Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MADAN LAL RAM CHANDRA DAGA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/02/1968
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1267 1968 SCR (3) 34
ACT:
Practice and Procedure--Criminal appeal--Offence of
cheating--Offer by accused to return money if sentence was
reduced--High Court willing to consider--Propriety.
HEADNOTE:
The three appellants were a partner, munim and clerk of the
R. R. firm and were closely related to one another. In the
course of their dealings with the J. R. firm, who were
Bankers and Commission Agents, the appellants were alleged
to have, inflated the invoices of goods, drawn up
exaggerated hundies, and borrowed money from the J. R. firm
on the security of such invoices and hundies. The J. R.
firm came to know the facts when the hundies were not
honoured, but before the hundies were tendered to the R. R.
firm, its partners were declared insolvent. The appellants
were charged with the offence of cheating the J. R. firm.
In the High Court, the partner offered to pay his share of
the losses of the J. R. firm if the sentence passed on him
by the trial court was reduced. The High Court adjourned
the appeal to enable him to deposit the money but did not
reduce the sentence though it recovered the fine imposed
from the money deposited.
in appeal to this Court it was contended that : (1) there
was no evidence against the clerk; (2) the High Court should
have reduced the sentence; and (3) the partner and munim
would pay to the J. R. firm the amounts wrongly realised by
them and this Court may reduce the sentence.
HELD : (1) As regards the clerk there was nothing to show
that be took part in the negotiations with the J. R. firm,
or that any representation was made by him to that firm, or
that he made the inflated invoices and hundies. The only
evidence against him was (a) that he wrote some invoices
which were not inflated, (b) that he took them to the J. R.
firm, and (c) that he drew up some, pay-in-slips on behalf
of the J. R. firm. In the absence of a charge of
conspiracy, the evidence was not relevant and the clerk
could not he held guilty of the offence of cheating. [38A-F]
(2)It is very wrong for courts to enter into a bargain with
the accused by which money is recovered for the complainant
through their agency. Offences should be tried and punished
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according to the guilt of the accused, and if any leniency
is to be shown in the sentence it should be on the facts of
the case. The High Court should not have agreed to consider
the question of sentence and the offer of the accused in
this Court could not also be accepted. [39 E--G]
(3) The sentences were however reduced, because, but for the
supervening insolvency the accused might have paid back the
money as they had done in the past. [39 H]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeals Nos. 99
to 104 of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 10, 1964 of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeals
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Nos. 1323 to 1325 of 1962 and 1073 to 1075 of 1962
respectively.
Nuruddin Ahmed, G. L. Sanghi and O. C. Mathur,for the
appellants (in all the appeals).
M.S.K. Sastri and S. P. Nayar, for the respondent(in
all ,the appeals).
Purshottam Trikamdas and I. N. Shroff, for the complainants
(in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. ’This judgment shall govern the disposal
of .Criminal Appeals Nos. 99-104, of 1964. These appeals
arise ’from a number of criminal prosecutions started
against four persons for cheating. In the original court
there were as many as nine cases filed against them which
were tried simultaneously, three of the same kind being-
tried together, as required by the Code of Criminal
Procedure. As a result of the trial the first and the
fourth accused were acquitted. Accused Nos. 2 and 3 were
convicted. They were sentenced in the aggregate to rigorous
imprisonment for two years and were imposed fines ,totalling
Rs. 15,000 each. The convicted accused appealed to the High
Court. The State Government also appealed against the
acquittal of accused No. 4. The High Court maintained the
conviction and sentences of accused Nos. 2 and 3 and further
set aside the acquittal of accused No. 4 who on conviction
was sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for two years but no
fine was imposed on him. The convicted accused have now
filed these appeals by special leave.
The case started on the complaint of one Bansilal who was a
partner in a firm Jawarmal Ramkaran of Kalbadevi, Bombay.
It had five or six partners. This firm deals as Bankers
:and Commission Agents. The accused are connected with
another firm the name of which is Ramnarayan Rajmal Rathi.
The first accused (Laxminarayan Ramchandra) and the second
accused (Murlidhar Daga) were partners of this firm and were
doing business at Jhaveri Bazar, Bombay. The third accused
Motilal, who is the, brother of accused No. 2 was working as
a Munim in the firm Accused No. 4, Madan Lal, is a nephew of
accused Nos. 2 and 3 and was working as a. clerk. The third
firm which is involved in the narration of facts was called
Satyanarayan Shyamsunder Finn at Tejpur, Assam. Accused No.
4 is a partner of that firm. In the High Court the first
firm is shortly described as J. R. Finn, the second as R. R.
Firm and the third as S. S. Firm. We shall adhere to these
abbreviations in this judgment.
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It is an admitted fact that the R, R. Firm had dealings with
the J. R. Firm for several years and had borrowed in the
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past large sums of money from the J. R. Finn. In September,
1959, accused No. 3 approached Bansilal representing that
the R.R. Finn had to supply cloth to certain constituents in
Assam and that the R.R. Firm needed money for this purpose.
Accused No. 3 offered to the J.R. Firm a commission of 2 as.
on every Rs. 100 and 6-1/2 per cent. interest. It appears
that Bansilal wanted--that some security should be furnished
and accused No. 3 promised that the railway receipts,
invoices and the hundies drawn upon the S.S. Firm. would be
handed over as security. For a time things went on quite
regularly and honestly. As many as 110 hundies and railway
receipts were ..tendered and the liability was also met.
This involved a sum of no less than Rs. 1,20,000. Later,
however, the R.R. Firm began to inflate its invoices and to
draw hundies for exaggerated amounts. When these hundies
and the invoices reached the S.S. Firm they were returned.
The hundies and the railway receipts were then returned and
the Bank got back the goods ’from the railway authorities.
The parcels were opened and surveyed. It was found that the
goods represented by the invoices were not in the parcels
and that cloth very much less in value was actually
despatched. In other words, it was apparent that the RR.
Firm was inflating the invoices and drawing up exaggerated
hundies although cloth which was being sent was, very much
less in value. In, other words, the drawing of the money on
the security of the invoices and hundies from the J.R. Firm
was an act of cheating pure and simple because if the J.R.
Firm knew that the invoices and hundies were worthless or at
any rate not of sufficient worth they would not have
advanced such large sums of money to the R.R. Finn. , It may
be,, mentioned here that in this way, 40 invoices and
hundies were found to be inflated and they involved a sum of
Rs. 1,10,000 or thereabouts.
The matter might not have come to a head but for an event
which made the R.R. Firm incompetent even to pay the hundies
if tendered to them. A petition in insolvency was filed
against them and they were declared insolvent on December
30, 1959. The first hundi and invoice which was rejected by
the S.S. Firm was as far back as October 8, 1959. Although
the R.R. Firm wrote to the J.R. Firm that the hundies may be
tendered to them for payment no action appears to have been
taken. In this way the offence of cheating which really
arose when the inflated invoices and hundies were tendered
representing not the full value in terms of bales was made
out. Accused Nos. 2 and 3, who were partner and Munim,
respectively were held to be responsible for this cheating.
Accused No. 1 was acquitted because he was only a financing
partner and had no knowledge about these
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happenings. Ms acquittal was allowed to remain because the
State did not appeal against his acquittal. Accused No. 4,
who was only a clerk, was also acquitted by the court of’.
trial. on the ground that he had made no representation to
the J. R. Firm and thus was not guilty of any offence. It
may be stated here that no charge of conspiracy was made.
If it had been, other considerations might have applied.
Since accused No. 4 was directly charged with cheating some
representation on his behalf had’ to be made out. It is on
this point that the court of trial and the High Court have
differed; the court of trial having held that there was no
such representation and the- High Court, taking the view, on
evidence, ’Which we shall consider presently, that accused
No. 4 must be. held to be equally guilty.
In this appeal it is practically admitted that the offence
was committed although Mr. Nuruddin Ahmed described it as
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technical because (a) Bansilal knew what was being done, (b)
this ruse was adopted so that the other partners of the J.
R. Firm may not object, and (c) but for the intervention of
insolvency the hundies if they had been presented for
payment to the R.R Finn would have been met. He draws our
attention to the fact’ that as many as 110 invoices and
hundies were regular and also met by the R.R.Firm. He pleads
for a mitigation of the sentence on this ground. As regards
accused No. 4, Mr. Nuruddin Ahmed submits that his case
has been wrongly viewed by the High Court which has read too
much, into his actions and has thus erroneously held that he
was responsible for cheatingthe J.R. Firm. Mr. Nuruddin
Ahmed also draws our attention to what the High, Court did
during, the hearing of the appeal.It appears that-it was
represented to the High Court that. accused No. 2 was
willing to bring the money in payment of his share of the
losses caused to the J.R. Firm. The High Court adopted’ an
unusual procedure by adjourning _the, appeal and affording
accused No. 2 an opportunity of tendering his share of the
amount. Accused No. 2 brought a sum of Rs. 35,000 and
deposited it in Court. It appears from the High Court
judgment that it had assured his counsel that the question
of reduction of sentence would be heard after the amount Was
deposited. When the amount was deposited the matter was
heard again. The High Court found it- difficult to reduce
the sentence. It returned the balance of the amount after
retaining the gross amount of fine imposed upon accused No.
2 in the case. Mr. Nuruddin Ahmed contends that the High
Court should have reduced the sentence and taken over the
money which had been deposited for payment to the
complainant. He contends also that the High Court,was in
error in deducting the amount of fine When no question of
reduction of sentence was to be Considered: We shall say
Something about the procedure adopted in’ the High Court
presently.
38
We may begin first by considering the case, of the fourth
accused. Evidence shows that he was a mere clerk in the
R.R. Firm. No doubt he is a nephew of accused Nos. 2 and 3
but there is nothing to show that he took any part in the
negotiations or in the making out of the inflated invoices
and hundies. We have already said that no charge of
conspiracy was made and his action as a mere clerk is
capable of a different interpretation unless we can
attribute to him an intention to cheat the J.R. Firm as did
the other accused. On this part there is no evidence
whatever. The only evidence is that being a clerk he wrote
some of the invoices and took to the J.R. Firm. There is
also evidence that at the ’instance of the J.R. Finn he drew
up some pay-inslips which were later submitted, not by him,
but by the J.R. Firm to the Bank with the hundies. In our
judgment this evidence falls short of the requirements of
the law. No representation was made by the fourth accused
to induce the J.R. Firm to part with the funds. If a charge
of conspiracy had been made this evidence might have been
relevant under S. 10 of the Evidence Act but as no charge of
conspiracy was made the charge of cheating by the fourth
accused had to be made out on good and proper evidence.
There is nothing to show that the fourth accused knew that
the hundies were not going to be met or that the invoices
were in fact inflated. In the absence of any such proof it
is difficult to hold (as did the High Court) that accused
No. 4 was also guilty of the offence of cheating. None of
the invoices which were written by the fourth accused was
found to be inflated. The bad invoices were apparently
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written by someone else and he was only instrumental in
taking them to the J.R. Finn as the servant of the R.R.
Firm. Even if he wrote some of the bad invoices or the pay-
in-slips some more evidence was needed before it could be
held that he was instrumental in cheating the J.R. Firm. On
these grounds he was entitled to an acquittal and the High
Court erred in setting it aside in the appeal of the State
Government. We accordingly allow his .appeal and order his
acquittal. He need not surrender his bail which was granted
by this Court. The bail bond is cancelled.
This brings us to the question of the sentence of the
remaining accused, viz., accused Nos. 2 and 3. From what We
have said above it is quite clear that these accused seem
now to admit that they were guilty of cheating the J. R.
Firm. Their case is that Bansilal knew that the invoices
and the hundies were inflated, but that is no excuse because
Bansilal was not the only person involved. There was the J.
R. Finn who as Bankers and Commission Agents, would never
have lent such large sums of. money if they knew that the
invoices and hundies did not represent the proper value of
the goods. It is also to be noticed that
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Bansilal denies all this and the suggestion Of the second
and the third accused that he knew everything is merely an
assertion. It appears to us that having found a financier
who was willing to lend money on the security of invoices
and hundies, the second and the third accused engineered a
plan under which a larger sum could be borrowed than what
could be if the true facts were known. In other words, they
devised a method under which inflated invoices and false
hundies would enable them to get at larger loans than the
actual value of the goods represented. There was thus
cheating and their conviction must be held to be proper. We
do not think that the offence can be described as merely
technical. It was quite clearly a bold attempt to get more
money through false documents which were to form security
for the loans. It is true that in some way they might even
have paid this money if the hundies had been tendered to
them but there is nothing to show that they were in a
position to meet the liability because the insolvency which
supervened clearly indicates that they were not in-
possession of funds. It is their insolvency or lack of
funds which must have induced them to adopt this method.
Having, therefore, held that the offence against them is
proved we are now to consider the question of sentence in
the case. we pointed out that the High Court adopted an
unusual course in the case. In fact a similar course was
suggested to us at the hearing by submitting that we should
increase the fine and reduce the sentence to the period
undergone. In other words, the accused were adopting the
same method which they did in the High Court, namely, that
they will pay the amount which they have wrongly realised
from the J.R. Firm and this may be taken in mitigation of
the punishment imposed on them. In our opinion, it is very
wrong for a court to enter into a bargain of this character
Offences should be tried and punished according to the guilt
of the accused. If the Court thinks that leniency can be
shown on the facts of the case it may impose a lighter sen-
tence. But the court should never be a party to a bargain
by which money is recovered for the complainant through
their agency. We do not approve of the action adopted by
the High Court and for the same reason we would refrain from
accepting the suggestion of Mr. Nuruddin Ahmed that we
should increase the fine with a view to reducing the
sentence of imprisonment.
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We. however, think that in this case, but for the
supervening insolvency the accused might have paid back the
money to the J.R. Firm. The fact that they were on this
occasion and also in the High Court willing to pay shows
that if the matter had not been concluded against them by
the insolvency they might even have attempted to satisfy the
J.R. Firm. They were influenced
40
by the ease with which they could borrow money and therefore
tempted to depart from the strict path of honesty to meander
into an offence of cheating. Taking this into consideration
we think that although we cannot condone such offences there
is room for reduction of the sentence of imprisonment
imposed upon these two appellants. We reduce their sentence
to one year’s rigorous imprisonment. The sentence of fine
imposed on them shall stand. With this modification the
appeal of the second and the third accused will stand
dismissed. Their bill is cancelled and they shall surrender
forthwith.
V.P.S. Sentence reduced and Appeal dismissed.
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