Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DIVISIONAL FOREST OFFICER & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
G.V. SUDHAKAR RAO & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/10/1985
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
MADON, D.P.
CITATION:
1986 AIR 328 1985 SCR Supl. (3) 680
1985 SCC (4) 573 1985 SCALE (2)897
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh Forest Act, 1967, ss. 44, 45 & 58A read
with ss. 20 and 29 - Power vested in the Authorised Officer
to direct confiscation of seized timber or forest produce
u/s.44 (2A) and the power of Magistrate to direct
confiscation of such property on conviction of the accused -
Whether separate and distinct powers - Stay of proceedings
for confiscation of seized forest produce before the
Authorised Officer - Whether permissible when criminal case
is pending against the accused in respect of the same forest
offence or when accused is acquitted of the offence.
Code of Criminal Procedure, ss. 451, 452 and 457 -
Power of Criminal Court to dispose of property - Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The Forest Range Officer, Flying Squat, Nirmal seized
teak timber valued at Rs.. 1,71,000 from the residential
house of respondent no. l and produced the same before the
Divisional Forest Officer, Hyderabad who is the Authorised
Officer under s.44 (2A) of the ALP. Forest Act, 1967 along
with a report under sub-a.(2) thereof that he had reason to
believe that a forest offence had been committed, for
purposes of confiscation of the seized timber under sub-s.
(2A) of s. 44 of the Act. While the confiscation proceedings
were pending before the Authorised Officer under s. 44(2A)
in relation to the seized timber, the Forest Range Officer
simultaneously lodged a complaint with the Metropolitan
Magistrate, City Civil Court, Hyderabad for trial of the
respondents for commission of offences punishable under 8.
20(1)(c)(iv) and (x) and y. 20(1)(t) read with s.
29(4)(a)(ii) of the Act. The respondents moved the High
Court under s. 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1963
for stay of the c proceedings before the Authorised Officer
under 8. 44(2A) of the Act in view of the pending criminal
prosecution. Upon the view that the power of the Authorised
Officer to direct confiscation under sub-s. (2A) of 8- 44 of
the Act and that of the Metropolitan Magistrate under s. 45
of the Act were mutually exclusive therefore there could not
be simultaneous proceedings for confiscation before the
Authorised Officer under s. 44(2A) as also
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prosecution of the respondents for commission of a fore t
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offence A under 8. 20 or 29 of the Act, a learned Single
Judge by the impugned order directed stay of the proceedings
before the Authorised Officer under 8. 44(2A) till the
disposal of the criminal case by the Metropolitan
Magistrate.
Allowing the appeal.
^
HELD:1. The power of the Authorised Officer to direct
confiscation of the seized timber or forest produce and the
implements etc. under sub-s.(2A) of s.44 of the Act produced
before him by the Forest Range Officer along with a report
under sub-s.(2) thereof, if the Authorised Officer i-
satisfied that y for. t offence has been committed in
respect thereof, and the power of the Magistrate to direct
confiscation of such property under 8. 45 upon conviction of
the accused for commission of a forest offence under 8. 20
or 29 of the Act, are separate and distinct and there is no
overlapping of the same. The changes brought about by Act
No.17 of 1976 clearly contemplate for two separate
proceedings before two independent forums. There is no
conflict of jurisdiction as 8.45, as amended by the
Amendment Act, in terms curtails the power of the Magistrate
to direct confiscation of the seized timber or forest
produce on conviction of the accused, by the use of the
words ’except where an order for confiscation has already
been passed in respect thereof under 8. 44’ inserted in 8.45
of the Act.
2. The High Court was in error in holding that there
could not be simultaneous proceedings for confiscation
before the Authorised Officer under sub-s.(2A) of the Act
and prosecution of the accused for commission of forest
offences under 8.20 or 29 of the Act.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
752 of 1985.
From the Judgment and Order dated 26.8.83 of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in Crl. Misc. Petn. No. 1810 of 1983. G
K. Parasaran, Attorney General and G. Narashimulu for
the Appellants.
P. Ram Reddy and A.V.V. Nair for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by H
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SEN, J. This appeal by special leave raises a question
whether the High Court could have stayed under s. 482 of the
code of criminal Procedure, 1973 the Proceedings for
confiscation of illicitly felled teak timber trees by the
respondents from the reserved forests in Adilabad district,
which were seized under sub-s. (1) thereof, pending before
the Divisional Forest Officer, Hyderabad who is the
Authorized Officer under 8. 44(2A) of the Andhra Pradesh
Forest Act, 1967 till the disposal of the criminal case
pending against him before the Court of XVIIth Metropolitan
Magistrate, City Civil Court, Hyderabad for commission of
alleged offences punishable under s. 20 (1) (c) (iv) and (x)
and s. 20 (1) (d) read with s. 29 (4) (a) (ii) of the Act.
First as to the facts. On an information being laid
that the respondent G.V. Sudhakar Rao was indulging in
widespread illicit felling and removal of teak trees from
the reserved forest in Adilabad district, the Forest Range
Officer, Flying Squad, Nirmal on July 18, 1982 seized teak
timber measuring 42.7 cubic metres valued at Rs. 1,71,000
from the residential house of the respondent under sub-s.
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(1) of s. 44 of the Act. On July 19, 1982, the Range Officer
forthwith produced the seized timber before the Divisional
Forest Officer, who is the Authorized Officer under s. 44
(2A) of the Act, along with a report that he had reason to
believe that a forest offence had been committed by the
respondent in respect of the seized timber. While the
confiscation proceedings were pending before the Authorized
Officer under sub-s. (2A) of s.44 of the Act, on October 9,
1982 the respondent filed a petition before the High Court
under Art. 226 of the Constitution praying for release of
the seized timber but the Writ Petition was dismissed by a
learned Single Judge. In appeal preferred by the respondent,
a Division Bench declined to grant any interim relief but
directed the Forest Department to decide either to proceed
with confiscation of the seized timber under s. 44 (2) of
the Act or file a complaint regarding the commission of a
forest offence before a Magistrate. Accordingly, the Forest
Range Officer lodged a complaint before the XVIIth
Metropolitan Magistrate, City Civil Court, Hyderabad for
trial of the respondents for commission of alleged offences
under s. 20 (1) (c) (iv) and (x) and s. 20 (1) (d) read with
s. 29 (4) (a) (ii) of the Act. On August 1, 1983, the
respondents moved an application before the High Court under
s. 482 of the Code for staying the proceedings before the
Authorized Officer under s. 44 (2) of the Act in view of the
pending criminal prosecution. A learned Single Judge
(Ramachandra Raju, J.) by the impugned order directed stay
of the proceedings before the Authorized Officer
683
under 8. 44(2A) of the Act till the disposal of the criminal
case A by the learned Metropolitan Magistrate. Aggrieved,
the State has come up in appeal by way of special leave as
the impugned order passed by the learned Single Judge is of
far-reaching consequences .
The precise question that falls for determination is
whether where a Forest Officer makes a report of seizure of
any timber or forest produce and produces the seized
property along with a report under s. 44 (2) that he has
reason to believe that a forest offence has been committed
in respect of such timber or forest produce seized, can
there simultaneously be proceedings for confiscation to
Government of such timber or forest produce and the
implements etc. by the Authorized Officer under 8. 44 (2A)
of the Act if he is satisfied that a forest offence has been
committed, along with a criminal case instituted on a
complaint by the Forest Officer before a Magistrate of the
commission of a forest offence under 8. 20 of the Act. The
appeal turns upon a proper construction of 88. 44 (2), 44
(2A) and 45 of the Act, as amended by Act 17 of 1976.
In order to deal with the question involved, it is
necessary to refer to the statutory changes brought about.
The Act, prior to its amendment by Act 17 of 1976 provided
by 8. 44 insofar as material, as follows :
44(1) Where there is reason to believe that a
forest offence has been committed in respect of
any timber or forest produce, such timber, or
forest produce, together with all tools, ropes,
chains, boats, vehicles and cattle used in
committing any such offence, may be seized by any
forest officer or police officer.
(2) Every officer seizing any property under this
section shall place on such property, or the
receptacle, if any, in which it is contained a
mark indicating that the same has been 80 seized
and shall, except where the offender agrees in
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writing forthwith to get the offence compounded,
make a report of such seizure to the magistrate :
Provided that where the timber or forest produce
with respect to which such offence is believed to
have been committed is the property of the Central
or State
684
Government and the offender is not known, it shall
be sufficient if the officer makes, as soon as may
be, a report of the circumstances to the
Divisional Forest Officer.
(3)
(4) *
(5) The property seized under this section, shall
be kept in the custody of the forest officer not
below the rank of a Forest Guard or the village
headman until the compensation for compounding the
offence is paid or until an order of the
magistrate directing its disposal is received.
Section 45 of the Act, prior to its amendment, was in these
terms :
45. Where a person is convicted of a forest
offence, the court sentencing him shall order
confiscation to the Government of timber or forest
produce in respect of which such offence was
committed and of any tool, boat, vehicle other
than a cart drawn by animals, vessel or other
conveyance or any other article used in committing
such offence.
The change in the law was brought about with a view to
prevent the growing menace of ruthless exploitation of
Government forests by illicit felling of teak and other
valuable forest produce by unscrupulous traders,
particularly from the reserved forests by providing for a
machinery for confiscation of illegally felled trees or
forest produce by the Forest authorities. Under s. 45 of the
Act as it then stood, where a person was convicted of a
forest offence, the Court sentencing him was empowered to
order confiscation to the Government of timber or forest
produce in respect of which a forest offence was committed
and of any tool, boat, vehicle other than a cart draw by
animals, vessel or other conveyance or any other article
used in committing such offence. Although there was a
provision for seizure of such articles in s. 44 of the Act,
there was no provision in the Act enabling the forest
officers to confiscate such timber or forest produce and the
implements etc. used for committing forest offences even in
a case where he was satisfied that a forest offence had been
committed. In view of this, the
685
Forest Department was finding it difficult to curb the
forest A offences effectively and quickly inspite of the
fact that large scale felling and smuggling of forest
produce was on the increase. Hence it was thought necessary
to empower the officials of the Forest Department seizing
any property under sub-s.(l) of s. 44, instead of merely
making a report of the seizure to a Magistrate, also to
order confiscation of timber or forest produce seized
together will all the tools, boats, vehicles etc. used in
committing such offence. Statement of Objects and Reasons:
The intendment of the Legislature in enacting Act 17 of 1976
was therefore to provide for two separate proceedings before
two independent forums in the Act, one, for confiscation by
a departmental authority exercising quasi-judicial powers
conferred under sub-s. (2A) of s. 44 of the goods forming
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the subject matter of the offence, and the other for the
trial of the person accused of the offence so committed. It
brought about the following changes, namely, : (1) In sub-
s.(2) of s. 44 of the Act in the opening paragraph, for the
words make a report of such seizure to the magistrate: , the
following words and brackets were substituted, namely :
Without any unreasonable delay either produce the
property seized before an officer not below the
rank of an Assistant Conservator of Forests
authorized by the Government in this behalf by
notification (hereinafter referred to as the
authorized officer) or make a report of such
seizure to the magistrate:
(2) After sub-s. (2), Sub-ss; (2A), (2B), (2C), (2D) and
(2E) were inserted. Sub-s. (2A), which is material for our
purposes,provides:
(2A) Where an authorized officer seizes under sub-
section (1) any timber or forest produce or where
any such timber or forest produce is produced
before him under sub-section (2) and he is
satisfied that a forest offence has been committed
in respect thereof, he may order confiscation of
the timber or forest produce 80 seized or produced
together with all tools, ropes, chains, boats or
vehicles used in committing such offence.
Sub-s. (2B) enjoins that no order confiscating any property
shall be made under sub-s. (2A) unless the person from whom
the property is seized is given (a) a notice in writing
informing him
686
of the grounds on which it is proposed to confiscate such
property; (b) an opportunity of making a representation in
writing within such reasonable time as may be specified in
the notice against the grounds for confiscation; and (c) a
reasonable opportunity of being heard in the matter. Sub-s.
(2C) provides that without prejudice to the provisions in
sub-s. (2B), no order of confiscation under sub-s. (2A) of
any tool, rope, chain, boat or vehicle shall be made after
the owner thereof proves to the satisfaction of the
Authorized Officer that it was used in carrying the property
without his knowledge or connivance, or the knowledge or
connivance of his agent, if any, or the person in charge of
the tool, rope, chain, boat or vehicle in committing the
offence and that each of them had taken all reasonable and
necessary precautions against such use. Sub-s. (2D) confers
power on an Authorized Officer not below the rank of a
Conservator of Forests empowered by the Government in that
behalf, may within 30 days of the date of the order of
confiscation by the Authorized Officer under sub-s. (2A),
either suo motu or on an application call for and examine
the record of that order and may make such inquiry or cause
such inquiry to be made and pass such orders as he may think
fit. Proviso thereto enjoins that no order prejudicial to
any person shall be passed without giving him an opportunity
of being heard. Sub-s.(2E) confers a right of appeal to the
person aggrieved by an order passed under sub-s.(2A) or sub-
s. (2D). Such an appeal had to be preferred within 30 days
from the date of communication to him of such order, to the
District Court having jurisdiction over the area in which
the property had been seized. The District Court was
conferred the power after giving an opportunity to the
parties to be heard, to pass such order as it may think fit
and the order of the District Court so passed shall be
final.
With the conferral of power on an officer not below the
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rank of an Assistant Conservator of Forests authorized by
the State Government to order confiscation of the property
seized under sub-s.(2A) of s.44, there was a corresponding
change made in s.45 of the Act. The amended s. 45 reads:
45. Where a person is convicted of a forest
offence, the court sentencing him shall order
confiscation to the Government of timber or forest
produce in respect of which such offence was
committed and of any tool, boat, vehicle, vessel
or other conveyance or any other article used in
committing such offence except There an order of
confiscation has already been passed in respect
thereof under section 44."
687
The Act also inserted s. 58A which reads :
58A. An order of confiscation under sub-section
(2A) or sub-section (2D) of section 44 shall not
be deemed to bar the imposition of any other
penalty to which the person from whom the property
is seized is liable under this Act. B
We cannot but accept the contention of the learned
Attorney General appearing on behalf of the State that the
effect of the amendments brought about by Act 17 of 1976 is
that the Act, as amended, does contemplate two separate
proceedings before two different forums. It is urged that
there is no conflict of jurisdiction as s. 45 of the Act as
amended by the Amendment Act, in terms, curtails the power
conferred on the Magistrate to direct confiscation of timber
or forest produce on conviction of the accused. Emphasis was
laid on the words except where an order for confiscation has
already been passed in respect thereof under 8.44 inserted
by 8.3 of Act 17 of 1976. The submission, therefore, is that
the power vested in the Authorized Officer to direct
confiscation of the seized timber or forest produce and the
implements etc. under sub-s.(2A) of 8.44 and the power of
the Magistrate to direct confiscation of such property on
conviction of the accused under 8.45, are two separate and
distinct powers. According to his, the learned Single Judge
proceeded on a wrongful assumption that there is overlapping
of the two powers and therefore exceeded his jurisdiction
under 8. 482 of the Code in directing stay of the
confiscation proceedings before the Authorized Officer under
s.44(2A) of the Act. In support of his submissions, the
learned Attorney General drew our attention to certain
decisions of the High Court, particularly to a decision of
this Court in State of A.P. v. Smt.Haji Begum,(C.A. No. 1216
of 1979 decided on April 23, 1979) which, he says, the
learned Single Judge has wrongly tried to distinguish.
The contention to the contrary by learned counsel
appearing for the respondents is that under sub-s.(2) of
s.44 as amended, The Forest Officer has either to produce
without any unreasonable delay the property seized before
any officer not below the rank of an Assistant Conservator
of Forests authorized by The Government in that behalf, or
to make a report of such seizure to the Magistrate. Much
stress was placed on the use of the Words either and or in
sub-s.(2) of 8.44 of the Act for the arguments that the
power vested in the Authorized Officer to direct
confiscation of seized timber or forest produce and the
688
implements etc. under sub-s. (2) of 8.44 of the Act and the
power of the Magistrate to direct confiscation of such
property on conviction of the accused under 8.44 were
mutually exclusive and, therefore, the Forest Department has
the option of adopting either of the two courses. He
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contends that the Forest authorities having elected to
prosecute the respondents for commission of the alleged
offences under s. 20 (l)(c)(iv) and (x) and s. 20(1)(d) read
with s. 29(4)(a)(ii) of the Act, they cannot at the same
time proceed with the confiscation proceedings before the
Authorized Officer under s. 44 (2A) for confiscation of the
timber or forest produce and the implements etc. seized or
produced before him. In other words, it is said that there
cannot be two parallel proceedings before two distinct
forums empowered to direct confiscation of the timber or
forest produce seized under s. 44 (2A) of the Act and s. 45
and this would give rise to an anamolous situation. The
submission is that the order of confiscation passed by the
Authorized Officer under s. 44(2A) on being satisfied that a
forest offence had been committed must necessarily be
subject to the finding of the court in a criminal
prosecution as to whether such an offence under s.20 or s.29
has been committed or not and in case the trial ends in an
acquittal of the accused, the seized timber or forest
produce ant the implements etc. cannot be confiscated to the
Government. He tries to distinguish the decision of this
Court in State of A.P. v. Smt. Haji Begum, supra, and
submits that the Court did not lay down that after the
Amendment Act the Magistrate has no jurisdiction to
confiscate the seized property. It is urged that the Court
only held on the facts and circumstances before it that the
High Court in Smt. Haji Begum’s case had taken an erroneous
view of the report made by the Authorized officer under sub-
s.(2) of s.44 of the Act while forwarding the accused to the
Magistrate and hence the proceedings before the Divisional
Forest Officer had to go on. We are afraid, these
contentions cannot prevail.
Under the scheme of the Act, where a Forest Officer
effects a seizure under sub-s.(l) of s. 44 of the Act of any
timber or forest produce together with the implements etc.,
when he has reason to believe that a forest offence has been
committed in respect thereof, he has the discretion to
either produce the property seized before the Authorized
Officer or make a report of such seizure to the Magistrate.
Where the timber or forest produce 18 seized by the
Authorized Officer or the Forest Officer or where any such
timber or forest produce 18 produced b fore him by any
Forest Officer under sub-s.(2), the Authorized Officer has
to proceed to order confiscation thereof after Following the
689
procedure laid down in sub-ss. (2B) and (2C). The order of
confiscation passed by an Authorized Officer under sub-s.
(2A) is liable to be interfered with within 30 days of the
passing of such order by an officer not below the rank or
Conservator of Forests empowered by the Government in that
behalf under sub-s.(2D) either suo motu or on an application
made by the person aggrieved after making such inquiry as he
thinks fit. Under the proviso thereto, no order prejudicial
to any person shall be passed without giving him an
opportunity of being heard. The person aggrieved by an order
of confiscation passed under sub-s.(2A) or (2D) has a right
of appeal within 30 days from the date of communication to
him of such order under sub-s.(2E) to the District Court
having jurisdiction over the area in which the property had
been seized. The District Court has been conferred the power
to pass such order as it may think fit after giving an
opportunity to the parties to be heard, and the order of the
District Court 80 passed is final.
The Forest Department may also decide to prosecute the
accused. In such a case, the Forest Officer shall, except
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where the offender agrees in writing forthwith to get the
ofence compounded, make a report of such seizure to the
Magistrate under sub-s.(2) of s.44. As regards the
implements used in committing any such offence i.e. tools,
ropes, chains, boats, vehicles etc. seized by the Forest
Officer under sub-s.(l) and where he makes a report of such
seizure to the Magistrate under sub-s.(2), the Forest
Officer is empowered by sub-s.(3) to release the same on the
execution by the owner thereof of a bond for the production
of the property so released, if and when so required before
the Magistrate. Sub-s.(4) of s.44 of the Act enjoins that
upon receipt of any report from a Forest Officer under sub-
s.(2) thereof, the Magistrate shall except where the offence
is compounded take such measures as may be necessary for the
trial of the accused and the disposal of the property
according to law. Sub-s.(5) directs that the property seized
under sub-s.(l) shall be kept in the custody of the forest
Officer until the compensation for compounding the offence
is paid or until an order of the Magistrate directing its
disposal 18 received. Under s. 45, where a person 18
convicted of a forest offence the Court sentencing him shall
order confiscation to the government of timber or forest
produce in respect of which such offence was committed and
of the implements etc. used in committing such offence,
except where an order of confiscation his already been
passed in respect thereof under s.44. The words except where
an order of confiscation has already been passed in respect
thereof
690
under s.44 appearing in s. 45 of the Act have the effect of
curtailment of the power of the Magistrate to order
confiscation on conviction of an accused of a forest offence
under s.45. It would therefore appear that there can be no
conflict of jurisdiction between the Authorized Officer
acting under sub-s.(2A) of s.44 of the Act to direct
confiscation of the property seized under sub-s.(l) on has
being satisfied that a forest offence has been committed,
and the Magistrate making an order for confiscation of the
property so seized on conviction of an accused for a forest
offence under s.45. The power of confiscation conferred on
the Authorized officer under sub-s.(2A) of s. 44 of the Act
is separate and distinct from the power of the Magistrate to
direct confiscation on conviction of an accused under s.45.
There 18 no overlapping of their respective jurisdictions as
there is clear demarcation over the areas in which they
operate.
True it is, where any property is produced by an
officer before a Criminal Court in an inquiry or trial, the
Court may under 8. 451 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 make any direction, as it thinks fit, for the proper
custody of such property pending the conclusion of the
inquiry or trial. At the conclusion of the inquiry or trial,
the Court may also under 8. 452 of the Code make an order
for the disposal of the property produced before it and make
such other directions as it may think necessary. Where the
property is not produced before a Criminal Court in an
inquiry or trial, the Magistrate is empowered under s.457 of
the Code to make such order as he thinks fit, respecting the
disposal of the property. The general provision of s. 452 of
the code with regard to ’disposal of property by a Criminal
Court such as by destruction, confiscation or delivery to
any person claiming to be entitled to possession thereof,
and that of 8.457 investing a Magistrate to make an order
for disposal of property seized by a Police Officer and not
produced before a Criminal Court during an inquiry or trial,
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must necessary yield where a statute makes a special
provision with regard to forfeiture of any property and its
disposal. In the instant case, admittedly, the illicitly
felled teak trees seized by the Forest Range Officer,
Adilabad were produced by him before the Divisional Forest
Officer, Hyderabad who is the Authorised Officer under sub-
s. (2A) of s.44 of the Act, along with a report by his under
sub-s. (2) thereof that he had reason to believe that a
forest offence had been committed by the respondents. Merely
because the Forest Range Officer also later lodged a
complaint before the learned Metropolitan Magistrate for
trial of he
691
respondents for commission of offences under ss.
20(1)(c)(iv) and A (x) and 20(1)(d) read with s.
29(4)(a)(11) of the Act, did not imply that the Authorised
Officer was bereft of his power and authority to direct
confiscation of the seized timber and the implements etc.
under sub-s.(2A) of s.44 of the Act if he was satisfied that
a forest offence had been committed.
A close, careful and combined reading of the various
subsections of s. 44, s. 45 and s. 58A of the Act as
introduced or amended by Act 17 of 1976 leaves no doubt that
the intendment of the Legislature was to provide for two
separate proceedings before two different forums and there
is no conflict of jurisdiction as s.45, as amended by the
Amendment Act, in terms curtails the power conferred on the
Magistrate to direct confiscation of timber or forest
produce on conviction of the accused. The conferral of power
of confiscation of seized timber or forest produce and the
implements etc. On the Authorized officer under sub-s.(2A)
of s.44 of the Act on his being satisfied that a forest
offence had been committed in respect thereof, is / t
dependent upon whether a criminal prosecution for commission
of a forest offence has been launched against the offender
or / t. It is a separate and distinct proceeding from that
of a trial before the Court for commission of an offence.
Under sub-s.(2A) of 8.44 of the Act, where a Forest Officer
makes a report of seizure of any timber or forest produce
and produces the seized timber before the Authorized Officer
along with a report under 8.44(2), the Authorized Officer
can direct confiscation to Government of such timber of
forest produce and the implements etc. if he is satisfied
that a forest offences has been committed irrespective of
the fact whether the accused is facing a trial before a
Magistrate for the commission of a forest offence under 8.20
or 29 of the Act.
As to the scope and effect of sub-s. (2A) of 8. 44 of
the Act, different views appear to have prevailed in the
High Court. In State of Andhra Pradesh v. P. Mohammed &
Ors., (1978) A.P.L.J. 391, Jeewan Reddy, J. held that the
general power of the Court under 8. 452 of the Code or that
of the Magistrate under 8. 457 to direct disposal of seized
property, had to be read along with and in the context of
the special procedure prescribed by the Amendment Act 17 of
1976. In that case, the Forest Officer produced the seized
forest produce and the vehicle used for the commission of a
forest offence under sub-s. (1) of 8. 44 before the
Authorized Officer along with a report as contemplated by
sub-s. (2) thereof for purposes of confiscation, and
thereafter
692
he produced the accused before a Magistrate for trial for
the commission of such offence. In those circumstances, the
learned Judge held that the Amending Act by sub-s. (2A) of
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s. 44 created the Authorized Officer to be the competent
authority to direct confiscation of any timber or forest
produce on his being satisfied that a forest offence has
been committed in respect thereof, and the seized property
having been produced by the Forest Officer before the
Authorized Officer along with a report for confiscation
under sub-s.(2A) of s. 44 of the Act, the Magistrate could
not have any jurisdiction to pass an order under s. 457 of
the Code for the disposal of such property. A discordant
note was, however, struck by a Division Bench consisting of
Sambasiva Rao, C.J. and Raghuvir, J. in Smt. Haji Begum v.
State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors., (1978) 2 A.P.L.J. 191. The
learned Judges held that the power of the Authorized officer
to direct confiscation under sub-s.(2A) of s.44 of the Act
and that of the Magistrate under 8.45 were mutually
exclusive and, therefore, there could not be simultaneous
proceedings for confiscation before the Authorized Officer
under sub-s. (2A) of s.44 and also the trial of the accused
for commission of a forest offence under s.20 or 29 of the
Act. Their conclusion was based on the use of the words
’either’ and ’or’ in sub-s.(2) of 8.44 of the Act and they
held that the Forest Department had an option to adopt
either of the two courses. The judgment of the High Court in
Smt. Haji Begum’s case was clearly wrong and was reversed by
this Court in State of Andhra Pradesh v. Smt. Haji Begam
(supra), where it was observed:
"In our opinion, on the facts and circumstances of
the case, the order of the High Court is not fit
to be sustained. The High Court has taken an
erroneous view of the report of the Forest Ranger
to the Magistrate while forwarding the accused to
him. The proceeding as to the confiscation of the
property seized as also the car has got to go on
before the Divisional Forest Officer.
We find that a later Division Bench consisting of
Kondaiah, C.J. and Punnayya, J. in Mohd. Yaseen & ors. v.
The Forest Range Officer, Flying Squad, Rayachoti & Ors.,
(1980) 1 A.L.T. 8, approved of the view expressed by Jeewan
Reddy, J. in P.K. Mohammad’s case (supra), and held that the
Act contemplates two procedures, one for confiscation of
goods forming the subject-matter of the offence by the
Authorized Officer under sub-s.(2A) of 8.44 of the Act, and
the other for trial of the person accused of the offence so
committed under 8. 20 or 29 of
693
the Act. The learned Judges held that the Act provides for a
special machinery for confiscation of illicitly felled
timber or forest produce by the Authorized Officer under
sub-s.(2A) of 8.44 enacted in the general public interest to
suppress the mischief of ruthless exploitation of Government
forest. by illicit felling and removal of teak and other
valuable forest produce. They further held that merely
because there was an acquittal of. the accused in the trial
before the Magistrate due to paucity of evidence or
otherwise did not a necessarily entail in nullifying the
order of confiscation of the seized timber or forests
produce by the Authorized Officer under sub-s.(2A) of 8.44
of the Act based on his satisfaction that a forest offence
had been committed in respect thereof. We affirm the view
expressed by Jeewan Reddy, J. in P.K. Mohammad’s case and by
Kondaiah, C.J. and Punnayya, J. in Mohd. Yaseen’s case.
The result therefore is that the appeal succeeds and is
allowed. The judgment and order of the High Court passed
under 8. 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 for
stay of the proceedings before the Authorized Officer under
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sub-s. (2A) of 8. 44 of the Andhra Pradesh Forest Act, 1967
are set aside and the Authorized Officer is directed to
proceed with the inquiry for confiscation of the seized
timber in accordance with law. D
M.L.A. Appeal Allowed
694