Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KASHMIRI LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/09/1969
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
SIKRI, S.M.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1868 1970 SCR (2) 187
1969 SCC (2) 706
ACT:
Railway Stores (Unlawful possession) Act (51 of 1955), ss. 2
and 3-’Railway Stores’, what are-Offence under s. 3-
Ingredients and proof.
HEADNOTE:
A large number of parts of machinery bearing railway marks,
contained in bags of metal scrap booked for transport by
lorry by the appellant, was seized by the Railway police and
the appellant was charged with an offence under s. 3 of the
Railway Stores (Unlawful Possession) Act, 1955. The expert
on railway machinery parts certified that the goods were
unactionable, suggesting that they could not have been
auctioned and lawfully purchased by any third party, but in
court, he gave evidence and made a categorical statement
that he could not say if the articles were auctioned in the
market or not. The appellant was convicted and the
conviction was confirmed by the High Court.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD: Before anyone can be charged with the offence
under s. 3, the prosecution must show that the articles in
his possession are ’railway stores’ as defined in s. 2, that
is: (i) that the articles are the property of a railway
administration (though it is not necessary to prove that
they belong to any particular railway administration); and
(ii) that they are used or intended to be used in the
construction, operation or maintenance of a railway. The
prosecution must also show that there was cause for
reasonable suspicion of the stores having been stolen or
unlawfully obtained. Evidence that the goods conformed to
the railway standards, or that they were new, fails short of
the requisite proof, because, an article, though it is the
property of a railway administration would not be "railway
stores’ if the article has been discarded or rejected as
useless. Since the evidence in this case did not establish
that the goods were used or intended to be used in the
construction, operation or maintenance of a railway the
charge must fail. [188 D---F, E--H; 189 F--H]
Moyalal Rostagir v. State, 66 C.W.N. 269, approved.
Observations contra in Udaya Dalai v. State, 30 Cuttack
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L.T. 275, disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:Criminal Appeal No. 65N
of 1968.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order,
dated October 5, 1967 of the Allahabad High Court, Lucknow
Bench in Criminal Revision No. 152 of 1966.
A.S.R. Chari, R.K. Garg, R.A. Gupta and S.C. Agarwal,
for the appellant.
H.R. Khanna and O.P. Rana, for the respondent.
188
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. In this appeal by special leave the
appellant challenges his conviction under s. 3 of the
Railway Stores (Unlawful Possession) Act, 1955.
The Act is a measure providing for punishment of persons
in unlawful possession of railway stores who cannot
satisfactorily account how they came by the same. By
section 2 "railway stores" are defined to mean any
article---(a) which is the property of any railway
administration, and (b) which is used or intended to be
used in the construction, operation or maintenance of a
railway. Section 3 defines the offence as also the measure
of punishment therefore. It reads:
"If any person is found, or is proved
to have been in possession of any article of
railway stores reasonably suspected of
being stolen or unlawfully obtained, and
cannot account satisfactorily how he
came by the same, he shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to five years, or with fine,
or with both."
Before anyone can be charged with the offence under s. 3
it must be shown that he was in possession of railway stores
which by the definition of section does not include all
articles which are’ the property of a railway
administration but only those which are used or intended to
be used in the construction, operation or maintenance of a
railway. Mere unlawful possession of the property of any
railway administration is not an offence. The prosecution
must also prove that the articles were being actually used
or were intended to be used for by the railway. Thus any
article which is the property of a railway administration
but which has been discarded or rejected for further use
would be outside the definition of railway stores. Railway
stores may be new or old and an offence may be committed in
respect of stores of either kind. If the railway
administration has no further use of them be they new or old
as in the case where they have become unserviceable or
outmoded no person can be charged with an offence under s.
3 in respect thereof. It is only when the articles satisfy
the definition of railway stores that the prosecution can be
successfully launched against a person in unlawful
possession thereof. Even in such a case. the prosecution
must first adduce evidence to show that there was cause for
reasonable suspicion of the stores being stolen or
obtained unlawfully. It is only when the burden in respect
of this is discharged by the prosecution that the onus
shifts to the accused to account satisfactorily of his
possession of the same. He may, for instance, show that he
had purchased the property in open market where goods of
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this
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kind are usually sold or that he had bought them from
someone bona fide in the belief that the vendor had lawfully
obtained the
The facts in this case are as follows. On the strength
of some information received on 28th July, 1964 that some
stolen railway property was being sent out of Lucknow
through a motor transport agency, a Sub Inspector attached
to the Railway Protection Force along with another Sub
Inspector of Police searched the premises of the motor
transport company at Lucknow the same night. The search
which took place in the presence of the appellant and the
manager of the transport company revealed that a large
number of parts of railway machinery (railway engines)
bearing railway marks were contained in 23 bags of metal
scrap booked the same day by the appellant for consignment
to Jullunder. The usual formality of preparing a recovery
memo and the sealing of goods in bags in the presence of
witnesses was gone through. One Jaswant Singh, described as
an expert of railway machinery parts and Foreman and Chief
Inspector of N.E. Kotwali Chowk, Lucknow, examined the goods
said to be railway stores and kept in 11 bags and made a
report to the effect that they were all railway stores being
parts of a railway engine. It was the case for the
prosecution that the appellant failed to offer any
satisfactory explanation of his possession of the goods. On
the strength of the evidence adduced and principally on the
report of Jaswant Singh along with his oral testimony the
Magistrate found him guilty and sentenced him to
imprisonment for two years. The conviction was maintained
by the Sessions Judge and the High Court.
The report made by Jaswant Singh shows that he had examined
the material which he classified under 38 heads and
described the same as unauctionable property. Against each
item he put a remark either "O" or "N", ’O’ signifying old
goods and ’N’ meaning new ones. The report seems to
suggest that the goods being unauctionable a third party
could not lawfully obtain possession of the same.
Curiously in his testimony before the court although he said
that he had prepared’ the report and signed the same he made
no statement to the effect that the contents of the report
were correct. His definite averment was:
"Railway engine is auctioned in the
market. I cannot say if these articles
were auctioned in the market. I cannot
say if these articles were auctioned Or
not."
In his cross examination he repeated the same averment in
’different words but only added that he had examined the
articles
1Sup. C.I./70--14
and they were parts of an engine and that railway articles
were mixed with other goods in the bags. From his
deposition it is not possible to spell out any averment to
the effect that the items mentioned in his report were used
or intended to be used in the construction, operation or
maintenance of a railway.
In our view there was no evidence before the courts to
prove that the articles seized were railway stores within
the meaning of s. 2 of the Act. Our attention was drawn to
the case of Moyalal Rostagir v. The State(1) wherein it was
held that in order to prove that the articles were railway
stores it was necessary to establish that the articles in
question were not only the property belonging to a railway
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administration but they were used or intended to be used for
the construction or operation of a railway. Counsel for
the respondent however cited a decision of the Orissa High
Court in Udaya Dalai v. The State(2). The material seized
in that case were tie-bars and iron sleepers which were
brand new. According to the learned Judge of the Orissa
High Court:
" .... section 2 of the Act does not
require the prosecution to prove that the
incriminating articles belonging to a
particular railway. From the evidence of
P.W. 5 it can be reasonably inferred that as
the seized articles were found to conform to
the specifications of the Indian Railway
Standards they held that they belonged to any
of the railways in India. His further
evidence that they were ’brand new’ is also
sufficient to show that they were intended to
be used in the construction, operation or
maintenance of the railway."
In our view although the prosecution is not called upon to
prove that the goods belong to any particular railway
administration it has to establish that the articles were
the property of a railway administration. Evidence to the
effect that the goods conformed to the Railway Standards
fails short of such proof. In most cases the burden of
proof in this respect may be discharged by leading evidence
about the identifying marks on the goods or some,
peculiarity of the goods not to be found in cases of non
railway goods. Again the mere description of the goods as
new would not fulfil the requirements of s. 2(b). Some
evidence will have to be led to the effect that the goods of
the kind were being actually used by a railway
administration and that the goods were in a serviceable
condition. In the case of goods which had not been put to
use evidence would have to be led to establish that they had
been manufactured for such us,.
(1) 66 C.W.N. 269. (2) 30 Cuttack Law Tims,
275.
191
The evidence ’in the case before us did not establish
that goods were railway stores within the meaning of s. 2 of
the Act and as such the question of punishment under s. 3
did not arise. The appeal will there be allowed and the bail
bond of the appellant directed to be cancelled.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
192