Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 688 of 2001
Special Leave Petition (crl.) 1875 of 2001
PETITIONER:
JOHN THOMAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR. K. JAGADEESAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/07/2001
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, R.P.Sethi
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
A renowned hospital in the Metropolis of Madras
(Chennai) has been caricatured in a newspaper as the
abattoir of human kidneys for trafficking purposes. When
the Director of the Hospital complained of defamation, the
publisher of the newspaper sought shelter under the umbrage
that the libel is not against the Director personally, but
against the hospital only and hence he cannot feel
aggrieved. The accused/publisher, who raised the objection
before the trial court, on being summoned by the court to
appear before it, succeeded in stalling the progress of the
trial by clinging to the said contention which the trial
magistrate has upheld. But the High Court of Madras
disapproved the action of the magistrate and directed the
trial to proceed. Hence the accused has come up to this
Court by filing the special leave petition. But after
hearing the learned senior counsel, who argued for the
appellant, we did not find the necessity to wait for the
respondent - complainant to reply to those arguments as the
appeal is only liable to be dismissed in limine.
The complainant (respondent in this) stated that he is
running a hospital as its Director under the name "K.J.
Hospital". He claimed to be the Honorary Overseer Adviser
of Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow in
UK. His grievance in the complaint is that a news item was
published by the "Madras Times" on 21.3.1991 containing
highly defamatory imputations against his hospital. The
said newspaper is a daily published and circulated by the
appellant as its editor. The passage which, according to
the complainant, is defamatory to him has been quoted in
the complaint. It is extracted below:
"It is stated that the hospital used to
stealthily deprive of its patients of one of
their kidneys when they were admitted for
minor operations. Women who were admitted
for caesarian operation had one of their
kidneys removed without their knowledge.
More than 120 women have so far been
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affected by this trading in kidneys. It is
reported that the kidneys were later
exported to Malaysia. The hospital has
engaged brokers to the lure in the needy
poor to part with one of their kidneys for a
hefty sum. The nefarious activity has been
going on for many months now."
So the complaint was filed by the respondent before
the Court of Metropolitan Magistrate for the offence under
Section 500 of the IPC. The magistrate, who took
cognizance of the offence, issued process to the appellant.
It seems, the appellant is interested in taking up his
defence and contentions only in a piecemeal manner. At the
first instance, he approached the High Court for quashing
the complaint on the ground that the magistrate ought to
have examined all the witnesses for the complainant before
issuing the process to the accused. The High Court
dismissed his petition and repelled his contention on that
score as per an order passed in Crl.O.P. No.2189/93.
Thereafter the appellant moved the trial court for
discharging him from the proceedings for which he raised
two other contentions. The first among them is that the
publication did not amount to defamation, second among them
is that "K.J. Hospital" is a private limited company
whereas the complainant is a private individual who had no
locus standi to file the complaint.
On the first contention, the trial magistrate found
that the imputations are "derogatory remarks about the
hospital". The learned magistrate upheld the second
contention for which he made the following observations:
"Even though the respondent himself admits
in his complaint that Dr. K. Jagadeesan is
the Director of K.J. Hospital, mere
admission by the complainant cannot give him
the status of Director of the hospital
without the Article of Association duly
registered in the Company Law Board under
Indian Companies Act. Therefore, onus is on
the respondent to prove that he is the
Director of K.J. Hospital, and he has the
locus standi to file this complaint. The
respondent has not discharged the onus that
he is the Director of K.J. Hospital and so
he has failed to prove that he has locus
standi in filing the complaint against the
petitioner."
The trial magistrate, on the above reasoning,
discharged the appellant as per its order dated 10.2.1995.
The complainant filed a revision before the High Court of
Madras challenging the aforesaid order of discharge. A
single Judge of the High Court reversed the order and
restored the criminal proceedings to reach its logical
culmination in accordance with law. It is the said order
of the High Court which the appellant/accused is
challenging now. The learned single Judge noticed that the
trial court has already recorded evidence of two witnesses
for the prosecution. He did not consider the points found
against by the trial court, instead he observed that the
trial court in a summons case cannot discharge the accused
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after passing over to the stage of evidence. According to
the learned single Judge, the accused should have filed the
application for discharge immediately after he entered
appearance and if he has not done so he could not do it
after the court has moved to the stage of evidence taking.
What the learned single Judge has stated on that aspect
reads as follows:
"If such an application is filed before the
court immediately after entering appearance
before commencement of the trial as
envisaged in Chapter XX Cr.P.C. the petition
is maintainable. But now, the stage has
passed and the evidence of two witnesses on
the side of prosecution was recorded and at
this stage in the absence of any provision
for discharge of the accused the magistrate
ought not to have discharged the accused and
he should have allowed the trial to flow in
accordance with the established procedure."
The appellant questioned the aforesaid view of the
learned single Judge on the strength of Section 258 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure (for short ’the Code’). It must
be pointed out that the offence under Section 500 of the
IPC is triable as a summons case in accordance with the
provisions contained in Chapter XX of the Code. Sections
251 to 257 of that Chapter deal with the steps to be
adopted from the commencement upto culmination of the
proceedings in summons cases. One of the normal rules in
summons cases is that once trial started, it should reach
its normal culmination. But Section 258 is included in
that chapter in the form of an exception to the aforesaid
normal progress chart of the trial in summons cases. It is
useful to extract the section here:
"258. Power to stop proceedings in certain
cases.- In any summons case instituted
otherwise than upon complaint, a Magistrate
of the first class or, with the previous
sanction of the Chief Judicial Magistrate,
any other Judicial Magistrate, may, for
reasons to be recorded by him, stop the
proceedings at any stage without pronouncing
any judgment and where such stoppage of
proceedings is made after the evidence of
the principal witness has been recorded,
pronounce a judgment of acquittal, and in
any other case, release the accused, and
such release shall have the effect of
discharge."
Summons cases are generally of two categories. Those
instituted upon complaints and those instituted otherwise
than upon complaints. The latter category would include
cases based on police reports. Section 258 of the Code is
intended to cover those cases belonging to one category
alone i.e. "summons cases instituted otherwise than upon
complaints". The segment separated at the last part of the
section by the words "and in any other case" is only a sub-
category or division consisting of "summons cases
instituted otherwise than upon complaints". That sub-
category is not intended to cover all summons cases other
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than those instituted on police report. In fact, Section
258 vivisects only "summons cases instituted otherwise than
on complaints" into two divisions. One division consists
of cases in which no evidence of material witness was
recorded. The section permits the court to acquit the
accused prematurely only in those summons cases instituted
otherwise than on complaints wherein the evidence of
material witnesses was recorded. But the power of court to
discharge an accused at midway stage is restricted to those
cases instituted otherwise than on complaints wherein no
material witness was examined at all.
The upshot of the above is that Section 258 of the
Code has no application to cases instituted upon
complaints. The present is a case which was instituted on
complaint. Hence the endeavour made by the accused to find
help from Section 258 of the Code is of no avail.
Shri Siva Subramaniam, learned senior counsel for the
appellant, contended that the imputations contained in the
publication complained of are not per se defamatory. After
reading the imputations we have no doubt that they are
prima facie libellous. The only effect of an imputation
being per se defamatory is that it would relieve the
complainant of the burden to establish that the publication
of such imputations has lowered him in the estimation of
the right thinking members of the public. However, even if
the imputation is not per se defamatory, that by itself
would not go to the advantage of the publisher, for, the
complaining person can establish on evidence that the
publication has in fact amounted to defamation even in
spite of the apparent deficiency. So the appellant cannot
contend, at this stage, that he is entitled to discharge on
the ground that the imputations in the extracted
publication were not per se defamatory.
The contention focussed by the learned senior counsel
is that the respondent, who filed the complaint, has no
locus standi to complain because he is only a Director of
K.J. Hospital about which the publication was made and that
the publication did not contain any libel against the
complainant personally. It is not disputed that the
complainant is the Director of K.J. Hospital. Explanation
2 in Section 499 of the IPC reads thus:
"Explanation 2.- It may amount to defamation
to make an imputation concerning a company
or an association or collection of persons
as such."
In view of the said Explanation, it cannot be disputed
that a publication containing defamatory imputations as
against a company would escape from the purview of the
offence of defamation. If the defamation pertains to an
association of persons or a body corporate, who could be
the complainant? This can be answered by reference to
Section 199 of the Code. The first sub-section of that
section alone is relevant, in this context. It reads thus:
"199. Prosecution for defamation.- (1) No
court shall take cognizance of an offence
under Chapter XXI of the Indian Penal Code
(45 of 1860) except upon a complaint made by
some person aggrieved by the offence."
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The collocation of the words "by some persons
aggrieved" definitely indicates that the complainant need
not necessarily be the defamed person himself. Whether the
complainant has reason to feel hurt on account of the
publication is a matter to be determined by the court
depending upon the facts of each case. If a company is
described as engaging itself in nefarious activities its
impact would certainly fall on every Director of the
company and hence he can legitimately feel the pinch of it.
Similarly, if a firm is described in a publication as
carrying on offensive trade, every working partner of the
firm can reasonably be expected to feel aggrieved by it.
If K.J. Hospital is a private limited company, it is too
farfetched to rule out any one of its Directors, feeling
aggrieved on account of pejoratives hurled at the company.
Hence the appellant cannot justifiably contend that the
Director of the K.J. Hospital would not fall within the
wide purview of "some person aggrieved" as envisaged in
Section 199(1) of the Code.
The learned senior counsel made a last attempt to save
the appellant from prosecution on the strength of the
decision of this Court in K.M. Mathew vs. State of Kerala
{1992 (1) SCC 217}. In that case prosecution against Chief
Editor was quashed for want of necessary averments in the
complaint regarding his role in the publication. That part
of the decision rests entirely on the facts of that case
and it cannot be imported to this case. It is pertinent to
point out, in this context, that the appellant did not have
any such point either when he first moved the High Court
for quashing the proceedings or when he moved the trial
court for discharge. Hence it is too late in the day for
raising any such point, even apart from non-availability of
that defence to the appellant on merits.
We, therefore, dismiss this appeal.