Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P. ARULSWAMI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/08/1966
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1967 AIR 776 1967 SCR (1) 201
ACT:
Madras Village Panchayats Act (Mad. Act X of 1960), s. 106-
In language similar to s. 197(1) Cr. P.C.--Sanction of
State Government for prosecution for offence under s. 409
I.P.C.-Whether required-Circumstances in which such sanction
necessary.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, who was the President of a Panchayat Board,
was charged with an offence under s. 409, I.P.C. for not
bringing to ’account in the book of the Panchayat Board a
sum of Rs. 4,000, belonging to the Board. The trial court
was not satisfied that the prosecution had proved the charge
and therefore acquitted the appellant but, on appeal, the
High Court accepted the prosecution evidence and convicted
him.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the
prosecution against him was not maintainable for want of
sanction by the State Government tinder s. 106 of the Madras
Village Parnchayats Act (Mad. Act X of 1960); but the High
Court rejected this contention.
On appeal to this Court.
HELD : Sanction of the State Government was not necessary
for the prosecution of the appellant under s. 409, Indian
Penal Code.
As in the case of s. 197(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code,
which is in similar language to s. 106 of the Madras Act, it
is not every offence committed by a public servant that
requires sanction for prosecution; 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. It is the
quality of the act that is important and if it falls within
the scope and range of his official duties the protection
contemplated by s. 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code will
be attracted. An offence may be entirely unconnected with
the official duty as such or it may be committed within the
scope of the official duty. Where it is unconnected with
the official duty there can be no protection. It is only
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when it is either within the scope of the official duty or
in excess of it that the protection is claimable. [205 D-F]
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal
Appeals Nos. 130 & 131 of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the Judgment and order dated
December 3, 1963 of the Madras High Court in Criminal
Appeals Nos. 380 of 1961 and 72 of 1962 respectively.
Sup.C.I./66-14
202
R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellant (in both the
appeals).
A. V. Rangam, for the respondent (in both the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J.
Criminal Appeal No. 130 of 1964
This appeal is brought, by special leave, from the judgment
of the Madras High Court dated December 3, 1963 in Criminal
Appeal No. 380 of 1961 by which the appellant was convicted
under s. 409, Indian Penal Code and sentenced to rigorous
imprisonment for one year.
The appellant was elected President of the Nerinjipet
Panchayat Board on May 17, 1958. At that time he was a duly
elected member of the Board. It appears that a sum of Rs.
4,000 of the Board had been invested in four National Plan
Savings Certificates in the Bhavani Post Office. It was
alleged that the appellant cashed them on February 11, 1959
and did not bring the amount in the account books of the
Panchayat Board. The defence of the appellant was that he
signed the certificates and handed them over to P.W. 4, the
Deputy Panchayat Officer of the block within which the
village was located. This was done by the appellant because
P.W. 4 approached him and asked him that the Board should
subscribe through him for small savings certificates for Rs.
7,000 just as the Panchayat had subscribed Rs. 7,000 through
Tass liar representing the Revenue Department. For that
purpose P.W. 4 got Rs. 500 in cash on December 2, 1958 and a
cheque for Rs. 2,500 on February 9, 1959. It was the -case
of the appellant that P.W. 4 represented that along with
this SUM of Rs. 3,000 he would cash the National Plan
Savings Certificates of the total value of Rs. 4,000 and
purchase small savings ,certificates for Rs. 7,000 that
being his quota from the Narinjipet Panchayat. To enable
P.W. 4 to make the purchase, the appellant endorsed the
National Plan Savings Certificates and handed them over to
P.W. 4. The Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Erode was not
satisfied that the prosecution had proved the charge and
therefore acquitted the appellant, but on appeal the High
Court accepted the prosecution evidence that it was the
appellant who ,cashed the certificates at the Post Office
and not P.W. 4 and accordingly found the appellant guilty of
the offence.
It was argued on behalf of the appellant in the High Court
that prosecution was not maintainable for want of sanction
by the State Government under s. 106 of the Madras Village
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Panchayats Act (Madras Act X of 1950) (hereinafter called
the ’Madras Act’). That section reads as follows :
"106. When the president, executive authority
or any member, is accused of any offence
alleged to have been committed by him while
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acting or purporting to act in the discharge
of his official duty, no Court shall take
cognizance of such offence except with the
previous sanction of the Government."
Sanction for the prosecution was, however, given in this
case by the Collector and not by the Government under powers
purported to have been delegated to him under s. 127 of the
Madras Act which provides :
"127. (1) The Government may, by notification,
authorize any authority, officer or person to
exercise in any local area, in regard to any
panchayat or any class of panchayats or all
pancbayats in that area, any of the powers
vested in them by this Act except the power to
make rules; and may in like manner withdraw
such authority.
The High Court held that no sanction of the Government was
necessary as the appellant had ceased to hold the office of
President when the prosecution was launched and further that
the sanction of the Collector was sufficient in law.
The question of law involved in this appeal is whether the
sanction of the Government under S. 106 of the Madras Act is
necessary for the prosecution of the appellant for the
offence under s. 409, Indian Penal Code.
On behalf of the appellant it was contended that the
sanction granted by the Collector was not valid in law and
sanction should have been given under s. 106 of the Madras
Act by the State Government. It was submitted that s.
127(1) of the Madras Act has not authorised the Government
to delegate the power for granting sanction under S. 106, to
the Collector, and that what was delegated was the power of
the State Government in respect of any panchayat or any
class of panchayats or all panchayats in any local area, but
the power under S. 106 that could be exercised was only a
power in regard to the President or any member of the
panchayat. It was therefore submitted that the Government
did not delegate its powers under S. 106 of the Madras Act
by virtue of the authority conferred under S. 127(1). It is
not necessary for us to express any concluded opinion on the
argument put forward by the appellant, for we consider that
no sanction of the Government under s. 106 of the Madras Act
is necessary for the prosecution of the appellant on the
charge under s. 409, Indian Penal Code, and the conviction
of the appellant on that charge is not invalid on this
account.
204
Hori Rain Singh v. Emperor(1) was a decision of the Federal
Court on the necessity for sanction under s. 270 of the
Government of India Act, 1935, which is similar to s. 197(1)
of the Code of Criminal Procedure and S. 106 of the Madras
Act. The facts in that case were that a Sub-Assistant
Surgeon was charged under s. 409 with having dishonestly
removed certain medicines from a hospital which was under
his charge, to his own residence, and under s. 477-A, with
having failed to enter them in the stock book. The sanction
of the Government had not been obtained for the
prosecution under s. 270 of the Government of India Act.
The question for decision in that case was whether such
sanction was necessary. It was held by the Federal Court
that the charge under s. 477-A required sanction, as ’the
official capacity is involved in the very act complained of
as amounting to a crime’; but that no sanction was required
for a charge under s. 409, because ’the official capacity is
material only in connection with the entrustment and does
not necessarily enter into the later act of misappropriation
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or conversion, which is the act complained of. In Gill v.
The King(2) the question arose directly with reference to s.
197(i) of the Criminal Procedure Code. In that case the
accused was charged under S. 161 with taking bribes, and
under s. 120-B with conspiracy. On the question whether
sanction was necessary under s. 197(1) it was held by the
Judicial -Committee that there was no difference in scope
between that sanction and section 270 of the Government of
India Act, 1935, and approving the statement of the law by
Varadachariar, J. in Hori Ram Singh v. Emperor(1) Lord
Simonds observed in the course of his judgment at page 40 of
the Report
"In the consideration of s. 197 much
assistance is to be derived from the judgment
of the Federal Court in Hori Ram Singh v. The
Crown (1939) F.C.R. 159, and in particular
from the careful analysis of previous
authorities which is to be found in the
opinion of Varadachariar, J. Their Lordships,
while admitting the cogency of the argument
that in the circumstances prevailing in India
a large measure of protection from harassing
proceedings may be necessary for public
officials, cannot accede to the view that the
relevant words have the scope that has in some
cases been given to them. A public servant
can only be said to act or to purport to act
in the discharge of his official duty, if his
act is such as to lie within the scope of his
official duty. Thus
a judge neither acts nor purports to act as a
judge in receiving a bribe, though the
judgment which he delivers may be such an act;
nor does a Government medical officer act or
purport to act as a public servant in picking
the pocket of a patient whom he is examining,
(1) [1939] F. C. R. 159. (2) [1948] F.
C. R. 19.
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though the examination itself may be such an
act. The test may well be whether the public
servant, if challenged, can reasonably claim
that, what he does, he does in virtue of his
office. Applying such a test to the present
case, it seems clear that Gill could not
justify the acts in respect of which he was
charged as acts done by him by virtue of the
office that he held. Without further
examination of the authorities their
Lordships, finding themselves in general
agreement with the opinion of the Federal
Court in the case cited, think it sufficient
to say that in their opinion no sanction under
s. 197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was
needed."
The view expressed by the Judicial Committee in Gill v. The
King(1) was followed by the Judicial Committee in the later
cases; Albert West Meads v. The King(2) and Phanindra
Chandra v. The King(3) and has been approved by this Court
in R. W. Mathams v. State of west Bengal(4). It is not
therefore every offence committed by a public servant that
requires sanction for prosecution under s. 197(1) of the
Criminal Procedure Code; 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
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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. It is the quality
of the act that is important and if it falls within the
scope and range of his official duties the protection
contemplated by s. 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code will
be attracted. An offence may be entirely unconnected with
the official duty as such or it may be committed within the
scope of the official duty. Where it is unconnected with
the official duty there can be no protection. It is only
when it is either within the scope of the official duty or
in excess of it that the protection is claimable. The same
principle has been expressed by this Court in Om Prakash
Gupta v. State of U.P.(5) in which it was pointed out that
sanction to the prosecution of a public servant under S. 409
of the Indian Penal Code ’is not necessary since the public
servant is not acting in his official capacity in committing
criminal breach of trust. In a later case--Satwant Singh v.
The State of Punjab(6), it was held that if a public servant
commits the offence of cheating or abets another so to
cheat, the offence committed by him is not one while he is
acting or purporting to act in the discharge of his official
duty. The same view his been taken by this Court in a later
decision-Baijnath Gupta and Ors. v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh(7), and it was held that the sanction of the State
Government was not necessary for the prosecution of
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 19. (2) 75 I.A. 185.
(3) 76 I.A. 10. (4) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 216.
(5) [1957] S.C.R. 423. (6) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 89.
(7) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 210.
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the appellant under s. 409 of the Indian Penal Code because
the act of criminal misappropriation was not committed by
the appellant while he was acting or purporting to act in
discharge of his official duties and that offence had no
direct connection with the duties of the appellant as a
public servant, and the official status of the appellant
only furnished the appellant with an occasion or an oppor-
tunity of committing the offence.
Section 106 of the Madras Act is similar in language to s.
197 of the Criminal Procedure Code and for the reasons
already expressed we are of the opinion that the sanction of
the State Government was not necessary for prosecution of
the appellant under S. 409, Indian Penal Code. We
accordingly reject the argument of learned Counsel for the
appellant on this aspect of the case and dismiss this
appeal.
Criminal Appeal No. 131 of 1964
This appeal is brought, by special leave, from the judgment
of the Madras High Court dated December 3, 1963 in Criminal
Appeal No. 72 of 1962 convicting the appellant of the
offence under s. 409, Indian Penal Code and sentencing him
to rigorous imprisonment for 6 months.
The question of law involved in this appeal is the same as
in Criminal Appeal No. 130 of 1964 and for the reasons given
in that case we hold that the sanction of the Government is
not necessary for prosecution of the appellant under s. 409,
Indian Penal Code and the conviction of the appellant on
that charge is not defective in law",. This appeal also
must be dismissed.
R.K.P.S. Appeals dismissed.
207