Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ABINASH CHANDRA BOSE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BIMAL CHANDRA BOSE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/08/1962
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 316 1963 SCR (3) 564
CITATOR INFO :
D 1965 SC1887 (3,5,7 ETC.)
D 1966 SC 356 (6)
ACT:
Criminal Breach of Trust-Prosecution of lawyer by client-
Hand-writing expert neither called nor examined-Acquittal by
trial Magistrate-Retrial and examination of expert directed
by High Court on appeal-Propriety.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a practising lawyer engaged by. the
respondent to investigate title in respect of a property
when the latter wanted to purchase, was prosecuted by him on
a charge under a. 409 &-the Indian Penal Code for misappro-
printing a sum of Rs. 50001-entrusted to him for that
purpose. The prosecution mainly depended on a letter
written by the appellant which would show that a sum of Rs.
4200/- out of the said amount of Rs. 5000/- had been asked
for by the appellant. This letter was challenged as a
forgery by the
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appellant. The respondent did not call a hand-writing
expert nor was he denied an opportunity to do so. The trial
Magistrate held that the prosecution case had not been
proved and acquitted the appellant. The High Court on
appeal by the respondent set aside the order of acquittal on
the ground that the appellant was a practicing lawyer in
fiduciary relationship with his client and directed that the
appellant be retried, by smother Magistrate with opportunity
to the respondent to examine a hand-writing expert in order
to establish the genuineness of the said letter. It held
that since the case was one not between ordinary litigants
but between a lawyer and his client, involving a fiduciary
relationship, no steps should be spared to ensure complete
justice between the parties and the case must be sent back
even though the prosecution did not avail of the opportunity
of proving its own case.
Held, that the order of the High Court were entirely
erroneous and must, be set aside. There was no ground for
directing a retrial and the appellant could not be put to a
second trial for the same offence simply because of the
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failure of the complainant to adduce all the evidence that
should and could, have been adduced. The fact that the
appellant was a lawyer could make no difference and the same
rules of criminal, jurisprudence that applied to all must
apply to him. Further, the High Court was not exercising
disciplinary jurisdiction and no relationship of lawyer and
client was involved in the criminal case.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 119 of
1961.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated December 21, 1961,
of the Calcutta High Court in Cr. A. No. 423 of 1958.
P. K. Chakravarty, for the appellant.
S. C. Mazumdar, for respondent No. 1.
D. N. Mukherjee, P. K. Mukherjee for P. K. Bose, for
the respondent No. 2.
1962. August 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SINHA, C.J.-This appeal on a certificate of fitness granted
by the High Court under Act 134(1), (c).
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of the Constitution, is directed against the order of a
Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court dated December 21,
1960, setting aside the order of acquittal passed by the
trial Magistrate, dated July 2, 1958. We heard this appeal
on the eve of the long vacation and pronounced our order to
the effect that the appeal was allowed and the order of
acquittal was to stand, and that reasons would be given
later.
It appears that the appellant, who it; a practising lawyer,
had been employed by the respondent to work for him to
investigate the title to some property which the latter was
about to purchase, sometime in October 1952. The
prosecution case was that the respondent had entrusted the.
sum of Rs. 5000/- to the appellant for depositing in Court
in connection with an application in respect of the proposed
transaction, under the Bengal Money Lenders’ Act, and that
the appellant having been so entrusted with the money, in
breach of trust, misappropriated the amount, thus causing
loss to his client. The appellant was, therefore, charged
under s. 409 of the Indian Penal Code, with having committed
criminal breach of trust in respect of the sum of Rs. 5000/-
, which had been entrusted to him as a lawyer on behalf of
the respondent. The appellant defense was that the case,
against him was false and that he had been falsely
implicated for reasons which need not be stated.
In order to substantiate the charge against him, the
complainant (now respondents examined himself and a number
of witnesses. He also adduced in evidence a certain
document, marketed Ex. 1, purporting to be a letter in the
handwriting of the appellant, to show that Rs. 4200/- being
a portion of the amount of Rs. 5000/- required for the
deposit, had been asked for by the appellant. It also con-
tained writings in the hand of the complainant &owing that
there was correspondence in the matter
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of the deposit. That was a very important piece of
evidence, which if genuine could go a long way to prove the
case against the appellant. But the appellant challenged
the document as a forgery in material parts, and cross-
examined the complainant who had produced the document. In
spite of the fact that the complainant was very pointedly
cross-examined with a view to showing that the document
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placed before the Court was a forgery in material parts, the
complainant did not take any steps to get an expert on
handwriting examined. The trial Court, on an examination
of-the evidence, oral and documentary, came to the
conclusion that the case against the accused had not been
proved and acquitted him. The complainant preferred an
appeal to the High Court against the order of acquittal,
which was heard by a Division Bench, The High Court took the
view that, in the circumstances of the case, there should be
retrial by another magistrate, who should give an
opportunity to the complainant to adduce the evidence of a
handwriting expert in order to establish the genuineness of
the questioned document. Apparently, the High court,
sitting in appeal on the judgment of the acquittal, passed
by the learned Magistrate, was not satisfied as to the
genuineness of the questioned document. Otherwise it could
have pronounced its judgment one way or the other, on the
merits of the controversy, whether or not the prosecution
had succeeded in bringing the charge home to the accused.
If it were not a case between a lawyer as an accused and his
client as the complainant, perhaps the High Court may not
have taken the unusual course of giving a fresh ’opportunity
to the complainant to have second round of litigation, to
the great prejudice of the accused. In this connection,
the following observations of the High Court may be
extracted in order to show the reasons.for the unusual
course it took in this case:
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"Thus there can be no doubt that this was a
document of considerable importance.
According to the prosecution it clearly showed
the respondent’s connection with the sum of
Rs. 4200/- which was a part of the sum of Rs.
5000/-, the subject matter of the charge.
According to the respondent, the figures 4200
and the Bengali word ’sankranta’ were for-
geries just as at the bottom of the document
the word yes’ and the signature of the res-
pondent with date were also forgeries. This
case was clearly put by the respondent to
Bimla, Krishna Ben and it was suggested to him
that the- impugned portions of the document
were clear forgeries made by the appellant in
order to falsely implicate the respondent. It
must be said that inspite of this challenge,
the appellant took no steps what. ever to
produce expert evidence to aid the court in
coming to a conclusion as to the authorship of
the impugned portion of the document. It is
true that expert evidence cannot always be a
final settler; still in a call of this kind,
it is eminently desirable that the court
should be assisted by a qualified expert since
almost the whole case depends upon proof of
the fact whether the impugned portions of that
document were in the hand of the
respondent......... Comment was also made by
the Magistrate on the appellant’s failure to
call expert evidence. In one sense that
comment was justified; but in a case of this
kind between lawyer and client we think the
matter cannot be left, where it is. In view
of the fiduciary relation. ship between the
parties it is as much necessary in the
interest of, the prosecution as in. the
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interest of the accused that the whole matter
should be cleared’ up, and no steps
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should be spared which might ensure complete
justice between the parties. If it were an
ordinary case between one litigant and
another, we might have hesitated at this dis-
tance of time to send the case back even
though the prosecution did not avail of the
opportunity of proving its own case."
In all civilised countries, criminal jurisprudence has
firmly established the rule that an accused person should
not be placed on trial for the same offence more than once,
except in very exceptional circumstances. In this case, the
complainant had the fullest opportunity of adducing all the
evidence that he was advised would be necessary to prove the
charge against the accused person. It was not that he
proved for the examination of an expert and that opportunity
had been denied to him. The prosecution took its chance of
having a decision in its favour on the evidence adduced by
it before the trial Court. That Court was not satisfied
that evidence was adequately reliable to bring the charge
home to the accused. The accused was thus acquitted. On
appeal, it was open to the High Court to take a different
view of the evidence, if the facts and circumstances placed
before it could lead to the conclusion that the appreciation
of the evidence by the trial Court was so thoroughly
erroneous as to be wholly unacceptable to the Appellate
Court. If the High Court could come to the conclusion, it
could have reversed the judgment and converted the order of
acquittal into an order of conviction. But it should not
have put the accused to the botheration and expense of a
second trial simply because the prosecution did not adduce
all the evidence that should, and could, have been brought
before the Court of first instance. It is not a case where
it in open to the Court of Appeal, against an order of
acquittal, to order a retrial for the reasons that
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the trial Court has not given the prosecution full
opportunity to adduce all available evidence in support of
the prosecution case. It has no where been suggested that
the trial Magistrate had unreasonably refused any
opportunity to the prosecution to adduce all the evidence
that it was ready and willing to produce. That being so,
the High Court, in our judgment, entirely misdirected itself
in setting aside the order of acquittal and making an order
for a fresh trial by another Magistrate, simply on the
ground that the case was between a lawyer and his client.
Simply because the accused happened to be a lawyer would not
be a ground for subjecting him to harassment a second time,
there being no reason for holding that his prosecutor had
not a fair chance of bringing the charge home to him. In
our opinion, the High Court gave way to considerations which
were not relevant to a criminal trial. The High Court was
not sitting on a disciplinary proceeding for professional
misconduct. It had to apply the same rules of criminal
jurisprudence as. apply to all criminal trials, and, in our
opinion, the only. reason given by the High Court for
ordering retrial is against all well-established rules of
criminal jurisprudence. The fact that the appellant is a
practising lawyer does not entitle him to any preferential
treatment when he is hauled up on a criminal charge, even as
he is not subject to any additional disability because the
cam was between a lawyer and his client. There was no
relationship of lawyer and client so far as the criminal
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case was concerned. Hence, in our opinion, the order of
retrial passed by the High Court is entirely erroneous and
must be set aside.
Appeal allowed.
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