Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NARAYAN SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/07/1989
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1789 1989 SCR (3) 549
1989 SCC (3) 596 JT 1989 (3) 239
1989 SCALE (2)93
ACT:
Essential Commodities Act, 1955: Sections 3 & 7 (as
amended by Act 36 of 1967)--Scope of--Whether includes
unintentional contravention.
Fertiliser (Movement Control) Order, 1973: Clauses 2(a)
and 3--Violation of--Export of fertilisers without
permit--Prosecution-Whether required to prove mens rea.
Indian Penal Code, 1860: Section 511. Attempt--Carrying
fertilisers in trucks without a permit--Trucks moving from
Madhya Pradesh. to Maharashtra--Interception at Sales Tax
Barrier near State Border-Whether attempted commission of
offence.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents who were lorry drivers, cleaners and
coolie were carrying fertiliser bags in trucks from Indore
(Madhya Pradesh) to Maharashtra. They were intercepted at a
Sales Tax Barrier near the border of Maharashtra State. The
documents seized from the lorry drivers contained the in-
voices and other records, but did not include permits issued
under the Fertilisers (Movement Control) Order, 1973. Conse-
quently, they were prosecuted under the Fertiliser (Movement
Control) Order, 1973 read with sections 3 and 7 of the
Essential Commodities Act, 1955 for exporting fertilisers
from Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra without a valid permit.
The Trial Court acquitted the respondents holding that:
(i) the prosecution had failed to prove mens rea on the part
of the respondents, and (ii) the act of transportation of
the fertiliser bags in trucks by the respondents constituted
merely preparation and not attempted commission of the
offence.
Appeals were tided by the State against the acquittal
under section 378(3) of the Cr. P.C. 1973 but the High Court
declined to grant leave. Hence these appeals by the State.
Allowing the appeals,
550
HELD: 1. The words used in section 7(1) are "if any
person contravenes whether knowingly, intentionally or
otherwise any Order made under section 3". The section is
comprehensively worded so that it takes within its fold not
only contraventions done knowingly or intentionally but even
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otherwise, i.e., done unintentionally. The element of mens
rea in export of fertiliser bags without a valid permit is
therefore not a necessary ingredient for convicting a person
for contravention of an order made under section 3 if the
factum of export or attempt to export is established by the
evidence on record. [554C-D]
1.1. The crucial words "whether knowingly, intentionally
or otherwise" were inserted in section 7 in order to prevent
persons committing offences under the Act escaping punish-
ment on the plea that the offences were not committed delib-
erately. The amendment was brought about in 1967 in order to
achieve the avowed purpose and object of the legislation.
[557C]
1.2. Therefore, the Trial Court and the High Court
committed an error in taking the view that the respondents
in each of the appeals were not liable for conviction for
contravention of the Fertiliser (Movement Control) Order,
1973 read with sections 3 and 7 of the Essential Commodities
Act, 1955 because the prosecution had failed to prove mens
rea on their part in transporting fertiliser bags from
Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra. [557E]
Swastik Oil Industries v. State, [1978] 19 Guj. Law
Reporter 1117; approved.
Nathu Lal v. State of Madhya Pradesh, A.I.R. 1966 S.C.
43, referred to.
2. In the commission of an offence there are four stages
viz. intention, preparation, attempt and execution. The
first two stages would not attract culpability but the third
and fourth stages would certainly attract culpability.
[557G]
2.1. The respondents in each case were actually caught
in the act of exporting fertiliser bags without a permit
therefore from Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra. If the inter-
ception had not taken place at the Sales Tax Barrier the
export would have become a completed act and the fertiliser
bags would have been successfully taken to Maharashtra State
in contravention of the Fertiliser (Movement Control) Order,
1973. It was not therefore a case of mere preparation viz.
the resport-
551
dents trying to procure fertiliser bags from someone or
trying to engage a lorry for taking those bags to Maharash-
tra. They were cases where the bags had been procured and
were being taken in the lorries under cover of sales in-
voices for being delivered to the consignees and the lorries
would have entered the Maharashtra border but for their
interception at the Sales Tax barrier. Surely, no one can
say that the respondents were taking the lorries with ferti-
liser bags in them for innocuous purposes or for more thrill
or amusement and that they would have stopped well ahead of
the border and taken back the lorries and the fertiliser
bags to the initial place of despatch or to some other place
in Madhya Pradesh State itself. The acts of transportation
of the fertiliser hags in the trucks in question by the
respondents were therefore clearly cases of attempted unlaw-
ful export of the fertiliser bags and not cases of mere
preparation alone. [557H, 558A-B-C-D]
[Section 7 of the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 was
again amended in 1974 and the words "whether knowingly,
intentionally or otherwise" were deleted and a new provision
in section 10 of the Act was added. The effect of this
amendment is that a presumption of guilty mind on the part
of the accused in respect of offences under the Act, includ-
ing Sec. 7, would arise and it would be open to the accused
to rebut the same.]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal Nos. 49
& 24 of 1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 8.4.1977 of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in Misc. Criminal Nos. 34 & 35 of 1977.
Vrijendra Jain, Ms. Hima Kohali and Umanath Singh for
the Appellant.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. In both the appeals by special leave, a
common question of law is involved and hence they were heard
together and are being disposed of by a common judgment. In
Crl. Appeal No. 49/78, a lorry driver and two cleaners and
in Crl. Appeal No. 24/78 a lorry driver and a coolie were
prosecuted for exporting fertilisers without a permit there-
for from Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra in contravention of
the Fertilisers (Movement Control) Order, 1973 (for short
the F.M.C. Order) read with Sections 3 and 7 of the Essen-
tial Commodities Act, 1955, (for short the E.C. Act). In
both
552
the cases, the Trial Magistrate held that the prosecution
had failed to prove that the accused were attempting to
export the fertilisers and he therefore acquitted them. On
the State preferring appeals against acquittal under Section
378(3) Criminal Procedure Code, the High Court declined to
grant leave. Hence the State has preferred these appeals by
special leave.
The facts in the two cases are identical. In Crl. Appeal
No. 49/78, a truck bearing registration no. M.P. 3668 carry-
ing 200 bags of fertilisers and proceeding from Indore to
Maharashtra was intercepted on 12.2.74 at Sendhwa Sales Tax
Barrier situate at a distance of 8 miles from the border of
Maharashtra State on the Agra-Bombay Road viz. National
Highway No. 3. The lorry driver was in possession of in-
voices and other records but they did not include a permit
issued under the F.M.C. Order. In Crl. Appeal No. 24/78, a
lorry bearing registration No. MPM-4866 proceeding from
Indore to Maharashtra was similarly intercepted on
30.10.1973 at Sendhwa Sales Tax Barrier. The truck was
carrying 170 bags of fertilisers. The documents seized from
the lorry driver contained the invoices and other records
but they did not include a permit issued under the F.M.C.
Order. Consequently, the lorry driver and the cleaners in
the first case and the lorry driver and the coolie in the
second case were prosecuted under the F.M.C. Order read with
Sections 3 & 7 of the E.C. Act for exporting fertilisers
from Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra without a valid permit.
In both the cases, the accused did not deny the factum of
the transport of fertiliser bags in their respective lorries
or the interception of the lorries and the seizure of the
fertiliser bags or about the fertiliser bags not being
covered by a permit issued under the F.M.C. Order. The
defence however was that they were not aware of the contents
of the documents seized from them and that they were not
engaged in exporting the fertiliser bags from Madhya Pradesh
to Maharashtra in concious violation of the provisions of
the F.M.C. Order.
The Trial Magistrate as well as the High Court have
taken the view that in the absence of the evidence of an
employee of the transport company, there was no material in
the cases to hold that the fertiliser bags were being ex-
ported to Maharashtra from Madhya Pradesh. The Trial Magis-
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trate and the High Court refused to attach any significance
or importance to the invoices recovered from the lorry
drivers because the drivers had said they had no knowledge
of the contents of the documents seized from them. The Trial
Magistrate and the High Court have further opined that the
materials on record would, at best, make out only a case of
preparation by the accused to
553
commit the offence and the evidence fell short of establish-
ing that the accused were attempting to export the fertilis-
er bags from Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra in contravention
of the FM.C. Order.
As we have already stated, the respondents admit that
the trucks in question were intercepted at Sendhwa Sales Tax
Barrier on 12.2.74 and 30.10.73 and they were carrying 200
bags and 170 bags of fertilisers respectively and the con-
signments were not covered by export permits issued under
the F.M.C. Order. In such circumstances what fails for
consideration is whether the prosecution must prove mens rea
on the part of the accused in exporting are fertiliser bags
without a valid permit for securing their conviction and
secondly whether the evidence on record established only
preparation by the accused for effecting export of fertilis-
er bags from the State to another without a permit therefor
and not an attempt to export fertiliser bags. For answering
these questions, it is necessary to refer to some of the
relevant provisions in the Fertiliser (Movement Control)
Order, 1973 framed in exercise of the powers conferred under
Sec. 3 of the E.C. Act. In the said Order, the relevant
provisions to be noticed are clauses 2(a) and 3.
"2. Definitions--In this Order unless the context
otherwise requires,--
(a) "Export" means to take or cause to be taken out of any
place within a State to any place outside that State";
"3. Prohibition of Export of Fertilisers, No person shall
export, or attempt to export, or abet the export or any
fertilisers from any State."
(Emphasis supplied).
Section 7 of the Essential Commodities Act 1955 provides
the penalty for contravention of any order made under Sec-
tion 3 and reads as under:
"7. Penalties. (1) If any person contravenes whether know-
ingly, intentionally or otherwise any order made under Sec.
3--
(a) he shah be punishable-
(Emphasis supplied)
554
(i) in the case of an order made with reference to clause
(h) or clause (i) of sub-sec. (2) of that Sec., with impris-
onment for a term which may extend to one year and shall
also be liable to fine; and
(ii) in the case of any other order, with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to five years and shall also be liable
to fine;
XX XX XX
Taking up the first question for consideration, we may
at once state that the Trial Magistrate and the High Court
have failed to comprehend and construe Section 7(1) of the
Act in its full perspective. The words used in Sec. 7(1) are
"if any person contravenes whether knowingly, intentionally
or otherwise any Order made under Sec. 3". The Section is
comprehensively worded so that it takes within its fold not
only contraventions done knowingly or intentionally but even
otherwise i.e. done unintentionally. The element of mens tea
in export of fertiliser bags without a valid permit is
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therefore not a necessary ingredient for convicting a person
for contravention of an order made under Sec. 3 if the
factum of export or attempt to export is established by the
evidence on record.
The sweep of Sec. 7(1) in the light of the changes
effected by the Legislature has been considered by one of us
(Ahmadi, J.) in Swastik Oil Industries v. State, (Special
Criminal Application) 1978 (19) Gujarat Law Reporter 117. In
that case, M/s. Swastik Oil Industries, a licencee under the
Gujarat Groundnut Dealers Licensing Order, 1966 was found to
be in possession of 397 tins of groundnut oil in violation
of the conditions of the licence and the provisions of the
Licensing Order. Consequently, the Collector ordered confis-
cation of 100 tins of groundnut oil from out of the 397 tins
under Sec. 6(1) of the Essential Commodities Act. On the
firm preferring on appeal, the Appellate Authority viz
Additional Sessions Judge, Kaira at Nadiad held "that cl.
(11) of the Licensing Order had been contravened but such
contravention was not deliberate as it arose out of a mere
bona fide misconception regarding the true content of cl.
(11) of the Licensing Order." The Additional Sessions Judge
therefore held that the contravention was merely a technical
one and not a wilful or deliberate one and hence the confis-
cation of 100 tins of groundnut oil was too harsh a punish-
ment and that confiscation of only 25 tins would meet the
ends of justice. Against this order, the firm preferred a
petition under Arti-
555
cle 227 of the Constitution to the High Court. Dealing with
the matter, the High Court referred to Sec. 7 of the Act as
it originally stood and the interpretation of the Section in
Nathu Lal v. State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR 1966 SC 43 wherein
it was held that an offence under Sec. 7 of the Act would be
committed only if a person intentionally contravenes any
order made under Sec. 3 of the Act as mens rea was an essen-
tial ingredient of the criminal offence referred to in Sec.
7. The High Court then referred to the change brought about
by the Legislature to Sec. 7 after the decision in Nathu
Lal’s case (supra) was rendered by promulgating Ordinance 6
of 1967 which was later replaced by Act 36 of 1967 and the
change effected was that with effect from the date of the
Ordinance i.e. September 16, 1967 the words "whether know-
ingly, intentionally or otherwise" were added between the
word "contravenes" and the words and figure "any order made
under Sec. 3". Interpreting the amendment made to the Sec.
the High Court held as follows:
"The plain reading of the Section after its amendment made
it clear that by the amendment, the Legislature intended to
impose strict liability for contravention of any order made
under Sec. 3 of the Act. In other words, by the use of the
express words the element of mens tea as an essential condi-
tion of the offence was excluded so that every contravention
whether intentional or otherwise was made an offence under
Sec. 7 of the Act. Thus by introducting these words in Sec.
7 by the aforesaid statutory amendment, the Legislature made
its intention explicit and nullified the effect of the
Supreme Court dicta in Nathu Lal’s case."
The High Court thereafter proceeded to consider the
further amendment effected to Sec. 7 of the Act pursuant to
the recommendation of the Law Commission in its 47th Report.
Though for the purpose of the two appeals on hand, it
would be enough if we examine the correctness of the view
taken by the High Court in the light of the words contained
in Sec. 7 of the Act as they stood at the relevant time viz
a contravention made of an order made under Sec. 3 "whether
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knowingly, intentionally or otherwise", it would not be out
of place if we refer to the further change noticed by the
High Court, which had been made to Sec. 7 by Parliament by
an Ordinance which was later replaced by Amending Act 30 of
1974. The High Court has dealt with the further amendment
made to Sec. 7(1) in
556
the Swastik Oil Industries as follows and it is enough if we
extract the same.
"But again in the year 1974, pursuant to the recommendations
of the Law Commission in their 47th Report and the experi-
ence gained in the working of the Act, by an Ordinance, Sec.
7 of the Act was amended whereby the words "whether knowing-
ly, intentionally or otherwise" which were introduced by
Amending Act 36 of the 1967 were deleted and the material
part of sec. 7(1) restored to its original frame and a new
provision in Sec. 10 of the Act was added which reads as
under:
"10. C(I) In any prosecution for any offence under this Act
which requires a culpable mental state on the part of the
accused the Court shall presume the existence of such mental
state but it shall be a defence for the accused to prove the
fact that he had no such mental state with respect to the
act charged as an offence in that prosecution.
Explanation: In this Section, "culpable mental state" in-
cludes intention, motive, knowledge of a fact and the belief
in, or reason to believe, a fact.
(2) For the purposes of this Section, a fact is said to be
proved only when the court believes it to exist beyond
reasonable doubt and not merely when its existence is estab-
lished by a preponderance of probability."
This Ordinance was replaced by Amending Act 30 of 1974. The
effect of this subsequent change in the statute is that a
presumption of guilty mind on the part of the accused in
respect of offences under the Act, including Sec. 7, would
arise and it would be open to the accused to rebut the same.
As the law now stands in any prosecution under the Act which
requires a culpable mental state on the part of the accused,
the ’same must be presumed unless the accused proves that he
had no such mental state with respect to the offence for
which he is tried. Now according to the explanation to Sec.
10(c) culpable mental state includes intention, motive,
knowledge of a fact and belief in or reason to believe a
fact. The degree of proof expected to rebut the presumption
has been indicated by sub-sec. (2) thereof
557
which says that a fact will be said to be proved only if it
exists beyond reasonable doubt and it will not be sufficient
to prove its existence by preponderance of probability. Thus
the burden of proof lies heavily on the accused to rebut the
statutory presumption and the degree of proof expected that
required for the proof of a fact by the prosecution. There
can therefore be no doubt that the aforesaid legislative
changes have reversed the thrust of the decision of the
Supreme Court in Nathu Lal’s case (supra) and the same no
longer holds the field."
Reverting back to Sec. 7 of the Act as amended by Act 36
of 1967, it is manifestly seen that the crucial words
"whether knowingly, intentionally or otherwise" were insert-
ed in Sec. 7 in order to prevent persons committing offences
under the Act escaping punishment on the plea that the
offences were not committed deliberately. The amendment was
brought about in 1967 in order to achieve the avowed purpose
and object of the legislation. To the same end, a further
amendment came to be made in 1974, with which we are not now
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directly concerned but reference to which we have made in
order to show the scheme of the Act and the amplitude of
Sec. 7 at different stages.
We are in full agreement with the enunciation of law as
regard Sec. 7 of the Act in Swastik Oil Industries (supra).
We therefore hold that. the Trial Magistrate and the High
Court were in error in taking the view that the respondents
in each of the appeals were not liable for conviction for
contravention of the F.M.C. Order read with Sec. 3 and 7 of
the E.C. Act since the prosecution had failed to prove mens
rea on their part in transporting fertiliser bags from
Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra.
As regards the second question, we find that the Trial
Magistrate and the High Court have again committed an error
in taking the view that the respondents can at best be said
to have only made preparations to export fertiliser bags
from Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra in contravention of the
F.M.C. Order and they cannot be found guilty of having
attempted to export the fertiliser bags. In the commission
of an offence there are four stages viz intention, prepara-
tion, attempt and execution. The first two stages would not
attract culpability but the third and fourth stages would
certainly attract culpability. The respondents in each case
were actually caught in the act of exporting fertiliser bags
without a permit therefore from Madhya Pradesh to Maharash-
tra.
558
The trucks were coming from Indore and were proceeding
towards Maharashtra. The interception had taken place at
Sendhwa Sales Tax Barrier which is only 8 miles away from
the border of Maharashtra State. If the interception had not
taken place, the export would have become a completed act
and the fertiliser bags would have been successfully taken
to Maharshtra State in contravention of the F.M.C. Order. It
was not therefore a case of mere preparation viz. the re-
spondents trying to procure fertiliser bags from someone or
trying to engage a lorry for taking those bags to Maharash-
tra. They were cases where the bags had been procured and
were being taken in the lorries under cover of sales in-
voices for being delivered to the consignees and the lorries
would have entered the Maharashtra border but for their
interception at the Sendhwa Sales Tax Barrier. Surely, no
one can say that the respondents were taking the lorries
with the fertiliser bags in them for innocuous purposes or
for mere thrill or amusement and that they would have
stopped well ahead of the border and taken back the lorries
and the fertiliser bags to the initial place of despatch or
to some other place in Madhya Pradesh State itself. They
were therefore clearly cases of attempted unlawful export of
the fertiliser bags and not cases of mere preparation alone.
We have already seen that Clause 3 forbids not only
export but also attempt to export and abetment of export of
any fertiliser from one State to another without a permit.
It would therefore be wrong to view the act of transporta-
tion of the fertiliser bags in the trucks in question by the
respondents as only a preparation to commit an offence and
not an act of attempted commission of the offence. Hence the
second question is also answered in favour of the State.
In the light of our pronouncement of the two questions
of law, it goes without saying that the judgments of the
Trial Magistrate and the High Court under appeal should be
declared erroneous and held unsustainable. The State ought
to have been granted leave under Sec. 378(3) Cr. P.C. and
the High Court was wrong in declining to grant leave to the
State. However, while setting aside the order of acquittal
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in each case and convicting the respondents for the offence
with which they were charged we do not pass any order of
punishment on the respondents on account of the fact that
more than fifteen years have gone by since they were acquit-
ted by the Trial Magistrate. The learned counsel for the
appellant State was more interested in having the correct
position of law set out than in securing punishment orders
for the respondents in the two appeals for the offence
committed by them. Therefore, while allowing the appeals and
declaring that the
559
Trial Magistrate and the High Court were wrong in the view
taken by them of the Fertilizer (Movement Control) Order
read with Sections 3 and 7 of the Essential Commodities Act,
we are not awarding any punishment to the respondents for
the commission of the aforesaid offence.
T.N.A. Appeals allowed.
560