1 IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBY CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION CRIMINAL REVISION APPLICATION NO.174 OF 1997 1. Shri Shripat Ramnath Sanap, ) aged about 19 years, occupation ) Education and Agriculturist, ) residing at Nimgaon Taluka Sinnar, ) District Nashik. ) ) 2. Shri Ramnath Krishna Sanap, aged ) about 50 years, occupation Agricul- ) -turist, residing at Nimgaon Taluka ) Sinnar, District Nashik. ) ....Petitioners. V/s 1. Shri Dilip Baban Sanap, aged about ) 20 years. ) ) 2. Shri Baban Waliba Sanap, aged ) about 49 years. ) ) 3. Shri Tukaram Waliba Sanap, aged ) about years. ) ) No. 1 to 3 all agriculturist, residing ) at Nimgaon Taluka Sinnar, Dist. Nashik ) ) 4. The State of Maharashtra ) ....Respondents. --- Mr. N.J. Patil for the Petitioners. Mr. S.V. Marvadi for Respondent Nos. 1 to 3 Mr. M.U. Nikam, APP for the State. ---- CORAM: V.M. KANADE, J. DATE : 10 th November, 2006 2 ORAL JUDGMENT: 1. Heard the learned Counsel for the Petitioners and the learned Counsel appearing on behalf of Respondent Nos. 1 to 3. 2. This Criminal Revision Application has been filed by the original complainant who had lodged a complaint with the Police, alleging that the Respondents herein had set their crop at fire and, in the said fire, the entire crop as well as part of the residential house and cattle shed were damaged. After the complaint was filed, investigation was carried out by the Police and, thereafter, charge- sheet was filed against the respondents. The respondents - accused were tried and the 3rd Additional Sessions Judge, Nashik, after appreciating the evidence which was brought on record by the prosecution, held that the prosecution had failed to prove beyond the reasonable doubt that the accused had committed the said offence of setting the crop of the complainant at fire and hence acquitted the accused Nos. 1 to 3 of the offence punishable under sections 436, 435 read 3 with section 34 of the Indian Penal Code. 3. The State did not prefer appeal against acquittal of the accused. The original complainants, however, preferred this Criminal Revision Application. It is submitted by the learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the Petitioners that the the trial court has failed to take into consideration the evidence of the original complainant and of his father and the finding recorded by the Sessions Court, therefore, is liable to be set aside. He submitted that on this count alone, the judgment and order of the Sessions Court was liable to be set aside and the matter should be remanded for fresh hearing. He further submitted that the finding of delay in recording the FIR, as stated by the Sessions Judge, is incorrect. He submitted that the complainants, initially, had to extinguish the fire and, thereafter, a complaint would be lodged in the Police Station. He submitted that, therefore, the Sessions Court clearly erred in not taking into consideration this vital aspect. He invited my attention to the judgment and order of the Sessions Court and finding recorded by the trial court. 4 4. It is not possible to accept the submissions made by the learned Counsel appearing for the Petitioners. It is quite well settled that the scope and the power which can be exercised by this Court while exercising its revisional jurisdiction under section 401 of the Criminal Procedure Code in a revision application filed by the original complainant is very limited. This Court cannot reappreciate the evidence on record and record the finding after reappreciating the evidence. It is only if the Court comes to the conclusion that the finding recorded by the trial court is perverse or is given on material which is not borne out by the record, this Court can interfere with the order of acquittal which is passed by the Sessions Court. In the present case, in my view, it cannot be said that the finding of the Sessions Court is either perverse or is not in accordance with the material which is on record. Apart from coming to the conclusion that the evidence of the complainant (P.W.1) was unreliable in view of the discrepancy in the complaint filed by the complainant and the evidence given by him in Court and the discrepancy in the evidence of complainant and his father, the Sessions Court also has taken into consideration one another vital 5 aspect i.e. the initial information, which was given by the accused to the Police Station. The Sessions Court has recorded that, initially, when a telephone call was made to the Police Station, it was not informed that the accused had set the crop at fire and the case of accidental fire bearing No.3 of 1997 was registered initially and, thereafter, on the next day, a complaint was filed against the present accused. The Sessions Court, therefore, considered this lacuna as a serious infirmity in the prosecution case. In view of these findings recorded by the Sessions Court, it is not possible to interfere with the judgment and order passed by the Sessions Court. 5. In the result, there is no merit in the submissions made by the learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the Petitioners. Criminal Revision Application is accordingly dismissed. V.M. KANADE, J.