Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RANCHHODLAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/11/1964
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
SUBBARAO, K.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1248 1965 SCR (2) 283
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 496 (2)
ACT:
Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, (Act 5 of 1898), ss. 222,
233, 234 and 235--Indian Penal Code, 1860 (Act 45 of 1860),
s. 409--Criminal Breach of Trust--Separate Trials--Sentence
Awarded--To run consecutively--Whether illegal.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was convicted in four cases for an offence
under s. 409 I.P.C. He was sentenced to imprisonment and
line in the first two cases. The sentences imposed in the
other two cases for the offence under S. 409 I.P.C. were to
run consecutively. The High Court dismissed the appellant’s
appeal.
HELD : (i) There had been no illegality in the Court’s
trying the appellant in four cases regarding amounts
embezzled within a few months and in not ordering the
various sentences awarded in different Sessions Trials to
run concurrently. [288 C]
The normal rule is that there should be a charge for each
distinct offence, as provided in s. 233 of the Code.
Section 222 mentions what the contents of the charge should
be. It is only in certain circumstances that the court is
authorised to Jump up the various items with respect to
which criminal breach of trust was committed and to mention
the total amount misappropriated within a year in the
charge. When so done, the charge is deemed to be the charge
of one offence. [286 H-287 B]
(ii)Section 234 is an enabling provision and is an exception
to a. 233 of Code of Criminal Procedure. There is nothing
illegal in trying each of the several offences separately.
[287 E]
(iii)Assuming without deciding, that these offences could be
said to have been committed in the course of the same
transactions, the separate trial for certain specific
offences is not illegal. Section 235 too is an enabling
section. [287 F-G]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 218
to 221 of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and orders, dated
May 21, 1964 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court (Indore Bench)
at Indore in Criminal Appeals Nos. 30 and 31 of 1962 Nos.
246 and 258 of 1963 respectively.
Jai Gopal Sethi, R. C. Mukati and R. L. Kohli, for the
appellant (in all the appeals).
I. N. Shroff, for the respondent (in all the appeals).
284
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Raghubar Dayal, J. The appellant, in these four appeals by
special leave, was convicted in four cases of an offence
under s. 409 I.P.C. and was sentenced to 4 years’ rigorous
imprisonment and fine in the first two cases on January 17,
1962, by the First Additional Sessions Judge, Ujjain, Shri
H. B. Aggarwal. He was also convicted in these two cases of
offences under s. 467 read with s. 471 and s. 477A I.P.C.
The sentences imposed for these offences were to run
concurrently with the sentence of imprisonment for the of-
fence under s. 409 I.P.C. The sentences imposed in the two
cases for the offence under s. 409 I.P.C. were to run
consecutively as no order had been made by the Sessions
Judge for the sentence in the case in which judgment was
pronounced later, to run concurrently with the sentence
imposed in the other case.
In each of the other two cases, the appellant was sentenced
to 3 years’ rigorous imprisonment under S. 409 I.P.C. by
Shri Dube, First Additional Sessions Judge, Ujjain, on July
20, 1963. The Sessions Judge ordered the sentences in these
two cases to run concurrently, but did not order them to run
concurrently with the sentence awarded in the first case on
January 17, 1962.
The appeals against the conviction of the appellant in the
four cases were dismissed by the High Court. With respect
to the sentence in the appeal against the first conviction
in Sessions Trial No. 35 of 1961, the High Court said :
"Coming to the sentences, the basic offence is
criminal breach of trust under section 409 IPC
and a sentence of four years’ rigorous
imprisonment cannot, in these circumstances,
be considered excessive. If anything, I would
call it somewhat lenient."
The sentence of fine of Rs. 1,000 was considered to be
’feeble’.
In disposing of the appeal against the conviction in the
second case, Sessions Trial No. 36 of 1961, the High Court
said with respect of the sentence :
"The sentence of imprisonment is also low; but
possibly the Sessions Court took account of
the fact that there were other and similar
cases against Ranchhodlal in which there was a
possibility of a conviction."
In the third appeal from the order in Sessions Trial No. 55
of 1962, the High Court said :
"If there had been an application for
enhancement of sentence, I would not have
hesitated to increase the
285
sentence because this paying himself on the
part of the appellant is a very serious
matter. But there being no such prayer by the
State, the matter has to be left at that."
In the fourth appeal, the High Court said
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"The trial Court has awarded a sentence of
three years without fine. It is quite
lenient."
The result of the four convictions and sentences passed in
these cases is that the appellant has to undergo
imprisonment for 11 years for mainly committing the offences
under s. 409 I.P.C. with respect to different amounts, in
his capacity as Sarpanch of the Mandal Panchayat, Ujjain.
Special leave was granted on the question of sentence only.
One of the grounds taken in the special leave petitions was
that his being tried in four cases for committing criminal
breach of trust with respect to different amounts, led to
the petitioner’s prejudice and harassment inasmuch as he was
to undergo sentences, of imprisonment consecutively.
Sub-section (1) of s. 397, Cr. P.C. provides that when a
person already undergoing a sentence of imprisonment is
sentenced on a subsequent conviction to imprisonment, such
imprisonment shall commence at the expiration of the
imprisonment to which he has been previously sentenced,
unless the Court directs that the subsequent sentence shall
run concurrently with such previous sentence. It follows
that a subsequent sentence of imprisonment is ordinarily to
commence at the expiration of imprisonment under the
previous sentence, and that the Court recording the
conviction has the discretion to order that the later
sentence would run concurrently with the previous one.
The Additional Sessions Judge who convicted the appellant in
two cases in January 1962 did not exercise his discretion in
favour of the appellant. The other Sessions Judge who
convicted the appellant in two cases in 1963 exercised his
discretion to the extent that he made the sentences in those
two cases concurrent and did not make those sentences
concurrent with the earlier sentences imposed on the
appellant in January 1962. The judgments in the four
Sessions Trials are not before us and we are not in a
’Position to say whether this aspect of the matter was urged
before the Sessions Judges when they recorded the
convictions and sentenced the appellant in the four Sessions
Trials.
It was not urged before the High Court that the sentences in
all the four cases be made to run concurrently. If it had
been urged, the decision might have gone against the
appellant if one
286
considers the remarks of the High Court on the nature of the
sentence in each case. The High Court considered that the
sentences were inadequate.
Learned counsel for the appellant has not urged that there
is any illegality in the sentences awarded to the appellant
in the various Sessions cases or in not making them run
concurrently with the sentence awarded in the first Sessions
Trial No. 35 of 1961. He has, however, urged that the
various acts of criminal breach of trust which formed the
basis of the convictions took place within a period of a few
months, from November 19, 1955 to February 23, 1956, and
that therefore the appellant should have been charged for
committing criminal breach of trust with respect to the
total amount he had misappropriated, in view of s. 222 Cr.
P.C. and that if he had been so charged, the charge for
misappropriating the total amount would have been the charge
for one offence and the appellant would have been tried on
such one charge at one trial and, on conviction, would have
been awarded only one sentence which would not have
ordinarily exceeded 4 years’ rigorous imprisonment.
Section 222 Cr. P.C. reads :
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"(1) The charge shall contain such particulars
as to the time and place of the alleged
offence, and the person (if any) against whom,
or the thing (if any) in respect of which, it
was committed, as are reasonably sufficient to
give the accused notice of the matter with
which he is charged.
(2) When the accused is charged with
criminal breach of trust or dishonest
misappropriation of money, it shall be
sufficient to specify the gross sum in respect
of which the offence is alleged to have been
committed, and the dates between which the
offence is alleged to have been committed,
without specifying particular items or exact
dates, and the charge so framed shall be
deemed to be a charge of one offence within
the meaning of section 234 :
Provided that the time included between the
first and last of such dates shall not exceed
one year."
Sub-section (2) is an exception to meet a certain
contingency and is not the normal rule with respect to
framing of a charge in cases of criminal breach of trust.
The normal rule is that there should be a charge for each
distinct offence, as provided in s. 233 of the Code.
Section 222 mentions what the contents of the charge should
be. It is only when it may not be possible
287
to specify exactly particular items with respect to which
criminal breach of trust took place or the exact date on
which the individual items were misappropriated or in some
similar contingency, that the Court is authorised to lump up
the various items with respect to which criminal breach of
trust was committed and to mention the total amount
misappropriated within a year in the charge. When so done,
the charge is deemed to be the charge of one offence. If
several distinct item with respect to which criminal breach
of trust has been committed are not so lumped together, no
illegality is committed in the trial of those offences. In
fact, a separate trial with respect to each distinct offence
of criminal breach of trust with respect to an individual
item is the correct mode of proceeding with the trial of an
offence of criminal breach of trust.
Learned counsel for the appellant also relied on s. 234 Cr.
P.C. and urged that three offences of criminal breach of
trust could have been tried at one trial as s. 234 provides
that when a person is accused of more offences than one of
the same kind committed within the space of twelve months
from the first to the last of such offences, whether in
respect of the same person or not, he may be charged with,
and tried at one trial for any number of them not exceeding
three. This again, is an enabling provision and is an
exception to s. 233 Cr. P.C. If each of the several
offences is tried separately, there is nothing illegal about
it. It may also be mentioned that the total number of items
charged in the four cases exceeded three.
Lastly, reference was made, on behalf of the appellant, to
s. 235 Cr. P.C. and it was urged that all these offences
were committed in the course of the same transaction, and
therefore, they should have been tried at one trial.
Assuming, without deciding, that these offences could be
said to have been committed in the course of the same
transaction, the separate trial of the appellant for certain
specific offences is not illegal. This section too is an
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enabling section.
Apart from the fact that the separate trials of the
appellant in four cases for committing breach of trust with
respect to several items was not illegal, there is nothing
on record to show that the investigating agency had worked
out all the cases of criminal breach of trust prior to
prosecuting the appellant for the offences of which he was
tried at Sessions Trial No. 35 of 1961. If all the offences
had not been worked out prior to that, there could not have
been a joint trial for all of them even if that could have
been thought to be more reasonable way of proceeding against
the appellant.
288
The fact that the first two Sessions Trials ended in a
conviction in January 1962 on commitments made sometime in
1961 and that the Sessions Trials ending on July 20, 1963
were on commitments made sometime in 1962, prima facie
indicate that the investigating agency submitted the charge
sheets against the appellant for the offences tried in 1963
after-and possibly long after it had submitted charge-sheet
with respect to the first two cases. There cannot therefore
be any design in prosecuting the appellant for different
offences in four cases.
We are, therefore, of opinion that there had been no
illegality in the Court’s trying the appellant in four cases
and in not ordering the various sentences awarded in
different Sessions Trials to run concurrently with the
sentences awarded in Session Trial No. 35 of 1961.
It has been strongly urged that the total sentence of 11
years which the appellant has to undergo for committing the
various offences of criminal breach of trust is severe and
that if he had been tried for these offences at one trial
after taking advantage of the provisions of s. 222 Cr.
P.C., the sentence which would have been awarded to him
would not have exceeded 4 years, as that is the normal
maximum sentence awarded for an offence under s. 409 I.P.C.
An offence under s. 409 I.P.C. is punishable up to
imprisonment for life or imprisonment up to 10 years. The
measure of the sentence is usually governed by the nature of
the offences committed and the circumstances of their
commission and it cannot be held as a hard and fast rule
that a. sentence is not to exceed a certain period of
imprisonment when the law has itself laid down the extent up
to which a sentence can be inflicted for a certain offence
and has left discretion to the Court to adjust the sentence
according to the circumstances of each case. We need not
detail the circumstances of these cases, but would simply
note that they do not justify taking any lenient view about
the sentences for the offences committed by the appellant
who held a very responsible position as Sarpanch of the
Societies and as such had to deal with the proper
disbursement of public money for the purposes of public
benefit. He miserably failed in discharging these duties in
the manner expected of him. A deterrent sentence is always
essential so that others in such responsible Positions and
having occasions to deal with large sums of public money do
not victim to greed and dishonesty.
We, therefore, dismiss these appeals.
Appeals dismissed.
289