Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF BIHAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANGAL SAO
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/03/1962
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
KAPUR, J.L.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1963 AIR 445 1963 SCR (1) 148
ACT:
Radio Receiving Set-Keeping and using without licence
Whether an offence-Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 (13 of 1885),
s. 20.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was found using a Radio without a licence and
was prosecuted under s. 20 of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885
as well as s. 3 and s. 6 of the Indian Wireless Telegraphy
Act, 1933 (17 of 1933). He was convicted of both the
offenses by the lower courts but the High Court acquitted
him of the offence under s. 20 of the Indian Telegraph Act.
On an appeal by the State against the acquittal.
Held, that a Radio Receiving Set is a "telegraph" within the
meaning of s. 3 (1) of the Indian Telegraph Act.
Senior Electric Inspector v. Laxmi Chopra, [A. I. R.] 1962,
S. C. R. 9, 16, referred to.
Held, further, that using and keeping a Radio Set amounted
to "maintaining" and "working" a "telegraph" under s. 3. (1)
of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 222 of
1960.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 11, 1960, of the Patna High Court in Criminal Revision
No. 76 of 1960.
S. P. Varma and P. D. Menon, for the appellant.
The respondents did not appear.
1962. March 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SUBBA RAO, J.-This appeal by special leave against the
judgment and order of the High Court at Patna raises the
question whether-to use neutral
149
terms-the keeping or using of a radio set by the person
without a licence would be an offence under s. 20 of the
Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 (13 of 1885), hereinafter called
the Act.
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The respondent is a businessman, having a shop in the city
of Patna. In November, 1955 an Inspector of Wireless
Telegraph visited his shop and found a radio set being
played therein. As he was using the radio without a
licence, be was prosecuted, under ss. 3 and 6 of the India
Wireless Telegraphy Act, 1933 (17 of 1933) and s. 20 of the
Act. The Judicial Magistrate, Patna City, convicted the
respondent under the said sections and sentenced him only
under s. 20 of the Act to pay a fine of Rs. 200/- and in
default to undergo simple imprisonment for three months. On
appeal the learned Sessions Judge, Patna., confirmed both
the conviction and sentence. On revision, the High Court at
Patna set aside the conviction and sentence under s. 20 of
the Act, but confirmed the conviction under ss. 3 and 6 of
the Indian Wireless Telegraphy Act, 1933 and sentenced him
to pay a fine of Rs. 100/- and in default to undergo simple
imprisonment for one month. The State of Bihar has
preferred the present appeal against the order of acquittal
made by the High Court under s. 20 of the Act.
The High Court set aside the conviction under s. 20 of the
Act on the ground that the use of a wireless receiving set
without a licence would not be an offence under the said
section having regard to the provisions of s. 4 of the Act.
Mr. Varma, learned Counsel for the State, canvasses the
correctness of that decision.
It would be convenient at the outset to read the relevant
provisions of the Act as they stood before amendment by Act
15 of 1961.
Section 3. (1) "telegraph" means an
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electric, galvanic or magnetic telegraph, and
includes appliances and apparatus for making,
transmitting or receiving telegraphic, tele-
phonic or other communications by means of
electricity, galvanism or magnetism.
Section 4. (1) Within India, the Central
Government shall have the exclusive privilege
of establishing, maintaining and working tele-
graphs:
Provided that the Central Government may grant
a licence, on such conditions and in con-
sideration of such payments as it thinks fit,
to any person to establish, maintain or work a
telegraph within any part of India.
Provided further that the Central Government
may, by rules made under this Act and
published in the Official Gazette, permit,
subject to such restrictions and conditions as
it thinks fit, the establishment, maintenance
and working.
(a) of wireless telegraphs on ships within
Indian territorial waters and on aircraft
within or above India, or Indian territorial
waters, ’and
(b) of telegraphs other than wireless
telegraphs within any part of India.
Section 20. (1) If any person establishes,
maintains or works a telegraph within India in
contravention of the provisions of section 4
or otherwise than as permitted by rule made
under that section, he shall be punished, if
the telegraph is a wireless telegraph with
imprisonment which may extend to three years,
or with fine, or with both, and, in any other
case, with a fine which may extend to one
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thousand rupees.
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Under the said section, if a person establishes, maintains
or works a telegraph without a licence in contravention of
the provisions of a. 4, he would be committing an offence
punishable thereunder. The first question is whether a
radio receiving set is a "telegraph" within the meaning of
the definition given in the Act. This Court had an occasion
to consider the scope of the said definition in the context
of a Post and Telegraph Wireless Station, which was
receiving communications from different cities of the
country, in Senior Electric Inspector v. Laxminarayan
Chopra(1). After quoting the provisions of s. 3(1) of the
Act, this Court proceeded to observe :
"The Telegraph Wireless Receiving Station
clearly comes within the definition of
"telegraph" in the Telegraph Act. The Tele-
graph Act was passed in 1885. "Telegraph"
then included ,an electric, galvanic, or mag-
netic telegraph and appliances and
apparatus ...... for telegraphic, telephonic
or other communications by means of
electricity, galvanism or magnetism". At that
time Wireless telegraphy or radio had not been
developed. In the year 1914, s.3(1) of the
said Act was amended and the following words
were inserted after the words "apparatus
for".: " making, transmitting or receiving".
With the result that, after the amendment,
receiving of communications by means of
electricity was included in the definition. A
wireless receiving station certainly receives
communications by means of electricity and
therefore, it is "telegraph" within the
meaning of the said definition.
If a telegraph wireless receiving station is a telegraph as
defined in s. 3(1) of the Act, a radio set receiving
communications should equally be a
(1) A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 159,161,
152
telegraph within the meaning of the said section; for a
radio set receives communications by means of electricity.
Wireless transmitter transmits .sound as electromagnetic
waves and the said waves are detected and received by the
receiving apparatus. We, therefore, hold that a receiving
set is a telegraph within the meaning of the Act.
The next question is whether the respondent established,
maintained or worked a telegraph within the territories of
India in contravention of the provisions of s. 4. Section
4(1) consists of a main part and two provisos. The main
part of the section confers an exclusive privilege on the
Central Government of establishing maintaining and working
telegraphs. The second proviso enables the’ Central
Government to make rules to permit the establishment,
maintenance and working of wireless telegraphs on ships and
aircraft within a specified area or of telegraphs other than
wireless telegraph within any part of India. The first
proviso confers a power on the Central Government to grant
licence to establish, maintain or work a telegraph within
any part of India. There is difference in the phraseology
used in the main part and the second proviso and that used
in the first proviso. While in the main part and the second
proviso the conjunction "and" is placed between
"’maintaining" and "’working", in the first proviso the
disjunctive "or" is used. It is not necessary to express
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our view whether in the main part and the second proviso the
three words "establishing", "maintaining" and "working" can
be read disjunctively, for we are only concerned with the
first proviso which expressly made them disjunctive. Under
s. 20 of the Act also the disjunctive "or" is used between
,,maintains" and ",,works". It is, therefore. clear that
under the first proviso to s. 4 the Central Government may
grant a licence to a person for establishing, maintaining
and working a telegraph or in respect of any of them; and if
a person either establishes, maintains or
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works a telegraph without a licence or in contravention of
the terms of licence, he would be committing an offence
under s. 20 of the Act.
It is suggested that neither of the three terms would be
appropriate for keeping a radio set or using it. Learned
counsel for the appellant argues that keeping or using a
radio set would be maintaining or working a radio within the
meaning of that section. In the Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary the following meaning, among others, is given to
the word "maintain" ; "to keep in being; to preserve
unimpaired ; to pay or furnish the means of keeping up of ;
to keep supplied or equipped to keep in repair. A person
who has a radio set for the purpose of using it must
necessarily keep it in good condition and bear the
expenditure for so keeping it and for repairing it, if it
goes wrong., He can, therefore, appropriately be said to
maintain it within the meaining of the section.
The same dictionary gives various meaning to the verb
,’work". The following are some of them "to bestow labour
or effort upon" ; "to manipulate ,so as to bring it into the
required condition" ; ",to operate upon so as to get into
some state or convert into something else" ; "to bring or
get into some condition by labour or exertion". If a person
tunes a radio, he can properly be said to operate upon it or
manipulate it for the purpose of receiving the said
communications. Such a person works on the radio. We,
therefore, hold that a person in possession of a radio for
use maintains as well as works it. In this case it has been
established that when the Inspector visited the shop of the
respondent$ the latter was using the radio and therefore was
working it.
Reliance was placed by the High Court on a judgment of the
Madras High Court in In Re Pandian (1), wherein Pandrang
Row, J., appears to
(1) A.I.R. 1938 Mad. 821.
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accept the contention that the use of a wireless set without
a licence is not an offence under s. 20 of the Act. The
learned Judge observed :
"It is, to say the least, extremely doubtful
whether the use of a wireless receiving set
without a licence would amount to an offence
under s. 20, Telegraph Act, which in view of
s. 4 of that Act could not have been intended
to include wireless receiving sets used
ordinarily to receive broadcast programmes."
The learned Judge has not expressed a final opinion on the
construction of the section. Presumably, he was of opinion
that s. 4 applies only to a telephone established,
maintained and worked by Government or with its permission.
With great respect, the learned Judge has omitted to notice
the first proviso to s. 4 of the Act which takes in a
licence of a telegraph for one or other of the three purpo-
ses mentioned therein. In the result, we hold that as the
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respondent used the radio without a licence, he committed an
offence under s. 20 of the Act.
We, therefore, convict him under s. 20 of the Act also. But
in the circumstances of this case, we think that no separate
sentence is called for. The sentence already imposed under
ss. 3 and 6 of the Indian Wireless Telegraphy Act, 1933, is
sufficient. In the result, the order of the High Court is
modified to the extent indicated.
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