Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1143 of 2001
PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL
RESPONDENT:
GOPAL SARKAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/2001
BENCH:
D.P. MOHAPATRA & P. VENKATARAMA REDDI
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2001 Supp(5) SCR 212
The following Order of the Court was delivered :
Leave granted.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties.
The judgment of the learned single judge of Calcutta High Court in C.R. No.
558 of 2000 setting aside the order passed by the Authorised Officer under
the Indian Forest Act (as amended in the State of West Bengal),
confiscating certain tools and implements, is under challenge in this
appeal filed by the State of West Bengal.
In a raid made by the Deputy Ranger of Moraghat Forest Range, on 29.7.1998
the premises of the saw mill of the respondent, 11 pieces of Gammer, Toon,
Sisso, logs measuring 1.054 meters alongwith band saw and other ’
implements were seized on the allegation that the forest produce (logs of
timber) were illegally felled and removed out of the forest area without
valid permission and transit permit and the band saw and other implements
were used in commission of the forest offence. After completing the
procedure prescibed under the statute the authorised Officer-cum-Division
Officer, Jalpaiguri District, by the order dated 11.2.2000 ordered
confiscation of the forest produce (logs of timber) together with the band
saw and implements. The order was passed in exercise of the power vested in
the authority under Sec. 59-A(3) of the Indian Forest Act, 1927 (West
Bengal Amendment 1988) (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). The
Authorised Officer recorded the finding to the effect :
"In view of the facts stated above, I am satisfied that the timber in
respect of which the offence has taken place is the property of the State
Government and the cutting impements (tools) i.e. Band Saw etc. was used in
committing a Forest offence & also to conceal the timber by way of changing
the identity of timber in question which is liable to be confiscated to the
State as per provision of Section 59-A(3) of the Indian Forest Act, 1927
(West Bengal Amendment, 1988). Further till this date nobody has come
forward to claim the timber in question, had it been a genuine timber there
must have been some claimant."
Summing up his finding in the proceedings he passed the order on the
following terms :
"Whereas I am satisfied that a Forest Offence has been committed in respect
of forest produce which is the property of the State Govern-ment and the
registered owner of Band Saw which has been used as_ cutting tools and used
in commission of said forest offence, has failed ’ to prove to my
satisfaction that the same was not used without the knowledge or connivance
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of himself, or his agent or person in charge of the Band saw and that he
failed to prove that each of them had taken all reasonable and necessary
precautions against such use of Band saw. I Authorised Officer, Jalpaiguri
District on the strength of powers conferred on me vide notification No.
2760-FOR; dated 24.5.1989 hereby order the confiscation of the said seized
timber along with cutting tools (implements) to the State of West Bengal
under Section 59A(3) of the Indian Forest Act, 1927 (West Bengal Amendment,
1988)."
The respondent did not prefer any appeal against the confiscation order
before the District Judge as provided under the Act. He filed a petition
purportedly under Article 227 of the Constitution of India and Section 482
of Criminal Procedure Code. In the said proceeding the order under
challenge was passed.
From the discussions in the judgment, it appears that the learned single
judge passed the order mainly relying on the decision of the High Court in
the case of Subhash Rai v. State of West Bengal, WP 1591(W) of 1997 dt.
3-2-1997, in which it was held that the confiscation proceeding of the
machineries and/or saw mill cannot be held to be valid in terms of Section
59A(3) of the Forest Act as amended by the State of West Bengal on the
grounds that saw mill cannot be treated to be a property of the State Gov-
ernment. Relying on the said decision, the learned single judge held that
the confiscation order passed by the Authorised Officer was unsustainable.
That decision, in our view, has no application to the case in hand. In that
case a saw mill and its machinery was sought to be confiscated. The reasons
for such confiscation are not clear from the judgment. The High Court
observed that the saw-mill is neither timber nor forest produce nor can it
be treated as property of the State Government and therefore the
confiscation was wholly illegal. In the earlier sentence, it was observed
that Section 59A(3) was attracted only when any timber or forest produce
which are the properties of the State Government are produced before a
Forest Officer and such Officer is satisfied that a forest offence has been
committed in respect of such property. The ratio of that decision seems to
be that saw-mill or its machinery cannot be confiscated independently
without reference to the forest produce belonging to the State Government
and without recording a finding that the forest offence has been committed
in respect of such property of the State produced before the authorised
Officer. Such is not the fact situation in the present case. The case is
clearly distinguishable.
It is relevant to note here that the findings recorded by the Authorised
Officer, quoted above, were not disturbed by the learned single judge in
the judgment.
Section 59A(3) of the Act reads as follows :
"Where any timber or other forest produce which is the property of the
State Government is produced before an Authorised Officer under sub-section
1 and Authorised Officer is satisfied that a forest offence has been
committed in respect of such property, he may, whether or not a prosecution
is instituted for the commission of such offence, order confiscation of the
property together with all tools, ropes, chains, boats, vehicles and cattle
used in committed the offence."
On a fair reading of the provision it is clear that in a case where any
timber or other forest produce which is the property of the State
Government is produced under sub-section (1) and an Authorised Officer is
satisfied that a forest offence has been committed in respect of such
property he may pass order of confiscation of the said property (forest
produce) together with all tools, ropes, chains, boats, vehicles and cattle
used in committing the offence. The power of confiscation is independent of
any proceeding of prosecution for the forest offence committed. This
position is manifest from the Statute and has also been held by this Court
in Divisional Forest Officer and Anr. v. G. V. Sudhakar Rao and Ors., AIR
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(1986) SC 328. Therein this Court elucidating the provision held as follows
:
"The conferral of power of confiscation of seized timber or forest produce
and the implements, etc., on the Authorised Officer under sub-s.(2A) of
S.44 of the Act on his being satisfied that a forest offence had been
committed in respect thereof, is not dependent upon whether a criminal
prosecution for commission of a forest offence has been launched against
the offender or not. It is a separate and distinct proceeding from that of
a trial before the Court for commission of an offence. Under sub-s.(2A) of
S. 44 of the Act, where a Forest Officer makes report of seizure of any
timber or forest produce and produces the seized timber before the
Authorised Officer along with a report under Section 44(2), the Authorised
Officer can direct confiscation to Government of such timber or forest
produce and the implements, etc., if he is satisfied that a forest offence
has been committed, irrespective of the fact whether the accused is facing
a trial before a Magistrate for the commission of a forest offence under
section 20 or 29 of the Act."
As noted earlier, on the facts of the present case, the finding of fact
recorded by the Authorised Officer which remained undisturbed was that he
was satisfied that the band saw and the implements in question were used in
commission of the forest offence in illicit removal and use of the timber
from the forest area. It is relevant to note the validity of confiscation
of timber was conceded before the High Court. It follows that the finding
recorded by the Authorised Officer that the Band Saw and implements in
question were used in commission of the forest offence relating to the
illicit felling and removal of the timber remained undisturbed. The High
Court, therefore, clearly erred in interfering with the confiscation order
of the Band Saw and the implements. The position of law that is manifest on
a reading of the provision of the Statute is that if tools, implements,
vehicles etc. seized were used in commission of the forest offence alleged,
it is open to Authorised Officer to pass order of confiscation under
Section 59A(3). In that view of the matter the judgment under challenge is
clearly unsustainable and has to be set aside.
The appeal is allowed and the judgment under challenge is set aside. There
will, however, be no order as to costs.