Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P. RATNAKAR RAO & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/05/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (6) 624 1996 SCALE (5)386
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Delay condoned.
This special leave petition arises from the judgment
and order of the Andhra Pradesh High Court dated December
29, 1995 made in Writ Petition No.23323 of 1995. The
petitioners are the owners of goods motor vehicles and were
plying the same on the basis of pucca national/State permits
issued by the appropriate transport authorities. When they
challenged the validity of GOMS No.54 dated March 31, 1995
issued by the Department of Transport [Roads and Buildings]
enhancing the compounding fee from Rs.10 per k.g. to
Rs.100/- per k.g. as being violative of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1988 [for short, the "Act"] and arbitrary being
violating Article 14 of the Constitution, the Division Bench
in the impugned judgment upheld the said GOMS.
Section 194 of the Act enacts penal sanctions for
driving a vehicle in violation of Sections 113 to 115 of the
Act with a minimum fine of Rs.2,000/- and additional amount
of Rs. 1,000/- per tonne of excess load together with
liability to pay charges for off loading of the excess load.
Sub-section [2] thereof imposes penalty on the driver who
refuses to stop and submit the vehicle to weighing after
being directed to do so by the authorized officer in that
behalf under Section 114 or refuses to remove or causes to
remove the load or part of it, prior to weightment in the
form of fine to the extent of Rs.3,000/-. Section 200 of the
Act empowers the authorized officer to compound the offences
punishable under the provisions enumerated in sub-section
[1] thereof. Section 194 is one of the provisions for the
offence of which the officer is empowered either before or
after the institution of the proceedings for prosecution, to
compound such an offence for such amount as the State
Government may by notification in the official Gazette
specify in this behalf. Under sub-section [2] thereof, after
compounding the offence the accused in custody shall be
discharged and the proceedings shall be dropped in respect
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of such an offence.
The contention raised before the High Court and
repeated before us by Shri Rajeev Dhavan, learned senior
counsel for the petitioners is that the discretion given in
Section 200 [1] of the Act is unguided, uncanalised and
arbitrary. Until an accused is convicted under Section 194,
the right to levy penalty thereunder would not arise. When
discretion is given to the court for compounding of the
offence for the amount mentioned under Section 200, it
cannot be stratified by specified amount. It would,
therefore, be clear that the exercise of power to prescribe
maximum rates for compounding the offence is illegal,
arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
We find no force in the contention. For violation of
Sections 113 to 115, Section 194 accords penal sanction and
on conviction for violation thereof, the Section sanctions
punishment with fine as has been enumerated hereinbefore.
Section would give guidance to the State Government as a
delegate under the statute to specify the amount for
compounding the offences enumerated under sub-section [1] of
Section 200. It is not mandatory that the authorized officer
would always compound the offence. It is conditional upon
the willingness of the accused to have the offences
compounded. It may also be done before the institution of
the prosecution case. In the event of the petitioner’s
willing to have the offence compounded, the authorized
officer gets jurisdiction and authority to compound the
offence and call upon the accused to pay the same. On
compliance thereof, the proceedings, if already instituted,
would be closed or no further proceedings shall be
initiated. It is a matter of volition or willingness on the
part of the accused either to accept compounding of the
offence or to face the prosecution in the appropriate court.
As regards canalization and prescription of the amount of
fine for the offences committed Section 194, the penal and
charging section prescribes the maximum outer limit within
which the compounding fee would be prescribed. The
discretion exercised by the delegated legislation, i.e., the
executive is controlled by the specification in the Act. It
is not necessary that Section 200 itself should contain the
details in that behalf. So long as the compounding fee does
not exceed the fine prescribed by penal section, the same
cannot be declared to be either exorbitant or irrational or
bereft of guidance.
It would, therefore, be clear that the Government as a
delegate, did not exceed its power under Section 200 of the
Act in prescribing the compounding fee for the offence
punishable under Section 194 of the Act.
The special leave petition is accordingly dismissed.