Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGIRATH KANORIA & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF M.P. & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/08/1984
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1688 1985 SCR (1) 626
1984 SCC (4) 222 1984 SCALE (2)218
ACT:
Employees Provident Fund and Family Pension Fund Act
1952. Section 14 and Employees’ Provident Fund Scheme 1952,
Paragraph 38.
Employers contribution to Provident Fund-Non-payment on
due dates-Whether a continuing offence period of limitation
prescribed in Section 468 and 473 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure Code-Applicability of.
Code of Criminal Procedure 1973, Sections 468 and 473-
Continuing offence-What is-Period of limitation in
continuing offences commencement of.
Words & Phrases: continuing offence-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The Provident Fund Inspector filed complaints against
the appellants Directors and Factory Manager and respondent
No.2-Company charging them with non-payment of employers
contribution under the Employees’ Provident Fund and Family
Pension Fund Act, 19 of 1952, alleging that the accused did
not pay the employers contribution to the Fund from February
1970 to June 1971.
At the commencement of the trial, the accused filed
applications contending that since the limitation prescribed
by section 468 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 had
expired before the filing of the complaints, the Court had
no jurisdiction to take cognizance of the complaints. These
applications were rejected by the Judicial Magistrate on the
ground that the offences of which the accused were charged
are ’continuing offences’ and therefore, no question of
limitation could arise. This order was upheld by the High
Court in the revision applications filed by the appellants.
In the appeals to this Court filed by the Directors of
the Company it was contended that the offence of non-payment
of the employers contribution can be committed once and for
all on the expiry of fifteen days after the close of every
month and, therefore, prosecution for that offence must be
launched within the period of limitation provided in section
468 of the Code.
627
Dismissing the appeals,
^
HELD 1. The offence of which the appellants are
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charged, namely non-payment of the employer’s contribution
to the Provident Fund before the due date, is a ’continuing
offence’ and, therefore, the period of limitation prescribed
by section 468 of the Code cannot have any application. The
offence which is alleged against the appellants will be
governed by section 472 of the Code, according to which, a
fresh period of limitation begins to run at every moment of
the time during which the offence continues. [636 D-E]
2. The concept of ’continuing offence’ does not wipe
out the original guilt. It keeps the contravention alive,
day by day. [636 D]
S.V. Lachwani v. Kanchanlal C. Parikh and others, 1978,
Lab. I. C. 868, over-ruled.
3. Courts when confronted with provisions which lay
down a rule of limitation governing prosecutions, in cases
of this nature will give due weight and consideration to the
provisions contained in section 473 of the Code. That
section is in the nature of an overriding provision
according to which, notwithstanding anything contained in
the provisions of Chapter XXXVI of the Code, any Court may
take cognizance of an offence after the expiry of the period
of limitation if, inter alia, it is satisfied that it is
necessary to do so in the interest of justice. [636 F-G]
4. The expression ’continuing offence’ is not defined
in the Code but that is because expressions which do not
have a fixed connotation or static import are difficult to
define. The question whether a particular offence is a
’continuing offence’ must necessarily depend upon the
language of the statute which creates that offence, the
nature of the offence and, above all, the purpose which is
intended to be achieved by constituting the particular act
as an offence. [632 E, 635E]
State of Bihar v. Deokaran Nanshi, [1973]1 SCR 1004,
explained.
5. The offence of which the appellants is charged is
the failure to pay the employers contribution before the due
date. Considering the object and purpose of this provision,
which is to ensure the welfare of workers, it is impossible
to hold that the offence is not of a continuing nature. The
appellants were unquestionably liable to pay their
contribution to the Provident Fund before the due date and
it was within their power to pay as soon after the due date
had expired as they willed. The late payment could not have
absolved them of their original guilt but it would have
snapped the recurrence. Each day that they failed to comply
with the obligation to pay their contribution to the Fund,
they committed a fresh offence.[635 F-G]
628
6. To hold that the employer who has not paid his
contribution or the contribution of the employees to the
Provident Fund can successfully evade the penal consequences
of his act by pleading the law of limitation, would be
putting an incredible premium on lack of concern for the
welfare of workers. Such offences must be regarded as
continuing offences to which the law of limitation cannot
apply. [635 G-636 A]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal Nos.
407 to 418 of 1979.
Appeals by Special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 6th July, 1977 and 12th May, 1978 of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in Crl. Case Nos. 857, 851, 853, 858,
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852, 850 of 1977 and 1394, 1391, 1395, 1392, 1393 & 1387 of
1976.
WITH
Criminal Appeal No. 828 of 1981
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 1st May, 1981 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in
Crl. Revision No. 187 of 1977
AND
Criminal Appeal Nos. 315-317 of 1982
Appeal by Special Leave from the judgment and order
dated the 7th September, 1977 of the Madhya Pradesh High
Court in Crl. Revision No. 186, 185 & 184 of 1977
G. L. Sanghi. Vinod Bobde, Mrs. A. K. Verma, O. C.
Mathur and D. N. Misra for the Appellant in Crl. As. 407-
18/79.
Gopal Subramaniam and D.P. Mohanty for Respondents
Nos. 1 & 2 in Crl. As. 407-18 of 1979.
Mrs. Urmila Sirur S. N. Kohil and M.P. Jha for the
Intervener in Crl. A.. Nos. 407-18/79.
M. K. Ramamurthy and Miss A. Vaiji for A.C. in Crl.
As.No. 407-18/79.
S. Govind Swaminathan and S.K. Gambhir for the
appellants Crl. A. 828/81 and Crl. A. Nos. 828/81 & 315-
17/82.
629
N. C. Taluqdar and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Respondents in Crl. A. Nos. 828/81 & 315-317/82.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD C.J. These appeals raise a question of
general public importance as to whether failure to pay the
employers’ contribution to the Provident Fund is continuing
offence. If it is, no question of limitation can arise. On
the other hand, if it is not a continuing offence, the
complaint for non-payment of the contribution has to be
filed within the stated period.
The facts of these appeals vary from case to case but
such variation is inconsequential for our purpose. We will
therefore state the facts of a representative group of these
cases which comprises Criminal Appeals Nos. 407-418 of 1979.
On August 22, 1975 the Provident Fund Inspector,
Indore, Madhya Pradesh, filed six complaints against the
appellants and respondent 2, charging them with non-payment
of employers’ contribution under the Employees Provident
Fund and Family Pension Fund Act 19 of 1952, (referred to
herein as "the Act"). Respondent 2 is a Company called M/s
Burhanpur Tapti Mills Limited, of which appellants 1 to 3
were Directors and appellant 4 the Factory Manager. Under
section 17 of the Act, the Company was granted exemption
from the operation of the Employees Provident Fund Scheme,
1952 which is framed under the Act. That exemption was
granted on the condition that the Company will transfer
monthly collections of the Provident Fund of workers,
inclusive of the employers’ contribution, to the Board of
Trustees of the Fund within 15 days of the close of each
month. The allegation against the accused, about which there
is no factual dispute, is that they did not pay the
employers’ contribution to the fund from February 1970 to
June 1971.
At the commencement of the trial, the accused filed
applications contending that since the limitation prescribed
by section 468 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
(referred to herein as "the Code"), had expired before the
filing of the complaints, the Court had no jurisdiction to
take cognizance of the complaints. Those applications were
rejected by the learned Judicial Magistrate by an order
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dated November 29, 1976 on the ground that the offences of
630
which the accused were charged are continuing offences and
therefore, no question of limitation could arise.
The accused filed revision applications in the High
Court of Madhya Pradesh against the order passed by the
trial court. By a judgment dated July 6, 1977 a learned
single Judge of the High Court upheld the order of the trial
court and dismissed the revision petitions. The Directors of
the company who, along with the company, were arraigned as
the accused have filed these appeals by special leave,
against the judgment of the High Court.
By a Notification dated April 22, 1971 the Company was
declared as a Relief Undertaking under the Industries
(Development and Regulation) Act, 1951. As a result of that
notification, the administration and control of the Company
are vested in an administrator appointed by the Central
Government under that Act. Later, the Company was notified
as a Sick Textile Undertaking under the First Schedule to
the Sick Textile Undertakings (Nationalisation) Act, 1974,
which came into force on April 1, 1974.
The complaints for non-payment of the employer’s
contribution to the Provident Fund were filed against the
accused under section 14 (2A) of the Act which reads thus:
"Section 14. Penalties.
X X X X
(2-A). Whoever contravenes or makes default in
complying with any provision of this Act or of any
condition subject to which exemption was granted under
Section 17 shall, if no other penalty is elsewhere
provided by or under this Act for such contravention or
non-compliance, be punishable with imprisonment which
may extend to three months or with fine which may
extend to one thousand rupees, or with both."
The allegation against the accused is that by not paying
their contribution to the Provident Fund, they committed
default in complying with the condition subject to which
exemption was granted to them under section 17 of the Act
from complying with the provisions of the Act. Stated
briefly, section 17 confers upon the appropriate Government
the power to exempt any establishment from the operation of
all or any of the provisions of the Act, if
631
such establishment has its own scheme of Provident Fund, of
which the rules are not less favourable than the rules of
the scheme framed under the Act. The Company, in the instant
case, was granted exemption under section 17 on the
condition that it shall pay the employer’s contribution
within fifteen days of the close of each month. This
condition is the same as the one contained in paragraph 38
(1) of the Employees’ Provident Funds Scheme, 1952.
Paragraph 38 (1) reads as follows, in so far as is relevant;
"38. Mode of payment of contribution-
(1) The employer shall, before paying the member
his wages in respect of any period or part of period
for which contributions are payable, deduct the
employee’s contribution from his wages which together
with his own contribution.... he shall, within fifteen
days of the close of every month, pay.... to the Fund."
The question as to whether the offence of non-payment
of the employer’s contribution of the Provident Fund is a
continuing offence, arises because of the provisions
contained in Chapter XXXVI of the Code which is entitled
’Limitation for taking cognizance of certain offences.’
Sections 468, 472 and 473 which occur in that Chapter and
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which are relevant for our purpose, read as follows:-
"468. (1) Except as otherwise provided elsewhere
in this Code, no Court shall take cognizance of an
offence of the category specified in sub-section (2),
after the expiry of the period of limitation.
(2) The period of limitation shall be-
(a) six months, if the offence is punishable
with fine only;
(b) one year, if the offence is punishable
with imprisonment for a term not
exceeding one year;
(c) three years, if the offence is
punishable with imprisonment for a term
exceeding one year but not exceeding
three years."
632
"472. In the case of a continuing offence, a fresh
period of limitation shall begin to run at every moment
of the time during which the offence continues."
"473. Notwithstanding anything contained in the
foregoing provisions of this Chapter, any Court may
take cognizance of an offence after the expiry of the
period of limitation, if it is satisfied on the facts
and in the circumstances of the case that the delay has
been properly explained or that it is necessary so to
do in the interests of justice."
It is contended by Shri Bobde who appears on behalf of
the appellants that, the offence of non-payment of the
employer’s contribution can be committed once and for all on
the expiry of fifteen days after the close of every month
and, therefore, prosecution for that offence must be
launched within the period of limitation which is mentioned
in section 468 of the Code. It is common ground that if the
offence is non-continuing, the period of limitation for
filing the complaint will be one year as provided in clause
(b) of sub-section (2) of section 468 since, the offence in
the instant case is punishable with imprisonment which may
extend to three months or with fine.
It is impossible to accept Shri Bobde’s contention. The
expression ’continuing offence’ is not defined in the Code
but, that is because expressions which do not have a fixed
connotation or a static import are difficult to define. How
difficult it is to put the concept of a continuing offence
in a strait jacket is illustrated by the decision of this
Court in State of Bihar v. Deokaran Nenshi. In that case,
respondents who were owners of a stone quarry in Bombay were
required to forward certain annual returns in respect of the
preceding year, on or before January 21 in each year.
Failure to forward the returns as required is punishable
with fine under section 66 of the Mines Act, 1952. The
respondents having failed to furnish the returns by the due
date, which was January 21, 1960 a complaint was filed
against them in a Court at Dhanbad on April 12, 1961. One of
the contentions of the respondents was that the complaint
was barred by limitation under section 79 of the Mines Act
which provided that no Court shall take cognizance of an
offence under that Act unless the complaint was filed within
six months of the date of the offence. The Explanation to
section 79
633
provided that if the offence in question was a continuing
offence, the period of limitation shall be computed with
reference to every part of the time during which the said
offence continued. It was held by this Court that the
infringement which occurred on January 21 of the relevant
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year was complete when the owner failed to furnish the
annual returns on that date. Since, the Regulation did not
lay down that the owner would be guilty of an offence if he
continued to work the mine without furnishing the returns,
the offence was non-continuing and, therefore, the complaint
was time barred. While discussing the question as to when an
offence could be said to be a continuing offence, the Court
made the following observations:
"A continuing offence is one which is susceptible
of continuance and is distinguishable from the one
which is committed once and for all. It is one of those
offences which arises out of a failure to obey or
comply with a rule or its requirement and which
involves a penalty, the liability for which continues
until the rule or its requirement is obeyed or complied
with. On every occasion that such disobedience or non-
compliance occurs and recurs, there is the offence
committed. The distinction between the two kinds of
offences is between an act or omission which
constitutes an offence once and for all and an act or
omission which continues and therefore, constitutes a
fresh offence every time or occasion on which it
continues. In the case of a continuing offence, there
is thus the ingredient of continuance of the offence
which is absent in the case of an offence which takes
place when an act or omission is committed once and for
all " (p. 1006)
This passage shows that apart from saying that a
continuing offence is one which continues and a non-
continuing offence is one which is committed once and for
all, the Court found it difficult to explain as to when an
offence can be described as a continuing offence. Seeing
that difficulty, the Court observed that a few illustrative
cases would help to bring out the distinction between a
continuing offence and a non-continuing offence. The
illustrative cases referred to by the Court are three from
England, two from Bombay and one from Bihar.
634
In Best v. Butlar and Fitzgibbon, the English Trade
Union Act, 1871 made it penal for an officer or a member of
a Trade Union to wilfully withhold any money, books, etc. of
the Trade Union. It was held in that case that the offence
of withholding the money was a continuing offence, the basis
of the decision evidently being that every day that the
moneys were wilfully withheld, the offence was committed.
In Verney v. Mark. Fletcher & Sons Ltd., section 10 (1)
of the Factory and Workshop Act, 1901 provided that every
fly-wheel directly connected with steam, water or other
mechanical power must be securely fenced. Section 135
provided the penalty for non-compliance with section 10 (1),
while section 146 provided that information of the offence
shall be laid within three months after the date on which
the offence comes to the knowledge of the Inspector. It was
held that the breach of section 10 (1) was a continuing
breach and therefore the information was in time. Every day
that the fly-wheel remained unfenced, the factory was run
otherwise than in conformity with the Act of 1901 and,
therefore, the offence defined in section 10 was a
continuing offence.
The third English case referred to is The London County
Council v. Worley, in which section 85 of the Metropolis
Management Amendment Act, 1852 prohibited the erection of a
building on the side of a new street in certain
circumstances, without the consent of the London County
Council. The Court construed section 85 as creating two
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offences: building to a prohibited height and, continuing
such a structure already built after receiving a notice from
the County Council. The Court held that the latter offence
was a continuing offence.
In Emperor v. Karandas, section 390 (1) of the Bombay
City Municipal Act, 1888 provided that no person shall newly
establish in any premises any factory of a certain
description without the previous permission of the
Commissioner nor shall any person work or allow to be worked
any such factory without such permission. It was held by the
High Court that establishing a new factory was an offence
committed once and for all but working it without permission
was a continuing offence.
635
In The State of Bombay v. Bhiwandiwala. it was held
that the offence of using the premises as a factory without
a licence is a continuing offence.
In State of Bihar v. J.P. Singh, the High Court of
Patna held that conducting a restaurant without having it
registered and without maintaining proper registers were
continuing offences.
The decision of this Court in State of Bihar v.
Deokaran Nenshi to the effect that failure to furnish
returns before the due date is not a continuing offence must
be confined to cases of failure to furnish returns. It
cannot be extended to cases like those before us in which,
the contravention is not of a procedural or formal nature
and goes against the very grain of the statute under
consideration. What is of closer resemblance to the cases
before us are the three English cases, the two Bombay cases
and the Patna case referred to by this Court as illustrative
of cases in which the offences were held to be of a
continuing nature. We adopt the reasoning in those cases as
applicable to the circumstances of the instant prosecutions.
The question whether a particular offence is a
continuing offence must necessarily depend upon the language
of the statute which creates that offence, the nature of the
offence and, above all, the purpose which is intended to be
achieved by constituting the particular act as an offence.
Turning to the matters before us, the offence of which the
appellants are charged is the failure to pay the employer’s
contribution before the due date. Considering the object and
purpose of this provision, which is to ensure the welfare of
workers, we find it impossible to hold that the offence is
not of a continuing nature. The appellant were
unquestionably liable to pay their contribution to the
Provident Fund before the due date and it was within their
power to pay it, as soon after the due date had expired as
they willed. The late payment could not have absolved them
of their original guilt but it would have snapped the
recurrence. Each day that they failed to comply with the
obligation to pay their contribution to the fund, they
committed a fresh offence. It is putting an incredible
premium on lack of concern for the welfare of workers to
hold that the employer who has not paid
636
contribution or the contribution of the employes to the
Provident Fund can successfully evade the penal consequences
of his act by pleading the law of limitation. Such offences
must be regarded as continuing offences, to which the law of
limitation cannot apply.
our attention has been drawn to a judgment of the
Bombay High Court in Criminal Revision Applications 337 and
338 of 1976, which were decided by a learned single Judge on
November 7,1977. It was held in that Judgment that the
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failure to pay the employer’s share of contribution to the
Provident Fund is not a continuing offence. For reasons
which we have mentioned above, we dissent from that
judgment. With respect, we are unable to appreciate the
reasoning of that judgment that if the failure to pay the
employer’s contribution is regarded as a continuing offence,
it would be open to the employer to pay the contribution
even after the due date has expired, in order to escape
punishment. The concept of continuing offence does not wipe
out the original guilt. It keeps the contravention alive,
day by day.
For these reasons, we are of the opinion that the
offence of which the appellants are charged, namely, non-
payment of the employer’s contribution to the Provident Fund
before the due date, is a continuing offence and, therefore,
the period of limitation prescribed by section 468 of Code
cannot have any application. The offence which is alleged
against the appellants will be governed by section 472 of
the Code, according to which, a fresh period of limitation
begins to run at every moment of the time during which the
offence continues.
Before we close, we consider it necessary to draw
attention to the provision of section 473 of the Code which
we have extracted above. That section is in the nature of an
overriding provision according to which, notwithstanding
anything contained in the provisions of Chapter XXXVI of the
Code, any Court may take cognizance of an offence after the
expiry of the period of limitation if, inter alia, it is
satisfied that it is necessary to do so in the interest of
justice. The hair-splitting argument as to whether the
offence alleged against the appellants is of a continuing or
non continuing nature, could have averted by holding that,
considering the object and purpose of the Act, the learned
Magistrate ought to take cognizance of the offence after the
expiry of the period of limitation, if any such period is
applicable, because the interest of justice so requires. We
believe that in case of this nature, Courts
637
which are confronted with provisions which lay down a rule
of limitation governing prosecutions, will give due weight
and consideration to the provisions contained in section 473
of the Code.
We confirm the view of the High Court that in passing
the impugned order, the learned Magistrate has not in any
manner reviewed his earlier order dated September 20, 1976.
In the result, these appeals are dismissed. The
prosecutions will proceed and be disposed of expeditiously
in accordance with law. The learned Magistrate will dispose
of these cases by considering all the points together, that
is to say, without treating any particular point as a
preliminary point.
N.V.K. Appeals dismissed.
638