Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
JAGANNATH SONU PARKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/10/1962
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1963 AIR 728 1963 SCR Supl. (1) 573
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1980 SC1382 (111)
ACT:
Criminal Trial-Special Judicial Magistrates-Notification
constituting and conferring powers on-Change In venue of
trial and appeal-If discriminatory-Notification dated Decem-
ber 29, 1961, of Bombay Government-Code of Criminal Proce-
dure, 1898 (Act V of 1898), s. 14-Bombay Separation of Judi-
cial and Executive Functions Act, 1951 (Bom. 23 of 1951)-
Constitution of India, Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
Section 14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, as amended by
Bombay Act 23 of 1951, empowered the State Government to
appoint a qualified person as a special Magistrate and to
confer upon him powers conferrable upon a judicial
Magistrate in respect of a particular case or a particular
class or classes of cases or in regard to cases generally in
any local area. By a notification dated December 29, 1961,
the Government appointed Mr. G to be a Special Judicial
Magistrate for the area comprising Greater Bombay and
Ratnagiri District and conferred upon him all the powers of
a Presidency Magistrate in respect of the trial of the
Deogad Gold Seizure case. The petitioners, who are accused
in the case, moved the Supreme Court for a writ of
certiorari for quashing the notification on the ground that
the notification and the amended s.14 infringed Art. 14 of’
the Constitution.
Held, that the amended s. 14 does not offend Art. 14 and is
valid. There is substantially no difference between the
powers conferrable by the unmended and by the amended s. 14.
M. K. Gopalan v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1955] 1 S.C.R.
168, relied on.
Held, further that the notification constituting a Special
Magistrate for the trial of the petitioners was not
discriminatory. Amended s. 14 contemplates both a case
which is pending and one which may be instituted after the
date of the constitution of the Special Magistrate. The
constitution of a Special Magistrate does not amount
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
directly or indirectly to a transfer of any
574
case. The fact that Mr. G may hold the trial at Bombay and
not at Deogad while other similarly situated would be tried
at Deogod may result in inconvenience to the petitioners but
this could not sustain the plea of discrimination. The
charge against the petitioners is in respect of conspiracy
at Bombay, Deogad and other places and the petitioners could
have been lawfully tried at Bombay. The notification
constituted a Special Magistrate and conferred jurisdiction
on him both over the place where the petitioners are alleged
to have conspired and the place where the offences are
alleged to have been actually committed. It did not amount
to discrimination that from the judgment of the Special
Magistrate an appeal would lie to the High Court while if
the petitioners were tried by a Magistrate at Deogad, an
appeal would lie to the Sessions judge and then a revision
would lie to the High Court. The difference of the venue
results from the nature of the jurisdiction exercised by the
Magistrate trying the case and not from any unequal dealing
by the notification.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ PEtitioN No. 65 of 1962.
Petition under Art. 32 of the CoNstitution of India for the
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
A. S. R. Chari, R. K. Garg avid K. R. Chaudhri, for the
petitioners.
N. S. Bindra and R. H. Dhebat, for the respondents.
1962. October 11. The judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-Being in possession of evidence that the
petitioners and others were concerned in the commission of
offences of conspiracy to smuggle gold from foreign
countries into thE port of Deogad in the District of
Ratnagiri, contrary to the provisions of the Sea Customs Act
and the Foreien Exchange Regulation Act, P. N.- Kalyankar,
Sub-Inspector.of Customs and Central Excise, arrested the
petitioners and produced them before the judicial Magistrate
F Class,
575
Deogad. On December 29, 1961, the Government of Maharashtra
promulgated a notification in exercise of the powers
conferred by s. 14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898
(as amended by Bombay Act XXIII of 1951 in its application
to the State of Maharashtra) appointing Mr. V. M, Gehani to
be a Special judicial Magistrate having jurisdiction over
the area comprising Greater Bombay and Ratnagiri District,
and conferred upon him all the powers of a Presidency
Magistrate in respect of the trial in the case involving the
seizure of approximately 49,990 tolas of foreign gold and
known as the "Deogad Gold Seizure Case.’
On January 10, 1962, the Government of Maharashtra gave
consent in writing as required by s. 196-A sub-section (2)
of the Code of Criminal Procedure to the institution of
criminal proceedings against the petitioners and eight
others for offences punishable "under s. 120B of the Indian
Penal Code, 1860 read with s. 167(81) of the Sea Customs
Act, 1878 (as amended) and s. 120B of the Indian Penal Code
read with s. 167(81) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (as
amended) and s. 8(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act.
1947 (as amended) and s. 120B of the Indian Penal Code read
s. 8(1) with and s. 23 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
Act, 1947 (as amended)". Thereafter H. R. Jokhi, Assistant
Collector of Customs & Central Excise, Marine & Prevention
Division, Collectorate of Central Excise Bombay instituted a
complaint in the Court of the Special Magistrate appointed
under the Notification dated December 29, 1961, against 16
persons (including the petitioners) alleging that they were
parties to a conspiracy at Bombay, janjira, Dabhol and
Deogad (the latter three places being in the District of
Ratnagiri) and other places to smuggle large quantities of
gold into India, with a view to evade or attempt to evade
payment of duty thereon and to evade or attempt to evade the
prohibition and
576
restrictions in force relating thereto during the period
from about October 1959 to the end of April 1961. or
thereabout in breach of the provisions of the Sea Customs
Act, 1878 and the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947, and
that the said persons had in pursuance of the "conspiracy
and with continuing purpose and design" in or about the
month of April 1961 acquired or were concerned in importing
and acquiring possession, contrary to the Sea Customs Act
and the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, gold totalling
49,990 tolas valued at over Rs. 70,00,000/-. The
petitioners applied to the Special Magistrate that they be
tried at Deogad or at Ratangiri the headquarters of the
District, for they were permanent residents of Deogad
carrying on their respective occupations at Deogad, that
they had already made their individual arrangements for
their defence at Deogad and that it would be just and
convenient that their trial should take place in the
District of Ratnagiri. The Magistrate rejected their appli-
cation. The petitioners then moved the High Court of
judicature at Bombay praying for an order that the case
against the petitioners be transferred for trial to the
court of some judicial Magistrate at Deogad or at Ratnagiri
competent to try the case : in the alternative the
petitioners prayed that the Special Magistrate Mr. Gehani be
directed to try the said case either at Deogad or at
Ratnagiri at which place all ’facilities’ were available.
The High Court dismissed their application. The petitioners
then moved this Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution for
a writ of certiorari or other appropriate writ or direction
quashing the Notification dated December 29, 1961., issued
by the Government of Maharashtra or in the alternative
declaring s. 14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure as amended
by the Bombay Act 23 of 1951 ultra vires and void and for an
order that the case be heard at Deogad or at Ratnagiri in
the State of Maharashtra by any Magistrate competent to
enquire into or try the case. By this petition
577
the petitioners submitted that s. 14 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure as amended by the Bombay Legislature by Act 23 of
1951 and the Notification dated December 29, 1961, issued by
the Government of Maharashtra appointing Mr. Gehani as
Special judicial Magistrate and investing him with the
powers of a Presidency Magistrate, infringed Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
Sub-section (1) of s. 14 of the Code as amended, in so far
as it is material, provides
"14. Special Magistrates.- The State
Government may in consultation with the High
Court, confer upon any person who holds or has
held any judicial post under the Union or a
State, or possesses such other qualifications
as may, in consultation with the High Court,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
be specified in this behalf by the State
Government by notification in the Official
Gazette, all or any of the powers conferred or
conferrable by or under this Code on a
judicial Magistrate in respect to particular
cases or to a particular class or classes of
cases, or in regard to cases generally in any
local area."
By s. 6-A which was also added by Bombay Act 23 of 1951 in
the Code, constitution of different classes of ,Judicial
Magistrates was provided, and under that head were included
Presidency Magistrates. The State Government was, under the
amended Code, competent to appoint a person with the
requisite qualifications a Special Magistrate and to confer
upon him the powers conferred or conferrable under the Code
on a judicial Magistrate in respect of a particular case or
a particular class or classes of cases or in regard to cases
generally in any local area. Section 14 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure as originally enacted prohibited the
578
appointment of a Special Magistrate to function in any local
area within the Presidency towns, but that limitation upon
the power of the State Government has, by the amendment made
by Bombay Act 23 of 1951, been removed, and it is now open
to the Government of Maharashtra to constitute a Special
judicial Magistrate with power to function in any local area
including Greater Bombay. The expression ,local area’
includes any part of a State, and it may cover more than one
District. The Government of Maharashtra therefore could
appoint Mr. Gehani a Special,’ judicial Magistrate, having
jurisdiction over Greater Bombay and the District of
Ratnagiri and could confer upon him the powers of a
Presidency Magistrate in respect of the trial of the case
known as the Deogad Gold Seizure Case.
In M. K. Gopalan v. The state of Madhya Pradesh the validity
of s. 14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 (V of 1898.)
was challenged on the plea that it was void because it
infringed the fundamental right of equality before the law
guaranteed by Art. 14 of the Constitution. This Court held
that a law vesting discretion in an authority to appoint a
Special Magistrate under s. 14 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure to try cases entirely under the normal Procedure
cannot be regarded as discriminatory and is not hit by Art.
14 of the Constitution. There is substantially no
difference between the powers conferrable by s. 14 of the
Code as originally enacted and s. 14 as amended by Bombay
Act 23 of 1951. Apart from certain procedural matters such
as consultation with the High Court before entrustment of
the said powers, the only difference made by the Bombay Act
is that a Special Magistrate may be appointed even in
respect of a Presidency town. Section 14 contemplates that
a Special ’Magistrate may be entrusted with powers which are
conferrable by or under the Code on a judicial Magistrate.
A Presidency Magistrate being a Judicial Magistrate under
(1) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 168.
579
s. 6-A as added by the Bombay Legislature, powers
conferrable on a Presidency Magistrate may lawfully be
conferred upon a Special judicial Magistrate who has been
appointed for the Presidency town with or without any
additional locality. Section 20 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure provides that every Presidency Magistrate shall
exercise jurisdiction in all places within the presidency-
town for which he is appointed, and within the limits of the
port of such town and of any navigable river or channel
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
leading thereto, as such limits are defined under the law
for the time being in force for the regulation of ports and
port-dues. There is, however, nothing in this section which
detracts from the authority which may be exercised by the
State Government under s. 14 to appoint a Special judicial
Magistrate in respect of a Presidency Town nor is there any
prohibition against the investiture of powers of a
Presidency Magistrate upon such Magistrate in respect of a
locality outside the Presidency town so long as he has
jurisdiction also over a Presidency Town. On the principle
of M. K. Gopalan’s case (1), s. 14 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, as amended, cannot be regarded as infringing Art.
14 of the Constitution.
Validity of the Notification issued by the Government of
Maharashtra directing the trial by Mr. Gehani who had
jurisdiction both over the Greater Bombay area and the
District of Ratnagiri may now be considered. Relying upon
the judgment of this Court in Bidi Supply Company v. The
Union of India (2), it was submitted that the impugned
Notification was unauthorised. That was a case where an
assessee who was ordinarily assessed to income-tax by
Officers within the town of Calcutta was informed by letter
dated January 25, 1955, in pursuance of s. 5 (7-A) of the
Income-tax Act, 1922 (Xl of 1922) as amended by Act XL of
1940 the assessment records of the assessee were transferred
from the Income-tax Officer, Calcutta to the Income-
(1) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 168.
(2) [1956] S. C. R. 267.
580
tax Officer, Special Circle, Ranchi in the State of Bihar
and that he do correspond in future regarding the assessment
proceedings with that Income-tax officer. The assessee had
received no previous notice of the intention of the Income-
tax authorities to transfer the assessment proceedings from
Calcutta to Ranchi, nor had he any opportunity to make any
representation against the said decision. The assessee
challenged by a petition to this Court the validity of the
order of transfer contending that it violated the equal
protection clause of the Constitution. Section 64 of the
Income-tax Act provides for the normal place of assessment
of assesses. By subsection (1) it provides that where an
assessee carries on a business, profession or vocation at
any place, he shall be assessed by the Income-tax Officer of
the area in which that place is situate, or, where the
business, profession or vocation is carried on in more
places than one, by the Income-tax Officer of tile area in
which the principal place of his business, profession or
vocation is situate. In all other cases, in assessee shall
be assessed by the Income-tax Officer of the area in which
he resides. By subsection (5) of s. 64 it is provided,
inter alia, that the provisions of sub-s. (1) and (2) shall
not apply where by any direction given or any distribution
or allocation of work made by the Commissioner of Income-tax
under sub-s. (5) of section 5, or in consequence of any
transfer made under sub-s. (7A) of s. 5, a particular
Income-tax Officer has been charged with the function of
assessing that assessee. This Court held in the Bidi supply
Company’s case (1) that sub-s. 5 (7A) of s. 5 as it stood at
the material time contemplated transfer of a pending case
for a particular year. It was observed that "the provision
that such a transfer may be made ’at any stage of the
proceedings’ obviously postulates proceedings actually
pending, and ’stage’ refers to a point in between the
commencement and the termination of those proceedings.
Further the provision that such transfer shall not render
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
necessary
(1) [1956] S. C. R. 267.
581
the reissue of notice already issued by the Income-tax
Officer from whom the case is transferred quite clearly
indicates that the transfer contemplated by the sub-section
is the transfer of a particular case actually pending before
an income-tax Officer of one place to the Income-tax Officer
of another place." The decision of the Court turned on the
meaning of the word ’case’ used in sub-s. 5(7A) as enacted
by the Income-tax Act Amendment Act, 1940 and this Court
held that the expression ’case’ meant an assessment case of
a particular year. After this decision the Legislature
intervened and by the Income-tax Amendment Act 26 of 1956 it
added an explanation that the word ’case’ in relation to any
person whose name is specified in the order of transfer
means all proceedings under the Income-tax Act in respect of
any year which may be pending on the date of the transfer,
and includes all proceedings under this Act which may be
commenced after the date of the transfer in respect of any
year. The principle of the case in Bidi Supply Company (1)
has no relevance in considering the validity of the
Notification issued under s. 14 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure as amended by the Bombay Act 23 of 1951. The
assessee in the Bidi Supply Company’s case (1) obtained the
benefit of a lacuna in the provisions of the Indian Income-
tax Act, there being apart from a provision for transfer of
a pending case, no general power to transfer future
assessment proceedings. A Notification Under s. 14 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure is an order constituting a
Special Magistrate with jurisdiction over a certain local
area and with powers which are normally exercisable by a
Judicial Magistrate. The constitution of a Special
Magistrate does not amount either directly or indirectly to
a transfer of any ’case’: nor are there any such
considerations present in that order as were pointed out by
this Court in the Bidi Supply Company’s case (1) relating to
the meaning of the word "case’ used in the Income-tax Act,
as would compel us to
(1) [1956] S. C R. 267.
582
hold that a "case’ within the meaning of s. 14 means a
pending case only. Under s. 14 the State Government is
competent to appoint a special Judicial Magistrate in
respect of ’any particular case or a particular class or
classes of cases or in regard to cases generally in any
local area’. The words used in s. 14 must mean a case which
is either pending or which may be instituted after the date
of the constitution of the Special Magistrate.
It was then submitted that the Notification appointing a
Special Magistrate, for trial of the intended complaint
against the petitioners, having regard to the circumstances
of this case, and conferring upon him the powers of a
Presidency Magistrate operated discriminatively against the
petitioners, for, it was said, other persons similarly
situated as the petitioners were ordinarily liable to be
tried by the Magistrate within whose jurisdiction the
offence was alleged to be committed, and could not be
required to go to a distance of more than three hundred
miles from their normal place of residence to defend them-
selves. It was urged that Mr. Gehani being a Presidency
Magistrate for the trial of the case against the petitioners
and others he would be sitting in Bombay where he normally
functions, and it would result in great inconvenience to the
petitioners to be called upon to attend the sittings of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
Court in Bombay specially when there are Magistrates availa-
ble in Deogad who are competent to hear and decide the case
against the petitioners. By the Notification Mr. Gehani has
been invested with the powers over Greater Bombay and
Ratnagiri District. His jurisdiction therefore extends over
the whole of the Greater Bombay area and the District of
Ratnagiri. There is no provision in the Code of Criminal
Procedure which enjoins upon a Magistrate the duty to hold
his sitting in any particular place. Under s. 9(2) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure the State Government is required
to direct at what place or
583
places the Court of Session shall ordinarily hold its
sitting, but if, in any particular case, the Court of
Session is of opinion that it will tend to the general
convenience of the parties and witnesses to hold its sitting
at any other place in the sessions division, it may with the
consent of the prosecution and the accused, sit at that
place for the disposal of the case or the examination of any
witness or witnesses therein. There is, however, no similar
provision in respect of the sittings to be held by
Magistrates. The Special judicial Magistrate Mr. Gehani
having the power therefore to sit at any place within his
local area as defined by the terms of his appointment, this
Court cannot speculate as to what place Mr. Gehani will
function in the exercise of his jurisdiction. The question
is one for his discretion. It may be remembered that the
petitioners had moved the High Court of Bombay asking for
the transfer of the case from the Court of Mr. Gehani to any
Magistrate functioning in the District of Ratnagiri, because
of the alleged ground of inconvenience, and that application
was rejected by the High Court. It cannot be now urge by
the petitioners that the trial at Bombay is inconvenient to
them and may prejudice a fair trial. It is true that under
the Code of Criminal Procedure "every offence shall
ordinarily be enquired into and tried by a Magistrate of the
local area in whose jurisdiction it was committed" but the
charge in this case against the accused is in respect of a
conspiracy at Bombay, Deogad, Dabhol, janjira and other
places to commit offences under the Sea Customs Act and the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act and also of commission in
pursuance of the conspiracy of substantive offences under
those Acts. It is the prosecution case that importation of
gold contrary to law took place in the area of Deogad port
whereas the offenders conspired at different places
including Bombay. By designating a Special Magistrate who
would have jurisdiction both over the place where the
offenders are alleged to have conspired and the place where
offences were
584
actually committed, the State has taken care to see that the
trial of the case is held by a Magistrate who has
territorial jurisdiction in both areas. It is not
suggested that the Notification was issued for any ulterior
purpose. The State has having regard to the special
circumstances constituted a Special Magistrate, as it was
entitled to, and the Notification does and even suggest the
place where the Magistrate is to hold his sittings. The
ground of inconvenience in support of the plea of
discrimination cannot therefore be sustained.
It is urged that against the order of conviction which may
be passed by Mr. Gehani whole is invested with the powers of
a Presidency Magistrate an appeal would lie only to the High
Court whereas if the case were tried before a Magistrate of
Ratnagiri District an appeal would lie to the Court of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
Session and a further revision application to the High
Court. This it was pointed out made a substantial
difference of procedure between persons similarly situated.
It is true that if the complaint was filed in the Court of
Magistrate having jurisdiction over Deogad alone, as it
could lawfully be filed, an appeal would, against an order
of conviction, lie to the Court of Session, Ratnagiri and an
application in the exercise of revisional jurisdiction to
the High Court from the order of the Court of Session. But
it is difficult to hold that this amounts to any
discrimination. Apart from the fact that the trial by a
special Magistrate and an appeal directly to the High Court
against the order of the Magistrate may be regarded normally
as more advantageous to the accused persons, the distinction
between Courts to which the appeal may lie arises out of the
constitution of the Special Magistrate and not any special
procedure evolved by the Notification. On the allegation
made in the complaint, the complainant could lawfully
institute proceedings in the Court of a Presidency
Magistrate at Bombay or of any competent Magistrate in the
District of Ratnagiri.
585
Such Magistrates would by virtue of s. 182 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure entertain the complaint and appeals from
orders of conviction recorded by them would lie to the High
Court, or the Court of Session, according as the Magistrate,
trying- the case was a Presidency Magistrate, or a judicial
Magistrate of the First Class. The difference of the venue
results from the nature of the jurisdiction exercised by the
Magistrate trying the case, and not from any unequal dealing
by the’ executive constituting the Courts of the
Magistrates. It is because Powers exercisable by a
Presidency Magistrate are conferred upon the Special
Magistrate, as they may lawfully be conferred, that the
incidental right of appeal, which is prescribed, by the
statute is exercisable in the High Court and not in the
Court of Session. We do not think that there is any
discrimination practised by the Notification constituting a
Special Magistrate for the trial of the case against the
petitioners and others.
The petition therefore fails and is dismissed.
Petition dismissed.
586