Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5162-5167 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Bhaurao Dagdu Paralkar
RESPONDENT:
State of Maharashtra and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/08/2005
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & B.N. SRIKRISHNA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP ) Nos. 11344-11349/2004)
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Leave granted.
When one talks of freedom fighters’ the normal image
that comes to one’s mind is a person who had suffered
physically and mentally for unshackling chains of foreign
rule in our country. The normal reaction when one sees such
person is one of reverence, regard and respect. The brave
courageous deeds of these persons is a distinctive part of
India’s fight for freedom. Many persons lost their lives,
many were injured and large number of such persons had
languished in jails for various periods. The common thread
which must have passed through the minds of these people is
their sole objective to see that their motherland has a
government of its own, free from foreign rule. But these
images get shattered when one hears that with a view to gain
financially, vague documents have been produced, false
claims of participation in the freedom movement have been
made. It is a sad reflection on the moral values of the
citizens of our country that a large number of cases have
surfaced where it has been established that people who were
not even born when the freedom fight was on or the country
got independence or were toddlers when the country got
independence have applied for and managed to get
"Sammanpatra", pensionary and other allied benefits. The
appeals at hand deal with such allegations. This is
"Asanman" (disrespect) to the whole country and such
dishonourable ventures have to be dealt with sternness to
send out a message that they are not freedom fighters, but
are traitors sullying the name of freedom fight.
In these appeals challenge is to the judgment delivered
by a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court at Aurangabad
Bench by which several writ petitions were disposed of.
Writ petitions came to be filed before the High Court
challenging the grant of benefits to such phantoms
masquerading to be freedom fighters. The basic allegation in
the writ petitions was that in the Beed District of
Maharashtra, there were large number of persons who had been
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granted pensionary benefits under the Freedom Fighters’
Pension Scheme (in short the ’Scheme’). Such writ petitions
were purported to have been filed by persons in public
interest. In one case the petition was filed by a freedom
fighter who claimed that he was surprised to see the number
of persons falsely claiming to be freedom fighters. The
prayer essentially was to hold detailed enquiry and to
cancel the pensionary benefits and for a direction to
recover the amounts which had already been paid along with
the prayer for initiation of criminal proceedings against
the bogus claimants. It was pointed out that in as many as
354 bogus claims have been allowed in the concerned
district. Such persons were availing pensionary and other
benefits which are to be availed only by genuine freedom
fighters. It was highlighted in the petitions that some of
the so called freedom fighters were all of tender age and/or
were not born when freedom struggle was fought. In respect
of others it was alleged that they managed to get freedom
fighters’ pension by submitting forged, false and fabricated
documents. A Division Bench of the High Court taking
cognizance of the petitions and the serious allegations made
therein constituted a three-member Enquiry Committee headed
by a retired Judge of the Maharashtra Administrative
Tribunal and two other members who were practising advocates
from the Beed District. They were required to enquire into
the claims of so called freedom fighters. The Committee was
constituted by order dated 3.12.2002. Allegations were made
that out of 3000 applications filed, 354 were ineligible and
the High Power Committee of the State had wrongly
recommended payment of pension holding them to be freedom
fighters. It is stated that there are two Committees i.e.
District Level Committee (District Gaurav Committee) and
State Level High Power Committee which are required to
examine the claims. The High Court after perusing the 3000
applications retained the files of these suspected 354
cases. Order passed prior to the appointment of the Enquiry
Committee revealed that the Court prima facie was of the
view that in 26 cases the persons were less than 10 years of
age when the freedom struggle was fought. The Enquiry
Committee submitted its report. After the enquiry report was
submitted, the High Court passed orders at various stages.
It appears that some of the persons whose names were
included in the list of 354 suspected beneficiaries filed
the writ petitions. While the High Court directed the
Collector, Beed District not to release pension to these
freedom fighters whose cases were covered by the Enquiry
Committee until further orders. The said order of the High
Court was also made applicable to the freedom fighters whose
civil writ applications were already rejected. Aggrieved by
the order, Special Leave Petition was filed before this
Court which was disposed of by the following order:
"Heard the learned counsel for the
petitioners.
We decline to grant permission to file
the Special Leave petitions but give liberty
to the petitioners to file independent writ
petitions, challenging the order of the
Enquiry Committee, if so desired.
At this stage, the learned counsel for
the petitioners states that certain
observations made in the impugned order will
come in their way and/or affect the case of
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the petitioners on merits. We make it clear
that the observations made in the impugned
order shall not affect the merits of the case
of the petitioners in the writ petitions that
may be filed."
After hearing the cases, the High Court by the impugned
judgment held that the foundation on which the allegations
were made was really factually incorrect. The High Court
took five sample cases and came to hold that the report of
the Enquiry Committee was not to be accepted and
accordingly dismissed the writ petitions. It was of the
view that the documents produced were sufficient to
substantiate the claims. It found that the parameters
fixed by this Court for dealing with the applications for
freedom fighters’ pension were fulfilled and therefore no
interference was called for. It also held that the
petitions filed as ’Public Interest Litigation’ were not
really so. It was observed that the enquiries conducted
before grant of pension cannot be upset by contrary
findings recorded by the Enquiry Committee and, therefore,
the petitions challenging grant of freedom fighters’
pension were dismissed while the petitions questioning
correctness of the Enquiry Committee appointed by the High
Court were allowed.
In support of the appeals, Mr. A.V. Savant, learned
senior counsel submitted that the approach of the High
Court is clearly erroneous. The fact that it took up 5
sample cases itself shows that the High Court was not
adopting the proper course. Even if it is accepted for the
sake of argument that the persons covered by the five
sample cases were genuine freedom fighters that does not
necessarily lead to an inference that all others were also
genuine freedom fighters. After elaborate analysis of the
materials the Committee came to hold that the claims were
bogus and tainted with fraud. The High Court should not
have lightly interfered with the findings on suppositions
and presumptions.
Per contra, learned counsel for the beneficiaries
whose eligibility was questioned submitted that all
relevant documents had been submitted, were scrutinized
and thereafter pension was granted and, therefore, the
Committee appointed by the High Court was not justified in
lightly brushing aside the intrinsic value of the
documents produced to hold otherwise.
The object of the scheme was highlighted by this Court
in Mukundlal Bhandari v. Union of India and Ors. (AIR 1993
SC 2127)
"The object was to honour and where it
was necessary also to mitigate the sufferings
of those who had given their all for the
country in the hour of its need. In fact,
many of those who do not have sufficient
income to maintain themselves refuse to take
benefit of it since they consider it as an
affront to the sense of patriotism with which
they plunged in the freedom struggle. The
spirit of the scheme being both to assist and
honour the needy and acknowledge the valuable
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sacrifices made, it would be contrary to its
spirit to convert it into some kind of a
programme of compensation. Yet that may be
the result if the benefit is directed to be
given retrospectively whatever the date the
application is made. The Scheme should retain
its high objective with which it was
motivated..."
Again in Gurdial Singh v. Union of India (2001 AIR SCW
3843) this Court observed:
"It should not be forgotten that the
persons intended to be covered by the scheme
have suffered for the country about half a
century back and had not expected to be
rewarded for the imprisonment suffered by
them. Once the country has decided to honour
such freedom fighters, the bureaucrats
entrusted with the job of examining the cases
of such freedom fighters are expected to keep
in mind the purpose and object of the
scheme...."
We are in respectful agreement with the view expressed
in Mukundlal’s and Gurdial Singh’s cases (supra). As noted
at the threshold, the genuine freedom fighters deserve to
be treated with reverence, respect and honour. But at the
same time it cannot be lost sight of that people who had
no role to play in the freedom struggle should not be
permitted to benefit from the liberal approach required to
be adopted in the case of the freedom fighters, most of
whom in the normal course are septuagenarians and
octogenarians. It baffles one, beyond comprehension, when
claim is made by a person who was not even born during the
freedom struggle to be a freedom fighter. Learned counsel
for the appellant has submitted a list which makes an
interesting reading. Some of the beneficiaries were born
in 1951 and some in 1955. Accepting claims of such persons
to be freedom fighters would be making a mockery of the
scheme which is intended for genuine freedom fighter. The
approach of the High Court is clearly untenable. Sampling
cannot be the method for determining the truth or
otherwise of the allegations or claims made. Each case was
required to be individually examined. On that score alone,
the High Court’s judgment is vulnerable. Allegations made
were to the effect that fraud has been practiced.
By "fraud" is meant an intention to deceive; whether
it is from any expectation of advantage to the party
himself or from the ill will towards the other is
immaterial. The expression "fraud" involves two elements,
deceit and injury to the person deceived. Injury is
something other than economic loss, that is, deprivation of
property, whether movable or immovable or of money and it
will include and any harm whatever caused to any person in
body, mind, reputation or such others. In short, it is a
non-economic or non-pecuniary loss. A benefit or advantage
to the deceiver, will almost always call loss or detriment
to the deceived. Even in those rare cases where there is a
benefit or advantage to the deceiver, but no corresponding
loss to the deceived, the second condition is satisfied.
(See Dr. Vimla v. Delhi Administration (1963 Supp. 2 SCR
585) and Indian Bank v. Satyam Febres (India) Pvt. Ltd.
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(1996 (5) SCC 550).
A "fraud" is an act of deliberate deception with the
design of securing something by taking unfair advantage of
another. It is a deception in order to gain by another’s
loss. It is a cheating intended to get an advantage. (See
S.P. Changalvaraya Naidu v. Jagannath (1994 (1) SCC 1).
"Fraud" as is well known vitiates every solemn act.
Fraud and justice never dwell together. Fraud is a conduct
either by letter or words, which includes the other person
or authority to take a definite determinative stand as a
response to the conduct of the former either by words or
letter. It is also well settled that misrepresentation
itself amounts to fraud. Indeed, innocent misrepresentation
may also give reason to claim relief against fraud. A
fraudulent misrepresentation is called deceit and consists
in leading a man into damage by willfully or recklessly
causing him to believe and act on falsehood. It is a fraud
in law if a party makes representations, which he knows to
be false, and injury enures therefrom although the motive
from which the representations proceeded may not have been
bad. An act of fraud on court is always viewed seriously.
A collusion or conspiracy with a view to deprive the rights
of the others in relation to a property would render the
transaction void ab initio. Fraud and deception are
synonymous. Although in a given case a deception may not
amount to fraud, fraud is anathema to all equitable
principles and any affair tainted with fraud cannot be
perpetuated or saved by the application of any equitable
doctrine including res judicata. (See Ram Chandra Singh v.
Savitri Devi and Ors. (2003 (8) SCC 319).
"Fraud" and collusion vitiate even the most solemn
proceedings in any civilized system of jurisprudence. It
is a concept descriptive of human conduct. Michael Levi
likens a fraudster to Milton’s sorcerer, Comus, who exulted
in his ability to, ’wing me into the easy hearted man and
trap him into snares’. It has been defined as an act of
trickery or deceit. In Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary "fraud" in equity has been defined as an act or
omission to act or concealment by which one person obtains
an advantage against conscience over another or which
equity or public policy forbids as being prejudicial to
another. In Black’s Legal Dictionary, "fraud" is defined
as an intentional perversion of truth for the purpose of
inducing another in reliance upon it to part with some
valuable thing belonging to him or surrender a legal right;
a false representation of a matter of fact whether by words
or by conduct, by false or misleading allegations, or by
concealment of that which should have been disclosed, which
deceives and is intended to deceive another so that he
shall act upon it to his legal injury. In Concise Oxford
Dictionary, it has been defined as criminal deception, use
of false representation to gain unjust advantage; dishonest
artifice or trick. According to Halsbury’s Laws of England,
a representation is deemed to have been false, and
therefore a misrepresentation, if it was at the material
date false in substance and in fact. Section 17 of the
Indian Contract Act, 1872 defines "fraud" as act committed
by a party to a contract with intent to deceive another.
From dictionary meaning or even otherwise fraud arises out
of deliberate active role of representator about a fact,
which he knows to be untrue yet he succeeds in misleading
the representee by making him believe it to be true. The
representation to become fraudulent must be of fact with
knowledge that it was false. In a leading English case i.e.
Derry and Ors. v. Peek (1886-90) All ER 1 what constitutes
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"fraud" was described thus: (All ER p. 22 B-C) "fraud"
is proved when it is shown that a false representation has
been made (i) knowingly, or (ii) without belief in its
truth, or (iii) recklessly, careless whether it be true or
false". But "fraud" in public law is not the same as
"fraud" in private law. Nor can the ingredients, which
establish "fraud" in commercial transaction, be of
assistance in determining fraud in Administrative Law. It
has been aptly observed by Lord Bridge in Khawaja v.
Secretary of State for Home Deptt. (1983) 1 All ER 765,
that it is dangerous to introduce maxims of common law as
to effect of fraud while determining fraud in relation of
statutory law. "Fraud" in relation to statute must be a
colourable transaction to evade the provisions of a
statute. "If a statute has been passed for some one
particular purpose, a court of law will not countenance any
attempt which may be made to extend the operation of the
Act to something else which is quite foreign to its object
and beyond its scope. Present day concept of fraud on
statute has veered round abuse of power or mala fide
exercise of power. It may arise due to overstepping the
limits of power or defeating the provision of statute by
adopting subterfuge or the power may be exercised for
extraneous or irrelevant considerations. The colour of
fraud in public law or administration law, as it is
developing, is assuming different shades. It arises from a
deception committed by disclosure of incorrect facts
knowingly and deliberately to invoke exercise of power and
procure an order from an authority or tribunal. It must
result in exercise of jurisdiction which otherwise would
not have been exercised. The misrepresentation must be in
relation to the conditions provided in a section on
existence or non-existence of which the power can be
exercised. But non-disclosure of a fact not required by a
statute to be disclosed may not amount to fraud. Even in
commercial transactions non-disclosure of every fact does
not vitiate the agreement. "In a contract every person
must look for himself and ensures that he acquires the
information necessary to avoid bad bargain. In public law
the duty is not to deceive. (See Shrisht Dhawan (Smt.) v.
M/s. Shaw Brothers, (1992 (1) SCC 534).
In that case it was observed as follows:
"Fraud and collusion vitiate even the most solemn
proceedings in any civilized system of jurisprudence. It is
a concept descriptive of human conduct. Michael levi likens
a fraudster to Milton’s sorcerer, Comus, who exulted in his
ability to, ’wing me into the easy-hearted man and trap him
into snares’. It has been defined as an act of trickery or
deceit. In Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
fraud in equity has been defined as an act or omission to
act or concealment by which one person obtains an advantage
against conscience over another or which equity or public
policy forbids as being prejudicial to another. In Black’s
Legal Dictionary, fraud is defined as an intentional
perversion of truth for the purpose of inducing another in
reliance upon it to part with some valuable thing belonging
to him or surrender a legal right; a false representation of
a matter of fact whether by words or by conduct, by false or
misleading allegations, or by concealment of that which
should have been disclosed, which deceives and is intended
to deceive another so that he shall act upon it to his legal
injury. In Concise Oxford Dictionary, it has been defined
as criminal deception, use of false representation to gain
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unjust advantage; dishonest artifice or trick. According to
Halsbury’s Laws of England, a representation is deemed to
have been false, and therefore a misrepresentation, if it
was at the material date false in substance and in fact.
Section 17 of the Contract Act defines fraud as act
committed by a party to a contract with intent to deceive
another. From dictionary meaning or even otherwise fraud
arises out of deliberate active role of representator about
a fact which he knows to be untrue yet he succeeds in
misleading the representee by making him believe it to be
true. The representation to become fraudulent must be of
the fact with knowledge that it was false. In a leading
English case Derry v. Peek [(1886-90) ALL ER Rep 1: (1889)
14 AC 337 (HL)] what constitutes fraud was described thus:
(All Er p. 22 B-C)
’Fraud is proved when it is shown that a false
representation has been made (i) knowingly, or (ii) without
belief in its truth, or (iii) recklessly, careless whether
it be true or false’."
This aspect of the matter has been considered recently
by this Court in Roshan Deen v. Preeti Lal (2002 (1) SCC
100) Ram Preeti Yadav v. U.P. Board of High School and
Intermediate Education (2003 (8) SCC 311), Ram Chandra
Singh’s case (supra) and Ashok Leyland Ltd. v. State of T.N.
and Another (2004 (3) SCC 1).
Suppression of a material document would also amount to
a fraud on the court. (see Gowrishankar v. Joshi Amba
Shankar Family Trust (1996 (3) SCC 310) and S.P.
Chengalvaraya Naidu’s case (supra).
"Fraud" is a conduct either by letter or words, which
induces the other person or authority to take a definite
determinative stand as a response to the conduct of the
former either by words or letter. Although negligence is
not fraud but it can be evidence on fraud; as observed in
Ram Preeti Yadav’s case (supra).
In Lazarus Estate Ltd. v. Beasley (1956) 1 QB 702,
Lord Denning observed at pages 712 & 713, "No judgment of
a Court, no order of a Minister can be allowed to stand if
it has been obtained by fraud. Fraud unravels everything."
In the same judgment Lord Parker LJ observed that fraud
vitiates all transactions known to the law of however high
a degree of solemnity. (page 722)
These aspects were recently highlighted in the State of
Andhra Pradesh and Anr. v. T. Suryachandr Rao (2005 (5)
SCALE 621)
To give finality to the controversy, we appoint Mr.
Justice A.B. Palkar, a retired Judge of the Bombay High
Court to examine the 354 cases. The relevant files shall
be handed over to the Commission immediately. The
Commission is requested to complete the verification
within four months and submit its report to the State
Government for necessary action. The claimants whose cases
are to be examined shall be given opportunity to have
their say before the Commission. The records of the Zilla
Gaurav Samittee, High Power Committee and the Committee
appointed by the High Court shall be examined by the
Commission before issuing notice to he individual
applicants to decide the acceptability or otherwise of the
claims for freedom fighters’ pension. On getting report of
the Commission, the State Government shall take necessary
action. We make it clear that we have not expressed any
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opinion on the acceptability or otherwise of the claims as
the Commission appointed by this Court shall examine those
aspects.
The Commission appointed by this Court shall be paid
the same emoluments as are admissible to a sitting Judge
of the High Court for the duration of its work, which we
expect will be finished within a period of 4 months. The
emoluments admissible to the Commission shall be paid by
the State Government, apart from other expenses that may
be incurred for functioning of the Commission.
The appeals are allowed with no order as to costs.