Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
KANWAL LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/09/1962
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1317 1963 SCR Supl. (1) 479
ACT:
Defamation-Accusing a person to be a prostitute-Statememt
made in complaint to Panchayat Officer-Whether protected-
Panchayat Officer, if had authority to take cognizance of
offence-Whether statement made in the interest of the
maker-Punjab Gram Panchayat Act, 1952 (4 of 1953), ss. 38
and 42-Indian Penal Code, 1860 (Act XLV of 1860), s. 500
exceptions 8, 9.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant a public servant, addressed a communication to
the Panchayat Officer alleging that the complainant was a
prostitute and that she should be removed from the house in
which she was living. He was prosecuted and convicted of
the offence of defamation under s. 500 Penal Code. The
appellant contended that he was protected by exceptions 8
and 9 to 500.
Held, that exceptions 8 and 9 to s. 500 were not applicable
to the case and that the appellant was rightly convicted.
Exception 8 was applicable only in cases where the
defamatory statement was contained in a complaint to a
person who had lawful authority over the person concerned in
respect of the subject matter of the accusation.
Prostitution was not an offence of which cognizance could be
taken under the Punjab Gram Panchayat Act, 1952. Besides s.
42 barred the Gram Panchayats from taking cognizance of any
offence in which either the complainant or the accused was a
public servant.
Exception 9 applied to cases where the imputation was made
in good faith for the protection of the interest of the per-
son making it, or of any other person, or for the public
good. Even assuming good faith, exception 9 was not
applicable merely on account of the imputation having been
made in the interest of the appellant. It was further
necessary that the person to whom the communication was made
must have an interest in protecting the person making it.
Besides the bona fides of the person making the imputation,
the person to whom the imputation is conveyed must have a
common interest with the person making it which is served by
the communication.
480
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
Harrison v. Bush, (1855) 5 E. & B. 344 : 119 E.R. 509,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 106 of
1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
May 11, 1961, of the Punjab High Court in Cr. R. No. 580 of
1961.
Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
Gopal Singh and P. D. Menon, for the respondent.
1962. September 28. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
AYYANGAR, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the High Court of Punjab by which a Criminal
Revision filed against an appellate order of the Additional
Sessions judge, Ludhiana confirming the appellant’s
conviction and sentence was dismissed in limine.
The facts giving rise to the appeal lie in a very narrow
compass. The appellant was prosecuted on a complaint filed
by Mst. Ram Rakhi of the offence of defamation under s.
500, I.P.C. The appellant and Mst. Ram Rakhi were
neighbours. The defamatory matter was contained in a
communication addressed by the appellant who is a member of
the police force to the District Panchayat Officer,
Ludhiana. In this "application" the appellant alleged that
the complainant was a woman of loose character who was
having illicit connection with goondas, her paramours coming
to her frequently at nights and that her immoral activities
reflected badly on the locality in which the appellant
lived. There is no doubt that this was grossly defamatory
of the complainant. The defence of the appellant subs-
tantially was that in substance the allegations were true
and that he was entitled to make this application
481
to the Panchayat in order to seek the assistance of that
body for getting the complainant out of the locality and for
this purpose he relied upon the last paragraphs of the
application which ran :
"Petty problems like this can be easily solved
by the village Panchayat instead of referring
the case to the Court. It is therefore
requested that the Panchayat of village
Sanghol (P. O. Sangho) District Ludhiana may
kindly be asked to take suitable action to end
this prostitution add after getting the house
in which Shadi (father of the complainant,) is
residing at present, vacated from him."
The learned Magistrate considered a large volume of evidence
that was led as regards the plea of justification as well as
of the qualified privilege’ within exceptions 8 and 9 of s.
499, I.P.C., and rejecting the defence, convicted the
appellant of the offence charged and sentenced him to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for six months. The appellant
filed an appeal which was dismissed by the Additional
Sessions judge and he recorded:
"I come to the conclusion that accused Kanwal
Lal was rightly convicted and sentenced by the
Trial Court. ’the offence against him is
fully established. He deserves no mercy. He
was employed in the office of the Inspector
General Police, Punjab Chandigarh and he tried
to use his office which he was holding simply
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
to overawe the poor complainant and her
parents, just to get the possession of his
house from them. The quantum of sentence
passed against the accused appears to be
correct in view of his first offence and
youthful age."
It was the revision filed against this judgment that was
dismissed in limine by the High Court.
482
There being no dispute about the publication or of the
published matter being defamatory being of a character
falling within s. 499, I.P.C., the only argument that was
addressed before us was based upon the case falling within
Exceptions 8 and 9 to S. 499, I.P.C. Exception 8 runs in
these terms :
"It is not defamation to prefer in good faith
an accusation against any person to any of
those who have lawful authority over that
person with respect to the subject-matter of
accusation.
In order to establish a defence under this exception the
accused would have to prove that the person to whom the
complaint was made had lawful authority over the person
complained against, in respect of the subject-matter of the
accusation. If the District Panchayat Officer or the
Panchayat had such lawful authority, the last paragraph of
the offending communication would have justified such a
plea. But there is no basis at all for this argument in
view of the clear provisions of the Punjab Gram Panchayat
Act, 1952, under which statute alone Panchayats have
jurisdiction. Chapter IV of that Act deals with the
Criminal jurisdiction of the Panchayat. Section 38 with
which that Chapter opens enacts:
"The criminal jurisdiction of a Gram Panchayat
shall be confined to the trial of offences
specified in Schedule IA."
Prostitution is not an offence under the Indian Penal Code
and the keeping of a disorderly or bawdy house is not an
offence within Schedule 1 A to which offences alone the
criminal jurisdiction of Panchayats extends. If this were
not sufficient to negative any defence based upon Exception
8, reference may be made to s. 42 of the Gram Panchayat Act
which by its 1st sub-section enacts:
483
"Subject to the provisions of sub.s. (3) no
panchayat shall take cognizance of any offence
under the Indian Penal Code, 1860 in which
either the complainant or the accused is a
public servant.
So even if the complaint should be taken to be a complaint
of a public- nuisance it was doubly excluded from the
jurisdiction of the Panchayat since the appellant was a
public servant. The defence based on Exception 8 must
therefore fail.
Nor is there more substance in the invocation of the 9th
exception. That exception runs:
"It is not defamation to make an imputation on
the character of another provided that the
imputation be made in good faith for the
protection of the interest of the person
making it, or of any other person, or of the
public good."
Even if good faith be taken to have been established, the
imputation has to be made for the protection of the interest
of the person making it. Learned Counsel suggested that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
terms of the provision were satisfied since the appellant
made the accusation to protect his own interest. That is
certainly not the meaning of the exception. It posits that
the person to whom the communication is made has an interest
in protecting the person making the accusation. In other
words, besides the bona fides of the person making the
imputation, the person to whom the imputation is conveyed
must have a common interest with the person making it which
is served by the communication. This exception merely
reproduces the principle laid down by Lord Campbell, C. J.,
in Harrison v. Bush (1).
"A communication made bona fide upon any
subject matter in which the party
communicating
(1) (1855) 5 E. & B. 344, 348; 119 E. R. 509,
484
has an interest, or in reference to which he
has a duty, is privileged, if made to a person
having a corresponding interest or duty,
although it contains criminatory matter which,
without this privilege, would be slanderous
and actionable."
The point of difference between exceptions, 8 and 9 is that
whereas in the former the person to whom the complaint is
made must have lawful authority to deal with the subject
matter of the complaint and take proceedings against that
person, there is no such requirement in exception 9 where it
is sufficient if a communication is made to a person for the
protection of one’s own interest in which the other also has
an interest. This is clearly brought out by the illustra-
tions to the exception.
It cannot be seriously suggested that the communication now
in question satisfies this test.
The appellant was therefore properly convicted of the
offence and nothing was said about the sentence. The appeal
fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
485