Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THOMAS DANA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB(and connected appeal)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/11/1958
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 375 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 274
CITATOR INFO :
R 1961 SC 29 (22)
RF 1961 SC 663 (8)
R 1962 SC 276 (12,22)
R 1964 SC1140 (9)
F 1970 SC 962 (7)
RF 1971 SC 44 (31)
RF 1972 SC 648 (8)
ACT:
Sea Customs-Confiscation of goods and imposition of penalty
by Collector of Customs-subsequent conviction and sentence
by Magistrate, if violative of fundamental right to
protection against double jeopardy-Constitution of India,
Art. 20(2)-Sea Customs Act, 1878 (8 of 1878), ss..167(8) and
167(81).
HEADNOTE:
The two petitioners were apprehended while attempting to
smuggle a huge amount of Indian and foreign currency and
other contraband goods out of India and the Collector of
Central Excise and Land Customs passed orders confiscating
the seized goods and imposing heavy personal penalties on
both of them under
275
s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act. On a subsequent
complaint made by the Customs Authorities on the same facts,
the petitioners were convicted and sentenced by the
Additional District Magistrate to various terms of
imprisonment under s. 23, read with s. 23B, of the Foreign
Exchange Regulation Act, s. i67(8I) of the Sea Customs Act
and s. 120B of the Indian Penal Code. The Additional
Sessions judge in appeal affirmed the said orders of
conviction and sentences and the High Court refused to
interfere in revision. It was contended on behalf of the
petitioners, who had, at an earlier stage, made an
unsuccessful attempt to move this Court under Art. 32 and
have the prosecutions quashed, that the orders of conviction
and sentences passed on them by the Courts below infringed
the constitutional protection against double jeopardy
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afforded by Art. 20(2) Of the Constitution.
Held, (Per Das, C. J., Bhagwati, B. P. Sinha and Wanchoo,
Jj., Subba Rao, J., dissenting) that the contention was
without substance and must be negatived.
In order to sustain a plea of double jeopardy and to avail
of the protection of Art. 20(2) of the Constitution it was
incumbent to show that (1) there was a previous prosecution,
(2) a punishment and (3) that for the same offence, and
unless all the three conditions were fulfilled the Article
did not come into operation. The word ’prosecution’ as used
in that Article contemplated a proceeding of a criminal
nature either before a court or a judicial tribunal.
Maqbool Hussain v. The State of Bombay, [1953] S.C.R. 730,
relied on.
The insertion of s. 187A into the Sea Customs Act by the
amending Act of 1955, left no scope for doubt that the
hierarchy of Authorities under that Act functioned not as
Courts or judicial tribunals but as administrative bodies,
even though in recording evidence or hearing arguments they
acted judicially. The words " offences " and " penalties "
used by the Act could not have the same meaning as in
Criminal Law and a penalty or confiscation ordered under s.
167(8) of the Act could not be a punishment such as is
inflicted by a Criminal Court for a criminal offence.
Sewpujanrai Indrasanrai Ltd. v. The Collector of Customs and
others, [1959] S.C.R. 821, referred to.
Nor were the Customs Authorities invested with the powers of
a Criminal Court under the Schedule to s. 167 and the
procedure laid down by Ch. XVII of the Act, and any orders
passed by them either in rem or in personal, by way of
confiscation of the goods or imposition of penalties on the
person, could only be in the nature of administrative ones
made in the interest of revenue and could not bar a criminal
prosecution.
Morgan v. Devine, 59 L. Ed. 1153: 237 U. S. 632 and United
States of America v. Anthony La Franca, 75 L. Ed. 551: 282
U. S. 568, considered.
276
The proceedings against the petitioners before the Collector
of Customs under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act could. not
therefore, be a prosecution within the meaning of Art. 20(2)
Of the Constitution and the petitioners were not put to
double jeopardy.
Per Subba Rao, J.-The prosecution of ’the petitioners before
the Magistrate and the punishment inflicted on them directly
infringed Art. 20(2) of the Constitution.
There can be no inconsistency in an authority under an Act
functioning in an administrative capacity in respect of
certain specified duties while it acts as a judicial
tribunal in respect of others, and the question as to which
of them it discharges in a judicial capacity has to be
decided on the facts of each case and in the light of well-
settled characteristics of a judicial tribunal.
Cooper v. Wilson, [1937] 2 K. B. 309 and Venkataraman v.
Union of India, [1954] S.C.R. 1150, relied on.
Although this Court has held that the Sea Customs Autho-
rities in adjudging confiscation do not function as judicial
tribunals but as mere administrative authorities, the
question as to whether imposing personal penalties they act
as judicial tribunals still remains open.
Maqbool Hussain v. The State. of Bombay, [1953] S.C.R. 730
and Sewpujanrai Indrasanrai Ltd. v. The Collector of
Customs, [1959] S.C.R. 821, explained.
An examination of the entire scheme of the Sea Customs Act
leaves no manner of doubt that the Customs Authorities act
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as judicial tribunals so far as offences under s. 167 Of the
Act are concerned.
The word ’prosecuted’ used in Art. 20(2) of the Constitution
is comprehensive enough to include a prosecution before an
authority other than a Magistrate or a Criminal Court, and
the offences described in s. 167 Of the Sea Customs Act are
offences within the meaning of the General Clauses Act and
the Indian Penal Code and the penalties prescribed therefor
are nothing but punishments inflicted for those offences
either by the Customs Authorities or the Magistrate.
The question of the identity of an offence has to be deter-
mined on the facts of each particular case and the real test
is whether the previous prosecution and punishment were
based on the same facts on which rested the subsequent
prosecution and punishments
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 65 of 1958.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of fundamental rights.
AND
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 112 of 1958.
277
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 28, 1958, of the Punjab High Court in Criminal
Revision No. 145 of 1958.
N. C. Chatterjee and Nanak Chand, for the petitioner and
the appellant.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, H J.
Umrigar, R. H. Dhebar and T. M. Sen, for the respondent in
both the matters.
1958. November 4. The Judgment of Das, C. J., Bhagwati,
Sinha and Wanchoo, JJ. was delivered by Sinha J., Subba Rao,
J., delivered a separate judgment.
SINHA, J.-Petition Nos. 65 of 1958, under Art. 32 of the
Constitution, on behalf of one Thomas Dana, and Criminal
Appeal No. 112 of 1958, by special leave to appeal granted
to one Leo Roy Frey (appellant), raise substantially the
same question of some constitutional importance, and have,
therefore, been heard together, and will be covered by this
judgment. The main question for determination in these two
cases, is whether there has been an infringement of the
constitutional protection granted under Art. 20(2) of the
Constitution. For the sake of brevity and convenience, we
shall refer to Thomas Dana as the first petitioner, and Leo
Roy Frey, as the second petitioner, in the course of this
Judgment.
The relevant facts are these : The first petitioner is a
Cuban national. He came to India on a special Cuban
passport No. 11822, dated November 16, 1954, issued by the
Government of the Republic of Cuba. The second petitioner
is a citizen of the United States of America, and holds a
U.S.A. passport No. 45252, dated July 1, 1955. In May,
1957, both the petitioners were in Paris. There, the second
petitioner purchased a motor car from an officer of the
American Embassy. He is said to have sold that car to the
first petitioner on May 14, 1957, and the same month, it was
registered in the first petitioner’s name. The two
petitioners sailed by the same steamer at the end of May.
The car was also shipped by the same steamer. They reached
Karachi on June 11, 1957, and from there, flew to Bombay.
From June 11 to 19, 1957, they
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278
stayed together in Hotel Ambassador in Bombay. The car was
delivered to the first petitioner in Bombay on June 13, and
on June 19, both of them flew from Bombay to Delhi. In
Delhi also, they stayed together at Hotel Janpath. The
first petitioner received the car at Delhi by rail on June
22, and the same night, the two petitioners left by the said
car for Amritsar, where they reached after mid-night, and
stayed in Mrs. Bhandari’s Lodge. On the morning of June 23,
they reached Attari Road Land Customs Station by the same
car (No. CD 75 TT 6587). On arrival at Attari, the
petitioners presented themselves for completing customs
formalities for crossing over to Pakistan. The Customs
officers at Attari Road Land Customs Station, handed over to
them the Baggage Declaration forms, to declare the articles
that they had in their possession, including any goods which
were subject to the Export Trade Control and/or Foreign
Exchange Restrictions, and/or were dutiable. Both the
petitioners completed the forms aforesaid, and handed those
completed statements over to the Customs officers. The first
petitioner declared the under-noted articles:-
Indian currency Rs. 40
Pakistan currency Rs. 50
U. S. Dollars $. 30.00
Gold ring I (valued at Rs. 100)
Personal effects Valued at $ 100.00
Car Valued at Rs. 15,000
On suspicion, the Customs officers searched his baggage
which was being carried in the car aforesaid. His person
was also searched, and as a result of the search, the under-
noted articles which had not been declared by him, were
recovered :-
Indian currency Rs. 900
Pakistan currency Rs. 250
U. S. Dollars $ 1.00
Hong Kong Dollars $ 1100
Thailand currency 78
Pocket radio 1
Time-piece 1
279
The second petitioner, in his statement, had declared the
following articles:-
Indian currency Rs. 40
U. S. Dollars $ 500.00
U. S. Coins $ 1.23
Belgian coins BF 26.00
French coins BF 205.00
Italian coins L. 400.00
Wrist watch I
Personal effects Rs. 1,00,000
On suspicion, the Customs staff searched the person of the
second petitioner also. They recovered from him one pistol
of 22 bore with 48 live cartridges of the same bore. As he
could not produce a valid licence under the Indian law, the
pistol and the cartridges were handed over to the police,
for taking appropriate action under the Indian Arms Act.
The car was thoroughly searched, and as a result of the
intensive search and minute examination on June 30, 1957, a
secret chamber above the petrol tank, behind the hind seat
of the car, was discovered. The chamber was opened, and the
following things which had not been declared by the
petitioners, were recovered from inside the secret chamber:-
Indian currency Rs. 8,50,000
U. S. Dollars $ 10,000.00
Empty tin containers 10(The containers bore
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(rectangular) marks to indicate that
they were used for
carrying gold bars)
Mirror 1.
besides other insignificant things. Under the Indian law,
Indian currency over Rs. 50, Pakistan currency over Rs. 100
and any foreign currency, could not be exported out of
India, without the permission of the Reserve Bank of India.
The export of a pocket radio also required a valid licence
under the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947. The
petitioners could not produce, on demand the requisite
permission from the Reserve Bank of India..’ or the licence
for the export of the pocket radio, or a permit for
exporting
280
a time-piece, as required by the Land Customs Act, 1924.
The car also was handed over to the police for necessary
action. The offending articles, namely
Indian currency Rs.8,50,900
Pakistan currency Rs.250
U. S. Dollars $ 10,001.00
Hong Kong Dollar $.1.00
Thailand currency T.78.00
pocket radio, and the time-piece, etc., were seized under s.
178 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878. Both the petitioners were
taken into custody for infringement of the law. On July 7,
both the petitioners were called upon to show cause before
the Collector of Central Excise and Land Customs, New Delhi,
why a penalty should not be imposed upon them under s.
167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, and why the seized
articles aforesaid, should not be confiscated under s.
167(8) and s. 168 of the Act. Both the petitioners objected
to making any statements in answer to the show-cause notice,
on the ground that the matter was. subjudice and any
statement made by them, might prejudice them in their
defence. But at the same time, the second petitioner
disclaimed any connection with the car in which the two
petitioners were travelling, and which had been seized.
After some adjournments granted to the petitioners to avail
themselves of the opportunity of showing cause, the
Collector of Central Excise and Land Customs, New Delhi,
passed orders on July 24, 1957. He came to the conclusion
that the petitioners had planned to smuggle Indian and
foreign currency out of India, in contravention of the law.
They had been acting in concert with each other, and had,
throughout the different stages of their journey from France
to India, been acting together, and while leaving India for
Pakistan, were travelling together by the same car, until
they reached the Attari Road Land Customs Station, on their
way to Pakistan. He directed that the different kinds of
currency which had been seized, as aforesaid, from the
possession of the petitioners, be " absolutely confiscated "
for contravention of s. 8(2) of the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act, 1947, read with ss. 23-A
281
and 23-B of the Act. He also directed the confiscation of
the car aforesaid, which could be redeemed on payment of a "
redemption fine " of Rs. 50,000. He also ordered the
confiscation of the pocket radio and the time-piece and
other articles seized, as aforesaid, under s. 167(8) of the
Sea Customs Act, read with s. 5 of the Imports and Exports
(Control) Act, 1947, and s. 7 of the Land Customs Act, 1924.
He further imposed a personal penalty of Rs. 25,00,000 on
each of the petitioners, under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs
Act.
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After making further inquiry, on August 12, 1957, the
Assistant Collector of Customs and Central Excise, Amritsar,
under authority from the Chief Customs Officer, Delhi, filed
a complaint against the petitioners and a third person,
named Moshe Baruk of Bombay, (since acquitted), under s. 23,
read with s. 8, of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act,
1947, and s. 167 (81) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878. The
petition of complaint, after stating the facts stated -
above, charged the accused persons with offences of attempt-
ing to take out of India Indian and foreign currency, in
contravention of the provisions of the Acts referred to
above.
After recording considerable oral and documentary evidence,
the learned Additional District Magistrate, Amritsar, by his
judgment dated November 13, 1957, convicted the petitioners,
and sentenced them each to two years’ rigorous imprisonment
under s. 23, read with s. 23-B, of the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act, six month’s rigorous imprisonment under s.
120-B(2) of the Indian Penal Code, the sentences to run con-
currently. It is not necessary to set out the convictions
and sentences in respect of the third accused Moshe, who was
subsequently acquitted by the High Court of Punjab, in
exercise of its revisional jurisdiction. The learned
Magistrate also, perhaps, out of abundant caution, directed
that " The entire amount of currency and foreign exchange
and the car in which the currency had been smuggled as well
as the sleeveless shirt Ex. P. 39 and belt Ex. P. 40 shall
be
36
282
confiscated to Government ". This order of confiscation was
passed by the criminal court, notwithstanding the fact, as
already stated, that the Collector of Central Excise and
Land Customs, New Delhi, had ordered the confiscation of
the-offending articles under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs
Act and the other related
Acts referred to above.
On appeal by the convicted persons, the learned Additional
Sessions Judge, Amritsar, by his judgment and order dated.
December 13, 1957, dismissed the appeal after a very
elaborate examination of the facts and circumstances brought
out in the large volume of evidence adduced on behalf of the
prosecution. It is riot necessary, for the purposes of
these cases, to set out in detail the findings arrived at by
the appellate court, or the evidence on which those
conclusions were based. It is enough to state that both the
courts of fact agreed in coming to the conclusion that the
accused persons had entered into a conspiracy to smuggle
contraband property out of this country.
The petitioners moved the High Court of Judicature for the
State of Punjab, separately, against their convictions and
sentences passed by the courts below, as aforesaid. Both
the revisional applications were dismissed summarily by the
learned Chief Justice. By his order dated February 28,
1958, the learned Chief Justice refused to certify that the
case was a fit one for appeal to this Court.
The petitioners then moved this Court for, and obtained,
special leave to appeal from the judgment and orders of the
courts below, convicting and sentencing them, as stated
above. They also moved this Court for writs of habeas
corpus. The petition of the first petitioner for a writ of
habeas carp= was admitted, and was numbered as petition No.
65 of 1958, and a rule issued. The writ petition on behalf
of the second petitioner was dismissed in limited. All
these orders were passed on April 28, 1958. Subsequently,
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the first petitioner moved this Court for revocation of the
special leave granted to him, and for an early hearing of
his writ petition No. 65 of 1958, as the points for
consideration were common to both the cases. This
283
Court granted the prayers by its order dated May 13,1958.
Before dealing with the arguments advanced on behalf of the
petitioners, in order to complete the narrative of events
leading up to the filing of the cases in this Court, it is
necessary to state that the petitioners had moved this Court
separately under Art. 32 of the Constitution, against their
prosecution in the Magistrate’s court, after the aforesaid
orders of confiscation and penalty, passed by the Collector
of Customs. They prayed for a writ of certiorari and/or
prohibition, and for quashing the proceedings. There was
also a prayer for a writ in the nature of habeas corpus. On
that occasion also, the protection afforded by Art. 20(2) of
the Constitution, was pressed in aid of the petitioners’
writ applications. This Court, after hearing the parties,
dismissed those writ petitions, holding that the charge
against the petitioners included an offence under s.120B of
the Indian Penal Code, which certainly was not one of the
heads of charge against them before the Collector of
Customs. This Court, therefore, without deciding the
applicability of the provisions of Art. 20(2) of the
Constitution, to the facts and circumstances of the present
case, refused to quash the prosecution. The question
whether Art. 20(2) of the Constitution, barred the pro-
secution of the petitioners under the provisions of the Sea
Customs Act and the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, was
apparently left open for future determination, if and when
the occasion arose. In view of the events that have
happened since after the passing of the order of this Court,
dated October 31, 1957, (reported in [1958] S. C. R. 822),
it has now become necessary to determine that controversy.
It was vehemently argued on behalf of the petitioners that
the prosecution of the petitioners under the provisions of
the Acts aforesaid, and their convictions and imposition of
sentences by the courts below, infringe the protection
against double jeopardy enshrined in Art. 20(2) of the
Constitution, which is in these terms
284
" No person shall be prosecuted and punished, for the same
offence more than once."
It is manifest that in order to bring the petitioners’ case
within the prohibition of Art. 20(2), it must be shown that
they had been " prosecuted " before the Collector of
Customs, and " punished " by him for the " same offence "
for which they have been convicted and punished as a result
of the judgment and orders of the courts below, now
impugned. If any one of these three essential conditions,
is not fulfilled, that is to say, if it is not shown that
the petitioners had been it prosecuted " before the
Collector of Customs, or that they had been " punished " by
him in the proceedings before him, resulting in the
confiscation of the properties aforesaid, and the imposition
of a heavy penalty of Rs. 25,00,000, each, or that they had
been convicted and " sentenced" for the " same offence ",
the petitioners will have failed to bring their case within
the prohibition of Art. 20(2). It has been argued, in the
first instance, on behalf of the petitioners that they had
been " prosecuted " within the meaning of the article. On
the other hand, the learned Additional Solicitor-General has
countered that argument by the contention that the previous
adjudication by the Collector of Customs, was by an
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administrative body which has to act judicially, as held by
this Court in F. N. Roy v. Collector of Customs(1), and
reiterated in Leo Roy Frey v. Superintendent, District Jail,
Amritsar (2); but the Collector was not a criminal court
which could in law, be said to have tried the petitioner for
an offence under the Indian Penal Code, or under the penal
provisions of the other Acts mentioned above.
It is, therefore, necessary first to consider whether the
petitioners had really been prosecuted before the Collector
of Customs, within the meaning of Art. 20(2). To "
prosecute ", in the special sense of law, means, according
to Webster’s Dictionary, " (a) to seek to obtain, enforce,
or the like, by legal process; as, to prosecute a right or a
claim in a court of law. (b) to pursue (a person) by legal
proceedings for redress or
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 1151.
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 822.
285
punishment; to proceed against judicially; espy., to accuse
of some crime or breach of law, or to pursue for redress or
punishment of a crime or violation of law, in due legal form
before a legal tribunal; as, to prosecute a man for
trespass, or for a riot." According to Wharton’s Law
Lexicon, 14th edn., p. 810, " prosecution " means " a
proceeding either by way of indictment or information,, in
the criminal courts, in order to put an offender upon his
trial. In all criminal prosecutions the King is nominally
the prosecutor." This very question was discussed by this
Court in the case of Maqbool Hussain v. The State of Bombay
(1), with of reference to the context in which the word "
prosecution " occurred in Art. 20. In the course of the
judgment, the following observations, which apply with full
force to the present case, were made:-
"....... and the prosecution in this context would mean an
initiation or starting of proceedings of a criminal nature
before a court of law or a judicial tribunal in accordance
with the procedure prescribed in the statute which creates
the offence and regulates the procedure."
In that case, this Court discussed in detail the provisions
of the Sea Customs Act, with particular reference to Chapter
XVI, headed " Offences and Penalties ". After examining
those provisions, this Court came to the following
conclusion:-
"We are of the opinion that the Sea Customs Authorities are
not a judicial tribunal and the adjudgeing of confiscation,
increased rate of duty or penalty under the provisions of
the Sea Customs Act do not constitute a judgment or order of
a court or judicial tribunal necessary for the purpose of
supporting a plea of double jeopardy."
The learned counsel for the petitioners, did not
categorically attack the correctness of that decision, but
suggested that that case could be distinguished on the
ground that in the present case, unlike the case then before
this Court, a heavy penalty of Rs. 25,00,000 on each of the
petitioners, was imposed by the Collector of Central Excise
and Land Customs,
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 730, 738, 739, 743.
286
besides ordering confiscation of properties and currency
worth over 81 lacs. But that circumstance alone cannot be
sufficient in law to distinguish the previous decision of
this Court, which is otherwise directly in point. Simply
because the Revenue Authorities took a very serious view of
the smuggling activities of the petitioners, and imposed
very heavy penalties under item 8 of the Schedule to s. 167
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of the Sea Customs Act, would not convert the Revenue
Authorities into a court of law, if the Act did not
contemplate their functioning as such. That the Sea Customs
Act did not envisage the Chief Customs Officer or the other
officers under him in the hierarchy of the Revenue
Authorities under the Act, to function as a Court, is made
absolutely clear by certain provisions of that Act. The
most important of those is the new s. 187A, which was
inserted by the Sea Customs (Amendment) Act, (21 of 1955).
That section is in these terms:"
187A. No Court shall take cognizance of any offence
relating to Smuggling of goods punishable under item 81 of
the Schedule to section 167, except upon complaint in
writing, made by the Chief Customs officer or any other
officer of Customs not lower in rank than an Assistant
Collector of Customs authorized in this behalf by the Chief
Customs officer."
This section makes it clear that the Chief Customs Officer
or any other officer lower in rank than him, in the Customs
department, is not a " court ", and that the offence
punishable under item 81 of the Schedule to s. 167, cannot
be taken cognizance of by any court, except upon a complaint
in writing, made, as prescribed in that section. This
section, in our opinion, sets at rest the controversy, which
has been raised in the past upon certain expressions, like "
offences " and " penalties used in Chapter XVI. These words
have been used in that Chapter in their generic sense and
not in their specific sense under the penal law. When a
proceeding by the Revenue Officers is meant, as is the case
in most of the items in the Schedule to s. 167, those
officers have been empowered to deal with the offending
articles by way of confiscation, or with the person
287
infringing those rules, by way of imposition of penalties in
contradistinction to a sentence of imprisonment or fine or
both. When a criminal prosecution and punishment of the
criminal, in the sense of the Penal law, is intended, the
section makes a specific reference to a trial by a
Magistrate, a conviction by such Magistrate, and on such
conviction, to imprisonment or to fine or both. In this
connection, reference may be made to the penalties mentioned
in the third column against items 72, 74, 75, 76, 76A, 76B,
77, 78 and 81, which illustrate the latter class of the
penalty in column 3. The penalties mentioned in the third
column of most of the items of the Schedule to s. 167 of the
Act, do not make any reference to a conviction by a
Magistrate and punishment by him in terms of imprisonment or
of fine or of both. For example, item 76C, which was
inserted by the Sea Customs Amendment Act X of 1957, in the
third column meant for penalties, has only this " such
vessel shall be liable to confiscation and the master of
such vessel shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding one
thousand rupees". Item 76A, on the other hand, specifically
mentioning conviction, imprisonment and fine, was inserted
by Sea Customs Act XXI of 1955. Both the amending Acts, by
which the aforesaid additional offences were created, and
penalties prescribed, were enacted after the coming into
force of the Constitution. The Legislature was, therefore,
aware of the distinction made throughout the Schedule to s.
167, between a proceeding before Revenue authorities by way
of enforcing the preventive and penal provisions of the
Schedule and a criminal trial before a Magistrate, with a
view to punishing offenders under the provisions of the same
section. It is, therefore, in the teeth of these provisions
to contend that the imposition of a penalty by the Revenue
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officers in the hierarchy created by the Act, is the same
thing as a punishment imposed by a criminal court by way of
punishment for a criminal offence.
This distinction has been very clearly brought out in the
recent judgment of this Court in the case of Sewpujanrai
Indrasanrai Ltd. v. The Collector of
288
Customs(2). In that case, though the question of double
jeopardy under Art. 20(2) of the Constitution, had not been
raised, this Court has pointed out the difference in the
nature of proceedings against offending articles and
offending persons. A proceeding under the Sea Customs Act
and the corresponding provisions of the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act, in respect of goods which have been the
subject-matter of the proceeding, has been held to be of
the-nature of a proceeding in rem whereas, a proceeding
against a person concerned in smuggling goods within the
purview of those Acts, is a proceeding in personam,
resulting in the imposition of a punishment by way of
imprisonment or fine on him, where the offender is known.
In the former case, the offender may not have been known,
but still the offending goods seized may be confiscated as a
result of the proceedings in rem. That case was not
concerned with the further question whether, besides the
liability to the penalty as contemplated by s. 23(1)(a),
namely, a penalty not exceeding three times the value of the
foreign exchange in respect of which the contravention had
taken place, the person contravening the provisions of the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947, upon conviction by a
court, is also punishable with imprisonment which s.
23(1)(b) prescribes, namely, imprisonment for a term which
may extend to 2 years, or with fine, or with both. The
decision of this Court (supra) is also an authority for the
proposition that in imposing confiscation and penalty under
the Sea Customs Act, the Collector acts judicially. But
that is not the same thing as holding that the Authority
under s. 167 of the Act, functions as a Judicial Tribunal or
as a Court. An Administra. five Tribunal, like the
Collector and other officers in the hierarchy, may have to
act judicially in the sense of having to consider evidence
and hear arguments in an informal way, but the Act does not
contemplate that in so doing, it is functioning as a court.
As already pointed out, s. 187A, which was inserted by the
Amending Act of 1955 (21 of 1955), brings out, in bold
relief, the legal position that the Chief Customs
(I) [1959] S.C.R. 821.
289
Officer or any other officer of Customs, does not function
as a court or as a Judicial Tribunal. All criminal offences
are offences, but all offences in the sense of infringement
of a law, are not criminal offences. Likewise, the other
expressions have been used in their generic sense and not as
they are understood in the Indian Penal Code or other laws
relating to criminal offences. Section 167 speaks of
offences mentioned in the first column in the Schedule, and
the third column in that Schedule lays down the penalties in
respect of each of the contravention of the rules or of the
sections in the Act. There are as many as 81 entries in the
Schedule to s. 167, besides those added later, but each one
of those 81 and more entries, though an offence, being an
act infringing certain provisions of the section is and
rules under the Act, is not a criminal offence. Out of the
more than 81 entries in the Schedule to s. 167, it is only
about a dozen entries, which contemplate prosecution in the
criminal sense, the remaining entries contemplate penalties
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other than punishments for a criminal offence. The
provisions of Chapter XVII of the Act, headed " Procedure
relating to offences, Appeals, etc.", also make it clear
that the hierarchy of the Customs Officers under the Act
have not been empowered to try criminal offences. They have
been only given limited powers of search. Similarly, they
have been given limited powers to summon persons to give
evidence or to produce documents. It is true that the
Customs Authorities have been empowered to start proceedings
in respect of suspected infringements of the provisions of
the Act, and to impose penalties upon persons concerned with
those infringements, or to order confiscation of goods or
property which are found to have been the subjectmatter of
the infringements, but when a trial on a charge of a
criminal offence is intended under any one of the entries of
the Schedule aforesaid, it is only the Magistrate having
jurisdiction, who is empowered to impose a sentence of
imprisonment or fine or both.
it was also suggested in the course of the argument that the
use of a particular phraseology in the Act, 37
290
should not stand in the way of looking at the substance of
the matter. It may be that the Act has drawn a distinction
between confiscation of property and goods, and imposition
of penalties on persons concerned with the infringement, on
the one hand, and the imposition of a sentence of
imprisonment or fine or both by a Magistrate, on the other
hand; but, it is further contended, the Customs Authorities,
who impose a penalty or who order confiscation of goods of
very large value, are in substance imposing punishments
within the meaning of the criminal law. In this connection,
our particular attention was drawn to para. 24 of the order
dated July 24, 1957, passed by the Collector of Central
Excise and Land Customs, New Delhi, which is in these
terms:-
" 24. Having regard to all the circumstances of the case, I
find that both Sarvshri Thomas Dana and Leo Roy Frey are
equally guilty of the offence. They attempted to smuggle
Indian and foreign currency out of India. I hold both of
them as the persons concerned in the offence committed under
section 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878. The foregoing
facts prove beyond doubt that the offence was the result of
the most deliberate and calculated conspiracy to smuggle
this huge amount of currency out of the country. The
offenders, therefore, deserve deterrent punishment. 1,
therefore, impose a personal penalty of Rs. 25,00,000
(Rupees twenty-five lakhs only) each on Shri Thomas Dana and
Shri Leo Roy Frey which should be paid within two months
from the date of this order or such extended period as the
adjudicating officer may allow."
The expressions " equally guilty of the offence the offence
was the result of the most deliberate and calculated
conspiracy to smuggle ", and " deserve deterrent punishment
", have been greatly emphasized in aid of the argument that
the Collector had really intended to punish the petitioners
in respect of the " offence", and found them ’,guilty". It
is true that these expressions are commonly used in
judgments given in criminal trials, but the same argument
can be used
291
against the petitioners by saying that mere nomenclature
does not matter. What really matters is whether there has
been a " prosecution ".
It is true that the petitioners were dealt with by the
Collector of Central Excise and Land Customs, for the" offence
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" of smuggling; were found " guilty ", and a deterrent "
punishment " was imposed upon them, but as he had not been
vested with the powers of a Magistrate or a criminal court,
his proceedings against the petitioners were in the nature
of Revenue proceedings, with a view to detecting the
infringement of the provisions of the Sea Customs Act, and
imposing penalties when-it was found that they had been
guilty of those infringements. Those penalties, the
Collector had been empowered to impose in order not only to
prevent a recurrence of such infringements, but also to
recoup the loss of revenue resulting from such infringe-
ments. A person may be guilty of certain acts which expose
him to a criminal prosecution for a criminal offence, to a
penalty under the law intended to collect the maximum
revenue under the Taxing law, and/or, at the same time, make
him liable to damages in torts. For example, an assessee
under the Income-tax law, may have submitted a false return
with a view to defrauding the Revenue. His fraud being
detected, the Taxing Officer may realise from him an amount
which may be some multiple of the amount of tax sought to be
evaded. But the fact that he has been subjected to such a
penalty by the Taxing Authorities, may not avail him against
a criminal prosecution for the offence of having submitted a
return containing false statements to his knowledge.
Similarly, a person may use defamatory language against
another person who may recover damages in tort against the
maker of such a defamatory statement. But the fact that a
decree for damages has been passed against him by the civil
court, would not stand in the way of his being prosecuted
for defamation. In such cases, the law does not allow him
the plea of double jeopardy.
That this is the law in America also, is borne out by the
following quotation from the " Constitution
292
of the United States of America "-revised and annotated in
1952 by Edward S. Corwin-at p. 840:-
"A plea of former jeopardy must be upon a prosecution for
the same identical offense. The test of identity of
offenses is whether the same evidence is required to sustain
them; if not, the fact that both charges relate to one
transaction does not make a single offense where two are
defined by the statutes. Where a person is convicted of a
crime which includes several incidents, a second trial for
one of those incidents puts him twice in jeopardy. Congress
may impose both criminal and civil sanctions with respect to
the same act or omission, and may separate a conspiracy to
commit a substantive offense from the commission of the
offense and affix to each a different penalty. A conviction
for the conspiracy may be had though the subsequent offense
was not completed. Separate convictions under different
counts charging a monopolization and a conspiracy to
monopolize trade, in an indictment under the Sherman
Antitrust Act, do not amount to double jeopardy......
"...... A forfeiture proceeding for defrauding the
Government of a tax on alcohol diverted to beverage uses is
a proceeding in rem, rather than a punishment for a criminal
offense, and may be prosecuted after a conviction of
conspiracy to violate the statute imposing the tax."
To the same effect is the following placitum tinder Art. 240
in Vol. 22 of ’Corpus Juris Secundum’, headed " Offenses and
Proceedings in Which Former Jeopardy Is a Defense ":-
" The doctrine applies to criminal prosecution only and
generally to misdemeanours as well as felonies. A former
conviction or acquittal does not ordinarily preclude
subsequent in rem proceedings, civil actions to recover
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statutory penalties or exemplary damages, or proceedings to
abate a nuisance."
On behalf of the petitioners, their learned counsel placed
reliance upon the two American decisions in Morgan v. Zevine
(1) and United States of America v.
(1) 59 L. Ed. 1153; 237 U.S. 632.
293
Anthony La Franca (,). The former decision is really
against the contention of double jeopardy, raised in this
case. That case lays down that persons who steal postage
stamps and postal funds from a post office of the United
States, after having committed burglary, and thus, having
effected their entry into the premises, committed two
distinct offences which may be separately charged and
punished under the United States’ Penal Code. Two separate
convictions and Sentences as for two distinct offences in
those circumstances were not held to be within double
jeopardy within the meaning of the United States’
Constitutional 5th Amendment. The reason given for the
decision against the contention of double jeopardy was that
though the offences had been committed in the same
transaction, they had been constituted separate and distinct
offences by the United States’ Penal Code-articles 190 and
192. In the latter case, the plea of double jeopardy was
given effect to because the special statutes, infringements
of which formed the subjectmatter of the controversy,
namely, for unlawfully selling intoxicating liquor, had made
a specific provision that if any act is a violation of
earlier laws in regard to the manufacture and taxation of
and traffic in intoxicating liquor, and also of the National
Prohibition Act, a conviction for such act or offence under
one statute, shall be a bar to prosecution therefor under
the other. It is clear, therefore, that where there is a
specific statutory provision creating a bar to a second
prosecution, the court is bound to give effect to the plea
of double jeopardy. It is not necessary to refer to certain
decisions of the English courts, relied upon by the learned
counsel for the petitioners, because those cases had
reference to the question whether certain orders passed by
certain courts were or were not made in a criminal case or
matter within the meaning of the statutes then under
consideration before the court. Those are observations made
with reference to the terms of those statutes, and are of no
assistance in the present controversy. The learned counsel
for the petitioners was not able to produce before us any
(1) 75 L. Ed. 551 ; 282 U.S. 568.
294
authority in support of the proposition that once a person
has been dealt with by the Revenue Authorities for an
infringement of the law against smuggling, he cannot also be
prosecuted in a criminal court for a criminal offence.
In view of these considerations, and particularly in view of
the decision of this Court in the case of Maqbool Hussain v.
The State of Bombay (1), there is no escape from the
conclusion that the proceedings before the Sea Customs
Authorities under s. 167(8) were not " prosecution " within
the meaning of Art. 20 (2) of the Constitution. In that
view of the matter, it is not necessary to pronounce upon
the other points which were argued at the Bar, namely,
whether there was a " punishment " and whether " the same
offence " was involved in the proceedings before the Revenue
Authorities and the criminal court. Unless all the three
essential conditions laid down in el. (2) of Art. 20, are
fulfilled, the protection does not become effective. The
prohibition against double jeopardy would not become
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operative if any one of those elements is wanting.
It remains to consider a short point raised particularly on
behalf of the second petitioner (Leo Roy Frey). It was
argued that the letter Ex. P. DD/2, admittedly written by
him to his father in German, had not been specifically put
to him with a view to eliciting his explanation as to the
circumstances and the sense in which it had been written.
The learned Magistrate in the trial court put the following
question (No. 20) to him :-
" It is in evidence that Ex. P. FF/I is the translation of
the letter Ex. P. DD/2. What have you to say about it
The answer given by the accused to this question was " The
translation of Ex. P. FF/I is mostly correct except for few
variations which could have been due to misinterpretation of
handwriting ". It is clear from the question and answer
quoted above, that the learned Magistrate did afford an
opportunity to this petitioner to explain the circumstances
appearing in the
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 730, 738, 739, 743-
295
evidence against him with particular reference to the
letter. If the court had persisted in putting more
questions with reference to that letter, perhaps, it may
have been argued that the examination under s. 342 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, was in the nature of a cross-
examination of the accused person, which is not permitted.
In our opinion, there is no substance in the contention that
the petitioner had not been properly examined under s. 342,
Criminal Procedure Code, to explain the circumstances
appearing in the evidence
against him.
It follows from what has been said above, that there is no
merit either in the appeal or in the petition. They are,
accordingly dismissed.
SUBBA RAO, J.-I have had the advantage of reading the
judgment prepared by Sinha J., but I cannot persuade myself
to agree with my learned brother.
The facts are fully stated in the judgment of my learned
brother and therefore it would suffice if I restate briefly
the facts strictly relevant to the question raised. On June
11, 1957, the petitioner arrived at Bombay, later came to
Delhi and from there he travelled to Amritsar by car in
company with Mr. Leo Roy Frey. On June 23, 1957, he reached
Attari Road Land Customs Station and was arrested under s.
173 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (Act VIII of 1878) on
suspicion of having committed an offence thereunder. He was
served with a notice by the Collector of Central Excise and
Land Customs, New Delhi, on July 7, 1957, to show cause why
penalty should not be imposed on him under s. 167(8) of the
Sea Customs Act (hereinafter called the Act) and s. 7(2) of
the Land Customs Act, 1924, and why the goods should not be
confiscated. By order dated July 24, 1957, the petitioner
was adjudged guilty under s. 167(8) of the Act and currency
of the value of over 9 lakhs, car worth Rs. 50,000, and
other things were confiscated, and he was punished with
personal penalty of Rs. 25,00,000. The petitioner was again
prosecuted on the same facts before the Additional District
Magistrate, Amritsar, on charges under s. 167(81) of the Act
and ss. 23 and 23B of the
296
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. ’He was convicted on
charges under s. 23 read with s. 23B of the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act, s. 167(81) of the Act and s. 120B of the
Indian Penal Code and sentenced to imprisonments of 2 years,
6 months and 6 months respectively by ’the Additional
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District Magistrate, Amritsar. The conviction and sentences
were confirmed on appeal by the Additional Sessions Judge,
and the revision filed in the High Court was dismissed.
The learned counsel for the petitioner contends that the
Courts in punishing him violated the fundamental right
conferred on him under Art. 20(2) of the Constitution as he
hag been prosecuted and punished for the same offence by the
Collector of Customs. The learned Additional Solicitor
General counters this argument by stating that the
petitioner was not prosecuted earlier before a judicial
tribunal and punished by such tribunal, and, in any view,
the prosecution was not for the same offence with which he
was charged before the Magistrate, and therefore this case
does not fall within the Constitutional protection given
under Art. 20(2).
Before addressing myself to the arguments advanced it would
be convenient at this stage to steer clear of two decisions
of this Court. The first is Maqbool Hussain v. The State of
Bombay (1). There proceedings had been taken by the Sea
Customs Authorities under s. 167(8) of the Act and an order
for confiscation of goods had been passed. The person
concerned was subsequently prosecuted before the Presidency
Magistrate for an offence under s. 23 of the Foreign
Exchange Regulation Act in respect of the same act. This
Court held that the proceeding before the Sea Customs
Authorities was not a prosecution and the order for
confiscation was -not a punishment inflicted by a Court or a
judicial tribunal within the meaning of Art. 20(2) of the
Constitution and the prosecution was not barred. The
important factor to be noticed in that case is that the Sea
Customs Authorities did not proceed against the person
concerned but only confiscated the goods found in his
possession. At page
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 730.
297
742 Bhagwati J. says " Confiscation is no doubt one of the
penalties which the Customs Authorities can impose. But
that is more in the nature of proceedings in rem than
proceedings in personal, the object being to confiscate the
offending goods which have been dealt with contrary to the
provisions of the law......... Though the observations in
the judgment cover a wider field. I shall deal with them at
a later stage the decision could be sustained on the simple
ground that the previous proceedings were not against the
person concerned and therefore he was not prosecuted and
punished for the same offence for which he was subsequently
proceeded against in the Criminal Court. The second
decision is Sewpujanrai Indrasanrai Ltd. v. The Collector of
Customs (1). There also the Customs Authorities confiscated
the goods found in the possession of the appellant. Under
s. 8(3) of the Foreign Exchange Act, a restriction imposed
by notification made under that section-is deemed to have
been imposed under s. 19 of the Sea Customs Act, and all the
provisions of the Sea Customs Act shall have effect
accordingly. But the said deeming provision is subject to
an important qualification contained in the words ’ without
prejudice to the provisions of s. 23 of the former Act’. It
was argued that by reason of the provisions of s. 8(3) of
the Foreign Exchange Regulations Act, the appellant should
have been proceeded against under s. 23 of that Act and it
was not open to the Customs Authorities to take action
against the offender under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act.
This Court negatived that contention accepting the principle
that confiscation of the goods under s. 167(8) of the Sea
Customs Act was an action in rem and not a proceeding in
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personal. Das, J., who delivered the judgment of the Court
made the following observations in repelling the said
argument:
The penalty provided is that the goods shall be liable to
confiscation. There is a further provision in the penalty
column that any person concerned in any such offence shall
be liable to a penalty not exceeding
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 82I.
298
three times the value of the goods etc. The point to note
is that so far as the confiscation of the goods is
concerned, it is a proceeding in rem and the penalty is
enforced against the goods whether the offender is known or
not known; the order of confiscation under s. 182, Sea
Customs Act, operates directly upon the status of the
property, and under s. 184 transfers an absolute title to
Government. Therefore, in a case where the Customs
authorities can proceed only against the goods, there can be
no question of applying s. 23 of the Foreign Exchange Act
and even on the construction put forward on behalf of the
appellant company as respects s. 8(3), the remedy under the
Sea Customs Act against the smuggled goods cannot be
barred."
This decision also indicates that the confiscation of the
goods is an action in rem and is not a proceeding in
personam. A combined effect of the aforesaid two decisions
may be stated thus:
Section 167(8) of the Act provides for the following two
kinds of penalties when contraband goods are imported into
or exported from India: (1) such goods shall be liable to
confiscation; (2) any person concerned in any such offence
shall be liable to a penalty. If the authority concerned
makes an. order of confiscation it is only a proceeding in
rem and the penalty is enforced against the goods. On the
other hand, if it imposes a penalty against the person
concerned, it is a proceeding against the person and he is
punished for committing the offence. It follows that in the
case of confiscation there is no prosecution against the
person or imposition of a penalty on him. If the premises
be correct, the subsequent prosecution of the person con-
cerned cannot be affected by the principle of double
jeopardy, as he was not prosecuted or punished in the
earlier proceedings. But the question that arises in this
case is whether, when there was a proceeding in personam and
a penalty was imposed upon the person concerned under s.
167(8) of the Act, he could be prosecuted and punished in
regard to the same act before another tribunal.
On the facts of this case it is manifest that the
299
petitioner was prosecuted before the Magistrate for the same
act in respect of which a penalty of Rs. 25,00,000 had been
imposed on him by the Collector of Customs under s. 167(8)
of the Act. The question is whether the prosecution and
punishment of the petitioner infringed his fundamental right
under Art. 20(2) of the Constitution. It reads:
" No person shall be prosecuted and punished for the same
offence more than once."
The words of this Article are clear and unambiguous and
their plain meaning is that there cannot be a second
prosecution where the accused has been prosecuted and
punished for the same offence previously. The clause uses
the three words of well-known connotation: (1) Prosecution;
(2) punishment; and (3) offence. The word offence’ is
defined in s. 3(38) of the General Clauses Act, 1897, to
mean any act or omission made punishable by any law for the
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time being in force. Under s. 4 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, it means any act or omission made punishable by
any law for the time being in force. An offence is
therefore an act committed against law or omitted where the
law requires it.
Punishment is the penalty for the transgression of law. The
terms ’punishment’ and ’penalty’ are frequently used as
synonyms of each other; and, indeed under cl. (I)of Art. 20
of the Constitution the word penalty issued in the sense of
punishment. The punishments to which offenders are
liable under the provisions of the -Indian Penal Code
are: (1) death; (2) imprisonment for life; (3) imprisonment,
which is of two descriptions, viz., (1) rigorous, i.e., with
hard labour; and (ii) simple; (4) for feature of property ;
and (6) fine.
The word ’prosecuted’ is comprehensive enough to take in a
prosecution before an authority other than a magisterial or
a criminal Court. Having regard to the historical
background, a restricted meaning has been placed upon it by
this Court in Maqbool Hussain v. The State of Bombay (1).
Bhagwati, J., in delivering the Judgment of the Court
observed at page 742 thus:
(I) [1953] S.C.R. 730.
300
Even though the customs officers are invested with the power
of adjudging confiscation, increased rates of duty or
penalty, the highest penalty which can be inflicted is Rs.
1,000. Confiscation is no doubt one of the penalties which
the Customs Authorities can impose, but that is more in the
nature of proceedings in rem than proceedings in personam,
the object being to confiscate the offending goods which
have been dealt with contrary to the provisions of the law
and in respect of the confiscation also an option is given
to the owner of the goods to pay in lieu of confiscation
such fine as the officer thinks fit. All this is for the
enforcement of the levy of and safeguarding the recovery of
the sea customs duties. There is no procedure prescribed to
be followed by the Customs Officer in the matter of such
adjudication and the proceedings before the Customs Officers
are not assimilated in any manner to the provisions of the
Civil or the Criminal Procedure Code. The Customs Officers
are not required to act judicially on legal evidence
tendered on oath and they are not authorised to administer
oath to any witness. The appeals, if any, lie before the
Chief Customs Authority which is the Central Board of
Revenue and the power of revision is given to the Central
Government which certainly is not a judicial authority. In
the matter of the enforcement of the payment of penalty or
increased rate of duty also the Customs Officer can only
proceed against other goods of the party in the possession
of the Customs Authorities. But if such penalty or
increased rate of duty cannot be realised therefrom the only
thing which he can do is to notify the matter to the
appropriate Magistrate who is the only person empowered to
enforce payment as if such penalty or increased rate of duty
had been a fine inflicted by himself. The process of
recovery can be issued only by the Magistrate and not by the
Customs Authority. All these provisions go to show that far
from being authorities bound by any rules of evidence or
procedure established by law and invested with power to
enforce their own judgments or orders the Sea Customs
Authorities are merely constituted administrative machinery
for the purpose of
301
adjudging confiscation, increased rates of duty and Penalty
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prescribed in the Act."
This Court therefore accepted the view that the earlier
prosecution should have been before a Court of law or a
judicial Tribunal, and that the Sea Customs Authorities when
they entertained proceedings for the confiscation of gold
did not act as a judicial Tribunal. In my view the said
decision unduly restricted the scope of the comprehensive
terms in which the fundamental right is couched. If res
integral I would be inclined to hold that the prosecution
before the Customs Authority for an offence created by the
Act is prosecution within the meaning of Article 20, even
though the Customs Authority is not a judicial Tribunal.
But I am bound by the decision of this Court in so far as it
held that the earlier prosecution should have been held
before a Court of law or a judicial Tribunal, and that the
Customs Authority adjudging confiscation was not such a
tribunal. But the said observations must be confined to the
adjudication of confiscation by the Customs Authority.
The outstanding question therefore is whether a Collector of
Customs in adjudging on the question whether any person
concerned in the importation or exportation of the
prohibited goods committed an offence, and in imposing a
penalty on him, acts as a judicial Tribunal. There is a
current of judicial opinion in support of the contention
that under a particular Act an authority may act as a
judicial Tribunal in discharge of certain duties and as an
executive or administrative authority in discharge of other
duties. The question whether a particular authority in dis-
charging specified duties is a judicial tribunal or not
falls to be decided on the facts of each case, having regard
to the well-settled characteristics of a judicial
tribunal.
In ’Words and Phrases’, permanent edition, Vol. 23,
Judicial Tribunal " has been defined thus: " It is a body
who has the power and whose duty it is to ascertain and
determine the rights and enforce the relative duties of
contending parties." In I The Encyclopedia of Words and
Phrases-Legal Maxims’,
302
by Sanagan and Drynan, much to the same effect it is stated
thus:
" A ’judicial tribunal’ is one that dispenses justice, is
concerned with legal rights and liabilities, which means
rights and liabilities conferred or imposed by I law’.
These legal rights and liabilities are treated by a judicial
tribunal as preexisting; such a tribunal professes merely to
ascertain and give effect to them; it investigates the facts
by hearing the ’evidence’ (as tested by long-settled rules),
and it investigates the law by consulting precedents. A
judicial tribunal looks for some law to guide it. An
administrative tribunal, within its province, is a law unto
itself."
In Cooper v. Wilson (1) the characteristics of a judicial
decision are given as follows, at page 340:
" A true judicial decision presupposes an existing dispute
between two or more parties, and then involves four
requisites:- (1) The presentation (not necessarily orally)
of their case by the parties to the dispute; (2) If the
dispute between them is a question of fact, the
ascertainment of the fact by means of evidence adduced by
the parties to the dispute and often with the assistance of
argument by or on behalf of the parties on the evidence ;
(3) If the dispute be. tween them is a question of law, the
submission of legal argument by the parties; and (4) A
decision which disposes of the whole matter by a finding
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upon the facts in dispute and application of the law of the
land to the facts so found, including where required a
ruling upon any disputed question of law."
This passage has been approved by this Court in Maqbool
Hussain’s Case (2).
In Venkataraman v. The Union of India (3) this Court
considered the question whether Art. 20 protects an Officer
against whom an enquiry was held under Public Servants
Enquiries Act, 1850 (Act XXXVII of 1850) from being
prosecuted again on the same facts before a Criminal (Court.
This Court held on a consideration of the provisions of that
Act that the appellant was neither prosecuted nor punished
(1) (1937) 2 K.B. 309, 340, 341- (2) [1953] S-C.R. 730.
(3) [1954] S.C.R. 1150.
303
for the same offence before a judicial tribunal. But in
coming to that conclusion the following criteria were
applied to ascertain the character of the proceedings: (1)
duty to investigate an offence and impose a punishment; (ii)
prosecution must be in reference to the law which creates
the offence and punishment must also be in accordance with
what the law proscribes; (iii) there must be the trappings
of a judicial tribunal and (iv) the decision must have both
finality and authoritativeness, which are the essential
tests of a judicial pronouncement. Having regard to the
aforesaid tests, I shall now proceed to consider the
applicability of Article 20 to the present prosecution.
A fundamental right is transcendental in nature and it
controls both the legislative and the executive acts.
Article 13 explicitly prohibits the State from making any
law which takes away or abridges any fundamental right and
declares the law to the extent of the contravention as void.
The law therefore must be carefully scrutinized to ascertain
whether a fundamental right is infringed. It is not the
form but the substance that matters. If the legislature in
effect constitutes a judicial tribunal, but calls it ail
authority, the tribunal does not become any the less a
judicial tribunal. Therefore the correct approach is first
to ascertain with exactitude the content and scope of the
fundamental right and then to scrutinize the provisions of
the Act to decide whether in effect and substance, though
not in form, the said right is violated or curtailed.
Otherwise the fundamental right will be lost or unduly
restricted in our adherence to the form to the exclusion of
the content.
The question therefore is whether the petitioner was in
effect and in substance prosecuted and punished by a
judicial tribunal for the same offence for which he is now
prosecuted. Section 167 of the Act opens with the following
words:
" The offences mentioned in the first column of the
following schedule shall be punishable to the extent
mentioned in the third column of the same with reference to
such offences respectively."
Chapter XVI of the Act deals with ’Offences and
304
Penalties’. Section 167 provides for offences and penalties
in a tabular form. The first column gives the particulars
of the offences; the second column gives the sections of the
Act to which the offence has reference ; and the third
column gives the penalties in respect of the relevant
offences. Apart from the fact that the statute itself, in
clear terms, describes the acts detailed in the first column
of s. 167 as offences against particular laws, the acts
described therein clearly fall within the definition of
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’offences’ in the General Clauses Act and the Indian Penal
Code. There cannot therefore be the slightest doubt in this
case that the contravention of any of the provisions of the
Act mentioned in s. 167 is an offence.
The next question is whether the penalties prescribed for
the various offences in the third column of s. 167 are
punishments within the meaning of Art. 20 of the
Constitution. A glance at the third column shows that the
penalties mentioned therein include direction of payment of
money, confiscation of goods and the receptacles wherein
they are found, and imprisonment. The penalties may be
imposed by the Customs Officers or Magistrates as the case
may be. Where a person is convicted by a Magistrate and
sentenced to imprisonment or payment of fine or where a
penalty is imposed by a Customs Officer, in either case, the
punishment is described as penalty in the third column of s.
167. Section 167 clearly indicates that penalty is
punishment inflicted by law for its violation-for doing or
failing to do something that is the duty of the party to do.
Section 167 therefore defines a criminal act and fixes a
penaltv or punishment for that act. The two words penalty’
and ’punishment’ are interchangeable and they convey the
same idea.
The more difficult question is whether a Customs Authority,
when it functions under s. 167 of the Act, is a judicial
tribunal. It is not, and cannot be, disputed that a
magistrate, who convicts and punishes a person for the
infringement of some of the provisions of s. 167 of the Act,
is a judicial tribunal. Is it reasonable to assume that
when another authority adjudges on similar offences under
the same section, it is
305
functioning in a different capacity ? Section 182 defines
the jurisdiction of the Customs Authority in respect of the
offences mentioned in s. 167 of the Act. It says:
" In every case, except the cases mentioned in Section 167,
Nos. 26, 72 and 74 to 76, both inclusive, in which under
this Act, anything is liable to confiscation or to increased
rates of duty or any person is liable to a penalty,
such confiscation, increased rate of duty or penalty may be
adjudged-
(a) without limit, by a Deputy Commissioner or Deputy
Collector of Customs, or a Customs-collector;
(b) up to confiscation of goods not exceeding two hundred
and fifty rupees in value, and imposition of penalty or
increased duty, not exceeding one hundred rupees, by an
Assistant Commissioner or Assistant Collector of Customs ;
(c) up to confiscation of goods not exceeding fifty rupees
in value, and imposition of penalty or increased duty not
exceeding ten rupees, by such other subordinate officers of
Customs as the Chief Customs authority may, from time to
time, empower in that behalf in virtue of their office : ".
Section 187 : " All offences against this Act, other than
those cognizable under section 182 by officers of Customs,
may be tried summarily by a Magistrate." It is therefore
clear that some offences under s. 167 are cognizable by the
Customs Authorities and some offences by Magistrates.
Section 171A, inserted by the Sea Customs (Amendment) Act,
1955 (Act 21 of 1955), confers power on officers of Customs
to summon any person to give evidence and produce documents;
it reads:
" 171A. (1) Any officer of Customs duly employed in the
prevention of smuggling shall have power to summon any
person whose attendance he considers necessary either to
give evidence or to produce a document or any other thing in
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any inquiry which such officer is making in connection with
the smuggling of any goods.
39
306
(2) A summons to produce documents or other things may be
for the production of certain specified documents or things
or for the production of all documents or things of a
certain description in the possession or under the control
of the person summoned.
(3) All persons so summoned shall be bound to attend either
in person or by an authorised agent, as such officer may
direct;. and all persons so summoned shall be bound to state
the truth upon any subject respecting which they are
examined or make statements and to produce such documents
and other things as may be required:
Provided that the exemption under section 132 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, shall be applicable to any
requisition for attendance under this section.
(4) Every such inquiry as aforesaid shall be deemed to be a
judicial proceeding within the meaning of section 193 and
section 228 of the Indian Penal Code." Under this section,
the Customs Authority, who makes an inquiry, is empowered in
connection with that inquiry, to summon persons to give
evidence and produce documents and the witnesses summoned
are under a statutory duty to speak the truth. The cir-
cumstance that under el. (4) of the said section, an inquiry
is deemed to be a judicial proceeding within the meaning of
s. 193 and s. 228 of the Indian Penal Code, viz., for the
purpose of punishment for giving false evidence and for
contempt of Court, does not detract from the judicial
characteristics conferred upon the authority by the other
clauses of the section. Clause (4) must have been enacted
only by way of abundant caution to guard against the
contention that the authority is not a Court ; and to bring
in the inquiry made by the Customs Officer in regard to
administrative matters other than those conferred upon him
under s. 167, within the fold of s. 193 and s. 228 of the
Indian Penal Code. Sections 188, 189, 190A and 191 provide
a hierarchy of tribunals for deciding appeals and revisions.
The Chief Customs authority May, suo motu or otherwise
exercise revisional powers in regard to the orders of the
subordinate officers. Power is also conferred on Government
to
307
inter in matters in regard whereof no appeal is provided
for. It is true that no rules have been framed providing
the manner in which the Customs collector should proceed
with the inquiry in regard to offences committed under the
Act of which he is authorized to take cognizance. But the
record discloses that a procedure analogous to that
obtaining in criminal Courts is followed in regard to the
said offences. Charges are framed, evidence is taken,
advocates are heard, decision is given on the question
whether an offence is committed or not; and, if the offence
is held to have been committed, the person concerned is con-
victed and a penalty is imposed. When the statute empowers
the officer to take cognizance of an offence, to adjudge
upon the question whether the offence is committed or not
and to impose a penalty for the offence, it is implied in
the statute that the judicial procedure is to be followed.
The entire scheme of the Act as disclosed in the Sea Customs
Act leaves no doubt in my mind that so far as offences
mentioned in s. 167 are concerned, the Customs Authority has
to function as a Judicial Tribunal. I have therefore no
hesitation to hold that the Customs Officers in so far as
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they are adjudicating upon the offences mentioned under s.
167 of the Act are functioning as judicial tribunals. If
the other view, viz., that an authority is not a judicial
tribunal, be accepted, it will lead to an anomalous
position, which could not have been contemplated by the
legislature. To illustrate, a Customs Collector may impose
a penalty of Rs. 25,00,000 as in this case on his finding
that a person has committed an offence under s. 167 (8) of
the Act, and the accused can be prosecuted again for the
same offence before a Magistrate. On the other hand, if the
prosecution is first laid before a Magistrate for an offence
under s. 167(81) and he is convicted and sentenced to a fine
of a few rupees, he cannot be prosecuted and punished again
before a Magistrate. Unless the provisions of the
Constitution are clear, a construction which will lead to
such an anomalous position should not be accepted, for, by
accepting such a construction, the right itself is defeated.
308
It is then contended that the offence for which the
petitioner was prosecuted by the Magistrate is different
from that in regard whereof he was sentenced by the Customs
Officer. The petitioner was convicted under s. 167(8) of
the Act, whereas he was subsequently prosecuted and punished
under s. 167(81) of the Act. Section 167(81) of the Act
reads as follows :
"If any person knowingly, and with intent to defraud the
Government of any duty payable thereon, or to evade any
prohibition or restriction for the time being in force under
or by virtue of this Act with respect thereto acquires
possession of, or is in any way concerned in carrying,
removing, depositing, harboring, keeping or concealing or in
any manner dealing with any goods which have been unlawfully
removed from a warehouse or which are chargeable with a duty
which has not been paid or -with respect to the importation
or exportation of which any prohibition or restriction is
for the time being in force as aforesaid ; or
if any person is in relation to any goods in any way
knowingly concerned in any fraudulent evasion or attempt at
evasion of any duty chargeable thereon or of any such
prohibition or restriction as aforesaid or of any provision
of this Act applicable to those goods,
such person shall on conviction before a Magistrate be
liable to imprisonment for any term not exceeding two years,
or to fine, or to both."
It is contended that under s. 167(81) knowledge or intention
to defraud is an ingredient of the offence, whereas under s.
167(8) they are not part of the offence, that offences under
ss. 167(8) and 167(81) are different, and that therefore the
prosecution and punishment for an offence under the former
sub-section would not be a bar for prosecution and
punishment under the latter sub-section. It is not
necessary to consider the decisions cited in support of the
contention that for the application of the principle of
double’ jeopardy the offence for which a person is
prosecuted and punished in a second proceeding should be the
same in respect of which he has been prosecuted and
309
punished at an earlier stage. That fact is self-evident
from Art. 20(2) of the Constitution itself. If so, the only
question is whether the petitioner was prosecuted before the
Magistrate for the same offence in regard to which he was
prosecuted before the Collector of customs. It is true that
the phraseology in s. 167(8) is more comprehensive than that
in sub-s. (81) in that the offences under the former sub-
section take in acts committed without knowledge or intent
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to defraud. But it does not exclude from its scope acts
committed with knowledge or with intent to defraud. For, a
person who imports or exports prohibited goods with intent
to defraud is also concerned in the offence of such
importation or exportation. The question of identity of
offence is one to be determined on the facts and
circumstances of a particular case. One of the tests is
whether an offence for which a person was earlier prosecuted
takes in all the ingredients of the offence, the subject
matter of the second prosecution. The fact that he might
have been prosecuted for a lesser offence is not a material
circumstance. The question therefore is not whether under
s. 167(8) a person can be found guilty of an offence even if
there is no fraudulent intent or knowledge, but the question
is whether the petitioner was prosecuted and punished on the
same facts in regard to which he was subsequently prosecuted
and punished before the Magistrate. The record discloses
that the petitioner was prosecuted before the Customs
Authority as well as the Magistrate on the same facts, viz.,
that he, along with others, attempted to take out of India,
Indian currency (as detailed in paragraphs 14 and 17 of the
complaint of the Assistant Collector of Customs and Central
Excise, Amritsar), in contravention of the law prohibiting
such export. It is not the case that the knowledge on the
part of the petitioner of his illegal act is excluded from
the first prosecution and included in the subsequent one.
In the circumstances, I cannot hold that the offence for
which he was prosecuted by the Magistrate is different from
that in regard to which he was prosecuted and punished by
the Customs Authority. In this view, the prosecution and
punishment by the Magistrate
310
directly infringes the fundamental right under Art. 20 (2)
of the Constitution.
No attempt has been made by the learned Solicitor General to
contend that the offence under ss. 23 and 23B of the Foreign
Exchange Regulations Act for which the petitioner is
convicted is an offence different from that for which he was
prosecuted earlier under s. 167(8) of the Act.
It is conceded that the decision in the writ petition covers
the decision in the connected appeal also. In the result,
the writ petition and the appeal are allowed.
ORDER
In view of the opinion of the majority, the Petition and the
Appeal are dismissed.