
Jurisdiction of a Magistrate to Discharge an Accused: A Critical Analysis of Lahore High Court’s Judgment
مجسٹریٹ کا ملزم کو ڈسچارج کرنے کا اختیار: لاہور ہائی کورٹ کے فیصلے کا قانونی تجزیہIntroduction
In criminal jurisprudence, the boundaries of a Magistrate's jurisdiction during the administrative phase of an investigation are strictly defined by law. A recent landmark judgment by the Lahore High Court provides crucial clarity on whether a Duty Magistrate, lacking the jurisdiction to try an offence, can discharge an accused under the garb of Section 167 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Cr.P.C.), 1898.
Factual Matrix (Case Background)
An FIR (No. 02/2019) was registered under Section 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, read with Sections 161 and 162 of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC). The accused, acting as a "Munshi" of a Revenue Patwari, was caught red-handed accepting a bribe of Rs. 25,000 during a raid supervised by a Judicial Magistrate.
When the Investigating Agency sought physical remand, the Duty Magistrate (Section-30) refused the request and discharged the accused. The Magistrate reasoned that the accused was a private person, not a public servant, and therefore did not fall under the purview of Anti-Corruption laws. The State challenged this discharge order via a Writ Petition under Article 199 of the Constitution.