Children Act
An Act to provide for the care, protection, maintenance, welfare, training, education and rehabilitation of neglected or delinquent children and for the trial of delinquent children in the Union territories.
Chapter I - Preliminary
1. Short title, extent and commencement
2. Definitions
3. Continuation of inquiry in respect of child who has ceased to be child
Chapter II - Competent Authorities And Institutions For Children
4. Child Welfare Boards
5. Children's courts
6. Procedure, etc., in relation to Boards and children's courts
7. Power of Board and children's court
8. Procedure to be followed by a magistrate not empowered under the Act
9. Children's homes
10. Special schools
11. Observation homes
12. After-care organizations
13. Production of neglected children before Boards
14. Special procedure to be followed when neglected child has parent
15. Inquiry by Board regarding neglected children
16. Power to commit neglected child to suitable custody
17. Uncontrollable children
Chapter IV - Delinquent Children
18. Bail and custody of children
19. Information to parent or guardian or probation officer
20. Inquiry by children's court regarding delinquent children
21. Orders that may be passed regarding delinquent children
22. Orders that may not be passed against delinquent children
23. Proceeding under Chapter VIII of the Criminal Procedure Code not competent against child
24. No joint trial of child and person not a child
25. Removal of disqualification attaching to conviction
26. Special provision in respect of pending cases
27. Sittings, etc., of Boards and children's courts
28. Persons who may be present before competent authority
29. Attendance of parent or guardian of child
30. Dispensing with attendance of child
31. Committal to approved place of child suffering from dangerous disease and its future disposal
32. Presumption and determination of age
33. Circumstances to be taken into consideration in making orders under the Act
34. Sending a child outside jurisdiction
35. Reports to be treated as confidential
36. Prohibition of publication of names, etc., of children involved in any proceeding under the Act
37. Appeals
38. Revision
39. Procedure in inquiries, appeals and revision proceedings
40. Power to amend orders
41. Punishment for cruelty to child
42. Employment of children for begging
43. Penalty for giving intoxicating liquor or dangerous drug to a child
44. Exploitation of child employees
Chapter VII - Miscellaneous
45. Power of Administrator to discharge and transfer children
46. Transfers between children's homes, etc., under the Act, and children's homes, etc, of like nature in different parts of India
47. Transfer of children of unsound mind or suffering from leprosy
48. Placing out on license
49. Provision in respect of escaped children
50. Contribution by parents
51. Control of custodian over child
52. Delinquent child under-going sentence at commencement of the Act
53. Appointment of officers
54. Officers appointed under the Act to be public servants
55. Procedure in respect of bonds
56. Delegation of powers
57. Protection of action taken in good faith
58. Act 8 of 1897 and certain provisions of Act 2 of 1974 not to apply
59. Power to make rules
60. Repeal and savings
Foot Notes
Chapter I - Preliminary
1. Short title, extent and commencement
(1) This Act may be
called the Children Act, 1960.
(2) It extends to all
the Union territories.
(3) It shall come into force in any Union territory on such date2 as the Administrator may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint and different dates may be appointed for different areas thereof.
2. Definitions
In this Act, unless
the context otherwise requires,-
(a)
"Administrator" means the administrator of a Union territory, whether
called a Lieutenant Governor, a Chief Commissioner or by any other name;
(b)
"begging" means-
(i) soliciting or receiving alms in a public
place or entering on any private premises for the purpose of soliciting or
receiving alms, whether under the pretence of singing, dancing,
fortune-telling, performing tricks or selling articles or otherwise;
(ii) exposing or exhibiting with the object of
obtaining or extorting alms any sore, wound, injury, deformity or disease,
whether of himself or of any other person or of an animal;
(iii) allowing oneself to be used as an
exhibit for the purpose of soliciting or receiving alms;
(c) "Board"
means a Child Welfare Board constituted under section 4;
(d)
"brothel", "prostitute", "prostitution" and
"public place" shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them
in the Suppression of Immoral Traffic in Women and Girls Act, 1956;
(e) "child"
means a boy who has not attained the age of sixteen years or a girl who has not
attained the age of eighteen years;
(f) "children's
court" means a court constituted under section 5;
(g) "children's
home" means an institution established or certified by the Administrator
under. section 9 as a children's home;
(h) "competent
authority" means, in relation to neglected children, a Board constituted
under section 4 and, in relation to delinquent children a children's court
constituted under section 5, and where no such Board or children's court has
been constituted, includes any court empowered under sub-section (2) of section
7 to exercise the powers conferred on a Board or children's court;
(i) "dangerous
drug" shall have the meaning assigned to it in the Dangerous Drugs Act,
1930;
(j) "delinquent
child" means a child who has been found to have committed an offence;
3[(jj) "fit
person" or "fit institution" means any person or institution
(not being a police station or jail) found fit by the competent authority to
receive and take care of a child entrusted to his or its care and protection on
the terms and conditions specified by the competent authority;]
(k)
"guardian" in relation to a child, includes any person who, in the
opinion of the competent authority having cognizance of any proceeding in
relation to a child, has, for the time being, the actual charge of, or control
over, that child;
(l) "neglected
child" means a child who-
(i) is found begging;
or
(ii) is found without having any home or
settled place of abode or any ostensible means of subsistence or is found
destitute, whether he is an orphan or not; or
(iii) has a parent or guardian who is unfit 3[or
unable] to exercise or does not exercise proper care and control over the
child; or
(iv) lives in a brothel or with a prostitute
or frequently goes to any place used for the purpose of prostitution, or is
found to associate with any prostitute or any other person who leads an
immoral, drunken or depraved life;
(m) "observation
home" means any institution or place established or recognized by the Administrator
under section 11 as an observation home;
(n)
"offence" means an offence punishable under any law for the time
being in force;
3[(nn) "place of
safety" means any place or institution (not being a police station or
jail), the person in charge of which is willing temporarily to receive and take
care of a child and which in the opinion of the competent authority may be a
place of safety for the child;]
(o)
"prescribed" means prescribed by rules made under this Act;
(p) "probation
officer" means an officer appointed as a probation officer under this Act
or under the Probation of Offenders Act, 1958;
(q) "special
school" means an institution established or certified by the Administrator
under section 10;
(r) "supervision",
in relation to a child placed under the care of any parent, guardian or other 4[fit
person or fit institutions] under this Act, means the supervision of that child
by a probation officer for the purpose of ensuring that the child is properly
looked after and that the conditions imposed by the competent authority are
complied with;
(s) all words and expressions used but not defined in this Act and defined in the 5[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973], shall have the meanings assigned to them in that Code.
3. Continuation of inquiry in respect of child who has ceased to be child
Where an inquiry has been initiated against a child and during the course of such inquiry the child ceases to be such, then, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act or in any other law for the time being in force, the inquiry may be continued and orders, may be made in respect of such person as if such person had continued to be a child.
Chapter II - Competent Authorities And Institutions For Children
4. Child Welfare Boards
(1) The Administrator
may, by notification in the Official Gazette, constitute for any area specified
in the notification, one or more Child Welfare Boards for exercising the powers
and discharging the duties conferred or imposed on such Board in relation to
neglected children under this Act.
(2) A Board shall
consist of a chairman and such other members as the Administrator thinks fit to
appoint, of whom not less than one shall be a woman; and every such member
shall be vested with the powers of a magistrate under the 5[Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973].
(3) The Board shall function as a Bench of magistrates and shall have the powers conferred by the 6[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, on a Metropolitan Magistrate or, as the case may be, a Judicial Magistrate of the first class].
5. Children's courts
5. Children�s courts
(1) Notwithstanding
anything Contained in the 5[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973], the
Administrator may, by notification in the Official Gazette, constitute for any
area specified in the notification, one or more children's courts for
exercising the powers and discharging the duties conferred or imposed on such
court in relation to delinquent children under this Act.
7[(2) A children's court
shall consist of such number of Metropolitan Magistrates or Judicial
Magistrates of the first class, as the case, may be, forming a Bench as the
Administrator thinks fit to appoint, of whom one shall be designated as the
principal magistrate; and every such Bench shall have the powers conferred by
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, on a Metropolitan Magistrate or, as the
case may be, a Judicial Magistrate of the first class.
(3) Every children's court shall be assisted by a panel of two honorary social workers possessing such qualifications as may be prescribed, of whom at least one shall be a woman, and such panel shall be appointed by the Administrator.]
6. Procedure, etc., in relation to Boards and children's courts
6. Procedure, etc., in relation to Boards and children�s
courts
(1) In the event of
any difference of opinion among the members of a Board or among the magistrates
of a children's court, the opinion of the majority shall prevail, but where
there is no such majority, the opinion of the chairman or of the 8[principal
magistrate], as the case may be, shall prevail.
(2) A Board or
children�s court may act notwithstanding the absence of any member of the Board
or, as the case may be, any magistrate of the children's court, and no order
made by the Board or children�s court shall be invalid by reason only of the
absence of any member or magistrate, as the case may be, during any stage of
the proceeding.
(3) No person shall be appointed as a member of the Board or as a magistrate in the children's court unless he has, in the opinion of the Administrator, special knowledge of child psychology and child welfare.
7. Power of Board and children's court
7. Power of Board and children�s court
(1) Where a Board or a
children's court has been constituted for any area, such Board or court shall,
notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force
but save as otherwise expressly provided in this Act, have power to deal
exclusively with all proceedings under this Act relating to neglected children
or delinquent children, as the case may be :
9[Provided that
a Board or a children's court may, if it is of opinion that it is necessary so
to do having regard to the circumstances of the case, transfer any proceedings
to any children's court or Board, as the case may be :
9Provided further that where
there is any difference of opinion between a Board and a children's court
regarding the transfer of any proceedings under the first proviso, it shall be,
referred to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate or, as the case may be, the Chief
Judicial Magistrate for decision, and in a case where the District Magistrate
is functioning as a Board or a children's court, such difference of opinion
shall be referred to the Court of Session, and the decision of the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate or Chief Judicial Magistrate or, as the case may be, the
Court of Session on such reference shall be final.]
(2) Where no Board or
children's court has been constituted for any area, the powers conferred on the
Board or the children's court by or under this Act shall be exercised in that
area, only by the following, namely :-
(a) the district
magistrate; or
(b) the sub-divisional
magistrate; or
10[(c) any Metropolitan Magistrate or Judicial
Magistrate of the first class, as the case may be.]
(3) The powers conferred on the Board or children's court by or under this Act may also be exercised by the High Court and the court of session, when the proceeding comes before them in appeal, revision or otherwise.
8. Procedure to be followed by a magistrate not empowered under the Act
(1) When any
magistrate not empowered to exercise the powers of a Board or a children's
court under this Act is of opinion that a person brought before him under any
of the provisions of this Act (otherwise than for the purpose of giving evidence)
is a child, he shall record such opinion and forward the child and the record
of the proceeding to the competent authority having jurisdiction over the
proceeding.
(2) The competent authority to which the proceeding is forwarded under sub-section (1) shall hold the inquiry as if the child had originally been brought before it.
9. Children's homes
9. Children�s homes
(1) The Administrator
may establish and maintain as many children's homes as may be necessary for the
reception of neglected children under this Act.
(2) Where the
Administrator is of opinion that any institution other than an institution
established under sub-section (1) is fit for the reception of the neglected
children to be sent there under this Act, he may certify such institution as a
children's home for the purposes of this Act.
(3) Every children's
home to which a neglected child is sent under this Act shall not only provide
the child with accommodation, maintenance and facilities for education, but
also provide him with facilities for the development of his character and
abilities and give him necessary training for protecting himself against moral
dangers or exploitation and shall also perform such other functions as may be
prescribed 9[to ensure all round growth and development of his
personality].
(4) The Administrator may, by rules made under this Act, provide for the management of children�s homes 3[, including the standards and the nature of services to be maintained by them,] and the circumstances under which, and the manner in which, the certificate of a children�s home may be granted or withdrawn.
10. Special schools
(1) The Administrator
may establish and maintain as many special schools as may be necessary for the
reception of delinquent children under this Act.
(2) Where the
Administrator is of opinion that any institution other than an institution
established under sub-section (1) is fit for the reception of the delinquent
children to be sent there under this Act, he may certify such institution as a
special school for the purposes of this Act.
(3) Every special
school to which a delinquent child is sent under this Act shall not only
provide the child with accommodation, maintenance and facilities for education
but also provide him with facilities for the development of his character and
abilities and give him necessary training for his reformation and shall also
perform such other functions as may be prescribed 9[to ensure all
round growth and development of his personality].
(4) The Administrator may, by rules made under this Act, provide for the management of special schools 3[including the standards and the nature of services to be maintained by them,] and the circumstances under which, and the manner in which, the certificate of a special school may be granted or withdrawn.
11. Observation homes
(1) The Administrator
may establish and maintain as many observation homes as may be necessary for
the temporary reception of children during the pendency of any inquiry
regarding them under this Act.
(2) Where the
Administrator is of opinion that any institution other than an institution
established under sub-section (1) is fit for the temporary reception of
children during the pendency of any inquiry regarding them under this Act, he
may recognize such institution as an observation home for the purposes of this
Act.
(3) Every observation
home to which a child is sent under this Act shall not only provide the child
with accommodation, maintenance and facilities for medical examination and
treatment, but also provide him with facilities for useful occupation.
(4) The Administrator may, by rules made under this, Act, provide for the management of observation homes 3[, including the standards and the nature of services to be maintained by them,] and the circumstances under which, and the manner in which, an institution may be recognized as an observation home or the recognition may be withdrawn.
12. After-care organizations
The Administrator may,
by rules made under this Act, provide-
(a) for the
establishment or recognition of after-care organizations and the powers that
may be exercised by them for effectively carrying out their functions under
this Act;
(b) for a scheme of
after-care programme to be followed by such after-care organizations for the
purpose of taking care of children after they leave children�s homes or special
schools and for the purpose of enabling them to lead an honest, industrious and
useful life;
(c) for the
preparation and submission of a report by the probation officer in respect of
each child prior to his discharge from a children�s home or special school, as
the case may be, regarding the necessity and nature of after-care of such
child, the period of such after-care, supervision thereof and for the
submission of a report by the probation officer on the progress of each such
child;
(d) for the standards
and the nature of services to be maintained by such after-care organizations;
(e) for such other matters as may be necessary for the purpose of effectively carrying out the scheme of after-care programme of children.]
13. Production of neglected children before Boards
(1) If any police
officer or any other person authorized by the Administrator in this behalf, by
general or special order, is of opinion that a person is apparently a neglected
child, such police officer or other person may take charge of that person for
bringing him before a Board.
(2) When information
is given to an officer-in-charge of a police station about any neglected child
found within the limits of such station, he shall enter in a book to be kept
for the purpose the substance of such information and take such action thereon
as he deems fit and if such officer does not propose to take charge of the
child, he shall forward a copy of the entry made to the Board.
(3) Every child taken
charge of under sub-section (1) shall be brought before the Board within a
period of twenty-four hours of such charge taken excluding the time necessary
for the journey from the place where the child had been taken charge of to the
Board.
(4) Every child taken charge of under sub-section (1) shall, unless he is kept with his parent or guardian, be sent to an observation home (but not to a police station or jail) until he can be brought before a Board.
14. Special procedure to be followed when neglected child has parent
(1) If a person, who
in the opinion of the police officer or the authorized person is a neglected
child, has a parent or guardian who has the actual charge of, or control over,
the child, the police officer or the authorized person may, instead of taking
charge of the child, make a report to the Board for initiating an inquiry
regarding that child.
(2) On receipt of a report under sub-section (1), the Board may call upon the parent or guardian to produce the child before it and to show cause why the child should not he dealt with as a neglected child under the provisions of this Act and if it appears to the Board that the child is likely to be removed from its jurisdiction or to be concealed, it may immediately order his removal (if necessary by issuing a search warrant for the immediate production of the child) to an observation home 3[or a place of safety].
15. Inquiry by Board regarding neglected children
(1) When a person
alleged to be a neglected child is produced before a Board, it shall examine
the police officer or the authorized person who brought the child or made the report
and record the substance of such examination and hold the inquiry in the
prescribed manner and may make such orders in relation to the child as it may
deem fit.
(2) Where a Board is
satisfied on inquiry that a child is a neglected child and that it is expedient
so to deal with him, the Board may make an order directing the child to be sent
to a children's home for the period until he ceases to be a child:
Provided that the Board may,
for reasons to be recorded, extend the period of such stay, but in no case the
period of stay shall extend beyond the time when the child attains the age of
eighteen years, in the case of a boy, or twenty years, in the case of a girl :
Provided further that the Board
may, if it is satisfied that having regard to the circumstances of the case it
is expedient so to do, for reasons to be recorded, reduce the period of stay to
such period as it thinks fit.
(3) During the
pendency of any inquiry regarding a child, the child shall, unless he is kept
with his parent or guardian, be sent to an observation home, 3[or a
place of safety] for such period as may be specified in the order of the Board:
Provided that no child shall be kept with his parent or guardian if, in the opinion of the Board, such parent or guardian is until 3[or unable] to exercise or does not exercise proper care and control over the child
16. Power to commit neglected child to suitable custody
(1) If the Board so
thinks fit, it may, instead of making an order under sub-section (2) of section
15 for sending the child to a children�s home, make an order placing the child
under the care of a parent, guardian or other fit person , on such parent,
guardian or fit person executing a bond with or without surety to be
responsible for the good behavior and well-being of the child and for the
observance of such conditions as the Board may think fit to impose.
(2) At the time of
making an order under sub-section (1) or at any time subsequently, the Board
may, in addition, make an order that the child be placed under supervision for
any period not exceeding three years in the first instance.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2), if at any time it appears to the Board, on receiving a report from the probation officer or otherwise, that there has been a breach of any of the conditions imposed by it in respect of the child, it may, after making such inquiry as it deems fit, order the child to be sent to a children�s home.
17. Uncontrollable children
Where a parent or guardian of a child complains to the Board that he is not able to exercise proper care and control over the child and the Board is satisfied on inquiry that proceedings under this Act should be initiated regarding the child, it may send the child to an observation home 3[or a place of safety] and make such further inquiry as it may deem fit and the provisions of section 15 and section 16 shall, as far as may be, apply to such proceedings.
Chapter IV - Delinquent Children
18. Bail and custody of children
(1) When any person
accused of a bailable or non-bailable offence and apparently a child is
arrested or detained or appears or is brought before a children�s court, such
person shall, notwithstanding anything contained in the 5[Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973], or in any other law for the time being in force, be
released on bail with or without surety but he shall not be so released if
there appear reasonable grounds for believing that the release is likely to
bring him into association with any reputed criminal or expose him to moral
danger or that his release would defeat the ends of justice.
(2) When such person
having been arrested is not released on bail under sub-section (1) by the
officer-in-charge of the police station, such officer shall cause him to be kept
in an observation home 3[or a place of safety] in the prescribed
manner (but not in a police station or jail) until be can be brought before a
children's court.
(3) When such person is not released on bail under sub-section (1) by the children's court, it shall instead of committing him to prison, make an order sending him to an observation home 3[or a place of safety] for such period during the pendency of the inquiry regarding him as may be specified in the order.
19. Information to parent or guardian or probation officer
Where a child is
arrested, the officer-in-charge of the police station to which the child is
brought shall, as soon as may be after the arrest, inform-
(a) the parent or guardian
of the child, if he can be found, of such arrest and direct him to be present
at the children�s court before which the child will appear; and
(b) the probation officer of such arrest in order to enable him to obtain information regarding the antecedents and family history of the child and other material circumstances likely to be of assistance to the children's court for making the inquiry
20. Inquiry by children's court regarding delinquent children
20. Inquiry by children�s court regarding delinquent
children
Where a child having been charged with an offence appears or is produced before a children's court, the children's court shall hold the inquiry in accordance with the provisions of section 39 and may, subject to the provisions of this Act, make such order in relation to the child as it deems fit.
21. Orders that may be passed regarding delinquent children
(1) Where a children's
court is satisfied on inquiry that a child has committed an offence, then,
notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other law for the
time being in force, the children's court may, if it so thinks fit,-
(a) allow the child to
go home after advice or admonition;
(b) direct the child to be released on
probation of good conduct and placed under the care of any parent, guardian or
other fit person on such parent, guardian or other fit person executing a bond,
with or without surety as that court may require, for the good behavior and
well-being of the child for any period not exceeding three years;
(c) make an order
directing the child to be sent to a special school,-
(i) in the case of a boy over fourteen years
of age or of a girl over sixteen years of age, for a period of not less than
three years;
(ii) in the case of any other child, for the
period until he ceases to be a child:
Provided that the children's court may, if it is
satisfied that having regard to the nature of the offence and the circumstances
of the case it is expedient so to do, for reasons to be recorded, reduce the
period of stay to such period as it thinks fit:
Provided further that the children's court may,
for reasons to be recorded, extend the period of such stay, but in no case the
period of stay shall extend beyond the time when the child attains the age of
eighteen years, in the case of a boy, or twenty years, in the case of a girl;
(d) order the child to pay a fine if he is
over fourteen years of age and earns money.
(2) Where an order
under clause (b) or clause (d) of sub-section (1) is made, the children�s court
may, if it is of opinion that in the interests of the child and of the public
it is expedient so to do, in addition make an order that the delinquent child
shall remain under the supervision of a probation officer named in the order
during such period, not exceeding three years, as may be specified therein, and
may in such supervision order impose such conditions as it deems necessary for
the due supervision of the delinquent child:
Provided that if at any time
afterwards it appears to the children's court on receiving a report from the
probation officer or otherwise, that the delinquent child has not been of good
behavior during the period of supervision, it may, after making such inquiry as
it deems fit, order the delinquent child to be sent to a special school.
(3) The children�s
court making a supervision order under sub-section (2) shall explain to the
child and the parent, guardian or other fit person, as the case may be, under
whose care the child has been placed, the terms and condition of the order and
shall forthwith furnish one copy of the supervision order to the child, the
parent, guardian or other fit person, as the case may be, the sureties, if any,
and the probation officer.
(4) In determining the special school, or any person to whose custody a child is to be committed or entrusted under this Act, the court shall pay due regard to the religious denomination of the child to ensure that religious instruction contrary to the religious persuasion of the child is not imparted to him.
22. Orders that may not be passed against delinquent children
(1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any other law for the time being in
force, no delinquent child shall be sentenced to death or imprisonment, or
committed to prison in default of payment of fine or in furnishing security:
Provided that where a child who
has attained the age of fourteen years has committed an offence and the
children's court is satisfied that the offence committed is of so serious a
nature or that his conduct and behavior have been such that it would not be in his
interest or in the interest of other children in a special school to send him
to such special school and that none of the other measures provided under this
Act is suitable or sufficient, the children's court may order the delinquent
child to be kept in safe custody in such place and manner as it thinks fit and
shall report the case for the orders of the Administrator.
(2) On receipt of a
report from a children's court under sub-section (1), the Administrator may
make such arrangement in respect of the child as he deems proper and may order
such delinquent child to be detained at such place and on such conditions as he
thinks fit:
Provided that the period of detention so ordered shall not exceed the maximum period of imprisonment to which the child could have been sentenced for the offence committed.
23. Proceeding under Chapter VIII of the Criminal Procedure Code not competent against child
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in the 5[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973], no proceeding shall be instituted and no order shall be passed against a child under Chapter VIII of the said Code.
24. No joint trial of child and person not a child
(1) Notwithstanding
anything contained in 12[section 223 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973] or in any other law for the time being in force, no child
shall be charged with or tried for, any offence together with a person who is
not a child.
(2) If a child is accused of an offence for which under 12[section 223 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973] or any other law for the time being in force, such child and any person who is not a child would, but for the prohibition contained in sub-section (1), have been charged and tried together, the court taking cognizance of that offence shall direct separate trials of the child and the other person.
25. Removal of disqualification attaching to conviction
Notwithstanding
anything contained in any other law, a child who has committed an offence and has
been dealt with under the provisions of this Act shall not suffer
disqualification, if any, attaching to a conviction of an offence under such
law.
26. Special provision in respect of pending cases
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, all proceedings in respect of a child pending in any court in any area on the date on which this Act comes into force in that area, shall be continued in that court as if this Act had not been passed and if the court finds that the child has committed an offence, it shall record such finding and, instead of passing any sentence in respect of the child, forward the child to the children's court which shall pass orders in respect of that child in accordance with the provisions of this Act as if it had been satisfied on inquiry under this Act that the child has committed the offence.
27. Sittings, etc., of Boards and children's courts
27. Sittings, etc., of Boards and children�s courts
(1) A Board or a
children's court shall hold its sittings at such place, on such day and in such
manner, as may be prescribed.
(2) A magistrate empowered to exercise the powers of a Board or, as the case may be, a children's court under sub-section (2) of section 7 shall, while holding any inquiry regarding a child under this Act, as far as practicable, sit in a building or room different from that in which the ordinary sittings of civil and criminal courts are held, or on different days or at times different from those at which the ordinary sittings of such courts are held.
28. Persons who may be present before competent authority
(1) Save as provided
in this Act, no person shall be present at any sitting of a competent
authority, except-
(a) any officer of the
competent authority, or
(b) the parties to the inquiry before the
competent authority, the parent or guardian of the child and other persons
directly concerned in the inquiry including police officers 3[and
legal practitioners], and
(c) such other persons
as the competent authority may permit to be present.
(2) Notwithstanding
anything contained in sub-section (1), if at any stage during an inquiry, a
competent authority considers it to be expedient in the interest of the child
or on grounds of decency or morality that any person including the police
officers, legal practitioners, the parent, guardian or the child himself should
withdraw, the competent authority may give such direction, and if any person
refuses to comply with such direction, the competent authority may have him
removed and may, for this purpose, cause to be used such force as may be necessary.
13[(3) No legal practitioner shall be entitled to appear before a Board in any case or proceeding before it, except with the special permission of that Board.]
29. Attendance of parent or guardian of child
Any competent authority before which a child is brought under any of the provisions of this Act may, whenever it so thinks fit, require any parent or guardian having the actual charge of, or control over, the child to be present at any proceeding in respect of the child.
30. Dispensing with attendance of child
If, at any stage during the course of an inquiry, a competent authority is satisfied that the attendance of the child is not essential for the purpose of the inquiry, the competent authority may dispense with his attendance and proceed with the inquiry in the absence of the child.
31. Committal to approved place of child suffering from dangerous disease and its future disposal
(1) When a child who
has been brought before a competent authority under this Act is found to be
suffering from a disease requiring prolonged medical treatment or physical or
mental complaint that will respond to treatment, the competent authority may
send the child to any place recognized to be an approved place in accordance
with the rules made under this Act for such period as it may think necessary
for the required treatment.
(2) Where a child is
found to be suffering from leprosy or is of unsound mind, he shall be dealt
with under the provisions of the Lepers Act, 1898 or the Indian Lunacy Act,
1912, as the case may be.
(3) Where a competent authority has taken action under sub-section (1) in the case of a child suffering from an infectious or contagious disease, the competent authority before restoring the said child to his partner in marriage, if there has been such, or to the guardian, as the case may be, shall where it is satisfied that such action will be in the interest of the said child call upon his partner in marriage or the guardian, as the case may be, to satisfy the court by submitting to medical examination that such partner or guardian will not re-infect the child in respect of whom the order has been passed.
32. Presumption and determination of age
(1) Where it appears
to a competent authority that a person brought before it under any of the
provisions of this Act (otherwise than for the purpose of giving evidence) is a
child, the competent authority shall make due inquiry as to the age of that
person and for that purpose shall take such evidence as may be necessary and shall
record a finding whether the person is a child or not, stating his age as
nearly as may be.
(2) No order of a competent authority shall be deemed to have become invalid merely by any subsequent proof that the person in respect of whom the order has been made is not a child, and the age recorded by the competent authority to be the age of the person so brought before it shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be the true age of that person.
33. Circumstances to be taken into consideration in making orders under the Act
In making any order in
respect of a child under this Act, a competent authority shall take into
consideration the following circumstances, namely :-
(a) the age of the
child;
(b) the circumstances
in which the child is living;
(c) the reports made
by the probation officer;
(d) the religious
persuasion of the child;
(e) such other
circumstances as may, in the opinion of the competent authority, require to be
taken into consideration in the interests of the child:
Provided that in the case of a
delinquent child, the above circumstances shall be taken into consideration
after the children�s court has recorded a finding against the child that he has
committed the offence :
Provided further that if no report of the probation officer is received within ten weeks of his being informed under section 19, it shall be open to the children's court to proceed without it.
34. Sending a child outside jurisdiction
In the case of a neglected or delinquent child whose ordinary place of residence lies outside the jurisdiction of the competent authority before which he is brought, the competent authority may, if satisfied after due inquiry that it is expedient so to do, send the child back to a relative or other person who is fit and willing to receive him at his ordinary place of residence and exercise proper care and control over him, notwithstanding that such place of residence is outside the jurisdiction of the competent authority; and the competent authority exercising jurisdiction over the place to which the child is sent shall in respect of any matter arising subsequently have the same powers in relation to the child as if the original order had been passed by itself.
35. Reports to be treated as confidential
The report of the
probation officer or any circumstance considered by the competent authority
under section 33 shall be treated as confidential:
Provided that the competent authority may, if it so thinks fit, communicate the substance thereof to the child or his parent or guardian and may give such child, parent or guardian an opportunity of producing such evidence as may be relevant to the matter stated in the report.
36. Prohibition of publication of names, etc., of children involved in any proceeding under the Act
(1) No report in any
newspaper, magazine or news sheet of any inquiry regarding a child under this
Act shall disclose the name, address or school or any other particulars
calculated to lead to the identification of the child, nor shall any picture of
any such child be published:
Provided that for reasons to be
recorded in writing, the authority holding the inquiry may permit such
disclosure, if in its opinion such disclosure is in the interest of the child.
(2) Any person contravening the provisions of sub-section (1) shall be punishable with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees.
37. Appeals
(1) Subject to the
provisions of this section, any person aggrieved by an order made by a
competent authority under this Act may, within thirty days from the date of
such order, prefer an appeal to the court of session:
Provided that the court of
session may entertain the appeal after the expiry of the said period of thirty
days if it is satisfied that the appellant was prevented by sufficient cause
from filing the appeal in time.
(2) No appeal shall
lie from-
(a) any order of acquittal made by the
children's court in respect of a child alleged to have committed an offence; or
(b) any order made by a Board in respect of a
finding that a person is not a neglected child.
(3) No second appeal shall lie from any order of the court of session passed in appeal under this section.
38. Revision
The High Court may, at
any time, either of its own motion or on an application received in this behalf,
call for the record of any proceeding in which any competent authority or court
of session has passed an order for the purpose of satisfying itself as to the
legality or propriety of any such order and may pass such order in relation
thereto as it thinks fit:
Provided that the High Court shall not pass an order under this section prejudicial to any person without giving him a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
39. Procedure in inquiries, appeals and revision proceedings
(1) Save as otherwise
expressly provided by this Act, a competent authority while holding any inquiry
under any of the provisions of this Act, shall follow such procedure as may be
prescribed and subject thereto, shall follow, as far as may be, the procedure
laid down in the 5[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973], for trials in
summons cases.
(2) Save as otherwise expressly provided by or under this Act, the procedure to be followed in hearing appeals or revision proceedings under this Act shall be, as far as practicable, in accordance with the provisions of the 5[Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973].
40. Power to amend orders
(1) Without prejudice
to the provisions for appeal and revision under this Act, any competent
authority may, either on its own motion or on an application received in this
behalf, amend any order as to the institution to which a child is to be sent or
as to the person under whose care or supervision a child is to be placed under
this Act.
(2) Clerical mistakes in orders passed by a competent authority or errors arising therein from any accidental slip or omission may, at any time, be corrected by the competent authority either on its own motion or on an application received in this behalf.
41. Punishment for cruelty to child
(1) Whoever, having
the actual charge of, or control over, a child, assaults, abandons, exposes or
willfully neglects the child or causes or procures him to be assaulted,
abandoned, exposed or neglected in a manner likely to cause such child
unnecessary mental and physical suffering shall he punishable with imprisonment
for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine, or with both.
(2) No court shall take cognizance of an offence punishable under sub-section (1) unless the complaint is filed with the previous sanction of the Administrator or an officer authorized by him in this behalf.
42. Employment of children for begging
(1) Whoever employs or
uses any child for the purposes of begging or causes any child to beg shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year, or with
fine, or with both.
(2) Whoever, having
the actual charge of, or control over, a child, abets the commission of the
offence punishable under sub-section (1), shall be punishable with imprisonment
for a term which may extend to one year, or with fine, or with both.
(3) The offence punishable under this section shall be cognizable.
43. Penalty for giving intoxicating liquor or dangerous drug to a child
Whoever gives, or causes to be given to any child any intoxicating liquor in a public place or any dangerous drug, except upon the order of a duly qualified medical practitioner or in case of sickness or other urgent cause, shall be punishable with fine which may extend to two hundred rupees.
44. Exploitation of child employees
Whoever ostensibly procures a child for the purpose of any employment and withholds the earnings of the child or uses such earnings for his own purposes shall be punishable with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees.
Chapter VII - Miscellaneous
45. Power of Administrator to discharge and transfer children
(1) The Administrator
may, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, at any time, order a
neglected or delinquent child to be discharged from the children's home or
special school, either absolutely or on such conditions as he may think fit to
impose.
(2) The Administrator
may, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, order-
(a) a neglected child
to be transferred from one children's home to another;
(b) a delinquent child to be transferred from
one special school to another or from a special school to a borstal school
where such school exists or from a special school to a children's home;
(c) a child who has been released on license
which has been revoked or forfeited, to be sent to the special school or
children's home from which he was released or to any other children's home or
special school or borstal school:
Provided that the total period
of the stay of the child in a children's home, or a special school shall not be
increased by such transfer.
(3) The Administrator may, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, at any time, discharge a child from the care of any person under whom he was placed under this Act either absolutely or on such conditions as the Administrator may think fit to impose.
46. Transfers between children's homes, etc., under the Act, and children's homes, etc, of like nature in different parts of India
46. Transfers between children�s homes, etc., under the
Act, and children�s homes, etc, of like nature in different parts of India
(1) The Administrator
of a Union territory may direct any neglected child or delinquent child to be
transferred from any children's home or special school within the Union
territory to any other children�s home, special school or institution of a like
nature in any other State with the consent of the Government of that State.
(2) The Administrator of a Union territory may, by general or special order, provide for the reception in a children's home or special school within the Union territory of a neglected child or delinquent child detained in a children's home or special school or institution of a like nature in any other State where the Government of that State makes an order for such transfer, and upon such transfer the provisions of this Act shall apply to such child as if he had been originally ordered to be sent to such children's home or special school under this Act.
47. Transfer of children of unsound mind or suffering from leprosy
(1) Where it appears
to the Administrator that any child kept in a special school or children's home
in pursuance of this Act is suffering from leprosy or is of unsound mind, the
Administrator may order his removal to a leper asylum or mental hospital or
other place of safe custody for being kept there for the remainder of the term
for which he has to be kept in custody under the orders of the competent
authority or for such further period as may be certified by a medical officer
to be necessary for the proper treatment of the child.
(2) Where it appears to the Administrator that the child is cured of leprosy or of unsoundness of mind, he may, if the child is still liable to be kept in custody, order the person having charge of the child to send him to the special school or children's home from which he was removed or, if the child is no longer liable to be kept in custody, order him to be discharged.
48. Placing out on license
(1) When a child is
kept in a children's home or special school, the Administrator may, if he so
thinks fit, release the child from the children's home or special school and grant
him a written license for such period and on such conditions as may be
specified in the license permitting him to live with, or under the supervision
of, any responsible person named in the license willing to receive and take
charge of him with a view to educate him and train him for some useful trade or
calling..
(2) Any license so
granted under sub-section (1) shall be in force for the period specified in the
license or until revoked or forfeited by the breach of any of the conditions on
which it was granted.
(3) The Administrator
may, at any time, by order in writing revoke any such license and order the
child to return to the children's home or special school from which he was
released or to any other children's home or special school, and shall do so at
the desire of the person with whom or under whose supervision the child has
been permitted to live in accordance with a license granted under sub-section
(1).
(4) When a license has
been revoked or forfeited and the child refuses or fails to return to the
special school or children's home to which he was directed so to return, the
Administrator may, if necessary, cause him to be taken charge of and to be
taken back to the special school or children's home.
(5) The time during
which a child is absent from a special school or children's home in pursuance
of a license granted under this section shall be deemed to be part of the time
for which he is liable to be kept in custody in the special school or
children's home:
Provided that when a child has failed to return to the special school or children's home on the license being revoked or forfeited, the time which elapses after his failure so to return shall be excluded in computing the time during which he is liable to be kept in custody
49. Provision in respect of escaped children
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other law for the time being in force, any police officer may take charge without warrant of a child who has escaped from a special school or a children's home or from the care of a person under whom he was placed under this Act and shall send the child back to the special school or the children's home or that person, as the case may be; and no proceeding shall be instituted in respect of the child by reason of such escape but the special school, children's home or the person may, after giving the information to the competent authority which passed the order in respect of the child, take such steps against the child as may be deemed necessary.
50. Contribution by parents
(1) The competent
authority which makes an order for sending a neglected child or a delinquent
child to a children's home or a. special school or placing the child under the
care of a fit person may make an order requiring the parent or other person
liable to maintain the child to contribute to his maintenance, if able to do
so, in the prescribed manner.
(2) The competent
authority before making any order under sub-section (1) shall inquire into the
circumstances of the parent or other person liable to maintain the child and
shall record evidence, if any, in the presence of the parent or such other
person, as the case may be.
(3) The person liable
to maintain a child shall, for the purposes of sub-section (1), include in the
case of illegitimacy, his putative father:
Provided that where the child
is illegitimate and an order for his maintenance has been made under 14[section
125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973], the competent authority shall not
ordinarily make an order for contribution against the putative father, but may
order the whole or any part of tile sums accruing due under the said order for
maintenance to be paid to such person as may be named by the competent
authority and such sum shall be paid by him towards the maintenance of the
child.
(4) Any order made under this section may be enforced in the same manner as an order 14[section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973].
51. Control of custodian over child
Any person in whose
custody a child is placed in pursuance of this Act shall, while the order is in
force, have the like control over the child as he would have if he were his
parent, and shall be responsible for his maintenance, and the child shall
continue in his custody for the period stated by the competent authority,
notwithstanding that he is claimed by his parent or any other person:
Provided that no child while in such custody shall be married except with the permission of the competent authority.
52. Delinquent child under-going sentence at commencement of the Act
In any area in which this Act is brought into force, the Administrator may direct that a delinquent child who is undergoing any sentence of imprisonment at the commencement of this Act shall, in lieu of undergoing such sentence, be sent to a special school, or be kept in safe custody in such place and manner as the Administrator thinks fit, for the remainder of the period of the sentence; and the provisions of this Act shall apply to the child. as if he had been ordered by a children's court to be sent to such special school or, as the case may be, ordered to be detained under sub-section (2) of section 22.
53. Appointment of officers
(1) The Administrator
may appoint as many probation officers, officers for the inspection of special
schools, children's homes, observation homes or after-care organizations and
such other officers as he may deem necessary for carrying out the purposes of
this Act.
(2) It shall be the
duty of the probation officer-
(a) to inquire in accordance with the
direction of a competent authority, into the antecedents and family history of
any child accused of an offence, with a view to assist the authority in making
the inquiry;
(b) to visit neglected and delinquent children
at such intervals as the probation officer may think fit;
(c) to report to the competent authority as to
the behavior of any neglected or delinquent child;
(d) to advise and, assist neglected or delinquent
children and, if necessary, endeavor to find them suitable employment;
(e) where a neglected or delinquent child is
placed under the care of any person on certain conditions, to see whether such
conditions are being complied with; and
(f) to perform such
other duties as may be prescribed.
(3) Any officer empowered in this behalf by the Administrator may enter any special school, children�s home, observation home, or after-care organization and make a complete inspection thereof in all its departments and of all papers, registers and accounts relating thereto and shall submit the report of such inspection to the Administrator.
54. Officers appointed under the Act to be public servants
Probation officers and other officers appointed in pursuance of this Act shall be deemed to be public servants within the meaning of section 21 of the Indian Penal Code.
55. Procedure in respect of bonds
The provisions of 15[Chapter XXXIII of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973], shall, as far as may be, apply to bonds taken under this Act.
56. Delegation of powers
The Administrator may, by general or special order, direct that any power exercisable by him under this Act shall, in such circumstances and under such conditions, if any, as may be specified in the order, be exercisable also by an officer subordinate to the Administrator.
57. Protection of action taken in good faith
No suit or other legal proceeding shall lie against the Administrator or any probation officer or other officer appointed under this Act in respect of anything which is in good faith done or intended to be done in pursuance of this Act or of any rules or orders made thereunder.
58. Act 8 of 1897 and certain provisions of Act 2 of 1974 not to apply
(1) The Reformatory Schools
Act, 1897, and 16[section 27 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973], shall cease to apply to any area in which this Act has been brought into
force.
(2) The Women's and Children�s Institutions (Licensing) Act, 1956 shall not apply to any children�s home, special school or observation home established and maintained under this Act.
59. Power to make rules
(1) The Administrator
may, by notification in the Official Gazette, make rules to carry out the
purposes of this Act.
(2) In particular, and
without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, such rules may
provide for all or any of the following matters, namely :-
(a) the places at which, the days on which,
the time at which, and the manner in which, a competent authority may hold its
sittings;
(b) the procedure to be followed by a
competent authority in holding inquiries under this Act; and the mode of
dealing with children suffering from dangerous diseases or mental complaints;
(c) the circumstances in which, and the
conditions subject to which, an institution may be certified as a special
school or a children�s home or recognized as an observation home, and the
certification or recognition withdrawn;
(d) the internal management of special
schools, children�s home and observation homes 9[and the standards
and the nature of services to be maintained by them];
(e) the functions and responsibilities of
special schools, children�s homes and observation homes;
(f) the inspection of special schools,
children�s homes, observation homes and after-care organizations;
(g) the establishment, management and
functions of after-care organizations; the circumstances in which, and the
conditions subject to which, an institution may be recognized as an after-care
organization 9[and such other matters as are referred to in section
12];
(h) the qualifications
and duties of probation officers;
(i) the recruitment and training of persons
appointed to carry out the purposes of this Act and the terms and conditions of
their service;
(j) the conditions subject to which a girl who
is a neglected or delinquent child may be escorted from one place to another,
and the manner in which a child may be sent outside the jurisdiction of a
competent authority;
(k) the manner in which contribution for the
maintenance of a child may be ordered to be paid by a parent or guardian;
(l) the conditions under which a child may be
placed out on license and the form and conditions of such license;
(m) the conditions subject to which children
may be placed under the care of any parent, guardian or other 4[fit
person or fit institution] under this Act and the obligations of such 17[
persons or institutions] towards the children so placed;
(n) any other matter
which has to be, or may be, prescribed.
13[(3) Every rule made under this section shall be laid, as soon as may be after it is made, before each House of Parliament, while it is in session for a total period of thirty days which may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive sessions, and if, before the expiry of the session immediately following the session or the successive sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any modification in the rule or both Houses agree that the rule should not be made, the rule shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be, so, however, that any such modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done under that rule.]
60. Repeal and savings
If, immediately before
the date on which this Act comes into force in any area, there is in force in
that area, any law corresponding to this Act, that law shall stand repealed on
the said date:
Provided that the repeal shall
not affect-
(a) the previous
operation of any law so repealed or anything duly done or suffered thereunder;
or
(b) any right,
privilege, obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under any law
so repealed; or
(c) any penalty,
forfeiture or punishment incurred in respect of any offence committed against
any law so repealed; or
(d) any investigation,
legal proceeding or remedy in respect of any such right, privilege, obligation,
liability, penalty, forfeiture or punishment as aforesaid;
and any such investigation, legal proceeding or remedy may be instituted, continued or enforced and any such penalty, forfeiture or punishment may be imposed, as if this Act had not been passed.
Foot Notes
1. This Act has been
extended, to Goa, Daman and Diu by Reg. 12 of 1962, section 3 and Schedule to
Dadra and Nagar Haveli by Reg. 6 of 1963, section 2 and Schedule I and to
Pondicherry by Reg. 7 of 1963, section 3 and Schedule I.
2. Appointed date is
1st. January, 1962 in the Union Territory of Delhi; vide Notification No. F. 40
(8)/61-DSW (1), dated 1st December, 1961, published in the Delhi Gazette.
3. Inserted by Act No.
15 of 1978.
4. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words "fit person".
5. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words, figure and brackets "Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898)".
6. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978.
7. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for former sub-section (2).
8. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words "senior magistrate".
9. Inserted by Act No.
15 of 1978.
10. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for former clause (c).
11. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for former section 12.
12. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words, brackets and figure "section 239 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898)".
13. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for former sub-section (3).
14. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words, brackets and figure "section 488 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898)".
15. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words, brackets and figure "Chapter XLII of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898)".
16. Substituted by Act
No. 15 of 1978, for the words, brackets and figure "section 29B and
section 399 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898)".
17. Substituted by Act No. 15 of 1978, for the word "persons".