Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KAILASH NATH ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/11/1988
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 558 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 911
1989 SCC (1) 321 JT 1988 (4) 502
1988 SCALE (2)1464
ACT:
Punjab Civil Service Rules: Volume II Rule 2.2--
Government Servant--Prosecution for offence committed while
in service after retirement--Whether there is immunity if
the cause of action arose four years before the institution
of proceedings.
%
Words and Phrases: ‘Conditions of service’--Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
On the basis of a vigilance enquiry against Kailash
Nath, respondent, pertaining to the purchase of sign boards
by him while working as Executive Engineer in the State
Public Works Department, a First Information Report was
lodged against him in August 1985. The respondent challenged
the F.I.R. in the High Court on the ground that the same
having been lodged about three years after his retirement in
October 1982 and about six years after the event of purchase
in 1979. was in the teeth of proviso (3) to Rule 2.2(b) of
the Punjab Civil Service Rules, Volume II, which provided
that no judicial proceedings if not instituted while the
officer was in service, shall be instituted in respect of a
cause of action which arose or an event which took place
more than four years before such institution. The same
ground was taken by Mangal Singh Minhas, respondent, when a
challan was filed against him.
The High Court, relying on its earlier decision, quashed
the First Information Report and the challan.
Dismissing the State appeal against Kailash Nath and
allowing it against Mangal Singh Minhas, this Court,
HELD: (1) Any rule framed under Article 309 has to be
confined to recruitment and conditions of service of persons
mentioned therein.[916E]
(2) The expression "conditions of service" means all
those conditions which regulate the holding of a post by a
person right from the time of his appointment till his
retirement and even beyond it,in matters like pension etc.
PG NO 911
PG NO 912
(3) Rule 2.2. is in Chapter II of the Punjab Civil
Service Rules which deals with ordinary pension. There can
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be no manner of doubt that making provision with regard to
pension falls within the purview of "conditions of service".
[918D]
(4) Whether or not a government servant should be
prosecuted for an offence committed by him obviously cannot
be treated to be something pertaining to conditions of
service. [917D]
(5) Even on a plain reading of Rule 2.2, it is apparent
that the intention of framing the said rule was not to grant
immunity from prosecution to a government servant, if the
conditions mentioned therein are satisfied. [918C]
(6) Making a provision that a government servant, even
if he is guilty of grave misconduct or negligence which
constitutes an offencepunishable either under the Penal Code
or Prevention of Corruption Act or an analogous law should
be granted immunity from such prosecution after the lapse of
a particular period so as to provide incentive for efficient
work would not only be against public policy but would also
be counter productive. [917D-E]
(7) On the face of it, the government servants cannot
constitute a class by themselves so as to bring their case
within the purview of reasonable classification, if the
purpose of granting immunity from prosecution is ensuring
peace of mind in old age. [918B]
(8) Even if in a given case a proviso may amount to a
substantive provision, making of such a substantive
provision, will have to be within the framework of Article
309. If a rule containing an absolute or general embargo on
prosecution of a government servant after his retirement for
grave misconduct or negligence during the course of his
service does not fall within the purview of laying down
conditions of service under Article 309, such a provision
cannot in the purported exercise of power under Article 309
be made by either incorporating it in the substantive clause
of a rule or in the proviso thereto. [919C-D]
(9) Even if on first impression Rule 2.2 may appear to
be placing an embargo on prosecution it has to be
interpreted by taking recourse to the well settled rule of
reading down a provision so as to bring it within the
framework of its source of power, without, of course
frustrating the purpose for which such provision was made.
This purpose can be achieved if the said proviso by adopting
the rule of reading down is interpreted to mean that even if
PG NO 913
a government servant is prosecuted and punished in judicial
proceedings instituted in respect of cause of action which
arose or an event which took place more than four years
before such institution the government will not be entitled
to exercise the right conferred on it by the substantive
provision contained in clause (b) with regard to pension of
such a government servant. The word "such" in the beginning
of the third proviso also supports this interpretation.
[919D-H;920A]
(10) By applying the role of interpretation with regard
to a beneficent legislation, a benefit never intended to be
conferred cannot be conferred. [923D]
(11) It is always open to quash a prosecution on the
ground of unexplained unconscionable delay in investigation
and prosecution on the facts of a given case. In this view
of the matter. the appeal against Kailash Nath is dismissed
whereas the appeals against Mangal Singh Minhas are allowed.
[924F]
Des Raj Singhal v. State of Punjab, [1986] P.L.R. 86;
State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors. v. Shardul Singh, [1970] 3
SCR 302; I.N. Subba Reddy v. Andhra University, [1976] 3 SCR
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1013; M/s. Ram Narain Sons Ltd. v. Asstt. Commissioner of
Sales Tax and Others, [1955] 2 SCR 483; Abdul Jabar Butt v.
State of Jammu & Kashmir, [1957] SCR 51; Ishverlal
Thanorelal Almaule v. Motibhai Nagjibhai [1966] 1 SCR 367;
P.P. Venkatavardan v. The State of Tamil Nadu by the Deputy
Superintendent of Police, Vigilance and Anti-corruption
Vellore, [1979] 23 MLJ (Crl.) 275; State of Punjab v. Charan
Singh, [1981] 2 SCR 989; Madhashwardhari Singh and Another
v. State of Bihar, AIR (1986) Patna (Vol.73) page 324,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal Nos.
422-424 of 1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 12.2.1986 and 4.9.1986
from the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in Crl. Misc. No.
5837 of 1985 and Crl. Misc. No. 4488 and 2993 of 1986
respectively.
R.S. Suri for the Appellants.
M.R. Sharma, Kapil Sibal, M.C. Dhingra, T.S. Arora and
Miss Kamini Jaiswal for Respondents.
PG NO 914
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
OJHA, J. These appeals raise an identical question of
law and can conveniently be decided by a common order.
Kailash Nath, respondent in Criminal appeal No. 422/88, was
working as Executive Engineer in Public Works Department in
the State of Punjab in the year 1979. On various dates in
that year, he placed orders for the purchase of sign boards
which were required by the Department to avoid accidents on
roads and for traffic safety. The requisite sign boards were
purchased in pursuance of the aforementioned orders. In the
year 1980 some complaints were received in the Department
against the respondent pertaining to the purchase of the
sign-boards. vigilance enquiry was instituted by the
Vigilance Bureau to enquire into the complaints and
ultimately a First Information Report was lodged on August
27, 1985 against the respondent under sub-sections (1) and
(2) of Section 5 of the Prevention of Corruption Act. In the
meantime, the respondent had retired from the post of
Executive Engineer with effect from October 31, 1982.
The aforesaid First Information Report was challenged by
the respondent in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in
Criminal miscellaneous No. 5837-M/85 on the ground that the
same having been lodged about three years after his
retirement and about six years after the event of purchase
of sign-boards in 1979 was in the teeth of Rule 2.2 of the
Punjab Civil Service Rules, Volume II and consequently was
liable to be quashed. The plea raised by the respondent
found favour with the High Court which relying on an earlier
decision of that Court in Des Raj Singhal v. State of
Punjab, [1986] P.L.R. 82 quashed the First Information
Report by its order dated February 12, 1986.
Mangal Singh Minhas, the respondent in Criminal Appeal
Nos. 423-24/1988, was posted in the Industrial Supply
Section of the Directorate of Industries where various types
of raw materials including wax and import lincences are
dealt with. A First Information Report was lodged against
the respondent on June 19, 1980. It appears that the
respondent applied in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
for quashing of the First Information Report on account of
which challan could not be filed and it was only when the
challenge to the First Information Report was repelled by
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the High Court that a challan was filed on August 28, 1985
In the meantime, the respondent retired as Superintendent,
Directorate of Industries, Punjab, on September 30, 1983. On
the challan being filed the respondent again made an
application in the High Court for quashing of the
prosecution against him. This prayer has been allowed by the
PG NO 915
High Court by its order dated September 4, 1986 and the
prosecution against the respondent has been quashed relying
on the aforesaid decision in the case of Des Raj Singhal v.
State of Punjab. The present appeals have been filed by the
State of Punjab against the aforesaid orders passed on the
application of Kailash Nath and Mangal Singh Minhas
respectively.
It has been urged by learned counsel for the appellant
that Rule 2.2 of the Punjab Civil Service Rules has been
misinterpreted by the High Court in holding that the said
Rule placed an embargo on initiating judicial proceedings
for prosecution of a government servant on the expiry of
four years of the cause of action or the event referred to
in the said rule and the High Court committed an error of
law in taking the said view. Learned counsel for the
respondents, on the other hand, submitted that the view
taken by the High Court was correct and in view of Rule 2.2
the First Information Report against Kailash Nath and the
prosecution as against Mangal Singh Minhas were rightly
quashed. In order to appreciate the respective submissions
made by learned counsel for the parties with regard to the
scope and interpretation of Rule 2.2, it would be useful to
extract the relevant portion of sub-rule (b) of Rule 2.2. It
reads:
"(b) The Government further reserve to themselves the
right of withholding or withdrawing a pension or any part of
it, whether permanently or for a specified period and the
right of ordering the recovery from a pension of the whole
or part of any pecuniary loss caused to Govt. if in a
departmental or judicial proceedings, the pensioner is found
guilty of grave misconduct or negligence during the period
of his service, including service rendered upon re-
employment after retirement.
Provided that:
(1) ... ... ...
(2) ... ... ...
(3) No such judicial proceedings, if not instituted
while the officer was in service, whether before his
retirement or during his re-employment shall be instituted
in respect of a cause of action which arose or an event
which took place more than four years before such
institution:
PG NO 916
Explanation: For the purpose of his rule.
(a) ... ... ...
(b) a judicial proceeding shall be deemed to be
instituted
(i) in the case of a criminal proceedings on the date on
which the complaint or report of the police officer on which
the Magistrate takes cognizance is made; ......."
There is no dispute that Punjab Civil Service Rules have
been framed by the Governor in exercise of the power
conferred on him by Article 309 of the Constitution and that
Rule 2.2 occurs in chapter II of Volume II of the Rules
dealing with "Ordinary Pension". It has been urged by the
learned counsel for the appellant that keeping in view the
scope of Article 309 as also the purpose of Rule 2.2, the
said rule cannot be interpreted to be a rule placing an
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embargo on prosecution of a government servant on the expiry
of a period of four years from the date of cause of action
or event mentioned therein.
Having heard learned counsel for the parties, we find
substance in the submission made by learned counsel for the
appellant. Article 309 empowers making of rules regulating
the recruitment and conditions of service of persons
appointed to public services and posts in connection with
the affairs of the Union or any State. On the plain language
of Article 309, the proposition that any rule framed under
this article has to be confined to recruitment and
conditions of service of persons mentioned therein admits of
no doubt. The rule in question certainly does not purport to
regulate recruitment . The question which, therefore,
presents itself for answer is whether the said rule if it is
to be interpreted as one placing an embargo on institution
of judicial proceedings as against a person referred to
therein for prosecution in respect of a cause of action
which arose or an event which took place more than four
years before such institution, as has been held by the High
Court can be treated to be a rule regulating the condition
of service of such a person. Learned counsel for the
respondents asserts that the embargo aforesaid is a
condition of service calculated to ensure a person mentioned
in the said rule peace of mind after retirement. According
to learned counsel for the respondent every employer wants
his employee to be efficient and to achieve this object,
various incentives are given. Consequently, according to
learned counsel, an assurance to an employee that he shall
not be prosecuted after his retirement, even though guilty
of committing a grave misconduc or negligence during the
PG NO 917
period of his service, after the lapse of a particular time
which has been fixed in the instant case as four years would
fall within the purview of "conditions of service" as
contemplated by Article 309. We find it difficult to agree
with the submission. As explained by this Court in State of
Madhya Pradesh and Ors. v. Shardul Singh, [1970] 3 SCR 302
and reiterated in I.N. Subba Reddy v. Andhra University,
[1976] 3 SCR 1013 the expression "conditions of service"
means all those conditions which regulate the holding of a
post by a person right from the time of his appointment till
his retirement and even beyond it, in matters like pension
etc.
In the normal course what falls within the purview of
the term "conditions of service" may be classified as salary
or wages including subsistance allowance during suspension,
the periodical increments, pay-scale, leave, provident fund,
gratuity, confirmation, promotion, seniority, tenure or
termination of service, compulsory or premature retirement,
superannuation, pension, changing the age of superannuation,
deputation and disciplinary proceedings. Whether or not a
government servant should be prosecuted for an offence
committed by him obviously cannot be treated to be something
pertaining to conditions of service. Making a provision that
a government servant, even if he is guilty of grave
misconduct or negligence which constitutes an offence
punishable either under the Penal Code or Prevention of
Corruption Act or an analogous law should be granted
immunity from such prosecution after the lapse of a
particular period so as to provide incentive for efficient
work would not only be against public policy but would also
be counter productive. It is likely to be an incentive not
for efficient work but for committing offences including
embezzlement and misappropriation by some of them at the fag
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end of their tenure of service and making an effort that the
offence is not detected within the period prescribed for
launching prosecution or manipulating delay in the matter of
launching prosecution. Further, instances are not wanting
where a government servant may escape prosecution at the
initial stage for want of evidence but during the course of
prosecution of some other person evidence may be led or
material may be produced which establishes complicity and
guilt of such government servant. By that time period
prescribed, if any, for launching prosecution may have
expired and in that event on account of such period having
expired the government servant concerned would succeed in
avoiding prosecution even though there may be sufficient
evidence of an offence having been committed by him. Such a
situation, in our opinion, cannot be created by framing a
rule under Article 309 of the Constitution laying down an
embargo on prosecution as a condition of service.
PG NO 918
There is another cogent ground on account of which the
submission that giving a government servant peace of mind
after his retirement in his old age can be a good ground to
grant him immunity from prosecution cannot be accepted. This
would on the face of it be discriminatory and thus arbitrary
inasmuch as if peace of mind in old age can be a good ground
for immunity from prosecution for offences committed by a
person, there seems to be no reason why such immunity may
not be available to all old persons and should be confined
only to government servants. On the face of it, the
government servants cannot constitute a class by themselves
so as to bring their cases within the purview of reasonable
classification, if the purpose of granting immunity from
prosecution is ensuring peace of mind in old age.
Even on a plain reading of Rule 2.2, it is apparent that
the intention of framing the said rule was not to grant
immunity from prosecution to a government servant, if the
conditions mentioned the- rein are satisfied. As seen above,
Rule 2.2 is in chapter II of the Punjab Civil Service Rules
which deals with ordinary pension. There can be no manner of
doubt that making provision with regard to pension falls
within the purview of "conditions of service". The embargo
on prosecution spelt out by the High Court is not to be
found in the main rule 2.2 but in the third proviso to the
said rule. It is the third proviso which enjoins that no
judicial proceedings. if not instituted while the officer
was in service, whether before his retirement or during his
re-employment shall be instituted in respect of a cause of
action which arose or an event which took place more than
four years before such institution. The scope of a proviso
is well settled.
In M/s Ram Narain Sons Ltd. v. Asst. Commissioner of
Sales Tax and others, [1955]2 SCR 483, it was held:
"It is a cardinal rule of interpretation that a proviso
to a particular provision of statute only embraces the-field
which is covered by the main provision. It carves out an
exception to the main provision to which it has been enacted
as a proviso and to no other."
The same view was reiterated in Abdul Jabar Butt v.
State of Jammu & Kashmir, [1957] SCR 51 where it was held
that a proviso must be considered with relation to the
principle matter to which it stands as a proviso.
PG NO 919
With regard to scope of a proviso, it was urged by the
learned counsel for the respondents relying on the decision
of this Court in Ishverlal Thakorelal Almaula v. Motibhai
Nagjibhai, [1966] 1 SCR 367 that even though the proper
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function of a proviso is to except or qualify something
enacted in the substantive clause which but for the proviso
would be within that clause, there is no rule that the
proviso must always be restricted to the ambit of the main
enactment. It may at times amount to a substantive
provision. This submission too does not advance the case of
the respondent inasmuch as even if in a given case a proviso
may amount to a substantive provision, making of such a
substantive provision will have to be within the framework
of Article 309. If a rule containing an absolute or general
embargo on prosecution of a government servant after his
retirement for grave misconduct or negligence during the
course of the service does not fall within the purview of
laying down conditions of service under Article 309, such a
provision cannot in the purported exercise of power under
Article 309 be made by either incorporating it in the
substantive clause of a rule or in the proviso thereto. In
view of what has been said above and keeping in mind the
scope of rule making power under Article 309 of the
Constitution, the third proviso to Rule 2.2 cannot be
interpreted as laying down an absolute or general embargo on
prosecution of government servant if the conditions stated
therein are satisfied. Even if on first impression the said
rule may appear to be placing such an embargo it has to be
interpreted by taking recourse to the well settled rule of
reading down a provision so as to bring, it within the
framework of its source of power without, of course,
frustrating the purpose for which such provision was made.
Clause (b) of Rule 2.2 which can be called the substantive
clause reserves to the government the right of withholding
or withdrawing a pension or any part of it, whether
permanently or for a specified period and the right of
ordering the recovery from a pension of the whole or part of
any pecuniary loss caused to Govt. if, in a departmental or
judicial proceeding, the pensioner is found guilty of grave
misconduct or negligence during the period of his service,
including service rendered upon re-employment after
retirement.
The purpose of the third proviso thereto is, as is the
scope of a proviso, to carve out an exception to the right
conferred on the government by the substantive clause if the
conditions contemplated by the proviso are fulfilled. This
purpose can be achieved if the said proviso by adopting the
rule of reading down is interpreted to mean that even if a
government servant is prosecuted and punished in judicial
proceedings instituted in respect of cause of action which
arose or an event which took place more than four years
PG NO 920
before such institution the government will not be entitled
to exercise the right conferred on it by the substantive
provision contained in clause (b) with regard to pension of
such a government servant. The word "Such" in the beginning
of the third proviso also supports this interpretation.
At this place, it may be pointed out that an analogous
provision contained in Article 351-A of the Madras Pension
Code came up for consideration before the Madras High Court
in P. V. Venkatavardan v. The State of Tamil Nadu by the
Deputy Superintendent of Police, Vigilance and Anti-
corruption, Vellore, [1979] 23 MLJ (Crl) 275. Article 35 1-A
in so far as it is relevant for the purpose of this case is
reproduced hereunder:
351-A. Government further reserve to themselves the
right of withholding or withdrawing a pension or any part of
it, whether permanently or for a specified period and the
right of ordering the recovery from a pension of the whole
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or part of any pecuniary loss caused to Government, if, in a
departmental or judicial proceeding, the pensioner is found
guilty of grave misconduct or negligence during the period
of his service, including service rendered upon re-
employment after retirement:
Provided that:
(a)..........
(b)..........
(c) no such judicial proceeding, if not instituted while
the officer was in service, whether before his retirement or
during his re-employment shall be instituted in respect of a
cause of action which arose or an event which took place
more than four years before such institution; . . .
A similar submission as has been made by the learned
counsel for the respondents in the instant cases was made in
the case of Venkatavardan, (supra) also. S. Natarajan, J. as
his Lordship then was repelled the submission and held:
"The other point urged was that as per Article 351-A of
the Madras Pension Code, the right of the Government to
PG NO 921
withhold the pension of a Government sevant will not cover
events of grave misconduct or negligence committed by the
government servant more than four years prior to the
institution of the departmental proceedings. As the offences
alleged to have been committed by the petitioner are
referable to the years 1968 and 1969, the petitioner
contends, the filing of a charge-sheet on 5th December, 1973
against him was beyond the period of four years contemplated
under Article 351-A of the Madras Pension Code and,
therefore, the proceedings were vitiated. Even this
contention must fail, for, a prosecution under section 161
and/or section 165, Indian Penal Code, read with section
5(1)(a) and 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, is not
controlled or restricted or trammelled in any manner by the
Madras Pension Code. The provisions of the Pension Codemay,
if at all, be relied on only for safeguarding the pension
and cannot be pressed into service to defeat a prosecution
on the threshold itself."
The decision of this Court in State of Punjab v. Charan
Singh, [1981] 2 SCR 989 also throws some light on the
principle involved in the instant cases. In that case Rule
16.38 of the Punjab Police Rules 1934 came up for
consideration. The Punjab Police Rules laid down the
procedure to be followed in imposing punishment on a Police
Officer found guilty of misconduct or a criminal offence and
made an exhaustive provision for departmental inquiries.
Rule i6.38 laid down the guidelines to be followed by the
Superintendent of Police in dealing with a complaint about
the commission of a criminal offence by a police officer in
connection with his official relations with the public. The
respondent Charan Singh in that case was a police officer
and was convicted and sentenced of an offence under section
5(1)(d) read with section 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act. His conviction as well as sentence was set
aside and he was acquitted by the High Court on the ground
that there was non compliance with the provisions of Rule
16.38. Setting aside the order of acquittal and remanding
the case to the High Court for fresh disposal in accordance
with law, this Court held that Rule 16.38 was not designed
to be a condition precedent to the launching of a
prosecution in a Criminal Court; it was in the nature of
instructions to the Department and was not meant to be of
the nature of sanction or permission for a prosecution, nor
could it overrid the provisions of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and the Prevention of Corruption Act.
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PG NO 922
We may also point out that the correctness of the
judgment of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in the case
of Des Raj Singhal, (supra), relying upon which the orders
appealed against in the instant cases have been passed, was
challenged by the State of Punjab in this Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 40 of 1987. The question of law raised in the
appeal was, however, not gone into and was left open to be
decided in an appropriate case inasmuch as this Court on the
facts of that case, in its order dated April 15, 1987 took
the view that it would be a futile exercise to consider the
question of law involved in the appeal for the reason that
the respondent had retired as long as on December 13, 1979.
We now proceed to consider the other submissions made by
learned counsel for the respondents. It was urged that
since government had the power to make suitable amendments
even retrospectively in Rule 2.2 of the Punjab Civil Service
Rules in order to bring home its intention, it was not open
to it to challenge the validity of Rule 2.2. Suffice it to
say, so far as this submission is concerned that the purpose
of the State of Punjab in filing these appeals is really to
get the interpretation made by the High Court of Rule 2.2
reversed and to have the interpretation made by the Trial
Court in the case of Des Raj Singhal, (supra) restored and
not to get the said rule declared ultra vires.
It was also urged by the learned counsel for the
respondents that the third proviso to clause (b) of Rule 2.2
as for the benefit of a government servant and virtually
incorporates the principle underlying Article 21 of the
Constitution by fixing four years as the limit for
initiating prosecution. In support of the submission
reliance was placed on a full bench decision of the Patna
High Court in Madhesh- wardhari Singh and Another v. State
of Bihar, AIR 1986 Patna Vol. 73 Page 324. In that case, it
was held that in all criminal prosecutions the right to a
speedy public trial is now an inalienable fundamental right
of the citizen under Article 21 of the Constitution and it
extends to all criminal proceedings for all offences
generically irrespective of their nature. It was also held
that giving effect to fundamental right of a speedy public
trial, therefore, would not in any way conflict with the
provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure and that unless
the fundamental right to speedy trial is to be whittled down
into a mere pious wish, its enforceability in Court must at
least be indicated by an outer limit to which an
investigation and the trial in a criminal prosecution may
ordinarily extend.
PG NO 923
We are informed that special leave has been granted by
this Court against the aforesaid judgment and its
correctness is thus sub judice. That apart, even if the
soundness of the principle that there should be speedy trial
may not be disputed, the said principle cannot be invoked by
the respondents in support of their interpretation of the
third proviso to clause (b) of Rule 2.2 framed under Article
309 of the Constitution whose purpose, as already indicated
above, is not to place an embargo on prosecution. It is
always open to quash a prosecution on the ground of
unexplained unconscionable delay in investigation and
prosecution on the facts of a given case.
It was then urged by the learned counsel for the
respondents that the third proviso to clause (b) of Rule 2.2
is in the nature of a beneficent legislation and in case of
doubt has to be interpreted in favour of the person for
whose benefit the Rule has been framed. In our opinion,
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keeping in view the scope of the power to frame a rule under
Article 309 and the purpose of Rule 2.2, there is no doubt
with regard to the interpretation of the said rule. By
applying the rule of interpretation with regard to a
beneficent legislation, a benefit never intended to be
conferred cannot be conferred.
Learned counsel for the respondents also submitted that
the State enjoys plenary power in the matter of prosecution
for an offence and if the Government in its wisdom thought
it fit that a government servant after his retirement should
not be be prosecuted for grave misconduct of action arose or
the incident took place more than your years before the
institution of judicial proceedings for prosecution, no
exception can be taken to that power. In this connection,
apart form relying on various sections of the Code of
Criminal Procedure such as sections 197,321,432,433 and 468
and the power of the Governor to grant pardon, learned
counsel for the respondents also relied on Harold J. Laski’s
"A Girammar Of Politics" for the proposition that every
government has a power to decide not to prosecute or
prosecution having been commenced to decide upon its
discontinuance. We are of opinion that this submission too
does not help the respondents in these appeals for the
simple reason that the third proviso to clause (b) of Rule
2.2 has not been framed for that purpose but has been
framed for a different purpose namely to provide an
exception to the power of the government in the matter of
withholding or withdrawing etc. of pension of a retired
government servant contained in clause (b) of Rule 2.2.
PG NO 924
Lastely, it was urged by learned counsel for the
respondents in these appeals that on the same principle on
which criminal appeal No. 40 of 1987 in the matter of Des
Raj Singhal, was dismissed these appeals also deserve to be
dismissed. So far as this submission is concerned, we find
substance as regards the appeal against Kailash Nath. The
First Information Report in this case was lodged on 27th
August, 1985, that is, after about six years of the accrual
of the cause of action or taking place of the events which
took place in 1979 and after about three years even from 3
1st October 1982 when the respondent retired from service.
Now in 1988 it would be pursuing a stale matter. In this
view of the matter, we are of the opinion that the order of
the High Court quashing the First Information Report as
against Kailash Nath, respondent in criminal appeal No. 422
of 1988, deserves to be maintained though on a different
ground.
The facts of the case, with regard to Mangal Singh
Minhas, respondent in Criminal Appeal Nos. 423-24 of 1988,
however, are different. In this case, as seen above, First
Information Report was promptly lodged on June 19, 1980. The
filing of challan, however, was delayed on account of the
steps taken by the respondent for getting the First
Information Report quashed. He retired about three years
after lodging of the First Information Report and during the
pendency of the proceedings in the High Court for quashing
of the said First Information Report. Since the High Court
quashed the prosecution of Mangal Singh Minhas on one ground
alone based on its earlier decision in the case of Des Raj
singhal and did not consider other grounds, if any, that may
have been raised by him for quashing of the prosecution, we
are of the opinion that after setting aside the orders
appealed against in this case, the High Court should be
required to decide afresh the petition mde by Mangal Singh
Minhas for quashing of the prosecution on grounds, if any,
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other than those which have already been considered above.
In view of the foregoing discussion, Criminal Appeal No.
422 of 1988 as against Kailash Nath is dismissed and the
order quashing the First Information Report in his case is
maintained even though on another ground; whereas Criminal
Appeal Nos. 423-24 of 1988 as against Mangal Singh Minhas
are allowed and the orders appealed against passed by the
High Court as set aside. The High Court shall however,
decide the petition made by Mangal Singh Minhas afresh in
accordance with law in the light of the observations made
above.
R.S.S.
Crl. A No. 422/88 is dismissed and
Crl. A Nos. 423-24/88 is allowed.