Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL .
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RASHMOY DAS AND ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/12/1999
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, M.B.Shah
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
The High Court seems to have pre-empted launching of
prosecution proceedings against the respondent as the High
Court pre-maturely stepped in with an order of quashment.
State of West Bengal has therefore challenged the said order
of the High Court in this appeal by special leave.
The facts which appellant has set up against the.
respondents which led to the aforesaid order are the
following:
A search was conducted by the officers of the Excise
Department of the West Bengal State, at the office-cum-
godown of an institute called M/a Homeo Implex India Private
Limited on 22.3.1996. A huge quantity uf spirit (9,683
litres) was seized therefrom. As the storing of such
spirit, according to the officers, was without support of
any valid authority, they took samples from the contraband
and forwarded them to the Chemical Examiner for the purpose
of testing them in the laboratory. On the same day the
officers arrested two persons. They were produced before
the Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate, Alipore who later
released them on bail. The three respondents in thia appeal
moved the sessions court for anticipatory bail and the
sessions judge granted an order in their favour on
16.4.1996. .1 On 19.10.1935, the Chemical Examiner
forwarded the report of analysis of the samples. The
officers of the Excise Department took the view that
respondents, besides those who were arrested at the first
instance were also
responsible for the storage of the contraband and all
of them are liable to be prosecuted for v.ario’.i.s offences
under the Bengal Excise Act 1909 (for short the ’Act’).
As they proposed to launch prosecution against those
persons they realised that there were two hurdles to be.
circumvented. First is. Section 92 of the Act contains a
rider that institution of the prosecution was to be made
after the expiry of six months from the date of commission
of offence, only with the sanction of the State Government.
The second wag that under Section 167(5) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure (West Bengal Amendment) an order of the
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Magistrate’ was necessary for continuing the investigation
beyond six months from the date of arrest of the accused.
As per the said sub- section if investigation in a case
triable by a magistrate as summons case could not be
concluded within six months from the date on which the
accused was arrested or made his appearance, the magistrate
shall make an order stopping . further investigation, into
the offence and shall discharge the accused unless the
officer making the investigation satisfies the magistrate
that for special reasons and in the interest of justice
continuation of the investigation beyond the said period is
necessary. This is a special provision applicable only in
the State .of West Bengal.
By the time the Excise Officers received the report
from the Chemical Examiner the period of six months got
expired. Hence they adopted a twin measure - one, seeking
the order of the magistrate for continuing the investigation
and the other, seeking the State Government’s order
sanctioning prosecution.
Though the magistrate initially granted further time
to complete investigation that period too expired and the
officers again approached the magistrate for further
extension which was granted. In the meanwhile, the
respondents moved the magistrate to discharge them from the
said case on the ground that the State failed to launch the
prosecution within the period of six months from the date of
the alleged commission of offence. But the magistrate
dismissed the petition against which the respondents moved
the High Court in revision. Learned Single Judge of the
High Court disposed of the said revision as per the impugned
order and all the proceedings against the respondents were
quashed.
On behalf of the respondents it was submitted before
the High Court, inter aiia, that as per the provisions of
the Act the Magistrate had no authority to extend the time
of filing the Police Report and that steps should have been
initiated for securing sanction within the period of six
months from the date of occurrence. It appears that the
learned Single Judge has upheld the said argument which
could be discerned from the following observations:
"In the background of the above submissions it appears
that failure of the prosecution to apply for sanction before
the expiry of the period of six months when it was unable to
file the prosecution report within six months and its
failure to produce the sanction order as yet and its further
- failure to file the prosecution report by now have
entitled the accused persons to be discharged and the
proceedings quashed."
Learned Judge further observed that "where the
prosecution intends to file the prosecution report beyond
the prescribed period of six months for initiation of
proceedings with a view to take cognisance by the Magistrate
it must come with the sanction order together with the
prosecution report. In the instant case neither the
prosecution report has been filed before the Magistrate &s
yet nor the sanction order has been produced."
The final operative portion in the impugned judgment
is "in the light of the above discussions the petition 1.3
allowed and the proceedings quashed.
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Shri Tapas Chandra Ray, learned senior counsel who
argued for the appellant State has submitted that when the
High Court found that the prosecution report has not been
filed there was no scope for ordering quashment of the
proceedings. There is merit in the said contention that the
High Court cannot quash something which was non-existent.
There is no necessity for quashing prosecution in
anticipation or initiation of such prosecution proceedings.
Further learned Single Judge has not correctly interpreted
Section 92(1) of the Act. The sub-section is extracted
below:
"92. Limitation of suits and prosecutions.- (1) No
Civil Court shall try any suit against the Government in
respect of anything done or alleged to have been done, in
pursuance of this Act, and except with the previous sanction
of the State Government, no Magistrate shall take cognizance
of any charge made against any Excise Officer under this Act
or any other law relating to the excise revenue, or made
against any other person under this Act, unless the suit or
prosecution is instituted within six months after the date
of the .act complained of."
We need not bother ourselves iri this case about the
constraint imposed by the section on the civil courts which
alone is covered by first paragraph of the said provision.
The power of criminal courts in taking cognizance of an,
offence under the Act has been circumscribed by the second
paragraph of the section. Nevertheless a reading of it
makes the position clear that. there is no ban on the
magistrate against taking cognizance of the offence under
the Act if one of the two conditions is satisfied. If the
prosecution has been. instituted within six months of the
act alleged there is no question of producing any sanction
as the magistrate would then be free to take cognizance
under the Act. But if the aforesaid six months period is
over the court can still take cognizance of the offence
under the Act when the prosecution is instituted with the
previous sanction of the State Government. In other words
the only requirement for initiating prosecution proceedings
against an offender after the expiry of the period of six
months from the date of the act alleged is that such
institution should be accompanied by the sanction granted by
the State Government for such institution.
It has to be noted that after the initial period of
six months is lapsed no further period of limitation is
prescribed in the Act for instituting the prosecution
supported by the
sanction. Of course such institution may be subject
to the other general provisions contained in the Coda of
Criminal Procedure. The reasoning adopted by the learned
Single Judge that steps for obtaining sanction .should have
been adopted before the expiry of the first six months
period has no support in Section 92 or any other provision
of the Act. However even the necessity for obtaining
sanction would arise only if the prosecution has not been
instituted till the expiry of the said period of six months.
Hence fchere is no scope for suggesting that the officer
should have commenced proceedings for securing sanction
before the expiry of the said period of six months. If
papers are complete for launching the prosecution before the
expiry of the said period they can straight away approach
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the magistrate for initiating such prosecution. Ho question
of sanction would then arise. So the need for obtaining
sanction would arise only after the expiry of the said
period of six months.
Attention of the learned Single Judge should have been
drawn to an earlier decision rendered by a Division Bench of
the Calcutta High Court in Superintendent and Remembrancer
of Legal Affairs, West Bengal vs. Mahendra Singh (1972
Criminal Law Journal 544). In the said case the situation
was that the magistrate pasted an order discharging the
accused in a
prosecution for certain offences under the Act on the
premise that no magistrate could take cognisance of the
affence as the initial period of six months had already
expired. The Division Bench of the High Court interfered
with that order and observed thus:
"The bar therefore to the institution of the
proceedings without a previous sanction as enjoined under
Section 92 of Bengal Act V of 1909 relates only to a
prosecution instituted after six months but if and when the
same is instituted within six months, no such sanction would
be necessary. The emphasis therefore put by the legislature
is on a sanction on the expiry of six months and the said
provisions do not constitute ’ any bar simpliciter as Mr.
Das contended. Therefore, the ratio of the learned
Magistrate’s order in this context are not correct. The
State Government can conform to the requirements of the
statute on expiry of six months by getting a sanction before
the court takes cognizance. It is, therefore, premature at
this stage to hold that there has been a statutory
limitation and that Section 92 of the Bengal Act V of 1909
lends assurance to the same."
We have no doubt that the learned Single Judge had
missed the correct legal position laid down by the Division
Bench in the aforesaid decision. For all those reasons we
allow this appeal and sot aside the impugned judgment.
Learned counsel for the respondents pleaded that the
respondents may be allowed to raise all other contentions
regarding the maintainability of the prosecution. It is
needless to observe that it is open to the rspondents
to raise whatever contention they think proper for resisting
the prosecution pitted against them.