Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 953 of 1997
PETITIONER:
G.L.Raval
RESPONDENT:
State of Gujarat
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/03/2004
BENCH:
N.Santosh Hegde & B.P.Singh
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
SANTOSH HEGDE,J.
The appellant herein was found guilty of offence punishable
under Section 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 as
also under Section 161 of the Indian Penal Code. He was convicted
for the said offences to suffer rigorous imprisonment for one year
and to pay a fine of Rs.100/- in default to suffer further rigorous
imprisonment for one month by the Special Judge, Ahmedabad.
An appeal filed against the said judgment and conviction to
the High Court of Gujarat at Ahmedabad having failed, the
appellant is now before us in this appeal.
Brief facts necessary for the disposal of this case are as
follows:
When the appellant was working as a Senior Clerk in the
office of Licensing Board, Gujarat, the complainant was working
as a Junior Assistant Electrical Inspector. The appellant while
holding the said post was responsible for clearing TA, DA bills of
the complainant. It is the case of the prosecution that for clearing
one such bill of the complainant, the appellant demanded Rs.101/-
hence, the complainant approached the Anti Corruption Bureau
who agreed to lay a trap and in the said trap which was organised
on the 17th of December, 1984 the appellant did not accept the
gratification amount because he was in a hurry to leave the office.
It is further case of the prosecution that two days later, i.e. on 19th
of December, 1984 the complainant along with ACB officers and
other panch witnesses went to the office of the appellant and when
the complainant and the panch witnesses approached the appellant
he received the said sum of money which was pre-marked and
treated with phenopthylin. When the officers of the ACB came into
the room of the appellant, the appellant threw away the currency
notes which landed on the next table. The members of the ACB
team then arrested the appellant and on conducting the necessary
test it was found that the appellant had handled the currency.
The prosecution in support of its case had examined the
complainant, two panch witnesses and the Investigating Officer
among other witnesses. The appellant took the defence that the
complainant was a person of dubious character having been
removed from his previous job and was also in the habit of
preparing false TA, DA bills. The appellant had taken the stand
that it is because the appellant refused the request of the
complainant to approve the false TA, DA bills, the complainant
had decided to take revenge on the appellant, accordingly, he had
lodged a false complaint. It was also the case of the appellant that
the two panch witnesses who were chosen for witnessing the trap
were officials working under the father of the complainant in the
health department and were specially chosen and the Investigating
Officer also for reasons of his own had colluded with the
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complaintant in implicating the appellant.
The trial court as well as the High Court have accepted the
prosecution case and convicted the appellant, as stated above. In
this appeal, Shri H.A.Raichura, learned counsel for the appellant
contended that from the prosecution case itself it is seen that the
demand of Rs.101/- as a bribe seems highly improbable. He
contended the fact that earlier attempt to bribe the appellant having
failed, the appellant really would not have been careless enough to
accept the money the next time around. He also contended that
both the courts below have not properly appreciated the defence of
the appellant and mechanically proceeded to extract the evidence
of the prosecution witnesses given in the examination-in-chief, and
without appreciating the contradictions and omissions brought out
in the cross-examination, accepted the prosecution case.
We have heard the arguments and perused the records and
we find no justification to interfere with the concurrent findings of
the two courts below.
The learned counsel for the appellant, however, contended if
really the demand of illegal gratification was genuine there was no
need for the Investigating Officer to choose panch witnesses who
were working under the complainant’s father which itself shows
that the I.O. was unfair to the appellant and had oblique motives in
organising the trap. Since on the face of it, we found that if this
allegation of choosing of such panch witnesses who were closely
associated with the father of the complainant was true then, in our
opinion, the prosecution case required a careful consideration. In
this process, when we examined the said argument of the learned
counsel by perusing the evidence of the panch witnesses as also the
I.O. we were unable to find any material to accept the argument of
the learned counsel for the appellant that the panch witnesses were
either associated with or were working under complainant’s father.
It has come in evidence that while the complainant’s father was
working in the Health Department of Municipal Corporation of
Ahmedabad City, the panch witnesses were working in the Health
Department of State Government which are not situated in the
same premises nor is the father of the complainant anyway
connected with the panch witnesses. From the perusal of the cross
examination of these witnesses also we notice that no suggestion
whatsoever has been made to these witnesses that they are in any
way associated with complainant’s father. Even to the
investigation officer no such suggestions have been made,
therefore, we find no merit in this contention also.
For the reasons stated above, this appeal fails and the same
is dismissed.