Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DAU DAYAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/11/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 433 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 639
CITATOR INFO :
E 1966 SC1820 (7,8)
ACT:
Criminal Trial-Counterfeiting trade mark-Limitation, of one
year for prosecution-Prosecution, when commences-Whether on
filing of complaint or on issue of Process-Indian
Merchandise Marks Act, 1889 (4 of 1889), s. 15.
HEADNOTE:
On April 26, 954, the appellant was arrested for offences
under ss. 420, 482, 483, 485 and 486 Indian Penal Code and
bidis alleged to bear counterfeit trade marks were seized
from him. On this a complaint was filed on May 26, against
the appellant that he was in possession of counterfeit
bidis, wrappers and labels. After investigation, the police
submitted a charge sheet on September 30, 1954, and summons
was ordered to the appellant on July 22, 1955. The
appellant raised a preliminary objection before-the
Magistrate that the proceedings were barred by s. 15 of the
Indian Merchandise Marks Act. He contended that the offence
was discovered on April 26, 1954, when he was arrested and
the prosecution which commenced with the issue of process
against him on July 22, 1954, was beyond the period of one
year provided by s. 15.
Held, that the prosecution was not barred by S. 15 as the
prosecution commenced on the presentation of the complaint
which was within one year of the discovery of the offence
and not on the issuing of the process. It is settled law
that unless there is something to the contrary in the
statute, when a private complaint is presented it is the
date of presentation thereof that marks the commencement of
the prosecution. The period of limitation is intended to
operate against the complainant and not against the Court.
It will defeat the object of the Act and deprive traders of
the protection of the law if it were held that the complaint
should be thrown out unless process was issued within one
year. of the discovery of the offence.
JUDGMENT:
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CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 118 of
1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 14, 1958, of
the Allahabad High Court in Criminal Revision No. 1594 of
1956, arising out of the judgment and order of the Court of
Additional Sessions Judge at Kanpur in Criminal Revision No.
13 of 1956.
C. P. Lal, for the appellant.
640
Gopi Nath Dikshit, for the respondent.
1958. November 24. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR, J.-The facts leading up to this appeal
are these: On April 26, 1954, the appellant was arrested by
the Sisamau Police for offences under ss. 420, 482,483, 485
and 486 of the Indian Penal Code on the allegation that he
was in possession of 25 packets of Chand Chhap Biri, which
were alleged to bear counterfeit trade marks. On May 26,
1954, one Harish Chandra Jain acting on behalf of Messrs.
Mohan Lal Hargovind Das filed a complaint charging that the
appellant was in possession of counterfeit bidis, wrappers
and labels and praying that a case under the sections above
mentioned be registered and investigated. On that, the
Magistrate passed the following order :
" S. O. Sisamau. Please investigate and register a case."
After investigation, the police submitted their chargesheet
on September 30, 1954, and summons was ordered to the
appellant on July 22, 1955. On September 17, 1955, the
appellant filed an application before the Magistrate wherein
he raised a preliminary objection that the proceedings were
barred by s. 15 of the Indian Merchandise Marks Act, 1889 (4
of 1889), hereinafter referred to as the Act. That section
provides :
" No such prosecution as is mentioned in the last foregoing
section shall be commenced after the expiration of three
years next after the commission of the offence, or one year
after the first discovery thereof by the prosecutor,
whichever expiration first happens."
The contention of the appellant was that the offence was
discovered on April 26, 1954, when he was arrested and the
goods seized, and that, in consequence, the issue of process
on July 22, 1955, was beyond the period of one year provided
under s. 15 of the Act, and that the proceedings should
therefore be quashed as barred by limitation. The
Magistrate rejected this contention, and a Revision Petition
preferred against this order to the Additional Sessions
Judge, Kanpur,
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shared the same fate. The appellant then filed a further
Revision Petition to the High Court of Allahabad, being
Criminal Revision No. 1594 of 1956, and the same was heard
along with other similar Revision Petitions by a Bench
consisting of James and Takru, JJ. By their judgment dated
May 13, 1958, the learned Judges held that the prosecution
commenced when the complaint was presented on May 26, 1954,
and that as the discovery was on April 26, 1954, the
proceedings were within time under s. 15 of the Act. In
view of the importance of the question raised, they granted
leave to appeal to this Court under Art. 134 (1)(c) of the
Constitution, and that is how the matter comes before us.
The point for decision is, when does a prosecution commence
for purposes of s. 15 of the Act, whether on the date when
the complaint is preferred, or when the process is issued
thereon? The word "prosecution " is not defined in the Act,
nor are there any provisions therein bearing on this
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question. Now, under the law and apart from statutory
prescriptions, a prosecution commences, where it is at the
instance of a private prosecutor, when the complaint is
preferred. The position is thus stated in Halsbury’s Laws
of England, Vol. X, 3rd Edn., p. 340, para. 630:
" Criminal prosecutions, except where there are statutory
provisions to the contrary, may be commenced at any time
after the commission of the offence. A prosecution is
commenced, when an information is laid before a justice, or,
if there is no information, when the accused is brought
before a justice to answer the charge, or, if there is no
preliminary examination before a justice, when an indictment
is preferred. "
It is further stated there that different statutes provide
for various periods of limitation within which a prose-
cution could be commenced after the commission of the
offence, and that three years is the period provided for an
offence under the Merchandise Marks, Act, 1887, which
corresponds to the Indian Merchandise Marks Act, 1889. It
is therefore settled law that unless
642
there is something to the contrary in the statute, when a
private complaint is presented it is the date of pre-
sentation thereof that marks the commencement of the
prosecution.
Now, what is the nature of the prosecution under s. 15 of
the Act ? It is relevant in this connection to refer to ss.
13 and 14, which run as follows:
S. 13: ’,In the case of goods brought into India’ by sea,
evidence of the port of shipment shall, in a prosecution for
an offence against this Act or section 18 of the Sea Customs
Act, 1878, as amended by this Act, be prima facie evidence
of the place or country in which the goods were made or
produced."
S. 14(1): " On any such prosecution as is mentioned in the
last foregoing section or on any prosecution for an offence
against any of the sections of the Indian Penal Code, as
amended by this Act, which relate to trade, property and
other marks, the Court may order costs to be paid to the
defendant by the prosecutor or to the prosecutor by the
defendant, having regard to the information given by and the
conduct of the defendant and prosecutor respectively.
(2) Such costs shall, on application to the Court, be
recoverable as if they were fine."
The object of the above provisions is to protect the rights
of persons who manufacture and sell goods with distinct
trade marks against invasion by other persons passing off
their goods fraudulently and with counterfeit trade marks as
those of the manufacturers. Normally, the remedy for such
infringement will be by action in Civil Courts. But in view
of the delay which is incidental to civil proceedings and
the great injustice which might result if the rights of
manufacturers are not promptly protected, the law gives them
the right to take the matter before the Criminal Courts, and
prosecute the offenders, so as to enable them effectively
,and speedily to vindicate their rights. It is for this,
reason that a short period of limitation is provided heir
preferring a complaint under a. 15 of the and there is also
a special provision for award of costs of the proceedings to
or by the complainant.
in Ruppell v. Ponnuswami Tewan (1), the question &rose
whether a prosecution launched by the complainant in 1898 in
respect of goods sold and marked with what was alleged to
be, a counterfeit trade mark in 1893 was in time. In
deciding that it was a barred under s. 15 of the Act, the
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Court observed as follows:
Section 15 of the Merchandise Mark,% Act IV of 1889, enacts
that no prosecution such as the present shall be commenced
after the expiration of one year after the first discovery
of the offence by the prosecutor. The reason for this
limitation is clear.
Ordinarily the infringement of a trade. mark is rather a
civil than a criminal wrong, but as civil proceedings may
require much time and expenditure to bring them to a
conclusion, the Legislature, in its anxiety to protect
traders, has allowed resort to the criminal courts to
provide a speedy remedy in cases where the aggrieved party
is diligent and does not by his conduct show that the case.
is not one of urgency. if, therefore, the person aggrieved
fails to resort to the criminal courts within a year of the
offence coming to his knowledge, the law assumes that the
case is not one of urgency, and it leaves him to his civil
remedy by an action for injunction."
It will be noticed that the complainant is required to
resort to the Court within one year of the discovery of the
offence if he is to have the benefit of proceeding under the
Act. That means that if the complaint is presented within
one year of such discovery, the requirements of s. 15 are
satisfied. The period of limitation, it should be
remembered, is intended to operate against the complainant
and to ensure’ diligence on his part in prosecuting his
rights, and not against the Court. Now, it will defeat the
object of the enactment and de-Drive traders of the
protection which the law intended to give them, if we were
to hold that unless process is issued on their complaint
within one year of the discovery of the offence, it should
be thrown out. - It will be an unfortunate - state of the
law if the trader whose rights -had been-infringed and who
takes lip the matter promptly before the Criminal
(1) (1899) I.L.R. 22 Mad. 488.
644
Court is, nevertheless, denied redress owing to the delay in
the issue of process which occurs in Court.
The appellant relies on certain decisions as showing that.
the prosecution must be held to commence only when process
is issued and not when complaint is filed. In Sheik Meeran
Sahib v. Ratnavelu Mudali (1), De Rozario v. Gulab Chand
Anundjee (2) and Golap Jan v. Bholanath Khettry (3) cited by
the appellant, the question was whether an action for
damages for malicious prosecution would lie when the
complaint was dismissed without notice to the plaintiff. It
was held that the plaintiff could not be held to have been
prosecuted unless process was issued to him and that where
the complaint was dismissed without such process being
issued, there was no prosecution and no action for damages
in respect of such prosecution would lie. These decisions
have no bearing on the present question. In suits for
damages for malicious prosecution, one of the points to be
decided is, whether the plaintiff was, in fact, prosecuted;
and if he was, no question arises as to when the prosecution
commenced. On the other hand, the point for decision in a
prosecution under the Act is, not whether there was a
prosecution but when it was instituted ; and a question as
to whether there was prosecution or not would be wholly
foreign to it. Indeed, in an action for damages for
malicious prosecution, when it is held that there was
prosecution, that could properly be held to have commenced
when the complaint was filed and not when the process was
issued. Vide the observations of Woodroffe, J., in the
course of the argument in Golap Jan v. Bholanath Khettry (3)
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at p. 884. The decisions in Sheik Meeran Sahib v. Ratnavelu
Mudali (1), De Rozario v. Gulab Chand Anundjee (2) and Golap
Jan v. Bholanath Khettry (3) therefore do not throw any
light on the matter now under consideration. It may be that
these decisions may have to be reconsidered in the light of
the recent decision of the Privy Council in Mohamed Amin v.
Jogendra Kumar Bannerjee (4), wherein it was observed:
(1) (1912) I.L.R. 37 Mad. 181 (2) (1910) I.L.R. 37 Cal.
358.
(3) (1911) I.L.R. 38 Cal. 890. (4) [1947] A.C. 322, 331.
645
" The test is not whether the criminal proceedings have
reached a stage at which they may be described as a
prosecution; the test is whether such proceedings have
reached a stage at which damage to the plaintiff results."
Vide also Ramaswami Iyer on The Law of Torts, 4th Edn., p.
318.
The decision in R. R. Chari v. The State of Uttar Pradesh
(1) was relied on by the appellant as showing that until
process was issued, there was no prosecution. There, the
appellant was proceeded against under the provisions. of the
Prevention of Corruption Act No. 2 of 1947. The Deputy
Magistrate, Kanpur, issued a warrant for his arrest on
October 22, 1947. Thereafter, on December 6, 1948, the
prosecution obtained the necessary sanction under the Act.
The contention of the appellant was that the prosecution
must be held to have been instituted against him on October
22, 1947, when he was arrested, that as no sanction for his
prosecution had been obtained at that time, the proceedings
were bad, and that the defect was not cured by sanction
being obtained subsequently on December 6, 1948. This Court
held that under the special provisions of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, the police had the power to arrest the
appellant pending investigation and that was all the effect
of the order of the Deputy Magistrate dated October 22,
1947, and that therefore there was no prosecution on the
date of the arrest. But here, we are dealing with a private
complaint, and as pointed out at p. 315 of the Report, s.
190(1)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Code would apply to such
cases, and the Magistrate must be held to have taken
cognizance when the complaint was received. This decision,
in our opinion, does not assist the appellant; nor does the
decision in Gopal Marwari v. King-Emperor (2). There,
considering ss. 200 and 202 of the Criminal Procedure Code,
the learned Judges observed that there was a distinction
between initiation of proceedings before the Magistrate and
his taking cognizance of the same. It is Sufficient to say
that that is not
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 312.
(2) (1943) I.L.R. 22 Pat- 433.
646
the question ’which we have got to -decide here, and on the
language of s. 15 of the Act, which is what we are concerned
with in this appeal, all that is-required is that a private
’prosecutor’ should prefer this complaint within one year of
the discovery of the offence’, and if that is done,’ the bar
under that section cannot apply. We agree with the decision
of the learned Judges of the Court. below that - the,
proceedings are not barred by s. 15 of the Act.
This appeal is accordingly dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.