Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
GOBIND SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHANTI SARUP
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/09/1978
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1979 AIR 143 1979 SCR (1) 806
1979 SCC (2) 267
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC1622 (17)
ACT:
Nuisance-Public nuisance removal of-Preventive
Jurisdiction of the Magistrate under Section 133 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, explained-Magistrate must act
purely in the interests of the public.
HEADNOTE:
On a complaint by the respondent a partner of the
Punjab Oil Mills, that the appellant who had been carrying
on the occupation of a baker in the premises let out to him
by the Mills had constructed an oven and a chimney, which
constituted a nuisance under Section 133 of the Criminal
Procedure Code, the trial magistrate after hearing the
parties and on local inspection confirmed his earlier
conditional order directing the appellant to demolish the
oven and the chimney within a period of ten days. While
confirming the conditional order the magistrate however
directed the appellant to cease carrying on the trade of a
baker at the particular site and not to lit the oven again.
The Additional Sessions Judge recommended reversal of the
said order and made a reference to the High Court. The High
Court, upheld the trial court’s order.
Dismissing the appeal by special leave, the Court
^
HELD : 1. In a matter of this nature where what is
involved is not merely the right of a private individual but
the health, safety and convenience of the public at large,
the safer course would be to accept the view of the learned
magistrate, who saw for himself the hazard resulting from
the working of the bakery. [809B-C]
The magistrate however went beyond the scope of the
conditional order passed by him. Preventing the appellant
from using the oven is certainly within the terms of the
conditional order but not so the order requiring him to
desist from carrying on the trade of a baker at the site.
[809C-D]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
59 of 1973.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 15-1-73 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Crl.
Revision No. 176-R of 1971.
Turth Singh Munjiral and H. K. Puri for the appellant.
V. M. Tarkunde, R. L. Batra, S. K. Mehta, K. R.
Nagaraja and P. N. Puri for the Respondent.
807
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C. J.-The respondent who is partner of the
Punjab Oil Mills, Khanna, filed in the Court of the Sub-
Divisional Magistrate, Samrala, an application under section
133 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, complaining
that the appellant, who had been carrying on the occupation
of a baker in the premises let out to him by the Mills, had
constructed an oven and a chimney which constituted a
nuisance under Section 133 of the Code.
By an order dated December 16, 1969, the learned Sub-
Divisional Magistrate served a conditional order on the
appellant under section 133(1) of the Code calling upon him
to demolish the oven and the chimney within a period of 10
days from the date of the order and to show cause why the
order should not be confirmed. After hearing the parties and
considering the evidence led by them, the learned Magistrate
made the conditional order absolute on June 18, 1970. While
confirming the conditional order, the learned Magistrate
however directed the appellant to cease carrying on the
trade of a baker at the particular site and not to lit the
oven again.
The appellant filed a revision petition against the
order of the Sub Divisional Magistrate under sections 435
and 436 of the Code. By a judgment dated August 26, 1971,
the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Ludhiana, disagreed
with the order passed by the Sub-Divisional Magistrate and
made a reference to the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
recommending that since there was no evidence on record to
show that the oven was enlarged by the appellant in the year
1969 as alleged by the respondent and since there was
positive documentary evidence on the record to show the
particular oven was in existence for a period of 16 or 17
years, the order passed by the Sub-Divisional Magistrate
should be quashed.
The reference was heard by a learned single Judge of
the High Court, who by a judgment dated January 15, 1973
rejected the recommendation of the learned Additional
Sessions Judge and upheld the order of the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate. Being aggrieved by the judgment of the High
Court the appellant has filed this appeal by special leave
of this Court.
Section 133(1) of the Code of 1898 provides insofar as
is relevant that
Whenever a District Magistrate, a Sub-divisional
Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first class
considers, on receiving a police-report or other
information and on taking such evidence if any as he
thinks fit.
808
that any unlawful obstruction or nuisance should
be removed from any way, river or channel which is or
may be lawfully used by the public, or from any public
place, or
that the conduct of any trade or occupation, or
the keeping of any goods or merchandise, is injurious
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
to the health or physical comfort of the community, and
that in consequence such trade or occupation should be
prohibited or regulated or such goods or merchandise
should be removed or the keeping thereof regulated, or
that the construction of any building, or the
disposal of any substance, as likely to occasion
conflagration or explosion, should be prevented or
stopped, or
that any building, tent or structure, or any tree
is in such a condition that it is likely to fall and
thereby cause injury to persons living or carrying on
business in the neighbourhood or passing by, and that
in consequence the removal, repair, or support of such
building, tent or structure, or the removal or support
of such tree, is necessary,
Such Magistrate may make a conditional order
requiring the person causing such obstruction or
nuisance, or carrying on such trade or occupation, or
keeping any such goods;
to desist from carrying on, or to remove or
regulate in such manner as may be directed, such trade
or occupation; or
to prevent or stop the erection of, or to remove,
repair or support, such building, tent or structure.
It is clear from the judgment of the learned Sub-
Divisional Magistrate that the evidence disclosed that the
smoke emitted by the chimney constructed by the appellant
was "injurious to the health and physical comfort of the
people living or working in the proximity" of the
appellant’s bakery and that there was no justification on
the part of the appellant for discharging the smoke from the
chimney on the G. T. Road. The learned Magistrate had made a
local inspection on the basic of which he prepared a report
dated February 11, 1970. That report and the photo-print
Exh. ‘A’, show that the upper horizontal portion of the
chimney constructed by the appellant juts out into the G. T.
Road to the extent of about six feet. Considering the nature
of this construction and the volume of smoke emitted by it
the learned Magistrate concluded that the chimney was not
only an encroachment upon a public place but its
construction led to a graver consequence. Allowing the use
of the oven and the chimney was, according to the
809
Magistrate, "virtually playing with the health of the
people". A strong wind, according to the learned Magistrate,
could carry the flames over a distance and cause a
conflagration.
It is true that the learned Additional Sessions Judge
did not agree with the findings of the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate, but considering the evidence in the case, the
reasons given by the Magistrate in support of his order and
the fact that the High Court was unable to accept the
recommendation made by the Additional Sessions Judge, we are
of the opinion that in a matter of this nature where what is
involved is not merely the right of a private individual but
the health, safety and convenience of the public at large,
the safer course would be to accept the view of the learned
Magistrate, who saw for himself the hazard resulting from
the working of the bakery.
The learned Magistrate has however gone beyond the
scope of the conditional order which he had passed on
December 16, 1969, by which he required the appellant "to
demolish the said oven and the chimney" within a period of
10 days from the issue of the order. The final order passed
by the learned Magistrate is to the effect that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
appellant shall cease to carry on the trade of a baker at
the particular site and shall not lit the oven again.
Preventing the appellant from using the oven is certainly
within the terms of the conditional order but not so the
order requiring him to desist from carrying on the trade of
a baker at the site. While, therefore, upholding the order
of the learned Magistrate and the view of the High Court, we
consider it necessary to clarify that the proper order to
pass would be to require the appellant to demolish the oven
and the chimney constructed by him within a period of one
month from today. It is needless to add that the appellant
shall not in the meanwhile use the oven and the chimney for
any purpose whatsoever.
For these reasons we dismiss the appeal with the
modification suggested above in the order passed by the
learned Magistrate.
S. R. Appeal dismissed.
810