Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 671-678 of 1987
PETITIONER:
State of Rajasthan
RESPONDENT:
Hat Singh & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/01/2003
BENCH:
R.C. LAHOTI & BRIJESH KUMAR.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
R.C. Lahoti, J.
The Rajasthan Sati (Prevention) Ordinance 1987 was
promulgated by the Governor of Rajasthan on 01.10.1987. The
following Sections of the Ordinance are relevant for our purpose and
hence are extracted and reproduced hereunder :-
2(b). "glorification", in relation to Sati, includes, among other things,
the observance of any ceremony or the taking out of a
procession in connection with the Sati or the creation of a trust
or the collection of funds or the construction of a temple with a
view to perpetuating the honour of, or to preserve the memory
of the person committing Sati.
2(c). Sati means the burning or burying alive of any widow
alongwith the body of her deceased husband or with any article,
object or thing associated with the husband, irrespective of
whether such burring is voluntary on the part of the widow or
otherwise.
5. Punishment for glorification of Sati Whoever does any act for
the glorification of Sati shall be punishable with imprisonment
for a term which shall not be less than one year but which may
extend to seven years and with fine which shall not be less than
five thousand rupees but which may extend to thirty thousand
rupees.
Part III
Power of Collector and District Magistrate to
prevent offences relating to Sati
6. Power to prohibit certain acts (1) Where the collector and
District Magistrate is of the opinion that Sati is being or is
about to be committed in any area, he may, by order, prohibit
the doing of any act towards the commission of Sati in such
areas and for such period as may be specified in the order.
(2) The Collector and District Magistrate may also, by order,
prohibit the glorification in any manner of the commission of
sati by any person in any area or areas specified in the Order.
(3) Whoever contravenes any order made under sub-sec (1)
or sub-sec (2) shall, if such contravention is not punishable
under any other provisions of this Ordinance, be punishable
with imprisonment for a term which shall not be less than one
year but which may extend to seven years and with fine which
shall not be less than five thousand rupees but which may
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extend to thirty thousand rupees.
19. Removal of doubts For the removal of doubts, it is hereby
declared that nothing in this Ordinance shall affect any temple
constructed for the glorification of Sati and in existence
immediately before the commencement of this Ordinance or the
continuance of any ceremonies in such temple in connection
with such Sati.
The Ordinance was replaced by the Rajasthan Sati (Prevention)
Act 1987 which received the assent of the President on 26th
November, 1987. Sub-Section (3) of Section 1 provides that it shall
be deemed to have come into force on 1st October 1987. The relevant
provisions of the Act with which we are concerned remain the same as
they were in the Ordinance excepting that the word ’Act’ has been
replaced for the word ’Ordinance’ wherever it occurs.
In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 6(2) of the
Ordinance, the Collector and District Magistrate, Jaipur issued the
following order on 6th October 1987 :-
"In exercise of powers vested in me vide Section
6(2) of the Rajasthan Sati (Prevention) Ordinance,
1987, I, J.N. Gaur, Collector & District Magistrate,
District: Jaipur, Jaipur do hereby prohibit with
immediate effect, the glorification of the commission
of Sati in any manner in District Jaipur, by any
person or Association of persons.
Issued on the 6th day of October 1987 under my hand
and seal of my office.
(J.N. Gaur)
(Collector & District Magistrate)
Jaipur "
The Ordinance does not require the order of the Collector
issued under Section 6(2) of the Ordinance to be published in the
official gazette so as to be effective. Undisputedly, the order was not
published in the official gazette. The manner in which the order was
publicized can best be demonstrated by quoting from the judgment of
the High Court :-
311.. the Collector’s order dated 06.10.1987 relating to
Rajasthan Sati (Prevention) Ordinance, 1987 had been sent
in the form of a press note for publication in local news
papers on 07.10.1987. This news was published in
Rajasthan Patrika, Rastra Doot, Nav Bharat Times, Nav
Jyoti and some other newspapers on 07.10.1987. In
addition to this, the news was broadcast by the Jaipur
Station of All India Radio on 07.10.1987. That the
Collector’s order dated 06.10.1987 was broadcast by Jaipur
Station of All India Radio on 07.10.1987 in Hindi at 7.10
PM and 8.05 in Rajasthan by Smt. Ujjwala and Shri Ved
Vyas respectively is stated in a letter produced on
06.11.1987.
Three incidents took place leading to the registration of three
offences pursuant to the FIRs recorded and registered at local police
stations. On 08.10.1987, a mass rally was organised which, according
to the prosecution, contravened the prohibitory order issued by the
Collector. FIR No. 270/87 was registered at Police Station Moti
Doongri, Jaipur u/s 6(3) of the Ordinance in which Section 5 was also
added later. On 20.10.1987, Hindi Dharam Raksha Samiti , Kotputli
Branch, contravened the prohibitory order of the Collector at Kotputli.
FIR No. 238/87 was registered at Police Station Kotputli. On
28.10.1987, Dharam Raksha Samiti demonstrated against the
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Ordinance and thereby contravened the Collector’s prohibitory order.
In that regard FIR No. 451/87 was registered on 30.10.1987 at Police
Station Manakchowk. Several accused persons were arrested and
investigation commenced. Some of the persons filed petitions from
jail, which were treated by the High Court as petitions seeking the
writ of Habeas Corpus. A few petitions were filed u/s 482 CrPC
seeking quashing of the prosecution. All these petitions were taken up
for consolidated hearing. Challenge was laid to the vires of the
several provisions of the Ordinance and the Division Bench of the
High Court was persuaded to examine the constitutional validity
thereof, later replaced by and included in the Act. The cases before
the Division Bench were argued from very many angles. For our
purpose, it would suffice to sum up the following relevant findings :-
(1) Barring Section 19, the Ordinance and the Act are perfectly
legal and constitutional.
(2) Section 19 of the Ordinance and the Act are unconstitutional
and declared void and struck down.
(3) The Ordinance and the Act are not violative of the freedom of
religion under Articles 25 and 26 of the Constitution.
(4) The prohibitory order issued by the Collector on 06.10.1987,
was not duly published. If the prohibitory order would have
been published in the Official Gazette, it would have amounted
to publication. However, the Ordinance or the Act does not
insist on such publication. It could have been published in a
manner other than by way of publication in the Official Gazette.
The evidence that has been produced before the High Court
goes to show that although radio bulletins broadcast and
newspapers carried news about some prohibitory order having
been issued by the Collector, the fact remains that the
prohibitory order of the Collector was not as such published in
any of the newspapers nor read out in the news bulletins.
Therefore, the prohibitory order cannot be said to have been
promulgated. In the opinion of the High Court, in the absence
of the prohibitory order dated 06.10.1987 having been
published in accordance with law, the same could not have been
enforced and no one could be prosecuted for the alleged
defiance or violation of the prohibitory order issued by the
Collector.
Yet another important finding arrived at by the High Court is
that the provisions of Sections 5 & 6 are overlapping. Both the
provisions aim at declaring glorification of Sati as an offence making
the same punishable with imprisonment. Once a prohibitory order has
been issued u/s 6(2), the provisions of Section 5 merge into the
provisions of Section 6 and thereafter a person can be held liable for
commission of an offence only by reference to sub-section (3) of
Section 6 as having contravened an order made either under sub-
section (1) or sub-section (2). Inasmuch as, in the opinion of the High
Court, the prohibitory order of the Collector was not published in
accordance with law, the prosecution u/s 6(3) was not maintainable,
and, therefore, could not be proceeded with. All the prosecutions
were, therefore, directed to be quashed.
Before this Court none of the parties has made any submissions
regarding the constitutional validity of Section 19 of the Act and,
therefore, we are not called upon to express any opinion thereon. The
only submission made before this court on behalf of the appellant
State was that the High Court was not right in forming an opinion that
Sections 5 and 6 are overlapping and, therefore, once a prohibitory
order has been made by the Collector under sub-section (1) or (2) of
Section 6, then Section 5 ceases to apply. We find force in the
submission of the learned counsel for the State.
Article 20 (2) of the Constitution provides that no person shall
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be prosecuted and punished for the same offence more than once. To
attract applicability of Article 20(2) there must be a second
prosecution and punishment for the same offence for which the
accused has been prosecuted and punished previously. A subsequent
trial or a prosecution and punishment are not barred if the ingredients
of the two offences are distinct.
The rule against double jeopardy is stated in the maxim nemo
debet bis vexari pro una et eadem causa. It is a significant basic rule
of Criminal Law that no man shall be put in jeopardy twice for one
and the same offence. The rule provides foundation for the pleas of
autrefois acquit and autrefois convict. The manifestation of this rule
is to be found contained in Section 26 of the General Clauses Act,
1897, Section 300 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 and
Section 71 of the Indian Penal Code. Section 26 of the General
Clauses Act provides "Where an act or omission constitutes an
offence under two or more enactments, then the offender shall be
liable to be prosecuted and punished under either or any of those
enactments, but shall not be liable to be punished twice for the same
offence (emphasis supplied)." Section 300 of the CrPC provides, inter
alia, - "A person who has once been tried by a court of competent
jurisdiction for an offence and convicted or acquitted of such offence
shall, while such conviction or acquittal remains in force, not be liable
to be tried again for the same offence, nor on the same facts for any
other offence for which a different charge from the one made against
him might have been made under sub-section (1) of Section 221 or for
which he might have been convicted under sub-section (2) thereof
(emphasis supplied)." Both the provisions employ the expression
"same offence".
Section 71 of IPC provides
"Where anything which is an offence is made-up of parts, any
of which parts is itself an offence, the offender shall not be punished
with the punishment of more than one of such his offences, unless it
be so expressly provided.
Where anything is an offence falling within two or more
separate definitions of any law in force for the time being by which
offences are defined or punished, or
where several acts, of which one or more than one would by
itself or themselves constitute an offence, constitute, when combined,
a different offence,
the offender shall not be punished with a more severe
punishment than the Court which tries him could award for any one of
such offences.
The leading Indian authority in which the rule against double
jeopardy came to be dealt with and interpreted by reference to Article
20(2) of the Constitution is the Constitution Bench decision in
Maqbul Hussain v. State of Bombay AIR 1953 SC 325. If the
offences are distinct, there is no question of the rule as to double
jeopardy being extended and applied. In State of Bombay v. S.L.
Apte & Another, AIR 1961 SC 578, the Constitution Bench held that
the trial and conviction of the accused u/s 409 IPC did not bar the trial
and conviction for an offence u/s 105 of Insurance Act because the
two were distinct offences constituted or made up of different
ingredients though the allegations in the two complaints made against
the accused may be substantially the same. In Om Prakash Gupta v.
State of UP, AIR 1957 SC 458 and The State of Madhya Pradesh v.
Veereshwar Rao AIR 1957 SC 592, it was held that prosecution and
conviction or acquittal u/s 409 of IPC do not debar the accused being
tried on a charge u/s 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947
because the two offences are not identical in sense, import and
content. In Roshan Lal & Ors. v. State of Punjab AIR 1965 SC
1413, the accused had caused disappearance of the evidence of two
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offences u/s 330 and 348 IPC and, therefore, he was alleged to have
committed two separate offences u/s 201 IPC. It was held that neither
Section 71 IPC nor Section 26 of the General Clauses Act came to the
rescue of the accused and the accused was liable to be convicted for
two sets of offences u/s 201 IPC though it would be appropriate not to
pass two separate sentences.
The offences u/s 5, under Section 6(1) r/w Section 6(3) and
Section 6(2) r/w Section 6(3) are three distinct offences. They are not
the same offences. This is clear from a bare reading of Sections 5 and
6. While Section 5 makes the commission of an act an offence and
punishes the same; the provisions of Section 6 are preventive in nature
and make provision for punishing contravention of prohibitory order
so as to make the prevention effective. Commission of sati may or
may not have taken place and may not actually take place (after the
issuance of prohibitory order), yet the prohibitory order under sub-
section (1) or (2) of Section 6 can be issued. Section 5 punishes "any
act for the glorification of Sati". The words ’glorification’ and ’sati’
are both defined in the Act. What is prohibited by the Collector and
District Magistrate u/s 6(1) is "any act towards the commission of
Sati" subject to his forming an opinion that Sati is being committed or
is about to be committed. The prohibition is against abetment of Sati
or doing of any act, which would aid or facilitate the commission of
Sati. On such prohibitory order being promulgated, its contravention
would be punishable u/s 6(3) without regard to the fact whether Sati is
committed or not and whether such act amounts to glorification of
Sati or not. Under Section 6(2), the Collector and District Magistrate
may prohibit "the glorification in any manner" of the commission of
Sati. The expression ’the glorification in any manner’ carries a wider
connotation than the expression ’the glorification of sati’ as employed
in Section 5. In case of prosecution under Section 6(2) r/w Section
6(3), what would be punishable is such defiance or contravention of
the order of the Collector and District Magistrate, as has the effect of
the glorification in any manner of the commission of Sati. In
distinction therewith, it is the actual doing of an act for the
glorification of Sati which is made punishable u/s 5. The Legislature
in its wisdom thought fit to enact Section 5, worded very widely,
contemplating cognizance post happening and also enact Section 6
which aims at prevention in anticipation of happening. The object
sought to be achieved by enacting Section 6 is to empower the
Collector and District Magistrate to take preventive action by
prohibiting certain acts and enable cognizance being taken and
prosecution being launched even before commission of sati or
glorification of sati has actually taken place. Thus the sense, import
and content of the offence u/s 5 are different from the one under
Section 6(3).
The gist of the offence under Section 5 is the commission of an
act, which amounts to glorification of Sati. It is the commission of act
by itself, which is made punishable on account of the same having
been declared and defined as an offence by Section 5 of the
Ordinance/Act. The gist of the offence under Section 6 of the
Ordinance/Act is the contravention of the prohibitory order issued by
the Collector and District Magistrate. Section 5 punishes the
glorification of Sati. Section 6 punishes the contravention of
prohibitory order issued by the Collector and District Magistrate,
which is a punishment for the defiance of the lawful authority of the
State to enforce law and order in the society. What is punished under
Section 5 is the criminal intention for glorification of sati; what is
punishable under Section 6 is the criminal intention to violate or defy
the prohibitory order issued by the lawful authority. We do not agree
with the High Court that the ingredients of the offences contemplated
by Section 5 and Section 6(3) are the same or that they necessarily
and in all cases overlap or that prosecution and punishment for the
offences under Sections 5 and 6 (3) both are violative of Article
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20(2) of the Constitution or of the rule against double jeopardy.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that in a given case, same set
of facts may give rise to an offence punishable under Section 5 and
Section 6(3) both. There is nothing unconstitutional or illegal about
it. So also an act which is alleged to be an offence under Section 6(3)
of the Act and if for any reason prosecution u/s 6 (3) does not end in
conviction, if the ingredients of offence under Section 5 are made out,
may still be liable to be punished under Section 5 of the Act. We,
therefore, do not agree with the High Court to the extent to which it
has been held that once a prohibitory order under sub-section (1) or
(2) has been issued, then a criminal act done after the promulgation of
the prohibitory order can be punished only under Section 6(3) and in
spite of prosecution u/s 6(3) failing, on the same set of facts the
person proceeded against cannot be held punishable u/s 5 of the Act
although the ingredients of Section 5 are fully made out.
The appeals are allowed. The judgment of the High Court is set
aside. The prosecution shall proceed against the accused persons
consistently with the observations made hereinabove. In view of the
delay which has already taken place, it is directed that the Trial Court
shall give precedence to the present case and try to conclude the
proceedings as expeditiously as possible preferably within a period of
six months from the date of first appearance of the accused persons
before it pursuant to this order.