Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
A.JAYARAM & ANR.ETC.ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH BYC.B.I.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/07/1995
BENCH:
RAY, G.N. (J)
BENCH:
RAY, G.N. (J)
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2128 1995 SCC Supl. (3) 333
JT 1995 (5) 238 1995 SCALE (4)393
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 13TH DAY OF JULY, 1995
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice G.N.Ray
Hon’ble Mr. Justice Faizan Uddin
Mr.K.T.S.Tulsi, Additional Solicitor General, Mr. K.Madhava
Reddy and Ms.Amreshwari, Sr. Advs., Mr.K.R. Choudhary,
Mr.G.Narasimhlu, Mr. V.V.Vaze Mr.D.Satyanarayan, Mr.R.P.
Srivastava, Mr. Hemant Sharma, Mr. W.A.Quardi, Mr.
P.Parmeswaran and C.B.Babu, Advs. with them for the
appearing parties.
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 310 OF 1989
A.Jayaram and Anr.
Versus
State of Andhra Pradesh
By C.B.I.
WITH Criminal appeals Nos.308 and 309 of 1989, 311 to 317 of
1989, 163 to 166 of 1994 and Criminal Appeals Nos. 184 to
185 of 1994.
J U D G M E N T
G.N. RAY.J.
All the aforesaid appeals were heard analogously
because the criminal proceedings instituted against the
appellants in these appeals, being the officers of the State
Government of Andhra Pradesh and dealers of fertilizers in
the State of Andhra Pradesh related to an alleged scandal in
transporting imported fertilisers from the ports of Tamil
Nadu and Andhra Pradesh to different destinations in
the State of Andhra Pradesh. A tabular statement indicating
the numbers of the appeals in this Court, corresponding
numbers of the appeals in the Andhra Pradesh High Court and
corresponding numbers of the criminal cases in the trial
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court out of which the appeals in the High Court arose is
given below:
Government and others are dealers.
The Special Judge for Fertilizers Transport Cases
(A.P.) acquitted all the accused in the criminal cases
instituted against the officers and dealers. But on appeals
by the State of Andhra Pradesh, the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh by the impugned judgments reversed the orders of
acquittal and convicted all the appellants. As the Criminal
Appeal No. 310 of 1989 was taken up first for hearing and
was argued at length as the main appeal and learned counsel
appearing for the appellants in the other appeals
supplemented the arguments by drawing attention of this
Court to the special facts relating to such appeals, we
propose to deal with the arguments advanced in Criminal
Appeal No. 310 of 1989 at length.
Criminal Appeal No. 310 of 1989 has been preferred by
Accused No. 2 District Agricultural Officer Nandiyal (DAO)
and Accused No. 3 Assistant Agricultural Officer Nandiyal
(AAO) Accused No.1 who was a dealer in fertiliser was also
convicted by the High Court. Both A-2 and A-3 have been
convicted by the High Court under Section 120B read with
Section 420 I.P.C. and sentenced to pay a fine of Rs.100/-
and in default to undergo rigorous imprisonment for one
month. They were further convicted under Section 5(2) read
with Section 5(1) (d) of prevention of Corruption Act and
sentenced to pay a fine of Rs.100/- and in default to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for one month. They were also
sentenced to imprisonment till the rising of the Court. The
dealer accused No.1 was however convicted under Section 477-
A I.P.C. and was sentenced to pay a fine of Rs.100/- in
default to unergo rigorous imprisonment for one month. He
was also sentenced to detention till the rising of the
Court. It may be indicated here that the Government Officers
in the other appeals were sentenced similarly on similar
evidence. Accordingly submissions on behalf of such
appellants were also more or less on similar terms.
The impugned judgments of the High Court reversing the
orders of acquittal and convicting the appellants in these
appeals have been assailed by the learned counsel for the
appellants by contending that although an appellate Court
has jurisdiction to interfere with the finding of fact and
reverse such finding on proper appreciation of evidence
adduced in the trial, as a rule of prudence, court of appeal
should not interfere with the order of acquittal are not
perverse of against the weight of the evidence addced in the
case and the basis of judgment is founded on a reasoning
which can not be held to be one of the possible views which
may be reasoning which can not be held to be one of the
possible views which may be reasonably taken by the Court.
The learned counsel have submitted that the guidelines or
the principles justifying interference by the Court of
appeal against an order of acquittal have been well settled
by a number of decisions of this Court indicating that rules
of prudence dictate that unless a very strong case for
interference against a well reasoned order of acquittal is
made out, the court of appeal will refrain from making its
own assessment of the evidence for taking one of the
possible views, different from the view taken by the trial
court. It has been submitted that although High Court has
rightly pointed out the principles justifying interference
against the order of acquittal it failed to appreciate the
facts and circumstances of the cases and the evidences
adduced in the trial and has reversed the decisions of the
trial court cotrary to the well established principles
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justifying such interference. The contention of the learned
counsel appearing for the appellants in Criminal Appeal No.
310 of 1989 are to the following effect:-
(a) The High Court in this case has
totally ignored the reasons given by the
Trial Court and totally overlooked the
several admissions made by the
prosecution witnesses in their Cross-
examination which wholly demolisnes the
value of their evidence in examination-
in-chief. Except discussing one aspect,
namely that owners of the shops are
competent witnesses to identify the
handwriting of their clerks who made the
entries in the account books, there is
no discussion regarding several other
reasons given by the Trial Court for not
accepting the evidence of the
prosecution witnesses.
(b) The High Court has gone by surmises.
The High Court has, in reversing the
Trial Courts Judgement of acquittal
nowhere found that on the evidence
adduced the view taken by the trial
court could not have been taken. The
High Court, sitting in appeal, ought not
to have reversed the acquittal without
displacing the findings of the Trial
Court merely because a different view
was also possible. The High Court has
nowhere considered how the officers, A-2
and A-3, could be held guilty of
conspiracy without a categorical finding
that no fertilizer was received by the
AAD (A-3). It has not adverted to the
admissions made by the prosecution
witnesses in their cross examination
which were referred to by the Trial
Court for acquitting them.
(c) The High Court has failed to notice
that not a single witness of the
prosecution has stated that there was no
stock of fertilizers on the day when it
was recorded in the stock register by A-
3.
(d) The High Court failed to see that
upto the date of issuance of the
impugned certificates, there was no
obligation to verify the registration
numbers of the trucks in which the
fertilizers were transported.
(e) The High Court failed to consider
that the District Agricultural Officer
in Nandiyal which is in Kurnool
District, has neither jurisdiction nor
the staff to monitor each lorry
transporting fertilizers lifted from
Kakinada port which is five districts
away at a distance of nearly 600 kms.
from his place of posting. He (A-2,DAO)
was to take the certificate given by A-3
(AAO) and issue a certificate verifying
the distance and reasonableness of Rate
after verifying the stock which he did.
There is no evidence to the contrary.
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(f) The High Court has erred in nothing
the DAO’s (A-2) contention. It was never
argued for A-2 that he had no obligation
to verify the stock.
(g) The High Court failed to notice that
there is an entry in the stock register
of the respective stock on the
particular day and A-(3) (AAO) gave the
certificate. Prosecution has not
examined any witness even to say that no
truck came and no fertilizer was
delivered to A-2 on that day.
(h) No witness was examined to prove
that on the day the entry was made, any
inspection was done either on that day
or within a reasonable time thereafter
to hold that no stock was received and
certificate given by A-2 and A-3 are
false.
(i) No witness was examined to show that
attempt was made to ascertain if any
stock was in the godown
contemporaneously with the date of the
entry in the stock Register or the
issuance of the certificate; nor was
there any specific complaint to this
effect.
No one was examined to prove that there
was no stock on the relevant date.
(j) The High Court totally ignored the
evidence of PWs. 13 and 15 who
categorically stated that fertilizers
were freely available in the market
which fact was specifically referred to
and relied upon by the Trial Court to
acquit the appellant. With the limited
jurisdiction of A-2 and A-3 they could
only verify the stock brought to them
and enter in the stock register. They
had no machinery to verify whether it
was the self same stock which was lifted
by A-1 from Kakinada or some other
stock. For that purpose A-2 was required
only to verify the port documents
showing lifting at this port. It is the
admitted case of prosecution that Dealer
A-1 did lift fertilizer from Kakinada.
Hence some fertilizer was delivered to
A-2. Even if it was not the same, A-2
and A-3 were bound to issue the
certificates. Hence they cannot be held
guilty. There is no evidence that
fertilizer was not delivered at all.
When fertilisers were freely available
the dealers could even after selling
away fertilizers lifted at port could
very well have purchased fertilizers
locally and delivered it to A-2. Unless
this hypothesis, which is highly
probable is excluded by positive
evidence A-2 and A-3 cannot be found
guilty.
(k) The trial court further held that
the alleged sales by dealer (A-1) at
Bubbili and Sompeta was not established.
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The trial Court also held that the
identify of the fertilisers sold is not
established. In the absence of such
evidence, the trial court refused to
believe that the fertilisers were not
transported from Kakinada to Allagadda
in Kurnool District. Dealing with this
aspect, the High Court has observed that
the partner of the shop has been
examined and in some cases clerk has
been examined and accounts in which the
sale transactions are entered are proved
and hence sale by A-1 is proved. In
coming to that conclusion, the High
Court failed to notice that:
i) day books were not filed and only
ledgers were filed.
ii) In the ledgers there is no entry of
A-1 selling the fertilisers.
iii) There is also no entry to identify
the fertilisers sold, nor even that it
was imported fertiliser taken delivery
of at Kakinada by A-1. The day book in
which such entries are said to have been
made was not produced.
iv) That the registration number of
trucks were not entered in the ledger
and are said to have been entered in the
day book but that day book was not
produced. The witnesses examined
admitted that they did not travel in the
trucks which transported the fertilisers
purchased by them.
v) The drivers were not examined.
vi) The trip sheets of the trucks were
not filed. A few filed are loose sheets.
Witnesses admitted that they were not
maintained for all trips. Refering to
the decision in State of Kerala versus
Thomas Alias Boby (1986 (2) SCC 411) it
was contended that trip sheets were not
worthy of credence because loose sheets
properly maintained and kept not in any
book form, have no evidentiary value. No
liability can be imposed on the basis of
mere entry in the account books and such
trip sheets. All these facts were taken
note of by the trial court in holding
the sales not proved.
vii) The High Court in reversing the
findings has only made a general
reference to the examination-in-chief of
those witnesses and wholly ignored the
damaging admissions made by each one of
the witnesses in cross-examination.
viii) The High Court has only pointed
out that partners of the firm which
purchased fertilisers were competent
witnesses to identify the signature of
the clerks who made these entries. That
by itself does not establish the
identity of the fertilisers lifted from
Kakinada port nor does it establish that
A-1 had sold those fertilisers.
ix) The High Court has placed reliance
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on entries at the check posts. Judicial
notice of the fact could be taken note
of that for several trucks moving on
road there are no entries in the check
post regions. When these fertilisers are
admittedly not liable for sales tax. If
no entries are made, no inference
adverse to the accused could be drawn.
1) The ingredients of the offences
charged against the appellants have not
been established for the following
reasons:
a) A-2 and A-3 are charged with the
offence of giving false certificates.
For bringing home the charge of 120-B
read with 420 against A-2 and A-3, the
prosecution in this case must establish
that they had conspired with A-1 to
cheat. There is no direct evidence on
this aspect. Of course, it can be
established by circumstantial evidence.
The most essential ingredient of the
offence of cheating is deceiving any
person and inducing that person to
deliver any property. In this case there
is no proof of non delivery of
fertiliser. The certificate issued by A-
2 and A-3, could be said to be false
only if no fertiliser was received by A-
3 and yet A-3 entered in the stock
register and issued the certificate.
There is no finding of the High Court
that the stock of fertilisers was not
received. It may be noted that there is
no duty cast upon A-3 to certify that a
particular type of fertiliser has been
received or imported fertiliser has been
received or the very same stock lifted
from Kakinada port was received by him.
A-3 was only to certify the quantity of
fertiliser received. It was not within
the power of A-3 to monitor the
transport all the way from Kakinada to
Allagadda over a distance of 600 kms.
His jurisdiction is limited to one of
the several talukas of the district
while the fertiliser was to be
transported over 5 districts. When
fertiliser was freely available in the
market, it may very well be that A-1
disposed of the fertiliser lifted from
Kakinada at Kakinada or at any other
place nearby, purchased other
fertilisers freely available in the
market and delivered to A-3 and A-3 who
having received the same entered in the
stock register and issued the
certificate. The certificate so issued
could not be said to be false or given
to deceive anyone unless it is
established that no fertiliser at all
was received on the particular day a
certificate issued cannot be said to be
false. There is no such evidence; hence
A-3 cannot be held guilty.
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b) A-2, DAO, issued certificate
certifying the distance from Kakinada to
Allagadda and the reasonable rate which
could be paid per ton of fertiliser per
km. It is not the case of the
prosecution that the certificate of
distance and reasonable price is false
or untrue. The case is that the
fertilisers were not transported at all
and that no fertiliser was reversed on
the day when it was entered in the stock
register. A-3 was to give the
certificate certifying the distance and
the rate for transport after verifying
the stock after obtaining the
certificate issued by A-3. If the
certificate issued by A-3 is not false,
as submitted above, when there is no
evidence that DAO A-2 has not verified
the stock, A-2 also cannot be held
guilty. Even assuming that A-1 has
disposed of the fertiliser lifted from
Kakinada at any other place and did not
actually transport it to Allagadda, so
long as it is not established that on
the day when the entry is made in the
stock register, there was no stock
received by A-3 neither A-2 nor A-3 can
be held guilty. The prosecution has
failed to prove positively that there
was no fertiliser on the relevant date.
The prosecution however wants the
court to draw an inference against the
accused on the evidence of sale of
certain fertilisers by A-1 the dealer,
at some other place. There is no basis
for such an inference especially when
plenty of fertilisers were freely
available in the market and even after
disposing of the fertilisers at a
different place, the dealer (A-1) could
have purchased fertiliser from the
nearby market and delivered the same to
A-3. A certificate issued by A-3 on
receiving such fertilisers cannot be
said to be falsely issued with an intent
to deceive the government to secure
benefit for A-1. A-2 also could not
therefore be found guilty.
The prosecution, however, says that
in the circumstances only negative
evidence could be adduced that
fertiliser were disposed of elsewhere
and positive evidence of fertiliser not
having been delivered on the relevant
date to A-3, could not be adduced. This
contention cannot be accepted for
several reasons.
i) The evidence of anyone who inspected
the godowns as they are expected to be
inspected periodically could have been
adduced. Not a single witness has been
examined by the prosecution to prove
this.
ii) Evidence of persons of the locality
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where the godown was situated, could
have been adduced to show that no trucks
came and no fertilisers were received at
that godown on that day or a day or two
earlier or later.
iii) A-3 had certified that A-1 dealer
has taken delivery at Kakinada as per
port documents and that he has delivered
certain quantity of fertiliser.
iv) The conspiracy is said to be of the
DAO (A-2) and AAO, (A-3) with the dealer
(A-1). The conspiracy is not between any
officer above the level of DAO and yet
none of those higher officers have been
examined to show that in or about the
relevant date, these fertilisers were
not available in the godown.
v) While the offence is alleged to have
taken place in october 1968. FIR was
registered on 24.6.1970 and the
chargesheet was laid in 1973. The charge
sheet does not say that any Officer
higher in hierarchy to A-2 was involved.
Yet none of them has been examined to
prove that fertilisers were not in the
godown on the day when they were
purportedly received by A-2.
It has been very strongly contended by the learned
counsel for the appellant that the prosecution pleaded an
excuse for not leading better evidence to establish all the
ingredients of the offence on account of inordinate delay in
making proper investigation and filing the charge sheet and
contended that adverse inference should be drawn against the
accused. The learned counsel for the appellants has
contended that such contention being against all cannons of
criminal jurisorudence should not have been accepted by the
Court. It was the unfailing obligation of the prosecution to
lead convincing and unimpeachable evidence to prove the
charges levelled against the accused. Failure of the
prosecution to establish such charge for any reason
whatsoever cannot but ensure to the benefit of the accused
particularly when the delay in investigating the case and
filing chargesheet was not attributable to the accused.
It has also been contended that the conviction was
sought to be based on circumstantial evidence are well
settled by decisions of this Court in a catina of cases.
Referring to the decision made by this Court in Janar Lal
Das versus State of Orissa (1991 (3) SCC 27), the learned
counsel has submitted that this court has indicated that in
order to sustain conviction on circumstantial evidence,
three conditions must be fulfilled namely;
(i) the circumstances from which an
inference of guilt is sought to be
drawn, must be cogently and firmly
established.
(ii) those circumstances should be
definite unerringly pointing towards the
guilt of the accused:
(iii) the circumstances, taken
cumulatively, should from a chain so
complete that there is no escape from
the conclusion that within all human
probability the crime was committed by
the accused and none else, and it should
also be incapable of explanation on any
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other hypothesis than that of the guilt
of the accused.
In cases depending largely upon
circumstantial evidence there is always
a danger that conjecture or suspicion
may take the place of legal proof. The
Court must satisfy itself that various
circumstanced in the chain of evidence
should be established clearly and that
the completed chain must be such as to
rule out a reasonable likelihood of the
innocence of the accused. When the main
link goes, the chain of circumstances
gets snapped and other circumstances
cannot in any manner establish the guilt
of the accused beyond all reasonable
doubts. It is at this juncture the court
has to be watchful and avoid the danger
of allowing the suspicion to take the
place of legal proof for sometimes
unconsciously it may happen to be a
short step between moral certainty and
legal proof. At times it can be a case
of ‘may be true’. But there is a long
mental distance between ‘may be true’
and ‘must be true’ and the same divides
conjectures from sure conclusions.
It has been contended that there is no convincing and
unimpeachable evidence which unerringly points out to the
guilt of the accused and in the facts of the case, no
conclusion other than complicity of the accused for the
offence charged, is possible. Hence, conviction of the
appellant on proobability, surmise or conjecture was not
warranted.
The learned counsel for the appellant has submitted that the
appellants had no special knowledge as to whatroute had been
actually followed by the dealer or transporter in bringing
the fertilisers to government godown. The appellants had the
duty to certify shortest route between the point of lifting
and point of delivery and certify reasonable rate on the
basis of such shortest route.
It has been contended that the appellants being government
officers responsible at the receiving point were required to
ensure that fertilisers had in fact delivered at the
receiving point. On receiving the fertilisers, the
appellants have discharged their duties in certifying the
receipt of fertilisers. Nobody had verified the stock
received at the godown on the day of delivery or even within
a reasonable time. If a dealer or transporter disposes of
fertilisers lifted at port on route and brings a new
consignment of fertiliser by procuring elsewhere, the
government officers at the receiving and had nothing to do.
If on receipt of the fertilisers delivered at the
destination, such officers had issued certificates, no
offence charged against them could be held to have been
established.
Circulars issued subsequent to 1.11.68 would go to show
that A-2 (DAO) nor A-3 (AAO) were required to verify the
Registration number of trucks in which the fertilisers were
actually transported to Allagadda. That was prescribed only
subsequent to the date of the alleged offence. Under the
earlier circulars there was no such requirement. Reliance
was placed by the prosecution on circular dated 5.2.68 at
page 29 to 31 of paper book, Vol.II which require the A-2
(DAO) to conduct physical verification of stocks received in
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the district and the manure mixing firm and report the same
in a cover addressed to the Director of Agriculture by name.
There was no failure to verify on the part of A-2 when
he issued such a letter. That letter is extracted at page 70
of the High Court judgment, Ex.P-87. No evidence is adduced
by the prosecution to show that no stock was received by A-3
and that A-2 did not physically verify the stock. Not one
witness has so stated. The prosecution only insists upon the
court to draw adverse inference against the accused from the
fact that A-1 had disposed of some fertilisers somewhere at
Kakinada, Bubli, or Sompeta after lifting from Kakinada.
When several complaints were made that officers were
delaying in issuing the certificates the procedure was
modified by circulars dated 27.6.1966 Ex.P-1 at page 149 and
circular dated 12.3.1968 Ex.D-48 page 155. Ex.D-48
specifically says that DAO (A-2) should ensure that the
parties have actually moved the stock and for this purpose
the DAO may obtain the certificate of verification from
Agricultural Extension Officer (A-3). A-2 has obtained such
certificate. Further, the Agricultural Extension Officer (A-
3) should furnish the stock book entry of the depot
concerned. Admittedly such an entry is found and it is
furnished by A-3 to A-2 and A-2 in turn has forwarded the
same to the higher authorities. Further, Agricultural
Extension Officer (A-3) is required to make the stock book
entry basing on the material furnished in proforma 1 issued
at the ports. It is the admitted case of the prosecution
that proforma 1 issued at the ports was so furnished. Hence
the certificate issued by A-3 cannot be said to be false
when for the purpose of ensuring actual movement of stocks,
these alone were to be taken into account. As regards the
certificate to be issued by A-2 (which is at page 152 of the
Special Leave Petition paper book), circular dated
27.6.1966, states that in view of the clarification given by
the Government of India, the following procedure is
prescribed for certification regarding rates and distance.
That procedure was followed. There is no evidence of the
prosecution that that procedure was not followed. There is
no allegation that distance and rates certified are not
correct.
Circular dated 5.2.1968 only emphasises the physical
verification. There is no evidence that he has not
physically verified issuing the certificate of distance and
route in the covering letter addressed to the Director of
Agriculture. It does not prescribe verifying Registration
Number of trucks.
The learned counsel appearing for the appellants who
are government officers have submitted that charges against
the government servants could not be established. Even if
the transporters or dealers in fertilisers had committed
guilt they were liable to be convicted for the part played
by them but on account of any guilt on the part of the
dealers, the officers could not be prosecuted. Hence, there
was no occasion to convict such officers by reversing the
orders of acquittal.
The learned counsel for other appellants who are
government officers have submitted that facts and
circumstances in other cases are more or less similar. No
varification of stock at the receiving and had been done
immediately after receipt of the goods or even within a
reasonable time. Therefore, the appellants for the grounos
indicated in Criminal Appeal No.310 of 1989 should be
acquitted by setting aside the unjust and improper order of
conviction and sentence passed by the High Court.
The learned counsel appearing for the dealers in their
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appeals have submitted that it was alleged that the dealers,
pursuant to the conspiracy with other accused namely the
government officers had preferred false claims for
reimbursement of the road transport charges. It has been
contended that the dealers had obtained certificates about
the receipt of the goods transported at the destination
issued by the competent government official. It had not been
established that such goods had in fact not been received by
leading any convincing positive evidence about the stock
position at the relevant time. No one had verified the stock
at the receiving end either on the date of delivery or
within reasonable time thereafter. Hence, it cannot be
contended that goods in question had not been transported at
all but false claim for such transportation charge had been
made. It has been contended that the High Court allowed the
appeals against the dealers mainly on the ground that there
were no entries at the checkposts and that there was
evidence of sale of some fertilisers. Absence of entries in
chekposts ipso facto did not establish that the lorries did
not ply through the routes in question. It could not be
established beyond all reasonable doubts that invariably in
all cases appropraite entries in checkposts had been made.
It has been established that checkpost entries had not
always been properly maintained. Hence, absence of entry in
the checkpost could not be held to be conclusive evidence
about non transportation of goods.
It has also been contended that transportation of goods
by alternative route was not prohibited. The only embargo
was that transportation charge should be paid on the basis
of shortest route certified by competent government
official. The learned counsel have contended that evidence
about sale of fertilizers at some places had been led by the
prosecution. Such fact ipso facto, does not establish
conclusively and beyond reasonable doubt as to whether the
goods to be transported had been sold and as such the same
had not been delivered at the destination. No proof has been
given by the prosecution as to what quality of fertilisers
had been sold. There is also no evidence that no fertiliser
was available in the market in the entire region. It has
been contended by the learned counsel for the appellants
that after a long lapse of time, an uproar was made in the
State Assembly and in the media about large scale
manipulation in the transportation of fertilisers. It was
only because of public pressure that long after
transportation was effected enquiries were sought to be
made. It was unfortunate that the government could not place
reliance on the State’s police and because of public uproar,
C.B.I. was entrusted to cause enquiry into the allegation of
scandal with the transportation of fertilisers. Admittedly,
such enquiry had been made at a very belated stage when
hardly there was any material or evidence to substantiate
the charges against the accused. It has been contended that
knowing fully well that such allegations about the scandal
in dealing with fertilizers could not be established for
want of proof, the government in order to pacify public
demand initiated the criminal cases against the appellants.
The trial court by giving detailed reasons acquitted all the
accused in the criminal cases instituted against them. But
as aforesaid, the High Court reassessed the findings of the
trial court and convicted the appellants mainly on the basis
of suspicion, surmise and conjectures. It has been contended
that the token punishment given by the High Court amply
demonstrates that the High Court also entertained a feeling
that the guilt had not been established in a fully
convincing manner. In the aforesaid facts, the learned
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counsel have submitted that the impugned decisions of the
High Court have occasioned grave injustice and should be set
aside by this Court.
The learned counsel appearing for the State of A.P. in
these appeals have, however, seriously disputed the
contentions made on behalf of the appellants. The learned
counsel for the State in Criminal Appeal No.310 of 1989 has
contended that transportation of fertilisers had to be made
from the port of Kakinada to Allagadda in Karnool District.
It is the prosecution case that such fertiliser had not been
transported to the destination but the goods were sold at
Kakinada itself and at some intermediate places and the
dealers made a false claim of transportation charge for a
sum of Rs.13,972.50. A-3 who was the Agricultural Assistant
Officer and consignee of the goods made a false entry in the
stock register to the effect that the fertilizers were
received at Allogadda and on the oasis of certificate used
by A-3 since endorsed by A-23, the District Agricultural
Officer about actual transportation of the fertilizers
through shortest route, the claim of the dealer was allowed
by the government. The prosecution alleged that there had
been conspiracy and connivance between A-2 and A-3 and A-1
to defraud the Government.
Learned counsel for the State respondent in support of
the judgment has submitted that the prosecution in support
of its case examined the owners of the lorries alleged to
have transported the goods from Kakinada to Allagada as PWs.
6,7,8,16 and 22. It is the prosecution case that the
fertilisers stated to have been carried to the destination
at Allagada had been disposed of at Kakinada. Such
purchasers of fertilisers were examined as PWs. 1-4, 13-15,
21, 24, 29, 30, 34 and 35. The officials of the check post
on the regular route between Kakinada and Allagada were also
examined by the prosecution being PWs. 26-28 and 31. It has
been contended by the learned counsel for the respondent
that unfortunately after long laspe of time it was not
possible to lead direct evidence about the actual position
of stock of fertilisers at the destination point on the date
of alleged receipt of fertilisers or immediately thereafter.
It has been submitted that it was a large scale scandal in
the matter of transportation of imported fertilisers at
various destinations at State of Andhra Pradesh and because
the fraud was perpetrated with the active connivance of the
government officials entrusted to receive the fertilisers at
the destination, such fraud could not be detected
immediately. He has submitted that it is unfortunate that
the C.B.I. had to be entrusted for causing enquiry because
effective enquiry could not be made by the State agencies.
Such enquiry had been held long after the incident of fraud.
Naturally, the C.B.I. was handicapped to a great extent but
despite the same the C.B.I. has done excellent job and by
examining the lorry owners, the persons purchasing the
fertilisers stated to have been transported and the
officials in the check post. It has been conclusively
established from depositions of such witnesses that the
fertilisers in question had in fact not been transported to
destination. The learned counsel has submitted that once
this fact is clearly established that the fertilisers which
had been lifted at the port and was scheduled to be
transported at the destination Allagada had not been
transported by the lorries through which it was said to have
been transported and it is also proved that fertilisers had
in fact been sold elsewhere and such lorries did not pass
through the usual route to be followed for such
transportation, there will be no difficulty in holding that
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the certificate which was issued by the government officials
about the actual transportation of the said fertilisers by
the shortest route was false and fabricated and such
certificate had been issued without actually receiving the
goods. On the basis of such evidences since accepted by the
High Court, the order of conviction by the High Court by
reversing improper judgment of acquittal passed by the trial
court is wholly justified and no interference is called for.
The trial court proceeded on surmise and conjecture. The
learned counsel has submitted that the High Court was fully
aware of the appeal court’s responsibilities and duties in
dealing with the judgment of acquittal. Since the finding of
the trial court was completely against the weight of the
evidence and such finding could not be held to be based on a
reasonable view which could be taken on the basis of
evidence adduced in the case, the High Court felt that such
order of acquittal could not be sustained. Accordingly, the
impugned orders of conviction of sentence have been passed.
It has been submitted by the learned counsel for the
respondent that the trial court erred in drawing adverse
inference against the prosecution case because the drivers
of the lorries had not been examined but only the lorry
owners were examined. The trial court also draw an adverse
inference because the clerks of the lorry owners who made
entries about the movement of the lorries in question had
not been examined. The learned counsel has submitted that
such view of the trial court was wholly erroneous and
unjustified. The lorry owners were competent to say whether
the lorry owned by them had been engaged for the
transportation of the fertilisers in question and it was not
necessary to examine the drivers who actually drove the
lorries. The owners of the lorries were expected to know the
hand writings of the clerks engaged by them in the registers
maintained in their office. To prove such entries about the
movement of lorries, the clerks were not required to be
examined and no adverse inference was required to be drawn
for not examining the clerks. It has been submitted that the
High Court observed that there were several Circulars issued
prior to March 12, 1968 and subsequent to March 12, 1960 and
such circulars only indicated the responsibilities of the
Agricultural Officer. It has been submitted that the High
Court elaborately dealt with the circulars and held that
despite specific guidelines given, the accused A-2 and A-3
deliberately failed and neglected to perform their official
duties. The learned counsel has submitted that in a case
governed by the circumstantial evidence it is often very
difficult to prove when the minds of the accused met and it
is only from the facts proved, the reasonable inference can
be drawn about the collusion between A-2 and A-3, namely,
the government officials and the dealer in fertilisers A-1.
It has been contended by the learned counsel for the
respondent that the owner of lorry PW.6 was examined by the
prosecution. The said owner was the best person to speak
about the fact whether his lorry had been taken on hire at
the relevant time for transporting the goods. The lorry
owner is not expected to maintain the trip sheets written
some time in 1968 when he was examined after several years.
P.W 35 the clerk in the shop of G. Surya Narayana stated
that he had purchased 340 bags of urea from PW 30 Bhoja
Dharam Raju & Company, Kakinada and by making an entry he
took delivery of the said 340 bags of urea. PW 30 was also
examined to prove that Bhoja Dharma Raju and Company had
sold 340 bags of urea. Ex.P.164 and P.167 are the sale bills
issued by Dharma Raju. Ex.P.65 and P.67 are the two sale
bills which were also sent with the lorries and by which the
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stocks were sent. Such bills clearly established that the
lorry did not proceed on the same date to Kakinada and any
statement to that effect was false. Ex.P.164 is the seal of
Ramabhadrapuram check post entry. It has been contended by
the learned counsel for the respondent that if the lorry in
question had in fact travelled by any other route, such fact
was within special knowledge of the accused trader. In that
event, the burden shifts to the accused to prove the special
facts within his knowledge. The owner of the lorry had been
examined as PW 7 and the said owner had proved the entry
Ex.P.20 in the day book maintained by him on 9.10.1968. The
trip sheet Ex.P.21 dated 11.10.1968 shows that the lorry
made a trip from Kakinada to Sompeta. Sompeta is situated
within Srikakulam District which is at one end of the State
of Andhra Pradesh touching the border State of Orissa. It
has been established by examining the officials of the check
posts that there is no entry in any of the check posts
between Kakinada and Allagada in respect of the lorry in
question namely lorry bearing No. A.P.W.4926. Ex.P.39 is the
account book dated October 10, 1968 showing that fertilizers
belonging to A-1 were loaded in the said lorry. The account
book of P.W.30 shows that they purchased the fertilisers on
October 10, 1968 and the trip sheet shows that the
fertilisers had in fact been transported to a different
place. From such evidences a reasonable conclusion can be
drawn that the said lorry did not reach the destination.
P.W.1 is the husband of the owner of lorry No. APP 8379. The
said witness has stated that Ex.P.1 is the trip sheet and
his lorry did not transport any fertiliser to Allagadda and
he does not know whereabout of his driver Rama Rao. P.W.22
is the clerk who identified the signatures of Rama Rao,
Driver. P.W.33 gave evidence to the effect that the lorry
made a trip from Kakinada to Amatalagalsa and identified
Ex.P.58 the way bill and stated that the vehicle did not
transport any fertiliser for Thallam Trading Company namely
A-1 from Kakinada to Allagadda on October 10, 1968. So far
as the transporter of fertilisers of lorry No. APV 7335 is
concerned, the owner of the lorry P.W 24 has proved that the
Ex.P.28 is the trip sheet dated January 10, 1968 which shows
that the lorry transported from Kakinada to Rajam. Rajam is
in Srikakulam District. Such fact clearly indicates that the
fertiliser in question had not been transported by lorry No.
APV 7335. The learned counsel has submitted that even if
transportation by one of the lorry appears to have not been
conclusively proved, there is no difficulty in convicting
the accused if non delivery of the fertiliser at the
destination on other occasions is established. The learned
counsel has submitted that ingenuous plea has been taken for
raising unfounded doubts to the effect that the case had not
been established beyond all reasonable doubts. Accordingly,
the benefit of doubt should go to the accused. Such case of
the accused, however, should not be accepted for the simple
reason that the prosecution has established by examining the
purchasers of fertilisers, the lorry owners, the officials
of the check posts that such lorries had not transported the
fertiliser at the destination and the lorries had in fact
transported different goods at other destinations. On the
basis of such evidence, only conclusion can be drawn that a
false certificate was procured by the dealer A-1 and false
certificates were given by the local government officials,
A-2 and A-3 in perpetrating a deep rooted conspiracy to
defraud public exchequer. It has been contended that the
learned counsel for the State that the Assistant
Agricultural Officer was the consignee of the goods. He was
required to make an entry in the stock register after
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physically verifying that the goods had in fact been
transported. It was on the basis of such receipt of goods
that he was required to issue certificate that the goods had
reached the destination. The other accused namely the
District Agricultural Officer had to satisfy himself about
the physical arrival of goods for the purpose forwarding the
claim of the dealer for payment.
The learned counsel has further submitted that several
circulars were issued from time to time by the competent
authorities with regard to the verification of stocks and
certificate to be issued on the genuineness of the claim.
Between 1958 and 1968, different circulars have been issued
on different dates. The subsequent circulars issued after
the commencement of offence however need not be considered
for these appeals Ex.P.83, the circular dated June 24, 1964
requires that the Assistant Agricultural Officer should
satisfy himself that the goods were actually transported by
shortest route through the mode of transport claimed in the
bill and the rates mentioned said Assistant Agricultural
Officer had verified the same and found correct. Such
certificate only points out that he was a party to
conspiracy and when the goods had in fact not reached the
destination, he issued a false certificate only for the
purpose of defrauding public exchequer. It has been also
submitted by the learned counsel for the respondents that
the trial court failed to consider some of the relevant
materials and it had also considered some materials
improperly. It is because of such errors and omissions that
the High Court was fully justified in considering the
evidences and setting aside the orders of acquittal passed
against the weight of the evidence. It has been submitted by
the learned counsel for the State that a very lenient
sentence by the High Court has been passed but such lenient
sentence by no means establishes that the accused are not
guilty. The Court in awarding sentence takes mitigating
circumstances into consideration. The case continued for
long because large number of documents had been exhibited
and large number of witnesses were examined. The Government
officials had to suffer because of the pendency of criminal
cases. Considering such mitigating circumstances, it is
quite likely that a lenient sentence has been passed by the
High Court. The learned counsel for the respondent submits
that there is no merit in the appeals and the same should be
dismissed.
The facts and circumstances of the case in the other
appeals are more or less the same. The prosecution by
examining the purchasers of the fertilizers the owners of
the transport, officials of the check posts on usual routes,
tried to establish that the fertilisers in question had not
in fact been carried to the destination. Hence, no bill for
such transportation could be presented by the dealers and no
certificate about transportation of such goods by the
shortest route at a reasonable cost could be issued by the
government officials. Accordingly, it was contended by the
learned counsel for the state that the conviction in all the
cases should be upheld and this Court should dismiss the
appeals preferred by the accused.
After giving our anxious consideration to the facts and
circumstances of the case and considering the judgments by
both the courts and evidences adduced in the case through
which we have been taken by the learned counsel for the
parties, it appears to us that a large scale fraud had been
committed in the matter of transportation of fertilisers
from the ports of arrival to various destinations in the
State of Andhra Pradesh. Such fertilisers had been brought
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at a point of time when the State was in dire need of good
quality of fertilisers for cultivation. It is the case of
the prosecution that large scale fraud had been committed by
a large number of government officials in conspiracy with
the dealers in fertilisers who were entrusted to take the
fertilisers from the port to various government godowns. The
prosecution case is because there was a conspiracy involving
reasonable government officials, the fraud could not be
detected earlier. Thereafter, when the State Police was
entrusted with the enquiry, for some inexplicable reasons,
the enquiry appeared to be tardy. In the meantime, uproar
was made in the State Assembly and the newspapers published
the news of large scale scandal relating to transportation
of fertilisers. The embarrassed State Government thereafter
entrusted the C.B.I. to make enquiries. The C.B.I. made
enquiries and charge sheets were filed. There is no manner
of doubt that by that time it was quite late and the C.B.I.
was handicapped in causing more effective enquiry. Despite
such fact, it appears to us that the C.B.I. has done
excellent job by examining the lorry owners, the clerks of
the lorry owners, the officials of different check posts and
also the purchasers of fertilisers at different places for
the purpose of showing that the fertilisers lifted from the
port and stated to have been transported at different
destinations had in fact not been transported in the manner
alleged but on the basis of false entries made by the
government officials and also by issuing false certificate
of such transportation payments had been made.
Unfortunately, no evidence has been led whether fertilisers
in fact had not been delivered on the relevant date at the
destination by proving the stock register at the relevant
time. It is really unfortunate that in a case of such
magnitude senior officials of the concerned department were
not examined. No witness from the locality of the godown was
also examined to show that on the relevant dates no delivery
of fertiliser at the destination had taken place. Unless by
unimpeachable and convincing evidence, the factum of non
delivery of such fertilisers with reference to actual stock
position on the relevant date can be clearly established, in
our view, it becomes very difficult to proceed on the
footing that the concerned government officials issued false
certificate about receipt of the goods on the dates in
question. There is force in the contention of the learned
counsel for the appellants that it was not unlikely that
some fertilisers had in fact been delivered to the
government officials at the destination. On the basis of
such delivery, the certificates had been issued by them. It
0is not the case of the prosecution that the quality of the
fertilisers was required to be examined by the officers at
the receiving end and they had proper infrastructure to make
such exercise. It has been rightly contended that it was not
established that the fertilisers was not available anywhere
in the locality so that it was not possible to replace the
quantity of fertiliser after selling the original
consignment. Simply on the basis of evidence given by lorry
owners that their lorries did not carry the fertiliser or
such lorries had gone to different places and some
fertilisers were sold by the dealers to other persons, non
delivery of fertiliser at the destination by other means can
not be fully ruled out. The circumstances are undoubtedly
very intriguing and raise considerable doubt but in the
absence of unimpeachable direct evidence about the actual
stock position at the receiving end, the indirect
circumstantial evidences, in our view do not establish the
prosecution case beyond all reasonable doubts. It is true
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that there is no absolute standard of proof in a criminal
trial and the court should not nurture fanciful doubts by
exaggerated devotion to the rule of benefit of doubt but in
a case of circumstantial evidence all the links in the chain
of events from which irresistible conclusion about the guilt
of the accused for the offence alleged can be drawn, must be
established beyond the pale of reasonable doubt. The court
has to be watchful and avoid the danger of allowing
suspicion to take the place of legal proof. Conviction can
not be based on circumstances indicating that the
prosecution case is quite likely to be true. For basing the
conviction in a case governed by circumstantial evidence,
the facts established must rule out any likelihood of
innocence of the accused. The exact stock position on the
alleged date of delivery of fertiliser which would have
repelled any other possibility is unfortunately not
forthcoming. It does not appear that any attempt to
establish the actual stock position of fertiliser in the
godown in question on the relevant date or soon thereafter
with reference to register of stock or any other
contemporaneous document has been made. It is only through
negative and indirect evidence the prosecution is attempting
to establish that the fertiliser had not been delivered.
Such evidence would have been very convincing to corroporate
the direct evidence about the stock position in the event
the correctness of such stock position was challenged. So
long the possibility of some other conclusion cannot be
fully ruled out, the prosecution case remains in the realm
of probability.
In the facts of the case, we are of the view that the
government officials who are appellants in some of these
appeals cannot be held to be guilty with all certainty and
they are entitled to get the benefit of doubt. The appeals,
preferred by the government officials therefore, should be
allowed by setting aside the conviction of sentence passed
against them by the High Court. It appears to us that
although the High Court reversed the orders of acquittal in
convicting the government officials, the High Court perhaps
felt that some convincing evidences were lacking and it is
not unlikely that for the said reasons, although the High
Court convicted the government officials for serious
offences charged against them only a token sentence of fine
of Rs.100/- and detention till the rising of the Court had
been passed which sentence normally should not have been
passed.
So far as the appeals preferred by the dealers of the
fertilisers are concerned, it appears to us that direct and
positive evidences have been led by the prosecution to show
that the fertilisers were not transported by the dealers in
the manner alleged by them. If the dealers had transported
the fertilisers by a different route or by any other
transport and if they had sold different fertilisers, such
facts were within their special knowledge and in the facts
of the case, the dealers ought to have satisfied the court
that the fertilisers had in fact been transported by other
transports and in a manner different from what was mentioned
in the bills. The evidence adduced by the prosecution by
examining lorry owners, clerks of such owners, officers of
the check posts on the usual routes convincingly point out
that the fertiliser was not transported in the way it
appeared in the bills since certified by the government
officials at the destination. If some fertilisers of equal
quantity had been handed over at the destination, it was not
unlikely that the government officials having taken delivery
of such fertilisers without appreciating the fraud and with
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reference to the record of loading of the fertiliser at
port, would be justified in issuing certificate about
transportation at reasonable rate by the shortest route. As
the possiblity of delivering fertiliser of similar quantity
which may not be qualitatively same, by procuring them
locally, when non availability of fertiliser in the region
had not been established by the prosecution, cannot be fully
ruled out, the government officers, in our view, were
entitled to benefit of doubt. But in the facts of the case,
such benefit will not be available to the dealers. We,
therefore, do not find any reason to interfere with the
orders of conviction passed against the dealers and their
appeals being Criminal Appeals Nos.163,165,166,184 and 185
of 1994 are dismissed. Criminal Appeal No.164 of 1994 has
been preferred both by the dealers and the government
officials. Such appeal stands allowed in part and conviction
and sentence passed against the government officials being
appellants Nos. 3 to 5 stand set aside and they are
acquitted. But the appeal preferred by appellants Nos. 1 & 2
stands dismissed.
It is really unfortunate that in fertiliser scandal of
such magnitude, appropriate steps at the right time had not
been taken and for want of convincing and unimpeachable
evidence, the accused who were government officials have
been acquitted by giving them benefit of doubt. It appears
to us that such large scale scandal in transporting imported
fertiliser would not have occurred if larger number of
government officials and others than prosecuted were not
involved. It is not unlikely that superior government
officials had also played a vital role in perpetrating the
said fraud or concealing the same. The tardy enquiries made
by the State police thereby necessitating an enquiry by the
C.B.I. at a belated stage is only a sad commentary on the
efficiency of the police administration. We may only hope
that in future there will be proper vigilance and scandal of
this type may not take place.