Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BANSRAJ(and connected appeal)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/10/1958
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1959 AIR 79 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 153
ACT:
Motor Vehicle-Driving in contravention of terms of Permit-
Driver, if liable--Motor Vehicles Act (IV Of 1939), ss.
42(1) and 123.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents who were drivers, not being owners, were
found driving motor vehicles in contravention of the terms
of the ’permits granted under S. 42(1) of the Motor Vehicles
Act. They were prosecuted and were convicted under s. 123
Of the Act and sentenced to pay fine. The High Court held
that under S. 42(1) it was the owner alone who was
interdicted from using or permitting the use of the vehicle
save in accordance with the conditions of the permit and
that, accordingly, if the vehicle was used against the
conditions of the permit only the owner, and no one else,
including the driver, could be guilty of the contravention
under s. 123.
Held, that drivers of the motor vehicles were also liable
under s. 123 of the Act for driving in contravention of the
terms of the permits. Section 42(1) contemplates not only
prohibition against the user by the owner of the vehicle or
his permitting its user contrary to the conditions of the
permit but it also contemplates that the vehicle itself
shall be used only in the manner authorised by the permit.
Section 123 penalises all
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persons who drive a motor vehicle or cause or allow a motor
vehicle to be used or let out a motor vehicle to be used in
contravention of the provisions of s. 42(1).
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Criminal Appeals Nos. 115/56
& 83/57.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 13, 1955, of the Allahabad High in Criminal
Reference No. 359 of 1952, arising out of the Reference
dated August 4, 1952, by the Sessions Judge, Gorakpur, under
section 438 of Criminal Procedure Code.
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G. C. Mathur and C. P. Lal for the appellant (In both the
appeals).
The respondent did not appear.
1958. October 9. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KAPUR, J.-These two appeals involve a common question of law
and may be disposed of by one judgment.
In Criminal Appeal No. 115/56 the respondent Bansraj, driver
of a public carrier, of which he was not an owner, was found
carrying 23 passengers instead of 6 allowed under the
conditions of permit No. 42-926/123 granted to the owner.
The vehicle was checked by a Head Constable who on counting
the number of passengers found them to be 23. Bansraj
respondent was prosecuted under s. 42 read with s. 123 of
the Motor Vehicles Act, (IV of 1939), as it existed at the
date of the offence; (to be called the Act in this
judgment). Bansraj respondent pleaded not guilty and stated
that only six passengers were being carried. He was tried
summarily by a First Class Magistrate at Gorakhpur and found
guilty under s. 123 of the Act and sentenced to pay a fine
of Rs. 200 and in default three months’ rigorous
imprisonment. He went in revision to the Sessions Judge,
Gorakhpur, and there it was contended that he was only a
driver and therefore could not be convicted under s. 123 of
the Act. The learned Judge accepted that contention and
being of the opinion that a mere driver could not be so con-
victed, he recommended the case to the High Court
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under s. 438 of the Criminal Procedure Code. The matter
came up as Criminal Reference No. 359/52 before Mukherji J.,
who referred it to a Division Bench and was heard by Desai
and Upadhya JJ. The interpretation which the High Court put
on s. 42(1) was that under the section it was the owner
alone who was interdicted from Using or permitting the use
of the vehicle save in accordance with the conditions of a
permit and therefore if the vehicle was used against the
conditions of the permit, no one else, including the driver,
could be guilty under s. 123 of contravention of the terms
of the permit.
The reference was therefore accepted and the conviction and
sentence of the respondent was set aside. The State has
come up in appeal pursuant to special leave against the
judgment and order of the High Court of Allahabad.
In Criminal Appeal No. 83/57 respondent Vishwanath the
driver of a private station wagon W.B.C. 8744 and this owner
Sunder Singh were both prosecuted for carrying 13 passengers
from Moghulsarai to Banaras in the station wagon which had
no permit for carrying passengers on hire. Out of these 8
persons were travelling as passengers who had been charged
fares. The Magistrate acquitted Sundar Singh giving him the
benefit of doubt and sentenced the driver to a fine of Rs.
500 under s. 123 of the Act and in default to simple
imprisonment for six months. This enhanced sentence was
given because he had four previous convictions under the
Act. The respondent Vishwanath took an appeal to the
Sessions Judge, Banaras, who set aside the conviction
holding that the driver of a vehicle could not be convicted
under s. 123 for contravention of the conditions of the
permit. The State took an appeal to the High Court and this
appeal also was heard by Desai and Upadhya JJ. who dismissed
the State’s appeal and the State has come to this Court
pursuant to special leave.
The question for decision in both these appeals is the same
i.e. the liability of the driver of a motor vehicle used in
contravention of the terms of the permit under s. 42(1) of
the Act and this will depend
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upon the construction to be put on ss. 42 and 123 of the
Act. At the time when the Respondents in the two appeals
are alleged to have committed the offence s. 42(1)
provided:-
" No owner of a transport vehicle shall use or permit the
use of the vehicle in any public place, save in accordance
with the conditions of a permit granted or countersigned by
a Regional or Provincial Transport Authority authorising the
use of the vehicle in that place in the manner in which the
vehicle is being used............... "
And s. 123 of the Act provided
" Whoever drives a motor -vehicle or causes or allows a
motor vehicle to be used or lets out a motor vehicle for use
in contravention of ’the provisions of sub-section (1) of
section 42 shall be punishable for a first offence with fine
which may extend to five hundred rupees and for a subsequent
offence if committed within three years of the commission of
a previous similar offence with a fine which shall not be
less than one hundred rupees and may extend to one thousand
rupees
The Act regulates the use of motor vehicles and for that
purpose its various provisions provide for control on motor
vehicles and on those who own them and those who drive them.
Chapter II provides for licensing of motor vehicles, Chapter
II-A for licensing of conductors, Chapter III for
registration of motor vehicles and Chapter IV for control of
transport vehicles. Chapter IX deals with offences,
penalties and procedure. Section 3 in Chapter II is headed
necessity for driving licences. Section 22 in Chapter III
is headed necessity for registration. The marginal note of
section 42 in Chapter IV is necessity for permits. There
are several provisions in the Act contained in Chapter VI
which provide for control of traffic, requiring the drivers
of motor vehicles to observe speed limits, to obey duty
signals and there are other provisions for subserving safety
in regard to driving of motor vehicles. The provisions of
Chapter IX show how particular the legislature is in regard
to the road safety. With that object in view the Act makes
provision for
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a complete control over the owners of motor vehicles and
over the drivers of such vehicles and makes elaborate
provisions in regard to every aspect of motor traffic and
penalises every one who contravenes the provisions of the
Act including the seller of a defective motor vehicle.
Section 42 is headed " necessity for permits ". The language
of the section employs prohibitive or negative words and
therefore its legislative intent is that the statute is
mandatory. The negative words convey a forbidding of the
doing of the act prohibited and from the use by the
legislature of the words " no owner of a transport vehicle
shall use or permit the use " in s. 42(1) a total
prohibition against user of the vehicle except in accordance
with the conditions of the permit is indicated. Further the
words " authorizing the use of the vehicle in that place in
the manner in which the vehicle is being used " have
reference to the transport vehicle itself and not to the
owner that is to say s. 42(1) does not only prohibit the
owner from using the transport vehicle contrary to the
conditions of the permit but there is an express provision
in the section that the permit authorises the use of the
vehicle in the place and in the manner it is being used, and
that it is to be used in accordance with the conditions of
the permit. Thus construed s. 42(1) contemplates not only
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prohibition against the user by the owner of the vehicle or
his permitting its user in a manner contrary to the condi-
tions of the permit but it also contemplates that the
vehicle itself shall be used in the manner authorised by the
permit. The prohibition therefore is not merely against the
use by the owner but against the use contrary to the
conditions of the permit of the vehicle itself.
Section 123 is in the chapter dealing with offences and
penalties. The marginal note shows what the section intends
to punish, and that the intention was to provide for
punishment of every person who drives a motor vehicle in
contravention of the provisions Of sub-s. (1) of s. 42. We
have said above that s. 42(1) ,requires the use of a
transport vehicle in accordance
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with the conditions of the permit and that it does not
merely prohibit its user by the owner contrary to the
conditions of the permit. Therefore when a transport
vehicle is driven by any one in contravention of the terms
of the permit, it is in contravention of the provisions of
s. 42(1). Section 42(1) is not a penslising section. For
its breach s. 123 provides the penalties. The legislature
advisedly did not use the word I owner’ in s. 123 of the
Act. Having by s. 42(1) prohibited an owner from using or
permitting the use of a transport vehicle contrary to the
conditions of the permit and having clearly stated therein
that the permit granted by the Regional or the Provincial
Transport Authority authorised the use of the vehicle in the
manner in which the vehicle was to be used, the legislature
provided punishment for anyone who drove a motor vehicle or
caused or-allowed a motor vehicle to be used or lets out a
motor vehicle to be used in contravention of the provisions
of sub-s. (1) of s. 42. It is for this reason that the
Legislature used the word ’whoever’ and did not limit the
punishment set out in s. 123 to the owner himself. The
Legislature intended that no motor vehicle should be driven
by anyone contrary to the provisions of s. 42(1) and that if
it was driven in contravention of those provisions he was
liable to punishment. The two sections read together do not
lead to the conclusion that s. 123 only makes the owner
liable to punishment. The words " or causes or allows a
motor vehicle to be used, or lets out a motor vehicle for
use in contravention of the provisions of sub-s. (1) of
section 42 " may well refer to the owner. That is to say,
this part of s. 123 punishes an owner for contravening the
provisions of s. 42(1). The driving of the motor vehicle,
however, is a different matter. It could be driven by the
owner himself or by some one other than the owner.
Therefore, the words " whoever drives a motor
vehicle............... in contravention of the provisions of
sub-s. (1) of section 42 " would cover both the owner and
one who is not the owner. What is made punishable is the
driving of the motor vehicle by anyone contrary to the
provisions of s. 42(1). That is to say, the motor vehicle
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cannot be driven by anyone contrary to the conditions of the
permit relating to that vehicle.
It may here be remarked that there is a preponderance of
judicial opinion in favour of the view that a driver of a
motor vehicle who is not its owner and who drives in
contravention of the conditions of a permit under s. 42(1),
would fall within s. 123 of the Act. Except the High Court
of Allahabad the other High Courts are in accord in holding
that such driver would be guilty under s. 123. Public
Prosecutor v. Jevan (1); Provincial Government, C. P. &
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Berar v. Mohan Lal (2), Chandra Deo Singh v. The State(3)
Teja Singh v. The State (4) ; Kalyan Lal v. The State(3) The
State v. Ram Chandra(5); The State v. Motilal All these
cases have proceeded on the view that thewords whoever
drives’ are wide enough to include the case of a non-owner
driver who contravenes the provisions of s. 123. Even in
the High Court of Allahabad in an earlier decision Uma
Shankar v. Rex (8), Aggarwala J., was of the opinion that a
driver driving in contravention of the conditions of a
permit would fall within s. 123 of the Act.
In our opinion, the interpretation put in this case by the
Allahabad High Court on ss. 42 and 123 is erroneous. We
would therefore allow these appeals, set aside the orders of
acquittal and restore those of the Magistrates convicting
the respondents.
Appeals allowed.
(1) A.I.R. 1941 Mad. 845.
(3) (1954) 59 C. W. N. 787.
(5) A.I.R. 1954 Raj. 250.
(7) A.I.R. 1957 Raj.63.
(2) A.I.R. 1944 Nag, 89.
(4) A.I.R. 1952 Punj. 45.
(6) A.I.R. 1955 Raj. 83.
(8) A.I.R. 1950 All. 234.
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