Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C. G. MENON AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/05/1954
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1954 AIR 517 1955 SCR 280
CITATOR INFO :
E 1969 SC1171 (15,20,21,25)
RF 1973 SC1461 (587)
ACT:
Constitution of India-India-Sovereign Democratic Republic
-Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 (44 Victoria Chapter 69), ss.
12 and 14-Whether applies to India after the coming into
force of the Constitution-Indian Extradition Act, (XV of
1903)-Adaptation under art. 372 of the Constitution-Effect
of.
HEADNOTE:
After the achievement of independence and the coming into
force of the new Constitution India became a Sovereign Demo-
cratio Republic and could not be described as a British
Possession or grouped by an Order-in-Council amongst those
Possessions within the meaning of S. 12 of the Fugitive
Offenders Act, 1881. It became a foreign country so far as
other British Possessions &re concerned and the extradition
of persons taking asylum in India, having committed offences
in British Possessions could only be dealt with by an
arrangement between the Sovereign Democratic Republic of
India and the British Government and given effect to by
appropriate Legislation.
The Indian Extradition Act, 1903 (Act XV of 1903) has been
adapted under the provisions of article 372 of the
Constitution but this Act has not kept &live any of the
provisions of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, which was an
act of the British Parliament and which has not been adopted
and therefore section 12 and section 14 of the Fugitive
Offenders Act, 1881, have no application to India.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 33 of
1953.
Appeal under article 132(1) of the Constitution of India
from the Judgment and Order, dated the 20th February, 1953,
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of the High Court of Judicature at Madras in Criminal
Revision Case No. 1034 of 1953 (Criminal Reference No. 51 of
1953).
C.. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, V. K. T. C Chari,
Advocate-General for Madras (Porus A. Mehta and P. G.
Gokhale, with them) for the appellant.
M. K. Nambiar, (S. Subramanian, with him) for the
respondent.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (Porus A. Mehta
and P. G. Gokhale with him) for the Intervener (Union of
India).
281
1954. May 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MEHAR CHAND MAHAJAN C. J.-This is an appeal on a
certificate under article 132(1) of the Constitution against
the judgment of the High Court of Judicature at Madras dated
the 20th February, 1953, holding that section 14 of the
Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, is void as it offends against
the provisions of the Constitution being discriminatory in
its effect.
The respondents, husband and wife, were apprehended and
produced before the Chief Presidency Magis trate, Egmore,
Madras, pursuant to warrants of arrest issued under the
provisions of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881. Mr. Menon
is a barrister-at-law, and was practising as an advocate and
solicitor in the Colony of Singapore. Mrs. Menon is an
advocate of the Madras High Court and was until recently a
member of the Legislative Council of the Colony of
Singapore. Both of them came to India some time after July,
1952. On the 22nd August, 1952, the Government of Madras
forwarded to the Chief Presidency Magistrate, Madras, copies
of communications that passed between the Government of
India and the Colonial Secretary of Singapore requesting the
assistance of the Government’ of India to arrest and return
to the Colony of Singapore the Menons under warrants issued
by the Third Police Magistrate of Singapore. Mr. Menon was
charged on several counts of having committed criminal
breach of trust and Mrs. Menon was charged with the abetment
of these offences.
The Menons, when produced before the Presidency Magistrate
questioned the validity of their arrest. They pleaded their
innocence and contended that being citizens of India, -they
could not be surrendered as. the warrants related to matters
of a civil nature and had been given the colour of criminal
offences merely for the purpose of harassing them out of
political animosity and with a view to prejudice the Court
against them and were issued in bad faith. It was further
urged that the provisions of the Fugitive Offenders Act
under which action was sought to be taker against them were
282
repu gnant to the Constitution of India and were void and
unenforceable.
The Presidency Magistrate expressed the view that by
retaining the Indian Extradition Act, 1903, and with it
Chapter IV, the President of India may have intended to give
effect to the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, but by the
omission to adapt or modify it suitably it had become
impossible to give effect to that intention, the provisions
of the Act, as they are, being inconsistent with and
repugnant to the sovereign status of the Indian Republic.
In view, however, of the provisions of section 432, Criminal
Procedure Code, as amended by Act XXIV of 1951, he referred
to the decision of the High Court the following questions of
law:-
(1) Whether the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, applies to
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India after 26th January, 1950, when India became a
Sovereign Democratic Republic; and
(2) Whether, even if it applied, it or any of its pro-
visions, particularly Part II thereof, is repugnant to the
Constitution of India and is therefore void and or
inoperative.
The High Court held that section 14 of the Fugitive
Offenders Act was inconsistent with the fundamental right of
equal protection of the laws guaranteed by article 14 of the
Constitution and was void to that extent and unenforceable
against the petitioner. The second question referred having
thus been answered in favour of the respondents, it was not
thought necessary to return any answer to the first
question. As above stated, a certificate under article
132(1) of the Constitution for leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court against this decision was granted to the State
of Madras. The Union of India was allowed to intervene at
their request.
The learned Solicitor-General who argued the case on behalf
of the Intervener as well as on behalf of the State of
Madras conceded that the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, was
not adapted by any specific order of the President, and that
the Parliament in India had not enacted any Legislation on
its lines. He, however, contended that the omission to
adapt the impugned Act
283
in no way affected the question whether it was in force as
the law in the territory of India after the commencement of
the Constitution. Reliance was placed on article 372 (1) of
the Constitution which is in these terms: -
Notwithstanding the repeal by this Constitution of the
enactments referred to in article 395 but subject to the
other provisions of this Constitution, all the law in force
in the territory of India immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution shall continue in force
therein until altered or repealed or amended by a competent
Legislature or other competent authority."
And it was said that the impugned Act was the law in force
in the territory of India immediately before the
commencement of the Constitution and continued in force
under the provisions of this article after its commencement.
It was also said that the adaptations made in the Indian
Extradition Act, 1903, by implication kept alive the
Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, and its different -provisions.
In order to decide whether Part 11 of the Fugitive Offenders
Act, 188 1, comprising sections 12 and 14 under the
provisions of which the Menons are under arrest, has force
after the coming into force of the Constitution, it is
necessary to appreciate the relevant provisions of the Act.
The Fugitive Offenders Act, 188 1, as enacted by the British
Parliament is sub-divided into four parts and is comprised.
of 41 sections. Part I of the Act concerns itself with
offences mentioned in section 9. Section 5 of this part
provides that a fugitive when apprehended shall be brought
before a Magistrate who shall hear the case in the same
manner and have the same jurisdiction and powers, as near as
may be, as if the fugitive was charged with an offence
committed within his jurisdiction, and that if the endorsed
warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive is duly authen-
ticated, and such evidence is produced as according to the
law ordinarily administered by the magistrate raises a
strong or probable presumption that the fugitive committed
the offence mentioned in the warrant, and that the offence
is one to which this part of this Act
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applies, the magistrate shall commit the fugitive to prison
to await his return, and shall forthwith send a certificate
of the committal and such report of the case as he may think
fit, if in the United Kingdom to a Secretary of State, and
if in a British Possession to the Governor of that
possession. Section 12 which is the first section in Part
II of the Act is in these terms :-
"This part of this Act shall apply only to those groups of
British Possessions to which, by reason of their contiguity
or otherwise, it may seem expedient to Her Majesty to apply
the same.
It shall be lawful for Her Majesty from time to time by
Order in Council to direct that this part of this Act shall
apply to the group of British possessions mentioned in the
Order, and by the same or any subsequent Order to except
certain offences from the application of this part of this
Act, and to limit the application of this part of this Act
by such conditions, exceptions, and qualifications as may be
deemed expedient."
Section 14 which is directly in point so far as the
respondents are concerned provides as follows :
"The magistrate before whom a person so apprehended is
brought, if he is satisfied that the warrant is duly
authenticated as directed by this Act and was issued by a
person having lawful authority to issue the same, and is
satisfied on oath that the prisoner is the person named or
otherwise described in the Warrant, may order such prisoner
to be returned to the British Possession in which the
warrant was issued, and for that purpose to be delivered
into the custody of the person to whom the warrant is
addressed, or any or more of them, and to be held in custody
and conveyed by sea or otherwise into the British Possession
in which the warrant was issued, there to be dealt with
according to law as if he had been there apprehended. Such
order for -return may be made by warrant under the hand of
the magistrate making, it, and may be executed according to
the tenor thereof"
A comparison between the provisions of Part I and Part II of
the Act makes it clear that with regard to
285
offences relating to which Part I has application a fugitive
when apprehended could not be committed to prison and
surrendered unless the magistrate was satisfied that on the
evidence produced before him there was a strong or probable
case against him, while in regard to a fugitive governed by
Part II of the Act it was not necessary to arrive at such a
finding before surrendering him. There is thus a
substantial and material difference in the procedure of
surrendering fugitive offenders prescribed by the two parts
of the Act.
The scheme of the Fugitive Offenders Act is that it
classifies fugitive offenders in different categories and
then prescribes a procedure for dealing with each class.
Regarding persons committing offences in the United Kingdom
and British Dominions and foreign countries in which the
Crown exercises foreign jurisdiction, the procedure
prescribed by Part I of the Act has to be followed before
surrendering them and unless a prima facie case is
established against them they cannot be extradited.
Extradition with foreign States is, except in exceptional
cases, governed by treaties or arrangements made inter se.
Extradition of offenders between the United Kingdom and the
Native States in India is governed by the Indian Extradition
Act. Under the provisions of that Act no person apprehended
could be surrendered unless prima facie case was made out
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against him. Extraditions inter se between British
possessions, however, were dealt with differently by the
Act. They were grouped together according to their
contiguity etc. by an Order in Council and treated as one
territory and this grouping was subject to alterations and
modifications by Order in Council and conditions of
extradition. could also be prescribed by such an Order.
An Order in Council dated the 2nd January, 1918, .grouped
together the following British Possessions and Protected
States with British India for the purposes of Part II of the
Act :-Ceylon, Hongkong, the Straits Settlements, the
Federated Malay States, Johore, Kedah and Perlis, Kelantan,
Trengannu, Brunei, North Borneo and Sarawak. The Order is
these terms:--
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",Whereas by an order of Her Majesty Queen Victoria in
Council bearing date the 12th day of December, 1885, it was
ordered that Part 11 of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881,
should apply to the ,group of British Possessions therein
mentioned, that is to say, Her Majesty’s East Indian
Territories, Ceylon and the Straits Settlements;
And whereas by the Straits Settlements and Protected States
Fugitive Offenders Order in Council, 1916, as amended by the
Straits Settlements and Protected States Fugitive Offenders
Order in Council, 1917, it is ordered that the Fugitive
Offenders Act, 1881, shall apply as if the Protected States
named in the schedule to the first mentioned order were
British Possessions ;
And whereas by reason of their contiguity or the frequent
intercommunication between them it seems expedient to His
Majesty and conducive to the better administration of
justice therein to apply Part II of the Fugitive Offenders
Act, 1881, to the above named British Possessions and
Protected States and such application has been requested by
the Rulers of the said States ;
Now therefore, His Majesty, by virtue of the powers in this
behalf by the Fugitive Offenders Acts, 1881 and 1915, and
otherwise in His Majesty vested is pleased, by and with the
advice of His Privy Council, to order, and it is hereby
ordered, as follows : -
On and after the first day of February, 1918, the herein
before recited Order in Council of the 12th day of December,
1885, shall be revoked, without prejudice to anything
lawfully done thereunder or to any proceedings commenced
before the said date, and Part II of the Fugitive Offenders
Act, 1881, shall apply to the group of British Possessions
and Protected States hereunder mentioned, that is to say,
British India, Ceylon, Hongkong, Straits Settlements, the
Federated Malay States, Johore, Kedah and Perlis, Kelantan,
Trengannu, Brunei, North Borneo and Sarawak."
287
By another Order in Council dated the 29th July, 1937, Burma
which ceased to be part of British India was also included
in the group of British Possessions and Protected States
mentioned in the earlier Order in Council.
It is plain from the above provisions of the Act as well as
from the Order in Council that British Possessions which
were contiguous to one another and between whom there was
frequent inter-communication were treated for purposes of
the Fugitive Offenders Act as one integrated territory and a
summary procedure was adopted for the purpose of extraditing
persons who had committed offences in these integrated
territories. As the laws prevailing in those possessions
were substantially the same, the requirement that no
fugitive will be surrendered unless a prima facie case was
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made against him was dispensed with. Under the Indian
Extradition Act, 1903, also a similar requirement is
insisted upon before a person can be extradited.
The situation completely changed when India became a
Sovereign Democratic Republic. After the achievement of
independence and the coming into force of the new
Constitution by no stretch of imagination could India be
described as a British Possession and it could not be
grouped by an Order in Council amongst those Possessions.
Truly speaking, it became a foreign territory so far as
other British Possessions are concerned and the extradition
of persons taking asylum in India, having committed offences
in British Possessions, could only be dealt with by an
arrangement between the Sovereign Democratic Republic of
India and the British ’Government and given effect to by
appropriate legislation. The Union Parliament has not so
far enacted any law on the subject and it was not suggested
that any arrangement has been arrived at between these two
Governments. The Indian Extradition Act, 1903, has been
adapted but the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, which was an
Act of the British Parliament has been left severely alone.
The provisions of that Act could only be made applicable to
288
India by incorporating them with appropriate changes into an
Act of the Indian Parliament and by enacting an Indian
Fugitive Offenders Act. In the absence of any legislation
on those lines, it seems difficult to hold that section 12
or section 14 of the Fugitive Offenders Act has force in
India by reason of the provisions of article 372 of the
Constitution. The whole basis for the applicability of Part
II of the Fugitive Offenders Act has gone; India is no
longer a British Possession and no Order in Council can be
made to group it with other British Possessions. Those of
the countries which still form part of British Possessions
and which along with British India were put into a group may
legitimately decline to reciprocate with India in the matter
of surrender of fugitive offenders on the ground that
notwithstanding article 372 of our Constitution India was no
longer a British Possession and therefore the Fuogitive
Offenders Act, 1881, did not apply to India and they were
not bound in the absence of a new treaty to surrender their
nationals who may have committed extraditable offences in
the territories of India. Indeed some of the other members
of this group have also achieved independence. Under
section 12 of the Act it is not possible for His Majesty
from time to time by Order in Council to alter the character
of this group or its composition or to take any action as
prescribed by that section. Article 372 of the Constitution
cannot save this law because the grouping is repugnant to
the conception of a sovereign democratic republic. The
political background and shape of things when Part II of the
Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, was enacted and envisaged by
that Act having completely changed, it is not possible
without radical legislative changes to adapt that Act to the
changed conditions. That being so, in our opinion, the
tentative view expressed by the Presidency Magistrate was
right and though the High Court did not return the answer to
the first question referred to it, in our judgment, the case
can be shortly disposed of on that ground.
The contention of the learned Solicitor-General that by
reason of the adaptations made in the Indian and references
wade therein to Extradition Act, 1903, the Fugitive
Offenders Act, it should be held that the whole of the
Fugitive Offenders Act including PartII had been adapted by
the President does not seem to be well founded. The scheme
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of the Indian Extradition Act which was founded on the
English Act is quite different. It does not specifically
keep alive any of the provisions of Part II of the Fugitive
Offenders Act, 1881, and thefere is no adaptation of the
Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 within the four corners of the
Indian Extradition Act, 1903. In these circumstances it is
not possible to work out the sections of the Fugitive
Offenders Act and apply them to the situation that has
arisen after the coming into force of the Constitution of
India. Moreover clause 28 of the Adaptation of Laws Order,
1950, can have no application to such a case. We do not
think that it is necessary in the present case to enter into
a discussion of the question whether British Possessions
with which India was grouped under Part 11 of the Fugitive
Offenders Act, 1881, should now be treated as foreign States
qua India and that offenders apprehended can be surrendered
under the Indian Extradition Act or any other law, provided
a prima facie case is made against them as the proceedings
taken against the respondents were specifically taken Under
section 14 of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, and it is
not the practice of this Court to decide questions which are
not properly raised before it or which do not arise directly
for decision.
For the reasons given above we uphold the decision of the
High Court, though on a ground different from that on which
that Court decided, in favour of the respondents. The
appeal therefore fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismiesed.
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