The
word "Arrest" when used in its ordinary sense means the restraint or
the deprivation of one's personal liberty to go where he pleases. When used in
the legal sense, an arrest consists of taking a person into custody under the
authority empowered by law for the purpose of holding or detaining him to
answer a criminal charge and preventing the commission of criminal
offence. Section 46 of Criminal Procedure Code provides as to
how arrest is to be made.
Section
46 says that in making an arrest the police
officer or other person making the same shall actually touch and confine the
body of the person to be arrested unless there be a submission to the custody
by words or action.
In Rahimal
v. State of U.P. 1992 Criminal Law Journal 3819, it was observed
that Section 46 does not contemplate any formality before a person can be said
to be taken in custody. Submission to custody by words or action is sufficient.
But investigating officer should give full details as to in what manner the
accused was arrested. Single sentence of I.O. regarding arrest without
mentioning even the time and place is not sufficient to prove arrest.
ARREST
BY PRIVATE PERSON Section 43 of
Cr.P.C. provide that any private person may arrest or cause to be arrested any
person:
(a) Who in his
presence commits a non-bailable and cognizable offence.
(b) Who is a
proclaimed offender.
Such
private person after the arrest, without unnecessary delay shall make over or
cause to be made over the person arrested to police officer or take him to
nearest police station.
Sub-section
(2) to Section 43 then provides that if the person so arrested
appears to come under the provisions of Section 41 of Code,
such police officer shall rearrest him. Section 43(3) says if the
police officer has reason to believe that the person arrested has committed a
non-cognizable offence provisions of Section 42 would apply if
such arrested person refuses to give his name and address or gives a false name
and address.
In Abdul
Habib v. State 1974 Criminal Law Journal 248, it was held that a
private person can not arrest any one on mere suspicion or information. The
offence must be committed in his view or in his presence. Where therefore an
individual seeing a person fleeing with the knife in his hand pursued by
others, tries to arrest him his exercise of power of arrest cannot be brought
under Section 43.
In Directorate
of Enforcement v. Deepak Mahajan AIR 1994 SC 1775, it was observed
"The code gives power of arrest not only to a Police Officer and a
Magistrate but also under certain circumstances or given situations to private
persons. Further, when an accused person appears before a Magistrate or
surrenders voluntarily, the Magistrate is empowered to take that accused person
into custody and deal with him according to law. Needless to emphasize that the
arrest of a person is a condition precedent for taking him into judicial
custody thereof. To put it differently, the taking of the person into judicial
custody is followed after the arrest of the person concerned by the Magistrate
on appearance or surrender. In every arrest, there is custody but not
vice-versa and that both the words `custody' and `arrest' are not synonymous
terms."
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