Harnam Das Vs. State of Uttar Pradesh
[1961] INSC 192 (27 April 1961)
SARKAR, A.K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION: 1961 AIR 1662 1962 SCR (2) 371
CITATOR INFO :
R 1972 SC2086 (9) F 1977 SC 202 (8)
ACT:
High Court, Powers of-Forfeiture of seditious
Publications Order Passed by Government-Application to High Court to set aside
order-Grounds of opinion not stated in orderOrder, if liable to be set
aside-Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of 1898), ss. 99A, 99B, 99C, 99D.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent passed an order under s. 99A
of the Code of Criminal Procedure forfeiting two books written by the appellant
as in its opinion they contained matter the publication of which was punishable
under s. 153A and 295A of the Indian Penal Code. The order did not state the
grounds on which the respondent had formed this opinion as was required by s.
99A. The appellant applied to the High Court under s. 99B of the Code to set
aside the order.
Section 99D of the Code provided that the
High Court shall set aside the order of forfeiture if it was not satisfied that
the book contained seditious or other matter of such a nature as was referred
to in sub-s. (1) of s. 99A. The High Court was of the view that it could not
set aside the order under s. 99D for the reason that the order did not set out
the grounds on which the Government had formed its opinion and that its duty
was only to see whether the books in fact came within the mischief of the
offence charged. Upon examining the books for itself the High Court came to the
conclusion that their contents were obnoxious and highly objectionable and
dismissed the application.
Held (Per Gajendragadkar, Sarkar, Wanchoo and
Ayyangar, jj.
Das Gupta, J. contra) that on the failure of
the respondent to set out the grounds of its opinion as required by s. 99A of
the Code the High Court should have set aside the order under s. 99D. It is the
duty of the High Court under that section to set aside the order of forfeiture
if it is not satisfied that the grounds on which the Government formed its
opinion could justify that opinion. Where no grounds of its opinion are given
at all the High Court must set aside the order for it cannot then be satisfied
that the grounds given by the Government justified the order.
Arun Ranjan Ghose v. State of West Benaal,
(1955) 59 C.W.N. 495, approved.
Premi Khem Rai v. Chief Secretary, A.I.R.
(1951) Raj. II3, N. Veerabrahmam v. State of Andhra Pradesh, A.I.R. (1959) A.
Pr. 572 and Baba Khalil Ahmed v. State of U. P., A.I.R.
(1960) All. 715, disapproved.
488 Per Das Gupta, J.-The High Court had no
power to set aside the order on the ground of failure of the Government to set
out the grounds of its opinion in the order. The duty cast on the High Court is
not to see whether the grounds stated by the Government for forming its opinion
are correct but to see whether the opinion formed is correct; this can only be
done by examining the books. Section 99B has limited the grounds on which
relief can be asked for to one and one only, viz., that the books do not
-contain any objectionable matter. It was not permissible for courts to add to
that ground.
Baijnath v. Emperor A.I.R. (1925) All. 195,
Premi Khem Raj v. Chief Secretary, A.I.R. (1951) Raj. 113, N. Veerabrahmam v.
State of Andhra Pradesh, A.I. R. 1959 A. Pr. 572 and Baba Khalil Ahmed v. State
of U. P., A.I.R. (1960) All. 715, approved.
Arun Ranjan Ghose v. The State of West
Bengal, (1959) 59 C.W.N. 495, disapproved.
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 74 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated May 7, 1957, of the Allahabad High Court in Criminal Misc.
No. 2006 of 1953.
Veda Vyas, S. K. Kapur and Ganpat Rai, for
the appellant.
G.C. Mathur and C. P. Lal, for the
respondent.
1961. April 27. The Judgment of
Gajendragadkar, Sarkar, Wanchoo and Ayyangar, JJ., was delivered by Sarkar, J.
Das Gupta, J., delivered a separate Judgment.
SARKAR, J.-The only question that was argued
in this appeal is substantially one of construction of s. 99D of the Code of
Criminal Procedure.
The appellant was the author of two books in
Hindi called Sikh Mat Khandan Part 1 and Bhoomika Nazam Sikh Mat Khandan which
he had published in April 1953. On July 30, 1953, the Government of Uttar
Pradesh, the respondent in this appeal, made an order under s. 99A of that Code
forfeiting these books which were thereupon seized and taken away. That order,
so far as material, was in the following terms: "In exercise of its powers
conferred by section 99A of the Code of Criminal Procedure......... the 489
Government is pleased to declare the books forfeited to Government on the
ground that the said books contain matter, the publication of which is
punishable under section 153-A and 295-A of the Indian Penal Code." It is
the validity of this order that is challenged in the present appeal.
Section 99A under which the order was made,
so far as relevant, is in these terms:
"Where any newspaper, or book or any
document appears to the State Government to contain any seditious matter or any
matter which promotes or is intended to promote feelings of enmity or hatred
between different classes of the citizens of India or which is deliberately and
maliciously intended to outrage the religious feelings of any such class by
insulting the religion or the religious belief of that class, that is to say,
any matter the publication of which is punishable under section 124A or section
153A or section 295A of the Indian Penal Code, the State Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette stating the grounds of its opinion,
declare every copy of such book to be forfeited to Government Two things appear
clearly from the terms of this section.
The first thing is that an order under it can
be made only when the Government forms a certain opinion. That opinion is that
the document concerning which the order is proposed to be made, contains
"any matter the publication of which is punishable under section 124A or
section 153A or section 295A of the Penal Code." Section 124A deals with
seditious matters, s. 153A with matters prompting enmity between different
classes of Indian citizens and s. 295A with matters insulting the religion or
religious beliefs of any class of such citizens. The other thing that appears
from the section is that the Government has to state the grounds of its
opinion. The-order made in this case, no doubt, stated that in the Government's
opinion the books contained matters the publication of which was punishable
under ss.
153A and 295A of the Penal Code. It did not,
however, state, as it should have, the grounds of that opinion. So it is 490
not known which communities were alienated from each other or whose religious
beliefs had been wounded according to the Government, nor why the Government
thought that such alienation or offence to religion had been caused.
Now s. 99B gives the person interested in the
books, or documents forfeited, a right to apply to the High Court to set aside
the order made under s. 99A, and s. 99D specifies the High Court's duty on such
an application being made to it. These two sections will have to be especially
considered in this case and so they along with s. 99C, are set out below.
S. 99B. Any person having any interest in any
newspaper, book or other document, in respect of which an order of forfeiture
has been made under section 99A, may, within two months from the date of such
order, apply to the High Court to set aside such order on the ground that the
issue of the newspaper, or the book or other document, in respect of which the
order was made, did not contain any seditious or other matter of such a nature
as is referred to in sub-section (1) of section 99A.
S. 99C. Every such application shall be heard
and determined by a Special Bench of the High Court composed of three Judges.
S. 99D. (1) On receipt of the application,
the Special Bench shall, if it is not satisfied that the issue of the
newspaper, or the book or other document, in respect of which the application
has been made, contained seditious or other matter of such a nature as is
referred to in sub-section (1) of section 99A, set aside the order of
forfeiture.
We think it fairly clear from these sections
that the ground on which an application can be made under s. 99B is the ground
which, if established, would require the High Court to set aside the order
under S. 99D.
The appellant bad moved the High Court. at
Allahabad under s. 99B to set aside the order of forfeiture of his books. It
seems to have been contended in the High Court that the order of forfeiture
should be set aside on the ground that the grounds of the 491 Government's
opinion had not been stated.
With regard to this contention, the High
Court observed, "The requirement to state the ground is mandatory. A mere
citation of words of the section will not do. But as has been held by a Special
Bench of this Court in Baijnath v. Emperor (A.I.R. 1925 All. 195), with which
we respectfully agree, the High Court in view of the provisions of s. 99D of
the Code of Criminal 'Procedure is precluded from considering any other point
than the question whether in fact the document comes within the mischief of the
offence charged." In this view of the matter the High Court refused to set
aside the order on account of the omission to state the grounds of the opinion.
The High Court then proceeded to examine the books for itself and found that
their contents were "obnoxious and highly objectionable" and
dismissed the application observing that the appellant had "entirely
failed to show that the books did not contain matters which promoted feelings
of enmity and hatred between different classes, or which did not (sic) insult
or attempt to insult the religion or religious beliefs of the Sikhs". The
present appeal arises out of this order of the High Court.
The High Court was of the view that its duty
under s. 99D was only to see "whether in fact the document comes within
the mischief of the offence charged". It thought that a document would be
within the mischief of the offence charged if, in its own opinion, it contained
matters the publication of which would be punishable under either s. 124A, or
s. 153A or s. 295A of the Penal Code as mentioned in the order of forfeiture,
irrespective of the Government's opinion on the matter.
Otherwise, it seems to us, the High Court
could not uphold the order for the reason that in its view the books offended
the Sikhs and the Sikh religion in spite of the fact that there is nothing to
show that the Government thought that the books had that effect. The same view
appears to have been taken in certain other cases, namely, Premi Khem Raj v. Chief
Secretary (1), N. Veerabrahmam v. State of Andhra Pradesh (2) and Baba Khalil
Ahmed v. State of U.P. (3).
(1) A.I.R. (1951) Raj. 113. (2) A.I.R (1959)
A.P. 572.
(3) A.I.R. (1960) All. 715.
492 Apparently, it was thought in these cases
that the words "if it is not satisfied that......... the book.........
contained seditious or other matter of such a nature as is referred to in
sub-section (1) of section 99A" in s. 99D meant, not so satisfied for any
reason whatsoever irrespective of the reasons on which the Government formed
its opinion about it. We are unable to accept this construction of s. 99D.
The question is what do the words
"matter of such a nature as is referred to in sub-section (1) of section
99A" appearing in s. 99D mean? Do they mean any matter of that nature as
the High Court thought? Or do they mean only those on which the order of
forfeiture was based, that is, those which for the reasons stated by it, the
Government thought were punishable under one or more of sections 124A, 153A and
295A of the Penal Code mentioned by it?. It seems to us that the latter is the
correct view and follows inevitably if ss. 99A, 99B and 99D are read together,
as they must.
Now s. 99D is concerned with setting aside an
order. That order is one made under s. 99A.
An order under that section can be made only
when certain things have appeared to the Government and the Government has
formed a certain opinion. The section further requires the Government to state
the grounds of its opinion. It is this order, that is, the order based on the
grounds stated, which the party affected has been given by s. 99B the, right to
move the High Court to set aside. It would follow that all that s. 99B can
require the party. to do is to show that order was improper. Whether that order
was proper or not would, of course, depend onlyon the merits of the grounds on
which it was based; whether another order to the same effect could have been
made on other grounds is irrelevant, for that would not show the validity of
the order actually made; that order would be bad if the grounds on which it is
made do not support it.
Two orders, though both saying that a publication
contains matter which offends the same section of the Penal Code cannot be the
same or an identical order if the reasons why they are considered so to 493
offend the section of the Penal Code concerned are different. Now s. 99B says
that a person affected by the order may move the High Court to set it aside on
the ground that the book "did not contain any seditious or other matter of
such a nature as is referred to in subsection (1) of section 99A". The
matter mentioned here must, for the reasons stated, refer only to such matter
on which for the grounds stated by it, the Government's opinion has been based.
We proceed now to a. 99D. It is concerned
with the same order of forfeiture. An order contemplated by s. 99D is made on
an application under s. 99B. That order must therefore accept or reject the
grounds on which the application under s. 99B was made.
These grounds, as we have seen, are confined
to challenging the propriety of the grounds on which the Government's opinion
resulting in the order, was based. The words which we have earlier quoted from
s. 99B occur substantially in the same form in s. 99D. The scope of the two
sections is identical. The common words occurring in them must, therefore, have
the same meaning in both. They must hence, in s. 99D also mean such matters on
which for the grounds stated by it the Government's opinion was based. They
cannot mean, as the High Court thought, any matter whatsoever, irrespective of
the Government's reasons for making the order, which in the High Court's
opinion would have justified it.
This view of the matter also explains why s. 99A
requires the Government to state the grounds of its opinion. The reason was to
enable the High Court to set aside the order of forfeiture if it was not
satisfied of the propriety of those grounds. If it were not so, the grounds of
the Government's opinion would serve no purpose at all. This would specially be
so as s. 99G provides that an order of forfeiture cannot be called in question
except in accordance with the provisions of s. 99B. If the order could be
upheld, as the High Court seems to have thought, on grounds other than those on
which the Government based its opinion, there would have been no need to
provide 63 494 that the grounds of the Government's opinion should be stated; such
grounds would then have been wholly irrelevant in judging the validity of the
order.
The acceptance of the interpretation put by
the High Court would lead to a result which, in our view, would be wholly
anomalous. The order of forfeiture with which s. 99D is concerned is
indisputably an order under s. 99A. Now, an order under that section is
essentially an order of the Government and of no one else. Take a case where
the Government making the order states the grounds of its opinion on which the
order is based. Suppose the Government says that the expression of view A in
the book concerned offends the religious beliefs of community X. Now assume
that in an application made to set it aside, the High Court was not satisfied
that view A could offend community X but thought that another expression of
view in the same book which we will call B, offended the religious beliefs of a
different community, say community Y. If in such a case the High Court upheld
the order, which, if the view of the Court below is right, it could do, there
would really be an order of forfeiture made by the High Court and not by the
Government, because the Government in stating the grounds of its opinion had
not, since it did not say so, thought that view B could offend the religious beliefs
of community Y. We think it impossible that the sections concerned contemplated
such a result; the Code nowhere provides for an order of forfeiture being made
by the High Court. We are, therefore, of opinion that under s. 99D it is the
duty of the High Court to set aside an order of forfeiture if it is not
satisfied that the grounds on which the Government formed its opinion that the
books contained matters the publication of which would be punishable under any
one or more of ss. 124A, 153A or 295A of the Penal Code could justify that
opinion. It is not its duty to do more and to find for itself whether the book
contained any such matter whatsoever.
What then is to happen when the Government
did not state the grounds of its opinion? In such a case 495 if the High Court
upheld the order, it may be that it would have done so for reasons which the
Government did not have in contemplation at all. If the High Court did that, it
would really have made an order of forfeiture itself and not upheld such an order
made by the Government. This, as already stated, the High Court has no power to
do under s. 99D. It seems clear to us, therefore, that in such a case the High
Court must set aside the order under s. 99D, for it cannot then be satisfied
that the grounds given by the Government justified the order. You cannot be
satisfied about a thing which you do not know. This is the view that was taken
in Arun Ranjan Ghose v. State of West Bengal (1) and we are in complete
agreement with it. The present is a case of this kind. We think that it was the
duty of the High Court under s. 99D to set aside the order of forfeiture made
in this case.
We accordingly allow the appeal and set aside
the Government's order of forfeiture dated July 30, 1953. The appellant will be
entitled to a return of all books, documents and things seized under that
order.
DAS GUPTA, J.-By a notification dated July
30, 1953 the Uttar Pradesh Government acting under s. 99A of the Code of
Criminal Procedure declared the books "Sikh Mat Khandan, Part 1" and
"Bhoomika Nazam Sikh Mat Khandan" which had been published by the
appellant Harnam Das in April 1953, forfeited to government on the ground that
these books contained matters the publication of which was punishable under s. 153A
and 295A of the Indian Penal Code. The High Court held on an examination of the
books that they clearly came within the mischief of s. 153A and s. 295A of the
Indian Penal Code.
Accordingly it held that the order of the
State Government forfeiting the two books was eminently just and proper and in
that view dismissed the application.
One argument appears to have been raised that
the order of forfeiture should be set aside as the notification by which the
government made the declaration (1) (1955) 59 C.W.N. 495.
496 of forfeiture did not state the grounds
of the government's opinion as required by s. 99A.
The High Court rejected this argument being
of opinion that in view of the provisions of s. 99D of the Code of Criminal
Procedure the High Court was "precluded from consideration of any other
point than the question whether in fact the document comes within the mischief
of the offence charged." It is quite clear that the government
notification did not state the grounds of the opinion formed by the government
that these documents contained matters the publication of which was punishable
under s. 153A and s. 295A of the Indian Penal Code. The question raised before
us is whether the High Court was right in rejecting the argument that the order
of forfeiture should be set aside on the ground that grounds of the
government's opinion were not stated in the government notification as required
by s. 99A. The view which prevailed with the learned judges in respect of this
question was in accord with what had been held by the same High Court in an
earlier case of Baijnath v. Emperor (1) and by the Rajasthan High Court in
Premi Khem Raj v. Chief Secretary (2). The same view has later on been taken by
the Andhra Pradesh High Court in N. Veerabrahmam v. State Of Andhra Pradesh (3)
and by the Allahabad High Court in a later decision in Baba Khalil Ahmad v.
State of U. P. (4). A contrary view appears to have been taken by the Calcutta
High Court in Arun Ranjan Ghose v. The State of West Bengal (5).
The material portion of s. 99A is in these
words:
"Where any newspaper, or book...... or
any document...... appears to the Government to contain any seditious matter or
any matter which promotes or is intended to promote feelings of enmity or
hatred between different classes of the citizens of India or which is
deliberately and maliciously intended to outrage the religious feelings of any
such class by insulting the religion or the religious belief of that (1) A.I.R.
(1925) All. 195.
(2) A.I.R. (1951) Raj. 113.
(3) A.I.R. (1950) An. Pr. 572.
(4) A.I.R. (1960) All, 715.
(5) (1955) 59 C.W.N. 495.
497 class, that is to say, any matter the
publication of which is punishable under section 124A or section 153A or
section 295A of the Indian Penal Code, the State Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette stating the grounds of its opinion,
declare ...... every copy of such book......
to be forfeited to the government." It
is clear therefore that before any government makes a declaration forfeiting a
book under the provisions of this section it has first to be of opinion that
the book does contain a matter the publication of which is punishable under s.
124A or s. 153A or s. 295A of the Indian Penal Code. Once it forms such an
opinion the government has the power to declare the book forfeited. The section
requires that this must be done by a notification in the official gazette and
in that notification the government is required to state the grounds on which
it formed the opinion.
The legislature however did not make such an
order made by the government immune from any attack. In s. 99B it has provided
the means by which the aggrieved person may obtain relief against the order if
in fact the government was wrong in its opinion and the book did not contain a
matter the publication of which is punishable under s. 124A, or s. 153A or s.
295A of the Indian Penal Code. Section 99B runs thus:"Any person having
any interest in any newspaper, book or other document, in respect of which an
order of forfeiture has been made under s. 99A, may, within two months from the
date of such order, apply to the High Court to set aside such order on the
ground that the issue of the newspaper, or the book or other document, in
respect of which the order 'wa s made, did not contain any seditious or other -matter
of such a nature as is referred to in sub-section (1) of s. 99A." Section
99D provides that if after hearing the application the High Court is not
satisfied that the issue of the document in question contains any seditious
matter or any other matter referred to in s. 99A, that is to say, any matter
the publication of which is 498 punishable under s. 124A or s. 153A or s. 295A
of the Indian Penal Code the High Court shall set aside the order of
forfeiture. The necessary result of the provision also is that if the High
Court is satisfied that the book in question contains matter the publication of
which is punishable under s. 124A or s. 153A or s. 295A of the Indian Penal
Code, the High Court will refuse to set aside the order of forfeiture.
It has to be noticed that s. 99B in providing
for relief to a person aggrieved by an order of forfeiture has limited the
grounds on which relief can be applied for to one and one only, viz., that the
issue of the newspaper, or the book or other document, in respect of which the
order was made, does not contain any seditious matter or other matter of such a
nature as is referred to in sub-section (1) of s. 99A.
The appellant's contention that the High
Court should also examine the notification to find out whether the government
had stated the grounds of its own opinion as required by s. 99A and set aside
the order of forfeiture if it finds that this requirement has note been
fulfilled seeks to add an additional ground on which an application can be made
under s. 99B and relief can be given by the High Court under s. 99D. The
question is: Can that be done? It is well to recognise that just as a right of
appeal is a creature of statute the right to apply for setting aside an order
which is really in the nature of an appeal-is equally a creature of statute and
when the legislature creates such a right by a statute it may at its option
make the right unlimited or may limit it in any manner it likes. It is settled
law that no Court can add to or enlarge the grounds for appeal as laid down in
the statute creating the appeal.
The position is exactly the same when the
statute creates a right to seek relief by way of application and no court can
add to the grounds on which relief can be sought if the statute creating the
right to obtain relief is limited to one or more specified grounds. It is
interesting to remember in this connection the right to apply for review
granted by O. 47 r. 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure. After specifying 499 some
grounds on which a review can be applied for, the legislature added a further
ground in the words "for any other sufficient reason". The proper
interpretation of these words "for any other sufficient reason" has
engaged the anxious consideration of the courts and in 1922 the Privy Council after
a review of the numerous cases laid down, the rule that "for any other
sufficient reason" means a reason sufficient on grounds at least analogous
to those specified immediately previously. If the correct position had been
that the court might add to the ground for a review whenever it thought fit,
all the discussion as regards the interpretation of "for any other
sufficient reason" would have been meaningless and unnecessary.
Indeed the position in law that the courts
cannot add to the grounds to which the legislature has limited the right of
relief is so very clear and unassailable that the learned counsel for the
appellant did not like to suggest that a ground can be added. To overcome this
difficulty that the courts cannot add to the grounds of relief specified in s. 99B
and s. 99D, an ingenious argument has been put forward that in order that the
High Court can give proper relief on the very ground mentioned in s. 99B and s.
99D it is essential that the government's order should state the grounds of its
opinion. The steps of the argument may shortly be stated thus:-The government
has formed an opinion. The High Court has to see that opinion is correct.
In order to do this the High Court must know
what weighed with the government in coming to its opinion. Therefore, without
the grounds of the Government's opinion the High Court cannot be satisfied
within the meaning of s. 99D that the issue of the newspaper contained the
matter complained of.
The fallacy of this syllogistic process is in
the unsoundness of the premises that in order to determine whether the
government's opinion is correct or not the High Court must know what weighed
with the government. When the application is heard by the High Court and it has
to come to a conclusion whether it is or it is not satisfied that the issue of
the newspaper, 500 or the book or other document does contain a matter
mentioned in s. 99A, the one and only way of coming to a conclusion appears to
me to be to read the newspaper, or the book or other document. Arguments of
counsel might be of assistance; if the government has stated its grounds for
coming to its opinion, that would also help; but the ultimate responsibility of
deciding whether or not to be satisfied that the issue of newspaper contains
matters as mentioned in s. 99A can only be discharged by the High Court by
reading the document in question.
It has been suggested that when s. 99B and s.
99D uses the words "any seditious or other matter of such a nature as is
referred to in sub-s. (1) of s. 99A", they mean only those matters on
which the Government based the order of forfeiture; so it is urged, unless the
Government stated the ground of its opinion, it will be impossible for the
Court to decide the question under s. 99D.
I confess I do not think it reasonably
possible to conceive of a case, where an order under section 99A will not
mention the particular matter referred to in s. 99A. (1) The mention of the
particular matter out of the several matters referred to in section 99A which
in its opinion is contained in the document does not however involve the
statement of reasons for forming the opinion. Suppose a Government states that
in its opinion the document contains seditious matters. It does not cease to be
a complete statement on this point merely because the reason for forming the
opinion are not also stated. The formation of the opinion that one or more of
the matter,% referred to in the section are contained in a document and the
statement that such an opinion has been formed are quite distinct from the
statement of the reasons for forming the opinion. It appears to me clear that
where, as in the present case the Government order contains a statement of the
particular matter or matters out of the several matters, referred to in s. 99A,
viz., any seditious matter or any matter which promotes or is intended to
promote feelings of enmity or hatred between different classes of the citizens
of India or 501 which is deliberately and maliciously intended to outrage the
religious feelings of any such class by insulting the religion or the religious
beliefs of that class, that is to say, any matter the publication of which is
punishable under section 124A or section 153A or section 295A of the Indian
Penal Code" which in its opinion the document contains, no difficulty can
possibly arise from the fact that the Court has not got before it Government's
grounds for forming such opinion.
But, asks the appellant, why was it necessary
then for the legislature to require in s. 99A that the Government should state
the grounds of its opinion when notifying the order of forfeiture? The real
reason, it is urged, was to enable the High Court to set aside the order of
forfeiture if it was not satisfied of the propriety of those grounds, and
necessarily also when no grounds were stated. If that were correct, it was
reasonable to expect the legislature to make the necessary provision in a. 99B
that an order could be challenged on the ground that the grounds of the opinion
were not stated, and consequential provisions in s. 99D. I can see no
justification for reading into these sections section 99A and section 99D-words
which are not there, in an attempt to understand why s. 99A contains such a
requirement for statement of grounds of the opinion. There can be no doubt that
this is a very salutary provision that Government should record the grounds of
its opinion. Such a provision diminishes the risk of government making an
arbitrary order of forfeiture. It was therefore a question of legislative
policy for the legislature to require that the government should state its
opinion. To say that there could have been no reason for including such a
requirement in s. 99A unless the legislature intended the High Court to
interfere if grounds of the opinion were not stated, is, in my opinion, wholly
unjustified.
It seems clear to me that the duty cast by
section 99D on the judges of the High Court is not to see whether in a
particular case the grounds stated by 64 502 the government for forming its
opinion are correct, but to see whether the opinion formed was correct. To
perform this duty the one and the only way is to examine the document which in
the Government's opinion contains the matter complained of.
The argument that the High Court is not in a
position to perform this duty under s. 99D satisfactorily in the absence of a
statement by the government of the grounds of its opinion appears to me
therefore wholly unsound.
In this very case, the learned judges of the
High Court of Allahabad felt no difficulty in coming to a conclusion on the
question before them even though the government had not stated the grounds of
its opinion. I fail to see any justification for imagining difficulties where
there are none.
I have therefore come to the conclusion that
the High Court was right in rejecting the argument that the order of forfeiture
should be set aside on the ground that the notification did not state
government's grounds for forming the opinion.
The appeal should therefore be dismissed.
By COURT--In view of the opinion of the majority,
this appeal will be allowed and the order of the High Court, set aside. The
appellant will be entitled to the return of all the books, documents and other
things seized from him under the order now set aside. He will also be entitled
to the refund of expenses and costs that he had to pay under the order of the
High Court.
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