Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ARNIT DAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/05/2000
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, R.C.Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
On 5.9.1998, Crime No. 574/98 under Section 302,
I.P.C. was registered at P.S. Kadamkuan, Patna. According
to the FIR, one Abhishek was shot dead on that day. On
13.9.1998 the petitioner was arrested in connection with the
said offence. On 14.9.1998 the petitioner was produced
before the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, Patna who
after recording his statement under Section 164 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure remanded him to Juvenile home, Patna.
The petitioner claimed to have been born on 18.9.1982 and
therefore a juvenile, entitled to protection of The Juvenile
Justice Act, 1986, (hereinafter The Act for short). The
petitioners claim was disputed on behalf of the
prosecution. The A.C.J.M. directed an enquiry to be held
under Section 32 of the Act. The petitioner was referred to
examination by a Medical Board. On receipt of the report of
the Medical Board and on receiving such other evidence as
was adduced on behalf of the petitioner, the A.C.J.M.
concluded that the petitioner was above 16 years of age on
the date of the occurrence and therefore was not required to
be tried by a Juvenile Court. The finding has been upheld
by the Sessions Court in appeal and the High Court in
revision. The petitioner has filed this petition seeking
leave to appeal.
Leave granted.
Two questions have arisen for consideration. Firstly,
by reference to which date the age of the petitioner is
required to be determined for finding out whether he is a
juvenile or not. Secondly, whether the finding as to age,
as arrived at by the Courts below and maintained by the High
Court, can be sustained.
Shri U.R. Lalit, the learned senior counsel for the
appellant has submitted that it is the date of the offence
which is crucial for determining the age of the person
claiming to be juvenile while according to the learned
Additional Solicitor General it is the date on which the
person is brought before the competent authority by
reference to which the age of the person is required to be
determined so as to find whether he is a juvenile or not.
The Juvenile Justice Act, 1986, as its preamble
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speaks, is an Act to provide for the care, protection,
treatment, development and rehabilitation of neglected or
delinquent juvenile and for the adjudication of certain
matters relating to, and disposition of, delinquent
juveniles. The statement of objects and reasons, it will
be useful to reproduce (with emphasis supplied by us) as
under :-
A review of the working of the existing Children Acts
would indicate that much greater attention is required to be
given to children who may be found in situations of social
maladjustment, delinquency or neglect. The justice system
as available for adults is not considered suitable for being
applied to juveniles. It is also necessary that a uniform
juvenile justice system should be available throughout the
country which should make adequate provision for dealing
with all aspects in the changing social, cultural and
economic situation in the country. There is also need for
larger involvement of informal systems and community based
welfare agencies in the care, protection, treatment,
development and rehabilitation of such juveniles.
2. In this context, the proposed legislation aims at
achieving the following objectives :-
(i) to lay down a uniform legal framework for juvenile
justice in the country so as to ensure that no child under
any circumstances is lodged in jail or police lock-up. This
is being ensured by establishing Juvenile Welfare Boards and
Juvenile Courts;
(ii) to provide for a specialised approach towards the
prevention and treatment of juvenile delinquency in its full
range in keeping with the developmental needs of the child
found in any situation of social maladjustment;
(iii) to spell out the machinery and infrastructure
required for the care, protection, treatment, development
and rehabilitation of various categories of children coming
within the purview of the juvenile justice system. This is
proposed to be achieved by establishing observation homes,
juvenile homes for neglected juveniles and special homes for
delinquent juveniles;
(iv) to establish norms and standards for the
administration of juvenile justice in terms of investigation
and prosecution, adjudication and disposition, and care,
treatment and rehabilitation;
(v) to develop appropriate linkages and co-ordination
between the formal system of juvenile justice and voluntary
agencies engaged in the welfare of neglected or socially
maladjusted children and to specifically define the areas of
their responsibilities and roles;
(vi) to constitute special offences in relation to
juveniles and provide for punishments therefor;
(vii) to bring the operation of the juvenile justice
system in the country in conformity with the United Nations
Standard Minimum Rule for the Administration of Juvenile
Justice.
3. As its various provisions come into force in
different parts of the country they would replace the
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corresponding laws on the subject such as the Children Act,
1960 and other State enactments on the subject.
The Bill seeks to achieve the above objects.
Clause (h) of Section 2 of the Act defines juvenile as
under :- 2. Definitions.- In this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires, -
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(h) juvenile means a boy who has not attained the
age of sixteen years or a girl who has not attained the age
of eighteen years;
Section 3 provides where an enquiry has been initiated
against a juvenile and during the course of such enquiry a
juvenile ceases to be such, then, notwithstanding anything
contained in this Act or any other law for the time being in
force, the enquiry may be continued and orders may be made
in respect of such persons as if such person had continued
to be a juvenile. Chapter II of the Act speaks of competent
authorities and institutions for juveniles such as Juvenile
Welfare Boards, Juvenile Courts, Juvenile homes, Special
homes, Observation homes and After-care organisations.
Chapter III makes provision for neglected juveniles wherein
is also included Section 17 making provision for
uncontrollable juveniles. Chapter IV deals with delinquent
juveniles. Provisions contained in Sections 18 to 26
provide for bail and custody of juvenile accused of a
bailable or non- bailable offence, the manner of dealing
with them and the orders that may be passed regarding or
against delinquent juveniles. Proceedings under Chapter
VIII of the Code of Criminal Procedure are not competent
against juvenile. A juvenile and a person not a juvenile
cannot be jointly tried. No disqualification attaches to
conviction of a juvenile for any offence under any law.
Then there are special provisions contained in Section 26 as
to proceedings in respect of juveniles pending in any Court
on the date of coming into force of the Act. Chapter V
(Sections 27 to 40) lay down procedure of competent
authorities generally under the Act and appeals and
revisions from orders of such authorities. Chapter VI
(Sections 41 to 45) provides for special offences in respect
of juveniles. Chapter VII (Sections 46 to 63) contains
miscellaneous provisions.
It is pertinent to note that neither the definition of
juvenile nor any other provision contained in the Act
specifically provides the date by reference to which the age
of a boy or a girl has to be determined so as to find out
whether he or she is a juvenile or not.
The learned Additional Solicitor General submitted
that the answer is to be found in Section 32 of the Act
which reads as under :-
32. Presumption and determination of age. (1)
Where it appears to a competent authority that a person
brought before it under any of the provisions of this Act
(otherwise than for the purpose of giving evidence) is a
juvenile, the competent authority shall make due enquiry as
to the age of that person and for that purpose shall take
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such evidence as may be necessary and shall record a finding
whether the person is a juvenile or not, stating his age as
nearly as may be.
(2) No order of a competent authority shall be deemed
to have become invalid merely by any subsequent proof that
the person in respect of whom the order has been made is not
a juvenile, and the age recorded by the competent authority
to be the age of the person so brought before it shall, for
the purpose of this Act, be deemed to be the true age of
that person.
It is submitted by the learned Additional Solicitor
General that order of the competent authority has been given
a finality subject to decision in appeal and/or revision as
regards the age of that person and the jurisdiction to
record that finding commences when the person is brought
before it. It is this expression which provides the vital
clue to the date by reference to which the age is to be
determined.
There are several provisions in the Act which provide
for first appearance of the person before the competent
authority. Competent Authority has been defined in Clause
(d) of Section 2 to mean, in relation to neglected
juveniles, a Juvenile Welfare Board constituted under
Section 4 of the Act and, in relation to delinquent
juveniles, Juvenile Court and where no such Board or
Juvenile Court has been constituted, includes any Court
empowered under sub-section (2) of Section 7 to exercise the
powers conferred on a Board or a Juvenile Court. Under
sub-section (2) of Section 7, where no Board or Juvenile
Court has been constituted for any area, the powers
conferred on the Board or the Juvenile Court by or under the
Act shall be exercised in that area by the District
Magistrate or the Sub-Divisional Magistrate or any
Metropolitan Magistrate or Judicial Magistrate of the First
Class, as the case may be. The powers conferred on the
Board or Juvenile Court may also be exercised by the High
Court and the Court of Sessions, when the proceeding comes
before them in appeal, revision or otherwise.
The scheme of the Act contemplates its applicability
coming into play only when the person may appear or be
brought before the competent authority. Under Section 8,
when any Magistrate not empowered to exercise the powers of
the Board or Juvenile Court under this Act is of opinion
that the person brought before him under any of the
provisions of this Act (otherwise then for the purpose of
giving evidence) is a juvenile, he shall record such opinion
and forward the juvenile and the record of the proceeding to
the competent authority having jurisdiction over the
proceeding. The competent authority to which the proceeding
is so forwarded shall hold the enquiry as if the juvenile
had originally been brought before it.
Under Section 18, when any person accused of a
bailable or non-bailable offence and apparently a juvenile
is arrested or detained or appears or is brought before a
Juvenile Court, such person shall, notwithstanding anything
contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, or in any other
law for the time being in force, be released on bail with or
without surety unless there appears reasonable grounds for
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believing that the release is likely to bring him in
association with any known criminal or expose him to moral
danger or that his release would defeat the ends of justice.
In the latter case, the person has to be kept in an
observation home or a place of safety until he can be
brought before a Juvenile Court. The Juvenile Court if not
releasing the person on bail must not commit him to prison
but send him to an observation home or a place of safety
during the pendency of the enquiry before him. Under
Section 20, where a juvenile charged with an offence appears
or is produced before a Juvenile Court, the Juvenile Court
shall hold an enquiry in accordance with the provisions of
Section 39. A reading of all these provisions referred to
herein above makes it very clear that an enquiry as to the
age of the juvenile has to be made only when he is brought
or appears before the competent authority. A Police Officer
or a Magistrate who is not empowered to act or cannot act as
a competent authority has to merely form an opinion guided
by the apparent age of the person and in the event of
forming an opinion that he is a juvenile, he has to forward
him to the competent authority at the earliest subject to
arrangements for keeping in custody and safety of the person
having been made for the duration of time elapsing in
between. The competent authority shall proceed to hold
enquiry as to the age of that person for determining the
same by reference to the date of the appearance of the
person before it or by reference to the date when person was
brought before it under any of the provisions of the Act.
It is irrelevant what was the age of the person on the date
of commission of the offence. Any other interpretation
would not fit in the scheme and phraseology employed by the
Parliament in drafting the Act.
The use of the word is at two places in sub-section
(1) of Section 32 of the Act read in conjunction with a
person brought before it also suggests that the competent
authority is required to record the finding by reference to
an event in presenti before it, i.e. by reference to the
date when the person is brought before it and not by
reference to a remote event i.e. the date on which the
offence was committed.
Prior to the enactment of the Juvenile Justice Act,
1986 there were several laws prevailing in different States
and the need for a uniform legislation for juveniles for the
whole of India was expressed in various forums including the
Parliament. Such uniform legislation was not being enacted
on the ground that the subject matter of such a legislation
fell in the State List of the Constitution. The U.N.
Standard Minimum Rules for the administration of juvenile
justice enabled the Parliament exercising its powers under
Article 253 of the Constitution read with entry 14 of the
Union List to make any law for the whole of India to fulfil
international obligations (see Treatise on the Juvenile
Justice Act by Ved Kumari, Indian Law Institute, New Delhi,
p.5). The said United Nations Standard Minimum Rules,
called Beijing Rules, adopted by the General Assembly in
1985 vide Chapter 2 & 5 of Part-I provide as under:-
2. Scope of the Rules and definitions used
2.1 The following Standard Minimum Rules shall be
applied to juvenile offenders impartially, without
distinction of any kind, for example as to race, colour,
sex, language, religion, political or other opinions,
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national or social origin, property, birth or other status.
2.2 For purposes of these Rules, the following
definitions shall be applied by Member States in a manner
which is compatible with their respective legal systems and
concepts:
(a) A juvenile is a child or young person who, under
the respective legal systems, may be dealt with for an
offence in a manner which is different from an adult.
(b) An offence is any behaviour (act or omission) that
is punishable by law under the respective legal systems;
(c) A juvenile offender is a child or young person who
is alleged to have committed or who has been found to have
committed an offence.
2.3 Efforts shall be made to establish, in each
national jurisdiction, a set of laws, rules and provisions
specifically applicable to juvenile offenders and
institutions and bodies entrusted with the functions of the
administration of juvenile justice and designed :
(a) to meet the varying needs of juvenile offenders,
while protecting their basic rights;
(b) to meet the needs of society; and
(c) to implement the following rules thoroughly and
fairly.
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xxx xxx xxx xxx
5. Aims of juvenile justice
5.1 The juvenile justice system shall emphasize the
well-being of the juvenile and shall ensure that any
reaction to juvenile offenders shall always be in proportion
to the circumstances of both the offenders and the offence.
[Source Juvenile Justice Act by Asutosh Mookerjee
published by S.C. Sarkar & Sons, pp. 20-21]
The term juvenile justice before the onset of
delinquency may refer to social justice; after the onset of
delinquency, it refers to justice in its normal juridical
sense. (See Juvenile Justice : Before and after the
onset of delinquency, working paper prepared by the
Secretariat for 6th U.N. Congress on the Prevention of
Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, quoted at page 4 of
The Treatise, Ved Kumari, ibid). The Juvenile Justice Act
provides for justice after the onset of delinquency. The
societal factors leading to birth of delinquency and the
preventive measures which would check juvenile delinquency
legitimately fall within the scope of social justice. Once
a boy or a girl has assumed delinquency, his or her
treatment and trial at the hands of justice delivery system
is taken care of by the provisions of the Juvenile Justice
Act. The view so taken finds support from the preamble to
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the Act and the statement of objects and reasons. The
preamble speaks for the Act making provisions for the things
post- delinquency. Several expressions employed in the
statement of objects and reasons vocally support this view.
The Act aims at laying down a uniform juvenile justice
system in the country avoiding lodging in jail or police
lock-up of child; and providing for prevention and
treatment of juvenile delinquency, for care, protection,
etc. post- juvenility. In short the field sought to be
covered by the Act is not the one which had led to juvenile
delinquency but the field when juvenile having committed a
delinquency is placed for being taken care of post-
delinquency.
During the course of hearing, the Court posed a
question to Shri U.R. Lalit, the learned senior counsel for
the appellant What happens if a boy or a girl of just less
than 16 or 18 years of age commits an offence and then
leaves the country or for any reasons neither appears nor is
brought before the competent authority until he or she
attains the age of say 50 years ? If the interpretation
suggested by the learned senior counsel for the appellant
were to be accepted, he shall have to be sent to a juvenile
home, special home or an observation home or entrusted to an
after care organisation where there would all be boys and
girls of less than 16 or 18 years of age. Would he be
required to be dealt by a Juvenile Welfare Board or a
Juvenile Court ? The learned senior counsel, with all the
wits at his command, had no answer till the end and had to
give up ultimately. We are, therefore, clearly of the
opinion that the procedure prescribed by the provisions of
the Act has to be adopted only when the competent authority
finds the person brought before it or appearing before it is
found to be under 16 years of age if a boy and under 18
years of age if a girl on the date of being so brought or
such appearance first before the competent authority. The
date of the commission of offence is irrelevant for finding
out whether the person is a juvenile within the meaning of
Clause (h) of Section 2 of the Act. If that would have been
the intendment of the Parliament, nothing had prevented it
from saying so specifically.
Section 3 of the Act also provides a clue to the
legislative intent. It provides for an enquiry initiated
against the juvenile being continued and orders made thereon
even if such person had ceased to be a juvenile during the
course of such enquiry. There would have been no need of
enacting Section 3 if only the age of the juvenile would
have been determinable by reference to the date of the
offence.
Shri U.R. Lalit, the learned senior counsel for the
appellant invited our attention to Santanu Mitra v. State
of W.B. 1998 (5) SCC 697, Bhola Bhagat v. State of Bihar
1997 (8) SCC 720 and Gopinath Ghosh v. State of W.B. 1984
Supp. SCC 228 and to a number of other decisions which we
do not propose to catalogue separately for most of them have
been referred to in paras 14 and 15 of the decision in Bhola
Bhagat (Supra). What has been emphasized by Shri Lalit is
that in all these cases the question whether the person,
arrayed as accused/appellant before the Court, was a
juvenile or not was decided by taking into consideration the
age of the accused on the date of the occurrence or the date
of the commission of the offence. We have carefully pursued
all these decisions. In all these cases the counsel for the
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contesting parties before the Court have made their
submissions by assuming that the date of the offence was the
relevant date for determining the age of the juvenile.
Accordingly this Court, having examined the facts of each
case, recorded a finding as to the age of the accused on the
date of the occurrence of the offence. Generally speaking
these cases are authorities for the propositions that (i)
the technicality of the accused having not claimed the
benefit of the provisions of the Juvenile Justice Act at the
earliest opportunity or before any of the Courts below
should not, keeping in view the intendment of the
legislation, come in the way of the benefit being extended
to the accused appellant even if the plea was raised for the
first time before this Court; (ii) a hypertechnical
approach should not be adopted while appreciating the
evidence adduced on behalf of the accused in support of the
plea that he was a juvenile and if two views may be possible
on the same evidence, the Court should lean in favour of
holding the accused to be a juvenile in border line cases;
and (iii) the provisions of the Act are mandatory and while
implementing the provisions of the Act, those charged with
responsibilities of implementation should show sensitivity
and concern for a juvenile. However, in none of the cases
the specific issue by reference to which date (the date of
the offence or the date of production of the person before
the competent authority), the Court shall determine whether
the person was a juvenile or not, was neither raised nor
decided.
A decision not expressed, not accompanied by reasons
and not proceeding on conscious consideration of an issue
cannot be deemed to be a law declared to have a binding
effect as is contemplated by Article 141. That which has
escaped in the judgment is not ratio decidendi. This is the
rule of sub-silentio, in the technical sense when a
particular point of law was not consciously determined.
(See State of U.P. Vs. Synthetics & Chemicals Ltd. 1991
(4) SCC 138, para 41).
Full Bench decision of the High Court of Calcutta in
Dilip Saha Vs. State of West Bengal AIR1978 Calcutta 529
and Full Bench decision in Krishna Bhagwan Vs. State of
Bihar AIR 1989 Patna 217 were strongly relied on by the
learned senior counsel, Shri Lalit submitting that the
question specifically arising for consideration before this
Court was also before the two High Courts. We have examined
the two decisions. In Dilip Saha (supra) the Calcutta High
Court, interpreting the provisions of WB children Act, 1959
which is a pari materia enactment, has taken the view that
the age of the accused at the time of the commission of the
offence is the relevant age for attracting the provisions of
the WB Children Act, 1959 and not his age at the time of
trial. Vide paras 22 to 24 the Full Bench has assigned two
reasons for taking the view which it has done which in our
opinion are both erroneous. One reason is that according to
Section 24 of that Act a child cannot be sentenced to death
or ordinarily to imprisonment then denying the benefit of
the provisions of the Act to a person who was a child on the
date of the offence but had ceased to be so on the date of
commencement of the inquiry or trial, may result in the
child being sentenced to death or imprisonment for life
consequent upon his being held guilty which would be
violative of Article 20 (1) of the Constitution which
prohibits any person on conviction for any offence being
subjected to a penalty greater than that which might have
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been inflicted under the law in force at the time of the
commission of the offence. The High Court has overlooked
that Article 20 (1) of the Constitution would be attracted
only if the applicability of the Act was determined by
reference to the date of the offence but if it was
determined by reference to the date of the commencement of
the inquiry or trial then Article 20 (1) would not apply.
The second reason assigned by the High Court is that the
Investigating Officer may by delaying investigation and
putting up of the accused for trial deny the accused benefit
of the provisions of the Act and thereby defeat the object
and purpose of the Act. Suffice it to say that such an
occasion would not arise at all because before the
commencement of the trial there would be some point of time
when the accused shall have to be brought before the
competent authority and that date would be determinative of
the fact whether the accused was a juvenile or not. As to
Krishna Bhagwans case decided by Patna High Court suffice
it to observe that the opening part of the judgment itself
indicates that the question posed before us was not a
question arising before the High Court. The two questions
considered and answered by the High Court were different.
The High Court was seized of the issues as to what would be
the impact of the event of the child ceasing to be so before
the conclusion of the trial and the effect of the plea under
the Juvenile Justice Act, 1986 having not been taken before
the trial court and the trial having proceeded oblivious of
the provisions of the Act. During the course of discussion
the Full Bench has observed that the juvenile is one who was
below a certain age on the date of the commission of the
offence but the observation is also based on an assumption
and is certainly not a point deliberated upon before the
High Court.
All this exercise would have been avoided if only the
Legislature would have taken care not to leave an ambiguity
in the definition of juvenile and would have clearly
specified the point of time by reference to which the age
was to be determined to find a person a juvenile. The
ambiguity can be resolved by taking into consideration the
Preamble and the Statement of Objects and Reasons. The
Preamble suggests what the Act was intended to deal with.
If the language used by Parliament is ambiguous the Court is
permitted to look into the preamble for construing the
provisions of an Act (M/s. Burrakur Coal Co. Ltd. & M/s.
East Indian Coal Co. Ltd. Vs. The Union of India and
others, AIR 1961 SC 954). A preamble of a statute has been
said to be a good means of finding out its meaning and, as
it were, the key of understanding of it, said this Court in
A. Thangal Kunju Musaliar Vs. M. Venkatachalam Potti AIR
1958 SC 246. The Preamble is a key to un-lock the
legislative intent. If the words employed in an enactment
may spell a doubt as to their meaning it would be useful to
so interpret the enactment as to harmonise it with the
object which the Legislature had in its view. The
Legislative aims and objectives set out in the earlier part
of this judgment go to show that this Legislation has been
made for taking care of the care and custody of a juvenile
during investigation, inquiry and trial, i.e., from a point
of time when the juvenile is available to the law
administration and justice delivery system; it does not
make any provision for a person involved in an offence by
reference to the date of its commission by him. The long
title of the Act too suggests that the content of the Act is
the justice aspect relating to juveniles.
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We make it clear that we have not dealt with the
provisions of Chapter VI dealing with special offences in
respect of juveniles. Prima facie, we feel that the view
which we have taken would create no difficulty even in
assigning meaning to the term juvenile as occurring in
Chapter VI(Sections 41 to 45) of the Act because a juvenile
covered by any of these provisions is likely to fall within
the definition of neglected juvenile as defined in clause
(l) of Section 2 who shall also have to be dealt with by a
Juvenile Board under Chapter III of the Act and the view
taken by us would hold the field there as well. However, we
express no opinion on the scope of Chapter VI of the Act and
leave that aspect to be taken care of in a suitable case.
At any rate in the present context we need not vex our mind
on that aspect. Section 2 which defines juvenile and
neglected juvenile itself begins by saying that the words
defined therein would have the assigned meaning unless the
context otherwise requires. So far as the present context
is concerned we are clear in our mind that the crucial date
for determining the question whether a person is juvenile is
the date when he is brought before the competent authority.
So far as the finding regarding the age of the
appellant is concerned it is based on appreciation of
evidence and arrived at after taking into consideration of
the material available on record and valid reasons having
been assigned for it. The finding arrived at by the learned
A.C.J.M. has been maintained by the Sessions Court in
appeal and the High Court in revision. We find no case
having been made out for interfering therewith.
For the foregoing reasons the appeal is dismissed.