Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHAMMAD NOOH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/09/1957
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 86 1958 SCR 595
ACT:
Certiorari, writ of-Principles governing issue-Availability
of alternative remedy by appeal, if a bar-Departmental en-
quiry Violation of principles of natural justice-Presiding
officer himself witness-- order of dismissal made previous
to the Constitution Revision disallowed after the Constitu-
tion-Such order, if can be quashed-Constitution India, Art.
226.
HEADNOTE:
A departmental enquiry against the respondent, a Head Con-
stable, was held by the District Superintendent of Police.
During the enquiry the District Superintendent of Police
himself became a witness and gave evidence at two stages
against the respondent, his statement being recorded by a
Deputy Superintendent of Police. The District Superintend-
ent of Police then found the respondent guilty and on April
20, 1948, passed an order of dismissal against him. The
respondent went up in appeal to the Deputy Inspector General
of Police but the appeal was dismissed on May 7, 1949. The
respondent then filed a revision application to the Inspec-
tor General of Police which was also dismissed on April 22,
1950. Thereupon, the respondent filed a writ petition under
Art. 226 of the Constitution before the High Court praying
for the setting aside of the order of dismissal. The High
Court held that the rules of natural justice and fair-play
had been disregarded and accordingly, quashed the proceed-
ings and set aside the three several orders. The State
obtained a certificate of fitness and appealed.
Held, (percuriam) that the District Superintendent of Police
who had acted both as the judge and as a witness had dis-
qualified himself from presiding over the enquiry. The
procedure adopted was contrary to the rules of natural
justice and fair-play. Decisions and orders based on such
procedure are invalid and not binding.
There is no rule with regard to certiorari, as there is with
mandamus, that it will lie only where there is no other
equally effective remedy. The existence of another adequate
remedy may be taken into consideration in the exercise of
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the discretion. If an inferior Court or tribunal of first
instance acts without jurisdiction or in excess of it or
contrary to the rules of natural justice, the superior Court
may quite properly issue a writ of certiorari to correct the
error, even if an appeal to another inferior Court or tribu-
nal was available, whether recourse was or was not had to
it. This would be so all the more in the case of departmen-
tal tribunals composed of persons without adequate legal
training and background.
76
596
Janardan Reddy v. The State of Hyderabad, (1951) S.C.R. 344
referred to. King v. Postmaster-General, Exparte Carmichael
(1928) i K.B. 291 ; Rex v. Wandsworths justices, Exparte
Read, (1942) I K.B. 281; Khurshed Modi v. Rent Controller,
Bombay, A. [.R. (1947) Bom. 46; Assistant Collector of
Customs v. Soorajmull Nagarmull, (1952) 56 C.W.N. 453 relied
on.
Held, (per S. R. Das, C.J., Venkatarama Ayyar, Jafer Imam
and Sarkar, JJ. Bose, J., dissenting) that Art. 226 of the
Constitution is not retrospective and the High Court could
not exercise its powers under Art. 226 to quash the order of
dismissal passed before the commencement of the Constitu-
tion. It is wrong to say that the order of dismissal passed
on April 20, 1948, merged in the order in the appeal dated
May 7, 1949, and the two orders merged in the order in the
revision dated April 22, 1950, or that the original order of
dismissal became final only on the passing of the order in
revision. The original order of dismissal was operative on
its own strength.
Per Bose, J.--The High Court had jurisdiction to quash all
the orders, as the proceedings should be regarded as still
pending till the order in revision was passed on April 22,
195o. The District Superintendent of Police was acting in a
judicial capacity and was bound to observe principles of
natural justice. These principles he ignored.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 130 of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated the 10th March,
1952, of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Writ No. 737 of
1951.
G. C. Mathur and C. P. Lal, for the appellant.
S. P. Sinha and S. D. Sekhri, for the respondent.
1957. September 30. The judgment of Das C. J., Venkatarama
Aiyar, Jafer Imam and Sarkar JJ. was delivered by Das C. J.
Bose J. delivered a separate judgement.
DAS C. J.-This is an appeal filed under a certificate of
fitness granted by the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad
under Arts. 132 (1) and 133 (1) (c) of the Constitution. It
is directed against the judgment and order of a Division
Bench of the said High Court pronounced on March 10, 1952,
in Civil Misc. Writ No. 7376 of 1951 quashing the depart-
mental proceedings against the respondent and the orders
passed
597
therein, namely, the order for his dismissal passed by the
District Superintendent of Police on -December 21, 1948, the
order of the Deputy Inspector General of Police passed on
June 7, 1949, dismissing his appeal against the order of his
dismissal and the order of the Inspector General of Police
dated April 22,1950 rejecting his application for revision.
The judgment of the High Court also directed that, if it
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were desired to proceed against the respondent, the trial
should be presided over by a person other than the District
Superintendent of Police who gave evidence in the case and
also passed the order of dismissal against the respondent
and that it should be in strict conformity with the relevant
Police Regulations.
The respondent was a constable in the Uttar Pradesh Police
Force and was, at the material time, officiating as a Head
Constable and posted in the District of Fatenpur. In Decem-
ber, 1947, sixty candidates had to be selected from the
Police Force for training at tile Police Training College,
Moradabad. The respondent was sent up for selection from
the District of Fatehpur. He, however, failed in the Hindi
test and was not selected and sixty other candidates were
selected for the training.
On December 8, 1947 a letter, purporting to have been issued
from Lucknow, was received in the U. P. Police Head Office
at Allahabad intimating that the respondent had been select-
ed for training at the Police Training College. As there
were only sixty vacancies and as sixty candidates had al-
ready been selected, the Head Office people were led to make
enquiries as to how this letter came to be issued from
Lucknow. The letter having been placed before the Inspector
General of Police, Lucknow,he declared it to be a forgery.
As the letter was ostensibly for the benefit of the respond-
ent, it was naturally suspected that it must have been sent
by or at his instance.
On March 15, 1948 the respondent was placed under suspen-
sion. Under s. 243 of the Government of India Act, 1935,
which was then in force, the respondent, who was in the
police force, was not governed by sub-s. (3) of s. 240 which
corresponds to art. 311 (2) of
598
the Constitution but was governed by the Police Act, 1861
(Act V of 1861) and the Regulations made thereunder by the
State Government. Accordingly, under s. 7 of the Police Act
read with Uttar Pradesh Police Regulations, a departmental
enquiry, called a "trial" in the Regulations, was started
against the respondent. One Shri B. N. Bhalla, the then
District Superintendent of Police, Fatehpur, was deputed to
hold the trial. He found the respondent guilty and on April
20, 1948 passed an order of dismissal against him. The
respondent went up on appeal to the Deputy Inspector General
of Police under Reg. 508. That appeal was dismissed on June
7, 1949. The respondent then filed a revision application
to the Inspector General of Police under Reg. 512. That
application was also dismissed on April 22, 1950.
Having exhausted all his remedies under the Police Act read
with the Regulations thereunder the respondent on February
24, 1951, filed a writ petition under Art. 226 of the Con-
stitution, praying that the file of the applicant (now
respondent) be called for and his dismissal be set aside and
that he be given such further and other relief as he may, in
law, be entitled to. The main point taken in the affidavit
filed in support of the petition and urged before the High
Court was that Shri B. N. Bhalla, District Superintendent of
Police, who presided over the trial and as such had to come
to a finding and to make an order, also gave his own evi-
dence in the proceedings at two stages and had thus become
disqualified from continuing as the judge, as, in the cir-
cumstances he was bound to be biased against the respondent.
A preliminary objection was taken on behalf of the appellant
State that the High Court had no power, under Art. 226, to
deal with the order of dismissal which had been passed at a
time when the Constitution of India had not come into force,
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but the High Court rejected that plea as it took the view
that the order of dismissal passed by the District Superin-
tendent of Police on December 20, 1948, and the order of
dismissal of the appeal passed by the Deputy Inspector
General of Police on June 7,1949, had not become final
599
until the Inspector General of Police, on April 22, 1950,
made his order dismissing the revision application filed by
the respondent under Reg. 512 and that as the last mentioned
order had been passed after the Constitution had come into
force, and had, by Art. 226, vested powers in the High Court
to issue prerogative writs, the High Court had ample juris-
diction to exercise its newly acquired powers under that
article. On the merits the High Court came to the conclu-
sion that the rules of natural justice and fair-play had
been disregarded, in that the District Superintendent of
Police had continued to preside over the trial even after it
had become necessary for him to put on the record his own
testimony as against that of another witness and it held
that the presiding officer had, in the circumstances, become
disqualified, on the ground of bias, from further acting as
the presiding officer and that the departmental trial con-
ducted by him thereafter had become vitiated. The High
Court, accordingly, quashed the proceedings and set aside
the three several orders herein before mentioned. The
appellant State on February 4, 1955, obtained from the High
Court a certificate of fitness under Arts. 132(1) and
133(1)(c) and hence the present appeal to this Court.
It will be recalled that the forged letter of December 8,
1947, was suspected to have been manufactured or sent by or
at the instance of the respondent to further his interest.
The case against the respondent was that the offending
letter had been typed by one Shariful Hasan, the typist
attached to the office of the Superintendent of Police,
Fatehpur, and, therefore, it was essential for the depart-
ment to establish that the respondent was in friendly rela-
tions with Shariful Hasan who was said to have typed the
letter. Apparently in some preliminary enquiry and in the
presence of Shri B. N. Bhalla one Mohammad Khalil, a Head
Constable, had spoken about Shariful Hasan being very
friendly with the respondent. But while giving his evidence
at the departmental trial the said Mohammad Khalil denied
having made any such statement. In the circumstances it
became necessary to contradict him by the testimony of Shri
B. N. Bhalla in whose presence
600
that witness had, on a previous occasion, stated that Shari-
ful Hasan was very friendly with the respondent. According-
ly Shri B. N. Bhalla had his testimony recorded by a Deputy
Superintendent of Police. This was done at two stages,
namely, once before the charges were framed and again after
the framing of the charges. The respondent’s grievance is
that Shri ’B. N. Bhalla, who had thus become a witness in
the case, ought not to have further continued to act as the
presiding officer and that his continuing to do so vitiated
the trial and his order was a nullity. That Shri B. N.
Bhalla had his own testimony recorded in the case is not
denied. Indeed the appellant State, in opposition to the
respondent’s writ application, filed an affidavit affirmed
by Shri B. N. Bhalla, paragraph 8 of which runs as follows:
" 8. That the deponent gave his first statement on 13th
October, 1948, which was recorded by Shri Mohammad Sadiq,
Deputy Superintendent of Police before the charge and the
second statement on 25th October, 1948, which was recorded
by another Deputy Superintendent of Police after the charge.
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One Head Constable, Mohammad Khalil, who was prosecution
witness in the case, when cross-examined denied to have said
that the applicant and Shariful Hasan were on friendly
terms. He turned hostile and it became necessary for the
deponent to depose about certain facts which had happened in
his presence and which belied the testimony of Mohammad
Khalil - "
The salient facts being thus admitted there can be no escape
from the conclusion that Shri B. N. Bhalla should not have
presided over the trial any longer. The point in issue was
whether Shariful Hasan was in friendly relationship with the
respondent. Mohammad Khalil had in his evidence at the
trial denied having made any statement to this effect. Shri
B. N. Bhalla gave evidence that Mohammad Khalil had in his
presence admitted this friendship of Shariful Hasan with the
respondent. Which of the two witnesses, Mohammad Khalil and
Shri B. N. Bhalla, was to be believed was the duty of the
person presiding over the trial to determine. Shri B. N.
Bhalla was obviously
601
most ill suited to undertake that task. Having pitted his
evidence against that of Mohammad Khalil Shri B. N. Bhalla
vacated the Judge’s seat and entered the arena as a witness.
The two roles could not obviously be played by one and the
same person. lndeed Shri B. N. Bhalla himself realised it
and accordingly bad his own evidence recorded on both the
occasions by other high officers. It is futile to expect
that he could, in the circumstances, hold the scale even. it
is suggested that there might have been other evidence
establishing the friendship between Shariful Hasan and the
respondent and that the evidence of Shri B. N. Bhalla might
not have been relied on or might Dot have been the deciding
factor. There is nothing on the record before us to support
this suggestion. But assuming that Shri B. N. Bhalla did
not rely on his own evidence in preference to that of
Mohammad Khalil-a fact which is hard to believe, especially
in the face of his own affidavit quoted above-the act of
Shri B. N. Bhalla in having his own testimony recorded in
the case indubitably evidences a state of mind which clearly
discloses considerable bias against the respondent. If it
shocks our notions of judicial propriety and fair-play, as
indeed it does, it was bound to make a deeper impression on
the mind of the respondent as to the Unreality and futility
of the proceedings Conducted in this fashion. We find
ourselves in agreement with the High Court that the rules of
natural justice were completely discarded and all canons of
fair-play were grievously violated by Shri B. N. Bhalla
continuing to preside over the trial. Decision arrived at
by such process and order founded on such decision cannot
possibly be regarded as valid or binding.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellant State then urges
that, assuming that any error, irregularity or illegality
had been committed by Shri B. N. Bhalla in the course of the
trial held by him, a writ application under art. 226 was not
the proper remedy for correcting the same. Reference is
made to s. 7 of the Police Act, 1861 which, subject to such
rules as the State Government may make under the Act, gives
602
power to certain specified Police Officers of high rank to
dismiss, suspend or reduce any Police Officer of the
subordinate ranks whom they may think remiss or negligent in
the discharge of his duties or unfit for the same.
Regulation 508 of the Police Regulations made by the State
of Uttar Pradesh provides for an appeal from the decision of
the officer holding the trial. Likewise Reg. 512 confers on
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an officer whose appeal has been rejected to submit an
application for revision to the authority next in rank above
that by which his appeal has been rejected. The argument is
that the Police Act and the Regulations made thereunder
having provided for an appeal and a revision and having set
up special forums with full powers and jurisdiction to
correct the error, irregularity or illegality touching
jurisdiction, procedure and the merits committed by the
officer presiding over the trial, such forums alone are
competent to correct all such errors, irregularities and
illegalities. In this case admittedly the respondent
preferred an appeal and then went up to the Inspector
General of Police in revision. In the appeal and in the
revision the respondent either took the plea of the breach
of the rules of natural justice and fair-play now complained
of or he did not. The respondent knew the material facts
and must be deemed to have been conscious of his legal
rights in the matter and, therefore, if he failed to raise
the objection before the officer who was dealing with his
appeal or revision he cannot, it is urged, be permitted to
do so for the first time on a writ petition under Art. 226
before the High Court, as has been held by this Court in
Manak Lal v. Dr. Prem Chand (1). On the other hand if he
had raised the question in his grounds of appeal or in his
revision petition and insisted on it at the hearing of his
appeal or his revision application then the orders of
dismissal of his appeal and his revision petition by
authorities fully competent and having full powers and
jurisdiction to decide the question must be taken as a
rejection of that plea on its merits and as no error or
irregularity or illegality is alleged to have been committed
at the
603
stages of the appeal or the revision proceedings, the High
Court could not, under Art. 226, interfere in the matter.
In support of this argument learned counsel for the
appellant State relies upon the decision of this Court in
Janardan Reddy v. The State of Hyderabad (1). In that case
the petitioners were convicted by a special Tribunal of
Hyderabad of murder and other offenses and sentenced to
death by hanging. Their Convictions and sentences had been
Confirmed by the Hyderabad High Court before January 26,
1950, when the Constitution of India came into force. It
was after the commencement of the Constitution that the
petitioners applied to this Court under Art. 32 praying (1)
for a writ in the nature of certiorari calling Upon the
Government of Hyderabad and the Special Judge to produce the
records of the case and to show cause why the convictions
and sentences should not be quashed and (2) for a writ of
prohibition directing the Government and the Special Judge
not to execute the petitioners. Subsequently the petition
was amended, with the leave of the court, by adding prayer
(3) for a writ of habeas corpus. A number of points were
raised before this Court. As regards the several points
complaining of alleged illegality by reason of misjoinder of
charges and the infliction of the sentence of death by
hanging and not decapitation this Court at page 351 observed
" But, for the purpose of the present case, it is
,sufficient to point out that even if we assume that there
was some defect in the procedure followed at the trial, it
does not follow that the trial court acted without
jurisdiction. There is a basic difference between want of
jurisdiction, and an illegal or irregular exercise of
jurisdiction, and our attention has not been drawn to any
authority in which mere non-compliance with the rules of
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procedure has been made a ground for granting one of the
writs prayed for. In either case, the defect, if any, can
according to the procedure established by law be corrected
only by a court of appeal or revision. Here the appellate
court which was competent to deal with the matter has
pronounced its judgment against the petitioners, and the
matter
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 344.
604
having been finally decided is not one to be reopened in a
proceeding under article 32 of the Constitution."
As regards the prayers for writs of certiorari and
prohibition it was held that the writs of certiorari and
prohibition were hardly appropriate remedies in that case,
because they were usually directed to an inferior court, but
at the date when the High Court dealt with those cases and
confirmed the convictions and sentences of the petitioners,
this Court was not in existence, and at that point of time,
by no stretch of reasoning, the High Court could be said to
have been subordinate to this court. Then this Court went
on to consider the remaining question, namely, whether after
the commencement of the Constitution this Court could
exercise its newly acquired jurisdiction under Art. 32 and
issue a writ of habeas corpus as the detention of the
petitioners was continuing even after the commencement of
the Constitution. It was urged that it was open to the
petitioners to prove by affidavit that the court which
passed the order had acted without jurisdiction or in excess
of it and the superior court was free to investigate the
matter. After stating that a return that the persons were
in detention in execution of sentences on indictment on
criminal charges was a sufficient answer to the application
for a writ of habeas corpus, this Court proceeded at pages
366-367 to observe as follows:
" Assuming however, that it is open even in such cases to
investigate the question of jurisdiction, as was held in In
re Authers (1), it appears to us that the learned judges who
decided that case went too far in holding that
notwithstanding the fact that the conviction and sentence
had been upheld on appeal by a court of competent
jurisdiction, the mere fact that the trial court had acted
without jurisdiction would justify interference, treating
the appellate order as a nullity. Evidently, the Appellate
Court, in a case which properly comes before it on appeal,
is fully competent to decide whether the trial was with or
without jurisdiction, and it has jurisdiction to decide the
matter rightly as well as wrongly. If it affirms the
conviction
(1) I. L.R. 22 B.D.
605
and thereby decides wrongly that the trial court had the
jurisdiction to try and convict, it cannot be said to have
acted without jurisdiction, and its order cannot be treated
as a nullity. It is true that there is no such thing as the
principle of constructive res judicata in a criminal case,
but there is such a principle as finality of judgments,
which applies to criminal as well as civil cases and is
implicit in every system, wherein provisions are to be found
for correcting errors in appeal or in revision."
In the first place it must be noted that the two obser-
vations quoted from the decision of this Court on which
reliance is placed on behalf of the appellant State were
made in a case where the alleged error, irregularity or
illegality was committed by a special tribunal which had not
merely the trappings of a court but was a court of law
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presided over by a judge with legal training and background
and bound by rules of evidence and procedure laid down for
it and the appeal from its decision lay before the highest
and final court of the State-a superior court of record.
But orders made on departmental "trial" held by an officer
in the department without any legal training and orders
passed by his superior officers in the same department on
appeal or in revision which, in the words of Harries C.J. in
Assistant Collector of Customs v. Soorajmull Nagarmull (1)
were only in the nature of an appeal from Caesar to Caesar
and which might not be regarded with any great confidence by
persons brought before them can hardly be equated with
reasonable propriety with the orders passed by the Special
Tribunal and an appeal therefrom by the Hyderabad High Court
with reference to which bodies alone the said observations
had been made.
In the next place it must be borne in mind that there is no
rule, with regard to certiorari as there is with mandamus,
that it will lie only where there is no other equally
effective remedy. It is well established that, provided the
requisite grounds exist, certiorari will lie although a
right of appeal has been conferred by statute. (Halsbury’s
Laws of England, 3rd Ed., Vol. 11, p. 130 and the cases
cited there). The fact
(1) (1952) 56 C.W.N. 43, 46.
606
that the aggrieved party has another and adequate remedy may
be taken into consideration by the superior court in
arriving at a conclusion as to whether it should, in
exercise of its discretion, issue a writ of certiorari to
quash the proceedings and decisions of inferior courts
subordinate to it and ordinarily the superior court will
decline to interfere until the aggrieved party has exhausted
his other statutory remedies, if any. But this rule
requiring the exhaustion of statutory remedies before the
writ will be granted is a rule of policy, convenience and
discretion rather than a rule of law and instances are
numerous where a writ of certiorari has been issued in spite
of the fact that the aggrieved party had other adequate
legal remedies. In the King v. Postmaster General Ex parte
Carmichael (1) a certiorari was issued although the
aggrieved party had an alternative remedy by way of appeal.
It has been held that the superior court will readily issue
a certiorari in a case where there has been a denial of
natural justice before a court of summary jurisdiction. The
case of Rex v.Wadsworth Justices Ex parte Read (2) is an
authority in point. In that case a man had been convicted
in a court of summary jurisdiction without giving him an
opportunity of being heard. It was held that his remedy was
not by a case stated or by an appeal before the quarter
sessions but by application to the High Court for an order
of certiorari to remove and quash the conviction. At page
284 Viscount Caldecote C.J. observed:
" It remains to consider the argument that the remedy of
certiorari is not open to the applicant because others were
available. It would be ludicrous in such a case as the
present for the convicted person to ask for a case to be
stated. It would mean asking this court to consider as a
question of law whether justices were right in convicting a
man without hearing his evidence. That is so extravagant an
argument as not to merit a moment’s consideration.. As to
the right of appeal to quarter sessions, it may be that the
applicant could have had his remedy if he
(1)[1928] 1 K.B. 201.
(2) [1942] 1 K.B. 281.
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607
had pursued that course, but I am not aware of any reason
why, if in such circumstances as these, he preferred to
apply for an order of certiorari to quash his conviction,
the court should be debarred from granting his application."
Likewise in Khurshed Modi v. Rent Controller, Bombay (1), it
was held that the High Court would not refuse to issue a
writ of certiorari merely because there was a right of
appeal. It was recognized that ordinarily the High Court
would require the petitioner to have recourse to his
ordinary remedies, but if it found that there had been a
breach of fundamental principles of justice, the High Court
would certainly not hesitate to issue the writ of
certiorari. To the same effect are the following
observations of Harries C.J. in Assistant Collector of
Customs v. Soorajmull Nagarmul (2) at page 470:
" There can, I think, be no doubt that Court can refuse to
issue a certiorari if the petitioner has other remedies
equally convenient and effective. But it appears to me that
there can be cases where the court can and should issue a
certiorari even where such alternative remedies are
available. Where a Court or Tribunal, which is called upon
to exercise judicial or quasi-judicial functions discards
all rules of natural justice and arrives at a decision
contrary to all accepted principles of justice then it
appears to me that the court can and must interfere."
It has also been held that a litigant who has lost his right
of appeal or has failed to perfect an appeal by no fault of
his own may in a proper case obtain a review by certiorari.
(See Corpus Juris Secundum Vol. 14, art. 40, p. 189). If,
therefore, the existence of other adequate legal remedies is
not per se a bar to the issue of a writ of certiorari and if
in a proper case it may be the duty of the superior court to
issue a writ of certiorari to correct the errors of an
inferior court or tribunal called upon to exercise judicial
or quasi-judicial functions and not to relegate the
petitioner to other legal remedies available to him and if
the superior court can in a proper case exercise its
jurisdiction
1) A.I.R. 1 Bom. 6.
2) 1952) 6 C.W.N. 3.
608
in favour of a petitioner who has allowed the time to appeal
to expire or has not perfected his appeal, e.g., by
furnishing security required by the statute, should it then
be laid down as an inflexible rule of law that the superior
court must deny the writ when an inferior court or tribunal
by discarding all principles of natural justice and all
accepted rules of procedure arrived at a conclusion which
shocks the sense of justice and fair play merely because
such decision has been upheld by another inferior court or
tribunal on appeal or revision? The case of In re, Authers
(1) referred to in Janardan Reddy’s case, (2) furnishes the
answer. There the manager of a club was convicted under a
certain statute for selling beer by retail without an excise
retail license. Subsequently he was convicted of selling
intoxicating liquor, namely, beer without a license under
another statute. Upon hearing of the later charge the
magistrate treated it as a second offence and imposed a full
penalty authorised in the case of a second offence by the
latter statute. His appeal to the quarter sessions having
been dismissed, he applied for a writ of habeas corpus and
it was granted by the King’s Bench Division on the ground
that the magistrate could not treat the later offence as a
second offence, because it was not a second offence under
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the Act under which he was convicted for the second time.
Evidently the point was taken that if there had been any
error, irregularity or illegality committed by the
magistrate, the quarter sessions could have on appeal
corrected the same and that the quarter sessions having
dismissed the appeal the court of Queen’s Bench Division
could not issue the writ of habeas corpus. This was
repelled by the following observation of Hawkins J.:
" This is true as a fact, but it puts the prosecution in no
better position, for if the magistrate had no power to give
himself jurisdiction by finding that there had been a first
offence where there had been none, the justices could not
give it to him."
On the authorities referred to above it appears to us that
there may conceivably be cases-and the instant
(1) 889 L.R. 22 Q.B.D 345.
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 344.
609
case is in point-where the error, irregularity or illegality
touching jurisdiction or procedure committed by an inferior
court or tribunal of first instance is so patent and loudly
obtrusive that it leaves on its decision an indelible stamp
of infirmity or vice which cannot be obliterated or cured on
appeal or revision. If an inferior court or tribunal of
first instance acts wholly without jurisdiction or patently
in excess of jurisdiction or manifestly conducts the
proceedings before it in a manner which is contrary to the
rules of natural justice and all accepted rules of procedure
and which offends the superior court’s sense of fair play
the superior court may, we think, quite properly exercise
its power to issue the prerogative writ of certiorari to
correct the error of the court or tribunal of first
instance, even if an appeal to another inferior court or
tribunal was available and recourse was not had to it or if
recourse was had to it confirmed what ex facie was a nullity
for reasons aforementioned. This would be so all the more
if the tribunals holding the original trial and the
tribunals hearing the appeal or revision were merely
departmental tribunals composed of persons belonging to the
departmental hierarchy without adequate legal training and
background and whose glaring lapses occasionally come to our
notice. The superior court will ordinarily decline to
interfere by issuing certiorari and all we say is that in a
proper case of the kind mentioned above it has the power to
do so and may and should exercise it. We say no more than
that.
Learned counsel for the appellant State next urges that
because the order of dismissal was passed by the District
Superintendent of Police on December 20, 1948, and the order
dismissing the appeal was passed by the Deputy Inspector
General of Police on June 7, 1949, both of which were before
the commencement of the Constitution, the High Court could
not exercise its powers under Art. 226 to quash those
orders. This argument is countered by the respondent by the
argument that the dismissal order of December 20, 1948, did
not become final until after the Inspector General of Police
had dismissed the revision,
610
application on April 22,1950, that is to say, after the
Constitution came into force, and, therefore, the High Court
had ample power to quash all the three orders.
It is not disputed that our Constitution is prospective in
its application and has no retrospective operation except
where the contrary has been expressly provided for. It has
been held in a series of decisions of the High Courts, some
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of which are referred to in the judgment under appeal, that
Art. 226 and Art. 227 have no retrospective operation and
transactions which are past and closed and the rights and
liabilities which have accrued and vested would remain
unaffected. The correctness of this principle has not been
questioned by the High Court when dealing with the present
case and has not been disputed before us. It is, therefore,
conceded that if the matter had rested with the order of
dismissal passed by the District Superintendent of Police on
April 20, 1948, and the order passed by the Deputy
Inspector-General of Police on June 7, 1949, dismissing the
appeal and confirming the order for the dismissal of the
respondent, an application for a writ under Art. 226 would
not lie in this High Court to set aside those orders as this
was not one of the High Courts that had writ jurisdiction
before the Constitution. It is, however, contended that the
order of dismissal dated April 20, 1948, had merged in the
order passed on appeal on June 7,1949, and that both the
orders merged in the order passed by the Inspector-General
of Police on April 22, 1950, on the revision application.
It is said that the revisional jurisdiction is a part of the
appellate jurisdiction and the principle on which a decree
of the court of first instance in a civil suit merges in the
decree on appeal applies with equal force to an order made
on an application for revision and consequently both the
orders passed by the District Superintendent of Police and
that passed on appeal by the Deputy Inspector General of
Police merged in the order passed on revision by the
Inspector-General of Police on April 22, 1950. To put it
shortly, the contention of the respondent is that the order
of dismissal passed on April 20,became final only on the
passing of the order in
611
revision on April 22, 1950, and as that order was passed
after the date of the commencement of the Constitution, its
validity could be called in question on an application under
Art. 226.
There appear to be two answers to the foregoing contention.
As we have already observed an order of dismissal passed on
a departmental enquiry by an officer in the department and
an order passed by another officer next higher in rank dis-
missing an appeal therefrom and an order rejecting an
application for revision by the head of the department can
hardly be equated with any propriety with decrees made in a
civil suit under the Code of Civil Procedure by the court of
first instance and the decree dismissing the appeal there-
from by an appeal court and the order dismissing the
revision petition by a yet higher court, as has been sought
to be done by the High Court in this case, because the
departmental tribunals of the first instance or on appeal or
revision are not regular courts manned by persons trained in
law although they may have the trappings of the courts of
law. The danger of so doing is evident from what has
happened in the very case now before us. In the next place,
while it is true that a decree of a court of first instance
may be said to merge in the decree passed on appeal there-
from or even in the order passed in revision, it does so
only for certain purposes, namely, for the purposes of
computing the period of limitation for execution of the
decree as in Batuk Nath v. Munni Dei(1), or for computing
the period of limitation for an application for final decree
in a mortgage suit as in Jowad Hussain v. Gendan Singh (2).
But, as pointed out by Sir Lawrence Jenkins in delivering
the judgment of the Privy Council in Juscurn Boid v.
Prithichand Lal (3), whatever be the theory under other
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systems of law, under the Indian Law and’ procedure an
original decree is not suspended by the presentation of an
appeal nor is its operation interrupted where the
(1) (1914) L.R. 41 I.A. 104.
(2) (1926) L.R. 53 1 A. 197.
(3) (1918) L.R. 46 I.A, 52; I.L.R. 46 Cal. 670, 678-679.
612
decree on appeal is merely one of dismissal. There is
nothing in the Indian Law to warrant the suggestion that the
decree or order of the court or tribunal of the first
instance becomes final only on the termination of all
proceedings by ’way of appeal or revision. The filing of
the appeal or revision may put the decree or order in
jeopardy but until it is reversed or modified it remains
effective. In that view of the matter the original order of
dismissal passed on April 20, 1948, was not suspended by the
presentation of appeal by the respondent nor was its
operation interrupted when the Deputy Inspector-General of
Police simply dismissed the appeal from that order or the
Inspector General simply dismissed the application for
revision. The original order of dismissal, if there were no
inherent infirmities in it, was operative on its own
strength and it did not gain any greater efficacy from the
subsequent orders of dismissal of the appeal or the revision
except for the specific purposes hereinbelow mentioned.
That order of dismissal having been passed before the
Constitution and rights having accrued to the appellant
State and liabilities having attached to the respondent
before the Constitution came into force, the subsequent
conferment of jurisdiction and powers on the High Court can
have no retrospective operation on such rights and
liabilities. Even if the order of dismissal of the
respondent was a nullity on the ground that it was passed by
disregarding the rules of natural justice, the High Court
could not properly be asked to exercise its newly acquired
jurisdiction and powers under Art. 226 to correct errors,
irregularities or illegalities committed by the inferior
departmental tribunal before the commencement of the
Constitution, for then there will be no limit to its going
backward and that will certainly amount to giving the
provisions of Art. 226 a retroactive operation. This aspect
of the matter does not appear to have been pressed in the
High Court or adverted to by it. It is only on this ground
that we are constrained, not without regret, to accept this
appeal.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed, but in the circumstances
of the case we make no order as to costs.
613
BOSE J.-With great respect I am unable to agree.
I respectfully agree with my Lord that Janardan Reddy’s case
(1) must not be construed to mean that a High Court can
never interfere under Art. 226 once a competent Court of
appeal has finally decided whether a Court subordinate to it
has jurisdiction or not in a given matter. I also accept
the position that the Constitution is not retrospective and
that the Courts cannot exercise any new jurisdiction and
powers conferred by it to reopen decisions and orders that
had become final before it came into being. But I cannot
agree that is the case here.
The very wide powers conferred on the High Courts by Art.
226, and on this Court by Art. 136, were given in order to
ensure that justice is done in this land and that the Rule
of Law prevails. I see no reason why any narrow or ultra
technical restrictions should be placed on them. Justice
should, in my opinion, be administered in our Courts in a
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common-sense liberal way and be broad-based on human values
rather than on narrow and restricted considerations hedged
round with hairsplitting technicalities.
What is the position here ? What would have been the result
if the order of April 20, 1948, dismissing the respondent
had been passed after the Constitution instead of before it
? At what point of time would the High Court have
entertained a petition under Art. 226 ?
I think it is elementary that, save in exceptional cases,
the Courts will not interfere under Art. 226 until all
normal remedies available to a petitioner have been
exhausted. The normal remedies in a case of this kind are
appeal and revision. It is true that on a matter of
jurisdiction, or on a question that goes to the root of the
case, the High Courts can entertain a petition at an earlier
stage but they are not bound to do so and a petition would
not be thrown out because the petitioner had done that which
the Courts usually direct him to do, namely, to exhaust his
normal remedies before invoking an extraordinary
jurisdiction. Therefore, if this order of dismissal had
(1)[1951] S.C.R.344.
614
been made after the Constitution, the petitioner would have
been expected to pursue his remedies of appeal and revision
first and could not have come to the High Court in the
ordinary way until he had exhausted them; and having come at
that stage he could not have been turned away unheard on the
ground that he was out of time because his grievance was
against the original order. The very decisions to which my
Lord has referred establish that for these purposes, at any
rate, the earlier orders would merge in the final one. But
I am not basing on technicalities. What is plain to me is
that if this order of dismissal had been made after the
Constitution, the petitioner would have been entitled to
wait for the final order (and in the ordinary way would have
been bound to wait) before coming to the High Court. Why is
the position any different because he has done before the
Constitution exactly what he would have been expected, and
in the ordinary course bound, to do after it ?
The final order was passed after the Constitution on April
22, 1950. It is true that if it had been passed before the
Constitution came into force on January 26, 1950, the
petitioner would have had no remedy in the Courts. But the
Constitution breathed fresh life into this land and
conferred precious rights and privileges that were not there
before. Why should they be viewed narrowly ? Why should not
that which would have been regarded as still pending for
present purposes, if all had been done after the
Constitution, be construed in any different way when the
final act, which is the decisive one for these purposes, was
done after it ?
I regard it as unduly narrow and restrictive to equate these
broad-based constitutional privileges to highly technical
procedural decisions dealing with limitation and the merger
of decrees. The question to my mind is not whether there
has been merger but whether those proceedings can, on any
broad and commons view, be regarded as still pending for the
purposes of Art. 226. If they would be so regarded when all
is done after the Constitution (and about that I have no
doubt), what conceivable justification is there for
615
holding that they cannot in this case just because a part of
the process had started before it ?
The principle that new rights conferred under the
Constitution can be used in pending proceedings with
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devastating effect has been accepted by this Court in many
cases. In Lachmandas Kewalram Ahuja v. The State of Bombay
(1) my Lord the Chief Justice, delivering the judgment of
the Court, pointed out at page 734 that though the
Legislature had power to take away normal rights of, among
other things, transfer and revision in a criminal case
before the Constitution, that kind of legislation became bad
after the Constitution, even if it bad been enacted before,
because of the new rights conferred by Art. 14. The
principle was also applied in Shree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v.
Sri A. V. Visvanatha Sastri (2), Dhirendra Kumar Mandal v.
The Superintendent and Remembrance of Legal Affairs to the
Government of West Bengal(3), Habeeb Mohamed v. The State of
Hyderabad(4) Syed Casim Razvi v. The State of Hyderabad (5)
and Keshavan Madhava Menon v. The State of Bombay (6).
These cases are not exactly in point but the principle is
there and it is that principle that I invoke here.
On the merits I am clear that the appeal should be
dismissed. In the first place, this Court, following the
English decisions, has decided in Manak Lal v. Dr. Prem
Chand Singhvi (7) that the principles of natural justice
must be observed not only by Courts proper but also by " all
tribunals and bodies which are given jurisdiction to
determine judicially the rights of parties"; and if they are
not observed, the decision is vitiated. So that is now
beyond controversy.
Next, there can, I think, be no doubt that the District
Superintendent of Police, who conducted the departmental
trial and found the respondent guilty, acted in a judicial
capacity. The Departmental Rules that require an enquiry in
such cases call the
2,0.7
(1) [1952) S.C.R. 710.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 787, 798.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 224,237.
(4) [1953] S.C.R. 661.
(5) [1953] S.C.R. 589.
(6) [1951] 9.C.R. 228.
(7) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 425, 429.
616
proceedings a trial and the procedure ,set out in them
indicates the judicial nature of the enquiry. So that
condition is also fulfilled.
Then, thirdly, were the principles of natural justice
ignored in this case ? That also is, I think, settled by
authority.
What happened here ? The District Superintendent of Police
examined a certain witness in the course of the enquiry. It
seems that witness’s evidence was considered a vital link in
the chain of evidence against the respondent. The District
Superintendent of Police reached the conclusion that the
witness had turned hostile. He may have been right about
that, but he also considered it necessary to refute this
evidence and make good the lacunas by bringing other
material on record. Apparently, no other witness was
available, so the District Superintendent of Police, who
seems to have had personal knowledge about the facts,
stepped down from the Bench and got his testimony recorded
by another authority, once before charge and again after
charge, and each time, after that was done, stepped back on
to the Bench in order solemnly to decide whether he should
believe his own testimony in preference to that of the
witness who, in his judgment, had committed perjury and gone
back on the truth. It hardly matters whether this was done
in good faith or whether the truth lay that way because the
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spectacle of a judge hopping on and off the bench to act
first as judge, then as witness, then as judge again to
determine whether he should believe himself in preference to
another witness, is startling to say the least. It would,
doubtless delight the hearts of a Gilbert and Sullivan Comic
Opera audience but will hardly inspire public confidence in
the fairness and impartiality of departmental trials; and
certainly not in the mind of the respondent. Even before
the Constitution, departmental trials were instituted to
instil a sense of security in the services and inspire
confidence in the public about the treatment accorded to
government servants. The question in these cases is always:
Whether it is likely to produce, in the minds, of the
litigant or the public at large a reasonable doubt
617
about the fairness of the administration of justice. (Manak
Lal v. Dr. Prem Chand) (1).
One of the English cases relied on by this Court in the case
just cited was the House of Lords’ decision in Frome United
Breweries CO. v. Bath Justices(2). At page 600 Lord
Atkinson cited an instance which is almost on all fours with
the present case. He said:
" It could not possibly have been intended by this statute
to authorise a practice which would, I think, be
inconsistent with the proper administration of justice-
namely, that a licensing justice, one of the members of the
compensation authority, should, on a given occasion, descend
from the Bench, give his evidence on oath, and then return
to his place upon the Bench to give a decision possibly
based on his own evidence. "
The matter is, as I said, covered by authority and I need
say no more except that, even if it were not, I would have
had no hesitation in reaching the same conclusion.
Some question arose about waiver. If the respondent,
knowing his rights, had acquiesced in the continuance of the
trial despite this defect, then, of course, he would not
have been allowed to complain at a later stage. I do not
know whether he was represented by counsel in the enquiry or
whether, if he was not, he was aware that this kind of
action vitiated the proceedings; nor do I know whether he
protested and took the point in the appeal and revision.
Those papers have not been filed. But I do know that waiver
is not raised in the grounds of appeal to this Court nor is
the point taken in the appellant’s statement of the case.
As this is a question of fact, I, for one, would not allow
it to be urged at this stage.
I would dismiss the appeal.
ORDER.
In accordance with the opinion of the majority, the appeal
is allowed.
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 425, 429.
(2) (1926) A.C. 586.
618