Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. K. GHOSH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/04/1962
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1963 AIR 255 1963 SCR (2) 111
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC1194 (26)
ACT:
Attached Property, Disposal of--Termination of Criminal
Proceeding for scheduled offence--Order of District Judge--
Validity--Forfeiture, if a penalty--Criminal Law Amendment
Ordinance. 1944(38 of 1944), SS. 13(3), 12(1) 3.--Criminal
Law Amendment Ordinance, 1943 (29 of 1943), as amended by
Criminal Law (1943 Amendment) Amending Ordinance, 1945(12 of
1945), s.10--Constitution of India, Art. 20(1)--Indian penal
Code, 1860(Act 56 of 1860), ss. 120B, 409, 53.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, who was the Chief Refugee Administrator of
Burma Refugee Organisation from November, 1942, to August
25) 1944, was tried under ss. 120B and 409 of the Indian
Penal Code by the Second Special Tribunal, functioning under
the Criminal Law Ordinance No. 29 of 1943 as amended by
Criminal Law (1943 Amendment) Amending Ordinance No. 12 of
1945. On an application made on
112
behalf of the Provincial Government under s. 3 of the Crimi-
nal Law Amendment Ordinance, No. 38 of 1944, the District
Judge attached certain properties as having been purchased
by the respondent with Money procured by the said offence.
The Special Tribunal found the respondent guilty and senten-
ced him to rigorous imprisonment for five years and a fine
of Rs. 45 lacs as in its view the money procured by the
offences exceeded that amount. On appeal by the respondent
the High Court affirmed the order of conviction and
sentence. There was a further appeal to this Court and this
Court affirmed the finding of the High Court that at least
Rs. 30 lacs must have been misappropriated and refused to
interfere. Thereafter the District judge, on an application
made under s. 13 of the 1944 Ordinance passed the order, out
of which the present appeal arose, directing that Rs. 30
lacs together with the cost of attachment should first be
forfeited to the Union of India ’from the attached
properties and thereafter the fine of Rs. 45 lacs was to be
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recovered from the residue of the attached properties and
directed the receiver to report as to the valuation and the
cost of attachment and management of the attached
properties. The respondent appealed to the High Court and
the two judges of the Division Bench hearing the appeal
agreed in quashing the order of the District judge; one of
them on the ground that no order having been obtained under
S. 12(1) of that Ordinance, no application lay under s. 13(3
thereof and the other on the ground that since forfeiture
was not prescribed as punishment before the 1944 Ordinance
and that Ordinance came into force after the offence has
been committed, any forfeiture ordered under the Ordinance
would contravene Art. 20(1) of the Constitution. The State
of West Bengal appealed.
Held, that the order of the High Court must be set aside and
that of the District judge resorted.
Section 12(1) of the 1944 Ordinance only required that at
the request of the prosecution the court should give a
finding as to the amount of money or the value of the pro-
perty that had been procured by the accused by the commis-
sion of the offence, no matter whether such representation
was by application or oral, and if the court gave the
finding that would be sufficient compliance with the
section. Where such a finding was given under s. 10 of the
1943 Ordinance as amended in 1945, that finding would also
satisfy the requirement of s. 12(1) of the 1944 Ordinance.
of the two kinds of property contemplated by s. 3 of the
1944 Ordinance for the purpose of attachment, s. 12 was
concerned only with the determination of the value of such
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property alone as bad been procured by the offence and the
Criminal Court had thereunder to evaluate such property and
none others. Since what was attached in this case was, not
property procured by the commission of the offence, what the
Criminal court was required to do was to declare the amount
of money procured by the offence. It was for the District
judge to value other properties purchased by that money when
he considered the question of forfeiture under s. 13(3) and
that was what the District Judge did in this case.
The forfeiture provided under s; 18(3) of the 1944 Ordinance
was not a penalty within the meaning of Art.20(1) of the
Constitution. Nor could it be equated to forfeiture of
property under s. 53 of the Indian Penal Code The Ordinance
provided for no punishment or penalty, but for attachment of
the money or property procured by the offence or any other
property of the offender in case the above property was not
available, to prevent the disposal or concealment of such
property. The forfeiture provided by it was in, effect a
speedier method of realising Government money or property
than by a suit which the Government was entitled to bring
without in any way affecting the right to realised the fine
imposed by the Criminal Court in connection with the
offence. That section was not concerned with any convic-
tion punishment and Art. 20(1) could, therefore, have no
applications to orders passed under it.
Rao Shiv Bahadur Singh v. State of Vindha Pradesh, (1953)
S.C.R. 1188, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION, Criminal Appeal No. 140 of
1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 20/22, 1958,
of the Calcutta High Court, in Criminal Appeal No. 176 of
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1958.
B. Sen, P. K. Chatterjee and P. K. Bose, for the
appellant.
N. C. Chatterjee and S. 0. Mazumdar, for the respondent.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, B B. L. Iyengar
and P. D. Menon, for the Intervener,
114
1962. April 16. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
WANCHOO, J.-This is an appeal on a certificate granted by
the Calcutta High Court. The respondent was appointed the
Chief Refugee Administrator of the Burma Refugee
Organisation in November, 1942, and held that post till
August 25, 1944 when he was suspended. He was believed to
have embezzled large sums of money belonging Government
which were at his disposal as the Chief Refugee
Administrator, in conspiracy with certain persons. It was
in that connection that he Was suspended on August 25, 1944,
and investigation into the alleged offences began
thereafter. In that connection, the respondent was arrested
in October, 1944, and was bailed out. Eventually, on July
21, 1945, the respondent was prosecuted under ss. 120-B and
409 of the Indian Penal Code before the Second Special
Tribunal constituted under the Criminal Law Amendment
Ordinance, No. 29 of 1943 (hereinafter referred to as the
1943-Ordinance). In the mean time, the Criminal Law
Amendment Ordinance No. 38 of 1944 (hereinafter referred to
as the 1944 Ordinance) was passed. The object of this
Ordinance was to prevent the disposal or concealment of
money or other property procured by means of certain
scheduled offences punishable under the Indian Penal Code,
and one of the offences to which this Ordinance applied was
s. 409 of the Indian Penal Code, and any conspiracy to
commit such offence. Section 3 of this Ordinance provided
that where the Provincial Government had reason to believe
that any person had committed (whether after the
commencement of this Ordinance or not) any scheduled
offence, the Provincial Government was empowered (whether or
not the Court had taken cognizance of the offence) to make
an application to the District Judge within the local limits
of whose jurisdiction the
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said person ordinarily resided or carried on his business,
for the attachment of the money or other property which the
Provincial Government believed the said person to have
procured by means of the offence. But if for some reason
such money or property could not be attached, the Provincial
Government was given power to apply for the attachment of
other property of the said person of value as nearly as
might be equivalent to that of the aforesaid money or
property. Section 3 therefore provided for something like
what is attachment before judgment in a civil court, and the
Provincial Government was authorised to apply for attachment
either of the money or property with respect to which the
offence was said to have been committed and if that was not
available, other property of equal value could be attached
even though no offence had been committed with respect to
that other property. Consequently on November 21, 1944, an
application was made on behalf of the Provincial Government
before the District Judge for attachment of certain
properties under s. 3 of the 1944-Ordinance on the ground
that these properties had been purchased by the respondent
with moneys procured by him by committing off(- noes under
ss. 120-B and 409 of the Indian Penal Code. On February 22,
1945, another application was made for attachment of certain
other properties. The District Judge ordered attachment of
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these two sets of properties after hearing the respondent
and the orders of attachment have been extended from time to
time. This took place even before the case of the
respondent was sent up for trial before the Special
Tribunal.
The respondent was eventually convicted by the Special
Tribunal after a protracted trial on August 31, 1949. In
the meantime, the Criminal Law (1943 Amendment) Amending
Ordinance, No. 12 of 1945, (hereinafter referred to as the
1945
116
Ordinance) came into force on May 12, 1945. By this
Ordinance, s. 10 of the 1943 Ordinance’ was amended and the
amended section was in these terms
"When any person charged before a Special
Tribunal with an offence specified in the
Schedule is found guilty of that offence, the
special Tribunal shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in the Indian Penal Code
(XLV of 1860), whether or not it imposes a
sentence of imprisonment, impose a sentence of
fine which shall not be less in amount than
the amount of money or value of other property
found to have been procured by the offender by
means of the offence."
Therefore, when the Special Tribunal found the respondent
guilty of the offences under ss. 120-B and 409 of the Indian
Penal Code it sentenced him to rigorous imprisonment for
five years and a fine of Es. 45 lacs ON the charge of
conspiracy, and the reason why the fine was fixed at Rs. 45
lacs was that in the view of the Special Tribunal, the money
procured by the respondent by means of the offence was over
Rs. 45 lacs. The respondent went in appeal to the High
Court from his conviction and the High Court upheld the
conviction as well as the sentence of fine. The High Court
however found that the money procured by the respondent by
the commission of the offence of conspiracy was at least Rs.
30 lacs Even so, the High Court did not interfere with the
sentence of fine imposed by the Special Tribunal as it was
of the view that s. 10 of the 1943-Ordinance as amended in
1945 prescribed the minimum limit of fine only and it was
open to the Special Tribunal under the ordinary law to
impose any amount of fine. The respondent then came in
appeal to this Court, which was dismissed. This Court held
that on the finding it was clear that at least Rs. 30 lacs
had been misappropriated by the respondent as a result of
the conspiracy and the
117
minimum fine therefore had to be of that order; but
considering the serious nature of the defalcation made by
the respondent and the position of trust in which he had
been placed, this Court found it impossible to interfere
with the sentence. Judgment of this Court was delivered on
December 12, 1956.
On January 8, 1957, an application was made to the District
Judge concerned under s. 13 of the 1944-Ordinance, and it
was prayed that as it had been found by the courts that the
respondent had procured at least a sum of Rs. 30 lacs by
committing the offences specified in the Schedule to the
1943Ordinance, the properties attached under s. 3 of the
1944-Ordinance, which were in the hands of a receiver, might
be confiscated and receiver be ordered to hand over all the
properties in his hands to the Government of India. An ex
parte order was passed by the District Judge allowing the
application on January 10, 1957. Thereafter, applications
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were made by the respondent and his wife for vacating this
ex parte order and on May 11, 1957, the ex parte order was
vacated. Finally, on March 22,1958, the District Judge
passed the order which is now under appeal, after hearing
the respondent and his wife. The main objection taken
before the District Judge appears to have been that there
was no finding under s. 12 of the 1914-Ordinance and
therefore it was not open to the District Judge to take
action under s. 13 of the 1944-Ordinance. ’The District
Judge repelled this objection and held on a construction of
ss. 12 and 13(3) of the 1944-Ordinance that the amount of
Rs. 30 lacs together with the cost of attachment had first
to be forfeited to the Union of India from the properties
attached and thereafter the fine of Rs. 45 lacs was to be
recovered from the ,residue of the said attached properties.
As however it was not possible to forfeit properties to the
118
value of Rs. 30 lacs without valuation of the properties,
the District Judge directed the receiver to report as to the
cost of attachment, including the cost of management of the
properties attached. He also directed the parties to submit
their estimates as to the value of the properties attached,
with the proviso that, if there was no agreement between
them, a valuer would be appointed by the court to evaluate
the properties under attachment.
The respondent then went in appeal to the High Court and
challenged the order of the District Judge. This appeal was
heard by a Division Bench of the High Court consisting of
Mitter and Bhattacharya, JJ. Two points were urged before
the High Court in this connection. The first was. that as
no proceedings under s. 12 of’ the 1944 Ordinance had been
taken as to the money which had been procured by the
commission of the offence and no finding had been arrived at
under that Section, it was not open to the District Judge to
take proceedings under s. 13 of the 1944-Ordinance.
Secondly, it ",as urged that even if it were open to the
District Judge to take proceedings under s. 13, the
proceedings could not go on in view of Art. 20(1) of the
Constitution.
Mitter, J., on a construction of SS. 12 and 13 of the 1914-
Ordinance held that only it an order s. 12 had been
obtained, it would be open to take action under s. 13; but
as in his view no order under S 3.12 had been obtained, and
all that had been found was that the respondent had obtained
at least Rs. 30 lacs by the commission of the offence under
s. 10 of the 1943 Ordinance as amended in 1945, that was not
what was required under s. 12. Therefore, he held that no
proceedings under is. 13 could be taken for forfeiture of
Rs. 30 lacs worth of properties and all that could be done
was only to recover the fine of Rs. 45 lacs. In view of
this finding, Mitter, J.,
119
did not express any opinion as to the applicability of Art.
20(1) of the Constitution.
Bhattacharya J. on the other hand did not agree with the
view expressed by Hitter J. on the interpretation of ss. 12
and 13 of the 1944 Ordinance. In his opinion, the District
Judge had jurisdiction to forfeit properties worth Rs. 30
lacs under s. 13. But he was of opinion that s. 53 of the
Indian Penal Code refers to forfeiture as punishment as
distinct from fine and as the punishment of, forfeiture, as
contemplated by the 1944 Ordinance had yet to take place,
Art. 20(1) of the Constitution would Apply. His reason for
coming to this conclusion was that the 1944-Ordinance came
into force on August 23, 1944, while the real and effective
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period during which the offences were committed ended with
July 1944. Therefore, according to him, as forfeiture was
not prescribed as a punishment before the 1914-Ordinance and
as that Ordinance came into force after the offences with
which the respondent was charged had been committed, no
forfeiture could be ordered under the 1944-Ordinance as that
would be violative of Art. 20(1) of the Constitution. He
therefore agreed with Mitter J. that, the order of the
District Judge should be quashed but for a different reason.
Thereafter, the State of West Bengal applied for a
certificate, which was granted; and that is how the matter
has come up before us.
The contention of the appellant is that the view of Mitter
J. that a specific order in terms of s. 12 of the 1944-
Ordinance was required in this case was not correct, and
that in any case an order under s. 12 had been passed in
substance in this case by the court trying the respondent
and therefore the District Judge would have jurisdiction to
forfeit properties up to the value of Rs. 30 lacs under s. 1
3. Incidentally, Mitter J. had also held
120
that it was the duty of the court trying the respondent to
value properties attached under S. 12, and as that had not
been done it was another ground for holding that no action
could be taken under s. 13. This view of Mitter J. is also
challenged by the appellant. The appellant further
challenges the view of Bhattacharya J. that Art. 20(1)
applies in the circumstances of this case, and it is
contended that the provision in s. 13 of the 1944-Ordinance
for forfeiture is not a punishment but merely a method of
realising money of the Government which bad been embezzled
by the respondent and therefore Art. 20(1) had no
application. It is urged that it would have been open to
Government to file a suit to recover the money or, the
property embezzled and that s. 13 only provides a speedier
remedy for attaining the same object. Learned counsel for
the respondents on the other hand supports the view taken by
the High Court on both points and urges that there is no
reason to interfere with the order passed by the High Court.
We shall first consider the view of Mitter J. as to the
interpretation of se. 12 and 13 of the 1944, Ordinance. The
two sections read as follows
"12. Criminal Courts to evaluate property
procured by scheduled offence:-
(1) Where before judgment is pronounced in
any criminal trial for a scheduled offence it
is represented to the Court that an order of
attachment of property has been passed under
this Ordinance in connection with such
offence,, the Court shall, if it is convicting
the accused, record a finding as to the amount
of money or value of other property procured
by the accused by means of the offence.
(1) In any appeal or revisional proceedings
against such conviction, the appellate or
121
revisional court shall, unless it sets aside
the conviction, either confirm such finding or
modify it in such manner as it thinks proper.
(3) In any appeal or revisional proceedings
against an order of acquittal in a trial such
as is referred to in sub-section (1), the
appellate or revisional Court, it convicts the
accused, shall record a finding such as is
referred to in that sub-section.
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13. Disposal of attached property upon
termination of criminal proceedings
(1) Upon the termination of any criminal
proceedings for any scheduled offence in
respect of which any order of attachment of
property has been made under this Ordinance or
security given in lieu thereof, the agent of
the Provincial Government shall without delay
inform the District Judge, and shall- where
criminal proceedings have been taken in any
Court, furnish the District Judge with a copy
of the judgment or order of the trying Court
and with copies of the judgments or orders, if
any, of the appellate or revisional Courts
thereon.
(2) Where it is reported to the District
Judge under sub section (1) that cognizance of
the alleged scheduled offence has not been
taken or where the final judgment or order of
the criminal Courts is one of acquittal, the
District Judge shall forthwith withdraw any
orders of attachment of property made in
connection with the offence, or where Security
has been given in lieu of such attachment,
order such security to be returned.
(3) Where the final judgment or order of the
Criminal Courts is one of conviction, the
District Judge. shall order that from the
122
property of the convicted person attached
under this Ordinance or out of the security
given in lieu of such attachment, there shall
be forfeited to His Majesty such amount or
value as is found in the final judgment or
order of the criminal Courts in pursuance of
section,, 12 to have been procured by the con-
victed person by means of the offence, toge-
ther with the cost of attachment as determined
by the District Judge ; and where the final
judgment or order of the criminal Courts has
imposed or upheld a sentence of fine on the
said person (whether alone or in conjunction
with any other punishment), the District Judge
may order, without prejudice to any other mode
of recovery, that the said fine shall be
recovered from the residue of the said
attached property or of the security given in
lieu of attachment.
(4) Where the amounts ordered to be
forfeited or recovered under subsection (3)
exceed the ’Value of the property of the con-
victed person attached, and where the property
of any transferee of the convicted person has
been attached under section 6 the District
Judge shall order that the balance of the
amount ordered to be forfeited under sub-
section (3) together with the cost of attach-
ment of the transferee’s property as determin-
ed by the District Judge shall be forfeited to
His Majesty from the attached property of the
transferee or out of the security given in
lieu of such attachment ; and the District
Judge may order, without prejudice to any
other mode of recovery, that any fine referred
to in sub-section(3) or any portion thereof
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not recovered under the sub-section shall be
recovered from the attached property of the
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transferee or out of the security given in lie
of such attachment.
(5) If any property remains under attachment
in respect of any scheduled offence or any
security given in lieu of such attachment
remains with the District Judge after his
orders under sub-section (3) and (4) have been
carried into effect, the order of attachment
in respect of such property remaining shall be
forthwith withdrawn, or as the case may be,
the remainder of the security returned, under
the orders of the District Judge."
We have already pointed out that the provision for making an
application for attachment is contained in a. 3 of the Act.
Section 5 then provides for investigation of objections to
attachment and under sub-s. (3) thereof the District Judge
is authorised to pass an order making the attachment
absolute or varying its by releasing a portion of the
property from attachment or withdrawing the order. In the
present case, the District Judge made the order absolute and
the properties have continued under attachment ever since.
It may be mentioned that under s. 3 two kinds of properties
may be attached; namely, (i) the property which has been
procured by the commission of the offence, whether it be in
the form of money or in the form of movable or immoral
property, and (ii) properties other than the above In this
case, the charge against the respondent was that he had
embezzled money. The reason why the application for
attachment under s. 3 was made was that he had used the
money procured by commission of the offence in purchasing
certain properties. Therefore, the properties attached in
this case were not actually the properties procured by the
offence but other properties. But s. 13 applies whether the
property attached is of one kind or the other, and the
District Judge would have jurisdiction to deal with the
property
124
attached under a. 13 for the purpose of forfeiture provided
s. 12 has been complied with.
The question therefore that falls for consideration is the
meaning of s. 12(1). The subsection lays down that before
the judgment is pronounced by the court trying the offender
if it is represented to the court that an order of
attachment of property bad been passed under s. 3 in
connection with such offence, the court shall, if it is
convicting the accused, record a finding as to the amount of
money or value of other property procured by the accused by
means of the offence. Clearly all that s. 12(1) requires is
that the court trying the offender should be asked to record
a finding as to the amount of .money or value of other
property procured by the accused before it by means of the
offence for which be is being tried. There is no procedure
provided for making the representation to the court to
record a finding as to the amount of money or value of other
property procured by the offence. In our view, all that s.
12(1) requires is that at the request of the prosecution the
court should give a finding as to the amount of money or
value of other property procured by the accused.
Representation may be by application or even oral so long as
the court gives a finding as to the amount of money or value
of other property procured by the offence that would in our
opinion be sufficient compliance with s. 12(1). It is not
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necessary that the court when it gives a finding as to the
amount of money or value of other property procured by means
of the offence should say in so many words in passing the
order that it is making that finding on a representation
under s. 12 (1). It is true that under S. 10 of the 1943-
Ordinance as amended in 1945 the court when imposing a fine
has to give a finding as to the amount of money or value of
other property found to have been procured by the offender
by mean,% of the offence in order that it
125
may comply with the provisions of s. 10 as to the minimum
fine to be imposed. We see no reason however why a finding
given for the purpose of s. 10 determining the amount of
money or the value of other property found to have been
procured by the offender by means of the offence should not
also be taken as a finding under s. 12(1) of the1914-
Ordinance. The result of the two findings in our opinion is
exactly the same, the only difference being that under s. 10
of 1943-Ordinance, as amended in 1945, the court may do this
suo mote .while under s. 12 (1) of the 1944-Ordinance it has
to be done on the representation made by the prosecution.
The result however in either case is that a finding as to
the amount of money or the value of other property procured
by the offender by means of the offence is given. That if;
what both s. 10 of the 1943-Ordinance, as amended in 1945,
and s. 12(1) of the 1944-Ordinance require. It is true that
in this case there was no written application by the
prosecution under s. 12(1) of the 1914-Ordinance, but it may
very well be that the court may have been asked orally to
determine the amount of money or value of property procured
by the offence. In any case so long as a finding is there
as to the amount of money or value of other property found
to have been procured by means of the offence that will
satisfy the requirement of s. (12)(1) of the 1944-Ordinance.
We are therefore of opinion that the view taken by
Bhattacharya J. is the correct view and the view taken by
Mitter J. is not correct.
Further what a. 13(3) of the 1944-Ordinance which provides
for forfeiture requires is that there should be in the final
judgment of the criminal court a finding as to the amount of
money or value of property in pursuance of s. 12. As soon
as that finding is there, the District Judge would know the
amount he is to forfeit, and the purpose of the
126
finding is that if the District Judge is asked to make a
forfeiture under s. 13 (3) he should know exactly the amount
which he is require to forfeit. So long therefore as the
criminal court trying an offender has given a finding as the
amount of money or value of other property procured by means
of the offence in the judgment that in our opinion is
sufficient compliance with S. (21) of the 1944-Ordinance and
the requirement therein that it should be on the
representation of the prosecution is a mere formality.
Obviously, even a determination under s. 10 of the 1943-
Ordinance as amended in 1945 of the amount procured by the
offence must be at the instance of the prosecution, for it
is the prosecution which will provide the material for that
determination which in turn will be the basis on which the
fine will be determined by the court under s. 10. The view
taken therefore by Mitter J. that there must be a specific
finding in terms to the effect that on the representation of
the prosecution the court finds under s. 12(1) that such and
such amount was procured by means of the offence is not
correct. In our opinion, there was a finding in this case
by the criminal court about the amount of money procured by
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the respondent by means of the offence, namely at least Rs.
30 lacs. Therefore the District Judge would have
jurisdiction on the basis of the finding to proceed to
forfeit the property attached up to that value.
We are further of opinion that the view taken by Mitter J.
that the property attached under s. 3 of the 1944 Ordinance
has to be valued by the criminal court is obviously
incorrect and is not born out by the terms of s. 12(1). We
have pointed out that under s-3 an application can be made
for attaching two kinds of property, namely, (i) the money
or other property procured by means of the offence; and (ii)
property other than the above. What s. 12(1) requires is
that where money has
127
been procured by the offence, the Criminal Court shall
determine the amount of that money. Where instead of money
some other property, say, for example, diamonds or rubies,
have been procured by means of the offence, the Criminal
court shall value that other property. But under s. 12(1)
only the amount of money procured by means of the offence or
the value of the property procured by means of the offence
has to be determined by the criminal court. Section 12 has
nothing to do with the determination of the value of the
property other than that procured by the offence and the
criminal court has not to evaluate this other property,
which comes under the second head under S. 3 mentioned
above. We have already pointed out that in this case, the
property procured by the offence was only money and
therefore all that the criminal court. had to do was to
declare the amount of money procured by the offence and that
it has done by finding, that it was ’at least Rs. 30 lacs.
Property attached under s. 3 in this case was not the
property procured by the commission of the offence. The two
applications under s. 3 themselves show that the respondent
had procured money by means of the offence and had later
converted that Money into this property. The property
attached in this case therefore was not property which bad
been procured by the commission of the offence and there was
therefore no.question of the valuation of the property
attached under s. 3 by the criminal court under s. 12. With
respect, the error in which Mitter J. seems to have fallen
is to confuse the property which was procured by the
commission of the offence with the other property which was
not procured by the commission of the offence and which
could also be attached under s. 3. This other property has
Dot to be valued by the criminal court it will be valued by
the District Judge when he comes to consider the question of
forfeiture under s. 13(3) and this is exactly what the
District Judge
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has ordered in this case. We must therefore hold that the
District Judge had jurisdiction to order forfeiture out of
the property attached to the extent of Rs. 30 lacs, as that
was amount found by the criminal court to have been procured
by the commission of the offence, and in order to effect
forfeiture he would naturally have jurisdiction to have the
property attached valued in order’ to enable him to forfeit
it under s. 19(3) to the extent of the amount procured by
means of the offence.
This brings us to the contention which found favour with
Bhattacharya J., namely, that the provision of s. 13(3) is a
punishment and that as the 1944-Ordinance was not in force
at the time when the offence was committed s. 13(3) could
not be applied to the respondent inasmuch as Art. 20(1) lays
down that no person shall be subjected to a penalty greater
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than that which might have been inflicted under the law in
force at the time of the commission of the offence. Two
arguments have been urged on behalf of the appellant in this
connection. In the first place, it is urged that the
respondent remained in office till August 25, 1944 while the
Ordinance came into force on August 23, 1944 and therefore
the conspiracy by means of which the money was procured
continued till after the Ordinance had come into force and
therefore Art.20(1) can have no application, for it cannot
be said that the respondent was being subjected to a penalty
greater than that which might have been inflicted under the
law in force at the time of the commission of the offence.
In the second place, it is urged that the forfeiture
provided by s. 13(3) is not a penalty at all within the
meaning of Art. 2(1), but is merely a method of recovering
money ’belonging to the Government which had been embazzled.
It is urged that the Government could file a suit to recover
the money embezzled and s. 13(3) only provides a Speedier
remedy for that purpose and
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the forfeiture provided therein is not a penalty within the
meaning of Art. 20(1).
We do not think it necessary for the purpose of this appeal
to decide whether the facts that the respondent continued in
office till August 25, 1944 and the Ordinance came into
force on August 23; 1944, would take the case out of the
ambit of Art. 20(1), for we have come to the conclusion that
the forfeiture provided under a. 13(3) is not a penalty at
all within the meaning of Art. 20(1) and the second argument
urged on behalf of the appellant must prevail. Now the
1944-Ordinance is an independent Ordinance and is not an
amendment to the 1943-Ordinance, It is true that the
Ordinance is termed "The Criminal Law Amendment ordinance
but its provisions will show that it deals mainly with
recovery of money or property belonging to Government
procured by the offender by means of the offence. An
analysis of provisions of the 1944 Ordinance will show this
clearly. Section 3 provides for application for attachment
of property; s. 4 provides for an ad interim attachment; s.
5 provides for investigation of objections to attachment; s.
6 provides for attachment of property of mala fide
transferees; s. 7 provides for execution of orders of
attachment and s. 8 for security in lieu of attachment; a. 9
for administration of attached property and a. 10 for the
duration of attachment. Section 11 provides for appeals.
Then come ss. 12 and 13. Lastly there are s. 14 which bars
certain proceedings and s. 15 which protects certain actions
taken in pursuance of the Ordinance. It will therefore be
clear that the Ordinance provides for no punishment or
penalty; all that it provides is attachment of the money or
property procured by the offence or any other property of
the offender if the above property is not available and the
purpose of the attachment is to prevent the disposal or
concealment of such
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property. Section 13(3) with which we are particularly
concerned lays down that the District Judge shall order that
from the property of the convicted person attached under
this Ordinance or out of the security given in lieu of such
attachment, there shall be forfeited to His Majesty such
amount or value as is found in the final judgment or order
of the criminal courts in pursuance of a. 12 to have been
procured by the convicted person by means of the offence,
together with the costs of attachment as determined by the
District Judge. It is further provided, that where the
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final judgment or order of the criminal court has imposed or
upheld a sentence of fine on the said person, the District
Judge may order without prejudice to any other mode of reco-
very, that the said fine shall be recovered from the residue
of the said attached property or of the security given in
lieu of attachment. The forfeiture by the District Judge s.
13 (3) cannot in our opinion be equated to forfeiture of
property which is provided in s. 53 of the Indian Penal
Code. The forfeiture provided in s. 53 is undoubtedly a
penalty or punishment within the meaning of Art. 20(1); but
that order of forfeiture has to be passed by the court
trying the offence, where there is a provision for
forfeiture in the section concerned in the Indian Penal
Code. There is nothing however in the 1944. Ordinance to
show that it provides for any kind of punishment for any
offence. Further it is clear that the Court of District
Judge which is a principal court of civil jurisdiction can
have no jurisdiction to try an offence under the Indian
Penal Code. The order of forfeiture therefore by the
District Judge under s. 13(3) cannot be equated to the
infliction of a penalty within the meaning of Art. 20(1).
Article 20(1) deals with conviction of persons for offences
and for subjection of them to penalties. It provides
firstly that "no person shall be convicted of any offence
except for violation of a law in force at the
131
time of the commission of the act charged as an offence".
Secondly, it provides that no person shall be "subjected to
a penalty greater than that which might have been inflicted
under the law in force at the time of the commission of the
offence". Clearly, therefore Art. 20 is dealing with
punishment for offences and provides two safeguards, namely,
(1) that no one shall be punished for an act which was not
an offence under the law in force when it was committed, and
(ii) that no one shall be subjected to a greater penalty for
an offence than what was provided under the law in force
when the offence was committed. The provision for
forfeiture under s. 13(3) has nothing to do with the
infliction of any penalty on any person for an offence. If
the forfeiture provided in s. 13(3) were really a penalty on
a convicted person for commission of an offence we should
have found it provided in the 1943-Ordinance and that
penalty of forfeiture would have been inflicted by the
criminal court trying the offender.
The argument for the respondent is apparently based on the
use of the word "forfeited" in s. 13(3) and also on the use
of the word "forfeiture"’ in s. 53 of the Indian Penal Code.
There is no doubt that forfeiture in s. 53 of the Indian
Penal Code is a penalty but when s. 13(3) speaks of forfei-
ting to His Majesty the amount of money or value the other
property procured by the accused by means of the offence, it
in effect provides for recovery by the Government of the
property belonging to it, which the accused might have
procured by embezzlement etc. The mere use of the word
"’forfeited" would not necessarily make it a penalty. The
word ,’forfeiture’ has been used in other laws without
importing the idea of penalty or punishment within the
meaning of Art. 20(1). Reference in this connection may be
made to s. III (g) of the Transfer of Property Act (No. 4 of
1882) which talks of
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determination of a lease by forfeiture. We are therefore of
opinion that forfeiture provided in, a. 13(3) in case of
offences which involve the embezzlement etc. of government
money or property is really a speedier method of realising
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Government money or property as compared to a suit which it
is not disputed the Government could bring for realising the
money or property and is not punishment or penalty within
the meaning of Art. 20(1). Such a suit could ordinarily be
brought without in any way affecting the right to realise
the fine that may have been imposed by a criminal court in
connection with the offence.
We may in this connection refer to Rao Shiv Bahadur Singh v.
The State of Vindhya Pradesh (1) where Art. 20(1) came to be
considered. In that case it was held that (,the prohibition
contained in Art. 20 of the Constitution against convictions
and subjections to penalty under ex post facto laws is not
confined in its operation to post-Constitution laws but
applies also to ex post facto laws passed before the
Constitution in their application to pending proceedings."
This Court further held that Art. 20 prohibits only
conviction or sentence under an ex post facto law, and not
the trial thereof. Such trial under a procedure different
from what obtained at the time of the offence or by a court,
different from that which had competence at that time can-
not ipso facto be held to be unconstitutional. Therefore,
this case shows that it is only conviction and punishment as
defined in s. 53 of the Indian Penal Code which are included
within Art. 20(1) and a conviction under an ex post facto
law or a punishment under an ex post facto law would be hit
by Art. 20(1); but the provisions of s. 13(3) with which we
are concerned in the present appeal have nothing to do with
conviction or punishment and
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1188.
133
therefore Art. 20(1) in our opinion can have no application
to the orders passed under s. 13 (3).
Learned counsel for the respondent however drew our
attention to the Criminal Law (1943 Amendment) Amending
Ordinance, No. 7 of 1946, by which s. 10 of the 1943-
Ordinance was further amended. It is not disputed that the
Ordinance of 1946 by which s. 10 was further amended had no
application to the trial of the respondent. This will clear
from the judgment of the High Court in appeal filed by the
respondent from his conviction. In that appeal the High
Court held that s. 10, as amended by the 1946-Ordinance,
could not apply to the case, which was pending before the
tribunal on the date when the 1946-Ordinance became law.
Therefore, the respondent cannot take advantage of the
provisions of s. 10, as amended by the 1946 Ordinance and
his case must be governed by s. 10 as it was after the
amendment of 1945. It is clear that though s. 10 of the
1943-ordinance, as amended in 1945, provided for a minimum
fine, it still left it open to the criminal court to pass
any fine above the minimum. Further the fine as passed
under s.10, as it was in 1945, was one fine and not divided
into two parts as was the case under the Ordinance of 1946.
Again, as the High Court pointed out in the appeal of the
respondent from his conviction, "the liability to fine in
addition to a sentence of imprisonment for an offence of
criminal breach of trust by a public servant, or for an
offence of criminal conspiracy to commit an offence under
section 409 of the Indian Penal Code was thus not created
for the first time by section 10 of the Ordinance. The
liability was already there under the Indian Penal Code.
But while under the Penal Code, it was discretionary for the
court to pass a sentence of fine, in addition to a term of
imprisonment, section 10 of the Ordinance (the 1943-Ordinan-
ce) made it compulsory for the court to pass a
134
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sentence of fine also-" and fixed the minimum. But it was
always open to a Court of Session under the Penal Code to
award any amount of fine and there was no statutory upper
limit to such imposition except that it shall not be
excessive (see a. 63 of the Indian Penal Code).
Therefore, the fine of
Rs. 45 lacs imposed in this case has nothing to do with the
amount to be forfeited under s. 13(3) and simply because
that fine was imposed after taking into account the amount
embezzled would make no difference so far as s. 13(3) is
concerned. That section clearly contemplates that the
District Judge will first forfeit the Attached properties
upto the amount of money determined under s. 12 and
thereafter if any further properties are left the fine
imposed by the criminal court may be realised from those
properties. The fact that the fine imposed by the criminal
court may have taken into account under s. 10 of the 1943-
Ordinance the amount of money procured by means of the
offence makes no difference to the interpretation of s.
13(3). Therefore, the District Judge was right in holding
that out of the properties attached he had first to forfeit
properties up to the value of Rs. 30 lacs under s. 13(3) and
thereafter if any properties are left, it will be open to
Government to realise the fine of Rs. 45 lacs from such
properties. The respondent therefore cannot take advantage
of the amendment of a. 10 of the 1943-Ordinance by the 1946-
Ordinance, and on the law as it stood in 1945 and as
applicable to the respondent, the order of the District
judge is in our opinion correct.
We therefore allow the appeal and setting aside the order of
the High court restore the order of the District Judge who
will now take further steps in accordance with law.
Appeal allowed,
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