Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAJJAN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/08/1963
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 464 1964 SCR (4) 630
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC2091 (5)
RF 1979 SC 602 (6)
R 1981 SC1186 (11)
ACT:
Corruption-Criminal misconduct in discharge of official
duty Conviction based on presumption-Validity-Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947, (2 of 1947), s. 5(3).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was an overseer and then became a Sub-Divi-
sional Officer in the Irrigation Department. On the basis
of a complaint, a case was registered against him and after
sanction by the Government had been obtained for his
prosecution under s. 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act and s. 161/165 of the Indian Penal Code he was tried by
the special judge on a charge under s. 5(2) of the Act. The
allegation made was that the appellant demanded his
commission from the contractors on the cheques issued to
them and on are Used he started with-holding their payments
and putting obstacles in the smooth execution of the work
entrusted to them. The commission was then paid from time
to time and the payments were fully entered in the regular
Rokar and Khata Bhais. The trial court accepted the
prosecution case and found that the total pecuniary
resources and property in appellant’s possession or in the
possession of his wife and son were disproportionate to his
known sources of income and that such possession had not
been satisfactorily accounted for. On these findings the
presumption under s. 5(3) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act was raised and the appellant was convicted and sentenced
to rigorous imprisonment for one year and a fine of Rs.
5,000/- in default, rigorous imprisonment for six months.
On appeal, the conviction and sentence were confirmed by the
High Court. The two learned judges of the High Court,
however, differed on the question whether pecuniary
resources and property acquired before the Prevention of
Corruption Act came into force, could be taken into
consideration for the purpose of s. 5(3) of the Act.
Held, that to take into consideration the pecuniary
resources or property in the possession of the accused or
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any other person on his behalf which were acquired before
the date of the Act, was in no way giving the Act a
retrospective operation.
Maxwell on Interpretation of statutes, 11th Edition, P. 210
and State of Bomaby v. Vishnu Ramchandra, [1961] 2 S.C.R.
26, relied on.
Sub-section 3 of s. 5 does not create a new kind of offence.
It merely prescribes a rule of evidence for the purpose of
proving the offence of criminal misconduct as defined in s.
5(l) for which an accused person is already under trial.
C.S.D. Swamy v. The State, [196
of 1 S.C.R. 461 and Surajpal Singh v. State of U.P. [1961] 2
S.C.R. 971, relied on.
631
On proper construction of the words of the section and
giving them their plain and natural meaning, it is clear,
that the pecuinary resources and property in possession of
the accused person or any other person on his behalf have to
be taken into consideration for the purpose of s. 5(3),
whether these were acquired before or after the Act came
into force.
While it is quite true that pecuniary resources and property
are themselves sources of income, that does not present any
difficulty in understanding a position that at a particular
point of time the total pecuniary resources or property can
be regarded as assets, and an attempt being made to see
whether the known sources of income, including, it may be,
these very items of property, in the past, could yield such
income as to explain reasonably the emergence of these
assets at this point of time.
There is no warrant for the proposition that where the law
provides that in certain circumstances a presumption shall
be made against the accused, the prosecution is barred from
adducing evidence in support of its case if it wants to rely
on the presumption.
D. Del Vecchio v. Bowers, 296 U.S. 280; 80 L. ed. 229 and
Bratty v. Attorney General for Northern Ireland, [1961] 3
All E.R. 523, held inapplicable.
The facts proved in this case raise a presumption under s.
5(3) of the Act and the appellant’s conviction must be
maintained on the basis of that presumption.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 98 of
1960.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 20, 1960 of the Punjab High Court in Criminal Appeal
No. 683 of 1957.
I. M. Lall and B. N. Kirpal, for the appellant.
B. K. Khanna and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
August 28, 1963. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DAS GUPTA J.-Sajjan Singh, son of Chanda Singh, joined the
service of the Punjab Government in January 1922 as an
Overseer in the Irrigation Department. He continued as
Overseer till July 1944 when he became a Sub-divisional
Officer in the Department. From the date till May 1947 he
worked as Sub-Divisional Officer in that part of Punjab
which has now gone to West Pakistan. From November 30, 1947
to September 26, 1962 he was employed as Sub-Divisional
Officer of Drauli Sub-Division of the Nangal Circle, except
for a short break from November 8, 1950 to April 3, 1951,
when he was on leave. The work of excavation-for the Nangal
Project
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632
within the Drauli Sub-Division was carried out by several
contractors, including Ramdas Chhankanda Ram and M/s.
Ramdas Jagdish Ram. On December 7, 1952, the General
Manager, Bhakra Dam, made a complaint in writing to the
Superintendent of Police, Hoshiarpur, alleging that Sajjan
Singh and some other officials subordinate to him had by
illegal and corrupt means and by abusing their position as
public servants, dishonestly and fraudulently, obtained
illegal gratification from the contractors Ramdas Chhankanda
Ram and M/s. Ram Das Jagdish Ram by withholding their
payments and putting various obstacles in the smooth
execution of the work entrusted to them. A case under s.
45(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 was
registered on the basis of this complaint, which was treated
as a first information report and after sanction of the
Government of Punjab had been obtained for the prosecution
of Sajjan Singh under s. 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act and s. 161/165 of the Indian Penal Code,
Sajjan Singh was tried by the Special Judge, Ambala, on a
charge under s. 5(2) of the Act.
The learned Special judge convicted him under s. 5(2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act and sentenced him to rigorous
imprisonment for one year and a fine of Rs. 5000/in default
of payment of fine, he was directed to undergo rigorous
imprisonment for six months. The conviction and sentence
were confirmed by the Punjab High Court, on appeal. The
High Court however rejected the State’s application for
enhancement of the sentence. The present appeal is by
Sajjan Singh against his conviction and sentence under s.
5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act by special leave of
this Court.
The prosecution case is that after work had been done by the
firm Ramdas Chhankandas for several months, and some
’running’ payments had been received without difficulty, the
appellant demanded from Ram Das, one of the partners of the
firm, his commission on the cheques issued to the
partenrship firm. It is said that Ram Das at first refused.
But, ultimately when the appellant started unnecessary
criticism of the work done by them and even withholding some
running payments the partners of the firm decided to pay
commission to him as demanded. The
633
first payment, it is said, was made on March 21, 1949 and
further payments were thereafter made from time to time.
The case is that the partnership paid altogether a sum of
Rs. 10,500/- in cash as commission to the appellant, besides
paying Rs. 2,000/- to him for payment to the Executive
Engineer and Rs. 241/12/- made up of small sums paid on
different occasions on behalf of the accused. All these
payments made to the appellant were fully entered in the
regular Rokar and Khata Bhais of the partnership under a
fictitious name of Jhalu Singh, Jamadar, though a few of the
later payments were entered in these books in Sajjan Singh’s
own name. In order to allay suspicion some fictitious
credit entries were also made in the books. The prosecution
also alleged payment to the appellant of Rs. 1,800/- by
another firm M/s. Ram Das Jagdish Ram. But as that has not
been found to be proved it is unnccessary to mention details
of the allegations in that connection.
To prove its case against the appellant the prosecution
relied on the testimony of three partners of the firm who
claimed to have made payments and on various entries in the
several books of account of the firm. The prosecution also
tried to prove the guilt of the accused by showing that the
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pecuniary resources and property that were in the ap-
pellant’s possession or in the possession of his wife, Dava
Kaur, and his son, Bhupinder Singh, on his behalf we are
disproportionate to the appellant’s known sources of income.
The learned Special judge mentioned the possession of
pecuniary resources and property disproportionate to his
known sources of income in the charge framed against the
accused. According to the prosecution the total assets held
by the appellant, and his wife, Dava Kaur, and his son
Bhupinder Singh on his behalf, on December 7, 1952 amounted
to Rs. 1,47,502/12/-, while his total emoulments upto the
period of the charge would come to about Rs. 80,000/-.
The main defence of the appellant as regards this allegation
of possession of pecuniary resources and property
disproportionate to his known sources of income was that the
property and pecuniary resources held by his wife and son
were not held on his behalf and that what, was in his
possession amounted to less than Rs. 50,000/- and can by no
means be said to be disproportionate to his known
41--2 S. C. India/64.
634
sources of income. In denying the charge against him the
appellant also contended that false evidence had been given
by the three partners and false and fictitious books
prepared by them in support of their own false testimony.
The learned Special judge rejected the defence contention
that the account books on which the prosecution relied had
not been kept regularly in the course of business and held
the entries therein to be relevant under s. 34 of the Indian
Evidence Act. He accepted the defence contention that
evidence of the partners who were in the position of
accomplices required independent corroboration and also that
the account books maintained by themselves would not amount
to independent corroboration. Independent corroboration was
however in the opinion of the learned Judge furnished by the
fact that some admitted and proved items of payment were
interspersed in the entire account books. The learned judge
also accepted the prosecution story as regards the
possession of pecuniary resources and property by the
appellant’s wife and his son on his behalf and adding these
to what was in the appellant’s own possession he found that
the total pecuniary resources and property in his possession
or in the possession of his wife and son were
disproportionate to his known sources of income, and that
such possession had not been satisfactorily accounted for.
He concluded that the presumption under s. 5(3) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act was attracted. On all these
findings he found the appellant guilty of the charge for
criminal misconduct in the discharge of his duties and
convicted and sentenced him as, stated above.
The two learned judges of the Punjab High Court who heard
the appeal differed on the question whether pecuniary
resources and property acquired before- March 11, 1947, when
the Prevention of Corruption Act came into force, could be
taken into consideration for the purpose of s. 5 (3) of the
Act. In the opinion of Mr. Justice Harbans Singh these
could not be taken into consideration-. Taking into
consideration the assets acquired by the appellant after
January 1948 the learned judges held that these came to just
above Rs. 20,000/- and could not be held to be
disproportionate to his known sources of income. The other
learned Judge, Mr. Justice
635
Capoor, was of opinion that pecuniary resources and property
acquired prior to March 11, 1947 had also to be taken into
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consideration in applying s. 5 (3) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act if they were in the possession of the accused
or anybody on his behalf, on the date when the complaint was
lodged. He agreed with the Special judge that certain
assets possessed by Daya Kaur and Bhupinder Singh were
possessed by them on behalf of the appellant and that those
possessed by him, or by his wife and son on his behalf were
much in excess of his known sources of income, even without
making any allowance for his house-hold expenses. Mr.
justice Capoor further held that if the pecuniary resources
or property acquired during the period April 1, 1947 to June
1, 1950 as suggested on behalf of the appellant were
considered such assets held by the appellant or any other
person on his behalf were more than double of the known
sources of his income without making any allowance whatever
for the appellant’s house-hold expenses. In the opinion of
the learned judge a presumption under subsection 3 of s. 5
of the Act therefore arose that the appellant had committed
the offence, as the appellant had not been able to prove to
the contrary. Both the learned judges agreed that the
witnesses who gave direct evidence about the payment of
illegal gratification could not be relied upon without
independent corroboration and that the entries in the books
of account did by themselves amount to such corroboration,
but that the fact of admitted and proved items being
interspersed in the entire account furnished the required
corroboration. In the result, as has been already stated,
the learned judges affirmed the conviction and sentence.
In support of the appeal Mr. 1. M. Lall has attacked the
finding that the books of account were kept regularly in the
course of business and has contended that the entries
therein were not relevant under s. 34 of the Indian Evidence
Act. He further contended that even if they be relevant
evidence the Special judge as also the High Court while
rightly thinking that they by themselves did not amount to
independent corroboration, were in error when they thought
that the fact of certain admitted entries being interspersed
through the books of account furnished the
636
necessary independent corroboration. Mr. Lall has also
argued that the Special Judge as well as Mr. justice Capoor
in the High Court were wrong in drawing a presumption under
s. 5(3) of the Prevention of Corruption Act.
We shall first consider the question whether on the evidence
on the record a presumption under s. 5(3) of the Prevention
of Corruption Act arose. It is useful to remember that the
first sub-section of s. 5 of the Prevention of Corruption
Act mentions in the four clauses a, b, c and d, the acts on
the commission of which a public servant is said to have
committed an offence of criminal misconduct in the discharge
of his duties. The second subsection prescribes the penalty
for that offence. The third subsection is in these words:-
"In any trial of an offence punishable under
sub-section (2) the fact that the accused
person or any other person on his behalf is in
possession, for which the accused person
cannot satisfactorily account, of pecuniary
resources or property disproportionate to his
known sources of income may be proved, and on
such proof the court shall presume, unless the
contrary is proved, that the accused person is
guilty of criminal. misconduct in the
discharge of his official duty and his
conviction therefor shall not be invalid by
reason only that it is based solely on such
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presumption."
This sub-section thus provides an additional mode of proving
an offence punishable under sub-s. 2 for which any accused
person is being tried. This additional mode is by proving
the extent of the pecuniary resources or property in the
possession of the accused or any other person on his behalf
and thereafter showing that this is disproportionate to his
known sources of income and that the accused person cannot
satisfactorily account for such possession. If these facts
are proved the section makes it obligatory on the Court to
presume that the accused person is guilty of criminal
misconduct in the discharge of his official duty, unless the
contrary, i.e., that he was not so guilty is proved by the
accused. The section goes on to say that the conviction for
an offence of criminal misconduct shall not be invalid by
reason only that it is based solely on such presumption.
637
This is a deliberate departure from the ordinary principle
of criminal jurisprudence, under which the burden of proving
the guilt of the accused in criminal proceedings lies all
the way on the prosecution. Under the provision of this
subsection the burden on the prosecution to prove the guilt
of the accused must be held to be discharged if certain
facts as mentioned therein arc proved; and then the burden
shifts to the accused and the accused has to prove that in
spite of the assets being disproportionate to his known
sources of income, he is not guilty of the offence. There
can be no doubt that the language of such a special
provision must be strictly construed. if the words are
capable of two constructions, one of which is more
favorable to the accused than the other, the Court will be
justified in accepting the one which is more favourable to
the accused. There can be no Justification however for
adding any words to make the provision of law less stringent
than the legislature has made it.
Mr. Lall contends that when the section speaks of the
accused being in possession of pecuniary resources or pro-
perty disproportionate to his known sources of income only
pecuniary resources or property acquired after the date of
the Act is meant. To think otherwise, says the learned
Counsel, would be to give the Act retrospective operation
and for this there is no ’Justification. We agree with the
learned Counsel that the Act has no retrospective operation.
We are unable to agree however that to take into
consideration the pecuniary resources or property in the
possession of the accused or any other person on his behalf
which are acquired before the date of the Act is in any way
giving the Act a retrospective operation.
A statute cannot be said to be retrospective "because a part
of the requisites for its action is drawn from a time
antecedent to its passing". (Maxwell on interpretation of
Statutes, 11th Edition, p. 211; See also State of
Maharashtra v. Vishnu Ramchandra(l)). Notice must be taken
in this connection of a suggestion made by the learned
Counsel that in effect sub-section 3 of section 5 creates a
new offence in the discharge of official duty, different
from what is defined in the four clauses of s. 5(l). It is
said that the act of being in possession of pecuniary
resources or pro-
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 26.
638
perty disproportionate to known sources of income, if it
cannot be satisfactorily accounted for, is said by this sub-
section to constitute the offence of criminal misconduct in
addition to those other acts mentioned in cls. a, b, c and d
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of s. 5(l) which constitute the offence of criminal mis-
conduct. On the basis of this contention the further argu-
ment is built that if the pecuniary resources or property
acquired before the date of the Act is taken into consi-
deration under sub-section 3 what is in fact being done is
that a person is being convicted for the acquisition of
pecuniary resources or property, though it was not in vio-
lation of a law in force at the time of the commission of
such act of acquisition. If this argument were correct a
conviction of a person under the presumption raised under
the s. 5(3) in respect of pecuniary resources or property
acquired before the Prevention of Corruption Act would be a
breach of fundamental rights under Art. 20(l) of the
Constitution and so it would be proper for the Court to
construe s. 5(3) in a way so as not to include possession of
pecuniary resources or property acquired before the Act for
the purpose of that subsection. The basis of the argument
that s. 5(3) creates a new kind of offence of criminal
misconduct by a public servant in the discharge of his
official duty is however unsound. The sub-section does
nothing of the kind. It merely prescribes a rule of
evidence for the purpose of proving the offence of criminal
misconduct as defined in s. 5(1) for which an accused person
is already under trial. It was so held by this Court in
C.D.S. Swamy v. The State(1) and again in Surajpal Singh v.
State of U.p.(2). It is only when a trial has commenced for
criminal misconduct by doing one or more of the acts
mentioned in cls. a, b, c and d of s. 5(l) that sub-s 3 can
come into operation. When there is such a trial, which
necessarily must be in respect of acts committed after the
Prevention of Corruption Act came into force, sub-section 3
places in the hands of the prosecution a new mode of proving
an offence with which an accused has already been charged.
Looking at the words of the section and giving them their
plain and natural meaning we find it impossible to say that
pecuniary resources and property acquired before
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 461. (2) [1961] 1 2 S.C.R. 971.
639
the date on which the Prevention of Corruption Act came into
force should not be taken into account even if in possession
of the accused or any other person on his behalf. To accept
the contention that such pecuniary resources or property
should not be taken into consideration one has to read into
the section the additional words "if acquired after the date
of this Act" after the word "property". For this there is
no justification.
It may also be mentioned that if pecuniary resources or
property acquired before the date of commencement of the Act
were to be left out of account in applying subs. 3 of s. 5
it would be proper and reasonable to limit the receipt of
income against which the proportion is to be considered also
to the period after the Act. On the face of it this would
lead to a curious and anomalous position by no means
satisfactory or helpful to the accused himself. For, the
income received during the years previous to the
commencement of the Act may have helped in the acquisition
of property after the commencement of the Act. From
whatever point we look at the matter it seems to us clear
that the pecuniary resources and property in the possession
of the accused person or any other person on his behalf have
to be taken into consideration for the purpose of sub-
section 3 of section 5, whether these were acquired before
or after the Act came into force.
Mention has next to be made of the learned Counsel’s
submission that the section is meaningless. According to
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the learned Counsel, every pecuniary resource or property is
itself a source of income and therefore it is a contradic-
tion in terms to say that the pecuniary resources or pro-
perty can be disproportionate to the known sources of
income. This argument is wholly misconceived. While it is
quite true that pecuniary resources and property are
themselves sources of income that does not present any
difficulty in understanding a position that at a particular
point of time the total pecuniary resources or property can
be regarded as assets, and an attempt being made to see
whether the known sources of income including, it may be,
these very items of property in the past could yield such
income as to explain reasonably the emergence of these
assets at this point of time.
Lastly it was contented by Mr. Lall that no presump-
640
tion under s. 5(3) can arise if the prosecution has adduced
other evidence in support of its case. According to the
learned Counsel, s. 5(3) is at the most an alternative mode
of establishing the guilt of the accused which can be
availed of only if the usual method of proving his guilt by
direct and circumstantial evidence is not used. For this
astonishing proposition we can find no support either in
principle or authority.
Mr. Lall sought assistance for his arguments from a decision
of the Supreme Court of the United States of America in D.
Del Vecchio v. Botvers(1). What fell to be considered in
that case was whether a presumption created by s. 20(d) of
the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act that
the death of an employee was not suicidal arose where
evidence had been adduced by both sides on the question
whether the death was suicidal or not. The Court of Appeal
had held that as the evidence on the issue of accident or
suicide was in its judgment evenly balanced the presumption
under s. 20 must tip the scales in favour of accident. This
decision was reversed by the learned Judges of the Supreme
Court. Section 20 which provided for the presumption ran
thus:--
"In any proceedings for the enforcement of a
claim for compensation...... it shall be
presumed, in the absence of substantial
evidence to contrary-that the injury was not
occasioned by the wailful intention of the
injured employee to injure or kill himself or
another."
On the very words of the section the presumption against
suicide would arise only if substantial evidence had not
been adduced to support the theory of suicide. It was in
view of these words that the learned judges observed:--
.lm15
"The statement in the act that the evidence to overcome
the effect of the presumption must be substantial adds
nothing to the well understood principle that a finding must
be supported by evidence. Once the employer has carried his
burden by offering testimony sufficient to justify a finding
of suicide, the presumption falls out of the case. It never
had and cannot acquire the attribute of evidence in the
claimant’s favour. Its only office is to control the result
where
(1)296 U.S. 280 : 80 L. ed. 229.
641
there is an entire lack of competent evidence. If the
employer alone adduces evidence which tends to support the
theory of suicide, the case must be decided upon that
evidence. Where the claimant offers substantial evidence in
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opposition, as was the case here, the issue must be resolved
upon the whole body of proof pro and con."
The whole decision turns upon the words ’in the absence of
substantial evidence". These or similar words are
conspicuous by their absence in sub-s. 3 of s. 5 of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, and consequently, Del Vec-
chio’s Case(1) is of no assistance.
Mr. Lall then drew our attention to an observation of Lord
Denning in Bratty v. Attorney General for Northern
Ireland(2) where speaking about the presumption that every
man has sufficient mental capacity to be responsible for his
crimes, the Lord Justice observed that the presumption takes
the place of evidence. Similarly, argues Mr. Lall, the
presumption under s. 5(3) of the Prevention Corruption Act
also merely "takes the place" of evidence. So, he says, it
can arise only if no evidence has been adduced. We are not
prepared to agree however that when the Lord Justice used
the words "a presumption takes the place of evidence" he
meant that if some evidence had been offered by the
prosecution the prosecution could not benefit by the
presumption. We see no warrant for the proposition that
where the law provides that in certain circumstances a
presumption shall be made against the accused the pro-
secution is barred from adducing evidence in support of its
case if it wants to rely on the presumption.
Turning now to the question whether the facts and
circumstances proved in this case raise a presumption under
s. 5(3), we have to examine first whether certain pecuniary
resources or property in possession of Daya Kaur and those
in possession of Bhupinder Singh were possessed by them on
behalf of the appellant as alleged by the prosecution. On
December 7, 1952, Bhupinder Singh has been proved to have
been in possession of: (1) Rs. 28,998/7/3/- in the Punjab
National Bank; (2) Rs. 20,000/- in fixed deposit with the
Bank of Patiala at Doraha (3) Rs. 5,577/-
(1)226 U.S. 280. (2) [1961] 3 All. E.R. p. 523 at 535.
642
in the Imperial Bank of India at Moga; (4) Rs. 237/8/3/in
the Savings Bank Account in the Bank of Patiala at Doraha;
and (5) Half share in a plot of land in Ludhiana of the
value Rs. 11,000/-.
Bhupinder Singh has given evidence (as the 11th witness for
the defence) and has tried to support his father’s case that
none of the properties were held by him on behalf of his
father. Bhupinder Singh has been in military service since
1949 and was at the time when he gave evidence a Captain in
the Indian Army. If the bank deposits mentioned above had
been made by him after he joined military service there
might have been strong reason for thinking that they were
his own money. That however is not the position. Out of
the sum of Rs. 28,998/- with the Punjab National Bank a part
is admittedly interest; the remainder, viz., about Rs.
26,000/- was deposited by Bhupinder Singh in his account
long before 1949 when he joined military service. His
explanation as to how he got this money is that Rs. 20,200/-
was received by him from Udhe Singh in December 1945 and Rs.
6,000/- was given to him by his grand-father Chanda Singh.
Udhe Singh has given evidence in support of the first part
of the story and has said that he paid Rs. 20,200/- to
Bhupinder Singh in payment of what he owed to Bhupinder
Singh’s grandfather Chanda Singh and to his father Sajjan
Singh. When asked why he made the payments to Bhupinder
Singh, son of Sajjan Singh instead of to Chanda Singh or to
Chanda Sing’s son Surjan Singh, Udhe Singh replied that he
did so "because my account was with Sardar Sajjan Singh."
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Udhe Singh it has to be remembered is a close relation of
Sajjan Singh, Sajjan Singh’s father Chanda Singh being Udhe
Singh’s mother’s brother.
On a careful consideration of the evidence of these two
witnesses, Bhupinder Singh and Udhe Singh and also the
registered letter which was produced to show that a pucca
receipt was demanded for an alleged payment of Rs. 20,200/-
we have come to the conclusion that the Special Judge has
rightly disbelieved the story that this sum of Rs. 20,000/-
was paid by Udhe Singh to Bhupinder Singh. It has to be
noticed that even if this story of payment was believed that
would not improve the appellant’s case. For, according to
Udhe Singh this payment was
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made by him to Bbupinder Singh on behalf of his father. In
any case, therefore, this amount of Rs. 20,200/- was Sajjan
Singh’s money. As regards the other amount of Rs. 6000/-
which formed part of the deposits in the Punjab National
Bank and a further sum of Rs. 20,000/in fixed deposit with
the Bank of Patiala the defence case as sought to be proved
by Bhupinder Singh was that these were received by him from
his grand-father Chanda Singh. The learned Special judge
disbelieved the story and on a consideration of the reasons
given by him we are of opinion that his conclusion is
correct.
When it is remembered that Bhupinder Singh was at the
relevant dates a student with no independent income or
property of his own the reasonable conclusion from the
rejection of his story about these amount is, as held by the
Special Judge, that these were possessed by him on behalf of
his father, Sajjan Singh. We are also convinced that the
Special Judge was right in his conclusion that Rs. 5,577/-
in the Imperial Bank of India at Moga, Rs. 237/8/3 in the
Savings Bank Account in the Bank of Patiala at Doraha and
the half share in a plot of land in Ludhiana of the value of
Rs. 11,000/- standing in the name of Bhupinder Singh were
held by Bhupinder Singh on behalf of his father, Sajjan
Singh. It has to be mentioned that Mr. Justice Capoor in
the High Court agreed with these conclusions, while the
other learned judge (Mr. Justice Harbans Singh) did not
examine this question at all being wrongly of the opinion
that the properties acquired prior to March 11, 1947 should
not be taken into consideration.
Thus even if we leave out of account the amount of Rs.
26,500/- standing in the name of appellant’s wife Daya Kaur
which according to the prosecution was held by her on behalf
of her husband, Sajjan Singh, it must be held to be clearly
established that the pecuniary resources or property in
possession of Sajjan Singh and his son, Bhupinder Singh, on
his behalf amounted to more than Rs. 1,20,000/-. The
question then is: Was this disproportionate to the
appellant’s known sources of income? As was held by this
Court in Swamy’s Case(1) "the expression ’known sources of
income’ must have reference to
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 461.
644
sources known to the prosecution on a thorough investigation
of the case" and that it could not be contended that ’known
sources of income’ meant sources known to the accused. In
the present case the principal source of income known to the
prosecution was what the appellant received as his salary.
The total amount received by the appellant throughout the
period of his service has been shown to be slightly less
than Rs. 80,000/-. The appellant claimed to have received
considerable amounts as traveling allowance a Overseer and
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S.D.O. and also as horse and conveyance allowance. For the
period of his service prior to May 1947, the records which
would have shown what the accused drew as traveling
allowance were not available. The Special judge found that
from May 1947 upto January 1953 the appellant got Rs.
6,504/6/- as traveling allowance. On that basis he also
held that for the period of service as S.D.O. prior to May
1947 he may have got about Rs. 5,000/- at the most. For the
period of his service as Overseer, the learned Special judge
held that, the appellant did not get more than Rs. 100/- a
year as travelling allowance, including the horse allowance.
No reasonable objection can be taken to the conclusion
recorded by the Special Judge as regards the travelling
allowance drawn by the appellant for the period of his
service as S.D.O. It was urged however that Rs. 100/- a year
,is travelling allowance is too low an estimate for his
services as Overseer. As the relevant papers are not
available it would be proper to make a liberal estimate
under this head favourable to the appellant. Even at the
most liberal estimate it appears to us that the total
receipts as travelling allowance as Overseer could not have
exceeded Rs. 5,000/-.
One cannot also forget that much of what is received as
travelling allowance has to be spent by the officer con-
cerned in travelling expenses itself. For many officers it
’IS not unlikely that travelling allowance would fall short
of these expenses and they would have to meet the deficit
from their own pocket. The total receipt that accrued to
the appellant as the savings out of travelling allowance
inclusive of horse allowance and conveyance allowance, could
not reasonably be held to have exceeded Rs. 10,000/at the
most. Adding these to what he received as salary and also
as Nangal Compensatory allowance the total in-
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come received during the years would be about Rs. 93,000/-.
It also appears that income by way of interest was earned by
the appellant on his provident fund and also the bank
deposits standing in his own name or in the name of his son,
Bhupinder Singh. The income under this head appears to be
about Rs. 10,000/-.
The total receipts by the appellant from his known sources
of income thus appears to be about Rs. 1,03,000/-. If
nothing out of this had to be spent for maintaining himself
and his family during all these years from 1922 to 1952
there might have been ground for saying that the assets in
the appellant’s possession, through himself or through his
son (Rs. 1,20,000/-) were not disproportionate to his known
sources of income. One cannot however live on nothing; and
however frugally the appellant may have lived it appears to
us clear that at least Rs. 100/- per month must have been
his average expenses throughout these years-taking the years
of high prices and low prices together. These expenses
therefore cut a big slice of over Rs. 36,000/- from what he
received. The assets of Rs. 1,20,000/- have therefore to be
compared with a net income of Rs. 67,000/-. They are
clearly disproportionate--indeed highly disproportionate.
Mr. Lall stressed the fact that the legislature had not
chosen to indicate what proportion would be considered
disproportionate and he argued on that basis that the Court
should take a liberal view of the excess of the assets over
the receipts from the known sources of income. There is
some force in this argument. But taking the most liberal
view, we do not think it is possible for any reasonable man
to say that assets to the extent of Rs. 1,20,000/- is
anything but disproportionate to a net income of Rs.
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1,03,000/- out of which at least Rs. 36,000/- must have been
spent in living expenses.
The next question is : Has the appellant satisfactorily
accounted for these disproportionately high assets? The
Speical judge has examined this question carefully and
rejected as untrustworthy the appellant’s story of certain
receipts from one Kabul Singh, his son Teja Singh, and from
his father, Chanda Singh. These conclusions appear to us to
be based on good and sufficient reasons and we can see
nothing that would justify us in interfering with these.
646
The prosecution has thus proved facts on which it becomes
the duty of the Court to assume that the accused has
committed the offence with which he is charged, unless the
contrary is proved by him. Mr. Lall has submitted that if
the other evidence on which the prosecution relied to prove
its case against the appellant is examined by us, he will be
able to satisfy us that evidence is wholly insufficient to
prove the guilt of the accused. It has to be remembered
however that the fact-assuming it to be a fact in this case-
that the prosecution has failed to prove by other evidence
the guilt of the accused, does not entitle the Court to say
that the accused has succeeded in proving that he did not
commit the offence.
Our attention was drawn in this connection to this Court’s
decision in Surajpal Singh’s Case(1) where this Court set
aside the conviction of the appellant Surajpal Singh on the
basis of the presumption under s. 5(3). What happened in
that case was that though the accused had been charged with
having committed the offence of criminal misconduct in the
discharge of his duty by doing the acts mentioned in cl. (c)
of sub-s. 1 of s. 5, the Special Judge and the High Court
convicted him by invoking the rule of presumption laid down
in sub-s. 3 of s. 5, of an offence under cl. (d) of s. 5(l).
This Court held that it was not open to the Courts to do so.
This case is however no authority for the proposition that
the courts could not have convicted the accused for an
offence under s. 5 ( 1) (c) for which he had been charged.
On the contrary it seems to be a clear authority against
such a view. After pointing out that the charge against the
appellant was that he has dishonestly and fraudulently
misappropriated or otherwise converted for his own use
property entrusted to him, this Court observed:--
"It was not open to the learned Special Judge
to have convicted the appellant of that
offence by invoking the rule of presumption
laid down in sub-section (3). He did not
however to do so. On the contrary he acquit-
ted the appellant on that charge. Therefore,
learned Counsel has submitted that by calling
in aid the rule of presumption in sub-s. 3 the
appellant could not be found guilty of any
other type of criminal misconduct
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 971.
647
referred to in cls. (a), (b) or (d) of sub-s.
(1) in respect of which there was no charge
against the appellant.
We consider that the above argument of learned
Counsel for the appellant is correct and must
be accepted."
The appellant’s Counsel is not in a position to submit that
there is evidence on the record which would satisfy the
Court that the accused has "proved the contrary", that is,
that he had not committed the offence with which he was
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charged.
We have therefore come to the conclusion that the facts
proved in this case raise a presumption under s. 5(3) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act and the appellant’s conviction
of the offence with which he was charged must be maintained
on the basis of that presumption. In this view of the
matter we do not propose to consider whether the High Court
was right in basing its conclusion also on the other
evidence adduced in the case to prove the actual payment of
illegal gratification by the partners of the firm M/s.
Ramdas Chhankanda Ram.
Lastly, Mr. Lall prayed that the sentence be reduced. The
sentence imposed on the appellant is one year’s rigorous
imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 5,000/-. Under s. 5(2) the
minimum sentence has to be one year’s imprisonment, subject
to the proviso that the Court may for special reasons to be
recorded in writing, impose a sentence of imprisonment of
less than one year. We are unable to see anything that
would justify us in taking action under the proviso.
In the result, the appeal is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.