Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1330 of 2006
PETITIONER:
M.R. Kudva \005Appellant
RESPONDENT:
State of Andhra Pradesh \005Respondent
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/12/2006
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out S.L.P. (Criminal) No.1405 of 2006]
S.B. SINHA, J :
Leave granted.
Application of the provision of Section 427 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (for short, ’the Code’) falls for consideration in this appeal
which arises out of a judgment and order dated 17.10.2005 passed by a
learned Single Judge of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in Criminal
Petition No. 3917 of 2005.
Appellant was a bank employee. He worked as a Manager in
Syndicate Bank at its Branch at Abid Road, Hyderabad. His job was to
advance loans. Allegedly, in one case he sanctioned a loan to a customer
for Black & White Television, while the scheme was for something else. In
another case he sanctioned a loan for obtaining plots from the Housing
Society. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) had also filed
chargesheets against the appellant in both the cases. Two cases were, thus,
came to be registered against him; one being Criminal Case No. 9 of 1992
and another being Criminal Case No. 5 of 1993. The judgment in the first
case was pronounced by the Special Judge, C.B.I. Court on 04.07.1997
whereby and whereunder he was convicted for commission of offences
punishable under Sections 120B/420, 468, 471 of the Indian Penal Code
(IPC) read with Section 5(1) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. He
was sentenced to undergo 18 months’ rigorous imprisonment. Different
amounts of fines for offences punishable under Sections 120B/420, 468,
471 IPC and Section 5(1) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 were
also imposed. By a judgment of conviction and sentence dated 06.08.1997,
the Special Judge, CBI, found him guilty for commission of offences
punishable under Sections 120B/420, 468, 471 read with Section 5(1) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 in Criminal Case No. 5 of 1993 and
sentenced him to undergo rigorous imprisonment for two years. Different
amounts of fines for offences punishable under the said sections were also
imposed against him.
Appeals preferred thereagainst before the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh were registered as Criminal Appeal No. 792 of 1997 and Criminal
Appeal No. 894 of 1997 respectively. The appeals were dismissed by a
judgments and orders dated 30.12.2004 and 20.01.2005 respectively.
Special Leave Petitions filed thereagaisnt have also been dismissed by this
Court by an order dated 11.05.2005. Appellant thereafter filed an
application before the High Court purported to be under Sections 482/427 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, praying, inter alia, therein that the
sentences imposed upon him in both the cases be directed to run
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
concurrently. The said application has been rejected by the High Court by
reason of the impugned judgment.
Mr. V.B. Joshi, the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellant, would, inter alia, submit that having regard to the facts and
circumstances of this case and particularly in view of the fact that the nature
of offence in both the cases being the same, the High Court should have
directed that sentences imposed upon the appellant to run concurrently and
not consecutively.
Section 427 of the Code of Criminal Procedure reads as under :
"427. Sentence on offender already sentenced for
another offence.-(1) When a person already undergoing a
sentence of imprisonment is sentenced on a subsequent
conviction to imprisonment or imprisonment for life,
such imprisonment or imprisonment for life shall
commence at the expiration of the imprisonment to
which he has been previously sentenced, unless the Court
directs that the subsequent sentence shall run
concurrently with such previous sentence :
Provided that where a person who has been
sentenced to imprisonment by an order under Section 122
in default of furnishing security is, whilst undergoing
such sentence, sentenced to imprisonment for an offence
committed prior to the making of such order, the latter
sentence shall commence immediately.
(2) When a person already undergoing a
sentence of imprisonment for life is sentenced on a
subsequent conviction to imprisonment for a term or
imprisonment for life, the subsequent sentence shall run
concurrently with such previous sentence."
The learned Sessions Judge while passing the judgment and
conviction in Criminal Case No. 5 of 1993 took note of the fact that the
appellant had been convicted in Criminal Case No. 9 of 1992 also. He,
however, categorically opined that the accused did not deserve any
sympathy. The appellant was convicted under all the charges levelled
against him and sentenced him to undergo rigorous imprisonment for
different periods. For commission of the offences punishable under Section
420 IPC, he was sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for two years.
The sentences of imprisonment imposed upon him, however, were directed
to run concurrently.
Although according to the appellant, the High Court heard both the
matters almost at the same time, no such prayer appears to have been made,
nor the same fell for consideration by the High Court. The Special Leave
Petitions filed by the appellant, as noticed hereinbefore, have also been
dismissed.
Strong reliance has been placed by Mr. Joshi on a decision of this
Court in Mohd. Akhtar Hussain alias Ibrahim Ahmed Bhatti v. Assistant
Collector of Customs (Prevention), Ahmedabad and Another [(1988) 4 SCC
183]. Therein the court upheld a contention that if a given transaction
constitutes two offences under the enactments, generally it would be wrong
to impose consecutive sentences. It was, however, opined that it would be
proper and legitimate to have concurrent sentences; but at the same time, it
was held that the said rule would have no application if the facts
constituting the same offences are quite different. The said decision,
therefore, in view of the fact that the appellant has been convicted in two
distinct and different offences, runs counter to the submission of Mr. Joshi.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
Reliance has also been placed by Mr. Joshi in Ammavassi and
Another v. Inspector of Police, Valliyanur and Others [AIR 2000 SC 3544].
Therein, the appellants were convicted in four-five different cases, during a
period of three to four months. The appellants therein claimed benefit under
Section 427 of the Code in order to avoid undergoing imprisonment of a
total period of 28 or 35 years in jail. This Court opined that 14 years
rigorous imprisonment would meet the ends of justice. It is, therefore, clear
that even in that case whereas Section 427 of the Code was applied in three
cases, but in two cases, the sentences were directed to run consecutively.
The said decisions, therefore, are not the authorities for the
proposition that it is incumbent upon the court to direct in a case of this
nature that both the sentences shall run concurrently and not consecutively.
However, in this case the provision of Section 427 of the Code was
not invoked in the original cases or in the appeals. A separate application
was filed before the High Court after the special leave petitions were
dismissed. Such an application, in our opinion, was not maintainable. The
High Court could not have exercised its inherent jurisdiction in a case of this
nature as it had not exercised such jurisdiction while passing the judgments
in appeal. Section 482 of the Code was, therefore, not an appropriate
remedy having regard to the fact that neither the Trial Judge, nor the High
Court while passing the judgments of conviction and sentence indicated that
the sentences passed against the appellant in both the cases shall run
concurrently or Section 427 would be attracted. The said provision,
therefore, could not be applied in a separate and independent proceeding by
the High Court. The appeal being devoid of any merit is dismissed.