Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BISWABAHAN DAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOPEN CHANDRA HAZARIKA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/09/1966
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 895 1967 SCR (1) 447
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC 248 (43)
ACT:
Assam Forest Regulation 7 of 1891, s. 62-Effect of
compounding forest offence-If results in acquittal.
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act 5 of 1898), s. 345(6)-
Scope.
Certiorari-Board of Revenue-Grant of excise licence-
Consideration of conduct in rendering compensation for
forest offence and suitability-If writ lies.
HEADNOTE:
The settlement of an excise shop in Dibrugarh area with the
respondent was challenged before the Board of Revenue in an
appeal by the appellant. The Board held that the respondent
was not a suitable person because as a forest contractor and
holder of a firewood mahal licence, he had compounded an
offence of illegally felling green trees by paying com-
pensation. The respondent filed a writ petition and the
High Court relied on s. 345(6) Cr. P.C. in holding that the
compounding of the offence had the effect of an acquittal
with the result that once the offence was compounded the
Board was not entitled to take into account the propriety or
otherwise of the conduct of the respondent. In appeal to
this Court, the appellant contended that (i) s. 345(6)
Cr.P.C., had no application to an offence under the Assam
Forest Regulation 7 of 1891, and (ii) that the Board was
right in considering the respondent’s conduct in rendering
compensation for a forest offence.
HELD.The appeal must be allowed.
(i) The High Court was not right in coming to the conclusion
that the effect of s. 62 of the Assam Regulation was the
same as that of s. 345(6) Cr. P.C. and that no moral
turpitude of any description could be said to be involved in
the case. In effect the payment of compensation by the
respondent amounted to his acceptance of the charge against
him. Section 62(2) of the Assam Regulation only protected
him with regard to further proceeding, but had not the
effect of clearing his character or vindicating his conduct.
[451 A-B; 452 B]
If a person is charged with an offence, then unless there is
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some provision for compounding of it the law must take its
course and the charge enquired into resulting either in
conviction or acquittal. If the composition of an offence
was permissible in law, the effect of such composition would
depend cm what the law provided for. If the effect of
composition is to amount to an acquittal then it may be said
that no stigma should attach to the Character of the person,
but unless it is expressly provided for the mere rendering
of compensation would not amount to the vindication of the
character of the person charged with the offence. [451 H]
(ii) The High Court was not justified in quashing the
appellate order of the Board under Art. 226 of the
Constitution. The Board had not gone wrong in law in
considering the respondent’s conduct in rendering
compensation for a forest offence. The Board therefore
could be said to have exceeded its jurisdiction under the
law or committed an error apparent on the face of the
record. [453 A]
Nagendra Nath Bora & Anr. v. The Commissioner of Hills
Division and Appeals, Assam & Ors. [1958] S.C.R. 1240,
followed.
448
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 94 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 24, 1964 of the Assam and Nagaland High Court in
Civil Rule No. 208 of 1964.
Sarjoo Prasad, H.Goswami and D. N. Mukherjee, for the
appellant.
R. Gopalakrishnan, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter,J.This is an appeal by special leave from a judgment
and order of the High Court of Assam and Nagaland dated
January 24, 1964 passed in Civil Rule No. 208 of 1964 under
Art. 226 of the Constitution of India.
The sole question involved in this appeal is whether the
High Court was right in quashing the order of the Board of
Revenue on the ground that the very basis on which the
appellate order of the Board was founded did not exist and
that the Board had gone wrong in taking into consideration
the compounding of an offence under the Forest Regulation by
the petitioner before the High Court as affecting his
suitability in getting settlement of an excise shop in
Dibrugarh area.
The facts necessary for the disposal of this appeal are as
follows. One Biswabahan Das, the appellant before us, was
the lessee of the said shop from 1956 to 1962. The shop was
settled with him again for the term 1962-64 by the Deputy
Commissioner. On appeal to the Board of Revenue, this was
set aside, on the basis of a report submitted by the
Inspector of Excise and the shop was settled with the
present respondent. Biswabahan went to the Assam High Court
with a writ petition and succeeded there on the ground that
the evidence of the Inspector had been taken behind his back
and as such should not have been taken into consideration,
but the High Court also held in that matter that no useful
purpose would be served by granting any relief to Biswabahan
at that late stage when the period of the licence was about
to expire. This had the result that Hazarika remained the
lessee of the shop when a fresh settlement became due. The
Deputy Commissioner settled the shop with Hazarika again for
the years 1964 to 1967. ;This settlement was challenged in
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appeal before the Board of Revenue. The Board went into the
question as to whether Hazarika was a suitable person
because as the holder of a firewood mahal licence he had
compounded an offence of illegally felling green trees by
paying Rs. 50 when he was acting as a forest contractor.
From the appellate order of the Board of Revenue which
was .quashed by the High Court, it appears that a Forest
Beat Officer of Dibru Reserve had detected that Hazarika had
illegally felled
449
some green trees and converted them into firewood although
under the agreement between him and the authorities he was
only entitled to cut and collect firewood from dead and
fallen trees. There was no dispute that Hazarika had paid
compensation of Rs. 50 in respect thereof and had filed an
affidavit before the Board of Revenue that a mistake had
been committed by his labourers in collecting some broken
and fallen green trees in his absence. The Board was not
satisfied with this explanation and took the view that the
fact of Hazarika having compounded the offence did not clear
his conduct although he had succeeded in getting a sub-
sequent settlement of a forest mahal. It was observed by
the Board, "forest mahals and excise shops are settled under
different sets of rules and the fact that the respondent
(Hazarika) was considered suitable for one would not
automatically entitle him to the other. In the matter of
settlement of excise shops, the settling authority is
entitled under Executive Instruction III to take other
factors under consideration including the moral character of
the tenderer in determining his suitability. This Board has
consistently held that conduct of a tenderer is a valid
consideration in this context. In view of his conduct as
discussed above we do not consider respondent (Hazarika) to
be a suitable candidate and are unable to uphold the
settlement made with him."
The High Court relied on s. 345(6) of the Criminal.
Procedure Code to reach the conclusion that the compounding
of the offence had the effect of an acquittal with the
result that once the offence was compounded the Board was
not entitled to take into account the propriety or otherwise
of the conduct of Hazarika in respect of the offence with
which he had been charged.
Before us Mr. Sarjoo Prasad appearing in support of the
appeal contended that s. 345(6) of the Criminal Procedure
Code had no application to an offence under the Assam Forest
Regulation VII of 1891.
Sub-section (5) of s. 3 of the said Regulation defines a
"forest offence" as an offence punishable under the
Regulation or any rule thereunder. Section 62 sub-s. (1) of
the said Regulation which has the marginal note "power to
compound offences" provides-
"The State Government may, by notification in
the official Gazette, empower a Forest Officer
by name, or as holding an office,-
(a) to accept from any person against whom a
reasonable suspicion exists that he has
committed any forest offence, other than an
offence specified in section 58 or section 59,
a sum of money by way of compensation for the
offence which such, person is suspected to
have committed; and
450
(b) when any property has been seized as
liable to confiscation, to release the same on
payment of the value thereof as estimated by
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such officer."
Sub-section (2) provides:-
"On the payment of such sum of money, or such
value, or both, as the case may be,
to such
officer, the suspected person, if in custody,
shall be discharged, the property, if any,
seized shall be released and no further
proceedings shall be taken against such person
or property."
We may now note the relevant provisions of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. Section 345(1) of the Code prescribes
that the offences thereunder specified may be compounded by
the persons mentioned in the third column of the appended
Table. By subs. (2) provision is made for the compounding
of the offences specified in the first column of the Table
appended to this sub-section by certain persons with the
permission of the court before which any prosecution for the
offence is pending. Sub-s. (6) lays down that-
"The composition of an offence under this
section shall have the effect of the acquittal
of the accused with whom the offence has been
compounded."
It is, therefore, clear that to have the effect of an
acquittal the offence compounded must be one specified
either under sub-s. (1) or sub-s. (2). The principle behind
the scheme seems to be that wrongs of certain classes which
affect mainly a person in his individual capacity or
character may be sufficiently redressed by composition with
or without the leave of the court as the case may be but any
such composition would have the effect of an acquittal. It
was urged by Mr. Sarjoo Prasad that assuming the effect of
an acquittal to be the wiping out or negation of the
wrongful conduct on the part of the accused, the scope of
sub-s. (6) was only limited to the offences specified in
sub-ss. (1) and (2) of s. 345 and the principle thereof
could not be extended to offences under other Acts unless
there was a provision similar to sub-s. (6) in those Acts.
It must be borne in mind that although the marginal note to
s. 62 of the Assam Regulation is "power to compound
offences" the word "compounding" is not used in sub-s.(1)
cl. (a) of that section. That provision only empowers a
forest officer to accept compensation for a forest offence
from a person suspected of having committed it. The person
so suspected can avoid being proceeded with for the offence
by rendering compensation. He may think that he was being
unjustly suspected of an offence and he ought to defend
himself or he may consider it prudent on his part to pay
such compensation in order to avoid the harassment of a pro-
secution even when he is of the view that he had not
committed the offence. By adopting the latter course he
does not remove the
451
suspicion of having committed the offence unless he is to
have such benefit conferred on him by some provision of law.
In effect the payment of compensation amounts to his
acceptance of the truth of the charge against him. Sub-s.
(2) of s. 62 only protects him with regard to further
proceedings, but has not the effect of clearing his
character or vindicating his conduct.
Our attention was drawn by the learned Advocate for the res-
pondent to ss. 58 and 59 of the Assam Regulation which
provides for certain offences being visited with
imprisonment for a term or with fine or with both and on a
comparison of those sections with s. 62 it was argued that
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the latter related only to very minor offences which the
Legislature in its wisdom had thought compoundable by the
rendering of compensation. It was urged that the suspicion
of having committed a forest offence under s. 62(1) (a)
should not amount to the imputation of any stigma on the
character of the suspected person when by the rendering of
compensation for such an offence he was to be protected from
further proceedings and the principle behind sub-s. (2) of
s. 62 was the same as that contained in s. 345 (6) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. It was said that other statutes
contained provisions for compounding of certain offences and
the object of the Legislature in all such cases was that
trivial offences once compounded were not to be raked up
again or taken any notice of afterwards.
Reference was made to the observations of the Madras High
Court in Chandanmal v. Rupakula Ramkrishnayya and another(1)
that an agreement to compound an offence under s. 345(1) of
the Criminal Procedure Code was not in violation of any law
or public policy.
We were also referred to certain general observations in the
case of Reg. v. Rahimat(2) that there was a class of cases
which might be the subject either of criminal or civil
cognizance and if the person injured desired to obtain
compensation the law did not forbid him whereas if he
invoked the penal interposition of the Magistrate, that
interposition was not refused.
From the above it was sought to be argued that if the wrong
done was of a very trivial nature the rendering of
compensation was in the eye of the law sufficient to redress
it and to put an end to the matter without any reflection on
the character of the person charged with having done the
wrong.
We are unable to accept the above reasoning. If a person is
charged with an offence, then unless there is some provision
for composition of it the law must take its course and the
charge enquired into resulting either in conviction or
acquittal. If composition of an offence was permissible
under the law, the effect of
(1) A.I.R. 1942 Mad. 173 at 176.
(2) I.L.R. 1 Bom. 147 at p. 151.
452
such composition would depend on what the law provided for.
If the effect of composition is to amount to an acquittal
then it may be said that no stigma should attach to the
character of the person, but unless that is expressly
provided for the mere rendering of compensation would not
amount to the vindication of the character of the person
charged with the offence.
The High Court, therefore, was not right in coming to the
conclusion that the effect of s. 62 of the Assam Regulation
was the same as that of s. 345(6) of the Criminal Procedure
Code and that no moral turpitude of any description could be
said to be involved in the case. It follows that the High
Court was not right in quashing the order of the Board of
Revenue by the issue of a writ of certiorari. In Nagendra
Nath Bora and another v. The Commissioner of Hills Division
and Appeals, Assam and others(1) the Assam High Court had
quashed certain orders of settlement of a number of country
spirit shops made by the Commissioner of the Hills Division
and Appeals setting aside the orders of the Deputy
Commissioner and the Excise Commissioner. It was there
pointed out that the powers of the Appellate Authorities in
the matter of settlement would be co-extensive with the
powers of the primary authority, namely, the District
Collector of the Sub-Divisional Officer. The same can be
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said of the powers of the Board of Revenue in this case.
This Court observed (p. 1259) that-
"There is no doubt that if the Appellate
Authority whose duty it is to determine
questions affecting the right to settlement of
a liquor shop, in a judicial or quasi-judicial
manner, acts in excess of its authority vested
by law, that is to say, the Act and the rules
thereunder, its order is subject to the
controlling authority of the High Court. The
question, therefore, is whether the High Court
was right in holding that the Appellate
Authority had exceeded its legal power."
The Court examined at length the extent of jurisdiction of
superior courts to issue writs of certiorari. "On an
examination of the authorities of this Court as also of the
courts in England" it was pointed out that "one of the
grounds on which the jurisdiction of the High Court on
certiorari may be invoked, is an error of law apparent on
the face of the, record and not every error either of law or
fact, which can be corrected by a superior court, in
exercise of its statutory powers as a court of appeal or
revision". It was also remarked that an order of certiorari
was not meant to take the place of an appeal and that its
purpose was only to determine whether the inferior tribunal
had exceeded its jurisdiction or had not proceeded in
accordance with the essential requirements of the law which
it was meant to administer.
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1240.
453
In this case the Board of Revenue had not gone wrong in law
in taking into consideration Hazarika’s conduct in rendering
compensation for a forest offence. The Board was quite
competent to take the view that Hazarika was not vigilant in
observing the law even if it had found-when it did not-that
Hazarika’s explanation was not unconvincing. The Board
cannot be said to have exceeded its jurisdiction under the
law or committed an error apparent on the face of the
record. It follows that the High Court was not justified in
quashing the appellate order of the Board under Art. 226 of
the Constitution.
In the result, the appeal is allowed, the order of the High
Court is set aside and that of the Board of Revenue is
restored. The respondent will pay the costs of the
appellant.
Y.P. Appeal allowed.
454