Bare Acts

PART IV SPECIAL COURTS


9. Trial of offences under this Act.—(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code, all
offences under this Act shall be triable only by a Special Court constituted under this section.
(2) The State Government shall, by notification in the Official Gazette, constitute one or more Special
Courts for the trial of offences under this Act and every Special Court shall exercise jurisdiction in respect
of the whole or such part of the State as may be specified in the notification.
(3) A Special Court shall be presided over by a Judge to be appointed by the State Government with
the concurrence of the Chief Justice of the High Court.
(4) A person shall not be qualified for appointment as a Judge of a Special Court unless he is,
immediately before such appointment, a Sessions Judge or an Additional Sessions Judge in any State.
10. Special Public Prosecutors.—(1) For every Special Court, the State Government shall appoint a
person to be a Special Public Prosecutor.
(2) A person shall be eligible to be appointed as a Special Public Prosecutor under this section only if
he had been in practice as an advocate for not less than seven years or has held any post for a period of
not less than seven years under the State requiring special knowledge of law.
(3) Every person appointed as a Special Public Prosecutor under this section shall be deemed to be a
Public Prosecutor within the meaning of clause (u) of section 2 of the Code and the provisions of the
Code shall have effect accordingly.
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11. Procedure and powers of Special Courts.—(1) A Special Court may take cognizance of any
offence, without the accused being committed to it for trial, upon receiving a complaint of facts which
constitute such offence, or upon a police report of such facts.
(2) Subject to the other provisions of this Act, a Special Court shall, for the purpose of the trial of any
offence, have all the powers of a Court of Session and shall try such offence as if it were a Court of
Session, so far as may be, in accordance with the procedure prescribed in the Code for trial before a Court
of Session.
12. Power of Special Court with respect to other offences.—(1) When trying any offence under
this Act, a Special Court may also try any other offence with which the accused may, under the Code, be
charged at the same trial if the offence is connected with such other offence.
(2) If, in the course of any trial of any offence under this Act it is found that the accused person has
committed any other offence under this Act or under any other law, a Special Court may convict such
person also of such other offence and pass any sentence authorised by this Act or such other law for the
punishment thereof.
(3) In every inquiry or trial, the proceedings shall be held as expeditiously as possible and, in
particular, where the examination of witnesses has begun, the same shall be continued from day to day
until all the witnesses in attendance have been examined, and if any Special Court finds the adjournment
of the same beyond the following date to be necessary, it shall record its reasons for doing so.
13. Forfeiture of funds or property.—Where a person has been convicted of an offence under this
Act, the Special Court trying such offence may, if it is considered necessary so to do, declare that any
funds or property seized under section 8 shall stand forfeited to the State.
14. Appeal.—(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code, an appeal shall lie as a matter of
right from any judgment, sentence or order, not being an interlocutory order, of a Special Court to the
High Court both on facts and on law.
(2) Every appeal under this section shall be preferred within a period of thirty days from the date of
the judgment, sentence or order appealed from:
Provided that the High Court may entertain an appeal after the expiry of the said period of thirty days
if it is satisfied that the appellant had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal within the period of
thirty days. 

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