Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MADHUKAR BHASKARRAO JOSHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/11/2000
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas, & R.P. Sethi.
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
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Once the prosecution established that gratification in
any form cash or kind had been paid or accepted by a
public servant the court is under a legal compulsion to
presume that the said gratification was paid or accepted as
a motive or reward to do (or forbear from doing) any
official act. The only exception to the said rule is, when
the gratification is so trivial that no inference of
corruption could in fairness be drawn on a particular fact
situation the court has no such legal compulsion to presume.
Such a presumption was introduced in the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 (Act of 1947, or short) through a later
amendment. The said legal presumption was carried forward
into the successor enactment of 1988. In the present case,
a public servant admitted that a certain amount was paid to
him by a private party, but he sought to explain that it was
an amount otherwise payable to him and hence it was no
gratification at all. The trial court and the High Court
found that the public servant failed to prove that the
amount received by him was legally due to him otherwise.
The trial court convicted him under Section 5(2) of the Act
of 1947, and sentenced him to rigorous imprisonment for one
year and a fine of Rs.5000/-. Though he was convicted under
Section 161 of the Indian Penal Code also the court did not
award any separate sentence on that account. When he
appealed to the High Court, a single judge concurred with
the finding and confirmed the conviction. However, learned
single judge reduced the imprisonment limb of the sentence
to just one day, but enhanced the fine limb to Rs.3000/-.
The public servant was not satisfied with the substantial
amelioration he secured from the High Court. Perhaps he
thought that the conviction itself would magnetize hazards
in his service career. Hence he filed this appeal by
special leave. But when the special leave petition was
considered we felt, prima facie, that the learned single
judge reduced the sentence of imprisonment to the vanishing
point without the authority of law after confirming the
conviction. We therefore, issued notice to the appellant to
show cause why the sentence passed by the trial court shall
not be restored if the conviction remains undisturbed. The
appellant public servant, optimistic as he was, has chosen
to pursue the SLP to its logical end even at the risk of
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losing the benefit he secured from the High Court.
Appellant was a Sub Engineer in the Maharashtra State
Electricity Board (Electricity Board, for short). During
the relevant time he was posted at Wadia Sub Station, Pune.
The incident which dragged him into the vortex of this
criminal litigation had happened during his tenure at Wadia.
It all happened in the following manner: PW-1 (Prem
Gangaram Adwani) was a businessmen and also a social
activist. He was engaged in carrying out contract work for
electrical decorations and illumination at different places.
The name of his business was Modern Decorators. According
to the prosecution case, PW-1 secured a contract work to do
illumination and electric decoration during a particular
period in November 1979, in connection with the birth
centenary of a spiritual person who was adored in the
locality. As additional load of electric power was required
for the aforesaid illumination he filed an application to
the Electricity Board for sanction of such additional load.
The Manager of the company (Kishan Jadhav) was deputed to
approach the appellant in connection with the said sanction.
But Jadhav reported to PW-1 that appellant was demanding a
sum of Rs.550/- as reward for granting sanction for the
additional load. PW-1 assured that the sum would be paid
and on that assurance appellant sanctioned the additional
load of power. But the amount expected by the appellant was
not paid till December 1979. Hence, he phoned up PW-1 and
reminded him of his word. It appears there was a little
bargaining and appellant reduced the amount to Rs.300 and
agreed to collect that amount from the office of PW-1. In
the meanwhile PW-1 lodged a complaint with the Anti
Corruption Bureau. They arranged a trap to catch the
appellant red-handed. After the scheme for the trap was
finalised appellant was informed of the readiness of PW-1 to
pay the amount desired by him. On 25.2.1980, around 8.00
P.M. appellant went to the office of PW-1. On seeing him
PW-1 switched on a concealed tape-recorder. There was some
dialogue between them which got recorded on the tape-
recorder. However, when other customers visited the same
office appellant indicated to PW-1 through a gesticulation
about his readiness to accept the promised money then and
there. It was then that PW-1 handed over the pre-arranged
currency notes to the appellant. PW-1 transmitted the
message through a signal to the members of the Anti
Corruption Squad who were waiting outside. Those persons
then rushed to the room and caught the appellant red-handed
with the tainted currency notes. Later the case was
charge-sheeted against him. After recording the evidence
relating to the said trap the Special Judge examined the
appellant under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. Appellant filed a written statement in which he
said, inter alia, that he went to the office of PW-1 on the
said night as he was requested to reach there for a
discussion about certain programmes of the Sindhi
Association in which, perhaps, both were interested. While
they were talking on that subject some persons reached
there. Then the appellant stood up and was about to leave
the place, but then PW-1 paid him some money saying that it
was a gift. Appellant told him that he would not accept any
such gift. However, appellant wanted to ask his manager as
to why PW-1 was giving such gifts to him. But before he
could actually hand over the money back to PW-1 he was
caught by the office bearers of the Anti Corruption Bureau.
The above is, in substance, the statement made by the
appellant in court through the written submission. In the
light of the said stand of the appellant we do not find the
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necessity to consider the evidence of the prosecution
witnesses who all said that PW-1 gave the money to the
appellant at his office. Of course, learned counsel for the
appellant contended that the testimony of PW-1, on that
score, is not corroborated by any other independent witness.
At this stage itself we may point out that there is no merit
in the said contention, as there is sufficient corroboration
on that aspect, even apart from the testimony of other
witnesses examined by the prosecution. The very undisputed
fact that the amount had reached the hands of the appellant
itself is sufficient corroboration for the testimony of PW-1
that the amount was paid to the appellant. Learned counsel
next contended that the legal presumption envisaged in
Section 4 of the Act of 1947 can be drawn only on
establishing that gratification was paid to or accepted by
the public servant and not merely that he was found in
possession of the currency notes smeared with
phenolphthalein. True the word gratification is not
defined in the Act of 1947. (In the successor enactment,
the Act of 1988, the same word is explained as not
restricted to pecuniary gratification or to gratification
estimable in money vide Explanation (b) to Section 7 of the
Act of 1988). In Blacks Law Dictionary, gratification is
defined as a recompense or reward for services or benefits
given voluntarily without solicitation or promise. But in
Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary of Current English the
said word is given the meaning to give pleasure or
satisfaction to. Among the above two descriptions for the
word gratification with slightly differing nuances as
between the two, what is more appropriate for the context
has to be found out. The context in which the word is used
in Section 4(1) of the Act of 1947 is, hence, important. As
the wording on the relevant portion employed in the
corresponding provision in the PC Act of 1988 {Section
20(1)} is identical we would reproduce that sub-section
herein: Where, in any trial of an offence punishable under
section 7 or section 11 or clause (a) or clause (b) of sub-
section (1) of section 13 it is proved that an accused
person has accepted or obtained or has agreed to accept or
attempted to obtain for himself, or for any other person,
any gratification (other than legal remuneration) or any
valuable thing from any person, it shall be presumed, unless
the contrary is proved, that he accepted or obtained or
agreed to accept or attempted to obtain that gratification
or that valuable thing, as the case may be, as a motive or
reward such as is mentioned in section 7 or, as the case may
be, without consideration or for a consideration which he
knows to be inadequate.
The premise to be established on the facts for drawing
the presumption is that there was payment or acceptance of
gratification. Once the said premise is established the
inference to be drawn is that the said gratification was
accepted as motive or reward for doing or forbearing to do
any official act. So the word gratification need not be
stretched to mean reward because reward is the outcome of
the presumption which the court has to draw on the factual
premise that there was payment of gratification. This will
again be fortified by looking at the collocation of two
expressions adjacent to each other like gratification or
any valuable thing. If acceptance of any valuable thing can
help to draw the presumption that it was accepted as motive
or reward for doing or forbearing to do an official act, the
word gratification must be treated in the context to mean
any payment for giving satisfaction to the public servant
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who received it.
In Mohmoodkhan Mahboobkhan Pathan vs. State of
Maharashtra {1997(10) SCC 600} this Court has taken the same
meaning for the word gratification appearing in Section
4(1) of the PC Act of 1947. We quote the following
observations:
The primary condition for acting on the legal
presumption under Section 4(1)of the Act is that the
prosecution should have proved that what the accused
received was gratification. The word gratification is not
defined in the Act. Hence it must be understood in its
literal meaning. In the Oxford Advanced Learners
Dictionary of Current English, the word gratification is
shown to have the meaning to give pleasure or satisfaction
to. The word gratification is used in Section 4(1) to
denote acceptance of something to the pleasure or
satisfaction of the recipient.
We, therefore, repel the contention of the learned
counsel that prosecution has a further duty to prove beyond
the fact that PW-1 had paid the demanded money to the
appellant for enabling it to lay the hand on the legal
presumption employed in the Prevention of Corruption Act.
We may point out that the defence did not even attempt to
prove that the amount received by the appellant was not
accepted as a reward or motive for the official act done by
him, except the ipse dixit of the appellant, that too made
at the fag end of the trial when he put in a written
statement of his defence. Hence no exception can be taken
to the conviction passed by the trial court which was
concurred by the High Court in respect of the offence under
Section 5(2) of the Act of 1947.
Dealing with the sentence aspect learned single judge of
the High Court has counted two aspects. One is that the
counsel pointed out that the appellant was under suspension
for 7 years and the High Court had suspended both the
conviction and sentence during the pendency of the appeal in
the High Court and that he was reinstated and continued as
such till the date of the impugned judgment and in the
meanwhile he was promoted to the post of Junior Engineer.
Second is that another single judge of the Bombay High Court
(Saldhana, J.) had reduced a sentence of imprisonment from
two years to just one day, and increased the fine sentence
from Rs.1,000/- to Rs.35,000/- for a similar offence in
another case. That decision has been reported as Vasant
Maruti Waikar vs. State of Maharashtra (1991 Maharashtra
Law Journal 1318). The said decision was relied on as a
precedent.
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted before us
that the court has powers to impose any sentence below the
minimum prescribed. He cited two decisions of this Court
[Balaram Swain vs. State of Orissa, (AIR 1991 SC 279, M.O.
Shamsuddin vs. State of Kerala (1995 3 SCC 351)]. In both
the said decisions this Court had reduced the sentence to
the period of imprisonment already undergone by the public
servants in consideration of the long duration of the
pendency of criminal proceedings against the convicted
persons. We perused these decisions and it is difficult to
find out therefrom as to the precise period of imprisonment
awarded by this Court since there is no indication as to the
period during which the convicted persons were in jail in
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those cases. It is necessary to remind ourselves of the
scope of the power of the court for reducing the sentence
from the minimum fixed in the statute. We, therefore,
extract Section 5(2) of the Act of 1947.
Any public servant who commits criminal misconduct
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which shall
not be less than one year but which may extend to seven
years and shall also be liable to fine: Provided that the
court may, for any special reasons recorded in writing,
impose a sentence of imprisonment of less than one year.
It must be noted that in the corresponding provision of
the Act of 1988 [Section 13(2) of that Act] there is no such
proviso as in Section 5(2) of the earlier Act and no power
whatsoever is given to the court to impose a sentence less
than the minimum, even if there are special reasons for
doing so. The Parliament fixed the minimum sentence of
imprisonment of one year even under the Act of 1947 by
making an amendment to it in 1958 for which the legislative
language is apparently peremptory i.e. shall not be less
than one year. The proviso is in the form of a rare
exception by giving power to the court for reducing the
imprisonment period below one year only when there are
special reasons and the law required that those special
reasons must be recorded in writing by the court.
When corruption was sought to be eliminated from the
polity all possible stringent measures are to be adopted
within the bounds of law. One such measure is to provide
condign punishment. Parliament measured the parameters for
such condign punishment and in that process wanted to fix a
minimum sentence of imprisonment for giving deterrent impact
on other public servants who are prone to corrupt deals.
That was precisely the reason why the sentence was fixed as
7 years and directed that even if the said period of
imprisonment need not be given the sentence shall not be
less than the imprisonment for one year. Such a legislative
insistence is reflection of Parliaments resolve to meet
corruption cases with very strong hand and to give signals
of deterrence as the most pivotal feature of sentencing of
corrupt public servants. All public servants were warned
through such a legislative measure that corrupt public
servants have to face very serious consequences. If on the
other hand any public servant is given the impression that
if he succeeds in protracting the proceedings that would
help him to have the advantage of getting a very light
sentence even if the case ends in conviction, we are afraid
its fallout would afford incentive to public servants who
are susceptible to corruption to indulge in such nefarious
practices with immunity. Increasing the fine after reducing
the imprisonment to a nominal period can also defeat the
purpose as the corrupt public servant could easily raise the
fine amount through the same means.
In the present case, how could the mere fact that this
case was pending for such a long time be considered as a
special reason? That is a general feature in almost all
convictions under the PC Act and it is not a speciality of
this particular case. It is the defect of the system that
longevity of the cases tried under the PC Act is too
lengthy. If that is to be regarded as sufficient for
reducing the minimum sentence mandated by the Parliament the
legislative exercise would stand defeated. The High Court
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unfortunately did not look at the sentencing aspect with the
seriousness which the Parliament wanted the court to
exercise in such situations. In our view, there was
absolutely no special reason in this case as for the
appellant to entitle to get a sentence less than the minimum
prescribed by law. Accordingly, we restore the sentence
passed by the trial court on the appellant for the offence
under Section 5(2) of the Act of 1947.