Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AMRIK SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PEPSU.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/02/1955
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 309 1955 SCR (1)1302
ACT:
Criminal Procedure Code (Act V of 1898), s. 19 7(1)-Charge
of criminal misappropriation against a public servant-
Sanction for prosecution under s. 197(1) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure When necessary-Whether every offence
committed by a public servant or every act done by him while
performing official duties requires sanction for
prosecution.
HEADNOTE:
It is not every offence committed by a public servant that
requires sanction for prosecution under s. 197 (1) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure nor even every act done by him
while he is actually engaged in the performance of his
official duties; but if the act complained of is directly
concerned with his official duties so that, if questioned,
it could be claimed to have been done by virtue of the
office, then sanction would be necessary; and that would be
so, irrespective of whether it was, in fact, a proper
discharge of his duties, because that would really be a
matter of defence on the merits, which would have to be
investigated at the trial, and could not arise at the stage
of the grant of sanction, which must precede the institution
of the prosecution.
Whether sanction is necessary to prosecute a public servant
on a charge of criminal misappropriation, will depend on
whether the acts complained of hinge on his duties as a
public servant. If they do, then sanction is requisite.
But if they are unconnected with such duties, then no
sanction is necessary.
Hori Ram Singh v. Emperor ([1939] F.C.R. 159), H. H. B. Gill
v. The King ([1948] L.R. 75 I.A. 41), Albert West Meads v.
The King ([1948] L.A. 75 I.A. 185), Phanindra Chandra v. The
King ([1949] L.R. 76 I.A. 10), B. W. Mothavzs v. State of
West Bengal ([1955] 1 S.C.R. 216) and Shreekantiah Ramayya
Munipalli v. The State of Bombay ([1955] 1 S.C.R. 1177),
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
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CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 48 of
1954.
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Appeal by Special Leave granted by the Supreme Court by its
Order dated the 31st July 1953 from the Judgment and Order
dated the 15th May 1953 of the High Court of Judicature for
the State of Pepsu at Th, Patiala in Criminal Appeal No. 140
of 1952 arising out of the Judgment and Order dated the 31st
March 1952 of the Court of Magistrate 1st Class, Patiala in
Challan Case No. 160/102 of 1951.
Jai Gopal Sethi, (Naunit Lal, with him) for the appellant.
N. S. Bindra, (Porus A. Mehta and P. G. Gokhale, with him)
for the respondent.
1955. February 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-The appellant was a Sub-Divisional
Officer in the Public Works Department, Pepsu, and was, at
the material dates,, in charge of certain works at a place
called Karhali. It was part of his duties to disburse the
wages to the workmen employed in the works, and the
procedure usually followed was that be drew the amount
required from the treasury, and paid the same to the emplo-
yees against their signatures or thumb-impressions in the
monthly acquittance roll. In the roll for April 1951, one
Parma was mentioned as a khalasi (menial servant), and a sum
of Rs. 51 shown as paid to him for his wages, the payment
being vouched by thumbimpression. The case of the
prosecution was that there was, in fact, no person of the
name of Parma, that the thumb-impression found in the
acquittance roll was that of the appellant himself, that he
had included a fictitious name in the acquittance roll, with
intent to himself draw the amount, and that by this
expedient he had received Rs. 51 and misappropriated the
same.
The First-Class Magistrate of Patiala, before whom the
appellant was put up for trial, framed charges against him
under section 465 of the Indian Penal Code for forging the
thumb-impression of Parma, and under section 409 of the
Indian Penal Code for criminal misappropriation of Rs. 51,
and after a full trial,
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acquitted him. He held on the evidence that "there was a
khalasi Parma by name in the service of the accused at
Kehrauli", and that though the thumbimpression in the
acquittance roll was that of the appellant, the prosecution
had not established that the amount drawn by him did not
reach the hands of Parma. Against this judgment, there was
an appeal by the State to the High Court of Pepsu, which
held that proof that the thumb-impression in the acquittance
roll was that of the appellant was sufficient, ,.when taken
along with other circumstances, to establish his guilt, and
accordingly convicted him both under section 465 and section
409 of the Indian Penal Code. This appeal by special leave
is directed against this judgment.
In support of " the appeal it is argued by Mr. Jai Gopal
Sethi that the conviction of the appellant is illegal, as
sanction had not been obtained under section 197 (1) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure for his prosecution, that the
evidence on record is insufficient to establish an offence
either under section 465 or section 409 of the Indian Penal
Code and that there having been an acquittal of the
appellant by the trial Magistrate, the materials on record
did not justify a reversal of that verdict by the appellate
Court.
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The question of sanction under section 197 (1) of the Code
of Criminal Procedure may be taken up first for
consideration, as it goes to the root of the matter. The
facts bearing on this question are that there was an
application by the Department for sanction to prosecute
the appellant for an offence under section 409, and that,
the Chief Secretary, Home Department, sent the
communication, Exhibft PX, stating that he had been
"directed to convey sanction of the Government to his
prosecution". In view of this, no question was raised
before the trial Magistrate or the High Court that the
prosecution was bad for want of sanction. But after the
disposal of the appeal by the High Court, it was discovered
that, in fact, there was no order of the Government
sanctioning the prosecution, and that the Chief Secretary
had committed a mistake in sendidg the communication,
Exhibit PX.
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The position, therefore, is that the prosecution which has
resulted in the conviction of the appellant was initiated
without any sanction under section 197(1) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure and if sanction under that section is
necessary, as contended for by Mr. Sethi, then the entire
proceedings including the conviction must be quashed.
According to the respondent, however, the main charge
against the appellant is under section 409, and no sanction
is required for a prosecution under that section. The point
for decision is whether sanction under section 197 (1) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure is necessary for prosecuting
the appellant under section 409. -
There has been considerable divergence of judicial opinion
on the scope of section 197(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. The question has latterly been the subject of
consideration by the highest Courts in this country, and by
the Privy Council, and the position may now be taken to be
fairly well-settled. Hori Ram Singh v. Emperor(1) is a
decision of the Federal Court on the necessity for sanction
under section 270 of the Government of India Act, 1935,
which is similar in terms to section 197(1) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. The facts in that case were that a Sub-
Assistant Surgeon was charged under section 409 with having
dishonestly removed certain medicines from a hospital which
was under his charge, to his own residence, and under
section 477-A, with having failed to enter them in the stock
book. The sanction of the Government had not been obtained
for the prosecution under section 270 of the Government of
India Act, and the point for decision was whether it was
necessary. It was held that the charge under section 477-A
required sanction, as "the official capacity is involved in
the very act complained of as amounting to a crime"; but
that no sanction was required for a charge under section
409, because "the official capacity is material only in
connection with the ’entrustment’ and does not necessarily
enter into the later act of misappropriation or conversion,
which is the act complained of".
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 159.
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In the course of his judgment, Varadachariar, J. discussed
the scope of section 197(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and after observing that the decisions on that
section were not uniform, proceeded to group them under
three categories-those which had held that sanction was
necessary when the act complained of attached to’ the
official character of the person doing it, those which had
held that it was necessary in all cases in which the
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official character of the person gave him an opportunity for
the commission of the crime, and those which had held it
necessary when the offence was committed while the accused
was actually engaged in the performance of official duties.
The learned Judge expressed his agreement with the first of
the three views.
In H. H. B. Gill v. The King(1), the question arose directly
with reference to section 197(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. There, the accused was charged under section 161
with taking bribes, and under section 120-B with conspiracy.
On the question whether sanction was necessary under section
197(1) it was held by the Privy Council that there was no
difference in scope between that section and section 270 of
the Government of India Act, 1935, and approving the
statement of the law by Varadachariar, J. in Hori Ram Singh
v. Emperor(2), Lord Simonds observed:
"A public servant can only be said to act or to purport to
act in the discharge of his official duty, if his act is
such as to lie within the scope of his official duty........
The test may well be whether the public servant, if
challenged, can reasonably claim that, what he does, he does
in virtue of his office".
It was accordingly held that as the acts with which the
accused was charged could not be justified as done by virtue
of his office, no sanction was necessary. The view taken in
H. H. B. Gill v. The King(1) was followed by the Privy
Council in A16 ert West Meads v. The King(-’), and
reaffirmed in Phanindra Chandra v.
(1) [1948] L.R. 75 I.A. 41.
(2) [1939] F.C.R. 159.
(3) [1948] L.,R. 70 I.A. 185,
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The King(1), and adopted by this Court in R. W. Mathams V.
State of We8t Bengal(1).
The result of the authorities may thus be summed up: It is
not every offence committed by a public servant that
requires sanction for prosecution under section 197(1) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure; nor even every act done by
him while he is actually engaged in the performance of his
official duties; but if the act complained of is directly
concerned with his official duties so that, if questioned,
it could be claimed to have been done by virtue of the
office, then sanction would be necessary; and that would be
so, irrespective of whether it was, in fact, a proper
discharge of his duties, because that would really be a
matter of defence on the merits, which would have to be in-
vestigated at the trial, and could not arise at the stage of
the grant of sanction, which mu_t precede the institution of
the prosecution.
It is conceded for the respondent that on the principle
above enunciated, sanction would be required for prosecuting
the appellant under section 465, as the charge was in
respect of his duty of obtaining signatures or thumb-
impressions of the employees before wages were paid to them.
But he contends that misappropriation of funds could, under
no circumstances, be said to be within the scope of the
duties of a public servant, that he could not, when charged
with it, claim justification for it by virtue of his office,
that therefore no sanction under section 197(1) was
necessary, and that the question was concluded by the
decisions in Hori Ram Singh v. Emperor(1) and Albert We8t
Meads v. The King(1), in both of which the charges were of
criminal misappropriation. We are of opinion that this is
too broad a statement of the legal position, and that the
two decisions cited lend no support to it. In our judgment,
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even when the charge is one of misappropriation by a public
servant, whether sanction is required under section 197(1)
will depend upon the facts of each case. If the acts
complained of are so integrally connected with the duties
attach-
(1) [1949] L.R. 76 I.A. 10.
(3) [1939] F.C.R. 159.
(2) [1955] 1 S.O.R. 216.
(4) [1948] L.R. 75 I.A. 180,
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ing to the office as to be inseparable from them, then
sanction under section 197(1) would be necessary; but if
there was no necessary connection between them and the
performance of those duties) the official status furnishing
only the occasion or opportunity for the acts, then no
sanction would be required.
Quite recently, this Court had to consider in Shreekantiah
Ramayya Munipalli v. The State of Bombay(1) the necessity
for sanction under section 197(1), when the charge was one
of misappropriation under section 409. There, the law was
laid down in the following terms:
"The section has content and its language must be given
meaning. What it says is-
’When any public servant........ is accused of any offence
alleged to have been committed by him while acting or
purporting to act in the discharge of his official
duty.........
We have therefore first to concentrate on the word
"offence’.
Now an offence seldom consists of a single act. It is
usually composed of several elements and, as a rule, a whole
series of acts must be proved before it can be established.
In the present case, the elements alleged against the second
accused are, first, that there was an ’entrustment’ and/or
’dominion’; second, that the entrustment and/or dominion was
’in his capacity as a public servant’; third, that there was
a ’disposal’; and fourth, that the disposal was ’dishonest’.
Now it is evident that the entrustment and/or dominion here
were in an official capacity, and it is equally evident that
there could in this case be no disposal, lawful or
otherwise, save by an act done or purporting to be done in
an official capacity".
On the facts, it was held in that case that the several acts
which were complained of, were official acts, and that the
prosecution was bad for want of sanction.
The decisions in Hori Ram Singh v. Emperor(1), and Albert
West Meads v. The King(1), when properly examined, do not
support the extreme contention
(1) [1955] 1 B.C.R. 1177. (2) [1989] F.C.R. 159.
(3) [1948] L.R 75 I.A. 185.
1309
urged on behalf of the respondent. In Hori Ram Singh v.
Emperor(1), the medicines had not been entered in the stock
book, and were removed by the accused to his residence, and
the charge against him was that in so removing them he had
committed MISappropriation. It was no part of the duty of
the accused to remove medicines to his house, and he could
not claim that he did so by virtue of his office. He could
have made such a claim if he had, let us suppose, entered
the medicines in- the stock books and shown them as expended
in the hospital. But, on the facts, no official act was
involved, and that was why Varadachariar, J. observed that,
".... so far as the charge under section 409 was con
cerned, the acts in respect of which he was intended to be
prosecuted could not be regarded as acts done or purported
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to be done in execution of his duty".
Reference may also be made to the following observations of
Sulaiman, J. in the same case:
"The question whether a criminal breach of trust can be
committed while purporting to act in execution of his duty
is not capable of being answered hypothetically in the
abstract, without any reference to the actual facts of the
case. An attempt to answer the question in a generalized
way has been responsible for loose language used in some of
the cases cited before us.... The question whether the act
purported to have been done in execution of duty or not must
depend on the special circumstances of each case".
In Albert West Meads v. The King(1), an Army Officer had
received two sums of money, and was subsequently unable to
produce them. He was charged with criminal
misappropriation, and convicted. He contended that the
conviction was illegal for want of sanction, but the Privy
Council, following H. H. B. Gill v. The King(1), rejected
this contention. It is essential to note that the accused
did not claim to have spent the amount in the course of his
official duties, but stated that the moneys had been con-
sumed by fire. It is with reference to these facts that the
Privy Council observed:
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 159. (2) [1948] L.R. 75 I.A. 185.
(3) [1948] L.R. 75 I.A. 41.
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of which he was charged’, i.e. acts of fraudulently
misapplying money entrusted to his care as a public servant,
’as acts done by him by virtue of the office that he held’
".
The result then is that whether sanction is necessary to
prosecute a public servant on a charge of criminal
misappropriation, will depend on whether the acts complained
of hinge on his duties as a pubic servant. If they do, then
sanction is requisite. But if they are unconnected with
such duties, then no sanction is necessary.
In this view, we have to examine whether the acts with which
the appellant is charged directly bear on the duties which
he has got to discharge as a public servant. The appellant
received the sum of Rs. 51 alleged to have been
misappropriated, as Subdivisions Officer, and he admits
receipt of the same. Then it was his duty to pay that
amount to the khalasi Parma, and take his signature or
thumb-impression in acknowledgment thereof. The accused
does claim to have paid the amount to Parma, and the
acquittance roll records the payment, and there is in
acknowledgment thereof a thumb-impression as against his
name. If what appears on the face of the roll is true-and
whether it is true or not is not a matter relevant at the
stage of sanction-then the acts with which the appellant is
charged fall within the scope of his duties, and can be
justified by him as done by virtue of his office. Clearly,
therefore, sanction was required under section 197(1) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure before the appellant could be
prosecuted under section 409, and the absence of such sanc-
tion is fatal to the maintainability of the prosecution.
The conviction should, therefore, be quashed.
In this view, there is no need to consider whether on the
evidence, the offence of criminal misappropriation or
forgery has been brought home to the appellant or not.
The appeal is accordingly allowed, and the convictions and
sentences passed on the appellant arc set aside. Fine, if
paid, will be refunded.
Appeal allowed.
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