Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JANARDAN REDDY AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF HYDERABAD AND OTHERS.KULLURI YELLADU AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/03/1951
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1951 AIR 217 1951 SCR 344
CITATOR INFO :
R 1955 SC 633 (25)
R 1957 SC 540 (53)
E&D 1958 SC 86 (8,10,16)
R 1960 SC1186 (10)
RF 1961 SC1457 (13)
R 1962 SC1737 (14)
RF 1963 SC1120 (5)
D 1968 SC1313 (5)
RF 1979 SC 478 (63)
RF 1983 SC 624 (8)
R 1990 SC 485 (3)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 32--Special Tribunals Regu-
lation (Hyderabad), ss. 2, 7__Conviction and death sentence;
by Special Tribunal--Confirmation by High Court before 26th
January, 1950 Application under Art. 32 for writs of prohi-
bition, certiorari and habeas
corpus--Maintainability--Detention under conviction by
criminal court--Application for habeas corpus--Jurisdiction
of convicting court, whether can be gone into--Effect of
confirmation of conviction on appeal--Misjoinder of
charges--Omission to provide counsel for accused---Validity
of conviction--Interference under Art. 32.
HEADNOTE:
There is a basic difference between want of jurisdiction
and an illegal or irregular exercise of jurisdiction, and
mere noncompliance with rules of procedure (e.g., misjoinder
of charges) cannot be made a ground for granting a writ
under Art. 32 of the Constitution. The defect, if any, can,
according to the procedure established by law, be corrected
only by a court of appeal or revision, and if the appellate
court which was competent to deal with the matter has con-
sidered the matter and pronounced its judgment, it cannot be
reopened in a proceeding under Art. 32 of the Constitution.
Where, some time after the pronouncement of a sentence
of death by hanging by a Special Tribunal of the Hyderabad
State and pending confirmation of the sentence by the High
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Court of Hyderabad, a Regulation was passed to the effect
that notwithstanding anything contained in any law for the
time being in force any sentence of death passed by a Spe-
cial Tribunal shall. be carried into execution by hanging:
Held, that the Regulation
345
must be taken to have retrospective effect, as the mode of
execution of a sentence cannot be regarded as a matter of
substantive law, and the sentence for hanging cannot be held
to be illegal even assuming that under the law which was in
force in Hyderabad at the time the sentence was passed by
the Special Tribunal, sentences to death could be carried
out only by decapitation. In any event, as the High Court
which upheld the conviction had the power to impose the
sentence of death by hanging under the Regulation, no relief
could be granted to the accused under Art. 32 of the Consti-
tution.
Section 7(2) of the Special Tribunals Regulation passed
by the Military Governor of Hyderabad covered all those
cases where manzuri and tashih were contemplated under the
old law and sentences of death passed by a Special Tribunal
could therefore be executed without the assent or approval
of H.E.H. the Nizam.
The result of s. 271 of the Hyderabad Criminal Procedure
Code, (which corresponds to s.340 of the Indian Criminal
Procedure Code) read along with the Rules and Circular
Orders issued by the Hyderabad High Court is: (i) that it
cannot be laid’ down as a rule of law that in every capital
sentence where the accused is unrepresented the trial should
be held to be vitiated;and (ii) that a court of appeal or
revision is not powerless to interfere if it is found that
the accused was so handicapped for want of legal aid that
the proceeding against him may be said to amount to negation
of a fair trial.
The writs referred to in Art. 32 must obviously be
correlated to one or more of the fundamental rights con-
ferred by Part III of the Constitution and can be made only
for the enforcement of such rights.
The petitioners who were convicted by a Special Tribunal
of Hyderabad of murder and other offences and sentenced to
death by hanging and whose convictions and sentences had
been confirmed by the Hyderabad High Court before the 26th
January, 1950, applied to the Supreme Court under Art. 32 of
the new Constitution for the following reliefs: (i) a writ
in the nature of certiorari calling upon the Government of
Hyderabad and the Special Judge to produce the records of
the case and show cause why the convictions and sentences
should not be quashed, (ii) for a writ of prohibition
directing the Government and Special Judge not to execute
the petitioners, and (ill) for a writ of habeas corpus:
Held, (i)that the writs of certiorari and prohibition
could not be granted as at the date when the High Court
dealt with the case and confirmed the conviction and sen-
tences of the petitioners, the Supreme Court was not in
existence and the Hyderabad Court could not by any stretch
of reasoning be said to have been subordinate to the Supreme
Court:
45
346
(ii) the writ of habeas corpus could not be granted
inasmuch as a return that the person is in detention in
execution of a sentence on indictment on a criminal charge
is a sufficient answer to an application for such a writ;
(iii) assuming that it is open even in such cases to
investigate the jurisdiction of the court which convicted
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the petitioners, the mere fact that the trial court had
acted without jurisdiction would not justify interference,
if the conviction and sentence had been upheld on appeal by
a court of competent jurisdiction; for, the appellate court
in a case which properly comes before it on appeal, is fully
competent to decide whether the trial was with or without
jurisdiction and it has jurisdiction to decide the matter
rightly as well as wrongly; and as the High Court at Hydera-
bad had jurisdiction to hear and decide the appeal, the
detention of the petitioners could not be held to be in-
valid;
(iv) as the judgment of the High Court was pronounced
before the 26th January, 1950, and it had acquired a finali-
ty in the fullest sense of the term before that date, the
Supreme Court had no power to re-open that judgment under
the provisions of the new Constitution;
(v) the fact that the petitioners had lost their right
of appeal to the Judicial Committee of Hyderabad by a sudden
change in the law and by the delay on the part of the High
Court in the disposal of their application for leave to
appeal to the said Committee was a matter for the executive
authorities to consider; it could not widen the scope of the
existing remedial laws beyond legitimate bounds.
Quaere: Whether an application under Art. 32 is main-
tainable after a similar application under Art. 226 has been
dismissed by the High Court.
In re Authers [(1889) 22 Q.B.D. 345], In re Bailey (3 E.
JUDGMENT:
re Newton (139 E.R. 692), In re Bonomally Gupta (44 Cal.
723), Greene v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs ([1942]
A.C. 284), Ex parte Lees [(1868) E.B. & E. 828, R. v. Stud-
dis [(1801)1 East 306], Carus Wilson’s case [(1845) 7 Q.B.
984] referred to.
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION :These were two sets of petitions
by three groups of persons, one under Art. 32 of the Consti-
tution (Petitions Nos. 12, 13 and 14, of 1951) and the other
under Art. 136(1) of the Constitution (Criminal Miscellane-
ous Petitions Nos. 14, 15 and 16) against the judgment and
order dated 19th December, 1950, of the High Court of Judi-
cature at Hyderabad (M. Khaliluzzaman Siddiqi J.) in
Miscel-. laneous Petitions Nos. 2297, 2298 and 2299 of 1950.
The facts are set out in detail in the judgment.
347
D.N. Pritt (Danial Latifi and Gopal Singh, with him) for
the petitioners.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, and Rajaram
Aiyar, Advocate-General of Hyderabad, (G .N. Joshi, with
them) for the respondents.
1951. March 16. The judgment of the Court was delivered
by
FAZL ALI J.--These are six petitions which have been
presented to this Court on behalf of three groups of persons
in the following circumstances.
On the 30th October, 1948, the Military Governor of
Hyderabad by virtue of the powers delegated to him by
H.E.H. the Nizam enacted the Special Tribunals Regulation
(No. 5 of 1358 F), which was amended by several later Regu-
lations issued on the 22nd May, 1949, 10th July, 1949, 23rd
July and 30th October, 1949. The Regulation provided among
other things that the Military Governor may constitute a
Special Tribunal or Tribunals, each consisting of three
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members appointed by him, and that he may by general or
special order direct that these Tribunals shall try any
offence, whether committed before or after the commencement
of the Regulation, or any class of offences. Section 8 of
the Regulation empowered the Military Governor to direct, by
order, that in such circumstances and under such conditions,
if any, as may be specified in the direction, any power or
duty conferred or imposed upon him by the Regulation may be
exercised or discharged by any other authority. In accord-
ance with the Regulation, certain Tribunals were constitut-
ed, and one of the Tribunals--Tribunal A for Nalgonda dis-
trict--proceeded to try certain cases made over to it by the
Civil Administrator of Nalgonda under the powers vested in
him by the Military Governor. Among the cases tried by this
Tribunal were also three cases in which the petitioners were
concerned, these being registered as Criminal Cases Nos. 14,
17 and 18 of 1949. These cases were based on three charge
sheets submitted by one Mr. Hanumantha
348
Naidu, a senior police officer of Nalgonda district, one of
which was No. 14 dated the 7th April, 1949, and’ the other
two were Nos. 14 and 15 dated the 20th July, 1949. In these
charge sheets, the accused were generally referred to as
"Communists wedded to the policy of overthrowing the Govern-
ment by violence and setting up in its place Communist Raj,"
and the specific cases made out against them were briefly as
follows. In the first case (Criminal Case No. 14 of 1949),
the chargesheet stated that the accused went to a certain
village in Nalgonda district on 21st September, 1948 "in
khaki uniform and holding unnotified firearms," caught
hold of four persons as they had not paid the full subscrip-
tion demanded of them, decoyed them to the outskirts of the
village and then "killed them by cutting their throats." In
the second case (Criminal Case No. 17), it was stated that
on the 6th April, 1949, at about 9 A.M. two of the accused
came to a certain village and began to fire their guns, but
when "the public" approached them asking them to surrender
they ran away and joined the other persons accused in the
case. Later on, all the accused "marched on the villagers"
and opened fire at them indiscriminately with the result
that one of them received an injury in his right high which
subsequently proved fatal, and another received a minor
injury on his left hand. The version given at the trial in
this case was slightly different and shows that the two
accused who had visited the village were chased by 50 or 100
persons to a place called Madireddychelka where the other
accused joined them, and after parleying with the chasers,
accused No. 4 fired and hit one of the villagers on the
thigh and the latter died. Thereupon the accused chased the
remaining villagers, firing their guns, and one of the
bullets grazed the middle finger of one of the villagers and
caused a slight injury to it. In the third case (Criminal
Case No. 18), the facts were stated to be these:--On the
15th May, at about midnight, the accused visited Kasthala
village, carrying firearms and dressed in khaki uniform.
They got upon the terrace of one Kankayya where one Natala
Rama Reddy was
349
sleeping, caught hold of him and took him forcibly to the
outskirt’s of the village in spite of the protests of a
number of villagers who had followed, and "killed him by
firing gunshots at him.
Upon these facts, the trial of the petitioners proceed-
ed, and they were ultimately convicted of murder and sen-
tenced to death, and also convicted of certain other of-
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fences including the offence of carrying firearms without
licences and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment.
After their conviction, the petitioners appealed to the
Hyderabad High Court, but their convictions and sentences
were confirmed. Thereafter, they tried to obtain the leave
of the High Court for appealing to the Judicial Committee of
Hyderabad, but, while their applications were still pending,
the Constitution of India came into force and since the
Judicial Committee ceased to function under the new Consti-
tution they amended their original application by asking for
leave to appeal to this Court under article 134 (c) of the
Constitution. This application being unsuccessful, they
applied to this Court for special leave to appeal, but that
application was dismissed on the ground that this Court had
no jurisdiction under article 136 of the Constitution to
hear an appeal from a judgment delivered by the High
Court at Hyderabad before the 26th January, 1950, since
that Court was not within the territory of India..
The petitioners then made applications to the High Court
under article 226 of the Constitution, and those applica-
tions having been rejected, they filed two sets of peti-
tions in this Court, one under article 32 of the Constitu-
tion, and the other for special leave to appeal against the
order of the High Court refusing to grant them relief under
article 226.
The main points urged by Mr. Pritt, who appeared before
us on behalf of the petitioners, were as follows:-
(1) The trial of the petitioners by the Special Tribu-
nal was without jurisdiction.
(2) In Criminal Cases Nos. 17 and 18 of 1949, there was
no fair trial, inasmuch as the persons accused in
* Vide [1950] S.C.R. 940.
350
those eases were not afforded any opportunity to instruct
counsel and they had remained undefended throughout the
trial.
(3) The trials in question were illegal by reason of
misjoinder of charges.
(4) At the time of the passing of the sentence, the
sentence of death could be lawfully executed by decapitation
only and not by hanging, and hence the sentence of death by
hanging passed upon the accused in the first case was ille-
gal.
(5) The sentence of death could not be executed without
the assent or the lapproval of H.E.H. the Nizam which had
not yet been obtained.
The last three points seem to us to have very little
substance and may be shortly disposed of.
It appears that in all the three cases, besides being
charged with murder, rioting and certain other cognate
offences, which on the face of the record appear to have
been committed in the course of the same transaction, the
petitioners were also charged with carrying unlicensed
firearms. It was contended on behalf of the petitioners that
the offence of carrying unlicensed firearms was wholly
unconnected with the other offences and could not be said to
have been committed in the course of the same transaction.
It seems that this very point was raised in the High Court,
but it was negatived, firstly on the ground that there was
no misjoinder of charges and no violation of the provisions
of the Criminal Procedure Code, and secondly, on the ground
that no prejudice had been caused by the so-called misjoin-
der. The entire argument on behalf of the petitioners was
based on the case of Subramania lyer v. King Emperor (1).
That case had somewhat peculiar features, because the ac-
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cused was tried for no less than 41 separate offences in
contravention of the provisions of section 234 of the Crimi-
nal Procedure Code, and in these circumstances it was ob-
served by the Privy Council that the mischief sought to be
avoided by the section having been
(1) L.R. 28 I.A. 267.
351
committed, "the effect of the multitude of charges before
the jury had not been averted by dissecting the verdict
afterwards and appropriating the finding of guilt only to
such parts of the written accusation as ought to have been
submitted to the jury." The case has been discussed, ex-
plained and distinguished in a number of cases, and it must
be read with the subsequent decisions of the Privy Council
in Abdul Rahman v. King Emperor (1) and in Babu Lal v.
Emperor(2) which have been understood by some of the Indian
courts to have greatly modified and restricted the very
broad rule which at one time there was a tendency to deduce
from certain general observations made by the Privy Council.
It may be that on a more appropriate occasion we may have to
review the case law on the subject and.lay down the true
scope of the pronouncements made by the Privy Council in the
cases referred to above and the effect which in law the
misjoinder of charges would have upon the trial. But, for
the purpose of the present case, it is sufficient to point
out that even if we assume that there was some defect in the
procedure followed at the trial, it does not follow that the
trial court acted without jurisdiction. There is a basic
difference between want of jurisdiction and an illegal or
irregular exercise of jurisdiction, and our attention has
not been drawn to any authority in which mere non-compliance
with the rules of procedure has been made a ground for
granting one of the writs prayed for. In either case, the
defect, if any, can according to the procedure established
by law be corrected only by a court of appeal or revision.
Here, the appellate court which was competent to deal with
the matter has pronounced its judgment against the peti-
tioners, and the matter having been finally decided is not
one to be reopened in a proceeding under article 32 of the
Constitution.
The fourth point raised on behalf of the petitioners is
not only a highly technical one but is also entirely devoid
of merit. A reference to the Hyderabad Penal Code shows
that in section 243, which deals with the
(1) L.R. 54, I.A. 96. (2) A.I.R. 1930 P. c. 130.
352
offence of murder, all that is stated is that death is one
of the penakties. That section does not state how the
sentence of death is to be executed. When we turn to the
Hyderabad Criminal Procedure Code, we find that section 311,
which is the relevant section, runs as follows:-
" When an order of death sentence or any other sentence
has been submitted to the High Court for ratification
(tashih) the Sessions Court shall, on receiving the order
of ratification or other order of the High Court thereon,
cause such order to be carried into effect by issuing a
warrant or taking such other steps as may be necessary or
expedient ."
In this section also, no mention is made as to how the
sentence of death is to be executed, but in Schedule IV of
the Code, in the form prescribed for the warrant of execu-
tion of a death sentence (Form No. 29)the concluding sen-
tence runs as follows:--
" ...... you shall hand over the accused ...... to the
executioner so that the latter may separate the head from
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the body of the said prisoner in such a way that his life
may be extinct and that the execution of this order may be
reported to the High Court."
In the first case (Criminal Case No. 14 of 1949), the
sentence was" death by hanging," but in the other two cases
the accused were simply sentenced to death, without any
indication as to how the sentence was to be executed. It has
been argued that in view of the provisions of the Hyderabad
Criminal Procedure Code, the sentence of death’ by hanging
was not strictly appropriate. But, however that may be, we
find that on the 30th October, 1949, i.e., sometime after
the pronouncement of the sentences by the Special Tribunal
and before they were confirmed by the High Court, the Spe-
cial Tribunals Regulation was amended and a specific provi-
sion was made to the following effect :--
"2-B. Notwithstanding anything contained in any law for
the time being in force-
(i) any sentence of death passed by a Special Tribunal
shall be carried into execution by causing
353
the person sentenced to be hanged by the neck until he is
dead,
(ii) warrants of commitments under sentence of death.
warrants of execution of a sentence of death and any other
instruments issued by a Special Tribunal ....... shall be
issued in such form as the Special Tribunal thinks fit."
Apparently. these provisions applied to all sentences
which had remained unexecuted or were to be executed at the
date of the amending Regulation, and therefore they should
govern the case of the petitioners also. In our opinion,
they must be taken to have retrospective effect, because the
mode of the execution of a sentence can hardly be regarded
as a matter of substantive law or something which would
affect any substantive rights. In any event, the High
Court, which upheld the conviction, had the power to inflict
the sentence of death by hanging under the amended Regula-
tion, and therefore this point does not properly arise in a
matter involving the question whether any relief under
article 32 of the Constitution should be granted.
The fifth point also does not appear to us to have much
merit. The determination of this point is said to rest upon
the proper interpretation of the word "manzuri," which is
used in sections 20,302, 307 and 339 of the Hyderabad Crimi-
nal Procedure Code. Section 20, which is the most impor-
tant section, runs as follows :--
"Every Sessions Judge may pass any sentence authorised
by law but such sentence shall not be carried into effect
until
(1) in the case of a sentence of ten years imprisonment
or more the appropriate Bench of the High Court,
in the case of life imprisonment the Government,
and
(3) in the case of death sentence H.E.H. the Nizam
shall have assented thereto (given manzuri),"
354
Section 302 (1) states that in certain cases, execution
of sentence shall be stayed until manzuri in accordance with
section 20 is given. Section 307 deals with cases where
the High Court affirms a death sentence or a sentence of
life imprisonment and provides that after such confirmation,
the opinion of the High Court together with the file Of the
case shall be forwarded for tashih (rectification or
ratification) to the Government within one week and the
sentence shall not be carried into effect until manzuri is
obtained as provided in section 20. Section 308 runs as
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follows:-
"When the High Court thus forwards any file for ratifi-
cation (tashih) H.E.H. the Nizam or the Government as the
case may be shall be empowered
(a) to uphold the sentence of the High Court,
(b) to substitute any other penalty for the same, (c)
to set the prisoner at liberty,
(d) to make any other appropriate order.
Section 309 provides that after the manzuri is obtained
in the manner already stated, the Registrar of the High
Court shall send a copy of the order to the Sessions Court
for carrying it into effect. It will be noticed that there
are two different words used in these sections, viz., man-
zuri and tashih. Manzuri literally means approval or ac-
ceptance, but, in the context in which it occurs, confirma-
tion would seem to convey adequately the sense underlying
it. Tashih means rectification or correction, and conveys
the sense that the superior authority named in section 308
may either uphold the sentence or revise it in the manner
stated therein.
Now, the important point to be considered is in what way
the provisions to which reference has been made, have been
affected by the Regulations issued by the ,Military Gover-
nor. A reference to these Regulations will show that in
section 7 of the original Regulation, the following words
have been substituted:-
"7. (2) ......... no sentence of a Special Tribunal
shall be subject to confirmation (tausiq is the vernacular
expression used here.)
355
(3) The Military Governor may on such conditions, if
any, as he thinks fit, suspend, remit, reduce, or alter the
nature of, any sentence passed by a Special Tribunal, or any
sentence substituted by the High Court on an appeal under
sub-section (2) for any sentence so passed."
It was contended by the learned Attorney-General that
these provisions cover all those cases where manzuri and
tashih were contemplated under the old law. On the other
hand, it was contended on behalf of the petitioners that
manzuri was a peculiarly apt expression when used with
reference to a ruler, and the primary sense conveyed by it
was that no sentence was a good sentence without the approv-
al or sanction of the monarch. A mere reference to section
20 will show that the word manzuri has not been used with
reference only to H.E.H. the Nizam, but it has also been
used with reference to the High Court and the Government,
and therefore it is difficult to hold that the word bears
the special meaning attributed to it on behalf of the peti-
tioners. In the context in which it is used, it has no
other meaning than the act of confirmation, and the new
word, tausiq, which has been used in the Regulation, and
which literally means confirmation, appears to convey the
same sense as the word manzuri. It was also contended on
behalf of the petitioners that the use of the word ’ hakim’
in connection with confirmation in one of the amending
Regulations could not have been intended to cover confirma-
tion by H.E.H. the Nizam. But since ’hakim’ literally means
a ruler or an authority, we are not inclined to attach much
importance to the distinction sought to be drawn between
hakim and ruler. It is quite plain that one of the objects
of the Regulations was to simplify procedure and expedite
trials, and the interpretation which is suggested by the
learned Attorney-General seems to be in conformity with
those objects.
Having dealt with these minor points, we shall now
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advert to the first and second points, which appear to us to
be the only serious points urged in this case. In urging the
second point, which arises only in Criminal
356
Cases Nos. 17 and 18 (covered by Petitions Nos. 13 and 14
under article 32), it is contended on behalf of the peti-
tioners that the whole trial in these cases was bad, because
the accused were denied the right of being defended by a
pleader. The petitions with which we are dealing, do not
recite any facts to support this point. There are however
the following allegations made in paragraphs 2 and 4 of the
affidavits filed on behalf of the petitioners :--
"2. All this time I was not allowed to communicate with
my relations and friends. Before I was brought before the
Special Tribunal on 3-8-49, during the trial or afterwards I
never saw any of my friends or relations, whether in the
lock-up, the Court or in the jail due to circumstances best
known to the police.
*
4. The Court never offered to facilitate my communica-
tion with my relations and friends or to adjourn the case or
to appoint counsel at State expense for my defence. In fact
they said they would not adjourn the case under any circum-
stances. Being ignorant I did not know that I had any right
to ask for any of these things."
In arguing this part of the case, Mr. Pritt relied on
certain American cases, especially on Powell v. Alabama(1),
in which the Supreme Court of America is reported to have
observed as follows :-
"In a capital case where the defendant is unable to
employ counsel, and is incapable of adequately making his
own defence because of ignorance, feeblemindedness, illit-
eracy or the like, it is the duty of the Court whether
requested or not, to assign a counsel for him as a necessary
requisite of due process of law."
That the assignment of a counsel in the circumstances
mentioned in the passage is highly desirable, cannot be
disputed. But the question raised before us is whether in
law non-assignment of a counsel would vitiate the triad. It
seems to us that in dealing with the point, we cannot rest
our judgment wholly on
(1) 287 U.S. 45.
357
American precedents, which are based on the doctrine of due
process of law, which is peculiar to the American Constitu-
tion, and also on certain specific provisions bearing on the
right of representation in a criminal proceeding. The
provision which is material to the contention raised before
us is section 271 of the Hyderabad Criminal Procedure Code
which corresponds to section 340 of the Indian Criminal
Procedure Code, which runs as follows :--
"Any person accused of an offence before a criminal
court, or against whom proceedings are instituted under
this Code in any such court, may of right be defended by a
pleader."
This provision must undoubtedly be construed liberally
in favour of the accused and must be read along with the
rules made by the High Courts and the circular orders issued
by them enjoining that where in capital cases the accused
has no means to defend himself, a counsel should be provided
to defend him. The proper view seems to us to be: (1) that
it cannot be laid down as a rule of law that in every capi-
tal case where the accused is unrepresented, the trial
should be held to be vitiated; and (2) that a court of
appeal or revision is not powerless to interfere, if it is
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found that the accused was so handicapped for want of legal
aid that the proceedings against him may be said to amount
to negation of a fair trial.
Passing now to the facts of the cases before us, it
appears that in Criminal Case No. 14, the accused persons
concerned were defended by a pleader, but those concerned in
Cases Nos. 17 and 18 were not presented at all by any law-
yer. Further a reference to the docket sheets in Case No.
17 shows that the accused in Case No. 17 were brought into
court on the 3rd August, 1949, and they were informed on
that day that the case would be heard on the 6th August,
1949, and that they must get ready with their defence law-
yers and witnesses on that date. On the 6th August, the
case was adjourned because none of the prosecution witness-
es was present and the trial
358
commenced on the 7th August, i.e., next day. In Case No. 18,
an order similar to the one passed in Case No. 17 was passed
on the 3rd August, but the hearing was fixed for the 7th
August. The docket sheets also show that the trial was
concluded in Case No. 17 on the 14th August and in Case No.
18 on the 13th August. As to the circumstances under which
the accused were not represented by a lawyer, we have been
referred to a counter-affidavit filed by Mr.’ Hanumantha
Naidu, who investigated the case, in which the following
statement occurs:-
"4. Regarding the means of accused Hanumanthu enquiries
were made by the Tribunal and it was found that he had
enough means to engage a lawyer. He owned lands and house
property. But he, however, did not want to engage a lawyer
and this is noted in docket sheet of Criminal Case No. 14/49
by the President of the Tribunal. Facilities were given to
the accused to engage lawyers for their defence. In cases in
which the accused had no means to engage pleaders for their
defence and applied to the Tribunal for appointment of
pleaders at Government cost, this was done. In some cases,
the accused declined to accept the pleaders appointed by the
Tribunal for their defence. Some engaged pleaders of their
choice at their cost.
5. The allegations in para 5 of the affidavit that
lawyers were afraid to come forward and defend the accused,
that they were afraid of incurring the displeasure of the
police and the Administration and that they were unwilling
to appear before the Special Tribunal, are not true. Law-
yers were willing to appear and defend the accused if they
were engaged, and in Criminal Case No. 14/49, Ramireddy,
Pleader, appeared for A-4, A-7 and A-8 and conducted their
defence. Mr. Ramireddy also offered to defend the other
accused, but they declined to have him and stated that they
did not want any lawyer to defend them. In Nalgonda, there
are about 40 practising pleaders out of whom about half a
dozen are B.A. LL.B.s well conversant with English and able
to conduct cases in English."
359
It was contended on behalf of the petitioners that this
affidavit concerns the petitioners in Case No. 14 of 1949
only, and this contention does receive some apparent support
from the fact that in the earlier part of paragraph 4 refer-
ence is made to the means of one of the accused in Case No.
14, and there is also a direct reference to that case later.
But, on a careful reading of the affidavit as a whole, it
seems to us that the affidavit was intended to cover the
allegations of the petitioners in all the three cases. We
also find that the point raised before us was also urged
before the High Court when the petitioners applied for leave
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to appeal against their conviction, and it was dealt with
somewhat elaborately by two learned Judges in separate
judgments, and they have expressed the view that the conten-
tion that the Tribunal did not give the accused an adequate
opportunity to engage lawyers is not well-founded. Sripat
Rao J., who delivered the leading judgment, after dealing
with the various facts, observed as follows:--
"It was not contended before us in appeal that they were
not afforded such an opportunity by the Special Tribunal. In
fact, in Appeal No. 1385 of 1338 F. proceedings dated 29-2-
58 F., show that the High Court also wanted them to be
represented by lawyers for which time was allowed, but on
the next hearing they stated that they do not wish to engage
any lawyer on their behalf and that the High Court need not
engage any lawyer for them. This shows that the accused for
reasons best known to themselves did not avail of the oppor-
tunity of engaging lawyers. This was also the case regarding
appeals Nos. 1379 to 1384 of 1358 F., in which High Court’s
proceedings dated 29-2-59 F. show that the accused neither
wanted to engage any lawyer on their behalf nor did they
wish -the High Court should engage any one for them. In view
of this, the plea that opportunity was not given to the
accused to engage lawyers and therefore the trial was viti-
ated in our opinion fails,"
It appears to us on the materials before us that we
cannot altogether rule out the suggestion of the High
360
Court that the curious attitude adopted by the accused,to
whatever cause it may have been due, to some extent accounts
for their not being represented by a lawyer. In the course
of the arguments, our attention was drawn to the fact that
some of the relations of the accused in the first case (Case
No. 14)were present at the trial, and some of the accused in
that case were in fact defended by a pleader, and it was
contended that this fact lent support to the conclusion
expressed by the High Court, because if the accused in the
first case were not denied access to their relations and
lawyers, there was no reason why the accused in the other-
cases should have been denied such access. Therefore, in the
state of evidence before us, the position is hardly clear
enough to justify the conclusion which the petitioners ask
us to draw in these petitions. But we must state that
throughout the arguments on this point, we could not help
feeling that the Special Tribunal should have taken some
positive steps to assign a lawyer to aid the accused in
their defence.
We will now deal with the first point which relates to the
jurisdiction of the Special Tribunal by which the accused
have been tried and convicted. The general ground urged to
make good this point is that the order made by the Civil
Administrator purporting to confer jurisdiction on the
Special Tribunal to try the petitioners did not indicate
with sufficient certainty that the petitioners were the
persons whose cases were to be tried by that Tribunal,
and hence there was no proper order to enable the
Tribunal to take cognizance of the petitioners’ cases. It
was contended that under the ordinary law, the cases of the
petitioners would have been placed in the first instance
before a Magistrate for holding an enquiry before commitment
and thereafter they would have been tried by a Sessions
Judge. This procedure, it is argued, could have been dis-
pensed with only if a proper order had been made under the
Regulation by the Civil Administrator, and, in the absence
of such an order, the trial was null and void. This point
was also raised by the petitioners in their application to
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the High Court for leave to
361
appeal to this Court, and the High Court in negativing it
relied on the orders made by the Civil Administrator in two
letters produced before it, viz., (1) letter No. 3176/49-ST,
dated 7th April, 1949, by which criminal cases covered by
charge sheets Nos. 1 to 14 were ordered to be tried by the
Special Tribunal at Nalgon- ’ da; and (2) letter No.
4234/49-ST, dated 23rd July, 1949, by which cases covered by
charge sheets Nos. 15 to 40 were made over to the same
Tribunal for trial. The statement made in the judgment of
the High Court is confirmed by an affidavit filed before us
on behalf of the respondents. It was contended on behalf of
the petitioners that a mere reference to the number of the
charge sheet is too vague a description to satisfy the
requirements of law and that the Civil Administrator in
making over the cases should have stated the names of the
accused and other necessary particulars. We think however
that the reference to the charge sheet numbers was in the
circumstances of the case sufficient to particularize the
cases which were being made over to the Special Tribunal,
especially as the charge sheets contained the names of the
accused as well as other details necessary to identify the
cases made over to the Tribunal. The general argument
therefore necessarily fails. But, on a careful scrutiny of
the record as it stands before us, we are unable to find any
specific order of the Civil Administrator making over the
case covered by the charge sheet No. 14 dated the 20th July,
1949, to the Tribunal. It will be recalled that there were
two charge sheets numbered 14, one of which was submitted by
the Investigating Officer on the 7th April, 1949, and the
other on the 20th July, 1949. The first letter of the Civil
Administrator, which was written on the 7th April, 1949,
covered one of the charge sheets numbered 14 (the earlier
one), but it cannot be held to cover the second charge sheet
bearing the same number (No. 14), which came into existence
on the 20th July, 1949, i.e., nearly 3 months after that
letter was despatched. The second letter does not refer to
any charge sheet numbered 14.
47
362
Therefore the charge sheet No. 14 of the 20th July, which we
will for the sake of brevity describe as 14 (2), is not
covered by any written order made by the Civil Administra-
tor. Prima facie, therefore, there is room for the argument
that Case No. 17, which is affected by this charge sheet
[No. 14 (2)], was never properly made over to the Tribunal
and the trial of the accused in that case was therefore
without jurisdiction.
In the course of the arguments, the learned AttorneyGen-
eral referred to the affidavit of Mr. Hanumantha Naidu, in
which it is stated that that case also was transferred by
the Civil Administrator to the Tribunal for trial, and he
was also prepared to file an affidavit by the Civil Adminis-
trator himself to show that the case had been validly trans-
ferred to the Tribunal. It is unfortunate that this point
was neither raised nor investigated in the appeal to the
High Court, but has to be dealt with in this Court merely
upon affidavits, many of which are not properly drafted or
sworn. In these circumstances, we would have been inclined
to pursue the matter by further investigation had we felt
that such a course would serve any useful purpose, but we
think it unnecessary to do so, as we find that there are
certain insuperable obstacles in the way of our granting the
petitioners any relief under article 32.
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Article 32 (2) provides that "the Supreme Court
shall have power to issue directions or orders or
writs, including writs in the nature of habeas cor-
pus, mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto and certio-
rari, whichever may be appropriate, for the enforce-
ment of any of the rights conferred by this Part (Part
III)." The power given to this Court under this provision is
a large one, but it has to be exercised in accordance with
well established principles. The writs to which reference
has been made must obviously be correlated to one or more of
the fundamental rights conferred by Part III of the Consti-
tution and can be made only for the enforcement of such
rights. In the petitions before us, the petitioners have
made the following relevant prayers:--
363
"(1) that this Court may issue a writ in the nature of
certiorari or a direction or order directed to respondents
Nos. 1 and 3 (the Government of Hyderabad and the Special
Judge, Nalgonda) calling upon them to produce the records
before it and to show cause why the convictions and sen-
tences of the petitioners should not be quashed;
(2) that this Court may issue a writ of prohibition or a
direction or order directed to respondents Nos. 1 and 2 (the
Government of Hyderabad and the Superintendent of the Jail)
requiring them not to execute the petitioners."
At a late stage of the hearing of the case, an applica-
tion was made on behalf of the petitioners to allow them to
amend their petition so as to include a further prayer for a
writ of habeas corpus, and this was done.
The question to be decided now is whether any of these
prayers can be granted. The writs of certiorari and prohibi-
tion are hardly appropriate remedies in this case, because
they are usually directed to an inferior court, but at the
date when the High Court dealt with these cases and con-
firmed the convictions and sentences of the petitioners,
this Court was not in existence, and at that point of time,
by no stretch of reasoning, the High Court can be said to
have been subordinate to this Court. The prayer for the
issue of a writ of habeas corpus is however said to stand
clear of this difficulty, on the ground that the detention
of the petitioners would be illegal from day to day, if it
is held to be based on an order made without jurisdiction
which is therefore liable to be ignored as a nullity.
The matter is however not so simple as it may appear at
the first sight. There is a long line of cases relating to
the habeas corpus writs, in which it has been held that when
the return states that the party who is alleged to be unlaw-
fully detained, is detained in execution of a sentence on
indictment on a criminal charge, the return cannot be con-
troverted. [See R.v. Suddis (1), Carus Wilson’s case (2), Ex
parte Lees (3)] In some
(1) (1801) 1 East 306. (3) (1858) E. B. & E. 828.
(2) (1845) 7 Q. B. 984.
364
cases, however, the question arose as to whether affidavits
would be admissible to show that there was no jurisdiction
in the court by which the prisoner was convicted. On this
point, there are three cases in which it was held that such
an affidavit would be admissible. The most important of
these cases is In re Authers (1), on which very great reli-
ance has been placed by Mr. Pritt. In that case, the manager
of a club was convicted under a certain statute of selling
beer by retail without having an excise retail licence.
Subsequently, he was convicted of selling intoxicating
liquor, viz., beer, without a licence under another statute.
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Upon the hearing of the latter charge, the magistrate treat-
ed it as a second offence, and imposed the full penalty
authorized in the case of "the second offence" by the latter
statute. His appeal to the Quarter Sessions having been
dismissed, he applied for a writ of habeas corpus, and it
was granted by the Queen’s Bench Division on the ground that
the Magistrate could not treat the later offence as a second
offence, because it was not a second offence under the Act
under which he was convicted for the second time. Hawkins
J. in dealing with the case observed as follows:--
"I have had many doubts whether it was competent for us
to go behind a conviction which had not been quashed upon
certiorari or by any other process of law; but I have satis-
fied myself that we can go behind this conviction upon
affidavits. There are two authorities, in the Queen’s Bench
and Exchequer respectively, which seem to be conclusive.
They were two cases of prosecution of workmen for neglecting
their duty to their employers, and in each of them there was
a summary conviction; upon the argument of a rule for a writ
of habeas corpus it was allowed to be proved by affidavits
that the men were, as a fact, not in that particular employ-
ment, and, therefore, not subject to the jurisdiction of the
justices, the ground of admission of the affidavits being
that there was no evidence before the justices to justify a
conviction. So, in the present case, the Court is at liber-
ty to go behind the
(1) (1899) 22 Q.B.D. 845 at 350.
365
conviction and to receive affidavits, it not being a
case of conflicting testimony, but one in which the magis-
trate had found a previous conviction, when, in point of
fact, there was none. For these reasons, I think that the
prisoner is entitled to be discharged."
Referring to the appeal of the prisoner to the Quarter
Sessions, the learned Judge observed:--
"This is true as a fact, but it puts the prosecution in
no better position, for if the magistrate had no power to
give himself jurisdiction by finding that there had been a
first offence where there had been none, the justices could
not give it to him."
In his judgment, the learned Judge did not refer to
the previous precedents on which he relied, but it has
been generally assumed that he intended to refer to In re
Bailey (1), and In re Baker (2).
As against these cases, there lare a number of cases in
which a different view has been taken and which cannot be
easily reconciled with them. The leading case on the other
side of the line is In re Newton (3), where it was held that
"the Queen’s Bench Division had no power to grant a habeas
corpus to bring up a prisoner who had been convicted at the
Central Criminal Court, on the ground that the offence
charged was committed at a place out of the jurisdiction of
that court." In dealing with the case, Jervis C.J. observed
as follows:--
"The question raised in this case is undoubtedly one of
very great importance. No authority has been found to
warrant it. The point, it would seem, therefore, has never
before been raised,--it may be because it is so plain that
there is nothing in it. The state of things is this: Mr.
Newton has been tried and convicted on an indictment alleg-
ing that the offence charged was committed within the juris-
diction of the Central Criminal Court. Either that was
traversed, or the jurisdiction was admitted by pleading
over. If it were traversed, the finding of the jury is that
the prisoner committed the offence within the jurisdiction
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of the
(1) 3 E & B. 607. 2) 2 H. & N. 219. (3) 139 R. R. 692.
366
court, as alleged. He now seeks to impeach that finding, on
the ground that the place where the offence was actually
committed is more than one thousand yards distant from the
boundary of the parish in which the record alleges it to
have been committed. That is not to be governed by the
inquiry whether the fact be indisputable or otherwise. If
we could entertain the application because the boundary is
clearly ascertained, we should be equally bound to entertain
disputes of the most refined and minute character. The
inconvenience of this is manifest. The truth is that the
remedy is not by an application of this sort."
Another learned Judge agreeing with the view of the
Chief Justice, observed as follows:--
"Ordinarily upon criminal trials, the jurisdiction of
the court over the place where the offence is alleged to
have been committed is assumed. And here, no doubt, the
trial proceeded upon the assumption that Beulah Spa was
within the jurisdiction of the Central Criminal Court.
Whether it was so or not was as much a matter of fact to be
proved (or admitted) as any other fact alleged in the in-
dictment, in order to establish the conviction."
The view expressed in this case has been taken in sever-
al other cases also, and in Greene v. Secretary of State for
Home Affairs (1), Viscount Maugham seems to have thrown the
weight of his authority in favour of that view. A Bench of
the Calcutta High Court has also supported that view in
In re Bonomally Gupta (2).
The trend of decisions thus seems to be in favour of the
view that if it should appear on the face of the return that
a person is in detention in execution of a sentence on
indictment on a criminal charge, that would be a sufficient
answer to an application for a writ of habeas corpus. Assum-
ing, however, that it is open even in such cases to investi-
gate the question of jurisdiction, as was held in In re
Anthers (3) it appears to us that the learned judges
who
(1) [1942] A. C. 284. (2) I.L.R. 44 Cal. 723. (3) (1889)
22 Q.B.D. 345.
367
decided that case went too far in holding that
notwithstanding the fact that the conviction and sentence
had been upheld on appeal by a court of competent jurisdic-
tion, the mere fact that the trial court had acted without
jurisdiction would justify interference, treating the appel-
late order also as a nullity. Evidently, the appellate court
in a case which properly comes before it on appeal, is fully
competent to decide whether the trial was with or without
jurisdiction, and it has jurisdiction to decide the matter
rightly as well as wrongly. If it affirms the conviction and
thereby decides wrongly that the trial court had the juris-
diction to try and convict, it cannot be said to have acted
without jurisdiction, and its order can not be treated as a
nullity. It is true that there is no such thing as the
principle of constructive res judicata in a criminal case,
but there is such a principle as finality of judgments,
which applies to criminal as well as civil cases and is
implicit in every system, wherein provisions are to be found
for correcting errors in appeal or in revision. Section
430, Criminal Procedure Code, and section 355 of the Hydera-
bad Criminal Procedure Code, have given express recognition
to this principle of finality by providing that "Judgments
and orders passed by an Appellate Court upon appeal shall be
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final, except in cases provided for in section 417 and
Chapter XXXII."
It is well settled that if a court acts without juris-
diction, its decision can be challenged in the same way as
it would have been challenged if it had acted with jurisdic-
tion, i.e., an appeal would lie to the court to which it
would lie if its order was with jurisdiction. [See Ranjit
Misser v. Ramudar Singh (1); Bandiram Mookerjee v. Purna
Chandra Roy C); Wajuddi Pramanik v. Md. Balaki Moral (3);
and Kalipada Karmorkar v. Sekher Bashini Dasya(4)]. There-
fore, the High Court at Hyderabad had jurisdiction to hear
and decide the appeal in this case. In view of this fact,
the deprivation of life or liberty, upon which the case of
the
(1) (1912) 16 O.L.J. 77. (3) 30 C.W.N. 63 at
64.
(2) I. L. R. 45 Ca1, 926 of 929. (4) 24 C.L.J. 233.
368
petitioners is founded, has been brought about in accordance
with a procedure established by law, and their present
detention cannot be held to be invalid.
There is also another difficulty in the way of the
petitioners which may be briefly stated. From the facts
already narrated, it should be clear that the judgment of
the High Court affirming the convictions and sentences of
the petitioners had acquired finality in the fullest sense
of the term before the 26th January, 1050, and by reason of
this finality, no one could question the validity of the
convictions at the date when the Constitution came into
force. Can then a new law or a change in the old law entitle
us to reopen a transaction which has become closed and final
? It is common ground that the provisions of the Constitu-
tion which are invoked here, were not intended to operate
retrospectively, and therefore something which was legally
good on the 25th January, 1950, cannot be held to have
become bad on the 26th January, 1950. If we had no jurisdic-
tion to sit in appeal over the judgment of the Hyderabad
High Court, can we now reinvestigate the cases and pass
orders which cannot be passed without virtually setting
aside the judgments of the High Court which have become
final. Can we, in other words, do indirectly what we refused
to do directly ? It is argued that we are asked not to
reopen a past transaction but to deal with the present
detention of the petitioners, i.e., their detention at this
moment. But, how can we hold the present detention to be
invalid, unless we reopen what could not be reopened prior
to the 26th January, 1950. This is, in our opinion, one of
the greatest difficulties which the petitioners have to
face, and it rests not merely on technical grounds but on
sound legal principles which have always been, and should
be, respected.
The learned counsel for the petitioners tried to make
much of the fact that the petitioners had lost their right
to appeal by a sudden change in the law and by the delay on
the part of the High Court in the disposal of their applica-
tion for leave to appeal to the Judicial Committee of Hyd-
erabad. That may be unfortunate,
369
but there can be no justification for widening the scope of
the existing remedial laws beyond legitimate bounds. A
similar argument was addressed in Ex parte Lees(1) and Lord
Campbell C.J. met it with these observations :--
"It is alleged, on the part of the prisoner, that the
proceedings were upon a repealed statute, and that there
were errors in the judgment and hardships and irregulari-
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ties in the proceedings. If such allegations are well-found-
ed, and obstacles are found to prevent any remedy by appeal
to the Privy Council, or by writ of error to this Court, we
apprehend that the advisers of the Crown will take the
matter into their consideration, and form their judgment
with respect to any alleged error, wrong or hardship which
may be brought before them; and, if any such be established
to their satisfaction, will advise the Crown to give the
relief to which they may think the applicant entitled, by
pardon or mitigation of punishment. We have no authority to
interfere."
All that we can say is that the petitioners accused in
Criminal Case No. 17 of 1949 have made out a prima facie
case that there was no specific order of the Civil Adminis-
trator directing the case to be tried by a Special Tribunal
and they have shown that in that case one of the three
members of the Tribunal gave a dissenting judgment which is
more favourable to the accused than the majority judgment.
While the facts were being analysed before us, it was
brought to our notice that there were altogether six accused
in Case No. 17, out of which five have been convicted and
sentenced to death in Case No. 18 also. The remaining ac-
cused, Kallur Gowndla Elladu, is thus the only person to be
affected by the arguments relating to the trial being with-
out jurisdiction, and a further point in his favour is that
the fatal blow on which the charge of murder is based, is
not attributed to him but to another person and no definite
overt acts are ascribed to him. We have no doubt that these
facts will receive
(1) (1858) E.B. &.F. 826.
48
370
due consideration at the hands of the executive authorities.
As the points involved in the petitions for special
leave to appeal to this Court against the order of the High
Court refusing to grant relief under article 226 of the
Constitution are the same as those involved in the petitions
under article 32, all the six petitions are dismissed. It
may however be observed that in this case we have not con-
sidered it necessary to decide whether an application under
article 32 is maintainable after a similar application under
article 226 is dismissed by the High Court, and we reserve
our opinion on that question.
Petitions dismissed.
Agent for the petitioners: 1. N. Shroff.
Agent for the respondents: P.A. Mehta.