Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
A.K. SINGH AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UTTARAKHAND JAN MORCHA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/05/1999
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, D.P.Mahapatra, U.C.Banerjee
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS,J.
Leave granted.
There was a stir in support of the demand for a
separate State of Uttarakhand comprising of certain hilly
regions of the State of U.P. and some other areas. The
stir collected momentum when the State Government issued a
notification in 1994 pertaining to reservation in
educational institutions based on region-wise domicile. The
agitationists fixed up the Gandhi Jayanti day in 1994 for
staging a public rally at New Delhi for the twin objective
of protesting against the notification and to press the
demand for the separate State. The administration took
stern measures to resist the protestors march towards the
National Capital as the officials claimed to have received
secret information that the proposed rallysts were carrying
lethal weapons in violation of the prohibitory orders issued
by the Government and might create serious law and order
situation. The confrontation which ensued had resulted in
lot of blood-shed including loss of many lives, infliction
of injuries on persons belonging to both sides, outraging
the modesty of women ranging to ravishments.
An association styling itself as Uttarakhand
Sangharsh Samity (for short the Samity) moved a writ
petition in the High Court of Allahabad (before the
Allahabad Bench) on 6-10-1994, for different directions to
be issued to the authorities to meet the consequence of the
said confrontation. A Division Bench of the High Court
issued certain interim directions on 7-10-1994 one of which
was to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI for short)
to enquire into the allegations of human rights
violations. The substance of the aforesaid directions is
extracted below:
Thus, this Court calls upon the Home Secretary,
Government of India and the Central Bureau of Investigation,
through its Director General, by a writ of mandamus, to
execute the investigation on the incidents which have
happened in the regions of Garhwal and Kumaun, between 17
June 1994 (the date of issue of the first order securing
reservations in educational institutions including its
applicability to these regions) and until the investigation
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is determined. The investigation will also include the
incidents narrated in this petition in the towns of Khatima,
Mussoorie, Dehradun and near Muzaaffarnagar. The scope of
the enquiry by the Central Bureau of Investigation, on its
discretion, will not remain curtailed to these towns
relating to deaths and injuries and molestation of women by
police.
But, the investigation will be confined to: (a) the
agitations in the regions of Garhwal and Kumaun, and to
include the Muzafarnagar incident, (b) the matters connected
with the agitations for Uttarakhanad only, (c) consequential
detentions of the agitationists, (da) the agitators
detained, (e) details of injuries, deaths and molestation of
women, and (f) damage to property, as a consequence of these
agitations within the aforesaid regions.
The CBI took up investigation pursuant to the said
directions and laid charge-sheet against certain officers on
19-1-1995 for offences under Sections 109 and 120-B read
with Sections 341 and 342 of the Indian Penal Code.
Sanction of the State Government was obtained for launching
prosecution in respect of those offences. Some of the
accused who were arrayed in the said charge-sheet filed Writ
Petitions Nos.3463 and 3515 of 1995 before the Lucknow Bench
of the High Court of Allahabad, in challenge of the validity
of the sanction order issued by the State Government for
prosecuting them.
On 9-2-1996 the Division Bench of the High Court of
Allahabad (Ravi S. Dhawan and A.B. Srivastava, JJ)
disposed of the first mentioned writ petition filed by the
Samity holding, inter alia, that no sanction of the
Government is required under Section 197 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure (for short the Code) for prosecuting
the officials as for any of the offences committed by them
while resisting the rallysts. In view of the aforesaid
stand adopted by the Allahabad Bench of the High Court, Writ
Petitions 3463 and 3515 of 1995 were dismissed by Lucknow
Bench of the High Court on the premise that those writ
petitions have become infructuous.
SLPs were filed by the Union of India and the
Government of U.P. as well as some of the aggrieved
officials in challenge of the judgment dated 9-2-1996. SLPs
are also filed against the judgment by which writ petitions
were dismissed by the Lucknow Bench as having become
infructuous.
We are told that the accused arraigned in the
charge-sheet filed by the CBI on 19-1-1995 were discharged
by the trial court subsequently. If that be so,
SLP(Criminal) No.1810 of 1996 and SLP (Civil) No.12485 of
1996 which were filed against the judgment of the Lucknow
Bench must be treated to have become infructuous. We do so.
However, learned counsel for the petitioners therein
expressed apprehension that the order of discharge may be
set aside and the accused therein may have to face
prosecution. A revision petition is pending before the High
Court in challenge of the aforesaid discharge order. It is
submitted before us that in case the order of discharge is
set aside for any reason, dismissal of the aforesaid two
SLPs should not debar the petitioners from challenging the
validity of the sanction order. We preserve the said right
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of the petitioners concerned for challenging the validity of
the sanction if such a contingency as apprehended would
arise in future.
The Judgment under attack delivered by the Division
Bench of the Allahabad High Court dated 9-2-1996 consists of
a lot of directions. Both the judges of the Division Bench
wrote separate judgments, each of them is voluminous in size
and in the end the directions were catalogued by the
Division Bench under 19 heads as per the common judgment.
We propose to skip major portion of the judgments as
all the learned counsel who appeared for the parties in this
Court were unanimous in expressing that a large chunk of the
judgments contains unnecessary deliberations without any
nexus with the points in controversy. We too share the view
expressed by both sides. It is unfortunate that the
judgments under challenge contain a lot of rigmorale and
learned Judges could have focussed on the core issues
without niggling on academic subjects. Shri D.D. Thakur,
learned counsel took strong objection to the following
observations made by Dhawan, J:
This court, of the cases which were brought in large
scale violations of human rights have been occasioned at the
hands of the respondents already named in the reports of the
Central Bureau of Investigation and that these violations
have also partaken the nature of constitutional torts. Only
for demonstrating for fulfillment of the promise formalised
by the legislature of the Uttar Pradesh and under discussion
with the Union Government that the people of Kumaon and
Garhwal should receive statehood the civil rights activities
had to suffer what seemed like a direct attack by
functionaries of the government aimed at them as a class.
Learned senior counsel submitted that High Court
should have refrained from making such observations, and
such pre-judging of the cases pending before the criminal
courts should have been averted.
We agree with the said submission of the learned
senior counsel that learned judges should have avoided
making observations concerning matters which are pending
consideration by subordinate courts. The High Court did
more than that. Without trial, and even without considering
the evidence which may be adduced in the cases, learned
Judges ordered the Government to pay Rs.10 lakhs each to the
dependants of all the persons who died in police firing.
Rs.10 lakhs each were given to the victims of molestation,
Rs. Fifty thousand each for 398 persons who were detained
by the police.
All the learned counsel made scathing attack on the
rationale of the High Court in fixing up such huge sum as
compensation at a premature stage. They contended that the
High Court while imposing such heavy liability on the State
has not made any attempt to discuss the relevant questions
which are to be answered for fixing liability of
compensation and for quantification of the amount of
compensation. On consideration we are satisfied that there
is ample substance in the contentions raised by the learned
counsel in this regard. The direction for payment of
compensation is clearly unsustainable and is liable to be
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vacated. We are told that pursuant to the directions in the
impugned judgment amounts have been disbursed to all those
persons who claimed it. We, therefore, make it clear that
no further amount need be paid as compensation pursuant to
the judgment of the High Court but if any sum has been
disbursed to claimants the State will not recover the same
from them. We also make it clear that if any person has not
made his/her claim or has not received compensation despite
making a claim for it, it will be open to him/her to
approach the competent Court for compensation in accordance
with law.
The serious criticism made by the learned counsel
against the direction issued by the High Court, regarding
fund allotment for the development of certain regions,
cannot be side stepped. That direction is in the following
lines:
Damages and compensation for constitutional wrongs
committed subjecting injuries to the class of
people of Kumaun and Garhwal for their only fault that
they were securing their civil rights on the guarantee
already given by the legislature, as discussed in the
judgment, the repairment to the people of Kumaun and Garhwal
Divisions shall stand related to their population (5,926,146
: Kumaun 2,943,199, Garhwal 2,982,947) in the equation
of a rupee per month per person for a plan period of five
years and this compensation shall be invested amongst the
population of Kumaun and Garhwal earmarked specifically for
a programme for the upliftment of the woman; 50 paise of
this reparation shall come from the State of Uttar Pradesh
and the other 50 paise from the Union of India. This would
be in addition to the normal plan allocation which this area
would receive as what the court is suggesting is damages
beyond the normal allocation. The details of the allocation
will be chalked out and formalised at a meeting which will
be called by the Commissioners of Kumaun and Garhwal
representing:
(i) Members of Parliament of the area: (ii) Members
of the Legislative Assembly of the area, and (iii) the
District Magistrates of the district concerned.
The magnitude of the financial burden for complying
with the said direction has been approximately estimated as
amounting to several crores of rupees. The money has to
come out of State coffers. A criticism made against such
direction is that learned Judges of the High Court did not
take into account the financial capacity of the State
Government, nor its resources for making up the said amount
nor the priorities to be honoured by the State Government
nor even the legislative mandates involving State funding,
while ordering the Government to incur such huge expenditure
of a recurring nature.
This is not a case where the High Court was ordering
compensation to one individual or even to a limited number
of persons de horse its legal liability enjoined by
statutory provisions. For Kumaun region the State
Government will have to raise a very substantial amount of
about 36 crores of rupees, and for Garhwal region another
huge amount has to be raised, if the impugned judgment is in
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force.
As the learned Judges did not indicate how the
Government should make up the whopping amounts, we are
unable to concur with the aforesaid direction. We cannot
ignore the reality that major revenue of the State
Government is through taxation. But no taxation is possible
without legislative sanction. Government must have other
resources to meet the direction.
It may be that people of Kumaun and Garhwal require
much upliftment. But they are not the only regions to be
attended to by the State or Central Government. Every part
of the county requires further development. If the High
Courts are to issue such directions for each region, using
different writ petitions, financial policy may have to be
restructured by the Governments. Judicial creativity has,
no doubt, expanded to newer dimensions in recent past, but
that is no justification for using judicial power for
imposing such unbearable burden on the State which in turn
would be compelled to extract money out of common mans
coffers to meet such massive financial burden. Suffice it
to say that the above direction cannot stand judicial
scrutiny and it is hereby set aside.
The Division Bench of the High Curt then proceeded to
consider whether sanction of the Government is required for
prosecution of Government officials for the offences
mentioned in the charge-sheet filed by the CBI. Learned
Judges first held that there is no necessity for sanction to
investigate into the offences. The following observations
were made for that purpose:
The High Court did not need any sanction to require
the C.B.I. to inquire and investigate into alleged
violation of constitutional torts when citizens brought
these petitions to the courts, whether the High Court or the
Supreme Court. The Supreme Court had already made it clear
that when the C.B.I. is called upon to investigate any
matter, the sanction of the Central Government is not
necessary. A corollary follows that the C.B.I. would not
need any sanction when, acting under the orders of the High
Court, after inquiry and investigation, it has come to a
prima facie conclusion that as an investigating agency it is
obliged to draw up a charge-sheet.
Nobody raised a contention that sanction of the
Government is required for ordering investigation.
Therefore, the aforesaid exercise of the High Court was one
in futility. But the High Court further proceeded and held
that no sanction is necessary for prosecuting the Government
officials as it is not part of any official duty to fire on
unarmed political activists, exhume dead bodies of agitators
shot in an agitation, loot or plunder unarmed people, and
rape and molest women.
Learned counsel who argued for all the appellants
seriously assailed the findings of the High Court, firstly,
on the ground that question of sanction under Section 197 of
the Code should not have been considered in a writ petition
filed by the Samity and secondly, on the ground that even
otherwise the High Courts reasoning is absolutely faulty.
It is doubtful whether learned Judges would have meant
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that no sanction is required for the court to take
cognizance of the offences as the observations were confined
to the stage up to laying the charge-sheet. But we agree
that the effect of the observations of the learned Judges is
to convey the message that High Court is of the view that no
sanction is required for such prosecution.
We are told that the magistrate before whom the
charge-sheets were laid has taken cognizance of offence
under Section 302 of IPC among other offences. Learned
senior counsel appearing for the respondents argued that no
sanction under Section 197 of the Code can be contemplated
as for the offence of murder, for, that offence cannot, by
any stretch of imagination, be regarded as committed in the
discharge of official duties. In reply thereto it was
argued that the magistrate had gone completely wrong in
taking cognizance of the offence under Section 302 of the
IPC because the entire allegations, even assuming that they
are true, would only fall within the contours of Exception
No.3 of Section 300 IPC. Counsel contended that the offence
on which cognizance could have been taken was only Section
304 IPC and not Section 302 IPC.
We do not think it necessary to decide the question
regarding the offences to be included in the charge which
may be framed against the accused persons because that work
has to be done by the Sessions Judges concerned after
hearing both sides, as provided under Section 228 of the
Code. Appellants can raise their arguments regarding what
offences can be included in the charge at the appropriate
stage.
The question of necessity of sanction need be
considered by the Sessions Judge if and when raised by the
accused. We have no doubt that the High Court should not
have embarked upon a discussion regarding sanction at such a
premature stage, that too in the writ petition filed by the
Samity. If the finding of the High Court is that no
sanction is required such finding has to be treated as bad
mainly because that question has to be decided after taking
into account various considerations including the fact
situation in each case.
Learned Judges issued the following directions
regarding the venue of the trial of different cases :
Trial for offences within the districts of Kumaun region is
to be held by the court in sessions Division at Nainital and
for the offences within the districts of Garhwal region,
Haridwar and Muzzafarnagar, to be held in the court in
Sessions Division at Dehradun. Where a special court does
not exist, in any of the two sessions divisions, as above,
it shall be established by the State of U.P. in
consultation with the High Court, within one month and until
so established, the charge sheet, in context, shall be
submitted into the court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate,
and deal with in accordance with chapter XVI of the Code of
Criminal Procedure.
The jurisdiction of the Court can be decided on the
factual foundation in each case for offences within the
districts seems to be true with an expression incorporated
in the aforesaid directions. We are of the view that the
High Court should not have pre-empted the Court, before
which, each case would come up in the normal course, to
determine the question of jurisdiction, if it is raised by
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any of the parties. It is difficult for us to comprehend
what the learned judges would have meant by special court
to be established by the State Government. There is ;no
suggestion in the impugned judgment as to what are the
offences alleged to have been committed by the officials
under any special enactment. The aforesaid
direction(extracted above) if allowed to remain in force
would create only confusion and provide room for
procrastination of the trials
When the above mentioned directions of the High Court
are unsustainable nothing further survives, because the
remaining directions in the judgment are only ancillary or
incidental to those main directions. When the main pillars
are to be removed, the edifice cannot be allowed to remain.
On careful consideration of the entire matter we have
no hesitation to hold that the judgment of the High Court is
unsustainable and has to be set aside. The appeal is
accordingly allowed and the impugned judgment dated 9.2.1996
is set aside. There will however, be no orders as to costs.