THE POLICE ACT, 1861
3.
Superintendence in the State Government.
4.
Inspector-General of Police, etc.
5.
Powers of Inspector-General-Exercise of powers.
6.
[Repealed.]
7.
Appointment, dismissal, etc., of inferior officers.
8.
Certificates to police officers.
9. Police-officers not to resign without leave or two months’
notice.
10.
Police-officer
not to engage in other employment.
11.
[Repealed.]
12.
Power
of Inspector-General to make rules.
13.
Additional
police officers employed at cost of individuals.
14.
Appointment
of additional force in the neighbourhood of railway and other works.
15.
Quartering
of additional police in disturbed or dangerous districts.
15A.
Awarding
compensation to sufferers from misconduct of inhabitants or persons interested
in land.
16.
Recovery of moneys payable under sections 13, 14, 15 and 15A and
disposal of same when recovered.
18.
Powers of special police officers.
19.
Refuse
to serve as special police officers.
20.
Authority
to be exercised by police officers.
Police-chaukidars in the Presidency of Fort William
22.
Police-officers
always on duty and may be employed in any part of district.
23.
Duties
of police officers.
24.
Police-officers
may lay information, etc;
26.
Magistrate
may detain property and issue proclamation.
27.
Confiscation
of property if no claimant appears.
28.
Persons
refusing to deliver up certificate, etc; on ceasing to be police officers.
29. Penalties
for neglect of duty, etc.
30. Regulation
of public assemblies and processions and licensing of the same.
30A. Powers with
regard to assemblies and processions violating conditions of licence.
31.
Police
to keep order on public roads, etc.
32.
Penalty
for disobeying orders issued under last three sections, etc.
33.
Saving
of control of Magistrate of district.
34.
Punishment
for certain offences on roads, etc.
35.
Jurisdiction.
36.
Power
to prosecute under other law not affected.
37.
Recovery
of penalties and fines imposed by Magistrates
38. [Repealed.]
39. [Repealed.]
40. [Repealed.]
41. [Repealed.]
43. Plea that acts
was done under warrant.
44.
Police-officers
to keep diary.
45.
State
Government may prescribe from of returns.
46.
Scope
of act.
47.
Authority
of District Superintendent of Police over village police.
1THE POLICE ACT,
1861
(5 of 1861)
[22nd March
1861]
An Act for the Regulation of
Police
1.
Short title given by the
Indian Short Titles Act, 1897 (14 of 1897).
Preamble. -WHEREAS it
is expedient to re-organise the police and to make it a more efficient
instrument for the prevention and detection of crime; It is enacted as follows:
-
1. Interpretation clause. --The
following words and expressions in this Act shall have the meanings assigned to
there, unless there be something in the subject or context repugnant to such
construction, that is to say---
The words “Magistrate of the district” shall mean the chief officer charged with the executive administration of a district and exercising the powers of a Magistrate, by whatever designation the chief officer charged with such executive administration is styled;
The word “Magistrate” shall include all persons within the general police district, exercising all or any of the powers of a Magistrate;
The
word “police” shall include all persons who shall be enrolled under this Act;
The
words “general police-district” shall embrace any1 presidency, State or place or any part of
any presidency, State or place in which this Act shall be ordered to take
effect;
2[the words
“District Superintendent” and “District Superintendent of
Police” shall. include any Assistant District Superintendent or other person
appointed by general or special
order of the State Government to perform all or any of the duties of a District Superintendent of Police
under this Act in any district;]
The word “property” shall
include any movable property, money or valuable security;
3* * *
*
The word “person” shall
include a company or corporation;
The word “month” shall mean
a calendar month;
4The word “cattle” shall, besides horned cattle,
include elephants, camels, horses, asses, mules, sheep, goats and swine.
5[References to the subordinate ranks of a
police-force- shall be construed as references to members of that force below
the rank of Deputy Superintendent.]
1.
Under sec. 2 of the Police Act,
1888 (3 of 1888), the Central Government may notwithstanding this provision,
create a special police-district, consisting of parts of two or more States. As
to Delhi State see Gazette of India, 1912, Pt. 1, p.1105.
2. Ins. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 1.
3. The
definitions relating to “number” and “gender” rep, by Act No. 10 of 1914, sec.
3 and sch. II
4. Cf. definition
of “cattle” in sec. 3 of the Cattle-trespass Act, 1871 (1 of 1871).
5. Ins. by the
A.0. 1937.
12. Constitution of the force.
--The entire
police-establishment under la State Government shall, for the purposes of this
Act, be deemed to be one 2police-force and shall be
formally enrolled; and shall consist of such number of officers and men, and
shall be constituted in such manner, 3*** as shall from time to time be ordered by the State Government. 4***
5[Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
pay and all other conditions of service of members of the.sub6rdinate ranks of
any police-force shall be such as may be determined by the State Government.]
1.
Section. 2, so far as it is related
to the provinces under the administration of the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal,
rep. by the Bengal Police Act, 1869 (Ben. No. 7 of 1869).
2. See note to sec. 8, infra, as to
enrolment of the police force in certain places.
3. The words “and the members of such force
shall receive such pay” omitted by the A.0. 1937.
4. Certain words omitted by the A.0. 1937.
5. Ins. by A.0. 1937.
3. Superintendence in the State Government.
--- The superintendence of the police throughout a
general police-district shall vest in and 1*** shall be exercised by the State Government to which such district
is subordinate, and except as authorised under the provisions of this Act, no
person, officer or Court shall be empowered by the State Government to 2*** supersede or control any
police functionary.
1.
Certain words omitted by the A.0.
1937.
2. The word
“appoint” omitted by the A.0. 1937.
4. Inspector-General of Police, etc.--- 1The administration of the police through out
a general police-district shall be vested in an officer to be
styled the Inspector-General of Police, and in such Deputy Inspectors-General
and Assistant Inspectors-General, as the State Government shall deem fit.
The administration of the
police throughout the local jurisdiction of the Magistrate of the district
shall, under the general control and direction of such Magistrate, be vested in
a District Superintendent and such Assistant District
Superintendents as the State Government shall consider necessary.
2* * * *
1. In the town
and suburbs of Calcutta, the administration of the police vests in the
“Commissioner of Police”, see sec. 3 of the Calcutta Police Act, 1866 (Ben. No.
4 of 1866). ss
2. Certain words
omitted by the A.0. 1937.
5. Powers of Inspector- General--- Exercise
of Powers. -
The Inspector- General of Police shall have the full powers of a Magistrate
throughout the general police-district but shall exercise those powers subject
to such limitation as may, from time, be imposed by the State Government.
6. Magisterial
powers of police officers.- [Rep. by the Code of Criminal
procedure, 1882 (10 of 1882), sec. 2 and Sch. 1 (b)].
7. Appointment,
dismissal, etc. of inferior officers. --- 1[2[Subject to the provisions of article 311 of the Constitution,
and to such rules] as the State Government may, from time to time, make under
this Act, the Inspector-General, Deputy Inspectors General, Assistant
Inspectors-General and District Superintendents of Police may at any time
dismiss, suspend or reduce any police-officer of the subordinate ranks] whom they
shall think remiss or negligent in the discharge of his duty, or unfit for the
same; 3[or may award any one of the
following punishments to any police-officer 4[of the subordinate ranks] who shall discharge his duty in a careless
or negligent manner, or who by any act of his own, shall render himself unfit
for the discharge thereof, namely
(a) Fine of any amount not exceeding one month’s
pay;
(b) Confinement to quarters for a term not
exceeding fifteen days with or without punishment-drill, extra guard, fatigue
or other duty;
(c) Deprivation of good-conduct pay;
(d) Removal from any office of distinction or
special emolument]5
1. Subs. by the A.0. 1937, for certain
words.
2. Subs. by the A.0. 1950 (as amended by
C.O. 29), for “subject to such rules”.
3. Subs. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 2 for
certain words.
4. Ins. by the A.0. 1937.
5. For cl: (e), applicable to certain areas
in the U.P., see U.P. Act No. 2 of 1944.
8. Certificates to police officers.
-1Every police-officer 2[appointed to the police force, other than an
officer mentioned in section 4] shall receive on his appointment, a certificate
in the form annexed to this Act, under the seal of the Inspector-General or
such other officer as the Inspector-General shall appoint, by virtue of which the
per-son holding such certificate shall be vested with the powers, functions,
and privileges of a police officer.
Surrender
of Certificate. –3[Such certificate shall cease to have effect whenever the person named
in it ceases for any reason, to be a police-officer, and on his ceasing to be
such an officer, shall be forthwith surrendered by him to any officer empowered
to receive the same.
A police officer shall not,
by reason of being suspended from office, cease to be a police officer. During the term of such suspension the
powers, functions and privileges vested in him as a police-officer shall be in
abeyance, but he shall continue subject to the same responsibilities,
discipline and penalties and to the same authorities,
as if he had not been suspended.]
1. As to enrolment, maintenance and
discipline of-
(1) The Military Police force employed in-
(a) The Andaman and Nicobar Islands, see the
Andaman and Nicobar Islands Military Police (Disbandment) Regulation, 1946 (3
of 1946);
(b) Assam,
see the Assam Rifles Act - 1941 (5 of 1941);
(c) Bengal see the Eastern frontier Rifles
(Bengal Battalion) Act, 1920 (Ben. No.
2 of 1920);
(2) The Punjab Frontier Police-officers,
seethe Punjab Frontier Police-officers Regulation, 1893 (7 of 1893);
(3) The Calcutta and Suburban Police see the
Calcutta Police Act, 1866 (Ben. No. 4
of 1866) and the Calcutta Suburban Police Act, 1866 (Ben. No. 2 of 1866);
(4) The Police establishment in municipal
areas in the U.P., see the U.P. Municipalities Act, 1916 (U.P. No. 2 of 1916);
(5) The Police establishment in municipal
areas in the Punjab, see the Punjab Municipal Act, 1911(Pun. No. 3 of 1911);
(6) The Rural Police in the Santhal Parganas,
see the Santhal Parganas Rural Police Regulation, 1910 (4 of 1910);
(7) The Rural police in Chhotta Nagpur see the
Chotta Nagpur Rural Police Act, 1914 (B. & 0. No. 1 of 1914);
(8) The U.P. Special Armed Constabulary, see
the U.P. Special Armed Constabulary Act, 1942 (U.P. No. 5 of 1942);
(9) The Delhi Special Police Establishment,
see the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946 (25 of 1946);
(10) Delhi Police, see Delhi Police Act, 1978
(134 of 1978).
2. Subs. by the A.0. 1937 for “so
appointed”.
3. Subs. by Act
No. 8 of 1895, sec. 3, for the original second paragraph.
9. Police-officers
not to resign without leave or two months’
notice. - No
police-officer shall be at liberty to withdraw himself from the duties of his office unless expressly allowed to do so
by the District Superintendent or by some other officer authorized to
grant such permission, or without the leave of the District Superintendent, to
resign his office, unless he shall have given to his superior officer notice in
writing, for a period of not less than two months, of his intention to resign.
10. Police-officers not to engage in other employment. -No police officer shall engage in an employment or office
whatever other than his duties under this Act, unless expressly permitted to do
so in writing by the Inspector-General.
11.
Police
superannuation fund. - [Rep. by the Repealing Act,
1874 (16 of 1874), sec. I and Sch. Pt.
I].
12. Power
of Inspector-General to make rules. -The Inspector-General
o Police may, from time to time, subject to the approval of the State Government,
frame such orders and rules as he shall deem expedient relative to the
Organisation, classification and distribution of the police-force, the places
at which the members of the force shall reside, and the particular services to be formed by them; their inspection, the
description of arms, accoutrement and other necessaries to be furnished to them; the collecting an
communicating by them of intelligence and information, and all such other
orders an rules relative to the police-force as the Inspector-General shall,
from time to time, deem expedient for preventing abuse or neglect of duty, and
for rendering such force efficient in the discharge of its duties.
13. Additional
police officers employed at cost of individuals. -It shall lawful for the Inspector-General
of Police or any Deputy Inspector- General or Assistant Inspector-General, or
for the District Superintendent, subject to the general direction the
Magistrate of the district, on the application of any person showing the
necessity thereof, to depute any additional number of police-officers to keep the peace at any place within the
general police-district and for such time as shall be deemed proper. Such force shall be exclusively under the orders
of the District Superintendent and shall be at the charge of the person making
the application:
Provided that it shall be
lawful for the person on whose application such deputation shall have been made, on giving one month’s
notice in writing to the Inspector-General, Deputy Inspector-General or
Assistant Inspector-General, or to the District Superintendent to require that
the police-officers so deputed shall be withdrawn; and such person shall be
relieved from the charge of such additional force from the expiration of such
notice.
14. Appointment
of additional force n the neighbourbood of railway and
other works. -Whenever any railway, canal or other public work, or
any manufactory or commercial concern, shall be carried on or be in operation
in any part of the country and it shall appear to the Inspector-General that
the employment of an additional police force in such place is rendered
necessary by the behaviour or reasonable apprehension of the behaviour of the
persons employed upon such work, manufactory or concern, it shall be
lawful for the Inspector-General, with the consent of the State Government, to
depute such additional force to such place, and to employ the same so long as
such necessity shall continue, and to make orders, from time to time, upon the
person having the control or custody of the funds used in carrying on such
work, manufactory or concern, for the payment of the extra force so rendered
necessary, and such person shall, thereupon, cause payment to be made
accordingly.
1
[15. Quartering of additional police in disturbed or dangerous districts. –
(1) It shall be lawful for the State
Government, by proclamation to be notified in the Official Gazette, and in such
other manner as the State Government shall direct, to declare that any area
subject to its authority has been found to be in a disturbed or dangerous
state, or that, from the conduct of the inhabitants of such area or of any
class or section of them, it is expedient to increase the number of police.
(2) It shall, thereupon, be lawful for the
Inspector General of Police, or other officer authorised by the State
Government in this behalf, with the sanction of the State Government, to employ
any police force in addition to the ordinary fixed complement, to be quartered
in the area specified in such proclamation as aforesaid.
(3) Subject to the provisions of sub-section
(5) of this section, the cost of such additional police force shall be borne by
the inhabitants of such area described in the proclamation.
(4) The Magistrate of the district, after such
enquiry as he may deem necessary, shall as aforesaid, liable to bear the same
apportion such cost among the inhabitants who are such and who shall not have
been exempted under the next succeeding sub-section. Such apportionment shall
be made according to the Magistrate’s judgment of the respective means within
such area of such inhabitants.
(5) It shall be lawful for the State
Government, by order, to exempt any persons or class or section of such
inhabitants from liability to bear any portion of such cost.
(6) Every proclamation issued under sub-section
(1) of this section shall state the period for which it is to remain in force,
but it may be withdrawn at any time or continued from time to time for a
further period or periods as the State Government may, in each case, think fit
to direct.
Explanation. -For the purposes of this
section, “inhabitants” shall include persons who themselves or by their agents
or servants, occupy or hold land or other immovable property within such area;
and landlords who themselves or by their agents or servants, collect rents
direct from raiyats or occupiers in such area, notwithstanding that they do not
actually reside therein.]
1. Subs. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 4, for the original section.
1[15A.Awarding compensation to sufferers from misconduct of
inhabitants or persons interested in land. –
(1) If, in any area in regard to which any
proclamation notified under the last preceding section is in force, death or
grievous hurt, or loss of, or damage to, property has been caused by or has
ensued from the misconduct of the inhabitants of such area or any class or
section of them, it shall be lawful for any person, being an inhabitant of such
area, who claims to have suffered injury from such misconduct, to make, within
one month from the date of the injury or such shorter period as may be
prescribed, an application for compensation to the Magistrate of the district
or of the subdivision of a district within which such area is situated.
(2) It shall, thereupon, be lawful for the
Magistrate of the district, with the sanction of the State Government after
such enquiry as he may deem necessary, and whether any additional police force
has or has not been quartered in such area under the last preceding section,
to-
(a) Declare the persons to whom injury has
been caused by or has ensued from such misconduct;
(b) Fix the amount of compensation to be paid
to such persons and the manner in which it is to be distributed among them; and
(c) Assess the proportion in which the same
shall be paid by the inhabitants of such area other than the applicant who
shall not have been exempted from liability to pay under the next succeeding
sub-section:
Provided that the Magistrate
shall not make any declaration or assessment under this sub-section, unless he
is of opinion that such injury, as aforesaid, had arisen from a riot or
unlawful assembly within such area, and that the person who suffered the injury
was himself free from blame in respect of the occurrences which led to such
injury.
(3) It
shall be lawful for the State Government, by order, to exempt any persons or
class or section of such
inhabitants from liability to pay any portion of such compensation.
(4) Every
declaration or assessment made or order passed by the Magistrate of the
district under subsection (2) shall be subject to revision by the Commissioner
of the Division or the State Government, but save as aforesaid, shall be final.
(5) No civil suit shall be maintainable in
respect of any injury for which compensation has been awarded under this
section.
(6) Explanation. -In this section, the word
“inhabitants” shall have the same meaning as in the last preceding section].
1.
Ins. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 5.
1[16. Recovery of moneys payable under sections 13, 14,
15 and 15A, and disposal of same when recovered. –
(1) All moneys payable under
sections 13, 14, 15 and 15A
shall be recoverable by the Magistrate of the district in the manner provided
by sections 386 and 387 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 18822 (10 of 1882) for the recovery of fines, or
by suit in any competent Court.
3 * *
* * * *
(3) All moneys paid or recovered under section
15Ashall be paid by the Magistrate of the district to the persons to whom, and
in the proportions in which, the same are payable under that section.]
1. Subs. by sec. 6 Act 8 of 1895 for the
original section.
2. See now sections 421 and 422 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
3. Sub-section
(2) omitted bytheA.0. 1937.See, however, Para 4of the Indian and Burma
(Transitory Provisions Order, 1937).
17. Special police officers. -When it shall appear that any
unlawful assembly or riot or disturbance of the peace has taken place, or may
be reasonably apprehended, and that the police force ordinarily employed for
preserving the peace is not sufficient for its preservation and for the protection
of the inhabitants and the security of property
in the place where such unlawful assembly or riot or disturbance of the peace
has occurred, or is apprehended, it shall be lawful for any police-officer,
not below the rank of Inspector, to apply to the nearest Magistrate, to appoint
so many of the residents of the neighbourhood as such police-officer may
require, to act as special police-officers for such time and within such limits
as he shall deem necessary, and the Magistrate to whom such application is made
shall, unless he sees cause to the contrary, comply with the application.
18. Powers
of special police officers. -Every
special
police-officer so appointed, shall have same powers, privileges and protection
and shall be liable to perform the same duties and shall be amenable to the
same penalties and be subordinate to the same authorities, as the ordinary
officers of police.
19. Refusal
to serve as special police officers. -If any person, being appointed as special
police-officer as aforesaid, shall without sufficient excuse, neglect or refuse
to serve as such, or to obey such lawful order or direction as may be given to
him for the performance of his duties, he shall be liable, upon conviction
before a Magistrate, to a fine not exceeding fifty rupees for every such neglect, refusal or disobedience.
120. Authority to be exercised by police officers. -Police officers enrolled
under this Act shall not exercise any authority, except the authority provided
for a police officer under this Act and any Act which shall, hereafter, be
passed for regulating criminal procedure.
1. For some cases
in which the application of sec. 20 has been restricted, see the Assam
Police-officers Regulation, 1883 (2 of 1883), and sec. 2 of the Punjab Frontier
Police-Officers Regulation, 1893 (7 of 1893).
21. Village
police officers. -Nothing in
this Act shall affect any hereditary or other village police officer, unless
such officer shall be enrolled as a police officer under this Act. When so enrolled, such officer shall be
bound by the provisions of the last preceding section. No hereditary or other village police
officer shall be enrolled without his consent and the consent of those who have
the right of nomination.
Police chaukidars in the Presidency of Fort William. -If any police-officer appointed under 1Act XX of 1856 (to
make better provision for the appointment and maintenance of police-chaukidars in Cities, Towns,
Stations, Suburbs, and Bazaars in the Presidency of fort William in Bengal) is
employed out of the district for which he shall have been appointed under that
Act, he shall not be paid out of the rates levied under the said Act for
that district.
1. The
Bengal Chaukidari Act, 1856.
22. Police-officers
always on duty and may be employed in any part of
district. -Every police officer shall, for all purposes in this Act contained, be
considered to be always on duty, and may, at any time, be employed as a police
officer in any part of the general police-district.
23. Duties
of police officers. -It
shall be the duty of every police-office promptly, to obey
and execute all orders and warrants lawfully issued to him by any
competent authority; to collect and communicate intelligence affecting the
public peace; to prevent the commission of offences and public nuisances; to detect and bring offenders to
justice and to apprehend all persons whom he is legally authorised to
apprehend, and for whose apprehension sufficient ground exists; and it shall be
lawful for every police-officer, for any of the purposes mentioned in this
section, without a warrant to enter and inspect, any drinking-shop,
gaming-house or other place of resort of loose and disorderly characters.
24. Police-officer
may lay information, etc.-It shall be lawful for any
police officer to lay any information before a Magistrate and to apply for a
summon, warrant, search-warrant or such other legal process as may, by law, be
issued against any person committing an
Offence. 1* * *
1. The words “and to prosecute such person
up to final judgement” rep. by Act No. 10 of 1882, sec. 2 and Sch. I (b).
25. Police-officers to take charge of unclaimed
property and be subject to Magistrate’s orders as to disposal. -It shall
be the duty of every police-officer to take charge of all unclaimed property,
and to furnish an inventory thereof, to the Magistrate of the district.
The police officers shall be
guided as to the disposal of such property such orders, as they shall receive
from the Magistrate of the district.
26. Magistrate
may detain property and issue proclamation. -
(1) The Magistrate of the
district may detain the property and issue a proclamation, specifying the
articles of which it consists, and requiring any person who has any claim
thereto, to appear and establish his right to the same, within six months from
the date of such proclamation.
1[(2) The
provisions of section 525 of the 2Code of Criminal Procedure,
1882 (10 of 1882) shall be applicable to property referred to in this section].
1. Ins. by Act 8 of 1895, sec.7.
2. See now the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 (Act 2 of 1974), sec. 459.
1[27. Confiscation of property if no claimant appears. –
(1) If no person shall, within
the period allowed, claim such property, or the proceeds thereof, if sold, it
may, if not already sold under sub-section (2) of the last preceding section,
be sold under the orders of the Magistrate of the district.
(2) The sale-proceeds of
property sold under the preceding sub-section and the proceeds of property sold under
section 26 to which no claim has been established shall be 2[at the disposal of the State Government].
1. Subs. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec.8, for
the original section.
2.
Subs. by the A. O. 1937, for “at
the disposal of Government”.
28. Persons refusing to deliver up certificate,
etc., on ceasing to be police officers. -Every
person; having ceased to be an enrolled police-officer under this Act, who
shall not forthwith deliver up his certificate, and the clothing,
accountrements, appointments and other necessaries which shall have been
supplied to him for- the execution of his duty, shall be liable, on conviction
before a Magistrate, to a penalty not exceeding two hundred rupees, or to
imprisonment, with or without hard labour, for a period not exceeding six
months, or to both.
29. Penalties for neglect of duty, etc.- Every police-officer who shall be guilty of any violation of duty or
willful breach or neglect of any rule or regulation of lawful order made by
competent authority, or who shall withdraw from the duties of his office
without permission, or without having given previous notice for the period of
two month, 1[or who, being absent on
leave shall fail, without reasonable cause, to report himself for duty on the
expiration of such leave] or who shall engage without authority in any
employment other than his police-duty, or who shall be guilty of cowardice, or
who shall offer any unwarrantable personal Violence to any person in his
custody, shall be liable, on conviction before a Magistrate, to a penalty not
exceeding three months’ pay, or to imprisonment, with or without hard labour,
for a period not exceeding three months, or to both.
1.
Ins. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec.9.
1[30. Regulation of public
assemblies and processions and licensing of the same: -
(1) The District Superintendent or Assistant
District Superintendent of Police may, as occasion required, direct the conduct
of all assemblies and processions on the public roads, or in the public streets
or thoroughfares, and prescribe the routes by which, and the times at which,
such processions may pass.
(2) He may also, on being satisfied that it is
intended by any persons or class of persons to convene or collect an assembly
in any such road, street or thoroughfare, or to form a procession which would,
in the judgment of the Magistrate of the district, or of the sub-division of a
district, if uncontrolled, be likely to cause a breach of the peace, require by
general of special notice, that the person convening or collecting such
assembly or directing or promoting such procession shall apply for a licence.
(3) On such application being made, he may
issue a ‘licence, specifying the names of the licensees and defining the
conditions on which alone such assembly or such procession is to be permitted
to take place, and otherwise giving effect to this section:
Provided that no fee shall
be charged on the application for, or grant of any such licence.
(4) Music in the streets. -He may also
regulate the extent to which music may be used in streets on the occasion of
festivals and ceremonies.]
1.
Subs. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec.
10, for the original section.
1[30A.Powers with regard to assemblies and processions violating
conditions of licence. –
(1) Any Magistrate or District Superintendent
of Police or Assistant District Superintendent of Police or Inspector of Police
or any police-officer in charge of a station may stop any procession which
violates the conditions of a licence granted under the last foregoing section,
and may order it or any assembly, which violates any such conditions, as
aforesaid, to disperse.
(2) Any procession or assembly which neglects
or refuses to obey any order given under the last preceding sub-section, shall
be deemed to be an unlawful assembly].
1.
Ins. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 11.
31. Police to keep order on public roads, etc.-
It shall
be the duty of the police to keep order on the public roads, and in the public
streets, thoroughfares, ghats and landing-places, and at all other places of
public resort, and to prevent obstruction on the occasions of assemblies and
processions on the public roads and in the public streets, or in the
neighbourhood of places of worship, during the time of public worship, and in
any case when any road, street, thoroughfare, ghat or landing-place may be
thronged or may be liable to be obstructed.
32. Penalty for disobeying orders issued under
last three sections, etc.-Every person opposing or not
obeying the orders issued under the last 1[three] preceding sections, or violating the conditions of any licence
granted by the District Superintendent or Assistant District Superintendent of
Police for the use of music, or for the conduct of assemblies and processions,
shall be liable, on conviction before a Magistrate, to a fine not exceeding two
hundred rupees.
1. Subs. by Act
No. 8 of 1895, sec. 12, for “two”.
33. Saving
of control of Magistrate of district. -Nothing in the last 1[four] preceding sections shall be deemed to
interfere with the general control of the Magistrate of the district over the
matters referred to therein.
1. Subs. by Act
No. 8 of 1895 sec. 12, for “three”.
34. Punishment
for certain offences on roads, etc. -Powers of
police officers. - Any person who, on any road or in any 1[open place or] street or thoroughfare within the limits of any town to
which this section shall be specially extended by the State Government, commits
any of the Following offences, to the obstruction inconvenience, annoyance, risk, danger
of damage of the 2[residents or passengers]
shall, on conviction before A Magistrate, be liable to a fine not exceeding fifty rupees, or to imprisonment 3[with or without hard labour] not exceeding eight days; and it shall be
lawful for any police-officer to take into custody, without a warrant, any
person who, within his view, commits any
of such offences, namely:-
First- Slaughtering cattle, furious riding, etc.-Any person who slaughters any cattle or cleans any carcass; any
person who rides or drives any cattle recklessly or furiously, or trains or
breaks any horse or other cattle;
Second- cruelty to animal-. Any person who wantonly or
cruelly beats, abuses or tortures any animal;
Third-Obstructing passengers. -Any person who keeps any cattle
or conveyance of any kind standing longer, than is required, for loading or
unloading or for taking up or setting down passengers, or who leaves any
conveyance in such a manner as to cause inconvenience or danger to the public;
Fourth-Exposing goods for sale.
-Any
person who exposes any goods for sale;
Fifth-Throwing dirt into street.-Any person who throws or
lays down any dirt, filth, rubbish or any stones or building materials, or who
constructs any cowshed, stable or the like, or who causes any offensive matter
to run from any house, factory, dung-heap or the like ;
Sixth- Being found drunk or riotous -Any person
who is found drunk or riotous or who is incapable of
taking care of himself
Seventh- Indecent exposure of person. -Any person
who willfully and indecently exposes his person or any offensive deformity or disease, or commits nuisance
by easing himself, or by bathing or washing in any tank or reservoir, not being
a place set apart for the purpose;
Eighth- Neglect to protect dangerous places.-Any person who neglects to
fence in or duly to protect any well, tank or other dangerous place or
structure.
1. Ins. by sec. 13, Act No. 8 of 1985.
2. Subs. by sec.13, Act No. 8 of 1985 for
“residents and passengers”.
3. Ins.
by Act No. I of 1903, sec.3 and sch. II.
35. Jurisdiction
1***. -Any charge against a
police-officer above the rank of a constable, under this Act shall be enquired
into and determined only by an officer exercising the powers of a 2Magistrate.
1. Certain words rep. by Act No. 10 of
1982, sec. 2 and sch. I (b).
2. I.e., by a Magistrate of the first
class, see, sec.3 (I) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974)
36. Power to
prosecute under other law not affected-
Nothing contained in this
Act shall be construed to prevent any person from being prosecuted under any
other Regulation or Act for any offence made punishable by this Act, or from
being liable under any other Regulation or Act or any other or higher penalty
or punishment than is provided for such offence by this Act.
Proviso. -Provided that no person
shall be punished twice for the same offence.
1[37. Recovery of penalties and fines imposed by
Magistrates. -The provisions of sections
64 to 70, both inclusive of the Indian Penal Code, (45 of 1860) and of sections
386 to 389, both inclusive, of the Code of 2 Criminal Procedure, 1882 (10 of 1882) with respect to fines, shall
apply to penalties, and fines imposed under this Act on conviction before a
Magistrate:
Provided that, notwithstanding
anything contained in section 65 of the first mentioned Code, any person
sentenced to fine under section 34 of this Act, may be imprisoned in default of
payment of such fine for any period not exceeding eight days.]
1. Subs. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 14, for
the original sections 37 to 40.
2. See now sections 421 to 424 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
38. Procedure until return is made to warrant
of distress. -[Repealed by the Police Act
(1861) Amendment Act, 1895 (8 of 1895), sec. 14].
39. Imprisonment of distress not sufficient.
–[Repealed
by the Police Act (1861) Amendment Act, 1895 (8 of 1895), sec 14].
40. Levy of fines from European British Subjects. - [Repealed by the Police
Act, 1895 Amendment Act, 1895 (8 of 1895), sec. 14].
41. Rewards to police and informers payable to
General Police Fund. - [Repealed by the A.0. 19371]
1.
See, however, paragraph 4 of the
India and Burma (Transitory Provisions) order, 1937, section 41 read as follow:
-All sums paid for the service of process by police-officers, and all rewards,
forfeiture and penalties or shares of rewards, forfeiture and penalties which
by law are payable to informer s shall when the information is laid by a
police-officer, be paid into the general police fund.’
142. Limitation of actions. - All actions and prosecutions against any person, which may be lawfully
brought for anything done or intended to be done under the provisions of this
Act, or under the general police powers hereby given shall be commenced within
three months after the act complained of shall have been committed, and not
otherwise; and notice in writing of such action and of the cause thereof shall
be given to the defendant, or to the District Superintendent or an Assistant
District Superintendent of the district in which the act was committed, one
month, at least before the commencement of the action.
Tender or amends. -No plaintiff shall recover in any such action, if tender of sufficient
amends shall have been made before such action brought, or if a sufficient sum
of money shall have been paid into Court after such action brought, by or on
behalf of the defendant, and though a decree shall be given for the plaintiff
in any such action, such plaintiff shall not have costs against the defendant,
unless the Judge before whom the trial is held shall certify his approbation of
the action:
Proviso. -Provided always that no
action shall, in any case, lie where such officers shall have been prosecuted
criminally for the same act.
1. So much of
section 42 (the portion printed in italics) as relates to the limitation of
suits rep. by Act No. 9 of 1871, sec.2 and sch. I.
43. Plea that act was done under warrant. -When any action of prosecution
shall be brought or any proceedings held against any police officer for any act
done by him in such capacity, it shall be lawful for him to plead that such act
was done by him under the authority of a warrant issued by a Magistrate.
Such plea shall be proved by
the production of the warrant directing the act, and purporting to be signed by
such Magistrate and the defendant shall, thereupon, be entitled to a decree in
his favour, notwithstanding any defect of jurisdiction in such Magistrate. No proof of the signature of such Magistrate
shall be necessary, unless the Court shall see reason to doubt its being
genuine:
Proviso. - Provided
always that any remedy which the party may have against the authority issuing
such warrant shall not be affected by anything contained in this section.
44. Police-officers to keep diary. -It shall be the duty of
every officer in-charge of a police-station to keep a general diary in such
form as shall, from time to time, be prescribed by the State Government and to record
therein, all complaints and charges preferred, the names of all persons
arrested, the names of the complainants, the offences charged against them, the
weapons or property that shall have been taken from their possession or
otherwise, and the names of the witnesses who shall have been examined.
The Magistrate of the
district shall be at liberty to call for and inspect such diary.
45. State Government may prescribe form of
returns. -The
State Government may direct the submission of such returns by the
Inspector-General and other police officers as to such State Government
shall seem proper, and may prescribe
the form in which such returns shall be made.
1[46. Scope
of Act. –
(1) This Act shall not, by its own operation,
take effect in any2 presidency,
State or place.
But the 3[state Government] by an
order, to be published in the official Gazette, may extend the whole or any
part of this Act to any Presidency, State of place, and the whole or such
portion of this Act, as shall be specified in such order shall, thereupon, take
effect in such presidency, State or place.
(2) When the whole or any part of this Act
shall have been so extended, the State Government may, from time to time by
notification in the official Gazette, make rules consistent with this Act-
(a) To regulate the procedure to be followed by
Magistrates and police-officers in the discharge of any duty imposed upon them
by or under this Act;
(b) To prescribe the time manner and conditions
within and under which claims for compensation under section a15A are to be
made, the particulars to be stated in such claims, the manner in which the same
are to be verified, and the proceedings (including local inquiries, if necessary)
which are to be taken consequent thereon; and
(c) Generally,
for giving effect to the provisions of this Act.
(3) All rules made under this Act may from time
to time be amended, added to or
cancelled by the State Government.
1. Subs. by Act No. 8 of 1895, sec. 15, for
the original section.
2. In the States of Madras and Bombay,
there are special Police Acts, see the Madras District Police Act, 1859 (24 of
1859) and the Bombay District Police Act, 1867 (Bombay No. 7 of 1867). In the lower Provinces of Bengal, Bengal Act
No. 7 of 1869 is to be read and taken as part of Act No. 5 of 1861, see sec. 6
of the former Act.
This Act has been
extended under the power conferred by the original section to-
(1)
The U.P. including Ajmer-Merwara then
under that Government, see Notification No.964 in the North-Western Provinces
Gazette, 1861, p. 634:
[The orders as to
enforcement of the Act in 27districts in the U.P., in Hamirpur, Jalaun, Jhansi,
Lalitpur, Nainital (including the Tarai Parganas) and Almora and Garhwal,
issued under the original sec. 46, paragraph 2 (after the Act had been extended
under paragraph 1 of that section to the whole Province), are kept in force by
sec. 16 of Act 8 of 1895];
(2) Oudh, see Notification No. 34 in the
North-Western Provinces Gazette 1861, p. 1758;
(3) The tract of land between Allahabad and
Jubbulpore ceded in full sovereignty by certain Native States;
(4) The C.P., Districts of Nagpur, Raipur,
Bhandara, Chanda and Chhindwara, Sironcha, Nimar;
(5)
Bengal and Assam;
(6) Several
districts in the Punjab, see Notification No.971. dated 15th. May, 1861,
Calcutta Gazette, 18th. May 1861, p. 1302.
Under the power
conferred by the section as it stood before the 1st.April, 1937, it has been
extended as follow to:-
(1) Madras; sec.15, 15A, 16, 30, 30A, 31 and
32 of the Act have been extended to the whole of the Madras Presidency, see
Notification No. 728, dated 31st.Oct.,1895, Gazette of India, 1895,
Pt.I, p.876;
(2) Eastern Doars in the Goalpara District,
see Notification No.230, Gazette of India, 1897, Pt.I.,p. 198;
(3) The North and South Lushai Hills and the
tract known as Rutton Puiya’s villages including Demagri (now known as the
Lushai Hills), see Gazette of India,1898, Pt. I., p.370.
3. Subs. by the A.O. 1937, for “G.G.in C.”
47. Authority of District Superintendent of
Police over village police. -It shall
be lawful for the State Government in carrying this Act into effect in any
part of the territories subject to such State Government, to declare that any
authority which now is or maybe exercised by the Magistrate of the district
over any village-watchmen or other village police-officer for the purposes of
police, shall be exercised subject to the general control of the Magistrate of
the district, by the District Superintendent of Police.
(See section 8)
A.B. has been appointed a member of the police force
under Act 5 of 1861, and is vested with the powers, functions and privileges of
a police officer.