Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PARSHOTTAM KANAIYALAL.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/08/1960
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1 1961 SCR (1) 458
CITATOR INFO :
F 1977 SC 912 (4)
R 1986 SC2160 (12)
ACT:
Criminal Trial-Statute barring prosecution except with
written consent of competent authority-Whether consent must
be in favour of named person Food Adulteration Act, 1954
(37. of 1954), S. 20(1).
HEADNOTE:
A complaint was filed against the respondent by the Food
Inspector for selling adulterated milk. Section 20(1) of
the Food Adulteration Act, 1954, provided that no
prosecution shall be instituted under the Act " except by,
or with the written consent of, the State Government or
local authority or a person authorised in this behalf by the
State Government or a local authority ". On the application
of the Food Inspector consent in writing was given by a
person authorised by the local authority. But it was
contended by the respondent that the written consent was of
no avail as it did not in terms name the person in whose
favour it was given.
Held, that where a prosecution was launched on the basis of
a written consent granted by the competent person or
authority, it was not necessary to name the complainant in
the consent. The Act did not in terms require that the
complainant shall be named in the written consent nor could
such a limitation or condition be gathered as a necessary
intendment of the provision. The written consent was for
the launching of a specified prosecution and need not
necessarily be in favour of a complainant authorising him to
file a complaint.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Criminal Appeal No. 56 of
1959.
Appeal by special leave. from the judgment and order dated-
December 18, 1957, of the former Bombay High Court in
Criminal Revision No. 1671 of 1957, arising out of the
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judgment and order dated June 7, 1957, of the Sessions
Judge, Baroda, in Criminal Appeal No. 33 of 1957.
H. B. Khanna and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
G. C. Mathur, for the respondent.
1960. August 31. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
459
AYYANGAR J.-This appeal by special leave of this Court
raises a very short point regarding the construction of s.
20(1) of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 (37
of 1954).
The respondent owned a milk shop within the Municipal limits
of the city of Baroda. The Food Inspector of the
Municipality visited the shop on July 9, 1956 and purchased
milk for analysis. This was sent to the Public Analyst and
when his report was to the effect that the sample was
adulterated, the Inspector applied to the Chief Officer,
Borough Municipality, Baroda, for the latter’s consent, for
instituting criminal proceedings under the Prevention of
Food Adulteration Act, 1954 (referred to hereafter as the
Act), against the respondent. A consent in writing to the
initiation of this prosecution was given by the Chief
Officer and thereafter the complaint out of which this
appeal arises was instituted charging the respondent with an
offence under s. 16 read with s. 7 of the Act for selling
adulterated food.
The case was tried by the Special Judicial Magistrate, First
Class, Baroda. Besides denying his guilt, the accused
raised various technical objections, the principal of which
was that the prosecution was incompetent because of non-
compliance with the terms of s. 20(1) of the Act. This
provision, omitting the proviso to which it is unnecessary
to refer, runs:
" No prosecution for an offence under this Act shall be
instituted except by, or with the written consent of, the
State Government or a local authority or a person authorised
in this behalf by the State Government or a local
authority."
The Magistrate overruled these objections and holding the
accused guilty of the offence charged sentenced him to pay a
fine of Rs. 300/- and in default to rigorous imprisonment
for three months. Dealing with the objection based on s.
20(1) of the Act with which alone we are concerned, the
learned Magistrate said:
" In the present case Baroda Municipal Borough is the local
authority and it has authorized the Chief Officer and the
health officer of the Municipality to
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460
grant sanction to institute proceedings under this Act by
its resolution No. 222 dated May 7,1956, the Chief Officer
has given consent in writing to lodge this coin plaint
against the present accused under the Act on October 13,
1956. The said consent in writing is on record at Ex. 10/7
and the copy of the Resolution of the Municipality
empowering the Chief Officer and the health officer is also
on record at Ex. 18/8. Thus in the present case there is a
valid consent in writing given by the Chief Officer who has
been duly authorised in this behalf by the Baroda Municipal
Borough, to institute proceeding against the present accused
under the Act............... The Food Inspector can lodge
the complaints under the Act if consent in writing is given
by a local authority or a person empowered in this behalf by
the local authority. The food inspector had in the present
case submitted all the papers to the Chief Officer who has
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been invested with the powers by the Municipality to give
consent in order to seek his necessary consent in writing
before lodging the complaint against the present accused.
And after going through the said papers the Chief Officer
had duly given consent to him to lodge this complaint. It
is true that the consent does not bear the name of the food
inspector but it impliedly follows that the consent was
given by the Chief Officer to the person, viz., the
complainant food inspector who sought the permission and
none else."
Against his conviction and sentence the respondent filed an
appeal to the Court of the Sessions Judge at Baroda. The
Appellate Court set aside the order of conviction and
sentence on the ground that the Food Inspector was not
competent to institute the prosecution under s. 20(1) of the
Act. Relying on the decision of a single Judge of the
Madras High Court in Cannanore Milk Supply Co-operative
Society, In re(1), the learned Sessions Judge held that
under the terms of the section, the only authority with
whose " written consent " a prosecution could be instituted
was the State Government and that neither " the local autho-
rity " nor " the person authorized in that behalf by the
(1) (1956) 2 M.L.J. 465.
461
State Government or the local authority " were competent to
grant " written consents " for the initiation of
prosecutions. He, therefore, set aside the conviction and
sentence and discharged the respondent.
The matter was thereafter brought up before the High Court
of Bombay by the State by an appeal later converted into a
Criminal Revision petition. The learned Judges of the High
Court affirmed the order passed by the learned Sessions
Judge. They disagreed with the Sessions Judge in his
interpretation of s. 20(1) that a prosecution could not be
instituted with " the written consent" of any authority
other than the State Government. They, however, held that "
the written consent " should name the person who could
institute the complaint and that as " the consent " in the
present case bad not named the Food Inspector as the person
authorized to file the complaint, the prosecution was not
legally initiated. It is from this decision of the High
Court that the State of Bombay, having obtained special
leave of this Court, has brought this matter up before us.
There is here no dispute that " the local authority the
Baroda Municipality, had authorized the Chief Officer of the
Municipality to grant consents under s. 20(1) of the Act for
the filing of complaints in regard to offenses under the
Act. There is no dispute either that the Chief Officer
granted on October 13, 1956, his " written consent " to the
filing of this complaint against the respondent. The "
consent " is in the following terms:
"Under authority vested in the Chief Officer of the Baroda
Borough Municipality............... sanction is hereby given
for instituting prosecution against the following milk
vendors for contravening the provisions of Government of
India’s Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954."
The name of the respondent, his address and the date of the
offence are then set out and it is followed
by a paragraph which runs:
" This sanction is accorded after going through Milk
Analysis Report and other pertinent documents and the nature
of offence committed by each of the
462
above persons as required by s. 20 of the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, 1954."
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We may, at the outset, point out that we entirely agree with
the learned Judges of the High Court in their view that on
the terms of a. 20(1) a prosecution could be instituted with
the written consent not merely of the State Government but "
of a focal authority " or " a person authorised in this
behalf by the State Government or a local authority ". In
our opinion, on the language of the sub-section no other
construction appears possible. The learned Judges of the
High Court said:
" The construction which has been put by the learned
Sessions Judge obviously ignores the two commas, which
appear in the section before and after the clause " or with
the written consent of ". One of the commas precedes, and
the other follows the clause " or with the written consent
of " The plain grammatical meaning of this section is that
the written consent may be of the State Government, or a
local authority, or a person authorised in that behalf by
the State Government or local authority. In our view, under
this section, the prosecution can be instituted (1) by the
State Government, (2) by- a local authority, (3) by a person
authorised in that behalf by the State Government, or (4) by
a person similarly authorised by a local authority.
Further, a prosecution can also be instituted with the
consent of any of these four authorities."
Even apart from-the two commas, the construction which found
favour with the learned Judge of the Madras High Court in
Cannanore Milk Supply Cooperative Society, In re (1) is not
possible without the sub-section being rewritten in these
terms:
" ............ shall be instituted by or with the written
consent of the State Government or by a local authority or a
person authorised in this behalf by the State Government or
a local authority."
Without the insertion of the word " by " before the words "
a local authority ", it would not be possible to exclude the
written consents of local authorities etc. from the content
of the sub-section.
(1) (1956) 2 M.L.J. 465.
463
As already stated, the reasoning, however, by which the
learned Judges of the High Court held the prosecution to be
incompetent was that " the written consent " did not in
terms, name the person " in whose favour " the sanction or "
written consent " was given. The learned Judges stated:
" A written sanction of the nature which we have in the
present case, or a written consent, without mentioning the
person to whom such consent or sanction is given, would, in
our view, not be a sufficient compliance with the terms of
the sanction................ The present written consent
does not mention the name of the Food Inspector as the
person competent to institute the prosecution, and therefore
we must hold that the institution of the prosecution, was
without jurisdiction".
The learned Counsel for the appellant-State challenged the
correctness of this construction. He referred us to the
analogy of the decisions rendered on s. 197 of the Criminal
Procedure Code where it has been held that " the sanction "
referred to need not name the person who could institute the
prosecution. We consider it unnecessary to canvass the
relative scope of the language of s. 197 of the Criminal
Procedure Code and of s. 20(1) of the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act. We prefer to rest our decision on the
terms of s. 20(1) itself. To start with, the Statute does
not in terms prescribe that the complainant shall be named
in the " written consent ". The only question, therefore, is
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whether such. a limitation or condition could be gathered as
a necessary intendment of the provision. In the first
place, the reason of the rule could not suggest or imply
such a condition. The rule has undoubtedly been designed to
prevent the launching of frivolous or harassing prosecutions
against traders. It therefore provides that the complaint
should be filed, either by a named or specified authority or
with the written consent of such authority. To read by
implication that before granting a written consent, the
authority competent to initiate a prosecution should apply
its mind to the facts of the case and satisfy itself that a
prima facie case exists for the
464
alleged offender being put up before a Court appears
reasonable, but the further implication that the complainant
must be named in the written consent does not, in our
opinion, follow. In the present case, the Analyst’s Report
was before the Chief Officer of the Municipality and it was
after considering that report and the connected documents
that the written consent or sanction was given. In the
second place, the subsection itself contains an indication
that the written consent is for the launching of a specified
prosecution, and not one " in favour " of a complainant
authorising him to file the complaint. Omitting for the
moment the State Government and " the local authority "
which are specified in the provision as competent by
themselves to initiate prosecutions, persons " authorised by
" these two authorities are further included. The
expression " person authorised in this behalf " obviously
refers to a named person who is so authorized. In the case
of these four categories, the authority or person filing the
complaint has itself or himself to consider the
reasonableness and propriety of the prosecution and be
satisfied that the prosecution is not frivolous and is
called for. Turning next to the other class, the relevant
words are " no prosecution shall be instituted except with
the written consent of Here the emphasis is on the consent
to the filing of the prosecution, not to the person filing
it. The preliminary examination of the facts to ascertain
the desirability and propriety of the prosecution is in this
last case, the responsibility of the person or authority
giving the written consent-not of the person who figures as
the complainant. The two classes are distinct and the
employment of different phraseology to designate the two
types of devolution of authority, constitutes an indication that in the
second class of cases-where prosecutions are
filed on the basis of written consents granted by the
competent person or authority, the specification of the name
of the complainant is not a statutory requirement-the
consent being to a specified prosecution. We, therefore,,
consider that the prosecution in the present case was
instituted on a
465
complaint which fulfilled the requirements of s. 20(1) of
the Act.
One part of the reasoning of the learned Judges of the High
Court was, that in the absence of persons being named in the
written consent, a complaint might be lodged by persons over
whom " the local authority " would have no control and that
for this reason it was necessary to adopt the construction
which they did of s. 20(1), namely, that the written consent
should name the person authorized to file the complaint. In
our opinion, this apprehension is not justified, for the
written consent has to be filed by the complainant in order
to enable the complaint to be entertained, and it is not as
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if the written consent will be available to all and sundry
to be filed before the Magistrate. Besides, even on the
reasoning of the learned Judges of the High Court there is
no restriction as to the person who might be named as
authorised to file the complaint. Normally,, of course, the
person named would be an officer of the Municipality, but
theoretically there is a possibility that the person named
might not be a Municipal servant, and if " the written
consent" is in favour of such a person, the Municipal
authority would have no administrative control over him.
The complication referred to by the learned Judges would
still be there, even though a person be named in the written
consent given by the local authority. We, therefore,,
consider that this is not a circumstance which of necessity
leads to the construction that the complainant ought to be
named in the written consent under s. 20(1).
The respondent was not represented before this Court, and in
view of the importance of the matter, Mr. G. C. Mathur was
requested by the Court to appear as amicus-curiae and we
express our thanks to him for the assistance he rendered us.
The appeal is accordingly allowed, the order of the High
Court is set aside, and that of the Magistrate restored.
Appeal allowed.
466