Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 635 of 2007
PETITIONER:
V.K. Puri
RESPONDENT:
Central Bureau of Investigation
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/04/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 635 OF 2007
[Arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 5932 of 2006]
WITH
TRANSFER PETITION (CRL.) NO. 351 OF 2006
S.B. SINHA, J :
Leave granted.
What would be the territorial jurisdiction of a Special Court within the
meaning of the provisions of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (for
short "the 1988 Act") is the question involved in this appeal which arises out
of a judgment and order dated 1.09.2006 passed by the High Court of Delhi
in Crl. Rev. Petition No. 556 of 2006.
Appellant was an officer working in the Customs Department.
Central Bureau of Investigation registered a First Information Report against
him purported to be for commission of an offence under Section 13(2) read
with Section 13(1)(e) of the 1988 Act, viz., acquiring of assets
disproportionate to the appellant’s known sources of income for the check
period of 1.06.1988 to 22.02.2002. Contention of the appellant is that, as he
had never been posted in Delhi during the aforementioned period, the Delhi
Court has no jurisdiction to his case. The learned Special Judge as also the
High Court has rejected the said contention of the appellant.
Mr. L. Nageshwara Rao, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf
of the appellant, would submit that the ingredients of an offence involving
Section 13(1)(e) of the 1988 Act vis-‘-vis the other provisions thereof read
with the relevant provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, viz.,
Sections 177 and 178 thereof, would clearly go to show that the situs of the
properties which are said to have been acquired out of the income of the
employee would not confer jurisdiction upon the court.
It was submitted that the only fact relevant therefor would be as to
where the public servant concerned committed acts of misconduct or abused
his official position, which would be the places where he had held his
offices. It was urged that the principal place of commission of offence will
have to be judged having regard to the area where the offence has been said
to have been completed. Reliance in this behalf has been placed on M.
Krishna Reddy v. State Deputy Superintendent of Police, Hyderabad [(1992)
4 SCC 45] and CBI, ADH, Patna v. Braj Bhushan Prasad and Others [(2001)
9 SCC 432].
Drawing our attention to a judgment of Punjab and Haryana High
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Court rendered by M.M. Punchhi, J. (as the learned Chief Justice then was)
in Kamal Dev v. State of Haryana [1986 (3) Crimes 305], it was submitted
that the term "possession" would refer to the source and not the situs of the
property.
Mr. A. Sharan, learned Additional Solicitor General appearing on
behalf of the respondent, on the other hand, would submit that as by reason
of Sub-section (3) of Section 5 of the 1988 Act, the provisions of the Code
of Criminal Procedure have been made applicable in relation to the
proceedings initiated against the 1988 Act, in a case where the offence was
committed at more than one place, any of the courts concerned will have
jurisdiction to try the offence. Reliance in this behalf has been placed on P.
Nallammal and Another v. State Represented by Inspector of Police [(1999)
6 SCC 559].
Before embarking on the questions involved herein, we may notice
the relevant provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure and the 1988 Act.
Sections 177 and 178 of the Code of Criminal Procedure read as
under:
"177 - Ordinary place of inquiry and trial
Every offence shall ordinarily be inquired into and
tried by a Court within whose local jurisdiction it
was committed.
178 - Place of inquiry or trial
(a) When it is uncertain in which of several local
areas an offence was committed, or
(b) where an offence is committed partly in one
local area and partly in another, or
(c) where an offence is a continuing one, and
continues to be committed in more local areas than
one, or
(d) where it consists of several acts done in
different local areas,
it may be inquired into or tried by a Court having
jurisdiction over any of such local areas."
The relevant provisions of the 1988 Act read as under:
"3 - Power to appoint special Judges
(1) The Central Government or the State
Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, appoint as many special Judges as may be
necessary for such area or areas or for such case or
group of cases as may be specified in the
notification to try the following offences, namely:-
-
(a) any offence punishable under this Act; and
(b) any conspiracy to commit or any attempt to
commit or any abetment of any of the offences
specified in clause (a).
(2) A person shall not be qualified for appointment
as a special Judge under this Act unless he is or
has been a Sessions Judge or an Additional
Sessions Judge or an Assistant Sessions Judge
under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of
1974).
4 - Cases triable by special Judges
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), or
in any other law for the time being in force, the
offences specified in sub-section (1) of section 3
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shall be tried byspecial Judges only.
(2) Every offence specified in sub-section (1) of
section 3 shall be tried by the special Judge for the
area within which it was committed, or, as the case
may be, by the special Judge appointed for the
case, or where there are more special Judges than
one for such area, by such one of them as may be
specified in this behalf by the Central Government.
(3) *
(4) *
5 - Procedure and powers of special Judge
(1) A special Judge may take cognizance of
offences without the accused being committed to
him for trial and, in trying the accused persons,
shall follow the procedure prescribed by the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), for the
trial of warrant case by Magistrates.
(2) *
(3) Save as provided in sub-section (1) or sub-
section (2), the provisions of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), shall, so far as they
are not inconsistent with this Act, apply to the
proceedings before a special Judge; and for
purposes of the said provisions, the Court of the
special Judge shall be deemed to be a Court of
Session and the person conducting a prosecution
before a special Judge shall be deemed to be a
public prosecutor.
(4) *
(5) *
(6) *
*
13 - Criminal, misconduct by a public servant
(1) A public servant is said to commit the offence
of criminal misconduct, \027
(a) *
(b) *
(c) if he dishonestly or fraudulently
misappropriates or otherwise converts for his own
use any property entrusted to him or under his
control as a public servant or allows any other
person to do so; or
(d) if he,\027
(i) by corrupt or illegal means, obtains for himself
or for any other person any valuable thing or
pecuniary advantage; or
(ii) by abusing his position as a public servant,
obtains for himself or for any other person any
valuable thing or pecuniary advantage; or
(iii) while holding office as a public servant,
obtains for any person any valuable thing or
pecuniary advantage without any public,
interest; or
(e) if he or any person on his behalf, is in
possession or has, at any time during the period of
his office, been in possession for which the public
servant cannot satisfactorily account, of pecuniary
resources or property disproportionate to his
known sources of income."
The 1988 Act is a Special Act. It over-rides the provisions of the
general law, viz., Code of Criminal Procedure. But, then when a matter is
not covered by the 1988 Act, in view of Sub-section (3) of Section 5 of the
1988 Act, the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure shall clearly be
applicable.
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A distinction exists between a case filed under Sections 13(1)(c) and
13(1)(d) of the 1988 Act, on the one hand, and Section 13(1)(e) thereof, on
the other.
Ingredients of the offence under Section 13(1)(e) of the 1988 Act are:
(i) The accused is a public servant;
(ii) The nature and extent of the pecuniary resources of property found
in his possession;
(iii) His known sources of income, i.e., known to the prosecution.
(iv) Such resources or properties found in possession of the accused
were disproportionate to his known sources of income.
Once, however, the aforementioned ingredients are established by the
prosecution, the burden of proof would shift on the accused to show that the
prosecution case is not correct. [See M. Krishna Reddy (supra), para 7]
One of the ingredients of offences, therefore, is known sources of
income. What is material therefor is that the criminal misconduct had been
committed during the period he held office and not the places where he had
held offices. The fact that the appellant had bank accounts within the
jurisdiction of the Delhi Courts as also immovable properties is not in
dispute. Respondent in the chargesheet has clearly pointed out that one of
his known sources of income was the rental received by him from his Delhi
flat. The same had been given due credit for the purpose of arriving at a
prima facie satisfaction that the assets possessed of by him are
disproportionate to his known source of income.
From a perusal of the chargesheet, it furthermore appears that the
appellant is said to have acquired large properties including several bank
accounts. For the purpose of proving the offence, therefore, on the one
hand, known sources of income must be ascertained vis-‘-vis the possession
of property or resources which were disproportionate to the known sources
of income of public servant and the inability of the public servant to account
for it, on the other. Whereas the burden to prove the first part of the offence
is on the prosecution, in the event the same is proved, it would shift to the
public servant concerned. [See P. Nallammal (supra)]
It is not a case where the offence revolves round any conspiracy or
abetment to commit an offence to commit an offence. It is also not a case
falling under Clauses (c) and (d) of Sub-section (1) of Section 13 of the 1988
Act as was the case in Braj Bhushan Prasad (supra). Appellant is not
accused of commission of such an offence. No other person has been
charged with the offence of abetment and conspiracy. The question of
finding out the place where the offence was completed, thus, does not arise
in this case.
Strong reliance has been placed by Mr. Nageshwara Rao on a Single
Judge Bench decision of the Kerala High Court in Banwarilal Jhunjhunwalla
and Others v. Union of India [AIR 1959 Kerala 311] wherein it was
observed:
"13. Taking the first offence under Section 5 (2) of
the Prevention of Corruption Act, alleged to have
been committed by Thomson, there can be little
doubt that it was committed within the State of
Kerala where he passed inferior jungle-wood as
timber of the contract quality and issued false
certificates to that effect. (Of course these
statements are as yet no more than assumptions
based on the prosecution case, in accordance with
which the question of jurisdiction has to be
determined and it is unnecessary to repeat this
caution at every stage of the discussion).
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When Thomson did this, he was undoubtedly
abusing his position as a public servant, and it is a
legitimate inference that he thereby obtained for
himself or at least for the contractors, a pecuniary
advantage. The act of abusing his position as a
public servant certainly took place within the
Kerala State where the false certificates were
issued, and even if the consequence of obtaining a
pecuniary advantage for himself or for the
contractors which consequence makes that act an
offence took place elsewhere, under Section 179,
Criminal Procedure Code, the special judge for
Kerala would have jurisdiction to try the offence.
That the special judge has jurisdiction to try
Thomson for the offence under Section 5 (2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act is, in fact, not
disputed."
However, therein the factual matrix was absolutely different. In a
case of this nature, the question of completion of any offence does not arise.
In a case involving Section 13(1)(e) of the 1988 Act, what is
necessary is as to whether keeping in view the period in question, commonly
known as check period, the public servant has acquired wealth which is
disproportionate to his known sources of income. It has nothing to do with
individual case of bribery. It has nothing to do with a series of acts
culminated into an offence.
Each Court, where a part of the offence has been committed, would,
therefore, be entitled to try an accused. The 1988 Act does not bar
application of Section 178 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. If application
of the provision of Section 178 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is not
barred, the fact that the appellant has a part of his known source of income at
Delhi, in our opinion, would confer jurisdiction upon the Delhi Courts. It is
one thing to say that only the Special Courts will have jurisdiction to try the
offence, but for the purpose of arriving at a decision as to the Special Judge
of which place shall have the requisite jurisdiction, the situs of the property
may or may not have any relevance. Once the situs of the property is held to
have relevance for the purpose of ascertaining his known source of income
and consequent acquisition of disproportionate assets, in our opinion, the
Special Judge concerned will also have the requisite jurisdiction to try the
case. For the said purpose, purport and object for which the 1988 Act has
been enacted must be taken into consideration. The doctrine of purposive
construction therefor must be taken recourse to.
With respect, Punchhi, J. (as the learned Chief Justice then was) in
Kamal Dev (supra) was not concerned with such a question and in that view
of the matter, the following observations made in paragraph 4 may not have
strict application:
"4. The commission of the offence of criminal
misconduct has nexus to the period of his office. It
is so intimately interlinked that it is the place of
office which would determine the place of
commission of his misconduct. It is through his
office alone that one can determine his known
source of income and if his property which is
presently in his possession or in possession of
someone on his behalf, or has at any time during
the period of his office been in his possession or of
someone on his behalf, then it is relatively to be
viewed with the period of his office. In this
context, the place of office assumes importance,
for that would determine the jurisdiction in which
the offence of criminal misconduct would be
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triable. Thus, in the instant case, I am of the view
that it was the Special Judge at Chandigarh who
had the jurisdiction to try the offence against the
petitioner."
In any event, as would appear from paragraph 5 of the said judgment
itself, the learned Judge did not intend to determine the said question finally
as ultimately the doctrine of forum conveniens had been taken recourse to
for holding that although more than one Special Judge may have jurisdiction
to try the offence, the Special Judge at Chandigarh would be the appropriate
authority to have the case tried before it in the interest of justice.
For the reasons aforementioned, we, albeit for different reasons, do
not find merit in this appeal which is dismissed accordingly.
TRANSFER PETITION (CRL.) NO. 351 OF 2006
An application for transfer has been filed wherein one of the principal
questions raised was the absence of territorial jurisdiction of the Special
Judge, Delhi.
The matter is pending for a long time before the Delhi Court. Charges
have already been framed. It may be that many of the prosecution witnesses
do not hail from Delhi. It may further be that Accused No. 3 is a resident of
Indore but as the offence is said to have been committed in the year 2002
and chargesheet has also been submitted in that year, we are of the opinion
that the transfer petition at this stage should not be entertained. It is
dismissed accordingly.