Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ANANT GOPAL SHEOREY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/05/1958
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1958 AIR 915 1959 SCR 919
ACT:
Criminal trial-Amendment in procedure during pendency of
trial-If retrospective-Code of Criminal Procedure (V of
1898), S. 342 A-Criminal Procedure Code (Amendment) Act (26
of 1955),s. 116.
HEADNOTE:
A complaint was filed against the appellant on January
13,1953, and the Special Magistrate trying him commenced the
recording of evidence on July 4, 955. During the trial the
Criminal Procedure Code (Amendment) Act (26 of 955) came
into force on January 2, 1956, which introduced s. 342 A in
the Code of Criminal Procedure. The appellant made an
application to the Magistrate claiming the right to appear
as a witness on his own behalf under s. 342 A in disproof of
the charges made against him. The Magistrate rejected the
application on the ground that S. 342 A could not be applied
to pending proceedings which would be according to the
procedure laid down in the unamended Code:
Held, that on a plain construction of s. ii6 of the amending
Act which provided for procedure to be followed in pending
cases S. 342 A was clearly applicable in such cases. Under
the general law also a change in procedure operates
retrospectively.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 178 of
1957.
117
920
Appeal by special leave from the order dated May 28, 1956,
of the former Nagpur High Court in Criminal Revision No. 150
of 1956 arising out of the order dated February 2, 1956, of
Shri K. L. Pandey, Special Magistrate at Nagpur in Criminal
Case No. I of 1955.
R. Patnaik, for the appellant.
S. N. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1958. May 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KAPUR J.-This is an appeal against the judgment and order of
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the High Court of Nagpur confirming the decision of the
Special Magistrate disallowing the application of the
appellant to give evidence as a witness under s. 342A of the
Criminal Procedure Code.
The Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh, on January 13, 1953,
filed a complaint against the appellant and three others
under s. 282 of the Indian Companies Act and ss. 465 and
477A of the Indian Penal Code. The proceedings commenced in
1954 before a Magistrate but on May 18, 1955, they were
transferred to a Special Magistrate who commenced the
recording of evidence on July 4, 1955. On August 12, 1955,
the Criminal Procedure Code (Amendment) Act (26 of 1955)
received the assent of the President and came into force on
January 2, 1956. In this judgment it will be referred to as
the Amending Act and the Code of Criminal Procedure as the
Code. On January 14, 1956, the appellant made an
application to the Magistrate claiming the right to appear
as a witness on his own behalf under s. 342A of the amended
Code "in disproof of the charges made against him ". His
application was dismissed and so was his revision to the
High Court of Nagpur which held:
" While it must be conceded that the wording of clause (c)
as also the other clauses of section 116 of the amending Act
could have been put in simpler and more direct language, its
ingenuous circumlocution cannot be allowed to cloak. its
true meaning or to permit the construction which the
applicant seeks to
921
put upon it. The language used doe,-, not justify hold ing
that when the statute says " this Act it means only " some
of the provisions of this Act Thus the High Court was of the
opinion that the proceedings pending before the Special
Magistrate would be according to the procedure laid down in
the unamended Code and the appellant could not therefore
appear as a witness under s. 342A of the amended Code.
According to the provisions of the unamedded Code an accused
person could not appear as a witness in his defence although
for the purpose of enabling him to explain circumstances
appearing in the evidence against him the Court could put
such questions as it considered necessary. Section 118 of
the Evidence Act deals with persons who are competent to
testify as witnesses but in view of s. 342 of the unamended
Code no accused person could appear as a witness and there-
fore s. 118 was inapplicable to such persons. Article 20(3)
of the Constitution provides that no person accused of an
offence shall be compelled to be a witness against himself
and s. 342A was inserted into the Code by s. 61 of the
amending Act. It provides:-
S.342A " Any person accused of an offence before a
Criminal Court shall be a competent witness for the defence
and may give evidence on oath in disproof of the charges
made against him or any person charged together with him at
the same trial:
Provided that
(a) he shall not be called as a witness except on
his own request in writing; or
(b) his failure to give evidence shall not be made
the subject of any comment by any of the parties or the
Court to give rise to any presumption against him:self or
any person charged together with him at the same trial."
Thus the law was amended and the accused person has become a
competent witness for the defence but he cannot be compelled
to be a witness and cannot be called as a witness except at
his own request in writing and his failure to give evidence
cannot be
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922
made the subject matter of comment by the parties or the
Court.
The question that arises for decision is whether to a
pending prosecution the provisions of the amended Code have
become applicable. There is no controversy on the general
principles applicable to the case. No person has a vested
right in any course of procedure. He has only the right of
prosecution or defence in the manner prescribed for the time
being by or for the Court in which the case is pending and
if by an Act of Parliament the mode of procedure is altered
he has no other right than to proceed according to the
altered mode. See Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes on
p. 225; The Colonial Sugar Refining Co. Ltd. v. Irving (1).
In other words a change in the law of procedure operates
retrospectively and unlike the law relating to vested right
is not only prospective.
The amending Act contains provisions in regard to the
procedure to be applied to pending cases in s. 116 which is
as follows:-
S.116 " Notwithstanding that all or any of the provisions
of this Act have come into force in any State-
(a)the provisions of section 14 or section 30 or section
145 or section 146 of the principal Act as amended by this
Act shall not apply to or affect, any trial or other
proceeding which, on the date of such commencement, is
pending before any Magistrate and every such trial or other
proceeding shall be continued and disposed of as if this Act
had not been passed ;
(b)the provisions of section 406 or section 408 or section
409 of the principal Act as amended by this Act shall not
apply to, or affect, any appeal which, on the date of such
commencement, is pending before the District Magistrate or
any Magistrate of the First class empowered by the State
Government to hear such appeal, and every such appeal shall,
notwithstanding the repeal of the first proviso to section
406 or of section 407 of the principal Act, be heard and
disposed of as if this Act had not been passed;
(i)(1905) A.C. 369,"372.
923
(c)the provisions of clause (w) of section 4 or section
207A or section 251A or section 260 of the principal Act as
amended by this Act shall not apply to, or affect, any
inquiry or trial before a Magistrate in which the Magistrate
has begun to record evidence prior to the date of such
commencement and which is pending on that date, and every
such inquiry or trial shall be continued and disposed of as
if this Act had not been passed;
(d)the provisions of Chapter XXIII of the principal Act as
amended by this Act shall not apply to, or affect, any trial
before a Court of Sessions either by jury or with the aid of
assessors in which the Court of Sessions has begun to record
evidence prior to the date of such commencement and which is
pending on that date, and every such trial shall be
continued and disposed of as if this Act had not been
passed; but save as aforesaid, the provisions of this Act
and the amendments made thereby shall apply to all pro-
ceedings instituted after the commencement of this Act and
also to all proceedings pending in any Criminal Court on the
date of such commencement."
It was contended on behalf of the respondent that the
following words in clause (c) of s. 116 of the amending Act
" and every such enquiry or trial shall be continued and
disposed of as if this Act had not been passed " mean that
no provision of the Act would be applicable to pending
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trials and particular stress was laid on the words " as if
this Act had not been passed". If that is the
interpretation to be put then it would be in conflict with
the last portion of the section i. e. " Save as aforesaid
the provisions of this Act and the amendments made thereby
shall apply to all proceedings instituted after the
commencement of this Act and also to all proceedings pending
in any Criminal Court on the date of such commencement." The
language used in this portion of the section in regard to
the proceedings which are instituted after the commencement
of the amended Code is identical with that dealing with
-proceedings pending in a Criminal Court on the date of its
commencement. Therefore if this Act applies to all
proceedings which commenced
924
after the Act came into force they would equally apply to
proceedings which had already commenced except those
provisions which have been expressly excluded. If the whole
section is construed in the manner contended for by the
respondent then there will be a conflict between the words
used in the various clauses and words- used in the main s.
116 and it is one of the principles of interpretation that
the words should be construed in such a manner as to avoid a
conflict. Thus construed the words of cl. (c) and the words
of the rest of the s. 116 would mean this that the pro-
visions of ss. 4 (w), 207A, 251A or 260 of the Code as
amended shall not apply or affect any enquiry or trial
before a Magistrate where the recording of evidence has
started prior to the date of the commencement of the
amending Act and every such enquiry should be continued and
disposed of as if these sections had not been enacted.
Except as to this and except as to the provisions mentioned
in sub-cls. (a), (b) and (d) the other provisions of the
amended Code would be applicable to such proceedings which
is also in accordance with the general principles applicable
to amendments in procedural law.
By s. 34 of the amending Act, s. 251 of the Code was
substituted by two sections i. e. 251 and 251A. Section 251
lays down the procedure in warrant cases. It provides:-
S. 251 " In the trial of warrant cases by Magi.
strates,the Magistrate shall,-
(a) in any case instituted on a police report,
follow the procedure specified in section 215A; and (b) in
any other case, follow the procedure specified in the other
provisions of this Chapter."
Sub-clause (a) deals with cases instituted on a police
report and sub-cl. (b) with other cases. To the former s.
251A is applicable and to other cases procedure specified in
other provisions in Chapter 21 is made applicable. Section
342A is in Chapter 24 and there is nothing in the amending
Act or the amended Code which makes the provision of s. 342A
inapplicable to criminal proceeding-, which are pending
before a Magistrate and in which the recording of evidence
has commenced.
925
In our opinion on the plain construction of the words used
in s. 116 of the amending Act, s. 342A available to the
appellant. The High Court, it appears, was misled into
construing the words in clause (c) of s. 116 i. e. "as if
this Act had not been passed". The High Court was therefore
in error and the appellant is entitled, in our view, as a
competent witness for the defence to testify in disproof of
the charges made against him or any other person charged
together with him at the same trial.
We would, therefore., allow this appeal, set aside the order
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of the courts below and hold that the application made by
the appellant to appear as a witness was well-founded and
should have been allowed.
Appeal allowed.