Full Judgment Text
* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
nd
% Judgment reserved on: 22 March, 2018
st
Judgment pronounced on: 31 July, 2018
+ CRL.REV.P. 223/2018
SANJAY BHANDARI ..... Petitioner
versus
STATE (NCT OF DELHI) ..... Respondent
Advocates who appeared in this case:
For the Petitioner : Mr Kapil Sibal, Senior Advocate with Mr Manu
Sharma, Mr Kabir Srivastava, Mr Adit Pujari, Mr
Avneesh Arputham and Mr Abhir Datt, Advocates.
For the Respondents : Mr Akshai Malik, Addl. PP for the State.
Insp Prem Chandra, Crime Branch.
CORAM:-
HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJEEV SACHDEVA
SANJEEV SACHDEVA, J.
1. The petitioner impugns order dated 08.01.2018 to the limited
extent, the Trial court has declared the petitioner as a ‘ proclaimed
offender’ .
2. The fulcrum of the challenge to the said order is based on the
premise that the petitioner has not been accused of any of the offences
mentioned in Section 82(4) of the Criminal procedure Code, 1973
(hereinafter referred to as Cr.P.C.) and, thus, it is contended that
declaration of the petitioner as a proclaimed offender is unwarranted.
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It is contended that even if the proceedings under Section 82(1) to
82(3) of Cr.P.C. is completed qua the petitioner, the petitioner could
not be declared as a proclaimed offender as he is not accused of any
offences mentioned under Section 82(4) Cr.P.C. Reliance is placed on
the decision of the Rajasthan High Court in Rishabh Sethi vs. State of
Rajasthan, judgment dated 08.03.2018 in S.B. Crl.Misc.(Petition)
No.5767/2017.
3. Per contra, it is contended on behalf of the State that even
though the petitioner may not have been accused of the offences
mentioned in Section 82(4) Cr.P.C., the petitioner can still be declared
as a proclaimed offender as the procedure contemplated in Section
82(1) to 82(3) has been complied with. It is contended that the term
‘proclaimed offender’ can also be used in respect of individuals who
are accused of offences other than those mentioned in Section 82(4)
Cr.P.C, though consequences may be different. Reliance is placed on
the decisions of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Crl.Misc.No.
No.30146/2011 titled Rajiv vs. State of Haryana dated 12.10.2011 and
Crl.M.359/2012 titled Deeksha Puri vs. State of Haryana, (2013) 1
RCR (Crl.) 159(2) decided on 16.10.2012.
4. Petitioner is one of the accused in FIR No.173/2016, Police
Station Parliament Street, under Section 3 and 5 of the Official Secrets
Act, 1923. Subject FIR has been lodged on a complaint made by the
Ministry of Defence. It is alleged in the FIR that intimation was
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received by the Defence Secretary, Ministry of Defence from the
Member, Central Board of Direct Taxes that the Investigation Wing of
the Income Tax Department had come across photocopies of certain
classified documents.
5. It is contended that search and seizure action under Section 132
of the Income Tax Act was carried out in the case of certain
Companies as well as individuals as also the petitioner. From one of
the premises certain documents seized inter alia contained
photocopies of documents of Ministry of Defence marked ‘secret and
confidential’ . The secret and confidential documents recovered,
pertained to defence related proposals as well as deliberations of
Ministry of Defence. Consequent thereto, subject FIR was lodged.
6. The impugned order dated 08.01.2018 was passed on an
application moved by the Investigating Officer in the subject FIR
contending that the process under Section 82 had been executed
against the accused petitioner. Proclamations were published in the
newspaper Hindustan Times and Navbharat Times on 25.01.2017.
Despite the same, the petitioner failed to appear before the Court even
after a lapse of 30 days. The statement of the process server was
recorded and the petitioner was declared as a proclaimed offender in
the said case.
7. The question that arises of consideration is as to whether a
person who is not accused of any of the offences mentioned in section
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82(4) Cr.P.C. can be declared a Proclaimed Offender ?
8. Section 82 of Cr.P.C. reads a under:
“ 82. Proclamation for person absconding.
(1) If any Court has reason to believe (whether after
taking evidence or not) that any person against whom a
warrant has been issued by it has absconded or is
concealing himself so that such warrant cannot be
executed, such Court may publish a written proclamation
requiring him to appear at a specified place and at a
specified time not less than thirty days from the date of
publishing such proclamation.
(2) The proclamation shall be published as follows:-
(i) (a) it shall be publicly read in some
conspicuous place of the town or village in which
such person ordinarily resides;
(b) it shall be affixed to some conspicuous part
of the house or homestead in which such person
ordinarily resides or to some conspicuous place of
such town or village;
(c) a copy thereof shall be affixed to some
conspicuous part of the Court- house;
(ii) the Court may also, if it thinks fit, direct a copy of
the proclamation to be published in a daily
newspaper circulating in the place in which such
person ordinarily resides.
(3) A statement in writing by the Court issuing the
proclamation to the effect that the proclamation was duly
published on a specified day, in the manner specified in
clause (i) of sub- section (2), shall be conclusive evidence
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that the requirements of this section have been complied
with, and that the proclamation was published on such
day.
(4) Where a proclamation published under sub-section
(1) is in respect of a person accused of an offence
punishable under section 302, 304, 364, 367, 382, 392,
393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 402, 436, 449,
459 or 460 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860), and
such person fails to appear at the specified place and
time required by the proclamation, the Court may, after
making such inquiry as it things fit, pronounce him a
proclaimed offender and make a declaration to that
effect.
(5) The provisions of sub-sections (2) and (3) shall
apply to a declaration made by the Court under sub-
section (4) as they apply to the proclamation published
under sub-section (1).”
9. Section 82(1) empowers a court to publish a written
proclamation against a person, requiring him to appear at a specified
place and at a specified time not less than thirty days from the date of
publishing such proclamation. This proclamation is issued if the court
has reason to believe that a person against whom a warrant has been
issued by it, has absconded or is concealing himself so that such
warrant cannot be executed. Further, it may be noticed that
proclamation can be issued not only against a person, against whom a
warrant has been issued and who has absconded but also against a
person who is concealing himself so that such warrant cannot be
executed.
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10. Section 82(2) stipulates the manner and procedure of such
proclamation. Section 83(3) stipulates that a statement in writing by
the Court issuing the proclamation to the effect that the proclamation
was duly published on a specified day, in the manner specified in
clause (i) of sub- section (2), shall be conclusive evidence that the
requirements of this section have been complied with, and that the
proclamation was published on such day.
11. Section 82(4) and 82(5) were inserted by the 2005 amendment
of the Code w.e.f. 23.06.2006. Section 82(4) stipulates that a person,
in respect of whom a proclamation has been published under section
82(1), if he fails to appear at the specified place and time required by
the proclamation and if he is accused of offences mentioned in
Section 82(4), the court may pronounce him as a proclaimed offender ,
after making such inquiry as it things fit. Section 82(5) stipulates that
the provisions of Section 82(2) and (3) shall apply to a declaration
made by the court under section 82(4) as they apply to a proclamation
made under 82(1).
12. Other than section 82(4), Section 82 does not stipulate the
consequences of non-compliance of the proclamation issued under it.
82(4) stipulates that where the proclaimed person fails to appear at the
specified place and time, the court may pronounce him as a
proclaimed offender . This pronouncement as a proclaimed offender
can only be issued if he is accused of the offences stipulated in 82(4)
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and that also, only after the court has made such inquiry as it deems
fit. There is no provision, other than section 82(4) in the Cr.P.C.,
under which the court can pronounce a person as a proclaimed
offender .
13. There are adverse consequences stipulated in Cr.P.C. and
Indian Penal Code qua a person in respect of whom a proclamation
has been published under section 82, which shall be referred to a little
later.
14. If the contention of learned Additional Public Prosecutor for the
State were to be accepted – that every person in respect of whom a
proclamation has been published is deemed to be a proclaimed
offender irrespective of the provisions of Section 82(4) – then the
consequence would be that a person qua whom a proclamation has
been published and is not accused of any of the offences mentioned in
Section 82(4), would be deemed so, without the safeguard of an
inquiry stipulated in section 82(4). This can certainly not be the
intention of the legislature. The offence enumerated in section 82(4)
are serious in nature. It could not be the intention of the legislature
that qua a person who is accused of offences that are serious in nature,
the safe guard of an inquiry is stipulated and no such safeguard is
stipulated qua a person who is accused of offences that may not be so
serious.
15. The necessity of safeguard is further felt if one were to examine
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the other stipulations contained in Cr.P.C. qua proclaimed offenders.
16. Section 40 Cr.P.C. inter alia stipulates that every officer
employed in connection with the affairs of a village and every person
residing in a village shall forthwith communicate to the nearest
Magistrate or to the officer in charge of the nearest police station,
whichever is nearer, any information which he may possess respecting
the resort to any place within, or the passage through, such village of
any person whom he knows, or reasonably suspects, to be a thug,
robber, escaped convict or proclaimed offender . Section 40(2),
stipulates that for the said section the expression ‘proclaimed
offender’ includes any person proclaimed as an offender by any Court
or authority in any territory in India to which this Code does not
extend, in respect of any act which if committed in the territories to
which this Code extends, would be an offence punishable under any
of the following sections of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860),
namely, 302, 304, 382, 392 to 399 (both inclusive), 402, 435, 436,
449, 450 and 457 to 460 (both inclusive). Most of the sections of
Indian Penal Code referred to in Section 40(2) and Section 82(4) are
common.
17. Section 41 Cr.P.C. inter alia empowers every police officer to
arrest any person who has been proclaimed as an offender either under
the Cr.P.C or by order of the State Government, without an order from
a Magistrate and without a warrant.
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18. Section 43 Cr.P.C. inter alia empowers every private person to
arrest or cause to be arrested any proclaimed offender .
19. Section 73 Cr.P.C. inter alia authorises the Chief Judicial
Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first class to direct a warrant to any
person within his local jurisdiction for the arrest of a proclaimed
offender or of any person who is accused of a non-bailable offence
and is evading arrest.
20. The stipulations contained in Sections 40, 41, 43 and 73 qua a
proclaimed offender clearly shows that there are adverse
consequences attached to being declared a proclaimed offender. The
intention of the legislature cannot be that such adverse consequences
would automatically get attracted to a person qua whom a
proclamation has been published and is accused of offences of a less
serious nature but for a person who is accused of serious offences
enumerated in section 82(4), they would get attracted only after the
safeguard stipulated in section 82(4) has been followed.
21. I am in respectful disagreement with the judgment of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Rajiv vs. State of Haryana (supra)
and Deeksha Puri vs. State of Haryana (supra).
22. The reasoning given by learned Judge in Deeksha Puri (supra)
inter alia is that “ Sub-section (4) of Section 82 Cr.P.C., if read,
independent of the other sub-sections of Section 82Cr.P.C. and
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provision of Section 174-A IPC and Section 174 IPC, is capable of
being misconstrued to mean that it is only that accused person, facing
trial, only for offences mentioned in Section 82 (4), who can be
declared "proclaimed offender" after publication under Section 82 (1)
(2) and (3) Cr.P.C. giving immunity to the other absconders from
being declared "proclaimed offenders". In that imaginary situation, it
appears to be a relaxation clause. But if sub-sections (4) and (5)
of Section 82Cr.P.C. are read alongwith sub-sections (1) and (2)
of Section 82 Cr.P.C. and Scheme of other provisions of Cr.P.C.
and Sections 174 and 174 A IPC, following the Rule of "Contextual
construction", and "Harmonious Construction", it would avoid the
risk of making interrelated provisions becoming otiose or devoid of
meaning. The intention of legislation to make stringent penal
provisions of Section 174 A IPC for securing the presence of an
absconder by providing 7 years imprisonment for avoiding summons,
warrants or proclamation, under Section 82 (1) Cr.P.C. can not be
ignored while construing Section 82 (4) Cr.P.C. One can not negate
the effect of Section 174-A IPC and render it redundant by
misconstruing the Section 82 (4) Cr.P.C. to mean that it is meant to
provide relaxation to offenders of offences not covered under Section
82 (4) Cr.P.C.”
23. The basic reasoning for the learned judge to hold that all
persons qua whom a declaration has been published under section
82(1) Cr.P.C. would be deemed to be proclaimed offender is that any
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other interpretation would render the provisions of section 174A IPC
otiose and redundant.
24. In my view, learned judge has not noticed that the provisions of
section 174 IPC and 174A IPC operate in different circumstances.
25. Sections 174 and 174A IPC read as under:
“ 174. Non-attendance in obedience to an order from
public servant — Whoever, being legally bound to attend
in person or by an agent at a certain place and time in
obedience to a summons, notice, order or proclamation
proceeding from any public servant legally competent, as
such public servant, to issue the same, intentionally omits
to attend at that place or time, or departs from the place
where he is bound to attend before the time at which it is
lawful for him to depart, shall be punished with simple
imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month,
or with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees, or
with both, or, if the summons, notice, order or
proclamation is to attend in person or by agent in a
Court of Justice, with simple imprisonment for a term
which may extend to six months, or with fine which may
extend to one thousand rupees, or with both.
174A. Non-appearance in response to a proclamation
under section 82 of Act 2 of 1974.— Whoever fails to
appear at the specified place and the specified time as
required by a proclamation published under sub-section
(1) of section 82 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 shall be punished with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three years or with fine or with
both, and where a declaration has been made under
sub-section (4) of that section pronouncing him as a
proclaimed offender, he shall be punished with
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imprisonment for a term which may extend to seven years
and shall also be liable to fine.”
26. Section 174 makes it an offences if a person being legally
bound to attend in person or by an agent at a certain place and time in
obedience to a summons, notice, order or proclamation proceeding
from any public servant, intentionally omits to attend at that place or
time, or departs from the place where he is bound to attend before the
time at which it is lawful for him to depart. Section 174 applies to all
persons and public servants and is in respect of summons, notice,
order or proclamation proceeding. Section 174 is not restricted only to
accused but inter alia encompasses in its scope, witnesses, parties to
civil and criminal proceedings, noticees to whom notice may have
been issued by public authorities.
27. On the other had section 174A makes it an offence if a person,
required by a proclamation published under sub-section (1) of section
82, to appear, fails to appear. It further stipulates that if such a person
fails to appear he would be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three years or with fine or with both, and where
a declaration has been made under section 82(4) against such a
person, pronouncing him as a proclaimed offender, then he shall be
punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to seven
years and shall also be liable to fine.
28. Under section 82 (1) Cr.P.C. a proclamation can be issued only
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against a person against whom a warrant has been issued and has
absconded or is concealing himself so that such warrant cannot be
executed. Clearly, the scope and operation of sections 174 and 174A
are different. However, there may be an overlap in their operation but
largely they operate in different spheres. Persons covered by section
174A second part would be a sub set of persons covered by section
174A first part who in turn would be subset of persons covered by
section 174 IPC.
29. Further it may be seen that sections 83, 84 and 85 Cr.P.C.,
which provide for attachment of property of person absconding,
claims & objections thereto and release, sale and restoration of
attached properties of persons qua whom a declaration under section
82 has been issued, uses the expression ‘Proclaimed Person’.
30. The provisions of Section 82 to 84 become applicable on the
issuance of the proclamation and are not dependent on the declaration
under section 82(4).
31. I am thus of the view that a person who is accused of offences
other than the ones enumerated in section 82(4) and qua whom a
proclamation has been published under section 82(1) would be a
‘Proclaimed person’ and not a deemed ‘Proclaimed Offender’ .
32. As noticed above, there is no provision other than section 82(4)
for pronouncing such a person as a proclaimed offender and 82(4)
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applies only in respect of persons accused of sections of IPC
enumerated therein.
33. In view of the above, order dated 08.01.2018 declaring the
petitioner as a proclaimed offender is not sustainable and is
accordingly quashed to the said extent. However, this would not affect
the status of the petitioner as a proclaimed person and would be
without prejudice to the action initiated against the petitioner for
failure to appear in terms of the proclamation issued.
34. The Petition is disposed of in the above terms.
35. Order Dasti under signatures of Court Master.
SANJEEV SACHDEVA J
JULY 31, 2018
St/HJ
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