CrPC 20 — Executive Magistrates

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Statutory text

(1) In   every   district   and   in   every   metropolitan   area,   the   State
Government  may  appoint as  many persons as  it thinks fit to be  Executive  Magistrates and  shall appoint one of them to be the District Magistrate.
(2) The  State  Government  may  appoint  any  Executive  Magistrate  to  be  an  Additional  District
Magistrate, and such Magistrate shall have

[such] of the powers of a District Magistrate under this Code
or under any other law for the time being in force

[as may be directed by the State Government].
 (3)  Whenever,  in  consequence  of  the  office  of  a  District  Magistrate  becoming  vacant,  any  officer
succeeds temporarily to the executive administration of the district, such officer shall, pending the orders
of  the  State  Government,  exercise  all  the  powers  and  perform  all  the  duties  respectively  conferred  and imposed by this Code on the District Magistrate.
(4)  The  State  Government  may  place  an  Executive  Magistrate  in  charge  of  a  sub-division  and  may relieve  him of the  charge  as occasion requires; and the  Magistrate  so  placed  in charge  of a  sub-division shall be called the Sub-divisional Magistrate.

[(4A) The  State  Government  may,  by  general  or  special  order  and  subject  to  such  control  and directions  as  it  may  deem  fit  to  impose,  delegate  its  powers  under  sub-section  (4)  to  the  District Magistrate.]
(5) Nothing  in  this  section  shall  preclude  the  State  Government  from  conferring,  under  any  law  for
the time being in force, on a Commissioner of Police, all or any of the powers of an Executive Magistrate in relation to a metropolitan area.

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