Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
KAUSHALYA RANI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOPAL SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/09/1963
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1964 AIR 260 1964 SCR (1) 982
CITATOR INFO :
R 1964 SC1099 (5,23)
R 1970 SC1093 (7)
D 1974 SC 480 (15)
D 1976 SC 105 (5,6,7)
R 1979 SC 984 (12)
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure, s. 417(3), (4)-Accused acquitted
by Additional Sessions judge-Application for special leave
to appeal to High Court against acquittal filed after 60
days of order-Provisions of Limitation Act, s. 5, whether
applicable-Special law-Limitation Act (9 of 1908) s. 29(2).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was committed to the Court of Sessions to
stand his trial. However, he was acquitted by the
Additional Sessions Judge on December 31, 1959. The
appellant filed on April 22, 1960, an application under s.
417(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure in the High Court
for Special Leave to appeal from the order of the Additional
Sessions Judge. The High Court dismissed the appeal on the
ground that the application for special leave to appeal was
barred by time. It was held that the provisions of s.
417(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure were in the nature
of a special law and the provisions of s. 5 of the
Limitation Act were not applicable. The appellant came to
this Court after getting a certificate of fitness to appeal
to this Court. Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (i) The special rule of limitation laid down in s.
417(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure is a special law of
limitation Governing appeals by private prosecutors and s. 5
of the Limitation Act does not apply in view of s. 29(2)(b)
of. the Limitation Act. A special law means a law enacted
for special cases, in special circumstances, in contra-
distinction to the general rule of law laid down as
applicable generally to all cases with which general law
deals. In that sense, the Code of Criminal Procedure is a
general law regulating the procedure for the trial of
criminal cases Generally. When it lays down the bar of time
in respect of special cases, in special circumstances, like
those contemplated by s. 417(3) and (4), it is a special law
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
contained within the general law. likewise, the Limitation
Act is a general law laying down general rules of limitation
applicable to all cases dealt with by the Act, but there may
be instances of a special law of limitation laid down in
other statutes, though not dealing generally with the law of
Limitation.
S.M Thakur v. The State of Bihar, 30 Pat. 126; Canara Bank
Ltd. v. The Warden Insurance Co., I.L.R. [1952] Bom. 1083;
Mohammad Ibrahim v. Gopi Lal, A.I.R. (1958) All. 691; Rajjan
Lal v. State I.L.R. [1960] 2 All. 761; Viswanathan Chettiar,
in re. (1957) 1 M.L.). 150; Coimbatore Municipality v. K. L.
Narayanan A.I.R. (1958) Mad. 416; P. F. Subbareddi, V. D.
Papireddi,
983
A.I.R. (1957) Andh. Pra. 406; In re Parchuri Adeshamma,
A.I.R. (1958) Andh. Pra. 230; Anjanabai’ v. Yeshwantrao
Daulatrao Dudhe, I.L.R. [1961] Bom. 135, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Criminal Appeal No. 126 of
1962.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 31, 1961 of
the Punjab High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 825 of 1960.
Vidya Dhar Mahajan, for the appellant.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SINHA, C. J.-In this appeal, on a certificate of fitness
granted by the Punjab High Court, the only question for
determination is whether the provisions of S. 5 of the
Limitation Act (9 of 1908) apply to an application for
special leave to appeal, from an order of acquittal, under
sub-s. of S. 417 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (to be
hereinafter referred to as the Code). The certificate was
granted by the High Court "because there is a considerable
conflict of opinion in the various High Courts".
In this case we are not concerned with the factual aspect of
the controversy between the parties. It is not, therefore,
necessary to set out in any detail the facts of that
controversy. It is enough to state that the respondent was
committed to the Court of Sessions to stand his trial under
s. 493, or in the alternative under S. 495, of the Indian
Penal Code, on the charge that he had, by deceit, caused the
appellant who was not lawfully married to him to believe
that she was so married and in that belief had sexual
intercourse with her. In the alternative, it was alleged
that he married the appellant after concealing the fact that
he was already married.
The prosecution was launched by a petition of complaint
filed by the appellant before the Magistrate. The
respondent was tried by the Additional Sessions judge,
Gurdaspur, who by his judgment dated December 31, 1959,
acquitted him on the ground that the prosecution had failed
to prove that there was a marriage between the ,complainant
and the accused. The appellant filed an ap-
984
application on April 22, 1960, very much later than 60 days
from the date of the order of acquittal, for special leave
to appeal from that order, under s. 417(3) of the Code. In
a note appended to the application it was stated "that the
time in filing the present petition might be excluded in
view of the fact that the District Magistrate, Gurdaspur,
moved the Advocate-General in filing the appeal under s.
417, Criminal Procedure Code, which if filed would have
obviated the necessity of filing this petition. But., the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
State Government declined to file appeal and the intimation
to this effect was received on April 1, 1960. The original
letter is attached herewith; from this date, it is within
time." On this application, a Division Bench of the High
Court passed the order "Admitted", on September 1, 1960.
When the appeal was placed for hearing before Falshaw and
Grover, JJ, a preliminary objection was raised on behalf of
the respondent that the appeal was out of time. While it
was admitted on behalf of the appellant that the appeal was
filed long after the period prescribed by sub. s. (4) of s.
417 of the Code, it was argued that the delay could be
condoned under s. 5 of the Limitation Act, and that the
delay had been so condoned by the Bench when the appeal was
admitted.
The Bench pointed out that as a matter of fact no
application had been made by the appellant for extension of
the period of limitation for filing the petition for special
leave. The Bench further held that it could not accede to
the contention that the Bench while admitting the appeal had
condoned the delay. The Court, on an elaborate examination
of the provisions of the Code, and of the Limitation Act,
came -to the conclusion that the bar of time prescribed by
sub-s. (4) of s. 417 was a ’special law’ within the meaning
of s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act, and that, therefore, s. 5
of the Limitation Act would not be available to the
appellant for condoning the admitted delay in filing the
application for special leave. The High Court noticed a
number of decisions of the different High Courts and
preferred to accept the view that the provisions of sub. s.
(4) of s. 417 of the Code were in the nature of a ’special
law’ though the Code as a whole was a general law. In that
view of the matter, the High Court dismissed the appeal on
the ground that the application for
985
special leave to appeal was barred by time. The appellant
applied to the High Court and obtained the necessary
certificate of fitness and has come up to this Court on
appeal from that order of the High Court. The High Court
,naturally did not go into the merits of the controversy. We
have, therefore, to consider whether the High Court. was
right in coming to the conclusion that s. 5 of the
Limitation Act could not be available to the appellant for
condonation of the delay in filing the application for spe-
cial leave under sub-s. (3) of s. 417 of the Code.
Before we refer to the different decisions of the High
Courts, taking conflicting views on the only question now
before us, we would examine the relevant provisions of the
Code and the Limitation Act. Section 417 of the Code is in
these terms : -
"417(1) Subject to the provisions of sub-
section (5), the State Government may, in any
case, direct the Public Prosecutor to present
an appeal to the High Court from an original
or appellate order of acquittal passed by any
Court other than a High Court.
(2)If such an order of acquittal is passed in any case in
which the offence has been investigated by the Delhi Special
Police Establishment constituted under the Delhi Special
Police Establishment Act, 1946 (XXXV of 1946), the Central
Government may also direct the Public Prosecutor to present
an appeal to the High Court from the order of acquittal.
(3)If such an order of acquittal is passed in any case
instituted upon complaint and the High Court, on an
application made to it by the complainant in this behalf,
grants special leave to appeal from the order of acquittal,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
the complainant may present such an appeal to the High
Court.
(4)No application under sub-section (3) for the grant of
special leave to appeal from the order of acquittal shall be
entertained by the High Court after the expiry of sixty days
from the date of that order of acquittal.
(5) If, in any Case, the application under sub-section
(3) for the grant of special leave to appeal from an order
of, acquittal is refused, no appeal from that order of
acquittal shall lit under sub-section (1)."
63-2 S. C. India/64
986
It will appear that the section, which was recast by Act
XXVI of 1955, for the first time made provision for an
appeal by a private complainant from an order of acquittal,
if he obtained special leave to appeal from the High Court.
Previous to the Amending Act aforesaid, it was only the
State Government which could come up in appeal from an order
of acquittal. The section, thus, provides for an appeal by
the State Government, as also by the complainant in a cast
instituted upon a complaint, provided that special leave of
the Court is obtained. So far as appeal by the State
Government is concerned, s. 417 itself does not provide for
any period of limitation. The period of limitation for such
an appeal is laid down in Art. 157 of the Limitation Act.
Previous to the amendment of 1955, the period of limitation
for such an appeal by the State Government was six months,
which was reduced to three months by the Act XXVI of 1955
with effect from January 1, 1956. Hence, so far as an
appeal by the State Government is concerned, the period of
limitation thus reduced is a part of the general law of
limitation and is amenable to the operation of s. 5 of the
Limitation Act. But the provisions of sub-s. (3) and (4) of
s. 417 arc in the nature of ’special provisions’ introduced
for the first time by the Amending Act XXVI of 1955. Sub-
section (4), in terms, is very precise and mandatory,
prohibiting the High Court from entertaining any application
for special leave to appeal from an order of acquittal after
the expiry of 60 days from the date of such an order. On a
perusal of the bare provisions of the section and the
history of the law on the subject, two things are clear;
namely, (1) that the legislature thought it expedient in the
interest of justice and public policy that the period of six
months allowed to the State Government to appeal from an
order of acquittal should be curtailed by half, thus
evincing its clear intention to cut short the duration of
the litigation which had already resulted in an order of
acquittal; and (2) that in certain cases the High Court
should have the power of granting special leave to a
complainant, as distinguished from the State Government, to
come up in appeal from an order of acquittal, but at the
same time indicating in clear and unambiguous terms that
such an application must be made within 60
987
days from the date of the order of acquittal. This rule of
60 days bar of time has been specifically provided for in
the section itself, unlike the general rule of limitation
applicable to an appeal against acquittal, at the instance
of the State Government. In our opinion, therefore, the
position is clear that so far as appeal by the State
Government is concerned, the law of limitation is the
general law laid down in the Limitation Act (Art. 157) to
which s. 5 would apply by its own force. But in so far as
an appeal by a private prosecutor is concerned, the
legislature was astute to specifically lay down that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
foundation for such an appeal should be laid within 60 days
from the date of the order of acquittal. In that sense,
this rule of 60 days bar is a special law, that is to say, a
rule of limitation which is specially provided for in the
Code itself, which does not ordinarily provide for a period
of limitation for appeals or applications. It is the
general law of limitation, as laid down in the Limitation
Act, which governs appeals ordinarily preferable under the
Code, vide Arts. 150, 154, 155 and 157. To such appeals the
provisions of s. 5 would apply.
It has been observed in some of the cases decided by the
High Courts that the Code is not a special or a local law
within the meaning of s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act, that
is to say, so far as the entire Code is concerned, because
it is a general law laying down procedure, gene-
rally, for the trial of criminal cases. But the specific
question with which we are here concerned is whether the
provision contained in s. 417(4) of the Code is a special
law. The whole Code is indeed a general law regulating the
procedure in criminal trials generally, but it may contain
provisions specifying a bar of time for particular class of
cases which are of a special character. For example, a Land
Revenue Code may be a general law regulating the
relationship between the revenue-payer and the revenue-
receiver or the rent-payer and the rent-receiver. It is a
general law in the sense that it lays down the general rule
governing such relationship, but it may contain special
provisions relating to bar of time, in specified cases,
different from the general law of limitation. Such a law
will be a ’special law’ with reference to the law generally
governing the subject-matter of that kind of re-
64-2 S C India/64
988
lationship. A ’special law’, therefore, means a law enacted
for special cases, in special circumstances, in contradis-
tinction to the general rules of the law laid down, as ap-
plicable generally to all cases with which the general law
deals. In that sense, the Code is a general law regulating
the procedure for the trial of criminal cases, generally;
but if it lays down any bar of time in respect of special
cases in special circumstances like those contemplated by s.
417(3) & (4), read together, it will be a special law
contained within the general law. As the Limitation Act has
not defined ’special law’, it is neither necessary nor
expedient to attempt a definition. Thus, the Limitation Act
is a general law laying down the general rules of limitation
applicable to all cases dealt with by the Act; but there may
be instances of a special law of limitation laid down in
other statutes, though not dealing generally with the law of
limitation. For example, rules framed under Defence of
India Act, vide S. M. Thakur v. The State of Bihar(1);
Canara Bank Ltd. v. The Warden Insurance Co.(2) dealing with
the special rule of limitation laid down in the Bombay Land
Requisition Act (Bom. XXXIII of 1948). These arc mere
instances of special laws within the meaning of s. 29(2) of
the Limitation Act. Once it is held that the special rule
of limitation laid down in sub-s. (4) of s. 417 of the Code
is a ’special law’ of limitation, governing appeals by
private prosecutors, there is no difficulty in coming to the
conclusion that s. 5 of the Limitation Act is wholly out of
the way, in view of s. 29(2) (b) of the Limitation Act.
But the question is whether it can be said that even though
the provisions of s. 417(4) are a ’special law’, they
prescribe a different period of limitation from that
prescribed by the First Schedule of the Limitation Act,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
because s. 29(2) applies where there is a difference between
the period prescribed by the Limitation Act and that
prescribed by the special law. It is said that the
Limitation Act does not prescribe any period of limitation
for an application for special leave to appeal from an order
of acquittal at the instance of a private prosecutor. In
the first instance, the Limitation Act, Art. 157, has
prescribed the rule of limitation
(1) I.L.R. 30 Pat. 126.
(2) I.I.R. [1952] Bom. 1083.
989
in respect of appeals against acquittal at the instance of
the State. Hence, it may be said that there is no
limitation prescribed by the Limitation Act for an appeal
against an order of acquittal at the instance of a private
prosecutor. Thus, there is a difference between the
Limitation Act and the rule laid down in s.417(4) of the
code in respect of limitation affecting such an application.
Section 29(2) is supplemental in its character in so far as
it provides for the application of s. 3 to such cases as
would not come within its purview but for this provision.
And for the purposes of determining any period of limitation
prescribed by any special law, it has made the provisions of
the Limitation Act, referred in cl. (a) of sub-section (2)
of section 29 applicable to such cases to the extent to
which they are not expressly excluded by such special or
local law, and cl. (b) of that subsection expressly lays it
down that the remaining provisions of the Limitation Act
shall not apply to cases governed by any special or local
law. In our opinion, therefore, the provisions of the Code,
supplemented by the provisions of s. 29(2) of the Limitation
Act, make it clear that s. 5 of the Limitation Act would not
apply to an application for special leave to appeal under s.
417(3) of the Code.
That is our conclusion based on the interpretation of the
statutes in question. But the High Courts of Allahabad,
Andhra Pradesh and Madras have taken the contrary view. On
the other hand, earlier decisions of the Allahabad High
Court at-id the Bombay High Court, to be presently noticed,
have taken the view that what we have indicated is the
correct view of the legal position.
A Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court, in the case of
Mohammad Ibrahim v. Gopi Lal (1) bad taKen the view that the
words of sub.s. (4) of s. 417 make it clear that the
application under sub.s. (3) must be made within 60 days of
the order of acquittal, and that the High Court had no power
to extend the period of limitation, and 5. 5 of the
Limitation Act did not apply to such cases. They based
their conclusion entirely on the wording of sub. ss. (3) and
(4) of s. 417 of the Code. That Bench decision of the
Allahabad High Court was overruled by a Full Bench of that
Court in Rajjan Lel v. State(2). The three Hon’ble judges
con-
(1) A.I.R. (1958 All 691).
(2) I.L.R. [1960] 2 All. 761.
990
stituting the full bench, in separate but concurring judg-
ments, took the view that the Code was not a local or a
special law and that s. 5 of the Limitation Act was
applicable to an application under s. 417(3) of the Code.
In the Andhra Pradesh High Court a Division Bench was of the
same opinion as had been held by the Full Bench of the
Allahabad High Court, but the decision was obiter because
the Court dismissed the petition on the ground that the
order of acquittal had been passed before the Amending Act
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
XXVI of 1955 came into force, so that the order of acquittal
was not amenable to an appeal at the instance of the private
prosecutor.
A Single Judge of the Andhra Pradesh High Court took the
view that s. 5 was applicable to applications for special
leave under s. 417(4).
In the Madras High Court, a Single Judge decided the case of
Viswanathan Chettiar. in re (1) and held that "section 1,
sub-section (2) of the Criminal Procedure Code makes all
laws applicable to Criminal Procedure Code including the Law
of Limitation and nothing could prevent the appellant from
taking advantage of section 5 of the Limitation Act." He
also held that there was no difference between the period
prescribed by the law of limitation and the Criminal
Procedure Code. Both these observations do not appear to be
correct.
Another Single Judge of the Madras High Court decided in the
case of Coimbatore Municipality v. K. L. Narayanan(2) that
s. 5 of the Limitation Act could be availed of by the
private prosecutor, but the learned judge did not base his
decision on the reasoning of the previous judgment of that
Court but preferred to follow the reasoning adopted by the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in P. F. Subbareddi v. D.
Papireddi(3) and in re Parchuri Adeshamma(4).
In our opinion, the view taken by the Full Bench of the
Bombay High Court in the case of Anjanabai v. Yeshwantrao
Daulatrao Dudhe(5) is the correct one. In that case it was
(1)(1957) 1 M.L.J 150.
(2) A.I.R. [1958] Mad. 416.
(3) A.T.R. [1957] And. Pra. 406.
(4) A.I.R. [1958] And. Pra. 230.
(5) I.L.R. [1961] Bom. 135.
991
held that the provisions of s. 417(4) were a ’special law’
within the meaning of s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act. In
that cast" the High Court has dealt with the decisions of
the different High courts on the question and with the
reasonings for those decisions. As we agree with the
conclusions of the High Court of Bombay, we do not think it
necessary to repeat the observations made therein, bearing
on the reasons given by the High Courts of Allahabad, Andhra
Pradesh and Madras for coming to contrary conclusions.
For the reasons given above, We hold that the view taken by
the High Court of Punjab is entirely correct. The appeal is
accordingly dismissed,
Appeal dismissed.