Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2455 of 1997
PETITIONER:
Smt. Kesar Devi
RESPONDENT:
Vs.
Union of India & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/07/2003
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & G. P. Mathur.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
G.P. Mathur, J.
1. This appeal has been preferred by special leave against the judgment
and order dated 12.1.1996 of a Division Bench of Rajasthan High Court by
which the special appeal preferred by the appellant against the judgment and
order dated 19.7.1995 of a learned Single Judge was dismissed and the order
passed by the Appellate Tribunal for Forfeited Property, New Delhi, was
affirmed.
2. The appellant is widow of late Jagannath Sharma. The Customs and
Central Excise Authorities of Jaipur recovered 5 gold bars from Jagannath
Sharma on 24.7.1969. On 8.4.1972 Police Authorities recovered 15 gold
bars from Radha Ballabh and on 15.11.1972 two gold bars of foreign origin
were recovered from Ram Parekh and both of them gave statements that
they had bought the same from Jagannath Sharma. On 11.10.1973 police
recovered 38 gold bars from one Ram Prasad Sharma and the documents
showed that the same belonged to Jagannath Sharma. Jagannath Sharma
was then detained under MISA on 8.10.1974, but the detention order was
revoked and he was released in November, 1974. Thereafter, he was again
detained on 4.8.1975 under COFEPOSA Act by an order passed by the
Deputy Secretary to the Home Department, Government of Rajasthan,
Jaipur. The detention order was passed on the ground that the State
Government was satisfied that with a view to prevent Jagannath Sharma
from dealing in smuggled goods and engaging in transporting or concealing
or keeping smuggled goods, it was necessary to make an order under Section
3(1) of the COFEPOSA Act to detain him.
3. Proceedings for forfeiture of three properties, namely, (1) House
property No. D-48, Bapu Nagar, Jaipur; (2) House property known as Haldia
House, Johari Bazar, Jaipur (Municipal No.JD-JMC-1/106/1948); and (3)
House Property in Mehandi Ka Chowk, Ramganj Bazar, Jaipur (Municipal
No.GD-JMC-1/276/1948) were initiated under the Smugglers and Foreign
Exchange Manipulators (Forfeiture of Property) Act, 1976 (for short
"SAFEMA"). A notice under Section 6(1) of SAFEMA (hereinafter
referred to as "the Act") was issued to the appellant Smt. Kesar Devi with
regard to Bapu Nagar property and a similar notice was issued to the
appellant’s husband Jagannath Sharma with regard to the other two
properties, namely, Haldia House and Mehandi Ka Chowk. Jagannath
Sharma gave a reply that the aforesaid two properties did not belong to him
but belonged to his wife. Thereafter, the competent authority issued a letter
dated 27.4.1977 purporting to be a notice under Section 6(2) of the Act to
the appellant. In this letter apart from enclosing a copy of the notice under
Section 6(1) issued to Jagannath Sharma as required by clause (2) of Section
6, the competent authority called upon the appellant "to produce evidence if
she was the real owner of the aforesaid property, and if so, to indicate the
source of her income, earnings or assets out of which or by means of which
she had acquired the properties." In her reply dated 5.5.1977, the appellant
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asserted that she was the absolute and exclusive owner of all the three
properties and the same had been purchased out of her own individual
income and they had nothing to do with her husband Jagannath Sharma.
The competent authority, after considering the material on record passed an
order under Section 7(1) of the Act on 28.7.1977 against the appellant
forfeiting Bapu Nagar property. A separate order was passed against
Jagannath Sharma on the same date forfeiting the other two properties. The
orders were passed on the finding that though the ostensible owner of the
properties was Smt. Kesar Devi but the real owner was her husband
Jagannath Sharma. In appeal, the appellate Tribunal vide its order dated
26.10.1977 set aside the order and remanded the matter to the competent
authority to enable the appellant and her husband to cross-examine the
witnesses and also to produce such witnesses in support of their case, as they
may desire. Thereafter, the competent authority, after affording an
opportunity of hearing and leading evidence, passed a fresh order, forfeiting
all the three properties, namely, properties at Bapu Nagar, Haldia House and
Mehandi Ka Chowk.
4. Feeling aggrieved by the said order, the appellant preferred an appeal
before the appellate Tribunal. The appellate Tribunal held that in the notice
issued to the appellant under Section 6(1) of the Act, two properties, namely,
Haldia House and Mehandi Ka Chowk were not included. The Tribunal did
not accept the contention of the representative of the Department that the
letter dated 27.4.1977 forwarding to the appellant a copy of the notice under
Section 6(1) issued to her husband Jagannath Sharma, was not only a notice
under Section 6(2) to her but also a notice under Section 6(1) in respect of
these two properties. After consideration of the evidence adduced by the
parties, the Tribunal agreed with the finding of the competent authority that
there was no evidence to support the assertion that the appellant was
carrying on any business and that any savings were thus available to her for
making investment in the properties acquired. Accordingly, the appeal was
allowed qua (1) Haldia House property and (2) Mehandi Ka Chowk
properties and the order of forfeiture passed regarding the aforesaid
properties was set aside. The appeal was, however, dismissed with regard
to house property No.D-48, Bapu Nagar, Jaipur and its forfeiture as directed
by the competent authority was upheld.
5. The appellant then preferred a writ petition before the Jaipur Bench of
Rajasthan High Court challenging the orders of the competent authority and
of the appellate authority. During the course of hearing of the writ petition,
three main contentions assailing the detention of Jagannath Sharma were
raised, namely, (1) when challenge is made regarding forfeiture of the
property under SAFEMA, the Court is competent to examine the orders
passed under COFEPOSA Act; (2) the order passed by the State
Government for detaining the appellant’s husband under COFEPOSA Act
was bad in law; and (3) the grounds of detention under COFEPOSA Act
were not communicated. It was also urged that reasons for belief had not
been recorded as provided under Section 6(1) of the Act. The finding of
the authorities that the appellant had failed to establish that she had
purchased the property from her own income, was also assailed. The
learned Single Judge did not accept the contentions raised on behalf of the
appellant and after a detailed consideration of the same dismissed the writ
petition. The special appeal preferred by the appellant was dismissed
summarily by the Division Bench of the High Court.
6. In support of the contention that it is open to a person to assail the
validity of a detention order passed under COFEPOSA Act while
challenging the proceedings initiated under SAFEMA regarding forfeiture of
property, the appellant before the High Court had placed reliance on Union
of India Vs. Haji Mastan Mirza (1984) 2 SCC 427. However, this decision
has been expressly overruled by a Bench of nine Judges in Attorney General
for India v. Amratlal Prajivandas (1994) 5 SCC 54, wherein it has been held
as under:
"Thus the conclusion is that an order of detention to
which Section 12-A is applicable as well as an order of
detention to which Section 12-A was not applicable can serve
as the foundation, as the basis, for applying SAFEMA to such
detenu and to his relatives and associates provided such order
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of detention does not attract any of the sub-clauses in the
proviso to Section 2(2)(b). If such detenu did not choose to
question the said detention (either by himself or through his
next friend) before the Court during the period when such order
of detention was in force, - or is unsuccessful in his attack
thereon â\200\223 he, or his relatives and associates cannot attack or
question its validity when it is made the basis for applying
SAFEMA to him or to his relatives or associates."
In view of this authoritative pronouncement by this Court, the main
grounds of challenge raised before the High Court have no legs to stand.
7. The competent authority as also the appellate authority considered the
evidence adduced by the appellant and came to the conclusion that there was
no evidence to support the appellant’s claim that she was carrying on any
business and that any savings were thus available to her for making
investment in the acquired property. The finding is based upon a thorough
and proper appraisal and consideration of the evidence on record and we
find no reason to differ from the same. In the special leave petition, the
grounds taken relate to the validity of the detention order passed under
COFEPOSA Act against Jagannath Sharma and also to the correctness of the
finding recorded by the authorities that the appellant did not have any
individual income of her own to purchase the properties. These grounds, in
our opinion, have no substance for the reasons indicated above and they
were rightly not very seriously pressed by the learned counsel before us.
8. An application was moved by the appellant on 24.3.2003 for
producing additional documents and for urging additional grounds.
Learned counsel has submitted that the notice issued under Section 6(1) of
SAFEMA does not show as to how any link or nexus is established between
the properties sought to be forfeited and the alleged illegally acquired money
of the detenu Jagannath Sharma. It has been urged that unless the notice
itself showed the link or nexus between the illegally acquired money of the
detenu and the property sought to be forfeited, no order for forfeiture under
Section 7 could be passed. In support of his submission, learned counsel
has placed reliance on a decision of this Court in Civil Appeal No.7400-
7401 of 1996 (Smt. Fatima Mohd. Amin (dead) through LR v. Union of
India & Anr.) decided on 16.1.2003.
9. Section 2(1) of SAFEMA lays down that the provisions of the said
Act shall apply only to the persons specified in Sub-section (2) of that
Section. Sub-section (2) of Section 2 gives a long list of different categories
of persons to whom the Act shall apply and they include those who have
been convicted under the Customs Act, 1962; Sea Customs Act, 1878;
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 or 1973, where the value of goods
or the amount involved exceeds Rs.1 lakh or have been convicted
subsequently under the aforesaid Acts. Clause (b) of this Sub-section
includes a person against whom an order of detention has been made under
COFEPOSA Act and is not covered by the proviso to this clause. Clause
(c) to Sub-section (2) includes every person who is a relative of the person
referred to in clause (a) or clause (b). Explanation (2) gives a long list of
relatives for the purpose of clause (c) and in view of clause (i) thereof, Kesar
Devi being the spouse of Jagannath Sharma is clearly covered by the
provisions of the Act. Section 6 of the Act lays down that if, having regard
to the value of the properties held by any person to whom the Act applies,
either by himself or through any other person on his behalf, his known
source of income, earnings or assets, and any other information or material
available to it as a result of action taken under Section 18 or otherwise, the
competent authority has reason to believe (the reasons for such belief to be
recorded in writing) that all or any of such properties are illegally acquired
properties, it may serve a notice upon such person calling upon him to
indicate the sources of his income, earnings or assets, out of which or by
means of which, he has acquired such property and to show cause why all or
any of such properties, as the case may be, should not be declared to be
illegally acquired properties and forfeited to the Central Government. The
condition precedent for issuing a notice by the competent authority under
Section 6(1) is that he should have reason to believe that all or any of such
properties are illegally acquired properties and the reasons for such belief
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have to be recorded in writing. The language of the Section does not show
that there is any requirement of mentioning any link or nexus between the
convict or detenu and the property ostensibly standing in the name of the
person to whom the notice has been issued. Section 8 of the Act which
deals with burden of proof is very important. It lays down that in any
proceedings under the Act, the burden of proving that any property specified
in the notice served under Section 6 is not illegally acquired property, shall
be on the person affected. The combined effect of Section 6(1) and Section
8 is that the competent authority should have reason to believe (which
reasons have to be recorded in writing) that properties ostensibly standing in
the name of a person to whom the Act applies are illegally acquired
properties, he can issue a notice to such a person. Thereafter, the burden of
proving that such property is not illegally acquired property will be upon the
person to whom notice has been issued. The statutory provisions do not
show that the competent authority, in addition to recording reasons for his
belief, has to further mention any nexus or link between the convict or
detenu (as described in Sub-section (2) of Section 2) and the property which
is sought to be forfeited in the sense that money or consideration for the
same was provided by such convict or detenu. If a further requirement
regarding establishing any link or nexus is imposed upon the competent
authority, the provisions of Section 8 regarding burden of proof will become
otiose and the very purpose of enacting such a Section would be defeated.
10. The requirement of establishing a "link or nexus" between the
illegally acquired money of the convict or detenu as described in Sub-section
(2) of Section 2 of the Act and the properties sought to be forfeited is sought
to be derived from certain observations made by this Court in Attorney
General for India v. Amratlal Prajivandas (supra) in paragraph 44 of the
Reports. If paragraph 44 is read as a whole, it will be clear that no such
requirement of establishing any link or nexus on the part of the competent
authority has been laid down therein. In the said paragraph, the Bench
dealt with contention of the counsel for the petitioners that extending the
provisions of SAFEMA to the relatives, associates and other "holders" is
again a case of overreaching or of over-breadth, as it may be called â\200\223 a case
of excessive regulation. The relevant part of para 44 (page 92 of the
Reprots) is being reproduced below :
"â\200¦â\200¦. The language of this section is indicative of the
ambit of the Act. Clauses (c) and (d) in Section 2(2) and the
Explanations (2) and (3) occurring therein shall have to be
construed and understood in the light of the overall scheme and
purpose of the enactment. The idea is to forfeit the illegally
acquired properties of the convict/detenu irrespective of the fact
that such properties are held by or kept in the name of or
screened in the name of any relative or associate as defined in
the said two Explanations. The idea is not to forfeit the
independent properties of such relatives or associates which
they may have acquired illegally but only to reach the
properties of the convict/detenu or properties traceable to him,
wherever they are, ignoring all the transactions with respect to
those properties. By way of illustration, take a case where a
convict/detenu purchases a property in the name of his relative
or associate â\200\223 it does not matter whether he intends that such a
person to be a mere name lender or whether he really intends
that such person shall be the real owner and/or possessor
thereof â\200\223 or gifts away or otherwise transfers his properties in
favour of any of his relatives or associates, or purports to sell
them to any of his relatives or associates â\200\223 in all such cases, all
the said transactions will be ignored and the properties
forfeited, unless the convict/detenu or his relative/associate, as
the case may be, establishes that such property or properties are
not "illegally acquired properties" within the meaning of
Section 3(c). â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦
â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦
â\200¦.â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦ It is equally necessary to reiterate that the
burden of establishing that the properties mentioned in the
show-cause notice issued under Section 6, and which are held
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on that date by a relative or an associate of the convict/detenu,
are not the illegally acquired properties of the convict/detenu,
lies upon such relative/associate. He must establish that the
said property has not been acquired with the monies or assets
provided by the detenu/convict or that they in fact did not or do
not belong to such detenu/convict. We do not think that
Parliament ever intended to say that the properties of all the
relatives and associates, may be illegally acquired, will be
forfeited just because they happen to be the relatives or
associates of the convict/detenu. There ought to be the
connecting link between those properties and the
convict/detenu, the burden of disproving which, as mentioned
above, is upon the relative/associate. â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦â\200¦.."
11. The judgment of a Court has not to be interpreted like a Statute where
every word, as far as possible, has to be given a literal meaning and no word
is to be ignored. The observations made have to be understood in the
context of the facts and contentions raised. As mentioned earlier,
Explanation (2) appended to Clause (c) of Sub-section (2) of Section 2 gives
a very long list of relations. The combined effect of clauses (iii) and (vii) of
the Explanation is that a convict or detenu’s wife’s sister’s lineal descendant
whether male or female and howsoever low is also included even though the
relationship is quite remote. In those cases where the relationship is very
remote one, the competent authority may have to indicate some link or nexus
while recording reasons for belief that the property is illegally acquired
property. But cases where relationship is close and direct like spouse, son
or daughter or parents stand on altogether different footing. Here no link or
nexus has to be indicated in the reasons for belief between the convict or
detenu and the property as such an inference can easily be drawn.
12. We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that under the Scheme of the
Act, there is no requirement on the part of the competent authority to
mention or establish any nexus or link between the money of the convict or
detenu and the property sought to be forfeited. In fact, if such a condition is
imposed, the very purpose of enacting SAFEMA would be frustrated, as in
many cases it would be almost impossible to show that the property was
purchased or acquired from the money provided by the convict or detenu.
In the present case, the appellant is the wife of the detenu and she has failed
to establish that she had any income of her own to acquire the three
properties. In such circumstances, no other inference was possible except
that it was done so with the money provided by her husband.
13. In order to examine whether the notice issued by the competent
authority satisfies the requirement of Section 6, it is necessary to reproduce
the same and the same reads as under :
"1. Kesar Devi alias Kani Devi, of DG-JMC-1/169/1948,
Bakshiji-Ki-Gali, Mehandi Ka Chowk, Ramganj Bazar, Jaipur
is the wife of Jagan Nath Sharma in respect of whom an order
of detention under the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and
Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 was made on
4.8.1975. She is, therefore, a person covered by Sec. 2(2)(c)
of the Smugglers and Foreign Exchange Manipulators
(Forfeiture of Property) Act, 1976 (hereinafter referred to as the
SAFEMA).
2. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Jaipur has, vide his
D.O. No.ADI/JPR/COFEPOSA/350 dated 1.9.1976, furnished
information under Sec. 16(2) of the SAFEMA regarding the
illegally acquired properties of Kesar Devi.
3. Kesar Devi has never been assessed to tax nor has she
ever filed her return of income. Kesar Devi is the holder of
house property D-48, Bapu Nagar, Jaipur. Kesar Devi, in her
statement on 22.7.1976 before Sh. S.P. Gupta, Inspector, Jaipur
has stated that she purchased the plot of land D-48, Bapu
Nagar, about 13 years back and immediately thereafter
constructed a house on this plot. She admitted that she did not
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remember the price paid for the purchase of the above plot but
stated that the house, including the plot, cost her about
Rs.30,000. She further stated that she received money from
her mother-in-law and father-in-law for the construction of the
house, besides the sale proceeds of her ornaments. She also
asserted that she used to earn income from stitching of gota on
sarees and that this income was available to her. When
specifically questioned about evidence in respect of the
assertions made by her regarding the source of investment in
the plot or the construction of the house, she in no unequivocal
terms, admitted that she had no evidence. Kesar Devi is
reported to have had no known sources of income. The source
of investment in the house, therefore, remains unproved. The
house property thus constitutes property which has, wholly or
partly, come out of or by means of any income, earnings or
assets, the source of which cannot be proved and which cannot
be shown to be attributable to any act or thing done in respect
of any matter in relation to which Parliament has no power to
make laws and accordingly is a property within the meaning of
Sec. 3(1)(c)(iii) of the SAFEMA.
4. I have, therefore, reason to believe that the property
mentioned below held by Kesar Devi is illegally acquired
property within the meaning of Sec. 3(1)(c) of the SAFEMA in
respect of which a notice under Section 6(1) of the Smugglers
and Foreign Exchange Manipulators (Forfeiture of Property)
Act, 1976 should be served on her to indicate the sources of her
income, earnings or assets, out of which or by means of which
she acquired this property, the evidence on which she relies and
other relevant information and particulars and to show cause
why this property should not be declared to be illegally
acquired property and forfeited to the Central Government."
The notice clearly records the reasons for belief and, therefore, it fully
complies with the requirement of law and there is no infirmity in the same.
14. The judgment in Civil Appeal No.7400-7401 of 1996 relied upon by
the learned counsel for the appellant can be of no assistance to him. On
facts, the Court found that the notice issued by the competent authority did
not disclose any reasons and thus the same did not meet the requirement of
Sub-section (1) of Section 6 of the Act. As shown above, this is not the
case here as the reasons for belief have been clearly recorded by the
competent authority.
We, therefore, find no merit in the appeal and the same is hereby
dismissed.