Bare Acts

CHAPTER VII PROCEDURE OF SECURITY GUARD COURTS


79. Presiding officer.—At every General Security Guard Court or Petty Security Guard Court, the
senior member shall be the presiding officer.
80. Judge Attorneys, etc.—Every General Security Guard Court shall, and every Petty Security
Guard Court may, be attended by a Judge Attorney or a Deputy Judge Attorney-General or an Additional
Judge Attorney-General, or, if no such officer is available, an officer approved by the Judge
Attorney-General or by any officer authorised in this behalf by the Judge Attorney-General.
81. Challenges.—(1) At all trials by a General Security Guard Court or by a Petty Security Guard
Court, as soon as the Court is assembled, the names of the presiding officer and members shall be read
over to the accused, who shall thereupon be asked whether he objects to being tried by any officer, sitting
on the Court.
(2) If the accused objects to such officer, his objection and also the reply thereto of the officer
objected to shall be heard and recorded, and the remaining officers of the Court shall, in the absence of
the challenged officer, decide on the objection.
(3) If the objection is allowed by one half or more of the votes of the officers entitled to vote, the
objection shall be allowed, and the member objected to shall retire, and his vacancy may be filled in the
prescribed manner, by another officer subject to the same right of the accused to object.
(4) When no challenge is made, or when a challenge has been made and disallowed, or the place of
every officer successfully challenged has been filled by another officer to whom no objection is made or
allowed, the Court shall proceed with the trial.
82. Oaths of members, Judge Attorney and witness.—(1) An oath or affirmation in the prescribed
manner shall be administered to every member of every Security Guard Court and to the Judge Attorney,
or, as the case may be, the Deputy Judge Attorney-General or the Additional Judge Attorney-General or
the officer approved under section 80, before the commencement of the trial.
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(2) Every person giving evidence before a Security Guard Court shall be examined after being duly
sworn or affirmed in the prescribed form.
(3) The provisions of sub-section (2) shall not apply where the witness is a child under twelve years
of age and the Security Guard Court is of the opinion that though the witness understands the duty of
speaking the truth, he does not understand the nature of an oath or affirmation.
83. Voting by members.—(1) Subject to the provisions of sub-sections (2) and (3), every decision of
a Security Guard Court shall be passed by an absolute majority of votes; and where there is an equality of
votes on either the finding or the sentence, the decision shall be in favour of the accused.
(2) No sentence of death shall be passed by a General Security Guard Court without the concurrence
of at least two-thirds of the members of the Court.
(3) In matters, other than a challenge or the finding or sentence, the presiding officer shall have a
casting vote.
84. General rule as to evidence.—The Indian Evidence Act, 1872, (1 of 1872) shall, subject to the
provisions of this Act, apply to all proceedings before a Security Guard Court.
85. Judicial notice.—A Security Guard Court may take judicial notice of any matter within the
general knowledge of the members as officers of the Security Guard.
86. Summoning witnesses.—(1) The convening officer, the presiding officer of a Security Guard
Court, the Judge Attorney or, as the case may be, the Deputy Judge Attorney-General or the Additional
Judge Attorney-General or the officer approved under section 80 or the Commander of the accused
person may, by summons under his hand, require the attendance, at a time and place to be mentioned in
the summons, of any person either to give evidence or to produce any document or other thing.
(2) In the case of a witness who is subject to this Act, the summons shall be sent to his Commander
and such officer shall serve it upon him accordingly.
(3) In the case of any other witness, the summons shall be sent to the Magistrate within whose
jurisdiction he may be, or resides, and such Magistrate shall give effect to the summons as if the witness
was required in the Court of such a Magistrate.
(4) When a witness is required to produce any particular document or other thing in his possession or
power, the summons shall describe it with reasonable precision.
87. Documents exempted from production.—(1) Nothing in section 86 shall be deemed to effect
the operation of sections 123 and 124 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872) or to apply to any
letter, postcard, telegram or other document in the custody of the postal or telegraph authorities.
(2) If any document in such custody is, in the opinion of any District Magistrate, Chief Judicial
Magistrate, Court of Session on High Court wanted for the purpose of any Security Guard Court, such
Magistrate or Court may require the postal or telegraph authorities, as the case may be, to deliver such
document to such person as such Magistrate or Court may direct.
(3) If any such document is, in the opinion of any other Magistrate or of any Commissioner of Police
or District Superintendent of Police, wanted for any such purpose, he may require the postal or telegraph
authorities, as the case may be, to cause such search to be made for, and to detain such document pending
the order of any such District Magistrate, Chief Judicial Magistrate, Court of Session or High Court.
88. Commissions for examination of witnesses.—(1) Whenever, in the course of a trial by a
Security Guard Court, it appears to the Court that the examination of a witness is necessary for the ends
of justice, and that the attendance of such witness cannot be procured without an amount of delay,
expense or inconvenience which, in the circumstances of the case, would be unreasonable, such Court
may address the Judge Attorney-General in order that a commission to take the evidence of such witness
may be issued.
(2) The Judge Attorney-General may then if he thinks necessary, issue a commission to any Chief
Judicial Magistrate or Magistrate of the first class, within the local limits of whose jurisdiction such
witness resides, to take the evidence of such witness.
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(3) The Magistrate or officer to whom the commission is issued, or, if he is the Chief Judicial
Magistrate, he or such Magistrate of the first class as he appoints in this behalf, shall proceed to the place
where the witness is, or shall summon the witness before him and shall take down his evidence in the
same manner, and may for this purpose exercise the same powers, as in the trials of warrant-cases under
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
(4) When the witness resides in a tribal area or in any place outside India, the commission may be
issued in the manner specified in Chapter XXIII-B of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
89. Examination of witness on commission.—(1) The prosecutor and accused person in any case in
which a commission is issued under section 88 may respectively forward any interrogatories in writing
which the Court may think relevant to the issue, and the Magistrate or officer executing the commission
shall examine the witness upon such interrogatories.
(2) The prosecutor and the accused person may appear before such Magistrate or officer by counsel,
or, except in the case of an accused person in custody, in person, and may examine, cross-examine and
re-examine, as the case may be, the said witness.
(3) After a commission issued under section 88 has been duly executed, it shall be returned, together
with the deposition of the witness examined thereunder, to the Judge, Attorney-General.
(4) On receipt of a commission, and deposition returned under sub-section (3), the Judge
Attorney-General shall forward the same to the Court at whose instance the commission was issued or, if
such Court has been dissolved, to any other Court conveaned for the trial of the accused person; and the
commission, the return thereto and the deposition shall be open to inspection by the prosecutor and the
accused person, and may, subject to all just exceptions, be read in evidence in the case by either the
prosecutor or the accused and shall form part of the proceedings of the Court.
(5) In every case in which a commission is issued under section 88, the trial may be adjourned for
specified time reasonably sufficient for the execution and return of the commission.
90. Conviction of offence not charged.—A person charged before a Security Guard Court,—
(a) with desertion may be found guilty of attempting to desert or of being absent without leave;
(b) with attempting to desert may be found guilty of being absent without leave;
(c) with using criminal force may be found guilty of assault;
(d) with using threatening language may be found guilty of using insubordinate language;
(e) with any one of the offences specified in clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) of section 29 may be
found guilty of any other of these offences with which he might have been charged;
(f) with an offence punishable under section 45 may be found guilty of any other
offence of which he might have been found guilty, if the provisions of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), were applicable;
(g) with any offence under this Act may, on failure of proof of an offence having been committed
in circumstances involving a more severe punishment, be found guilty of the same offence as having
been committed in circumstances involving a less severe punishment;
(h) with any offence under this Act may be found guilty of having attempted or abetted the
commission of that offence, although the attempt or abetment is not separately charged.
91. Presumption as to signatures.—In any proceeding under this Act, any application, certificate,
warrant, reply or other document purporting to be signed by an officer in the service of the Government
shall, on production, be presumed to have been duly signed by the person by whom and in the character in
which it purports to have been signed, until the contrary is shown.
92. Appointment paper.—(1) Any appointment paper purporting to be signed by an appointing
authority shall, in proceedings under this Act, be evidence of the person appointed having given the
answers to questions which he is therein represented as having given.
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(2) The appointment of such person may be proved by the production of the original or a copy of his
appointment paper purporting to be certified to be a true copy by the officer having the custody of the
appointment paper.
93. Presumption as to certain documents.—(1) A letter, return or other document respecting the
service of any person in, or the dismissal or discharge of any person from, any unit of the Security Guard,
or respecting the circumstances of any person not having served in, or belonged to, any unit of the
Security Guard, if purporting to be signed by or on behalf of the Central Government or the
Director-General, or by any other competent authority, shall be evidence of the facts stated in such letter,
return or other document.
(2) A National Security Guard List or Gazette purporting to be published by authority shall be
evidence of the status and rank of the officers and Assistant Commanders therein mentioned, and of any
appointment held by them and of the group, unit or branch of the Security Guard to which they belong.
(3) Where a record is made in any unit book in pursuance of this Act or of any rules or otherwise in
the discharge of official duties, and purports to be signed by the Commander or by the officer whose duty
it is to make such record, such record shall be evidence of the facts therein stated.
(4) A copy of any record in any unit book purporting to be certified to be a true copy by the officer
having custody of such book shall be evidence of such record.
(5) Where any person subject to this Act is being tried on a charge of desertion or of absence without
leave, and such person has surrendered himself into the custody of any officer or other person subject to
this Act, or any unit of the Security Guard, or has been apprehended by such officer or person, a
certificate purporting to be signed by such officer, or by the Commander of the unit to which such person
belongs, as the case may be, and stating the fact, date and place of such surrender or apprehension, and
the manner in which he was dressed, shall be evidence of the matters so stated.
(6) Where any person subject to this Act is being tried on a charge of desertion or of absence without
leave and such person has surrendered himself into the custody of, or has been apprehended by, a police
officer not below the rank of an officer in charge of a police station, a certificate purporting to be signed
by such police officer and stating the fact, date and place of such surrender or apprehension and the
manner in which he was dressed shall be evidence of the matters so stated.
(7) (a) Any document purporting to be a report under the hand of a Government scientific expert to
whom this sub-section applies, upon any matter or thing duly submitted to him for examination or
analysis and report in the course of any proceeding under this Act, may be used as evidence in any
inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this Act.
(b) The Security Guard Court may, if it thinks fit, summon and examine any such expert as to the
subject matter of his report.
(c) Where any such expert is summoned by a Security Guard Court and he is unable to attend
personally, he may, unless the Court has expressly directed him to appear personally depute any
responsible person working with him to attend the Court if such officer is conversant with the facts of the
case and can satisfactorily depose in the Court on his behalf.
(d) This sub-section applies to the Government scientific experts, for the time being specified in
sub-section (4) of section 293 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
94. Reference by accused to Government officer.—(1) If at any trial for desertion or absence
without leave, over-staying leave or not rejoining when warned for service, the accused person states in
his defence any sufficient or reasonable excuse for his unauthorised absence, and refers in support thereof
to any officer in the service of the Government, or if it appears that any such officer is likely to prove or
disprove the said statement in the defence, the Court shall address such officer and adjourn the
proceedings until his reply is received.
(2) The written reply of any officer so referred to shall, if signed by him, be received in evidence and
have the same effect as if made on oath before the Court.
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(3) If the Court is dissolved before the receipt of such reply or if the Court omits to comply with the
provisions of this section, the convening officer may, at his discretion, annul the proceedings and order a
fresh trial.
95. Evidence of previous convictions and general character.—(1) When any person subject to this
Act has been convicted by a Security Guard Court of any offence, such Security Guard Court may inquire
into and receive and record evidence of any previous convictions of such person, either by a Security
Guard Court or by a Criminal Court, or any previous award of punishment under section 51 or section 53
or section 54 and may further inquire into and record the general character of such person and such other
matters as may be prescribed.
(2) The evidence received under this section may be either oral, or in the shape of entries in, or
certified extracts from, books of Security Guard Courts or other official records; and it shall not be
necessary to give notice before trial to the person tried that evidence as to his previous convictions or
character will be received.
(3) At a Summary Security Guard Court, the officer holding the trial may, if he thinks fit, record any
previous convictions against the offender, his general character, and such other matters as may be
prescribed, as of his own knowledge, instead of requiring them to be proved under the foregoing
provisions of this section.
96. Lunacy of accused.—(1) Whenever, in the course of a trial by a Security Guard Court, it appears
to the Court that the person charged is by reason of unsoundness of mind incapable of making his
defence, or that he committed the act alleged but was by reason of unsoundness of mind incapable of
knowing the nature of the Act or knowing that it was wrong or contrary to Law, the Court shall record a
finding accordingly.
(2) The presiding officer of the Court, or, in the case of a Summary Security Guard Court, the officer
holding the trial, shall forthwith report the case to the confirming officer, or to the authority empowered
to deal with its finding under section 111, as the case may be.
(3) The confirming officer to whom the case is reported under sub-section (2) may, if he does not
confirm the finding, take steps to have the accused person tried by the same or another Security Guard
Court for the offence with which he was charged.
(4) The authority to whom the finding of a Summary Security Guard Court is reported under
sub-section (2), and a confirming officer confirming the finding in any case so reported to him shall order
the accused person to be kept in custody in the prescribed manner and shall report the case for the orders
of the Central Government.
(5) On receipt of a report under sub-section (4), the Central Government may order the accused
person to be detained in a lunatic asylum or other suitable place of safe custody.
97. Subsequent fitness of lunatic accused for trial.—Where any accused person, having been found
by reason of unsoundness of mind to be incapable of making his defence, is in custody or under detention
under section 96, any officer prescribed in this behalf, may—
(a) if such person is in custody under sub-section (4) of section 96, on the report of a medical
officer that he is capable of making his defence, or
(b) if such person is detained in a jail under sub-section (5) of section 96, on a certificate of the
Inspector-General of Prisons, and if such person is detained in a lunatic asylum under the said
sub-section, on a certificate of any two or more of the visitors of such asylum and if he is detained in
any other place under that sub-section, on a certificate of the prescribed authority, that he is capable
of making his defence,
take steps to have such person tried by the same or another Security Guard Court for the offence with
which he was originally charged or, if the offence is a civil offence, by a Criminal Court.
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98. Transmission to Central Government of orders under section 97.—A copy of every order
made by an officer under section 97 for the trial of the accused shall forthwith be sent to the Central
Government.
99. Release of lunatic accused.—Where any person is in custody under sub-section (4) of section 96
or under detention under sub-section (5) of that section,—
(a) if such person is in custody under the said sub-section (4), on the report of a medical officer,
or
(b) if such person is detained under the said sub-section (5), on a certificate from any of the
authorities mentioned in clause (b) of section 97 that in the judgment of such officer or authority such
person may be released without danger of his doing injury to himself or to any other person,
the Central Government may order that such person be released or detained in custody, or transferred to a
public lunatic asylum if he has not already been sent to such an asylum.
100. Delivery of lunatic accused to relatives.—Where any relative or friend of any person who is in
custody under sub-section (4) of section 96 of under detention under sub-section (5) of that section
desires that he should be delivered to his care and custody, the Central Government may, upon
application by such relative or friend and, on his giving security to the satisfaction of that Government
that the person delivered shall be properly taken care of, and, prevented from doing injury to himself or to
any other officer, and be produced for the inspection of such officer, and at such times and places, as the
Central Government may direct, order such person to be delivered to such relative or friend.
101. Order for custody and disposal of property pending trial.—When any property regarding
which any offence appears to have been committed, or which appears to have been used for the
commission of any offence, is produced before a Security Guard Court during a trial, the Court may make
such order as it thinks fit for the proper custody of such property pending the conclusion of the trial, and
if the property is subject to speedy or natural decay may, after recording such evidence as it thinks
necessary, order it to be sold or otherwise disposed of.
102. Order for disposal of property regarding which offence is committed.—(1) After the
conclusion of a trial before any Security Guard Court, the Court or the officer confirming the finding or
sentence of such Security Guard Court, or any authority superior to such officer, or in the case of a
Summary Security Guard Court whose finding or sentence does not require confirmation, an officer not
below the rank of a Deputy Inspector-General within whose command the trial was held, may make such
order as it or he thinks fit for the disposal by destruction, confiscation, delivery to any person claiming to
be entitled to possession thereof, or otherwise, of any property or document produced before the Court or
in its custody, or regarding which any offence appears to have been committed or which has been used for
the commission of any offence.
(2) Where any order has been made under sub-section (1) in respect of property regarding which an
offence appears to have been committed, a copy of such order signed and certified by the authority
making the same may, whether the trial was held within India or not, be sent to a Magistrate within whose
jurisdiction such property for the time being is situated, and such Magistrate shall thereupon cause the
order to be carried into effect as if it were an order passed by him under the provisions of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
(3) In this section, the term “property” includes in the case of property regarding which an offence
appears to have been committed, not only such property as has been originally in the possession or under
the control of any person, but also any property into or for which the same may have been converted or
exchanged and anything acquired by such conversion or exchange whether immediately or otherwise.
103. Powers of Security Guard Court in relation to proceedings under the Act.—Any trial by a
Security Guard Court under the provisions of this Act shall be deemed to be a judicial proceeding within
the meaning of sections 193 and 228 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) and the Security Guard Court
shall be deemed to be a Court within the meaning of sections 345 and 346 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).

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