Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 231 of 1996
Appeal (crl.) 232 of 1996
Appeal (civil) 6643-44 of 2003
PETITIONER:
The State of Bihar & Anr.
The State of Bihar & Ors.
Niraj Kumar Singh & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Kedar Sao & Anr.
Srikant Prasad Pradhan & Anr.
The State of Bihar & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/08/2003
BENCH:
Doraiswamy Raju & H. K. Sema.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
D. RAJU, J.
Special leave granted in S.L.P. (C) Nos.1140-1141 of 1998.
Common and identical questions of law are involved in these appeals and,
therefore, they are dealt with together.
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.231 OF 1996:
On receipt of secret information, the Range Officer of Forests, Simariya
Range, Chatra South Forest Division, along with a team of forest officials chased
a truck bearing Registration No. UPF 7233 and seized about 445 Kgs. of illicit
Katha together with the truck in exercise of powers under Section 52 of the
Indian Forest (Bihar Amendment) Act, 1990 (hereinafter referred to as "Bihar
Amendment Act, 1990") near Danapur, on 5.2.1991. The seizure list was said to
have been sent to the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, Chatra, by his letter
dated 6.2.1991. On 11.3.1991, the Divisional Forest Officer, Chatra South
Division, the Authorised officer, as per notification dated 2.1.1991 under Section
5 of the Bihar Amendment Act, 1990, informed the Additional Chief Judicial
Magistrate regarding initiation of action. The Range Officer was said to have
submitted prosecution report against the respondents M/s Kedar Sao and Prem
Kumar that the investigation in the matter revealed that the katha seized was
illegally manufactured after illegal cutting of Khair trees from Delho, Jarhi, Kori,
Chardram and Sima protected forest within the Chatra South Forest Division and
sought for the confiscation of the seized truck. After hearing the respondents,
the Authorised Officer by his order dated 19.1.1992 ordered confiscation of the
truck seized, as above, in exercise of the powers under Section 52 of the said
Act. The respondents filed an appeal before the Appellate Authority constituted
under Section 52A of the said Act, viz., The Deputy Commissioner, Chatra.
The respondents seem to have also filed Crl. Writ jurisdiction case No.201
of 1993 (R) seeking to quash the order dated 19.1.92 and also for the release of
the truck in the meantime. A Division Bench of the Patna High Court (Ranchi
Bench) by an order dated 3.9.94 allowed the writ petition on the ground that the
order dated 19.1.92 was totally without jurisdiction and the power to order for
confiscation or forfeiture of the vehicle involved in the offence was with the court
and not the Divisional Forest Officer. The High Court while accepting the stand
of the private party held that the provisions of Bihar Forest Produce (Regulation
of Trade) Act, 1984 (hereinafter referred to as "Trade Act"), alone applied to the
case by virtue of Section 32 of the said Act and the provisions of the Indian
Forest Act, 1927 stood excluded and consequently the Authorities under the
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central enactment had no powers to confiscate the vehicle and the order passed
was wholly without jurisdiction. The matter was left for the decision of the
competent court as to whether the respondents have committed any offence and
observing further that it was for that Court to pass any such orders. Hence, this
appeal by the State of Bihar and the Divisional Forest Officer.
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.232 of 1996:
The seizure effected on 27.3.1993, which is the subject matter of this
appeal, by the Forest Officials at Hunterganj was of the truck bearing
Registration No. BRM-9615 while it was found carrying illicit forest produce like
Harra, Gond, and Katha and the seizure list prepared therefor appears to have
been sent forthwith to the Chief Judicial Magistrate concerned. The Range
Officer of forest was said to have moved on 29.3.1993 the Authorised Officer to
confiscate the seized forest produce and the truck and the said Authority appears
to have initiated action as in the other case, and informed the Chief Judicial
Magistrate, Chatra, of the said move. Notice of such proceedings was said to
have been issued to the owner of the vehicle Mohan Lal Vaidya to show cause
against the proposals and on the said person informing that the vehicle was
under an agreement with the respondent Sri Kant Prasad Pradhan, he was also
issued with a notice to show cause. After hearing the respondent, by an order
dated 3.5.1993, the request for release of the truck came to be rejected since the
respondent could not prove his ownership of the same. While so, the respondent
filed Criminal W.J.C. No.227 of 1993 (R) seeking to quash the confiscation
proceedings and for the release of the truck. The Division Bench of the Patna
High Court (Ranchi Bench) by an order dated 3.9.94 allowed the writ petition of
the respondent on similar grounds as in the other writ petition, passing a similar
nature of order. Hence, this appeal.
Civil Appeals arising out of SLP (C) Nos.1140-1141 of 1998:
On 26.1.1995, the District Forest Officer, Gaya, Bihar, along with a team
of forest officials seized eight trucks including those of the two of the appellants
at Upwan Hotel near Mohaniya within Bhabhna District loaded with Khair wood
(Acacia catechu). The report of the said seizure was said to have been also sent
to the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Bhabhna. The District Forest Officer seems to
have also moved on 27.1.1995 the Divisional Forest Officer, Shahbad at
Sasaram, Bihar, for initiation of confiscation proceedings in respect of all those
trucks and the illegal Khair wood, which they were found to carry. On 28.1.1995,
the Divisional Forest Officer, who is the Authorised Officer for the purpose,
initiated proceedings to show cause against the confiscation and forfeiture of the
seized trucks and goods. After hearing the respondents and others, by an order
dated 25.9.1995, the Authorised Officer ordered confiscation of the illegal Khair
wood as well as the trucks used for its transportation. The appeal filed before the
Appellate Authority viz., The District Magistrate-cum-Collector, Kaimur, Bhabhna,
was also dismissed on 24.1.1996. Further Revision filed thereon also came to
be rejected on 21.6.1997. At this stage, the respondents filed CWJC Nos.6542
and 6543 of 1997 seeking to quash the above orders and for release of their
trucks. A learned Single Judge of the Patna High Court by an order dated
28.8.1997 dismissed the Writ Petitions. Thereupon, L.P.A. Nos. 1206 and 1207
of 1997 came to be filed and a Division Bench of the High Court dismissed the
appeals on 20.10.1997. The Division Bench held that having regard to the
magnitude of the offence, in appropriate cases confiscation has to be resorted to
as is provided in law. Hence, these appeals, taking advantage of the other
appeals already pending before this Court.
Heard Shri Amarendra Sharan, learned Senior Counsel for the State, and
Shri S.K. Sinha for private respondent in Crl. Appeal No.231 of 1996 and the
appellants in two appeals filed by the private parties and other counsel. The
stand taken on behalf of the State in these appeals, as before the High Court,
was that the Bihar Forest Produce (Regulation of Trade) Act, 1984 was enacted
only to provide for regulation in public interest the Trade and related matters of
certain forest produce notified thereunder by creation of the State Monopoly in
such trade in the State of Bihar and it is the Indian Forest Act, 1927, as amended
by the State by the Indian Forest (Bihar Amendment) Act (Bihar Act 9 of 1990)
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which was enacted for the overall protection and management of forests and
forest produce and regulate the transit of such forest produce and the rules made
and notifications issued thereunder that applied to the cases on hand and
consequently the impugned orders of confiscation are quite legal and well within
the competency of the Authorised Officer. In support of such stand reliance was
placed upon the relevant provisions of the Indian Forest Act, 1927, the Bihar
Timber and other Forest Produce Regulation of Transit Rules, 1973, the
provisions of the Bihar Amendment Act (Act 9 of 1990) and the Trade Act. It is
further urged that cutting, felling, girdling, lopping and tapping, etc. of forest trees
and forest produce and/or manufacture of forest produce, as notified therein, are
squarely covered under the Indian Forest Act, 1927 as amended by Bihar Act 9
of 1990 and by virtue of Section 52 (3), as amended by the Bihar Amendment
Act (Act 9 of 1990), power to confiscate inhere in the forest officials notified for
the purpose and, therefore, no exception could be taken to the orders passed in
all these cases. Section 15 of the Trade Act, according to the stand of the State,
stood repealed by necessary implication by Bihar Amendment Act 9 of 1990 and,
in any event, Section 15 cannot be claimed to exclude the Indian Forest Act even
in respect of matters not dealt with or provided for under the Trade Act. The
forest produce seized in all these cases, viz., Katha, Gond, Harra, was said to
have been illegally collected from the trees unlawfully felled and by unlawful
tapping and collection of such produce and, therefore, the provisions of the
Indian Forest Act, as amended by the Bihar Amendment Act and the Rules made
thereunder, alone are attracted to these cases and rightly applied, too. The
decision of the High Court, taking a contra view, would, according to the State,
defeat the very object of the Indian Forest Act, as amended by Bihar Act 9 of
1990, to conserve and protect the forest wealth and arrest and curb large scale
of illegal falling and exploitation of forest wealth, said to be rampant of late, in the
State.
Per contra, the learned counsel for the private parties, while drawing
inspiration from and adopting the reasoning of the High Court, contended that
Section 32 of the Trade Act excluded the applicability of the Indian Forest Act,
1927 to forest produce specified in the Trade Act, that therefore it is only Section
15 etc. of the Trade Act which would be attracted and any action could be taken
under the said Act only. Reliance has also been placed on yet another decision
of a Division Bench reported in Smt. Chandrawati Devi Vs. State of Bihar &
Ors. (1992 Bihar Bar Council Journal 13) taking an identical view as in these
cases under what is claimed to be a similar situation arising with reference to the
Indian Forest Act and the Bihar Kendu Leaves (Control of Trade) Act, 1973.
So far as Criminal Appeal No.231 of 1996 is concerned, the vehicle in
question was found unlawfully carrying 445 Kg. Illegal Katha biscuits, which were
concealed in a specially designed secret chamber built inside the truck behind
the driving seat and the seizure could be effected after a long chase of the
fleeing vehicle for contravention of Sections 33(1), 41(1) and 42(1) of Indian
Forest (Bihar Amendment) Act and Section 20 of the Trade Act. Our attention
was drawn to show from the Schedule of the Trade Act that Khair (Acacia
Catechu) alone is notified and a manufactured product from the said Khair like
Katha biscuits seized and confiscated are not covered by the Trade Act. Katha
biscuits are said to be prepared from the heartwood of Khair by boiling and once
again after reboiling, the thick liquid and by pouring it into moulds to suit the
needs of the manufacturer. On the other hand, the notification issued by the
State Government on 19.10.1959, under Section 30 of the Indian Forest Act,
1927, not only declared the species of trees enumerated therein as reserved in
the protected forest of Chatra Forest Division for purposes of Section 29 (2) but
also prohibited the doing or commission of certain kind of activities including the
collection or subjection to any manufacturing process and removal of any forest
produce. This would, as claimed for the State, go to show, at any rate, by the
very nature of the commodity itself, the inapplicability of Trade Act.
In order to appreciate the claims on behalf of the parties on either side as
to whether recourse to provisions of the Indian Forest Act, 1927 as amended in
Bihar Act 9 of 1900 was permissible in these cases or that it is only the Trade Act
that applied as claimed for private parties, a reference to some of the provisions
in both of the two enactments would become necessary. The Indian Forest Act,
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1927 is a central enactment, to consolidate the law relating to forests, the transit
of forest produce and the duty leviable on timber and other forest produce.
Section 2(3) defines forest offence to mean an offence punishable under the Act
or under any Rule made thereunder. The inclusive definition of ‘forest produce’
in Section 2(4) encompass within its fold ‘catechu’ as well as the trees and
leaves, flowers and fruits and all other parts or produce not mentioned in the
earlier part. Section 41 provides for the State Governments making their own
rules to regulate the transit of all timber and other forest produce. Section 42
provides for penalty for breach of rules made under Section 41. Section 52
provided for seizure of property liable to confiscation and while the subsequently
following provisions deal with further course of action to be followed, Section 55
enables the Court to even confiscate the forest produce as well as the vehicle
etc. used in the commission of the forest offence, in addition to any other
punishment prescribed for such offence.
Finding that not only the commission of forest offences are on the
increase but rampant involving large scale pilferage and depletion of forest
wealth not only causing serious onslaught on the nature and environment
causing ecological imbalance and irreparable loss and damage to public property
- the State Government has chosen to introduce certain drastic legislative
measures to arrest, control and strongly put down their recurrence as well, by
enacting the Indian Forest (Bihar Amendment) Act \026 No.9 of 1990, which came
into force on 10.9.1990 after obtaining the required assent of the President of
India, for the same. Section 52, which was inserted by Section 5 of the
Amendment Act, reads as follows:-
"52. Seizure and its Procedure for the property
liable for confiscation. \026 (1) When there is reason to
believe that a forest offence has been committed in
respect of any forest produce, such produce, together
with all tools, arms, boats, vehicles, ropes, chains or
any other article used in committing any such offence
may be seized by any Forest Officer or Police Officer.
(2) Every officer seizing any property under this
Section shall place on such property a mark indicating
that the same has been so seized and shall, as soon
as may be, either produce the property seized before
an officer not below the rank of the Divisional Forest
Officer authorized by the State Government in this
behalf by notification (hereinafter referred to as the
authorized officer) or where it is, having regard to
quantity of bulk or other genuine difficulty, not
practicable to produce the property seized before the
authorized officer, or where it is intended to launch
criminal proceedings against the offender
immediately, make a report of such seizure to the
Magistrate having jurisdiction to try the offence on
account of which the seizure has been made :
Provided that when the forest produce with
respect to which such offence is believed to have
been committed is the property of Government and
the offender is unknown, it shall be sufficient if the
Officer makes, as soon as may be, a report of the
circumstances to his immediate superior.
(3) Subject to sub-section (5), where the authorized
officer upon production before him of property seized
or upon receipt of report about seizure, as the case
may be, is satisfied that a forest offence has been
committed in respect thereof, he may by order in
writing and for reasons to be recorded confiscate
forest produce so seized together with all tools, arms,
boats, vehicles, ropes, chains or any other article
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used in committing such offence. The Magistrate
having jurisdiction to try the offence concerned may,
on the basis of the report of the authorized
confiscating officer, cancel the registration of a vehicle
used in committing the offence, the licence of the
vehicle driver and the licence of the arms. A copy of
order on confiscation shall be forwarded without
undue delay to the Conservators of Forests of the
forest-circle in which the Forest produce as the case
may be, has been seized.
(4) No order confiscating any property shall be made
under sub-section (3) unless the authorized officer \026
(a) sends an intimation about initiation of
proceedings for confiscation of property to the
Magistrate having jurisdiction to try the offence on
account of which the seizure has been made;
(b) issues a notice in writing to the person from
whom the property is seized, and to any other person
who may appear to the authorized officer to have
some interest in such property;
(c) affords an opportunity to the persons referred
to in clause (b) of making a representation within such
reasonable time as may be specified in the notice
against the proposed confiscation, and
(d) gives to the officer effecting the seizure and the
person or persons to whom notice has been issued
under clause (b), a hearing on date to be fixed for
such purposes.
(5) No order of confiscation under sub-section (3)
of any tools, arms, boats, vehicles, ropes, chains or
any other article (other than the forest produce seized
shall be made if any person referred to in clause (b) of
sub-section (4) proves to the satisfaction of
authorized officer that any such tools, arms, boats,
ropes, chains or other articles were used without his
knowledge or convenience or as the case may be,
without the knowledge or convenience of his servant
or agent and that all reasonable and necessary
precautions had been taken against use of the objects
aforesaid for commission of forest offence."
Section 6 of the Amendment Act inserted Section 52A, which
provided for an appeal against the order of confiscation, while Section 52-B
provided for revision by the person aggrieved. Section 52-C also inserted by
Section 6 of the Bihar Amendment Act reads as hereunder:-
"52-C Bar of Jurisdiction of Courts etc. in certain
circumstances.--- (1) On receipt of intimation under
sub-section (4) of section 52 about initiation of
proceedings for confiscation of property by the
magistrate having jurisdiction to try the offence on
account of which the seizure of property which is
subject matter of confiscation, has been made, no
Court, Tribunal or Authority (other than the authorized
officer, Appellate Authority and Revision Authority
referred to in sections 52, 52A and 52B) shall have
jurisdiction to make orders with regard to possession,
delivery, disposal or distribution of the property in
regard to which proceedings for confiscation are
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initiated in this Act, or any other law for the time being
in force.
Explanation.--- Where under any law for the time
being in force, two or more courts have jurisdiction to
try forest offence, then on receipt of intimation under
sub-section (4) of section 52 by one of the Courts of
Magistrates having such jurisdiction shall be
construed to be receipt of intimation under that
provision by all the Courts and the bar to exercise
jurisdiction shall operate on all such Courts.
(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall affect the power
saved under section 61.
Section 52-D, inserted by Section 6 of the Amendment Act, empowers the
Officers enumerated therein to enter, inspect, search and seize in the following
terms:-
"52-D. Power of entry, inspection, search and
seizure.---
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law
for the time being in force any Forest Officer not
below the rank of a Range Officer of Forests or any
Police Officer not below the rank of a Sub-Inspector,
may, if he has reasonable grounds to believe that any
forest offence has been committed in contravention of
this Act enter upon, inspect and search any place,
premises, appurtenances thereto, land, vehicle or
boat and seize any illegal forest produce and all tools,
arms, boats, vehicles, ropes, chains or any other
article used in committing such offence".
So far as the Bihar Forest Produce (Regulation of Trade) Act, 1984 \026
(Bihar Act 12 of 1984) is concerned, the same was enacted to provide for
regulating in public interest the trade and other related matter of certain produce
by creation of a State Monopoly in such trade in the State of Bihar and made
applicable to such forest produce and on such date(s) as the Government may
by notification specify in this behalf. Forest produce has been defined in Section
2(4) to mean any forest product as specified in the Schedule and thereby called
to be specified forest produce. Section 5 provides that on the issue of a
notification under Section 1(3) & (4), no person other than the Government, an
Officer of Government authorized in writing in this behalf and an Agent in respect
of the unit in which the specified forest produce is grown or found, shall purchase
or transport or import or export such specified produce in and from such area.
What constituted a purchase not in contravention of the Act or what other shall
be deemed to have been purchased in contravention of the provisions of the Act
has also been explained therein, with exceptions indicated relating thereto.
Consequently, the bar or restrictions and regulations envisaged in respect of any
area or unit, in respect of the specified forest produce, comes into play only when
it is shown that a notification under Section 1(4) has been issued and published.
Equally so would be the point of time when the enforcement of penal provisions
provided under this Act would arise. This Act also contains provisions enabling
the Government to fix prices for purchase, opening of depots and display of
pricelist, registration of manufacturers, traders and industrialists, disposal of
forest produce, retail sale of specified produce etc. Section 14 provides that
every Forest Officer and Police Officer shall prevent and may interfere for the
purposes of preventing commission of any offence under this Act. Section 15, on
which reliance is sought to be placed for the private parties \026 reads as follows:-
"15. Power to entry, search, seizure, etc.\027(1)
Any Forest Officer not below the rank of a Range
Officer of Forest or Police Officer not below the rank
of a Sub-Inspector, or any other person authorized
by the Government in this behalf may with a view to
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securing compliance with the provision of this Act or
the rule made thereunder, or to satisfying himself
that the said provisions have been complied with\027
(i) stop and search any person, boat,
vehicle or receptacle used or intended to be
used for the transport of specified forest
produce;
(ii) enter and search any place;
(iii) seize the specified forest produce in
respect of which he suspects that any provision
of this Act or the rules made thereunder has
been, is being or is about to be contravened
along with the receptacles containing such
produce and all tools, ropes, chains, boats
or/and vehicles used in committing any such
offence.
(2) The provisions of sections 102 and 103 of
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (II of 1974)
relating to search and seizure shall so far as may
be, apply to searches and seizure under this
section.
(3) Every Officer seizing specified forest produce
and other property under clause (iii) of sub-section
(1) above shall place on such produce, if physically
possible, a property mark indicating that the same
has been seized and shall, except when the
offender agrees in writing forthwith to get the
offence compounded in the manner prescribed,
make a report of such seizure to the Magistrate.
(4) Any Forest Officer not below the rank of a
Range Officer of Forest, who or whose subordinate
has seized any property other than the specified
forest produce under clause (iii) of sub-section (1)
may release the same on the execution by the
owner thereof of a bond for the production of the
property so released, if and when so required before
the Magistrate."
Sections 20 and 21 of this Act read as hereunder:-
"20. Penalty.-- If any person contravenes any of the
provisions of this Act or rules made thereunder\027
(1) he shall be punished with imprisonment which
may extend to one year or fine which may extend to
two thousand rupees, or both :
Provided that penalties which are double of those
mentioned above may be inflicted in case where the
offence is committed after preparation for resistance
to lawful authority or where the offender has been
previously convicted of a like offence;
(2) the specified forest produce in respect of which
such contravention has been made or such part
thereof as the Court may deem fit, and any boat,
tools, vehicle, animal, vessel, or other conveyance or
any other articles used in committing such offence
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shall be forfeited to Government and shall vest in
Government free from all encumbrances :
Provided that if the Court is of the opinion that it is not
necessary to direct confiscation in respect of whole,
or as the case may be, any part of the specified forest
produce or other property, it may, for the reasons to
be recorded refrain from doing so.
(3) such forfeiture may be in addition to any other
punishment prescribed for such offence.
21. Disposal of produce and other seized property
on conclusion of trial. \026 On the conclusion of the trial
of the offence any specified forest produce in respect
of which such offence has been committed, if it is the
property of Government or has been confiscated and
other forfeited property shall be taken charge of by a
Forest Officer, and in any other case, may be disposed
of in such manner as the Court may direct."
Section 28 provides that when in any proceeding taken under this Act, a
question arises as to whether any specified forest produce is the property of the
Government such produce shall be presumed to be the property of the
Government until the contrary is proved.
Section 32, on which strong reliance has been placed and which seems to
have weighed with the High Court, in countenancing the claim of the private
parties, reads as follows:-
"32. Limitation of applicability of Indian Forest
Act, 1927 and any other law or order.\027(1) Nothing
contained in the Indian Forest Act, 1927 (XVI of 1927)
shall apply to specified forest produce in respect of
matters for which provisions are contained in this Act.
(2) Nothing contained in any other thing having force
of law in any region of the State shall apply to the
specified forests produce in respect of matters for
which provisions have been made in this Act."
The High Court seems to have very much relied upon Section 32 of the
Trade Act to arrive at the conclusion that the Indian Forest Act, 1927 which in its
opinion was a general provision has no application with regard to trade and other
related matters concerning forest produce notified to be specified forest produce
under the Trade Act and that for dealing with any contravention in respect of any
transaction in specified forest produce one has to refer to only the Trade Act and
if any violation is actually found then the offence will be under the Trade Act and
not under the Indian Forest Act, 1927. The High Court on that premise appears
to have held that if there is any provision for confiscation of vehicle in the Trade
Act, that would only apply for the reason that any violation in respect of
transaction of specified forest produce can amount to offence only under the
Trade Act and in respect of specified forest produce there cannot be a forest
offence within the meaning of the Forest Act, 1927 so as to confer jurisdiction on
an Officer authorized under the said Act to confiscate either specified forest
produce or the vehicle connected therewith. It may be pointed out at this stage
that the High Court in the course of its judgment noticed specifically that on the
admitted position of fact proceedings in question have been initiated under the
relevant provisions of the Indian Forest Act, 1927.
The High Court appears to have not only misdirected itself as to the nature
of offence but also misconstrued the relevant provisions of the Trade Act and
ignored as well certain vitally important provisions contained in the Bihar
Amendment Act 9 of 1990. A proper comparison, scrutiny and consideration of
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the relevant provisions of the respective enactments Central Act and the state
amendment by Bihar Act 9 of 1990 on the one side and the Trade Act on the
other would go to show that the object underlying them are not only distinct and
separate but the essence, import, content and character as well as nature of
offence and the essential ingredients to constitute such offences under the
respective enactments are wholly different and the offences under these two
laws not only can co-exist but one cannot also be held to be destructive of the
other. In Municipal Corporation of Delhi Vs. Shiv Shanker [(1971) 1 SCC
442], while dealing with the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 and Fruit
Products Order 1955 and the case of a prosecution under the former enactment
of a licencee selling an adulterated goods while dealing with such goods under a
licence granted under order issued under the Essential Commodities Act, 1955,
this Court held that despite the patent differences in their main objects of these
laws merely because it may in certain respects or aspects cover the same field
also one can be said to be inconsistent or repugnant with the other.
As to how a non obstante clause has to be construed and considered in
cases of alleged inconsistency or repugnancy between the two legislations, a
Constitution Bench of this Court in M. Karunanidhi Vs. Union of India & Anr.
[(1979) 3 SCC 431] observed as follows:-
"35. On a careful consideration, therefore, of the
authorities referred to above, the following
propositions emerge :
1. That in order to decide the question of
repugnancy it must be shown that the two
enactments contain inconsistent and
irreconcilable provisions, so that they cannot
stand together or operate in the same field.
2. That there can be no repeal by implication
unless the inconsistency appears on the face
of the two statues.
3. That where the two statutes occupy a particular
field, but there is room or possibility of both the
statutes operating in the same field without
coming into collision with each other, no
repugnancy results.
4. That where there is no inconsistency but a
statute occupying the same field seeks to
create distinct and separate offences, no
question of repugnancy arises and both the
statutes continue to operate in the same field."
Reference has also been made therein to a passage from Craies in his
Statute Law \026 6th Edition, Page 369, which reads as hereunder:-
"Many earlier statutes contain clauses similar in effect
to the general rule, but without the confusing words as
to contrary intention. These statutes, of some of which
a list is given below, seem not to be affected by the
above rule, save so far as it enables the revisers of the
statute book to excise the particular clauses. In
accordance with this rule, penalties imposed by statute
for offence already punishable under a prior statute are
regarded as cumulative or alternative and not as
replacing the penalty to which the offender was
previously liable."
The provisions contained in Section 32 of the Trade Act are merely
exclusionary in nature rendering the provisions contained in the Indian Forest
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Act, 1927 inapplicable to only such of the specified forest produce as defined
under the Trade Act, and that too only in respect of matters for which the
provisions are contained in the Trade Act. Likewise the application of any other
thing having force of law in any region of the State is excluded in respect of such
produce and such matters as are provided for in the Trade Act. Though the
Indian Forest Act, 1927 is a central enactment being a legislation pertaining to an
entry in the concurrent list, the State of Bihar has chosen to amend the said law
in its application to the State of Bihar by the Bihar Amendment Act 9 of 1990, by
introducing its own sentence by way of punishment and scheme of provisions
providing for powers of entry, inspection, search and seizure as well as for
confiscation of produce or other properties seized and the procedure therefor in
its entirety. As noticed supra, the Bihar State Legislature has chosen to enact by
the Amendment Act, 1990 more comprehensive and stringent provisions by
providing for enhanced and deterrent punishments to deal with the forest
offences found to be rampant and on steep rise within the State providing its own
class of officers to deal with such situations, the manner and procedure to be
adopted in dealing with such offences and the nature, content and width of
powers, they should be armed with to make it onerous and impossible for
violators by dealing them with an iron hand by visiting upon such offenders with a
drastic and severe punishment for anyone guilty of such forest offences. The
Trade Act, apart from being a legislation of the year 1984 and strictly confined to
the nature, class and category of offences pertaining to violation of the provisions
in the said Act more in the nature of Regulation of Trade in the context of
monopoly created in favour of the State and that too with reference to particular
notified and enumerated forest produce defined for the purpose of the said Act to
be ’specified forest produce’, cannot be said to be destructive of the powers
conferred upon the Authorised officer, the Appellate and Revisional Authorities.
Section 32 of the Trade Act, thus, has no effect of effacing the Central Act as
amended by Bihar Amendment Act, 1990 completely so as to disarm the
concerned Authorities totally from having recourse to those provisions even in
respect of offences which pertain, arise and relating to the provisions contained
therein. The assumption on the part of the High Court that once by virtue of a
notification under Section 1(3) and (4) of the Trade Act, a produce become
specified forest produce, any and every offence in respect of such produce, could
be dealt with only under the Trade Act only renders meaningless the specific
words, "in respect of matters for which provisions have been made in this Act".
Section 32 cannot be viewed merely from the angle of offences and punishments
and procedure in respect of offences. The Regulatory measures in the Central
Act and the rules made thereunder on the one hand and those under the Trade
Act and the rules made thereunder on the other differ and consequently, the
main object of Section 32 of the Trade Act seems to be to do away with the need
to comply with and/or adhere to the rigor of the restrictions in the Central Act, in
addition to satisfying the requirements of the stipulations contained in the Trade
Act and the rules made thereunder. There is nothing as a matter of any general
principle for denying the very same legislature - the legislature of the Bihar State,
the power to enact different provisions in either separate Acts or in one and the
same Act conferring distinct and separate powers upon more than one authority
to deal with a particular situation arising, as it may deem fit, or as the exigencies
of the situation may warrant. All the more so, in our view, in this case, having
regard to Section 53-C inserted by the Bihar Amendment Act 9 of 1990 in the
Indian Forest Act, 1927, which in unmistakable language of a mandatory nature,
ordaining that on receipt of intimation under sub-section (4) of Section 52 about
initiation of proceedings for confiscation of property, by the Magistrate having
jurisdiction to try the offence on account of which the seizure of property, which is
subject matter of confiscation, has been made, no Court, Tribunal or Authority
(other than the Authorized Officer, Appellate Authority and Revision Authority
referred to in Sections 52, 52A and 52B) shall have jurisdiction under the said Act
or any other law for the time being in force to make orders with regard to
possession, delivery, disposal or distribution of the property in regard to which
proceedings for confiscation are initiated. That apart, it must also be kept in
consideration unlike the position under the Central Act in view of Section 17 of
the Trade Act, no court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under
the said Act except on report in writing from the authority specified therein.
Further, being a latter law, which has also obtained the assent of the President of
India on 5.3.1990, the same will apply notwithstanding the Trade Act of the year
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1984 and notwithstanding the fact that the said law had also obtained the assent
of the President. The assent of the President to the 1984 Trade Act may help for
its survival notwithstanding the Central Enactment / Indian Forest Act, 1927 in
relation to matters provided for under the Trade Act by virtue of Section 32
contained therein, but in view of the subsequent State Enactment the Bihar
Amendment Act 9 of 1990, which had also obtained the assent of the President,
the special procedure introduced under the Bihar Amendment Act 1990
empowering the designated authorities with more comprehensive and stringent
powers to order for the confiscation of the property to the exclusion of the Court,
Tribunal or any Authority cannot be curtailed, whittled down or circumscribed, in
any manner, by any of the provisions contained in the Trade Act of the year
1984. Section 52-C, which seems to have been completely overlooked by the
High Court, clinches the issue and dissuade any such construction. There is also
nothing wrong in more than one enactments conferring the same powers to be
exercised in the same or different circumstances upon two different and distinct
class of authorities and merely because they may have some overlapping
features alone, conflict or inconsistency cannot be attributed to the legislature
deny thereby such powers to the category of officers upon whom the legislature
has chosen to specifically confer powers with the object of ensuring a deterrent
exercise of the same keeping in view the growing attempts to deplete forest
wealth. Any such construction which tends to defeat the very purpose of
conferring such powers upon the authorities of the Department and frustrates
completely the object of the legislative amendment itself, is to be meticulously
avoided by courts, particularly in the context of overriding effect engrafted in
Section 52-C, stipulating that on receipt of a communication by the Magistrate
concerned from the specified officer of the Forest Department of the intention of
the specified authority to invoke powers under Section 52 to confiscate or forfeit
the property, which is subject matter of the offence, no Court, Tribunal or
authority other than the Authorized Officer, Appellate Authority and Revision
Authority shall have jurisdiction over the said matter. Consequently, we are
unable to agree with the decision of the High Court or approve of the reasoning
given in the judgment in support of its conclusion. The decision reported in Smt.
Chandrawati Devi (supra) said to have been rendered by a Division Bench of
the Patna High Court in the context of similar claims vis-‘-vis Bihar Kendu
Leaves (Control of Trade) Act, 1973 and the Indian Forest Act, 1927 cannot also
be considered to lay down the correct position of law, in the light of what has
been held by us in this judgment.
For all the reasons stated above, Criminal Appeal Nos.231 and 232 of
1996 shall stand allowed and the other two Civil Appeals shall stand dismissed.
No costs.
The concerned and competent authorities shall be at liberty to pursue
further course of action as a consequence of our decision and to this extent, the
interim orders already passed shall no longer stand in their way.