Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
DHARMADEO RAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAMNAGINA RAI
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/01/1972
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 928 1972 SCR (3) 111
1972 SCC (1) 460
ACT:
Indian Registration Act, 1916, s. 83(1)-Section is
permissive and not prohibitive-Does not prevent an aggrieved
private person from filing a complaint.
HEADNOTE:
A private complaint in connection with the forgery of a
zerpeshgi lease and its registration under the Indian
Registration Act was filed against several persons including
the appellant. The appellant was acquitted by the trial
court. In an appeal filed by the complainant the High Court
convicted the appellant under s. 82(d) of the Indian
Registration Act for abetment of an offence under s. 82
after overriding his contention that the complaint was not
maintainable without the permission as required by s. 83 of
the Act. Under s. 83(1) a prosecution for any offence under
the Act coming to the knowledge of a registering officer in
his official capacity may be commenced by or with the
permission of the Inspector-General, the Registrar or the
Sub-Registrar in whose territories, district or subdistrict
as the case may be, the offence has been committed. In
appeal by special leave before this Court the only point
argued on behalf of the appellant was that the complaint was
incompetent as it was filed by a person without obtaining
the necessary permission under s. 83 of the Act and
therefore the conviction of the appellant was bad and must
be set aside.
HELD : On a reading of the section it would be clear that it
deals only with prosecution for an offence under the Act
coming to the knowledge of the Registering Officer in his
official capacity. It, in effect, provides that where an
offence comes to the knowledge of the Registering Officer in
his official capacity, a prosecution may be commenced by or
with the permission of any of the officers mentioned in the
section. The section can possibly have no application to
cases in which the offences are committed under the Act, but
the offences do not come to the knowledge of the Registering
Officer in his official capacity. [113 H]
The section is not prohibitory in that it does not preclude
a private person from commencing a prosecution. Even in a
case where the commission of offence comes to the knowledge
of the Registering Officer in his official capacity, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
section does not prohibit a private person from commencing a
prosecution as the section is clearly permissive in language
and intent. [114B]
One would have expected a more apt phraseology if the
purpose of the Legislature was to prohibit the prosecution
of an offence under the Act by a private individual. Seeing
that a private person will be more seriously injured by the
action of an offender who not only forges a document but
endeavours to give it a higher efficacy by registering it,
there is no reason why the private person should be deprived
of the liberty to prosecute the offender. There is also no
reason why a registering officer guilty of an offence under
s. 81 of the Act should get immunity from prosecution. by a
private individual injured thereby. In s. 195(1) of the
Criminal
112
Procedure Code, s. 70(1) of the Indian Stamp Act and s. 29
of the Indian Arms Act, 1878 the language employed is
prohibitory in character. Section 83(1) of the Act is not
prohibitory either in terms or in intention [116 A-G]
The view taken by the Allahabad and Rangoon High Courts that
the word ’may’ in s. 83(1) should be read as ’must’ was not
correct.
[114 H-115 D]
Gopinath v. Kuldip Singh and Anr., I.L.R. Calcutta Series,
Vol. XI 566, Re Piranu Nadathi and Anr. and Emperor v. Yesa
Nath Didiwagh and Ors., A.I.R. 1937 Bombay 191, approved.
Nge Pan Gaing and Ors. v. King Emperor, A.I.R. 1927 Rangoon
61 and Emperor v. Mohd. Mehdi and Ors., A.I.R. 1934
Allahabad, 963. disapproved.
Gonga Dibya and Anr. v. Emperor, A.I.R. 1943 Patna 227 and
Habib Shah v. Mehda Shah, A.I.R. 1960 J & K. 18, referred
to.
K. M. Kanavi v. State of Mysore, [1968] 3 S.C.R. 821,
held inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 33 of
1969.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 12th November, 1968 of the Patna High Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 58 of 1966.
S. N. Prasad, for the appellant.
K. K. Sinha, for the respondent.
R. C. Prasad, for the State of Bihar.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mathew, J. This appeal, by special leave, is directed
against the judgment passed in Criminal Appeal No. 58/1966
whereby the High Court of Patna set aside the acquittal of
the appellant by the Additional Sessions Judge of Chapra and
convicted him under section 82(d) of the Indian Registration
Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act) and sentenced him
to six months rigorous imprisonment,
One Ramnagina Rai filed a complaint before the Sub-Divi-
sional Officer, Sadar, Chapra, against Bishundeo Rai. Sheo
Deo Prasad Rai, Mohan Rai, Jangli Rai and the appellant
stating that they entered into a conspiracy and forged a
Zerpeshgi deed on 25-1-1964 purporting to be executed by
Bishundeo Rai and Nageshwar Rai in favour of Jangli Rai in
which Sheo Deo Prasad Rai falsely personated Nageshwar Rai.
The Sessions Court, to which the case was committed, after
trial, came to the conclusion that Sheo Deo Prasad Rai,
posing as Nageshwar, son of Bujhawan. executed the Zerpeshgi
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
deed and that Sheo Deo Prasad
113
Rai falsely personated as Nageshwar before the Sub-
Registrar, that no such person as Nageshwar existed and that
Bishundeo Rai, the father of Sheo Deo Prasad Rai and co-
executant of the document was a party to the forgery. The
Court, therefore, convicted Bishundeo Rai and Sheo Deo
Prasad Rai of offences under section 467 and section 120 B
of the Indian Penal Code. Bishundeo and Sheo Deo Prasad
were also convicted under section 82(d) and 82(c)
respectively of the Act. The remaining three accused were
given the benefit of doubt , and acquitted. Two appeals
were filed from this judgment to the High Court, namely,
Criminal Appeal No. 205/1966 and Criminal Appeal No. 58/
1966. We are only concerned with the appeal filed by the
complainant against the acquittal of the appellant, namely,
Criminal Appeal No. 58/1966. In that appeal, the High Court
came to the conclusion that the, Sessions Judge was wrong in
acquitting the appellant as there was clear evidence that it
was be who identified Sheo Deo Prasad Rai as Nageshwar, son
of Bujhawan, before the Sub-Registrar. ’The Court,
therefore, convicted him under section 82(d) of the Act for
abetment, of an offence under s. 82 after overruling his
contention that the complaint was not maintainable without
the permission as required by section 83 of the Act.
In this Court, the only point argued on behalf of the
appellant was that the complaint was incompetent as it was
filed by a person without obtaining the necessary permission
under section 83 of the Act and, therefore, the conviction
was bad and must be set aside. Section 83 of the Act
provides :
"83(1) A prosecution for any offence under
this Act coming to the knowledge of a
registering officer in his official capacity
may be commenced by or with the permission of
the Inspector General, the Registrar or the
Sub-Registrar, in whose territories. district
or subdistrict, as the case may be, the
offence has been committed.
(2) Offences punishable under this Act shall
be triable by any Court or officer- exercising
powers not less than those of a Magistrate of
the second class."
On a reading of the section, it would be clear that it deals
only with prosecution for an offence under the Act coming to
the knowledge of the Registering Officer in his official
capacity. It, in effect, provides that where an offence
comes to the knowledge of the Registering Officer in his
official capacity, a prosecution may be commenced by or with
the permission of any of the officers mentioned in the
section. The section can possibly have no application to
cases in which offences are committed under the
114
Act, but the offences do not come to the knowledge of the
Registering Officer in his official capacity. If the
Registering Officer does not know in his official capacity
that the document produced before him is a false document or
that the person appearing before him is personating some
other person, the section has no application. The section
is not prohibitory in that it does not preclude a private
person from commencing a prosecution. Even in a case where
the commission of an offence comes to the knowledge of the
Registering Officer in his official capacity, the section
does not prohibit a private person from commencing a
prosecution as the section is clearly permissive in its
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
language and intent. In other words, the section is an
enabling one. It enables the persons mentioned therein to
commence a prosecution in cases where the commission of the
offence under the Act comes to the knowledge of the
Registering Officer in his official capacity. The Section
enables the officers named to use ’their official position
for the purpose of prosecution without personal risk.
In Gopinath v. Kuldip Singh and others(1), the question
whether the section prohibits a private person from
commencing a prosecution without the permission as provided
in the section, came up for consideration and a Full Bench
of the Calcutta High Court answered the question by saying
that the section is not prohibitory in character and that it
does not preclude a private person from commencing a
prosecution for an offence under the Act without the
permission as envisaged in the section. This case has been
followed by the Madras High Court in Re Piranu Nadathi and
others ( 2 ) . There also the Court has taken the view that
the section is an enabling one in that it only authorises
the authorities mentioned therein to commence a prosecution
and does not prohibit a private person from commencing a
prosecution without the permission as required by the
section. In Emperor v. Yesa Nath Bidwagh and others(,’),
Beaumont, C.J., speaking for the Court, said that the
section is intended to provide only for cases where the
knowledge of an offence under the Act comes to a Registering
Officer in his official capacity and that it has no
application when he has no such knowledge, and that even in
cases where he has knowledge of the commission of the
offence in his official capacity, the section is only
enabling and does not preclude a private person from
launching a prosecution for the offence. The same view was
taken by a Bench of the Patna High Court in Ganga Dibya and
another v. Emperor(4) and also by the High Court of Jammu
and Kashmir in Habib Shah v. Mehda Shah(5) In Nge Pan Gaing
and other v. King Emperor(6), the Rangoon High Court held
that the word ’may’
(1) I.L.R. Calcutta Series, Vol. XI, 566.
(3) A.I.R. 1937 Bombay 191.
(5) A.I.R. 1960 J & K 18.
(2) I.L.R. 40 Madras 880.
(4) A.I.R. 1943 Patna 227.
(6) A.I.R. 1927 Rangoon 61.
115
in section 83 of the Act should be read as equivalent to
’must be’and that a prosecution for an offence under the Act
coming to the knowledge of a Registering Officer in his
official capacity cannot be commenced by a private person
without the permission mentioned in the section. A Full
Bench it the Allahabad High Court, in Emperor v. Mohd.
Mehdi and others(1), took the view that section 83 lays down
a special procedure for prosecution of "he offences created
by the Act and, therefore, that procedure should be
followed; that although the word ’may’ occurring in the,
section cannot be read as ’must’, it has to be read in the
context as having a mandatory character. The Court said
that the offences contemplated by sections 81 and 82 of the
Act are, offences committed against registering authority,
that only indirectly that private persons would be affected
and, therefore, the provisions of the section are
prohibitory in character. In our view, this reading of the
section is inadmissible for the obvious reason that the
section, as we have said, provides only for one type of
cases, namely, cases in which the commission of an offence
under the Act comes to the knowledge of the Registering
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
Officer in his official capacity and even there, the
language of the section is permissive and not mandatory.
Section 81 of the, Act makes the endorsing, copying,
translating or registering of a document by a Registering
Officer charged with those duties in a manner which he knows
or believes to be incorrect, intending thereby to cause
injury as defined in the Penal Code to any person. an
offence punishable with imprisonment which may extend to
seven years or with fine or with both. Section 82 deals
with four classes of offences classified under (a), (b), (c)
and (d) of the section. Clause (a) deals with intentionally
make false statements before officers acting under the Act,
(b) with intentionally delivering to a registering officer a
false copy or translation of a document or a false copy of a
map or plan; and (c) with false personation and presentation
of a document or the making of an admission or a statement
in the assumed character in any proceeding or enquiry under
the Act. Clause (d) deals with the abetment of the above
offences.
If the authorities mentioned in section 83 of the Act were
to collide with the person guilty of an. offence under
section 82 of the Act’, or if they fail to launch a
prosecution against the registering officer for an offence
under section 81 of the Act, there, would be a total bar to
prosecution by a private person in case we accept the
reasoning of the Rangoon and Allahabad High Courts. We do
not think that a construction which would lead to that
result is warranted by the plain language of the section.
(1) A.I.R. 1934 Allahabad, 963.
116
One would have expected a more apt phraseology if the pur-
pose of the Legislature was to prohibit the prosecution of
an .,offence under the Act by a private individual. Seeing
that a private person will be more seriously injured by the
action of an offender who not only forges a document but
endeavors to give it a higher efficacy by registering it, we
can perceive no reason why the private person should be
denied the liberty to prosecute the offender. We also see
no reason why a registering officer guilty of an offence
under section 81 of the Act should get immunity from
prosecution by a private individual injured thereby.
Counsel for the appellant referred to the decision of this
Court in K. M. Kanavi v. State of Mysore(1) and contended
that section 83 of the Act is prohibitory in character.
There is no merit in this contention as the language of the
provision there considered was totally different.
It is permissible in this connection to look into the
language employed in similar sections in other statutes
where the legislature intended a prohibitory effect.
Section 195(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code provides that
"No Court shall take cognizance, (a) of any
offence punishable under sections 172 to 188
of the Indian Penal Code, except on the
complaint in writing of the public servant
concerned".
Section 70(1 ) of the Indian Stamp Act states
that
"No prosecution in respect of any offence
punishable under the Act ... shall be
instituted without the sanction of the
Collector or such other officer as the State
Government generally, or the Collector
specially authorises in that behalf".
Section 29 of the Indian Arms Act, 1878, says
"No proceedings shall be instituted against
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
an,,, person in respect of such offence
without the previous sanction of the
Magistrate of the District or, in a presidency
town, of the Commissioner of Police".
In all these sections, the language employed is prohibitory
in character. Section 83(1) of the Act is not prohibitory
either in terms or in intention.
We think that, on the point under consideration’. the
decisions in Gopinath v. Kuldip Singh and others (2 ) , Re
Piranu Nodathi and others(3), and Emperor v. Yesa Nana
Didwagh and others(4) lay down the correct law.
(1) [1968] 3 S.C.R. 821.
(3) I.L.R. 40 Madras 880.
(2) I.L.R Calcutta, Vol. XI 566.
(4) A.I.R. 1937 Bom. 191.
117
We cannot appreciate or approve the reasoning in Emperor v.
Mohd. Mahdi and others(1) and Nga Pan Gaing and others v.
King Emperor(2) or the cases followed in these rulings.
The result is that the appeal has to be dismissed and we do
so.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
(1) A.I.R. 1934 All. 963.
(2) A.I.R. 1927 Rangoon 61.
118