Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 689 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Bipinchandra Parshottamdas Patel (Vakil)
RESPONDENT:
State of Gujarat & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/04/2003
BENCH:
S. RAJENDRA BABU
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[With Contempt Petition (Civil) No.452 of 2002]
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
I have had the privilege of perusing the judgment proposed by my learned
brother S.B.Sinha, J. However, with respect, I express my inability to concur with
the same and I propose to deliver a separate judgment in the following terms.
As facts and provisions of the relevant law have been set out in the
judgment of my learned brother S.B.Sinha, J. I do not propose to reiterate them.
The petition in hand calls for interpretation of Section 40 of the Gujarat
Municipalities Act, 1963 (for short ’the Act’).
Section 40(1) is disjunctive in nature. First part of this sub-Section says
that a President or Vice-President of a municipality can be suspended if any
criminal proceeding has been instituted against him/her in respect of any offence
alleged to have been committed under the Prevention of Corruption Act or the
Bombay Prohibition Act or while acting or purporting to act in discharge of his/her
duties under the Act. Whereas, the second part deals with the suspension of a
President or Vice-President who has been detained in a prison during trial under
the provisions of any law. The present petition falls under the second part. Here
the appellant was suspended from the President’s office of Anand Municipality
owing to his detention in judicial custody for alleged offences under Sections 307,
143, 147, 148 and 149 of the Indian Penal Code read with Section 25 (c) of the
Arms Act and under Section 135 of the Bombay Police Act. To the appellant, his
suspension is bad in law since his detention was not ’during trial’ as
contemplated in Section 40(1) of the Act. It is also his case that the words ’during
trial’ should be given a strict meaning so as to cover detention only after
commencement of trial of a case as envisaged in the Code of Criminal
Procedure.
The manifest intention and obvious purpose of Section 40 is to ensure the
proper functioning of the Office of the President or Vice-President of the
Municipalities by keeping the public confidence. A person, who is detained in
prison, will not be able to effectively discharge his public duties. So the Act aims
to keep those persons, against whom serious criminal proceedings are initiated
or who are detained in prisons, away from the public office of the President or
Vice-President of the Municipalities until they are cleared of the charge. Actual
conviction for the alleged offence is not a necessary pre-condition for any
suspension under Section 40. For the purpose of suspension under part I of
Section 40(1), initiation of criminal proceeding in respect of any offence alleged
to have been committed by him/her is sufficient. Section 40 (2) deals about the
stopgap arrangement that has to be made in the eventuality of a suspension
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under sub-Section (1). This sub-Section provides for electing a councilor to
perform the functions of a President or Vice-President as the case may be. And
sub-Section (3) provides for the appeal from a decision of suspension under sub-
Section (1). Reading of sub-Sections (2) and (3) along with part I of sub-Section
(1) go on to show that immediately after the initiation of any criminal proceeding,
a President or Vice President could be suspended from office. At the same time
they could re-occupy the office immediately after clearing the charges against
them. By virtue of Section 40, a person who is alleged to have committed an
offence under part I of sub-Section (1) will have to be kept away from office. The
cardinal dictum that the legislature laid down vide Section 40 is to allow only
those persons, against whom there are no criminal proceedings, to man the
office of the Municipal President or Vice-President.
The proper meaning of words "detained in prison during trial" in part II of
sub-Section 40(1) could only be deciphered in the above contextual backdrop.
The meaning of these words should be in perfect tune with the spirit of Section
40. Otherwise, the purpose of section will be defeated. Therefore, word "trial"
used in the expression "detained in prison during trial" cannot be singled out and
cannot be accorded with a restricted meaning. The meaning will have to promote
the reason and spirit of Section 40 of the Act.
Now the entire issue boils down to the exercise of finding the true meaning
of the word ’trial’ as portrayed in the broad canvass of Section 40 of the Act.
In State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey 1957 SCR 279 at 289 this
Court observed:
" The words ’tried’ and ’trial’ appear to have no fixed or universal
meaning. No doubt, in quite a number of sections in the Code to
which our attention has been drawn the words ’tried’ and ’trial’
have been used in the sense of reference to a stage after the
inquiry. That meaning attaches to the words in those sections
having regard to the context in which they are used. There is no
reason why where these words are used in another context in the
Code, they should necessarily be limited in their connotation and
significance. They are words which must be considered with
regard to the particular context in which they are used and with
regard to the scheme and purpose of the provision under
consideration."
(Emphasis supplied)
Following this view, this Court in Omprakash Shivaprakash v. K I Kuriakose,
(1999) 8 SCC 633 ruled that:
"The term ’trial’ cannot be given a fixed meaning to be applied in all cases
uniformly."
Therefore, the word ’trial’ in Section 40 of the Act cannot be supplanted
with a straight jacket meaning so as to cover all situations. No doubt, the word
"trial" used in part II of sub-Section 40(1) is capable of two interpretations in the
context of the present case. One is the restricted interpretation so as to cover
only the period after framing of the charge. This view is what the appellant
advances. The second possibility is to assign a liberal meaning so as to cover
’detention at any stage of the case’.
Since the purpose of the Section 40 is to ’ensure the proper functioning of
the Office of the President or Vice-President of the Municipalities by keeping the
public confidence’, the concentration is on the expression "detention in prison".
For obvious reasons a person who is detained in prison cannot effectively
function as a President or Vice-President of a Municipality. So any person
’detained in prison’ cannot be allowed to hold the office. This is the purpose of
part II in Section 40(1). The words "during trial" is used so as to exclude the
situations like preventive detention or detention in police custody. If the words
employed in a provision are capable of two meanings or casts doubts as to the
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actual meaning, then it has to be interpreted in the light of the object of the
legislation. Word by word interpretation is not a welcome method of
interpretation. Words, vehicles of legislative intentions, take colour from the
context in which it is used. Hence the interpretation of the words ’during trial’ will
have to promote the purpose of Section 40. As already pointed out, object of this
Section is to keep shady characters away from local bodies and to pave way to
persons with high integrity and good moral conduct to hold public offices. This
large interest could only be promoted if the word ’trial’ is given a broad meaning.
This intention is vividly displayed by choosing the expression "under the
provisions of any law for the time being in force" in part II of Section 40(1). Which
means the provision is designed to cover any ’detention in prison’ under
provisions of any law . Only by this interpretation, the textual meaning of ’during
trial’ matches the contextual spirit of Section 40 that aims to ensure the smooth
functioning of the office and to keep confidence of people in the institution.
In result, the word ’trial’ should not be given a restricted meaning so as to
include only proceedings after the accused is actually arraigned before the
competent court for framing and facing of charges. Thus, detention in the present
case took place during the process of trial. It served as a step in aid for trial.
The distinction between two parts of Section 40(1) of the Act regarding
offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act, Bombay Prohibition Act, Gujarat
Municipalities Act on the one hand and other enactments on the other is strongly
relied upon on behalf of the appellant. Many offences arising under other laws
adverted to in the latter part of Section 40(1) of the Act are no less serious than
those adverted to in the former part of Section 40(1) of the Act. For that matter
they may be far more serious. For example, drunkenness may be an offence
under Bombay Prohibition Act, while murder and sedition are offences under the
Indian Penal Code. Further, for practical reasons, if a person is kept in prison,
whatever may be the nature of the offence whether falling under the first part or
the second part of Section 40(1) of the Act, the working of the Act will be put in
jeopardy unless he is suspended. While the one who has committed an offence
under the Bombay Prohibition Act is liable to be suspended immediately on being
accused of such an offence and arrested, while the other who has committed a
murder is not so liable. Thus a literal interpretation of the provision would lead to
anomalous results as in the categorisation of offences no scientific basis is
discernible. The object of Section 40(1) of the Act is to prevent a President/Vice-
President of a Municipality from functioning in event of a criminal case being
launched and arrested. However, in one set of cases, immediately on arrest
such officer bearer can be suspended, while in the other only on detention during
trial. Thus two classes are created one more onerous than the other and,
therefore, may lead to being irrational and arbitrary so as to violate Article 14 of
the Constitution. Such an interpretation can be avoided if we accept the
interpretation suggested by the High Court.
For the foregoing reasons, with regret, I cannot agree with the judgment of
brother S.B. Sinha, J. that assigns a restricted meaning to the word ’trial’ in
Section 40 of the Act. Therefore, the conclusion arrived at by the High Court
does not call for our interference. The petition shall stand dismissed accordingly.
I agree, with respect, with brother S.B.Sinha, J. that the contempt petition
(C) No.452 of 2002 should be dismissed. The appellant’s presidential term
expired on 30.6.2002. The concerned authorities conducted the election only on
11/7/2002. So they cannot be said to have violated the order of this Court.
Notice in contempt petition shall stand discharged and proceedings dropped.