Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMBHAI NATHABHAI GADHVI & ORS. STATE OF GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT, RAMBHAI NATHABHAI GADHVI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/08/1997
BENCH:
A. S. ANAND, K. T. THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
(VICE VERSA)
Present:
Hon’ble Dr. Justice A.S. Anand
Hon’ble Mr. Justice K.T. Thomas
Sushil Kumar, Sr. Adv., A.V. Palli, Atul Sharma and Mrs.
Rekha Palli, Advs. with him for the appellants
Dr. N.M. Ghatate, Sr. Adv., Ms. Rekha Pandey and Ms.
Hemantika Wahi, Advs. with him for the Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
W I T H
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 162 OF 1997
J U D G M E N T
THOMAS. J.
The Designated Court, Jamnagar convicted 4 persons
under Section 5 of the Terrorist and Disruptive
Activities(Prevention) Act, 1987, (for short ’TADA’). They
were also tried for certain offences under Section 25 of the
Arms Act, 1959 but the trial judge refrained from convicting
them under that section on the premise that the other
offence under TADA is a cognate offence of a graver
dimension. In the matter of sentences the trial court
awarded rigorous imprisonment for 7 years as against first
accused Rambhai Gadhvi, while the three others were given
only a sentence of rigorous imprisonment for 5 years each.
The convicted persons have come up in appeal under Section
19 of TADA and the State of Gujarat have field an appeal for
enhancement of the sentence of the first accused to the
maximum limit provided in law. We heard both appeals
together.
First accused in the father of second accused Kalu
Rambhai Gadhvi and also elder brother of the fourth accused
Nagshi Nathabhai Gadhvi. The third accused Hitesh vajshi
Pindariya is their neighbour. The nub of the case against
them is that they all were actively engaged in smuggling of
goods particularly arms and ammunitions. First accused is
described as the kingpin of the joint venture of all the
accused in the nefarious activities.
Further details of the prosecution case would show that
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the District Superintendent of Police, Jamnagar, got some
information about the activities of the accused and so he
proceeded to their residence at Khambalia (in Jamnagar
District with a posse of police personnel during the wee
hours on 18-6-1993. On the way, he secured the presence of
the Sub Divisional Magistrate (PW-4) and two other persons
for witnessing the operation which was in the offing. On
arrival at the residence of the first accused the
Superintendent of police knocked at the door and first
accused opened the door with a pistol in his hand, but was
suddenly overpowered by the police. The Superintendent of
Police also succeeded in snatching the pistol from him.
Police party then raided the house of the second accused and
seized one gun and another air gun and a belt containing 10
cartridges besides currency notes for Rs.67,000/-. When the
person of the third accused was searched a pistol and some
cartridges were recovered. Thereupon the police wanted to
raid the ice factory of the accused. In that operation they
succeeded in unearthing 9 boxes containing smuggled goods.
First accused was arrested and on interrogation the
Superintendent of Police came to know of the places where
first accused had hidden other articles. When he was taken
to one such place he removed a heap of stones and disintered
a bag containing submachine guns, pistols, cartridges etc.
From another place some more firearms and ammunitions were
recovered. On 23-6-1993 police arrested the fourth accused
and recovered a pistol from a place where that firearm was
concealed.
After obtaining sanction purportedly under Section
20A(2) of TADA the prosecution was launched against all the
accused. After trial the Designated Court convicted the
four accused and sentenced them as aforesaid.
Learned counsel for the appellant adopted a twin
strategy to get the appellants absolved of the conviction
and sentence. Counsel attacked the veracity of the evidence
and tried to persuade us to hold that the evidence of the
prosecution is unrealistic and unreliable. Next he focussed
on the validity of the sanction under Section 20A of TADA.
It is advantageous to advert first to the contention
relating to validity of the sanction, for; if that
contention deserves approval it renders the entire trial
vitiated and then it would be unnecessary to harp on the
other contention.
Under Section 20A(2) of TADA: "No Court shall take
cognizance of any offence under this Act without the
previous sanction of the Inspector-General of Police, or as
the case may be, the Commissioner of Police."
Taking cognizance is the act which the Designed Court
has to perform and granting sanction is an act which the
sanctioning authority has to perform. Latter is a condition
precedent for the former. Sanction contemplated in the sub-
section is the permission to prosecute a particular person
for the offence of offences under TADA. We must bear in
mind that sanction is not granted to the Designated Court to
take cognizance of the offence, but it is granted to the
prosecuting agency to approach the court concerned for
enabling it to take cognizance of the offence and to proceed
to trial against the persons arraigned in the report. Thus
a valid sanction is sine qua non for enabling the
prosecuting agency to approach the court in order to enable
the court to take cognizance of the offence under TADA as
disclosed in the report. The corrolary is that, if there was
no valid sanction the Designated Court gets no jurisdiction
to try a case against any person mentioned in the report as
the court is forbidden from taking cognizance of the offence
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without such sanction. If the Designated Court has taken
cognizance of the offence without a valid sanction, such
action is without jurisdiction and any proceedings adopted
thereunder will also be without jurisdiction.
In this case the prosecution relies on Ext. 63, an
order issued by the Director General of Police, Ahmedabad,
on 3-9-1993, as the sanction under Section 20A(2) of TADA.
We are reproducing Ext.63 below:
"Sr. No.J-1/1909/1/Khambalia
55/93
Director General of Police,
Gujarat State,
Ahmedabad
Dt. 3.9.93
Perused: 1) FIR in respect of
offence registered No.55/93 at
Khambalia Police Station 25(1)(b)
(a)(b) of Arms Act and section
3,4&5 of the TADA.
2) Application sent by DSP
Jamnagar vide his letter
No.RB/D/122/1993/1820 dt. 9.8.93.
Having considered the FIR in
respect of offence Registered
No.55/93 at Khambalia Police
Station District Jamnagar under
Section 25(1)(b)(a)(b) of Arms Act
and Sections 3,4 & 5 of TADA and
letter No.RB/D/122/1993/1820 of DSP
dt. 9.8.93 seeking permission to
apply the provisions of TADA
carefully. I A.K. Tandon, Director
General of Police, Gujarat State,
Ahmedabad under the powers
conferred under the Amended
provisions of TADA (1993) Section
20(A)(2) give permission to add
Section 3, 4 & 5 of TADA.
A.R.TONDON
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF POLICE
AHMEDABAD
GUJARAT"
Apparently Ext.63 makes reference only to two documents
which alone were available for the Director General of
Police to consider whether sanction should be accorded or
not. One is the FIR in this case and the other is the
letter sent by the Superintendent seeking permission or
sanction. No doubt in that letter to the Director General
of police the Superintendent of Police had narrated the
facts of the case. but we may observe that he did not send
any other document relating to the investigation or copy
thereof along with the application. Nor did the Director
General of Police call for any document for his perusal.
All that the DGP had before him to consider the question of
granting sanction to prosecute were the copy of the FIR and
the application containing some skeleton facts. There is
nothing on record to show that the Director General of
police called the Superintendent of Police atleast for a
discussion with him.
In such a situation, can it be said that the
sanctioning authority granted sanction after applying his
mind effectively and after reaching a satisfaction that it
is necessary in public interest that prosecution should be
launched against the accused under TADA. As the provisions
of TADA are more rigorous and the penalty provided is more
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stringent and the procedure for trial prescribed is summary
and compendious, the sanctioning process mentioned in
Section 20A(2) must have been adopted more seriously and
exhaustively than the sanction contemplated in other penal
statutes. One of us (Dr. Anand, J) has explained in
Hitendra Vishnu Thakur and ors vs. State of Maharashtra and
ors. [1994 (4) SCC 602], while dealing with sanction under
Section 20A of TADA, that
"The section was obviously
introduced to safeguard a citizen
from any vaxatious prosecution
under TADA. Vide Section 20-A(2)
of TADA no court can take
cognizance of an offence under TADA
unless there is a valid sanction
accorded by the competent authority
as prescribed by the section."
In Anirudhsinhji Karansinhji Jadeja and anr. vs. State
of Gujarat [1995(5) SCC 302], a three Judges Bench had
looked at the broad principles governing sanction
contemplated under TADA. The Bench noted in that case that
for prosecution under TADA the State Government had provided
two administrative instructions as additional safeguards
against the drastic provisions of TADA wherein the DSP would
required require the consent of the State Government. When
the consent relied on by the prosecution in that case was
considered the three Judges Bench observed that it was given
by the State Government without proper application of mind,
even though the said consent was granted on the strength of
"a quite exhaustive" letter addressed by the DSP. The
following observations are pertinent:
"Now, no doubt the message of the
DSP is quite exhaustive, as would
appear from that message which has
been quoted above in full, we are
inclined to think that before
agreeing to the use of harsh
provisions of TADA against the
appellants, the Government ought to
have taken some steps to satisfy
itself whether what had been stated
by the DSP was borne out by the
records, which apparently had not
been called for in the present
case, as the sanction/consent was
given post-haste on 18-3-1995,
i.e., the very next day of the
message of the DSP."
(emphasis supplied)
If the consenting exercise even in respect of an
administrative instruction was construed to be of such a
meaningful and serious matter it is needless to point out
that sanctioning exercise under a statutory provision like
Section 20A(2) would be no less.
Apart from what we have noticed above, the non-
application of mind by the Director General of Police,
Gujarat State, is even otherwise writ large in this case. A
perusal of Ext.63 (supra) shows that the Director General of
Police in fact did not grant any sanction for the
prosecution of the appellants. Last part of the order reads:
"I A.K. Tandon, Director General of Police, Gujarat State,
Ahmedabad under he powers conferred under the Amended
provisions of TADA (1993) Section 20(A)(2) give permission
to add Section 3. 4 and 5 of TADA." Thus, what the Director
General of Police did was to grant permission "to add
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Section 3. 4 and 5 of TADA" and not any sanction to
prosecute the appellants. It is pertinent to note here that
the permission to add Sections 3,4 and 5 of TADA had been
granted by the Home Secretary, the competent authority, much
earlier and no such permission was sought for from the
Director General of Police by the DSP. The Designated Court
thus, failed to notice that Ext.63 was not an order of
sanction but an unnecessary permission of the Director
General of Police to add Sections 3, 4 of TADA. The
Director General of Police, apparently, acted in a very
casual manner and instead of discharging his statutory
obligations under Section 20(A)(2) to grant (or not to
grant) sanction for prosecution proceeded to deal with the
request of the DEP contained in his letter dated 9.8.1993,
as if it was a letter seeking permission to apply the
provisions of TADA. The exercise exhibits that the Director
General of Police did not even read, let alone consider
"carefully", the FIR and the letter of the DSP dated
9.8.1983. We cannot but express our serious concern at this
casual approach of the Director General of Police. On a
plain reading of Ext.63, therefore, we must hold that it is
not an order of sanction to prosecute the appellants as
required by Section 20(A)(2) of the Act.
In view of the aforesaid legal and factual position we
have no doubt that sanction relied on by the prosecution in
this case was not accorded by the Director General of Police
in the manner required by law. Ext.63 is not the result of a
serious consideration and the document reflects scanty
application of the mind of the sanctioning authority into
vital and crucial aspects concerning the matter. It
vitiates sanction and hence Ext.63 cannot be treated as
sanction under Section 20A(2) of TADA.
Faced with this situation, learned counsel for the
State of Gujarat contended that it is open to this Court to
convict the accused under Section 25 of the Arms Act with
the available evidence on record since the interdict
contained in Section 20A(2) of the TADA has no application
to the offences under the Arms Act.
The said contention cannot be accepted for obvious
reasons. Trail in respect of the offence under Section 25
of the Arms Act was conducted by the Designated Court under
the purported power conferred by Section 12 of the TADA.
The said Section reads thus:
Power of Designated Courts with
respect to other offences - (1)
when trying any offence, a
Designated Court may also try any
other offence with which the
accused may, under the Code, be
charged at the same trial if the
offence is connected with such
other offence.
(2) If, in the course of any trial
under this Act of any offence, it
is found that the accused person
has committed any other offence
under this Act or any rule made
thereunder or under any other law,
the Designated Court may convict
such person of such other offence
and pass any sentence authorised by
this Act or such rule or, as the
case may be, such other law, for
the punishment thereof.
It is obvious that power of the Designated Court to
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charge the accused with any offence other than TADA offences
can be exercised only in a trial conducted for any offence
under TADA. When trial for offence under TADA could not
have been held by the Designated Court for want of valid
sanction envisaged in Section 20-A(2) the consequence is
that no valid trial could have been held by that court into
any offence under the Arms Act also. It is clear that a
Designated Court has no independent power to try any other
offence. Therefore, no conviction under Section 25 of the
Arms Act is possible on the materials collected by the
Designated Court in the present case.
In view of the above legal position we have to record
an order of acquittal of the accused. We, therefore, set
aside the conviction and sentence passed on them and acquit
them and direct them to be set at liberty forthwith unless
they are required in any others case. Bail bonds executed by
accused 4 shall stand discharged.
Learned counsel for the State of Gujarat submitted that
we may clarify that acquittal of the accused on the above
ground would not preclude the State from launching a
prosecution afresh with valid sanction. We may observe that
if the State Government considers the feasibility of
launching any such fresh prosecution it would bear in mind
the fact that first accused has remained in jail for all
these years pursuant to the prosecution already launched
against him and, therefore, whether it would be desirable to
launch fresh prosecution.
Criminal Appeal No.1909 of 1996 is thus, allowed and
criminal Appeal No.162 of 1997 is dismissed.