Kochi: The mere smell of alcohol cannot be construed to mean that the person was intoxicated or was under the influence of any liquor, the Kerala High Court has observed while quashing a case registered against a government servant.
Justice Sophy Thomas, while ordering quashing of an FIR against 38-year-old Salim Kumar, said that consuming liquor in a private place without causing nuisance or annoyance to anybody will not attract any offence.
"Consuming liquor in a private place without causing nuisance or annoyance to anybody will not attract any offence. The mere smell of alcohol also cannot be construed to mean that the person was intoxicated or was under the influence of any liquor," the court said in its order issued on November 10.
The court was hearing a criminal miscellaneous petition filed by Kumar, a village assistant, seeking to quash an FIR filed against him by police in 2013.
Police had registered a case under Section 118 (A) of the Kerala Police (KP) Act against Kumar, saying when he was called to the station to identify an accused, he was under the influence of alcohol.
Kumar has moved the court, saying he was called to the Police Station at seven in the evening to identify an accused, against whom a case was registered under Section 353 of IPC and Section 20 of the Kerala Protection of River Banks and Regulation of Removal of Sand Act (for short 'the Sand Act').
Kumar said since the accused was a stranger, he could not identify him and only because of that fact, police registered this crime under KP Act.