Kurban Hussein Mohammedali Rangwalla Vs.
State of Maharashtra [1964] INSC 295 (15 December 1964)
15/12/1964 WANCHOO, K.N.
WANCHOO, K.N.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION: 1965 AIR 1616 1965 SCR (2) 622
CITATOR INFO:
F 1968 SC 829 (12) D 1968 SC1319 (48) R 1972
SC1150 (8)
ACT:
Rash and negligent act-To be punishable It
must be proximate cause of death-Lighting fire and storage of combustible
material against conditions of license-Danger to human life caused thereby
whether 'probable'-Indian Penal Code, 1860 (Act 45 of 1860), ss. 304A and 285.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the manager and working
partner of a firm which manufactured paints and varnish. The factory was
licensed by the Bombay Municipality on certain conditions to manufacture paints
involving a cold process and to store certain specified quantities of
turpentine, varnish and paint. The factory did not have a license for
manufacturing wet paints but nevertheless manufactured them. Four burners were
used in the factory for the purpose of melting rosin or bitumen by heating them
in barrels and adding turpentine thereto after the temperature cooled down to a
certain degree. While this unlicensed process was going on froth overflowed out
of the barrel and because of heat varnish and turpentine, which were stored at
a short distance caught fire, as a result of which seven workmen died. The
appellant was prosecuted and convicted under ss. 304A and 285 of the Indian
Penal Code. His appeal before the High Court having been summarily dismissed he
came to the Supreme Court by special leave.
HELD : (i) The appellant was not guilty under
s. 304A. The mere fact that be allowed the burners to be used in the same room
in which varnish and turpentine were stored, even though it would be a
negligent act, would not be enough to make the appellant responsible for the
fire which broke out.
The cause of the fire was not merely the
presence of the burners within the room in which varnish and turpentine were
stored, though this circumstance was indirectly responsible for the fire which
broke out What s. 304A requires is causing of death by doing any rash or
negligent act and this means that death must be the direct or proximate result
of the rash or negligent act. From the facts of the present case it appeared
that the direct and proximate cause of the fire which resulted in seven deaths
was the act of one of the workmen in pouring the turpentine too early and not
the appellant's act in allowing the burners to bum in the particular room. [626
E-G] Emperor V. Omkar Rampratap, (1902) IV Bom. L.R. 679, relied on.
(ii) The appellant was however guilty under
s. 285 of the Penal Code inasmuch he knowingly and negligently omitted to take
such order with the fire and combustible matter in his possession as was
sufficient to guard against any probable danger to human life from such fire
and combustible matter.
His manufacture of wet paints was without the
required licence; the fire in question was not authorised as required by the
general conditions of his licence, and it was lighted in the proximity of
turpentine and varnish against the special conditions of his licence. The mere
fact that a similar accident had never taken place before in the same
conditions did not prove that the danger to human life caused thereby was not
'probable'. [629 D-F] 623
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal
Appeal No. 67 of1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated April 8, 1963 of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 433
of 1963.
S. T. Desai, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur
and Ravinder Narain, for the appellant.
S. G. Patwardhan, B. R. G. K. Achar, for R.
H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo, J. This appeal by special leave against the judg- ment of the Bombay
High Court raises questions regarding the interpretation of S. 304-A and S. 285
of the Indian Penal Code. The facts are not now in dispute and may be briefly
set out as found by the courts below. The appellant along with three partners
is the owner of a factory styled as Carbon Dry Colour Works which manufactures
paints and varnish. The factory was licensed by the Bombay Municipality in the
year 1953 to manufacture paints involving a cold process and was located at
79/81 Jail Road, Dongri. The factory was also licensed to store 455 litres of
turpentine, 455 litres of varnish and 14000 gallons of paint. The licence was
issued subject to certain conditions to which we shall refer later. The
appellant is the manager and working partner. He converted the factory from the
cold process of manufacturing dry paints to a process of manufacturing wet
paints by heating. For that purpose four burners were used for the purpose of
melting rosin or bitumen by heating them in barrels over the burners and adding
turpentine thereto after the temperature cooled down to a certain degree. On
April 20, 1962, this process was going on in the factory which had no licence
for manufacturing wet paints through heating. Hatim Tasduq was the person
looking after the operation. According to him the rosin was melted on one
burner and lime was added and the whole thing was boiled for half an hour.
Thereafter the burner was extinguished and the barrel in which the rosin was
melted was allowed to cool. This began at about 4 P.m.
The barrel in which the rosin is melted is
about 4 /12 feet high and after the temperature comes down to a certain level
turpentine is added in the barrel to prepare Black Japan.
Hatim Tasduq takes a drum X of 5 gallons of
turpentine which is poured into the barrel. As turpentine is poured, the
mixture begins frothing and in order to keep down the froth the whole thing is
stirred all the time. One man helps Hatim Tasduq in this operation. On April
624 20, 1962, rosin was melted and the barrel was allowed to cool down from 4
P.m. At about 5 P.m. Hatim started pouring turpentine, into the barrel. It may
be mentioned that 5 P.m. is the closing time and the process of pouring
turpentine started just about that. As soon as Hatim started pouring turpentine
the mixture began to froth.
Hatim was unable to stir as according to him
his assistant had gone some distance and he could not give the drum of
turpentine to him so that he might stir the mixture. The result was that forth
overflowed out of the barrel and because of heat, varnish and turpentine, which
were stored at a short distance, caught fire. Seven men were working in a loft
which is reached by a ladder and where manufactured paint is stored. The
material in the premises being of combustible nature, the fire spread rapidly.
Those who were working on the ground-floor managed to get out with burns only
but those who were working in the loft could not get out in time with the
result that all seven of them were burnt to death. The fire-brigade was sent
for, but in view of the combustible nature of the material stored it took 21
hours to bring the fire under control. After the fire was controlled, bodies of
four workmen were recovered the same night. Next morning two more bodies were
recovered and in the afternoon one more body was found. Thus seven of the
workmen lost their lives while seven other workmen suffered bums and were sent
to hospital where they were treated as indoor patients. It may be mentioned
that the appellant was not present on the premises when the fire took place,
though he came there as soon as the information about it reached him.
These facts have been found by courts below
to be proved.
Originally the other three partners were also
prosecuted but the Magistrate acquitted them as the appellant was the managing
partner and was directly in-charge of work in the factory. On these facts the
appellant was convicted under s. 304-A and s. 285 of the Indian Penal Code and
it is the correctness of that conviction which is being assailed in the present
appeal. The appellant appealed to the High Court but his appeal was summarily
dismissed. His application for leave to appeal to this Court having been
refused, he came to this Court and was granted special leave.
We shall first take up s. 304-A which runs
thus :- "Whoever causes the death of any person by doing any rash or
negligent act not amounting to culpable homicide shall be punished with
imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two years, or
with fine, or with both." 625 The main contention of the appellant is that
he was not present when the fire broke out resulting in the death of seven
workmen by burning and it cannot therefore be said that he caused the death of
these seven persons by doing any rash or negligent act. The view taken by the
Magistrate on the other hand which appears to have been accepted by the High
Court was that as the appellant allowed the manufacture of wet paints in the
same room where varnish and turpentine were stored and the fire resulted
because of the proximity of the burners to the stored varnish and turpentine,
he must be held responsible for the death of the seven workmen who were burnt
in the fire. We are -however of opinion that this view of the Magistrate is not
correct. The mere fact that the appellant allowed the burners to be used in the
same room in which varnish and turpentine were stored, even though it might be
a negligent act, would not be enough to make the appellant responsible for the
fire which broke out.
The cause of the fire was not merely the
presence of burners in the room in which varnish and turpentine were stored,
though this circumstance was indirectly responsible for the fire which broke
out. But what s. 304-A requires is causing of death by doing any rash or
negligent act, and this means that death must be the direct or proximate result
of the rash or negligent act. It appears that the direct or proximate cause of
the fire which resulted in seven deaths was the act of Hatim. It seems to us
clear that Hatim was apparently in a hurry and therefore he did not perhaps
allow the rosin to cool down sufficiently and poured turpentine too quickly.
The evidence of the expert is that the process of adding turpentine to melted
rosin is a hazardous process and the proportion of froth would depend upon the
quantity of turpentine added. The expert also stated that if turpentine is not
slowly added to bitumen and rosin before it is cooled down to a certain
temperature, such fire is likely to break out. It seems therefore that as
turpentine was being added at about closing time, Hatim was not as careful as
he should have been and probably did not wait sufficiently for bitumen or rosin
to cool down and added turpentine too quickly. The expert has stated that
bitumen or rosin melts at 300 degree F and if turpentine is added at that
temperature, it will catch fire. The flash point of turpentine varies from 76
to 110 degree F. Therefore the cooling must be brought down, according to the
expert, to below 76 degree F to avoid fire. In any case even if that is not
done, turpentine has to be added slowly so that there may not be too much
frothing. Clearly therefore the fire broke out because bitumen or rosin was not
allowed to cool down sufficiently and turpentine was added too quickly in view
of the fact that the process was performed at closing 626 time. It is clearly
the negligence of Hatim which was the director proximate cause of the fire
breaking out, though the fact that burners were kept in the same room in which
turpentine, and vamish were stored was indirectly responsible for the fire
breaking out and spreading so quickly. Even so in order that a person may be
guilty under s. 304-A, the rash or negligent act should be the direct or
proximate cause of the death. In the present case it was Hatim's act which was
the direct and proximate cause of the fire breaking out with the consequence
that seven persons were burnt to death; the act of the appellant in allowing
turpentine and varnish being stored at a short distance was only an indirect
factor in the breaking out of fire.
We may in this connection refer to Emperor v.
Omkar Ram- pratap(1) where Sir Lawrence Jenkins had to interpret s. 304-A and
observed as follows -- "To impose criminal liability under s. 304-A,
Indian Penal Code, it is necessary that the death should have been the direct
result of a rash and negligent act of the accused, and that act must be the
proximate and efficient cause without the intervention of another's negligence.
It must be the cause causans; it is not enough that it may have been the cause
sine qua non." This view has been generally followed by High Courts in
India and is in our opinion the right view to take of the meaning of s. 304-A.
It is not necessary to refer to other decisions, for as we have already said
this view has been generally accepted. Therefore the mere fact that the fire
would not have taken place if the appellant had not allowed burners to be put
in the same room in which turpentine and varnish were stored, would not be
enough to make him liable under s. 304-A, for the fire would not have taken
place, with the result that seven persons were burnt to death, without the
negligence of Hatim. The death in this case was therefore in our opinion not
directly the result of a rash or negligent act on the part of the appellant and
was not the proximate and efficient cause without the intervention of another's
negligence. The appellant must therefore be acquitted of the offence under s.
304-A.
This brings us to s. 285 which runs as
follows "Whoever does, with fire or any combustible matter, any act so
rashly or negligently as to endanger human (1) (1902) IV Bom. L.R.679 627 life,
or to be likely to cause hurt or injury to any other person, or knowingly or
negligently omits to take such order with any fire or any combustible matter in
his possession as is sufficient to guard against any probable danger to human
life from such fire or combustible matter, shall be punished with imprisonment
of either description for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine
which may extend to one thousand rupees, or with both We are in the present
case concerned with the second part of s. 285 which runs thus :
"Whoever knowingly or negligently omits
to take such order with any fire or any combustible matter in his possession as
is sufficient to guard against any probable danger to human life from such fire
or combustible matter, shall be punished........" The question is whether
the appellant on the facts which have been proved knowingly or negligently
omitted to take such order with fire or combustible matter in his possession as
was sufficient to guard against probable danger to human life from such fire or
combustible matter. In this connection we may refer to the fact that the
appellant did not have a licence for manufacturing wet paints and therefore
when he allowed wet paints to be manufactured in the circumstances which have
been proved, he must be held to have knowingly acted in a manner in which he
should not have done. There is a map on the record which shows that four
burners were in one corner while turpentine and varnish were in another corner
of the same room, and the distance between the burners and the stores was about
8 or 10 feet. The licence for storage given to the appellant contained general
and special conditions. One of the general conditions was that "the
licence shall not use or permit to be used any portion of the licensed premises
for dwelling or cooking purposes and no fire shall be lighted therein other
than what is authorised." The articles stored being combustible, this
general condition was imposed on the appellant and he had no business to light
any fire in the room where stores were kept unless he was authorised to do so.
There is no proof that he was authorised to light any fire in that room;
and therefore, be acted in breach of the
general condition of the licence which forbade him from lighting any fire in
the room where varnish and 628 turpentine were stored. We take it that when the
general condition says that no fire would be lighted except what is authorised,
the intention must have been that the municipal committee will take necessary
steps to see that the fire would be sufficiently guarded, if lighted in the
same room, so that there may not be any outbreak of fire. The appellant clearly
acted against this general condition of the licence and must be held to have
knowingly, or at any rate negligently, omitted to take such order with any fire
or any combustible matter in his possession as was required.
Further the special conditions for keeping
turpentine and varnish and paints require that "no smoking, light or fire
in any form shall be permitted at any time" in the room in which paints,
turpentine and varnish are kept or even in any premises licensed for storage
unless in the case of a light, such light be duly protected and on no account
be naked.
The appellant clearly committed breach of
this special condition also in allowing the lighting of four burners in the
same room without taking any precaution for duly protecting the fire and even
allowed it to be naked. It must therefore be held that the appellant
negligently or knowingly omitted to take proper order with the fire or
combustible matter in his possession. The contention on behalf of the appellant
however is that even if he may have negligently or knowingly omitted to take
proper order with the fire or combustible matter in his possession it cannot be
said that his omission to take proper order was such as was insufficient to
guard against any probable danger to human life. What is urged is that his not
taking precautions may result in possible danger to human life but it cannot be
said that this omission was such as would result in probable danger to human
life. In particular it is urged that this method of work had been going on for
some years and no fire had broken out and this shows that though there may have
been possible danger to human life from such fire or combustible matter there
was no probable danger. We are unable to accept this contention. The fact that
there was no fire earlier in X this room even though the process had been going
on for some years is not a criterion for determining whether the omission was
such as would result in probable danger to human life. We have already pointed
out that four burners were in one comer of the room and the combustible matter
was in another corner of the same room and there was only a distance of 8 or 10
feet between the two. The burners were lighted against the general as well as
the special conditions of the licence for storage granted to the appellant. The
proximity of naked fire to the stores of turpentine and varnish is in our
opinion always a matter of probable danger to human life, namely, the life of
the persons working in the room. This was particularly so with respect to
turpentine which has a low point, i.e., 76 decree F to 1 10 degree F The use of
naked fire could in conceivable circumstances even rase the temperature of the
room itself above the flash point of turpentine and if the turpentine ever
happened to be exposed it might easily catch fire.
There was in our opinion therefore always a
probable danger to human life by the appellant negligently or knowingly
omitting to take proper care in the matter of the four burners and turpentine
and varnish. His action in allowing burners to be lighted in the room without
any safeguard did in our opinion amount to omission to take such order with
fire and combustible matter as would be sufficient to guard against probable
danger to human life. We can only say that it was lucky that fire had not
broken out earlier. But there can be no doubt that the omission of the
appellant to take proper care with burners in particular when such combustible
matter as turpentine in large quantity was stored at a distance of 8 to 10 feet
from the burners was such omission as amounted to insufficient guard against
probable danger to human life. Finally when we remember that all this was done
in breach of the general and special conditions of the licence given to the
appellant for storage of turpentine, varnish and paints, we have no doubt that
the appellant knowingly, or at least negligently, failed to take such order
with fire and the combustible matter as would be sufficient to guard against
any probable danger to human life. In the circumstances we are of opinion that
the appellant has been rightly convicted under s. 285 of the Indian Penal Code.
Considering that seven lives have been lost on account of the negligence of the
appellant in this connection, the sentence of six months' rigorous imprisonment
which is the maximum provided under s. 285, cannot be said to be harsh.
We therefore partially allow the appeal and
set aside the conviction and sentence of the appellant under S. 304-A of the
Indian Penal Code. The appeal is dismissed so far as his conviction under S.
285 of the Indian Penal Code is concerned. The appellant will surrender to his
bail to serve the remaining sentence under s. 285 of the Indian Penal Code.
Appeal partly allowed.
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