Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
R. BANERJEE AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
H.D. DUBEY AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/03/1992
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1168 1992 SCR (2) 221
1992 SCC (2) 552 JT 1992 (2) 436
1992 SCALE (1)690
ACT:
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954:
Section 17-Prosecution-Launching of-Against
Directors/Managers of Public Limited Companies-Nomination
made under sub-section (2)-Validity of Nomination-
Prosecution only against the nominated person-Not against
others-Impleading others as co- accused-When arises-
Applicability of sub-section (4).
HEADNOTE:
The Respondent Food Inspector visited the godown of a
company and lifted samples of orange drink manufactured by
the company, as also Vanaspati ghee manufactured by the said
company as also by another company. He found that the label
affixed to the orange drink carried the date of manufacture
as June, 1988. Since the date of expiry was stated to be
six months from the date of manufacture he found that the
products was mis-branded or adulterated as six months had
already expired on the date of inspection. He forwarded the
samples so collected to the public Analyst. The report of
the Public Analyst was to the effect that all the three
samples were adulterated, as they did not conform to the
standard prescribed by law. The respondent then filed three
separate complaints against the respective companies, as
well as Directors, Managers and officers of the companies,
for the commission of offences punishable under Section 7/16
read with section 17 of the prevention of Food Adulteration
Act, 1954. The appellants’ contention that in view of the
nomination made by the companies, only the persons nominated
to be incharge of and responsible for the conduct of the
business could be prosecuted and not the other
Directors/Managers/Officers.
Having been unsuccessful before the Trial Court as also
before the High Court, the appellants have preferred the
present appeals by special leave.
Allowing the appeals on the question whether it was
permissible to
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launch a prosecution under section 17(1) of the Prevention
of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 against the Directors and
Managers of Public Limited Companies notwithstanding the
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nomination made by the companies as required by section
17(2) of the Act, this Court,
HELD : 1. It is clear from the scheme of section 17 of
the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 that where a
company has committed an offence under the Act, the person
nominated under sub-section (2) to be in charge of, and
responsible to , the company for the conduct of its business
shall be proceeded against unless it is shown that the
offence was committed with the consent/connivance/negligence
of any other Director, Manager, Secretary or Officer of the
Company in which case the said person can also be proceeded
against and punished for the commission of the said offence.
It is only where no person has been nominated under sub-
section (2) of section 17 that every person, who at the time
of the commission of the offence was in charge of and was
responsible to the company for the conduct of its business
can be proceeded against and punished under the law. [227G,
H; 228A,B]
2. In the present cases, on a careful perusal of the
complaints lodged by the Food Inspector under the Act it is
evident that intimation regarding the nomination had been
communicated to the Food Inspector before the complaints
came to be lodged. This is evident from the averments made
in the respective complaints. The nomination was, however,
not acted upon by the complainant on the ground that it was
incomplete. It was, therefore, said that in the absence of
a valid nomination from the concerned company the Directors
of the company were liable to be proceeded against and
punished on proof of the charge levelled against them in the
complaint. Thus there is no allegation in the complaint
which would bring the case within the mischief of section
17(4) of the Act. There is no allegation in the complaint
that the offence was committed with the
consent/connivance/negligence of the Directors, other than
the nominated person, who were impleaded as co-accused.
Therefore, the allegations in the complaint do not make out
a case under sub-section (4) of section 17 of the Act. That
being so, the inclusion of the co-accused other than the
company and the nominated person as the persons liable to be
proceeded against and punished cannot be justified. [230G,
H; 231A-C]
Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ram kishan Rohtagi &
Ors., [1983]
223
1 SCR 884, relied on.
3. Since the validity of the nominations require
investigation, the matters are remanded to the trial court
with a direction to inquire into the question whether the
nomination forms were received and acknowledged by the Local
(Health) Authority competent to receive and acknowledge
the same. This question will be considered as a preliminary
question and the magistrate will record a finding thereon.
If he comes to the conclusion that the nomination forms had
been acknowledged by the competent Local (Health) Authority
he shall drop the proceedings against the directors of the
Company, other than the company and the nominated persons.
If on the other hand he comes to the conclusion that the
prescribed forms had been acknowledged by a person other
than the competent Local (Health) Authority he will proceed
against all the persons who are shown as the accused in the
complaint i.e. all the Directors including the nominated
person and the company. [232H; 233A-C]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal Nos.
167-169 of 1992.
From the Judgment and Order dated 4.2.91 of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in Crl. Revision Nos. 356, 357 and
358/89.
Ram Jethmalani, Ravinder Narain, B.B. Lall, Ashok Sagar
and S. Sukumaran for M/s IJBD & Co. for the Appellants.
U.N. Bachawat, Ms. Mirdula Gupta and Uma Nath Singh for
the Respondents
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AHMADI. J. Special leave granted.
The short question which arises for determination in
these appeals is whether it was permissible to launch a
prosecution under sub-section (1) of section 17 of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 (hereinafter
called the ‘the Act’) against the Directors and Managers of
public limited companies, namely, M/s. Lipton India Limited
and M/s. Hindustan Lever Limited, for the commission of the
alleged offence punishable under the aforesaid provision
notwithstanding the nomination made by the said companies as
required by sub-section (2) of section 17 of the Act. In
order
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to appreciate contention raised on behalf of the appellants
it is necessary to notice a few provisions of the Act.
Section 7 of the Act inter alia provides that no person
shall himself or by any person on his behalf manufacture for
sale, or store, sell or distribute any adulterated food or
any misbranded food or any article of food in contravention
of the provisions of the Act and the rules made thereunder.
Section 16 prescribes penalties for contravention of the
provision of the Act. It lays down that if any person
whether by himself or by any person on his behalf,
manufactures for sale, or stores, sells or distributes any
article of food which is adulterated or misbranded or the
sale of which is prohibited under any provision of the Act
or any rule made thereunder or by an order of the Food
(Health) Authority, he shall be punishable with imprisonment
for a term which shall not be less than six months but which
may extend to three years, and with fine which shall not be
less than one thousand rupees. Then comes section 17, the
relevant part whereof may be reproduced:
"17. Offences by companies - (1) Where an offence
under this Act has been committed by a company -
(a) (i) the person, if any, who has been nominated
under sub-section(2) to be in charge of, and
responsible to, the company for the conduct of the
business of the company (hereinafter in this
section referred to as the person responsible), or
(ii) where no person has been so nominated, every
person who at the time the offence was committed
was in charge of, and was responsible to,the
company for the conduct of the business of the
company: and
(b) the company,
shall be deemed to be guilty of the offence and
shall be liable to be proceeded against and
punished accordingly :
Provided that nothing contained in this sub-
section shall render any such person liable to any
punishment provided in this Act if he proves that
the offence was committed without his knowledge and
that he exercised all due diligence to prevent the
commission of such offence.
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225
R.BANERJEE v. H.D. DUBEY [AHMADI, J.]
(2) Any company may, by order in writing,
authorise any of its directors or managers (such
managers) being employed mainly in a managerial or
supervisory capacity) to exercise all such powers
and take all such steps as may be necessary or
expedient to prevent the commission by the company
of any offence under this Act and may give notice
to the Local (Health) Authority, in such form and
in such manner as may be prescribed, that it has
nominated such director or manager as the person
responsible along with the written consent of such
director or manager for being so nominated.
Explanation- Where a company has different
establishment or branches or different units in any
establishment or branch, different persons may be
nominated under this sub-section in relation to
different establishment or branches or units and
the person nominated in relation to any
establishment, branch or unit shall be deemed to be
the person responsible in respect of such
establishment, branch or unit."
Sub-section (4) which begins with a non-obstante clause
next provides that where an offence under this Act has been
committed by a company and it is proved that the offence has
been committed with the consent or connivance of, or is
attributable to, any neglect on the part of, any director,
manager, secretary or other officer of the company, (not
being a person nominated under sub-section (2)) such
director, manager, secretary or other officer shall also be
deemed to be guilty of the offence and shall be liable to be
proceeded against and punished accordingly.
Section 23 of the Act empowers the Central Government
to make rules. In exercise of the said power the Central
Government has framed rules known as the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Rules, 1955 (hereinafter called ’the Rules’).
Rule 12-B with which we are concerned reads as under;
"Form of nomination of Director of Manager and his
consent, under Section 17-1 (1) A company may
inform the Local (Health) Authority of the
concerned local area, by notice in duplicate, in
Form VIII containing the name and address of the
Director or Manager, who has been nominated by it
under sub-section (2) of section 17 of the Act to
be in charge of, and
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responsible to,the company for the conduct of the
business of the company or any establishment,
branch or unit thereof :
Provided that no such nomination shall be valid
unless the Director or Manager who has been so
nominated, gives his consent in writing and has
affixed his signature, in Form VIII in duplicate in
token of such consent.
(2) The Local (Health) Authority shall sign and
return one copy of the notice in Form VIII to the
company to signify the receipt of the nomination
and retain the second copy in his office for
record."
Form VIII is in three parts. The first part is in the
nature of notice that the company has by a resolution passed
at its meeting nominated its named Director/Manager to be in
charge of, and responsible to, the company for the conduct
of the business of the said company or
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establishment/branch/unit thereof. A certified copy of the
resolution has to be sent along with the form. This part
must be signed by the Managing Director/Secretary of the
Company. The second part relates to the acceptance of the
nomination and must be signed by the nominated
Director/Manager. The third part has to be signed by the
Local (Health) Authority acknowledging the receipt of the
nomination.
It is clear from the plain reading of section 17 that
where an offence under the Act is alleged to have been
committed by a company, where the company has nominated any
person to be in charge of, and responsible to, the company
for the conduct of its business that person will be liable
to be proceeded against and punished for the commission of
the offence. Where, however, no person has been so
nominated, every person who at the time of the commission of
the offence was in charge of, and responsible to, the
company for the conduct of its business shall be proceeded
against and punished for the said crime. Even in such cases
the proviso offers a defence, in that, the accused can prove
his innocence by showing that the offence was committed
without his knowledge and notwithstanding the exercise of
due diligence to prevent it. The scheme of sub-section (1)
of section 17 is, therefore, clear that cases where a person
has been nominated under sub-section (2) of section 17, he
alone can be proceeded against and punished for the crime in
question. It is only where on such
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person has been nominated that every person who at the time
the offence was committed was in charge of, and was
responsible to, the company for the conduct of its business
can be proceeded against and punished. The proviso,
however, lays down an exception that any such person
proceeded against shall not be liable to be punished if he
proves that the offence was committed without his knowledge
and that he had exercised all due diligence to prevent the
commission thereof. Sub-section (2) of section 17 empowers
the company to authorise any of its Directors or Managers to
exercise all such powers and take all such steps as may be
necessary or expedient to prevent the commission by the
company of any offence under the Act. It further empowers
the company to give notice to the Local (Health) Authority
in the prescribed form that it has nominated a Director or
Manager as the person responsible to the company for the
conduct of its business. This has to be done with the
written consent of the nominated Director or Manager. Where
a company has different establishment or branches or units,
different persons may be nominated in relation to the
different establishments/ branches/units and the person so
nominated shall be deemed to be the person responsible in
respect of such establishment, branch or unit. Sub-section
(4) of section 17 overrides the preceding sub-section and
posits that where an offence has been committed by a company
and it is proved that the offence was committed with the
consent or connivance of, or is attributable to any neglect
on the part of any Director, Manager, Secretary or other
officer of the company, other than the one nominated, such
Director, Manager Secretary or other officer shall also be
deemed guilty and be liable to be proceeded against and
punished for the same. This sub-section,therefore, makes it
clear that notwithstanding the nomination under sub-section
(2) of section 17 and notwithstanding clause (a)(i) of sub-
section (1) of section 17, any Director, Manager, Secretary
or other officer of the company, other than the nominated
person, can be proceeded against and punished if it is shown
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that the offence was committed with his consent or
connivance or negligence. It is crystal clear from the
scheme of section 17 that where a company has committed an
offence under the Act, the person nominated under sub-
section (2) to be in charge of, and responsible to, the
company for the conduct of its business shall be proceeded
against unless it is shown that the offence was committed
with the consent/connivance/negligence of any other
Director, Manager, Secretary or Officer of the company in
which case the said
228
person can also be proceeded against and punished for the
commission of the said offence. It is only where no person
has been nominated under sub-section (2) of section 17 that
every person, who at the time of the commission of the
offence was in charge of and was responsible to the company
for the conduct of its business can be proceeded against
and punished under the law.
In the instant case it is the contention of both the
companies, namely (i) M/s. Lipton India Limited and (ii)
M/s. Hindustan Lever Limited that they had made the
nomination as required by sub-section (2) of section 17 of
the Act and, therefore, only the nominated person could be
proceeded against and punished since there is no allegation
in the complaints lodged by the Food Inspector to bring the
case within sub-section (4) of section 17 of the Act. If
the said two companies can show from the record of the case
that a valid nomination was made prior to the commission of
the alleged offence and the allegations in the complaints do
not attract sub-section (4) of section 17, the appellants-
Director, Manager and other Officers would be justified in
contending that they cannot be proceeded against or
punished for the offence alleged to have been committed by
their respective companies.
The facts of the present case reveal that Mr. H.D.
Dubey, Food Inspector, had visited the godown of Lipton
India Limited situate at Panagarh, Jabalpur and had lifted
samples of Tree Top Orange Drink in Tetrapacks and Dalda
Vanaspati Ghee manufactured by the said two companies as he
suspected the said products of the said two companies to be
adulterated. During inspection the Food Inspector found
that the Tree Top Tetrapack carried the date of manufacture
as June 1988 as evidenced by the label affixed thereto and
since the date of expiry was stated to be six months from
the date of manufacture, the product was adulterated as six
months had already elapsed on the date of inspection. It
was, therefore, felt that the product was misbranded or
adulterated. Suffice it to say that the samples collected
by the Food Inspector from the said godown were forwarded to
the Public Analyst for examination and report as required by
law and the Public Analyst reported that samples of all the
three products, namely, Tree Top Tetrapacks and Vanaspati
Ghee manufactured by M/s. Lipton India Limited as well as by
M/s. Hindustan Lever Limited were adulterated as they did
not conform to the standard prescribed by law. It was on
the receipt of this report that the Food Inspector filed
three
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separate complaints against the company as well as its
Directors, Managers and other officers for the commission of
offences punishable under section 7/16 read with section 17
of the Act.
The appellants however, contend that since the company
had made a nomination as required by sub-section (2) of
section 17 of the Act, only the person nominated could be
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proceeded against and punished for the alleged offence along
with the company. So far as Lipton India Limited is
concerned, it is said that it had nominated one H. Dayani by
company resolution dated 15th December, 1988 as the person
too be in charge of, and responsible to, the company for the
conduct of its business at its Nagpur branch and intimation
thereof was sent as required by Rule 12B with the consent of
the said H. Dayani to the concerned Local (Health) Authority
and hence the said H. Dayani alone could be proceeded
against and punished, besides the company, for the
commission of the offence in question. A copy of the
resolution passed by the Board of Directors of the company
at its meeting held on 15th December, 1988 was annexed to
the intimation sent in the prescribed form under Rule 12B of
the Rules. M/.s Hindustan Lever Limited contends that it too
had nominated one Dr. Nirmal Sen as the person in charge of,
and responsible to, the said company for the conduct of its
business at the Shamnagar factory and hence besides the
company the said Dr. Nirmal Sen alone could be proceeded
against and punished. That company also had intimated the
Local (Health) Authority about the nomination of Dr. Nirmal
Sen as the person in charge of, and responsible to, the said
company for the conduct of its business at its shamnagar
factory and this was duly verified by the Local (Health)
Authority of Bhatpara Municipality exercising administrative
control over the area in which the said factory was situate.
As pointed out earlier if the two companies succeed in
showing that they had made valid nominations of H.Dayani and
Dr. Nirmal Sen, respectively, and had duly intimated the
concerned Local (Health) Authority about the same before
the commission of the alleged offences, there can be no
doubt that the case would fall within the ambit of sub-
clause (i) of clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 17 of
the Act and not under sub-clause (ii) thereof. It would
then be necessary for the prosecuting agency to show from
the averments made in the complaint that the case falls
within sub-section (4) of section 17 of the Act. If the
prosecuting agency fails to show that the offence was
committed with the consent or connivance of any particular
Director, Manager, Secretary or other officer of the company
230
or on account of the negligence of any one or more of them,
the case set up against the appellants cannot be allowed to
proceed.
It may at this stage be mentioned that H. Dayani has
filed an affidavit stating that at the material point of
time he was the Branch Manager of the Nagpur Branch of
Lipton India Limited and the said branch had a godown at
Panagarh, District Jabalpur, where Dalda Vanaspati in
different packings and Tree Top Tetrapack were stored, By
the Board’s Resolution dated 15th December, 1988 he was
nominated under section 17 (2) of the Act to be the person
in charge of, and responsible to, the company for the
conduct of its business at Nagpur Branch. He further states
that as per Rule 12B, a nomination in Form VIII was duly
sent by the company to the Local (Health) Authority at
Jabalpur and he had signed the said form in token of having
accepted the nomination. This form, says the deponent, was
duly received by the Local (Health) Authority, Panagarh,
Jabalpur on 21st February, 1989. Similarly, Dr. Nirmal Sen
has filed an affidavit stating that he was the Factory
Manager of the Shamnagar Factory of Hindustan lever Limited
at the material time and his company had a godown at
Panagarh, District Jabalpur, where Dalda Vanaspati in
different packings was stored. By the Board’s Resolution
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dated 22nd March, 1983 he was nominated under section 17(2)
of the Act to be in charge of, and responsible to, the
company for the conduct of its business at the Shamnagar
factory and in that capacity he was entitled to exercise all
such powers and take all such steps as considered necessary
or expedient to prevent the commission of any offence under
the Act. As required by Rule 12B, a nomination in Form VIII
was sent by his company to the Local (Health) Authority,
Bhatpara Municipality and he had signed the same in token of
having accepted the nomination made in his favour on 13th
April, 1983. He states that this form was duly received by
the Local (Health) Authority on the same day. The
aforesaid sworn statements made by H. Dayani and Dr. Nirmal
Sen were produced on record to assure the Court that the
nominated person of the said two companies own their
responsibilities under the Act pursuant to the nomination.
On a careful perusal of the complaints lodged by the
Food Inspector under the Act it is evident that intimation
regarding the nomination in favour of H. Dayani and Dr.
Nirmal Sen had been communicated to the Food Inspector
before the complaints came to be lodged. This is evident
from the averments made in the respective complaints. The
nomination
231
was, however, not acted upon by the complainant on the
ground that it was incomplete. It was , therefore, said in
the absence of a valid nomination from the concerned company
the Directors of the company were liable to be proceeded
against and punished on proof of the charge levelled against
them in the complaint. It will thus be seen that there is
no allegation in the complaint which would bring the case
within the mischief of section 17 (4) of the Act. There is
no allegation in the complaint that the offence was
committed with the consent/connivance/negligence of the
Directors, other than the nominated person, who were
impleaded as co-assued. We are, therefore, satisfied that
the allegations in the complaint do not make out a case
under sub-section (4) of section 17 of the Act. That being
so, the inclusion of the co-accused other than the company
and the nominated person as the persons liable to be
proceeded against and punished cannot be justified. As held
by this Court in Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ram
Kishan Rohtagi & Ors., [1983] 1 SCR 884 where the
allegations set out in the complaint do not constitute any
offence, no process can be issued against the co-accused
other than the company and the nominated person and the High
Court would be justified in exercising its inherent
jurisdiction under section 482 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 to quash the order passed by the Magistrate
taking cognizance of the offence against such co-accused.
That brings us to the question whether process could be
issued against such co-accused under sub-clause (ii) of
clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 17 of the Act.
This would depend on the court’s finding whether there was a
valid nomination in favour of H. Dayani and Dr. Nirmal Sen.
If there was a valid nomination in existence at the date of
the commission of the offence there can be no doubt that the
case would be governed by section 17(1)(a)(i) of the Act and
section 17(1)(a)(ii) would not be attracted. The nomination
in favour of H. Dayani shows that it was received by the
Local (Health) Authority on 21st February, 1989 and the same
was signed by the Health Officer, Municipal Corporation,
Jabalpur on the same day and a copy thereof was returned to
the company sometime in March 1989. Although in the letter
of the Food Inspector dated 21st March, 1989 it was stated
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that the nomination form could not be accepted as it was not
signed by the Local (Health) Authority, no such averment was
made in the complaints subsequently filed. In the
complaints all that is said is that the nominations are not
valid as they are incomplete. Now during the pendency of
these appeals the Health Officer has by his letter dated
232
3rd October, 1991 informed as under :
"However, it is beyond my knowledge that who has
cut Jabalpur and written Panagarh in place of
Jabalpur when the nomination was handed over to the
party the word Jabalpur was written on the
document, Form No. VIII."
A perusal of the nomination form of H. Dayani shows
that some word has been scored out and Panagarh has been
written by its side. However, if it is the contention of the
complainant that this change was subsequently made after a
copy of the nomination was handed over to the party, the
original document in the possession of the Health Officer
could have been produced to show that Panagarh was
subsequently added for Jabalpur. Even the scored out word
does not read like Jabalpur. No where in the complaint has
it been contended that the document has been tempered with
subsequently. It is clear from this communication that the
nomination was sent in Form VIII and the same duly received
and acknowledged by the Health Officer, Municipal
Corporation, Jabalpur. It is, however, contended that since
of godown in which the offending goods were stored was
situate at Phutatal (Panagarh) of Jabalpur district,the
Local (Health) Authority was not the Health Officer of the
Jabalpur Municipality but the Civil Surgeon or the Chief
Medical Officer of District Jabalpur. A notification issued
by the State Government dated 14th February, 1983 under
clause (viii) of section 2 of the Act has been relied upon.
It is, therefore, necessary to inquire into the question
whether the nomination of H. Dayani was sent to, received
and acknowledged by the competent Local (Health) Authority.
The nomination form pertaining to Hindustan Lever
Limited is dated 30the March, 1983 in favour of Dr. Nirmal
Sen, Factory Manager of the Shamnagar unit of the company.
Dr. Nirmal Sen has signed that form on 13th April, 1983.
It appears to have been counter-signed by the Food
Inspector, Bhatpara Muncipality. It is, therefore, not
clear if it has been signed by the competent Local (Health)
Authority of the area in which the godown from which the
offending goods were recovered was situated. This too is a
matter which needs investigation.
In the result, the appeals are allowed. The order of
the learned Magistrate as well as the impugned order of the
High Court are set aside. The Matters are remanded to the
learned trial magistrate with a direction
233
to inquire into the question whether the nomination forms
nominating H. Dayani and Dr. Nirmal Sen were received and
acknowledged by the Local (Health) Authority competent to
receive and acknowledge the same. This question will be
considered as a preliminary question and the learned
magistrate will record a finding thereon . If he comes to
the conclusion that the nomination forms had been
acknowledged by the competent Local (Health) Authority he
shall drop the proceedings against the Directors of the
company, other than the company and the nominated persons.
If on the other hand he comes to the conclusion that the
prescribed forms had been acknowledged by a person other
than the competent Local (Health) Authority he will proceed
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against all the persons who are shown as the accused in the
complaint i.e. all the Directors including the nominated
person and the company. The appeals are allowed
accordingly.
G.N. Appeals allowed.
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