Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KANTA PRASHAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DELHI ADMINISTRATION(and connected appeal)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/02/1958
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 350 1958 SCR 1218
ACT:
Criminal Law--Gyant of pardon--Power of the District Magi-
strate-Case triable by Court of Special-judge-court of
Session-Concurrent jurisdiction to tender Pardon-Prevention
of Corruption Act, 1947 (2 of 1947), S. 5(2)-Criminal Law
(Amendment) Act, 1952 (46 of 1952), Ss. 8(2)(3), 9-Code of
Criminal Procedure (Act 5 of 1898), ss. 337, 338.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were convicted under s. 120B and S. 224/109
of the Indian Penal Code and s. 5(2) Of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947, by the Court of Special judge
constituted under the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1952. it
was contended for them that the conviction was bad on the
ground inter alia that the pardon tendered to the approver
by the District Magistrate under S. 337 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure by virtue of which he was examined as a
witness by the Special judge was without
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jurisdiction. The contention was that the provisions Of s.
337 were not applicable to the case, as the offence under s.
5(2) Of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, was
punishable with imprisonment which may extend to ten years,
while S. 337 Of the Code of Criminal Procedure enabled a
District Magistrate to tender a pardon "in the case of any
offence triable exclusively by the High Court or a Court of
Session or any offence punishable with imprisonment which
may extend to ten years......... But under ss. 8(3) and 9 of
the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1952, for the purposes of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, the Court of Special judge
is deemed to be a Court of Session trying cases without jury
:
Held, that although the offence was triable exclusively by
the Court of Special judge, the District Magistrate had
authority to tender a pardon under s. 337 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, as the Court of Special judge was, in
law, a Court of Session.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
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Appeals Nos. 202 and 203 of 1957.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 16, 1956, of the Punjab -High Court (Circuit Bench)
at Delhi in Criminal, Appeals Nos. 31-D and 506-C of 1956,
arising out of the judgment and order dated August 31, 1956,
of the Court of the Special Judge at Delhi, in Corruption
Case No. 8 of 1956.
D. R. Kalia and K. L. Arora, for the appellant in Criminal
Appeal No. 202 of 1957.
D. R. Kalia and Raghu Nath, for the appellant in Criminal
Appeal No. 203 of 1957.
H. J. Umrigar and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent in both
the appeals.
1958. February 6. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
IMAM J.-The appellants, who were police constables at the
time of the occurrence, were convicted by the Special Judge
of Delhi under s. 120B and s. 224/109 of the Indian Penal
Code and s. 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act (2 of
1947). They were sentenced to two years’ rigorous
imprisonment under s. 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947 and to nine months’ rigorous imprisonment under
each of the ss. 120B and 224/109 of the Indian Penal Code.
155
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The sentences of imprisonment were directed to run
concurrently. Their appeals to the Punjab High Court were
dismissed and the present appeals are by special leave.
The case of the prosecution, as stated in the charge, was
that the appellants had conspired at Delhi with Ram Saran
Das, the approver, M. P. Khare, Nand Parkash Kapur and
Murari between the 6th and 16th of November, 1955, to bring
about the escape from lawful custody of M. P. Khare, an
undertrial prisoner, and that they had also agreed to accept
Rs. 1,000 each and other pecuniary advantages as illegal
gratification for rendering the escape of M. P. Khare from
lawful custody and that in pursuance of the said conspiracy
they had abetted the escape of M. P. Khare and that they had
accepted the illegal gratification from Nand Parkash Kapur.
It is clear from the findings of the courts below that M.P.
Khare escaped from lawful custody and the appellants had
enabled him to do so and that they had received money as
illegal gratification for the part they had played in
enabling M.P. Khare to escape from lawful custody.
The learned Advocate for the appellants had submitted five
points for our consideration in support of his contention
that the conviction of the appellants must be set aside (1)
the pardon tendered to the approver Ram Saran Das by the
District Magistrate of Delhi under s. 337 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure was without jurisdiction and authority.
Consequently, the evidence of the approver was not admis-
sible (2) on the case of the prosecution, the offence of
conspiracy to commit an offence under s. 224 of the Indian
Penal Code had not been committed but that offence, if at
all, was one under s. 222 of the Indian Penal Code. As an
offence under s. 222 of the Indian Penal Code is a non-
cognizable offence no conviction under s. 120B of the Indian
Penal Code could be had in the absence of a sanction under
s. 196A of the Code of Criminal Procedure (3) Prosecution
witnesses Mela Ram, P.W. 6, and Shiv Parshad, P.W. 7, were
accomplices on their own showing and as such their testimony
could not be taken into consideration (4) no test
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identification parade of the appellants had been held (5)
the charge, as framed, contravened the mandatory provisions
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of s. 233 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
Points 3, 4 and 5 may be disposed of at the outset. We have
examined the evidence of Mela Ram and Shiv Parshad and find
nothing in their evidence which establishes them as
accomplices. It does not appear that before the High Court
it had ever been urged that these witnesses were accomplices
and their evidence could not be taken into consideration to
corroborate the approver. It was, however, urged that these
witnesses were unreliable because they had knowledge that an
attempt would be made to enable M.P. Khare to escape from
lawful custody and yet they informed no authority about it.
As to the reliability of these witnesses the courts below
were entitled to believe them and nothing of any consequence
has been placed before us to convince us to take a different
view from that taken by the courts below.
As for the test identification parade, it is true that no
test identification parade was held. The appellants were
known to the police officials who had deposed against the
appellants and the only persons who did not know them before
were the persons who gave evidence of association, to which
the High Court did not attach much importance. It would no
doubt have been prudent to hold a test identification parade
with respect to witnesses who did not know the accused
before the occurrence, but failure to hold such a parade
would not make inadmissible the evidence of identification
in court. The weight to be attached to such identification
would be a matter for the courts of fact and it is not for
this Court to reassess the evidence unless exceptional
grounds were established necessitating such a course.
It is true that no separate charges were framed under ss.
120B, 224/109 of the Indian Penal Code and s. 5(2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. Separate charges should
have been framed as required by s. 233 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. In our opinion, the irregularity
committed, in this case, was
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cured by the provisions of s. 537 of the Code. It is to be
noticed that it was urged before the Special Judge that
separate charges should have been framed and that a single
charge should not have been framed but the objection had
been abandoned by the Advocate for the accused when the
Special Judge told him that if it was his contention that
the accused had been prejudiced by this form of the charge,
he would frame separate charges under separate heads and
then proceed with the trial. Furthermore, when the charge
was framed, the public prosecutor had urged that charges
under separate heads for each offence should be framed and
that they should not be joined together under one head. The
Advocate for the accused, however, had urged that the
charge, as framed, was correct. It seems to us that when
the charge was being framed the Advocate for the appellants
desired. that the charge as framed should stand and the
public prosecutor’s objection should be overruled. It
cannot be now urged that the appellants were prejudiced by
the charge as framed. Indeed, the Advocate for the
appellants abandoned this objection and there is nothing in
the High Court’s judgment to show that this contention was
again raised. We cannot permit such a question to be raised
at this stage. It seems to us, therefore, that there is no
substance in the submissions made on behalf of the
appellants with reference to the above-mentioned points 3, 4
and 5.
With reference to the second point, even if it is assumed
that the offence alleged against the appellants does not
come under s. 224 of the Indian Penal Code, but under s. 222
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of the Indian Penal Code, it has to be remembered that this
would be of academic interest in this case, if the
appellants have been rightly convicted under s. 5(2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. It also does not appear
from the judgments of the Special Judge and the High Court
that it had been contended that there was no sanction under
s. 196A of the Code of Criminal Procedure and consequently
the court could not take cognizance of the offence under s.
120B of the Indian Penal Code. Whether a sanction had been
granted under s. 196A
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was a question of fact which ought to have been urged at the
trial and before the High Court. It is impossible at this
stage to go into this question of fact. Furthermore, this
question also is one of academic interest if the conviction
and sentence of the appellants under s. 5(2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, are affirmed.
Coming now to the first point urged on behalf of the
appellants, it would appear that the District Magistrate of
Delhi granted a pardon under s. 337 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure to Ram Saran Das, the approver, in consequence of
which Ram Saran Das was examined as a witness by the Special
Judge. It was urged that the District Magistrate could not
grant a pardon when the case was triable by the Court of
Special Judge constituted under the Criminal Law (Amendment)
Act, 1952. The offence under s. 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947, is punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to seven years, or with fine, or with
both. It was not an offence which was punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to ten years. The provisions
of s. 337 enabled a District Magistrate to tender a pardon
in the case of any offence triable exclusively by the High
Court or a Court of Session, or any offence punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to ten years, or any offence
punishable under s. 211 of the Indian Penal Code with
imprisonment which may extend to seven years, or any offence
under ss. 216A, 369, 401, 435 and 477A of the Indian Penal
Code. These provisions of s. 337 at the time that the
pardon was tendered were inapplicable as the present case
was not covered by its terms. It is pointed out that the
High Court erred in supposing that the District Magistrate
could grant pardon in a case where the offence was
punishable with imprisonment which may extend to seven years
or more and which was triable exclusively by the Court of
Session. The Code of Criminal Procedure at the time that
the pardon was granted spoke of an offence punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to ten years and
not seven years. The amendment to s. 337 of the
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Code, which came into effect in January, 1956, spoke of an
offence punishable with imprisonment which may extend to
seven years, but this amendment could have no application to
a pardon tendered on 1-12-55. It seems to us, however, that
the District Magistrate had authority to tender a pardon
under s. 337 of the Code of Criminal Procedure with
reference to a case concerning an offence triable
exclusively by the Special Judge and, therefore, we need not
consider whether the offence was punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to seven years. Under s. 8(3)
of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act of 1952 it is expressly
stated that for the purposes of the provisions of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1898, the Court of Special Judge
shall be deemed to be a Court of Session trying cases
without a jury or without the aid of assessors. Section 9
of that Act provides for an appeal from the Court of the
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Special Judge to the High Court and states that the High
Court may exercise, as far as they may be applicable, all
the powers conferred by Chapters XXXI and XXXII of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1898, as if the Court of the Special
Judge were a Court of Session trying cases without a jury.
It would seem, therefore, that although a Special Judge is a
court constituted under the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act
yet, for the purposes of the Code of Criminal Procedure and
that Act, it is a Court of Session. Accordingly, we are of
the opinion that although the offence was triable
exclusively by the Court of the Special Judge the District
Magistrate had authority to tender a pardon under s. 337 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure as the court of the Special
Judge was, in law, a Court of Session.
It was, however, suggested that the proper authority to
grant the pardon was the Special Judge and not the District
Magistrate, but it seems to us that the position of the
Special Judge in this matter was similar to that of a Judge
of a Court of Session. The proviso to s. 337 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure contemplates concurrent jurisdiction in
the District Magistrate and the Magistrate making an enquiry
or holding the trial to tender a pardon. According to the
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provisions of s. 338 of the Code, even after commitment but
before judgment is passed, the Court to which the commitment
is made may tender a pardon or order the committing
Magistrate or the District Magistrate to tender a pardon.
It would seem, therefore, that the District Magistrate is
empowered to tender a pardon even after a commitment if the
Court so directs. Under s. 8(2) of the Criminal Law (Amend-
ment) Act, 1952, the Special Judge has also been granted
power to tender pardon. The conferment of this power on the
Special Judge in no way deprives the District Magistrate of
his power to grant a pardon under s. 337 of the Code. At
the date the District Magistrate tendered the pardon the
case was not before the Special Judge. There seems to us,
therefore, no substance in the submission made that the
District Magistrate had not authority to tender a pardon to
Ram Saran Das, the approver, and consequently the approver’s
evidence was inadmissible.
The findings of the High Court establish the offence of the
appellants under s. 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947, and we can find no sufficient reason to think
that the appellants were wrongly convicted thereunder.
The appeals are accordingly dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.
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