Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G. A. MONTERIO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF AJMER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/09/1956
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
MENON, P. GOVINDA
CITATION:
1957 AIR 13 1956 SCR 682
ACT:
"Officer"-Tests to determine who is an ’officer’-Metal
examiner, called chaser, in Railway Carriage workshop-
Whether officer Indian Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860), s.
21(9)-Prevention of Corruption Act (II of 1947), s. 2.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a Class III servant employed as a metal
examiner, also called chaser, in the Railway Carriage
Workshop at Ajmer. He accepted a sum of Rs. 150 as illegal
gratification for securing a job for some person. He was
charged under s. 5(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947 (Act II of 1947). The appellant contended that he
was not an "officer" within the meaning of the term used in
s. 21(9) of the Indian Penal Code and so could not be a
public servant for purposes of Act II of 1947. It was found
that the appellant was working under the Works Manager who
was certainly an officer of the Government and the duties
which he performed were immediately auxiliary to those of
the Works Manager who was also armed with some authority or
representative character qua the Government.
Held, that the appellant was an officer within the meaning
of s. 21(9) of the Indian Penal Code and, therefore, a
public servant within the meaning of s. 2 of Act 11 of 1947.
The true test in order to determine whether a person is an
officer of the Government, is:-" .
(1) whether he is in the service or pay of the Government
and
(2) whether he is entrusted with the performance of
any,public duty.
The public duty may - be either,a function of - the
Government delegated to him or may be a duty immediately
auxiliary to that of someone who is an officer of the
Government.
Beg. v. Ramajirav Jivbajirav ([1875] XII Bom. H.C.R. 1),
explained.
Nazamuddin V. Queen-Empress, ([1900] I.L.R. 28 Cal. 344) and
Ahad Shah v. Emperor (A.I.R. 1918 Leh. 152), relied on
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 146 of
1954.-
Appeal from the judgment and order dated the 27th November
1954 of the Court of Judicial Com-
683
missioner at Ajmer in Criminal Appeal No. 15 of 1954 arising
out of the judgment and order dated 25th August 1954 of the
Court of Special Judge at Ajmer in Criminal Case No. 5 of
1953.
B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, Porus A. Mehta,
H. R. Khanna and B. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1956. September 21. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
BHAGWATI J.-This Appeal with a certificate of fitness under
article 134(1)(c) of the Constitution against the decision
of the Judicial Commissioner at Ajmer raises an important
question as to the connotation of the word "officer"
contained in section 21(9), Indian Penal Code.
The appellant was a Class III servant employed as a metal
examiner, also called Chaser, in the Railway Carriage
Workshops at Ajmer. I He was charged under section 161,
Indian Penal Code with having accepted from one Nanak Singh
currency notes of the value of Rs. 150 as illegal
gratification as a motive for securing a job for one Kallu.
He was also charged under section 5(1)(d) of Act II of 1947
with abusing his position as a public servant and obtaining
for himself by corrupt or illegal means pecuniary advantage
in the shape of Rs. 150 from the said Nanak Singh. He was
further charged with having committed an offence under
section 420, Indian Penal Code for having induced the said
Nanak Singh to deliver to him currency notes of the value of
Rs. 150 by dishonest representation that be could secure a
job for the said Kallu. The learned Special Judge, State of
Ajmer, who tried him in the first instance for the said
offences convicted him of the offence under section
161,’Indian Penal Code as also the offence under section
5(1) (d) of Act II of 1947 and sentenced him to suffer
rigorous imprisonment for six months and one year
respectively in regard to the same, both the sentences to
run concurrently. In so far,
684
however, as it was not proved that the appellant did not
believe when he accepted the money that he could secure or
would try to secure a job for Kallu, it was held that no
case under section 420, Indian Penal Code was made out and
he was acquitted of
that charge.
The appeal taken to the Judicial Commissioner, State of
Ajmer, by the appellant failed and on the 10th December,
1954, the learned Judicial Commissioner granted to the
appellant a certificate of fitness for appeal on two main
grounds, viz., (1) whether the appellant was an "officer"
within the meaning of clause (9) of section 21, Indian Penal
Code, and (2) whether the provisions of section 137 of the
Railways Act excluded all railway servants from the
definition of public servants except for purposes of
Chapter’ IX, Indian Penal Code.
Concurrent findings of fact were reached by both the Courts
below on the question as to whether the appellant accepted
Rs. 150 from Nanak Singh as and by way of illegal
gratification and these findings could not be and were not
challenged before us by the learned counsel for the
appellant. The only questions which were canvassed before
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us were the two legal points which formed the basis of the
certificate of fitness for appeal granted by the learned
Judicial Commissioner, State of Ajmer, to the appellant.
The second question has now become academical in the facts
of the present case by virtue of a decision of this Court in
Ram Krishan v. Delhi State(1), which lays down that before
the amendment of section 137 of the Railways Act by Act 17
of 1955 railway servants were treated as public servants
only for the purposes of Chapter IX, Indian Penal Code, but
in any event they were public servants under the Prevention
of Corruption Act (Act II of 1947). In so far as the
appellant has, in our -opinion, been rightly convicted of
the offense under section 5(1)(d) of Act If of 1947 and
awarded the sentence of rigorous imprigonment for one year,
the question whether he was rightly convicted of the offence
under section 161,
(1) A.I.R. 1956 S C. 476.
685.
Indian Penal Code for which he was awarded the lesser
sentence of six months’ rigorous imprisonment has become
merely academical and the only question which remains to be
considered by us here is whether he-was an "officer" within
the meaning of section 21 (9), Indian Penal Code.
The provisions of law in regard to the first question may be
conveniently set out at this stage:-
Section 2 of the Prevention of Corruption Act II of 1947
provides:-
"for the purposes of this Act "public servant" means a
public servant as defined in section 21 of the Indian Penal
Code".
Section 21, Indian Penal Code provides so far as is relevant
for the purposes of the present appeal:
"The words ’public servant’, denote a person falling under
any of the descriptions hereinafter following, namely,
Ninth..................... and every officer in the
service or pay of the Government or remunerated by fees or
commission for the performance of any public duty".
There is no doubt that the appellant was. in the service or
pay of the Government -and was performing the duty of a
metal examiner known as Chaser in the Railway Carriage
Workshops at Ajmer and was thus performing a public duty.
It was, however, contended that the appellant was not an
officer within the meaning of that term as used in section
21(9), Indian Penal Code. An Officer, it was contended, on
the authority of Reg. v. Ramajirav jivbajirav and
another(1), meant one to whom was delegated by the supreme
authority some portion of its regulating and coercive powers
and who was appointed to represent the State in its
relations to individual subjects. According to the dictum
of West, J., the word "officer" meant some person employed
to exercise to some extent and in certain circumstances a
delegated function of Government. He was either himself
armed with some authority or repre-
(1) XII Bom. H.C.R. 1.
386
sentative character or his duties were immediately auxiliary
to those of some one who was so armed. It was, therefore,
contended that the appellant being a metal examiner known as
Chaser in the Railway Carriage Workshops had not delegated
to him by the supreme authority some portion of its
regulating and coercive powers nor was he appointed to
represent the State in its relations to individual subjects.
He was neither armed with some authority or representative
character nor were his duties immediately auxiliary to those
of some one who was so armed. He was not employed to
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exercise to some extent and in certain circumstances the
delegated function of Government and, therefore, was not an
"officer" within the meaning of that term as used in section
21(9), Indian Penal Code. If he was thus not an officer of
the Government, he could not be a public servant within the
meaning of section 21, Indian Penal Code nor could he be a
public servant for the purposes of Act 11 of 1947 and could
not be convicted of the offence under section 5(1)(d) of Act
II of 1947.
It has to be noted, however, that the case before the
learned Judges of the High Court of Bombay in 12 Bombay High
Court Reports 1, concerned an Izaphatdar, that is a lessee,
of a village who bad undertaken to keep an account of its
forest revenue and pay a certain proportion to the
Government, keeping the remainder for himself and the
question ’that arose for the consideration of the Court was
whether such a person was an officer within the meaning of
section 21(9), Indian Penal Code. It was in this context
that the aforesaid observations were made by West, J., and
the Court came to the conclusion that Deshmukhs and
Deshpandes would be sufficiently within the meaning of the
clause they being appointed to perform for the State a
portion of its functions or to aid those who were its active
representatives but not so an Izaphatdar or the lessee such
as the accused. He was not an officer but a mere contractor
bound by his engagement but not -by the terms of his office
or employment to pay a certain proportion to the Government.
There was no delegation to him of any
687
authority for coercion or interference nor was he an
assistant appointed to help any one who was vested with such
authority. The duties which he performed were contractual
duties frauduler deception in the discharge of which might
subject him to punishment for cheating but not duties
attached to any office conferred on him or his predecessor
in title, failure to perform which with integrity could make
him liable, as an officer, to the special penalties
prescribed for delinquent public servants.
This decision in 12 Bombay High Court Reports 1, came to be
considered by the Calcutta High Court in Nazamuddin v.
Queen-Empress(1). The petitioner in that case was a peon
attached to the office of the Superintendent of the Salt
Department in the district of Mozafferpur and he had been
convicted under section 161, Indian Penal Code. The
contention urged on behalf of the petitioner was that he did
not fall within the terms of the last portion of clause (9)
of section 21, Indian Penal Code which declared "every
officer in the service or pay of Government" was a public
servant be cause he was not an officer. The case of Reg. v.
Ramajirav Jivbajirav(2) was cited in support of that
contention and the learned Judges of the Calcutta High Court
observed at page 346 as under:-
"The learned Judges in that case had to consider whether a
lessee from Government was on the conditions of his lease a
public servant and, in doing so, they considered generally
the meaning of the term "officer". It was there held that
an officer means "some person employed to exercise, to some
extent and in certain circumstances, a delegated function of
Government. He is either armed with some authority or
representative character, or his duties are immediately
auxiliary to those of some person who is so armed". The
meaning which we are asked to put on these words seems to us
to be too narrow as applied to the present case. The peon
who has been convicted as a public servant is in service and
pay of the Government, and he is attached to the office of
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the Superintendent of the Salt Department. The exact
(1) I.L.R. 28 Cal. 344. (2) XII Bom. H.C.R. 1.
688
nature of his duties is not stated, because this objection
was not taken at the trial., but we must take it that, from
the nature of his appointment, it was his duty to carry out
the orders of his official superior, who undoubtedly is a
public servant, and in that capacity to assist the
Superintendent in the performance of the public duties of
his office. In that sense he would be an officer of
Government, although he might not possibly exercise "any
delegated function of the Government". Still his duties
would be "immediately auxiliary to those of the
Superintendent who is so armed". We think that an "officer
in the service or pay of Government" within the terms of s.
21 of the Penal Code is one who is appointed to some office
for the performance of some pulice duty. In this sense the
peon would come within s. 21, cl. 9".
The true test, therefore, in order to determine whether a
person is an officer of the Government, is:
(1) whether he is in the service or pay of the Government,
and
(2) whether he is entrusted with the performance of any
public duty.
If both these requirements are satisfied it matters not the
least what is the nature of his office, whether the duties
he is performing are of an exalted character or very humble
indeed. As has been stated in Bacon’s Abridgment at Vol.
6, page 2, in the article headed "Of the nature of an
officer and the several kinds of officers":-"The word
"officium’ principally implies a duty, and in the next
place, the charge of such duty; and that it is a rule that
where one man ’bath to do with another’s affairs against his
will, and without his leave, that this is an office, and he
who is in it is an officer". The next paragraph thereafter
may also be referred to in this context:-"There is, a
difference between an office and an employment, every office
being an employment; but there are employments which do not
come under the denomination of offices; such as an agreement
to, make hay, herd a flock, &c; which differ widely from
that of steward of a manor" &c. (Vide 12 Bombay High Court
Reports at page 5).
689
This was the sense in which the decision in 12 Bombay High
Court Reports 1, was understood by the learned Judges of the
Lahore High Court in Ahad Shah v. Emperor(1) when they
observed at page 157:
"But it is not enough that a person should be in the pay or
service of Government to Constitute him a public servant
within the meaning of s. 21 (ninthly), I.P.C. He must also
be an "Officer". That expression is not, of course, to be
restricted to its colloquial meaning of a Commissioned or
non-Commissioned Officer; it means a functional or holder of
some "officium" or office. The office may be one of dignity
or importance; it may equally be humble. But whatever its
nature, it is essential that. the person holding the office,
should have in some degree delegated to him certain
functions of Government".
The question for consideration before the learned Judges of
the Lahore High Court was whether a Quarter Master’s ’clerk
was a public servant within the meaning of that expression
in section 21, Indian Penal Code. On the facts elicited
before them the learned Judges came to the conclusion that
the Quarter Master’s clerk as such was just a Babu and no
more an officer than a labourer or menial employed and paid
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by Government to do public work (See Queen
v. Nachimuttu(2).
if therefore on the facts of a particular case the Court
comes to the conclusion that a person is not only in the
service or pay of the ’Government but is also performing a
public duty, he has delegated to him the functions of the
Government or is in any event performing duties immediately’
auxiliary to those of some one who is an officer of the
Government and is therefore ’an officer’ of the Government
within the meaning of section 21(9), Indian Penal Code.
Applying this test to the facts of the case before us, we
find that the appellant was a Class III servant and was
employed as a metal examiner known as Chaser in the Railway
Carriage Workshop. He was working under the Works Manager
who was certainly
(1) A.I.R. 1918 Lah. 152.
(2) I.L.R. 7 Madras 18,
690
an officer of the Government and the duties which he
performed were immediately auxiliary to those of the Works
Manager who, beside being an officer of the Government was
also armed with some authority or representative character
qua the Government. The appellant was thus, even on a
narrow interpretation of the dicta of West, J. in 12 Bombay
High Court Reports 1, an officer in the service or pay of
the Government performing as such a public duty entrusted to
him by the Government and was therefore, a public servant
within the meaning of section 21 of the Indian Penal Code.
This being the true legal position, this contention of the
appellant also does not avail him and the first question
must be answered against him.
The appellant was, therefore, an officer within the meaning
of section 21(9) and therefore a public servant within the
meaning of section 21, Indian Penal Code and being such
public servant be fell within the definition of a public
servant contained in section 2 of the Prevention of
Corruption Act II of 1947. He was, therefore, on the facts
and circumstances of the case, rightly convicted under
section 5(1) (d) of Act II of 1947. His conviction and the
sentence imposed upon him by the Courts below were therefore
quite in order and this appeal must therefore stand
dismissed.
691