Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 981 of 2001
PETITIONER:
SATYA NARAYAN SHARMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/09/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
I am in respectful agreement with the judgment drafted
by brother Variava J. When Parliament imposed an undiluted
ban against granting stay of any proceedings involving an
offence under Prevention of Corruption Act 1988 (for short
the Act) on any ground whatsoever, no court shall
circumvent the said ban through any means. The reasons
which prompted the Parliament to divest all the courts in
India of the power to stay the proceedings in the trial
courts involving any such offence, is to foreclose even the
possible chance of delaying such trials on account of any
party to such proceedings raising any question before the
High Court during the pendency of trial proceedings.
In the Objects and Reasons for bringing the Act with
new measures the law-makers declared it in abundantly clear
terms that a provision prohibiting the grant of stay is
included in the statute for speeding up the proceedings.
This can be discerned from the following words:
In order to expedite the proceedings,
provisions for day-to-day trial of cases and
prohibitory provisions with regard to grant
of stay and exercise of powers of revision
on interlocutory orders have also been
included.
The prohibition is couched in a language admitting of
no exception whatsoever, which is clear from the provision
itself. The prohibition is incorporated in sub-section (3)
of Section 19 of the Act. The sub-section consists of
three clauses. For all the three clauses the controlling
non-obstante words are set out in the commencing portion
as:
Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Code of Criminal procedure 1973.
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Hence none of the provisions in the Code could be invoked
for circumventing any one of the bans enumerated in the
sub-section.
Clause (a) of the sub-section prohibits reversal or
alteration of any finding or sentence or order passed by a
Special Judge on the ground of absence of, or any error,
omission or irregularity in the sanction required for
taking cognizance of an offence punishable in the Act,
unless in the opinion of the appellate or revisional court
a failure of justice has in fact occasioned thereby.
Clause (b) contains the prohibition against stay of
proceedings under this Act, but it is restricted to
sanction aspect alone. No error, omission or irregularity
in the sanction shall be a ground for staying the
proceedings under this Act unless it is satisfied that
such error, omission or irregularity has resulted in a
failure of justice. In determining whether there was any
such failure of justice it is mandated that the court shall
have regard to the fact whether the objection regarding
that aspect could or should have been raised at any earlier
stage in the proceedings. We may now point out that merely
because objection regarding sanction was raised at the
early stage is not a ground for holding that there was
failure of justice. If the special judge has overruled the
objection raised regarding that aspect it is normally
inconceivable that there could be any failure of justice
even if such objections were to be upheld by the High
Court. Overruling an objection on the ground of sanction
does not end the case detrimentally to the accused. It
only equips a judicial forum to examine the allegations
against a public servant judicially. Hence it is an uphill
task to show that discountenance of any objection regarding
sanction has resulted in a failure of justice. The
corollary of it is this: The High Court would not normally
grant stay on that ground either.
It is in clause (c) of the sub-section that the
prohibition is couched in unexceptional terms. It reads
thus:
No court shall stay the proceedings under
this Act on any other ground.
The mere fact that yet another prohibition was also
tagged with the above does not mean that the legislative
ban contained in clause (c) is restricted only to a
situation when the High Court exercises powers of revision.
It would be a misinterpretation of the enactment if a court
reads into clause ( c ) of Section 19(3) a power to grant
stay in exercise of inherent powers of the High Court.
We are informed that several High Courts, overlooking
the said ban, are granting stay of proceedings involving
offences under the Act pending before courts of Special
Judges. This might be on account of a possible chance of
missing the legislative ban contained in clause ( c ) of
sub-section (3) of Section 19 of the Act because the title
to Section 19 is previous sanction necessary for
prosecution. It could have been more advisable if the
prohibition contained in sub-section (3) has been included
in a separate Section by providing a separate distinct
title. Be that as it may, that is no ground for by-passing
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the legislative prohibition contained in the sub-section.
I fully concur with the direction indicated by Variava
J. in the judgment that the Registrar of each High Court
shall list the cases in which such stay was granted by
orders happened to be passed by such High Court and to
board all such cases before the appropriate bench without
further delay. This is to enable the High Court concerned
to dispose of such matters in the light of this judgment.
J
[ K.T. Thomas ]
September 25, 2001.