Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 842 of 2003
PETITIONER:
The State rep. by Inspector of Police,Pudukottai, Tamil Nadu
RESPONDENT:
A. Parthiban
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/10/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & R.V. RAVEENDRAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
The State of Tamil Nadu is in appeal questioning
correctness of the decision rendered by a learned Single Judge
of the Madras High Court holding that the trial Court was not
justified in convicting the respondent in terms of Sections 7
and 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1988 (in short ’the Act’).
A brief reference to the factual aspects would suffice:
The respondent was convicted for offence punishable
under Sections 7 and 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the
Act. He was sentenced to undergo RI for six months and to pay
a fine of Rs.500/- with default stipulation for the earlier
offence and RI for one year and to pay a fine of Rs.1,000/-
with default stipulation for the latter offence. The conviction
was recorded and sentenced imposed by learned Chief Judicial
Magistrate and Special Judge Pudukottai. The said judgment
in Special Case No.4 of 1991 was challenged before the
Madras High Court which by the judgment dated 28.3.2002 in
Criminal Appeal No.659 of 1994 held that the conviction
under Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Act was
not maintainable and was accordingly set aside. However, the
conviction for offence under Section 7 of the Act was
confirmed. The High Court held that for a single act it would
not be proper to convict the accused under both the sections.
Accordingly, the sentence and conviction in terms of Section
13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Act was set aside.
Provisions of Section 360 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 (in short ’Cr.P.C.’) were applied and the respondent was
directed to be released on probation.
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
approach of the High Court is clearly erroneous. Section 7 and
Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Act operate
separately and, therefore, it cannot be said that the Trial
Court was not justified to convict both under Sections 7 and
13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Act. Additionally,
provisions of Section 360 Cr.P.C. are not applicable to offences
under the Act. Learned counsel for the appellant further
submitted that this Court has clearly held that where a statute
prescribed a minimum sentence the Court cannot reduce the
sentence any further. Reference was made to a decision of this
Court in State of J & K v. Vinay Nand [2001(2) SCC 504]. The
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severity of the offence and the chain reaction of any offence
under the Act generated clearly make Section 360
inapplicable. By operation of Section 8 of the General Clauses
Act, 1897 (in short the ’General Clauses Act’), the bar
contained with reference to Section 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 (in short ’Old Act’) clearly applies with
respect to Section 13(2) of the Act also. It was, therefore,
submitted that the High Court’s order is clearly vulnerable.
Learned counsel for the respondent submitted that
though Section 7 and Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d)
of the Act operate in different fields, in a given case where
there is a single offence, the conviction cannot be both under
Section 7 and Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the
Act. It was further submitted that Section 18 of Probation of
Offenders Act, 1958 (in short ’Probation Act’) made the
provisions of that inapplicable to only Section 5(2) of the Act
and corresponding to Section 13(2) of the Act; and Section 18
of the Probation Act did not bar the application of the
provisions of that Act to Section 7 of the Act which is
analogous to Section 161 of Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short
’I.P.C.’) and, therefore, where the conviction is only under
Section 7 of the Act, Section 360 Cr.P.C. was clearly
applicable. Learned counsel for the respondent-accused
submitted that the High Court having invoked powers under a
beneficial provision i.e. Section 360 of the Code no interference
is called for while exercising jurisdiction under Article 136 of
the Constitution of India, 1950 (In short the ’Constitution’).
The stand that respondent could not have been
simultaneously convicted for offences relatable to Section 7
and Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Act, as held
by the High Court is clearly unacceptable. Section 71 IPC
provides the complete answer. The same reads as follows:
"71. Limit of punishment of offence made up of
several offences. - Where anything which is an
offence is made up of parts, any of which parts
is itself an offence, the offender shall not be
punished with the punishment of more than
one of such his offences, unless it be so
expressly provided.
Where anything is an offence falling
within two or more separate definitions of any
law in force for the time being by which
offences are defined or punished, or
where several acts, of which one or more
than one would by itself or themselves
constitute an offence, constitute, when
combined, a different offence,
the offender shall not be punished with a
more severe punishment than the court which
tries him could award for any one of such
offences."
The position is further crystalised in Section 220 of the
Cr.P.C. Same reads as follows:
"220. Trial for more than one offence.\027(1) If, in
one series of acts so connected together as to
form the same transaction, more offences than
one are committed by the same person, he
may be charged with, and tried at one trial for,
every such offence.
(2) When a person charged with one or more
offences of criminal breach of trust or
dishonest misappropriation of properly as
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provided in sub-section (2) of section 212 or in
sub-section (1) of section 219, is accused of
committing, for the purpose of facilitating or
concealing the commission of that offence or
those offences, one or more offences of
falsification of accounts, he may be charged
with, and tried at one trial for, every such
offence.
(3) If the acts alleged constitute an offence
falling within two or more separate definitions
of any law in force for the time being by which
offences are defined or punished, the person
accused of them may be charged with, and
tried at one trial for, each of such offences.
(4) If several acts, of which one or more than
one would by itself or themselves constitute an
offence, constitute when combined a different
offence, the person accused of them may be
charged with, and tried at one trial for the
offence constituted by such acts when
combined, and for any offence constituted by
any one, or more, or such acts.
(5) Nothing contained in this section shall
affect section 71 of the Indian Penal Code (45
of 1860)."
The crucial question is whether the alleged act is an
offence and if the answer is in the affirmative, whether it is
capable of being construed as offence under one or more
provisions. That is the essence of Section 71 IPC, in the back
drop of Section 220 Cr.P.C.
Every acceptance of illegal gratification whether preceded
by a demand or not, would be covered by Section 7 of the Act.
But if the acceptance of an illegal gratification is in pursuance
of a demand by the public servant, then it would also fall
under section 13(1)(d) of the Act. The act alleged against the
respondent, of demanding and receiving illegal gratification
constitutes an offence both under Section 7 and under Section
13(1)(d) of the Act. The offence being a single transaction, but
falling under two different Sections, the offender cannot be
liable for double penalty. But the High Court committed an
error in holding that a single act of receiving an illegal
gratification, where there was demand and acceptance, cannot
be an offence both under Section 7 and under Section 13(1)(d)
of the Act. As the offence is one which falls under two different
sections providing different punishments, the offender should
not be punished with a more severe punishment than the
court could award to the person for any one of the two
offences. In this case, minimum punishment under Section 7
is six months and the minimum punishment under Section
13(1)(d) is one year. If an offence falls under both Sections 7
and 13(1)(d) and the court wants to award only the minimum
punishment, then the punishment would be one year.
It was next contended by the respondent that in the
absence of any bar in the Act for extending the benefits under
the provisions of Probation Act provisions of the said Act could
have also been applied, as has been noted by the High Court.
In any event Section 360 of the Code has been rightly applied
by the High Court by taking note of the extenuating
circumstances. Section 18 of the Probation Act stipulated that
the Act was inapplicable to offences punishable under Section
5(2) of the Old Act. Specific reference was made to Section 5(2)
of the Old Act which corresponds to Section 13 of the Act. But
no change was made in the Probation Act after the Act was
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enacted and brought into force in 1988. Much stress was laid
on the non-amendment of the Probation Act which referred to
the old Act and not the present Act. It was submitted that
since there has been no corresponding change in the
Probation Act, therefore, the provisions of said Act cannot be
applied to cases under the Act. The argument overlooks the
principles underlying Section 8 of the General Clauses Act.
When an Act is repealed and re-enacted unless a different
intention is expressed by the legislature, the reference to the
repealed Act would be considered as reference to the
provisions so re-enacted.
The Parliament has enacted the Probation Act and
Section 1(3) thereof stipulated that it shall come into force in a
State on such date as the State Government may be
notification in the official gazette appoint. In State of Tamil
Nadu it came into force in the entire State in the year 1964.
Section 19 of that Act lays down that, subject to the provisions
of Section 18, Section 562 of the Criminal Procedure Code,
1898 (hereinafter referred to as ’Old Code’) shall cease to apply
to the States or parts in which the Probation Act is brought
into force. Old Code came to be repealed and replaced by the
Code and Section 360 of the code is the corresponding
provision to Section 562 in the Old Code. In Bishnu Deo Shaw
v. State of West Bengal (1979 (3) SCC 714), this Court ruled
that Section 360 of the Code i.e. enacts in substance Section
562 of the Old Code. That apart, Section 18 of the Probation
Act inter-alia stipulates that nothing in the said Act shall
affect the provisions of Sub-section (2) of Section 5 of the Old
Act. This Court in the decisions reported in Isher Das v. The
State of Punjab (1973 (2) SCC 65) and Som Nath Puri v. State
of Rajasthan (1972 (1) SCC 630), has held specifically
adverting to Section 18 that the said provision renders the
Probation Act inapplicable to an offence under Sub-section (2)
of Section 5 of the Old Act, by expressly excluding its
operation. Section 13(2) of the re-enacted Act is the
corresponding provision to Section 5(2) of the Old Act.
The import of the above provisions, in view of the new
enactment of the code and the Act requires and has to be
considered in the light of Section 8 of the General Clauses Act
which reads as under:
"8. Construction of references to repealed
enactments. [(1) Where this Act, or any
[Central Act] or Regulation made after the
commencement of this Act, repeals and re-
enacts, with or without modification, any
provision of a former enactment, then
references in any other enactment or in any
instrument to the provision so repealed shall,
unless a different intention appears, be
construed as references to the provision so re-
enacted.
(2) Where before the fifteenth day of August,
1947, any Act of Parliament of the United
Kingdom repealed and re-enacted], with or
without modification, any provision of a former
enactment, then references in any [Central Act]
or in any Regulation or instrument to the
provision so repealed shall, unless a different
intention appears, be construed as references
to the provision so re-enacted.]"
The object of the said provision, obvious and patently
made known is that where any Act or Regulation is repealed
and re-enacted, references in any other enactment to
provisions of the repealed former enactment must be read and
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construed as references to the re-enacted new provisions,
unless a different intention appears. In similar situations this
Court had placed reliance upon Section 8 of the General
Clauses Act to tide over the situation. In New Central Jute
Mills Co. Ltd. v. The Astt. Collector of Central Excise,
Allahabad and Ors. (1970 (2) SCC 820), this Court held it to be
possible to read the provisions of the Customs Act, 1962 in the
place of Sea Customs Act, 1878 found mentioned in Section
12 of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944. In State of Bihar
v. S.K. Roy (AIR 1966 SC 1995), this Court held that by virtue
of Section 8 of the General Clauses Act, references to the
definition of the word ’employer’ in Clause (e) of Section 2 of
the Indian Mines Act, 1923 made in Coal Mines Provident
Fund and Bonus Schemes Act, 1948 should be construed as
references to the definition of ’owner’ in Clause (1) of Section 2
of the Mines Act, 1952, which repealed and re-enacted 1923
Act. Consequently, the references to Section 562 of Old Code
in Section 19 of the Probation Act and to Section 5(2) of the
Old Act in Section 18 of the Probation Act, respectively have to
be inevitably read as references to their corresponding
provisions in the newly enacted Code and the Act.
Consequently, for the conviction under Section 13(2) of the Act
the principles enunciated under the Probation Act cannot be
extended at all in view of the mandate contained in Section 18
of the said Act. So far as Section 360 of the Code is concerned,
on and from the date of extension and enforcement of the
provisions of the Probation Act to Madras powers under
Section 562 of the Old Code and after its repeal and
replacement powers under Section 360 of the Code, cannot be
invoked or applied at all, as has been done in the case on
hand.
In the case of Superintendent Central Excise, Bangalore
v. Bahubali (1979 (2) SCC 279), while dealing with Rule 126-P
(2)(ii) of the Defence of India Rules which prescribed a
minimum sentence and Section 43 of the Defence of India Act,
1962 almost similar to the purport enshrined in Section 28 of
the Act in the context of a claim for granting relief under the
Probation Act, this Court observed that in cases where a
specific enactment, enacted after the Probation Act prescribes
a minimum sentence of imprisonment, the provisions of
Probation Act cannot be invoked if the special Act contains
any provision to enforce the same without reference to any
other Act containing a provision, in derogation of the special
enactment, there is no scope for extending the benefit of the
Probation Act to the accused. Unlike, the provisions contained
in Section 5(2) proviso of the Old Act providing for imposition
of a sentence lesser than the minimum sentence of one year
therein for any "special reasons" to be recorded in writing, the
Act did not carry any such power to enable the Court
concerned to show any leniency below the minimum sentence
stipulated. These aspects were highlighted in State through
SP, New Delhi v. Ratan Lal Arora (2004 (4) SCC 590).
Consequently, the learned Single Judge in the High
Court committed a grave error in law in extending the benefit
of probation even under the Code. The sentences of
imprisonment shall be six months under Section 7 and one
year under Section 13(2) of the Act, both the sentences to run
concurrently. So far as the levy of fine in addition made by the
learned Trial Judge with a default clause on two separate
counts are concerned, they shall remain unaffected and are
hereby confirmed.
The appeal is accordingly allowed.
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