral directions made
in Common Cause (I) 3 Raj Deo Sharma ( D 1 and Raj Deo Sharma (U) 2
Page No.# 7/9

could not have been so prescribed or drawn and are not good law. The
criminal courts are not obliged to terminate trial or criminal proceedings
merely on account of lapse time, as prescribed by the directions made in
Common Cause case (I) 3 Raj Deo Sharma case (I) 1 and (H) 2 At the
most the periods of time prescribed in those decisions can taken by the
courts seized of the trial or proceedings to act as reminders when they
may be persuaded to apply their judicial mind to the facts and
circumstances of the case before them and determine by taking into
consideration the several relevant factors as pointed out in A.R. Antulay
cases and decide whether the trial or proceedings have become so
inordinately delayed as to be called oppressive and unwarranted. Such
time-limits cannot and will not by themselves be treated by any court as
a bar to further continuance of the trial or proceedings and as
mandatorily obliging the court to terminate the same and acquit or
discharge the accused.

(5) The criminal courts should exercise their available powers, such as
those under Sections 309, 311 and 258 of the Code of Crimina Procedure
to effectuate the right to speedy trial. A watchful and diligen trial Judge
can prove to be a better protector of such right than an guidelines. In
appropriate cases, jurisdiction of the High Court unde Section 482 CrPC
and Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution can b invoked seeking
appropriate relief or suitable directions.

(6) This is an appropriate occasion to remind the Union of India an the
State Governments of their constitutional obligation to strengthen
judiciary- quantitatively and qualitatively- by providing requisite funds,
manpower and infrastructure. We hope and trust that the Governments
shall act.

36. The declaration of law made by the Constitution Bench of five learned
Judges of this Court in the decision reported in A.R. Antulay cases still holds the
field and its binding force and authority has not been undermined or whittled
down or altered in any manner by any other decision of a larger Bench.
Consequently, the Benches of lesser number of constitution of Judges which
dealt with the cases reported in ‘Common Cause’ A Regd. Society v. Union of
India³
, ‘Common Cause A Regd. Society v. Union of India, Raj Deo Sharma v.
State of Bihar
and Raj Deo Sharma (11) v. State of Bihar could not have laid
down any principles in derogation of the ratio laid down in A.R. Antulay cases
either by way of elaboration, expansion, clarification or in the process of trying
to distinguish the same with reference to either the nature of causes considered
therein or the consequences which are likely to follow and which, in their view,
deserve to be averted. Even where necessities or justification, if any, were
found therefor, there could not have been scope for such liberties being taken
to transgress the doctrine of binding precedents, which has come to stay firmly
in our method of administration of justice and what is permissible even under
Page No.# 8/9

such circumstances being only to have had the matter referred to for 9
reconsideration by a larger Bench of this Court and not to deviate by any other
means. This solitary reason would suffice by itself to overrule the above
decisions, the correctness of which stands referred to for consideration by this
Bench. All the more so, when there is no reason to doubt the correctness of the
decision in A.R. Antulay cases and this Bench concurs with the principles laid
down therein.”

10. Thus, I find that the contention of the petitioner about closing the
Prosecution evidence invoking Raj Deo Sharma (supra) is not tenable as the said
proposition of law laid down in Raj Deo Sharma (supra) has been overruled in P.
Ramachandra Rao
(supra).

11. Further, I also find that section 256 Cr.P.C. pertains to closing of the case
and acquitting the accused, in the event of the complainant not appearing and
the said principles are also applicable to a case where the absence of the
complainant is due to his death. Even within those under section 256 Cr.P.C, the
Magistrate is given discretion not to close the case, if he is of the opinion that
the presence of the complainant is not essential or that he can be represented
by a pleader.

12. In any case, section 256 Cr.P.C. is applicable to summons cases and
therefore, the opinion of the learned JMFC – that the concerned case being a
warrant case, the provisions of Section 256 Cr.P.C. will not be applicable – is
correct.

13. Thus, in terms of P. Ramachandra Rao (supra) the prosecution evidence
was not required to be closed by the learned trial court and also the provisions
of Section 256 Cr.P.C. were also not applicable to the said case as the same was
a warrant case.

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14. Therefore, the present Criminal Revision is devoid of merits and is
accordingly dismissed.

15. Before parting, it may be mentioned herein that the learned trial court
may make an effort to expeditiously complete the trial, preferably within a
period of 6 (six) months.

16. The instant criminal revision stands disposed of on the aforesaid terms.

JUDGE

Comparing Assistant



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