Full Judgment Text
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 2061 OF 2008
[Arising out of SLP (Criminal) No. 5439 of 2006]
EX-CONSTABLE RAMVIR SINGH … APPELLANT
VERSUS
UNION OF INDIA & ORS. … RESPONDENTS
J U D G M E N T
S.B. SINHA, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Appellant is before us aggrieved by and dissatisfied with the
judgment and order dated 23.5.2006 passed by the High Court of Punjab &
Haryana at Chandigarh dismissing the writ petition filed by him questioning
an order of the Summary Security Force Court dated 8.9.2002 whereby and
whereunder a sentence of dismissal from service was imposed.
3. Appellant, at all material times, was working as a constable in the
Border Security Force. At the relevant time, he was posted at 24 Bn. BSF at
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Jodhpur. His duty, inter alia, was collection of official dak from Central
Diary, FHQ BSF, New Delhi through SHQ BSF Amritsar. He was sent to
SHQ BSF Amritsar along with one ‘Kalipada Mandal’. He had been given
an authority letter with an electricity bill. He was directed to collect bank
draft prepared in respect of the said bill by PAD well in advance, otherwise
to report to the Unit immediately. The Dak was collected from the Central
Diary. They reached at their destination on 31.7.2000; collected the Dak
from Central Diary, FHQ BSF New Delhi on 3.8.2000. Appellant informed
the Second-in-Command on phone on 3.8.2000 that some unit drafts were to
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be collected from PAD. As 5 and 6 August, 2000 were holidays,
appellant was directed to report back forthwith by boarding the evening
train from Amritsar on 3.8.2000 as he had official Dak in his possession.
He did not do so although he had already collected the official Dak.
He reported for duty on 7.8.2000. An enquiry was initiated. He
could not give a satisfactory reply before the Commandant. He was
awarded 7 days’ Rigorous Imprisonment (RI) in the custody of the force for
absence without leave. The said punishment was imposed as the offence
was committed by him for the second time during service. According to
respondents, earlier he had committed the following offences.
“1. Disobeyed the lawful command of then 21C
of his Unit.
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2. Kept official Dak with him for 4 days.
3. Absented himself from duty for 4 days.”
While in the custody of the force, he is said to have committed the
following offences:
“a. Refused to take meals w.e.f. 10/08/2000 to
11/08/2000 in protest of punishment.
b. Refused to do the pack drill on all seven
days while undergoing RI, which is total
defiance of authority.”
He was put to trial before a Summary Security Force Court on the
aforementioned two charges in terms of the provisions of the Border
Security Force Act, 1968 (for short, “the Act”) and the rules framed
thereunder.
4. He pleaded guilty to both the charges. He was dismissed from
service. A statutory petition filed by him under Section 117 of the Act was
rejected by the Director General of Border Security Force by an order dated
28.6.2001. Legality and/ or validity of the said order came to be questioned
by the appellant by filing a Writ Petition before the Punjab & Haryana High
Court at Chandigarh which was marked as Criminal Writ Petition No. 872
of 2003.
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5. Before the High Court, principally two contentions were raised, (1) he
had not been given an opportunity to engage the services of a counsel, and
(2) the punishment imposed is disproportionate to the gravity of the offence
charged against.
6. Both the said contentions were rejected by the High Court by reason
of the impugned judgment.
7. Mr. Shiv Prakash Pandey, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellant apart from the contentions raised before the High Court, urged:
i. As ‘Kalipada Mandal’, another constable of the Border
Security Force having also absented from the duties and no
action having been taken against him, the entire proceeding
against appellant is vitiated in law.
ii. The purported misconduct having been committed by appellant
while he was in prison, it does not come within the purview of
‘misconduct’ within the meaning of Section 22 of the Act.
8. Mr. A. Sharan, learned Additional Solicitor General, on the other
hand, submitted:
i. Appellant being in uniform service, where discipline is
considered to be of utmost importance, and in view of the
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indisciplined conduct on the part of the appellant, it is not a
case where he deserves a lesser punishment.
ii. The plea that he was not permitted to engage a counsel has
never been raised by appellant and as admittedly, in terms of
Rule 157 of the Border Security Force Rules, 1969, one Shri
Ashim Biswas, Assistant Commandant was detailed as a friend
of the accused in the trial, the same should not be allowed to be
raised.
iii. Appellant pleaded guilty to both the charges; he did not adduce
any evidence; he purported to have offered an explanation that
he was suffering from stomachache and, therefore, he could
neither take any food nor could participate in the pack drilling,
which have been found to be incorrect, this Court should not
interfere with the impugned judgment.
9. The question as to whether he was discriminated against vis-à-vis the
aforementioned Kalipada Mandal having not been raised by him before the
High Court, we are of the opinion that it is not possible for us to consider
the said contention which has been raised for the first time. Mr. Pandey
submitted that such a contention had been raised in the Writ Petition. It
might have been raised but it does not appear from the impugned judgment
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that the same was pressed before the High Court. This Court is bound by
the Judge’s record. If the High Court, as contended by Mr. Pandey, despite
raising a contention in that behalf did not deal therewith, the only remedy
available to him was to move the High Court drawing its attention thereto.
Apart from the fact that the said procedure was not adopted by appellant,
even before us, neither the counsel appearing in the High Court nor the
appellant, affirmed any affidavit that such a contention, in fact, had been
raised before the High Court. It is, therefore, not possible for us to accept
that the contention as regards the discrimination against the appellant vis-à-
vis the said Kalipada Mandal was raised.
10. In State of Maharashtra v. Ramdas Shrinivas Nayak [(1982) 2 SCC
462], this Court held:
“4. When we drew the attention of the learned
Attorney-General to the concession made before
the High Court, Shri A.K. Sen, who appeared for
the State of Maharashtra before the High Court
and led the arguments for the respondents there
and who appeared for Shri Antulay before us
intervened and protested that he never made any
such concession and invited us to peruse the
written submissions made by him in the High
Court. We are afraid that we cannot launch into an
inquiry as to what transpired in the High Court. It
is simply not done. Public policy bars us. Judicial
decorum restrains us. Matters of judicial record are
unquestionable. They are not open to doubt.
Judges cannot be dragged into the arena.
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‘Judgments cannot be treated as mere counters in
the game of litigation.’ (Per Lord Atkinson in
Somasundaram Chetty v. Subramanian Chetty.)
We are bound to accept the statement of the
Judges recorded in their judgment, as to what
transpired in court. We cannot allow the statement
of the Judges to be contradicted by statements at
the Bar or by affidavit and other evidence. If the
Judges say in their judgment that something was
done, said or admitted before them, that has to be
the last word on the subject. The principle is well
settled that statements of fact as to what transpired
at the hearing, recorded in the judgment of the
court, are conclusive of the facts so stated and no
one can contradict such statements by affidavit or
other evidence. If a party thinks that the
happenings in court have been wrongly recorded
in a judgment, it is incumbent upon the party,
while the matter is still fresh in the minds of the
Judges, to call the attention of the very Judges
who have made the record to the fact that the
statement made with regard to his conduct was a
statement that had been made in error (Per Lord
Buckmaster in Madhu Sudan Chowdhri v.
Chandrabati Chowdhrain.) That is the only way to
have the record corrected. If no such step is taken,
the matter must necessarily end there. Of course a
party may resile and an appellate court may permit
him in rare and appropriate cases to resile from a
concession on the ground that the concession was
made on a wrong appreciation of the law and had
led to gross injustice; but, he may not call in
question the very fact of making the concession as
recorded in the judgment.”
[See also Bhavnagar University v. Palitana Sugar Mill (P) Ltd. (2003)
2 SCC 111 and Dhanabhai Khalasi v. State of Gujarat, (2007) 4 SCC 241]
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11. Appellant did not even raise any contention before the Summary
Security Force Court that he intended to consult a lawyer or to select a
friend of his choice as provided for in Rule 157 of the Rules. The High
Court, therefore, in our opinion, has rightly opined that such a contention
cannot be permitted to be raised.
12. So far as the question of imposition of disproportionate punishment
on the appellant is concerned, suffice it to note that he pleaded guilty. It
was an unconditional plea. He might have offered an explanation, but as it
was not found to be correct; he should have proved the same. No medical
record was produced to show that he had been suffering from any kind of
ailment. Evidently, he refused to take meals only as a measure of protest
when he had been imposed a sentence of seven days R.I. He was bound to
follow the rules. He is presumed to know the consequences of violation
thereof. It may or may not be that he committed acts of insubordination by
not taking food but he did not even participate in the pack drilling, which,
concededly, is imperative. It is, therefore, not a case where the High Court
could come to the conclusion that the punishment imposed is shocking to
the conscience.
The doctrine of proportionality in a given case may be invoked by the
Superior Courts in exercise of its jurisdiction under Article 226 of the
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Constitution of India. It was so held in Ranjit Thakur vs. Union of India &
Ors. [(1987) 4 SCC 611], stating:
“25. Judicial review generally speaking, is not
directed against a decision, but is directed against
the "decision making process". The question of the
choice and quantum of punishment is within the
jurisdiction and discretion of the Court-Martial.
But the sentence has to suit the offence and the
offender. It should not be vindictive or unduly
harsh. It should not be so disproportionate to the
offence as to shock the conscience and amount in
itself to conclusive evidence of bias. The doctrine
of proportionality, as part of the concept of
judicial review, would ensure that even on an
aspect which is, otherwise, within the exclusive
province of the Court-Martial, if the decision of
the Court even as to sentence is an outrageous
defiance of logic, then the sentence would not be
immune from correction. Irrationality and
perversity are recognised grounds of judicial
review…”
13. In the facts of the present case, however, we are of the opinion that
the said doctrine should not have been invoked. Appellant was in uniform
service. BSF is a disciplinary force. Appellant pleaded guilty to both the
charges. He could not show any mitigating circumstances. He had
committed a similar offence earlier. He had been asked to report back to
duty as he had been carrying a bank draft, which was necessary for payment
of the electricity bill as it was required to be deposited by the due date. He
not only disobeyed the said order but also in fact reported three days after
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the date he was asked to arrive at Amritsar. In any event, we are not
concerned with the justification of imposition of the sentence or the
quantum thereof in the disciplinary proceedings. The order imposing the
said sentence is not in question before us. The purported harsh punishment
as submitted by Mr. Pandey is, therefore, not a matter of which we can take
cognizance at this stage.
14. The question as to whether refusal to take food by itself would come
within the purview of Section 41 of the Army Act, 1950, this Court in Ranjit
Thakur (supra) held:
“The submission that a disregard of an order to eat
food does not by itself amount to a disobedience to
a lawful command for purposes of Section 41 has
to be examined in the context of the imperatives of
the high and rigorous discipline to be maintained
in the Armed Forces. Every aspect of life of a
soldier is regulated by discipline. Rejection of
food might, under circumstances, amount to an
indirect expression of remonstrance and
resentment against the higher authority. To say
that, a mere refusal to eat food is an innocent,
neutral act might be an over-simplification of the
matter. Mere in-action need not always necessarily
be neutral. Serious acts of calumny could be done
in silence. A disregard of a direction to accept
food might assume the complexion of disrespect
to, and even defiance of authority. But an unduly
harsh and cruel reaction to the expression of the
injured feelings may be counter-productive and
even by itself be sub verse of discipline. Appellant
was perhaps expressing his anguish at, what he
considered, an unjust and disproportionate
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punishment for airing his grievances before his
superior officers.”
It was not a case where the quantum of punishment for violating the
regulation applicable to the inmates of a prison was involved. Therein the
delinquent employee was sentenced to one year’s R.I. and further dismissed
from service with the added disqualification of being declared unfit for any
future civil employment. The charge of misconduct that he refused to eat
his food was found to be strikingly disproportionate.
15. A punishment of simplicitor dismissal from service, in a situation of
this nature, cannot, however, be held to be disproportionate to the gravity of
misconduct.
16. In Union of India vs. Narain Singh [(2002) 5 SCC 11], this Court
held:
“7. This Court has, in the case of Union of India
v. Sardar Bahadur [(1972) 4 SCC 618], held that
there are limits of the powers which can be
exercised by a Single Judge under Article 226 of
the Constitution and, similarly, there are limits to
the powers of a Division Bench while sitting in
appeal over the judgment of a Single Judge. This
Court has held that where there are relevant
materials which support the conclusion that the
officer is guilty, it is not the function of the High
Court to arrive at an independent finding. It has
been held that if an enquiry has been properly held
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the question of adequacy or reliability of evidence
cannot be canvassed before the High Court.
8. In the case of Apparel Export Promotion
Council v. A.K. Chopra [(1999) 1 SCC 759], it has
been held by this Court that it is within the
jurisdiction of the competent authority to decide
what punishment is to be imposed and the
question of punishment is outside the purview of
High Court's interference unless it is so
disproportionate to the proved misconduct as to
shock the conscious of the Court. It has been held
that reduction of sentence by the High Court
would have a demoralising effect and would be a
retrograde step. It has been held that
repentance/unqualified apology at the last
appellate stage does not call for any sympathy or
mercy.”
17. Yet again in Union of India & ors. vs. Datta Linga Toshatwad [(2005)
13 SCC 709], this Court opined:
“8. The present case is not a case of a constable
merely overstaying his leave by 12 days. The
respondent took leave from 16.6.1997 and never
reported for duty thereafter. Instead he filed a writ
petition before the High Court in which the
impugned order has been passed. Members of the
uniformed forces cannot absent themselves on
frivolous pleas, having regard to the nature of the
duties enjoined on these forces. Such indiscipline,
if it goes unpunished, will greatly affect the
discipline of the forces. In such forces desertion is
a serious matter. Cases of this nature, in whatever
manner described, are cases of desertion
particularly when there is apprehension of the
member of the force being called upon to perform
onerous duties in difficult terrains or an order of
deputation which he finds inconvenient, is passed.
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We cannot take such matters lightly, particularly
when it relates to uniformed forces of this country.
A member of a uniformed force who overstays his
leave by a few days must be able to give a
satisfactory explanation. However, a member of
the force who goes on leave and never reports for
duties thereafter, cannot be said to be one merely
overstaying his leave. He must be treated as a
deserter. He appears on the scene for the first time
when he files a writ petition before the High
Court, rather than reporting to his Commanding
Officer. We are satisfied that in cases of this
nature, dismissal from the force is a justified
disciplinary action and cannot be described as
disproportionate to the misconduct alleged.”
18. The last contention raised on behalf of the appellant in regard to
construction of Section 22 of the Act may now be considered.
Section 22 of the Act reads as under:
“22 - Insubordination and obstruction - Any
person subject to this Act who commits any of the
following offences, that is to say,--
(a) being concerned in any quarrel, affray or
disorder, refuses to obey any officer, though
of inferior rank, who orders him into arrest,
or uses criminal force to or assaults any
such officer; or
(b) uses criminal force to, or assaults any
person, whether subject to this Act or not, in
whose custody he is lawfully placed, and
whether he is or is not his superior officer;
or
(c) resists an escort whose duty it is to
apprehend him or to have him in charge; or
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(d) breaks out of barracks, camp or quarters; or
(e) neglects to obey any general, local or other
order; or
(f) impedes the Force Police referred to in
section 63 or any person lawfully acting on
his behalf, or when called upon, refuses to
assist in the execution of his duty a Force
Police or any person lawfully acting on his
behalf,
shall, on conviction by a Security Force Court, be
liable to suffer imprisonment for a term which may
extend, in the case of the offences specified in
clauses (d) and (e), to two years, and in the case of
the offences specified in the other clauses, to ten
years, or in either case such less punishment as is
in this Act mentioned.”
19. It is wide in nature. It is neither in dispute nor doubt that even a
person while in custody would be subject to the Act. The custody of the
appellant was an internal custody, he having been imposed with
punishment.
It is not a case where a prisoner is governed by a separate set of
legislation. It is also not a case where a prisoner is sent to an independent
authority. Even while he is in custody, he is a member of the force. He,
therefore, in terms of clause (e) of Section 22 of the Act neglected to obey
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any general, local or other order. Even while in custody a member of the
force serving the sentence would still be an officer of the Force.
20. However, it is well known that except the cases where the punishment
is shockingly disproportionate, the Superior Courts would not ordinarily
interfere with the quantum of punishment.
21. In The Managing Director State Bank of Hyderabad & Anr. vs. P.
Kata Rao [2008 (6) SCALE 575], this Court held:
“18. There cannot be any doubt whatsoever that
the jurisdiction of superior courts in interfering
with a finding of fact arrived at by the Enquiry
Officer is limited. The High Court, it is trite,
would also ordinarily not interfere with the
quantum of punishment...”
22. We, therefore, do not find any infirmity in the judgment of the High
Court. The appeal is dismissed. However, there shall be no order as to
costs.
……………….…..………….J.
[S.B. Sinha]
..………………..……………J.
[Cyriac Joseph]
New Delhi;
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December 18, 2008