Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. S. DHARMADATAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/05/1979
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1495 1979 SCR (3) 832
1979 SCC (4) 204
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC 684 (19)
ACT:
prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, Section 6 scope of-
Whether sanction of competent authority is necessary for
prosecution when in fact on the said date the employee was
out of service, but on appeal in a departmental enquiry, he
is ordered to be reinstated with retrospective effect-
Construction of deeming provision.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was being prosecuted for offences under
sections 120-B, 420, 471 and 468 read with section 34 I
P.C., Section 167 (72) of the Sea Customs Act and Section
5(2) read with section 5(1)(d) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act 1947. At the time when the charge sheet was
filed and the special judge took cognizance against the
appellant sometime in October, 1970, the appellant ceased to
be a public servant and, therefore, no sanction under
Section 6 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 was
obtained. The departmental enquiry against the appellant
ended in his dismissal but the President of India allowed
his appeal and set aside the order of removal from service
passed by the Collector of Customs against him with
directions to treat the period of absence from 5-9-1967 till
the date of reinstatement as under suspension, and to
institute de novo proceedings against the appellant after
rectifying the defect in the charge sheet.
While the departmental proceedings were going on, the
trial against the appellant proceeded to its logical end
except the arguments being heard. The appellant on being
reinstated filed an application before the special Judge
praying that all further proceedings be dropped as the
prosecution against the appellant was initiated in the
absence of a proper and valid sanction having been obtained
under Section 6 of the Prevention of Corruption Act. The
special Judge rejected it and the High Court confirmed the
rejection.
Dismissing the appeal by special leave, the Court
^
HELD: 1. Section 6(1) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947 applies only where at the time when the offence
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was committed the offender was acting as a public servant.
If the offender had ceased to be a public servant then
section 6 would have no application at all. Furthermore, the
point of time when the sanction has to be taken must be the
time when the Court takes cognizance of an offence and not
before or after. If at the relevant time, the offender was a
public servant no sanction under section 6 was necessary at
all. [835E-F]
In the instant case, no sanction under section 6 of the
Act was necessary, as the appellant had ceased to be a
public servant at the time when the cognizance of the case
was taken against him by the special Judge. [836E]
S. A. Venkataraman v. The State, [1958] SCR 1037; C. R.
Bansi v. State of Maharashtra, [1971] 3 SCR 236 followed.
833
2. A deeming provision cannot be pushed too far as to
result in a most anomalous or absurd position. A deeming
provision should be confined only for the purpose for it is
meant. [837C, 838A]
Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. v. The Modi Sugar Mills
Ltd., [1961] 2 SCR 189; Braithwaite & Co. India Ltd. v.
Employees’ State Insurance Corporation, [1968] 1 SCR 771;
Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar and Ors., [1955]
2 S.C.R. 603; Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City v.
Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving Mills Co. Ltd., 40 I.T.R.
142; applied.
3. In the instant case:
(a) The order of the President reinstating the
appellant and creating a legal fiction regarding the period
of suspension must be limited only so far as time period of
and the incidents of suspension were concerned and could not
be carried too far as to project it even in cases where
actions had already been taken. [838A-B]
(b) The dismissal was not a nullity so as to vitiate
all proceedings. The order passed by the President was not
an order on merits. It was merely an order passed by the
President in an appeal an a departmental enquiry and the
appellant succeeded because of a manifest defect in the
charge sheet. The President never intended that the
appellant should be deemed to have been reinstated even for
the purpose of section 6 of the POCA, 1947 so as to nullify
actions completed, consequences ensued or transactions
closed. In fact when the President observed that the
appellant shall be deemed to have been placed under
suspension from the date of the original order of dismissal
it merely meant that for the purpose of certain civil
consequences flowing from the order of the President namely
the grant of subsistence allowance or other benefits the
order would be deemed to be retroactive in character. [837A-
C]
(c) At the time when actual cognizance by the Court was
taken the appellant ceased to be a public servant having
been removed from service. If some years later he had been
reinstated that would not make the cognizance which was
validly taken by the Court in October, 1970, a nullity or
render it nugatory, so as to necessitate the taking of a
fresh sanction. [838B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
362 of 1975.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 11th July, 1975 of the Kerala High Court in
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Criminal Revision Petition No. 73 of 1975.
S. Govind Swaminadhan, E. V. Rangam and N. S Sivam for
the Appellant.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Addl. Sol. Genl. of India, R. N.
Sachthey and E. C. Agarwala for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment and order of the High Court of Kerala
dated 11th July, 1975
834
dismissing a criminal revision petition filed by the
appellant before the High Court
The point involved in the present appeal lies within a
very narrow compass. The appellant was being prosecuted for
offences under sections 120-B, 420, 471 and 468 read with
section 34 I.P.C., section 167 (72) of the sea of the Sea
Customs Act and section 5 (2) read with section 5 (1)(d) of
the Prevention of Corruption Act. At the time when the
chargesheet was filed and the Special Judge took cognizance
against the appellant sometime in October, 1970 the
appellant ceased to be a public servant and, therefore, no
sanction under section 6 of the Prevention of Corruption Act
(hereinafter referred to as the Act) was obtained. It
appears that in pursuance of a departmental enquiry held
against the appellant he was charge-sheeted and ultimately
dismissed by the appointing authority. Thereafter, the
appellant filed an appeal before the President of India on
18-10-1967 against his removal from service. After
consulting the Union Public Service Commission the President
by his order dated 25-9-1972 allowed the appeal and set
aside the order of removal from service passed by the
Collector of Customs against the appellant. The order of the
President further directed that the period of absence from
5-9-1967 till the date of reinstatement was to be treated as
under suspension. The appeal appears to have been allowed by
the President mainly on the ground that there was some
defect in the charge-sheet served by the disciplinary
authority. The disciplinary authority was directed to
institute de novo proceedings against the appellant after
rectifying the defect in the charge-sheet. While these
proceedings before the President were going on, the trial
against the appellant proceeded to its logical end and we
now understand that evidence has already been led and the
arguments have to be heard.
The appellant on being reinstated by the President
filed an application before the special Judge praying that
all further proceedings be dropped inasmuch as the
prosecution against the appellant was initiated in the
absence of a proper and valid sanction having been obtained
under section 6 of the Act. The special Judge, however,
rejected the petition as a result of which the appellant
moved the High Court but was not successful there.
The only point raised by the appellant before the High
Court as also before us was that in view of the order of the
President reinstating the appellant retrospectively, the
appellant must be deemed to be in service with effect from
the date from which the departmental proceedings were
started against him, and, therefore, he would be a public
servant at the time when cognizance was taken by the special
Judge, and
835
as no sanction under section 6 of the Act was obtained, the
entire proceedings became void ab initio. Mr. Sorabjee
appearing for the respondents has submitted that admittedly
and factually at the point of time when the special Judge
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took cognizance of the case on 14-10-1970 the appellant
having been dismissed from service was no longer a public
servant, and, therefore, section 6 of the Act had no
application. Section 6 of the Act runs thus:-
"6(1) No court shall take cognizance of an offence
punishable under section 161 or section 164 or section 165
of the Indian Penal Code, or under sub-section (2) or sub-
section (3A) of section 5 of this Act, alleged to have been
committed by a public servant, except with the previous
sanction.
(a) in the case of a person who is employed in
connection with the affairs of the Union and is not
removable from his office save by or with the sanction of
the State Government or of the Central Government;
(b) in the case of a person who is employed in
connection with the affairs of a State and is not removable
from his office save by or with the sanction of the Central
Government or of the State Government;
(c) in the case of any other person, of the
authority competent to remove him from his office."
A perusal of this section would clearly disclose that
the section applies only where at the time when the offence
was committed the offender was acting as a public servant.
If the offender had ceased to be a public servant then
section 6 would have no application at all. Further more, it
is also manifest from the perusal of section 6 that the
point of time when the sanction has to be taken must be the
time when the court takes cognizance of an offence and not
before or after. If at the relevant time, as indicated
above, the offender was not a public servant no sanction
under section 6 was necessary at all.
Construing section 6 of the Act this Court in the case
of S. A. Venkararaman v. The State(1) pointed out as
follows:-
"When the provisions of s. 6 of the Act are
examined it is manifest that the two conditions must be
fulfilled before its provisions become applicable. One is
that the offences mentioned therein must be committed by a
public servant and the other is that that person is employed
in connection with the affairs of the Union or a State and
is not removable from his
836
office save by or with the sanction of the Central
Government or the State Government or is a public servant
who is removable from his office by any other competent
authority. Both these conditions must be present to prevent
a court from taking cognizance of an offence mentioned in
the section without the previous sanction of the Central
Government or the State Government or the authority
competent to remove the public servant from his office. If
either of these conditions is lacking, the essential
requirements of the section are wanting and the provisions
of the section do not stand in the way of a court taking
cognizance without a, previous sanction ...........
.............Conversely, if an offence under s. 161 of the
Indian Penal Code was committed by a public servant, but, at
the time a court was asked to take cognizance of the
offence, that person had ceased to be a public servant one
of the two requirements to make s. 6 of the Act applicable
would be lacking and a previous sanction would be
unnecessary. The words in s. 6(1) of the Act are clear
enough and they must be given effect to".
To the same effect is a later decision of this Court in
the case of C. R. Bansi v. State of Maharashtra(1)
In view of the observations referred to above, it is
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manifest that as the appellant had ceased to be a public
servant at the time when the cognizance of the case was
taken against him by the Special Judge no sanction under
section 6 of the Act was necessary.
It was, however, argued by Mr. Swaminadhan, learned
counsel for the appellant that the logical consequence of
the order of the President reinstating the appellant was
that he would be deemed to have been put jack into service
on the date the charge-sheet was submitted against him, and,
therefore, he must be deemed to be a public servant within
the meaning of section 6 of the Act. In other words, the
learned counsel wanted us to import a legal fiction arising
from the Presidential order by which even though factually
the appellant may not have been a public servant at the time
when the cognizance was taken, he would be deemed to be so
by virtue of the Presidential order even though the
Presidential order may have been passed years after the
cognizance was taken. We are however unable to agree with
the somewhat broad arguments advanced by the learned counsel
for the appellant.
837
To begin with, the dismissal of the appellant was not a
nullity so as to vitiate all proceedings previous or
subsequent. It was merely an order passed by the President
in an appeal and the appellant succeeded because of a
manifest defect in the charge-sheet. The order passed by the
President was therefore not an order on merits. There is
nothing to show that the President ever intended that the
appellant should be deemed to have been reinstated even for
the purpose of section 6 of the Act so as to nullify actions
completed, consequences ensued or transactions closed. In
fact, when the President observed that the appellant shall
be deemed to have been placed under suspension from the date
of the original order of dismissal it merely meant that for
the purpose of certain civil consequences flowing from the
order of the President. namely, the grant of subsistence
allowance or other benefits the, order would be deemed to be
retroactive in character. It is well settled that a deeming
provision cannot be pushed too far so as to result in a most
anamolous or absurd position.
In the case of Commissioner of Sales Tax, Uttar Pradesh
v. The Modi Sugar Mills Ltd. (1) while laying down the
principles on the basis of which a deeming provision should
be construed this Court observed as follows:-
"A legal fiction must be limited to the purposes
for which it has been created and cannot be extended beyond
its legitimate field".
Similarly in the case of Braithwaite & Co. (India) Ltd.
v. Employees’ State Insurance Corporation(2) this Court
further amplifying the principle of the construction of a
deeming provision observed thus:-
"A legal fiction is adopted in law for a limited
and definite purpose only and there is no justification for
extending it beyond the purpose for which the legislature
adopted".
In the Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar and
Ors.(3) this Court pointed out that "explanation should be
limited to the purpose the Constitution-makers had and legal
fictions are created only for some definite purpose".
In the case of Commissioner of Income Tax Bombay City
v. Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving Mills Co. Ltd.(4) this
court observed as follows:-
838
"As we have already stated, this fiction cannot be
carried further than what it is intended for".
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Thus, it is well settled that a deeming fiction should
be confined only for the purpose for it is meant. In the
instant case, the order of the President reinstating the
appellant and creating a legal fiction regarding the period
of suspension must be limited only so far as the period of
and the incidents of suspension were concerned and could not
be carried too far so as to project it even in cases where
actions had already been taken and closed. In other words,
the position seems to be that at the time when actual
cognizance by the court was taken the appellant had ceased
to be a public servant having been removed from service. If
some years later he had been reinstated that would not make
the cognizance which was validly taken by the court in
October, 1970 a nullity or render it nugatory so as to
necessitate the taking of a fresh sanction. We, therefore,
entirely agree with the view taken by the High Court that in
the facts and circumstances of the present case legal
fiction arising out of the Presidential order cannot be
carried to nullify the order of cognizance taken by the
special Judge. The argument of the learned counsel for the
appellant is, therefore, overruled. No other point was
pressed before us. The appeal being without merit is
accordingly dismissed. The special Judge would now hear the
arguments of the parties and dispose of the case as
expeditiously as possible. Let the records be sent back to
the special Judge immediately.
V.D.K. Appeal dismissed.
839