Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ORISSA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JANMEJOY DINDA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/1998
BENCH:
M.K. MUKHERJEE, K.T. THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Thomas J.
A Drugs Inspector conducted search of the premises of a
nursing home run by the respondent under the name
‘Kalicharan Poly Clinic’ at Naya Bazar in Jaleswar (Orissa)
on 7.8.1996. He was accompanied by one Deputy Drugs
Controller and an Assistant Drugs Controller. In the search
it was detected that medicinal drugs were stocked for sale
in two almirahs kept in the front room of the nursing home.
As respondent had no licence to stock or exhibit for sale
such drugs, the Drugs Inspector seized 22 items of drugs.
Respondent was not able to produce the purchase invoice
concerning those drugs and he failed to disclose the source
from which he purchased them.
On the aforesaid facts respondent was prosecuted before
a Court of Judicial Magistrate of First Class for offences
under Section 27(b)(ii) and Section 28 of the Drugs and
Cosmetics Act, 1940 (for short the ‘Act’). The magistrate,
on conclusion of the trial, convicted respondent under both
counts and sentenced him to undergo simple imprisonment for
one year and a fine of Rs. 5,000/- on the first count and to
simple imprisonment for one month on the second count.
Appeal filed by the respondent was dismissed by the
Sessions Court which confirmed the conviction and sentence
under both charges. But when he filed a revision before the
High Court of Orissa a learned Single Judge found that
conviction under Section 28 of the Act was unsustainable and
hence respondent was acquitted of that offence. In the
matter of sentence for the offence under Section 27(b)(ii)
of the Act learned Single Judge reduced it to the period of
imprisonment which had already been undergone and the fine
was reduce to Rs.3,000/-.
State of Orissa has filed this special leave petition
challenging the aforesaid alteration and modification made
by the High Court. Leave is granted.
The concurrent findings of facts arrived at by the
trial court and the appellate court which are not liable to
be re-opened are: (1) respondent stocked for sale the drugs
seized from his nursing home on 7.8.1996 without any valid
licence as required under clause (c) of Section 18 of the
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Act, and (2) respondent did not disclose to the Drugs
Inspector, even after he was required to do so, the name and
address of the persons from whom he acquired those drugs.
Learned counsel for the appellant contended that the
High Court committed an error in holding that the offence
under Section 28 of the Act has not been made out. That
Section reads thus:-
"Penalty for non-disclosure of the
name of the manufacturer, etc. -
whoever contravenes the provisions
of Section 18-A or Section 24 shall
be punishable with imprisonment for
a term which may extend to one
year, or with fine which may extend
to one thousand rupees, or with
both."
Learned Single Judge of the High Court took the view
that Section 18A of the Act would have application "only if
the person from whom the requisite information is sought
for, is either the manufacturer or an agent for
distribution" and since the respondent was neither of them
he could not have contravened the Section. The reasoning of
the learned Single Judge in reaching the aforesaid
conclusion, in his own words, are the following:-
"Section 18-A deals with disclosure
of the name of the manufacturer,
etc. It requires that every person,
being the manufacturer of a drug or
cosmetic or his agent for the
distribution thereof, shall, if so
required, disclose to the Inspector
the names address and other
particulars of the person from whom
he acquired the drug or cosmetic.
In order to attract application of
Section 18-A, a person, who is
either the manufacturer of the drug
or cosmetic or agent for
distribution thereof is required to
disclose to the inspector the name
and address and other particulars
of the person from whom he acquired
the articles. If a person does not
fall within either of the two
categories, Section 18-A will have
no application."
In this context it is necessary, to see how Section 18A
of the Act is worded which is extracted below:-
18-A Disclosure of the name of the
manufacturer, etc. - Every person,
not being the manufacturer of a
drug or cosmetic or his agent for
the distribution thereof, shall, if
so required, disclose to the
Inspector the name address and
other particulars of the person
from whom he acquired the drug or
cosmetic."
(emphasis supplied)
It is obvious that for application of the Section, the
person concerned shall not be a manufacturer of drug or his
agent. In other words, the person to whom Section 18A
applies is anyone other than a manufacturer or his agent for
distribution thereof. The raison d’etre of it is that, if he
is the manufacturer or his agent he cannot disclose the name
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of the person from whom he acquired the drug because he
himself is its manufacturer. To expect the other way is to
expect the impossible. Hence there is no question of
requiring him to disclose the identity of the person from
whom he acquired the drug. Exclusion of manufacturer and his
agent from the purview of Section 18A is, therefore, on
understandable premise.
It seems to us that learned Single Judge of the High
Court would have missed the monosyllable ‘not’ in Section
18A of the Act when he considered the amplitude of the
provision. The position of law when the word ‘not’ is
remaining in the provision, is just the other way around.
The Section, therefore, would apply to any person other than
the manufacturer of a drug or cosmetic or his agent. Hence,
there is much force in the contention of the State that
acquittal of the respondent of the offence under Section 28
of the Act is based on a basically faulty premise. Such
acquittal is, therefore, liable to be set aside and the
conviction of the respondent under Section 28 has to be
restored. We do so.
However, while dealing with the sentence we are of the
opinion that for failure to disclose the name of the person
from whom he acquired the drugs, he need not be sent to jail
as we feel that such failure could have happened perhaps
because he was oblivious of the name and address of the
person from whom he purchased the drug. That apart, there is
no case for the Drug Inspector, or for the prosecution
itself, that any of the drugs seized from the nursing home
was either a spurious drug or a misbranded one or even a
time expired medicine. It means that the drug seized would
have been otherwise genuine medicine.
We also notice that the offence under Section 28 is
punishable with either imprisonment or with fine which may
extend to Rs.1,000/- or with both. In other words, sentence
of imprisonment is not compulsory. In such circumstances, a
sentence of fine of Rs.1,000/- would be sufficient to meet
the ends or justice for Section 28 of the Act so far as the
facts in this case are concerned.
The remaining contention is that learned Single Judge
has acted without jurisdiction when he reduced the sentence
for the offence under Section 27(b)(ii) of the Act to
imprisonment for the period which respondent had already
undergone and to a fine of Rs. 3,000/-. For considering the
above contention it is necessary to extract the material
portion of the said sub-clause:
"27. Penalty for manufacture, sale,
etc., of drugs in contravention of
this Chapter.- Whoever, himself or
by any other person on his behalf,
manufactures for sale or for
distribution, or sells, or stocks
or exhibits or offers for sale or
distributes,-
(a)................................
..
(b) any drug-
(i)................................
.
(ii) Without a valid licence as
required under clause (c) of
Section 18,
shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which shall
not be less than one year but which
may extend to three years and with
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fine which shall not be less than
five thousand rupees:
Provided that the Court may, for
any adequate and special reasons to
be recorded in the judgment, impose
a sentence of imprisonment for a
term of less than one year and of
fine of less than five thousand
rupees;"
This Court has held in Ram Shankar Misra vs. State of
UP [AIR 1976 SC 727] that the sentence under Section 27 of
the Act cannot be reduced to one of fine only. Again in M/s
Rajasthan Pharmaceutical Laboratory Bangalore and others vs.
State of Karnataka [AIR 1981 SC 809] this Court pointed out
that a sentence of imprisonment is compulsory under Section
27 (b)(ii) of the Act. But in view of the proviso to the
Section (as quoted above) it cannot be said that the Court
has no jurisdiction to reduce the sentence of imprisonment
below the period of six months. If the conditions specified
in the proviso are present, the Court has the power to
reduce the sentence even further down. For that there must
be adequate and special reasons and such reasons should be
recorded in the judgment and there shall still be a term of
imprisonment and fine in the reduced sentence.
Learned Single Judge has given some reasons for
reducing the sentence of imprisonment "to the period already
undergone" and to a fine of Rs.3,000/-. Appellant-State has
not even mentioned in the special leave petition that the
reasons shown by the learned Single Judge are neither
adequate not special. We are, therefore, not inclined to
enhance the term of imprisonment or the quantum of fine
further upward for the offence under Section 27(b)(ii) of
the Act.
In the result, we allow this appeal by setting aside
the acquittal under Section 28 of the Act. We restore the
conviction of the respondent of the said offence. We impose
a fine of Rs.1,000/- on him for the said offence and direct
that in default of payment of such fine within two months
respondent shall undergo simple imprisonment for one month.
Appeal is thus, allowed to that extent.