Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5196 of 2001
PETITIONER:
State of M.P. & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Madhukar Rao
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/01/2008
BENCH:
H.K.Sema & Aftab Alam
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
W I T H
C.A.Nos.5197, 5198, 5199, 5200 of 2001, SLP) Nos.2095 and
8024 of 2002 and Criminal Appeal No.487 of 2006
AFTAB ALAM,J.
This judgment will dispose of the four appeals in all of
which the same question arises for consideration. The question
is whether a vehicle or vessel etc. seized under Section 50(1)(c)
of the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972 (hereinafter referred to
as \021the Act\022) is put beyond the power of the Magistrate to direct
its release during the pendency of trial in exercise of powers
under Section 451 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
(hereinafter referred to as \021the Code\022). On behalf of the
appellant, the State of Madhya Pradesh, it is strongly contended
that the answer to the question would be only in the affirmative.
The contention appears to us to be ex facie untenable but in
order to examine the stand of the State Government it would be
necessary to state the facts and circumstances in which the
question arises and to take note of the relevant provisions of
law in light of which it is to be answered.
The facts of the case are taken from Civil Appeal
No.5199 of 2001, the State of Madhya Pradesh vs. Madhukar
Rao, which was the leading case before the High Court. On
March 12, 1997 at about 3.30 a.m., in course of checking a
Sub-Inspector of Excise found a Tata Sumo vehicle, bearing
Registration No.MH.31-H/6919, carrying 206 kgs. of antlers.
The vehicle was owned by Madhukar Rao, the respondent, but
he was not in it at the time of checking. The Excise Sub-
Inspector informed the officers of the Forest Department who
registered a case being Offence No.6527/97 under Sections 39,
42, 43, 44, 49(Kha) and 51(Kha) of the Act. The four persons
occupying the vehicle were arrested and the vehicle and the
antlers were seized under Section 50(1)(c) of the Act. The
Judicial Magistrate, Raipur, was duly informed about the
institution of the case on March 13, 1997.
The respondent, being the owner of the vehicle, moved
the Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Raipur on May 12, 1997 for
its release on Supurdnama. On behalf of the respondent it was
stated that he was not an accused in the case and he had no
concern with the commission of any offences. It was further
stated that his neighbour Shri Lohiya, one of the accused in the
case, had borrowed the vehicle on the pretext of going to see his
ailing father. The Magistrate allowed the petition and directed
for release of the vehicle on Supurdnama by order, dated May
12, 1997.
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Against the order of the Magistrate, the State
Government filed a revision before the Sessions Judge, Raipur.
In the revision, it was stated that the Magistrate had erred in
allowing the release of the vehicle in disregard of Section 39(d)
of the Act in terms of which the seized vehicle became the
property of the Government and hence, the court had no power
to release it on Supurdnama. It was further contended that the
power of release under Section 451 of the Code could be
exercised only in respect of vehicles seized by a police officer.
The Sessions Judge by order, dated June 5, 1997 allowed the
revision, relying upon a Bench decision of the Gwalior Bench
of Madhya Pradesh High Court in L.P.A.No.152 of 1996. (Here
it is stated on behalf of the State that the S.L.P. filed against the
order in the L.P.A. was dismissed by this Court in limine).
After the revision was allowed and the order of release
passed by the Magistrate was set aside, the Wild Life Warden
and Divisional Forest Officer, Raipur passed an order on June
16, 1997 declaring the seized vehicle as Government property
in terms of Section 39(d) of the Act.
The respondent then went to the High Court at Jabalpur,
in Writ Petition No.4421 of 1997, challenging the decision of
the Sessions Judge and seeking a direction for release of the
vehicle on Supurdnama as ordered by the Magistrate. The case
of the present respondent along with three other cases (giving
rise to the three other appeals in this batch) was finally heard by
a full bench. Dharmadhikari,J. (as His Lordship then was) who
authored the full bench judgment held and found that the
Magistrate\022s power to release a vehicle during the pendency of
trial was not, in any way, affected by the legislative changes in
the Act relied upon by the State and in appropriate cases it was
fully open to the Magistrate to pass an order of interim release
of a seized vehicle. The three other cases were also disposed of
following the Full Bench decision in Madhukar\022s case.
The State is in appeal against the order passed by the
High Court.
On behalf of the State, it is contended that after the
amendments made in Section 50 and Section 39(1)(d) of the
Act w.e.f. October 2, 1991 by Act 44 of 1991 there was no way
a vehicle seized for violation of the Act could be released. The
amendments in Section 50 took away the power from the
Assistant Director of Wild Life Preservation or Wild Life
Warden (or an officer superior to them) and the Magistrate
under the Code, in any event, had no such power. Moreover,
the amendment of Section 39(1)(d) of the Act made any interim
release of the vehicle further impossible.
In order to appreciate the submissions made on behalf of
the State it would be necessary to examine the relevant
provisions of law. Chapter VI of the Act contains provisions
dealing with the prevention and detection of offences. The
chapter begins with Section 50 that gives to the specificied
officers the powers of entry, search, arrest and detention. It is a
long section having as many as nine sub-sections. Sub-section
(1) which is sub-divided into three clauses is as follows :
\02350. Power of entry, search, arrest and
detention - (1) Notwithstanding anything
contained in any other law for the time being in
force, the Director or any other officer authorized
by him in this behalf or the Chief Wild Warden or
the authorised officer or any Forest Officer or any
Police Officer not below the rank of a sub-
inspector, may, if he has reasonable grounds for
believing that any person has committed an
offence against this Act \026
(a) require any such person to produce
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for inspection any captive animal, wild animal,
animal article, meat, [trophy, uncured trophy,
specified plant or part or derivative thereof] in his
control, custody or possession, or any licence,
permit or other document granted to him or
required to be kept by him under the provisions of
this Act;
(b) stop any vehicle or vessel in order to
conduct search or inquiry or enter upon and search
any premises, land, vehicle or vessel, in the
occupation of such person, and open and search
any baggage or other things in the possession;
(c) seize any captive animal, wild animal,
animal article, meat, trophy or uncured trophy, or
any specified plant or part or derivative thereof, in
respect of which an offence against this Act
appears to have been committed, in the possession
of any person together with any trap, tool, vehicle,
vessel or weapon used for committing any such
offence and, unless he is satisfied that such person
will appear and answer any charge which may be
preferred against him, arrest him without warrant,
and detain him.
Provided that where a fisherman, residing
within ten kilometers of a sanctuary or National
Park, inadvertently enters on a boat, not used for
commercial fishing, in the territorial waters in that
sanctuary or National Park, a fishing tackle or net
on such boat shall not be seized.\024
Before the Act was subjected to a large number of amendments
with effect from October 2, 1991, Section 50 had sub-section
(2) which was as follows :
\023(2) Any officer of rank not inferior to that of an
Assistant Director of Wild Life preservation or
Wild Life Warden, who, or whose subordinate has
seized any trap, tool, vehicle, vessel or weapon
under clause (c) of sub-section (1), may release the
same on the execution by the owner thereof of
bond for the production of the property so
released, if and when so required, before the
Magistrate having jurisdiction to try the offence on
account of which the seizure has been made.\024
The Amendment Act 44 of 1991 deleted sub-section (2) and
inserted in its place sub-section (3-A) which is as follows :
\023(3-A). Any officer of a rank not inferior to that of
an Assistant Director of Wild Life Preservation of
[as Assistant Conservator of Forests], who, or
whose subordinate, has seized any captive animal
or wild animal under clause (c) of sub-section (1)
may give the same for custody on the execution by
any person of a bond for the production of such
animal if and when so required, before the
Magistrate having jurisdiction to try the offence on
account of which the seizure has been made.\024
At the same time, amendments were made in Section 39(1)(d)
after which it reads as follows :
\02339. Wild animals, etc., to be Government
property \026 (1) Every
(a) xxx xxx xxx xxx
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(b) xxx xxx xxx xxx
(c) xxx xxx xxx xxx
(d) vehicle, vessel, weapon, trap or tool that has
been used for committing an offence and has been
seized under the provisions of this Act, shall be the
property of the State Government, and, where such
animal is hunted in a sanctuary or National Park
declared by the Central Government, such animal
or any animal article, trophy, uncured trophy or
meat [derived from such animal, or any vehicle,
vessel, weapon, trap or tool used in such hunting]
shall be the property of the Central Government.\024
Ms.Vibha Datta Makhija, learned counsel appearing for
the State of Madhya Pradesh referred in detail to various sub-
sections of Section 50. She also referred to Section 51 laying
down the penalties for offences committed under the Act,
Section 53 dealing with the punishment for wrongful seizure
and Section 54 dealing with the power to compound offences.
Learned counsel submitted that prior to October 2, 1991, while
sub-section (2) of Section 50 was in existence, the specified
officers were empowered to release any trap, tool, vehicle,
vessel or weapon seized under clause (c) of sub-section (1) in
connection with any offence under the Act. But the provision
was deleted and was substituted by sub-section (3-A) that
limited the power of release only in regard to any captive
animal or wild animal. The legislative intent was thus clear that
no release was permissible of any article other than a captive
animal or wild animal that could be given in the custody of any
person on execution of a bond.
Learned counsel submitted that Section 50 of the Act
provided a complete and comprehensive scheme in matters of
entry, search, arrest and detention for prevention and detection
of offence under the Act and excluded the application of any
other Act, including the Code, in the matter. She maintained
that at no time it was open to the Magistrate to direct for interim
release of a vehicle seized under Section 50(1)(c) of the Act.
Previously officers of certain higher ranks had the power to
release the seized vehicle but after deletion of sub-section (2)
the power was taken away from the departmental officers as
well and hence, a vehicle seized for commission of an offence
under the Act could no longer be released on interim basis. In
support of the submission that Section 50 provided a complete
Code she also referred to Sections 51 and 53 of the Act. She
submitted that the punishment for wrongful seizure too was
provided under the Act itself and hence, the seizure would not
attract the provisions of any other law, including the Code. In
support of the submission she relied upon the decision of this
Court in State of Karnataka vs. K.A.Kunchindammed [2002 (9)
SCC 90]. She particularly relied upon paragraph 23 of the
decision.
We are unable to accept the submissions. To contend
that the use of a vehicle in the commission of an offence under
the Act, without anything else would bar its interim release
appears to us to be quite unreasonable. There may be a case
where a vehicle was undeniably used for commission of an
offence under the Act but the vehicle\022s owner is in a position to
show that it was used for committing the offence only after it
was stolen from his possession. In that situation, we are unable
to see why the vehicle should not be released in the owner\022s
favour during the pendency of the trial.
We are also unable to accept the submission that Section
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50 and the other provisions in Chapter VI of the Act exclude
the application of any provisions of the Code. It is indeed true
that Section 50 of the Act has several provisions especially
aimed at prevention and detection of offences under the Act.
For example, it confers powers of entry, search, arrest and
detention on Wild Life and Forest Officers besides police
officers who are normally entrusted with the responsibility of
investigation and detection of offences; further sub-section (4)
of Section 51 expressly excludes application of Section 360 of
the Code and the provisions of Probation of Offenders Act to
persons eighteen years or above in age. But it does not mean
that Section 50 in itself or taken along with the other provisions
under Chapter VI constitutes a self-contained mechanism so as
to exclude every other provision of the Code. This position
becomes further clear from sub-section (4) of Section 50 that
requires that any person detained, or things seized should
forthwith be taken before a Magistrate. Sub-section (4) of
Section 50 reads as follows :
\02350(4). Any person detained, or things seized
under the foregoing power, shall forthwith be
taken before a Magistrate to be dealt with
according to law [under intimation to the Chief
Wild Life Warden or the officer authorized by him
in this regard].\024
It has to be noted here that the expression used in the sub-
section is \021according to law\022 and not \021according to the
provisions of the Act\022. The expression \021according to law\022
undoubtedly widens the scope and plainly indicates the
application of the provisions of the Code.
We find that the full bench of the High Court has
correctly taken the view that the deletion of sub-section (2) and
its replacement by sub-section (3-A) in Section 50 of the Act
had no effect on the powers of the Magistrate to release the
seized vehicle during the pendency of trial under the provisions
of the Code. The effect of deletion of sub-section (2) and its
replacement by sub-section (3-A) may be summed up thus: as
long as, sub-section (2) of Section 50 was on the Statute Book
the Magistrate would not entertain a prayer for interim release
of a seized vehicle etc. until an application for release was made
before the departmental authorities as provided in that sub-
section. Further, in case the prayer for interim release was
rejected by the departmental authority the findings or
observations made in his order would receive due consideration
and would carry a lot of weight before the Magistrate while
considering the prayer for interim release of the vehicle. But
now that sub-section (2) of Section 50 stands deleted, an
aggrieved person has no option but to approach the Magistrate
directly for interim release of the seized vehicle.
We are also of the view that the decision in
Kunchindammed is of no help to the State in the present
appeals. Paragraph 23 of the decision apparently seems to
support the appellant\022s contention but we find it difficult to
apply it in the facts of the present case. The decision in
Kunchindammed was rendered on the provisions of the
Karnataka Forest Act, 1963. In that case, an order of
confiscation of the vehicle was passed by the competent
authority and the confiscation order had attained finality. The
present case arises under the Wild Life Protection Act and the
facts are materially different.
The decision of this Court closer to the issue under
consideration may be found in Moti Lal vs. Central Bureau of
Investigation & Anr. [2002 (4) SCC 713]. In that case an
offence committed under the Act was handed over for
investigation to the Central Bureau of Investigation and the
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action was assailed exactly on the plea that the Wild Life Act
was a special law and it contained comprehensive provisions
for investigation, inquiry, search, seizure, trial and imposition
of punishment and, therefore, the police force establishment
under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act was not
empowered to investigate the case. This Court rejected the
contention and after examining in detail the various provisions
of the Act particularly the provisions of Section 50 came to find
and hold as follows :
\023The scheme of Section 50 of the Wild Life Act
makes it abundantly clear that a police officer is
also empowered to investigate the offences and
search and seize the offending articles. For trial
of offences, the Code of Criminal Procedure is
required to be followed and for that there is no
other specific provision to the contrary. The
special procedure prescribed is limited for taking
cognizance of the offence as well as powers are
given to other officers mentioned in Section 50
for inspection, arrest, search and seizure as well as
of recording statement. The power to compound
offences is also conferred under section 54.
Section 51 provides for penalties which would
indicate that certain offences are cognizable
offences meaning thereby a police officer can
arrest without warrant. Sub-section (5) of Section
51 provides that nothing contained in Section 360
of the Code of Criminal Procedure or in the
Probation of Offenders Act, 1958 shall apply to a
person convicted of an offence with respect to
hunting in a sanctuary or a national park or of an
offence against any provision of Chapter 5-A
unless such person is under 18 years of age. The
aforesaid specific provisions are contrary to the
provisions contained in the Code of Criminal
Procedure and that would prevail during the trial.
However, from this, it cannot be said that
operation of rest of the provisions of the Code of
Criminal Procedure are excluded.
In this view of the matter, there is no
substance in the contention raised by the learned
counsel for the appellant that Section 50 of the
Wild Life Act is a complete code and, therefore,
CBI would have no jurisdiction to investigate the
offences under the said Act. Hence, it cannot be
said that the judgment and order passed by the
High Court rejecting the petition filed by the
appellant is in any way illegal or erroneous.\024
We have, therefore, no doubt that the provisions of
Section 50 of the Act and the amendments made thereunder do
not in any way affect the Magistrate\022s power to make an order
of interim release of the vehicle under Section 451 of the Code.
Learned counsel submitted that Section 39(1)(d) of the
Act made the articles seized under Section 50(1)(c) of the Act
as government property and, therefore, there was no question of
their release. The submission was carefully considered by the
Full Bench of the High Court and on an examination of the
various provisions of the Act it was held that the provision of
Section 39(1)(d) would come into play only after a court of
competent jurisdiction found the accusation and the allegations
made against the accused as true and recorded the finding that
the seized article was, as a matter of fact, used in the
commission of offence. Any attempt to operationalise Article
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39(1)(d) of the Act merely on the basis of seizure and
accusations/allegations leveled by the departmental authorities
would bring it into conflict with the constitutional provisions
and would render it unconstitutional and invalid. In our
opinion, the High Court has taken a perfectly correct view and
the provisions of Section 39(1)(d) cannot be used against
exercise of the Magisterial power to release the vehicle during
pendency of the trial.
We thus find no merit in any of the submission made on
behalf of the appellants. The High Court has taken a correct
view that warrants no interference by this Court. Accordingly,
all the appeals and special leave petitions are dismissed.