Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P.V. MOHAMMAD BARMAY SONS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIRECTOR OF ENFORCEMENT
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/08/1992
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
PANDIAN, S.R. (J)
CITATION:
1993 AIR 1188 1992 SCR (3) 960
1993 SCC Supl. (2) 724 JT 1992 (4) 565
1992 SCALE (2)227
ACT:
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 7 of 1947-Sections
5(1)(a), (b) and 23(1) read with Sections 9(1)(a), (c) and
50 of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973-
Comparative study-Language, penalty and contraventions-
Whether differ.
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973-Section 81
read with Section 6 (e) of the General Clauses Act-Repeal of
the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 7 of 1947-Rights
acquired or accrued, penalty, liability, forfeiture or
punishment incurred whether kept alive.
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973-Section 81
read with Section 6(e) of the General Clauses Act-Legal
proceeding for enforcing a right acquired or accrued or
liability, penalty, forfeiture, punishment incurred and
legal proceedings for acquisition of a right-Distinction.
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973-Section 81
read with section 6(e) of the General Clauses Act-Acts done,
penalties, forfeiture or punishment incurred before the
Repealed Act 7 of 1947, though no proceedings initiated
there-under-Whether attracts Section 6 of the General
Clauses Act-Legislative intention of Act 46 of 1973-
Appreciation-Court’s duty.
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973-Sections
9(1)(a), (c) and 50 read with Section 5(1)(a), (b) and 23 of
the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 7 of 1947-Penalty
imposed-Legality of-Doctrine of double jeopardy, Whether
applicable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-firm owned three vessels and carried on
export of timber, coir etc. to Gulf countries and imported
Emuphraez Zabdi Dates on return.
Out of the amounts payable in Pounds deducting the
price for dates, the appellant had fitted 230 H.P. Gardner
engine (second hand) to its first vessel and 240 H.P. Kalvin
engine (second hand) to its second vessel. The
961
second-hand engines were purchased at the cost of Rs. 50,000
and Rs. 55,000 respectively . Out of the amount payable
through Nakoda in Basrah , a sum of Rs. 30,000 was paid.
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For the third vessel an agreement was entered into to fit in
a second hand engine with one M/s. Mohd. Zasim of Kuwait at
a price of 2,100 Kuwaiti Dinars and payable in three annual
instalments.
On 4.10.1974, a raid conducted on the premises of the
appellant by the respondent and it was discovered that the
appellant contravened Secs. 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b) of the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947. In consequence of
discovery a notice was issued on 11.10.1974 and not having
been satisfied with the explanations, a show-cause notice
was issued. An explanation was given by the appellant. The
Addl. Director, Enforcement Directorate in the proceedings,
found that the appellant had purchased two engines and got
fitted to two motor vessels and agreement to the third
engine was also concluded without obtaining the permission
of the Reserve Bank of India and that the appellant was
found to have committed the contravention of Sec. 5(1)(a) &
(b) and penalty of Rs. 50,000 was imposed on 5.7.1977.
On appeal, the Appellate Board confirmed the penalties,
reduced the penalty from Rs. 50,000 to Rs. 37,500.
The appellant filed this appeal by special leave under
Art. 136 of the Constitution of India challenging the order
of the Appellate Board.
The appellant contended that the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act 7 of 1947 was repealed by the Foreign
Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973; that no action was
taken under the repealed Act before the Act 46 of 1973 came
into force on 19.9.1973 and, therefore, the action was
without jurisdiction and authority of law; that the
proceedings against the appellant was taken under the Sea
Customs Act, 1922 and the adjudicating authority imposed a
penalty of Rs. 4,30,000 and on Appeal, the Central Board of
Excise and Customs set aside the penalty; that for the same
offence no proceedings under the Act 46 of 1973 could be
taken; that the finding was based on no evidence, since the
respondent did not prove the offence under the repealed
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 Act or under the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1973.
The respondent submitted that in view of Sec. 81 (2) of
the Foreign
962
Exchange Regulation Act, 1973 read with Sec. 6 of the
General Clauses Act, the power of the respondent to
investigate and enforce the liability or penalty incurred
under the Repealed Act was saved, though the Act 7 of 1947
was repealed under sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 81 of the Act.
Dismissing the appeal, this court
HELD : 1, A comparative study of the provisions of the
repealed Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 7 of 1947 and the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 46 of 1973 clearly
adumberated that save as may be provided in accordance with
any general or special exemption from the provisions of this
sub-section, which may be granted conditionally or
unconditionally by the Reserve Bank of India, no person
resident in or outside India shall make any payment to or
for the credit of any persons residents outside India draw,
issue, negotiate any bill of exchange or promissory note or
acknowledge any debt so that a right whether actual or
contingent to receive a payment is created or transferred in
favour of any persons resident outside India, is a
contravention of the Repealed Act 7 of 1947 and the Act 46
of 1973, as well such person is liable to the penalty
prescribed under the respective provisions. Three times the
value was the penalty prescribed under the Repealed Act
and five times the value has been prescribed under the Act.
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Except this difference, there is no difference as regards
the language, in nature of penalty and contraventions are
concerned. [967 D,E,F]
2.01. The effect of the Repealed Act of 7 of 1947 by
operation of clause (e) of Sec. 6 of the General Clause Act
read with sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 81 is that though the Act 46
of 1973 obliterates the operation of Act 7 of 1947, despite
its repeal, the penalty, liability, forfeiture or
prosecution for acts done while the repealed Act was in
force were kept alive, though no action thereunder was taken
when the Repealed Act was in force. [968-G]
2.02. The rights acquired or accrued or the
liabilities incurred or any penalty, forfeiture or
punishment incurred during the operation of the Repealed Act
are kept alive. Investigations to be made or any remedy
which may have been available before the repeal be enforced
are also preserved. Such rights, liabilities, penalty,
forefeiture or punishment, due to repeal "shall not lapse".
The saving clause, thus, aimed to preserve the legal effect
and consequences of things done though those affects and
consequences projected to post repealed period. [968-H-969A]
963
2.03. The things done adumberated in Sec. 81(2) of the
Act 46 of 1973 or Sec. 6 of the General Clause Act or
penalty or punishment incurred would envisage that the
things already done or liabilities, penalty, punishment or
forfeiture incurred, though happened before the Act 46 of
1973 came into force, Sec. 81(2) of the Act 43 of 1973
empowers to effectuate the liabilities, penalties, etc. as
if they have been in existence and amenable to be pursued
under the Act 46 of 1973 or under the Repealed Act 7 of 1947
by operation of Sec. 6 of General Clauses Act. What is
unaffected by the repeal of the Act 7 of 1947 is a right
accrued, etc. [969-C]
3. There is a distinction between a legal proceeding
for enforcing a right acquired or accrued or liability,
penalty, forfeiture, punishment incurred and the legal
proceedings for acquisition of a right, the former is saved
whereas the later is not. In spite of repeal the right to
investigation or to take legal proceedings remain unaffected
and preserved as if the old Act continues to be operative.
[969-D]
4.01. What remains to be done, after the Act 46 of
1973 came into force, is the quantification, if necessary
after due investigation and legal proceedings and if proved
to impose the penalty, forfeiture or punishment. The Court
takes cognizance of the offence and not the offender or the
acts done. What the court is to enquire into is whether the
Act is incompatible with the Repealed Act and whether it
manifested any contrary intention to the Repealed Act.
Unless a different intention has been manifested in the Act,
the Repealed Act would continue to be operative. Even in a
case of bare repeal accompanied by a fresh legislation on
the same subject, the provisions of the new Act will have to
be looked into to find where and how far the new Act
envisages a contrary intention affecting the operation of
Sec. 6 of the General Clauses Act. Unless such contrary
intention is manifested, liabilities, penalties, forfeiture
or punishment under the Repealed Act will continue to exist
and remain in force by operation of Sec. 6 of the General
Clauses Act. [969-E-F]
4.02. The Act 46 of 1973 did not evince any contrary
intention. It merely reiterated the earlier law operating
the feld. Therefore, Clauses(d) of Sec.6 of the General
Clauses Act gets attracted to the acts done or the penalties
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incurred or forfeiture or punishment had already been
committed before the repealed enactment, though no criminal
proceedings have been actually initiated under repealed
enactment before its repeal.
[969-H-970-A]
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5.01. The Repealed Act prescribed three times the
value as penalty and under the Act 43 of 1973 Sec.50
provides five times penalty. So what would be impossible as
penalty is three times. the penalty imposed as reduced by
the appellate Tribunal is even not three times, as
contemplated under Sec. 23 of the Repealed Act. Therefore,
though the Act 43 of 1973, evinced a contrary intention of
imposition of higher penalty than one prescribed under the
Act 7 of 1947, on the facts in this case, the penalty
imposed is perfectly valid and legal. [970-D]
5.02. The mere fact that the penalty proceedings for
evasion of the excise duty had ended in favour of the
appellant, does not take away the jurisdiction of the
enforcement authorities under the Act to impose the penalty
in question. The doctrine of double jeopardy has not
application.
[970-F-H]
5.03. Since there was no express permission granted by
the Reserve Bank of India for the payments by the appellant
to the agent outside India, the contravention was proved
and penalty was imposed. It is the penalty under Sec.
5(1)(a) & (b) of the Repealed Act equivalent to sec.9 (1)
(a) & (c) of the Act. Therefore, the penalty imposed is
based on material, valid reasons and proper findings. [971-
A-B]
O. Abdul Aziz & Ors. v. Addl. Director of Enforcement,
AIR 1983 Madras 59; A.K.L. Labbai Thamdi Maraicar v.
Enforcement Directorate & Ors., AIR 1983 Madras 102; Tiwari
Kanhaiyalal & Ors. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi,
[1975 4 SCC 101 and The Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v.
M/s Shah Sadiq & Sons, [1987] 3 SCC 516 at 524, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
95 of 1981.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17.10.1978 of the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Appellate Board, New Delhi in
Appeal No. 112 of 1977.
S.P. Singh and Sunil Kr. Singh for the Appellants.
K.T.S. Tulsi, Addl. Solicitor General, Ms. A
Subhashini, Ms. A. Kripal and Kailash Vasdev for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
965
K. RAMASWAMY, J. A short but interesting question of
law had arisen in this case. The appellant is a firm which
owned three vessels, by name M.V. Fathel Beir, M.V. Fathel
Rehman and M.V. Saad Salam. It carries on export of timber,
coir etc. to Gulf countries and imported Euphraez Zabdi
Dates on return. Out of the amounts payable in Pounds
deducting the price for dates, the appellant had fitted 230
H.P. Gardner engine (second hand) to their vessel
Fatherlbari and 240 H.P. Kalvin engine (second hand) to
their vessel Fazther Rehman, which were purchases at the
cost of Rs. 50,000 and Rs. 55,000 respectively. Out of the
amount payable through Nakoda in Basrah, a sum of Rs. 30,000
was paid. For the third vessel Saad Salam an agreement was
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entered into to fit in a second hand engine with M/s Mohd.
Zasim of Kuwait at a price of 2,100 Kuwati Dinars and
payable in three annual installments. The Addl. Director,
Enforcement Directorate, Madras adjudicated the proceedings
against the appellant and found that the appellant had
purchased two engines and got them fitted into two motor
vessels and agreement to the third engine was also concluded
without obtaining the permission of the Reserve Bank of
India. Thereby it contravened Secs. 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b) of
the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act of 1947, for short
‘Repealed Act’, In this behalf admittedly this
contravention was discovered on a raid conducted on the
premises of the appellant on October 4, 1974. In
consequence of discovery a notice was issued on October 11,
1974 and not having been satisfied with the explanations, a
show-cause notice was issued on October 18, 1975 an
explanation was given by the appellant and he was found to
have committed the contravention of Sec. 5(1)(a) & (b) and
penalty was imposed on July 5, 1977. On appeal, while by
order dated October 17,1978, the Appellate Board confirmed
the penalties, reduced the penalty from Rs. 50,000 to Rs.
37,500. Questioning the legality thereof the appellant
filed this appeal by special leave under Art. 136 of the
Constitution of India.
Two main contentions have been raised by the appellant.
The first contention is that the Act 7 of 1947 was repealed
by Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 46 of 1973 for short
‘the Act’. No action was taken under the repealed Act
before the Act came into force on September, 19,1973. The
impugned action, therefore, is without jurisdiction and
authority of law. It is also contended that the proceedings
against the appellant was taken under the Customs Act, 1962
and the adjudicating authority imposed a penalty of Rs.
4,30,000. On Appeal, the Central Board of Excise and
Customs by order dated August 19, 1975 set aside the
penalty. For the same offence no proceedings under the Act
could be taken. It is also contended
966
that the finding is based on no evidence, since the
respondents did not prove the offence under the Repealed Act
or under the Act.
Section 5(1)(a) and (b) of the Repealed Act reads thus:
"5(1) - Save as may be provided in an in accordance
with any general or special exemption from the
provisions of this sub-section which may be granted
conditionally or unconditionally by the Reserve
Bank, no person in or resident in, (India) shall-
(a) - make any payment to or for the credit of any
person resident outside India.
xxx xxx xxx
(b) draw, issue or negotiate any bill of exchange
or promissory note or acknowledge any debt, so that
a right (whether actual or contingent) to receive a
payment is created or transferred in favour of any
person resident outside India."
Section 9(1)(a) and (c) of the 1973 Act provide thus:
"9(1) Save as may be provided in and in accordance
with any general or special exemption from the
provisions of this sub-section which may be granted
conditionally or unconditionally by the Reserve
Bank, no person in, or resident in, India shall-
(a) - make any payment to or for the credit of any
person resident outside India:
xxx xxx xxx
(c) - draw, issue or negotiate any bill of exchange
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or promissory note or acknowledge any debt, so that
a right (whether actual or contingent) to receive a
payment is created or transferred in favour of any
person resident outside India."
Section 23(1) of the Repealed Act prescribes penalty
thus :
"No person shall enter into any contract or
agreement which would directly or indirectly
evade or avoid in any way the
967
operation of any provisions of this Act or of
any rule, direction or order made thereunder."
Section 50 of the Act provides penalty thus :
"If any person contravenes any of the provisions of
this Act (other than Sec. 13, clause (a) of sub-
section (1) Sec. 18 and clause (a) of sub-section
(1) of Sec. 19)or of any rule, direction or order
made thereunder, he shall be liable to such penalty
not exceeding five times the amount of the value
involved in any such contravention or five thousand
rupees, whichever is more, as may be adjudged by
the Director of Enforcement or any other officer of
Enforcement not below the rank of an Asstt.
Director of Enforcement specially empowered in
this behalf by order of the Central Govt. (in
either case hereinafter referred to as the
adjudicating officer)."
A comparative study of these provisions of the
Repealed Act and the Act clearly adumberated that
save as may be provided in accordance with any
general or special exemption from the provisions of
this sub-section, which may be granted
conditionally or unconditionally by the Reserve
Bank of India, no person resident in or outside
India shall make any payment to or for the credit
of any persons residents outside India draw, issue,
negotiate any bill of exchange or promissory not or
acknowledge any debt so that a right whether actual
or contingent to receive a payment is created or
transferred in favour of any persons resident
outside India, is a contravention of the Repealed
Act and the Act as well and such person is liable
to the penalty prescribed under the respective
provisions. Three times the value was the penalty
prescribed under the Repealed Act and five times
the value has been prescribed under the Act.
Except this difference, there is no difference as
regards the language, nature of penalty and
contraventions are concerned. Section 81 of the
Act repeals and saves thus :
"Repeal and saving - (1) The foreign Exchange
Regulation Act, 1947 (7 of 1947), is hereby
repealed.
(2) "anything done"..........under the Act hereby
repealed shall, in so far as it is not inconsistent
with the provisions of this act, be deemed to have
been done or taken under the
968
corresponding provisions of this Act."
Section 6 of the General Clause Act, 1897 provides the
effect of repeal thus :
"Where this Act or any Central Act or Regulation
made after the commencement of this act repeals any
enactment hitherto made or hereafter to be made,
then, unless a different intention appears, the
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repeal shall not -
xxx xxx xxx
(e) affect any investigation, legal proceeding or
remedy in respect of any such right, privilege,
obligation, liability, penalty, forfeiture or
punishment.......
and any such investigation, legal proceeding or
remedy may be instituted, continued or enforced,
and any such penalty,forfeiture or punishment may
be imposed as if the Repealing Act or Regulation
had not been passed."
Sri Tulsi, the learned Addl. Solicitor General placing
reliance in O. Abdul Aziz & Ors. v. Addl. Director of
Enforcement, AIR 1983 Madras 59 and A.K.L. Labbai Thambi
Maraicar v. Enforcement Directorate & Ors., AIR 1983 Madras
102, contended that in view of Sec. 81(2) of the Act read
with Sec. 6 of the General Clause Act, the power of the
respondents to investigate and enforce the liability or
penalty incurred under the Repealed Act is saved, though the
Act 7 of 1947 has been repealed under sub-sec. (2) of Sec.
81 of the Act 7 of 1947 has been repealed under sub-sec.
(2) of Sec. 81 of the Act. The contention of the respondent
is that the Repealed Act, after the Act had come into force
in 1973, is a dead corpse and no life into it could be blown
with the aid of Sec. 81(20 of the Act or Sec. 6 of the
General Clause Act read with Sub-sec. (2) of sec. 81 is
that, though the Act obliterates the operation of Act 7 of
1947, despite its repeal, the penalty, liability, forfeiture
or prosecution for acts done while the repealed Act was in
force were kept alive, though no action thereunder was taken
when the Repealed Act was in force. The rights acquired or
accrued or the liabilities incurred or any penalty,
forfeiture or punishment incurred during its operation are
kept alive. Investigations to be made or any remedy
969
which may have been available before the repeal be enforced
are also preserved. Such rights, liabilities, penalty,
forefeiture or punishment, due to repeal "shall not lapse".
The saving clause, thus, aimed to preserve the legal effect
and consequences of things done though those effects and
consequences projected to post repealed period. The things
done adumberated in Sec. 81(2) or Sec. 6 of the General
Clause Act or penalty or punishment incurred would envisage
that the things already done or liabilities, penalty,
punishment or forfeiture incurred, though happened before
the Act came into force, Sec. 81(2) of the Act empowers to
effectuate the liabilities, penalties, etc. as if they have
been in existence and amenable to be pursued under the Act
or under the Repealed Act by operation of Sec. 6 of General
Clauses Act. What is unaffected by the repeal of the Act 7
of 1947 is a right accrued, etc. There is a distinction
between a legal proceeding for enforcing a right acquired or
accrued or liability, penalty, forefeiture, punishment
incurred and the legal proceedings for acquisition of a
right, the former is saved whereas the later is not. In
spite of repeal the right to investigation or to take legal
proceedings remain unaffected and preserved as if the old
Act continues to be operative. What remains to be done,
after the Act came into force, is the quantification, if
necessary after the investigation and legal proceedings and
if proved to impose the penalty, forfeiture or punishment.
The Court takes cognizance of the offence and not the
offender or the acts done. What the court is to enquire
into is whether the Act is incompatible with the Repealed
Act and whether it manifested any contrary intentions to the
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Repealed Act. Unless a different intention was been
manifested in the Act, the Repealed Act would continue to be
operative. Even in a case of bare repeal accompanied by a
fresh legislation on the same subject, the provisions of
the new Act will have to be looked into to find where and
how far the new Act envisages a contrary intention affecting
the operation of Sec. 6 of the General Clauses Act. Unless
such contrary intention is manifested, liabilities,
penalties, forfeiture or punishment under the Repealed Act
will continue to exist and remain in force by operation of
Sec. 6 of the General Clauses Act.
We have already seen that the Act did not evince any
contrary intention. It merely reiterated the earlier law
operating in the field. Therefore, clause (d) of Sec. 6 of
the General Clauses Act gets attracted to the acts done or
the penalties of forfeiture or punishment for any offaence
which had already been committed before the repelled
enactment, though no criminal proceedings have been actually
initiated under repealed enact-
970
ment before its repeal.
In Tiwari Kanhaiyalal & Ors. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Delhi, [1975] 4 SCC 101 where prosecution was laid
after the repeal of the Income-tax Act, 1992, the
contention raised was that saving clauses in Sec. 297 of
1961 Income-Tax Act did not save the punishment incurred
under the Repealed Act. Therefore, recourse to Sec. 6 of
General Clauses Act cannot be had, was negatived by this
Court and held that the repeal had not effected the
liability incurred under Sec. 52 of the Income-tax Act 1922
and it continued even after its repeal. The same view was
reiterated in the Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v. M/s
Shah Sadiq & Sons., [1987] 3 SCC 516 at 524. Accordingly,
we hold that despite repeal of Act 7 of 1947 by operation of
Sec. 6 of the General Clauses Act read with Sec. 81(2), the
penalty incurred by the appellant contained to subsist and
the respondents are entitled to institute the proceedings,
conduct investigation or enquiry and impose such penalty.
Article 20(1) of the Constitution of India provides
that no person shall be convicted of any offence except for
violation of the law in force at the time of commission of
the Act charged as an offence, nor be subjected to a penalty
greater than that which might have been inflicted under the
law in force at the time of commission of the offence. The
Repealed Act prescribed three times the value as penalty and
under the Act Sec. 50 provides five times penalty. So what
would be imposeable as penalty is three times. The penalty
imposed as reduced by the appellate Tribunal is even not
three times as contemplated under Sec. 23 of the Repealed
Act. Therefore, though the Act evinced a contrary intention
of imposition of higher penalty than one prescribed under
the Act 7 of 1947, on the facts in this case, the penalty
imposed is perfectly valid and legal.
The further contention that under the Customs Act 1962
for the self same contravention, the penalty proceedings
terminated in favour of the appellant, is of little avail to
the appellant for the reason that the two Acts operate in
different fields, one for Contravention of FERA and the
second for evasion of customs duty. The mere fact that the
penalty proceedings for evasion of the customs duty had
ended in favour of the appellant, does not take away the
jurisdiction of the enforcement authorities under the Act to
impose the penalty in question. The doctrine of double
Jeopardy has no
971
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application. The further contention that the offence is
based on no evidence is devoid of any substance. Notice was
given to the appellant. In the show-cause notice
contravention was brought to its notice. The appellant gave
the explanation. After consideration of the facts since
there was no express permission granted by the Reserve Bank
of India for the payments by the appellant to the agent
outside India, the contravention was proved and penalty was
imposed. It is the penalty under Sec. 5(1) (a) & (b) of the
Repealed Act equivalent to Sec. 9(1)(a) of the Act.
Therefore, the penalty imposed is based on material, valid
reasons and proper findings.
Accordingly we do not find any merit to interfere with
the order. The appeal is accordingly dismissed, but under
the circumstances the parties are directed to bear their own
costs.
V.P.R. Appeal dismissed.
972