Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. SREE RAMA RAO
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1723 1964 SCR (3) 25
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC1103 (8)
RF 1969 SC 983 (4)
RF 1970 SC1334 (11)
F 1975 SC2151 (25)
RF 1980 SC1896 (180)
R 1983 SC1102 (6)
RF 1986 SC 995 (16)
ACT:
Public Servant--Disciplinary action--Writ Petition-
Interference by High Court--Principles--Constitution of
India, Art. 226.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was a Sub-Inspector of Police in charge
01 a police station. One D, suspected of having committed
an offence, was apprehended by the village Munsif and was
sent to the police station. He was handed over to the
respondent. The respondent declined to give a written
acknowledgment of having received 1)and made no entries in
the station diary regarding him. D was confined in the
police station for several days without being produced
before a Magistrate. A departmental inquiry was started
against him for reprehensible conduct in wrongfully
confining D. The defence set up by him was that D had never
been handed over to him because he had escaped while on his
way to the police station. The Deputy Superintendent of
Police, who held the enquiry, found him guilty of the
charge. The Deputy Inspector-General of Police gave him a
show cause notice and after considering his explanation
ordered that he be dismissed from service. On appeal, the
Inspector-General of Police modified the order of dismissal
and converted it into one for removal from service. The
respondent filed a writ petition before the High Court
challenging the validity of the order and the High Court
quashed the orders.
Held that the High Court had no jurisdiction to
interfere with the orders. The High Court was wrong in its
view that in a departmental enquiry the rule followed in a
criminal trial that an offence is not established unless
proved by evidence beyond reasonable doubt to the
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satisfaction of the court must be applied and that if such a
rule was not applied the high court could set aside the
order of the departmental authority in exercise of its
power .under Art. 226 of the constitution. The High Court
does not sit as a court of appeal over the decision of the
authority holding a departmental enquiry:
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it has only to see whether the enquiry has been held by a
competent authority and according to the procedure
prescribed and whether the rules of natural justice have
been observed. Where there is some evidence which the
authority has accepted and which evidence may reasonably
support the conclusion that the officer is guilty, it is not
the function of the High Court exercising its jurisdiction
under Art. 226 to review the evidence and to arrive at an
independent finding on the evidence. If the enquiry has
been properly held the question of adequacy or reliability
of the evidence cannot be convassed before the High Court.
In the present case, the proceedings before the departmental
authorities were regular, no rules of natural justice were
voilated, the conclusions were borne out by the evidence and
the respondent had ample opportunity of examining his
witnesses. Therefore, the conclusions of the punishing
authority were not open tO be questioned before the High
Court.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 626 of
1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated November 18, 1959, of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in
Writ Petition No. 922 of 1956.
T.V.R. Tatachari and P.D. Menon, for the appellants.
K. Bhimasankaram and T. Satyanarayana, for the respondent.
1963. April 10. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHAH J.--On March 10, 1955, the Deputy Inspector General
of Police, State of Andhra, passed an order dismissing the
respondent (who was a sub-inspector of police appointed on
probation) from service. On appeal to the Inspector General
of Police, the order was altered into one of removal from
service. The respondent then. moved the High Court of
Andhra pradesh by a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for a writ of certiorari or other appropriate
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writ or direction quashing the proceedings of the Inspector
General of Police including his order dated September 24,
1955, and the order of the Deputy Inspector General of
Police dated March 10, 1955, and for such other orders as
the Court may deem fit. The High Court quashed the two
impugned orders. Against the order passed by the High
Court, this appeal is preferred with special leave.
It is necessary to set out in some detail the facts
which gave rise to the departmental proceedings against the
respondent resulting in his removal from service. The
respondent was at the material time in charge of the police
station Kodur, Visakhapatnam District. On February 18,
1954, an offence of house-breaking and theft was reported at
the police station and was registered on February 19,1954.
It was recited in the report of the Village Munsif of
Vechalam that one Durgalu who was then absconding was
suspected to be-the offender. This Durgalu was apprehended
by the Village Munsif of Kalogotla on March 5, 1954, and was
handed over to the Village Munsif of Vechalam, who in his
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turn sent Durgalu to Kodur police station with village
servants V. Polayya, Vechalapu Simhachalam, Kodamanchali
Simhachalam and Koduru Sumudram. It is the case of the
State that Durgalu was handed over to the respondent on the
night of March 5, 1954, but no written acknowledgment in
token of having received Durgalu from the village servants
was given by the respondent, nor was any entry posted in the
station diary, and Durgalu was thereafter confined in the
police station from the night of March 5, 1954, without any
order from a Magistrate remanding him to police custody. On
March 7, 1954, the’ respondent entrusted charge of the
police station to a head constable and left for Kakinada on
casual leave for five days. He returned to Kodur on
March 12, 1954. After the departure of the respondent,
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some constables arrested one Reddy Simhachalam and
brought him to the police station in the evening of March 7,
1954. It is the case of the State that as a result of
torture by police constables Nos. 1199, 363 and 662,
Reddy Simhachalam became unconscious. The dead body of
Reddy Simhachalam was found floating in a well near the
police station on the morning of March 9, 1954, and an
enquiry into the circumstances in which the death took place
was commenced by the Revenue Divisional Officer,
Narsipatnam. In the enquiry, Durgalu made a statement that
he had witnessed the torture of Reddy Simhachalam, in the
police station, by the three constables. Police constables
Nos. 1199, 363’ and 662 were then charged before the Sub-
Magistrate, Chodavaram, for offences under ss. 304(2) and
201 read with s. 114 I.P. Code, for causing the death of
Reddy Simhachalam by torturing him and for causing
disappearence of the evidence of his death. Before the Sub-
Magistrate, Durgalu retracted his earlier statement and
stated that the statement that he was an eye-witness to
the torture of Reddy Simhachalam was untrue and that he was
induced to make that statement by the police. He deposed
that he had escaped from the custody of the village servants
before he reached the police-station Kodur on March 5, 1954,
and that he was re-arrested on March 8, 1954. The Sub-
Magistrate discharged the police constables holding that
once Durgalu the only eye-witness turned hostile, there was
no direct evidence on which even a prima facie case could be
made out against them. The record of the case before the
Sub-Magistrate was called by the Sessions Judge,
Visakhapatnam, suo motu. The Sessions Judge held it proved
on the evidence that Durgalu was arrested on March 5, 1954
and was taken to the police-station Kodur and was wrongfully
confined since that date in the police station, and the
story of Durgalu before the Sub-Magistrate that after he was
arrested on March 5, 1954 and was taken to the
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Kodur village on that very day he had escaped from custody
and that he remained in his village Vechalam could not be
believed.
A departmental enquiry was commenced in May 1954:
against the respondent. The charge in the disciplinary
proceedings against the respondent after it was amended ran
as follows :--
"Reprehensible conduct in wrongfully confining
a K.D, Chandana Durgalu accused in Cr.
No.17/54: of Kodur Police Station from the
night of 5-3-54: to 7-3-1954: in the
Police
Station when he went on five days casual
leave.’ ’
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To the charge was appended a "statement of facts" reciting
inter aria, that Durgalu was apprehended by the Village
Munsif, Kaligotla and was handed over to the Village Munsif,
Vechalam, that Durgalu was sent by the latter with the
written report with the assistance of village servants, that
on the same night the latter handed over Durgalu to the
respondent in the police station Kodur at about 12 mid-
night, with the report of the Village Munsif and demanded
acknowledgment but the acknowledgment was refused by the
respondent, and that the respondent did not mention these
facts in any of the station records and wrongfully confined
Durgalu in the police station till March 7, 1954:, when he
proceeded on casual leave for five days. This, the
"statement of facts" added, constituted grave and
reprehensible conduct and hence the charge. The respondent
submitted an explanation in which he submitted that Durgalu
was not handed over to him on March S, 1954:, as
alleged nor at any time before he proceeded on March 7,
1904:, on casual leave. His plea was that when he proceeded
on leave he entrusted charge of the police station to the
head constable leaving instructions to trace Durgalu and to
take action.
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The Deputy Superintendent of Police held the
departmental enquiry and submitted his report on October 27,
1954, setting out the evidence of the witnesses examined on
behalf of the State and the respondent, and summing up the
conclusion by reciting that the evidence in the case for the
State made out a strong case against the respondent, that it
was established that Durgalu was arrested on March 5, 1954,
and was sent by the Village Munsif to Vechalam who in his
turn sent him with the village servants to the police
station Kodur, and Durgalu was handed over to the respondent
on the night o.f March 5, 1954, that the story of Durgalu
that after he was arrested on March 5, 1954, he escaped from
the custody of the village servants and was again arrested
on March 8, 1954, was false. The report then concluded "All
these facts go to show that he was arrested on the 5th
without a shadow of doubt, but if the judgment of the
learned Court which is based on the retracted statement of
Durgalu is considered the ’sacred truth’ the delinquent may
have benefit of doubt." This report was considered by the
authority competent to impose punishment and a provisional
conclusion that the respondent merited punishment of
dismissal for the charges held established by the report was
recorded. A copy of the report of the Enquiry Officer was
sent to the respondent and he was called upon to submit his
representation against the action proposed to be taken in
regard to him. The respondent submitted his representation
which was considered by the Deputy Inspector General of
Police, Northern Range, Waltair. That Officer referred to
the evidence of witnesses for the State about the arrest of
Durgalu on March 5, 1954, and the handing over of Durgalu to
the respondent on the same day. He observed that the
evidence of Durgalu ’that after he was arrested on March 5:
1954, he had made good his escape and was again arrested on
March 8, 1954, could not be accepted. Holding that the
charge
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against the respondent was serious and had on the evidence
been adequately proved, in his view the only punishment
which the respondent deserved was of dismissal from the
police force.-
In appeal the Inspector General of Police accepted
the evidence of the witnesses who had deposed that they had
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handed over Durgalu to the respondent on March 5, 1954.
In his view the respondent had "betrayed gross dishonesty
and lack of character in falsifying the records by omitting
to write what he had done and what happened in the police
station, thereby .proving himself thoroughly dishonest and
untrustworthy," and "showing himself unfit to hold the
responsible post of a SubInspector of police," and that "his
records as a probationary Sub-Inspector of police are
generally unsatisfactory. and he has earned a reputation
for inefficiency and lack of interest in work for weakness
in dealing with his subordinates, which are all attributes
that militate against his becoming useful SubInspector of
Police." But taking into consideration his young age and
inexperience, the Inspector General of Police reduced the
order of dismissal into one for removal from service.
In the departmental proceeding a simple question of
fact fell to be determined--viz. whether Durgalu was
arrested on March 5, 1954, and was delivered over by the
village servants to the respondent at police station Kodur
on the night of March 5, 1954. There is no dispute that
Durgalu was arrested on March 5, 1954, and was sent by the
Village Munsif, Vechalam with his report to the police
station Kodur. The only question in dispute was whether
Durgalu was handed over to the respondent on March 5, 1954,
as stated by the witnesses for the State. The case of the
State was accepted by the Deputy Inspect.or .General of
Police who passed the order of dismissal and the Inspector
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General of Police in appeal. But the High Court declined to
accept this view of the evidence. In so doing, with respect
it must be observed, the High Court assumed to itself
jurisdiction which it did not possess. The High Court was
of the view that the conclusion of the departmental
authorities was vitiated, because the Enquiry Officer dealt
with the evidences of witnesses for the State, and the
witnesses for the respondent separately, and the Deputy
Inspector General of Police and the Inspector General of
Police did not in recording their orders refer to all the
evidence led before the Enquiry Officer and they "failed to
appreciate the full significance of the rule concerning the
onus of proving. The rule meant that everything essential
to the establishment of a charge lies on the person, who
seeks to establish the charge. It further means that the
two sets of evidence in the case must not be examined
separately in order to ascertain first whether those for
establishing the charge have proved it and then to examine
the defence in order to see how far the conclusions are
unjustified. The better approach, which has been described
as the golden thread in the web of criminal law is to
examine the law, the whole evidence in order to ascertain
how far the liability of the person proceeded against has
been established beyond reasonable doubt". The High Court
then observed that ordinarily the conclusions on questions
of fact by a body or tribunal in a proceeding under Art. 226
of the Constitution are accepted by the High Court but that
general rule does not apply "whenever an important principle
of jurisprudence is discarded in reaching such findings",
and since the fundamental rule that a person should be
punished only after the entire evidence in the case had been
considered and he is found liable beyond reasonable doubt,
had not been followed, the conclusions of the departmental
authorities were vitiated. The High Court again observed
that the orders passed by the departmental authorities were
vitiated because of two
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other matters: (i) that the Enquiry Officer declined to
summon and examine two witnesses for the defence even though
a request in that behalf was made; and (ii) that there was
no charge against the respondent of "falsifying the record
by omitting to write what he had done or what happened in
the police station", and he had not been given an
opportunity of meeting such a charge and therefore the
respondent had no fair hearing consistent with the
principles of natural justice.
There is no warrant for the view expressed by the High
Court that in considering whether a public officer is guilty
of the misconduct charged against him, the rule followed in
criminal trials that an offence is not established unless
proved by evidence beyond reasonable doubt to the
satisfaction of the Court, must be applied, and if that rule
be not applied, the High Court in a petition under Art, 226
of the Constitution is competent to declare the order of the
authorities holding a departmental enquiry invalid. The
High Court is not constituted in a proceeding under Art. 226
of the Constitution a Court of appeal over the decision of
the authorities holding a departmental enquiry against a
public servant: iris concerned to determine whether the
enquiry is held by an authority competent in that behalf,
and according to the procedure prescribed in that behalf,
and whether the rules of natural justice are not violated.
Where there is some evidence, which the authority entrusted
with the duty to hold the enquiry has accepted and which
evidence may reasonably support the conclusion that the
delinquent Officer is guilty of the charge, it is not the
function of the High Court in a petition for a writ under
Art. 226 to review the evidence and to arrive at an
independent finding on the evidence. The High Court may
undoubtedly interfere where the departmental authorities
have held the proceedings against the delinquent in a manner
inconsistent with the
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rules of natural justice or in violation of the statutory
rules prescribing the mode of enquiry or where the
authorities have disabled themselves from reaching a fair
decision by some considerations extraneous to the evidence
and the merits of the case or by allowing themselves to be
influenced by irrelevant considerations or ;where the
conclusion on the very face of it is so wholly arbitrary and
capricious that no reasonable person could ever have arrived
at that conclusion, or on similar grounds. But the
departmental authorities are, if the enquiry is otherwise
properly held, the sole judges of facts and if there be some
legal evidence on which their findings can be based, the
adequacy or reliability of that evidence is not a matter
which can be permitted to be canvassed before the High Court
in a proceeding for a writ under Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
The Enquiry Officer had accepted the evidence of
witnesses for the Sate that Durgalu was handed over to the
respondent on March 5, 1954, and the observation that the
respondent may have the benefit of doubt if the judgment of
the Magistrate is considered "sacred truth" appears to have
been made in a somewhat sarcastic vein, and does not cast
any doubt upon the conclusion recorded by him. The Enquiry
Officer appears to have stated that the judgment of the
Magistrate holding a criminal trial against a public
servant could not always be regarded as binding in a
departmental enquiry against that public servant. in so
stating, the Enquiry Officer did not commit any error. The
first ground on which the High Court interfered with the
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order of the punishing authorities is therefore wholly
unsustainable.
The two other grounds on which the High Court also based
its conclusion, namely, refusal to summon and examine
witnesses for the respondent and holding the respondent
guilty of a charge of which he had no
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notice are equally without substance. It appears that the
respondent desired to examine police constables Nos. 178,
506 and 569 to prove that Durgalu was not in the lock-up
till March 8, 1954. Police constable No. 506 was examined
as a witness for the respondent, and the Enquiry Officer
has not accepted his evidence. The other two witnesses were
neither summoned nor examined, but it appears from the
record that on September 20, 1954, the respondent promised
to produce the witnesses whom he had cited in his defence.
At the hearing dated September 26, 1954, three witnesses
were examined by the respondent and the respondent was given
another opportunity to secure the presence of the remaining
defence witnesses. On September 27, 1954 police constable
506 was examined and it appears that the respondent
expressed his desire not to examine any more witnesses. In
the proceeding of the Enquiry Officer there is a note that
"your defence witnesses have been examined and such
documents you required have been produced and exhibited".
The respondent subscribed his signature in acknowledgment of
the correctness of that recital. He did not raise any
objection in the representation made by him before the
Deputy Inspector General of Police when notice was issued on
him to show cause why he should not be punished. In the
memo of appeal to the Inspector General of Police, it was
submitted by the respondent that the police witnesses were
to be summoned by the Enquiry Officer, and that he did not
summon them. It was also submitted that the statement signed
by the respondent was only in respect of private witnesses,
and not police witnesses. But the endorsement made by the
Enquiry Officer is not susceptible of any such
interpretation, which refers to all witnesses for the
respondent. The record does not show that an application for
summoning the police witnesses was made and the Enquiry
Officer in breach of the rules declined to summon them. We
are in the light of this evidence
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of the view that the respondent did not, after the
examination of police constable No. 506, desire to examine
the two police constables Nos. 178 and 569, whom he.
originally wanted to examine.
It was next urged that the findings recorded were not in
respect of the charge which the respondent was called upon
to answer. The charge against the respondent was that he had
wrongfully confined Durgalu on March 5, 1954, to March 7,
1954, in the police station. In the statement of
facts which accompanied the charge-sheet it was stated in
express terms that the respondent had not recorded in any
of the diaries of the police station that Durgalu was
handed over to him on March 5, 1954. The charge and the
"statement of facts" form part of a single document on the
basis of which proceedings were started against the
respondent and it would be hypercritical to proceed’ on the
view that though the respondent was expressly told in the
statement of facts which formed part of the charge-sheet,
that he had failed to record that Durgalu was handed over to
him, that ground of reprehensible conduct’ was not included
in the charge, and on that account the enquiry was vitiated.
No objection appears to have been raised before the Deputy
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Inspector General or even the Inspector General of
police, that there was infirmity in the charge on that
account, and that infirmity had prejudiced the respondent in
the enquiry. The respondent had full notice of the charge
against him, and he examined witnesses in support of his
defence and made several argumentative representations
before the Deputy Inspector General, the Inspector General
of Police and the Government of Andhra Pradesh.
In our Judgment the proceedings before the departmental
authorities were regular and were not vitiated on account of
any breach of the rules of natural justice. The conclusions
of the departmental
37
officers were fully borne out by the evidence before them
and the High Court had no jurisdiction to set aside the
order either on the ground that the "approach to the
evidence was not consistent with the approach in a criminal
case," nor on the ground that the High Court would have on
that evidence come to a different conclusion. The
respondent had also ample opportunity of examining his
witnesses after he was informed of the charge against him.
The conclusion recorded by the punishing authority was
therefore not open to be canvassed, nor was the liability of
the respondent to be punished by removal from service open
to question before the High Court.
The appeal is allowed and the order passed by the High
Court is set aside. The petition filed by the respondent is
dismissed. There will be no order as to costs. The order
as to costs passed by the High Court will stand.
Appeal allowed.
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