Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGWAN PRASAD SRIVASTAVA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
N. P. MISRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/04/1970
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
RAY, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1661 1971 SCR (1) 317
1969 SCC (2) 56
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC2591 (2,3)
R 1983 SC 610 (3)
RF 1986 SC 345 (6)
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure, (5 of 1898) s. 197-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent filed a complaint stating that the appellant,
a civil surgeon used defamatory and abusive words and got
the respondent pushed out by the cook of the hospital. On
the question whether the case was covered by s. 197 Cr.
P.C. and previous sanction of the superior authority was
necessary before the trial Court could take cognizance of
the complaint,
HELD : The case was not covered by s, 197 Cr. P.C.. The
object and purpose underlying section 197 Cr. P.C. is to
afford protection to public servants against frivolous,
vexatious or false prosecution for offences alleged- to have
been committed by them while acting or- purporting to act in
the discharge of their official duty. The larger interest
of efficiency of State administration demands that public
servants should be free to perform their official duty
’fearlessly and undeterred by apprehension of their
,possible prosecution at the instance. of private parties to
whom annoyance ,or injury may have been caused by their
legitimate acts done in the discharge of their official
duty. This section is designed to facilitate effective and
unhampered performance of their official duty by public
servants by providing for scrutiny into the allegations of
commission of offence by them by their superior authorities
and prior sanction ’for the-..- prosecution as a condition
precedent to the cognizance of the cases against them, by
the courts. It is neither to be too narrowly construed nor
too widely. Too narrow and pedantic construction may render
it otiose for it is no part of an official duty, and never
can be-to commit an offence. It is not the "duty" which
requires examination so much as the "act" because the
official act can be performed both in the discharge of the
official duty as well as in dereliction of it. One must
also guard against too wide a construction because in our
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constitutional set up the idea of legal equality or of
universal subjection of all citizens to one law administered
by the ordinary courts has been pushed to its utmost limits
by enshrining equality before the law in our fundamental
principles. The question whether a particular act is done
’by a public servant in the discharge of his official duty
is substantially one of fact to be determined on the
circumstances of each case. [320 D--H; 321 G]
In the present case the alleged offence consists of the use
of defamatory and abusive words and of getting the
complainant-respondent forcibly turned out of the operation
theatre by the Cook. There was nothing on the record to
show that this was a part of the official duty of the
appellant as Civil Surgeon or that it was so directly
connected with the performance of his official duty that
without so acting he could not have properly discharged, it.
[321 G-H]
Matajog Dobey v. H. C. Bhari, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 925 Amrik
Singh v. The State of PEPSU, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1302 at 1307
Baijnath Gupta v. State of M. P., [1966] 1 S.C.R. 210;
Prabhakar V. Sinari v. Shanker Anant verlekar [1969] 2
S.C.R. 1013, referred to.
318
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 139 of
1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 21, 1967 of the Patna High Court in Criminal
Revision No. 546 of 1965.
Sarjoo Prasad, S. S. Jauhar and K. K. Sinha, for the
appellant.
U. P. Singh, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Dua, J. In this appeal by special leave arising out of a
complaint filed ’by the respondent Shri N. P. Mishra against
the appellant Shri Bhagwan Prasad Srivastava, the only
question requiring determination is if cognizance of the
case by the Magistrate required previous sanction under s.
197, Cr. P.C. The Sub-bivisional Magistrate, in whose court
the complaint was instituted, upheld the preliminary
objection based, on the absence of previous sanction and the
Second Additional Sessions Judge, on revision, agreed with
this view. On further revision the Patna High Court
disagreed with the view taken by the two courts below and
holding s. 197, Cr. P.C. to be inapplicable to the case
directed the sub-Divisional Magistrate to make further
enquiry into the petition of complaint. Before us the view
taken by the High Court is assailed.
The complaint was filed by the respondent Shri N. P. Mishra,
Civil Assistant Surgeon, Sadar Hospital, Chapra (hereinafter
called the complainant) against Shri Bhagwan Prasad
Srivastava, Civil Surgeon, Chapra (appellant in this Court)
and Shri Ramjash Pandey. Cook, Sadar Hospital, Chapra. It
was alleged in the complaint that on the 6th and 7th
January, 1964 the appellant had used defamatory language
towards the complainant, and the two accused persons had
insulted and humiliated him in the eyes of the public. As a
result, the complainant was put to great mental pain and
agony, his reputation was harmed and his professional career
prejudicially affected. The relevant averments in the
complaint may now be stated with the requisite detail. The
complainant claiming to be a Master of Surgery and a
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specialist in Ophthalmology had joined Chapra Sadar Hospital
as Civil Assistant Surgeon (C.A.S.) in January, 1962. The
appellant joined the said hospital as Civil Surgeon towards
the end of 1962. The appellant bore illwill and malice
towards the complainant and was always on the look out for
an opportunity to harm him in his profession and to
humiliate and disgrace him in the eyes of the public. Some
cataract operations were to be performed on January 7, 1964
in the Blind Relief Camp to be organised for that
319
purpose. On January 6, when the complainant was making
final’ selection of the patients for the cataract operations
to be performed on the following day, the appellant informed
the complainant that he had not been able to arrange for
cataract knives and that the complainant should arrange for
them from somewhere. The complainant requested the
appellant to place order for the knives with some local firm
and give him the necessary letter of authority so that the
same could be purchased on credit. The appellant apparently
did not like this suggestion . He got enraged and in an
insulting tone and language told the complainant that it was
his job to arrange for the knives and that as a last resort
he might bring his own knife. The complainant repeated his
suggestion adding that in the alternative a man be sent to
Patna to make local purchases. On this the appellant again
addressed the complainant in highly defamatory language in
the presence of the hospital staff and the attendants. On
January 7, 1964 at about 9 a.m. the complainant was in the
operation theatre. Some members of the hospital staff and
some attendants of the patients who were waiting outside the
operation theatre were also present. The appellant came
there and again asked the complainant if he had brought two
more cataract knives from somewhere, The complainant replied
that in the absence of the appellant’s final orders the two
knives could not be arranged from the local market. The
appellant again got annoyed and addressed the complainant in
insulting tone and defamatory language. Not satisfied with
the use of such language the appellant ordered Ramjesh
Pandey, Cook of the Hospital, to turn out the complainant,
the purport of the actual words used being "Pandey turn out
this badmash (one who follows evil courses). To his utter
humiliation the complainant was then actually pushed out by
the Cook. The actual words used in Hindi by the appellant
have been reproduced in the judgment of the High Court. We
have, therefore, not considered it necessary to reproduce
them again, except the word ’badmash’ of which the literal
meaning in English as stated by us is generally well-
understood.
The question which falls for decision by this Court is
whether the complainant’s case is covered by S. 197, Cr-P.C.
and previous sanction of the superior authority is necessary
before the trial court can take cognizance of the complaint.
Section 197, Cr-P.C. provides as under :
"(1) When any person who is a Judge within the
meaning of section 19 of the Indian Penal
Code, or when any Magistrate or when any
public servant who is not removable from his
office save by or with the sanction of a State
Government or the Central Government, is
,accused of any offence alleged to have been
committed by him while acting or purporting to
act in the discharge
320
of his official duty, no Court shall take
cognizance of such offence except with the
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previous sanction-
(a) in the case of a person employed in
connection with the affairs of the Union, of
the Central Government; and
(b) in the case of a person employed in
connection with the affairs of a State of the
State Government.
Power of Central or State Government as to
prosecution.-
(2) The Central Government or the State
Government, as the case may be, may determine
the person ’by whom, the manner in which, the
offence or offences for which, the prosecution
of such Judge, Magistrate or public servant is
to be conducted, and may specify the Court be-
fore which the trial is to be held."
The object and purpose underlying section 197 Cr. P.C. to
afford protection to public servants against frivolous,
vexatious or false prosecution for offences alleged to have
been committed by them while acting or purporting to act in
the discharge of their official duty. The larger interest
of efficiency of State administration demands that public
servants should be free to perform their official duty
fearlessly and undeterred by apprehension of their possible
prosecution at the instance of private parties to whom
annoyance or injury may have been caused by their legitimate
acts done in the discharge of their official duty. This
section is designed to facilitate effective and unhampered
performance of their official duty ’by public servants by
providing for scrutiny into the allegations of commission of
offence by them by their superior authorities and prior
sanction for their prosecution as a condition precedent to
the cognizance of the cases against them by the courts. If,
is neither to be too narrowly construed nor too widely. Too
narrow and pedantic construction may render it otiose for it
is no part of an official duty-and never can be-to commit an
offence. In our view, it is not the "duty" which requires
examination so much as the "act" because the official act
can be performed both in the discharge of the official duty
as well as in dereliction of it. One must also guard
against too wide a construction because in our
constitutional set up the idea of legal equality or of
universal subjection of all citizens to one law administered
by the ordinary courts has been pushed to its utmost limits
by enshrining equality before the law in our fundamental
principles. Broadly speaking, with us no man, whatever his
rank or condition is above the law and every official from
the highest down to the lowest is under the
321
same responsibility for every act done without legal
justification as,, any other citizen. In construing S. 197,
CrP.C., therefore, a line has to be drawn between the narrow
inner circle of strict official duties and acts outside the
scope of official duties. According to the decision of this
Court in Matajor Dobey v. H. C. Bhari(1) cited by Shri
Sarjoo Prasad on behalf of the appellant there must be a
reasonable connection between the act and the discharge of
official duty; the act must-bear such relation to the duty
that theaccused could lay a reasonable claim, but not a
pretended or fanciful claim, that he did it in the course of
the performance of his duty. In Amrik Singh v. The State of
PEPSU(2) this Court said :
"It is not every offence committed by a public
servant that requires sanction for prosecution
under section 197 (1) of the Code of Criminal
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procedure; nor even every act done by him
while he is actually engaged in the
performance of his official duties; but if the
act complained of is directly concerned with
his official duties so that, if questioned, it
could ’be claimed to have been done by virtue
of the office, then sanction would be
necessary; and that would be so, irrespective
of whether it was, in fact, a proper discharge
of his duties, because that would really be a
matter of defence on the merits, which would
have to be investigated at the trial, and
could not arise at the stage of the grant of
sanction, which must precede the institution
of the prosecution.,."
Recently in Baijnath Gupta v. State of M.P.(3) this Court
further explained that it is the quality of the act that is
important and if it falls within the scope and range of the
official duties of the public servant concerned the
protection contemplated by s. 1 97 of the Criminal Procedure
Code will be attracted.
The principle embodied in this section seems to be well-
understood; the difficulty normally lies is in its
application to the facts of a given case. The question
whether a particular act is, done by a public servant in the
discharge of his official duty is substantially one of fact
to be determined on the circumstances of each case. In the
present case the alleged offence consists of the use of
defamatory and abusive words and of getting the complainant
forcibly turned out of the operation theatre by the Cook.
There is nothing on the record to show that this was a part
of the official duty of the appellant as Civil Surgeon or
that it was so directly connected with the performance of
his official duty that without so acting he could not have
property discharged it.
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 925. (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1302 at 1307.-
(3) [1966] 1 S.C.R.210.
322
As suggested by this Court in Prabhakar V. Sinari v. Shanker
Anant Vertekar(1) it would be open to the appellant to place
material on the record during, the course of the trial for
showing what his duty as Civil Surgeon was and also that the
impugned acts were inter-related with his official duty so
as to attract the protection afforded by s. 197, cr. p.c.we
do not find any material on the existing record suggesting
that the impugned acts were done by the appellant in the
discharge of his official duty or that they are directly
connected with it. This appeal accordingly must fail and is
dismissed.
Y.P. Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1969] 2S.C.R.1013
323