Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MARY ANGEL & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/05/1999
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, M.B.Shah
JUDGMENT:
SHAH,J.
Leave granted.
The question involved in this appeal is whether the
High Court has jurisdiction to impose exemplary cost of Rs.
10,000/- to be paid by each of the appellants while
rejecting a frivolous or vexatious petition under Section
482 of the Criminal Procedure Code for setting aside the
charge framed against the appellants? FIR was lodged by
Josephine Jaya on 29th September, 1989 stating that her
in-laws demanded from her father Rs. 60,000/- in cash, 65
soverigns of gold jewellary for the bride and nine soverigns
or similar jewellary for the groom; that out of
Rs.60,000/-, Rs.50,000/- were paid; that after the
marriage, she was treated cruelly and there were unlawful
demands for a colour television and Rs. 50,000/- in cash.
It is also alleged that at the instigation of in-laws
accused nos. 2 to 6, accused No.1 (her husband)
administered certain medicine with a view to abort her
pregnancy. After preliminary investigation, on 18th
October, 1989, a charge sheet was filed against A1 to A6
under Sections 498(A), 406, 420, 315 I.P.C. and Sections 3
& 4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act. The case was committed to
the Sessions Court, Nagercoil and was numbered as Sessions
Case No. 10 of 1989. Accused Nos. 3 to 6 filed an
application under Section 227 of the Criminal Procedure Code
for their discharge. That application was allowed by
holding that they had not demanded dowry and there is no
material to show that medicine for abortion was administered
at their instigation. Against that order, complainant filed
Criminal R.C. No. 442 of 1990 before the High Court of
Madras. By Order dated 9th July, 1993, the High Court
allowed the Revision case filed by the complainant and set
aside the order of discharge. In pursuance of the said
Order, on 13th June, 1996, learned Sessions Judge framed
charges against accused Nos. A3 to A6 also. Against that
Order dated 13th June, 1996, accused Nos.3 to 6, that is,
the present appellants preferred Criminal Revision case No.
601 of 1996 before the High Court on the ground that there
was no prima facie case for framing of charges against them.
The Court while dismissing the same observed that the
proceedings have been dragged on for 8 years and that
petition was filed without disclosing even to the learned
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counsel that revision against the order of non-framing of
charges was allowed earlier by the High Court by holding
that there was sufficient material for framing charges. The
Court also observed that despite the directions of the High
Court to the Sessions Court to finish the trial as
expeditiously as possible, appellants have not allowed the
Sessions Court to comply with the said directions of the
High Court. Considering the aforesaid conduct, the High
Court imposed costs of Rs. 10,000/- each on the appellants
to be paid to the informant (complainant), wife of accused
no. 1 and directed the Sessions Court to dispose of the
case within two months from the date of the communication of
the Order. That Order is challenged before us in this
appeal. The learned Counsel for the appellants submitted
that in criminal cases High Court has no jurisdiction to
impose costs except as provided under Sections 148(3), 342 &
359 of the Cr. P.C. empowering the Court to impose costs
and submitted that inherent powers of the Court cannot be
exercised contrary to the said provisions. As against this,
learned Counsel for the respondent submitted that while
exercising its jurisdiction under Section 482 of the
Criminal Procedure Code the High Court has inherent
jurisdiction to impose costs to prevent the abuse of the
process of law or otherwise to secure the ends of justice.
It is submitted that for one or other reason, the accused
prevented the Sessions Court from proceeding with the case
and by suppressing the previous Order passed by the High
Court, approached the Court for quashing and setting aside
the charges framed against them. It is, therefore,
submitted that the High Court has rightly exercised its
inherent powers and has imposed costs to be paid to the
cruelly treated wife (informant). Admittedly, in Criminal
R.C. No. 442 of 1990 and Criminal R.P. No. 440 of 1990,
the High Court by its detailed judgment and order dated 9th
July 1993, allowed the said Revision Petitions by holding
that there were sufficient grounds on record to establish
prima facie case against the accused for framing the charges
and Additional Sessions Judge exceeded his jurisdiction in
law as well as totally overlooked the material facts
available on record by discharging the appellants. Despite
the aforesaid order and by suppressing the same, appellants
filed petition under Section 482 before the High Court for
quashing the charges framed against them. In such
circumstances, Court has imposed the costs to be paid to the
wife of accused No.1 to prevent abuse of the process of the
Court and to secure the ends of justice. The question is
whether the Court had such jurisdiction? For deciding it,
we would first refer to the relevant sections of the
Criminal Procedure Code upon which reliance is placed by the
learned counsel for the appellants which empowers the Court
to impose costs. Section 148(3) provides that when any
costs have been incurred by any party to a proceeding under
Section 145, Section 146 or Section 147, the Magistrate
passing a decision may direct by whom such costs shall be
paid, whether by such party or by any other party to the
proceeding, and whether in whole or in part or proportion
and such costs may include any expenses incurred in respect
of witnesses and of pleaders’ fees, which the Court may
consider reasonable. Section 342 provides that any Court
dealing with an application made to it for filing a
complaint under Section 340 or an appeal under Section 341,
shall have power to make such order as to costs as may be
just. Further, Section 359 empowers the Court to order
payment of cost to the complainant in non cognizable case,
if it convicts the accused and in such case, the Court can
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pass an order for payment of costs incurred by the
complainant in the prosecution of the case and such costs
may include any expenses incurred in respect of process
fees, witnesses and pleaders fees which the Court considers
reasonable. This power can also be exercised by the
Appellate Court or by the High Court or Court of Sessions
exercising its power deciding the appeal or revision.
Section 357 provides for payment of compensation to the
victim for any loss or injury caused by the offence or in
case of death to the heirs of the victims out of the fine
imposed and while awarding compensation court has to take
into consideration, inter alia, the expenses properly
incurred in the prosecution; Section 358 provides for
payment of compensation where any person causes a police
officer to arrest another person, without sufficient ground
for causing such arrest, then compensation can be awarded by
the Magistrate not exceeding Rs. 100/-. It is, therefore,
submitted that Court has no jurisdiction to pass an order of
costs de hors the aforesaid statutory provisions. In our
view, Section 482 Cr. P.C. stands independently from other
provisions of the Code and it expressly saves inherent
powers of the High Court by providing that "nothing in this
Code shall be deemed to limit or affect the inherent powers
of the High Court to make such orders as may be necessary to
give effect to any order under this Code or to prevent abuse
of the process of any Court or otherwise to secure the ends
of justice". Therefore, to prevent abuse of the process of
the Court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice, the
High Court is empowered to pass such order which may
include order to pay costs to the informant (complainant)
and the language of the section does not in terms place any
fetter. This power is not conditioned or controlled by any
other section nor is curtailed by any provisions which
empower the court to award costs. No doubt, this
jurisdiction is of exceptional nature and is to be exercised
in exceptional cases for achieving the purposes stated in
the section. Secondly, costs could be either for the
purpose of meeting the expenses of the litigation as it can
be exemplary to prevent the abuse of the process of the
court or to secure ends of justice or giving effect to any
order passed under the Code. Learned counsel for the
appellants relied upon the decision of this Court in State
of Orissa vs. Ram Chander Aggarwal Etc 1979 (1) S.C.R.
1114 and submitted that inherent powers of the High Court
could not be exercised for awarding costs when Criminal
Procedure Code provides for awarding of costs in limited
cases. In the aforesaid case, Court was dealing with the
contention whether the High Court could review its Judgment
and Order despite the specific bar under Section 369 of the
Criminal Procedure Code except to correct a clerical error.
The Court held that in view of Section 369 Cr. P.C. which
prohibits all courts when it has signed its judgment to
alter or review the same except to correct a clerical error
and that in the case of a High Court, the prohibition was
subject to the Letters patent or other instrument
constituting such High Court. In similar provision section
362 under the new Code, subsequent part is omitted. Hence,
the Court held that giving the plain meaning of Section 369,
it was clear that no Court, subject to exception made in the
section, shall alter or review its judgment; inherent
powers of the High Court were meant to give effect to any
order under the Code or to prevent abuse of the process of
any court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice.
Hence, such powers cannot be invoked as it would be
inconsistent with the specific provisions of the Code. The
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Court further held that Section 561(A) of the Code confers
no new powers, it merely safeguards existing inherent powers
possessed by a High Court necessary (among other purposes)
to secure the ends of justice and "by the introduction of
the section, it was made clear that the inherent powers of
the Court, for the purposes mentioned in the section, shall
not be deemed to be limited or affected by the provisions of
the Criminal Procedure Code. Further, in the case of
Pampathy Vs. State of Mysore [1966 (Suppl.) SCR 477], this
Court dealt with the contention that the High Court cannot
exercise inherent jurisdiction under Section 561(A) of Cr.
P.C., 1898 of cancelling bail when the appellant was
released on bail by the High Court under Section 426 of the
Criminal Procedure Code pending disposal of the appeal.
Negativing the said contention, the Court held that it was
true that in Section 498 and Section 497(5), the Legislature
had made express provision for cancellation of bail bond in
the case of accused persons released on bail during the
course of trial but no such express provision has been made
by the Legislature in the case of a convicted person and
whose sentence has been suspended under Section 426, yet
there is no bar for exercise of inherent powers for
cancellation of bail pending appeal. The Court observed,
there is obviously a lacuna but the omission of the
legislature to make a specific provision in that behalf is
clearly due to oversight or inadvertence and cannot be
regarded as deliberate. The Court held that inherent powers
of the High Court could be exercised only for either of the
three purposes specifically mentioned in the Section; it
cannot be invoked in respect of any matter covered by the
specific provisions of the Code; it cannot also be invoked
if its exercise would be inconsistent with any of the
specific provisions of the Code; if the matter in question
is not covered by any specific provisions of the Code, power
would come into operation. The Court pertinently observed
"no legislative enactment dealing with procedure can provide
for all cases that can possibly arise and it is an
established principle that the Court should have inherent
powers, apart from the express provision of law, which are
necessary to their existence for the proper discharge of the
duties imposed upon them by law." Next, we would refer to
the decision in Dr. Raghubir Sharan vs. The State of Bihar
(1964) 2 S.C.R. 336 wherein this Court considered the power
of the High Court to expunge remarks made against a medical
practitioner who submitted his opinion on the health of the
accused pending the proceedings before magistrate. While
considering the scope of inherent powers under section
561(A) of the Code, the Court succinctly analysed the
jurisdiction which could be exercised by the High Court in
the following words :- When we speak of inherent powers of
the High Court of a State we mean the powers which must, by
reason of its being the highest court in the State having
general jurisdiction over civil and criminal courts in the
State, inhere in that court. The powers in a sense are an
inalienable attribute of the position it holds with respect
to the courts subordinate to it. These powers are partly
administrative and partly judicial. They are necessarily
judicial when they are exercisable with respect to a
judicial order and for securing the ends of justice. When
we speak of ends of justice we do not use the expression to
comprise within it any vague or nebulous concept of justice,
nor even justice in the philosophical sense but justice
according to law, the statute law and the common law.
Again, this power is not exercisable every time the High
Court finds that there has been a miscarriage of justice.
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For, the procedural laws of the State provide for correction
of most of the errors of subordinate courts which may have
resulted in miscarriage of justice. These errors can be
corrected only by resorting to the procedure prescribed by
law and not otherwise. Inherent powers are in the nature of
extraordinary powers available only where no express power
is available to the High Court to do a particular thing and
where its express power do not negative the existence of
such inherent power. The further condition for its
exercise, in so far as cases arising out of the exercise by
the subordinate courts of their criminal jurisdiction are
concerned, is that it must be necessary to resort to it for
giving effect to an order under the Code of Criminal
Procedure or for preventing an abuse of the process of the
court or for otherwise securing the ends of justice.
The power to expunge remarks is no doubt an
extraordinary power but nevertheless it does exist for
redressing a kind of grievance for which the statute
provides no remedy in express terms. The fact that the
statute recognizes that the High Courts are not confined to
the exercise of powers expressly conferred by it and may
continue to exercise their inherent powers makes three
things clear. One, that extraordinary situations may call
for the exercise of extraordinary powers. Second, that the
High Courts have inherent power to secure the ends of
justice. Third, that the express provisions of the Code do
not affect that power. The precise powers which inhere in
the High Court are deliberately not defined by s.561-A for
good reason. It is obviously not possible to attempt to
define the variety of circumstances which will call for
their exercise. No doubt, this section confers no new power
but it does recognize the general power to do that which is
necessary to give effect to any order under this Code, or
to prevent abuse of the process of any Court or otherwise to
secure the ends of justice. But then, the statute does not
say that the inherent power recognized is only such as has
been exercised in the past either. What it says is that the
High Courts always had such inherent power and that this
power has not been taken away. Whenever in a criminal
matter a question arises for consideration whether in
particular circumstances the High Court has power to make a
particular kind of order in the absence of express provision
in the Code or other statute the test to be applied would be
whether it is necessary to do so to give effect to an order
under the Code or to prevent the abuse of the process of the
Court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice.(Emphasis
added)
From the aforesaid decisions, it is apparent that if
there is an express provision governing the particular
subject matter then there is no scope for invoking or
exercising the inherent powers of the Court because Court is
required to apply, in the manner and mode prescribed, the
provisions of the statute which are made to govern the
particular subject-matter. But the Highest Court in the
State could exercise inherent powers for doing justice
according to law where no express power is available to do a
particular thing and express power do not negative the
existence of such power. It is true that under the Criminal
Procedure Code, specific provisions for awarding costs are
only those as stated above. At the same time, there is no
specific bar that in no other case, costs could be awarded.
Further, in non- cognizable cases, Section 359 empowers the
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Courts including Appellate Court or High Court or Court of
Sessions while exercising its powers of revision to order
the convicted accused to pay to the complainant, in whole or
in part, the cost incurred by him in the prosecution
including the expenses incurred in respect of process fees,
witnesses and pleaders fees which the Court may consider
reasonable. Hence, it may be inferred that in a cognizable
case and in appeal or revision arising therefrom, the High
Court cannot exercise inherent power for awarding costs de
hors the said provisions. But such inference is not
possible in cases where Court is exercising powers under
Section 482. It is to be stated that in cognizable cases
also under Section 357 while awarding compensation out of
the fine imposed on the accused, inter alia, the Court is
required to take into consideration expenses properly
incurred in the prosecution. Hence, exercise of such power
would, on the contrary, be in conformity and not in conflict
with the powers conferred under Sections 148(3), 342 and 357
or 359 of the Cr.P.C. In appropriate cases, where it is
necessary to pass such order, Court may award costs for the
purposes, namely, (i) to give effect to any order passed
under the Court (ii) to prevent abuse of the process of any
Court and (iii) to secure the ends of justice as there is no
(i) negative provision for exercise of such power and (ii)
inconsistency with the other provisions. Further, awarding
of costs, as stated above, can be for two purposes, one for
meeting the litigation expenses and, secondly, for
preventing the abuse of the process of Court or to do
justice in a matter and in such circumstances, costs can be
exemplary. It is true that this jurisdiction is to be
exercised sparingly for the aforesaid purposes in most
appropriate cases and is not limitless but is to be
exercised judiciously. Now, we would refer to the decisions
relied upon by the learned Counsel for the appellants to
contend that costs cannot be awarded while exercising
jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Criminal Procedure
Code. Reliance is placed on the decision of Lasu Janu Pawar
and Ors. Vs. Emperor (1948) AIR Bombay 169 wherein the
Court has held that where a complaint and the proceedings
resulting therefrom are quashed by the High Court as being
both frivolous and vexatious, it has no power to award costs
against the complainant. For that purpose, Court referred
to sections under the Code which specifically confer
jurisdiction/power in certain types of cases, to award costs
or compensation and held that it negatives the existence of
any general power or jurisdiction so to do in other cases
unless such general power or jurisdiction is to result from
Section 561(A) of the Code. The Court thereafter held that
all that section do is to preserve the inherent powers of
the High Court without conferring any additional power and
relied upon the decision rendered by the Full Bench of the
Madras High Court in A.T. Sankara Linga Mudaliar vs.
Narayana Mudaliar and Ors. (1922) AIR Madras 502 by holding
that reasoning in the said case was sound. Before parting
with the judgment the Court observed that it was for the
legislature to consider that in a criminal complaint
launched by private prosecutors wider powers with regard to
awarding costs should be conferred on the High Court in
cases where a complaint was frivolous or vexatious or was in
abuse of the process of the Court. The Full Bench decision
of the Madras High Court in the case of A.T. Sankara Linga
Mudaliar (supra) dealt with the question whether there was
power in the High Court to grant costs on a revision
petition brought not by the Crown but by a private
prosecutor against an acquittal, which petition has failed.
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Delivering the judgment Schwabe CJ observed that if there is
power it is a case in which he would gladly grant costs.
Court thereafter observed that as the Court was exercising
revisional power in a criminal case and the Code does
provide in several instances for payment of costs and as
there is no provision for granting costs in such case maxim
expressio unius est exclusio alterius [Expression of one
thing is the exclusion of another] applies and held that
costs cannot be awarded by exercising inherent powers.
Before holding that Court has no jurisdiction to grant
costs, the Court observed as under: A Court may have
inherent power to grant costs. That is clear from a
judgment in the House of Lords in Guardians of West Ham
Union vs. Churchwardens, etc. of St. Matthew, Bethral
Green (1896) App. Cas. 477) where the House of Lords held
that they had inherent power to grant costs, and in In re
Bombay Civil Fund Act, 1882: Pringle vs. Secretary of
State for India(5) where Cotton and Bower, L.JJ state
clearly their view that they have an inherent power to grant
costs in the matter which came before them, although there
was no statutory provision enabling them to grant costs.
But, in my view, the exercise of that inherent power must be
always restricted and limited to this that if the power of
granting costs by the Court in that kind of proceedings is
provided for in some way by statute, the Court cannot, by
invoking its inherent powers, extend the powers which had
been granted to it by the statute.
In concurring judgment, Coutts trotter J, observed
that Courts of Equity in England always asserted their
possession of such jurisdiction and constantly used it as is
pointed out in various judgments that it can award costs.
The learned Judge also referred to the decision of House of
Lords in Guardians of Westham Union (supra) and observed
that in the said case, it was undoubtedly laid down that as
and by virtue of its position as the highest Court in the
land and not by any devolution of powers from the Courts of
Equity it held jurisdiction to deal with the costs.
However, the learned Judge thereafter observed: But I
think that the main reason why it is not possible for this
Court to adopt that line of reasoning and take upon itself
the awarding of costs in criminal cases is this: Revision
is not an inherent power of this or any other Court: the
whole machinery of revision is a creature of statute and has
to be found within the four walls of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and, so far as criminal cases are concerned, I do
not see how we can posit an inherent power in ourselves to
supplement that purely statutory machinery by assuming to
ourselves the inherent power of supplementing it by the
awarding of costs.
The aforesaid decision was again followed by the full
bench of the Madras High Court in P. Veerappa vs.
Avudayammal and Anr. (AIR 1925 Madras 438) wherein the
Court observed that High Court has no power to invoke its
inherent powers on the hearing of a criminal revision
against an order passed under Sections 145 and 148 of the
Criminal Procedure Code. From the aforesaid decision of the
Full Bench, it is apparent that the Court recorded three
reasons for not awarding the costs. Firstly, the Court was
exercising revisionary jurisdiction under the Criminal
Procedure Code. Secondly, the Court cannot extend the
jurisdiction by invoking its inherent powers. Thirdly, the
Court relied upon the maxim expressio unius est exclusio
alterius and held that as there are specific provisions
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empowering the Court to grant costs, it excludes any other
power of granting costs. In our view, the aforesaid reasons
would not stand scrutiny; firstly, because there is
negative provision that except the cases for which the costs
could be awarded under different sections of the Code, High
Court shall not exercise its inherent jurisdiction of
granting costs. In cases where for preventing abuse of the
process of law or for securing justice, Court may find that
order for costs including exemplary costs is required to be
passed, then the phrase such order would include the same
and there is no reason to restrict the ambit of the phrase
such power. Secondly, with regard to the inherent
jurisdiction in the case of Dr. Raghuvir Saran (supra)
learned judges observed that the Statute does not say that
inherent power recognized is only such as has been exercised
in the past either. It is further observed that High Courts
have inherent power to secure the ends of justice which are
in the nature of extraordinary powers where no express power
is available to the High Court to do a particular thing and
when its express power do not negative the existence of such
inherent power. This would be further clear from the
English decisions referred to by the Full Bench of the
Madras High Court. In re Bombay Civil Fund act, 1882:
Pringle Vs. Secretary of State for India ( 1889) Chancery
Division 288 the Court of appeals held that even though
there is no provision in the Act to give costs of a
successful claim, the Court had inherent jurisdiction to
order him to pay the costs of wrongly putting the court in
motion, and there was nothing in the Act to show that the
Legislature intended the Court not to have such
jurisdiction. In case of a fruitless and unjustifiable
application made to the Court, the Court should have its
ordinary power of saying that such an application should be
dismissed with costs. In the case of the Guardians of West
Ham Union Vs. The Church Wardens and Overseas and Guardians
of the Poor of the Parish of St. Mathew, Bethnal Green
(1896) Law reports 477 (489), the House of Lords held as
under: The truth is, as it seems to me, that the House of
Lords, as the highest Court of appeal, has and necessarily
must have an inherent jurisdiction as regards costs. That
this inherent jurisdiction is the sole authority for the
action of the House of Lords in dealing with the costs of
appeals is, I think, shewn very plainly by the latest
alteration which this House has made in its practice with
regard to that matter. For a very long period it was the
practice of the House of Lords never to give costs against
a party coming to defend and sustain a decree in his favour
: Mackersy Vs. Ramsays. (1) That was said to be an
inflexible rule. But that rule was altered in 1877, after
the Judicature Act was passed. And it was altered by the
House of Lords of its own motion, without any statutory
authority, simply on the principle which then commended
itself to this House, that a successful appellant was
entitled to indemnity: Bowes Vs. Shand (2), per Lord
Cairns L.C. and Lord Blackburn. There is no reason not to
follow the aforesaid principle.
Thirdly, the maxim expressio unius est exclusio
alterius has its limited operation. Its operation is to be
restricted with regard to the sections which empower the
Court to grant costs in certain cases by holding that for
the cases mentioned in those sections, Court cannot exercise
its inherent jurisdiction of granting costs or pass an order
of granting costs in a method and mode different from what
is provided by the said sections. Application of this maxim
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would lead to inconsistency and injustice because in cases
where Court finds that a petition under Section 482 is an
abuse of the process of law and an unjustifiable petition
for some ulterior motive including dragging of the
proceedings of Court, it can pass any other order, but not
the order for costs.
Further, for the rule of interpretation on the basis
of the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius, it has
been considered in the decision rendered by the Queens
Bench in the case of Dean Vs. Wiesengrund 1955 (2) QBD 120.
The Court considered the said maxim and held that after all
it is no more than an aid to construction and has little, if
any, weight where it is possible, to account for the
inclusio unius on grounds other than intention to effect
the exclusio alterius. Thereafter, the Court referred to
the following passage from the case of Colquhoon Vs Brooks
1887 (19) QBD 400 at 406 wherein the Court called for its
approval the maxim expressio unius est exclusio
alterius has been pressed upon us. I agree with what is
said in the Court below by Wills J. about this maxim. It
is often a valuable servant, but a dangerous master to
follow in the construction of statutes of documents. The
exclusio is often the result of inadvertence or accident,
and the maxim ought not to be applied, when its application
having regard to the subject matter to which it is to be
applied, leads to inconsistency or injustice. In my
opinion, the application of the maxim here would lead to
inconsistency and injustice, and would make Section 14(1) of
the Act of 1920 uncertain and capricious in its operation.
The aforesaid maxim was referred to by this Court in the
case of Asstt. Collector, Central Excise Vs. National
Tobacco Co. 1972(2) S.C.C. 560, the Court in that case
considered the question whether there was or was not an
implied power to hold an inquiry in the circumstances of the
case in view of the provisions of the Section 4 of the
Central Excise Act read with Rule 10(A) of the Central
Excise Rules and referred to the aforesaid passage the
maxim is often a valuable servant, but a dangerous master
... and held that the rule is subservient to the basic
principle that Courts must endeavour to ascertain the
legislative intent and purpose, and then adopt a rule of
construction which effectuates rather than one that may
defeat these. Moreover, the rule of prohibition by
necessary implication could be applied only where a
specified procedure is laid down for the performance of a
duty. In the case of Parbhani Transport Co-op Society Ltd.
Vs. R.T.A. Aurangabad [1960 (3) S.C.R. 177], this Court
observed that maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius
is a maxim for ascertaining the intention of the legislature
and where the statutory language is plain and the meaning
clear, there is no scope for applying. Further, in Harish
Chander Vajpai Vs. Triloki Singh 1957 S.C.R. 371 (389),
the Court referred to the following passage from the Maxwell
on Interpretation of Statutes, 10th Edition, pages 316-317:
- Provisions sometimes found in statutes, enacting
imperfectly or for particular cases only that which was
already and more widely the law, have occasionally furnished
ground for the contention that an intention to alter the
general law was to be inferred from the partial or limited
enactment, resting on the maxim expressio unius, exclusio
alterius. But that maxim is inapplicable in such cases.
The only inference which a court can draw from such
superfluous provisions (which generally find a place in Acts
to meet unfounded objections and idle doubts), is that the
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Legislature was either ignorant or unmindful of the real
state of the law, or that it acted under the influence of
excessive caution.
Lastly, we would state that in the case of Pampathy
vs. State of Mysore (supra), the Court has specifically
observed that no legislative enactment dealing with the
procedure can provide for all cases and that Court should
have inherent powers apart from the express provisions of
law which are necessary for the proper discharge of duties.
In our view, application of the aforesaid maxim for
interpreting Section 482 would have only limited operation
as stated above. In the result, we hold that while
exercising inherent jurisdiction under Section 482, Court
has power to pass such orders (not inconsistent with any
provision of the Code) including the order for costs in
appropriate cases, (i) to give effect to any order passed
under the Code or (ii) to prevent abuse of the process of
any Court or (iii) otherwise to secure the ends of justice.
As stated above, this extraordinary power is to be used in
extrao rdinary circumstances and in a judicious manner.
Costs may be to meet the litigation expenses or purpos es.
can be exemplary to achieve the aforesaid In view of the
aforesaid findings, this appeal is dismissed.