Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAJ KUMAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/02/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 805 1988 SCR (2) 936
1988 SCC (1) 701 JT 1988 (1) 476
1988 SCALE (1)319
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC 811 (8)
ACT:
Punjab Police Rules, 1934 framed under the Police Act
1861-Rule 16.38-Interpretation of-Whether Mandatory or
directory in nature-Scope of-Whether applicable to
departmental inquiries alone or would govern criminal
proceedings also under I.P.C. and other acts. Held-
Applicable to departmental inquiries only.
HEADNOTE:
%
The respondent was apprehended while taking bribe.
Investigation was held and the respondent was chargesheeted
before the Special Judge. The respondent raised an objection
to the framing of charges against him on the ground that the
investigation of the case was in contravention of rule 16.38
of the Punjab Police Rules. The Special Judge overruled the
objection and framed charges and posted the case for trial.
The respondent filed a petition before the High Court under
section 561(A) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, for
quashing the proceedings against him before the Special
Judge. A full bench of the High Court held that rule 16.38
is mandatory and not directory in character and that the
mandate would govern criminal prosecution as well as
departmental inquiries in equal measure. The full bench
having noticed that the investigation against the respondent
had not been done in accordance with rule 16.38 allowed the
petition and quashed the charges framed against the
respondent. Hence this appeal filed by certificate issued by
the High Court.
Allowing the appeal and setting aside the High Court’s
judgment this Court,
^
HELD: The procedure prescribed in rule 16.38 has only a
limited field of operation that is applicable only to
departmental inquiries and punishments. This could be seen
from the fact that clause 3 of the rule enjoins every
Magistrate to whom a complaint against a police officer is
referred by the District Magistrate for judicial enquiry to
report the details of the case to the District Magistrate in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
order to enable the District Magistrate to forward the
report to the Superintendent of Police. The clause further
says that if the District Magistrate himself takes
cognizance of a case he should of his own accord send a
report to
937
the Superintendent of Police. Clause IV of rule 16.38 also
throws light on the matter and brings out the objective in
greater clarity. This clause sets out that in order to
protect the interest of police officers serving in districts
where petition mongering activities are notorious, the
District Magistrate can direct that all petitions
complaining about police officers shall be presented to him
personally so that he can scrutinize them to find out
whether the petitions are of a frivolous nature or they have
been engineered by factious groups in the districts etc. In
fact, the words used in the clause are of a tell-tale nature
viz. "complaints against police officers in those districts
where abuses of law with the object of victimising such
officers or hampering investigation is rife." [945F-H; 946A-
B]
The purpose underlying the rule is to enable the
District Magistrate and the District Superintendent of
Police to exercise personal control and supervision over the
complaints received against members of the police force in
the performance of their duties and enable the District
Magistrate to ensure that the complaint is not a baseless or
mala fide one and secondly to determine whether the
complaint requires investigation by a police officer or by a
selected Magistrate. The procedure envisaged by the rule is
for effective check being exercised against victimisation of
efficient and honest police officers on the one hand and
favouritism being shown to the delinquent police officers on
the other. These rules were not intended to replace and
certainly cannot over-ride the provisions of the Criminal
Procedure Code. [946C-E]
In the instant case the Full Bench was in error in
taking the view that the Punjab Police Rules read in
conjunction with the Police Act prescribe a different
procedure for the investigation and prosecution of offences
committed by Police Officer under the I.P.C. or other Acts
in connection with their relations with the public and that
the rules constitute a special statute and take precedence
over the provisions of the Cr. P.C. The Full Bench has
failed to note that Rule 16.38 only mandates the
investigation of cases pertaining to departmental enquiries
and the holding of departmental enquiries in accordance with
the procedure prescribed thereunder.[948B-C]
Raj Kumar, A. S. I. v. The State of Punjab, [1976] IV
CLR (Pb. & Har.) page 39, overruled.
State of Punjab v. Charan Singh, [1981] 2 SCC 197,
referred to/agreed to.
Delhi Administration v. Chanan Shah, [1969] 3 S.C.R.
653;
938
Union of India v. Ram Kishan, [1971] 2 S.C.C. 349; State of
Uttar Pradesh v. Babu Ram Upadhya, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 679;
Maulud Ahmad v. State of U.P., [1963] (Supp.) 2 S.C.R. 38;
Ajaib Singh v. Joginder Singh, [1969] 1 S.C.R. 145 and S.N.
Sharma v. Bipan Kumar Tiwari & Ors.,[1970] 1 S.C.C. 653,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
580 of 1976.
From the Judgment and Order dated 10.10.1975 of the
High Court of Punjab and Haryana in Criminal Miscellaneous
No. 772-M of 1974.
R.S. Sodhi for the Appellant.
Gopal Subramaniam, Amicus Curiae for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. This appeal by certificate granted under
Article 134(1)(c) of the Constitution is directed against
the judgment of a Full Bench of the High Court of Punjab and
Haryana in Raj Kumar, A.S.I. v. The State of Punjab, [1976]
IV C.L.R. (Pb. & Har.) page 39 allowing a petition under
Section 561(A) of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 filed
by the respondent. The objective in filing the appeal, it
was conceded by Mr. R.S. Sodhi, learned counsel for the
State is the determination of a larger issue transcending
the narrow confines of the quashing of the criminal
proceedings against the respondent viz. the construction of
Rule 16.38 of the Punjab Police Rules and its applicability
to criminal prosecutions launched against the members of the
Punjab Police Service for offences under the Indian Penal
Code and other Acts.
The controversy regarding the ambit of Rule 16.38 of
the Punjab Police Rules has arisen in the following
circumstances. One Jamuna Devi Mukhtiar Kaur gave a report
against the respondent, who was an Assistant Sub Inspector
in the Punjab Police Service, to the Deputy Superintendent
of Police, Patiala alleging command of illegal gratification
of Rs.200 by him for releasing her husband and brother on
bail bonds in a case pertaining to a land dispute. A first
information report was registered and a trap was laid for
the respondent and he was apprehended as soon as the marked
currency notes treated with phenolophthalene were handed
over to him and the marked currency
939
notes were recovered from him. After completion of
investigation, the respondent was chargesheeted before the
Special Judge, Sangrur. The respondent appeared before the
Special Judge and raised an objection to the framing of
charges against him on the ground the investigation of the
case was in contravention of Rule 16.38. The Special Judge
over-ruled the objection and framed charges and posted the
case for trial.
The respondent filed a petition before the High Court
under Section 561(A) of the Criminal Procedure Code 1898,
for quashing the proceedings against him before the Special
Judge. As there were conflicting decisions of the High Court
in the interpretation of Rule 16.38, a learned Single Judge
referred the matter to a Division Bench and in turn the
Division Bench referred the matter to a Full Bench. A Full
Bench of the High Court reviewed the earlier decisions and
held that Rule 16.38 is mandatory and not directory in
character and secondly the mandate would govern criminal
prosecutions as well as departmental enquiries in equal
measure and as such any prosecution launched or departmental
enquiry held in violation of the terms of the Rule would
vitiate the proceedings concerned. Having interpreted Rule
16.38 thus, the Full Bench noticed that the investigation
against the respondent had not been done in accordance with
Rule 16.38 and therefore the bench allowed the petition and
quashed the charges framed against the respondent. The High
Court, however, granted a certificate under Article
134(1)(c) to the State to file an appeal to this Court and
that is how the appeal is before us.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
What, therefore, calls for consideration is whether the
procedure prescribed in Rule 16.38 calls for observance in
the case of departmental enquiries alone or whether it would
govern criminal prosecutions also for offences under the
Indian Penal Code and other Acts, and secondly whether the
Rule is mandatory in character or only directory. Our task
has been considerably lightened by a pronouncement on the
first question, with which we are primarily concerned, by
another Bench of this Court in the State of Punjab v. Charan
Singh, [1981] 2 SCC 197 declaring that Rule 16.38 cannot
govern criminal prosecutions against the members of the
Police Force as it cannot over-ride the provisions of the
Criminal Procedure Code. In spite of the said pronouncement,
with which we are in respectful agreement, we feel it
necessary to deal with the matter at some length because of
certain misconceptions contained in the judgment of the High
Court under appeal.
940
Before we advert to the decisions pertaining to Rule
16.38, we may refer to certain provisions of the Police Act
1861 and the Punjab Police Rules framed thereunder. Section
3 of the Police Act, confers the right of superintendence of
the Police Force throughout the general police district on
the State Government and vests in such Government the right
to exercise such powers in that behalf. Section 7 deals with
the appointment, dismissal, etc. of inferior officers. The
Section lays down that the "Subject to the provisions of
Article 311 of the Constitution, and to such Rules as the
State Government may from time to time make under this Act,
the Inspector General, Deputy Inspector General, Asstt.
Inspector General and District Superintendents of Police may
at any time dismiss, suspend or reduce any police officer of
the subordinate ranks whom they shall think remiss or
negligent in the discharge of his duty or unfit for the
same" or to award any of the lesser punishments prescribed
under clauses (a) (b) (c) (d) for discharge of duty in a
careless or negligent manner etc. Besides the power
conferred on the State Government to make Rules under
Section 7, there is also provision under Section 12 for the
Inspector General of Police, subject to the approval of the
State Government, to frame such orders and rules as he shall
deem expedient relative to the organisation, classification
and distribution of police force, the places at which the
members of the police force shall reside, the services to be
performed by them etc. for ensuring the efficiency of the
police force in the discharge of its duties. It is in
exercise of the powers conferred by Sections 7 and 12 of the
Police Act that the Punjab Police Rules 1934 have been
framed. The Rules have been categorised under 28 Chapters
for dealing with various matters such as organisational
setup, uniforms, arms and ammunition, leave, pension,
promotions, rewards, punishments, training, supervision,
investigation, prosecution etc. The matters covered by the
Rules make it clear that the Rules have been framed for
regulating the set up and the service conditions of the
police force as well as for awarding them rewards and
departmental punishments and other matters of internal
administration for keeping efficient and disciplined one. It
is in that perspective Rule 38 of Chapter 16 has to be
viewed.
The very first Rule in Chapter 16 sets out the scope
and purpose of the Rule comprised in that chapter. Rules
16.1 reads as follows:
"(1) No police officer shall be departmentally
punished otherwise than as provided in these
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
rules;
(2) The departmental punishments mentioned in the
second
941
column of the subjoined table may be inflicted on
officers of the various ranks shown in the heading
Nos. 3 to 9, by the officers named below each
heading in each case, or by any officer of higher
ranks".
(Emphasis supplied)
Rule 16.38 with which we are concerned, contains 7 sub-
clauses. For our purpose it is enough if we extract sub-
clauses. 1 to 4 and refer in general terms to the contents
of Clauses 5 to 7.
"16.38(1) Immediate information shall be given to
the District Magistrate or any complaint received
by the Superintendent of Police, which indicates
the commission by a police officer of a criminal
offence in connection with his official relations
with the public. The District Magistrate will
decide whether the investigation of the complaint
shall be conducted by a police officer, or made
over to a selected magistrate having 1st class
powers.
(2) When investigation of such a complaint
establishes a prima facie case, a judicial
prosecution shall normally follow; the matter
shall be disposed of departmentally only if the
District Magistrate so orders for reasons to be
recorded. When it is decided to proceed
departmentally the procedure prescribed in rule
16.38 shall be followed. An officer found guilty
on a charge of the nature referred to in this rule
shall ordinarily be dismissed.
(3) Ordinarily a magistrate before whom a
complaint against a police officer if laid
proceeds at once to judicial enquiry. He is,
however, required to report details of the case to
the District Magistrate, who will forward a copy
of this report to the Superintendent of Police.
The District Magistrate himself will similarly
send a report to the Superintendent of Police in
cases of which he himself takes cognizance.
(4) The Local Government has prescribed the
following supplimentary procedure to be adopted in
the case of complaints against police officers in
those districts where abuses of the law with the
object of victimising such officers or hampering
investigation is rife. The District Magistrate
will order that all petitions against police
officers shall be
942
presented to him personally. If he considers that
these petitions are of a frivolous or factious
nature, it is within his discretion to take no
action on them. When he considers an enquiry to be
necessary he will use his discretion whether to
send the papers to the Superintendent of Police or
to a magistrate for judicial enquiry.
In the case of formal criminal complaints,
the District Magistrate will arrange for all cases
to be transferred from other courts to his own.
Clauses 5 to 7 relate to strictures passed by the High Court
and other courts against police officers and the manner of
communication of the strictures to the District Magistrate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
and the Government.
Different interpretations were given by different
Benches of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana regarding
the scope and force of rule 16.38. In Criminal Revision No.
1100 of 1972 (Amarjit Singh v. State of Punjab) H.R. Sharma,
J. held that Rule 16.38 debarred criminal proceedings if the
same had been instituted without a prior sanction of the
District Magistrate. In Ram Prakash, Asstt. Sub-Inspector v.
The State, [1974] Chandigarh Law Reporter 205 Gurnam Singh,
J. took a diametrically opposite view. In Hoshiar Singh v.
The State, [1965] PLR 438 a Division Bench of the High Court
held that Rule 16.38 was attrected in the case of
departmental enquiries only and the departmental enquiry
would be vitiated if the papers had not been produced before
the District Magistrate for getting his sanction at the
initial stage. In Nand Singh v. The Superintendent of Police
and another, Current Law Journal(Pb)146 it was held that the
Rule was mandatory. The said view was affirmed by a Full
Bench in Nand Mandan Sarup v. The District Magistrate and
others, [1966] Current Law Journal (Pb) 608. It was in that
backdrop of conflicting decisions, the petition filed by the
respondent herein under Section 561(A) for quashing of the
proceedings against him before the Special Judge came to be
referred to a Full Bench.
The reasoning of the Full Bench for allowing the
respondent’s petition can be summarised thus:
"The Police Act vests the right of superintendence
of the police force in a State on the State
Government. Section 7 of the Police Act empowers
the State Government to frame rules regarding
disciplinary matters and Section 12 em-
943
powers the Inspector General of Police, subject to
the approval of the State Government, to frame
orders and rules relating to the organisation,
classification and distribution of the police
force, the services to be performed by them etc."
Hence the rules framed in exercise of powers
conferred under section 7 and 12 have the force of
law and they constitute a special legislation
which takes precedence over the provisions of the
Criminal Procedure Code. Section 4 of the Police
Act inter alia lays down that the administration
of the police, within the jurisdiction of a
District Magistrate, shall under his general
control and direction, be vested in a District
Superintendent and Assistant District
Superintendents as the Government may appoint.
Consequently, the District Magistrate has
statutory authority to exercise control over the
administration of the police force in his District
including the launching of criminal prosecutions
or holding of Departmental enquiries against a
member of the police force. Rule 16.38 contains a
mandatory provision regarding the procedure to be
followed when any complaint is received by the
Superintendent of Police against a member of the
police force regarding the commission of an
offence by him in connection with his official
relations with the public. The said rule will
apply with equal force to investigations relating
to criminal offences for which a prosecution is to
be launched as it would to enquiries for taking
departmental action through disciplinary
proceedings. On the basis of such reasoning, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
Full Bench over-ruled the decision in Hoshiar
Singh v. State of Punjab (supra).
We will now refer to the decision in Hoshiar Singh
(supra), since it has been approved by this Court in State
of Punjab v. Charan Singh (supra), and then advert to some
decisions of this Court relevant for consideration. In that
case a Sub-Inspector of Police was challaned under Section
5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act and Section 161,
Indian Penal Code and was suspended from service and
chargesheeted and thereafter a departmental enquiry
followed. When a show cause notice was served on him on the
conclusion of the enquiry intimating him the proposed
punishment, he objected to the legality of the enquiry on
the ground that no permission of the District Magistrate in
accordance with Rule 16.38 of the Punjab Police Rules had
been obtained. The objection was sustained and the
departmental enquiry was quashed. Thereafter, the challan
was put into Court and
944
once again an objection was raised that in the absence of a
reference to the District Magistrate and his orders thereon
directing prosecution, the Special Judge could not take
cognizance of the case. The Special Judge over-ruled the
objection holding that his powers under the Criminal Law
(Amendment) Act were not trammelled by the Punjab Police
Rules. A criminal revision was filed before the High Court
against the order of the Special Judge and the High Court
dismissed the criminal revision holding thus:
"I do not think Rule 16.38 was intended or could
have the effect of imposing as a condition
precedent to the trial of a police officer in a
Court of Law, a sanction or an order by the
District Magistrate, as contemplated therein. The
language appears to me to be confined only to
departmental enquiries. The investigation for
establishing a prima facie case is merely meant to
guide the District Magistrate, uncontrolled by the
opinion of the Superintendent of Police, whether
or not a departmental proceeding should be
initiated against the guilty party, and it is the
procedure and the punishment controlling the
departmental proceedings alone, which appear to
have been prescribed by this rule."
In Delhi Administration v. Chanan Shah, [1969] 3 S.C.R.
653 an Asstt. Sub Inspector was censured, after summary
enquiry for having received illegal gratification in a case
he was investigating. The Deputy Inspector General of Police
revoked the order of censure and directed departmental
action being taken. The departmental enquiry culminated in
an order of dismissal against Chanan Shah. An appeal and
revision to the higher authorities having failed, Chanan
Shah filed a writ petition which was dismissed by a Single
Judge but allowed in writ appeal by a Division Bench and the
order of dismissal was quashed. The Delhi Administration
came in appeal to this Court and this Court held that
irrespective of whether Rule 16.38 is mandatory or
directory, the authorities had failed to substantially
comply with the provisions of the Rule and, therefore, the
laches vitiated the departmental enquiry. The same view was
taken in a later case Union of India v. Ram Kishan, [1971] 2
S.C.C. 349 which related to the dismissal of a constable
from service pursuant to a disciplinary enquiry being set
aside in a civil suit filed by the dismissed constable. The
decree of the Trial Court was affirmed by the Appellate
Court and the High Court and in further appeal to this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
Court, it was held that as no immediate information was
given to the District Magistrate in respect of the complaint
received
945
against the plaintiff (constable) and secondly since the
District Magistrate has also not decided whether the
investigating agency should be a police officer or a
magistrate, as prescribed by Rule 16.38, the departmental
enquiry was vitiated and, therefore, the plaintiff’s suit
had been rightly decreed. In State of Uttar Pradesh v. Babu
Ram Upadhya, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 679 the view taken by the
majority of the Bench was that paragraph 486 Rule 1 of U.P.
Police Rules was mandatory in character and hence the
departmental action taken against the respondent police
officer in disregard of the rule was invalid.
It may be noticed that the three decisions of this
Court which have been referred to above related to
departmental enquiries and not criminal prosecutions for
offences committed by the delinquent police officers. The
pronouncements in these cases will therefore govern only
cases where departmental enquiries are held in contravention
of the procedure prescribed by the Police Rules. The reason
for a special procedure being prescribed in the Rules for
investigations before departmental enquiries are held
against delinquent police officers is not far off to see. In
the very nature of their duties, the members of the police
force would often stand exposed to criticism and complaints
by not only the members of the public but also by the
members of the force themselves and consequently they stand
placed more vulnerable than members of other Government
services, of being implicated in false or exaggerated
charges. In order to protect them from false implications
and resultant proceedings, the Government had thought it
necessary to have an initial screening of the complaints
received against members of the police force by the District
Magistrate. Such screening would however extend only to
matters which fall within the zone of departmental action
and it could never extend to cases where the offences
alleged to have been committed would attract investigation
under the Criminal Procedure Code in the same manner the
investigation would be attracted if the offences complained
of had been committed by any member of the public. That the
procedure prescribed in Rule 16.38 has only a limited field
of operation i.e. applicable only to departmental enquiries
and punishments could be seen from the fact that clause 3 of
the Rule enjoins every Magistrate to whom a complaint
against a police officer is referred by the District
Magistrate for judicial enquiry to report the details of the
case to the District Magistrate in order to enable the
District Magistrate to forward the report to the
Superintendent of Police. The clause further says that if
the District Magistrate himself takes congnizance of a case,
he should of his own accord send a report to the
Superintendent of Police. Clause IV of Rule 16.38 also
throws light on the matter and brings out the
946
objective in greater clarity. This clause sets out that in
order to protect the interests of police officers serving in
districts where petition mongering activities are notorious,
the District Magistrate can direct that all petitions
complaining about police officers shall be presented to him
personally so that he can scrutinize them to find out
whether the petitions are of a frivolous nature or they have
been engineered by factious groups in the districts etc. In
fact, the words used in the clause are of a tell-tale nature
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
viz. "complaints against police officers in those districts
were abuses of law with the object of victimising such
officers or hampering investigation is rife."
All these features make it clear that the purpose
underlying the rule is to enable the District Magistrate and
the District Superintendent of Police to exercise personal
control and supervision over the complaints received against
members of the police force in the performance of their
duties and enable the District Magistrate to ensure that the
complaint is not a baseless or mala fide one and secondly to
determine whether the complaint requires investigation by a
police officer or by a selected magistrate. The procedure
envisaged by the Rule is for effective check being exercised
against victimisation of efficient and honest police
officers on the one hand and favouritism being shown to the
delinquent police officers on the other. These rules were
not intended to replace and certainly cannot over-ride the
provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code. The Full Bench
was therefore in error in taking the view that the Rules lay
down a special procedure for investigation of all offences
committed by the members of the police force and, that they
have over-riding effect over the provisions of the Criminal
Procedure Code in terms of Sections 4 and 5 of the Code.
We may now refer to some other decisions where it has
been laid down that the provisions of the Police Act cannot
prevail over the provisions of the Indian Penal Code. In
Maulud Ahmad v. State of U.P., [1963] (Supp) 2 S.C.R. 38,
the appellant who was a head constable contended that the
prosecution launched against him was barred by limitation
under Section 42 of the Police Act because the prosecution
had been launched beyond the period of three months
prescribed by Section 42. The contention was rejected and it
was pointed out that the period of three months prescribed
under Section 42 for commencing a prosecution would govern
only prosecutions of a police officer for something done or
intended to be done by him under the provisions of the
Police Act or under general police powers given by the Act
and Section 42 would not apply to prosecutions against a
police officer for anything done under the provisions of any
other Act or under
947
Police powers conferred under any other Act. It was also
brought to focus that Section 36 of the Police Act
explicitely provides that nothing contained in the said Act
shall be construed to prevent any person from being
prosecuted under any Regulation or Act for any offence made
punishable by the Act or for being liable under any other
Regulation or Act or any other or higher penalty or
punishment that is provided for such offence by the Police
Act. The above ratio was followed in Ajaid Singh v. Joginder
Singh, [1969] 1 S.C.R. 145. In yet another case viz. S.N.
Sharma v. Bipen Kumar Tiwari & Ors., [1970] 1 S.C.C. 653 it
was held that the power of the police to investigate a
cognizable offence is uncontrolled by the Magistrate and it
is only in cases where the police decided not to investigate
the case that the Magistrate can intervene and either direct
an investigation, or in the alternative himself proceed or
depute a Magistrate subordinate to him to proceed to enquire
into the case and that the powers of the police to
investigate have been made independent of any control by the
Magistrate.
Lastly, we come to the decision in the State of Punjab
v. Charan Singh (supra) where the identical question under
consideration had come up for determination by this Court.
The respondent therein was convicted by the Special Judge,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
Ludhiana of an offence under Section 5(1)(d) read with
Section 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act and
sentence to suffer rigorous imprisonment for a period of one
year and to pay a fine of Rs. 100. On appeal, a Single Judge
of the High Court acquitted the respondent on the ground the
prosecution was vitiated by reason of non-compliance with
the provisions of Rule 16.38 of the Punjab Police Rules,
1934. In the appeal preferred by the State, this Court
allowed the appeal and held as follows:
"A perusal of Chapter XVI of the Punjab Police
Rules shows that the provisions of the Chapter
deal with departmental punishments and the
procedure to be followed in imposing such
punishments. Guidance is given as to how police
officers guilty of misconduct and criminal
offences may be dealt with .............It is
clear that Rule 16.38 is not designed to be a
condition precedent to the launching of a
prosecution in a criminal court; it is in the
nature of instructions of the department and is
not meant to be of the nature of a sanction or
permission for a prosecution nor can it over-ride
the provisions of the Cr.P.C. and the Prevention
of Corruption Act. We agree with the observations
of Dua and Mahajan, JJ in Hoshiar Singh v. State
(supra)."
948
Though the decision of the Full Bench of the Punjab
High Court which is now under consideration had not been
brought to the notice of the Learned Judges when they
rendered judgment in State of Punjab v. Charan Singh, we are
in full agreement with the pronouncement of the Bench as the
conclusion therein accords with our own conclusion and the
reasons therefore. We therefore hold that the Full Bench was
in error in taking the view that the Punjab Police Rules
read in conjunction with the Police Act prescribe a
different procedure for the investigation and prosecution of
offences committed by Police officers under the I.P.C. or
other Acts in connection with their relations with the
public and that the rules constitute a special statute and
take precedence over the provisions of the Cr.P.C. The Full
Bench has failed to note that Rule 16.38 only mandates the
investigation of cases pertaining to departmental enquiries
and the holding of departmental enquiries in accordance with
the procedure prescribed thereunder. We therefore hold that
the decision of the Full Bench under appeal in Raj Kumar,
A.S.I. v. The State of Punjab (supra) is not in accordance
with law and has to be set aside. However, as mentioned at
the outset, the State is not interested in reviving the
charges against the respondent and pursuing the trial
because of the long lapse of time. Therefore, while allowing
the appeal and setting aside the judgment of the High Court,
we leave undisturbed the quashing of the charges framed
against the respondent.
Since the respondent did not enter appearance or engage
a counsel to contest the appeal in spite of the notice
served on him, we requested Mr. Gopal Subramaniam, Advocate,
to act as amicus curiae and render assistance to the Court
on behalf of the respondent. Mr. Gopal Subramaniam readily
complied with our request and placed all the authorities for
our consideration and we thank him for his assistance and
place on record our appreciation of the services rendered by
him.
H.S.K. Appeal allowed.
949
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11