Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
8SUVVARI SANYASI APPARAO AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BODDEPALLI LAKSHMINARAYANA ANDANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/10/1961
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 586 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 8
CITATOR INFO :
F 1965 SC 585 (5)
ACT:
Theft-Removal of property in the bonafide
exercise o right-If good defence-Indian penal Code
1860 (XLV of1860), s. 380.
HEADNOTE:
On a complaint by one L, the Magistrate
convicted the two appellants of an offence under
s. 380 of the Indian Penal Code for having removed
a printing press alleged to have belonged to L to
whom it was sold in 1955 by one R once a declared
keeper of the said press under s. 4 of the Press
Act, 1867. The defence was that the Press
originally belonged to one G. In 1947 transferred
it to N by Ex. D-2 wherein R joined formally, as
declaration of keeper stood in his name. N sold
the Press to the second appellant and another, but
R’s name continued as a printer and keeper of the
press In 1956 the second appellant leased out the
press to the first appellant. According to the
appellants, the second appellant was the owner in
law and fact of the press and the first appellant
was the lessee and had removed the press in the
bonafide exercise of his right as lessee. The case
of the prosecution hinged upon the evidence of R
and that of the appellants rested upon the proof
of the signature of R on Ex. D-2 which R denied.
The handwriting expert stated categorically that
Ex. D-2 bore the signature of R.
The Judge of the High Court who heard the
appeal against the acquittal order, passed by the
Additional District and Sessions Judge, said
nothing about Ex. D-2 and considered the
declaration of R under s. Of the Press Act which
continued unchanged, as sufficient to prove an
offence of theft. According to him, the removal of
the Press amounted to theft even though the
appellants removed it under a bonafide claim of
right.
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^
Held, that where a bonafide claim of right
exists, it can be a Good defence to a prosecution
for theft. An act does not amount to theft, unless
there be not only no legal right but no appearance
or colour of a legal right.
For the purpose of criminal law on the
present case the evidence prima facia pointed to a
transfer of the press by R and to N. The evidence
prima facie also established that the appellants
had taken possession of the press under a
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bonafide claim of right and there was some doubt
about the right of R to transfer the press to L
and further the defence that the appellants took
possession of the press under bonafide claim of
right was a good defence entitling them to an
acquittal.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 31 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated October 7, 1958 of the Andhra Pradesh
High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 456 of 1957.
P . Ram Reddy for the appellants.
Ratna Rao and K R. Choudhri, for respondent
No 1.
A. Ganganatham Chetty and T.M. Sen. for
respondent No.2.
1961. October 5. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-The two appellants who were
granted special leave by this Court, appeal
against the judgment of the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh convicting them, on appeal against
acquittal, of an offence under. 380 of the Indian
Penal Code and sentencing them to six months’
rigorous imprisonment and a fine Rs. 500/- each,
with further rigorous imprisonment for one month
in default of payment of fine.
The prosecution case which had a chequered
career in the High Court and the two Courts below,
is as follows: In Dusi, which is a part of
Bhaskararaopuram, there was a Press known as
Srinivasa Printing Press at Srinivasa Ashram. This
Press existed for over 17 years. Pappala Chinna
Ramadasu (P.W.4) was admittedly a printer and for
some years, the declared keeper of that Press
under s. 4 of the Press and Registration of Books
Act, 1867. The declarations were made in 1944
(Ex.P.4) and 1947 (Ex.P-5). On November 21, 1955,
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Pappala Chinna Ramadasu sold this press by a
registered document (Ex.P. 1 ) to one Boddepalli
Lakshminarayana for Rs 4,000/-, of which
Rs.3,500/- were shown to have been paid in advance
and the balance was received by Pappala Chinna
Ramadasu on January 10, 1956, (Ex.P.2). Two
applications were then made on December 1, 1955,
respectively by Chinna Ramadasu and Boddepalli
Lakshminarayana before the Collector and District
Magistrate for substituting the name of Boddepalli
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Lakshminarayana in place of that of Pappala Chinna
Ramadasu in the declaration. On December 6, 1955,
by Ex. P.11 they were informed that they should
apply under the Press and Registration of Books
Act (25 of 1867). Subsequently, on January 11,
1956, a declaration under s. 4 of that Act was
made by Boddepalli Lakshminarayana and was
accepted (Ex.P.3).
The case of the prosecution further is that
Boddepalli Lakshminarayana went to Kurnool on
March 20, 1956, and in his absence, the two
appellants with two others (who were prosecuted
but acquitted) removed the Printing Press on the
night of March 25, 1956 to Korlakota where the
first appellant, Apparao, resides. A report of the
offence (Ex.P-13), purporting to be written on
March 27, 1956, was handed in at the police
station house on the following day at 8 P.m. The
police took no action, and a complaint was,
therefore, filed on April 4, 1956, by Boddepalli
Laksminarayana. The Judicial Second class
Magistrate, Srikakulam, convicted the two
appellants of an offence under 8. 380 of the
Indian Penal Code, and acquitted the two others,
with whom we are not concerned, and sentenced each
of the appellants to imprisonment till the rising
of the Court and a fine of Rs. 250/-, with simple
imprisonment for one month in default. On appeal,
the Additional District and Sessions Judge,
Srikakulam, set aside the conviction and acquitted
them. The complainant then obtained special leave
of the High Court to file
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appeal against this acquittal, and the High Court
reversed the acquittal, as already indicated
above.
In support of the prosecution case, the
complainant examined four witnesses, including
himself. Pappala Chinna Ramadasu was examined as
P.W.4 to prove that he had sold the Press to
Boddepalli Lakshminarayana, and two other
witnesses were examined to prove the removal of
the Printing Press by the appellants.
The defence of the appellants was as follows:
According to them, the Press originally belonged
to one Govindachari, and on October 25, 1947 he
transferred it to Kuna Appala Naidu by Ex. D-2. In
the registered sale deed then executed,
Govindachari was joined formally by Pappala Chinna
Ramadasu. The sale was for Rs. 6,400/- and on the
same day, a promissory note was executed by Kuna
Appala Naidu in favour of Govindachari, which was
attested by Pappala Chinna Ramadasu. Subsequently,
Appala Naidu made payments of certain amounts, and
endorsements on tho promissory note showing these
payments were signed by Pappala Chinna Ramadasu as
a witness. Kuna Appala Naidu was examined as
D.W.1, and he stated that, the name of Pappala
Chinna Ramadasu was formally included in the
transfer deed, since the declaration stood in his
name. He also stated that the deed, Ex. D.2, was
signed as witness by one Akkala Naidu, who died
years before the present controversy started. Kuna
Appala Naidu later sold the Press to the second
appellant and one Sri K. Sriramda, and the second
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appellant continued in possession as owner.
Pappala Chinna Ramadas continued as the printer,
and his declaration as the keeper of the Press
also continued. In 1953, Pappala Chinna Ramadasu
left the Press for good. The Press was leased out
by the second appellant to one Appanna, and this
leave continued till 1956. On March 19, 1956, an
agreement for leave was executed in favour of the
first appellant, and on March 26, 1956, a
registered deed was duly
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executed. According to the appellants, the Press
WAS removed during the day on March 27 and the
lease amount was paid on the 28th. According to
them, the second appellant was the owner, in law
and in fact, of the Press and the first appellant
was the lessee and had removed the Press in the
bona fide exercise of his right as lessee. The
appellants examined eight witnesses in support of
their case.
The case of the prosecution hinged upon the
evidence of Pappala Chinna Ramadasu, when
confronted with Ex. D-2, he denied his signature,
and stated evasively that he could not identify
the signatures of Govindachari and Appala Naidu.
He admitted, however, that Appanna used to look
after the Press after 1953, though he said that he
used to visit the Press once in two or three
months before he sold it to P.W.1, and that the
correspondence used to be made in his name. He
also stated that he had purchased the Press from
the Madras Type Foundry Co., for RH. 9,107/- but
that the bills were lost, and he added that they
were taken away along with the Press, when it was
removed. The case of the appellants rested upon
the proof of the signature of Pappala Chinna
Ramadasu on Es. D-2 and additionally the proof of
the signature of Akkala Naidu, beoause if Akkala
Naidu signed the document in 1947 and died some
four years before the present controversy started,
there would be good reason to think that a
document of this character could not be a
fabricated one. The appellants examined a
handwriting expert, Sri B. R. Singh (D.W.8). He
stated categorically that Ex.D-2 bore tho
signature of Pappala Chimla Ramadasu. The
signature of Akkala Naidu was proved by his son,
Sri Rangam. He identified the signature of his
father not only on that document but also on Ex.
D-3, the promissory Dote. He also stated that h
father had died in 1951.
From this material, the Additional District
and Sessions Judge, Srikakulam, found that Ex- D-2
13
was not a forged document, as was suggested, but
was amply proved as genuine by Pappala Chandrudu
(D.W 4) and the combined evidence of Sri Rangam
(D. W. 3) and Sri B. R. Singh (D. W. 8). He
therefore, held that Pappala Chinna Ramadasu had
no right to sell the Pres in 1955 to Boddepalli
Lakshminarayana and that his connection with the
Press had effectively ceased from. 1953 even as a
mere printer. It is unnecessary to examine whether
this finding or the finding given by the Judicial
Second Class Magistrate, Srikakulam, who held
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otherwise, was the correct inference from the.
facts. The learned Judge of the High Court, who
heard the appeal against the acquittal, said
nothing about Ex. D-2. According to him, the
removal of the Press amounted to theft, even
though the appellants removed it under a bona fide
claim of right.
In this statement of the law, the learned
Judge was, with respect, clearly in error. This is
what the learned Judge observed:
"Further, to a charge of theft, the plea
that the property was removed under a bona
fide claim of right would not avail. For
example a person who bona fide believes that
the fountain pen on his neighbour’s desk is
his has no right in law to trespass into the
neighbour’s house and snatch away the pen
without the latter’s content."
The first of the statements is certainly not the
law. It is settled law that where a bona fide
claim of right exists, it can be a good defence to
a prosecution for theft. An act does not amount to
theft, unless there be not only no legal right but
no appearance or colour of a legal right. in 2
East . 659, the law was stated a long time ago
thus:
"If there be in the prisoner any fair
pretence of property of right, or if it be
brought into doubt at all, the court will
direct an acquittal."
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And according to I Hale P.C. 509, the best
evidence is that the goods were taken quite
openly. The law thus stated by East and Hale has
not been altered in modern times. There are
numerous cases in which Courts in India have
recognised a bone fide claim of right as a defence
to the charge of theft. See Ratanlal law of Crimes
19th Ed. p. 933.
We are not concerned in this case with the
declaration under the Press and Registration of
Books Act. A declared keeper of the Press is not
necessarily the owner thereof so as to be able to
confer title to the Press upon another. The
ownership of the Press is a matter of the general
law and must follow that law. Whether Pappala
Chinna Ramadasu was not only the declared keeper
of the Press but also its owner can only be
effectively decided by the Civil Court. For
purposes of Criminal law, the evidence prima facie
pointed to a transfer of the Press by Pappala
Chinna Ramadasu and Govindachari to Kuna Appala
Naidu. The evidence prima facie also established
that the appellants had taken possession of the
Press under a bona fide claim of right, and that,
in our opinion. was sufficient to dispose of the
present case. The Additional District and Sessions
Judge, Srikakulam, had rightly held that the
matter was for the decision of the Civil Court,
and that this was not a case of theft under the
Indian Penal Code, and had rightly directed the
acquittal of the appellants. The learned Judge of
the High Court considered the declaration by
Pappala Chinna Ramadasu, which continued
Unchanged, as sufficient to prove an offence of
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theft. In our opinion, in tho circumstances and in
the light of the finding given by the District and
Sessions Judge with regard to Ex. D-2, it was
necessary to go further to see what right Pappala
Chinna Ramadasu had to the Press at all. If this
had been considered, the learned Judge would have
seen that there was some doubt the right of
Pappala Chinna Ramadasu
15
to transfer the Press in 1955 to Boddepalli
Lakshminarayana, and further that the defence that
the appellants took possession of the Press under
a bona. fide claim of right was a good defence
entitling them to an acquittal.
In the result, this appeal must succeed. The
convictions of the appellants and the sentences
passed on them are set aside, they are acquitted
and their bail bonds shall stand discharged. The
fines, if realised, are ordered to be remitted.
Appeal allowed.