Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHANKAR KERBA JADHAV & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/09/1969
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
SIKRI, S.M.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1971 AIR 840 1970 SCR (2) 227
1969 SCC (2) 793
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1979 SC 745 (72)
R 1980 SC 962 (111)
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure, ss. 417 and 423(1)
(a)--Magistrate convicting accused--Sessions Judge
acquitting them--Appeal to High Court by State under s. 417
of Code--Powers of High Court in respect sentence to be
passed by it if it reverses order of acquittal--Can pass any
sentence which magistrate himself could have passed---
Powers not limited to the sentence which trial court
actually passed.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were charged with offences punishable under
s. 147, 447 and 325 read with s. 149 of the Indian
Penal Code in connection with an incident in which they
were alleged to have committed house trespass into the
compound of a school and injured a teacher. The Magistrate
convicted them and sentenced them on various counts to
imprisonment and fine. The. sentences and fines were
lower than the maximum that the Magistrate was empowered
to impose under the Code of Criminal Procedure. In appeal
the Sessions Judge acquitted the appellants. The State
appealed to the High Court under s. 417 Cr. P.C. The High
Court reversed the orders of the Sessions Judge and,
considering the nature of the acts committed by the
appellants imposed higher sentences and fines on them but
they were still not higher than what the Magistrate
could .himself have imposed. In appeal to this Court against
the High Court’s judgment it was contended that, the High
COurt acting under s. 423(1) (a) is not empowered to
impose higher sentences than the lower court had passed and
in any case not without a notice to show cause against
enhancement.
It was also urged that the High Court could under s.
423(1) (a) pass a sentence "according to law" and thus it
did not enjoy the powers which it otherwise might have
exercised under s. 31(1) of the Code under which a High
Court may pass "any sentence authorised by law".
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HELD: (i) The difference in the wording of s. 31 ( 1 )
and s.]23 ( 1 ) (a) is a matter of no moment. The
expression ’authorised by law means sanctioned by law while
’according to law’ means in conformity with law. The
question to be answered in either case remains the same i.e.
what is the. sentence the High Court is empowered to impose
after it sets aside an order of acquittal when the same is
preceded by a sentence of an inferior court. [232 H]
(ii) An appeal is a creature of statute and the power
and jurisdiction of the appellate court must be
circumscribed by the words of the statute. At the same time
a court of appeal is a ’court of error’ and its normal
function is to correct the decision appealed from if
necessary, and its jurisdiction should be co-extensive with
that of the trial court. It cannot and ought not to do
some.thing which the trial court was not competent to do.
There does. not seem to. be any fetter on its power to do.
what the trial court could do. In this case the trial
Magistrate was competent to pass a sentence of imprisonment
up to two. years and the High Court’s jurisdiction hearing
an appeal would therefore be limited to a sentence up to
that period, and no more. [233 B]
228
(iii) Although the Sessions Judge, in hearing the appeal
against the appellants’ conviction could not enhance the
sentence the High Court in hearing appeal against the order
of acquittal by the Sessions Judge could do so. When the
order of the Magistrate was set aside by the Sessions Judge
the matter became one at large and the High Court hearing an
appeal therefrom was empowered under s. 423(1) (a) to pass a
sentence according to law. It could therefore pass any
sentence which the Magistrate trying the case was empowered
to pass and the High Court in the present case did not
exceed that limit. [238 A--C]
The. acceptance of the appellant’s contention would lead
to the strange result that in an appeal against acquittal
by the Magistrate the High Court could pass any sentence
which the Magistrate was empowered to do but in an appeal
against a judgment of a Sessions Judge setting. aside a
conviction by the Magistrate the High Court’s power would be
limited to restoring the sentence which the Magistrate had
actually passed. Further the Sessions Judge would have been
entitled to recommend enhancement of sentence to the High
Court if he had maintained the conviction. And the High
Court could suo motu have issued notice for enhancement.
But on the appellant’s contention finality would be
attached to the sentence given by the Magistrate.
Such .could not be attached to the sentence given by the
Magistrate. Such could not be the scheme of the Code. [238
C E]
(iv) When the accused is given notice of appeal under s. 417
and actually takes part in the hearing before the High
Court, it would be superfluous to give him notice to show
cause why a sentence within the competence of the trial
Magistrate should not be passed. The accused knows or ought
to know that the High Court was bound to form its own
conclusions on the material before it and award a sentence
which the merits of the case demanded within the limit of
the trial court’s jurisdiction. The absence of a show cause
notice does not violate any known principle of natural
justice. [238 F--G]
On the above findings the ’appeal must be dismissed.
In re: Ramaswami Chetty & Anr. [1902] 2 Weir 487,
Muthiah v. Emperor, 29 Madras 190, Sita Ram v. Emperor, 11
Indian Cases 788. Mahmudi Sheik v. Aji Sheik, 21 Calcutta
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48, Parameswara Pillay v. Emperor, 30 Mad. 48, Maung E.
Maung v. The King, A.I.R. 1940 Rang. 118, Emperor v. Md.
Yakub Ali. 45 Allahabad 594, Lakshminarayana v. Apparao,
A.I.R. 1950 A,P. 530, Emperor v.Abbas Ali, A.I.R. 1935 Nag.
139, Public Prosecutor v. Annamalai, A.I.R. 1955 Mad. 608,
In the Tirumal Raju, A.I.R. 1947 Mad. 368, Jagat Bahadur
Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1966]2 S.C.R. 822 and
Emperor v. Abasali Yusufalli, 39 Calcutta 157, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMlNAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 79 of
1969.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated November 21, 1968 of the Bombay High Court in
Criminal Appeal No. 818 of 1967.
R.V. Pillai and Subodh Markandey, for the appellants.
H.R. Khanna, B.D. Sharma for S.P. Nayar, for the
respondent dent.
229
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. The six appellants in this appeal were
charge sheeted for having committed offences punishable
under ss. 147, 447 and 325 read with s. 149 of the Indian
Penal Code in the court of the Judicial Magistrate, First
Class, Deglur, District Nanded. Considering the evidence
on record the Magistrate held that the accused were members
of an unlawful assembly on September 27, 1965 at the village
school Chotwadi with the common object of causing injuries
to the complainant. He also found that the accused had
committed house trespass into the compound of the school and
actually caused grievous hurt to the complainant, a school
teacher, in pursuance of the common object of their
unlawful assembly. He convicted the ’accused for offences
under ss. 147, 447 and 325 read with s. 149 I.P.C. and
sentenced each of them to suffer rigorous imprisonment for
15 days and to pay a fine of Rs. 50/- and in default of
payment of fine to suffer further rigorous imprisonment for
15 days on the first count under s. 447 read with s. 149
I.P.C. and sentenced each of them to suffer rigorous
imprisonment for six months ’and to a fine of Rs.’ 200/or in
default of payment of fine to suffer further rigorous
imprisonment for one month on the second count under s. 325
read with s. 149 I.P.C. He did not pass any fresh sentence
on the third count under s. 147 I.P.C. He directed that the
substantive sentences of imprisonment passed against accused
on both counts should run concurrently. He also directed
that in case the amount of fine was recovered, Rs. 200/-
should be paid to the complainant Murlidhar as compensation
for the injury sustained by him under s. 545(1)(b) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. The accused went up in appeal
which was heard by the Additional Sessions Judge at Nanded.
The Sessions Judge allowed the appeal and set aside the
orders of conviction and directed the accused to be set at
liberty. The ’order for payment of fine also was set aside.
The State went up in appeal against the order of acquittal
to the High Court. The appeal was allowed by the High Court
and the order of acquittal was set ’aside. The High Court
convicted all the six accused under ss. 147, and 447 and
325 read with s. 149 I.P.C. and taking the view that the
assault on the village teacher was wanton and unprovoked
proceeded to deal with the culprits more firmly that the
trying Magistrate. It passed sentence on the second
accused holding him responsible for the blow which caused
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the fracture of the left ulna of the complainant, to one
year’s rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 300/- and
two months’ further rigorous imprisonment in default
under s. 325 read with s. 149 of the Penal Code. It also
held that the remaining accused had played a comparatively
minor part and injuries inflicted by them were simple. The
sentence passed on each of them was six months’ rigorous
imprisonment and
L2Sup.CI/70--3
230
a fine of Rs. 100 and one month’s further imprisonment in
default under s. 325 read with s. 149 I.P.C. A further
sentence of three months’ imprisonment was passed on all the
accused for the offence under s. 447 read with s. 149. No
separate sentence was passed under s. 147. This court
granted special leave to appeal to the accused "limited to
the question of legality of sentence passed by the High
Court."
Counsel on behalf of the appellants put forward his
argument in a two-fold manner. His first contention was
that it was not open to the High Court exercising
appellate jurisdiction under s. 423 (1)(a) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure to enhance the sentence passed by the
trial Magistrate. The second branch of his argument was
that even if the High Court was competent to do. so, the
appellants should have been asked to show cause why the
sentence imposed on them by the Magistrate should not be
enhanced and in the absence of such an opportunity, no
enhancement of sentence was competent. As the trial was by
a Magistrate of the First Class the maximum sentence which
could have been imposed on the accused was under s. 32 of
the Code limited to a term of imprisonment no.t exceeding
two years and a fine not exceeding Rs. 2,000/-. Under the
Indian Penal Code the limit of punishment for an offence
under s. 447 is imprisonment for a term which may extend to
three months or with fine which may extend to Rs. 500/- or
with both, but an offence under s. 325 Can be punished with
imprisonment of either description for a term which may
extend to seven years besides. a fine.
Under s. 417(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code an appeal
against acquittal lies only to a High Court. Under s. 4-18
an appeal lies on ’a matter of fact as well as on a matter
of law except in cases where the trial is by a jury. Ss.
419 and 420 deal with the procedure for lodging an appeal
and s. 421 gives the appellate court the power to dismiss
the appeal summarily on receiving the petition of appeal if
it considers that there is no sufficient ground for
interfering with the impugned order. Under s. 422 it is
obligatory on the appellate court if it does not dismiss the
appeal summarily to cause notice to be given to the
appellant or to his pleader of the time and place at which
the appeal will be heard and a like notice to be given to
the accused.
The powers of the appellate court in disposing of the
appeal are contained in s. 423 of the Code. The court after
giving the notice of appeal under s. 422 has to send for the
record of the case and after perusing such record and
hearing the appellant or his pleader if he appears and the
Public Prosecutor if he appears and in case of appeal under
s. 417 the .accused if he appears, it may dismiss the appeal
in case it is satisfied that there is no sufficient ground
231
for interfering. Where the appeal is from an order of
acquittal it may under s. 423(1)(a) reverse such order and
direct that further enquiry be made or that the accused be
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retried or committed for trial as the case may be and find
him guilty and pass a sentence on him according to law. No
limits ’are here set to the sentence which may be passed by
the appellate court except that it must be "according to
law". This power may be contrasted with the power under
cl. (b) of s. 423(1 ) dealing with appeals from a
conviction. For such appeals the Legislature specified the
powers of the appellate court with a good deal of precision.
Under sub-clause (b) a court can--
"(1) reverse the finding and sentence and
’acquit or discharge the accused or order him
to be tried by a court of competent
jurisdiction subordinate to such appellate
court or committed for trial, or
(2) alter the finding, maintaining the
sentences, or with or without altering the
finding reduce the sentence, or
(3 ) with or without such reduction and
with or without altering the finding, alter
the nature of the sentence but subject to the
provisions of s. 106 sub-s. (3), not so as to
enhance the sentence."
It would appear from the above that wide though the powers
of the appellate court be in dealing with an appeal from a
conviction, it has no jurisdiction to enhance the sentence
even if it alters the finding, or without altering the
finding takes the view that greater punishment than what was
meted is called for.
Sub-cl. (1 ) (b) however is not the last word for cl.
(iA) introduced in the section in the year 1955 expressly
provides that a High Court exercising jurisdiction under cl.
1 (b) may enhance the sentence notwithstanding anything
inconsistent therewith contained in the said clause provided
the accused has had an opportunity of showing cause against
such enhancement.
S. 423 cl. (1) (b) is based on the principle that where
it is the convicted person who complains against the
punishment given to him, he should not be put in peril of a
greater punishment if the State takes no exception to the
order impugned by the convicted person. The insertion of
cl. (1A) makes it clear that although the powers of courts
subordinate to the High Court are limited under cl. (1)(b)
the High Court may in a proper case enhance the sentence
after giving an opportunity to the accused to show cause
against the proposal.
232
Apart from the powers under Chapter XXXI of the Code
(containing sections 404 to 431) which principally deals
with appeals the High Court has powers infer alia of
revision under Chapter XXXII of the Code. Under s. 435 not
only the High Court but even courts subordinate to it may
call for and examine the record of any proceeding before any
inferior criminal court for the purpose of satisfying itself
as "to the correctness legality or propriety of any finding,
sentence or order recorded or passed and as to the
regularity of any proceeding of such inferior court". S.
439 deals exclusively with the High Court’s powers of
revision. Under this section the High Court is empowered in
the case of any proceeding the record o,f which has been
called for by itself or which has been reported for orders
or which otherwise comes to its knowledge, to exercise the
powers conferred on a court of appeal by sections 423,426,
427 and 428 or on a court by s. 338 (power to direct tender
of pardon) and may enhance the sentence but sub-s. (2) of
the section lays down that such an order is not to be made
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to the prejudice of the accused unless he has ’an
opportunity of being heard either personally or by a pleader
in his own defence. Further when an accused is called upon
to show cause why his sentence should not be enhanced he
has a right to challenge his conviction under sub-s. ( 6 ).
Referring to. the above provisions of the Code counsel
for the appellants argued that in ’all cases where it was,
considered necessary the Legislature was careful to: provide
that the accused should never be subjected to a greater
punishment by a superior court unless he was asked to show
cause against the proposed enhancement. As there was no
such provision in s. 423 ( 1 ) (a) the Legislature must be
taken to have contemplated that in any case of an appeal
against acquittal the accused should not ’be subjected to a
punishment greater than what had been meted out to him by
the punishing court. It was also argued that the words in s.
423 ( 1 ) (a) empowered the appellate court (the High Court
in this case) to pass sentence on the accused .according to
law which is in contrast to the words used in s. 31 (1 ) of
the Code under which a High Court may pass "any sentence
authorised by law". It was argued that s. 423 (1 ) (’a)
thus cuts down the power which the High Court might
otherwise have had under s. 31 ( 1 ).
In our view the difference in the wording of s. 31(1)
and s. 423(1) (a) is a matter of no moment. The expression
"authorised by law" means sanctioned by law while "according
to law" means in conformity with law. The question remains
’as to what would be a sentence according to law when a
High Court sets aside an order of acquittal when the same
is preceded by a sentence of an inferior court. Is the High
Court empowered to award any sentence which the law allows
under the relevant section of the
233
Indian Penal Code, or is its jurisdiction limited to such a
sentence as was within the competence of the court punishing
the offenders or again, is it to restore the sentence
originally passed ?
Let us look at the question ,apart from the authorities. An
appeal is a creature of a statute and the powers and
jurisdiction the appellate court must be circumscribed by
the words of the statute. At the same time a court of
appeal is a "court of error" and its normal function is to
correct the decision appealed from and its jurisdiction
should be co-extensive with that of the trial court. It
cannot and ought not to do something which the trial court
was not competent to do. There does not seem to be any
fetter to its power to do what the trial court could do..
In this case the trial Magistrate was competent to pass a
sentence of imprisonment up to two years and the High
Court’s jurisdiction hearing an appeal would therefore be
limited to a sentence up to that period and no more.
A special provision for asking the accused to show cause
when the appeal is from an order of conviction or when the
High Court exercises its revisional jurisdiction, is not in
derogation of the above rule. As already indicated, when
the accused prefers an appeal and the State is satisfied
with the punishment meted out it is only logical to hold
that the appellant should not stand in peril of something to
his further detriment unless he is put on notice that the
power of enhancement may be exercised. The same applies
to the High Court’s power of revision under s. 439. The
Legislature felt that when the High Court is exercising
powers in this regard, it should be given all the powers of
a court of appeal including the power to enhance the
sentence. Sub-s. (2) of s. 439 is only meant to give an
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opportunity to the accused so that he be not condemned
unheard and sub-s. (6) is. only an amplification of that
principle and gives him .a right to challenge his conviction
if he is put in peril of enhancement of sentence.
Where however the appeal is from ’an order of acquittal
the matter is at large. There is no sentence which is
binding on a person who was once an accused. He comes
before the court with the presumption of innocence. If the
court finds that the acquittal was not justified and that he
was guilty of the offence with which he was charged, it is
for the appeal court to order punishment to fit the crime.
If the appeal is from an order of acquittal with no prior
order of sentence, the punishment must be commensurate with
the gravity of the offence. But if the order of ’acquittal
is preceded by an order of conviction the court hearing the
appeal from acquittal should not impose a sentence greater
than what the court of first instance could have imposed
inasmuch as if the trial court had given him the maximum
sentence which it was competent to give and no appeal was
preferred by the accused, the State could
234
not have approached the High Court under any provision of
the Code for enhancement of the sentence. The interposition
of the order of an intermediate court of appeal and
acquittal of the accused by it should not put the accused
in a predicament worse than that before the trial court.
We may now proceed to examine the earlier authorities.
In re Ramaswami Chetty & Anr. (1) the action of the
appellate Magistrate enhancing a fine of Rs. 50/- to Rs.
65/- was held to be illegal by the Madras High Court. In
Muthiah v. Emperor(2) it was said that an appellate court
has not an unlimited power but was only empowered to do
which the lower court could and should have done. In Sita
Ram v. Emperor(3) which went up to the Nagpur Judicial
Commissioner’s court by way of revision, the appellants
had been convicted under s. 324 I.P.C. and sentenced to
rigorous imprisonment for a term of four months each by a
Magistrate of the Second Class. On appeal the District
Magistrate maintained the convictions but altered the
sentences on each of the accused to one of fine only; and in
default rigorous imprisonment was ordered for four months.
Before the Judicial Commissioner it was contended that the
sentence of fine imposed on the applicants was illegal so
far as it exceeded the maximum fine which could have been
inflicted by the Magistrate by whom they were tried. The
Court held that when the District Magistrate decided that
the case was one punishable with fine only he should have
inflicted a fine which was within the jurisdiction of the
trying Magistrate. The learned Judge relied on the decisions
in Mahmudi Sheik v. Aji Sheik(4), Muthiah v. Emperor(5),
Parameswara Pillay v. Emperor(6) and observed that alike
in civil and in criminal cases the power of the appellate
court was measured by the power of the court from whose
judgment or order the appeal before it had been made.
The decisions in Maung E Maung v. The King(7), Emperor
v. Md. Yakub Ali(8), Lakshminarayana v. Apparao(9) and
Emperor v. Abbas Ali(10) are on the same lines. A
different note was however struck in Public Prosecutor v.
Annamalai(1). This was a case of an appeal preferred by the
State against the acquittal of two ’accused by a Magistrate.
The High Court finding the accused guilty took the view that
"passing sentence according to law" meant passing any
sentence that could be given for the offence. According to
the learned single Judge the powers
(1) [1902] 2 Weir487. (2) 29 Madras 190
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(3) 11 Indian Cases 788 (4) 21 Calcutta 48
(5) 29 Madras, 130 (6) 30 Madras 48
(7) A.I.R. 1940 Rangoon 118 (8) 45 Allahabad 594
(9) A.I.R. 1950 A.P. 530. (10) A.I.R. 1935 Nagpur 139
(11) A.I.R. 1965 Madras 608
235
of an ,appellate court in hearing an appeal against
acquittal were not in any way restricted or limited to the
powers of the trial court. He said:
"Though there is no such limitation or
restriction, still there is one circumstance
which altogether cannot be ignored and which
must indeed be considered before imposing
the sentence and that is, what is it that the
accused would have got if he was convicted by
the Magistrate. He would not have got more
than six months, the maximum the Second Class
Magistrate who tried him can give.
The fact that he has been acquitted should
not place him in a more disadvantageous
position than if he were convicted. The
sentence should not therefore be more severe
than what he should have got in a case of
conviction."
Accordingly the accused were sentenced to six months’
rigorous imprisonment. In an earlier decision of the same
High Court In re Tirumal Raju (1) another learned single
Judge though disposed to accept the contention that the
appellate Magistrate had no jurisdiction to enhance the
fine beyond the powers of the trial Magistrate, maintained
the order sought to be revised by exercising powers under s.
439(3) of the Code. Running through the web of the. above
decisions the principle almost universally accepted is
that in exercise of its appellate powers the High Court
should not award a sentence which is beyond the jurisdiction
the trial court and in our opinion this is the principle
which should be adopted.
Our attention was however drawn to certain observations
in Jagat Bahadur Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh(2) where a
good many of the above authorities were taken note of by
this Court. Referring inter alia to the cases of Emperor v.
Abasali Yusufalli(3), Emperor v. Muhammad Yakub Ali(4) Maung
E. Maung v. The King(5) and In re Tirumal Raju(6) it was
said that these cases laid down the correct law. The Court
also added:
" .... both on principle and authority
it is clear that the power of the appellate
court to pass a sentence must be measured by
the power of the court from whose judgment an
appeal has been brought before it."
The question is, can this observation be pressed into
service by the appellants on the ground that as the Sessions
Judge hearing
(1) A.I.R. 1947 Madras 368. (2) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 822.
(3) 39 Calcutta/57 (4) 45 Allahabad 594.
(5) A.I.R. 1940 Rangoon 118 (6) A.I.R. 1947 Madras 368
236
the appeal from the order of the Magistrate could not have
enhanced the sentence, it was not open to the High Court to
do so when hearing an appeal from the order of acquittal by
the Sessions Judge. In other words, could the High Court
have done what the Sessions Judge was not empowered to do. ?
In our opinion, the .answer must be in the affirmative.
When the order of the Magistrate was set aside by the
Sessions Judge the matter became one at large and the High
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Court hearing an appeal therefrom was empowered under s.
423(1)(a) to pass a sentence ,according to law. It could
therefore pass any sentence which the Magistrate trying the
case was empowered to pass. and the High Court in this case
did not exceed that limit. A strange result would follow
if we were to accept the contention. If the accused had
been acquitted by the Magistrate and the State had filed an
appeal against the order of acquittal, the High Court would
no doubt have had power to impose ’any sentence, which the
Magistrate would have been entitled to impose. But if the
accused is acquitted on appeal by the Sessions Judge, the
power of the High Court would be limited. Surely the Code
does not contemplate this difference in the appeals under s.
417 Cr.P.C.
Further the Sessions Judge would have been entitled to
recommend enhancement of sentence to the High Court if he
had maintained the conviction. And the High Court could sua
motu have issued notice for enhancement. If we were to
accept the contention, finality is attached to. the sentence
given by the Magistrate. We do. not think this is the scheme
of the Code. On the other hand the scheme of the Code seems
to be to confer final authority on the High Court. The
first contention therefore fails and we hold that in
disposing of an appeal from an order of acquittal the High
Court is competent to. pass a sentence which the trial court
was empowered to pass.
The second branch of the argument is. without any
merit. Where the accused is given notice of appeal and
actually takes part in the hearing before the High Court, it
would be superfluous to give him notice to show cause why
a sentence within the competence of the trial Magistrate
should not be passed. The accused knows or ought to know
that the High Court was. bound to form its own conclusions
on the material before it and award a sentence which the
merits of the case demanded within the limit of the trial
court’s jurisdiction. The absence of a show cause notice
does not violate any known principle of natural justice.
On the facts of the case, we are of the view that the
sentence imposed by the High Court should be reduced to that
originally imposed by the trial Magistrate. The’ appeal is
allowed in part to this extent.
G.C. Appeal partly allowed.
237