Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. K. GOPALAN AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/04/1954
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1954 AIR 362 1954 SCR 168
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1957 SC 397 (24)
F 1963 SC 728 (4)
R 1974 SC 532 (11)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Article 14-Criminal Procedure Code
(Act V of 1898), sections 14 and 197(1) and (2) -Section 14
whether ultra vires article 14 of the Constitution-Scope of
power under section 197(2) and section 14- Whether the word
"Court" in section 197 (2) means the same thing as word "
person-in section 14.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, an officer of the Madras Government, was
employed in Central Provinces and Berar for the purchase of
grains on behalf of the Madras Government. He along with
many others, was under prosecution before a Special
Magistrate, Nagpur (Mad by a Pradesh), on charges for
offences under section 420 of the Indian Penal Code etc. for
causing loss to the Madras Government. The Special
Magistrate trying the case was appointed by the Madhya
Pradesh Government under section 14 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and as the petitioner was a servant of the
Government of Madras, the prosecution against him was
initiated with the sanction given by the Government of
Madras under section 197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
Held, (i) that section 14 of the Criminal Procedure Code in
so far as it authorises the Provincial Government to confer
upon any person all or any of the powers conferred or
conferrable by or under the Code on Magistrates of the
first, second or third class in
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respect of particular oases and thereby to constitute a
Special Magistrate for the trial of an individual case, does
not violate the guarantee under article 14 of the
Constitution as the Special Magistrate in the present case
had to try the case entirely under the normal procedure and
no discrimination of the-kind contemplated by the decision
in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s Case ([1952] S.C.R. 284) arose in the
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present case. A law vesting discretion in an authority
under such circumstances cannot be discriminatory and is,
therefore, not hit by article 14 of the Constitution.
(ii) It is not for the very Government which accords
sanction under section 197(1) to specify also the Court
before which the trial is to be held under section 197(2)
and therefore in a case to which section 197(1) applies, the
exercise of any power under section 14 is not excluded. The
word "Court" in sub-section (2) of section 197 is not the
same thing as a "person" in sub-section (1) of section 14.
The practice of direct approach to the Supreme Court under
article 32 (except for good reasons) in matters which have
been taken to the High Court and found against, without
obtaining leave to appeal therefrom, is not be encouraged.
Gokulchand Dwarkadas Morarka v. The King (A.I.R. 1948 P. C.
82) referred to; and Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case ([1952] S.C.R.
284) distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 55 of 1954.
Under article 32 of the Constitution for the enforcement of
fundamental rights.
N. C. Chatterjee, (J. B. Dadachanji and Rajinder Narain,
with him) for the petitioners.
K. V. Tambe and I. N. Shroff for the respondent.
1954. April 5. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANNADHADAS J.-This is a petition under article 32 of the
Constitution and is presented to this Court under the
following circumstances. Petitioner No. I before us was an
Agricultural Demonstrator of the Government of Madras and
was employed as an Assistant Marketing Officer in Central
Provinces and Berar for the purchase and movement of
blackgram and other grains on behalf of the Madras
Government. He, as well as the second petitioner and 44
others, are under prosecution before Shri K. E. Pandey, a
Special Magistrate of Nagpur, Madhya Pradesh, in Case No. I
of 1949 pending before him on charges of cheating, attempt
to commit cheating, criminal breach of trust
22
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and criminal conspiracy, (i.e., for offences punishable
under section 420 read with section 120-B or 109 of the
Indian Penal Code, section 409 and section 409 read with
section 120-B of the Indian Penal Code) and the allegation
is that by reason of the acts committed by the accused, the
Government of Madras had to incur an expenditure of Rs.
3,57,147-10-0 in excess of the amount due. The Special
Magistrate before whom the case is now pending was appointed
by the Madhya Pradesh Government under section 14 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, and as the first petitioner was a
servant of the Government of Madras, the prosecution against
him has been initiated by sanction given by the Government
of Madras under section 197(1) of the Criminal Procedure
Code.
The validity of the prosecution is challenged on various
grounds, and the present petition is for quashing the
proceedings on the ground of their invalidity. The three
main points taken before us are: (1) Section 14 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, in so far as it authorises the
Provincial Government to confer upon any person all or any
of the powers conferred or conferrable by or under the Code
on a Magistrate of the first, second or third class in
respect of particular cases and thereby to constitute a
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Special Magistrate for the trial of an individual case,
violates the guarantee under article 14 of the Constitution;
(2) The sanction given under section 197(1) of the Criminal
Procedure Code for the prosecution as against the first
petitioner is invalid, inasmuch as the order of the Madras
Government granting the sanction does not disclose that all
the facts constituting the offences to be charged were
placed before the sanctioning authority ; nor does the
sanction state the time or place of the occurrence or the
transactions involved in it, or the persons with whom the
offences were committed. This contention is raised relying
on the Privy Council case in Gokulchand Dwarkadas Morarka v.
The King(1); (3) Even if the sanction under section 197 (1)
of the Criminal Procedure Code is valid, it is for the very
Government which accords the sanction to specify also the
Court before
(1) A.I.R. 1948 P.C. 82.
171
which the trial is to be held under section 197(2) and in
the absence -of any such specification by the said
Government, the power under section 14 of the Criminal
Procedure Code of appointing a Special Magistrate for the
trial of the case cannot be exercised by the Madhya Pradesh
Government.
These points may now be dealt with seriatim. In support of
the objection raised under article 14 of the Constitution,
reliance is placed on the decision of this Court in Anwar
Ali Sarkar’s case (1). That decision, however, applies only
to a case where on the allotment of an. individual case to a
special Court authorised to conduct the trial by a procedure
substantially different from the normal procedure,
discrimination arises as between persons who have committed
similar offences, by one or more out of them being subjected
to a procedure, which is materially different from the
normal procedure and prejudicing them thereby. In the pre-
sent case, the Special Magistrate under section 14 of the
Criminal Procedure Code has to try the case entirely under
the normal procedure, and no discrimination of the kind
contemplated by the decision in Anwar Ali Sarkar’s case (1)
and the other cases following it arises here. A law vesting
discretion in an authority under such circumstances cannot
be said to be discriminatory as such, and is therefore not
hit by article 14 of the Constitution. There is, therefore,
no substance in this contention.
As regards the second ground which is put forward on the
authority of the Privy Council case of Gokulchand Dwarkadas
Morarka v. The King(2), it is admitted that the trial has
not yet commenced. The Privy Council itself in the case
mentioned above has recognised that the lacunas, if any, in
the sanction of the kind contemplated by that decision can
be remedied in the course of the trial by the specific
evidence in that behalf. Learned counsel for the State,
without conceding the objection raised, has mentioned to us
that evidence in that behalf will be given at the trial. It
is, therefore, unnecessary to decide the point whether or
not the sanction, as it is, and without such evidence is
invalid.
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 284.
(2) A.I.R. 1948 P.C. 82.
172
It is the third point that has been somewhat seriously
pressed before us. The contention of learned counsel for
the petitioners is based on sub-section (2) of section 197
of the Criminal Procedure Code, which runs as follows :-
" The Governor-General or Governor, as the case may be,
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exercising his individual judgment may determine the person
by whom, the manner in which, the offence or offences for
which, the prosecution of such Judge, Magistrate, or public
servant is to be conducted, and may specify the Court before
which the trial is to be held."
The argument is that it is for the very Government which
sanctioned the prosecution under section 197(1) to specify
the Court before which the trial is to be held and no other,
and that consequently, in a case to which section 197(1)
applies, the exercise of any power under section 14 is
excluded. It is said that though the exercise of the power
under section 197(2) in so far as it relates to
specification of the Court is concerned is discretionary and
optional, but if in an individual case, that power is not
exercised, it must be taken that the appropriate Government
did not feel called upon to allot the case ’to any special
Court, and that, therefore, such allotment by another
Government under section 14 would affect or nullify the
power of the appropriate Government under section 197(2).
It is also suggested that such dual exercise of the power by
two Governments would be contrary to the policy underlying
section 197 which is for the protection of the public ser-
vant concerned, by interposing the sanction of the
Government between, the accuser and its servants of the
categories specified therein. This argument is farfetched.
In the first instance, there is no reason to think that
section 197(2) is inspired by any policy of protection of
the concerned public servant, as section 197(1) is. There
can be no question of protection involved by an accused
being tried by one Court rather than by another at the
choice of the Government. The power under section 197(2)
appears to be vested in the appropriate Government for being
exercised, on grounds of convenience, or the complexity or
gravity of the case or other relevant considerations. The
argument as to
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the implication of non-exercise of the power by the
appropriate Government under section 197(2) is also
untenable. The power to specify a Court for trial in such
cases is a permissive power, and there can be no such
implication, as is contended for, arising from the non-
exercise of the power.
This entire argument, however, is based on a misconception
of the respective scopes of the powers under, section 197(2)
and section 14. The one relates to the "Court" and the
other to the "Person". Under sub-section (2) of section
197, the sanctioning Government may specify a. Court for the
trial of the’ case but is not bound to do so. When it does
not choose to specify the Court, the trial is subject to the
operation of the other provisions of the Code. But even
when it chooses to exercise the power of specifying the
Court before which the trial is to be held, such
specification of the Court does not touch the question as to
who is the person to function in such Court before which the
trial is to take place. That is a matter still left to be
exercised by the Provincial Government of the area where the
trial is to take place. ’The argument of learned counsel
proceeds on treating the word "Court" in sub-section (2) of
section 197 as being the same as a "person" in sub-section
(1) of section 14, for which there is no warrant. There is
accordingly no substance in this contention.
In addition to the above three points, learned counsel for
the petitioners has also raised a further point that in the
present case Shri K. L. Pandey who was first appointed as a
Special Magistrate for the trial of the case, and to whose
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file on such appointment this case was transferred, was
later on appointed as acting Sessions Judge for some time
and ceased to have this case before him. He reverted back
from his position as acting Sessions Judge to his original
post. The point taken is that without a fresh notification
appointing him as Special Magistrate and transferring the
case to him as such, he cannot be said to be seized of this
case as Special Magistrate. Here again, learned counsel for
the State informs us, without conceding the point so taken,
that he is prepared to advise the Government
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to issue the necessary notification and have the case
transferred. In view of that statement, it is unnecessary
to pronounce on the objection so raised.
In the result, all the points raised on behalf of the
petitioners fail, and this petition must be dismissed.
It is desirable to observe that the questions above dealt
with appear to have been raised before the High Court at
previous stages by means of applications under article 226
and decided against. No appeals to this Court have been
taken against the orders therein. Nothing that we have said
is intended to be a pronouncement as to the correctness or
otherwise of those orders, nor to encourage the practice of
direct approach to this Court (except for good reasons) in
matters which have been taken to the High Court and found
against, without obtaining leave to appeal therefrom.
Petition dismissed.