Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KAMINI KUMAR DAS CHOUDHURY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/07/1972
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
RAY, A.N.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2060 1973 SCR (1) 718
1972 SCC (2) 420
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC 533 (25)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 226-Laches in filing writ
petition--Court may refuse discretionary remedy-Disputed
questions of fact arising out of petition-Proper remedy is a
suit in a Civil Court.
HEADNOTE:
The appllant who was a Sub-inspector of police in the
Enforcement Branch of the Calcutta Police was ordered by the
Deputy Commissioner of Police to search a house. He was
found by the Assistant Commissioner of Police away from his
place of duty. A departmental enquiry was instituted
against him and the said Assistant Commissioner of Police
was appointed the Enquiry Officer. After the report of the
Enquiry Officer the appellant was dismissed by the Deputy
Commissioner of Police on 1-8-1951. The appeal preferred by
the appellant to the Inspector Genera( of Police was
dismissed on 27_-10-1951. Thereafter the appellant sub-
mitted a memorial to the Government of West Bengal. He
filed a petition in the High Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution on 9th September 1953. The delay was explained
by him by saying that fearing harassment and oppression by
the Police he had gone away to the Andaman Islands Hi
November 1952. A single judge of the High Court dismissed
the petition on the preliminary grounds namely, (i) that
there was inordinate delay in approaching the High Court,
and (ii) that the objection as to the jurisdiction of the
dismissing authority was not taken in the course of
departmental proceedings. The Division Bench dismissed the
appeal principally on the ground of delay through it was
disposed to bold that during the Departmental enquiry the
rules of natural justice bad bee" violated. With
certificate appeal was filed in this Court.
HELD: (i) The questions whether there was bias, ill-will
malafides, or a due opportunity to be heard or to produce
evidence, given in the course of departmental proceedings,
are so largely questions of fact that it is difficult to
decide them merely on conflicting assertions made by
affidavits given by the two sides. The mere fact that the
Deputy Commissioner’s orders were alleged to have been
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disobeyed did not make him a complainant and a witness.
Therefore, quite apart from the ground of delay in filing
the Writ Petition, the assertions and counter-as-ertions
made on merits were of such a nature that, in accordance
with the rule laid down by this Court in Union of India v.
T. R. Varma, the Writ Petition could have been dismissed on
the ground that it is not the practice of Courts to decide
such dispute questions of fact in proceedings under Art. 226
of the Constitution. L724 B-C]
Union of India v. T. R. Varma, [1958] S.C.R. 499 applied.
(ii) The High Court was right in dismissing the appellant’s
petition ,on the ground of delay.
The most that the High Court could have done in the present
case was to quash the order of dismissal and to leave the
authorities free to take proceedings against the appellant.
The appellant would then have got another long period of
years in front of him to go on contesting the validity of
proceedings against him until he bad gone past the age of
retirement. In such cases, it is imperative, if the
petitioner wants to
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invoke the extraordinary remedies available under Art.. 226
of the Constitution, that he should some to Court at the
earliest reasonably possible opportunity. If there is delay
in getting an adjudication, a suit for damages actually
sustained by wrongful dismissal may become the more or even
the only appropriate means of redress. Every case depends
upon its own facts. [725 F-H]
Rabindra Nath Bose & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. [1970]
(2) S.C.R. 697 applied.
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Bhaila) & Ors., [1964] (6) S.C.R.
261 referred to.
Chanra Bhushana Anr. v. Deputy Director of Consolidation
Regional U.P. & Ors., [1967] (2) S.C.R. 286 distinguished.
[Dismissing the appeal on the above grounds the Court
however observed that in such cases it was undoubtedly just
and proper that the enquiry and punishment proceedings
should have been entrusted to more unbiased and independent
officers.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : C. A. No. 1162 of 1967.
Appeal by certificate under Article 133 of the Constitution
of India from the judgment and order dated 14th May 1963 of
the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Order No. 44 of 1958.
Govinda Mukhoty, Rathin Day and G. S. Chatterjee, for the
appellant.
P. K. Chakravarty and Prodyat Kumar Chakravarty, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Beg, J. The appellant was a Sub Inspector of Police serving
in the Enforcement Branch of the Calcutta Police on 20th May
1951, when he was ordered by S. Mukherji, Deputy
Commissioner of Police, Enforcement Branch, to search a
house at 13/2 Sir Guru Das Road, in Kankurgachi Basti. He
alleged that the search concluded at 6-30 a.m., and,
thereafter, he had gone to take tea "with the permission
and/or knowledge of his immediate superior Sub Inspector S.
N. Bose". We fail to understand what the appellant exactly
meant when he swore, in his affidavit, that he had gone to
take tea "with the permission and/or knowledge of his
immediate superior officer. He could not reasonably be
believed to be uncertain on such a point. The appellant
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alleged that he was met by the Assistant Commissioner of
Police. Ataur Rahman, when he was coming back, after taking
tea, to the place of search, but he was still at a distance
of about one furlong from the assigned place of duty. He
alleged that the Assistant Commissioner charged the appel-
lant, immediately on accosting him, with dereliction of his
duties, with disobedience of the order to remain at the post
of his duty,
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with carrying out the search perfunctorily, with disloyalty
and giving away of information of proposed searches to
offending members of the public so that the purpose of the
search, which was said to be detection of spurious ration
cards, may be defeated. It was stated that the appellant
was immediately suspended and the Assistant Commissioner
Ataur Rahman was appointed the Enquiry Officer. The
appellant also alleged certain violations of the rules under
the Police Regulations in Bengal, mainly by not making the
charges or their particulars clear to him and by not
affording due opportunity to the appellant to offer his
defence or to cross-examine witnesses. Furthermore, the
appellant alleged that the proceeding was the result of the
bias and ill-will of Deputy Commissioner of Police, S.
Mukherji, against him, because the appellant had taken some
proceedings against "antisocial elements" who were,
according to him, friendly with the Deputy Commissioner of
Police. The appellant also assorted that he was harassed by
false and frivolous criminal proceedings under the Essential
Supplies Act and under Section 124-A I.P.C. in October,
1951, due to this grudge of the Deputy Commissioner against
him. The appellant had, however, been duly served with show
cause notices at two stages and had produced evidence which
the Enquirying Officer considered relevant. Permission to
call other evidence, considered irrelevant and to cross-
examine some witnesses, who had not been relied upon by the
prosecution, was not given. The five prosecution witnesses
relied upon by the prosecution were cross-examined by the
appellant. He had also examined seven defence witnesses.
After the report of the Enquirying Officer against the
appellant, he was dismissed from the Police Force by the
Deputy Commissioner of Police, S. Mukherji, on 1-8-1951.
The appeal preferred by the appellant to the Inspector
General of Police was also dismissed on 27-10-1951.
Thereafter, the petitioner had submitted a memorial to the
Govt. of West Bengal. He also stated that fearing
"harassment and oppression" by the Police he went away to
the Andaman Islands in November, 1952. He had filed his
petition under Article 226 of the Constitution on 9th
September, 1953.
The appellant’s petition was dismissed on 11-9-1957 by a
learned Judge of the Calcutta High Court on two preliminary
grounds : firstly, that there was inordinate delay on the
part of the appellant in approaching the High Court; and,
secondly, that the objection to the jurisdiction of the
dismissing authority, the Deputy Commissioner of Police, was
not taken, in the course of Departmental proceedings, so
that it could not be allowed to be raised before the High
Court for the first time. It appears that the, main point
argued, on merits, before the learned Single
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Judge, was the absence of power in the Deputy Commissioner
of Police, who was said to be an authority lower in rank
than the appointing authority of the appellant, to dismiss
the appellant from service. Although it was held that the
appellant was debarred from raising this question, as it was
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not raised during departmental proceedings, yet, the learned
Single Judge thought, it fit to consider and decide it. The
learned Judge held that the Deputy. Commissioner of Police
seemed to be of the same grade and status as the Principal
of the Police Training School, Sharda, with the rank of a
"Superintendent", and who had appointed the appellant, so
that there was no violation of Article 311 ( 1 ) of the
Constitution. And, in any case, the dismissal was confirmed
by the higher authority of the Inspector General. The
learned Single Judge had also found no substance in the plea
of alleged ill-will and malafides on the part of the Deputy
Commissioner of Police, S. Mukherji. Furthermore, the
learned Judge had found it "difficult to swallow" the
appellant’s assertions that he had gone away to the Andaman
Islands to avoid prosecution as he was afraid of being
arrested under the Preventive Detention Act. Such strange
conduct, indicating a possible,of guilt even if the
appellant’s assertions could be true,, was not found to be
natural. Hence, the explanation for delay givenby the
appellant was rejected by the learned Judge.
On appeal from the decision of the learned Single Judge, a
Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court dismissed it
principally on the ground of inordinate delay despite the
fact that the Division Bench was disposed to hold that rules
of natural justice had been violated in the Departmental
Enquiry against the appellant. The Division Bench, however,
observed that it appeared "that the grounds raised against
the proper conduct of the Enquiry and refusal of some of the
prayers of the appellant made during its pendency were not
pressed before the Trial Judge". The Division Bench also
rejected the explanation of the delay put forward by the
appellant. It held that, although it appeared that a
complainant had assumed the role of a judge in departmental
proceedings against the appellant, yet, the inordinate delay
in approaching the Court was fatal to the success of the
appellant. It observed : "If the, appellant before us had
been able to give a satisfactory explanation as to why he
could not move the Court within a few weeks after June 1952,
we would have felt disposed to allow the appeal. As noted
already, there is no corroboration of the appellant’s
statement that he had gone away to the Andaman Islands or of
the fact that he had fled the country through fear of
prosecution by the respondent No. 3".
The appellant had obtained a certificate of fitness of the
case for appeal to this Court under Article 133 (1) (c) of
the Consti-
722
tution, because it was contended on behalf of the appellant
that, as, the application under Article 226 of the
Constitution had been made within a period of 3 years from
the original order of dismissal, a suit, if filed for a
declaration that the dismissal was wrongful, would have been
within time. It appears that reliance was placed for this
contention on the following observations of Das Gupta, J, in
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Bhailal & Ors(1) (at page 273-
274) :
"It appears to us however that the maximum
period fixed by the legislature as the time
within which the relief by a suit in a civil
Court must be brought may ordinarily be taken
to be a reasonable standard by which delay in
seeking remedy under Article 226 can be mea-
sured. This Court may consider the delay
unreasonable even if it is less than the
period of limitation prescribed for a civil
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action for the remedy but where the delay is
more than this period, it will almost always
be proper for the Court to hold that it is
unreasonable".
In Bhilal’s case (Supra), the question before this Court was
whether an amount of money illegally realised as tax under a
legally void provision could be ordered to be refunded.
This Court held that, if the aggrieved person came to the
High Court within the period of limitation prescribed for
ordinary suits for challenging an illegal exaction under a
void order, the writ could issue. It, however, made it
clear that this was not an inflexible rule which could be
applied to the exercise of discretionary power under Article
226 of the Constitution in every case. It cautioned
"At the same time we cannot lose sight of the
fact that the special remedy provided in
Article 226 is not intended to supersede
completely the modes of obtaining relief by an
action in a civil court or to deny defences
legitimately open in such actions. It has
been made clear more than once that the power
to give relief under Article 226 is a
discretionary power. This is specially true
in the case of power to issue writs in the
nature of mandamus. Among the several matters
which the High Courts rightly take into
consideration in the exercise of that
discretion is the delay made by the aggrieved
party in seeking this special remedy and what
excuse there is for it. Another is the nature
of controversy of facts and law that may have
to be decided as regards the availability of
consequential relief. Thus, where as in these
cases, a person comes to the Court for relief
under Article 226 on the allegation that be
has been assessed to tax under a void
legislation and having paid it under a mistake
is entitled to get it back the court, if it-
finds that the assessment
(1) [1964]S.C.R.261.
723
was void, being made under a void provision of
law, and the payment was made by mistake, is
still not bound to exercise its discretion
directing repayment Whether repayment should
be ordered in the exercise of this discretion
will depend in each case on its own facts and
circumstances. It is not easy nor is it
desirable to lay down any rule for universal
application.
It may however he stated as a general rule
that if there has been unreasonable delay the.
court ought not ordinarily to lend its aid to
a party by this extraordinary remedy of
mandamus. Again, where even if there is no
such delay the Government or the statutory
authority against whom the consequential
relief is prayed for raises a prima facie
triable issue as regards the availability of
such relief on the merits on the grounds like
limitation the Court should ordinarily refuse
to issue the writ of mandamus for such
payment. In both these kinds of cases it will
be sound use of discretion to leave the party
to seek his remedy by the ordinary mode of
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action in a civil court and to refuse to
exercise in his favour the extraordinary
remedy under Art. 226 of the Constitution".
In the case before us, we find that at least the following
questions on which both sides made conflicting assertions in
affidavits before the Court, were seriously disputed : (1)
Was the appellant denied due opportunity to adduce any
relevant evidence or to cross-examine witnesses? (2) Did the
Deputy Commissioner of Police, who had passed the dismissal
order, become a complainant or a necessary witness in the
case so that be could not award punishments simply because
he had passed the order which the appellant was shown to
have disobeyed ? (3) Was there any actual bias on the part
of the dismissing authority, or, in other words, was the
order of dismissal vitiated by malafides ? Perhaps, it was
for this reason, as the Division Bench had observed, that
the appellant did not press his case on disputed questions
of fact before the Single Judge. Although, the appellant
raised these points in appeal, yet, the Division Bench was
only impressed by the submission that the Deputy
Commissioner of Police was in the position of a complainant
who could not act as a Judge. But we find that the actual
violation of the order of the Deputy Commissioner was
detected by other officers. It is true that the Enquiring
Officer had made certain charges against the appellant when
he found him returning from somewhere, one furlong removed
from the place where, according to orders given, the
appellant should have been present then, yet, he had merely
collected evidence against the appellant and made a report.
It could more properly be said that he and not the Deputy
Commissioner of Police was the accusing officer. In such
cases it is
724
undoubtedly just and proper that the enquiry and punishment
proceedings should both be entrusted to other officers who
may appear to be more unbiased and independent.
Nonetheless, the questions whether there was bias, ill-will,
malafides, or a due opportunity to be heard or to produce
evidence, given in the course of departmental proceedings,
are so largely questions of fact that it is difficult to
decide them merely on conflicting assertions made by
affidavits given by the two sides. The mere fact that the
Deputy Commissioner’s orders were alleged to have been
disobeyed did not make him a complainant and a witness. We,
therefore, think that, quite apart from the ground of delay
in filing the Writ Petition, the assertions and counter-
assertions made on merits were of such a nature that, in
accordance with the rule laid down by this Court in Union of
India v. T. R. Varma(1) the Writ Petition could have been
dismissed on the ground that it is not the practice of
Courts to decide such disputed questions of fact in
proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution. Other
proceedings are more appropriate for a just and proper
decision of such questions.
We find that the position taken up in affidavits filed on
behalf of the State and the Police authorities of West
Bengal was that the appellant’s case was, according to them,
considered fairly and impartially and that there was no
grudge or ill-will operating against him. The Calcutta High
Court had specifically repelled the allegations of malafides
and ill-will. If, however, the appellant considers that
there is substance in any of his allegations, we think it is
best to leave him free to go to an ordinary Civil Court for
such relief by way of declaration or damages as may still be
open to him. At any rate, we do not think that the
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discretion of the learned Single Judge and the Division
Bench, with regard to a delay which defeated the
petitioner’s right to a discretionary relief, could be
interfered with by us in this case.
Learned Counsel for the appellant had relied upon Chandra
Bhushan & Anr. v. Deputy Director of Consolidation
(Regional) U.P. & Ors. (2) , where this Court has set aside
an order of the Allahabad High Court dismissing a Writ
Petition in limine by "exalting a rule of practice into a
rule of limitation" so that a few days’ delay, shown to have
been caused by the closing of the office of the Court for
Diwali holidays was not condoned by the Allahabad High
Court. We do not think that the case cited could apply to
the facts of the case before us where the peculiar
explanation given by the petitioner-appellant for the delay
in filing his Writ Petition for so long had been disbelieved
by both the learn Single Judge and the Division Bench on
good and reasonable grounds.
(1) (19581 S.C.R. 499.
(2) [1967] 2 S. C. R. 286.
725
Rabindra Nath Bose & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (1) was
also referred to in the course of arguments, although this
case relates to the exercise of the powers of this Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution. It was said there by
this Court (at page 712) :-
" But after carefully considering the matter,
we are of the view that no relief should be
given to petitioners who without any
reasonable explanation, approach this Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution after
inordinate delay. The highest Court in this
land has been given Original Jurisdiction to
entertain petitions under Article 32 of the
Constitution. It could not have been the
intention that this Court would go into stale
demands after a lapse of years. It is said
that Article 32 is itself a guaranteed right.
So it is, but it does not follow from this
that it was the intention of the Constitution
makers that this Court should discard all
principles and grant relief in petitions filed
after inordinate delay".
If this is the position with regard to the petitions under
Article 32 of the Constitution, we do not think that the
rule that delay defeats the rights of a party to seek
redress, by means of prerogative Writ under Article 226 of
the Constitution, could be held to be abrogated merely
because, if the claim had been brought in a Civil Court, the
period of limitation would not have expired. The question
in such cases is always whether relief under Article 226 of
the Constitution could more justly and properly be given
than by leaving the parties to the ordinary remedy of a
suit. A case in which a tax is imposed under a clearly void
law is different from one where seriously contested
questions of fact have to be decided before an order of
dismissal could be held to be void. In the case before us,
the most that the High Court could have done was to quash
the order of dismissal and to leave the authorities free to
take proceedings afresh against the appellant. The
appellant would then have got another long period of years
in front of him to go on contesting the validity of
proceedings against him until he had gone past the age of
retirement. In such cases, it is imperative, if the
petitioner wants to invoke the extraordinary remedies
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available under Article 226 of the Constitution, that he
should come to Court at the earliest reasonably possible
opportunity. If there is delay in getting an adjudication,
a suit for damages actually sustained by wrongful dismissal
may become the more or even the only appropriate means of
redress. Every case depends upon its own facts.
(1) [1970]2 S.C.R. 697.
726
We may mention that the Division Bench of Calcutta High
Court had, treating the case as one for a mandamus to
reinstate the appellant, relied upon the ’statements in
Halsbury’s Laws of England, (Third Edition, Volume 11, page
73 article 133) that except in a case where the delay is
accounted for mandamus will not be granted unless supplied
for within a reasonable time after the demand and refusal".
The Division Bench had also referred to Farris on
"Extraordinary Legal Remedies" (page 228), to hold that not
only, on an analogy from the Statute of limitation in civil
cases, a reasonable period may be indicated for applications
for writs of mandamus, but relief may be refused on the
ground of acquiescence and presumed abandonment of the right
to complain inferred from inordinate delay. It rightly
observed that laches is a well established ground for
refusal to exercise the discretion to issue a writ. The
Division Bench had also referred to public interest or
public policy which could be taken into account in cases
where a public servant had come to a Court for an order in
the nature of mandamus for reinstatement. It had held that,
in such cases, promptness on the part of the aggrieved
servant is essential for invoking the extraordinary
jurisdiction of a High Court so that the State is not called
upon to pay unnecessarily for the period for which the
dismissed servant is not employed by it. Indeed, delay may
make the motives of the dismissed servant, who may have some
technical ground to urge against the dismissal, suspect. We
think that there are good grounds here for a refusal to
exercise the discretion to interfere with the impugned order
of dismissal.
The result is that we dismiss this appeal. The parties will
bear their own costs.
G.C.
Appeal dismissed.
727