Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
U.P. POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MODI DISTILLERY & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/08/1987
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1128 1987 SCR (3) 798
1987 SCC (3) 684 JT 1987 (3) 221
1987 SCALE (2)208
ACT:
Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974:
Ss. 25, 26, 44 & 47--Company--Discharge of trade effluents
without consent of the Board--Commission of offence under
the Act--Officials of the Company whether guilty of
offence----Vicarious responsibility.
Practice and Procedure: Prevention and Control of Pollu-
tion-Launching of prosecution--Need for drafting complaints
with circumspection and without any technical flaw.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent-distillery, an industrial unit of M/s.
Modi Industries Ltd., at Modi Nagar manufacturing industrial
alcohol has been discharging its highly noxious and polluted
trade effluents into the river through a local drain. It
applied to the Pollution Control Board under ss. 25(1) and
26 of the Act on March 27, 1981 for consent of the Board to
discharge its trade effluents into the stream. The Board
found the application incomplete in many respects, and
called upon the respondents to rectify the discrepancies. As
there was no response from the respondents, the appellant
Board refused to grant the consent prayed for in the public
interest and thereafter issued notice under s. 20 of the Act
directing the Company to furnish certain information regard-
ing the particulars and names of the Managing Director,
Directors and other persons responsible for the conduct of
the Company. This was followed by various reminders.
Finding no response from the respondents, the Board on
October 21, 1983 lodged a complaint against the respondents
under s. 44 of the Act in the Court of the Chief Judicial
Magistrate, Gaziabad. Instead of launching a prosecution
against M/s. Modi Industries Ltd., the Board impleaded the
industrial unit as respondent No. 1 and the Chairman. Vice-
Chairman, Managing Director and members of the Board of
Directors of the Company as respondent Nos. 2 to 11. The
Judicial Magistrate directed the issue of process.
799
The respondents preferred a revision under s. 397 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 before the High Court in
which an application was filed under s. 482 of the Code for
quashing the proceedings. The Single Judge of the High Court
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quashed the proceedings on the ground that there could be no
vicarious liability saddled on the Chairman, Vice-Chairman,
Managing Director and other members of the Board of Direc-
tors of the Company under s. 47 of the Act unless there was
a prosecution of the Company.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD: A combined reading of the provisions contained in
subss. (1) and (2) of s. 47 of the Water (Prevention and
Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 makes it apparent that the
officials of the Company owning the respondent industrial
unit could be prosecuted as having been in charge of and
responsible to the Company for the business of that unit and
could be deemed to be guilty of the offence with which they
were charged. [804DE]
The industrial unit owned by the Company was discharging
its trade effluents into the river prior to the commencement
of the Act. It was, therefore, mandatory for the Company to
make an application to the Board under s. 25(2) read with s.
26 of the Act for grant of consent for the discharge of its
trade effluents into the stream. The application made by the
industrial unit having been found incomplete in many re-
spects was rejected by the Board in public interest. There-
after the Company which did not have proper arrangements for
treatment of the highly polluted trade effluents discharged
by it, had been in spite of repeated letters from the Board
intentionally and deliberately avoiding compliance with the
requirements of ss. 25(1) and 26 rendering themselves pun-
ishable under s. 44 of the Act. The Chairman. ViceChairman,
Managing Director and members of the Board of Directors of
the Company in such capacity were incharge of and responsi-
ble for the conduct of the business of the Company and were,
therefore, deemed to be guilty of the said offence and
liable to be proceeded against and punished under s. 47 of
the Act. [805H-806F]
The vicarious liability of these officials of the Compa-
ny is to be viewed not in isolation but in the conspectus of
facts and events and not in vacuum. The technical flaw in
the complaint lodged by the appellant Board had occurred due
to the recalcitrant attitude of the industrial unit, which
in spite of more than one notice being issued had deliber-
ately failed to furnish information called for regarding the
particulars and
800
names of the Managing Director, Directors and other persons
responsible for the conduct of the Company. Having wilfully
failed to furnish the requisite information to the Board, it
is not open to the respondents 2 to 11 to seek the Court’s
assistance to derive advantage from the lapse committed by
their own industrial unit. Furthermore, the legal infirmity
is of such a nature which could be easily cured by having
the matter remitted to the trial court with a direction to
call upon the appellant to make the formal amendments to the
averments in the complaint so as to make the controlling
company of the industrial unit figure as the concerned
accused. [805BC, 804G, EF, H-805A]
The Board and its legal advisors should have drafted the
complaint with greater circumspection not to leave any
technical flaw which would invalidate the initiation of the
prosecution allowing a large business house to escape the
consequences of the breaches committed by it of the provi-
sions of the Act with impunity. [805GH]
JUDGMENT:
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CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 415
of 1986.
From the Judgment and Order dated 16.5. 1984 of the
Allahabad High Court in Crl. Rev. No. 2330 of 1983.
R.N. Trivedi, Additional Advocate General (U.P.) Mrs. S.
Dikshit and C.B. Singh for the Appellant.
Ram Jethmalani, Rajinder Sachhar, and D.N. Mishra for
the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment and order of the High Court of Allahabad dated
May 16, 1984 setting aside in its revisional jurisdiction an
order of the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Gaziabad dated
November 3, 1983 directing the issue of process against the
respondents on a complaint filed by the appellant under
section 44 of the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollu-
tion) Act, 1974. The issue involved is whether the Chair-
man, ViceChairman, Managing Director and members of the
Board of Directors of Messrs Modi Industries Limited, the
Company owning the industrial unit called Messrs Modi Dis-
tillery could be proceeded against on a complaint against
the said industrial unit. A learned Single Judge (K.C.
Agarwal, J.) following the decision of this Court in State
(Delhi
801
Admn.) v. LK. Nangia & Anr., [1980] 1 SCC 258 interpreting a
similar provision contained in sub-s. (4) of s. 17 of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 had held that
there was no sufficient ground against the respondents
inasmuch as the allegations made in the complaint do not
constitute an offence punishable under section 44 for the
admitted contravention of ss. 25(1) and 26 read with s. 47
of the Act. The question essentially turns upon the rule of
construction to be adopted in s. 47.
The facts of the case are these. Messrs Modi Industries
Limited is an existing company under the Companies Act,
1956. It is a large business organisation having diversified
business activities. Prior to the commencement of the Act it
had established an industrial unit called Messrs Modi Dis-
tillery at Modi Nagar, Gaziabad engaged in the business of
manufacture and sale of industrial alcohol. During the
process of manufacture of such industrial alcohol, the said
industrial unit discharges its highly noxious and polluted
trade effluents into the Kali River through the Kadrabad
Drain which is a stream within the meaning of s. 2(j) of the
Act and thereby causes continuous pollution of the said
stream without the consent of the Board and therefore it
falls within the purview of s. 26. Under the provisions of
s. 26, as amended, it has been made mandatory for every
existing industry to obtain the consent of the Board for
discharging its trade effluent into a stream or well or
sewer or on land. The last date for submission of such
application seeking the consent of the Board by an existing
industry had been extended upto December 31, 1981. In ac-
cordance with the procedure laid down under ss. 25(1) and 26
of the Act, the Company was required to submit an applica-
tion for consent of the Board in the prescribed form along
with the prescribed consent fee and the particulars. Instead
of the Company its industrial unit, namely, Messrs Modi
Distillery on March 27, 1981 applied to the Board for grant
of consent to discharge its trade effluents into the stream.
The aforesaid application was scrutinised by the Board and
found incomplete in many respects. The Board accordingly by
its letter dated April 29, 1981 informed the said industrial
unit with regard to the discrepancies and the particulars
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wanting. There was no response from the respondents nor did
they rectify the discrepancies pointed out or furnish the
particulars required. The Board accordingly by its letter
dated July 30, 1981 refused to grant the consent prayed for
in the public interest since the application was found
incomplete in many respects and also because the said indus-
trial unit did not have proper arrangements for treatment of
its highly polluted trade effluents. Thereafter, the Board
by its letter dated June 30, 1982 issued a notice under s.
20 of the Act
802
directing the Company to furnish certain information regard-
ing the particulars and names of the Managing Director,
Directors and other persons responsible for the conduct of
the Company, but the respondents did not furnish the infor-
mation called for. This was followed by two subsequent
letters of the Board dated February 21, 1983 and June 9,
1983 drawing the attention of the respondents that they were
deliberately violating the provisions of the Act and thereby
rendering themselves liable to be punished under s. 44 for
contravention of the provisions of ss. 25(1) and 26. On
October 21, 1983 the Board lodged a complaint against the
respondents under s. 44 of the Act in the Court of the Chief
Judicial Magistrate, Gaziabad. Unfortunately, the complaint
was inartistically drafted. It was averred in paragraph 2
that Messrs Modi Distillery i.e. the industrial unit was a
company within the meaning of s. 47 of the Act, that it had
been knowingly and wilfully discharging its highly noxious
and polluted trade effluents into the Kali River which is a
stream within the meaning of s. 2(j) of the Act through the
Kadrabad Drain and thereby causing continuous pollution of
the said stream. There were eleven persons arrayed as ac-
cused. Instead of launching a prosecution against Messrs
Modi Industries Limited, the Board impleaded its industrial
unit Messrs Modi Distillery as respondent no. 1 while re-
spondents nos.’ 2-11 were the Chairman, Vice-Chairman,
Managing Director and members of the Board of Directors of
Messrs Modi Industries Limited i.e. the Company owning the
industrial unit.
It appears that the respondents did not appear before
the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate in response to the
notice issued to them. The learned Magistrate after record-
ing the statement of S.M. Pandey, Legal Assistant of the
Board directed the issue of process to the respondents.
Aggrieved, respondents nos. 2, 3 and 4, namely, K.M. Modi,
K.K. Modi and M.L. Modi, the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and
Managing Director respectively of Messrs Modi Industries
Limited preferred a revision before the High Court under s.
397 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973. Two of the
other accused, namely, S.C. Trikha and Raghunath Rai, the
nominated members of the Board of Directors of the Company
also filed an application before the High Court under s. 482
of the Code for quashing the proceedings. As already stated,
a learned Single Judge invoking the revisional jurisdiction
of the High Court has quashed the proceedings on the ground
that there could be no vicarious liability saddled on the
Chairman, Vice Chairman, Managing Director and other members
of the Board of Directors of the Company under s. 47 of the
Act unless there was a prosecution of the Company i.e.
Messrs Modi Industries Limited. He
803
held that the complaint suffers from the serious legal
infirmity and in the circumstances, to allow the proceedings
to continue would amount to an abuse of the process of the
Court.
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The question that arises in the appeal is whether the
Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Managing Director and members of
the Board of Directors are liable to be proceeded against
under s. 47 of the Act in the absence of a prosecution of
the Company owning the said industrial unit. S. 47 insofar
as material reads as follows:
"47. Offences by companies--(1) Where an
offence under this Act has been committed by a
company every person who at the time the
offence was committed was in charge of, and
was responsible to the company for the con-
duct, of the business of the company, as well
as 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 or that he exercised all
due diligence to prevent the commission of
such offence.
(2) Notwithstanding anything con-
tained in subsection (1), 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 neglet on the part
of, any director. manager, secretary or other
officer of the company, such director, manag-
er, secretary or other officer shall also be
deemed to be guilty of that offence and shall
be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly."
On a plain reading of sub-s. (1) of s. 47 of the Act,
where an offence has been committed by a company, 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 the business of the company, as well as the company,
shall be deemed to be guilty of the offence and shall be
liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
Proviso to sub-s. (1) however engrafts an exception in the
case of any such person if he were to prove that the offence
was committed without his knowledge or that he exercised all
due diligence to prevent the
804
commission of such offence. It would be noticed that sub-s.
(1) of s. 47 is much wider than sub-s.(4) of s. 17 of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 which fell for
consideration in I.K. Nangia’s case. Furthermore, proviso to
sub-s. (1) shifts the burden on the delinquent officer or
servant of the company responsible for the commission of the
offence. The burden is on him to prove that he did not know
of the offence or connived in it or that he had exercised
all due diligence to prevent the commission of such offence.
The non-obstante clause in sub-s. (2) expressly provides
that notwithstanding anything contained in sub-s. (1), where
an offence under the 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, such director, manager, secretary or
other officer shall also be deemed to be guilty of that
offence, and shall be liale to be proceeded against and
punished accordingly.
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On a combined reading of the provisions contained in
sub-ss. (1) and (2), we have no doubt whatever that the
Chairman, Vice Chairman, Managing Director and members of
the Board of Directors of Messrs Modi Industries Limited,
the Company owning the industrial unit Messrs Modi Distill-
ery could be prosecuted as having been in charge of and
responsible to the company, for the business of the indus-
trial unit Messrs Modi Distillery owned by it and could be
deemed to be guilty of the offence with which they are
charged. The learned Single Judge has failed to bear in mind
that this situation has been brought about by the industrial
unit viz. Messrs Modi Distillery of Messrs Modi Industries
Limited because in spite of more than one notice being
issued by the Board, the unit of Messrs Modi Distillery
deliberately failed to furnish the information called for
regarding the particulars and names of the Managing Direc-
tor, Directors and other persons responsible for the conduct
of the Company. Having wilfully failed to furnish the requi-
site information to the Board, it is now not open to the
Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Managing Director and other members
of the Board of Directors to seek the Court’s assistance to
derive advantage from the lapse committed by their own
industrial unit. The learned Single Judge has focussed his
attention only on the technical flaw in the complaint and
has failed to comprehend that the flaw had occurred due to
the recalcitrant attitude of Messrs Modi Distillery and
furthermore the infirmity is one which could be easily
removed by having the matter remitted to the Chief Judicial
Magistrate with a direction to call upon the appellant to
make the formal amendments to the averments contained in
paragraph 2 of the comp-
805
laint so as to make the controlling company of the industri-
al unit figure as the concerned accused in the complaint.
All that has to be done is the making of a formal applica-
tion for amendment by the appellant for leave to amend by
substituting the name of Messrs Modi Industries Limited, the
Company owning the industrial unit, in place of Messrs Modi
Distillery. Although as a pure proposition of law in the
abstract the learned Single Judge’s view that there can be
no vicarious liability of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman,
Managing Director and members of the Board of Directors
under sub-s. (1) or (2) of s. 47 of the Act unless there was
a prosecution against Messrs Modi Industries Limited, the
Company owning the industrial trait, can be termed as cor-
rect, the objection raised by the petitioners before the
High Court ought to have been viewed not in isolation but in
the conspectus of facts and events and not in vacuum. We
have already pointed out that the technical flaw in the
complaint is attributable to the failure of the industrial
unit to furnish the requisite information called for by the
Board. Furthermore, the legal infirmity is of such a nature
which could be easily cured. Another circumstance which
brings out the narrow perspective of the learned Single
Judge is his failure to appreciate the fact that the aver-
ment in paragraph 2 has to be construed in the light of the
averments contained in paragraphs 17, 18 and 19 which are to
the effect that the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Managing Direc-
tor and members of the Board of Directors were also liable
for the alleged offence committed by the Company.
It is regrettable that although Parliament enacted the
Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 to
meet the urgent need for introducing a comprehensive legis-
lation with its established unitary agencies in the Centre
and the States to provide for the prevention. abatement and
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control of pollution of rivers and streams, for maintaining
or restoring wholesomeness of water courses and for control-
ling the existing and new discharges of domestic and indus-
trial wastes, which is a matter of grave national concern,
the manner in which some of the Boards are functioning
leaves much to be desired. This is an instance where due to
the sheer negligence on the part of the legal advisors in
drafting the complaint a large business house is allowed to
escape the consequences of the breaches committed by it of
the provisions of the Act with impunity, It was expected
that the Board and its legal advisors should have drafted
the complaint with greater circumspection not to leave any
technical flaw which would invalidate the initiation of the
prosecution allowing the respondents to escape the conse-
quences of the breaches committed by them of the provisions
of the Act with impunity. As already stated, prior to the
commencement
806
of the Act the Company owned an industrial unit styled as
Messrs Modi Distillery which was discharging its trade
effluents into the Kali River through the Kadrabad Drain and
therefore the matter fell within the ambit of s. 26 of the
Act. S. 26 provides that where immediately before the com-
mencement of the Act any person was discharging any sewage
or trade effluent into a stream, the provisions of s. 25
shall, so far as may be, apply to such person as they apply
in relation to a person referred to in that section. S.
25(1) creates an absolute prohibition against bringing into
use any new or altered outlet for the discharge of sewage or
trade’ effluent into a stream without the consent of the
Board. On a combined reading of ss. 25(1) and 26 it was
mandatory for the Company viz. Messrs Modi Industries Limit-
ed to make an application to the Board under sub-s. (2) of
s. 25 read with s. Z6 in the prescribed form containing the
prescribed particulars for grant of consent for the dis-
charge of its trade effluents into the said stream, subject
to such conditions as it may impose. Along with the com-
plaint the appellant has placed on record several documents
showing that the rejection of the application was in the
public interest as it was incomplete in many respects. These
documents also reveal that the Company did not have proper
arrangements for treatment of the highly polluted trade
effluents discharged by it and although the appellant re-
peatedly by its letter required the Company to obtain the
consent of the Board, the Company was intentionally and
deliberately avoiding compliance of the requirements of ss.
25(1) and 26 of the Act. The contravention of these provi-
sions is an offence punishable under s. 44. The other ten
persons arrayed by name as accused in the complaint are
respondents nos. 2-11, the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Managing
Director and members of the Board of Directors of Messrs
Modi Industries Limited. It cannot be doubted that in such
capacity they were in charge of and responsible for the
conduct of the business of the Company and were therefore
deemed to be guilty of the said offence and liable to be
proceeded against and punished under s. 47 of the Act. It
would be a travesty of justice if the big business house of
Messrs Modi Industries Limited is allowed to defeat the
prosecution launched and avoid facing the trial on a techni-
cal flaw which is not incurable for their alleged deliberate
and wilful breach of the provisions contained in ss. 25(1)
and 26 made punishable under s. 44 read with s. 47 of the
Act.
Faced with the difficulty of refuting the gravamen of
the offence set out in the complaint, Shri Ram Jethmalani,
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learned counsel appearing for the respondents drew our
attention to the counteraffidavit of Virendra Prasad, Manag-
er (Personnel & Administration), Modi Distillery dated
January 13, 1986 and the two supplementary
807
affidavits dated August 25, 1986 and November 17, 1986
tending to show that Messrs Modi Industries Limited, the
company owning the industrial unit, have taken effective
steps to set up an effluents treatment plant by entering
into an agreement dated December 23, 1985 with Messrs Chemi-
cal Consultants & Engineers, Ahmadnagar who would set it up
in collaboration with Sulzer Bros. Limited, Switzerland by
employment of the technical knowhow which would be able to
recover methane gas upto 70% and also bring down BOD reduc-
tion upto 90%. Further, it is averred that the company
sought and obtained the approval of the Board subject to a
time schedule for erection and installation of the plant by
the end of June 1987. It is also averred that since the
Government of India has turned down the application of the
respondents for subsidy for installation of the said plant
insofar as the year 1985-86 was concerned, they are trying
other sources of finance and that in the meanwhile pending
the installation and commissioning of the plant based on the
Sulzer’s process are treating the effluents by alternative
methods in order to reduce the extent of BOD discharge. They
are diluting the effluents by mixing fresh water to the
extent of 13 to 15 times the amount of effluent discharged
in order to reduce the extent of pollution. In view of the
subsequent events the learned counsel submits that this was
a fit case for dropping the proceedings. The averments made
by the respondents in the various affidavits have been
controverted by the affidavit-in-rejoinder sworn by Chandra
Bhal Singh, Law Officer of the appellant-Board showing that
there is little or no progress in the matter of establish-
ment of the effluents treatment plant. We need not enter
into this controversy. These are all matters to be dealt
with by the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate.
The result therefore is that the appeal succeeds and is
allowed. The judgment and order passed by the High Court are
set aside and that of the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate
directing issue of process to the respondents are restored.
The learned Magistrate shall proceed with the trial as
expeditiously as possible in accordance with law.
P.S.S. Appeal
allowed.
808