Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 125
PETITIONER:
A.R. ANTULAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R.S. NAYAK & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/04/1988
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH
OZA, G.L. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1531 1988 SCR Supl. (1) 1
1988 SCC (2) 602 JT 1988 (2) 325
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC1335 (22,23)
D 1990 SC 535 (3)
R 1990 SC1480 (55)
R 1990 SC1737 (6)
R 1990 SC1828 (16)
RF 1991 SC 101 (66)
E&D 1991 SC 818 (30)
RF 1991 SC 884 (16)
D 1991 SC2176 (51)
RF 1992 SC 248 (41,42,43)
RF&E 1992 SC 522 (23)
RF 1992 SC 604 (140,143)
R 1992 SC1277 (25)
RF 1992 SC1701 (9,10,58)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Articles 13, 14, 21, 32
Prosecution of appellant for offences under sections 161 and
165 I.P.C.-Trial under Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952 to
be held by Special Judge only-Supreme Court in its judgment
directing trial to be held by High Court Judge-Validity of
Supreme Court Judgment-Whether infringement of fundamental
right of accused involved-Whether procedure established by
law violated-Power to create or enlarge jurisdiction-
Legislative in character.
Articles 32, 134, 136, 737, 139, 141 and 142-Powers of
review-Nature and scope of-Whether Supreme Court can review
its directions if they result in deprivation of fundamental
rights of a citizen-Whether Supreme Court can issue writ of
certiorari to quash judicial order passed by another Bench-
Whether a larger Bench can overrule or recall a decision of
a smaller Bench.
Articles 140, 141, 142 and 145: Jurisdiction-Want of-
Can be established only by a superior court-No decision can
be impeached collatterally by any inferior court-Superior
court can always correct errors by petition or ex debito
justitiae Judgments per incuriam-Effect of.
Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1952: Sections 6 & 7-
offences under Act to be tried only by Special Judge-order
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 125
of Supreme Court transferring and directing trial by High
Court Judge-Whether legally authorised-Non-substante clause
in s.7(1)-Effect of.
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973: Sections 374, 406 & 407-
Transfer of case-Power of transfer postulates that Court to
which transfer or withdrawal is. sought is competent to
exercise jurisdiction over case-Intra state transfer is
within jurisdiction of the appropriate High Court.
2
Practice and Procedure: Judgment of Supreme Court-
Directions issued in proceedings inter partes-Found bad in
law or violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution
and principles of natural justice Whether immune from
correction even though they cause prejudice and do injury.
Criminal Trial-Criminal Procedure Code, 1973-sec. 223-
Whether an accused can demand as of a right trial with
co-accused.
lnterpretation of statutes-Words to be given normal
meaning with reference to context-Golden rule of
interpretation-When to be resorted to.
Legal Maxims: Actus curiae neminem gravabid-Coram non
judice-Per curiam-Ex debito justitiae-Nunc-Pro-tunc-
Applicability of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the Chief Minister of Maharashtra
between June 9, 1980 and January 12, 1982, when he resigned
that office in deference to the judgment of High Court in a
writ petition filed against him, but continued as an MLA.
On August 9, 1982, respondent No. 1, a member of a
political party filed a complaint before a Special Judge
against the appellant and others for offences under ss. 161
and 165 of the Indian Penal Code and s. 5 of the Criminal
Law Amendment Act, 1952 and also under ss. 384 and 420 read
with ss. 109 and 120B of the Indian Penal Code.
The Special Judge issued process to the appellant.
Later, the Special Judge over-ruled the objection of the
appellant to take cognizance of the offences on a private
complaint, and to issue process, in the absence of
notification under s. 7(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act, 1952, specifying as to which of the three special
Judges of the area should try such cases.
Against this, the appellant filed a revision
application in the High Court, which dismissed it
subsequently. The appellant’s Special Leave Petition against
this was dismissed by the Supreme Court which held that the
complaint filed by respondent No. 1 was clearly maintainable
and cognizance was properly taken of it.
During the pendency of the revision application in the
High Court, the State Government notified the Special Judge
to try the off-
3
ences specified under s. 6(1) of the Act and appointed
another Special Judge, who discharged the appellant, holding
that a member of the Legislative Assembly was a public
servant and there was no valid sanction for prosecuting the
appellant. Against this order of discharge. respondent No. 1
filed a Criminal Revision Application in the High Court,
which was subsequently withdrawn to this Court.
On an appeal filed by respondent No. 1 directly under
Article 136 of the Constitution against the order of
discharge, the Supreme Court held on 16.2.1984, that a
member of the Legislative Assembly was not a public servant,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 125
and set aside the order of the Special judge. The Court
observed that though nearly 2 1/2 years had rolled by since
prosecution against the accused, who was Chief Minister of a
State, was launched and his character and integrity came
under cloud, the case had not moved an inch further and that
an expeditious trial was primarily in the interest of the
accused and mandate of Article 21. It further observed that
expeditious disposal of a criminal case was in the interest
of both the prosecution and the accused. It, therefore, suo
motu withdrew this special case and another one filed
against the appellant by another person and transferred them
to the High Court, with the request to the Chief Justice to
assign these two cases to a sitting Judge of the High Court,
who should proceed to expeditiously dispose of the cases,
preferably by holding trial from day to day.
Pursuant to the directions of this Court dated February
16, 1984 the Chief Justice of the High Court assigned the
cases to one of the Judges of that Court. The appellant
appeared before him and raised an objection that the case
could be tried only by a Special Judge appointed by the
Government under the 1952 Act. The Judge rejected this and
other objections holding that he was bound by the order of
the Supreme Court .
Special Leave Petitions as well as a writ petition
filed by the appellant against the aforesaid decision were
dismissed by this Court on April 17, 1984, holding that the
Judge was perfectly justified, and indeed it was his duty to
follow the decision of this Court which was binding on him.
It also observed that the writ petition challenging the
validity of the order and judgment of this Court as nullity
or otherwise could not be entertained, and that the
dismissal of the writ petition would not prejudice the
petitioner’s right to approach this Court, with an
appropriate review petition or any other application, which
he may be entitled to in law.
4
Thereafter, the cases were transferred to another
Special Judge, who framed 21 charges and declined to frame
22 other charges proposed by respondent No. 1. This Court
allowed respondent No.1‘s appeal by special leave except in
regard to three draft charges under s. 384 IPC, and
requested the High Court to nominate another Judge to try
the cases.
The Judge, to whom the cases were transferred, framed
79 charges against the appellant, and refused to proceed
against the other named conspirators.
Against the aforesaid order, the appellant filed a
Special Leave Petition before this Court questioning the
jurisdiction of the Special Judge to try the case in
violation of the appellant’s fundamental rights conferred by
Articles 14 and 21 and the provisions of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act of 1952. The appellant also filed a Special
Leave Petition against the decision of the Judge, holding
that none of the 79 charges framed against the accused
required sanction under s. 197(1) of the Cr. P.C., and a
writ petition challenging a portion of s. 197(1) as ultra
vires Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution.
This Court granted special leave in the Special Leave
Petition questioning the jurisdiction of the Special Judge
to try the case and stayed further proceedings in the High
Court. It also issued notice in the other Special Leave
Petition and the writ petition, and directed these to be
tagged on to the appeal.
An application filed by respondent No. 1 for revocation
of the Special Leave was dismissed and the appeal was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 125
referred to a Bench of seven Judges. The other Special Leave
Petition and the writ petition were delinked, to be heard
after the disposal of the appeal.
In the appeal, two questions arose, namely, (1) whether
the directions given by this Court on 16th February, 1984,
withdrawing the special cases pending in the Court of
Special Judge and transferring the same to the High Court
with the request to the Chief Justice to assign these cases
to a sitting Judge of that High Court in breach of s. 7(1)
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952 which mandated that
the offences, as in this case, should be tried only by a
Special Judge, thereby denying at least one right of appeal
to the appellant was violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the
Constitution and whether such direction were at all valid or
legal and (2) if such directions were not at all valid or
legal in view of the Court’s order of April 17, 1984,
whether the present
5
appeal was sustainable or the grounds therein justiciable in
these proceedings. In other words, whether the said
directions in a proceeding inter parties were binding even
if bad in law or violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the
Constitution and as such, immune from correction by this
Court even though they caused prejudice and injury.
Allowing the appeal, and setting aside and quashing all
the proceedings subsequent to the directions of the Court on
16.2.1984 and directing that the trial should proceed in
accordance with law, i.e. Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952.
^
HELD:
Majority: Sabyasachi Mukharji, Oza and Natarajan, JJ.
Per Sabyasachi Mukharji. J:
1. Section 7(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952
creates a condition which is sine qua non for the trial of
offences under s. 6(1) of the said Act. The condition is
that notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure or any other law, the said offences shall
be triable by Special Judges only. The offences specified
under s. 6(1) of the 1952 Act are those punishable under ss.
161, 162, 163, 164 and 165A of the Indian Penal Code and s.
5 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. [44B-C,49H,A]
Gurcharan Das Chadha v. State of Rajasthan, [1966] 2
S.C.R. 678 referred to.
Therefore, the order of this Court transferring the
cases to the High Court on 16th February, 1984 was not
authorised by law. This Court, by its directions could not
confer jurisdiction on the High Court to try any case, when
it did not possess such jurisdiction under the scheme of the
1952 Act. [49A-B]
Kiran Singh and others v. Chaman Paswan & Others,
[1955] 1 SCR 117 at 121 and M. L. Sethi v. R. P. Kapur, 1973
1 SCR 697 relied on.
2.1 The power to create or enlarge jurisdiction is
legislative in character, so also the power to confer a
right of appeal or to take away a right of appeal.
Parliament alone can do it by law. No Court, whether
superior or inferior or both combined can enlarge the
jurisdiction of the Court or divest a person of his rights
of revision and appeal. [50E]
6
M.L. Sethi v. R.P. Kapur, [1973] 1 SCR 697 and Raja
Soap Factory v. S. P. Shantara;, 1965 2 SCR 800 referred to.
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Vol.10 page at para 720
and Ammon Rubinstein’s Jurisdiction and Illegality, [1965]
Edn. pp. 16-50 referred to.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 125
2.2 Want of jurisdiction can be established solely by
superior court and in practice, no decision can be impeached
collaterally by any interior court, but the superior court
can always correct its own error brought to its notice
either by way of petition or ex debito justitiae.[50G]
Rubinstein’s jurisdiction and illegality(1965 Edn.)
referred to.
2.3 The distinction between an error which entails
absence of jurisdiction and an error made within the
jurisdiction is so fine that it is rapidly being eroded.
[69H.70A]
Anismatic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation Commissioner,
[1969] 1 All E.R.208 at 241 referred to.
This is not a case of collateral attack on judicial
proceedings; it is a case where the Court having no court
superior to it rectifies its own order. [69]
The impugned directions were void because power was not
there for this Court to transfer a proceeding under the Act
of 1952 from one Special Judge to the High Court. [69G]
The singling out of the appellant for a speedier trial
by the High Court for an offence which the High Court had no
jurisdiction to try under the Act of 1952 was unwarranted,
unprecedented and directions given by this Court for the
said purposes were not warranted. When that fact is brought
to the notice of the court, it must remedy the situation.
[51D-E]
2.4 In rectifying the error, no personal inhibitions
should debar this Court because no person should suffer by
reason of any mistake of this Court. Here no rule of res
judicata would apply to prevent this Court from entertaining
the grievance and giving appropriate directions.[51E-F]
Soni Vrajlal Jethalal v. Soni Jadavji and Govindji &
Ors.. AIR 1972 Gujarat 148 approved.
7
In the earlier judgment, the points for setting aside
the decision did not include the question of withdrawal of
the case from the Court of Special Judge to the Supreme
Court and transfer of it to the High Court. Unless a plea in
question is taken it cannot operate as res judicata.[62G-H]
Shivshankar Prasad Shah and others v Baikunth Nath
Singh and others, [1969] 1 S.C.C. 718; Bikan Mahuri and
others v. Mst. Bibi Walian and others, A.I.R. 1939 Patna
633; S.L. Kapoor v. Jagmohan and others, [1981] 1 S.C.C.
746; Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621 at
pages 674-681 and Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. The State of
Bihar and others, [1955] 2 SCR 603 and 623 referred to.
3.1 Section 407 of the Criminal Procedure Code was
subject to over-riding mandate of s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act
and, hence it does not permit the High Court to withdraw a
case for trial to itself from the Court of Special
Judge.[60D-E]
3.2 Article 134(1)(b) of the Constitution does not
recognise in every High Court power to withdraw for trial
cases from any Court subordinate to its authority. At least
this Article cannot be construed to mean that where power to
withdraw is restricted, it can be widened by virtue of
Article 134(1)(b) of the Constitution. [67B-C]
3.3 Where by a specific clause of a specific statute
the power is given for trial by the Special Judge only and
transfer can be from one such Judge to another Special
Judge, there is no warrant to suggest that the High Court
has power to transfer Such a case from a Judge under s. 6 of
the Act of 1952 to itself. It is not a case of exclusion of
the superior Courts. [67C]
In the facts of the instant case, the criminal revision
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 125
application which was pending before the High Court even if
it was deemed to be transferred to this Court under Article
139A of the Constitution, it would not have vested this
Court with power larger than what is contained in s. 407 of
Criminal Procedure Code. Under s. 407 of the Criminal
Procedure Code read with the Criminal Law Amendment Act, the
High Court could not transfer to itself proceedings under
ss. 6 and 7 of the said Act. This Court, by transferring the
proceedings tb itself, could not have acquired larger
jurisdiction. The fact that the objection was not raised
before this Court gave directions on 16th February, 1984
cannot amount to any waiver. [161F-G]
8
Ledgard v. Bull, 131 A 134, Meenakshi Naidoo v.
Subramaniya A Sastri, 141 A 160 referred to.
3.4 The Parliament did not grant to the Court the
jurisdiction to transfer a case to the High Court. However,
as the superior Court is deemed to have a general
jurisdiction, the law presumes that the Court acted within
jurisdiction. [60G]
In the instant case, the presumption cannot be taken,
firstly, because the question of jurisdiction was not
agitated before the Court; secondly, these directions were
given per incuriam and thirdly, the superior Court alone can
set aside an error in its directions when attention is drawn
to that error. This view is warranted only because of the
peculiar facts and circumstances of the present case. Here
the trial of a citizen in a Special Court under special
jurisdiction is involved; hence the liberty of the subject
is involved. [60H,61A-B]
Kuchenmeister v. Home office, [1958] 1 Q.B. 496;
Attorney General v. Herman James Sillam, [1864] 10 H.L.C.
703 and Issacs v.Robertson, [1984] 3 A.I.R. 140 referred to.
Jurisdiction and Illegality by Amnon Rubinstein, [1965]
Edn. referred to.
4.1 Per incuriam are those decisions given in ignorance
or forget fulness of some inconsistent statutory provision
or some authority binding on the Court concerned so that in
such cases some part of the decision or some step in the
reasoning on which it is based is found, on that account to
be demonstrably wrong. If a decision is given per in curiam,
the Court can ignore it. [52A-B, 53G]
Morelle v. Wakeling, [1955] 1 ALL ER 708; State of
Orissa v. The Titaghur Paper Mills Co. Ltd., [1985] 3 SCR 26
and Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar [1955] 2 SCR
603, 623 referred to.
In the instant case, when this Court gave directions on
16th February 1984, for disposal of the case against the
appellant by the High Court, it was oblivious of the
relevant provisions of the law and the decision in Anwar Ali
Sarkar’s case, which is a binding precedent [51G-H]
4.2 A Full Bench or a Constitution Bench decision was
binding on the Constitution Bench because it was a Bench of
seven Judges. There is
9
a hierarchy in this Court itself where larger Benches
over-rule smaller Benches which is the crystallised rule of
law. [52E,F]
State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [1952] SCR
284; Nattulal v. Radhe Lal, [1975] 1 SCR 127; Union of lndia
and Anr. v. KS. Subramaniam, [1977] 1 SCR 87 at p. 92; State
of U.P. v. Ram Chandra Trivedi, [1977] 1 SCR 462 at 473;
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edn. Vol. 26 page 297, para
578 and page 300, relevant notes on 8.11 and 15; Dias on
Jurisprudence, 5th Edn. pages 128 and 130; Young v. Bristol
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 125
Aeroplane Co. Ltd. [1944] 2 AER 293 at 300; Moore v. Hewitt
1947 2 AER 270 at 272A; Penny v. Mcholas, 1950 2 AER 92A and
Javed Ahmed Abdul Hamid Pawala v. State of Maharashtra,
[1985] 2 SCR 8 referred to.
It was manifest to the Bench that exclusive
jurisdiction created under s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act read with
s. 6 of the said Act, when brought to the notice of the
Court, precluded the exercise of power under s. 407 of the
Code. There was no argument, no submission and no decision
on this appeal at all. There was no prayer in the appeal
which was pending before this Court for such directions.
[59D-E]
The order of this Court was clearly per incuriam. The
Court was not called upon to and did not, decide the express
limitation on the power conferred by s. 407 of the Code.
which includes offences by public servants mentioned in the
1952 Act to be over-ridden in the manner sought to be
followed as a consequential direction of this Court. This
Court did not have jurisdiction to transfer the case to
itself. That will be evident from an analysis of different
provisions of the Code as well as the 1952 Act [50C-D]
Therefore, in view of the clear provisions of s. 7(2)
of the Act of 1952 and Articles 14 and 21 of the
Constitution these directions were legally wrong. [52C]
4.3 Though the previous statute is referred to in the
other judgment delivered on the same date, in connection
with other contentions, s. 7(1) was not referred to in
respect of the impugned directions. Hence these observations
were indubitably per incuriam. [66A]
Miliangos v. George Frank (Textiles) Ltd, [1975] 3 All
E.R. 801 at 821 referred to.
5. This Court is not powerless to correct its error
which has the
10
effect of depriving a citizen of his fundamental rights and
more so, the A right to life and liberty. It can do so in
exercise of its inherent jurisdiction in any proceeding
pending before it without insisting on the formalities of a
review application. [54A-B]
Powers of review can be exercised in a petition file
under Article 136 or Article 32 or under any other provision
of the Constitution if the Court is satisfied that its
directions have resulted in the deprivation of the
fundamental rights of a citizen or any legal right of the
petitioner. [54B-C]
The Supreme Court has the power to review either under
Article 137 or suo motu the directions given by this Court.
[62E]
Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, U.P. Allahabad,
[1963] Suppl.1 SCR 885; Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar and others
v. State of Maharashtra and another, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 744 and
Smt. Ujjam Bai v. State of U.P., [1963] 1 S.C.R. 778;
Kailash Nath v. State of U.P. AIR 1957 (SC) 790; P.S.R.
Sadhananatham v. Arunachalam, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 873; Suk Das
v. Union Territory of Arunachal Pradesh, [1986] 2 S.C.C.
401; Asrumati Devi v. Kumar Rupendra Deb Raikot and others,
[1953] S.C.R. 1159; Satyadhyan Ghosal and others v. Smt.
Deorajin Debi and another, [1960] 3 S.C.R. 590; Sukhrani
(dead) by L.Rs. and others v. Hari Shanker and others,
[1979] 3 S.C.R. 671 and Bejoy Gopal Mukherji v. Pratul
Chandra Ghose, [1953] S.C.R. 930 referred to.
6. It is also well settled that an elementary rule of
justice is that no party should suffer by mistake of the
Court. [63B]
Sastri Yagnapurushadji and others v. Muldas Bhudardas
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 125
Vaishya and another, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 242; Jang Singh v.
Brijlal [1964] 2 S.C.R. 145;Bhajahari Mondal v.The State of
West Bengal, [1959] S.C.R. 1276 at 1284-1286 and Asgarali N.
Singaporawalle v. The State of Bombay 1957 S.C.R. 678 at 692
referred to.
It was a mistake of so great a magnitude that it
deprives a man by being treated differently of his
fundamental right for defending himself in a criminal trial
in accordance with law. Therefore, when the attention of the
Court is drawn, the Court has always the power and the
obligation to correct it ex debito justitiae and treat the
second application by its inherent power, as a power of
review to correct the original mistake. [56C-D]
The directions have been issued without observing the
principle of audi alteram partem.[53D]
11
This Court is not debarred from re-opening this
question and giving proper directions and correcting the
error in the present appeal. [53C]
The appellant should not suffer on account of the
direction of this Court based upon an error leading to
conferment of jurisdiction. [53B]
7. The principle of finality on which Article 145(e)
proceeds applies to both judgments and orders made by the
Supreme Court. But directions given per incuriam in
violation of certain constitutional limitations and in
derogation of the principles of natural justice can always
be remedied by the court ex debite justitiae. [68F-G]
In the instant case, this Court is correcting an
irregularity committed by the Court not on construction or
misconstruction of a statute but on non-perception of
certain provisions and certain authorities which would
amount to derogation of the constitutional rights of the
citizen. [69C-D]
Issacs v. Robertson, [1984] 3 A.E.R. 140 and Re Recal
Communications Ltd. Case, [1980] 2 A.E.R. 634 referred to.
8. No prejudice need be proved for enforcing the
fundamental rights. Violation of a fundamental right itself
renders the impugned action void. So also, the violation of
the principles of natural justice renders the act a
nullity.[59H]
9.1 Four valuable rights of the appellant have been
taken away by the impugned directions.
i) The right to be tried by a Special Judge in
accordance with the procedure established by law
and enacted by Parliament.
ii) The right of revision to the High Court under s. 9
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act.
iii) The right of first appeal to the High Court under
the same section
iv) The right to move the Supreme Court under Article
136 thereafter by way of a second appeal, if
necessary.
The right of the appellant under Article 14 regarding
equality
12
before the law and equal protection of law has been
violated. The appellant has also a right not to be singled
out for special treatment by a Special Court created for him
alone. This right is implicit in the right to equality.
[60A-C,62A-B]
State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [1952] SCR
284 relied on.
The appellant has a further right under Article 21 of
the Constitution-a right to trial by a Special Judge under
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 125
s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act which is the procedure established
by law made by the Parliament and a further right to move
the High Court by way of revision or first appeal under s. 9
of the said Act. He has also a right not to suffer any order
passed behind his back by a Court in violation of the basic
principles of natural justice. Directions having been given
in this case without hearing the appellant, though the order
was passed in the presence of the counsel for the appellant,
these are bad. [62B-Dl
It is proper for this Court to act ex debito justitiae,
in favour of the fundamental rights of the appellant. [62E]
Nawabkhan Abbas Khan v. The State of Gujarat, [1974] 3
SCR 427 referred to.
9.2 There was prejudice to the accused in being singled
out as a special class of accused for a special dispensation
witbout any room for any appeal as of right and without
power of revision to the High Court. [67G]
Romesh Chandra Arora v. The State, [1960] 1 SCR 924 at
927 distinguished.
9.3 The trial even of person holding public office
though to be made speedily must be done in accordance with
the procedure estab lished by law. The provisions of s. 6
read with s. 7 of the Act of 1952 in the facts and
circumstances of this case is the procedure established by
law, and any deviation even by a judicial direction will be
negation of the rule of law. [68D-E]
By judicial direction, the rights and previliges of the
accused have been curtailed without any justification in
law. [ 68B]
State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [1952] SCR
284 relied on.
13
Re: Special Courts Bill, [1978] 1979 2 SCR 476 referred
to.
9.4 The right of appeal under s. 374 of the Cr. P.C. is
confined only to cases decided by the High Court in its
Letters Patent jurisdiction which in terms is extraordinary
original criminal jurisdiction’ under clause 27 of Letters
Patent. [63F]
Kavasji Pestonji Dalal v. Rustomji Sorabji Jamadar &
Anr., AIR 1949 Bom. 42, Sunil Chandra Roy & Anr. v. The
State AIR 1954 Cal. 305; Sasadhar Acharjya & Anr. v. Sir
Charles Tegart & Ors., [1935] Cal. Weekly Notes1089;People
insurance Co. Ltd. v. Sardul Singh Caveeshgar & Ors. J AIR
1961 Punj. 87 and P.P. Front, New Delhi v. K. K Birla.
[1984] Cr. L.J. 545 referred to.
9.5 By the time the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 was
framed, Article 21 had not been interpreted so as to include
one right of appeal both on facts and law. [64C]
10. Words should normally be given their ordinary
meaning bearing in mind the context. It is only where the
literal meaning is not clear that one resorts to the golden
rule of interpretation or the mischief rule of
interpretation. [66C]
Sussex Peerage Claim, [1844] 11 Cl. & Fin. 85 at 143
referred to.
Cross: Statutory Interpretation, p. 36.
In view of the specific language used in s. 7 of the
1952 Act, it is not necessary to consider whether the
procedure for trial by Special Judges under the Code has
stood repealed or not. The concept of repeal may have no
application in this case. [66B]
11. No man is above the law, but at the same time, no
man can be denied his rights under the Constitution and the
laws. He has a right to be dealt with in accordance with the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 125
law and not in derogation of it. [71B]
This Court, in its anxiety to facilitate the parties to
have a speedy trial, gave direction on 16th February, 1984
without conscious awareness of the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Special Courts under the 1952 Act and that being the
only procedure established by law, there can be no deviation
from the terms of Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
That is the only procedure under which it should have been
guided. [71B-C]
14
By reason of giving the impugned directions, this Court
had also unintentionally caused the appellant the denial of
rights under Article 14 of the Constitution by denying him
the equal protection of law by being singled out for a
special procedure not provided for by law. [71C-D]
When these factors are brought to the notice of this
Court, even if there are any technicalities, this Court
should not feel shackled and decline to rectify that
injustice; or otherwise, the injustice noticed will remain
forever a blot on justice. [71D]
12.1 The basic fundamentals of the administration of
justice are simple. No man should suffer because of the
mistake of Court. No man should suffer a wrong by technical
procedure of irregularities. Rules or procedures are the
hand-maids of justice and not the mistress of the justice.
If a man has been wronged so long as it lies within the
human machinery of administration of justice that wrong must
be remedied. [72B-C]
12.2 The maxim "Actus Curiae Neminem Gravabit"-An act
of the Court shall prejudice no man-is founded upon justice
and good sense and affords a safe and certain guide for the
administration of the law. [71E]
Alaxander Rodger v. The Comptoir Dlescompte De Paris
Cham Reports, Vol. III 1869-71 p. 465 at 475 referred to.
13. Purity of public life is one of the cardinal
principles which t. must be upheld as a matter of public
policy. Allegations of legal infractions and criminal
infractions must be investigated in accordance with law and
procedure established under the Constitution. [73B]
Even if the accused has been wronged, if he is allowed
to be left in doubt that would cause more serious damage to
him. Public confidence in public administration should not
be eroded any further. One wrong cannot be remedied by
another wrong. [73B]
The legal wrong that has been done to the appellant
should be remedied and right should be done. In doing so, no
more further injury should be caused to the public purpose.
[73C]
The impugned directions were in deprival of the
Constitutional rights and contrary to the express provisions
of the Criminal Law
15
Amendment Act, 1952, in violation of the principles of
natural justice, and without precedent in the background of
the Act of 1952. The directions definitely deprived the
appellant of certain rights of appeal and revision and his
rights under the Constitution. [69F]
Having regard to the enormity of the consequences of
the error to the appellant and by reason of the fact that
the directions were given suo motu, there is nothing which
detracts the power of the Court to review its judgment ex
debito justitiae in case injustice has been caused. No Court
however high has jurisdiction to give an order unwarranted
by the Constitution. [70A-B]
Ittavira Mathai v. Varke,P Varkey and others, [1964] 1
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 125
SCR 495 referred to.
Bhatia Cooperative Housing Society Ltd. v. D.C. Patel,
[1953] SCR 185 at 190 distinguished.
Since this Court infringed the Constitutional
safeguards granted to a citizen or to an accused, in giving
the directions and injustice results therefrom, it is just
and proper for the Court to rectify and recall that
injustice in the peculiar facts and circumstances of this
case. Therefore, all the proceedings in the matter
subsequent to the directions of this Court on February 16,
1984, are set aside and quashed and the trial should proceed
in accordance with law, that is to say, under the Act of
1952. [70C,73D-E]
R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCR 495; A.R.
Antulay v. Ramdas Sriniwas Nayak and another, [1984] 2 SCR
914; Abdul Rehman Antulay v. Union of India and others etc.
[1984] 3 SCR 482 at 483; Kailash Nath v. State of U.P., AIR
1957 SC 790; Sukdas v. Union Territory of Arunachal Pradesh
Discretion to Disobey by Mortimer R. Kadish and Sanford H.
Kadish pages 111 and 112 referred to.
Per Ranganath Misra, J. (Concurring)
14. Section 7(1) has clearly provided that offences
specified in sub-section (1) of s. 6 shall be triable by the
Special Judge only and has taken away the power of the
courts established under the Code of Criminal Procedure to
try those offences. As long as s. 7 of the Amending Act of
1952 holds the field it was not open to any court including
the Apex Court to act contrary to s. 7(1) of the Amending
Act.[81E-F]
16
State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, 1952 SC R 284
referred to.
15. The power to transfer a case conferred by the
Constitution or by s. 406 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
does not specifically relate to the Special Court. Section
406 of the Code could be applied on the principle that the
Special Judge was a subordinate court for transferring a
case from one Special Judge to another Special Judge because
such a transfer would not contravene the mandate of s. 7(1)
of the Amending Act of 1952. While that may be so, the
provisions for transfer, do not authorise transfer of a case
pending in the court of a Special Judge first to the Supreme
Court and then to the High Court for trial. This Court did
not possess the power to transfer the proceedings from the
Special Judge to the High Court. [81G-H,82A]
Raja Soap Factory v. S.P. Santharaj, [1965] 2 SC R 800
referred to.
16.1 It is the settled position in law that
jurisdiction of courts comes solely from the law of the land
and cannot be exercised other wise. [77E]
16.2 Jurisdiction can be exercised only when provided
for either in the Constitution or in the laws made by the
Legislature. Jurisdiction is thus the authority or power of
the court to deal with a matter and make an order carrying
binding force in the facts. [77G]
17. By the change of forum of trial the accused has
been pre judiced. By this process he misses a forum of
appeal because if the trial was handled by a Special Judge,
the first appeal would lie to the High Court and a further
appeal by special leave could come before this Court. If the
matter is tried by the High Court there would be only one
forum of appeal being this Court, whether as of right or by
way of special leave. [83H, 84A-B]
18. The transfer was a suo motu direction of the court.
Since this particular aspect of the matter had not been
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 125
argued and counsel did not have an opportunity of pointing
out the legal bar against transfer, the Judges of this Court
obviously did not take note of the special provisions In s.
7(1) of the 1952 Act. If this position had been
appropriately placed, the direction for transfer from the
court of exclusive jurisdiction to the High Court would not
have been made by the Constitution Bench. It is appropriate
to presume that this Court never intends to act contrary to
law. [82E-F]
17
19. One of the well-known principles of law is that
decision made by a competent court should be taken as final
subject to further proceedings contemplated by the law of
procedure. In the absence of any further proceedings, the
direction of the Constitution Bench on 16th of February,
1984 became final and it is the obligation of everyone to
implement the direction of the apex Court. Such an order of
this Court should by all canons of judicial discipline he
binding on this Court as well and cannot be interfered with
after attaining finality. [84C-D]
20.1 It is a well-settled position in law that an act
of the court should not injure any of the suitors. [84F]
Alexander Rodger v. The Comptori D’Escompte De Paris,
[1871] 3 PC 465 referred to.
20.2. Once it is found that the order of transfer by
this Court was not within jurisdiction by the direction of
the transfer of the proceedings made by this Court, the
appellant should not suffer. [85B]
20.3 This being the apex Court, no litigant has any
opportunity of approaching any higher forum to question its
decisions. Once judicial satisfaction is reached that the
direction was not open to be made and it is accepted as a
mistake of the court, it is not only appropriate but also
the duty of the Court to rectify the mistake by exercising
inherent powers. A mistake of the Court can be corrected by
the Court itself without any fetters. In the present
situation, the Court’s inherent powers can be exercised to
remedy the mistake. [87F,88B-C]
Gujarat v. Ram Prakash [1970] 2 SCR 875; Alexander
Rodger v. The Comptori D’Escompte De Paris, [1871] 3 PC 465
and Krishna Deo v. Radha Kissan, [1953] SCR 136; Debi v.
Habib lLR 35 All 331 and Murtaza v. Yasin. AIR 191 PC 857
referred to.
20.4 The injustice done should be corrected by applying
the principle actus curiae neminem gravabit, an act of the
court shall prejudice no one.[88H]
20.5 To err is human. Courts including the apex one are
no exception. To own up the mistake when judicial
satisfaction is reached does not militate against its status
or authority. Perhaps it would enhance both. [89B]
21. If a mistake is detected and the apex Court is not
able to
18
correct it with a view to doing justice for fear of being
misunderstood, the cause of justice is bound to suffer and
for the apex Court the apprehension would not be a valid
consideration. This Court, while administering justice, does
not take into consideration as to who is before it. Every
litigant is entitled to the same consideration and if an
order is warranted in the interest of justice, the status or
influence of the accused cannot stand in the way as a bar to
the making of that order. [89F-G]
22. Finality of the orders is the rule. By directing
recall of an order, the well-settled propositions of law
would not be set at naught. Such a situation may not recur
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 125
in the ordinary course of judicial functioning and if there
be one, certainly the Bench before which it comes would
appropriately deal with it. Nn strait jacket formula can be
laid down for judicial functioning particularly for the apex
Court. The apprehension that the decision to recall the
earlier decision may be used as a precedent to challenge
judicial orders of this Court is perhaps misplaced because
those who are familiar with the judicial functioning are
aware of the limits and they would not seek support from
this case as a precedent. This Court is sure that if
precedent value is sought to be derived out of this
decision, the Court which is asked to use this as an
instrument would be alive to the peculiar facts and
circumstances of the case in which this order is being made.
[87H, 90A-B]
23. Under the Rules of the Court a review petition was
not to be heard in Court and was liable to be disposed of by
circulation. In these circumstances, the petition of appeal
could not be taken as a review petition. [87E]
24. Benches of this Court are not subordinate to larger
Benches thereof and certiorari is, therefore, not admissible
for quashing of the orders made on the judicial side of the
Court. [85C]
Naresh Chandra Mirajkar & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra
JUDGMENT:
Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, U.P., Allahabad
1963 1 SCR 885 referred to.
25. Apart from the fact that the petition of review had
to be filed within 30 days-and here there has been
inordinate delay-the petition for review had to be placed
before the same Bench and now that two of the learned judges
of that Constitution Bench are still available,
19
it must have gone only before a Bench of five with those two
learned Judges. [87D-E]
26. It is time to sound a note of caution. This Court
under its Rules of Business ordinarily sits in divisions and
not as a whole one. Each Bench, whether small or large,
exercises the powers vested in the Court and decisions
rendered by the Benches irrespective of their size are
considered as decisions of the Court. The practice has
developed that a larger Bench is entitled to overrule the
decision of a smaller Bench notwithstanding the fact that
each of the decisions is that of the Court. That principle,
however, would not apply in the present situation, and since
this Court is sitting as a Bench of Seven this Court is not
entitled to reverse the decision of the Constituffon Bench.
[89B-C]
27. Overruling when made by a larger Bench of an
earlier decision of a smaller one is intended to take away
the precedent value of the decision without affecting the
binding effect of the decision in the particular case. [89C]
In the instant case, the appellant is, therefore, not
entitled to take advantage of the matter being before a
larger Bench. In fact, if it is a case of exercise of
inherent powers to rectify a mistake it was open even to a
five-Judge Bench to do that and it did not require a Bench
larger than the Constitution Bench for that purpose. [89D]
Per Oza, J. (Supplementing)
28. The jurisdiction to try a case could only be
conferred by law enacted by the legislature and this Court
could not confer jurisdiction if it does not exist in law.
[90F]
29. No doubt a judgment or an order passed by this
Court will not be open to a writ of certiorari even if an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 125
error is apparent. But at the same time, there should be no
hesitation in correcting an error in exercise of inherent
jurisdiction if it comes to the notice of the Court. [90D-E]
In the instant case, it is this error which is sought
to be corrected, although it is being corrected after long
lapse of time. [90F]
Per Ray,J.(Concurring)
20
30. The Jurisdiction or power to try and decide a cause
is conferred on the courts by the Law of the Lands enacted
by the Legislature or by the provisions of the Constitution
and the court cannot confer a jurisdiction on itself which
is not provided in the law and judicial order of this Court
is not Emenable to a writ of certiorari tor correcting any
error in the judgment. However, since the act of the court
should not injure any of the suitors, the error in question
is sought to be corrected. after a lapse of more than three
years. [90H,91A-B]
Per Venkatachaliah, J. (Dissenting)
31.1 The exclusiveness of jurisdiction uf the special
judge under s. 7(1) of 1952 Act depends on the construction
to be placed on the relevant statutory-provision. If on such
a construction, however erroneous it may be, the court holds
that the operation of s. 407 Cr. P.C. is not excluded, that
interpretation will denude the plenitude of the exclusivity
claimed for the forum. To say that the court usurped
legislative powers and created a new jurisdiction and a new
forum ignores the basic concept of functioning of courts.
The power to interpret laws is the domain and function of
courts. [108D-E]
Thomas v. Collins, 323 (1945) US 516 referred to.
31.2 The earlier decision proceeded on a construction
of s. 7(1) of the Act and s. 407 of Cr. P.C. This bench does
not sit in appeal over what the five Judge Bench said and
proclaim how wrong they were. This Bench is simply not
entitled to embark, at a later stage, upon an investigation
of the correctness of the very decision. The same bench can,
of course, reconsider the matter under Article 137.
32.1 The expression "jurisdiction" or the power to
determine is a verbal cast of many colours. In the case of a
Tribunal, an error of law might become not merely an error m
jurisdiction but might partake of the character of an error
of jurisdiction. But, otherwise jurisdiction is a ’legal
shelter’, a power to bind despite a possible error in the
decision. [102C]
32.2. In relation to the powers of superior courts, the
familiar distinction between jurisdictional issues and
adjudicatory issues approts
priate to Tribunals of limited jurisdiction has no place.
[102A]
32.3 Before a superior court there is no distinction in
the quality of the decision-making-process respecting
jurisdictional questions on the one hand and adjudicatory
issues or issues pertaining to the merits, on the other.
[102B]
21
32.4 The existence of jurisdiction does not depend on
the correctness of its exercise. The authority to decide
embodies a privilege to bind despite error, a privilege
which is inherent in and indispensable to every judicial
function. The characteristic attribute of a judicial act is
that it binds whether it be right or it be wrong.
[102D]
Mallikarjun v. Narhari, [1900] 27 I.A. 2 10 referred
to.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 125
Anismatic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation Commission,
[1969] 1 All ER 208 distinguished.
32.5 A finding of a superior court even on a question
of its own jurisdiction, however grossly erroneous it may
otherwise be, is not a nullity nor one which could at all be
said to have been reached without jurisdiction, susceptible
to be ignored or to admit of any collateral attack.
Otherwise, the adjudications of superior courts would be
held up to ridicule and the remedies generally arising from
and considered concomitants of such classification of
judicial-errors would be so seriously abused and expanded as
to make a mockery of those foundational principles essential
to the stability of administration of justice. [102G,103A]
32.6 The superior court has jurisdiction to determine
its own jurisdiction and an error in that determination does
not make it an error of jurisdiction. [103B]
Holdsworth (History of English Law) Vol. 6 page 239 and
Rubinstein: Jurisdiction and Illegality referred to.
Re Racal Communications Ltd. [1980] 2 All ER 634 and
Issac v. Robertson, [1984] 3 All ER 140 referred to.
32.7 Superior courts apart, even the ordinary civil
courts of the land have jurisdiction to decide questions of
their own jurisdiction. [105H]
It would be wholly erroneous to characterise the
directions issued by the five Judge Bench as a nullity,
amenable to be ignored or so declared in a collateral
attack. [106E]
33. A judgment, inter-parties, is final and concludes
the parties. [106F]
Re Hastings (No. 3) [1969] 1 All ER 698; Daryao v.
State of UP, [1962] 1 SCR 574; Trilok Chand v. H.B. Munshi,
[1969] 2 SCR 824 and
22
Shiv Nandan Paswan v. State of Bihar, [ 1987] 1 SCC 288 at
343 relied on
34.1 All accused persons cannot claim to be tried by
the same Judge. The discriminations inherent in the choice
of one of the concurrent jurisdictions are not brought about
by an inanimate statutory-rule or by executive fiat. The
withdrawal of a case under s. 407 is made by a conscious
judicial act and is the result of judicial discernment. If
the law permits the withdrawal of the trial to the High
Court from a Special Judge, such a law enabling withdrawal
would not, prima facie, be bad as violation of Article 14.
[114G-H, 115A]
34.2 No doubt, the fundamental right under Article 14
has a very high place in constitutional scale of values.
Before a person is deprived of his personal liberty, not
only that the procedure established by law must strictly be
complied with and not departed from to the disadvantage or
detriment of the person but also that the procedure for such
deprivation of personal liberty must be reasonable, fair and
just. Article 21 imposes limitations upon the procedure and
requires it to conform to such standards of reasonableness,
fairness and justness as the Court acting as sentinel of
fundamental rights would in the context, consider necessary
and requisite. The Court will be the arbiter of the question
whether the procedure is reasonable, fair and just. [114D-F]
34.3 The five judge bench in the earlier case has held
that such a transfer is permissible under law. That decision
had assumed finality. The appeal to the principle in Anwar
Ali’s Sarcar’s case, in such a context would be out of
place. [115A]
State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [1952] SCR
284 distinguished.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 125
35. That a trial by a Judge of the High Court makes for
added re-assurance of justice, has been recognised in a
number of judicial pronouncements. The argument that a Judge
of the High Court may not necessarily possess the statutory-
qualifications requisite for being appointed as a Special
Judge appears to be specious. A judge of the High Court
hears appeals arising from the decisions of the Special
Judge and exercises a jurisdiction which includes powers co-
extensive with that of the trial court. [115C-D]
36. The plea that transfer of the case to the High
Court involves the elimination of the appellant’s right of
appeal to the High Court
23
which he would otherwise have and that the appeal under
Article 136 of the Constitution as of right cannot be
accepted in view of s. 374, Cr. P.C. which provides such an
appeal, as of right, when the trial is held by the High
Court. [117A-B]
37. Directions for transfer were issued on 16.2.1984 in
the open court in the presence of appellant’s counsel at the
time of pronouncement of the judgment and counsel had the
right and the opportunity of making submission to the court
as to the permissibility or otherwise of the transfer. After
the directions were pronounced and before the order was
signed, though there was opportunity for the appellant’s
counsel to make submission in regard to the alleged
illegality or impropriety of the directions, appellant did
not utilise the same. That apart, even after being told by
two judicial orders that appellant, if aggrieved, may seek a
review, he did not do so. Even the grounds urged in the many
subsequent proceedings appellant took to get rid of the
effect of the direction do not appear to include the
grievance that he had no opportunity of being heard. [115F,
G-H,116A-B]
Therefore, where a party having had an opportunity to
raise a grievance in the earlier proceedings does not do so
and makes it a technicality later, he cannot be heard to
complain. [116B]
Rules of natural justice embodies fairness in action.
By all standards, they are great assurances of justice and
fairness. But they should not be Pushed to a breaking point.
[116F]
R. v. Secretary of State for Home Deptt. ex-parte
Mughal, [1973] 3 All ER 796, referred to.
38.1 The circumstance that a decision is reached per-
incuriam, merely serves to denude the decision of its
precedent-value. Such a decision would not be binding as a
judicial precedent. A co-ordinate bench can discharge with
it and decline to follow it. A larger bench can over-rule
such decision. When a previous decision is so overruled it
does not happen nor has the overruling bench any
jurisdiction so to do that the finality of the operative
order, inter-parties, in the previous decision is over-
turned. In this context the word ’decision’ means only the
reason for the previous order and not the operative-order in
the previous decision, binding inter-parties. Even if a
previous decision is over-
24
ruled by a larger-bench, the efficacy and binding nature, of
the adjudication expressed in the operative order remains
undisturbed interparties. [119B-D]
38.2 Even if the earlier decision of the five judge
bench is perincuriam the operative part of the order cannot
be interfered with in the manner now sought to be done. That
apart, the five judge bench gave its reason. The reason may
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 125
or may not be sufficient. There is advertence to s. 7(1) of
the 1952 Act and to exclusive jurisdiction created
thereunder. There is also reference to s. 407 of the
Criminal Procedure Code. [119D-E]
39.1 An erroneous decision must be as binding as a
correct one. It would be an unattainable ideal to require
the binding effect of a judgment to depend on its being
correct in the absolute, for the test of correctness would
be resort to another Court the infallibility of which is
again subject to a similar further investigation. [101D-E]
39.2 However, motions to set aside the judgments are
permitted where a judgment was rendered in ignorance of the
fact that u necessary party had not been served at all, and
was wrongly shown as served or in ignorance of the fact that
a necessary-party had died and the estate was not
represented, or where a judgment was obtained by fraud, and
it tended to prejudice a non-party, as in the case of
judgments in-rem such as for divorce, or jactitation or
probate etc. even a person, not eo-nomine a party to the
proceedings, or where a party has had no notice and a decree
is made against him in which case, the party is said to
become entitled to relief ex-debito justitiae, on proof of
the fact that there was no service, since there is no trial
at all and the judgment is for default. [110C-F]
Cases of such frank failure of natural justice are
obvious cases where relief is granted as of right. [111A]
Where a person is not actually served out but is held
erroneously, to have been served, he can agitate that
grievance only in that forum or in any further proceeding
therefrom. [111A]
Issac v. Robertson, [1984] 3 All ER 140 distinguished.
Rajunder Narain Rae v. Bijai Govind Singh, 2 MIA 181,
referred to.
25
D.M. Gordan: Actions to set aside judgment, [1961] 77
Law quarterly Review 358
In the present case by the order dated 5.4.1984 a five
judge bench set-out, what according to it was the legal
basis and source of jurisdiction to order transfer. On
17.4.1984 appellant’s writ petition challenging that
transfer as a nullity was dismissed. These orders are not
which appellant is entitled to have set aside ex-debito
justitiae by another Bench. [111C-D]
40. The pronouncements of every Division-Bench of this
Court are pronouncements of the Court itself. A larger
bench, merely on the strength of its numbers, cannot un-do
the finality of the decisions of Other division benches.
[108H]
41.1 The power to alter a decision by review must be
expressly conferred or necessarily inferred. The power of
review and the limitations on the power under Article 137
are implict recognitions of what would, otherwise, be final
and irrevocable. No appeal could be made to the doctrine of
inherent powers of the Court either. Inherent powers do not
confer, or constitute a source of jurisdiction :. They are
to be exercised in aid of a e that is already invested.
[120F-G]
41.2 If the decision suffers from an error, the only
way to correct it, is to go in Review under Article 137 read
with order 40 Rule 1 framed under Article 145 before "as far
as is practicable" the same judges. This is not a matter
merely of some dispensable procedural ’form’ but the
requirement of substance. [109A]
In the instant case, the remedy of the appellant is
recourse to Article 137, no where else. This is both in good
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 125
sense and good law. [120G]
Judicial proceedings of this Court are not subject to
writ jurisdiction thereof. [118H]
Naresh Sridhar Mirajkar & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra
& Anr., [1966] 3 SCC 744 followed.
Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, UP, [1963] 1
SCR 885, referred to.
Kadesh & Kadesh: Discretion to Disobey, [1973] edn. P.
111, referred to.
26
42. The maxim Actus Curiae Neminem Gravabid had no
application to conscious conclusions reached in a judicial
decision. The maxim is not a source of a general power to
reopen and rehear adjudication which have otherwise assumed
finality. The maximum operates in a different and narrow
area. The best illustration of the operation of the maxim is
provided by the application of the rule of nunc-pro-tunc.
For instance, if owing to the delay in what the court
should, otherwise, have done earlier but did later, a party
suffers owing to events occurring in the interrugnum, the
Court has the power to remedy it. The area of operation of
the maxim is, generally, procedural. Errors in judicial
findings, either of facts or law or operative decisions
consciously arrived at as a part of the judicial-exercise
cannot be interfered with by resort to this maxim. [120B-C]
43. Those who do not put the teachings of experience
and the lessons of logic out of consideration would tell
what inspires confidence in the judiciary and what does not.
Judicial vacillations fall in the latter category and
undermine respect of the judiciary and judicial
institutions, denuding thereby respect for law and the
confidence in the even handedness in the administration of
justice by Courts. [120E]
This Court had, therefore, the jurisdiction and power
to with draw and transfer the cases from Special Judge to
the High Court, and the directions for trial of the offences
by a Special Judge are not void and these directions could
not be challenged in a collateral attack. This Court had not
created a new jurisdiction and usurped legislative power
violating the basic tenet of doctrine of separation of
powers. [99C-F, 114D, 106E]
44. An accused person cannot assert any right to a
joint trial with his co-accused. Normally it is the right of
the prosecution to decide whom it prosecutes. It can decline
to array a person as a co-accused and, instead examine him
as a witness for the prosecution. What weight is to be
attached to that evidence, as it may smack of the testimony
of a guilty partner in crime, is a different matter.
Prosecution can enter Nolle proseque against any accused-
person. It can seek to withdraw a charge against an accused
person. These propositions are too well settled to require
any further elaboration. [98B-D]
Choraria v. Maharashtra, [1969] 2 SCR 624, referred to.
In the instant case, the appellant cannot be heard to
complain. Of the so called co-conspirators some have been
examined already as pro-
27
secution witnesses; some others proposed to be so examined;
and two others, had died in the interregnum. The appeal, on
the point, has no substance and would require to be
dismissed. [98G]
Per Ranganathan, J. (partly concurring/dissenting)
45.1 The language of s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act places a
definite hurdle in the way of construing s. 407 of the Cr.
P.C. as overriding its provisions. In view of non-obstante
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 125
clause also, it cannot be held that the provisions of s. 407
of the 1973 Cr. P.C. will override, or even operate
consistently with, the provisions of the 1952 Act.
Similarly, the power of transfer contained m clause 29 of
the letters Patent of the High Court cannot be exercised in
a manner not contemplated by s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act. [131D-
E]
45.2 A power of transfer postulates that the court to
which transfer or withdrawal is sought is competent to
exercise jurisdiction over the case. [130F]
Raja Soap Factory v. Shantaraj, [ 1965] 2 SCR, relied
on.
45.3 The power of transfer contained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure cannot be availed of to transfer a
criminal case from a Special Judge to any other criminal
court or even to the High Court. The case can be transferred
only from one special judge to another special judge; it
cannot be transferred even to a High Court Judge except
where a High Court Judge is appointed as a Special Judge.
[130E-F]
Gurcharan Das Chadha v. State of Rajasthan, [1966] 2
SCR, referred to.
45.4 Not all the judges of the High Court (but only
those elevated from the State subordinate judiciary) would
fulfil the qualifications prescribed under s. 6(2) of the
1952 Act. Though there is nothing in ss. 6 and 7 read
together to preclude altogether the appointment of a judge
of the High Court fulfilling the above qualifications as a
special judge such is not the (atleast not the normal)
contemplation of the Act. The scheme of the Act, in
particular the provisions contained in ss. 8(3A) and 9,
militate against this concept. [126C, E]
Hence, in the instant case apart from the fact that no
appointment of a High Court Judge, as a Special Judge, has
in fact been made, it is not possible to take the view that
the statutory provisions permit the
28
conferment of a jurisdiction to try this case on a High
Court Judge as a Special Judge. [126F]
45.5 The 1952 Act sought to expedite the trial of cases
involving public servants by the creation of courts presided
over by experienced special judges to be appointed by the
State (government. Effect is only 13 being given to the
express and specific words used in s. 7(1) and no question
arises of any construction being encouraged that is
repugnant to the Cr. P.C. Or involves an implied repeal, pro
tanto, of its provisions. [132D. E]
46.1 The word "jurisdiction is a verbal coat of many
colours. " It is used in a wide and broad sense while
dealing with administrative or quasi-judicial tribunals and
subordinate courts over which the superior courts exercise a
power of judicial review and superintendence. Then it is
only a question of "how much latitude the court is prepared
to allow" and "there is no yardstick to determine the
magnitude of the error other than the opinion of the court.
" [158A-B]
M. L. Sethi v. Kapur, [ 1973] I SCR 697, referred to.
46.2 The Superior Courts, with unlimited jurisdiction
are always presumed to act with jurisdiction and unless it
is clearly shown that any particular order is patently one
which could not, on any conceivable view of its
jurisdiction, have been passed by such court, such an order
can neither be ignored nor even recalled, annulled, revoked
or set aside in subsequent proceedings by the same court.
[158B-C ]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 125
Dhirendera Kumar v. Superintendent, [1955] I SCR 224;
Kiran Singh v. Chaman Paswan, AIK 1955 S.C.R. 117; Anisminic
Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation Commissioner, [1969] 2 A.C.
147; Badri Prasad v. Nagarmal, [1959] 1 Supp. S.C.R. 769;
Surajmul Nagarmul v. Triton Insurance Co. Ltd., [1924] L.R.
52 I.A. 126; Balai Chandra Hazra v. Shewdhari Jadhav, [1978]
3 S.C.R. 147; Ledgard v. Bull, L.R. 13 I.A. 134; Meenakshi
Naidu v. Subramaniya Sastri, L.R. 14 I.A. 140; Sukhrani v.
Hari Shankar, [1979] 3 S.C.R. 671; Re: Recal Communications
Ltd., [1980] 2 AER 634 and lssacs v. Robertson, [1984] 3 AER
140. referred to.
In the present case, the order passed is not one of
patent lack of jurisdiction. Though the direction in the
order dated 16.2.1984 cannot be justified by reference to
Article 142 of the Constitution of s. 407 of the 1973
Cr.P.C., that is not an incontrovertible position. It was
29
possible for another court to give a wider interpretation to
these provisions and come to the conclusion that such an
order could be made under those provisions. If this Court
had discussed the relevant provisions and specifically
expressed such a conclusion, it could not have been modified
in subsequent proceedings by this Bench merely because it
was inclined to hold differently. The mere fact that the
direction was given, without an elaborate discussion, cannot
render it vulnerable to such review . [158D-F]
47. Unless the earlier order is vitiated by a patent
lack of jurisdiction or has resulted in grave injustice or
has clearly abridged the fundamental rights of the
appellant, this Court should not declare that an order
passed by a five-Judge Bench is wrong, and annul it. The
present case cannot be brought within the narrow range of
exceptions which calls for such interference. [166E]
The direction issued by this Court in the impugned
order cannot be said to be based on a view which is
manifestly incorrect, palpably absurd or patently without
jurisdiction. Whether it will be considered right or wrong
by a different Bench having a second-look at the issue is a
totally different thing. [167E]
48.1 The powers of the Supreme Court to transfer cases
from one court to another are to be found in Article 139-A
of the Constitution and s. 406 of the Cr.P.C. The provisions
envisage either inter-state transfers of cases i.e. from a
court in one State to a court in another State or the
withdrawal of a case by the Supreme Court to itself. Intra-
State transfer among courts subordinate to a High Court to
inter-se or from a court subordinate to a High Court to the
High Court is within the jurisdiction of the appropriate
High Court. [133F-G]
48.2 The powers of the Supreme Court, in disposing of
an appeal or revision, are circumscribed by the scope of the
proceedings before it. [133H]
In the instant case, the question of transfer was not
put in issue before the Supreme Court. The Court was hearing
an appeal from the order of discharge and connected matters.
There was no issue or controversy or discussion before it as
to the comparative merits of a trial before a special judge
vis-a-vis one before the High Court. There was only an oral
request said to have been made, admittedly after the
judgment was announced. Wide as the powers under Article 141
are, they do not envisage an order of the type presently in
question. [134A, C-D]
K.M. Nanavati v. The State of Bombay, [1961] SCR 497
distinguished.
30
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 125
48.3 If the provisions of the 1952 Act read with
Article 139-A and ss. 406-407 of the Cr.P.C. do not permit
the transfer of the case from a special judge to the High
Court, that effect cannot be achieved indirectly. In the
circumstances of the case, the Supreme Court cannot issue
the impugned direction in exercise of the powers under
Article 142 or under s. 407 available to it as an appellate
court. [l34F]
Hari v. Emperor, AIR 1935 PC 122, referred to.
The direction that the trial should be shifted to the
High Court can hardly be described as a consequential or
incidental order. Such a direction did not flow, as a
necessary consequence of the conclusion of the court on the
issues and points debated before it. Therefore, this Court
was in error when it directed that the trial of the case
should be before a High Court Judge, in consequence of which
the appellant is being tried by a Court which has no
jurisdiction-and which cannot be empowered by the Supreme
Court-to try him. The continued trial before the High Court,
therefore, infringes Article 21 of the Constitution. [135E-
GI
49.1 Section 407 cannot be challenged under Article 14
as it is based on a reasonable classification having
relation to the objects sought to be achieved. Though, in
general, the trial of cases will be by courts having the
normal jurisdiction over them, the exigencies of the
situation may require that they be dealt with by some other
court for various reasons. Likewise, the nature of a case,
the nature of issues involved and other circumstances may
render it more expedient, effective, expeditious or
desirable that the case should be tried by a superior court
or the High Court itself. [136E-F3]
49.2 The power of transfer and withdrawal contained in
s. 407 of the Cr.P.C. is one dictated by the requirements of
justice and is, indeed, but an aspect of the supervisory
powers of a superior Court over courts subordinate to it.
[136FJ]
49.3 A judicial discretion to transfer or withdraw is
vested in the highest court of the State and is made
exercisable only in the circumstances set out in the
section. Such a power is not only necessary and desirable
but indispensable in the cause of the administration of
justice. The accused will continue to be tried by a or equal
or superior jurisdiction. [136G]
The accused will, therefore, suffer no prejudice by
reason of the
31
application of s. 407. Even if there is a differential
treatment which causes prejudice, it is based on logical and
acceptable considerations with a view to promote the
interests of justice. The transfer or withdrawal of a case
to another court or the High Court, in such circumstances,
can hardly be said to result in hostile discrimination
against the accused in such a case. [137A-B]
49.4 only a power of transfer is being exercised by the
supreme Court which is sought to be traced back to the power
of the High Court under s. 407. [137E]
State v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [1952] SCR 284,
distinguished.
Kathi Raning Rawat v. The State of Saurashtra, [1952] 3
SCR 435, Re: Special Courts Bill, [1978] (1972) 2 SCR 476
and Shukla v. Delhi Administration, [1980] 3 SCR 500,
referred to.
50. l Where a case is withdrawn and tried by the Court,
the High Court will be conducting the trial in the exercise
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 125
of its extraordinary original criminal jurisdiction. Here
though the ordinary original criminal jurisdiction is vested
in a subordinate criminal court or special judge, a case is
withdrawn by the High Court to itself for trial. [139F, H]
Madura Tirupparankundram etc. v. Nikhan Sahib, 35
C.W.N. 1088; Kavasji Pestonji v. Rustomji Sorabji, AIR 1949
Bombay 42; Sunil Chandra Roy and another v. The State, AIR
1954 Calcutta 305; Peoples Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Sardul
Singh Caveeshar and others, AIR 1961 Punjab 87 and People’s
Patriotic Front v. K. K. Birla and others, [ 1984] Crl. L.J.
545, referred to.
50.2 In a withdrawn case, right of first appeal to the
Supreme Court against the order passed by the High Court
will be available to the accused under s. 374 of the 1973
Cr. P.C., and the accused has the privilege of being tried
in the first instance by the High Court itself with a right
to approach the apex Court by way of appeal. The
apprehension that the judgment in the trial by the High
Court, will be final, with only a chance of obtaining
special leave under Article 136 is totally unfounded. The
Supreme Court will consider any petition presented under
Article 136 in the light of the in built requirements of
Article 21 and dispose it of as if it were itself a petition
of appeal from the judgment. Therefore an accused tried
directly by the High Court by withdrawal of his case from a
subordinate court, has a right of appeal to the Supreme
Court under s. 374 of the Cr. P.C. The allegation of an in-
32
fringement of Article 21 in such cases is, therefore, -
unfounded. [140B-F]
Sadanathan v. Arunachalam, [1981] 2 SCR 673,
distinguished.
50.3 The court to which the case has been transferred
is a superior court and in fact the High Court. However, the
High Court Judge is not a person to whom the trial of the
case can be assigned under s.7(1) of the 1952 Act. The
circumstances that a much superior forum is assigned to try
a case than the one normally available cannot by itself be
treated as a "sufficient safeguard and a good Substitute"
for the normal forum and the rights available under the
normal procedure. [131G-H]
Surajmal Mohta v. Vishwanath Sastry, [1955] 1 SCR,
referred to.
50.4 The accused here loses his right of coming up in
revision or appeal to the High Court from the interlocutory
and final orders of the trial court, and the right of having
two courts subordinate court and the High Court-adjudicate
upon his contentions before bringing the matter up in the
Supreme Court. Though these are not such caps as violate
the fundamental rights of such an accused, they are
circumstances which create prejudice to the accused and may
not be Overlooked in adopting one construction of the
statue in preference to the other. [132A-B]
51.1 t It is true that the audi altarem partem rule is
a basic requirement of the rule of law. But the degree of
compliance with this rule and the extent or consequences
flowing from failure to do so will vary from case to case.
[168B]
Nawabkhan Abbaskhan v. State, [1974] 3 SCR 427,
referred to.
In the instant case the appellant had been given no
chance of being heard before the impugned direction was
given and it cannot be said whether the Bench would have
acted in the same way even if he had been given such
opportunity. However, in the circumstances of the case. this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 125
is not a fit case to interfere with the earlier order on
that ground. [167H, 168A]
51.2 The rules of natural justice must not be stretched
too far. They should not be allowed to be exploited as a
purely technical weapon to undo a decision which does not
in reality cause substantial injustice and which, had the
party been really aggrieved thereby, could live been set
right by immediate action. [169C]
33
R. v. Secretary of State for Home Department ex parte
Mughal, [1973] 3 All ER 796, referred to.
The direction of 16.2.1984 cannot be said to have
infringed the fundamental rights of the appellant or caused
any miscarriage of justice. The appellant did know on
16.2.1984 that the judges were giving such a direction and
yet he did not protest. Perhaps he did think that being
tried by a High Court Judge would be more beneficial to him,
as indeed it was likely to be. That apart, several
opportunities were available for the appellant to set this
right. He did not move his little finger to obtain a
variation of this direction from this Court. He is
approaching the Court nearly after two years of his trial by
the learned judge in the High Court. Volumes of testimony
have been recorded and numerous exhibits have been admitted
as evidence. Though the trial is only at the stage of the
framing of charges, the trial being according to the warrant
procedure, a lot of evidence has already gone in and if the
directions of this Court are re-called, it would wipe the
slate clean. To take the entire matter back at this stage to
square No. 1 would be the very negation of the purpose of
the 1952 Act to speed up all such trials and would result in
more injustice than justice from an objective point of view.
[168G-H, 169A-B]
52.1 Situations can and do arise where this Court may
be constrained to recall or modify an order which has been
passed by it earlier and that when ex facie there is
something radically wrong with the earlier order, this Court
may have to exercise its plenary and inherent powers to
recall the earlier order without considering itself bound by
the nice technicalities of the procedure for getting this
done. [163C]
52.2 Where a mlstake is committed by a subordinate
court or a High Court, there are ample powers in this Court
to remedy the situation. But where the mistake is in an
earlier order of this Court, there is no way of having it
corrected except by approaching this Court. Sometimes, the
remedy sought can be brought within the four corners of the
procedural law in which event there can be hurdle in the way
of achieving the desired result. But the mere fact that, for
some reason, the conventional remedies are not available
should not render this Court powerless to give relief.
[163D-E]
Ghulam Sarwar v. Union of India, [1965] 2 S.C.C. 271;
Soni Vrijlal Jethalal v. Soni Jadavji Govindji, AIR 1972
Guj. 148; Jang Singh v. Brij Lal [1964] 2 S.C.R. 145 at p.
159; Bhagat Ram v. State, [1972] 2 S.C.C. 466 and State v.
Tara Chand, [1973] S.C.C. Cr. 774, referred to.
34
52.3 lt may not be possible or prudent to lay down
comprehensive list of defects that will attract the ex
debito justiae relief. [163E]
52.4 Suffice it to say that the court can grant relief
where there is some manifest illegality or want of
jurisdiction in the earlier order or some palpable in
Justice is shown to have resulted. Such a power can be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 125
traced either to Article 142 of the Constitution or to the
powers inherent in this Court as the apex Court and the
guardian of the Constitution. [163F]
Issac v. Robertson, [1984] 3 AER 140. referred to.
52.5 However, such power has to be exercised in the
"rarest of rare" cases and there is great need for judicial
discipline of the highest order in exercising such a power,
as any laxity in this regard may not only impair the
eminence, dignity and integrity of this Court but may also
lead to chaotic consequences. Nothing should be done to
create an impression that this Court can be easily persuaded
to alter its views on any matter and that a larger Bench of
the Court will not only be able to reverse the precedential
effect of an earlier ruling but may also be inclined to go
back on it and render it ineffective in its application and
binding nature even in regard to subsequent proceedings in
the same case. [163G-H 164A]
Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. v. The State of Bihar and
ors., [1953] 2 SCR 603 and Sheonandan Paswan v. State of
Bihar & Ors., [1987] 1 SCR 288, referred to.
53. The power of review is conferred on this Court by
Article 137 of the Constitution. It is subject not on to the
provisions of any law made by Parliament but also to rules
made by this Court under article 145. [142H]
The order dated 16.2.1984 does not suffer from any
error apparent on the face of the record which can be
rectified on a review application. The prayer for review has
been made beyond the period mentioned in Rule 2 of order XL
of the Supreme Court Rules. No doubt this Court has power to
extend the time within which a review petition may be filed.
But having regard to the circumstances of the case there is
hardly any reason to condone the delay in the prayer for
review. [144A-B,143B,147H]
The appellant was alive to all his present contentions.
At least when the writ petition was dismissed as an
inappropriate remedy, he should have at once moved this
Court for review. [148A]
35
That apart even if the Court is inclined to condone the
delay, the application will have to be heard as far as
possible by the same Judges who disposed of the earlier
matter. [148B]
54. It will not behove the prestige and glory of this
Court as envisaged under the Constitution if earlier
decisions are revised or recalled solely because a later
Bench takes a different view of the issues involved.
Granting that the power of review is available, it is one to
be sparingly exercised only in extraordinary or emergent
situations when there can be no two opinions about the error
or lack of jurisdiction in the earlier order and there are
adequate reasons to invoke a resort to an unconventional
method of recalling or revoking the same. Such a situation
is not present in the instant case. [167F-G]
55. Prem Chand Garg cannot be treated as an authority
for the proposition that an earlier order of this Court
could be quashed by the issue of a writ on the ground that
it violated the fundamental rights. Mirajkar clearly
precludes such a course. [155G-H]
Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, [1963] Supp. 1
SCR 885, explained and distinguished.
Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar and others v. State of
Maharashtra and another. [1966] SCR 744 relied on.
The direction issued by this Court was not warranted in
law, being contrary to the special provisions of the 1952
Act, was also not in conformity with the principles of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 125
natural justice and that unless the direction can be
justified with reference to s. 407 of the Cr.P.C., the
petitioner’s fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 21 of
the Constitution can be said to have been infringed by
reason of this direction. [142C]
However, this is not one of those cases in which it is
considered appropriate to recall the earlier direction and
order a re-trial of the appellant de novo before a Special
Judge. [169D]
&
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
468 of 1986.
From the Judgement and order dated 24.7.86 of the
Bombay High Court in Special Cash No. 24/82.
P.P. Rao, R.D. Ovlekar. M.N. Dwevedi (Not in WP. No.
542)
36
Sulman Khurshid, N.V. Pradhan, D.R. Gadgil, R.S. Desai, M.N.
Shroff K.V. Sreekumar and P.S. Pradhan for the Petitioner
Ram Jethmalani, Miss Rani Jethmalani and Ashok Sharma
for the Respondents.
A.M. Khanwilkar and A.S.Bhasme for the Respondents-
State.
The majority Judgment of Sabyasachi Mukharji, G.L. Oza
and S. Natarajan, JJ. was delivered by Mukharji, J.
Ranganath Misra and B.C. Ray, JJ. gave separate concurring
opinions. G.L. Oza, J. also gave a separate opinion. M.N.
Venkatachaliah, J. delivered a dissenting opinion S.
Ranganathan, j was a partly concurring and partly dissenting
opinion:
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. The main question involved in
this appeal, is whether the directions given by this Court
on 16th February, 1984. as reported in R.S. Nayak v. A.R.
Antulay,[1984] 2 S.C.R. 495 at 557 were legally proper. The
next question is, whether the action and the trial
proceedings pursuant to those directions, are legal and
valid. Lastly, the third consequential question is, can
those directions be recalled or set aside or annulled in
those proceedings in the manner sought for by the appellant.
In order to answer these questions certain facts have to be
borne in mind.
The appellant became the Chief Minister of Maharashtra
on or about 9th of June, 1980. On 1st of September, 1981,
respondent No. 1 who is a member of the Bharatiya Janta
Party applied to the Governor of the State under section 197
of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (hereinafter referred
to as the Code) and section 6 of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred to as the Act)
for sanction to prosecute the appellant. On 11th of
September, 1981, respondent No. 1 filed a complaint before
the Additional Metropolitan Magistrate, Bombay against the
appellant and other known and unknown persons for alleged
offence under sections 161 and 165 of the Indian Penal Code
and section 5 of the Act as also under sections 384 and 420
read with sections 109 and 120B of the Indian Penal Code.
The learned Magistrate refused to take cognizance of the
offences under the Act without the sanction for prosecution.
Thereafter a criminal revision application being C.R.A. No.
1742 of 1981 was filed in the High Court of Bombay, by
respondent No. 1.
37
The appellant thereafter on 12th of January, 1982
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 125
resigned from the position of Chief Minister in deference to
the judgment of the Bombay High Court in a writ petition
filed against him. In CRA No. 1742 of 1981 filed by
respondent No. 1 the Division Bench of the High Court held
that sanction was necessary for the prosecution of the
appellant and the High Court rejected the request of
respondent No. 1 to transfer the case from the Court of the
Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate to itself.
On 28th of July, 1982, the Governor of Maharashtra
granted sanction under section 197 of the Code and section 6
of the Act in respect of five items relating to three
subjects only and refused sanction in respect of all other
items.
Respondent No. 1 on 9th of August, 1982 filed a fresh
complaint against the appellant before the learned Special
Judge bringing in many more allegations including those for
which sanction was refused by the Governor. It was
registered as a Special Case No. 24 of 1982. It was
submitted by respondent No. 1 that there was no necessity of
any sanction since the appellant had ceased to be a public
servant after his resignation as Chief Minister.
The Special Judge, Shri P.S. Bhutta issued process to
the appellant without relying on the sanction order dated
28th of July, 1982. On 20th of October, 1982, Shri P.S.
Bhutta overruled the appellants objection to his
jurisdiction to take cognizance of the complaint and to
issue process in the absence of a notification under section
7(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952 (hereinafter
referred to as 1952 Act) specifying which of the three
Special Judges of the area should try such cases.
The State Government on 15th of January, 1983 notified
the appointment of Shri R.B. Sule as the Special Judge to
try the offences specified under section 6(1) of the 1952
Act. On or about 25th of July 1983, it appears that Shri
R.B. Sule, Special Judge discharged the appellant holding
that a member of the Legislative Assembly is a public
servant and there was no valid sanction for prosecuting the
appellant.
On 16th of February, 1984, in an appeal filed by
respondent No. 1 directly under Article 136, a Constitution
Bench of this Court held that a member of the Legislative
Assembly is not a public servant and set aside the order of
Special Judge Sule. Instead of remanding the
38
case to the Special Judge for disposal in accordance with
law, this Court suo motu withdrew the Special Cases No.
24/82 and 3/83 (arising out of a complaint filed by one P.B.
Samant) pending in the Court of Special Judge, Greater
Bombay, Shri R.B. Sule and transferred the same to the
Bombay High Court with a request to the learned Chief
Justice to assign these two cases to a sitting Judge of the
High Court for holding the trial from day to day. These
directions were given, according to the appellant, without
any pleadings, without any arguments, without any such
prayer from either side and without giving any opportunity
to the appellant to make his submissions before issuing the
same. It was submitted that the appellant’s right to be
tried by a competent court according to the procedure
established by law enacted by Parliament and his rights of
appeal and revision to the High Court under section 9 of the
1952 Act had been taken away.
The directions of this Court mentioned hereinbefore are
contained in the decision of this Court in R.S. Nayak v.
A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 495 at 557. There the Court
was mainly concerned with whether sanction to prosecute was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 125
necessary. It was held that no such sanction was necessary
in the facts and circumstances of the case. This Court
further gave the following directions:
"The accused was the Chief Minister of a premier
State- the State of Maharashtra. By a prosecution
launched as early ’as on September 11, 1981, his
character and integrity came under a cloud. Nearly
two and a half years have rolled by and the case
has not moved an inch further. An expeditious
trial is primarily in the interest of the accused
and a mandate of Article 21. Expeditious disposal
of a criminal case is in the interest of both the
prosecution and - the accused. Therefore, Special
Case No. 24 of 1982 and Special Case No. 3/83
pending in the Court of Special judge, Greater
Bombay Shri R.B. Sule are withdrawn and
transferred to the High Court of Bombay with a
request to the learned Chief Justice to assign
these two cases to a sitting Judge of the High
Court. On being so assigned, the learned Judge may
proceed to expeditiously dispose of the cases
preferably by holding the trial from day to day."
The appellant as mentioned hereinbefore had appeared
before the Special Judge and objected to the jurisdiction of
the learned Judge on the ground that the case had not been
properly allocated to him by the State Government. The
Special Judge Bhutta after hearing
39
the parties had decided the case was validly filed before
him and he had properly taken cognizance. He based his order
on the construction of the notification of allocation which
was in force at that time. Against the order of the learned
Special Judge rejecting the appellant’s contention, the
appellant filed a revision application in the High Court of
Bombay. During the pendency of the said revision
application, the Government of Maharashtra issued a
notification appointed Special Judge R.B. Sule, as the Judge
of the special case. it is the contention of the respondents
before us that the appellant thereafter did not raise any
further objection in the High Court against cognizance being
taken by Shri Bhutta. It is important to take note of this
contention because one of the points urged by Shri Rao on
behalf of the appellant was that not only we should set
aside the trial before the High Court as being without
jurisdiction but we should direct that no further trial
should take place before the Special Judge because the
appellant has suffered a lot of which we shall mention later
but also because cognizance of the offences had not been
taken properly. In order to meet the submission that
cognizance of the offences had not been taken properly, it
was urged by Shri Jethmalani that after the Government
Notification appointing Judge Sule as the Special Judge, the
objection that cognizance of the offences could not be taken
by Shri Bhutta was not agitated any further. The other
objections that the appellant raised against the order
passed by Judge Bhutta were dismissed by the High Court of
Bombay. Against the order of the Bombay High Court the
appellant filed a petition under Article 136 of the
constitution. The appeal after grant of leave was dismissed
by a judgment delivered on 16th February, 1984 by this Court
in A.R. Antulay v. Ramdas Sriniwas Nayak and another, [1984]
2 S C.R. 914. There at page 954 of the report, this Court
categorically observed that a private complaint filed by the
complaint was clearly maintainable and that the cognizance
was properly taken. This was the point at issue in that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 125
appeal. This was decided against the appellant. On this
aspect therefore, the other point is open to the appellant.
We are of the opinion that this observation of this Court
cannot by any stretch of imagination be considered to be
without jurisdiction. Therefore, this decision of this Court
precludes any scope for argument about the validity of the
cognizance taken by Special Judge Bhutta. Furthermore, the
case had proceeded further before the Special Judge, Shri
Sule and the learned Judge passed an order of discharge on
25th July, 1983. This order was set aside by the
Constitution Bench of this Court on 16th February, 1984, in
the connected judgment (vide 1984 2 S.C.R. 495). The order
of taking cognizance had therefore become final and cannot
be reagitated. Moreover section 460(e) of the Code expressly
provides that if any Magistrate not empowered by law
40
to take cognizance of an offence on a complaint under
section 190 of the Code erroneously in good faith does so
his proceedings shall not be set aside merely on the ground
that he was not so empowered.
Pursuant to the directions of this Court dated 16th
February, 1984, on 1st of March, 1984, the Chief Justice of
the Bombay High Court assigned the cases to S.N. Khatri, J.
The appellant, it is contended before us, appeared before
Khatri, J. and had raised an objection that the case could
be tried by a Special Judge only appointed by the Government
under the 1952 Act. Khatri, J. On 13th of March, 1984,
refused to entertain the appellant’s objection to
jurisdiction holding that he was bound by the order of this
Court. There was another order passed on 16th of March, 1984
whereby Khatri, J. dealt with the other contentions raised
as to his jurisdiction and rejected the objections of the
appellant.
Being aggrieved the appellant came up before this Court
by filing special leave petitions as well as writ petition.
This Court on 17th April, 1984, in Abdul Rehman Antulay v.
Union of India and others etc., [1984] 3 S.C.R. 482 at 483
held that the learned Judge was perfectly justified and
indeed it was the duty of the learned Judge to follow the
decision of this Court which was binding on him. This Court
in dismissing the writ petition observed, inter alia, as
follows:
"In my view, the writ petition challenging the
validity of the order and judgment passed by this
Court as nullity or otherwise incorrect cannot be
entertained. I wish to make it clear that the
dismissal of this writ petition will not pre
judice the right of the petitioner, to approach
the Court with an appropriate review petition or
to file any other application which he may be
entitled in law to file."
D.N. Mehta, J. to whom the cases were transferred from
Khatri, J. framed charges under 21 heads and declined to
frame charges under 22 other heads proposed by respondent
No. 1. This Court allowed the appeal by special leave
preferred by respondent No. 1 except in regard to three
draft charges under section 384, I.P.C. (extortion) and
directed the Court below to frame charges with regard to all
other offences alleged. This Court requested the Chief
Justice of the Bombay High Court to nominate another Judge
in place of D.N. Mehta, J. to take up the trial and proceed
expeditiously to dispose of the case finally. See in this
connection R. S. Nayak v. A .R. Antulay and another, [1986]
2 S.C.C. 716.
41
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 125
P.S. Shah, J. to whom the cases were referred to from
D.N. Mehta, J. On 24th of July, 1986 proceeded to frame as
many as 79 A charges against the appellant and decided not
to proceed against the other named co-conspirators. This is
the order impugned before us. Being aggrieved by the
aforesaid order the appellant filed the present Special
leave Petition (Crl.) No. 2519 of 1986 questioning the
jurisdiction to try the case in violation of the appellant’s
fundamental rights conferred by Articles 14 and 21 and the
provisions of the Act of 1952. The appellant also filed
Special leave Petition (Crl.) No. 2518 of 1986 against the
judgment and order dated 21st of August, 1986 of P.S. Shah,
J. holding that none of the 79 charges framed against the
accused required sanction under section 197(1) of the Code.
The appellant also filed a Writ Petition No. 542 of 1986
challenging a portion of section 197(1) of Code as ultra
vires Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution.
This Court granted leave in Special Leave Petition
(Crl. ) No. 2519 of 1986 after hearing respondent No. 1 and
stayed further proceedings in the High Court. This Court
issued notice in Special Leave Petition (Crl.) No. 2518 and
Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 542 of 1986 and directed these to
be tagged on with the appeal arising out of Special Leave
Petition (Crl. ) No. 2519 of 1986.
On 11th of October, 1986 the appellant filed a Criminal
Miscellaneous Petition for permission to urge certain
additional grounds in support of the plea that the
origination of the proceedings before the Court of Shri P.S.
Bhutta, Special Judge and the process issued to the
appellant were illegal and void ab initio.
This Court on 29th October, 1986 dismissed the
application for revocation of special leave petition filed
by respondent No. 1 and referred the appeal to a Bench of 7
Judges of this Court and indicated the points in the note
appended to the order for consideration of this Bench.
So far as SLP (Crl.) No. 2518/86 against the judgment
and order dated 21st August, 1986 of P.S. Shah, J. Of the
Bombay High Court about the absence of sanction under
section 197 of the Code is concerned, we have by an order
dated 3rd February, 1988 delinked that special leave
petition inasmuch as the same involved confederation of an
independent question and directed that the special leave
petition should be heard by any appropriate Bench after
disposal of this appeal, Similarly, Writ Petition (Crl.) No.
542 of 1986 challenging a H
42
portion of section 197(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code as
ultra vires Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution had also
to be delinked by our order dated 3rd February, 1988 to be
heard along with special leave petition no 2518 of 1986.
This judgment therefore, does not cover these two matters.
In this appeal two questions arise, namely, (1) whether
the directions given by this Court on 16th of February, 1984
in R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 495
withdrawing the Special Case No. 24/82 and Special Case No.
3/83 arising out of the complaint filed by one shri P.B.
Samant pending in the Court of Special Judge, Greater
Bombay, Shri R.B. Sule, and transferring the same to the
High Court of Bombay with a request to the Chief Justice to
assign these two cases to a sitting Judge of the High Court,
in breach of section 7(1) of the Act of 1952 which mandates
that offences as in this case shall be tried by a Special
Judge only thereby denying at least one right of appeal to
the appellant was violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the
Constitution and whether such directions were at all valid
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 125
or legal and (2) if such directions were not at all valid or
legal in view. Of the order dated 17th. Of April, 1984
referred to hereinbefore, is this appeal sustainable or the
grounds therein justiciable in these proceedings. In other
words,- are 711 the said directions in a proceedings inter-
parties binding even if bad in law or violative of Articles
14 and 21 of the Constitution and as such are immune from
correction by this Court even though they cause prejudice
and do injury? These are the basic questions which this
Court must answer in this appeal.
The contention that has been canvassed before us was
that save as provided in sub-section (1) of section 9 of the
Code the provisions thereof corresponding to section 9(1) of
the Criminal Procedure Code, 1898) shall so far as they are
not inconsistent with the Act apply to the proceedings
before the Special Judge and for purposes of the said
provisions the Court of the Special Judge shall be deemed to
be a Court of Session trying cases without a jury or without
the aid of assessors and the person conducting the
prosecution before a Special Judge shall be deemed to be a
public prosecutor. It was submitted ’before us that it was a
private complaint and the prosecutor was not the public
prosecutor. This was another infirmity which this trial
suffered, it was pointed out. In the background of the main
issues involved in this appeal we do not propose to deal
with this subsidiary point which is of not any significance.
The only question with which we are concerned in this
appeal is,
43
whether the case which is triable under the 1952 Act only by
a Special Judge appointed under section 6 of the said Act
could be transferred to the High Court for trial by itself
or by this Court to the High Court for trial by it. Section
406 of the Code deals with transfer of criminal cases and
provides power to this Court to transfer cases and appeals
whenever it is made to appear to this Court that an order
under this section is expedient for the ends of justice. The
law provides that this Court may direct that any particular
case or appeal be transferred from one High Court to another
High Court or from a Criminal Court subordinate to one High
Court to another Criminal Court of equal or superior
jurisdiction subordinate to another High Court. Equally
section 407 deals with the power of High Court to transfer
cases and appeals. Under section 6 of the 1952 Act, the
State Government is authorised to appoint as many Special
Judges as may be necessary for such area or areas for
specified offences including offences under the Act. Section
7 of the 1952 Act deals with cases triable by Special
Judges. The question, therefore, is whether this Court under
section 406 of the Code could have transferred a case which
was triable only by a Special Judge to be tried by the High
Court or even if an application had been made to this Court
under section 406 of the Code to transfer the case triable
by a Special Judge to another Special Judge could that be
transferred to a High Court, for trial by it. It was
contended by Shri Rao that the jurisdiction to entertain and
try cases is conferred either by the Constitution or by the
laws made by Parliament. He referred us to the powers of
this Court under Articles 32, 131, 137, 138, 140, 142 and
145(1) of the Constitution. He also referred to Entry 77 of
List I of the Constitution which deals with the constitution
of the courts. He further submitted that the appellant has a
right to be tried in accordance with law. and no procedure
which will deny the equal protection of law can be invented
and any order passed by this Court which will deny equal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 125
protection of laws would be an order which is void by virtue
of Article 13(2) of the Constitution. He referred us to the
previous order of this Court directing the transfer of cases
to the High Court and submitted that it was a nullity
because of the consequences of the wrong directions of this
Court. The enormity of the consequences warranted this
Court’s order being treated as a nullity. The directions
denied the appellant the remedy by way of appeal as of
right. Such erroneous or mistaken directions should be
corrected at the earliest opportunity, Shri Rao submitted.
Shri Rao also submitted that the directions given by
the Court were without jurisdiction and as such void. There
was no jurisdiction, according to Shri Rao, or power to
transfer a case from the Court of
44
the Special Judge to any High Court. Section 406 Gf the Code
only permitted transfer of cases from one High Court to
another High Court or from a Criminal Court subordinate to
one High Court to a Criminal Court subordinate to another
High Court. It is apparent that the impugned directions
could not have been given under section 406 of the Code as
the Court has no such power to order the transfer from the
Court of the Special Judge to the High Court of Bombay.
Section 7(1) of the 1952 Act creates a condition which
is sine qua non for the trial of offences under section 6(1)
of the said Act. The condition is that notwithstanding
anything contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure or any
other law, the said offences shall be triable by Special
Judges only. (Emphasis supplied). Indeed conferment of the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Special Judge is recognised by
the judgment delivered by this Court in A.R. Antulay v.
Ramdas Sriniwas Nayak and another, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 914 where
this Court had adverted to section 7(1) of the 1952 Act and
at page 931 observed that section 7 of the 1952 Act
conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the Special Judge
appointed under section 6 to try cases set out in section
6(1)(a) and 6(1)(b) of the said Act. The Court emphasised
that the Special Judge had exclusive jurisdiction to try
offences enumerated in section 6(1)(a) and (b). In spite of
this while giving directions in the other matter, that is,
R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 495 at page 557,
this Court directed transfer to the High Court of Bombay the
cases pending before the Special Judge. It is true that
section 7(1) and Section 6 of the 1952 Act were referred to
while dealing with the other matters but while dealing with
the matter of directions and giving the impugned directions,
it does not appear that the Court kept in mind the
exclusiveness of the jurisdiction of the Special Court to
try the offences enumerated in section 6.
Shri Rao made a point that the directions of the Court
were given per incuriam, that is to say without awareness of
or advertence to the exclusive nature of the jurisdiction of
the Special Court and without reference to the possibility
of the violation of the fundamental rights in a case of this
nature as observed by a seven Judges Bench decision in The
State of West Bengal v. AnwarAli Sarkar [1952] S.C.R. 284.
Shri Ram Jethmalani on behalf of the respondents
submitted that the judgment of the Constitution Bench of
this Court was delivered on 16th of February, 1984 and
counsel for both sides were present and it was neither
objected to nor stated by the appellant that he wanted to be
heard in regard to the transfer of the trial forum. He
45
submitted that the order of discharge was not only
challenged by a special leave petition before this Court but
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 125
also that a revision application before the High Court being
Criminal Revision Application No. 354/83 was filed but the
Criminal Revision Application by an order of this Court was
withdrawn and heard along with the special leave petition.
That application contained a prayer to the effect that the
order of discharge be set aside and the case be transferred
to the High Court for trial. Therefore, it was submitted
that the order of transfer was manifestly just. There was no
review against this order. It was submitted that the order
of transfer to a superior court cannot in law or in fact
ever cause any harm or prejudice to any accused. It is an
order made for the benefit of the accused and in the
interests of justice. Reliance was placed on Romesh Chandra
Arora v. The State, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 924 at 927 and 934. It
was further submitted by Shri Jethmalani that a decision
which has become final cannot be challenged. Therefore, the
present proceedings are an abuse of the process of the
Court, according to him. It was further submitted that all
the attributes of a trial court were present in a Court of
Appeal, an appeal being a continuation of trial before
competent Court of Appeal and, therefore, all the
qualifications of the trial court were there. The High Court
is authorised to hear an appeal from the judgment of the
Special Judge under the Act of 1952. It was submitted that a
Special Judge except in so far as a specific provision to
the contrary is made is governed by all the provisions of
the Code and he is a Court subordinate to the High Court.
See A.R. Antulay v. R.S. Nayak and another, [1984] 2 S.C.R.
914 at 943 and 944.
It was submitted that power under section 526 of the
old Code corresponding to section 407 of the new Code can be
exercised qua a Special Judge. This power, according to Shri
Jethmalani, is exerciseable by the High Court in respect of
any case under Section 407(1)(iv) irrespective of the Court
in which it is pending. This part of the section is not
repealed wholly or pro tanto, according to the learned
counsel, by anything in the 1952 Act. The Constitution
Bench, it was submitted, consciously exercised this power.
It decided that the High Court had the power to transfer a
case to itself even from a Special Judge. That decision is
binding at least in this case and cannot be reopened, it was
urged. In this case what was actually decided cannot be
undone, we were told repeatedly. It will produce an
intolerable state of affairs. This Court sought to recognise
the distinction between finality of judicial orders qua the
parties and the reviewability for application to other
cases. Between the parties even a wrong decision can operate
as res judicata. The doctrine of res judicata is applicable
even to criminal
46
trials, it was urged. Reliance was placed on Bhagat Ram v.
State of Rajasthan, [1972] 2 S.C.C.466. A judgment of a High
Court is binding in all subsequent proceedings in the same
case; more so, a judgment which was unsuccessfully
challenged before this Court.
It is obvious that if a case could be transferred under
section 406 of the Code from a Special Judge it could only
be transferred to another Special Judge or a court of
superior jurisdiction but subordinate to the High Court. No
such court exists. Therefore, under this section the power
of transfer can only be from one Special Judge to another
Special Judge. Under section 407 however, corresponding to
section 526 of the old Code, it was submitted the High Court
has power to transfer any case to itself for being tried by
it, it was submitted.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 125
It appears to us that in Gurcharan Das Chadha v. State
of Rajasthan, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 678 an identical question
arose. The petitioner in that case was a member of an All
India Service serving in the State of Rajasthan. The State
Government ordered his trial before the Special Judge of
Bharatpur for offences under section 120B/161 of the Indian
Penal Code and under sections 5(1)(a) and (d) and 5(2) of
the Act. He moved this Court under section 527 of the old
Code praying for transfer of his case to another State on
various grounds. Section 7(1) of the Act required the
offences involved in that case to be tried by a Special
Judge only, and section 7(2) of the Act required the
offences to be tried by a Special Judge for the area within
which these were committed which condition could never be
satisfied if there was a transfer. This Court held that the
condition in sub-section (1) of section 7 of the Act that
the case must be tried by a Special Judge, is a sine qua non
for the trial of offences under section 6. This condition
can be satisfied by transferring the case from one Special
Judge to another Special Judge. Sub-section (2) of section 7
merely distributes, it was noted, work between Special
Judges appointed in a State with reference to territory.
This provision is at par with the section of the Code which
confers territorial jurisdiction on Sessions Judges and
magistrates. An order of transfer by the very nature of
things must sometimes result in taking the case out of the
territory. The third sub-section of section 8 of the Act
preserves the application of any provision of the Code if it
is not inconsistent with the Act save as provided by the
first two sub-sections of that Section. It was held by this
Court that section 527 of the old Code, hence, remains
applicable if it is not inconsistent with section 7(2) of
the Act. It was held that there was no inconsistency between
section 527 of the Code and
47
section 7(2) of the Act as the territorial jurisdiction
created by the latter operates in a different sphere and
under different circumstances. Inconsistency can only be
found if two provisions of law apply in identical
circumstances, and create contradictions. Such a situation
does not arise when either this Court or the High Court
exercises the power of transfer. Therefore, this Court in
exercise of its jurisdiction and power under section 521 of
the Code can transfer a case from a Special Judge
subordinate to one High Court to another Special Judge
subordinate to another High Court. It has to be emphasised
that that decision was confined to the power under section
527 of the previous Code and to transfer from one Special
to another Special Judge though of another State. It was
urged by Shri Jethmalani that Chadha’s case (supra) being
one of transfer from one Special Judge to another the
judgment is not an authority for the proposition that it
cannot be transferred to a court other than that of a
Special Judge or to the High Court. But whatever be the
position, this is no longer open at this juncture.
The jurisdiction, it was submitted, created by section
7 of the Act of 1952 is of exclusiveness qua the Courts
subordinate to the High Court. It is not exclusive qua a
Court of superior jurisdiction including a Court which can
hear an appeal against its decision. The non obstante clause
does not prevail over other provisions of the Code such as
those which recognise the powers of the superior courts to
exercise jurisdiction on transfer. It was submitted that the
power of transfer vested in the High Court is exercisable
qua Special Judges and is recognised not merely by Chadha’s
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 34 of 125
case but in earlier cases also, Shri Jethmalani submitted.
It was next submitted that apart from the power under
sections 406 and 407 of the Code the power of transfer is
also exercisable by the High Court under Article 228 of the
Constitution. There’ is no doubt that under this Article the
case can be withdrawn from the Court of a Special Judge. It
is open to the High Court to finally dispose it of. A
chartered High Court can make orders of transfer under
clause 29 of the Letters Patent. Article 134(1)(b) of the
Constitution expressly recognises the existence of such
power in every High Court.
It was further submitted that any case transferred for
trial to the High Court in which it exercises jurisdiction
only by reason of the order of transfer is a case tried not
in ordinary original criminal jurisdiction but in
extraordinary original criminal jurisdiction. Some High
Courts had both ordinary criminal jurisdiction as well as
extraordinary
48
criminal original jurisdiction. The former was possessed by
the High Courts of Bombay, Madras and Calcutta. The first
two High Courts abolished it in the 40’s and the Calcutta
High Court continued it for quite some time and after the
50’s in a truncated form until it was finally done away with
by the Code. After the Code the only original criminal
jurisdiction possessed by all the High Courts is
extraordinary. It can arise by transfer under the Code or
the Constitution or under clause 29 of the Letters Patent.
It was submitted that it was not right that extraordinary
original criminal jurisdiction is contained only in clause
24 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court. This is
contrary to section 374 of the Code itself. That refers to
all High Courts and not merely all or any one of the three
Chartered High Courts. In P.P. Front, New Delhi v. KK. Birla
and others, [1984] Criminal Law Journal 545, the Delhi High
Court recognised its extraordinary original criminal
jurisdiction as the only one that it possessed. The nature
of this jurisdiction is clearly explained in Madura,
Tirupparankundram etc. v. Alikhan Sahib and Ors, 35 Calcutta
Weekly Notes, 1088 and Sunil Chandra Roy and another v. The
State, A.I.R. 1954 Calcutta 305, paragraph 15. Reference may
also be made to the Law Commissioner’s 41st Report,
paragraphs 3.1 to 3.6 at page 29 and paragraph 31. 10 at
page 259.
The 1952 Act was passed to provide for speedier trial
but the procedure evolved should not be so directed, it was
submitted, that it would violate Article 14 as was held in
Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra).
Section 7 of the 1952 Act provides that notwithstanding
anything contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, or in
any other law the offences specified in sub-section (1) of
section 6 shall be triable by Special Judges only. So the
law provides for a trial by Special Judge only and this is
notwithstanding anything contained in sections 406 and 407
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973. Could it,
therefore, be accepted that this Court exercised a power not
given to it by Parliament or the Constitution and acted
under a power not exercisable by it? The question that has
to be asked and answered is if a case is tried by a Special
Judge or a court subordinate to the High Court against whose
order an appeal or a revision would lie-to the High Court,
is transferred by this Court to the High Court and such
right of appeal or revision is taken away would not an
accused be in a worse position than others? This Court in
R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 495 did not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 125
refer either to section 406 or section 407 of the Code. It
is only made dear that if the application had been made to
the
49
High Court under section 407 of the Code, the High Court
might have transferred the case to itself
The second question that arises here is if such a wrong
direction has been given by this Court can such a direction
inter-parties be challenged subsequently. This is really a
value perspective judgement.
In Kiran Singh and others v. Chaman Paswan and others,
l 19551 1 S.C.R. 117 at 121 Venkatarama Ayyar, J. Observed
that the fundamental principle is well established that a
decree passed by a Court without jurisdiction is a nullity,
and that its validity could be set up whenever and wherever
it is sought to be enforced or relied upon-even at the stage
of execution and even in collateral proceedings. A defect of
jurisdiction whether it is pecuniary or territorial, or
whether it is in respect of the subject-matter of the
action, strikes at the very authority of the Court to pass
any decree, and such a defect cannot be cured even by
consent of parties.
This question has been well put, if we may say so, in
the decision of this Court in M.L. Sethi v. R.P. Kapur,
[1973] 1 S.C.R. 697 where Mathew, J. Observed that the
jurisdiction was a verbal coat of many colours and referred
to the decision in Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation
Commission, [1969] 2 A.C. 147 where the majority of the
House of Lords dealt with the assimilation of the concepts
of ’lack’ and ’excess’ of jurisdiction or, in other words,
the extent to which we have moved away from the traditional
concept of jurisdiction. The effect of the dicta was to
reduce the difference between jurisdictional error and error
of law within jurisdiction almost to a vanishing point. What
is a wrong decision on a question of limitation, he posed
referring to an article of Professor H.W.R. Wade,
"Constitutional and Administrative Aspects of the Anismanic
case" and concluded; "it is a bit difficult to understand
how an erroneous decision on a question of limitation or res
judicata would oust the jurisdiction of the Court in the
primitive sense of the term and render the decision or
decree embodying the decision a nullity liable to collateral
attack .. And there is no yardstick to determine the
magnitude of the error other than the opinion of the Court."
(Emphasis supplied)
While applying the ratio to the facts of the present
controversy, it has to be borne in mind that section 7(1) of
the 1952 Act creates a condition which is sine qua non for
the trial of offenders under section 6(1) of that Act. In
this connection, the offences specified under section 6(1)
of the 1952 Act are those punishable under sections 161,
162,
50
163, 164 and 165A of the Indian Penal Code and section 5 of
the 1947 Act. Therefore, the order of this Court
transferring the cases to the High Court on 16th February,
1984, was not authorised by law. This Court, by its
directions could not confer jurisdiction on the High Court
of Bombay to try any case which it did not possess such
jurisdiction under the scheme of the 1952 Act. It is true
that in the first judgment in A.R. Antulay v. Ramdas
Sriniwas Nayak and another, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 914 when this
Court was analysing the scheme of the 1952 Act, it referred
to sections 6 and 7 at page 931 of the Reports. The
arguments, however, were not advanced and it does not appear
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 36 of 125
that this aspect with its remifications was present in the
mind of the Court while giving the impugned directions.
Shri Jethmalani sought to urge before us that the order
made by the Court was not without jurisdiction or irregular.
We are unable to agree. It appears to us that the order was
quite clearly per incuriam. This Court was not called upon
and did not decide the express limitation on the power
conferred by section 407 of the Code which includes offences
by public servants mentioned in the 1952 Act to be
overridden in the manner sought to be followed as the
consequential direction of this Court. This Court, to be
plain, did not have jurisdiction to transfer the case to
itself. That will be evident from an analysis of the
different provisions of the Code as well as the 1952 Act.
The power to create or enlarge jurisdiction is legislative
in character, so also the power to confer a right of appeal
or to take away a right of appeal. Parliament alone can do
it by law and no Court. whether superior or inferior or both
combined can enlarge the jurisdiction of a Court or divest a
person of his rights of revision and appeal. See in this
connection the observations in M.L. Sethi v. R.P. Kapur
(supra) in which Justice Mathew considered Anisminic, [1969]
2 AC 147 and also see Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edn.
Vol. 10 page 327 at para 720 onwards and also Amnon
Rubinstein ’Jurisdiction and Illegality’ (1965 Edn. pages
16-50). Reference may also be made to Raja Soap Factory v.
S. P. Shantaraj, [1965] 2 SCR 800.
The question of validity, however, is important in that
the want of jurisdiction can be established solely by a
superior Court and that, in practice, no decision can be
impeached collaterally by any inferior Court. But the
superior Court can always correct its own error brought to
its notice either by way of petition or ex debito justitiae.
See Rubinstein’s Jurisdiction and Illegality’ (supra).
In the aforesaid view of the matter and the principle
reiterated, it
51
is manifest that the appellant has not been ordered to be
tried by a procedure mandated by law, but by a procedure
which was violative of Article 21 of the Constitution. That
is violative of Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution also,
as is evident from the observations of the 7 Judges Bench
judgment in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra) where this
Court found that even for a criminal who was alleged to have
committed an offence, a special trial would be per se
illegal because it will deprive the accused of his
substantial and valuable privileges of defences which,
others similarly charged, were able to claim. As Justice
Vivian Bose observed in the said decision at page 366 of the
report, it matters not whether it was done in good faith,
whether it was done for the convenience of Government,
whether the process could be scientifically classified and
labelled, or whether it was an experiment for speedier trial
made for the good of society at large. Justice Bose
emphasised that it matters not how lofty and laudable the
motives were. The question which must be examined is, can
fair minded, reasonable, unbiased and resolute men regard
that with equanimity and call it reasonable, just and fair,
regard it as equal treatment and protection in the defence
of liberties which is expected of a sovereign democratic
republic in the conditions which are obtained in India
today. Judged by that view the singling out of the appellant
in this case for a speedier trial by the High Court for an
offence of which the High Court had no jurisdiction to try
under the Act of 1952 was, in our opinion, unwarranted,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 37 of 125
unprecedented and the directions given by this Court for the
said purpose, were not warranted. If that is the position,
when that fact is brought to our notice we must remedy the
situation. In rectifying the error, no procedural
inhibitions should debar this Court because no person should
suffer by reason of any mistake of the Court. The Court, as
is manifest, gave its directions on 16th February, 1984.
Here no rule of res judicata would apply to prevent this
Court from entertaining the grievance and giving appropriate
directions. In this connection, reference may be made to the
decision of the Gujarat High Court in Soni Vrajlal Jethalal
v. Soni Jadavji Govindji and others, A.I.R. 1972 Guj. 148.
Where D.A. Desai, J. speaking for the Gujarat High Court
observed that no act of the court or irregularity can come
in the way of justice being done and one of the highest and
the first duty of all Courts is to take care that the act of
the Court does no in jury to the suitors.
It appears that when this Court gave the aforesaid
directions on 16th February, 1984, for the disposal of the
case against the appellant by the High Court, the directions
were given oblivious of the relevant provisions of law and
the decision in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra).
52
See Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th End, Vol. 26, page
297, para 578 and page 300, the relevant notes 8, 11 and 15;
Dias on Jurisprudence, 5th Edn., pages 128 and 130; Young v.
Bristol Aeroplane Co. Ltd., [1944] 2 AER 293 at 300. Also
see the observations of Lord Goddard in Moore v. Hewitt,
[1947] 2 A.E.R. 270 at 272-A and Penny v. Nicholas, [1950] 2
A.E.R. 89, 92A. "per incuriam" are those decisions given in
ignorance or forgetfulness of some inconsistent statutory
provision or of some authority binding on the Court
concerned, so that in such cases some part of the decision
or some step in the reasoning on which it is based, is
found, on that account to be demonstrably wrong. See Morelle
v. Wakeling, [1955] 1 All E.R. 708, 718F. Also see State of
Orissa v. The Titaghur Paper Mills Co. Ltd., [19851 3 SCR
26. We are of the opinion that in view of the clear
provisions of section 7(2) of the Criminal Law Arnendment
Act, 1952 and Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution, these
directions were legally wrong.
The principle that the size of the Bench-whether it is
comprised of two or three or more Judges-does not matter,
was enunciated in Young v. Bristol Aeroplane Co. Ltd.
(supra) and followed by Justice Chinnappa Reddy in Javed
Ahmed Abdul Hamid Pawala v. State of Maharashtra, [1985] 2
SCR 8 where it has been held that a Division Bench of three
Judges should not overrule a Division Bench of two Judges,
has not been followed by our Courts. According to
wellsettled law and various decisions of this Court, it is
also well-settled that a Full Bench or a Constitution Bench
decision as in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra) was binding
on the Constitution Bench because it was a Bench of 7
Judjes.
The principle in England that the size of the Bench
does not matter, is clearly brought out in the decision of
Evershed M.R. in the case of Morelle v. Wakeling (supra).
The law laid down by this Court is somewhat different. There
is a hierarchy within the Court itself here, where larger
Benches overrule smaller Benches. See the observations of
this Court in Mattulal v. Radhe Lal, [1975] 1 SCR 127, Union
of India & Anr. v. K.S. Subramanian, [1977] 1 SCR 87 at page
92 and State of U.P. v. Ram Chandra Trivedi, [1977] 1 SCR
462 at 473. This is the practice followed by this Court and
now it is a crystallised rule of law. See in this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 38 of 125
connection, as mentioned hereinbefore, the observations of
the State of Orissa v. Titagarh Paper Mills (supra) and also
Union of India and others v. Godfrey Philips India Ltd.,
[1985] Suppl 3 SCR 123 at 145.
In support of the contention that a direction to delete
wholly the
53
impugned direction of this Court be given, reliance was
placed on Satyadhvan Ghoshal v. Deorajini Devi, [1960] 3 SCR
590. The ratio of the decision as it appears from pages 601
to 603 is that the judgment which does not terminate the
proceedings, can be challenged in an appeal from final
proceedings. It may be otherwise if subsequent proceedings
were independent ones.
The appellant should not suffer on account of the
direction of this Court based upon an error leading to
conferment of jurisdiction.
In our opinion, we are not debarred from re-opening
this question and giving proper directions and correcting
the error in the present appeal, when the said directions on
16th February, 1984, were violative of the limits of
jurisdiction and the directions have resulted in deprivation
of the fundamental rights of the appellant, guaranteed by
Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution. The appellant has
been treated differently from other offenders, accused of a
similar offence in view of the provisions of the Act of 1952
and the High Court was not a Court competent to try the
offence. It was directed to try the appellant under the
directions of this Court, which was in derogation of Article
21 of the Constitution. The directions have been issued
without observing the principle of audi alteram partem. It
is true that Shri Jethmalani has shown us the prayers made
before the High Court which are at page 121 of the paper-
book. He argued that since the transfers have been made
under section 407, the procedure would be that given in
section 407(8) of the Code. These directions, Shri
Jethmalani sought to urge before us, have been given in the
presence of the parties and the clarificatory order of April
5, 1985 which was made in the presence of the appellant and
his Counsel as well as the Counsel of the State Government
of Maharashtra, expressly recorded that no such submission
was made in connection with the prayer for grant of
clarification. We are of the opinion that Shri Jethmalani is
not right when he said that the decision was not made per
incuriam as submitted by the appellant. It is a settled rule
that if a decision has been given per incuriam the Court can
ignore it. It is also true that the decision of this Court
in the case of The Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. The State of
Bihar & Ors. [1955] 2 SCR 603 at 623 was not regarding an
order which had become conclusive inter-parties. The Court
was examining in that case only the doctrine of precedents
and determining the extent to which it could take a
different view from one previously taken in a different case
between different parties.
According to Shri Jethmalani, the doctrine of per
incuriam has
54
no application in the same proceedings. We are unable to
accept this A contention. We are of the opinion that this
Court is not powerless to correct its error which has the
effect of depriving a citizen of his fundamental rights and
more so, the right to life and liberty. It can do so in
exercise of its inherent jurisdiction in any proceeding
pending before it without insisting on the formalities of a
review application. Powers of review can be exercised in a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 39 of 125
petition filed under Article 136 or Article 32 or under any
other provision of the Constitution if the Court is
satisfied that its directions have resulted in the
deprivation of the fundamental rights of a citizen or any
legal right of the petitioner. See the observations in Prem
Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, U.P. Allahabad, [1963]
Supp. 1 S.C.R. 885.
In support of the contention that an order of this
Court be it administrative or judicial which is violative of
fundamental right can always be corrected by this Court when
attention of the Court is drawn to this infirmity, it is
instructive to refer to the decision of this Court in Prem
Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, U.P., Allahabad (supra).
This is a decision by a Bench of five learned Judges.
Gajendragadkar, J. spoke for four learned Judges including
himself and Shah, J. expressed a dissenting opinion. The
question was whether Rule 12 of order XXXV of the Supreme
Court Rules empowered the Supreme Court in writ petitions
under Article 32 to require the petitioner to furnish
security for the costs of the respondent. Article 145 of the
Constitution provides for the rules to be made subject to
any law made by Parliament and Rule 12 was framed
thereunder. The petitioner contended that the rule was
invalid as it placed obstructions on the fundamental right
guaranteed under Article 32 to move the Supreme Court for
the enforcement of fundamental rights. This rule as well as
the judicial order dismissing the petition under Article 32
of the Constitution for non-compliance with Rule 12 of order
XXXV of the Supreme Court Rules were held invalid. In order
to appreciate the significance of this point and the actual
ratio of that decision so far as it is relevant for our
present purpose it is necessary to refer to a few facts of
that decision. The petitioner and 8 others who were partners
of M/s. Industrial Chemical Corporation, Ghaziabad, had
filed under Article 32 of the Constitution a petition
impeaching the validity of the order passed by the Excise
Commissioner refusing permission to the Distillery to supply
power alcohol to the said petitioners. The petition was
admitted on 12th December, 1961 and a rule was ordered to be
issued to the respondents, the Excise Commissioner of U.P.,
Allahabad, and the State of U.P. At the time when the rule
was issued, this Court directed under the impugned rule that
the petitioners should deposit a security
55
Of Rs.2,500 in cash within six weeks. According to the
practice of this A Court prevailing since 1959, this order
was treated as a condition precedent for issuing rule nisi
to the impleaded respondents. The petitioners found it
difficult to raise the amount and so on January 24, 1962,
they moved this Court for modification of the said order as
to security. This application was dismissed, but the
petitioners were given further time to deposit the said
amount by March 26, 1962. This order was passed on March 15,
1962. The petioners then tried to collect the requisite
fund, but failed in their efforts and that led to the said
petition filed on March 24, 1962 by the said petitioners.
The petitioners contended that the impugned rule, in so far
as it related to the giving of security, was ultra vires,
because it contravened the fundamental right guaranteed to
the petitioners under Article 32 of the Constitution. There
were two orders, namely, one for security of costs and
another for the dismissal of the previous application under
Article 32 of the Constitution.
This Court by majority held that Rule 12 of order XXXV
of the Supreme Court Rules was invalid in so far as it
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 40 of 125
related to the furnishing of security. The right to move the
Supreme Court, it was emphasised, under Article 32 was an
absolute right and the content of this right could not be
circumscribed or impaired on any ground and an order for
furnishing security for the respondent’s costs retarded the
assertion or vindication of the fundamental right under
Article 32 and contravened the said right. The fact that the
rule was discretionary did not alter the position. Though
Article 142(1) empowers the Supreme Court to pass any order
to do complete justice between the parties, the Court cannot
make an order inconsistent with the fundamental rights
guaranteed by Part III of the Constitution. No question of
inconsistency between Article 142(1) and Article 32 arose.
Gajendragadkar, J. speaking for the majority of the Judges
of this Court said that Article F 142(1) did not confer any
power on this Court to contravene The provisions of Article
32 of the Constitution. Nor did Article 145 confer power
upon this Court to make rules, empowering it to contravene
the provisions of the fundamental right. At page 899 of the
Reports, Gajendragadkar, J. reiterated that the powers of
this Court are no doubt very wide and they are intended and
"will always be exercised in the interests of justice." But
that is not to say that an order can be made by this Court
which is inconsistent with the fundamental rights guaranteed
by Part III of the Constitution. It was emphasised that an
order which this Court could make in order to do complete
justice between the parties, must not only be consistent
with the fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution,
but it cannot even be inconsistent
56
with the substantive provisions of the relevant statutory
laws (Emphasis A supplied). The Court therefore, held that
it was not possible to hold that Article 142(1) conferred
upon this Court powers which could contravene the provisions
of Article 32. It follows, therefore, that the directions
given by this Court on 16th February, 1984, on the ground of
expeditious trial by transferring Special Case No. 24 of
1982 and Special Case No. 3 of 1983 pending in the Court of
Special Judge, Greater Bombay, Shri S.B. Sule, to the High
Court of Bombay with a request to the learned Chief Justice
to assign these two cases to a sitting Judge of the High
Court was contrary to the relevant statutory provision,
namely, section 7(2) of the Criminal law Amendment Act, 1952
and as such violative of Article 21 of the Constitution.
Furthermore, it violates Article 14 of the Constitution as
being made applicable to a very special case among The
special cases, without any guideline as to which cases
required speedier justice. If that was so as in Prem Chand
Garg’s case, that was a mistake of so great a magnitude that
it deprives a man by being treated differently of his
fundamental right for defending himself in a criminal trial
in accordance with law. If that was so then when the
attention of the Court is drawn the Court has always the
power and the obligation to correct it ex debito justitiae
and treat the second application by its inherent power as a
power of review to correct the original mistake. No suitor
should suffer for the wrong of the Court. This Court in Prem
Chand Garg’s case struck down not only the administrative
order enjoined by Rule 12 for deposit of security in a
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution but also
struck down the judicial order passed by the Court for non-
deposit of such security in the subsequent stage of the same
proceeding when attention of the Court to the infirmity of
the rule was drawn. It may be mentioned that Shah, J. was of
the opinion that rule 12 was not violative. For the present
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 41 of 125
controversy it is not necessary to deal with this aspect of
the matter.
The power of the Court to correct an error subsequently
has been reiterated by a decision of a bench of nine Judges
of this Court in Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar and others v.
State of Maharashtra and another, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 744. The
facts were different and not quite relevant for our present
purposes but in order to appreciate the contentions urged,
it will be appropriate to refer to certain portions of the
same. There was a suit for defamation against the editor of
a weekly newspaper, which was filed in the original side of
the High Court. One of the witnesses prayed that the Court
may order that publicity should not be given to his evidence
m the press as his business would be affected. After hearing
arguments, the trial Judge passed an oral order
57
prohibiting the publication of the evidence of the witness.
A reporter of the weekly along with other journalists moved
this Court under Article 32 of the Constitution challenging
the validity of the order. It was contended that: (1) the
High Court did not have inherent power to pass the order;
(2) the impugned order violated the fundamental rights of
the petitioners under Article 19(1)(a); and (3) the order
was amenable to the writ jurisdiction of this Court under
Article 32 of the constitution
It was held by Gajendragadkar, C.J. for himself and
five other learned Judges that the order was within the
inherent power of the High Court. Sarkar, J. was of the view
that the High Court had power to prevent publication of
proceedings and it was a facet of the power to hold a trial
in camera and stems from it. Shah, J. was, however, of the
view that the Code of Civil Procedure contained no express
provision authorising the Court to hold its proceedings in
camera, but if excessive publicity itself operates as an
instrument of injustice, the Court has inherent jurisdiction
to pass an order excluding the public when the nature of the
case necessitates such a course to be adopted. Hidayatullah,
J. was, however, of the view that a Court which was holding
a public trial from which the public was not excluded, could
not suppress the publication of the deposition of a witness,
heard not in camera but in open Court, on the request of the
witness that his business would suffer. Sarker, J. further
reiterated that if a judicial tribunal makes an order which
it has jurisdiction to make by applying a law which is valid
in all respects, that order cannot offend a fundamental
right. An order which is within the jurisdiction of the
tribunal which made it, if the tribunal had jurisdiction to
decide the matters that were litigated before it and if the
law which it applied in making the order was a valid law,
could not be interfered with. It was reiterated that the
tribunal having this jurisdiction does not act without
jurisdiction if it makes an error in the application of the
law.
Hidayatullah, J. Observed at page 790 of the report
that in Prem Chand Garg’s case the rule required the
furnishing of security in petition under Article 32 and it
was held to abridge the fundamental rights. But it was said
that the rule was struck down and not the judicial decision
which was only revised. That may be so. But a judicial
decision based on such a rule is not any better and offends
the fundamental rights just the same and not less so because
it happens to be a judicial order. If there be no
appropriate remedy to get such an order removed because the
Court has no superior, it does not mean that the order is
made good. When judged under the Constitution it is still a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 42 of 125
58
void order although it may bind parties unless set aside.
Hidayatullah, J. reiterated that procedural safeguards are
as important as other safeguards. Hidayatullah, J.
reiterated that the order committed a breach of the
fundamental right of freedom of speech and expression. We
are, therefore, of the opinion that the appropriate order
would be to recall the directions contained in the order
dated 16th February, 1984.
In considering the question whether in a subsequent
proceeding we can go to the validity or otherwise of a
previous decision on a question of law inter-parties, it may
be instructive to refer to the decision of this Court in
Smt. Ujjam Bai v. State of Uttar Pradesh, [1963] 1 S.C.R.
778. There, the petitioner was a partner in a firm which
carried on the business of manufacture and sale of hand-made
bidis. On December 14, 1957, the State Government issued a
notification under section 4(1)(b) of the U.P. Sales Tax
Act, 1948. By a subsequent notification dated 25th November,
1958, hand-made and machine-made bidis were unconditionally
exempted from payment of sales tax. The Sales Tax officer
had sent a notice to the firm for the assessment of tax on
sale of bidis during the assessment period 1st of April,
1958 to June 30, 1958. The firm claimed that the
notification dated 14th December, 1957 had exempted bidis
from payment of sales tax and that, therefore, it was not
liable to pay sales tax on the sale of bidis. This position
was not accepted by the Sales Tax officer who passed certain
orders. The firm appealed under section 9 of the Act to the
Judge (Appeals) Sales Tax, but that was dismissed. The firm
moved the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution.
The High Court took the view that the firm had another
remedy under the Act and the Sales Tax officer had not
committed any apparent error in interpreting the
notification of December 14, 1957. The appeal against the
order of the High Court on a certificate under Article
133(1)(a) of the Constitution was dismissed by this Court
for non-prosecution and the firm filed an application for a
restoration of the appeal and condonation of delay. During
the pendency of that appeal another petition was filed under
Article 32 of the Constitution for the enforcement of the
fundamental right under Articles 19(1)(g) and 31 of the
Constitution. Before the Constitution Bench which heard the
matter a preliminary objection was raised against the
maintainability of the petition and the correctness of the
decision of this Court in Kailash Nath v. State of U.P.,
A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 790 relied upon by the petitioner was
challenged. The learned Judges referred the case to a larger
Bench. It was held by this Court by a majority of five
learned Judges that the answer to the questions must be in
the negative. The case of Kailash Nath was not correctly
decided and the decision was not sustainable on
59
the authorities on which it was based. Das, J. speaking for
himself observed that the right to move this Court by
appropriate proceedings for the enforcement of fundamental
rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution was itself
a guaranteed fundamental right and this Court was not
trammelled by procedural technicalities in making an order
or issuing a writ for the enforcement of such rights. The
question, however, was whether, a quasi-judicial authority
which made an order in the undoubted exercise of its
jurisdiction in pursuance of a provision of law which was
intra vires, an error of law or fact committed by that
authority could not be impeached otherwise than on appeal,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 43 of 125
unless the erroneous determination related to a matter on
which the jurisdiction of that body depended. It was held
that a tribunal might lack jurisdiction if it was improperly
constituted. In such a case, the characteristic attribute of
a judicial act or decision was that it binds, whether right
or wrong, and no question of the enforcement of a
fundamental right could arise on an application under
Article 32. Subba Rao, J. was, however, unable to agree.
Shri Jethmalani urged that the directions given on 16th
February, 1984, were not per incuriam. We are unable to
accept this submission. It was manifest to the Bench that
exclusive jurisdiction created under section 7(1) of the
1952 Act read with section 6 of the said Act, when brought
to the notice of this Court, precluded the exercise of the
power under section 407 of the Code. There was no argument,
no submission and no decision on this aspect at all. There
was no prayer in the appeal which was pending before this
Court for such directions. Furthermore, in giving such
directions, this Court did not advert to or consider the
effect of Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra) which was a
binding precedent. A mistake on the part of the Court shall
not cause prejudice to any one. He further added that the
primary duty of every Court is to adjudicate the cases
arising between the parties. According to him, it is
certainly open to a larger Bench to take a view different
from that taken by the earlier Bench, if it was manifestly
erroneous and he urged that the trial of a corrupt Chief
Minister before a High Court, instead of a Judge designated
by the State Government was not so injurious to public
interest that it should be overruled or set aside. He
invited us to consider two questions: (1) does the impugned
order promote justice? and (2) is it technically valid?
After considering these two questions, we are clearly of the
opinion that the answer to both these questions is in the
negative. No prejudice need be proved for enforcing the
fundamental rights. Violation of a fundamental right itself
renders the impugned action void. So also the violation of
the principles of natural justice renders
60
the act a nullity. Four valuable rights, it appears to us,
of the appellant have been taken away by the impugned
directions;
(i) The right to be tried by a Special Judge in
accordance with the procedure established by law
and enacted by Parliament.
(ii) The right of revision to the High Court under
section 9 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act.
(iii)The right of first appeal to the High Court under
the same section.
(iv) The. right to move the Supreme Court under Article
136 thereafter by way of a second appeal, if
necessary.
In this connection Shri Rao rightly submitted that it
is no necessary to consider whether section 374 of the
Criminal Procedure Code confers the right of appeal to this
Court from the judgment of a learned Judge of the High Court
to whom the case had been assigned inasmuch as the transfer
itself was illegal. One has to consider that section 407 of
the Criminal Procedure Code was subject to the overriding
mandate of section 7(1) of the 1952 Act, and hence, it does
not permit the High Court to withdraw a case for trial to
itself from the Court of Special Judge. It was submitted by
Shri Rao that even in cases where a case is withdrawn by the
High Court to itself from a criminal court other than the
Court of Special Judge, the High Court exercised transferred
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 44 of 125
jurisdiction which is different from original jurisdiction
arising out of initiation of the proceedings in the High
Court. In any event section 374 of Criminal Procedure Code
limits the right to appeals arising out of clause 24 of the
Letters Patent.
In aid of the submission that procedure for trial
evolved in derogation of the right guaranteed under Article
21 of the Constitution would be bad, reliance was placed on
Attorney General of India v. Lachma Devi and others, [1985]
2 Scale 144. In aid of the submission on the question of
validity our attention was drawn to ’Jurisdiction and
Illegality’ by Amnon Rubinstein (1965 Edn.). The Parliament
did not grant to the Court the jurisdiction to transfer a
case to the High Court of Bombay. However, as the superior
Court is deemed to have a general jurisdiction, the law
presumes that the Court acted within jurisdiction. In the
instant case that presumption cannot be taken, firstly
because the question of jurisdiction was not agitated before
the
61
Court, secondly these directions were given per incuriem as
mentioned hereinbefore and thirdly the superior Court alone
can set aside an error in its directions when attention is
drawn to that error. This view is warranted only because of
peculiar facts and circumstances of the present case. Here
the trial of a citizen in a Special Court under special
jurisdiction is involved, hence, the liberty of the subject
is involved. In this connection, it is instructive to refer
to page 126 of Rubinstein’s aforesaid book. It has to be
borne in mind that as in Kuchenmeister v. Home office,
[1958] 1 Q.B. 496 here form becomes substance. No doubt,
that being so it must be by decisions and authorities, it
appears to us patently clear that the directions given by
this Court on 16th February, 1984 were clearly unwarranted
by constitutional provisions and in derogation of the law
enacted by the Parliament. See the observations of Attorney
General v. Herman James Sillem, [1864] 10 H.L.C. 703, where
it was reiterated that the creation of a right to an appeal
is an act which requires legislative authority, neither an
inferior Court nor the superior Court or both combined can
create such a right, it being one of limitation and
extension of jurisdiction. See also the observations of
Isaacs v. Roberston, [1984] 3 A.E.R. 140 where it was
reiterated by Privy Council that if an order is regular it
can be set aside by an appellate Court; if the order is
irregular it can be set aside by the Court that made it on
the application being made to that Court either under the
rules of that Court dealing expressly with setting aside
orders for irregularity or ex debito justitiae if the
circumstances warranted, namely, violation of the rules of
natural justice or fundamental rights. In Ledgard v. Bull,
13 I.A. 134, it was held that under the old Civil Procedure
Code under section 25 the superior Court could not make an
order of transfer of a case unless the Court from which the
transfer was souht to be made, had jurisdiction to try. In
the facts of the instant case, the criminal revision
application which was pending before the High Court even if
it was deemed to be transferred to this Court under Article
139A of the Constitution it would not have vested this Court
with power larger than what is contained in section 407 of
Criminal Procedure Code. Under section 407 of the Criminal
Procedure Code read with the Criminal law Amendment Act, the
High Court could not transfer to itself proceedings under
sections 6 and 7 of the said Act. This Court by transferring
the proceedings to itself, could not have acquired larger
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 45 of 125
jurisdiction. The fact that the objection was not raised
before this Court giving directions on 16th February, 1984
cannot amount to any waiver. In Meenakshi Naidoo v.
Subramaniya Sastri, 14 I.A. 160 it was held that if there
was inherent incompetence in a High Court to deal with all
questions before it then consent could not confer on the
High Court any jurisdiction which it never possessed.
62
We are clearly of the opinion that the right of the
appellant under Article 14 regarding equality before the law
and equal protection of law in this case has been violated.
The appellant has also a right not to be singled out for
special treatment by a Special Court created for him alone.
This right is implicit in the right to equality. See Anwar
Ali Sarkar’s case (supra).
Here the appellant has a further right under Article 21
of the Constitution-a right to trial by a Special Judge
under section 7(1) of the 1952 Act which is the procedure
established by law made by the Parliament, and a further
right to move the High Court by way of, revision or first
appeal under section 9 of the said Act. He has also a right
not to suffer any order passed behind his back by a Court in
violation of the basic principles of natural justice.
Directions having been given in this case as we have seen
without hearing the appellant though it appears from the
circumstances that the order was passed in the presence of
the counsel for the appellant, these were bad.
In Nawabkhan Abbaskhan v. The State of Gujarat, [1974]3
S.C.R. 427, it was held that an order passed without hearing
a party which affects his fundamental rights, is void and as
soon as the order is declared void by a Court, the decision
operates from its nativity. It is proper for this Court to
act ex debito justitiae, to act in favour of the fundamental
rights of the appellant.
In so far as Mirajkar’s case (supra) which is a
decision of a Bench of 9 Judges and to the extent it affirms
Prem Chand Garg’s case (supra), the Court has power to
review either under section 137 or suo motu the directions
given by this Court. See in this connection P.S.R.
Sadhananatham v. Arunachalam, [1980] 2 SCR 873 and Suk Das
v. Union of Territory of Arunachal Pradesh, [1986] 2 S.C.C.
401. See also the observations in Asrumati Debi v. Kumar
Rupendra Deb Raikot and others, [1953] S.C.R. 1159,
Satyadhyan Ghosal and others v. Smt. Deorajin Debi and
another, [1960] 3 S.C.R. 590, Sukhrani (dead) by L.Ls. and
others v. Hari Shanker and others, [1979] 3 S.C.R. 671 and
Bejoy Gopal Mukherji v. Pratul Chandra Ghose, [1953] S.C.R.
930.
We are further of the view that in the earlier judgment
the points for setting aside the decision, did not include
the question of withdrawal of the case from the Court of
Special Judge to Supreme Court and transfer it to the High
Court. Unless a plea in question is taken it cannot operate
as res judicata. See Shivshankar Prasad Shah and others v.
Baikunth Nath Singh and others, [1969] 1 S.C.C. 718, Bikan
63
Mahuri and others v. Mst. Bibi Walian and others, A.I.R.
1939 Patna 633. See also S. L. kapoor v. Jagmohan and
others, [1981] 1 S.C.R. 746 on the question of violation of
the principles of natural justice. Also see Maneka Gandhi v.
Union of India, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621 at pages 674-68 1.
Though what is mentioned hereinbefore in the Bengal Immunity
Co. Ltd. v. The State of Bihar and others (supra), the Court
was not concerned with the earlier decision between the same
parties. At page 623 it was reiterated that the Court was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 46 of 125
not bound to follow a decision of its own if it was
satisfied that the decision was given per incuriam or the
attention of the Court was not drawn. It is also well
settled that an elementary rule of justice is that no party
should suffer by mistake of the Court. See Sastri
Yagnapurushadji and others v. Muldas Bhudardas Vaishya and
another, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 242, Jang Singh v. Brijlal, l 1964]
2 S.C.R. 145, Bhajahari Mondal v. The State of West Bengal,
[1959] S.C.R. 1276 at 1284-1286 and Asgarali N.
Singaporawalla v. The State of Bombay, [1957] S.C.R. 678 at
692.
Shri Rao further submitted that we should not only
ignore the directions or set aside the directions contained
in the order dated 16th February, 1984, but also direct that
the appellant should not suffer any further trial. It was
urged that the appellant has been deprived of his
fundamental right guaranteed under Articles 14 and 21 as a
result of the directions given by this Court. Our attention
was drawn to the observations of this Court in Suk Das’s
case (supra) for this purpose. He further addressed us to
the fact that six and half years have elapsed since the
first complaint was lodged against the appellant and during
this long period the appellant has suffered a great deal. We
are further invited to go into the allegations and to held
that there was nothing which could induce us to prolong the
agony of the appellant. We are, however, not inclined to go
into this question.
The right of appeal under section 374 is limited to
Clause 24 of Letters Patent. It was further submitted that
the expression ’Extraordinary original criminal
jurisdiction’ under section 374 has to be understood having
regard to the language used in the Code and other relevant
statutory provisions and not with reference to decisions
wherein Courts described jurisdiction acquired by transfer
as extraordinary original jurisdiction. In that view the
decisions referred to by Shri Jethmalani being Kavasji
Pestonji Dalal v. Rustomji Sorabji jamadar & Anr., AIR 1949
Bom. 42, Sunil Chandra Roy & Anr. v. The State, AIR 1954
Cal. 305, Sasadhar Acharjya & Anr. v. Sir Charles Tegart &
Ors., [1935] Cal. Weekly Notes 1088, Peoples’ Insurance Co.
Ltd. v. Sardul Singh Caveeshgar & Ors., AIR 1961 Punj. 87
and P.P. Front, New
64
Delhi v. K. K. Birla, [1984] Cr. L.J. 545 are not relevant.
It appears to us that there is good deal of force in
the argument that-section 411A of the old Code which
corresponds to section 374 of the new Code contained the
expression ’original jurisdiction’. The new Code abolished
the original jurisdiction of High Courts but retained the
extraordinary original criminal jurisdiction conferred by
clause 24 of the Letters Patent which some of the High
Courts had.
The right of appeal is, therefore, confined only to
cases decided by the High Court in its Letter Patent
jurisdiction which in terms is ‘extraordinary original
criminal jurisdiction’.
By the time the new Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 was
framed, Article 21 had not been interpreted so as to include
one right of appeal both on facts and law.
Shri Ram Jethmalani made elaborate submissions before
us regarding the purpose of the Criminal Law Amendment Act
and the constitution of the Special Court. In our opinion,
these submissions have no relevance and do not authorise
this Court to confer a special jurisdiction on a High Court
not warranted by the statute. The observations of this Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 47 of 125
in Re The Special Courts Bill, 1978, [1979] 2 SCR 476 are
not relevant for this purpose. Similarly, the observations
on right of appeal in V. C. Shukla v. Delhi Administration,
[1980] 3 SCR 500, Shri Jethmalani brought to our notice
certain facts to say that the powers given in the Criminal
Law Amendment Act were sought to be misused by the State
Government under the influence of the appellant. In our
opinion, these submissions are not relevant for the present
purpose. Mr. Jethmalani submitted that the argument that in
so far as section 407 purports to authorise such a transfer
it stands repealed by section 7(1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act is wrong. He said it can be done in its
extraordinary criminal jurisdiction. We are unable to accept
this submission. We are also unable to accept the submission
that the order of transfer was made with full knowledge of
section 7(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act and the so-
called exclusive jurisdiction was taken away from Special
Judges and the directions were not given per incuriam. That
is not right. He drew our attention to the principles of
interpretation of statutes and drew our attention to the
purpose of section 7(1) of the Act. He submitted that when
the Amending Act changes the law, the change must be
confined to the mischief present and intended to be dealt
with. He drew us to the Tek Chand Committee Report and
submitted that he did not wish that an
65
occasional case withdrawn and tried in a High Court was
because of delay in disposal of corruption cases. He further
submitted that interference with existing jurisdiction and
powers of superior Courts can only be by express and clear
language. It cannot be brought about by a side wind.
Thirdly, the Act of 1952 and the Code have to be read
and construed together, he urged. The Court is never anxious
to discover a repugnancy and infer apro tanto repeal. Resort
to the non obstante clause is permissible only when it is
impossible to harmonise the two provisions.
Shri Jethmalani highlighted before us that it was for
the first time a Chief Minister had been found guilty of
receiving quid pro quo for orders of allotment of cement to
various builders by a Single Judge of the High Court
confirmed by a Division Bench of the High Court. He also
urged before us that it was for the first time such a Chief
Minister did not have the courage to prosecute his special
leave petition before this Court against the findings of
three Judges of the High Court. Shri Jethmalani also urged
that it was for the first time this Court found that a case
instituted in 1982 made no progress till 1984. Shri
Jethmalani also sought to contend that section 7(1) of the
1952 Act states "shall be triable by Special Judges only",
but does not say that under no circumstances the case will
be transferred to be tried by the High Court even in its
Extraordinary original Criminal Jurisdiction. He submitted
that section 407(1)(iv) is very much in the statute and and
it is not repealed in respect of the cases pending before
the Special Judge. There is no question of repealing section
407(1)(iv). Section 407 deals with the power of the High
Court to transfer cases and appeals. Section 7 is entirely
different and one has to understand the scheme of the Act of
1952, he urged. It was an Act which provided for a more
speedy trial of certain offences. For this it gave power to
appoint Special Judges and stipulated for appointment of
Special Judges under the Act. Section 7 states that
notwithstanding anything contained in the Code, the offences
mentioned in sub-section (1) of section 6 shall be triable
by Special Judges only. By express terms therefore, it takes
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 48 of 125
away the right to transfer cases contained in the Code to
any other Court which is not a Special Court. Shri
Jethmalani sought to urge that the Constitution Bench had
considered this position. That is not so. He submitted that
the directions of this Court on 16th February, 1984 were not
given per incuriam or void for any reason. He referred us to
Dias on jurisprudence, 5th Edition, page 128 and relied on
the decision of Milianges v. George Frank (Textiles) Ltd.,
66
[1975] 3 All E.R. 801 at 821. He submitted that the per
incuriam rule A does not apply where the previous authority
is alluded to. It is true that previous statute is referred
to in the other judgment delivered on the same date in
connection with different contentions. Section 7(1) was not
referred to in respect of the directions given on 16th
February, 1984 in the case of R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay
(supra). Therefore, as mentioned hereinbefore the
observations indubitably were per incuriam. In this case in
view of the specific language used in section 7, it is not
necessary to consider the other submissions of Shri
Jethmalani, whether the procedure for trial by Special
Judges under the Code has stood repealed or not. The concept
of repeal may have no application in this case. It is clear
that words should normally be given their ordinary meaning
bearing in mind the context. It is only where the literal
meaning is not clear that one resorts to the golden rule of
interpretation or the mischief rule of interpretation. This
is well illustrated from the observations of Tindal, C.J. in
Sussex Peerage Claim, [18441 11 Cl & Fin 85 at 143. He
observed:
"The only rule for the construction of Acts of
Parliament is that they should be construed
according to the intent of the Parliament which
passed the Act. If the words of the statute are in
themselves precise and unambiguous, then no more
can be necessary than to expound those words in
that natural and ordinary sense. The words
themselves alone do, in such case, best declare
the intention of the lawgiver. But if any doubt
arises from the terms employed by the legislature,
it has always been held a safe means of collecting
the intention, to call in aid the ground and cause
of making the statute, and to have recourse to the
preamble, which, according to Chief Justice Pyer,
Stewell v. Lord Zouch, [1569] 1 Plowd 353 at 369
is a key to open the minds of the makers of the
Act, and the mischiefs which they intend to
redress".
This passage states the commonly accepted view
concerning the relationship between the literal and mischief
rules of interpretation of statutes. Here there is no
question as to what was the previous law and what was
intended to be placed or replaced as observed by Lord
Wilberforce in 274 House of Lords Debate, Col. 1294 on 16th
November, 1966, see Cross; Statutory Interpretation, second
edition, page 36. He observed that the interpretation of
legislation is just a part of the process of being a good
lawyer; a multi-faceted thing, calling for many varied
talents; not a subject which can be confined in rules.
67
When the words are clear nothing remains to be seen. If
words are as such ambiguous or doubtful other aids come in.
In this context, the submission of controversy was whether
the Code repealed the Act of 1952 or whether it was
repugnant or not is futile exercise to undertake. Shri
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 49 of 125
Jethmalani distinguished the decision in Chadha’s case,
which has already been discussed. It is not necessary to
discuss the controversy whether the Chartered High Courts
contained the Extraordinary original Criminal Jurisdiction
by the Letters Patent.
Article 134(1)(b) does not recognise in every High
Court power to withdraw for trial cases from any Court
subordinate to its authority. At least this Article cannot
be construed to mean where power to withdraw is restricted,
it can be widened by virtue of Article 134(1)(b) of the
Constitution. Section 374 of the Code undoubtedly gives a
right of appeal. Where by a specific clause of a specific
statute the power is given for trial by the Special Judge
only and transfer can be from one such Judge to another
Special Judge, there is no warrant to suggest that the High
Court has power to transfer such a case from a Judge under
section 6 of the Act of 1952 to itself. It is not a case of
exclusion of the superior Courts. So the submissions made on
this aspect by Shri Jethmalani are not relevant.
Dealing with the submission that the order of the
Constitution Bench was void or non-est and it violated the
principles of natural justice, it was submitted by Shri
Jethmalani that it was factually incorrect. Inspite of the
submissions the appellant did not make any submission as to
directions for transfer as asked for by Shri Tarkunde. It
was submitted that the case should be transferred to the
High Court. The Court merely observed there that they had
given ample direction. No question of submission arose after
the judgment was delivered. In any case, if this was bad the
fact that no objection had been raised would not make it
good. No question of technical rules or res judicata apply,
Shri Jethmalani submitted that it would amount to an abuse
of the process of the Court. He referred us to Re Tarling,
[1979] 1 All E.R. 981 at 987; Ali v. Secretary of State for
the Home Department, [1984] 1 All E.R. 1009 at 1014 and
Seervai’s Constitutional Law, Vol. 1, pages 260 to 265. We
are of the opinion that these submissions are not relevant.
There is no abuse of the process of the Court. Shri
Jethmalani submitted that there was no prejudice to the
accused. There was prejudice to the accused in being singled
out as a special class of accused for a special dispensation
without room for any appeal as of right and without power of
the revision to the High Court. There . prejudice in that.
Reliance placed on the decision of this Court in
68
Ramesh Chandra Arora v. The State, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 924 at
927 was not proper in the facts of this case.
If a discrimination is brought about by judicial
perception and not by executive whim, if it is unauthorised
by law, it will be in derogation of the right of the
appellant as the special procedure in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s
case (supra) curtailed the rights and privileges of the
accused. Similarly, in this case by judicial direction the
rights and privileges of the accused have been curtailed
without any justification in law. Reliance was placed on the
observations of the seven Judges Bench in Re: Special Courts
Bill, 1978 (supra). Shri Jethmalani relied on the said
observations therein and emphasised that purity in public
life is a desired goal at all times and in all situations
and ordinary Criminal Courts due to congestion of work
cannot reasonably be expected to bring the prosecutions to
speedy termination. He further submitted that it is
imperative that persons holding high public or political
office must be speedily tried in the interests of justice.
Longer these trials last, justice will tarry, assuming the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 50 of 125
charges to be justified, greater will be the impediments in
fostering democracy, which is not a plant of easy growth.
All this is true but the trial even of person holding public
office though to be made speedily must be done in accordance
with the procedure established by law. The provisions of
section 6 read with section 7 of the Act of 1952 in the
facts and circumstances of this case is the procedure
established by law; any deviation even by a judicial
direction will be negation of the rule of law.
Our attention was drawn to Article 145(e) and it was
submitted that review can be made only where power is
expressly conferred and the review is subject to the rules
made under Article 145(e) by the Supreme Court. The
principle of finality on which the Article proceeds applies
to both judgments and orders made by the Supreme Court. But
directions given per incuriam and in violation of certain
constitutional limitations and in derogation of the
principles of natural justice can always be remedied by the
court ex debite justitiae. Shri Jethmalani’s submission was
that ex debite justitiae, these directions could not be
recalled. We are unable to agree with this submission.
The Privy Council in Isaacs v. Robertson, [1984] 3
A.E.R. 140 held that orders made by a Court of unlimited
jurisdiction in the course of contentious litigation are
either regular or irregular. If an order is regular it can
only be set aside by an appellate Court; if it is irregular
it can be set aside by the Court that made it on application
being made to that Court either under rules of Court dealing
expressly
69
with setting aside orders for irregularity or ex debite
justitiae if the circumstances warranted, namely, where
there was a breach of the rules of natural justice etc. Shri
Jethmalani urged before us that Lord Diplock had in express
terms rejected the argument that any orders of a superior
Court of unlimited jurisdiction can over be void in the
sense that they can be ignored with impunity. We are not
concerned with that. Lord Diplock delivered the judgment.
Another Judge who sat in the Privy Council with him was Lord
Keith of Kinkel. Both these Law Lords were parties to the
House of Lords judgment in Re Racal Communications Ltd .
case [1980] 2 A.E.R. 634 and their Lordships did not extend
this principle any further. Shri Jethmalani submitted that
there was no question of reviewing an order passed on the
construction of law. Lord Scarman refused to extend the
Anisminic principle to superior Courts by the felicitous
statement that this amounted to comparison of incomparables.
We are not concerned with this controversy. We are not
comparing incomparables. We are correcting an irregularity
committed by Court not on construction or misconstruction of
a statute but on non-perception of certain provisions and
certain authorities which would amount to derogation of the
constitutional rights of the citizen.
The directions given by the order of 16th February,
1984 at page 557 were certainly without hearing though in
the presence of the parties. Again consequential upon
directions these were challenged ultimately in this Court
and finally this Court reserved the right to challenge these
by an appropriate application.
The directions were in deprival of Constitutional
rights and contrary to the express provisions of the Act of
1952. The directions were given in violation of the
principles of natural justice. The directions were without
precedent in the background of the Act of 1952. The
directions definitely deprived the appellant of certain
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 51 of 125
rights of appeal and revision and his rights under the
Constitution.
We do not labour ourselves on the question of
discretion to disobey a judicial order on the ground of
invalid judicial order. See discretion to Disobey by
Mertimer R. Kadish and Sanford H. Kadish pages 111 and 112.
These directions were void because the power was not there
for this Court to transfer a proceeding under the Act of
1952 from one Special Judge to the High Court. This is not a
case of collateral attack on judicial proceeding; it is a
case where the Court having no Court superior to it
rectifies its own order. We recognise that the distinction
between an error which entails absence of jurisdiction and
70
an error made within the jurisdiction is very fine. So fine
indeed that it is rapidly being eroded as observed by Lord
Wilberforce in Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation
Commissioner, [1959] 1 All E.R. 208 at 244. Having regard to
the enormity of the consequences of the error to the
appellant and by reason of the fact that the directions were
given suo motu, we do not find there is anything in the
observations of Ittavira Mathai v. Varkey Varkey and
another, [19641 1 S.C.R. 495 which detract the power of the
Court to review its judgment ex debite justitiae in case
injustice has been caused. No court, however, high has
jurisdiction to give an order unwarranted by the
Constitution and, therefore, the principles of Bhatia Co-
operative Housing Society Ltd. v. D. C. Patel, [1953] S.C.R.
185 at 190 would not apply.
ln giving the directions this Court infringed the
Constitutional safeguards granted to a citizen or to an
accused and injustice results therefrom. It is just and
proper for the Court to rectify and recall that in justice,
in the peculiar facts and circumstances of this case
This case has caused us considerable anxiety. The
appellant accused has held an important position in this
country, being the Chief Minister of a premier State of the
country. He has been charged with serious criminal offences.
His trial in accordance with law and the procedure
established by law would have to be in accordance with the
1952 Act. That could not possibly be done because of the
directions of this Court dated 16th February, 1984, as
indicated above. It has not yet been found whether the
appellant is guilty or innocent. It is unfortunate,
unfortunate for the people of the State, unfortunate for the
country as a whole, unfortunate for the future working of
democracy in this country which, though is not a plant of an
easy growth yet is with deep root in the Indian polity that
delay has occurred due to procedural wrangles. The appellant
may be guilty of grave offences alleged against him or he
may be completely or if not completely to a large extent,
innocent. Values in public life and perspective of these
values in public life, have undergone serious changes and
erosion during the last few decades. What was unheard of
before is common place today. A new value orientation is
being undergone in our life and in our culture. We are at
the threshold of the cross-roads of values. It is, for the
sovereign people of the country to settle those conflicts
yet the Courts have vital roles to play in such matters.
With the avowed object of speedier trial the case of the
appellant had been transferred to the High Court but on
grounds of expediency of trial he cannot be subjected to a
procedure unwarranted by law, and contrary to the
constitutional provisions. The appellant may or may not be
an ideal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 52 of 125
71
politician. It is a fact, however, that the allegations have
been brought against him by a person belonging to a
political party opposed to his but that is not the decisive
factor. If the appellant Shri Abdul Rehman Antulay has
infringed law, he must be dealt with in accordance with the
law. We proclaim and pronounce that no man is above the law,
but at the same time reiterate and declare that no man can
be denied his rights under the Constitution and the laws. He
has a right to be dealt with in accordance with the law and
not in derogation of it. This Court? in its anxiety to
facilitate the parties to have a speedy trial gave
directions on 16th February, 1984 as mentioned hereinbefore
without conscious awareness of the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Special Courts under the 1952 Act and that being the
only procedure established by law, there can be no deviation
from the terms of Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
That is the only procedure under which it should have been
guided. By reason of giving the directions on 16th February,
1984 this Court had also unintentionally caused the
appellant the denial of rights under Article 14 of the
Constitution by denying him the equal protection of law by
being singled out for a special procedure not provided for
by law. When these factors are brought to the notice of this
Court, even if there are any technicalities this Court
should not feel shackled and decline to rectify that
injustice or other vise the injustice noticed will remain
forever a blot on justice. It has been said long time ago
that "Actus Curiae Neminem Gravabit"-an act of the Court
shall prejudice no man. This maxim is founded upon justice
and good sense and affords a safe and certain guide for the
administration of the law.
Lord Cairns in Alexander Rodger v. The Comptoir
D’escompte De Paris, (Law Reports Vol. III 1869-71 page 465
at page 475) observed thus:
"Now, their Lordships are of opinion, that one of
the first and highest duties of all Courts is to
take care that the act of the Court does no injury
to any of the Suitors, and when the expression
’the act of the Court’ is used, it does not mean
merely the act of the Primary Court, or of any
intermediate Court of appeal, but the act of the
Court as a whole, from the lowest Court which
entertains jurisdiction over the matter up to the
highest Court which finally disposes of the case.
It is the duty of the aggregate of those
Tribunals, if I may use the expression, to take
care that no act of the Court in the course of the
whole of the proceedings does an injury to the
suitors in the Court."
72
This passage was quoted in the Gujarat High Court by
D.A. Desai, J. speaking for the Gujarat High Court in
Vrajlal v. Jadavji (supra) as mentioned before. It appears
that in giving directions on 16th February, 1984, this Court
acted per incuriam inasmuch it did not bear in mind
consciously the consequences and the provisions of sections
6 and 7 of the 1952 Act and the binding nature of the larger
Bench decision in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra) which was
not adverted to by this Court. The basic fundamentals of the
administration of justice are simple. No man should suffer
because of the mistake of the Court. No man should suffer a
wrong by technical procedure of irregularities. Rules or
procedures are the hand-maids of justice and not the
mistress of the justice. Ex debite justitiae, we must do
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 53 of 125
justice to him. If a man has been wronged so long as it lies
within the human machinery of administration of justice that
wrong must be remedied. This is a peculiar fact of this case
which requires emphasis.
Shri Rao, learned counsel for the appellant has
vehemently canvassed before us that the appellant has
suffered a great wrong for over six and a half years. He has
undergone trials and proceedings because of the mistakes of
the Court. Shri Rao submitted that the appellant should be
made not to suffer more. Counsel urged that political
battles must be fought in the political arena. Yet a charge
of infraction of law cannot remain uninvestigated against an
erstwhile Chief Minister of a premier State of the country.
Shri Rao has canvassed before us on the authority of
Hussainara Khatoon v. Home Secretary, State of Bihar, Patna,
[1979] 3 S.C.R. 169 at 179-180; Kadra Pahadiyal (1) v. State
of Bihar, A.I.R. 1981 S.C. 939; Kadra Pahadiya (II) v. State
of Bihar, A.I.R. 1982 S.C. 1167 and Sheela Barse v. Union of
India, A.I.R. 1986 S.C. 1773. He has, however, very strongly
relied upon the observations of this Court in SukDas v.
Union Territory of Arunachal Pradesh (supra). In that case
the appellant a government servant was tried and convicted
to suffer imprisonment for two years for offences under
Section 506 read with Section 34, I.P.C. He was not
represented at the trial by any lawyer by reason of his
inability to afford legal representation. On appeal the High
Court held that the trial was not vitiated since no
application for legal aid was made by him. On appeal this
Court quashed the conviction and considered the question
whether the appellant would have to be tried in accordance
with law after providing legal assistance to him. This Court
felt that in the interests of justice the appellant should
be reinstated in service without back wages and accordingly
directed that no trial should take place. Shri Rao submitted
that we should in the
73
facts of this case in the interests of justice direct that
the appellant should not be tried again. Shri Rao submitted
to let the appellant go only on this long delay and personal
inconveniences suffered by the appellant, no more injury be
caused to him. We have considered the submission. Yet we
must remind ourselves that purity of public life is one of
the cardinal principal which must be upheld as a matter of
public policy. Allegations of legal infractions and criminal
infractions must be investigated in accordance with law and
procedure established under the Constitution. Even if he has
been wronged, if he is allowed to be left in doubt that
would cause more serious damage to the appellant. Public
confidence in public administration should not be eroded any
further. One wrong cannot be remedied by another wrong.
ln the aforesaid view of the matter and having regard
to the facts and circumstances of the case, we are of the
opinion that the legal wrong that has been caused to the
appellant should be remedied. Let that wrong be therefore
remedied. Let right be done and in doing so let no more
further injury be caused to public purpose.
ln the aforesaid view of the matter the appeal is
allowed; all proceedings in this matter subsequent to the
directions of this Court on 16th February, 1984 as indicated
before are set aside and quashed. The trial shail proceed in
accordance with law, that is to say under the Act of 1952 as
mentioned hereinbefore.
RANGANATH MISRA, J: I have had the advantage of
perusing the judgment proposed by my learned Brother
Mukharji, J. While I agree with the conclusion proposed by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 54 of 125
my esteemed Brother, keeping the importance of the matter,
particularly the consequences the decision may generate as
also the fact that I was a party to the two-Judge Bench
decision of this Court reported in 1986 (2) SCC 716 in view,
I propose to express my opinion separately.
Abdul Rehman Antulay, the appellant, was the Chief
Minister of the State of Maharashtra from 1980 till January
20, 1982, when he resigned his office but continued to be a
member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly. Ramdas
Shrinivas Nayak, Respondent No. I herein, lodged a complaint
in the Court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, 28th
Esplanade, Bombay, on September ll, 1981, against Antulay
alleging commission of several offences under the lndian
Penal Code as also Section 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 (’1947 Act’ for short). The learned
Magistrate was of the view that prosecution under Sections
161 and 165 of the Penal Code and
74
Section 5 of the 1947 Act required sanction as a condition
precedent and in its absence the complaint was not
maintainable. The Governor of Bombay later accorded sanction
and the Respondent no. 1 filed a fresh complaint, this time
in the Court of the Special Judge of Bombay, alleging the
commission of those offences which had formed the subject-
matter of the complaint before the Magistrate. On receiving
summons from the Court of the particular Special Judge,
Antulay took the stand that the said Special Judge had no
jurisdiction to entertain the complaint in view of the
provisions of Section 7 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act,
1952 (hereinafter referred to as the 1952 Act) to take
cognizance and such cognizance could not be taken on a
private complaint. These objections were overruled by the
Special judge by order dated October 20, 1982, and the case
was set down for recording evidence of the prosecution. The
Criminal Revision Petition of the accused against the order
of the Special Judge was rejected by the Bombay High Court
and it held that a private complaint was maintainable and in
view of the notification specifying a particular Special
Judge for the offences in question there was no basis for
the objections. This Court granted special leave to the
accused against the decision of the High Court that a
private complaint was maintainable. Criminal Appeal No. 347
of 1983 thus came to be instituted. ln the meantime,
objection raised before the Special Judge that without
sanction the accused who still continued to be a member of
Legislative Assembly, could not be prosecuted came to be
accepted by the Special Judge. The complainant filed a
criminal revision application before the High Court
questioning that order. This Court granted special leave
against the decision that sanction was necessary, whereupon
Criminal Appeal No. 356 of 1983 was registered and the
pending criminal revision application before the High Court
was transferred to this Court. Both the criminal appeals and
the transferred criminal revision were heard together by a
five-Judge Bench of this Court but the two appeals were
disposed of by two separate judgments delivered on February
16, 1984. The judgment in Criminal Appeal No. 347 of 1983 is
reported in (1984) 2 SCR 914. In the present appeal we are
not very much concerned with that judgment. The judgment of
Criminal Appeal No. 356 of 1983 is reported in (1984) 2 SCR
495. As already noticed the main theme of the criminal
appeal was as to whether a member of the Legislative
Assembly was a public servant for whose prosecution for the
offences involved in the complaint sanction was necessary as
a condition precedent. This Court at page 557 of the Reports
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 55 of 125
came to hold:
"To sum up, the learned Special Judge was
clearly in
75
error in holding that M.L.A. is a public servant
within the meaning of the expression in Section
12(a) and further erred in holding that a sanction
of the Legislative Assembly of Maharashtra or
majority of the members was a condition precedent
to taking cognizance of offences committed by the
accused. For the reasons herein stated both the
conclusions are wholly unsustainable and must be
quashed and set aside."
Consequently this Court directed:
"This appeal accordingly succeeds and is
allowed. The order and decision of the learned
Special Judge Shri R.B. Sule dated July 25, 1983
discharging the accused in Special Case No. 24 of
1982 and Special Case No. 3/1983 is hereby set
aside and the trial shall proceed further from the
stage where the accused was discharged."
This Court gave a further direction to the following effect:
"The accused was the Chief Minister of a
premier State-the State of Maharashtra. By a
prosecution launched as early as on September 11,
1981, his character and integrity came under a
cloud. Nearly 2 1/2 years have rolled by and the
case has not moved an inch further. An expeditious
trial is primarily in the interest of the accused
and a mandate of Article 21. Expeditious disposal
of a criminal case is in the interest of both, the
prosecution and the accused. Therefore, Special
Case No. 24 of 1982 and Special Case No. 3/83
pending in the Court of Special Judge, Greater
Bombay Shri R.B. Sule are withdrawn and
transferred to the High Court of Bombay with a
request to the learned Chief Justice to assign
these two cases to a sitting Judge of the High
Court. On being so assigned, the learned Judge may
proceed to expeditiously dispose of the cases
preferably by holding the trial from day to day."
Pursuant to this direction, the two cases came to be
posted for trial before Khatri J. Of the Bombay High Court
and trial opened on April 9, 1984. The appellant challenged
Khatri J.’s jurisdiction on 12th March, 1984 when the matter
was first placed before him but by two separate orders dated
13th March, 1984 and 16th March, 1984, the learned Judge
rejected the objection by saying that he was bound by
76
this Court’s direction of the 16th February, 1984. Antulay
then moved A this Court by filing an application under
Article 32 of the Constitution. A two-Judge Bench consisting
of Desai and A.N. Sen. JJ. by order dated 17th April, 1984
dismissed the applications by saying:
Sen, J .:
"There is no merit in this writ petition. The
writ petition is accordingly dismissed.
In my view, the writ petition challenging the
validity of the order and judgment passed by this
Court as nullity or otherwise incorrect cannot be
entertained. I wish to make it clear that the
dismissal of this writ petition will not prejudice
the right of the petitioner to approach the Court
with an appropriate review petition or to file any
other application which he may be entitled in law
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 56 of 125
to file."
Desai, J.:
"I broadly agree with the conclusion recorded
by my brother. The learned Judge in deciding the
SLP (Crl.) Nos. 1949-50 of 1984 has followed the
decision of this Court. The learned Judge was
perfectly justified and indeed it was the duty of
the learned Judge to follow the decision of this
Court which is binding on him. Special leave
petitions are dismissed. " (1984(3) SCR 482).
16 witnesses were examined by Khatri J. by July 27, 1984.
Khatri J. was relieved of trying the case on his request,
whereupon the learned Chief Justice nominated Mehta J. to
continue the trial. 41 more witnesses were examined before
him and at the stage when 57 witnesses in all had been
examined for the prosecution, the Trial Judge invited the
parties to consider the framing of charges. 43 draft charges
were placed for his consideration on behalf of the
prosecution and the learned Trial Judge framed 21 charges
and recorded an order of discharge in respect of the
remaining 22. At the instance of the complainant, Respondent
No. 1, the matter came before this Court in appeal on
special leave and a two-Judge Bench of which I happened to
be one, by judgment dated April 17, 1986, in Criminal Appeal
No. 658 of 1985 [(1962) 2 SCC 716] set aside the order of
discharge in regard to the several offences excepting
extortion and directed the learned Trial
77
Judge to frame charges for the same. This Court requested
the learned Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court to
nominate another Judge to take up the matter from the stage
at which Mehta J. had made the order of discharge. Shah J.
came to be nominated by the learned Chief Justice to
continue the trial. By order dated July 24, 1986, Shah J.
rejected the application of the accused for proceeding
against the alleged co-conspirators by holding that there
had been a long delay, most of the prosecution witnesses had
already been examined and that if the co-conspirators were
then brought on record, a de novo trial would be
necessitated. The appellant challenged the order of Shah J.
by filing a special leave petition before this Court wherein
he further alleged that the High Court had no jurisdiction
to try the case. A two-Judge Bench, of which Mukherji J., my
learned brother, was a member, granted special leave,
whereupon this Criminal Appeal (No. 468 of 1986) came to be
registered. The Respondent No. 1 asked for revocation of
special leave in Criminal Miscellaneous Petition No. 4248 of
1986. While rejecting the said revocation application, by
order dated October 29, 1986, the two-Judge Bench formulated
several questions that arose for consideration and referred
the matter for hearing by a Bench of seven Judges of the
Court. That is how this seven-Judge Bench has come to be
constituted to hear the appeal.
It is the settled position in law that jurisdiction of
courts comes solely from the law of the land and cannot be
exercised otherwise. So far as the position in this country
is concerned conferment of jurisdiction is possible either
by the provisions of the Constitution or by specific laws
enacted by the Legislature. For instance, Article 129
confers all the powers of a court of record on the Supreme
Court including the power to punish for contempt of itself.
Articles 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 137, 138 and 139 confer
different jurisdictions on the Supreme Court while Articles
225, 226, 227, 228 and 230 deal with conferment of
jurisdiction on the High Courts. Instances of conferment of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 57 of 125
jurisdiction by specific law are very common. The laws of
procedure both criminal and civil confer jurisdiction on
different courts. Special jurisdiction is conferred by
special statute. It is thus clear that jurisdiction can be
exercised only when provided for either in the Constitution
or in the laws made by the Legislature. Jurisdiction is thus
the authority or power of the court to deal with a matter
and make an order carrying binding force in the facts. In
support of judicial opinion for this view reference may be
made to the permanent edition of ’Words and Phrases Vol.
23A’ at page 164. It would be appropriate to refer to two
small passages occurring at pages 174 and 175 of the Volume.
At page 174, referring to the decision in Carlile v.
National
78
Oil & Development Co. it has been stated:
"Jurisdiction is the authority to hear and
determine, and in order that it may exist the
following are essential: (1) A court created by
law, organized and sitting; (2) authority given it
by law to hear and determine causes of the kind in
question; (3) power given it by law to render a
judgment such as it assumes to render; (4)
authority over the parties to the case if the
judgment is to bind them personally as a judgment
in personam, which is acquired over the plaintiff
by his appearance and submission of the matter to
the court, and is acquired over the defendant by
his voluntary appearance, or by service of process
on him; (5) authority over the thing adjudicated
upon its being located within the court s
territory, and by actually seizing it if liable to
be carried away; (6) authority to decide the
question involved, which is acquired by the
question being submitted to it by the parties for
decision."
Article 139A of the Constitution authorises this Court
to transfer cases from a High Court to itself or from one
High Court to another and is, therefore, not relevant for
our purpose. Section 406 of the Code empowers this Court to
transfer cases and appeals by providing:
"(1) Whenever it is made to appear to the
Supreme Court that an order under this section is
expedient for the ends of justice, it may direct
that any particular case of appeal be transferred
from one High Court to another High Court or from
a Criminal Court subordinate to one High Court to
another Criminal Court of equal or superior
jurisdiction subordinate to another High Court.
(2) The Supreme Court may act under this
section only on the application of the Attorney-
General of India or of a party interested, and
every such application shall be made by motion,
which shall, except when the applicant is the
Attorney-General of India or the Advocate-General
of the State, be supported by affidavit or
affirmation.
(3)...................".
The offences alleged to have been committed by the
accused here are either punishable under the Penal Code or
under Act 2 of 1947, both
79
Of which could have been tried in an appropriate court under
the Criminal Procedure Code; but Parliament by the Criminal
Law Amendment Act 46 of 1952 (1952 Act for short) amended
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 58 of 125
both the Penal Code as also the Criminal Procedure Code with
a view to providing for a more speedy trial of certain
offences. The relevant sections of the 1952 Act are sections
6, 7, 8, 9 and 10. For convenience, they are extracted
below:
"6. Power to appoint special Judges (1) The
State Government may, by notification in the
Official Gazette, appoint as many special Judges
as may be necessary for such area or areas as may
be specified in the notification to try the
following offences, namely,
(a) an offence punishable under section 161,
section 162, section 163, section 164,
section 165 or section 165A of the Indian
Penal Code (45 of 1860) or section 5 of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 (2 of
1947);
(b) any conspiracy to commit or any attempt
to commit or any abetment of any of the
offences specified in clause (a).
(2) A persorn 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, 1898
(5 of 1898)."
"7. Class triable by Special Judges (1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure? 1898 (5 of 1898) or in any
other law the offences specified in sub-section
(1) of section 6 shall be triable by Special
Judges only;
(2) Every offence specified in sub-section
(l) of section 6 shall be tried by the Special
Judge for the area within which it was committed.
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 State Government.
(3) When trying any case, a Special Judge may
also
80
try any offence other than an offence specified in
section 6 A with which the accused may, under the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898), be
charged at the same trial".
8. Procedure and powers of Special Judges (
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, 1898 (5 of 1898), for the
trial of warrant cases by Magistrates.
(2) A special Judge, may, with a view to
obtaining the evidence of any person supposed to
have been directly or indirectly concerned in, or
privy to, an offence, tender a pardon to such
person on condition of his making a full and true
disclosure of the whole circumstances within his
knowledge relating to the offence and to every
other person concerned, whether as principal or
abettor, in the commission thereof; and any pardon
so tendered shall, for the purposes of sections
339 and 339-A of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1898 (5 of 1898), be deemed to have been tendered
under section 338 of that Code.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 59 of 125
(3) Save as provided in sub-section ( 1 ) or
sub-section (2), the provisions of the Code of
Criminal Procedure 1898 (5 of 1898), shall, so far
as they are not inconsistent with this Act, apply
to the proceedings before a Special Judge; and for
the purposes of the said provisions, the Court of
the Special Judge shall be deemed to be a Court of
Session trying cases without a jury or without the
aid of assessors and the person conducting a
prosecution before a Special Judge shall be deemed
to be a public prosecutor.
(3-A) In particular, and without prejudice to
the generality of the provisions contained in sub-
section (3), the provisions of sections 350 and
549 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (5 of
1898), shall, so far as may be. apply to the
proceedings before a Special Judge, and for the
purposes of the said provisions a special Judge
shall be deemed to be a Magistrate.
(4) A special Judge may pass upon any person
convicted by him any sentence authorized by law
for punish-
81
ment of the offence of which such person is
convicted."
"9. Appeal and revision-The High Court may
exercise, so far as they may be applicable, all
the powers conferred by Chapters XXXI and XXXII of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, I898 (1; of 1898)
on a High Court as if the Court of the special
Judge were a Court of Session trying cases without
a jury within the local limits of the jurisdiction
of the High Court. ’
"10. Transfer of certain pending cases-All
cases triable by a special Judge under section 7
which, immediately before the commencement of this
Act, were pending before any Magistrate shall, on
such commencement, be forwarded for trial to the
special Judge having jurisdiction over such
cases."
On the ratio of the seven-Judge Bench decision of this Court
in the Slate of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [ 1952] SCR
284 the vires of this Act are not open to challenge. The
majority of the learned Judges in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case
expressed the view that it was open to the Legislature to
set up a special forum for expedient trial of particular
class of cases. Section 7( l) has clearly provided that
offences specified in sub-section (1) of section 6 shall be
triable by the Special Judge only and has taken away the
power of the courts established under the Code of Criminal
Procedure to try those offences. Section 10 of the Act
required all pending cases on the date of commencement of
the Act to stand transferred to the respective Special
Judge. Unless there be challenge to the provision creating
exclusive jurisdiction of the Special Judge, the procedural
law in the Amending Act is binding on courts as also the
parties and no court is entitled to make orders contrary to
the law which are binding. As long as section 7 of the
Amending Act of 1952 hold the field it was not open to any
court including the apex Court to act contrary to section
7(1) of the Amending Act.
The power to transfer a case conferred by the
Constitution or by section 406 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure does not specifically relate to the special Court.
Section 406 of the Code could perhaps be applied on the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 60 of 125
principle that the Special Judge was a subordinate court for
transferring a case from one special Judge to another
special Judge. That would he so because such a transfer
would not contravene the mandate of section 7( l ) of the
Amending Act of 1952 . While that may be so, the provisions
for transfer, already referred to. do not authorise H
82
transfer of a case pending in the court of a special Judge
first to the Supreme Court and then to the High Court for
trial. A four Judge Bench in Raja Soap Factory v. S.P.
Santharaj, [1956] 2 SCR 800 was considering the jurisdiction
of the High Court to deal with a matter Shah J., as he then
was, spoke for the court thus:
"But if the learned Judge, as reported in the
summary of the judgment, was of the opinion that
the High Court is competent to assume to itself
jurisdiction which it does not otherwise possess,
merely because an ’extra-ordinary situation’ has
arisen, with respect to the learned Judge, we are
unable to approve of that view. By ’jurisdiction’
is meant the extent of the power which is
conferred upon the court by its Constitution to
try a proceeding; its exercise cannot be enlarged
because what the learned Judge calls an extra
ordinary situation ’requires’ the Court to
exercise it".
Brother Mukharji in his elaborate judgment has come to
the conclusion that the question of transferring the case
from the court of the special Judge to the High Court was
not in issue before the five- Judge Bench. Mr. Jethmalani in
course of the argument has almost accepted the position that
this was not asked for on behalf of the complainant at the
hearing of the matter before the Constitution Bench. From a
reading of the judgment of the Constitution Bench it appears
that the transfer was a suo motu direction of the court.
Since this particular aspect of the matter had not been
argued and counsel did not have an opportunity of pointing
out the legal bar against transfer, the learned Judges of
this Court obviously did not take note of the special
provisions in section 7(1) of the 1952 Act. I am inclined to
agree with Mr. Rao for Antulay that if this position had
been appropriately placed, the direction for transfer from
the court of exclusive jurisdiction to the High Court would
not have been made by the Constitution Bench. It is
appropriate to presume that this Court never’ intends to act
contrary to law.
There is no doubt that after the Division Bench of
Desai and Sen, JJ. dismissed the writ petition and the
special leave petitions on 17th April, 1984, by indicating
that the petitioner could file an appropriate review
petition or any other application which he may be entitled
in law to file. no further action was taken until charges
Were framed on the basis of evidence of 57 witnesses and a
mass of documents. After a gap of more than three years.
want of jurisdiction of the High Court was sought to be
reagitated before the two-Judge Bench
83
in the present proceedings. During this intervening period
of three years or so a lot of evidence was collected by
examining the prosecution witnesses and exhibiting
documents. A learned Judge of the High Court devoted his
full time to the case. Mr. Jethmalani pointed out to us in
course of his argument that the evidence that has already
been collected is actually almost three-fourths of what the
prosecution had to put in. Court’s time has been consumed,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 61 of 125
evidence has been collected and parties have been put to
huge expenses. To entertain the claim of the appellant that
the transfer of the case from the Special Judge to the High
Court was without authority of law at this point of time
would necessarily wipe out the evidence and set the clock
back by about four years. It may be that some of the
witnesses may no longer be available when the de novo trial
takes place. Apart from these features, according to Mr.
Jethmalani to say at this stage that the DIRECTION given by
a five-Judge Bench is not binding and, therefore, not
operative will shake the confidence of the litigant public
in the judicial process and in the interest of the system it
should not be done. Long arguments were advanced on either
side in support of their respective stands-the appellant
pleading that the direction for transfer of the proceedings
from the Special Judge to the High Court was a nullity and
Mr. Jethmalani contending that the apex Court had exercised
its powers for expediting the trial and the action was not
contrary to law. Brother Mukharji has dealt with these
submissions at length and I do not find any necessity to
dwell upon this aspect in full measure. In the ultimate
analysis I am satisfied that this Court did not possess the
power to transfer the proceedings from the Special Judge to
the High Court. Antulay has raised objection at this stage
before the matter has been concluded. In case after a full
dressed trial, he is convicted, there can be no doubt that
the wise men in law will raise on his behalf, inter alia,
the same contention as has been advanced now by way of
challenge to the conviction. If the accused is really guilty
of the offences as alleged by the prosecution there can be
no two opinions that he should be suitably punished and the
social mechanism of punishing the guilty must come heavily
upon him. No known loopholes should be permitted to creep in
and subsist so as to give a handle to the accused to get out
of the net by pleading legal infirmity when on facts the
offences are made out. The importance of this consideration
should not be overlooked in assessing the situation as to
whether the direction of this Court as contained in the
five-Judge Bench decision should be permitted to be
questioned at this stage or not.
Mr. Rao for Antulay argued at length and Brother
Mukharji has noticed all those contentions that by the
change of the forum of the
84
trial the accused has been prejudiced. Undoubtedly, by this
process he misses a forum of appeal because if the trial was
handled by a Special Judge, the first appeal would lie to
the High Court and further appeal by special leave could
come before this Court. If the matter is tried by the High
Court there would be only one forum of appeal being this
Court, whether as of right or by way of special leave. The
appellant has also contended that the direction violates
Article 14 of the Constitution because he alone has been
singled out and picked up for being treated differently from
similarly placed accused persons. Some of these aspects
cannot be overlooked with ease. I must, however, indicate
here that the argument based upon the extended meaning given
to the contents of Article 21 of the Constitution, though
attractive have not appealed to me.
One of the well-known principles of law is that
decision made by a competent court should be taken as final
subject to further proceedings contemplated by the law of
procedure. In the absence of any further proceeding, the
direction of the Constitution Bench of 16th of February,
1984 became final and it is the obligation of everyone to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 62 of 125
implement the direction of the apex Court. Such an order of
this Court should by all canons of judicial discipline be
binding on this Court as well and cannot be interfered with
after attaining finality. Brother Mukharji has referred to
several authorities in support of his conclusion that an
order made without jurisdiction is not a valid one and can
be ignored, overlooked or brushed aside depending upon the
situation. I do not propose to delve into that aspect in my
separate judgment.
It is a well-settled position in law that an act of the
court should not injure any of the suitors. The Privy
Council in the well-known decision of Alexander Rodger v.
The Comptori D’ Escompte De Paris, [1871] 3 P.C. 465
observed:-
"One of the first and highest duties of all
courts is to take care that the act of the court
does no injury to any of the suitors, and when the
expression act of the court is used, it does not
mean merely the act of the primary court, or of
any intermediate court of appeal, but the act of
the court as a whole, from the lowest court which
entertains jurisdiction over the matter upto the
highest court which finally disposes of the case.
It is the duty of the aggregate of those
Tribunals, if I may use the expression, to take
care that no act of the court in the course of the
whole of the proceed
85
ings does an injury to the suitors in courts."
Brother Mukharji has also reffered to several other
authorities which support this view.
Once it is found that the order of transfer by this
Court dated 16th of February, 1984, was not within
jurisdiction by the direction of the transfer of the
proceedings made by this Court, the appellant should not
suffer.
What remains to be decided is the procedure by which
the direction of the 16th of February, 1984, could be
recalled or altered. There can be no doubt that certiorari
shall not lie to quash a judicial order of this Court. That
is so on account of the fact that the Benches of this Court
are not subordinate to larger Benches thereof and certiorari
is, therefore, not admissible for quashing of the orders
made on the judicial side of the court. Mr. Rao had relied
upon the ratio in the case of Prem Chand Garg v. Excise
Commissioner, U.P., Allahabad, [1963] 1 SCR 885. Brother
Mukharji has dealt with this case at considerable length.
This Court was then dealing with an Article 32 petition
which had been filed to challenge the vires of rule 12 of
order 35 of this Court’s Rules. Gajendragadkar, J., as the
learned Judge then was, spoke for himself and three of his
learned brethren including the learned Chief Justice. The
facts of the case as appearing from the judgment show that
there was a judicial order directing furnishing of security
of Rs.2,500 towards the respondent’s costs an(l the majority
judgment directed
"In the result, the petition is allowed and
the order passed against the petitioners on
December 12, 1961, calling upon them to furnish
security of Rs.2,500 is set aside."
Shah, J. who wrote a separate judgment upheld the vires of
the rule and directed dismissal of the petition. The fact
that a judicial order was being made the subject matter of a
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution was not
noticed and whether such a proceeding was tenable was not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 63 of 125
considered. A nine-Judge Bench of this Court in Naresh
Shridhar Mirajkar & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra & Anr.,
[1966] 3 SCR 744 referred to the judgment in Prem Chand
Garg’s case (supra). Gajendragadkar, CJ., who delivered the
leading and majority judgment stated at page 765 of the
Reports:
"ln support of his argument that a judicial
decision
86
can be corrected by this Court in exercise of its
writ jurisdiction under Article 32(2), Mr.
Setalvad has relied upon another decision of this
Court in Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner,
U. P. Allahabad (supra) . In that case, the
petitioner had been required to furnish security
for the costs of the respondent under rule 12 of
order 35 of the Supreme Court Rules. By his
petition filed under Article 32, he contended that
the rule was invalid as it placed obstructions on
the fundamental right guaranteed under Article 32
to move the Supreme Court for the enforcement of
fundamental rights. This plea was upheld by the
majority decision with the result that the order
requiring him to furnish security was vacated. In
appreciating the effect of this decision, it is
necessary to bear in mind the nature of the
contentions raised before the Court in that case.
The rule itself, in terms, conferred discretion on
the court. while dealing with applications made
under Article 32, to impose such terms as to costs
as to the giving of security as it thinks fit. The
learned Solicitor General who supported the
validity of the rule, urged that though the order
requiring security to be deposited may be said to
retard or obstruct the fundamental right of the
citizen guaranteed by Article 32(1), the rule
itself could not be effectively challenged as
invalid, because it was merely discretionary; it
did not impose an obligation on the court to
demand any security; and he supplemented his
argument by contending that under Article 142 of
the Constitution, the powers of this court were
wide enough to impose any term or condition
subject to which proceedings before this Court
could be permitted to be conducted. He suggested
that the powers of this Court under Article 142
were not subject to any of the provisions
contained in Part III including Article 32(1). On
the other hand, Mr. Pathak who challenged the
validity of the rule, urged that though the rule
was in form and in substance discretionary, he
disputed the validity of the power which the rule
conferred on this Court to demand security .. It
would thus be seen that the main controversy in
the case of Prem Chand Garg centered round the
question as to whether Article 145 conferred
powers on this Court to make rules, though they
may be inconsistent with the constitutional
provisions prescribed by Part III. Once it was
held that the powers under Article 142 had to be
read subject not only to the fundamental
87
rights, but to other binding statutory provisions,
it became clear that the rule which authorised the
making of the impugned order was invalid. It was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 64 of 125
in that context that the validity of the order had
to be incidentally examined. The petition was made
not to challenge the order as such, but to
challenge the validity of the rule under which the
order was made. Once a rule was struck down as
being invalid, the order passed under the said
rule had to be vacated. It is difficult to see how
this decision can be pressed into service by Mr.
Setalvad in support of the argument that a
judicial order passed by this Court was held to be
subject to the writ jurisdiction of this Court
itself .. ".
In view of this decision in Mirajkar’s case (supra) it must
be taken as concluded that judicial proceedings in this
Court are not subject to the writ jurisdiction thereof.
On behalf of the appellant,- at one stage, it was
contended that the appeal may be taken as a review. Apart
from the fact that the petition of review had to be filed
within 30 days-and here there has been inordinate delay-the
petition for review had to be placed before the same Bench
and now that two of the learned Judges of that Constitution
Bench are still available, it must have gone only before a
Bench of five with those two learned Judges. Again under the
Rules of the Court a review petition was not to be heard in
Court and was liable to be disposed of by circulation. In
these circumstances. the petition of appeal could not he
taken as a review petition. The question, therefore, to be
considered now is what is the modality to be followed for
vacating the impugned direction.
This being the apex Court, no litigant has any
opportunity of approaching any higher forum to question its
decisions. Lord Buckmaster in 1917 A.C. 170 stated:
"All rules of court are nothing but
provisions intended to secure proper
administration of justice. It is, therefore,
essential that they should be made to serve and be
subordinate to that purpose."
This Court in Gujarat v. Ram Prakash, [1970] 2 SCR 875
reiterated the position by saying:
"Procedure is the handmaid and not a mistress
of
88
law, intended to subserve and facilitate the cause
of justice and not to govern or obstruct it, like
all rules of procedure, this rule demands a
construction which would promote this
Once judicial satisfaction is reached that the direction was
not open to be made and it is accepted as a mistake of the
court, it is not only appropriate but also the duty of the
Court to rectify the mistake by exercising inherent powers.
Judicial opinion heavily leans in favour of this view that a
mistake of the Court can be corrected by the Court itself
without any fetters. This is on the principle as indicated
in Alexander Rodger’s case (supra). l am of the view that in
the present situation, the Court’s inherent powers can be
exercised to remedy the mistake. Mahajan, J. speaking for a
four-Judge Bench in Kishan Deo v. Radha Kissen, [ 1953] SCR
136, at page 153 stated:
"The Judge had jurisdiction to correct his
own error without entering into a discussion of
the grounds taken by the decree-holder or the
objections raised by the judgment debtors . "
The Privy Council in Debi v. Habib, ILR 35 All. 331,
pointed out that an abuse of the process of the Court may be
committed by the court or by a party. Where a court employed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 65 of 125
a procedure in doing something which it never intended to do
and there is an abuse of the process of the court it can be
corrected. Lord Shaw spoke for the Law lords thus:
"Quite apart from section 151, any court
might have rightly considered itself to possess an
inherent power to rectify the mistake which had
been inadvertently made."
It was pointed out by the Privy Council in Murtaza v. Yasin,
AIR 1916 PC 8:. that:
"Where substantial injustice would othenwise
result, the court has, in their Lordships opinion,
an inherent power to set aside its own judgments
of condemnation so as to let in bona fide claims
by parties .. ".
Indian authorities are in abundance to support the view that
injustice done should be corrected by applying the principle
actus curiae neminem gravabit an act of the court shall
prejudice no one.
89
To err is human, is the off-quoted saying. Courts
including the apex one are no exception. To own up the
mistake when judicial satisfaction is reached does not
militate against its status or authority. Perhaps it would
enhance both.
It is time to sound a note of caution. This Court under
its Rules of Business ordinarily sits in divisions and not
as a whole one. Each Bench, whether small or large,
exercises the powers vested in the Court and decisions
rendered by the Benches irrespective of their size are
considered as decisions of the Court. The practice has
developed that a larger Bench is entitled to overrule the
decision of a smaller Bench notwithstanding the fact that
each of the decisions is that of the Court. That principle,
however, would not apply in the present situation and since
we are sitting as a Bench of Seven we are not entitled to
reverse the decision of the Constitution Bench. Overruling
when made by a larger Bench of an earlier decision of a
smaller one is intended to take away the precedent value of
the decision without affecting the binding effect of the
decision in the particular case. Antulay, therefore, is not
entitled to take advantage of the matter being before a
larger Bench. In fact, if it is a case of exercise of
inherent powers to rectify a mistake it was open even to a
five-Judge Bench to do that and it did not require a Bench
larger than the Constitution Bench for that purpose.
Mr. Jethmalani had told us during arguments that if
there was interference in this case there was possibility of
litigants thinking that the Court had made a direction by
going out of its way because an influential person like
Antulay was involved. We are sorry that such a suggestion
was made before us by a senior counsel. If a mistake is
detected and the apex Court is not able to correct it with a
view to doing justice for fear of being misunderstood, the
cause of justice is bound to suffer and for the apex Court
the apprehension would not be a valid consideration. Today
it is Abdul Rehman Antulay with a political background and
perhaps some status and wealth but tomorrow it can be any
ill-placed citizen. This Court while administering justice
does not take into consideration as to who is before it.
Every litigant is entitled to the same consideration and if
an order is warranted in the interest of justice, the
contention of Mr. Jethmalani cannot stand in the way as a
bar to the making of that order.
There is still another aspect which should be taken
note of. Finality of the orders is the rule. By our
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 66 of 125
directing recall of an order the well-settled propositions
of law would not be set at naught. Such a
90
situation may not recur in the ordinary course of judicial
functioning and if there be one certainly the Bench before
which it comes would appropriately deal with it. No strait
jacket formula can be laid down for judicial functioning
particularly for the apex Court. The apprehension that the
present decision may be used as a precedent to challenge
judicial orders of this Court is perhaps misplaced because
those who are familiar with the judicial functioning are
aware of the limits and they would not seek support from
this case as a precedent. We are sure that if precedent
value is sought to be derived out of this decision, the
Court which is asked to use this as an instrument would be
alive to the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case in
which this order is being made.
I agree with the ultimate conclusion proposed by my
earned brother Mukharji.
OZA, J. I had the opportunity to go through opinion
prepared by learned brother Justice Mukharji and I agree
with his opinion. I have gone through these additional
reasons prepared by learned brother Justice R.N. Misra. It
appears that the learned brother had tried to emphasise that
even if an error is apparent in a judgment or an order
passed by this Court it will not be open to a writ of
certiorari and I have no hesitation in agreeing with this
view expressed. At the same time I have no hesitation in
observing that there should be no hesitation in correcting
an error in exercise of inherent jurisdiction if it comes to
our notice.
It is clear from the opinions of learned brothers
Justice Mukharji and Justice Misra that the jurisdiction to
try a case could only be conferred by law enacted by the
legislature and this Court could not confer jurisdiction if
it does not exist in law and it is this error which is
sought to be corrected. Although it is unfortunate that it
is being corrected after long lapse of time. I agree with
the opinion prepared by Justice Mukharji and also the
additional opinion prepared by Justice Misra .
RAY, J. I have the privilege of going through the
judgment prepared by learned brother Mukharji, J and I
agreed with the same. Recently, I have received a separate
judgment from brother R.N. Misra, J and I have decipherred
the same.
In both the judgments it has been clearly observed that
judicial order of this court is not amenable to a writ of
certiorari for correcting
91
any error in the judgment. It has also been observed that
the jurisdiction or power to try and decide a cause is
conferred on the courts by the Law of the Lands enacted by
the Legislature or by the provisions of the Constitution. It
has also been highlighted that the court cannot confer a
jurisdiction on itself which is not provided in the law. It
has also been observed that the act of the court does not
injure any of the suitors. It is for this reason that the
error in question is sought to be corrected after a lapse of
more than three years. I agree with the opinion expressed by
Justice Mukharji in the judgment as well as the additional
opinion given by Justice Misra in his separate judgment.
VENKATACHALIAH, J. Appellant, a former Chief Minister
of Maharashtra, is on trial for certain offences under
Sections 161, 165, Indian Penal Code and under the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. The questions raised in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 67 of 125
this appeal are extra-ordinary in many respects touching, as
they do, certain matters fundamental to the finality of
judicial proceedings. It also raises a question-of far-
reaching consequences-whether, independently of the review
jurisdiction under Article 137 of the Constitution, a
different bench of this Court, could undo the finality of
earlier pronouncements of different benches which have,
otherwise, reached finality.
If the appeal is accepted, it will have effect of
blowing-off, by a side-wind as it were, a number of earlier
decisions of different benches of this Court, binding
inter-parties, rendered at various stages of the said
criminal prosecution including three judgments of 5 judge
benches of this Court. What imparts an added and grim
poignance to the case is that the appeal, if allowed, would
set to naught all the proceedings taken over the years
before three successive Judges of the High Court of Bombay
and in which already 57 witnesses have been examined for the
prosecution-all these done pursuant to the direction dated
16.12.1984 issued by a five judge Bench of this Court. This
by itself should be no deterrant for this Court to afford
relief if there has been a gross miscarriage of justice and
if appropriate proceedings recognised by law are taken. Lord
Atkin said "Finality is a good thing, but justice is a
better". [See 60 Indian Appeals 354 PC]. Considerations of
finality are subject to the paramount considerations of
justice; but the remedial action must be appropriate and
known to law. The question is whether there is any such
gross miscarriage of justice in this case, if so whether
relief can be granted in the manner now sought.
The words of caution of the judicial committee in
Venkata Narasimha Appa Row v. The Court of Wards & Ors.
[1886] 1 ILR 660 (at page 664) are worth recalling:
92
"There is a salutary maxim which ought to be
observed by all courts of last resort-interest
reipublicae ut sit finis litium. Its strict
observance may occasionally entail hardship upon
individual litigants, but the mischief arising
from that source must be small in comparison with
the great mischief which would necessarily result
from doubt being thrown upon the finality of the
decisions of such a tribunal as this."
(emphasis supplied).
2. I have had the opportunity, and the benefit, of
reading in draft the learned and instructive opinions of my
learned Brothers Sabyasachi Mukharji J., and Ranganath Misra
J. They have, though for slightly differing reasons,
proposed to accept the appeal. This will have the effect of
setting-aside five successive earlier orders of different
benches of the Court made at different stages of the
criminal prosecution, including the three judgments of
Benches of five Judges of this Court in R.S. Nayak v. A.R.
Antulay, [1984] 2 SCR 495 and A . R. Antulay v. R. S. Nayak,
[1984] 2 SCR 914 and R. S. Nayak v. A. R. Antulay, [1984] 3
SCR 412.
I have bestowed a respectful and anxious consideration
to the weighty opinion of my brothers with utmost respect, I
regret to have to deny myself the honour of agreeing with
them in the view they take both of the problem and the
solution that has commended itse1f to them. Apart from other
things, how can the effect and finality of this Court’s
order dated 17.4.1984 in Writ Petition No. 708 of 1984 be
unsettled in these proceedings? Admittedly, this order was
made after hearing and does not share the alleged vitiating
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 68 of 125
factors attributed to the order dated 16.2.1984. That order
concludes everything necessarily inconsistent with it. In
all humility, I venture to say that the proposed remedy and
the procedure for its grant are fraught with far greater
dangers than the supposed injustice they seek to relieve:
and would throw open an unprecedented procedural flood-gate
which might, quite ironically, enable a repetitive challenge
to the present decision itself on the very grounds on which
the relief is held permissible in the appeal. To seek to be
wiser than the law, it is said, is the very thing by good
laws forbidden. Well trodden path is the best path.
Ranganath Misra J. if I may say so with respect, has
rightly recognised these imperatives:
"It is time to sound a note of caution. This
Court
93
under its rules of business ordinarily sits in
divisions and not as a whole one. Each Bench,
whether small or large, exercises the powers
vested in the Court and decisions rendered by the
Benches irrespective of their size are considered
as decisions of the Court. The practice has
developed that a larger bench is entitled to
over-rule the decision of a small bench
notwithstanding the fact that each of the
decisions is that of the Court. That principle,
however, would not apply in the present situation
and since we are sitting as a Bench of Seven we
are not entitled to reverse the decision of the
Constitution Bench."
Learned brother, however, hopes this case to be more
an exception than the Rule C
"Finality of the orders is the rule. By our
directing recall of an order the well-settled
propositions of law would not be set at naught.
Such a situation may not recur in the ordinary
course of judicial functioning and if there be
one, certainly the bench before which it comes
would appropriately deal with it. "
3. A brief advertence to certain antecedent events
which constitute the back-drop for the proper perception of
the core-issue arising in this appeal may not be out of
place:
Appellant was the Chief Minister of Maharashtra between
9.6.1980 and 12.1.1982 on which latter date he resigned as a
result of certain adverse findings made against him in a
Court proceeding. On 9.8.1982, Ramdas Srinivas Nayak,
respondent No. 1, with the sanction of the Governor of
Maharashtra, accorded on 28.7.1982, filed in the Court of
Special-Judge, Bombay, a criminal Case No. 24 of 1982
alleging against the appellant certain offences under
Section 161 and 165 of Indian Penal Code and Section 6 of
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, of which the
Special-Judge took cognisance.
Appellant questioned the jurisdiction of Special Judge
to take cognisance of those offences on a private complaint.
On 20.10.1982, the Special Judge over-ruled the objection.
On 7.3.1983, the High Court dismissed appellant’s revision
petition in which the order of the Special Judge was
assailed. The criminal case thereafter stood transferred to
another Special Judge, Shri R.B. Sule. Appellant did not
accept the order of the High Court dated 7.3.1983 against
which he
94
came up in appeal to this court, by Special-leave, in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 69 of 125
Criminal appeal No. 347 of 1983. During the pendency of this
appeal, however, another important event occurred. The
Special Judge, Shri R.B. Sule, by his order dated 25.7.1983,
discharged the appellant, holding that the prosecution was
not maintainable without the sanction of the Maharashtra
Legislative Assembly, of which the appellant continued to be
a member, notwithstanding his ceasing to be Chief Minister.
Respondent No. 1 challenged this order of discharge in a
Criminal Revision Petition No. 354 of 1982 before the High
Court of Bombay. Respondent No. 1 also sought, and was
granted, special-leave to appeal against Judge Sule’s order
directly to this court in Criminal appeal No. 356 of 1983.
This Court also withdrew to itself the,said criminal
revision application No. 354 of 1982 pending before the High
Court. All the three matters-the two appeals (Crl. A. 347 of
1983 and 356 of 1983) and Criminal Revision Petition so
withdrawn to this Court-were heard by a five Judge bench and
disposed of by two separate Judgments dated 16.2.1984.
By Judgment in Crl. appeal No. 356 of 1983 R. S. Nayak
v. A. R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCR 495 this Court, while setting
aside the view of the Special Judge that sanction of the
Legislative Assembly was necessary, further directed the
trial of the case by a Judge of the Bombay High Court. This
Court observed that despite lapse of several years after
commencement of the prosecution the case had "not moved an
inch further", that "expeditious trial is primarily
necessary in the interest of the accused and mandate of
Article 21", and that "therefore Special case No. 24 of 1982
and Special Case No. 3 of 1983 pending in the Court of
Special Judge, Greater Bombay, Shri R.B. Sule" be withdrawn
and transferred to the High Court of Bombay, with a request
to the learned Chief Justice to assign these two cases to a
sitting Judge of the High Court. The Judge so designated was
also directed to dispose of the case expeditiously,
preferably "by holding the trial from day-to-day".
Appellant, in these proceedings, does not assail the
correctness of the view taken by the 5 Judge Bench on the
question of the sanction. Appellant has confined his
challenge to what he calls the constitutional infirmity-and
the consequent nullity-of the directions given as to the
transfer of the case to a Judge of the High Court.
In effctuation of the directions dated 16.2.1984 of
this Court the trial went on before three successive learned
Judges of the High Court. It is not necessary here to advert
to the reasons for the change of
95
Judges. It is, however, relevant to mention that when the
matter was before Khatri J. who was the first learned Judge
to be designated by the Chief Justice on the High Court, the
appellant challenged his jurisdiction, on grounds which
amounted to a challenge to the validity of directions of
this Court for the transfer of the case. Khatri J. quite
obviously, felt bound to repel the challenge to his
jurisdiction. Learned Judge said appellant’s remedy, if any
was to seek a review of the directions dated 16.2.1984 at
the hands of this Court.
Learned Judge also pointed out in his order dated
14.3.1984 what, according to him, was the true legal
position permitting the transfer of the case from the
Special-Judge to be tried by the High Court in exercise of
its extra-ordinary original criminal jurisdiction. In his
order dated 16.3.1984, Khatri J. Observed:
"..... Normally it is the exclusive jurisdiction
of a Special Judge alone to try corruption
charges. This position flows from Section 7 of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 70 of 125
1952 Act. However, this does not mean that under
no circumstances whatever, can trial of such
offences be not tried by a Court of superior
jurisdiction than the Special Judge. I have no
hesitation in contemplating at three situations in
which a Court of Superior jurisdiction could try
such offence .. "
"8. The third situation can be contemplated under
the Code of Criminal Procedure itself where a
Court of superior jurisdiction may have to try the
special cases. Admittedly, there are no special
provisions in the 1952 Act or 1947 Act relating to
the transfer of special cases from one Court to
the other. So by virtue of the combined operation
of Sec. 8(3) of the 1952 Act and Section 4(2) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, the High Court
will have jurisdiction under Sec 407 of the Code
in relation to the special cases also. An
examination of the provisions of Section 407
leaves no doubt that where the requisite
conditions are fulfilled, the High Court will be
within its legitimate powers to direct that a
special case be transferred to and tried before
itself."
Appellant did not seek any review of the directions at
the hands of the Bench which had issued them, but moved in
this Court a Writ Petition No. 708 of 1984 under Article 32
of the Constitution assailing taken by Khatri J. as to
jurisdiction which in substance meant
96
a challenge to the original order dated 16.2.1984 made by
this court. A A division Bench consisting of D.A. Desai and
A.N. Sen, JJ. dismissed the writ petition on 17.4.1984. Sen,
J. speaking for the bench said:
"In my view, the writ petition challenging the
validity of the order and judgment passed by this
Court as nullity or otherwise is incorrect, cannot
be entertained. I wish to make it clear that the
dismissal of this writ petition will not prejudice
the right of the petitioner to approach the Court
with an appropriate review petition or to file any
other application which he may be entitled in law
to file."
(emphasis supplied)
[A.R. Antulay v. Union, []984] 3 SCR 482]
This order has become final. Even then no review was
sought.
It is also relevant to refer here to another
pronouncement of a five Judge bench of this Court dated
5.4.1984 in R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 3 SCR 412 in
Criminal misc. petition No. 1740 of 1984 disposing of a
prayer for issue of certain directions as to the procedure
to be followed before the designated Judge of the High
Court. The bench referred to the provisions of law, which
according to it, enabled the transfer of the trial of the
criminal case to the High Court. The view taken by my two
learned Brothers, it is needless to emphasise, has the
effect of setting at naught this pronouncement of the five
Judge Bench as well. The five Judge bench considered the
legal foundations of the power to transfer and said:
" ....... To be precise, the learned Judge
has to try the case according to the procedure
prescribed for cases instituted otherwise than on
police report by Magistrate. This position is
clearly an unambiguous in view of the fact that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 71 of 125
this Court while allowing the appeal was hearing
amongst others Transferred case No. 347 of 1983
being the Criminal Revision Application No. 354 of
1983 on the file of the High Court of the
Judicature at Bombay against the order of the
learned Special Judge, Shri R.B. Sule discharging
the accused. If the criminal revision application
was not withdrawn to this Court, the High Court
while hearing criminal revision application could
have under sec. 407(8), Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973, would have to follow the same
procedure which the Court of Sr"
97
Judge would have followed if the case would not
have been so transferred ..
(emphasis supplied)
According to the Bench, the High Court’s power under
Section 407, Criminal Procedure Code for withdrawing to
itself the case from a Special Judge, who was, for this
purpose, a Sessions Judge, was preserved notwithstanding the
exclusivity of the jurisdiction of the Special Judge and
that the Supreme Court was entitled to and did exercise
that, power as the Criminal Review application pending in
the High Court had been withdrawn to the Supreme Court. The
main basis of appellant’s case is that all this is
per-incurriam, without jurisdiction and a nullity .
In the meanwhile Mehta J. was nominated by the Chief
Justice of the High Court in place of Khatri. J. In addition
to the 17 witnesses already examined by Khatri J. 41 more
witnesses were examined for the prosecution before Mehta J.
of the 43 charges which the prosecution required to be
framed in the case, Mehta J. declined to frame charges in
respect of 22 and discharged the appellant of those alleged
offences. Again respondent No. 1 came up to this Court which
by its order dated 17.4.1986 in Criminal Appeal No. 658 of
1985, [reported in (1985) 2 SCC 716] set aside the order of
discharge in regard to 22 offences and directed that charges
be drawn in respect of them. This Court also suggested that
another Judge be nominated to take up the case. It is, thus,
that Shah J came to conduct the further trial.
4. I may now turn to the occasion for the present
appeal. In the further proceedings before Shah J. the
appellant contended that some of the alleged
co-conspirators, some of whom had already been examined as
prosecution witnesses, and some others proposed to be so
examined should also be included in the array of accused
persons. This prayer, Shah J had no hesitation to reject. It
is against this order dated 24.7.1986 that the present
appeal has come up. With this appeal as an opening,
appellant has raised directions of the five Judges Bench, on
16.2.1984; of the serious violations of his constitutional-
rights; of a hostile discrimination of having to face a
trial before a Judge of the High Court instead of the
Special-Judge, etc. A Division Bench consisting of E.S.
Venkataramiah and Sabyasachi Mukharji JJ. in view of the
seriousness of the grievances aired in the appeal, referred
it to be heard by a bench of seven Judges.
5. The actual decision of Shah J in the appeal
declining to pro-
98
ceed against the alleged co-conspirators is in a short
compass. But the appeal itself, has assumed a dimension far
beyond the scope of the order it seeks to be an appeal
against. The appeal has become significant not for its pale
determined by the order under appeal; but more for the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 72 of 125
collateral questions for which it has served as a spring
board in this Court.
6. Before going into these challenges, it is necessary
to say something on the merits of the order under appeal
itself. An accused person cannot assert any right to a joint
trial with his co-accused. Normally it is the right of the
prosecution to decide whom it prosecutes. It can decline to
array a person as a co-accused and, instead, examine him as
a witness for the prosecution. What weight is to be attached
to that evidence, as it may smack of the testimony of a
guilty partner, in crime, is a different matter. Prosecution
can enter Nolle proseque against any accused-person. It can
seek to withdraw a charge against an accused person. These
propositions are too well settled to require any further
elaboration. Suffice it to say that the matter is concluded
by the pronouncement of this Court in Choraria v.
Maharashtra, [1968] 2 SCR 624 where Hidayathullah J referred
to the argument that the accomplice, a certain Ethyl Wong in
that case, had also to be arrayed as an accused and repelled
it, observing:
"... Mr. Jethmalani’s argument that the
Magistrate should have promptly put her in the
dock because of her incriminating answers
overlooks S. 132 (proviso)".
"... The prosecution was not bound to
prosecute her, if they thought that her evidence
was necessary to break a smugglers’ ring. Ethyl
Wong was prosecuted by S. 132 (proviso) of the
Indian Evidence Act even if she gave evidence
incriminating herself. She was a competent witness
although her evidence could only be received with
the caution necessary in all accomplice evidence
... "
On this point, really, appellant cannot be heard to
complain. Of the so called co-conspirators some have been
examined already as prosecution witnesses; some others
proposed to be so examined; and two others, it would appear,
had died in the interregnum. The appeal on the point has no
substance and would require to be dismissed. We must now
turn to the larger issue raised in the appeal.
7. While Shri P.P. Rao, learned Senior Counsel for the
appel-
99
lant, handling an otherwise delicate and sensitive issue,
deployed all the legal tools that a first rate legal-smithy
could design, Shri Ram Jethmalani, learned Senior Counsel,
however, pointed out the impermissibility both as a matter
of law and propriety of a different bench embarking upon the
present exercise which, in effect, meant the exertion of an
appellate and superior jurisdiction over the earlier five
Judge Bench and the precedential problems and anomalies such
a course would create for the future.
8. The contentions raised and urged by Shri P.P. Rao
admit of being summarised and formulated thus:
(a) That Supreme Court has, and can, exercise only
such jurisdiction as is invested in it by the
Constitution and the laws; that even the power
under Article 142(1) is not unfettered, but is
confined within the ambit of the jurisdiction
otherwise available to it; that the Supreme Court,
like any other court, cannot make any order that
violates the law; that Section 7(1) of the
Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1952, (1952 Act)
envisages and sets-up a special and exclusive
forum for trial of certain offences; that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 73 of 125
direction for trial of those offences by a Judge
of the High Court is wholly without jurisdiction
and void; and that ’Nullity’ of the order could be
set up and raised whenever and wherever the order
is sought to be enforced or effectuated;
(b) That in directing a Judge of the High Court to
try the case the Supreme Court virtually sought to
create a new jurisdiction and a new forum not
existent in and recognised by law and has,
accordingly, usurped Legislative powers, violating
the basic tenets of the doctrine of separation of
powers;
(c) That by being singled out for trial by the
High Court, appellant is exposed to a hostile
discrimination, violative of his fundamental
rights under Articles 14 and 21 and if the
principles in State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali
Sarkar, [1952] SCR 284. The law applicable to
Anwar Ali Sarkar should equally apply to Abdul
Rahman Antulay.
(d) That the directions for transfer were issued
without affording an opportunity to the appellant
of being hear,, and therefore void as violative of
Rules of Natural Justice.
100
(e) That the transfer of the case to the High
Court deprived appellant of an appeal, as of
right, to the High Court. At least one appeal, as
of right is the minimal constitutional safeguard.
(f) That any order including a judicial order,
even if it be of the highest Court, which violates
the fundamental rights of a person is a nullity
and can be assailed by a petition under Article 32
of the Constitution on the principles laid down in
Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner, UP.,
[1963] J 1 SCR 885.
(g) That, at all events, the order dated 16.2.1984
in so far as the impugned direction is concerned,
is per incuriam passed ignoring the express
statutory provisions of Section 7(1) of Criminal
Law (Amendment) Act, 1952, and the earlier
decision of this Court in Gurucharan Das Chadha v.
State of Rajasthan, [1966] 2 SCR 678.
(h) That the direction for transfer of the case is
a clear and manifest case of mistake committed by
the Court and that when a person is prejudiced by
a mistake of Court it is the duty of the Court to
correct its own mistake: Actus Curiae Nominem
Gravabit.
9. Courts are as much human institutions as any other
and share all human susceptibilities to error. Justice
Jackson said:
"...... Whenever decisions of one Court are
reviewed by another, a percentage of them are
reversed. That reflects a difference in outlook
normally found between personnel comprising
different courts. However, reversal by a higher
court is not proof that justice is thereby better
done. There is no doubt that if there were a
super-Supreme Court a substantial proportion of
our reversals of state Courts would also be
reversed. We are not final because we are
infallible, but we are infallible only because we
are final . "
(See Brown v. Allen, [1944] US 443 at 540.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 74 of 125
In Broom v. Cassel, [1972] AC 1027 (at 1131) Lord
Diplock said:
101
" ... It is inevitable in a hierarchical system of
courts that there are decisions of the supreme
appellate tribunal which do not attract the
unanimous approval of all members of the
judiciary. When I sat in Court of Appeal I
sometimes thought the House of Lords was wrong in
over ruling me. Even since that time there have
been occasions, of which the instant appeal itself
is one, when, alone or in company, I have
dissented from a decision of the majority of this
House. But the judicial system only works if
someone is allowed to have the last word and if
that last word, once spoken, is loyally accepted."
Judge Learned Hand, referred to as one of the most
profound legal minds in the jurisprudence of the English
speaking world, commended the Cromwellian intellectual
humility and desired that these words of Cromwell be written
over the portals of every church, over court house and at
every cross road in the nation: "I beseech ye
....................... think that ye may be mistaken."
As a learned author said, while infallibility is an
unrealisable ideal, "correctness", is often a matter of
opinion. An erroneous decision must be as binding as a
correct one. It would be an unattainable ideal to require
the binding effect of a judgment to defend on its being
correct in the absolute, for the test of correctness would
be resort to another Court the infallibility of which is,
again subject to a similar further investigation. No self-
respecting Judge would wish to act if he did so at the risk
of being called a usurper whenever he failed to anticipate
and predict what another Judge thought of his conclusions.
Even infallibility would not protect him he would need the
gift of prophecy-ability to anticipate the fallibilities of
others as well. A proper perception of means and ends of the
judicial process, that in the interest of finality it is
inevitable to make some compromise between its ambitions of
ideal justice in absolute terms and its limitations.
10. Re: Contentions (a) ar.d (b): In the course of
arguments we were treated to a wide ranging, and no less
interesting, submissions on the concept of "jurisdiction"
and "nullity" in relation to judicial orders. Appellant
contends that the earlier bench had no jurisdiction to issue
the impugned directions which were without any visible legal
support, that they are ’void’ as violative of the
constitutional-rights of the appellant, and, also as
violating the Rules of natural justice. Notwithstanding
these appeal to high-sounding and emotive appellateous; I
have serious reservations about both the permissibility-in
these
102
proceedings-of an examination of the merits of these
challenges. Shri Rao’s appeal to the principle of "nullity"
and reliance on a collateral challenge in aid thereof
suffers from a basic fallacy as to the very concept of the
jurisdiction of superior courts. In relation to the powers
of superior courts, the familiar distinction between
jurisdictional issues and adjudicatory issues-appropriate to
Tribunals of limited jurisdiction,-has no place. Before a
superior court there is no distinction in the quality of the
decision-making-process respecting jurisdictional questions
on the one hand and adjudicatory issues or issues pertaining
to the merits, on the other.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 75 of 125
11. The expression "jurisdiction" or the power to
determine is, it is said, a verbal cast of many colours. In
the case of a Tribunal, an error of law might become not
merely an error in jurisdiction but might partake of the
character of an error of jurisdiction. But, otherwise,
jurisdiction is a ’legal shelter’-a power to bind despite a
possible error in the decision. The existence of
jurisdiction does not depend on the correctness of its
exercise. The authority to decide embodies a privilege to
bind despite error, a privilege which is inherent in and
indispensable to every judicial function. The characteristic
attribute of a judicial act is that it binds whether it be
right or it be wrong. In Malkarjun v. Narahari, [1900] 27
I.A. 216 the executing Court had quite wrongly, held that a
particular person represented the estate of the deceased
Judgment-debtor and put the property for sale in execution.
The judicial committee said:
"In doing so, the Court was exercising its
jurisdiction. It made a sad mistake, it is true;
but a court has jurisdiction to decide wrong as
well as right. If it decides wrong, the wronged
party can only take the course prescribed by law
for setting matters right and if that course is
not taken the decision, however wrong. cannot be
disturbed."
In the course of the arguments there were references to
the Anisminic case. In my view, reliance on the Anisminic
principle is wholly misplaced in this case. That case
related to the powers of Tribunals of limited jurisdiction.
It would be a mistake of first magnitude to import these
inhibitions as to jurisdiction into the concept of the
jurisdiction of superior courts. A finding of a superior
court even on a question of its own jurisdiction, however
grossly erroneous it may, otherwise be, is not a nullity;
nor one which could at all be said to have been reached
without jurisdiction, susceptible to be ignored or to admit
of any collateral-attack. Otherwise, the adjudications of
103
superior courts would be held-up to ridicule and the
remedies generally arising from and considered concomitants
of such classification of judicial-errors would be so
seriously abused and expanded as to make a mockery of those
foundational principles essential to the stability of
administration of justice.
The superior court has jurisdiction to determine its
own jurisdiction and an error in that determination does not
make it an error of jurisdiction. Holdsworth (History of
English Law vol. 6 page 239) refers to the theoritical
possibility of a judgment of a superior court being a
nullity if it had acted coram-non- judice. But who will
decide that question if the infirmity stems from an act of
the Highest Court in the land? It was observed:
". . . It follows that a superior court has
jurisdiction to determine its own jurisdiction; and that
therefore an erroneous conclusion as to the ambit of its
jurisdiction is merely an abuse of its jurisdiction, and not
an act outside its jurisdiction ......
" . . . ln the second place, it is grounded
upon the fact that, while the judges of the
superior courts are answerable only to God and the
king, the judges of the inferior courts are
answerable to the superior courts for any excess
of jurisdiction . . . " E
"Theoritically the judge of a superior court
might be liable if he acted coram non judice; but
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 76 of 125
there is no legal tribunal to enforce that
liability. Thus both lines of reasoning led to the
same conclusion-the total immunity of the judges
of the superior courts." F
Rubinstein in his "Jurisdiction and Illegality" says:
" .... In practice, every act made by a
superior court is always deemed valid (though,
possibly, voidable) wherever it is relied upon.
This exclusion from the rules of validity is
indispensable. Superior courts knew the final
arbiters of the validity of acts done by other
bodies; their own decisions must be immune from
collateral attack unless confusion is to reign.
The superior courts decisions lay down the rules
of validity but are not governed by these rules."
(See P. 12)
104
A clear reference to inappositeness and limitations of
the Anisminic Rule in relation to Superior Court so to be
found in the opinion of Lord Diplock in Re Racal
Communications Ltd. [ 198() 2 All E.R. 634], thus:
"There is in my view, however, also an
obvious distinction between jurisdiction conferred
by a statute on a court of law of limited
jurisdiction to decide a defined question finally
and conclusively or unappealably, and a similar
jurisdiction conferred on the High Court or a
judge of the High Court acting in his judicial
capacity. The High Court is not a court of limited
jurisdiction and its constitutional role includes
the interpretation of written laws. There is thus
no room for the inference that Parliament did not
intend the High Court or the judge of the High
Court acting in his judicial capacity to be
entitled and, indeed, required to construe the
words of the statute by which the question
submitted to his decision was defined. There is
simply no room for error going to his
jurisdiction, or as is conceded by counsel for the
respondent, is there any room for judicial review.
Judicial review is available as a remedy for
mistakes of law made by inferior courts and
tribunals only. Mistakes of law made by judges of
the High Court acting in their judicial capacity
as such can be corrected only by means of appeal
to an appellate court and if, as in the instant
case, the statute provides that the judge’s deci-
sion shall not be appealable, they cannot be
corrected at all." [See page 639 & 640l.
In the same case, Lord Salmon, said:
"The Court of Appeal, however, relied
strongly on the decision of your Lordship’s House
in Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation
Commission, [1969] 1 All ER 209. That decision
however was not, in my respectful view in any way
relevant to the present appeal. It has no applica-
tion to any decision or order made at first
instance in the High Court of Justice. It is
confined to decisions made by commissioners,
tribunals or inferior courts which can now be
reviewed by the High Court of Justice, just as the
decision of inferior courts used to be reviewed by
the old Court of King’s Bench under the
prerogative writs. If and when
105
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 77 of 125
any such review is made by the High Court. it Can
be A appealed to the court of Appeal and hence, by
lave, to your Lordship’s House. [See page 6411.
Again in Issac v. Robertson, [1984] 3 All E.R. 140 the
Privy Council reiterated the fallacy of speaking in the
language of Nullity void, etc., in relation to Judgement of
superior courts. lt Was pointed out that it could only be
called ’irregular’. Lord Diplock observed:
"Their L,ordships would, however, take this
opportunity to point out that in relation to
orders of a court of unlimited jurisdiction it is
misleading to seek to draw distinctions between
orders that are. " void’ in the sense that they
can be ignored with impunity by those persons to
whom they are addressed, and orders that arc
"voidable’ and may be enforced unless and until
they are set aside. Dicta that refers to the
possibility of these being such a distinction
between orders to which the description ’void’ and
’void. able’ respectively have been applied can be
found in the opinion given by the judicial
committee of the Privy Council in Marsh v. Marsh,
[1945] AC 271 at 284 and Maxfoy v. United Africa
Co. Ltd., [19611] All EWR 1169. [1962] AC 152, but
in neither of those appeals not in any other case
to which counsel has been able to refer their
Lordships has any order of a court of unlimited
jurisdiction been held to fall in a category of
court orders that can simply be ignored because
they are void ipso facto without there being any
need for proceeding to have them set aside.The
cases that are referred to in these dicta do not
support the proposition that there is any category
of orders of a court of unlimited jurisdiction of
this kind .. ’ F
"The contrasting legal concepts of voidness
and voidability form part of the English Law of
contract. They are inapplicable to orders made by
a court of unlimited jurisdiction in the course of
contentious litigation.Such an order is either
irregular or regular. if it is irregular it can be
sel aside by the court that made it on application
to High court. if it is regular it can only be set
aside by an appellate court on appeal if there is
one to which an appeal lies. "[See page 143]
Superior courts apart, even the ordinary civil courts of the
land
106
have jurisdiction to decide questions of their own
jurisdiction. This Court, in the context of the question
whether the provisions of Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947, was not attracted to the
premises in question and whether, consequently, the
exclusion under Section 28 of that Act, of the jurisdiction
of all courts other than the Court of Small Causes in
Greater Bombay did not operate, observed:
"... The crucial point, therefore, in order
to determine the question of the jurisdiction of
the City Civil Court to entertain the suit, is to
ascertain whether, in view of Section 4 of the
Act, the Act applies to the premises at all. If it
does, the City Civil Court has no jurisdiction but
if it does not then it has such jurisdiction. The
question at once arises as to who is to decide
this point in controversy. It is well settled that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 78 of 125
a Civil Court has inherent power to decide the
question of its own jurisdiction, although, as a
result of its enquiry, it may turn out that it has
no jurisdiction over the suit. Accordingly, we
think, in agreement with High Court that this
preliminary objection is not well founded in
principle or on authority and should be rejec-
ted." [See AIR 1953 (SC) 16 at 19. Bhatia Co-
operative Housing Society Ltd. v. D. C. Patel]
It would, in my opinion, be wholly erroneous to
characterise the directions issued by the five Judge bench
as a nullity, amenable to be ignored or so. declared in a
collateral attack.
12. A judgment, inter-parties, is final and concludes
the parties. In Re Hastings (No. 3) [ 1959] l All ER 698,
the question arose whether despite the refusal of a writ of
Habeas Corpus by a Divisional Court of the Queen’s bench,
the petitioner had, yet, a right to apply for the writ in
the Chancery Division. Harman J. called the supposed right
an illusion:
"Counsel for the applicant, for whose
argument I for one am much indebted, said that the
clou of his case as this, that there still was
this right: to go from Judge to Judge, and that if
that were not so the whole structure would come to
the ground ...."
"I think that the Judgment of the Queen’s
bench Divisional Court did make it clear that this
supposed right
107
was an illusion. If that be right, the rest
follows. No body doubts that there was a right to
go from court to court, as my Lord has already
explained. There are no different courts now to go
to. The courts that used to sit in banc have been
swept away and their places taken by Divisional
Courts, which are entirely the creatures of
statute and rule. Applications for a writ of
habeas corpus are assigned by the rule to
Divisional Courts of the Queen’s Bench Division,
and that is the only place to which a applicant
may go ...... " [See page 701]
In Daryao v. State of U. P., [1962] 1 SCR 574 it was
held:
"It is in the interest of the public at large
that a finality should attach to the binding
decisions pronounced by courts of competent
jurisdiction, and it is also in the public
interest that individuals should- not be vexed
twice over with the same kind of litigation. If
these two principles form the foundation of the
general rule of res-judicata they cannot be
treated as irrelevant or inadmissible even in
dealing with fundamental rights in petitions filed
under Article 32". [See page 583].
In Trilok Chand v. H. B. Munshi, [1969] 2 SCR 824
Bachawat J. recognised the same limitations even in matter
pertaining to the conferment of fundamental rights.
"... The right to move this Court for
enforcement of fundamental rights is guaranteed by
Article 32. The writ under Article 32 issues as a
matter of course if a breach of a fundamental
right is established. But this does not mean that
in giving relief under Article 32 the Court must
ignore and trample under foot all laws of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 79 of 125
procedure, evidence. limitation, res judicata and
the like ....
".... the object of the statutes of
limitation was to give effect to the maxim
’interest reipublicate ut sit finislitium’ (Cop
Litt 303)-the interest of the State requires that
there should be a limit to litigation. The rule of
res judicata is founded upon the same rule of
public policy ...... " [See page 842 and 843]
It is to be recalled that an earlier petition, W.P. No.
7()8 of 1984
108
under Article 32 moved before this Court had been dismissed,
reserving leave to the appellant to seek review.
The words of Venkataramiah J in Sheonandan Paswan v.
State of Bihar, [1987]1 SCC 288 at 343 are apt and are
attracted to the present case:
"The reversal of the earlier judgment of this
court by this process strikes at the finality of
judgments of this Court and would amount to the
abuse of the power of review vested in this Court,
particularly in a criminal case. It may be noted
that no other court in the country has been given
the power of review in criminal cases. I am of the
view that the majority judgment of Baharul Islam
and R.B. Misra, JJ. should remain undisturbed.
This case cannot be converted into an appeal
against the earlier decision of this Court. "
(Emphasis supplied)
13. The exclusiveness of jurisdiction of the special
judge under Section 7(1) of 1952 Act, in turn, depends on
the construction to be placed on the relevant statutory-
provision. If on such a construction, however erroneous it
may be, the court holds that the operation of Sec. 407,
Cr.P.C. is not excluded, that interpretation will denude the
plenitude of the exclusivity claimed for the forum. To say
that the court usurped legislative powers and created a new
jurisdiction and a new forum ignores the basic concept of
functioning of courts. The power to interpret laws is the
domain and function of courts. Even in regard to the
country’s fundamental-law as a Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States said: "but the Constitution is
what the judges say it is". In Thomas v. Collins, 323 (1945)
US 516 it was said:
"The case confronts us again with the duty our
system places on this Court to say where the
individual’s freedom ends and the State’s power
begins. Choice on that border, now as always is,
delicate ...."
I am afraid appellant does himself no service by
resting his case on these high conceptual fundamentals.
14. The pronouncements of every Division-Bench of this
Court are pronouncements of the Court itself. A larger
bench, merely on the strength of its numbers, cannot un-do
the finalily of the decisions of
109
Other division benches. If the decision suffers from an
error the only A way to correct it, is to go in Review under
Article 137 read with order 40 Rule I framed under Article
145 before "as far as is practicable" the same judges. This
is not a matter merely of some dispensable procedural ’form’
but the requirement of substance. The reported decisions on
the review power under the (Civil Procedure Code when it had
a similar provision for the same judges hearing the matter
demonstrate the high purpose sought to be served thereby.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 80 of 125
15. In regard to the concept of Collateral Attack on
Judicial Proceedings it is instructive to recall some
observations of Van Fleet on the limitations and their
desirability-on such actions.
"one who does not understand the theory of a
science, who has no clear conception of its
principles, cannot apply it with certainty to the
problems; it is adapted to solve. In order to
understand the principles which govern in
determining the validity of RIGHTS AND TITLES
depending upon the proceedings of judicial
tribunals, generally called the doctrine of
COLLATERAL ATTACK ON JUDG-MENTS, it is necessary
to have a clear conception of the THEORY OF
JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS .....
" .. And as no one would think of holding a
judgmenf of the court of last resort void if its
jurisdiction were debatable or even colorable, the
same rule must be applied to the judgments of all
judicial tribunals. This is the true theory of
judicial action when viewed collaterally. If any
jurisdictional question is debatable or colorable,
the tribunal must decide it; and an erroneous
conclusion can ony be corrected by some proceeding
provided by law for so doing, com- monly called a
Direct Attack. It is only where it can be shown
lawfully, that some matter or thing essential to
jurisdiction is wanting, that the proceeding is
void, collaterally.
It is the duty of the courts to set their
faces against all collateral assaults on judicial
proceedings for two reasons, namely: First. Not
one case in a hundred has any merits in it
"... Second. Thc second reason why the courts
should reduce the chances for a successful
collateral attack to the H
110
lowest minimum is, that they bring the courts
themselves into disrepute. Many people look upon
the courts as placed where jugglery and smartness
are substituted for justice
"...... such things tend to weaken law and order
and to cause men to settle their rights by
violence. For these reasons, when the judgment
rendered did not exceed the possible power of the
court7 and the notice was sufficient to put the
defendant upon inquiry, a court should hesitate
long before holding the proceedings void
collaterally
(emphasis supplied)
16. But in certain cases, motions to set aside
Judgments are permitted where,,for instance a judgment was
rendered in ignorance of the fact that a necessary party had
not been served at all, and was wrongly shown as served or
in ignorance of the fact that a necessaryD party had died,
and the estate was not represented. Again, a judgment
obtained by fraud could be subject to an action for setting
it aside. Where such a judgment obtained by fraud tended to
prejudice a non party, as in the case of judgments in-rem
such as for divorce, or jactita tion or probate etc. everl a
person, not eo-nomine a party to the proceedings, could seek
a setting-aside of the judgment.
Where a party nas naa no nonce ana a aecree ls maae
agamst him, he can approach the court for setting-aside the
decision. In such a case the party is said to become
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 81 of 125
entitled to relief ex-debito justitiae, on proof of the fact
that there was no service. This is a class of cases where
there is no trial at all and the judgment is for default.
D.N. Gordan, in his "Actions to set aside judgments." (1961
77 Law Quarterly Review 356) says:
"The more familiar applications to set aside
judgments are those made on motion and otherwise
summarily. But there are judgments obtained by
default, which do not represent a judicial
determination. In general, Judgments rendered
after a trial are conclusive between the parties
unless and until reversed on appeal. Certainly in
general judgments of superior courts cannot be
overturned or questioned bet ween the parties in
collateral actions. Yet there is a type of
collateral action known as an action of review, by
which even a superior court’s judgment can be
questioned, even between the parties, and set
aside
111
Cases of such frank failure of natural justice are
obvious cases where relief is granted as of right. Where a
person is not actually served but is held erroneously, to
have been served, he can agitate that grievance only in that
forum or in any further proceeding therefrom. In Issac’s
case [ 1984] 3 All ER 140 privy council referred to:
" ....... , .. a category of orders of such a
court which a person affected by the order is
entitled to apply to have set aside ex-debito
justitiae in exercise of the inherent jurisdiction
of the court without needing to have recourse to
the Rules that deal expressly with proceedings to
setaside orders for irregularity and give to the
judge a discretion as to the order he will make".
In the present case by the order dated 5.4.1984 a five
judge bench set-out, what according to it, was, the legal
basis and source of jurisdiction to order transfer. On
17.4.1984 appellant’s writ petition challenging that
transfer as a nullity was dismissed. These orders are not
which appellant is entitled to have set-aside ex-debito
justitiae by another bench. Reliance on the observations in
Issac’s case is wholly misplaced.
The decision of the Privy Council in Rajunder Narain
Rae v. Bijai Govind Singh, [2 NIA 181] illustrates the
point. Referring to the law on the matter, Lord Brougham
said: E
"It is unquestionably the strict rule, and ought
to be distinctly understood as such, that no cause
in this Court can be re-heard, and that an order
once made, that is, a report submitted to His
Majesty and adopted, by being made an order in
Council, is final, and cannot be altered. The same
is the case of the judgments of the House of
Lords, that is, of the Court of Parliament, or of
the King in Parliament as it is sometimes
expressed, the only other supreme tribunal in this
country. Whatever, therefore, has been really
determined in these Courts must stand, there being
no power of re-hearing for purpose of changing the
judgment pronounced; nevertheless, if by
misprision in embodying the judgments, errors have
been introduced, these Courts possess, by common
law, the same power which the Courts of Record and
Statute have of rectifying the mistakes which have
crept in. The Courts of Equity may correct the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 82 of 125
Decrees made while they are in minutes; when they
are
112
complete they can only vary them by re-hearing;
and when they are signed and enrolled they can no
longer be reheard, but they must be altered. if at
all, by Appeal. The Courts of Law, after the term
in which the judgments are given can only alter
them so as to correct misprisions, a power given
by the Statutes of Amendment. The House of Lords
exercises a similar power of rectifying mistakes
made in drawing up its own judgments, and this
Court must possess the same authority. The Lords
have, however, gone a step further, and have
corrected mistakes introduced through inadvertence
in the details of judgments; or have supplied
manifest defects, in order to enable the Decrees
to be enforced, or have added explanatory matter,
or have reconciled inconsistencies. But with the
exception of one case in 1669. Of doubtful
authority, here, and another in Parliament of
still less weight in 1642 (which was an Appeal
from the Privy Council to Parliament, and at a
time when the Government was in an unsettled
state), no instance, it is believed, can be
produced of a rehearing upon the whole cause., and
an entire alteration of the judgment once
pronounced.. .."
17. The second class of cases where a judgment is
assailed for fraud, is illustrated by the Duchess of
Kingston s case ( 1776 2 Sm. L.C. 644 13th Ed.). ln that
case, the Duchess was prosecuted for bigamy on the
allegation that she entered into marriage while her marriage
to another person, a certain Hervey, was still subsisting.
In her defence, the Duchess relied upon a decree of
jactitation from an ecclesiastical court which purported to
show that she had never been married to Hervey. The
prosecution sought to get over this on the allegation the
decree was obtained in a sham and collusive proceeding. The
House of lords held the facts established before Court
rendered the decree nugatory and was incapable of supplying
that particular defence. De Grey CJ said that the collusive
decree was not be impeached from within; yet like all other
acts of the highest authority, it is impeachable from
without, although it is not permitted to show that the court
was mistaken, it may be shown that they were misled. Fraud
which affected the judgment with described by the learned
Chief Justice as an "extrinsic collateral act. which
vitiates the most solemn proceedings of courts of justice..
’
18. The argument of nullity is too tall and has no
place in this case. The earlier direction proceeded on a
construction of Section 7(1)
113
Of the Act and Section 407 Cr.P.C. We do not sit here in
appeal over what the five Judge bench said and proclaim how
wrong they were. We are, simply, not entitled to embark, at
a later stage, upon an investigation of the correctness of
the very same decision. The same bench can, of course,
reconsider the matter under Article 137.
However, even to the extent the argument goes that the
High Court under Section 407 Cr.P.C. could not withdraw to
itself a trial from Special-Judge under the 1952 Act, the
view of the earlier bench is a possible view. The
submissions of Shri Ram Jethmalani that the exclusivity of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 83 of 125
the jurisdiction claimed for the special forum under the
1952 Act is in relation to Courts which would, otherwise, be
Courts of competing or co-ordinate jurisdictions and that
such exclusivity does not effect the superior jurisdiction
of the High Court to withdraw, in appropriate situations,
the case to itself in exercise of its extraordinary original
criminal jurisdiction; that canons of Statutory-
construction, appropriate to the situation, require that the
exclusion of jurisdiction implied in the 1952 amending Act
should not be pushed beyond the purpose sought to be served
by the amending law; and that the law while creating the
special jurisdiction did not seek to exclude the extra-
ordinary jurisdiction of the High Court are not without
force. The argument, relying upon Kavasji Pestonji Dalal v.
Rustor, Sorabji Jamadar & Anr., AIR 1949 Bombay 42 that
while the ordinary competing jurisdictions of other Courts
were excluded, the extraordinary jurisdiction of the High
Court was neither intended to be. nor, in fact, affected, is
a matter which would also bear serious examination. In Sir
Francis Bennion’s Statutory Interpretation, there are
passages at page 433 which referring to presumption against
implied repeal, suggest that in view of the difficulties in
determining whether an implication of repeal was intended in
a particular situation it would be a reasonable presumption
that where the legislature desired a repeal, it would have
made it plain by express words. In Sutherland Statutory
construction the following passages occur:
"Prior statutes relating to the same subject
matter are to be compared with the new provisions;
and if possible by reasonable construction, both
are to be so construed that effect is given to
every provision of each. Statutes in pari materia
although in apparent conflict, are so far as
reasonably possible constructed to be in harmony
with each other."
(Emphasis supplied)
114
"When the legislature enacts a provision, it
has before it a 11 the other provisions relating
to the same subject matter which it enacts at that
time, whether in the same statute or in a separate
Act. It is evident that it has in mind the
provisions of a prior Act to which it refers,
whether it phrases the later Act as amendment or
an independent Act. Experience indicates that a
legislature does not deliberately enact
inconsistent provisions when it is rec ogzant of
them both, without expressly recognizing the
inconsistency. (emphasis supplied)
Reliance by Shri Ram Jethmalani on these principles to
support his submission that the power under Section 407 was
unaffected and that the decision in State of Rajasthan v.
Gurucharan Das Chadda (supra), can not also be taken to have
concluded the matter, is not un-arguable. I would,
therefore, hold contentions (a) and (b) against appellant.
19 Re: contention (c):
The fundamental right under Article 14, by all
reckoning, has a very high place in constitutional scale of
values. Before a person is deprived of his personal liberty,
not only that the Procedure established by law must strictly
be complied with and not departed from to the disadvantage
or detriment of the person but also that the procedure for
such deprivation of personal liberty must be reasonable,
fair and just. Article 21 imposes limitations upon the
procedure and requires it to conform to such standards of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 84 of 125
reasonableness, fairness and justness as the Court acting as
sentinel of fundamental rights would in the context,
consider necessary and requisite. The court will be the
arbiter of the question whether the procedure is reasonable,
fair and just.
If the operation of Section 407, Cr.P.C. is not
impliedly excluded and therefore, enables the withdrawal of
a case by the High Court to itself for trial as, indeed, has
been held by the earlier bench, the argument based on
Article 14 would really amount to a challenge to the very
vires of Section 407. All accused persons cannot claim to be
tried by the same Judge. The discriminations-inherent in the
choice of one of the concurrent jurisdictions-are not
brought about by an inanimate statutory-rule or by executive
fiat. The withdrawal of a case under Section 407 is made by
a conscious judicial act and is the result of judicial
discernment. If the law permits the withdrawal of the trial
to
115
the High Court from a Special Judge, such a law enabling
withdrawal would not, prima facie, be bad as violation of
Article 14. The five Judge bench in the earlier case has
held that such a transfer is permissible under law. The
appeal to the principle in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (supra),
in such a context would be somewhat out of place.
If the law did not permit such a transfer then the
trial before a forum which is not according to law violates
the rights of the accused person. In the earlier decision
the transfer has been held to be permissible. That decision
has assumed finality.
If appellant says that he is singled out for a hostile
treatment on the ground alone that he is exposed to a trial
before a Judge of the . High Court then the submission has a
touch of irony. Indeed that a trial by a Judge of the High
Court makes for added re-assurance of justice, has been
recognised in a number of judicial pronouncement. The
argument that a Judge of the High Court may not necessarily
possess the statutory-qualifications requisite for being
appointed as a Special Judge appears to be specious. A judge
of the High Court hears appeals arising from the decisions
of the Special Judge, and exercises a jurisdiction which
includes powers co-extensive with that of the trial court.
There is, thus, no substance in contention (c).
21. Re: Contention(d):
This grievance is not substantiated on facts; nor,
having regard to the subsequent course of events permissible
to be raised at this stage. These directions, it is not
disputed, were issued on 16.2.1984 in the open Court in the
presence of appellant’s learned counsel at the time of
pronouncement of the judgment. Learned counsel had the right
and the opportunity of making an appropriate submission to
the court as to the permissibility or otherwise of the
transfer. Even if the submissions of Shri Ram Jethmalani
that in a revision application Section 403 of the Criminal
Procedure Code does not envisage a right of being heard and
that transfer of a case to be tried by the Judge of the High
Court cannot, in the estimate of any right thinking person,
be said to be detrimental to the accused person is not
accepted, however, applicant, by his own conduct, has
disentitled himself to make grievance of it in these
proceedings. It cannot be said that after the directions
were pronounced and before the order was signed there was no
opportunity for the appellant’s learned counsel to make any
submissions in regard to the alleged illegality or
impropriety of the directions. Appellant did
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 85 of 125
116
not utilise the opportunity. That apart, even after being
told by two A judicial orders that appellant, if aggrieved,
may seek a review he did not do so. Even the grounds urged
in the many subsequent proceedings appellant took to get rid
of the effect of the direction do not appear to include the
grievance that he had no opportunity of being heard. Where,
as here, a party having had an opportunity to raise a
grievance in the earlier proceedings does not do so and
makes it a technicality later he cannot be heard to
complain. Even in respect of so important jurisdiction as
Habeas Corpus, the observation of Gibson J in Re. Tarling l
19791 1 All E.R. 981 at 987 are significant:
"Firstly, it is clear to the Court that an
applicant for habeas corpus is required to put
forward on his initial application then whole of
the case which is then fairly available to him he
is not free to advance an application on one
ground, and to keep back a separate ground of
application as a basis for a second or renewed
application to the Court.
The true doctrine of estoppel known as res
judicata does not apply to the decision of this
Court on an application for habeas corpus we refer
to the words of Lord Parket CJ delivering the
Judgment of the Court in Re. Hastings (No. 2).
There is, however, a wider sense in which the
doctrine of res judicata may be applicable,
whereby it becomes an abuse of process to raise in
subsequent proceedings matters which could, and
therefore, should have been litigated in earlier
proceedings .. "
This statement of the law by Gibson J was approved by
Sir John Donaldson MR in the Court of appeal in Ali v.
Secretary of State for the Home Department, [1984] 1 All
E.R. 1009 at 1019.
Rules of natural justice embodies fairness in-action.
By all standards, they are great assurances of Justice and
fairness. But they should not be pushed to a breaking point.
It is not inappropriate to recall what Lord Denning said in
R. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department ex-parte
Mughal, [1973] 3 All ER 796:
" ... The rules of natural justice must not be
stretched too far. Only too often the people who
have done wrong seek to invoke the rules of
natural justice so as to avoid the consequences .
"
Contention (d) is insubstantial.
117
22. Re. Contention (e): A
The contention that the transfer of the case to the
High Court involves the elimination of the appellant’s right
of appeal to the High Court which he would otherwise have
and that the appeal under Article 136 of the Constitution is
not as of right may not be substantial in view of Section
374, Cr. P.C. which provides such an appeal as of right,
when the trial is held by the High Court. There is no
substance in contention (e) either.
23. Re.Contention (f):
The argument is that the earlier order of the five
Judge bench in so far as it violates the fundamental rights
of the appellant under Article 14 and 21 must be held to be
void and amenable to challenge under Article 32 in this very
Court and that the decision of this Court in Premchand
Garg’s case (supra) supports such a position. As rightly
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 86 of 125
pointed out by Ranganath Misra, J. Premchand Garg’s case
needs to be understood in the light of the observations made
in Naresh Sridhar Mirajkar & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra &
Anr., [ 1966] 3 SCC 744. In Mirajkar’s case, Gajendragadkar,
CJ., who had himself delivered the opinion in Garg’s case,
noticed the contention based on Garg’s case thus:
"ln support of his argument that a judicial
decision can be corrected by this Court in
exercise of its writ jurisdiction under Article
32(2), Mr. Setalvad has relied upon another
decision of this Court in Prem Chand Garg v.
Excise Commissioner, UP, Allahabad (supra) .. "
Learned Chief Justice referring to the scope of the
matter that fell for consideration in Garg’s case stated:
".... It would thus be seen that the main
controversy in the case of Prem Chand Garg
centered round the question as to whether Article
145 conferred powers on this Court to make rules,
though they may be inconsistent with the
constitutional provisions prescribed by part III.
Once it as held that the powers under Article 142
had to be read subject not only to the fundamental
rights, but to other binding statutory provisions,
it became clear that the ruler which authorised
the making of the impugned order was invalid. It
was in that context that the validity of the
118
order had to be incidentally examined. The
petition was A made not to challenge the order as
such, but to challenge the validity of the rule
under which the order was made
Repelling the contention learned Chief Justice said:
"... It is difficult to see now this decision
can be pressed into service by Mr. Setalvad in
support of the argument that a judicial order
passed by this Court was held to be subject to the
writ jurisdiction of this Court itself .. "
A passage from Kadish & Kadish "Discretion to Disobey",
1973 Edn. may usefully by recalled:
"on one view, it would appear that the right
of a citizen to defy illegitimate judicial
authority should be the same as his right to defy
illegitimate legislative authority. After all, if
a rule that transgresses the Constitution or is
otherwise invalid is no law at all and never was
one, it should hardly matter whether a court or a
legislature made the rule. Yet the prevailing
approach of the courts has been to treat invalid
court orders quite differently from invalid
statutes. The long established principle of the
old equity courts was that an erroneously issued
injunction must be obeyed until the error was
judicially determined. Only where the issuing
court could be said to have lacked jurisdiction in
the sense of authority to adjudicate the cause and
to reach the parties through its mandate were
disobedient contemnors permitted to raise the
invalidity of the order as a full defence. By and
large, American courts have declined to treat the
unconstitutionality of a court order as a
jurisdictional defect within this traditional
equity principle, and in notable instances they
have qualified that principle even where the
defect was jurisdiction in the accepted sense."
(See 111).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 87 of 125
Indeed Ranganath Misra, J. in his opinion rejected the
contention of the appellant in these terms:
"In view of this decision in Mirajkar’s case,
supra, it must be taken as concluded that judicial
proceedings in this Court are not subject to the
writ jurisdiction thereof."
119
There is no substance in contention (f) either. A
24. Contention (g):
It is asserted that the impugned directions issued by
the five Judge Bench was per-incuriam as it ignored the
Statute and the earlier Chadda’s case. B
But the point is that the circumstance that a decision
is reached per-incuriam, merely serves to denude the
decision of its precedent value. Such a decision would not
be binding as a judicial precedent. A co-ordinate bench can
disagree with it and decline to follow it. A larger bench
can over rule such decision. When a previous decision is so
overruled it does not happen-nor has the overruling bench
any jurisdiction so to do-that the finality of the operative
order, inter-parties, in the previous decision is
overturned. In this context the word ’decision’ means only
the reason for the previous order and not the operative-
order in the previous decision, binding inter-parties. Even
if a previous decision is overruled by a larger-bench, the
efficacy and binding nature, of the adjudication expressed
in the operative order remains undisturbed inter-parties.
Even if the earlier decision of the five Judge bench is per-
incuriam the operative part of the order cannot be
interfered within the manner now sought to be done. That
apart the five Judge bench gave its reason. The reason, in
our opinion, may or may not be sufficient. There is
advertence to Section 7(1) of the 1952 Act and to the
exclusive jurisdiction created thereunder. There is also
reference to Section 407 of the Criminal Procedure Code. Can
such a decision be characterised as one reached per-
incurium? Indeed, Ranganath Misra, J. says this on the
point:
"Overruling when made by a larger bench of an
earlier decision of a smaller one is intended to
take away the precedent value of the decision
without affecting the binding effect of the
decision in the particular case. Antulay,
therefore, is not entitled to take advantage of
the matter being before a larger bench .. "
I respectfully agree. Point (g) is bereft of substance
and merits.
25. Re: Contention (h):
The argument is that the appellant has been prejudiced
by a mistake of the Court and it is not only within power
but a duty as well, H
120
of the Court to correct its own mistake, so that no party is
prejudiced by the Court’s mistake: Actus Curiae Neminem
Gravabid.
I am afraid this maxim has no application to conscious
conclusions reached in a judicial decision. The maxim is not
a’source of a general power to reopen and rehear
adjudication which have otherwise assumed finality. The
maxim operates in a different and narrow area. The best
illustration of the operation of the maxim is provided by
the application of the rule of nunc-pro-tunc. For instance,
if owing to the delay in what the court should, otherwise,
have done earlier but did later, a party suffers owing to
events occurring in the interrugnum, the Court has the power
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 88 of 125
to remedy it. The area of operation of the maxim is.
generally, procedural. Errors in judicial findings, either
of facts or law or operative decisions consciously arrived
at as a part of the judicial-exercise cannot be interfered
with by resort to his maxim. There is no substance in
contention (h).
26. lt is true that the highest court in the land
should no., by technicalities of procedure forge fetters on
its own feet and disable itself in cases of serious
miscarriages of justice. It is said that "Life of law is not
logic; it has been experience." But it is equally true as
Cordozo said: But Holmes did not tell us that logic is to be
ignored when experience is silent. Those who do not put the
teachings of experience and the lessons of logic out of
consideration would tell what inspires confidence in the
judiciary and what does not. Judicial vacillations fall in
the latter category and undermine respect of the judiciary
and judicial institutions, denuding thereby respect for law
and the confidence in the even-handedness in the
administrating of justice by Courts. It would be gross
injustice, says an author, (Miller-’data of jurisprudence’)
to decide alternate cases on opposite principles. The power
to alter a decision by review must be expressly conferred or
necessarily inferred. The power of review-and the
limitations on the power-under Article 137 are implicit
recognitions of what would, otherwise, be final and
irrevocable. No appeal could be made to the doctrine of
inherent powers of the Court either. Inherent powers do not
confer, or constitute a source of, jurisdiction. They are to
be exercised in aid of a jurisdiction that is already
invested. The remedy of the appellant, if any, is recourse
to Article 137; no where else. This appears to me both good
sense and good law.
The appeal is dismissed.
RANGANATHAN, J. 1. I have had the benefit of perusing
the
121
drafts of the judgments proposed by my learned brothers
Sabyasachi Mukharji, Ranganath Misra and Venkatachaliah, JJ.
On the question whether the direction given by this Court in
its judgment dated 16.2.1984 should be recalled, I find
myself in agreement with the conclusion of Venkatachaliah,
J. (though for slightly different reasons) in preference to
the conclusion reached by Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. and
Ranganath Misra, J. I would, therefore, like to set out my
views separately on this issue.
THE ISSUES
1. This is an appeal by special leave from a judgment
of Shah J., of the Bombay High Court. The appellant is being
tried for offences under Ss. 120B, 420, 161 and 165 of the
Indian Penal Code (I.P.C.) read with S. 5(1)(d) and 5(2) of
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. The proceedings
against the appellant were started in the Court of Sri
Bhutta, a Special Judge, appointed under S. 6(1) of the
Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1952 (hereinafter referred to
as ’the 1952 Act’). The proceedings have had a chequered
career as narrated in the judgment of my learned brother
Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. Various issues have come up for
consideration of this Court at the earlier stages of the
proceedings and the judgments of this Court have been
reported In 1982 2 S.C.C. 463, 1984 2 SCR 495, 1984 2 SCR
914, 1984 3 SCR 412, 1984 3 SCR 482 and 1986 2 S.C.C. 716.
At present the appellant is being tried by a learned Judge
of the Bombay High Court nominated by the Chief Justice of
the Bombay High Court in pursuance of the direction given by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 89 of 125
this Court in its order dated 16.2.1984 (reported in 1984 2
SCR 495). By the order presently under appeal, the learned
Judge (s) framed as many as 79 charges against the appellant
and (b) rejected the prayer of the appellant that certain
persons, named as co-conspirators of the appellant in the
complaint on the basis of which the prosecution has been
launched should be arrayed as co-accused along with him. But
the principal contention urged on behalf of the appellant
before us centres not round the merits of the order under
appeal on the above two issues but round what the counsel
for the appellant has described as a fundamental and far-
reaching objection to the very validity of his trial before
the learned Judge. As already stated, the trial is being
conducted by the learned Judge pursuant to the direction of
this Court dated 16.2.1984. The contention of the learned
counsel is that the said direction is per incuriam, illegal,
invalid, contrary to the principles of natural justice and
violative of the fundamental rights of the petitioner. This
naturally raises two important issues for our consideration:
A. Whether the said direction is inoperative, invalid
or illegal, as alleged; and
122
B. Whether, if it is, this Court can and should recall,
withdraw, revoke or set aside the same in the present
proceedings.
Since the issues involve a review or reconsideration of
a direction given by a Bench of five judges of this Court,
this seven-judge Bench has been constituted to hear the
appeal.
2. It is not easy to say which of the two issues raised
should be touched upon first as, whichever one is taken up
first, the second will not arise for consideration unless
the first is answered in the affirmative. However, as the
correctness of the direction issued is impugned by the
petitioner, as there is no detailed discussion in the
earlier order on the points raised by the petitioner, and as
Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. has expressed an opinion on these
contentions with parts of which I am unable to agree, it
will be perhaps more convenient to have a look at the first
issue as if it were coming up for consideration for the
first time before us and then, depending upon the answer to
it, consider the second issue as to whether this Court has
any jurisdiction to recall or revoke the earlier order. The
issues will, therefore, be discussed in this order.
A. ARE THE DIRECTIONS ON 16.2.1984 PROPER, VALID AND
LEGAL?
3. For the appellant, it is contended that the
direction given in the last para of the order of the Bench
of five Judges dated 16.2.1984 (extracted in the judgment of
Sabyasachi Mukharji, J.) is vitiated by illegality,
irregularity and lack of jurisdiction on the following
grounds:
(i) Conferment of jurisdiction on courts is the
function of the legislature. It was not competent for
this Court to confer jurisdiction on a learned Judge of
the High Court to try the appellant, as, under the 1952
Act, an offence of the type in question can be tried
only by a special Judge appointed thereunder. This has
been overlooked while issuing the direction which is,
therefore, per incuriam.
(ii) The direction above-mentioned (a) relates to an
issue which was not before the Court (b) on which no
arguments were addressed and (c) in regard to which the
appellant had no opportunity to make his submissions.
It was nobody’s case before the above Bench that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 90 of 125
trial of the accused should no
123
longer be conducted by a Special Judge but should be
before a High Court Judge.
(iii) In issuing the impugned direction, the Bench
violated the principles of natural justice, as
mentioned above. It also overlooked that, as a result
thereof, the petitioner (a) was discriminated against
by being put to trial before a different forum as
compared to other public servants accused of similar
offences and (b) lost valuable rights of revision and
first appeal to the High Court which he would have had,
if tried in the normal course.
The direction was thus also violative of natural justice as
well as the fundamental rights of the petitioner under
Article 14 and 21 of the Constitution.
Primary Jurisdiction
4. There can be-and, indeed, counsel for the respondent
had-no quarrel with the initial premise of the learned
counsel for the appellant that the conferment of
jurisdiction on courts is a matter for the legislature.
Entry 77 of List I, entry 3 of List II and entries 1, 2, 11A
and 46 of List III of the Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution set out the respective powers of parliament and
the State Legislatures in that regard. It is common ground
that the jurisdiction to try offences of the type with which
are concerned here is vested by the 1952 Act in Special
Judges appointed by the respective State Governments. The
first question that has been agitated before us is whether
this Court was right in transferring the case for trial from
the Court of a Special Judge, to a Judge nominated by the
Chief Justice of Bombay.
High Court’s Power of Transfer
5. The power of the Supreme Court to transfer cases can
be traced, in criminal matters, either to Art. 139A of the
Constitution or Section 406 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure ("Cr. P.C.), 1973. Here, again, it is common
ground that neither of these provisions cover the present
case. Sri Jethmalani, learned counsel for the respondent,
seeks to support the order of transfer by reference to
Section 407 (not Section 406) of the Code and cl. 29 of the
Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court. Section 407 reads
thus:
(1) Whenever it is made to appear to the High Court-
124
(a) that a fair and impartial inquiry or trial cannot
be had in any Criminal Court subordinate thereto, or
(b) that some question of law of unusual difficulty is
likely to arise, or
(c) that an order under this section is required by any
provision of this Code, or will tend to the general
convenience of the parties or witnesses, or is
expedient for the ends of justice,
it may order-
(i) that any offence be inquired into or tried by any
Court not qualified under Section 177 to 185 (both
inclusive), but in other respects competent to inquire
into or try such offences;
(ii) that any particular case or appeal, or class of
cases or appeals, be transferred from a Criminal Court
subordinate to its authority to any other such Criminal
Court of equal or superior jurisdiction;
(iii) that any particular case be committed for trial
to a Court of Session; or
(iv) that any particular case or appeal be transferred
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 91 of 125
to and tried before itself.
(2) the High Court may act either on the report of the
lower court or on the application of a party interested
or on its own initiative:
XXX XXX XXX
XXX XXX XXX
XXX XXX XXX
(9) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to affect
any order of Government under Section 197."
And cl. 29 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court
runs thus:
"And we do further ordain that the said High Court
shall have power to direct the transfer of any
criminal case or
125
appeal from any Court to any other Court of appeal
or superior jurisdiction, and also to direct the
preliminary investigation of trial of any criminal
case by any officer of Court otherwise competent
to investigate or try it though such case belongs,
in ordinary course, to the jurisdiction of some
other officer, of Court."
The argument is that this power of transfer vested in the
High Court can well be exercised by the Supreme Court while
dealing with an appeal from the High Court in the case.
6. For the appellant, it is contended that the power of
transfer under section 407 cannot be invoked to transfer a
case from a Special Judge appointed under the 1952 Act to
the High Court. Learned counsel for the appellant contends
that the language of section 7(1) of the Act is mandatory;
it directs that offences specified in the Act can be tried
only by persons appointed, under S. 6(2) of the Act, by the
State Government, to be special judges, No other Judge, it
is said, has jurisdiction to try such a case, even if he is
a Judge of the High Court. In this context, it is pointed
out that a person, to be appointed as a special Judge, under
section 6(2) of the 1952 Act, should be one who is, or has
been, a Sessions Judge (which expression in this context
includes an Additional Sessions Judge and/or an Assistant
Sessions Judge). All High Court Judges may not have been
Sessions Judges earlier and, it is common ground, Shah, J.
who has been nominated by the Chief Justice for trying this
case does not fulfill the qualifications prescribed for
appointment as a Special Judge. But, that consideration
apart, the argument is that, while a High Court can transfer
a case from one special judge to another, and the Supreme
Court, from a special judge in one State to a special judge
in another State, a High Court cannot withdraw a case from a
Special Judge to itself and the Supreme Court cannot
transfer a case from a Special Judge to the High Court.
7. On the other hand, it is contended for the
respondent that the only purpose of the 1952 Act is to
ensure that cases of corruption and bribery do not get
bogged up in the ordinary criminal courts which are over-
burdened with all sorts of cases. Its object is not to
create special courts in the sense of courts manned by
specially qualified personnel or courts following any
special type of procedure. All that is done is to earmark
some of the existing sessions judges for trying these
offences exclusively. The idea is just to segregate
corruption and bribery cases to a few of the sessions judges
so that they could deal with them
126
effectively and expeditiously. It is a classification in
which the emphasis is on the types of offences and nature of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 92 of 125
offenders rather than on the qualifications of judges. That
being so, the requirement in section 7(1) that these cases
should be tried by special judges only is intended just to
exclude their trial by the other normal criminal courts of
coordinate jurisdiction and not to exclude the High Court.
8. Before dealing with these contentions, it may be
useful to touch upon the question whether a judge of a High
Court can be appointed by the State Government as a special
judge to try offences of the type specified in section 6 of
the 1952 Act. It will be seen at once that not all the
judges of the High Court (but only those elevated from the
State subordinate judiciary) would fulfill the
qualifications prescribed under section 6(2) of the 1952
Act. Though there is nothing in ss. 6 and 7 read together to
preclude altogether the appointment of a judge of the High
Court fulfilling the above qualifications as a special
judge, it would appear that such is not the (atleast not the
normal) contemplation of the Act. Perhaps it is possible to
argue that, under the Act, it is permissible for the State
Government to appoint one of the High Court Judges (who has
been a Sessions Judge) to be a Special Judge under the Act.
If that had been done, that Judge would have been a Special
Judge and would have been exercising his original
jurisdiction in conducting the trial. But that is not the
case here. In response to a specific question put by us as
to whether a High Court Judge can be appointed as a Special
Judge under the 1952 Act, Shri Jethmalani submitted that a
High Court Judge cannot be so appointed. I am inclined to
agree. The scheme of the Act, in particular the provision
contained in ss. 8(3A) and 9, militate against this concept.
Hence, apart from the fact that in this case no appointment
of a High Court Judge, as a Special Judge, has in fact been
made, it is not possible to take the view that the statutory
provisions permit the conferment of a jurisdiction to try
this case on a High Court Judge as a Special Judge.
9. Turning now to the powers of transfer under section
407, one may first deal with the decision of this Court in
Gurucharan Das Chadha v. State of Rajasthan, [1966] 2 S.C.R.
678 on which both counsel strongly relied. That was a
decision by three judges of this Court on a petition under
section 527 of the 1898 Cr.P.C. (corresponding to section
406 of the 1973 Cr.P.C.). The petitioner had prayed for the
transfer of a case pending in the court of a Special Judge
in Bharatpur, Rajasthan to another criminal court of equal
or superior jurisdiction subordinate to a High Court other
than the High Court of
127
Rajasthan. The petition was eventually dismissed on merits.
But the Supreme Court dealt with the provisions of section
527 of the 1898 A Cr.P.C. in the context of an objection
taken by the respondent State that the Supreme Court did not
have the jurisdiction to transfer a case pending before the
Special Judge, Bharatpur. The contention was that a case
assigned by the State Government under the 1952 Act to a
Special Judge cannot be transferred at all because, under
the terms of that Act, which is a self-contained special
law, such a case must be tried only by the designated
Special Judge. The Court observed that the argument was
extremely plausible but not capable of bearing close
scrutiny. After referring to the provisions of section 6, 7
and 8 of the 1952 Act, the Court set out the arguments for
the State thus:
"The Advocate-General, Rajasthan, in opposing the
petition relies principally on the provisions of
section 7(1) and 7(2) and contends that the two
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 93 of 125
sub-sections create two restrictions which must be
read together. The first is that offences
specified in section 6(1) can be tried by Special
Judges only. The second is that every such offence
shall be tried by the Special Judge for the area
within which it is committed and if there are more
special judges in that area by the Special Judge
chosen by the Government. These two conditions,
being statutory, it is submitted that no order can
be made under section 527 because, on transfer,
even if a special judge is entrusted with the
case, the second condition is bound to be broken."
Dealing with this contention the Court observed:
"This condition, if literally understood, would
lead to the conclusion that a case once made over
to a special Judge in an area where there is no
other special Judge, cannot be transferred at all.
This could hardly have been intended. If this were
so, the power to transfer a case intra-state under
s. 526 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, on a
parity of reasoning, must also be lacking. But
this Court in Ramachandra Parsad v. State of
Bihar, [1962] 2 S.C.R. 50 unheld the transfer of
a case by the High Court which took it to a
special judge who had no jurisdiction in the area
where the offence was committed. In holding that
the transfer was valid this Court relied upon the
third sub-section of Section 8 of the Act. That
sub-section preserves the application of any
provision of the Code of Criminal Procedure it it
is not
128
inconsistent with the Act, save as provided in the
first two sub-sections of that section. The
question, therefore, resolves itself to this: Is
there an inconsistency between S. 527 of the Code
and the second sub-section of S. 7? The answer is
that there is none. Apparently this Court in the
earlier case found no inconsistency and the
reasons appear to be there: The condition that an
offence specified in S. 6(2) shall be tried by a
special Judge for the area within which it is
committed merely specifies which of several
special Judges appointed in the State by the State
Government shall try it. The provision is
analogous to others under which the jurisdiction
of Magistrates and Sessions Judges is deter mined
on a territorial basis. Enactments in the Code of
Criminal Procedure intended to confer territorial
jurisdiction upon courts and Presiding officers
have never been held to stand in the way of
transfer of criminal cases outside those areas of
territorial jurisdiction. The order of transfer
when it is made under the powers given by the Code
invests another officer with jurisdiction although
ordinarily he would lack territorial jurisdiction
to try the case. The order of this Court,
therefore, which transfer(s) a case from one
special Judge subordinate to one High Court to
another special Judge subordinate to another High
Court creates jurisdiction in the latter in much
the same way as the transfer by the High Court
from one Sessions Judge in a Session Division to
another Sessions Judge in another Sessions
Division.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 94 of 125
There is no comparison between the first sub-
section and the second sub-section of Section 7.
The condition in the second sub-section of S. 7 is
not of the same character as the condition in the
first sub-section. The first sub-section creates a
condition which is a sine qua non for the trial of
certain offences. That condition is that the trial
must be before a special Judge. The second sub-
section distributes the work between special
Judges and lays emphasis on the fact that trial
must be before a special Judge appointed for the
area in which the offence is committed. This
second condition is on a par with the distribution
of work territorially between different Sessions
Judges and Magistrates. An order of transfer, by
the very nature of things must, some times, result
in taking the case out of the territory and the
provisions of the Code which are preserved by the
third sub-
129
section of S. 8 must supervene to enable this to
be done and the second sub-section of S. 7 must
yield. We do not consider that this creates any
inconsistency because the territorial jurisdiction
created by the second sub-section of S. 7 operates
in a different sphere and under different
circumstances. Inconsistency can only be found if
two provisions of law apply in identical
circumstances and create contradictions. Such a
situation does not arise when either this Court or
the High Court exercises its powers of transfer.
We are accordingly of the opinion that the Supreme
Court in exercise of its jurisdiction and power
under S. 527 of the Code of Criminal Procedure can
transfer a case from a Special Judge subordinate
to the High Court to another special Judge
subordinate to another High Court. "
(emphasis added)
10. The attempt of Sri Jethmalani is to bring the
present case within the scope of the observations contained
in the latter part of the extract set out above. He submits
that a special judge, except insofar as a specific provision
to the contrary is made, is a court subordinate to the High
Court, as explained in 1984 2 S.C.R. 914 (at pages 943-4)
and proceedings before him are subject to the provisions of
the 1973 Cr.P.C.; the field of operation of the first sub-
section of section 7 is merely to earmark certain Sessions
Judges for purposes of trying cases of corruption by public
servants and this provision is, in principle, not different
from the earmarking of cases on the basis of territorial
jurisdiction dealt with by sub-section 2 of section 7. The
argument is no doubt a plausible one. It does look somewhat
odd to say that a Sessions Judge can, but a High Court Judge
cannot, try an offence under the Act. The object of the Act,
as rightly pointed out by counsel, is only to segregate
certain cases to special courts which will concentrate on
such cases so as to expedite their disposal and not to oust
the superior jurisdiction of the High Court or its powers of
superintendencet over subordinate courts under article 227
of the Constitution, an aspect only of which is reflected in
s. 407 of the Cr.P.C. However, were the matter to be
considered as res integra, I would be inclined to accept the
contention urged on behalf of the appellant, for the
following reasons. In the first place, the argument of the
counsel for the respondent runs counter to the observations
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 95 of 125
made by the Supreme Court in the earlier part of the extract
set out above that the first sub-section of section 7 and
the second sub-section are totally different in character.
The first sub-section deals with a sine qua non for the
trial of certain offences, whereas the second sub-section is
only of a pro-
130
cedural nature earmarking territorial jurisdiction among
persons competent to try the offence. They are, therefore,
vitally different in nature. The Supreme Court has clearly
held in the passage extracted above that the case can be
transferred only from one special judge to another. In other
words, while the requirement of territorial jurisdiction is
subordinate to S. 406 or 407, the requirement that the trial
should be by a special judge is not. It is true that those
observations are not binding on this larger Bench and
moreover the Supreme Court there was dealing only with an
objection based on sub-section (2) of Section 7. It is,
however, clear that the Bench, even if it had accepted the
transfer petition of Gurcharan Das Chadha, would have
rejected a prayer to transfer the case to a court other than
that of a Special Judge appointed by the transferee State. I
am in respectful agreement with the view taken in that case
that there is a vital qualitative difference between the two
sub-sections and that while a case can be transferred to a
special judge who may not have the ordinary territorial
jurisdiction over it, a transfer cannot be made to an
ordinary magistrate or a court of session even if it has
territorial jurisdiction. If the contention of the learned
counsel for the respondent that s. 7(1) and s. 407 operate
in different fields and are not inconsistent with each other
were right, it should be logically possible to say that the
High Court can, under s. 407, transfer a case from a special
judge to any other Court of Session. But such a conclusion
would be clearly repugnant to the scheme of the 1952 Act and
plainly incorrect. It is, therefore, difficult to accept the
argument of Sri Jethmalani that we should place the
restriction contained in the first sub-section of section 7
also as being on the same footing as that in the second sub-
section and hold that the power of transfer contained in the
Criminal Procedure Code can be availed of to transfer a case
from a Special Judge to any other criminal court or even the
High Court. The case can be transferred only from one
special judge to another special judge; it cannot be
transferred even to a High Court Judge except where a High
Court Judge is appointed as a Special Judge. A power of
transfer postulates that the court to which transfer or
withdrawal is sought is competent to exercise jurisdiction
over the case. (vide, Raja Soap Factory v. Shantaraj, [1965]
2 S.C.R. 800).
11. This view also derives support from two provisions
of S. 407 itself. The first is this. Even when a case is
transferred from one criminal court to another, the
restriction as to territorial jurisdiction may be infringed.
To obviate a contention based on lack of territorial
jurisdiction in the transferee court in such a case, clause
(ii) of s. 407 provides that the order of transfer will
prevail, lack of jurisdiction
131
under Ss. 177 to 185 of the Code notwithstanding. The second
difficulty arises, even under the Cr.P.C. itself, by virtue
of S. 197 which not only places restriction on the
institution of certain prosecutions against public servants
without Government sanction but also empowers the
Government, inter alia, to determine the court before which
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 96 of 125
such trial is to be conducted. When the forum of such a
trial is transferred under s. 407 an objection may be taken
to the continuance of the trial by the transferee court
based on the order passed under s. 197. This eventuality is
provided against by s. 407(9) of the Act which porvides that
nothing in s. 407 shall be deemed to affect an order passed
under s. 407. Although specifically providing for these
contingencies, the section is silent in so far as a transfer
from the court of a Special Judge under the 1952 Act is
concerned though it is a much later enactment.
12. On the contrary, the language of s. 7(1) of the
1952 Act places a definite hurdle in the way of construing
s. 407 of the Cr.P.C. as overriding its provisions. For, it
opens with the words:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1898 or in any other law".
In view of this non-obstanti clause also, it becomes
difficult to hold that the provisions of section 407 of the
1973 Cr.P.C. will override, or even operate consistently
with, the provisions of the 1952 Act. For the same reason it
is not possible to hold that the power of transfer contained
in clause 29 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court
can be exercised in a manner not contemplated by section
7(1) of the 1952 Act.
13. Thirdly, whatever may be the position where a case
is transferred from one special judge to another or from one
ordinary subordirate criminal court to another of equal or
superior jurisdiction, the withdrawal of a case by the High
Court from such a Court to itself for trial places certain
handicaps on the accused. It is true that the court to which
the case has been transferred is a superior court and in
fact, the High Court. Unfortunately, however, the high Court
judge is not a person to whom the trial of the case can be
assigned under s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act. As pointed out by
the Supreme Court in Surajmal Mohta v. Viswanatha Sastry,
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 448 at pp. 464 in a slightly different
context, the circumstance that a much superior forum is
assigned to try a case than the one normally available
cannot by itself be treated as a "sufficient safeguard and a
good substitute" for the
132
normal forum and the rights available under the normal
procedure. The accused here loses his right of coming up in
revision or appeal to the High Court from the interlocutory
and final orders of the trial court. He loses the right of
having two courts-a subordinate court and the High Court-
adjudicate upon his contentions before bringing the matter
up in the Supreme Court. Though, as is pointed out later,
these are not such handicaps as violate the fundamental
rights of such an accused, they are circumstances which
create prejudice to the accused and may not be overlooked in
adopting one construction of the statute in preference to
the other.
14. Sri Jethmalani vehemently contended that the
construction of s. 407 sought for by the appellant is
totally opposed to well settled canons of statutory
construction. He urged that the provisions of the 1952 Act
should be interpreted in the light of the objects it sought
to achieve and its amplitude should not be extended beyond
its limited objective. He said that a construction of the
Act which leads to repugnancy with, or entails pro tanto
repeal of, the basic criminal procedural law and seeks to
divest jurisdiction vested in a superior court should be
avoided. These aspects have been considered earlier. The
1952 Act sought to expedite the trial of cases involving
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 97 of 125
public servants by the creation of courts presided over by
experienced special judges to be appointed by the State
Government. There is however nothing implausible in saying
that the Act having already earmarked these cases for trial
by experienced Sessions Judges made this provision immune
against the applicability of the provisions of other laws in
general and the Cr.P.C. in particular. Effect is only being
given to these express and specific words used in section
7(1) and no question arises of any construction being
encouraged that is repugnant to the Cr.P.C. Or involves an
implied repeal, pro tanto, of its provisions. As has already
been pointed out, if the requirement in s. 7(1) were held to
be subordinate to the provisions contained in s. 406-7, then
in principle, even a case falling under the 1952 Act can be
transferred to any other Sessions Judge and that would
defeat the whole purpose of the Act and is clearly not
envisaged by it.
Supreme Court’s power of transfer
15. It will have been noticed that the power of
transfer under section 407 or cl. 29 of the Letters Patent
which has been discussed above is a power vested in the High
Court. So the question will arise whether, even assuming
that the High Court could have exercised such power, the
Supreme Court could have done so. On behalf of the
133
respondent, it was contended that, as the power of the High
Court under s. 407 can be exercised on application of a
party or even suo motu and can be exercised by it at any
stage irrespective of whether any application or matter in
connection with the case is pending before it or not, the
Supreme Court, as an appellate Court, has a co-equal
jurisdiction to exercise the power of transfer in the same
manner as the High Court could. In any event, the Supreme
Court could exercise the power as one incidental or
ancillary to the power of disposing of a revision or appeal
before it. The appellants, however, contend that, as the
power of the Supreme Court to order transfer of cases has
been specifically provided for in section 406 and would
normally exclude cases of intra-state transfer covered by
section 407 of the Code, the statute should not be so
construed as to imply a power of the Supreme Court, in
appeal or revision, to transfer a case from a subordinate
court to the High Court. The argument also is that what the
Supreme Court, as an appellate or revisional court, could
have done was either (a) to direct the High Court to
consider whether this was a fit case for it to exercise its
power under section 407(1)(iv) to withdraw the case to
itself and try the same with a view to expeditiously dispose
it of or (b) to have withdrawn the case to itself for trial.
But, it is contended, no power which the Supreme Court could
exercise as an appellate or revisional court could have
enabled the Supreme Court to transfer the case from the
Special Judge to the High Court.
16. Here also, the contentions of both parties are
nicely balanced but I am inclined to think that had the
matter been res integra and directions for transfer were
being sought before us for the first time, this Court would
have hesitated to issue such a direction and may at best
have left it to the High Court to consider the matter and
exercise its own discretion. As already pointed out, the
powers of the Supreme Court to transfer cases from one court
to another are to be found in Article 139-A of the
Constitution and section 406 of the Cr.P.C. The provisions
envisaged either inter-state transfers of cases i.e. from a
court in one State to a court in another State or the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 98 of 125
withdrawal of a case by the Supreme Court to itself. Intra-
State transfer among courts subordinate to a High Court
inter-se or from a court subordinate to a High Court to the
High Court is within the jurisdiction of the appropriate
High Court. The attempt of counsel for the resondent is to
justify the transfer by attributing the powers of the High
Court under section 407 to the Supreme Court in its capacity
as an appellate or revisional court. This argument overlooks
that the powers of the Supreme Court, in disposing of an
appeal or revision, are circumscribed by the scope of the
proceedings before it. In this
134
case, it is common ground that the question of transfer was
not put in issue before the Supreme Court.
17. The reliance placed in this context on the
provisions contained in articles 140 and 142 of the
Constitution and S. 401 read with S. 386 of the Cr.P.C. does
not also help. Article 140 is only a provisions enabling
Parliament to confer supplementary powers on the Supreme
Court to enable it to deal more effectively to exercise the
jurisdication conferred on it by or under the Constitution.
Article 142 is also not of much assistance. In the first
place, the operative words in that article, again are "in
the exercise of its jurisdiction." The Supreme Court was
hearing an appeal from the order of discharge and connected
matters. There was no issue or controversy or discussion
before it as to the comparative merits of a trial before a
special judge vis-a-vis one before the High Court. There was
only an oral request said to have been made, admittedly,
after the judgment was announced. Wide as the powers under
article 141 are, they do not in my view, envisage an order
of the type presently in question. The Nanavati case (1961
SCR 497, to which reference was made by Sri Jethmalani,
involved a totally different type of situation. Secondly, it
is one of the contentions of the appellant that an order of
this type, far from being necessary for doing complete
justice in the cause or matter pending before the Court, has
actually resulted in injustice, an aspect discussed a little
later. Thirdly, however wide and plenary the language of the
article, the directions given by the Court should not be
inconsistent with, repugnant to or in violation of the
specific provisions of any statute. If the provisions of the
1952 Act read with article 139-A and Ss.406-407 of the
Cr.P.C. do not permit the transfer of the case from a
special judge to the High Court, that effect cannot be
achieved indirectly. it is, therefore, difficult to say, in
the circumstances of the case, that the Supreme Court can
issue the impugned direction in exercise of the powers under
Article 142 or under s. 407 available to it as an appellate
court.
18. Learned counsel for the complainant also sought to
support the order of transfer by reference to section 386
and 401 of the 1973 Cr.P.C. He suggested that the Court,
having set aside the order of discharge, had necessarily to
think about consequential orders and that such directions as
were issued are fully justified by the above provisions. He
relied in this context on the decision of the Privy Council
in Hari v. Emperor, AIR 1935 P.C.122. It is difficult to
accept this argument. Section 401 provides that, in the
revision pending before it, the High Court can exercise any
of the powers conferred on a
135
court of appeal under section 386. Section 386, dealing with
the powers of the appellate court enables the court, in a
case such as this: (i) under clause (a), to alter or reverse
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 99 of 125
the order under appeal/revision; or (ii) under clause (e),
to make any amendment or any consequential or incidental
order that may be just or proper. The decision relied on by
counsel, Hari v. Emperor, AIR 1935 P.C. 122, is of no
assistance to him. In that case, the Additional Judicial
Commissioner, who heard an appeal on a difference of opinion
between two other judicial commissioner had come to the
conclusion that the conviction had to be set aside. Then he
had the duty to determine what should be done and S. 426 of
the 1898 Cr.P.C. (corresponding to section 386 of the 1973
Cr.P.C.) exactly provided for the situation and empowered
him:
"to reverse the finding and sentence and acquit or
discharge the accused or order him to be retried
by a court of competent jurisdiction subordinate
to such apellate Court."
In the present case, the Special Judge. Sri Sule, had
discharged the accused because of his conclusion, that the
prosecution lacked the necessary sanction. The conclusion of
the Supreme Court that this conclusion was wrong meant,
automatically, that the prosecution had been properly
initiated and that the proceedings before the Special Judge
should go on. The direction that the trial should be shifted
to the High Court can hardly be described as a consequential
or incidental order. Such a direction did not flow, as a
necessary consequence of the conclusion of the court on the
issues and points debated before it. I am, therefore,
inclined to agree with counsel for the appellant that this
Court was in error when it directed that the trial of the
case should be before a High Court Judge.
19. It follows from the above discussion that the
appellant, in consequence of the impugned direction, is
being tried by a ’Court which has no jurisdiction-and which
cannot be empowered by the Supreme Court-to try him. The
continued trial before the High Court, therefore, infringes
Article 21 of the Constitution.
Denial of equality and violation of Article 21.
20. It was vehemently contended for the appellant that,
by giving the impugned direction, this Court has deprived
the appellant of his fundamental rights. He has been denied
a right to equality,
136
inasmuch as his case has been singled out for trial by a
different, though higher, forum as compared to other public
servants. His fundamental right under Article 21, it is
said, has been violated, inasmuch as the direction has
deprived him of a right of revision and first appeal to the
High Court which he would have had from an order or sentence
had he been tried by a Special Judge and it is doubtful
whether he would have a right to appeal to this Court at
all. It is pointed out that a right of first appeal against
a conviction in a criminal case has been held, by this
Court, to be a part of the fundamental right guaranteed
under Article 21 of the Constitution. It is not necessary
for me to consider these arguments in view of my conclusion
that the High Court could not have been directed to try the
petitioner’s case. I would, however, like to say that, in my
opinion, the arguments based on Articles 14 and 21 cannot be
accepted, in case it is to be held for any reason that the
transfer of the apellant’s case to the High Court was valid
and within the competence of this Court. I say this for the
following reason: If the argument is to be accepted, it will
be appreciated, it cannot be confined to cases of transfer
to the High Court of cases under the 1952 Act but would also
be equally valid to impugn the withdrawal of a criminal case
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 100 of 125
tried in the normal course under the Cr.P.C. from a
subordinate court trying it to the High Court by invoking
the powers under section 407. To put it in other words, the
argument, in substance, assails the validity of secion 407
of the 1973 Cr.P.C. In my opinion, this attack has to be
repelled. The section cannot be challenged under Article 14
as it is based on a reasonable classification having
relation to the objects sought to be achieved. Though, in
general, the trial of cases will be by courts having the
normal jurisdiction over them, the exigencies of the
situation may require that they be dealt with by some other
court for various reasons. Likewise, the nature of a case,
the nature of issues involved and other circumstances may
render it more expedient, effective, expeditious or
desirable that the case should be tried by a superior court
or the High Court itself. The power of transfer and
withdrawal contained in s. 407 of the Cr.P.C. is one
dictated by the requirements of justice and is, indeed, but
an aspect of the supervisory powers of a superior court over
courts subordinate to it: (see also sections 408 to 411 of
the Cr.P.C.). A judicial discretion to transfer or withdraw
is vested in the highest court of the State and is made
exercisable only in the circumstances set out in the
section. Such a power is not only necessary and desirable
but indispensable in the cause of the administration of
justice. The accused will continue to be tried by a court of
equal or superior jurisdiction. Section 407(8) read with S.
474 of the Cr.P.C. and section 8(3) of the 1952 Act makes it
clear that he will be
137
tried in accordance with the procedure followed by the
original Court or ordinarily by a Court of Session. The
accused will, therefore, suffer no prejudice by reason of
the application of s. 407. Even if there is a differential
treatment which causes prejudice, it is based on logical and
acceptable considerations with a view to promote the
interest of justice. The transfer or withdrawal of a case to
another court or the High Court, in such circumstances, can
hardly be said to result in hostile discrimination against
the accused in such a case.
21. Considerable reliance was placed on behalf of the
appellant on State v. Anwar Ali Sarkar, [1952] S.C.R. 284.
This decision seems to have influenced the learned judges
before whom this appeal first came up for hearing in
referring the matter to this larger Bench and has also been
aplied to the facts and situation here by my learned
brother, Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. But it seems to me that the
said decision has no relevance here. There, the category of
cases which were to be allocated to a Special Judge were not
well defined; the selection of cases was to be made by the
executive; and the procedure to be followed by the special
courts was different from the normal criminal procedure. As
already pointed out, the position here is entirely
different. The 1952 legislation has been enacted to give
effect to the Tek Chand Committee and to remedy a state of
affairs prevalent in respect of a well defined class of
offences and its provisions constituting special judges to
try offences of corruption is not under challenge. Only a
power of transfer is being exercised by the Supreme Court
which is sought to be traced back to the power of the High
Court under s. 407. The vires of that provision also is not
being challenged. What is perhaps being said is that the
Supreme Court ought not to have considered this case a fit
one for withdrawal for trial to the High Court. That plea
should be and is being considered here on merits but the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 101 of 125
plea that Article 14 has been violated by the exercise of a
power under s. 407 on the strength of Anwar Ali Sarkar’s
case wholly appears to be untenable. Reference may be made
in this context to Kathi Raning Rawat v. The State of
Saurashtra, [1952] 3 S.C.R. 435 and Re: Special Courts
Bill, 1978, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 476 and Shukla v. Delhi
Administration, [1980] 3 S.C.R. 500, which have upheld the
creation of special judges to try certain classes of
offences.
22. It may be convenient at this place to refer to
certain observations by the Bench of this Court, while
referring this matter to the larger Bench, in a note
appended to their order on this aspect. The learned Judges
have posed the following questions in paragraphs 4 and 6 of
their note:
138
"4. The Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952 as its
preamble says is passed to provide for speedier
trial? Does not further speeding up of the case by
transferring the case to the High Court for speedy
disposal violate the principle laid down by seven
learned Judges of this Court in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s
case (1952) S.C.R. 284 and result in violation of
Article 14 of the Constitution? The following
observations of Vivian Bose, J. in Anwar Ali
Sarkar’s case at pages 366-387 of the Report are
relevant:
’Tested in the light of these considerations, I am
of opinion that the whole of the West Bengal
Special Courts Act of 1950 offends the provisions
of Article 14 and is therefore bad. When the froth
and the foam of discussion is cleared away and
learned dialectics placed on one side, we reach at
last the human element which to my mind is the
most important of all. We find men accused of
heinous crimes called upon to answer for their
lives and liberties. We find them picked out from
their fellows, and however much the new procedure
may give them a few crumbs of advantage, in the
bulk they are deprived of substantial and valuable
privileges of defence which others, similarly
charged, are able to claim. It matters not to me,
nor indeed to them and their families and their
friends, whether this be done in good faith,
whether it be done for the convenience of
government, whether the process can be
scientifically classified and labelled, or whether
it is an experiment in speedier trials made for
the good of society at large. It matters now how
lofty and laudable the motives are. The question
with which I charge myself is, can fair-minded,
reasonable, unbiassed and resolute men, who are
not swayed by emotion or prejudice, regard this
with equanimity and call it reasonable, just and
fair, regard it as that equal treatment and
protection in the defence of liberties which is
expected of a sovereign democratic republic in the
conditions which obtain in India today? I have but
one answer to that. On that short and simple
ground I would decide this case and hold the Act
bad.’
(Underlining by us)
Do not the above observations apply to judicial
orders also?
139
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 102 of 125
6. Does the degree of heinousness of the crime
with which an accused is charged or his status or
the influence that he commands in society have any
bearing on the applicability or the constriction
of Article 14 or Article 21.?"
23. In my opinion, the answers to the questions posed
will, again, depend on whether the impugned direction can be
brought within the scope of section 407 of the 1973 Cr.P.C.
Or not. If I am right in my conclusion that it cannot, the
direction will clearly be contrary to the provisions of the
Cr.P.C. and hence violative of Article 21. It could also
perhaps be said to be discriminatory on the ground that, in
the absence of not only a statutory provision but even any
well defined policy or criteria, the only two reasons given
in the order-namely, the status of the petitioner and delay
in the progress of the trial-are inadequate to justify the
special treatment meted out to the appellant. On the other
hand, if the provisions of section 407 Cr.P.C. are
applicable, the direction will be in consonance with a
procedure prescribed by law and hence safe from attack as
violative of Article 21. The reasons given, in the context
of the developments in the case, can also be sought to be
justified in terms of clauses (a), (b) or (c) of Section
407(1). In such an event, the direction will not amount to
an arbitrary discrimination but can be justified as the
exercise of a choice of courses permitted under a valid
statutory classification intended to serve a public purpose.
24. The argument of infringment of article 21 is based
essentially on the premise that the accused will be
deprived, in cases where the trial is withdrawn to the High
Court of a right of first appeal. This fear is entirely
unfounded. I think Sri Jethmalani is right in contending
that where a case is thus withdrawn and tried by the Court,
the High Court will be conducting the trial in the exercise
of its extraordinary original criminal jurisdiction. As
pointed out by Sabyasachi Mukharji, J., the old Presidency-
town High Courts once exercised original jurisdiction in
criminal matters but this has since been abolished. One
possible view is that now all original criminal jurisdiction
exercised by High Court is only extraordinary original
criminal jurisdiction. Another possible view is that still
High Courts do exercise ordinary original criminal
jurisdiction in habeas corpus and contempt of court matters
and also under some specific enactments (e.g. Companies’ Act
Ss. 454 and 633). They can be properly described as
exercising extraordinary original criminal jurisdiction,
where though the ordinary original criminal jurisdiction is
vested in a subordinate criminal court or special Judge, a
case is withdrawn by the High Court to itself for trial. The
140
decision in Madura Tirupparankundram etc. v. Nikhan Sahib,
35 C.W.N. 1088, Kavasji Pestonji v. Rustomji Sorabji, AIR
1949 Bombay 42, Sunil Chandra Roy and another v. The State,
AIR 1954 Calcutta 305, People’s Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Sardul
Singh Caveeshar and others, AIR 1961 Punjab 87 and People’s
Patriotic Front v. K.K. Birla and others, [1984] Crl. L.J .
545 cited by him amply support this contention. If this be
so, then Sri Jethmalani is also right in saying that a right
of first appeal to the Supreme Court against the order
passed by the High Court will be available to the accused
under s. 374 of the 1973 Cr.P.C. In other words, in the
ordinary run of criminal cases tried by a Court of Sessions,
the accused will be tried in the first instance by a court
subordinate to the High Court; he will then have a right of
first appeal to the High Court and then can seek leave of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 103 of 125
the Supreme Court to appeal to it under Article 136. In the
case of a withdrawn case, the accused has the privilege of
being tried in the first instance by the High Court itself
with a right to approach the apex Court by way of appeal.
The apprehension that the judgment in the trial by the High
Court, in the latter case, will be final, with only a chance
of obtaining special leave under article 136 is totally
unfounded. There is also some force in the submission of Sri
Jethmalani that, if that really be the position and the
appellant had no right of appeal against the High Court’s
judgment, the Supreme Court will consider any petition
presented under Article 136 in the light of the inbuilt
requirements of Article 21 and dispose of it as if it were
itself a petition of appeal from the judgment. (see, in this
context, the observations of this Court in Sadananthan v.
Arunachalam, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 673. That, apart it may be
pointed out, this is also an argument that would be valid in
respect even of ordinary criminal trials withdrawn to the
High Court under s. 407 of the Cr.P.C. and thus, like the
previous argument regarding Article 14, indirectly
challenges the validity of S.407 itself as infringing
Article 21. For the reasons discussed, I have come to the
conclusion that an accused, tried directly by the High Court
by withdrawal of his case from a subordinate court, has a
right of appeal to the Supreme Court under s. 374 of the
Cr.P.C. The allegation of an infringement of Article 2 1 in
such cases is. therefore. unfounded. Natural Justice
25. The appellant’s contention that the impugned
direction is sued by this Court on 16.2.1984 was in
violation of the principles of natural justice appears to be
well founded. It is really not in dispute before us that
there was no whisper or suggestion in the proceedings before
this Court that the venue of the trial should be shifted to
the High Court. This direction was issued suo motu by the
learned Judges without putting it to the counsel for the
parties that this was what they
141
proposed to do. The difficulties created by observations or
directions on issues not debated before the Court have been
highlighted by Lord Diplock in Hadmor Productions Ltd. v.
Hamilton, [1983] A.C. 191). In that case, Lord Denning, in
the Court of Appeal, had in his judgment, relied on a
certain passage from the speech of Lord Wedderburn in
Parliament as reported in Hansard (Parliamentary Reports) in
support of the view taken by him. The counsel for the
parties had had no inkling or information that recourse was
likely to be had by the Judge to this source, as it had been
authoritatively held by the House of Lords in Davis v.
Johns, [1979] A.C. 264 that these reports should not be
referred to by counsel or relied upon by the court for any
purpose. Commenting on this aspect, Lord Diplock observed:
"Under our adversary system of procedure, for a
judge to disregard the rule by which counsel are
bound has the effect of depriving the parties to
the action of the benefit of one of the most
fundamental rules of natural justice: the right of
each to be informed of any point adverse to him
that is going to be relied upon by the judge and
to be given an opportunity of stating what his
answer to it is. In the instant case, counsel for
Hamilton and Bould complained that Lord Denning
M.R. had selected one speech alone to rely upon
out of many that had been made .. and that, if he
has counsel had known that (Lord Denning) was
going to do that, not only would he have wished to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 104 of 125
criticise what Lord Wedderburn had said in his
speech ....... but he would also have wished to
rely on other speeches disagreeing with Lord
Wedderburn if he, as counsel, had been entitled to
refer to Hansard ....."
The position is somewhat worse in the present case. Unlike
the Hamilton case (supra) where the Judge had only used
Hansard to deal with an issue that arose in the appeal, the
direction in the present case was something totally alien to
the scope of the appeal, on an issue that was neither raised
nor debated in the course of the hearing and completely
unexpected.
26. Shri Jethmalani submitted that, when the judgment
was announced, counsel for the complainant (present
respondent) had made an oral request that the trial be
transferred to the High Court and that the Judges replied
that they had already done that. He submitted that, at that
time and subsequently, the appellant could have protested
and put forward his objections but did not and had thus
142
acquiesced in a direction which was, in truth, beneficial to
him as this Court had only directed that he should be tried
by a High Court Judge, a direction against which no one can
reasonably complain. This aspect of the respondent’s
arguments will be dealt with later but, for the present, all
that is necessary is to say that the direction must have
come as a surprise to the appellant and had been issued
without hearing him on the course proposed to be adopted.
Conclusion
27. To sum up, my conclusion on issue A is that the
direction issued by the Court was not warranted in law,
being contrary to the special provisions of the 1952 Act.
was also not in conformity with the principles of natural
justice and that, unless the direction can be justified with
reference to S. 407 of the Cr. P.C., the petitioner’s
fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 21 can be said to
have been infringed by reason of this direction. This takes
me on to the question whether it follows as a consequence
that the direction issued can be, or should be, recalled,
annulled, revoked or set aside by us now.
B. CAN AND SHOULD THE DIRECTION OF 16.2.84 BE
RECALLED?
28. It will be appreciated that, whatever may be the
ultimate conclusion on the correctness, propriety or
otherwise of the Court’s direction dated 16.2.1984, that was
a direction given by this Court in a proceeding between the
same parties and the important and farreaching question that
falls for consideration is whether it is at all open to the
appellant to seek to challenge the correctness of that
direction at a later stage of the same trial.
Is a review possible?
29. The first thought that would occur to any one who
seeks a modification of an order of this Court, particularly
on the ground that it contained a direction regarding which
he had not been heard, would be to seek a review of that
order under Article 137 of the Constitution read with the
relevant rules. Realising that this would be a direct and
straight forward remedy, it was contended for the appellant
that the present appeal may be treated as an application for
such review.
30. The power of review is conferred on this Court by
Article 137 of the Constitution which reads thus:
143
"Subject to the provisions of any law made by
Parliament or any rules made under Article 145,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 105 of 125
the Supreme Court shall have power to review any
judgment pronounced or order made by it."
It is subject not only to the provisions of any law made by
Parliament (and there is no such law so far framed) but also
to any rules made by this Court under Article 145. This
Court has made rules in pursuance of art. 145 which are
contained in order XL in Part VIII of the Supreme Court
Rules. Three of these rules are relevant for our present
purposes. They read as follows:
"(1) The Court may review its judgment or order,
but no appliction for review will be entertained
in a civil proceeding except on the ground
mentioned in order XLVII, rule 1 of the Code, and
in a criminal proceeding except on the ground of
an error apparent on the face of the record.
(Z) An application for review shall be by a
petition. and shall be filed within thirty days
from the date of the judgment or order sought to
be reviewed. It shall set out clearly its grounds
for review.
(3) Unless otherwise ordered by the Court an
application for review shall be disposed of by
circulation without any oral arguments, but the
petitioner may supplement his petition by
additional written arguments. The court may either
dismiss the petition or direct notice to the
opposite party. An application for review shall as
far as practicable be circulated to the same Judge
or Bench of Judges that delivered the judgment or
order sought to be reviewed."
31. It is contended on behalf of the respondent that
the present pleas of the appellant cannot be treated as an
application for review, firstly, because they do not seek to
rectify any error apparent on the face of the record;
secondly, because the prayer is being made after the expiry
of the period of thirty days mentioned in rule 2 and there
is no sufficient cause for condoning the delay in the making
of the application and thirdly, for the reason that a review
petition has to be listed as far as practicable before the
same Judge or Bench of Judges that delivered the order
sought to be reviewed and in this case at least two of the
learned Judges, who passed the order on 16.2.1984, are still
available to consider the application for review. These
grounds may now be considered.
144
32. For reasons which I shall later discuss, I am of
opinion that the order dated 16.2.1984 does not suffer from
any error apparent on the face of the record which can be
rectified on a review application. So far as the second
point is concerned, it is common ground that the prayer for
review has been made beyond the period mentioned in Rule 2
of order XL of the Supreme Court Rules. No doubt this Court
has power to extend the time within which a review petition
may be filed but learned counsel for the respondent
vehemently contended that this is not a fit case for
exercising the power of condonation of delay. It is urged
that, far from this being a fit case for the entertainment
of the application for review beyond the time prescribed,
the history of the case will show that the petitioner has
deliberately avoided filing a review petition within the
time prescribed for reasons best known to himself .
33. In support of his contention, learned counsel for
the respondent invited our attention to the following
sequence of events and made the following points:
(a) The order of this Court was passed on 16.2.1984.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 106 of 125
At the time of the pronouncement of the said
order, counsel for the present respondent had made
a request that the trial of the case may be
shifted to the High Court and the Court had
observed that a direction to this effect had been
included in the judgment. Even assuming that there
had been no issues raised and no arguments
advanced on the question of transfer at the time
of the hearing of the appeals, there was nothing
to preclude the counsel for the appellant, when
the counsel for the complainant made the above
request, from contending that it should not be
done, or, at least, that it should not be done
without further hearing him and pointing out this
was not a matter which had been debated at the
hearing of the appeal. But no, the counsel for the
accused chose to remain quiet and did not raise
any objection at that point of time. He could have
filed a review application soon thereafter but he
did not do so. Perhaps he considered, at that
stage, that the order which after all enabled him
to be tried by a High Court Judge in preference to
a Special Judge was favourable to him and,
therefore, he did not choose to object.
(b) The matter came up before the trial judge on 13th
March, 1984. The accused, who appeared in person,
stated that he
145
did not want to engage any counsel "at least for
the present’. A He would not put down his
arguments in writing and when he argued the
gravemen of his attack was that this Court’s order
transferring the trial from the Special Judge to
the High Court was wrong on merits. Naturally, the
learned Judge found it difficult to accept the
contention that he should go behind the order of
the Supreme Court. He rightly pointed out that if
the accused had any grievance to make, his proper
remedy was to move the Supreme Court for review of
its judgment or for such further directions or
clarifications as may be expedient. Thus, as early
as 13th March, 1984, Khatri, J., had given a
specific opportunity to the accused to come to
this Court and seek a review of the direction. it
can perhaps be said that on 16.2.1984, when this
Court passed the impugned direction, the appellant
was not fully conscious of the impact of the said
direction and that, therefore, he did not object
to it immediately. But, by the 13th March, 1984,
he had ample time to think about the matter and to
consult his counsel. The appellant himself was a
barrister. He chose not to engage counsel but to
argue himself and, even after the trial court
specifically pointed out to him that it was bound
by the direction of this Court under Arts. 141 and
144 of the Constitution and that, if at all, his
remedy was to go to the Supreme Court by way of
review or by way of an application for
clarification, he chose to take no action thereon.
c) on 16th March, 1984, Khatri, J. disposed of the
preliminary objections raised by the accused
challenging the jurisdiction and competence of
this Court to try the accused. Counsel for the
respondent points out that, at the time of the
hearing, the appellant had urged before Khatri, J.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 107 of 125
all the objections to the trial, which he is now
putting forth. These objections have been
summarised in paragraph 3 of the order passed by
the learned Judge and each one of them has been
dealt with elaborately by the learned Judge. It
has been pointed out by him that the Supreme Court
was considering not only the appeals preferred by
the accused and the complainant, namely, Crl.
Appeal Nos. 246, 247 and 356 of 1983 but also two
revision petitions being C.R. Nos. 354 ’and 359 of
1983 which had been withdrawn by the Supreme Court
to itself for disposal along with Crl. Appeal No.
356 of 1983. A little later in the order the
learned Judge pointed out that, even
146
assuming that in the first instance the trial can
be conducted only by a Special Judge, the
proceedings could be withdrawn by the high Court
to itself under powers vested in it under Article
228(a) of the Constitution as well as section 407
of the Cr.P.C. When the criminal revisions stood
transferred to the Supreme Court (this was
obviously done under Article 139-A though that
article is not specifically mentioned in the
judgment of the Supreme Court), the Supreme Court
could pass the order under Article 139-A read with
Article 142. The learned Judge also disposed of
the objections based on Article 21. He pointed out
that as against an ordinary accused person tried
by a special judge, who gets a right of appeal to
the High Court, a court of superior jurisdiction,
with a further right of appeal to the Supreme
Court under s. 374 of the Cr.P.C. and that an
order of transfer passed in the interest of
expeditious disposal of a trial was primarily in
the interests of the accused and could hardly be
said to be pre judicial to the accused. Despite
the very careful and fully detailed reasons passed
by the High Court, the appellant did not choose to
seek a review of the earlier direction.
(d) Against the order of the learned Judge dated
16.3.1984 the complainant came to the Court
because he was dissatisfied with certain
observations made by the trial Judge in regard to
the procedure to be followed by the High Court in
proceeding with the trial. This matter was heard
in open court by same five learned Judges who had
disposed of the matter earlier on 16.2.1984. The
accused was represented by a senior counsel and
the Government of Maharashtra had also engaged a
senior counsel to represent its case. Even at this
hearing the counsel for the appellant did not
choose to raise any objection against the
direction given in the order dated 16.2.1984. The
appeal before the Supreme Court was for getting a
clarification of the very order dated 16.2.1984.
This was a golden opportunity for the appellant
also to seek a review or clarification of the
impugned direction, if really he had a grievance
that he had not been heard by the Court before it
issued the direction and that it was also contrary
to the provisions of the 1952 Act as well as
violative of the rights of the accused under Art.
21 of the Constitution.
(e) The petitioner instead filed two special leave
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 108 of 125
petitions and a writ petition against the orders
of Khatri. J. dated 13.3.1984
147
and 16.3.1984. In the writ petition, the
petitioner had mentioned that the impugned
direction had been issued without hearing him. In
these matters counsel for the accused made both
oral and written submissions and all contentions
and arguments, which have now been put forward,
had been raised in the written arguments. The
appeals and writ petition were disposed of by this
Court. This Court naturally dismissed the special
leave petitions pointing out that the High Court
was quite correct in considering itself bound by
the directions of the Court. The Court also
dismissed the writ petition as without merit. But
once again it observed that the proper remedy of
the petitioner was elsewhere and not by way of a
writ petition. These two orders, according to the
learned counsel for the respondent, conclude the
matter against the appellant. The dismissal of the
writ petition reminded the petitioner of his right
to move the Court by other means and, though this
advice was tendered as early as 17.4.1984, the
petitioner did nothing. So far as the special
leave petition was concerned, its dismissal meant
the affirmation in full of the decision given by
Justice Khatri dismissing and disposing of all the
objections raised by the petitioner before him.
Whatever may have been the position on 16.2.1984
or 16.3.1984, there was absolutely no explanation
or justification for the conduct of the petitioner
in failing to file an application for review
between 17.4.1984 and october, 1986.
34. Recounting the above history, which according to
him fully explained the attitude of the accused, learned
counsel for the respondent submitted that in his view the
appellant was obviously trying to avoid a review petition
perhaps because it was likely to go before the same learned
Judges and he did not think that he would get any relief and
perhaps also because he might have felt that a review was
not an adequate remedy for him as, under the rules, it would
be disposed of in chamber without hearing him once again.
But, whatever may be the reason, it is submitted, the delay
between April 1984 and october, 1986 stood totally
unexplained and even now there was no proper review petition
before this Court. In the circumstances, it is urged that
this present belated prayer for review.
35. There is substance in these contentions. The prayer
for review is being made very belatedly, and having regard
to the circumstances outlined above there is hardly any
reason to condone the
148
delay in the prayer for review. The appellant was alive to
all his present contentions as is seen from the papers in
the writ petition. At least when the writ petition was
dismissed as an inappropriate remedy, he should have at once
moved this Court for review. The delay from April 1984 to
october 1986 is totally inexplicable. That apart, there is
also validity in the respondent’s contention that. even if
we are inclined to condone the delay, the application will
have to be heard as far as possible by the same learned
Judges who disposed of the earlier matter. In other words,
that application will have to be heard by a Bench which
includes the two learned Judges who disposed of the appeal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 109 of 125
on 16.2.1984 and who are still available in this Court to
deal with any proper review application, that may be filed.
However, since in my view, the delay has not been
satisfactorily explained, I am of opinion that the prayer of
the appellant that the present pleas may be treated as one
in the nature of a review application and the appellant
given relief on that basis has to be rejected.
Is a writ maintainable?
36. This takes one to a consideration of the second
line of attack by the appellant’s counsel. His proposition
was that a judicial order of a court-even the High Court or
this Court may breach the principles of natural justice or
the fundamental rights and that, if it does so, it can be
quashed by this Court in the exercise of its jurisdiction
under Article 32. In other words, the plea would seem to be
that the present proceedings may be treated as in the nature
of a writ petition to quash the impugned order on the above
ground. The earliest of the cases relied upon to support
this contention is the decision in Prem Chand Garg v. Excise
Commissioner, [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 885, which may perhaps
be described as the sheet-anchor of the appellant’s
contentions on this point. The facts of that case have been
set out in the judgment of Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. and need
not be repeated. The case was heard by a Bench of five
judges. Four of them, speaking through Gajendragadkar, J.
held that Rule 12 of order XXXV of the Supreme Court Rules
violated Article 32 and declared it invalid. This also set
aside an earlier order dated 12.12.1961 passed by the Court
in pursuance of the rule calling upon the petitioner to
deposit cash security. Sri Rao contended that this case
involved two separate issues for consideration by the Court:
(a) the validity of the rule and (b) the validity of the
order dated 12.12.1961; and that the decision is authority
not only for the proposition that a writ petition under
Article 32 could be filed to Impugn the constitutional
validity of a rule but also for the proposition that the
Court could entertain a writ petition to set aside a
judicial
149
Order passed by the Court earlier on discovering that it is
inconsistent with the fundamental rights of the petitioner.
Counsel submitted that an impression in the minds of some
persons that the decision in Prem Chand Garg is not good law
after the decision of the nine-Judge Bench in Naresh Sridhar
Mirajkar v. State, [1966]3 S.C.R. 744 is incorrect. He
submitted that, far from Garg’s case being overruled, it has
been confirmed in the later case.
37. Mirajkar was a case in which the validity of an
interlocutory order passed by a judge of the Bombay High
Court pertaining to the publication of reports of the
proceedings in a suit pending before him was challenged by a
journalist as violating his fundamental rights under Article
19 of the Constitution. The matter came to the Supreme Court
by way of a writ petition under Article 32. The validity of
the order was upheld by the majority of the Judges while
Hidayatullah J. dissented. In this connection it is
necessary to refer to a passage at p. 767 in the judgment of
Gajendragadkar, C.J.
"Mr. Setalvad has conceded that if a court of
competent jurisdiction makes an order in a
proceeding before it, and the order is inter-
partes, its validity cannot be challenged by
invoking the jurisdiction of this Court under Art.
32, though the said order may affect the aggrieved
party’s fundamental rights. His whole argument
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 110 of 125
before us has been that the impugned order affects
the fundamental rights of a stranger to the
proceeding before the Court; and that, he
contends, justifies the petitioners in moving this
Court under Artc. 32. It is necessary to examine
the validity of this argument.
The question before the Supreme Court was thus as to
whether, even at the instance of a stranger to the earlier
proceedings, the earlier order could be challenged by means
of a writ petition under Article 32. One of the questions
that had to be considered by the Court was whether the
judicial order passed by the learned judge of the High Court
was amenable to be writ jurisdiction of the Court under
Article 32. On this question, the judges reacted
differently:
(i) Gajendragadkar, CJ and Wanchoo, Mudholkar, Sikri
and Ramaswamy, JJ. had this to say:
"The High Court is a superior Court of Record and
it is for it to consider whether any matter falls
within its jurisdiction
150
Or not. The order is a judicial order and if it is
erroneous, a person aggrieved by it, though a
stranger, could move this Court under Article 136
and the order can be corrected in appeal but the
question about the existence of the said
jurisdiction as well as the validity or the
propriety of the order cannot be raised in writ
proceedings under article 32.’,
(ii) Sarkar J. also concurred in the view that this
Court had no power to issue a certiorari to the High Court.
He observed:
"I confess the question is of some haziness. That
haziness arises because the courts in our country
which have been given the power to issue the writ
are not fully analogous to the English courts
having that power. We have to seek a way out for
ourselves. Having given the matter my best
consideration, I venture to think that it was not
contemplated that a High Court is an inferior
court even though it is a court of limited
jurisdiction. The Constitution gave power to the
High Court to issue the writ. In England, an
inferior court could never issue the writ. I think
it would be abhorrent to the principle of
certiorari if a Court which can itself issue the
writ is to be made subject to be corrected by a
writ issued by another court. When a court has the
power to issue the writ, it is not according to
the fundamental principles of certiorari, an
inferior court or a court of limited jurisdiction.
It does not cease to be so because another Court
to which appeals from it lie has also the power to
issue the writ. That should furnish strong
justification for saying that the Constitution did
not contemplate the High Courts to be inferior
courts so that their decisions would be liable to
be quashed by writs issued by the Supreme Court
which also had been given power to issue the
writs. Nor do I think that the cause of justice
will in any manner be affected if a High Court is
not made amenable to correct by this Court by the
issue of the writ. In my opinion, therefore, this
Court has not power to issue a certiorari to a
High Court."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 111 of 125
(iii) Bachawat J. held:
"The High Court has jurisdiction to decide if it
could restrain the publication of any document or
information relating to the trial of a pending
suit or concerning which the
151
suit is brought, if it erroneously assume a
jurisdiction not vested in it, its decision may be
set aside in appropriate proceedings but the
decision is not open to attack under Article 32 on
the ground that it infringes the fundamental right
under Article 19(1)(a). If a stranger is
prejudiced by an order forbidding the publication
of the report of any proceeding, his proper course
is only to apply to the Court tn lift the ban "
(iv) Justice Shah thought that, in principle, a writ
petition could perhaps be filed to challenge an order of a
High Court on the ground that it violated the fundamental
rights of the petitioner under Articles 20, 21 and 22 but he
left the question open. He, however, concluded that an order
of the nature in issue before the Court could not be said to
infringe Article 19.
38. Hidayatullah J., as His Lordship then was, however,
dissented. He observed:
"Even assuming the impugned order means a
temporary suppression of the evidence of the
witness, the trial Judge had no jurisdiction to
pass the order. As he passed no recorded order,
the appropriate remedy (in fact the only effective
remedy) is to seek to quash the order by a writ
under Article 32.
There may be action by a Judge which may offend
the fundamental rights under articles 14, 15, 19,
20, 21 and 22 and an appeal to this Court will not
only be practicable but will also be an
ineffective remedy and this Court can issue a writ
to the High Court to quash its order under Article
32 of the Constitution. Since there is no
exception in Article 32 in respect of the High
Courts there is a presumption that the High Courts
are not excluded. Even with the enactment of
Article 226, the power which is conferred on the
High Court is not in every sense a coordinate
power and the implication of reading articles 32,
136 and 226 together is that there is no sharing
of the powers to issue the prerogative writs
possessed by this Court. Under the total scheme of
the Constitution, the subordination of the High
Courts to the Supreme Court is not only evident
but is logical."
His Lordship proceeded to meet an objection that such a
course might
152
cast a slur on the High Courts or open the floodgates of
litigation. He observed:
"Article 32 is concerned with Fundamental Rights
and Fundamental Rights only. It is not concerned
with breaches of law which do not involve
fundamental rights directly. The ordinary writs of
certiorari, mandamus and prohibition can only
issue by enforcement of Fundamental Rights. A
clear cut case of breach of Fundamental Right
alone can be the basis for the exercise of this
power. I have already given examples of actions of
courts and judges which are not instances of wrong
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 112 of 125
judicial orders capable of being brought before
this court only by appeal but breaches of
Fundamental Rights clear and simple. Denial of
equality as for example by excluding members of a
particular party or of a particular community from
the public court room in a public hearing without
any fault, when others are allowed to stay on
would be a case of breach of fundamental right of
equal protection given by this Constitution. Must
an affected person in such a case ask the Judge to
write down his order, so that he may appeal
against it? or is he expected to ask for special
leave from this Court? If a High Court judge in
England acted improperly, there may be no remedy
because of the limitations on the rights of the
subject against the Crown. But in such
circumstances in England the hearing is considered
vitiated and the decision voidable. This need not
arise here. The High Court in our country in
similar circumstances is not immune because there
is a remedy to move this court for a writ against
discriminatory treatment and this Court should not
in a suitable case shirk to issue a writ to a High
Court Judge, who ignores the fundamental rights
and his obligations under the Constitution. Other
cases can easily be imagined under Article 14, 15,
19, 20, 21 and 22 of the Constitution, in which
there may be action by a Judge which may offend
the fundamental rights and in which an appeal to
this Court will not only be not practicable but
also quite an ineffective remedy.
We need not be dismayed that the view I take means
a slur on the High Courts or that this Court will
be flooded with petitions under Article 32 of the
Constitution. Although the High Courts possess a
power to interfere by way of high
153
prerogative writs of certiorari, mandamus and
prohibition, such powers have not been invoked
against the normal and routine work of subordinate
courts and tribunals. The reason is that people
understand the difference between an approach to
the High Court by way of appeals etc. and approach
for the purpose of asking for writs under Article
226. Nor have the High Courts spread a Procrustean
bed for high prerogative writs for all actions to
lie. Decisions of the courts have been subjected
to statutory appeals and revisions but the losing
side has not charged the Judge with a breach of
fundamental rights because he ordered attachment
of property belonging to a stranger to the
litigation or by his order affected rights of the
parties or even strangers. This is because the
people understand the difference between normal
proceedings of a civil nature and proceedings in
which there is a breach of fundamental rights. The
courts acts, between parties and even between
parties and strangers, done impersonally and
objectively are challengeable under the ordinary
law only. But acts which involve the court with a
fundamental right are quite different."
One more passage from the judgment needs to be quoted.
Observed the learned Judge:
"I may dispose of a few results which it was
suggested, might flow from my view that this Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 113 of 125
can issue a high prerogative writ to the High
Court for enforcement of fundamental rights. It
was suggested that the High Courts might issue
writs to this Court and to other High Courts and
one Judge or Bench in the High Court and the
Supreme Court might issue a writ to another judge
or Bench in the same Court. This is an erroneous
assumption. To begin with High Courts cannot issue
a writ to the Supreme Court because the writ goes
down and not up. Similarly, a High Court cannot
issue a writ to another High Court. The writ does
not go to a court placed on an equal footing in
the matter of jurisdiction
XX XX XX
I must hold that this English practice of not
issuing writs in the same court is in the very
nature of things. One High Court will thus not be
able to issue a writ to another High
154
Court nor even to a court exercising the powers of
the High Court. In so far as this Court is
concerned, the argument that one Bench or one
Judge might issue a writ to another Bench or
Judge, need hardly be considered. My opinion gives
no support to such a view and I hope I have said
nothing to give countenance to it. These are
imaginary fears which have no reality either in
law or in fact."
39. I have set out at length portions from the judgment
of Hidayatullah, J. as Shri Rao placed considerable reliance
on it. From the above extracts, it will be seen that the
majority of the Court was clearly of opinion that an order
of a High Court cannot be challenged by way of a writ
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution on the ground
that it violates the fundamental rights, not even at the
instance of a person who was not at all a party to the
proceedings in which the earlier order was passed. Even
Hidayatullah, J. has clearly expressed the view that, though
a writ of certiorari might issue to quash the order of a
High Court in appropriate case, it cannot lie from a Bench
of one court to another Bench of the same High Court. Subba
Rao, C.J. has also made an observation to like effect in
regard to High Court Benches inter se in Ghulam Sarwar v.
Union, [1967] 2 S.C.R. 271. The decision in Prem Chand Garg,
seems to indicate to the contrary. But it is clearly
distinguishable and has been distinguished by the nine judge
Bench in Mirajkar. The observations of Gujendragadkar, C.J.
(at p. 766), and Sarkar, J. (at p. 780), be seen in this
context. In that case, it is true that the order passed by
the Court directing the appellant to deposit security was
also quashed but that was a purely consequential order which
followed on the well-founded challenge to the validity of
the rule. Hidayatullah, J. also agreed that this was so and
explained that the judicial decision which was based on the
rule was only revised. (p.790).
40. Sri Rao also referred to Sadhanatham v.
Arunachalam, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 873. In that case, the
petitioner was acquitted by the High Court, in appeal, of
charges under section 302 and 148 of the Indian Penal Code.
The brother of the deceased, not the State or the informant,
petitioned this court under Article 136 of the Constitution
for special leave to appeal against the acquittal. Leave was
granted and his appeal was eventually allowed by the High
Court. The judgment of the High Court was set aside and the
conviction and sentence imposed by the trial court under
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 114 of 125
section 302 was upheld by the Supreme Court in his earlier
decision reported in [1979] 3 S.C.R. 482. Thereupon, the
petitioner filed a writ petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution,
155
challenging the validity of the earlier order of this Court.
Eventually, the petition was dismissed on the merits of the
case. However, learned counsel for the appellant strongly
relied on the fact that in this case a Bench of five judges
of this Court entertained a petition under Article 32 to
reconsider a decision passed by it in an appeal before the
Court. He submitted that it was inconceivable that it did
not occur to the learned judges who decided the case that,
after Mirajkar, a writ petition under Article 32 was not at
all entertainable. He, therefore, relied upon this judgment
as supporting his proposition that in an appropriate case
this court can entertain a petition under Article 32 and
review an earlier decision of this court passed on an appeal
or on a writ petition or otherwise. This decision, one is
constrained to remark, is of no direct assistance to the
appellant. It is no authority for the proposition that an
earlier order of the court could be quashed on the ground
that it offends the Fundamental Right. As the petition was
eventually dismissed on the merits, it was not necessary for
the court to consider whether, if they had come to the
conclusion that the earlier order was incorrect or invalid,
they would have interfered therewith on the writ petition
filed by the petitioner.
41. Two more decisions referred to on behalf of the
appellant may be touched upon here. The first was the
decision of this Court in Attorney-General v. Lachma Devi,
AIR 1986 S.C. 467. In that case the High Court had passed an
order that certain persons found guilty of murder should be
hanged in public. This order was challenged by a writ
petition filed under article 32 by the Attorney-General of
India, on the ground that it violated Article 21 of the
Constitution. This petition was allowed by this Court. The
second decision on which reliance was placed is that in
Sukhdas v. Union Territory, [1986] 2 S.C.C. 401. In that
case the petitioner, accused of a criminal offence had not
been provided with legal assistance by the court. The
Supreme Court pointed out that this was a constitutional
lapse on the part of the court and that the conviction on
the face of the record suffered from a fatal infirmity.
These decisions do not carry the petitioner any further.
Sukhdas was a decision on an appeal and Lachma Devi does not
go beyond the views expressed by Hidayatullah, J. and Shah,
J. in Mirajkar.
42. On a survey of these decisions, it appears to me
that Prem Chand Garg cannot be treated as an authority for
the proposition that an earlier order of this Court could be
quashed by the issue of a writ on the ground that it
violated the fundamental rights. Mirajkar clearly precludes
such a course. It is, therefore, not possible to accept the
156
appellant’s plea that the direction dated 16.2.1984 should
be quashed on the grounds put forward by the petitioner.
Inherent power to declare orders to be null and void
43. The next line of argument of learned counsel for
the appellant is that the order dated 16.2.1984, in so far
as it contained the impugned direction, was a complete
nullity. Being an order without jurisdiction, it could be
ignored by the person affected or challenged by him at any
stage of the proceedings before any Court, particularly in a
criminal case, vide Dhirendra Kumar v. Superintendent,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 115 of 125
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 224. Counsel also relied on the following
observations made in Kiran Singh v . Chaman Paswan,
[AIR 1955 S.C.R. 117.]
"The answer to these contentions must depend on
what the position in law is when a Court
entertains a suit or an appeal over which it has
no jurisdiction, and what the effect of Section 11
of the Suits Valuation Act is on that position. It
is a fundamental princple well established that a
decree passed by a Court without jurisdiction is a
nullity, and that its invalidity could be set up
whenever and wherever it is sought to be enforced
or relied upon, even at the stage of execution and
even in collateral proceedings. A defect of
jurisdiction, whether it is pecuniary or
territorial, or whether it is in respect of the
subject matter of the action, strikes at the very
authority of the Court to pass any decree, and
such a defect cannot be cured even by consent of
parties. If the question now under consideration
fell to be determined only on the application of
general principles governing the matter, there can
be no doubt that the District Court of Monghyr was
coram non judice, and that its judgments and
decree would be nullities.
(emphasis added)
He also extensively quoted from the dicta of this Court in
M. L. Sethi v. R.P. Kapur, [1973] 1 S.C.R. 697, where after
setting out the speeches of Lord Reid and Lord Pearce in
Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation Commissioner, [1969]
2 A.C. 147 this Court observed:
"The dicta of the majority of the House of Lords
in the above case would show the extent to which
’lack’ and ’excess’ of jurisdiction have been
assimilated or, in other words, the extent to
which we have moved away from the
157
traditional concept of "jurisdiction". The effect
of the dicta in that case is to reduce the
difference between jurisdictional error and error
of law within jurisdiction almost to vanishing
point. The practical effect of the decision is
that any error of law can be reckoned as
jurisdictional. This comes perilously close to
saying that there is jurisdiction if the decision
is right in law but none if it is wrong. Almost
any misconstruction of a statute can be
represented as "basing their decision on a matter
with which they have no right to deal", "impose an
unwarranted condition" or "addressing themselves
to a wrong question." The majority opinion in the
case leaves a Court or Tribunal with virtually no
margin of legal error. Whether there is excess or
jurisdiction or merely error within jurisdiction
can be determined only by construing the
empowering statute, which will give little
guidance. It is really a question of how much
latitude the Court is prepared to allow. In the
end it can only be a value judgment (see R.W.R.
Wade, "Constitutional and Administrative Aspects
of the Anisintic case", Law Quarterly Review, Vo.
85, 1969 p. 198). Why is it that a wrong decision
on a question of limitation or res judicata was
treated as a jurisdictional error and liable to be
interfered with in revision? It is a bit difficult
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 116 of 125
to understand how an erroneous decision on a
question of limitation or res judicata could oust
the jurisdiction of the Court in the primitive
sense of the term and render the decision or a
decree embodying the decision a nullity liable to
collateral attack. The reason can only be that the
error of law was considered as vital by the Court.
And there is no yardstick to determine the
magnitude of the error other than the opinion of
this Court."
He also referred to Badri Prasad v. Nagarmal, [1959] 1 Supp.
S.C.R. 769 which followed the clear law laid down in
Surajmul Nagarmul v. Trilon Insurance Co. Ltd., [1924] L.R.
52 I.A. 126, Balai Chandra Hazra v. Shewdhari Jadav, [1978]
3 S.C.R. 147 which followed Ledgard v. Bull, (L.R. 13 I.A.
134; Meenakshi Naidu v. Subramaniya Sastri, L.R. 14 I.A. 140
and Sukhrani v. Hari Shankar, [1979] 3 S.C.R 671. Sri Rao,
citing a reference from Halsbury’s Laws of England (4th
Edition) Vol. X, para 713, pages 321-2, contended that the
High Court’s jurisdiction clearly stood excluded by s. 7(1)
of the 1952 Act and, hence, the direction of the Supreme
Court was also one without jurisdiction.
158
44. In dealing with this contention, one important
aspect of the concept of jurisdiction has to be borne in
mind. As pointed out by Mathew J. in Kapur v. Sethi,
(supra), the word "jurisdiction is a verbal coat of many
colours.". It is used in a wide and broad sense while
dealing with administrative or quasi-judicial tribunals and
subordinate courts over which the superior courts exercise a
power of judicial review and superintendence. Then it is
only a question of "how much latitude the court is prepared
to allow" and "there is no yardstick to determine the
magnitude of the error other than the opinion of the court."
But the position is different with superior courts with
unlimited jurisdiction. These are always presumed to act
with jurisdiction and unless it is clearly shown that any
particular order is patently one which could not, on any
conceivable view of its jurisdiction, have been passed by
such court, such an order can neither be ignored nor even
recalled, annulled, revoked or set aside in subsequent
proceedings by the same court. This distinction is well
brought out in the speeches of Lord Diplock, Lord Edmund-
Devier and Lord Scarman in Re. Racal Communications Ltd.,
[1980] 2 A.E.R. 634. In the interests of brevity, I resist
the temptation to quote extracts from the speeches here.
45. In the present case, the order passed is not one of
patent lack of jurisdiction, as I shall explain later.
Though I have come to the conclusion, on considering the
arguments addressed now before us, that the direction in the
order dated 16.2.1984 cannot be justified by reference to
Article 142 of the Constitution or S. 407 of the 1973 Cr.
P.C., that is not an incontrovertible position. It was
possible for another court to give a wider interpretation to
these provisions and come to the conclusion that such an
order could be made under those provisions. If this Court
had discussed the relevant provisions and specifically
expressed such a conclusion, it could not have been modified
in subsequent proceedings by this Bench merely because we
are inclined to hold differently. The mere fact that the
direction was given, without an elaborate discussion, cannot
render it vulnerable to such review.
46. Shri P.P. Rao then placed considerable reliance on
the observations of the Privy Council in Isaacs v.
Robertson, [1984] 3 A.E.R.140 an appeal from a decision of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 117 of 125
the Court of Appeal of St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
Briefly the facts were that Robertson had obtained an
interim injunction against Isaacs and two others on
31.5.1979 which the latter refused to obey. The respondents
motion for committal of the appellant for contempt was
dismissed by the High Court of Saint Vincent. The Court of
Appeal allowed the respondents
159
application; the appellants were found to be in contempt and
also asked to pay respondents costs. However, no penalty was
inflicted because the appellant would have been entitled to
succeed on an application for setting aside the injunction,
has he filed one. The main attack by the appellant on the
Court of Appeal’s judgment was based on the contention that,
as a consequence of the operation of certain rules of the
Supreme Court of St. Vincent, the interlocutory injunction
granted by the High Court was a nullity: so disobedience to
it could not constitute a contempt of court. Lord Diplock
observed:
Glosgow J. accepted this contention, the Court of
Appeal rejected it, in their Lordships’ view
correctly, on the short and well established
ground that an order made by a court of unlimited
jurisdiction, such as the High Court of Saint
Vincent must be obeyed unless and until it has
been set aside by the court. For this proposition
Robotham AJA cited the passage in the judgment of
Romer L.J. in Hadkinson v. Hadkinson, [1952] 2
All. E.R. 567 at 569, (1952) P. 285 at 288.
It is the plain and unqualified obligation of
every person against, or in respect of whom an
order is made by a Court of competent jurisdiction
to obey it unless and until that order is
discharged. The uncompromising nature of this
obligation is shown by the fact that it extends
even to cases where the person affected by an
order believes it to be irregular or even void.
Lord Cotteniiam, Leven to cases where the person
affected by an order believes it to be irregular
or even void. Lord Cotteniiam, L.C. said in Chuck
v. Cremer, [1946] 1 Coop Temp Cott 338 at 342, 47
E.R.884 at 855: "A party, who knows of an order,
whether null or valid, regular or irregular,
cannot be permitted to disobey it .. It would be
most dangerous to hold that the suitors, or their
solicitors, could themselves judge whether an
order was null or valid-whether it was regular or
irregular. That they should come to the court and
not take upon themselves to determine such a
question. That the course of a party knowing of an
order, which was null or irregular, and who might
be affected by it, was plain. He should apply to
the Court that it might be discharged. As long as
it existed it must not be obeyed." Such being the
nature of this obligation, two consequences will,
in general, follow from its breach. The first is
that anyone who dis-
160
obeys an order of the court.....is in contempt and
may be published by committal or attachment or
otherwise.
It is in their Lordships view, says all that needs
to be said on this topic. It is not itself
sufficient reason for dismissing this appeal.
Having said this, the learned Law Lord proceeded to say:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 118 of 125
"The cases that are referred to in these dicta do
not support the proposition that there is any
category of orders of a court of unlimited
jurisdiction of this kind, what they do support is
the quite different proposition that there is a
category of orders of such a court which a person
affected by the order is entitled to apply to have
set aside ex debito justitiae in the exercise of
the inherent jurisdiction of the court without his
needing to have recourse to the rules that deals
expressly with proceedings to set aside orders for
irregularity and give to the Judge a discretion as
to the order he will make. The judges in the case
that have drawn the distinction between the two
types of orders have cautiously refrained from
seeking to lay down a comprehensive definition of
defects that bring an order in the category that
attracts ex debito justitiae the right to have it
set aside save that specifically it includes
orders that have been obtained in breach of rules
of natural justice. The contrasting legal concepts
of voidness and voidability form part of the
English law of contract. They are inapplicable to
orders made by a court of unlimited jurisdiction
in the course of contentions litigation. Such an
order is either irregular or regular. If it is
irregular it can be set aside by the court that
made it on application to that court, if it is
regular it can only be set aside by an appellate
court on appeal if there is one to which an appeal
lies."
Sri Rao strongly relied on this passage and, modifying his
earlier, somewhat extreme, contention that the direction
given on 16.2.1984 being a nullity and without jurisdiction
could be ignored by all concerned-even by the trial judge-he
contended, on the strength of these observations, that he
was at least entitled ex debito justitiae to come to this
Court and request the court, in the interests of justice, to
set aside the earlier order "without his needing to have
recourse to the rules that deal expressly with proceedings
to set aside orders for irre
161
gularity", if only on the ground that the order had been
made in breach of the principles of natural justice.
Violation of the principles of natural justice, he
contended, renders the direction a nullity without any
further proof of prejudice (see Kapur v. Jagmohan, [1981] 1
S.C.R. 746 at 766) .
47. Learned counsel contended, in this context, that
the fact the direction had been given in the earlier
proceedings in this very case need not stand in the way of
our giving relief, if we are really satisfied that the
direction had been issued per incuriam, without complying
with the principles of natural justice and purported to
confer a jurisdiction on the High Court which it did not
possess. In this context he relied on certain decisions
holding that an erroneous decision on a point of
jurisdiction will not constitute res judicata. In Mathura
Prasad v. Dossibai, [1970] 3 S.C.R. 830, this Court
observed:
"A question relating to the jurisdiction of a
Court cannot be deemed to have been finally
determined by an erroneous decision of the Court.
If by an erroneous interpretation of the statute,
the Court holds that it has no jurisdiction, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 119 of 125
question would not, in our judgment, operate as
res judicata. Similarly, by an erroneous decision,
if the Court assumes jurisdiction which it does
not possess under the statute, the question cannot
operate as res judicata between the same parties,
whether the cause of action in the subsequent
litigation is the same or otherwise. It is true
that in determining the application of the rule of
res judicata the Court is not concerned with the
correctness or otherwise of the earlier judgment.
The matter in issue, if it is one purely of fact,
decided in the earlier proceeding by a competent
court must in a subsequent litigation between the
same parties be regarded as finally decided and
cannot be re-opened. A mixed question of law and
fact determined in the earlier proceeding between
the same parties may not, for the same reason, be
questioned in a subsequent proceeding between the
same parties.
0 xxxxx xxxxx
Where, however the question is one purely of law
and it relates to the jurisdiction of the Court or
a decision of the court sanctioning something
which is illegal, by resor to the rule of res
judicata a party affected by the decision will not
162
be precluded from challenging the validity of that
order under the rule of res judicata, for a rule
of procedure cannot supersede the law of the land.
"
Counsel also relied on the decision of this Court in Ghulam
Sarwar v. Union of India, [1956] 2 S.C.C.271, where it was
held that the principle of constructive res judicata was not
applicable to habeas corpus proceedings. He also referred to
the observations of D.A. Desai J. in Soni Vrijlal Jethalal
v. Soni Jadavji Govindji, AIR 1972 Guj. 148 that no act of
the court or irregularity can come in the way of justice
being done and one of the highest and the first duty of all
courts is to take care that the act of the court does no
injury to the suitors. He also made reference to the maxim
that an act of, or mistake on the part, of a court shall
cause prejudice to no one, vide: Jang Singh v. Brij Lal,
[1964] 2 S.C.R. 145 at p. 159. Relying on these decisions
and passages from various treatises which I do not consider
it necessary to set out in in extenso here, Sri Rao
contended that this court should not consider itself bound
by the earlier order of the Bench or any kind of
technicality where the liberty of an individual and the
rights guaranteed to him under Articles 14 and 21 of the
Constitution are in issue. It is urged that, if this Court
agrees with him that the direction dated 16.2.1984 was an
illegal one, this Court should not hesitate nay, it should
hasten-to set aside the said order and repair the injustice
done to the appellant without further delay. On the other
hand, Sri Jethmalani vehemently urged that the present
attempt to have the entire matter reopened constitutes a
gross abuse of the process of court, that it is well settled
that the principle of res judicata is also available in
criminal matters (vide Bhagat Ram v. State, [1972] 2 S.C.C.
466 and State v. Tara Chand, [1973] S.C.c. Crl. 774) that in
the United States the principle of res judicata governs even
jurisdictional issues and that "the slightest hospitality to
the accused’s pleas will lead to a grave miscarriage of
justice and set up a precedent perilous to public interest.
48. I have given careful thought to these contentions.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 120 of 125
The appellant’s counsel has relied to a considerable extent
on the maxim "actus curiae neminem gravabit" for contending
that it is not only within the power, but a duty as well, of
this Court to correct its own mistakes in order to see that
no party is prejudiced by a mistake of the Court. I am not
persuaded that the earlier decision could be reviewed on the
application of the said maxim. I share the view of my
learned brother Venkatachaliah, J. that this maxim has very
limited application and that it cannot be availed of to
correct or review specific conclusions
163
arrived at in a judicial decision. My. brother
Venkatachaliah, J. has further taken the view that this
Court cannot exercise any inherent powers for setting right
any injustice that may have been caused as a result of an
earlier order of the Court. While alive to the consideration
that "the highest court in the land should not, by
technicalities of procedure, forge fetters on its own feet
and disable itself in cases of serious miscarriages of
justice", he has, nevertheless, come to the conclusion that
"the remedy of the appellant, if any, is by recourse to
article 137 and nowhere else." It is at this point that I
would record a dissent from his opinion. In my view, the
decisions cited do indicate that situations can and do arise
where this Court may be constrained to recall or modify an
order which has been passed by it earlier and that when ex
facie there is something radically wrong with the earlier
order, this Court may have to exercise its plenary and
inherent powers to recall the earlier order without
considering itself bound by the nice technicalities of the
procedure for getting this done. Where a mistake is
committed by a subordinate court or a High Court, there are
ample powers in this Court to remedy the situation. But
where the mistake is in an earlier order of this Court,
there is no way of having it corrected except by approaching
this Court. Sometimes, the remedy sought can be brought
within the four comers of the procedural law in which event
there can be no hurdle in the way of achieving the desired
result. But the mere fact that, for some reason, the
conventional remedies are not available should not, in my
view, render this Court powerless to give relief. As pointed
out by Lord Diplock in Isaac v. Robertson, [ 19841 3 A.E.R.
140, it may not be possible or prudent to lay down a
comprehensive list of defects that will attract the ex
debito justitiae relief. Suffice it to say that the court
can grant relief where there is some manifest illegality or
want of jurisdiction in the earlier order or some palpable
injustice is shown to have resulted. Such a power can be
traced either to article 142 of the Constitution or to the
powers inherent in this Court as the apex court and the
guardian of the Constitution.
49. It is, however, indisputable that such power has to
be exercised in the "rarest of rare" cases. As rightly
pointed out by Sri Jethmalani, there is great need for
judicial discipline of the highest order in exercising such
a power, as any laxity in this regard may not only impair
the eminence, dignity and integrity of this Court but may
also lead to chaotic consequences. Nothing should be done to
create an impression that this Court can be easily persuaded
to alter its views on any matter and that a larger Bench of
the Court will not only be able to reverse the precedential
effect of an earlier ruling but may also be
164
inclined to go back on it and render it ineffective in its
application and binding nature even in regard to subsequent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 121 of 125
proceedings in the same case. In Bengal Immunity Company
Limited v. The State of Bihar and Ors., [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603,
this Court held that it had the power, in appropriate cases,
to reconsider a previous decision given by it. While
concurring in this conclusion, Venkatarama Ayyar, J. sounded
a note of warning of consequences which is more germane in
the present context:
"The question then arises as to the principles on
which and the limits within which this power
should be exercised. It is of course not possible
to enumerate them exhaustively, nor is it even
desirable that they should not crystallised into
rigid and inflexible rules. But one principle
stands out prominently above the rest, and that is
that in general, there should be finality in the
decisions of the highest courts in the land, and
that is for the benefit and protection of the
public. In this connection, it is necessary to
bear in mind that next to legislative enactments,
it is decisions of Courts that form the most
important source of law. It is on the faith of
decisions that rights are acquired and obligations
incurred, and States and subjects alike shape
their course of action. It must greatly impair the
value of the decisions of this Court, if the
notion came to be entertained that there was
nothing certain or final about them, which must be
the consequence if the points decided therein came
to be re-considered on the merits every time they
were raised. It should be noted that though the
Privy Council has repeatedly declared that it has
the power to reconsider its decisions, in fact, no
instance has been quoted in which it did actually
reverse its previous decision except in
ecclesiastical cases. If that is the correct
position, then the power to reconsider is one
which should be exercised very sparingly and only
in exceptiona1 circumstances, such as when a
material provision of law had been overlooked, or
where a fundamental assumption on which the
decision is base(1 turns out to be mistaken. In
the present case, it is not suggested that in
deciding the question of law as they did in The
State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.,
[1953] S.C.R. l069 the learned Judges ignored any
material provisions of law, or were under any
misapprehension as to a matter fundamental to the
decision. The arguments for the appellant before
us were in fact only a repetition of the
165
very contentions which were urged before the
learned Judges and negatived by them. The question
then resolves itself to this. Can we differ from a
previous decision of this Court, because a view
contrary to the one taken therein appears to be
preferable? I would unhesitatingly answer it in
the negative, not because the view previously
taken must necessarily be infallible but because
it is important in public interest that the law
declared should be certain and final rather than
that it should be declared in one sense. Or the
other. That, I conceive, in the reason behind
article 141. There are questions of law on which
it is not possible to avoid difference of opinion,
and the present case is itself a signal example of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 122 of 125
it. The object of article 141 is that the
decisions of this Court on these questions should
settle the controversy, and that they should be
followed as law by all the Courts, and if they are
allowed to be reopened because a different view
appears to be the better one, then the very
purpose with which article 141 has been enacted
will be defeated, and the prospect will have been
opened of litigants subjecting our decisions to a
continuous process of attack before successive
Benches in the hope that with changes in the
personnel of the Court which time must inevitably
bring, a different view might find acceptance. I
can imagine nothing more damaging to the prestige
of this Court or to the value of its
pronouncements. In James v. Commonwealth, 18
C.L.R.54, it was observed that a question settled
by a previous decision should not be allowed to be
reopened "upon a mere suggestion that some or all
of the Members of the later Court might arrive at
a different conclusion if the matter was res
integra. Otherwise, there would be grave danger of
want of continuity in the interpretation of the
law" (per Griffiths, C.J. at p. 58). It is for
this reason that article 141 invests decisions of
this Court with special authority, but the weight
of that authority can only be what we ourselves
give to it."
Even in the context of a power of review, properly so
called, Ven- kataramiah, J. had this to say in Sheonandan
Paswan v. State of Bihar & Ors., [1987] 1 S.C.C. 288:
"The review petition was admitted after the appeal
had been dismissed only because Nandini Satpathy
cases, (1987 1 S.C.C.269 and 1987 lS.C.C.279) had
been subsequently
166
referred to a larger bench to review the earlier
decisions. When the earlier decisions are allowed
to remain intact, there is no justification to
reverse the decision of this Court by which the
appeal had already been dismissed. There is no
warrant for this extraordinary procedure to be
adopted in this case. The reversal of the earlier
judgment of this Court by this process strikes at
the finally of judgments of this Court and would
amount to the abuse of the power of review vested
in this Court, particularly in a criminal case. It
may be noted that no other court in the country
has been given the power of review in criminal
cases. I am of the view that the majority judgment
of Baharul Islam and R.B. Misra, JJ. should remain
undisturbed. This case cannot be converted into an
apeal against the earlier decision of this Court "
The attempt of the appellant here is more far-reaching. He
seeks not the mere upsetting of a precedent of this Court
nor the upsetting of a decision of a High Court or this
Court in accordance with the normal procedure. What he wants
from us is a declaration that an order passed by a five
judge Bench is wrong and that it should, in effect, be
annulled by us. This should not be done, in my view, unless
the earlier order is vitiated by a patent lack of
jurisdiction or has resulted in grave injustice or has
clearly abridged the fundamental rights of the appellant.
The question that arises is whether the present case can be
brought within the narrow range of exceptions which calls
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 123 of 125
for such interference. I am inclined to think that it does
not.
50. I have indicated earlier, while discussing the
contentions urged by Shri P.P. Rao that some of them were
plausible and, that, if I were asked to answer these
questions posed by counsel for the first time, I might agree
with his answers. But I have also indicated that, in my
view, they do not constitute the only way of answering the
questions posed by the learned counsel. Thus, to the
question: did this Court have the jurisdiction to issue the
impugned direction, a plausible answer could well be that it
did, if one remembers that one of the transferred cases
before this Court was the revision petition before the
Bombay High Court in which a transfer of the case to the
High Court has been asked for and if one gives a wide
interpretation to the provisions of Article 142 of the
Constitution. On the question whether this Court could
transfer the case to a High Court Judge, who was not a
Special Judge, a court could certainly accept the view urged
by Sri Ram Jethmalani that s. 7(1) of the 1952 Act should
not be so construed
167
as to exclude the application of the procedural provisions
of the Cr.P.C. in preference to the view that has found
favour with me. Though the order dated 16.2.1984 contains no
reference to, or discussion of, S. 407 Cr.P.C., this line of
thinking of the judges who issued the direction does surface
in their observations in their decision of even date
rendered on the complainant’s special leave petition,
[1984] 2 S.C.R. 914 at page 943-4.I have already pointed out
that, if the transfer is referable to s. 407 of the 1973
Cr.P.C., it cannot be impugned as offending Article 14 and
21 of the Constitution. The mere fact that the judges did
not discuss at length the facts or the provisions of s. 407
Cr.P.C. vis-a-vis the 1952 Act or give a reasoned order as
to why they thought that the trial should be in the High
Court itself cannot render their direction susceptible to a
charge of discrimination. A view can certainly be taken that
the mere entrustment of this case to the High Court for
trial does not perpetrate manifest or grave injustice. On
the other hand, prima facie, it is something beneficial to
the accused and equitable in the interest of justice. Such
trial by the High Court, in the first instance, will be the
rule in cases where a criminal trial is withdrawn to the
High Court under s. 407 of the Cr.P.C. Or where a High Court
judge has been constituted as a Special Judge either under
the 1952 Act or some other statute. The absence of an appeal
to the High Court with a right of seeking for further leave
to appeal to the Supreme Court may be considered outweighed
by the consideration that the original trial will be in the
High Court (as in Sessions cases of old, in the Presidency
Towns) with a statutory right of appeal to the Supreme Court
under s. 374 of the Cr.P.C. In this situation, it is
difficult to say that the direction issued by this Court in
the impugned order is based on a view which is manifestly
incorrect, palpably absurd or patently without jurisdiction.
Whether it will be considered right or wrong by a different
Bench having a second-look at the issues is a totally
different thing. It will be agreed on all hands that it will
not behove the prestige and glory of this Court as envisaged
under the Constitution if earlier decisions are revised or
recalled solely because a later Bench takes a different view
of the issues involved. Granting that the power of review is
available, it is one to be sparingly exercised only in
extraordinary or emergent situations when there can be no
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 124 of 125
two opinion about the error or lack of jurisdiction in the
earlier order and there are adequate reasons to invoke a
resort to an unconventional method of recalling or revoking
the same. In my opinion, such a situation is not present
here.
51. The only question that has been bothering me is
that the appellant had been given no chance of being heard
before the
168
impugned direction was given and one cannot say whether the
Bench A would have acted in the same way even if he had been
given such opportunity. However, in the circumstances of the
case, I have come to the conclusion that this is not a fit
case to interfere with the earlier order on that ground. It
is true that the audi altarem partem rule is a basic
requirement of the rule of law. But judicial decisions also
show that the degree of compliance with this rule and the
extent of consequences flowing from failure to do so will
vary from case to case. Krishna Iyer, J. Observed thus in
Nawabkhan Abbaskhan v. State, [1974]3 S.C.R. 4/7 thus:
"an order which infringed a fundamental freedom
passed in violation of the audi alteram partem
rule was a nullity. A determination is no
determination if it is contrary to the
constitutional mandate of Art. 19. On this footing
the externment order was of no effect and its
violation was not offence. Any order made without
hearing the party affected is void and ineffectual
to bind parties from the beginng if the injury is
to a constitutionally guaranteed right. May be
that in ordinary legislation or at common law a
Tribunal having jurisdiction and failing to-hear
the parties may commit an illegality which may
render the proceedings voidable when a direct
attack was made thereon by way of appeal, revision
or review but nullity is the consequence of
unconstitutionality and so the order of an
administrative authority charged with the duty of
complying with natural justice in the exercise of
power before restricting the fundamental right of
a citizen is void ab initio and of no legal
efficacy. The duty to hear menacles his
jurisdictional exercise and any act is, in its
inception, void except when performed in
accordance with the conditions laid down in regard
to hearing. " (emphasis added)
So far as this case is concerned, I have indicated earlier
that the direction Of 16.2.1984 cannot be said to have
infringed the fundamental rights of the appellant or caused
any miscarriage of justice. As pointed out by Sri
Jethmalani, the appellant did know, on 16.2.84, that the
judges were giving such a direction and yet he did not
protest. Perhaps he did think that being tried by a High
Court Judge would be more beneficial to him, as indeed was
likely to be. That apart, as discussed earlier, several
opportunities were available for the appellant to set this
right. He did not move his little finger to obtain a
variation of this
169
direction from this Court. He is approaching the Court
nearly after two years of his trial by the learned judge in
the High Court. Volumes of testimony, we are told, have been
recorded and numerous exhibits have been admitted as
evidence. Though the trial is only at the stage of the
framing charges, the trial being according to the warrant
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 125 of 125
procedure, a lot of evidence has already gone in and the
result of the conclusions of Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. would
be to wipe the slate clean. To take the entire matter back
at this stage to square no. 1 would be the very negation of
the purpose of the 1952 Act to speed up all such trials and
would result in more injustice than justice from an
objective point of view. As pointed out by Lord Denning in
R. v. Secretary of State for the Home Departrnent ex parte
Mughal, l 19731 3 All E.R. 796, the rules of natural justice
must not be stretched too far. They should not be allowed to
be exploited as a purely technical weapon to undo a decision
which does not in reality cause substantial injustice and
which, had the party been really aggrieved thereby, could
have been set right by immediate action. After giving my
best anxious and deep thought to the pros and cons of the
situation I have come to the conclusion that this is not one
of those cases in which I would consider it appropriate to
recall the earlier direction and order a retrial of the
appellant de novo before a Special Judge. I would,
therefore, dismiss the appeal.
O R D E R
In view of the majority judgments the appeal is
allowed; all proceedings in this matter subsequent to the
directions of this Court on 16th February, 1984 as indicated
in the judgment are set aside and quashed. The trial shall
proceed in accordance with law, that is to say, under the
Act of 1952.
N.P.V.
170