Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LENNART SCHUSSLER AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIRECTOR OF ENFORCEMENT & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/10/1969
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
SIKRI, S.M.
MITTER, G.K.
HEGDE, K.S.
RAY, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 549 1970 SCR (2) 760
1970 SCC (1) 152
ACT:
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (7 of 1947), ss. 4 and 21
(1)--Indian Penal Code; s. 120-B-Illegal acquisition of
foreign exchange and retention in foreign bank-Agreement to
do so whether an offence under s. 21(1) of Act 7 of
1947--Whether applicability of s. 21(1) excludes
applicability of s. 120-B I.P.C.--Retention of foreign
exchange not an offence at the time-when agreement entered
into-Subsequently made an offence--Acts in pursuance of
agreement after creation of offence whether to be treated as
acts in pursuance of conspiracy.
HEADNOTE:
The Rayala Corporation (P) Ltd. manufactured Halda
typewriters in India with materials imported from Sweden.
Initially it made purchases through a firm known as A.B.
Atvidabergs (later known as Facit A.B.). In 1963 the Rayala
Corporation decided to import certain materials through
another firm called the Associated Swedish Steels A.B.,
Sweden (ASSAB). Appellant No. 1 a Swedish national, was at
the relevant time export manager of A.B. Atvidabergs; in
1966 he also became a director of Rayala Corporation. In
November 1968 appellant no. 1 was travelling by aircraft
from Singapore to Karachi. The aircraft became grounded at
Delhi. The Director of Enforcement, New Delhi, acting under
the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 took appellant no.
1 into custody and detained him. He was served with a
notice of adjudication tinder the Act; the notice purported
to be in continuation of one already given to Rayala
Corporation under s. 23C of the Act. Appellant No. 1
challenged his detention by a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution. In this Court a statement was made on behalf
of the respondents that a complaint had already been filed
against the appellants under s. 120-B of the Indian Penal
Code read with certain sections of the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act. In the said complaint it was alleged that
in 1963 when appellant no. 2 had gone to Sweden he told
Appellant no. 1 of the decision taken by the Rayala
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Corporation to buy certain materials from ASSAB. He further
informed Appellant no. J that arrangements had been made
with ASSAB to over invoice to the goods by 40%, and that the
said excess over the true value would be kept in a bank in
the personal account of appellant no. 2. Appellant no. 1
agreed to help Appellant no. 2 in opening-. the said account
and keeping it secret; he also agreed to keep a watch over
the account and to bring copies of it Whenever he visited
India. This according to the complaint amounted to a
conspiracy between Appellants nos. 1 and 2 within the
meaning of s. 120-B of the Indian Penal Code for the purpose
of illegal acquisition of foreign exchange by appellant no.
2 and retaining the same abroad in contravention of ss.
4(3). 5(1)(e) and 9 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act
and Rule 132-A of the Defence of India (Amendment) Rules,
1964. It was alleged that appellant no. 1 actually sent to
appellant no. 2 from time to time statements of the illegal
account opened in Sweden in pursuance of the conspiracy. It
was further alleged that in November 1965 appellant no. 1
came to India and again agreed to continue helping appellant
no. 2 in operating the foreign account. The appellants
filed petitions in the Madras High
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Court asking it to quash the said complaint. These
petitions having been dismissed the appellants appealed to
this Court. it was contended on behalf of the appellants :
(i) that s. 120-B of the I.P.C. did not apply to the case
because s. 21 (1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act,
covered the same grounds; (ii) that when the alleged
agreement was made in 1963 the objects of it were not
illegal because they became so only on the enactment of r.
132A of the Defence of India Rules in 1964 and the amendment
of s. 4 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act in 1965. It
was urged that, whatever appellant no. 1 did or agreed to
do after the passing of these laws did not constitute any
offence and therefore he could not be said to have taken
part in a criminal conspiracy.
HELD: Per Sikri, Ray and Reddy, JJ.-The appeals must be
dismissed.
(i) The combined effect of the several provisions of s. 21
does not support the view that sub-s. (1) covers a case of
criminal conspiracy similar to s. 120-B. Section 21 does
not in terms deal with an agreement to commit an offence or
it legal act in an illegal way but merely provides that an
agreement or contract by itself ought not to evade or avoid
the provisions of the Act. The agreement entered into
between. ASSAB and appellant no. 2 would, if proved, come
within the mischief of s. 21(1) but the agreement such is
the one alleged to have been entered into between appellant
no. 1 and appellant no. 2 does not itself evade or avoid
any of the provisions of the Act, rules, or directions. The
words directly or indirectly do not take in any agreement to
be illegal acts in future. [769 H-770 B]
(ii) For the offence of conspiracy as defined in s. 120-A of
the Indian Penal Code there must be a meeting of minds in
the doing of an illegal act or the doing of a legal act by
illegal means. If in the furtherance of the conspiracy
certain persons are induced to do an unlawful act without
the knowledge of the conspiracy or the plot the cannot be
held to be conspirators, though they may be guilty of an
offence to the specific unlawful act. The offence of
conspiracy is complete when two or more conspirators have
agreed to do or cause to be do in act which it itself an
offence, in which case no overt act need be established. An
agreement to do an illegal act which amounts to a conspiracy
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will continue as long as the members of the conspiracy
remain in agreement and as long as they are acting in accord
and in furtherance of the object for which they entered into
the agreement. [770 D-F]
The contention that the acts of appellant no. 1 in watching
the bank account in Sweden on behalf of appellant no. 2 and
keeping him informed about it did not constitute any offence
and therefore he was not guilty of the offence of
conspiracy, could not be accepted. The several acts which
constitute a conspiracy cannot be split up into parts and
the liability of appellant, no. 1 could not be judged by
the part that he played. The entire agreement must be
viewed as a whole and it bad to be ascertained as to what in
fact the conspirators intended to do or the object they
wanted to achieve-. [771 D-E]
In this case on the allegations appellant no. 2 asked
appellant no. 1 to help him in acquiring foreign exchange
illegally and appellant no. 1 agreed to help him. This
agreement though initially may not have been an offence was
none the less an offence subsequently, but appellant no. 1
did not withdraw from it and was said to have continued to
carry out the agreement. The help of appellant no. 1 was
necessary to the design of appellant no. 2 because otherwise
he would not know whether ASSAB was in fact, crediting his,
account in the bank with the amount of over
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invoice Appellant no. 1 kept appellant no. 2 supplied with
necessary information from time to time and agreed while in
Madras in 1965 to continue to help appellant no. 2. The
several acts of appellant no. 1 were all acts- in
consequence of the agreement which had its origin in Sweden.
Appellant no. 2 also in pursuance of the conspiracy acquired
foreign exchange in Sweden. Therefore on the allegations
contained in the complaint appellant no. 1 and appellant
no. 2 could be charged with an offence under s. 120-B. [771
H-772 E]
M/s. Rayala Corporation (P) Ltd. & Anr. v. Director of
Enforcement, New Delhi [1970] 1 S.C.R. 639 and Denis Dowling
Mulchv v. Queen L.R. 3 H.L. 305, 317, referred to.
Per Mitter and Hedge, ]J. (dissenting).-The appeals must be
allowed.
Per Mitter, J.-(i) An agreement by two persons whereby one
agrees to help the other by ’facilitating transfer of
foreign exchange from a foreign exporter into the banking
account of that other is an agreement the object whereof is
not only the acquisition of foreign exchange but the
retention of it abroad. This is clearly an agreement to
evade the operation of the provisions of the Foreign
Exchange Regulation Act relating to the ill-gal acquisition
and retention of ’foreign exchange within the meaning of s.
21 (1) of the Act. So far as the violation of the different
provisions of the Act or rule or direction or order made
thereunder are concerned the Act is a complete code
including within its ambit by reason of s. 21(1) a criminal
conspiracy to acquire foreign exchange abroad illicitly and
retaining the same abroad. The offence alleged against the
appellants in the present case therefore fell under s.
23(1A) read with s. 21(1) of the Act and no complaint lay
under s. 120-B of the Indian Penal Code. [781 E-F, 782 B,
783 H]
(ii) In the Rayala Corporation’s case this Court laid down
that complaint under s. 23(1)(b) cannot be launched before
the Director of Enforcement has taken up the adjudication
proceedings and made some inquiry in these proceedings and
formed the opinion that it was necessary to have resort to
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the more drastic provisions of conviction by a court as
envisaged by s. 23(1)(b). In the present case no
proceedings had been started either against appellant no. 1
or appellant no. 2 in pursuance of the notice of
adjudication issued against them. Therefore in respect of
the substantive offences for contravention of the different
sections of the Act the Director of Enforcement could not
make a Complaint before first having followed the Procedure
laid down in s. 23D of the Act. It would be absurd to allow
him to file a complaint for violation of s. 21(1) by making
a charge under s. 120-B I.P.C. when the overt acts alleged
were contravention of different provisions of the Act
punishable only under s. 23(1)(b) ’by following the
procedure indicated in s. 23D To allow the prosecution to be
proceeded with at this stage would in effect be stultifying
in s. 23(1)(b). Accordingly the complaint filed under s.
120B of the I.P.C. against the appellants must be quashed.
[782 C-F]
Per Hegde, J.-(i) The appeals must be allowed following the
rule laid, down by this Court in the Rayala Corporation’s
case. It is a fundamental principle of law that what cannot
be done directly should not be permitted to be done
indirectly. [784 A-B]
(i) From the facts and circumstances of the case it was
clear that the complaint was not a bona fide one. It had
been filed with a collateral purpose viz. to justify the
unlawful detention of appellant no. 1 in this country.
[784 B-C]
763
(iii) Even if all the facts stated in the complaint were
accepted as correct the same did not amount to an offence
under s. 120B of the Indian Penal Code. These allegations
merely made out that appellant no. 1 was in accessory after
the fact and not that he was a conspirator. If a person
agreed with a robber to receive the stolen property to
arrange for its safe keeping he does not become a co-
conspirator with the robber in the commission of the offence
of robbery. On the facts alleged it was clear that
appellant no. 1 had nothing to do either with the
acquisition of foreign exchange by appellant no. 2 or in the
matter of the latter’s failure to repatriate the same to
this country. The allegation against him was that he
provided facility for its retention in Sweden. [786 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeals Nos. 113
and 163 of 1969.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated April 16, 1969 of
Madras High Court in Criminal Misc. Petitions Nos. 469 and
621 of 1969.
A. K. Sen, N. C. Raghavachari, W. S. Setharaman and R.
Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant (in Cr.A. No. 113 of
1969).
M. C. Setalvad, N. C. Raghavachari, W. S. Setharaman and
R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant (in Cr. A. No. 163
of 1969).
Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor-General, R. H. Dhebar, B. D.
Sharma and S. P. Nayar, for the respondents (in both the
appeals).
The Judgment of SIKRI, RAY and JAGAN MOHAN REDDY, JJ. was
delivered by REDDY J. MITTER and HEGDE, JJ. delivered
dissenting Opinions.
Jagamohan Reddy, J. The Director of Enforcement, New Delhi,
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filed a complaint on February 16, 1969 before the Chief
Presidency Magistrate, Madras against Lennart Schussler,
accused 1, and M. R. Pratap, accused 2, Managing Director,
The Rayala Corporation Ltd. hereinafter referred to as A.1
and A.2 respectively, under section 120-B I.P.C. and ss.
4(3), 5(1) (e) and 9 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act
(VII) of 1947 (hereinafter called the Act). Two Criminal
Miscellaneous Petitions, one filed by A.1 being No 469 of
1969 and the other filed by A.2 being No. 621 of 1969 for
quashing the complaint were dismissed which by the Madras
High Court by a common judgment against these two appeals by
certificate have been filed.
The complaint which is in respect of the acquisition of
88913.09 Swiss Kronars in contravention of the Act states
that on reliable information received by the Assistant
Director of Enforcement, Madras that A 2 was utilising his
position as Managing Director of the Rayala Corporation Ltd.
in acquiring foreign exchange illicitly, on December 20,
1966, a search was conducted of the premises of the Said
company in the presence of A-2,
764
Jaga Rao and the legal advisor of the company one Sita Ram.
During the search certain documents were recovered and
seized, one of which was a letter dated the 25th March 1965
in Swedish language from the Associated Swedish Steels A.B.
Sweden, as ASSAB to A with the enclosures. The Rayala
Corporation Private Ltd. was a concern manufacturing Halda
typewriters for which purpose certain materials were being
imported from Sweden. The firm with which initially the
transactions were being entered into was known as A.B.
Atvidabergs, later known as Facit AB, of which A 1, a
Swedish national, has been the export manager. It is
alleged that in August 1963, A 2 Jaga Rao and A 1 met
together at Stockholm and agreed to a plan regarding
purchase of certain raw materials, namely, steel alloy
sheets directly from ASSAB instead of purchasing them from
Atvidabergs. At that meeting A 2 informed A 1 that
henceforth he would buy material on behalf of his company
from ASSAB instead of M/s Atvidabergs. A 2 further informed
A 1 that the arrangement made between him and the ASSAB was
to over in voice the value of goods by 40 per cent of the
true value and that he should be paid the difference of 40
per cent on account of the aforesaid over-invoicing by
crediting it to his personal account and that since under
the laws of India this acquisition by him was unlawful and
had to be kept secret, it should not be mentioned in the
official correspondence of Messrs Rayala Corporation with
the Swedish firm. He requested the first accused to help
him in opening the account in Swenska Handles Banken,
Sweden, in order not only to transfer the money lying to his
credit in Atvidabergs but also to have further deposits to
his personal account from ASSAB on account of the difference
between the actual value and the over-invoiced value. A 1
agreed to act is requested by A 2. A 2 made arrangement with
ASSAB to intimate to A 1 the various amounts credited to A
2’s account and asked A 1 to keep a watch over the
correctness of the account and to further intimate to him
the account position from time to time through unofficial
channels and whenever A 1 came to India. A 1 is said to
have agreed to comply with this request. Subsequently in
November 1965 A 1 came to India when he is said to have
brought the incriminating letter dated the 25th March 1965
which was seized. He is said to have also agreed at that
time with A 2 to continue to help him to accumulate foreign
exchange. illegally in the same manner. In September 1966
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also A 1 arrived at Madras where he stayed for a month and
at that time also he brought further details of the account.
The gravamen of the charge is set out in paragraph 9 of the
complaint as follows :"Thus it is clear that A 1 and A 2
agreed to commit illegal acts.. namely, acquisition by A 2
of foreign exchange illicitly and retaining the same abroad
without surrendering the same to the Government of India and
also to defraud the Government of
765
India of foreign exchange thereby contravening Sections
4(3), 5 (1 ) (e) and 9 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation
Act and Rule 132A of the Defence of India (Amendment)
Rules, 1964 and further that between August 1963 and 1966 A
1 and A 2 in pursuance of the said agreement did commit acts
in contravention of sections 4 (3) , 5 (1) (e) and 9 of the
Foreign Exchange Regulating Act and Rule 132 A of the
Defence of India (Amendment) Rules, 1964 and thereby
committed offence punishable under sec. 120 B of the Indian
Penal Code, read with sections 4(3), 5 (1) (e) and 9 of the
F.E.R. Act and Rule 132 A of the Defence of India
(Amendment) Rules, 1964".
The complaint also refers to the fact that C.C. No. 8736 of
1968 had already been filed against the Rayala Corporation
Private Ltd. In view of this reference it is necessary, for
a better appreciation of the issues involved in this
petition, to give a brief account of the earlier proceedings
taken by the Directorate of Enforcement in this regard. It
appears that the earlier notice sent by the Enforcement
Directorate dated the 25th August 1967 was for the
contravention of the Act in respect of 244,713.70 Swiss
Kronars alleged to have been deposited in A 2’s bank
account, which amount included 88,913.09 Kronars. This
notice was followed by a further show cause notice under s.
23(3) of the Act dated the 4th November 1967 to A 2 as to
why he should not be prosecuted in respect of 88,913.09
Swiss Kronars. A 2 in his reply of November 13, 1967 to the
show cause notice of the 25th August 1967 denied the
allegations. The Enforcement Director further issued
another show cause notice dated the 15th November 1967 to
the other directors of the Corporation and its General
Manager, Jaga Rao in continuation of the notice dated the
25th August asking them to show cause why adjudication
proceedings should not be instituted. On November 29,
1967, A 2 replied to the notice of the 4th November 1967
denying the allegations. Thereafter on January 20, 1968 the
Director of Enforcement issued a notice to the Rayala
Corporation to show cause why if should not be prosecuted
for violation in respect of 88,913.09 Swiss Kronars. Two
months later, namely, on March 16, 1968, a revised show
cause notice was issued to the Corporation and A 2
superseding the notice of 25th August 1967 and intimating to
them that they were prosecuting the Corporation and A 2 for
the contravention of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act in
respect of 88.013.09 Kronars. Four days thereafter the
Director of Enforcement filed a complaint against the
Corporation and A 2 under r. 132-A of the Defence of India
Rules and ss. 4 (1). 4 (3). and 5 (1) (e) of the Act. ]Both
the Corporation and A 2- filed Criminal Misc. Petitions,
being respectively No, 978 and 980 of 1968. for quashing the
complaint but the High Court of Madras dismissed these
petitions in October
766
1968. Two appeals by certificate preferred against that
order, being Criminal Appeals Nos. 18 and 19 of 1969, were
allowed by this Court on July 23, 1969, setting aside the
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order of the High Court rejecting the applications under s.
561 A of the Code, of Criminal Procedure for quashing the
proceedings against the appellants therein. While the above
proceedings were pending, A 1 who happened to be a passenger
travelling by an aircraft from Singapore to Karachi via
Palam was detained on November 27, 1968 by the officers of
the Office of the Enforcement Directorate when the aircraft
which had landed at Palam on November 26, 1968 for
refuelling had to be temporarily grounded due to engine
trouble. On November 30, 1968, the Enforcement Directorate
served a notice for adjudication on A 1 in his capacity as a
director of the, Rayala Corporation which was purported to
be in continuation of the previous adjudication notice dated
August 25,’1967 issued to the company under s. 23 C of the
Act. These allegations were also denied by A 1 on the 30th
January 1969 and on 5th February 1969 A 1 filed a writ
petition in this Court for the issue of a writ of habeas
corpus. It is however unnecessary to narrate the various
stages of this and the subsequent. petitions for directing A
1’s release and for according him permission to leave this
country for Sweden. The subsequent writ petition filed by
him after the withdrawal of the first one filed on 5th Feb-
ruary 1969, came up for hearing along with these criminal
appeals and this Court on the 10th September 1969 while
allowing the writ petition to be withdrawn passed a consent
order permitting A 1 to depart from India provided he
furnishes ban guarantee in the foreign exchange equivalent
of Rs. 1,50,0001- in Swedish Kronars and on his undertaking
to appear before the Chief Presidency Magistrate, Madras or
any other Magistrate to whom the complaint case might be
transferred at the time of the disposal thereof.
The main question in these appeals is whether A 1 can be
charged in respect of acts alleged against him in the
complaint with an offence under s. 120B I.P.C. or with
offences under the several provisions of the Act and r. 132
A of the Defence of India Rules, read with s. 120B I.P.C.
Before considering this question it is necessary to mention
that at the time of the alleged agreement between A 1 and A
2 at Stockholm neither the Defence of India Rules nor the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act contained any provision
specifically making it an offence for a person resident in
India to acquire foreign exchange abroad. Rule 132 A of the
Defence of India Rules was added on 21st January 1964 by
Defence of India (Amendment) Rules 1964 by which dealings in
foreign exchange by persons other than an authorised person
were prohibited. The
767
provision remained in force till 31st March 1965 when it was
repealed. Section 4 of the, Foreign Exchange Regulation Act
was also amended as from 1st April 1965 so as to prohibit
the buying or otherwise acquiring or borrowing or selling or
otherwise transferring or lending to any person other than
an authorised dealer any foreign exchange without the
previous general or special permission of the Reserve Bank.
It is therefore apparent that at the time when the alleged
agreement between A 1, A 2 and Jaga Rao is said to have
taken place in Stockholm in August 1963 it was neither an
offence under the Defence of India Rules nor wider the Act
to acquire foreign exchange in a foreign country. But it is
contended by the learned Solicitor General that pursuant to
that agreement A 1 continued to help and agreed to help even
after it became an offence under the Defence of India Rules
or under the Act and consequently no exception can be. taken
to the complaint against A-1. At any rate,, s. 21(1) of the
Act would cover such agreements which are offences and
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consequently the accused can be charged with s. 120B I.P.C.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the appellants Shri
Asoke Sen submits that firstly, there was no mention of any
allegation against A 1 in the several show cause notices
issued either to the Rayala Corporation or to the directors
of that Corporation or to A 2 but it is an after thought
brought about by the mechanisation of Jagga Rao who was
hostile and inimical ’to A 2; secondly, as it appears on the
enquiry made by A 2 at the instance of the Enforcement
Directorate from Swenska Handels Banken, Stockholm, that in
fact there is no account is alleged either in the name of
the Rayala Corporation or in the name of the Managing
Director of the Rayala Corporation, that is, A 2. there
would be no basis for the complaint; and thirdly, the
agreement alleged does not either come under s. 120B I.P.C.
or would amount to a contravention of any of the provisions
of the Act including s. 21(1) thereof. It would not be
necessary at this stage to go into these questions because
what has to be seen is whether, assuming the facts as stated
in the complaint to be true, A 1 and A 2 could be charged
with the offences specified therein. The answer to this
question must depend upon the nature of the part which A 1
agreed to play in the acquisition of the foreign exchange
under which agreement he is said to have continued to
participate in the conspiracy by rendering, help to A 2 in
acquiring foreign exchange even after 21st of January 1964
and also till after the amendment of s. 4(1 of the Act.
Under s. 120B there must be an agreement between two or more
persons to commit an offence or where the agreement does not
amount to an offence in the doing of an act which is legal,
in an illegal way there should also be established an overt
act. In
768
so far as the offence under r, 132A of the Defence of India
Rules is concerned, in 1963 what Pratap did was not an
offence, nor was it an offence under the Act as s. 4 was
amended with effect from 1st April 1965. In so far as any
acts which may be considered to constitute an offence under
r. 132A of the Defence of India Rules, it has been held by
this Court in Criminal Appeals Nos. 18 and 19 of 1969,
decided on 23rd July 1969 (Rayala Corporation etc. v.
Director of Enforcement) that no prosecution can be launched
for an offence under that provision subsequent to the repeal
as there is no saving provision thereunder.
It is then contended that the agreement entered into in 1963
continued to be effective even after the acquisition of
foreign exchange became an offence after tile amendment of
the Act on 1st April 1965, and at any rate after this
amendment an agreement by A 1 to assist A 2 was again said
to have been arrived at in Madras in 1965. It is,
therefore, necessary to examine whether such an agreement
would constitute an offence and if so under what provision
of law. The agreement in Madras has a reference to the
initial agreement in Sweden. This alleged agreement between
A. 1 and A. 2, as set out in the complaint, can be briefly
stated to consist of the following, namely, in August 1963 A
2 asked A 1 to help him (a) to open an account in Swenska
Handels Banken, Stockholm, (b) to get the money lying to A
2’s credit with Atvidaberge accumulated by him as a result
of over-invoicing transferred to Pratap’s account with the
bank- and (c) to keep a watch on and check the correctness
of the account of the acquisitions from time to time and not
to mention anything in ,,he official correspondence but to
give information otherwise. Even in Madras in 1965, A-1. is
alleged to have agreed to keep a watch on the account and
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bring him statements of the account. The offence by A 2
under the Act would consist of setting the goods which the
Rayala Corporation was purchasing over-invoiced by 40 per
cent so that permission to remit foreign exchange from India
to the extent of the amount of the over-invoice could be
obtained from the Reserve Bank and after money is received
in Sweden by the Swedish company that company was to credit
Pratap’s (A 2) account with 40 per cent of the over-invoice
price. If these facts are established, they certainly
amount to a contravention of cl. (1) and cl. (3) of s. 4
which provide that where any foreign exchange is acquired by
any person other than by any authorised dealer for any
particular purpose or where any person has been permitted
conditionally to acquire foreign exchange, the said person
shall not use the foreign exchange so acquired otherwise
than for that purpose or as the case may be, fail to comply
with any condition to which. the permission granted to him’
is subject, and where any foreign’ tax. change so acquired
cannot be so used or. as the case may be the
769
condition cannot be complied with, the said person shall
without delay sell the foreign exchange to an authorised
dealer. Now it is alleged that A 2 Pratap has in breach of
this condition on which foreign exchange was released to the
Rayala Corporation to pay the actual cost of the goods has
not only not complied with the conditions on which the
permission was granted but has also committed default in not
selling the foreign exchange so acquired by him without
delay to an authorised dealer.
Before dealing with the question whether the agreement of A
1 to help A 2 amounts to criminal conspiracy punishable
under s. 120B I.P.C., it will be convenient first to dispose
of the submission that s. 120B I.P.C. does not apply because
s. 21(1) covers the same ground. It would appear that the
alleged agreement between A 1 and A 2 is not one which
transgresses s. 21 (1) of the Act. What s. 21 (1) provides
is that the provisions of the Act must be avoided or evaded
by the agreement or contract itself. The contracts or
agreements are those, which are entered into during the
course of commercial transactions and it is the intention of
the legislature to prohibit that such contracts or
agreements ought not to provide for the evasion or avoidance
of ,in any of the provisions of the Act either directly or
indirectly. This assumption is made clear by the subsequent
sub-section in which the legislature is anxious to preserve
the integrity of these transactions by providing that any
reference to any act being done without the permission of
the Central Government or Reserve Bank shall not render the
agreement invalid and it shall be an implied term of every
contract governed by the law of any part of India that
anything agreed to be done by any term of that contract
which is prohibited to be clone by or under any of the pro-
visions of this Act except with the permission of the
Central Government or Reserve Bank shall not be done unless
such permission is granted. Sub-sec. (3) provides that
notwithstanding anything in the Act or any provision in the
contract that anything for Article permission has to be
obtained from the Central Government or Reserve Bank- shall
not be done without that permission, no legal proceedings
shall be prevented from being brought in India to recover
any sum which apart from any of the said provisions and any
such term would be due whether as a debt, damages or
otherwise but subject to the certain condition-is provided
in cls. (a) to (c) therein.. Similarly, sub-s. (4) states
that nothing shall be deemed to prevent any instrument being
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a bill of exclaim ’ or promissory note in spite of any
inhibitions in. the Act and notwithstanding ’ anything
contained in the Negotiable Instruments Act. The combined
effect of the several provisions of s.21 does not incline us
t0 the view that sub-s. (1) covers a case of criminal
conspiracy similar to s. 120B. Section 21 does not in terms
deal with an agreement to commit in offence or a legal act
770
in an illegal way but merely provides that an agreement or
contract by itself ought not to evade or avoid the
provisions of the Act. The agreement entered into between
ASSAB and A 2 Pratap would, it proved, come within the
mischief of S. 21 ( 1 ) but the agreement such as the one
alleged to have been entered into between A 1 and A 2 does
not itself evade or avoid any of the provisions of the Act,
rules or directions. The words directly or indirectly do
not take in any agreement to do illegal acts in future.
It now remains to be seen whether the alleged agreement
which A 1 and A 2 arrived at in Stockholm in 1963 and again
in Madras in 1965, would, if established, amount to a
criminal conspiracy. The first of the offences defined in
S. 120A Penal Code which is itself punishable as a
substantive offence is the very agreement between two or
more persons to do or cause to be done an illegal act or a
legal act by illegal means subject however to the proviso
that where the agreement is not an agreement to commit an
offence the agreement does not amount to a conspiracy unless
it is followed up by an overt act done by one or more
persons in pursuance of such an agreement. There must be a
meeting of minds in the doing of the illegal act or the
doing of a legal act by illegal means. If in the
furtherance of the conspiracy certain persons are induced to
do an unlawful act without the knowledge of the conspiracy
or the plot they cannot be held to be conspirators, though
they may be guilty of an offence pertaining to the specific
unlawful act. The offence of conspiracy is complete when
two or more conspirators have agreed to do or cause to be
done an act which is itself an offence, in which case no
overt act need be established. It is also clear that an
agreement to do an illegal act which amounts to a conspiracy
will continue as long as the members of the conspiracy
remain in agreement and as long as they are acting in accord
and in furtherance of the object for which they entered into
the agreement.
As has been noticed earlier at the time A 1 and A 2 entered
into an agreement though A 2 thought it was an offence to
acquire foreign exchange by the method he was employing it
was not in fact an offence. It is none the less alleged
that A 1 agreed to help in the belief that what he is doing
would be to assist A 2 to acquire foreign exchange
illegally. This agreement continued and A 1 was assisting A
2 even after the acquisition of foreign exchange became
illegal and is said to have agreed even after he came to
Madras in 1965 to continue to help in acquiring the foreign
exchange. It is however contended that the agreement of A 1
with A 2 does not amount to a criminal conspiracy because
all that A 1 has agreed to do was, to help A 2 to open an
account in the Swedish Bank, have the amounts living to the
credit of A
771
with Atvidabergs to that account and to help A 2 by keeping
a watch over the account. It is true that none of these
acts amounts to an offence, because the opening of the
account in the Bank and having the amounts transferred from
Atvidabergs was not an offence in August 1963, and there is
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nothing to show that A 1 had not completed that part of the
agreement relating to Atvidabergs and the opening of the
account with the bank before January 1964 or that he had
rendered the assistance after that date. If this part of
the agreement does not amount to a conspiracy to do an
unlawful act, then it is submitted that the subsequent
watching over the account and sending or bringing a state-
ment of the account of A 2 relating to the acquisition of
the foreign exchange does not amount to an offence. The
agreement which constitutes an offence, it is said is the
one between A 2 and ASSAB. The subsequent act of A 1 was
neither necessary to acquire nor does it further the
acquisition of the foreign exchange in contravention of the
provisions of the Act and is therefore not an offence under
s. 120B of the Penal Code. This argument would postulate
that the several acts which constitute it can be split up in
parts and the criminal liability of A 1 must only be judged
by the part he has played. It appears to us that this is
not a justifiable contention, because what has to be seen is
whether the agreement between A 1 and A 2 is a conspiracy to
do or continue to do something which is illegal and if it
is, it is immaterial whether the agreement to do any of the
acts in furtherance of the commission of the offence do not
strictly amount to an offence. The entire agreement must be
viewed as a whole and it has to be ascertained as to what in
fact the conspirators intended to do or the object they
wanted to achieve. As observed by Willis, J. in his 1 1 the
answer given on behalf of the Judges when consulted by the
Lord Chancellor in Denis Dowling Mulcahy v. Queen (1)
"A conspiracy consists not merely in the
intention of two or more, but in the agreement
of two or more to do an unlawful act or to do
a lawful act by unlawful means. So long as
such a design rests in intention only, it is
not indictable. When two agree to carry it
into effect, the very plot is an act in it&-
,If, and the act of each of the parties
promise against promise, actus contra actum,
capable of being enforced, if lawful,
punishable if for a criminal object or for the
use of criminals means."
In this case on the allegations A 2 asked A 1 to help him in
acquiring foreign exchange illegally and A 1 agreed to, help
him. This agreement though initially may not, have been an
offence
(1) L.R3H.L. 305,317
SLIP. CI/70-4
772
was none the, less an offence subsequently but A 1 did not
withdraw from it and was said to have continue to carry out
that agreement. A 1’s help was necessary for A 2’s design
because otherwise he would not know whether ASSAB was in
fact crediting his account in the bank, with the amount of
over-invoice. Only when ASSAB credited A 2’s account could
he be said to have acquired the foreign exchange till then
it was only an understanding or agreement under which it is
enforceable a debt would be created in favour of A 2. The
knowledge that the amount was being credited from time to
time was an essential part of the agreement, between A 1 and
A 2 and would be in furtherance of illegal and unlawful
design to acquire foreign exchange contrary to the
provisions of the Act. It consisted in, as has already been
stated in A 1 keeping a watch over the accounts, his coming
over to India on several occasions, his bringing a letter in
reply to his letter, with a statement of account annexed in
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November 1965 from ASSAB to himself, in which the amount of
foreign exchange credited by ASSAB to A 2’s account with
Swenska Handels Banken was mentioned, his statement at the
time of handing it over that he brought the letter in person
as he did not want to send it by post in view of the nature
of the transactions and his further agreeing in Madras with
A 2 that he will continue to help him. The several acts of
A 1 are all acts in consequence of the agreement which had
its origin in Sweden. A 2 Pratap one of the conspirators
also in furtherance of that conspiracy obtained foreign
exchange invoices which were over priced with a view to
acquire the same in Sweden. It would, therefore, appear
that on the allegations contained in the complaint A 1 and A
2 could be charged with an offence under s. 120B.
These appeals are accordingly dismissed with a word of
caution that nothing that has been stated here should be
taken as establishing any of the facts required to
constitute the offence which if the prosecution case has to
be sustained must be proved at the trial in accordance with
law.
Mitter, J. These two appeals by certificate arise out of a
common judgment of the Madras High Court in Crl. M.P. 469/
1969 and Crl. M.P. No. 621/1969, the object of both being
to quash the complaint in C.C. No. 5438 of 1969 on the file
of the Court of the Chief Presidency Magistrate, Egmore,
Madras. Cr. M.P. 469 of 1969 was by Lennart Schussler
while Cr. M.P. 621/ 1969 was by M. R. Pratap. The
complaint before the Chief Presidency Magistrate was filed
on February 16, 1969 by the’ Director of Enforcement against
Schussler and Pratap under s. 120-B of the Indian Penal Code
read with various sections of the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act, 1947.
773
In order to appreciate how the complaint came to be made, it
is necessary to note a few facts which preceded it. The
Rayala Corporation Private Ltd., (hereinafter referred to as
the ’Corporation’) used to manufacture Halda typewriters and
in that connection import materials through A. B.
Atvidabergs, Sweden later known as Facit AB. M. R. Pratap
was the Managing Director of the Corporation. Schussler, a
Swedish national, has been export manager of Facit AB for
many years. He became a director of the corporation in
April 1956. On information received about violation of The
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (hereinafter referred to as
the ’Act’) the Enforcement Directorate raided the premises
of the corporation at Madras on 20th and 21st December, 1966
and seized certain records. According to the information at
the Directorate a plan had been hatched in August 1953
between Pratap, Schussler and one Jaggarao, General Manager
of the Corporation, in Stockholm regarding purchase of raw
materials by the corporation directly from a firm known as
ASSAB instead of Facit AB to give effect to an arrangement
already made by Pratap with ASSAB to over-invoice the value
of the goods imported by the corporation by 4O % of their
true value thereof and the difference of 40 per cent to be
paid to the personal account of Pratap. The part played by
Schussler was to help Pratap in opening an account in
Swenska Bandela Banken, Sweden (hereinafter referred to as
the ’bank’) and to transfer the moneys lying to his credit
to Facit AB and to have further deposits made to his
personal account on account of over-invoicing by Assab. It
is the case of the Directorate that Pratap had been
acquiring large amounts of foreign exchange abroad by the,
above means from before 1963 and had retained the same
abroad to put it beyond the reach of the Government of
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India. On August 25, 1967 the Enforcement Directorate sent
a notice to the corporation and Pratap alleging violations
of ss. 4 (1) and 9 of the Act calling upon them to show
cause why adjudication proceedings under the Act should not
be had. The notice was not only in respect of 88,913-09
Krs. but an additional sum making a total of 244,713-70 Sw.
Krs. alleged to have been deposited in a bank account. This
was followed by a further show cause notice dated November
4, 1967 from the Directorate to Pratap under s. 23(3) of the
Act for prosecuting him under the Act in respect of 88,913-
09 Krs. On November 13, 1967 Pratap replied to the show
cause notice dated August 25, 1967 denying the allegations.
On November 15, 1967 the Directorate, sent show cause
notices to the other Directors of the Corporation and its
Manager in continuation of the notice dated 25th August
asking them to show cause why adjudication proceedings
should not be instituted. On 29th November 1967 Pratap
denied the allegations in the notice dated 4th November. On
20th January 1968 notice was issued by the Director of En-
774
forcement to the Corporation to show cause why it should not
be prosecuted for the violation of the Act in respect of
88,913-09 Sw. Krs. On March 16, 1968 a revised adjudication
show cause notice was issued by the Director of Enforcement
to the Corporation and Pratap superseding the notice dated
August 25, 1967 and informing, them that they were
prosecuting the Corporation and Pratap for 88,913-09 Sw.
Krs. and adjudicating in respect of 155,801 Sw. Krs. On
March 20, 1968 the Director of Enforcement filed a complaint
against the Corporation and Pratap under rule 132A of the
Defence of India Rules and ss. 4(1), 4(3) and 5(1)(e) of the
Act. The Corporation and Pratap filed Cr. M. Ps. 978 and
980 of 1968 for quashing, the complaint. The High Court of
Madras dismissed these petitions in October 1968. The
appeals preferred to this Court on a certificate were
disposed of in July 1969 quashing the complaint.
Schussler happened to be a passenger travelling by an air-
craft from Singapore to Karachi via Palam in November 1968.
When the aircraft touched at Palam for a short space of time
engine trouble was noticed and all the passengers including
Schussler were asked to spend the rest of the night at a
hotel until the aircraft became airworthy once more. Before
Schussler could board the plane the next day i.e. 27th
November 1968 he was taken to the Enforcement Directorate
office and interrogated. His departure from India was
prohibited at the instance of the Director of Enforcement
under the Foreigners Order of 1948. On November 30, 1968
Schussler was served with an adjudication notice dated
November 15, 1967 under s. 23-C of the Act in his capacity
as Director of the Corporation and the notice was described
as in continuation of the previous adjudication notice dated
25th August 1967 issued to the company. On 13th December
1968 Schussler replied to the show cause notice denying the
allegations. On January 21, 1968 Schussler was served with
another adjudication notice similar to the notice of 16th
March 1968 in his capacity as Director of the Corporation
under s. 23-C of the Act. On 30th January 1969 Schussler
denied the allegations in the last adjudication notice. On
February 5, 1969 Schussler filed a Writ Petition in this
Court for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus etc. On 17th
February, 1969 when the said Writ Petition came up for
hearing before this Court a statement was made on behalf of
the respondents that a complaint C.C. No. 5438 of 1969 had
already been filed in the Court of the Chief Presidency
Magistrate Madras under s. 120B I.P.C. read with different
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sections of the Act. A suggestion was then made that
Schussler might be permitted to leave India by giving
security by way of a bank guarantee for Rs. 1,50,000.
Ultimately on April 21, 1969 when the Writ Petition came up
for hearing before this Court a consent order was made and
the respondent agreed to withdraw the order dated November
30, 1968 under the Foreigners Act on condition that
775
Schussler should move for bail before the Chief Presidency
Magistrate and then apply for permission to the Foreigners
Registration Officer to leave India. The Chief Presidency
Magistrate granted ball to Schussler on two sureties but his
application for permission to the Foreigners Registration
Officer was rejected on the objection raised by the
Additional Director, Enforcement. On April 30, 1969
Schussler filed Writ Petition No. 144 of 1969 for the issue
of a writ of habeas corpus directing the respondents, the
Foreigners Regional Registration Officer and others, to
allow him to leave the territory of India and for other
reliefs. This Writ Petition came up for hearing before this
Court along with the above Criminal Appeals Nos. 113 and 163
of 1969 on 8th September. On 10th September the Court
ordered that the Foreigners Regional Registration Officer
would permit him to leave India on condition of his giving a
bank guarantee for 155,800 Sw. Krs. and on his undertaking
to appear before the Chief Presidency Magistrate Madras or
any other Magistrate to whom the complaint case might be
transferred at the time of disposal.
The complaint in this case filed on February 16, 1969 by the
Director of Enforcement recites that to the knowledge of
Schussler Pratap had before August 1963 acquired foreign ex-
change amounting to 756,529 Sw. Krs. by getting Facit AB to
over-invoice the goods imported by the Corporation by 40 per
cent of their true value and that in August 1963 an
agreement was arrived at in Stockholm between Pratap,
Schussler and Jaggarao for the opening of an account in the
name of Pratap in the bank with the help of Schussler not
only to transfer the moneys lying to the credit of Pratap in
Facit AB but also to cause further deposits to be made in
the said account from Assab on account of similar over-
invoicing by Assab of the value of the goods to be bought by
the Corporation. Support for the case of the Directorate
that Pratap had been acquiring foreign exchange illicitly by
the above device of over-invoicing and retaining the same
abroad in a Swedish bank was said to be received as a result
of the search of the premises of the Corporation in December
1966 and in particular the seizure of the letter dated March
25, 1965 from Assab to Schussler in reply to Schussler’s
letter (not in the record) to the Assab. Reference is made
in the complaint to several invoices and other documents
seized during the course of search allegedly lending support
to the case of the Directorate. According to the complaint
such device had been adopted by the Corporation and Pratap
in respect of 14 invoices involving 88,913-09 Krs. which had
been released and secured for import of goods but was
actually not utilised for the purpose and kept back abroad
credited to the personal account of Pratap thus violating
the order made by the Central Government by Notification
dated 25th Sep-
776
tember 1958 No. F. 1(67)/E/57 under S. 9 of the Act. This
amount of 88,913-09 Sw. Krs. was said to have been acquired
surreptitiously in the year 1964-65 by Pratap without the
previous or general permission of the Reserve Bank of India
and Pratap had failed to offer the same to the Reserve Bank
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or to any author raised dealer within one month from the
date of the acquisition in terms of the notification
mentioned. The complaint goes on to relate that the letter
of 25th March, 1965 was brought by Schussler in person to
India when he came here in November 1965. The complaint
also alleges that in November 1965 Schussler agreed with
Pratap "to continue to help him and accordingly did help him
to accumulate foreign exchange illegally in the same manner.
Thereafter even later when Schussler became Director of
Rayala Corporation similar transactions were continued by
him and Pratap." In September 1966 Schussler came to Madras
bringing further details of the said account. The complaint
winds up with the statement that Schussler and Pratap had
agreed to commit illegal acts, namely, acquisition by Pratap
of foreign exchange illicitly and retaining the same abroad
without surrendering it to the Government of India and to
defraud the Government of India of foreign exchange thereby
contravening sections 4(3), 5(1)(e) and 9 of the Act and
Rule 132A of the Defence of India Rules 1962 and further
between August 1963 and 1966 Schussler and Pratap in
pursuance of the said agreement did commit acts in
contravention of the said sections of the Act and the said
r. 132A and thereby committed an offence punishable under s.
120B of the Indian Penal,Code read with the said sections of
the Act and the said rule.
The relevant provisions of the Act may now be
noticed. Sub-s. (1) of s. 4 of the Act as
originally provided that :
"Except with the previous general or special
permission of the Reserve Bank, no person
other than an authorised dealer shall in
India, and no person resident in India other
than an authorised dealer shall outside India.
buy or borrow from, or sell or lend to, or ex-
change with, any person not being an
authorised dealer, any foreign exchange."
The above was considered to be sufficient to attract the ban
on acquisition of foreign exchange by other means e.g. by
over invoicing the price of goods imported as was alleged to
have been done by the Corporation and Pratap The section as
amended with effect from April 1, 1965 contains the words
"or otherwise acquire" in between the words "by" and "or
borrow from" and the words "or otherwise transfer" in
between the words "sell" and "or lend to". Rule 132A of the
Defence of India Rules was promulgated on January 21, 1964
cured the lacuna in s. 4(1) of
777
the Act as from the said date. But this rule was omitted
from the rules by a notification dated March 30, 1965 in
view of the amendment of s. 4(1) which became effective from
April 1, 1965.
S. 4(3) prohibits the use of any foreign
exchange for a purpose other than for which it
was given and, runs as follows :
"Where any foreign exchange is acquired by any
person other than an authorised dealer for any
particular purpose, or where any person has
been permitted conditionally to acquire
foreign exchange, the said person shall not
use the foreign exchange so acquired otherwise
than for that purpose or as the case may be,
fail to comply with any condition to which the
permission ,,,-ranted to him is subject, and
where any foreign exchange so acquired cannot
be used or, as the case may be, the conditions
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cannot be complied with, the said person shall
without delay sell the foreign exchange to an
authorised dealer."
Section 5 contains certain restrictions on
payments. The Provisions, s. 5 (1) (e) reads
:
"Save as may be provided in and in accordance
with any general or special exemption from the
provisions of this sub-section which may be
granted conditionally by the Reserve Bank, no
person in, or resident in, India shall-
(a) to (d)
(e) make any payment to or for the credit of
any person as consideration for or in
association with-
(i) the receipt by any person of a payment
or the acquisition by any person of property
outside India;
(ii) the creation or transfer in favour of
any person of a right whether actual or
contingent to receive a payment or acquire
property outside India;
Section 9 reads
" The Central Government may, by notification
in tile official Gazette, order every person
in, or resident in, India-
(a) who owns or holds such foreign exchange
as may be specified in the notification, to
offer it, or cause it to be offered for sale
to the Reserve Bank on behalf of the Central
Government or to such person as the Reserve
Bank may authorise for purpose, at such price
778
as the Central Government may fix, being a
price which is in the opinion of the Central
Government not less than the market rate of
the foreign exchange when it is offered for
sale;
(b) who is entitled to assign any right to
receive, such foreign exchange as may be
specified in the notification to transfer that
right to the Reserve Bank on behalf of the
Central Government on payment of such
consideration therefore as the Central
Government may fix :
Provided that the Central Government may by
the said notification or another order exempt
any persons or class of persons from the
operation of such order
Provided further that nothing in this section
shall apply to any foreign exchange acquired
by a person from an authorised dealer and
retained by him with the permission of the
Reserve Bank for any purpose."
The other provisions which are necessary to
note are
"S. 21 (1) No person shall enter into any
contract or agreement which would directly or
indirectly evade or avoid in any way the
operation of any provision of this Act or of
any rule, direction or order made thereunder.
S. 23(1). If any person contravenes the
provisions of section 4, section 5, section 9,
section 10 or subsection (2) of section 12,
section 17, section 18A or section 18B or of
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any rule, direction or order made thereunder,
he shall-
(a) be liable to such penalty not exceeding
three times the value of the foreign exchange
in respect of which the contravention has
taken place, or five thousand rupees,
whichever is more, as may be adjudicated by
the Director of Enforcement in the manner
hereinafter provided, or
(b) upon conviction by a Court, be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which
may extend to two years, or with fine, or with
both.
(1A)If any person contravenes any of the
provisions of this Act or of any rule,
direction or order made thereunder, for the
contravention of which no penalty is expressly
provided, he shall, upon conviction by a
court, be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to two years, or with
fine, or with both,
779
(3) No court shall take cognizance-
(a) of any offence punishable under sub-
section
(1) except upon a complaint in writing made by
the
Director of Enforcement, or
(aa)
(b) of any offence punishable under sub-
section (1A) of this section or section 23F,
except upon complaint in writing made by the
Director of Enforcement or any officer
authorised in this behalf by the Central
Government or the Reserve Bank by a general or
special order
Provided that where any such offence is the
contravention of any of the provisions of this
Act or any rule, direction or order made
thereunder which prohibits the doing of an act
without permission, no such complaint shall be
made unless the person accused of the, offence
has been given an opportunity of showing that
he had such permission.
23C. (1) If the person committing a
contravention is a company, every person who,
at the time the contravention was committed,
was in-charge of, and was responsible to, the
company for the conduct of the business of the
company as well as the company, shall be
deemed to be guilty of the contravention and
shall be liable to be proceeded against and
punished accordingly :
Provided that nothing contained in this sub-
section shall render any such person liable to
punishment if he proves that the contravention
took place without his knowledge or that he
exercised all due diligence to prevent such
contravention.
23D. (1) For the purpose of adjudicating under
clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 23
whether any person has committed a
contravention, the Director of Enforcement
shall hold an inquiry in the prescribed manner
after giving that person a reasonable opportu-
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nity of being heard and if, on such inquiry,
he is satisfied that the person has committed
the contravention, he may impose such penalty
as he thinks fit in accordance with the
provisions of the said section 23 :
Provided that if, at any stage of the inquiry,
the Director of Enforcement is of opinion that
having regard to the circumstances of the
case, the penalty which he is empowered to
impose would not be adequate, he shall,
780
instead of imposing any penalty himself, make
a complaint in writing to the court.
(2) While holding an inquiry under this
section, the Director of Enforcement shall
have power to summon and enforce the
attendance of any person to give evidence or
to produce a document or any other thing
which, in the opinion of the Director of
Enforcement, may be useful for, or relevant
to, the subject-matter of the inquiry.
Of the two agreements mentioned in the complaint the one
arrived at in August 1963 was not unlawful. S. 4(1) of the
Act did not make it unlawful for anyone to acquire foreign
exchange abroad. Any foreign exchange acquired by Pratap
after January 21, 1964 when Rule 132-A of the Defence of
India Rules was promulgated would be an unlawful acquisition
but there could be no conspiracy under s. 120-A in respect
of the agreement arrived at in August 1963. In paragraph 7
of the complaint it was only Pratap who was charged with
contravention of s. 9 of the Act in respect of 88,913-09 Sw.
Krs. but the agreement of November 1965 stands on a
different footing. According to paragraph 8 of the
complaint, Schussler agreed with Pratap at Madras in
November 1965 to help him to accumulate foreign exchange as
before by getting the same credited to his account in the
bank. This agreement would be one in violation of s. 4(1)
and 9 of the Act. However any violation of S. 4(1) or S. 9
or S-.4-(3) and s. 5 (1) (e) the last two provisions being
hardly applicable to the facts of the case-would be offences
under the Act, in respect whereof the Director of
Enforcement was competent to levy penalty under s. 23(1)(a)
of the Act after following the procedure for adjudication
prescribed in s. 23D of the Act or alternatively by making a
complaint in court under s. 23 (1) (b).
The recent judgment of this Court in M/s. Rayala Corpora-
tion (P) Ltd. & another v. The Director of Enforcement, New
Delhi(1) arising out of the complaint in Case No. 8736 of
1968 has laid down that before a complaint can be filed
under s. 23 (1)(b) the Director of Enforcement must not only
initiate proceedings under S. 23(1)(a) but proceed with the
inquiry under s. 23-D(1) and form an opinion in course
thereof that having regard to the circumstances of the case,
the penalty which he was empowered to impose under s. 23 (1)
(a) would not be adequate and that it was necessary to make
a complaint in writing to the court instead of levying a
penalty himself.
1970] 1 S.C. R. 619.
781
Mr. Sen arguing the appeal of Schussler contended that the
Act was a complete Code containing provisions not only for
punishment of violation of different sections of the Act but
also a conspiracy to commit acts prohibited under the Act
which might otherwise have been amenable, to the
jurisdiction under s. 120-A and 120-B of the Indian Penal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 23
Code. In this connection, he referred to the provisions in
s. 21 (1) of the Act. Under s. 21 (1) any agreement which
could directly or indirectly evade in any way the operation
of the provisions of the Act or any rule direction or order
made thereon was forbidden. The contravention of s. 21 (1)
does not find a place in s. 23 ( 1 ) of the Act but it would
be an offence covered by s. 23(1A) and any contravention of
s. 21 (1) would be punishable upon conviction by a court
with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years
or with fine or with both. The punishment is the same as
the one prescribed under s. 23 (1) (b) and is greater than
that laid down in s. 120-B(2) of the Indian Penal Code.
The learned Solicitor-General arguing the case of the
respondents contended that s. 21 (1) did not touch a
criminal conspiracy which is covered by s. 120-A of the
Penal Code. I find myself unable to accept this argument.
An agreement which can form the basis of a criminal
conspiracy under s. 120-A may. inter alia be one to do or
cause to be done an illegal act or at offence. Under s. 21
(1) of the Act any agreement which directly or indirectly
evades in any way the operation of the Act etc. is
forbidden. An agreement by two persons whereby one agrees
to help the other by facilitating transfer of foreign
exchange from a foreign exporter into the banking account of
that other is an agreement the object whereof is not only
the acquisition of foreign reign exchange but the retention
of it abroad. This is clearly an agreement to evade the
operation of the provisions of the Act relating to the
illegal acquisition and retention of foreign exchange.
In my view, the Act is a complete Code with regard to the
offences specified by it though it is not a self-sufficient
Code with regard to the procedure to be followed
irrespective of the provisions of the Criminal Procedure
Code. It is true that there are different sections in the
Act regarding the power to search. persons believed to have
secreted any documents which will be useful or relevant to
any proceeding under the Act (s. 9-A), to arrest any person
believed to be guilty of an offence punishable under the Act
(19-B), to stop and search conveyances (19-C), to search
premises (19-D), to examine persons during the course of any
enquiry in connection with any offence (19-E), to summon
persons to give evidence and produce documents in connection
with enquiries (19-F), to retain custody of documents (19-G)
which are not in consonance with the provisions of the
Procedure Code.
782
S. 24A contains a very special rule of evidence regarding
the proof of documents seized and the evidentiary value
thereof at complete variance with the Indian Evidence Act.
Some of these powers are more drastic and are in addition to
similar powers contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure.
But so far as the violation of the different provisions of
the Act, or rule or direction or order made thereunder are
concerned, the Act is a complete Code including in its ambit
a criminal conspiracy to acquire foreign exchange abroad
illicitly and retaining the same abroad by reason of the
provision of s. 21 (1).
The judgment of this Court in Cr. As. 18 and 19 of 1969
lays down that a complaint under s. 23 (1) (b) cannot be
launched before the Director of Enforcement has taken up the
adjudication proceedings and made some inquiry in those
proceedings and formed the opinion that it was necessary to
have resort to the more drastic provision of conviction by a
court as envisaged by S. 23 (1)(b).
No proceedings have been started either against Schussler or
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Pratap in pursuance of the notices dated 30th November 1963
and 21st January 1969. It would therefore appear that in
respect of the substantive offences for contravention of the
different sections of the Act, the Director of Enforcement
cannot at present make a complaint as he has not followed
the procedure laid down in s. 23-D of the Act. It would be
absurd to allow him to file a complaint for violation of S.
21 (1) by making a charge under s. 120-B I.P.C. when the
overt acts alleged are contravention of different provisions
of the Act, punishable only under s. 23 (1) (b) by following
the procedure indicated in s. 23-D. To allow the
prosecution to be proceeded with at this stage would in
effect be stultifying s. 23 (1) (b) by allowing the
establishment of commission of offences punishable only by
following a procedure not yet adopted by the Director of
Enforcement.
Mr. Sen relied on the decision in Rex v. Barnett(1) in aid
of his contention that when a statute makes unlawful that
which was lawful before and appoints a specific remedy that
remedy and no other must be pursued. In that case a number
of persons alleged to be dealers in scrap metal were charged
on a count of an indictment to the effect that they
conspired together and with other persons unknown to
contravene the provisions of S. 1 of the Auctions (Building
Agreements) Act, 1927, by being dealers, agreeing to offer
and accept consideration as an inducement or reward for
abstaining from bidding at sales by auction. What in effect
had happened there was that the prosecution alleged that a
(1) [1951] 2 K.B. 425.
783
number of persons had agreed to form a ring and in pursuance
of that agreement they attended at auction sales where cable
and other Ministry of Supply commodities were being sold and
that after some representatives of the ring bid for and
acquired goods on behalf of the ring they were- re-auctioned
and the profits shared by the ring in an agreed proportion.
The forming of a ring in order to bid at an auction in the
way indicated was not an, offence at law up to the passing
of the Act of 1927 and it was therefore submitted on behalf
of the persons who had been convicted on a count of
indictment at the Central Criminal Court before the Court of
Criminal Appeal that as the agreement was not an offence
under the common law and only became one under the Act of
1927 the procedure laid down by the Act should be, followed.
The submission on behalf of the prosecution was that the
indictment alleged was a conspiracy which was something
different from the offences which the, Act created. It was
pointed out by the Court of Appeal that although it was
possible to frame a charge alleging conspiracy to contravene
this Act in any given set of circumstances, the court must
ascertain what in fact was alleged. According to the court
:
"In alleging the conspiracy to contravene the
Act particulars are given, and those
particulars are ’by, being dealers, agreeing
to, offer and accept consideration as an
inducement or reward for abstaining from
bidding at sales by auction.’ This Court is of
opinion that those particulars of this
particular conspiracy describe in terms
offences which the Act creates, or are
substantially the same."
The same can be said on the facts of this case. The
particulars of conspiracy alleged in this case are offences
which the Act has created. In my view the Director of
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Enforcement must first take up the adjudication proceedings,
it being open to him in the course thereof to form an
opinion that the penalty which he may impose will not be
adequate having regard to the circumstances of the case,
whereupon he can make a complaint in writing to the Court.
He can at the same time make a complaint about the agreement
to evade the operation of the provisions of the Act calling
for punishment under s. 23(1A) of the Act. The agreement
with overt acts alleged for proving a conspiracy under
s. 120-B I.P.C. is in reality an offence under s. 23(1A)
read with s. 21 ( 1 ). The complaint does not lie at this
stage and must be quashed.
In the result I would allow the appeals and quash the com-
plaint made on 16th February 1967.
784
Hegde, J. I have gone through the judgment just,, now read
out by my esteemed colleague Mitter J. I agree with him that
these appeals should be allowed following the rule laid down
by this Court in M/s. Rayala Corporation (P) Ltd. and anr.
v. The Director of Enforcement, New Delhi(1). In my opinion
it is a fundamental principle of law that what cannot be
done directly should not be permitted to be done indirectly.
From the facts and circumstances of the case I am satisfied
that the complaint with which we are concerned is not a bona
fide one. It has been filed with a collateral purpose viz.
to justify the unlawful detention of Schussler, in this
country. It may be noted that in the first complaint filed
by the Director of Enforcement, the allegation was that the
Rayala Corporation and its Managing Agent, Pratap had
contravened the provision of the Foreign Exchange
Regulations Act. When that complaint was pending trial
Schussler came to deplane in this country due to some engine
trouble in the plane in which lie was travelling. That
occasion was availed-to detain him illegally in-this
country. I am convinced that Schussler’s detention in this
country was unjustified.
Even if we accept all the facts stated in the complaint as
correct, the same do not amount to an offence under s. 120-B
of the Indian Penal Code. According to the complaint Pratap
and Schussler "agreed to commit illegal acts namely
acquisition by A-2 (Pratap) foreign exchange illicitly and
retaining the same abroad without surrendering,the same to
the Government of India and also to defraud the Government
of India of foreign exchange thereby contravening Sections
4(3), 5(1)(e) and 9 of the Foreign Exchange Regulations Act
and Rule 132-A of the Defence of India (Amendment) Rules,
1964 and further that between August, 1963 and August 1966
A-1 (Schussler) and A-2 (Pratap) in pursuance of the said
agreement did commit acts in contravention of sections 4(3),
5 (1) (e) and 9 of the Foreign Exchange Regulations Act and
Rule 132-A of the Defence of India (Amendment) Rules, 1964
and thereby committed offence punishable under s. 120 (b) of
the Indian Penal Code read with ss. 4 (3), 5 (1) (e) and 9
of the F.E.R. Act and Rule 132-A of the Defence of India
(Amendment) Rules, 1964."
The material allegations made in the complaint read as fol-
lows :
"The Rayala Corporation Private Limited is a
Private Limited Company with headquarters at
Madras,
(1) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 639.
785
manufacturing ’HALDA’ typewriters out of
materials imported from aboard. Originally
they were importing raw materials through one
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A. B. Atvidabergs , Sweden, now known as Facit
AB. The first accused has been working as the
Export Manager of that concern. The raw
material supplied by Atvidabergs was over-
invoiced at the instance of the ’And accused
and thereby foreign exchange was illicitly
acquired in Swedish Kronara to the tune of
7,56,529/- by the 2nd accused Pratap before
August 1963 with the full knowledge of the 1st
accused.
Later in August 1963 the 2nd accused and the General Manager
of Rayala Corporation Mr. Jagga Rao went to Sweden. There
Jagga Rao, 2nd accused and the first accused met to-ether at
Stockholm and agreed to a plan regarding purchase of certain
raw materials viz., steel alloy sheet directly from M/s.
Associated Swedish Steels AB, Sweden, also known as ASSAB,
instead of purchasing the same from M/s. Atvidabergs. The
2nd accused told the first accused that henceforth he would
buy on behalf of his company raw materials from ASSAB. He
in found him of the arrangements made with ASSAB people to
over-invoice the value of the goods by 40% of the true value
and that he should be paid the difference of 40% on account
of aforesaid over-invoicing to his personal account. He
also told the 1st accused that since under the laws of India
this acquisition by him was unlawful, it had got to be kept
a secret, without any mention in the official correspondence
of M/s. Rayala Corporation with the Swedish firm. He
requested the first accused to help him in opening an
account in Swenska Handels Banken, Sweden in order not only
to transfer the money lying to his credit in Atvidabergs but
also to have further deposits to his personal account from
ASSAB on account of the difference between the actual value
and the overinvest value. A-1 agreed to act as requested by
the second accused. A-2 also made arrangements with ASSAB
to intimate to A-1 the various amounts credited to A-2’s
account and asked A-1 to keep a watch over the correctness
of the account, which A-1 agreed to do so. A-2 also asked
A-1 to intimate to him the account position from time to
time through unofficial channels or whenever A-1 comes to
India periodically. In fact A-1 was coming to India
periodically once in six months, since he was also a
Director of a company called Facit Asia Ltd., in Madras. In
pursuance of this conspiracy between the two accused the 2nd
accused arranged with ASSAB to have the difference between
the over-invoiced price and the actual price credited to the
personal account of the second accused in Ovenska Handels
Banken and the statement of account sent to A-1".
786
These allegations merely make out that Schussler was an
accessory after the fact and not that he was a conspirator.
If a person agreed with a robber to receive the stolen
property and arrange for its safe keeping, he does not
become. a co-conspirator with the robber in the commission
of the offence of robbery-. On the facts alleged it is
clear that Schussler had nothing to do either with the
acquisition of foreign exchange by Pratap or in the matter
of Pratap’s failure to repatriate the same to this country.
The accusation against him is that he provided facility for
its retention in Sweden.
In the result I allow these appeals and acquit the
appellants
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion of the majority, these
appeals are dismissed.
G.C.
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787