Nirmaljit Singh Hoon Vs. The State of
West Bengal & ANR [1972] INSC 209 (6 September 1972)
SHELAT, J.M.
SHELAT, J.M.
DUA, I.D.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION: 1972 AIR 2639 1973 SCR (2) 66 1973
SCC (3) 753
CITATOR INFO:
RF 1976 SC1672 (15) R 1977 SC2018 (5) RF 1979
SC 437 (8) D 1981 SC 22 (20,21) RF 1986 SC2045 (45)
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure (Act 5 of 1898),
ss. 156(3), 195(1)(c), 202 and 204-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
H-company (in voluntary liquidation) was the
owner of 51% of the ,shares in T-company and 707 shares out of them were in the
possession ,of T-company. The 5th respondent owned the balance of 49% shares.
In a suit filed by him against the H-company the High Court passed a decree
directing H-company to deliver the 51% shares to him on payment of a certain
sum and issued an injunction restraining H-company, until delivery of the
shares, from exercising its rights as holder of those :shares. Sometime later
one of the liquidators, V, of H-company, and M went to the office of T-company
where V executed a receipt and an indemnity bond. The receipt recorded the fact
that the 707 share certificates were received from the 2nd respondent one of
the directors of the T-company. It also contained two endorsements; one in the
handwriting of the 2nd respondent stating "shares with me" and
another, addressed to the 2nd respondent alleged to.
have been written by V, stating, "I do
not want to carry these with me, hence leaving meantime with personally for
delivery to me later". The indemnity bond purported to indemnify T-company
against any claims by the 5th respondent in respect of the 707 shares and
contained also certain undertakings.
H-company took out execution against
T-company for the delivery of the 707 shares claiming entrustment of the shares
to the second respondent by V. Copies of the receipt and the indemnity bond
were filed, and the originals were shown to the Counsel for T-company, during
the proceedings for satisfying them that the copies were correct copies.
Thereafter, the appellant, another liquidator
of the Hcompany, filed a complaint before the Chief Presidency Magistrate
against respondents 2 to 5, the directors and Secretary of the T-company,
alleging that V and M went to the office of, T-company for obtaining the 707
shares for delivering them to respondent 5, that the second respondent
delivered the shares to V, that since V had a luncheon engagement he did not
want to take them with him, that the second respondent made the first
endorsement on the receipt and V himself made the second endorsement to clarify
why the shares were left with the second respondent, that V took away the
indemnity bond with him as the second respondent wanted the signature of the
appellant also, that later, on that day, the solicitors of H-company sent their
assistant C to the second respondent for the shares, that the :second
respondent gave an assurance that he would send them through the solicitors of
the T-company but did not do so, that the second respondent was withholding the
shares at the instance of the fifth respondent who was, as a result of the
injunction, in a position to control the T-company without having to pay for
the 51 % shares and was therefore interested in preventing H-company deliverng
the shares to him, and that respondents 2 to 5 were guilty of offences under
ss. 120B, 406 and 420, I. P. C.
The second respondent filed a counter
complaint against the appellant, V and M, under ss. 467, 471, 193, 474 and 109
I.P.C. He alleged that the 707 shares were always lying with the T-company as
the T-company 67 claimed a lien over them in respect of certain payments for
income-tax purposes,, that the second respondent produced them before V for his
inspection, that he objected to the word "received" in the receipt
and wanted instead the word "inspected", that V declined to alter the
receipt and thereupon the second respondent wrote out the first endorsement
with a view to clarify that the share certificates were still in his custody
and not with the fifth respondent. He denied his having delivered them to V or
that V entrusted them to him or, that he promised to hand them over to the
solicitors of H-company. He alleged that the appellant later on made an
interpolation, namely the second endorsement in the receipt to give a false
twist to the first endorsement and to show ;that the certificates were
entrusted to the second, respondent by V.
The Chief Presidency Magistrate directed the
police to enquire into the appellant's complaint under s. 156(3), Cr.P.C. The
receipt was produced before the police by the appellant, and the police seized
the 707 shares from the fourth respondent, the Secretary of T-company. The
,police however reported that the complaint was a false one. The appellant
thereupon filed objections and the Chief Presidency Magistrate directed a judicial
enquiry into the complaint. The Chief Presidency Magistrate find also directed
a judicial enquiry into the counter complaint. The Magistrate who inquired into
the matter reported to the Chief Presidency Magistrate that no prima facie case
was made out in the complaint, by the appellant, but that a prima facie case
was made out against the appellant, V and M. In the course of the enquiry, the
appellant and C and M, were examined as witnesses, but V, who was in U.K., was
not examined. His affidavit was sought to be filed, but it was held that the
affidavit could not be received in evidence.
The Chief Presidency Magistrate and the High
Court in revision agreed that the complaint of the appellant should be
dismissed, but held that in the counter complaint process should issue but only
against the appellant. Reference was also made by the High Court to the non examination
of V during the judicial enquiry.
In appeals to this Court, (1) allowing the
appeal regarding the com-plaint by the appellant, (by the Majority) and (2)
dismissing the appeal regarding the complaint against the appellant.
HELD (per Shelat and Dua, JJ.): (1) Under s.
202 Cr.P.C., Magistrate, 'on receipt of a complaint, may postpone the issue of
process and either inquire into the case himself or direct on inquiry to be
made by a Magistrate subordinate to him or by a police officer for
ascertaining. its truth or falsehood. The inquiry by the Magistrate envisaged
at this stage is for ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the complaint, that
is, for ascertaining whether there is evidence in support of the complaint. so
'as to justify the issue of process. Unless, therefore, the Magistrate finds
that the evidence led before him is self-contradictory, or intrinsically
untrustworthy, process cannot be refused if that evidence makes out a prima
facie case. In a revision against such refusal, the High Court also has to
apply the same test. [79A-B, F-H] In the present case, 'both the receipt and
the indemnity bond were before the Magistrate and were marked as documents in
the case. They were also before the High Court. The receipt prima facie showed
that V at first "received"' the share certificates from the 2nd
respondent and 'the endorsement admittedly written by the 2nd respondent,
indicates that V had left them with the 2nd respondent. The evidence of M and
the appellant was that the 2nd respondent had demanded an indemnity bond which
was signed by V and later by the appellant. Such a bond containing 68 the
indemnity and undertakings would not have been executed unless the share
certificates had been delivered to V.
According to the evidence of M, C, and the
appellant, the two documents were executed on the date when V went to the
T-company to obtain delivery of the shares. V, if examined, would have been the
principal witness, and his affidavit, in his absence, could not constitute
admissible evidence. But examination of V would have meant bringing him to
India from England at considerable cost. The mere fact that the appellant did
not examine him could not be a ground for throwing out the appellant's
complaint when there was other evidence making out a prima facie case. Neither
the Magistrate nor the High Court expressed any view that the evidence either
of the appellant or of the other witnesses was false or intrinsically
unbelievable. It may be that much could be said on both sides, but certainly
this was not a case of there being no prima facie, case or the evidence being
so self-contradictory or intrinsically untrustworthy that process could
properly be refused.[81H; 82A-H] (Per Khanna, J. dissenting) : An enquiry or
investigation is ordered under s. 202, Cr.P.C., by a Magistrate on receipt of a
complaint for the purpose of ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the
complaint. If the Magistrate, after considering the statement on oath of the
complainant and his witnesses and the result of the enquiry or investigation
under the section, is of the opinion that there is no sufficient cause for
proceeding, be may dismiss the complaint. If, on the contrary, he is of opinion
that there is sufficient cause for proceeding he should issue process against
the accusedin accordance with s. 204.
The evidence which is required to be adduced
by the complainant at this stage need not be sufficient for recording a finding
of conviction; but that does not absolve the complainant, who wants the
Magistrate to issue process against the accused, from leading some credible
evidence which shows,, prima facie, that the offence was committed.
[95E-H] In the present case, there seems to
be an inconsistency in the receipt between the writing of V and the endorsement
by the 2nd respondent. The receipt is thus ambiguous, and in the absence of
oral evidence, it is difficult to infer from the receipt that the shares were
entrusted by V to the 2nd respondent. The best and most important person to
explain the ambiguity and prove the entrustment was V but he was;
not examined as a witness, and his affidavit
could not be received in evidence under s. 510A, Cr.P.C., as his evidence was
not of a formal character. The other person, who was present at the time of the
alleged entrustment was M, but his evidence does not prove the delivery of the
shares to V or entrustment by him to the second respondent. The evidence of C,
the indemnity bond, the letters of the Solicitors of H-Company and the
statement of the second respondent in his compsaint-assuming it could be
referred to in the appellant's complaint-do, not reveal any entrustment of the
shares to the 2nd respondent. [92C; 93B-C; 94A-B, D, G; 95A-E] (2)(Per Curiam)
: The first part of s. 195(1) (c), Cr.P.C., provides that the offence in
respect of which the complaint in question is filed must be one under s. 463,
or s. 471, or s. 475 or 4. 476, I.P.C. The second part provides that such an
offence must be alleged to have been committed by a party to any proceeding in
any court in respect of a document produced or given in evidence in such
proceeding.
A document can be said to have been produced
in a court when it is not only produced for the purpose of being tendered in
evidence, but also for some other purpose. It is only if the two requirements
are satisfied that no court can take cognizance of such an offence except on a
complaint filed by such Court or a Court subordinate to it. [85-D-F; 87G-H;
88A-B] 69 (a)In the present case, in respect
of the counter complaint, the receipt was produced by the appellant before the
police, and formed part of the record of the case which went to the Chief
Presidency Magistrate along with the police report. It could not however be
said that because the investigation was ordered by the Chief Presidency
Magistrate under s.156(3), Cr. P.C. the investigation was part of the
proceedings in his Court. [86E-G] (i)Section 156(3) expressly states that an
investigation ordered by a Magistrate would be an investigation made by a
police officer in his statutory right under sub-sections (1) and (2). That
being so, once an investigation by the police is ordered by the Magistrate, he
cannot place any limitations on, or direct the officer conducting it as to how
to conduct it. It cannot be said that the police officer acting under s.156(3)
was a delegate of the Magistrate or that the investigation by him was an
investigation by or on behalf of the Magistrate. [86B-F; 87A-B] In re : Gopal
Sidheshwar, (1907) 9 Bom. L.R.737 and King Emperor v. Khawaja Ntzir Ahmad. 71
I.A. 203, referred to.
(ii)Before a Magistrate can be said to have
taken congizance of an offenceunder s. 190(1) (a), Cr.P.C. he must have not
only applied his mind to the contents of the complaint presented to him, but
must have done so or the purpose of proceeding under s. 200 and the following
sections. In the present case, the Chief Presidency Magistrate applied his mind
only for the purpose of directing police investigation under s. 156(3).
Therefore, the Chief Presidency Magistrate having not even taken cognizance of
the offence, no proceeding could be said to have commenced before him of which
the inquiry by the police could be said to be part and parcel. [86F-H] R.R. Chari
v. U.P. [1951] S.C.R. 312 and Jamuna Singh v.Bhadai Sah, [1964] 5 S.C.R. 37,
referred to.
(b)(i) It is only the copies of the receipt
and the indemnity bond, that were annexed to the affidavit in the execution
proceeding that could be said to have been produced in proceedings before the
High Court and not the originals, which were only shown to the Counsel of Tcompany.
[87B-D] (ii)Moreover, assuming the receipt was produced before the High Court,
the offence charged against the appellant is not its user in the proceedings
before the High Court, but its production and user by the appellant during the
investigation by the police in the appellant's complaint against the
respondents. [87E-F] (iii) It could not be said that once a document alleged to
be forged is used in any proceeding before any court at any time; s.195(1) (C),
Cr. P.C. would at once be attracted and would he a bar against a complaint by a
party complaining of its fraudulent user in any later proceeding because, if
that were so, a party to the proceeding before a court can go on producing such
a document ad seriatim in several subsequent proceedings with impunity, if the
Court before which it was first produced thinks it inexpedient to file a
complaint.
That clause only says that in respect of any
of the offences enumerated there, no congnizance can be taken of a private
complaint when such offence is said to have been committed by a party to a
proceeding in a court in respect of a document produced or tendered in evidence
in that proceeding except on a ,complaint by such court. [88C-G] 7 0
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeals Nos. 213 and 214 of 1968.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment
and orders dated December 7, 1967 of the Calcutta High Court in Criminal
Revisions Nos. 304 and 291 of 1967.
M.C. Chagla, K. K. Jain and H. K. Puri, for
the appellant (in both the appeals).
P.K. Chatterjee, S. Joseph and D. N. Gupta,
for respondent No. 2 (in Cr. A. No. 213 of 1968 and for respondents Nos. 2 and
3 (in Cr. A. No. 21th of 1968).
Debabroto Mookherjee, G. S. Chatterjee, for
respondent No. 1 tin Cr. A. No. 213 of 1968).
Debabroto Mookherjee, P. K. Chakravarty,
Prodyot Kumar Chakravarty, for respondent No. 1 (in Cr. A. No. 214 of 1968.).
The Judgment of J.M. SHELAT & 1. D. DUA, JJ.
was delivered by SHELAT, J., H. R. KHANNA, J., gave a dissenting opinion.
SHELAT, J. These two appeals, by special
leave, arise out of two complaints, both of which were filed in respect of the
same transaction and are therefore disposed of by a common judgment.
Appeal No. 214 of 1968 is against the
judgment of the High Court of Calcutta dismissing, the complaint filed by the
appellant on January 5, 1966 under secs. 120B, 406 and 420 of the Penal Code
against respondents 2 to 5, who are the directors' and the secretary of M/s
Turner, Morrison & Co.Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the company).
The case of the appellant in the said
complaint may be stated as follows :
At the material time, the appellant, one S.
Varma and Frank Goldstein were the liquidators of Hungarian Investment Trust
Ltd. (in voluntary liquidation) hereinafter referred to as Hungerford). At all
material times Hungerford was the registered owner of 51 % of the shares of the
company and as much was ordinarily entitled to have the control and management
of that company. These 51 % shares numbered 2295 shares of the face value of
Rs. 1.000 each. Out of these, 707 shares were in possession of the company.
Respondent 5, Haridas Mundra, owned the
balance of 49% shares. In or about 1961, Hungerford agreed to sell and Mundra
agreed to purchase the said 51% shares. Mundra filed a suit being Suit No. 600
of 1961 against Hungerford in the High Court of Calcutta for specific
performance of the said agreement.
7 1 The High Court decreed the suit directing
Hungerford to deliver the said 2295 shares against payment of Rs. 86 lacs and
odd and issued until delivery of the said shares was made to Mundra,
aninjunction restraining Hungerford from exercising its rights as holder of
those 51% shares. The curious result of the said induction was that Mundra
could get control and management of the company with the 49% shares held by him
without having to pay the price of the said 51% shares, until Hungerford gave
delivery of all those 2295 shares, out of which, as aforesaid, 707 shares were
in the custody of the company. The problem for Hunger-ford was how to get back
those 707 shares from the company so as to be able to deliver all those 2295
shares and obtain payment against such delivery of Rs. 86 lacs and odd from
Mundra.
The said S. Varma, who was then residing in
England, came to India in or about May 1965. According to the complaint,Varma,
accompanied by one N. K. Majumdar, went to the office of the company on May 27,
1965, and upon his request for the said 707 share certificates, obtained from
respondent 2(D.M.Jaffray) the said share certificates.
Varma thereupon issued areceipt for those
share certificates and also executed an indemnity bond in favour of the company
against any possible claims which Mundra might make in respect of those 707
share certificates. By the said bond the liquidators of Hungerford indemnified
the, company to the extent of Rs. 53 lacs said to have been paid by that
company by way of taxes for the Turner family, undertook to assist that company
to recover that sum from the estates of that family and furthermore to produce
the said 707 share certificates whenever required for delivery to Mundra in
terms of the said decree and to indemnify any claim which might arise as a
result of delivery thereof to Varma. It is clear that once those 707 share
certificates, were handed over to Verma, Hungerford would, in terms of the said
decree, be able to deliver to Mundra all the said 2295 shares and Mundra would
have to take delivery of them against payment of Rs. 86 lacs and odd.
The receipt (document 2) which Varma executed
at the time recorded the fact of the said 707 share certificates having been
received by him from Jaffray, and their particulars and numbers. The
prosecution case was that as Varma had, then a luncheon engagement he did not
wish to carry those scripts together with the corresponding bank transfer forms
endorsed by the company, and therefore, gave them back to Jaffray to hold them
on his behalf until called for them later in the day. He thereupon took
Jaffray's endorsement, viz., "shares with me" under which Jaffray
affixed his signature.
There was no dispute that the said
endorsement and the signature underneath it were in the handwriting of 72
Jaffray. In order to clarify how the said share certificates remained with
Jaffray, Verma also wrote over the said endorsement the following:
"Dear Mr. Jaffray, I do not want to
carry these with me, hence leaving meantime with you personally for delivery to
me later." Were this writing to be genuine, the word 'personally' therein
would mean safe custoday of Jaffray in his personal capacity as distinguished
from that of the company.
Later that day, on the instructions of Varma,
M/s Sanderson & Morgan, the Solictors of Hungerford, sent their assistant,
one Chaudhry, with their own letter as also a letter addressed by Varma to
Jaffray with a request to hand over to Chaudhary those 707 share certificates.
Jaffray declined to do so stating that he would send them to M/s Sanderson
& Morgan through M/s Orr Dignam & Co., the Company's solicitors. Since
the said share certificates were not sent to them, M/s Sanderson & Morgan,
by their letter, dated August 31, 1965 to the appellant, recorded the fact of
their having sent the said Chaudhary to Jaffray, the refusal of Jaffray to
deliver the said share certificates to Chaudhary and his assurance to hand them
over through the Company's solicitors, and lastly, of their having not received
so far the said share certificates either from Jaffray, or the Company's
solicitors. In the meantime Jaffray went to England and the rest of the
directors of the company, when demands for the said shares were made, replied
that they would wait for Jaffray's instructions on his return to India. This
position appears to emerge from Varma's letter dated November 29, 1965 to the
appellant. In that letter Varma, repeated that Jaffray had the said shares for
safe custody on his behalf, that Jaffrar was withholding delivery thereof at
the instance of Mundra and the other directors, that Jaffray thereby committed
breach of trust and that the appellant should adopt criminal proceedings
against Jaffray and t he other directors.
The appellant's case was that it was at the
instance of Mundra that Jaffray withheld delivery of those share certificates
with a view to prevent Hungerford from delivering all the said 2295 shares and
compelling Mundra to pay Rs. 86 lacs and odd against such delivery. It is clear
that so long as the liquidators could not deliver all the 2295 shares, Mundra
could not be called upon to pay the said price, and Mundra in the meantime
could continue to have the control of the Company, although he had only the
minority holding of 49% shares and thus keep Hungerford at bay preventing it by
virtue of the said injunction from exercising its rights in respect of its 51 %
shares as against 49% held by Mundra. It 73 was in this background that on
January 5, 1966 the appellant filed a complaint before the Chief Presidency
Magistrate against Jaffray, C.N. Rodewald and Mundra, the directors of the
Company and A.J. Hormusji, its secretary.
Para 3 of the said complaint set out the
delivery of the said 707 share certificates with the corresponding blank
transfer deeds therefore by Jaffray to Varma, his having executed the receipt
in favour of the Company, Jaffray having made the said endorsement and Varma
thereafter having written the said note partly by the side of and partly over
the said endorsement. Para 9 of the complaint read as follows:
"That your petitioner has come to know
that accused No. 1 (Jaffray) has parted custody of the said 707 shares
illegally and wrongfully to Turner Morrison & Co., Calcutta in conspiracy
with the other three accused connected with Turner Morrison & Co. to
deprive your petitioner from the physical custody of the said 707 share
certificates and the blank transfer deeds with the sole object of defeating
your petitioner's right to recover Rs. 86,60,000 from accused No. 4, Haridas
Mundhra against physical delivery of 2,295 shares of Turner Morrison & Co.,
Calcutta." The Chief Presidency Magistrate directed, under sec. 156(3) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, the police to make an inquiry. In the course of
that inquiry the police seized the said 707 share certificates from Hormusji.
It would appear that although the appellant requested the investigating officer
to examine the said Majumdar and Varma, who, it was said, was prepared to come
to India for that purpose, that officer declined to do so. The police
thereafter made their report recommending discharge of the accused on the
ground that the complaint filed by the appellant was false, that the said
receipt was a forged document and sought permission of the Magistrate to take
action against the appellant. On May 7, 1966, the appellant filed a protest application
requesting the Chief Presidency Magistrate to take the matter out of the hands
of the police and to order a judicial inquiry. Thereupon the Chief Presidency
Magistrate directed the Presidency Magistrate, 3rd Court, Calcutta to hold such
an inquiry. The proceedings thereupon went to that magistrate before whom the
appellant and his witnesses P. R. Chaudhary and Majumdar gave their
depositions. Varma was not examined as he was in England, but an affidavit by
him was produced before the Magistrate.
In his deposition before the Magistrate the
appellant produced the said receipt (marked document 2) and the said 7 4
indemnity bond (marked document 5) and stated on oath that the receipt was in
the handwriting of Varma, that the words "shares with me" marked '2'
and the signature thereunder were in the handwriting of Jaffray, and that the
indemnity bond was in Varma's handwriting and which he had given to the witness
for his signature He also deposed that he had gone to Jaffray on that very day,
that is, May 27, 1965, with the receipt, the said bondand a letter from Varma
to Jaffray and had demanded from himthe said 707 share certificates and had
said at the time that he was agreeable to sign the said bond as the other
liquidator of Hungerford, that Jaffray thereupon showed the said
sharecertificates to him and assured him that he would hand them overto M/s
Sanderson & Morgan, and that on that assurance he affixed his signature on
the indemnity bond and told Jaffray that he would send his solicitors to take
delivery of the said share certificates His evidence further was that
thereafter, he returned back to his hotel where Mundra was waiting. Mundra
inquired of him as to why he wanted those share certificates to which he
replied that he wanted them together with the rest of the share certificates to
be delivered to him, against payment of Rs. 86 lacs, whereupon Mundra
threatened that he would see that the said 707 share certificates were not
handed over to him. Faced with this threat, he called on his solicitors and
instructed them to call for those share certificates immediately. M/s Sanderson
and Morgan sent their assistant with their own letter and the letter written by
Varma, with whom he, (the appellant) also went.
The assistant handed over those letters to
Jaffray and asked for the delivery of the share certificates. Jaffray pleaded
that it was late in the day, that the office was closed and its key was not
with him, but promised that he would send them to his solicitors M/s Orr,
Dignam & Co. The share certificates were, however, not sent and were later
seized by the police from the custody, not of Jaffray, but of Hormusji to, whom
Jaffray must have handed them over in his capacity as the secretary of the
Company.
To the same effect was the deposition of P.
R. Chaudhry, the assist-ant of M/s Sanderson & Morgan with 'Whom the
appellant had on that day approached Jaffray. Wit. N. M. Majumdar, who was said
to have accompanied Varma earlier in the day, deposed that both Jaffray and
Rodewald were, present when they went to the office of Turner Morrison &
Co., that on Varma asking for the shares, the two directors wanted him to
execute the indemnity bond, that Varma signed the bond, that as the two
directors wanted the signature of Hoon also, Varma kept the bond with him so as
to secure Hoon's signature, that Varma then left, leaving the said certificates
with Jaffray to be sent later to M/s Sanderson & Morgan. He 'also deposed
to the fact of 75 Varma having written out the receipt in his presence and
Jaffray making the said endorsement and then Varma writing on the receipt the
reason why he left the said shares with Jaffray.
Varma did not come to India to give his
deposition, but sent in affidavit giving his version as to the delivery of the
said share certificates to him by Jaffray, his having been accompanied by
Majumdar at that time, his having executed the said receipt and 'he indemnity
bond, his having then entrusted the said shares to Jaffray, and Jaffray having
assured him to keep them in his personal custody and to hand them over later to
M/s Sanderson, & Morgan, his having given a note addressed to Jaffray to
deliver he said share certificates to the appellant, and lastly, Jaffray having
told him on telephone that as the representative of M/s Sanderson & Morgan
had arrived late he had not been able to hand over the said. share certificates
and once again assuring him that he would deliver them to M/s Sanderson &
Morgan.
At that stage of the inquiry, when no process
bad yet been issued, Jaffray could not give his version. But his version as to
what took place on May 27, 1965 is avail-able from his deposition in the
counter-complaint he lodged against Hoon.
That complaint is the subject matter of
Criminal Appeal No,. 213 of 1968 heard along with this appeal. His case in that
deposition, was that the said 707 share certificates were lying with the
company as the company claimed a lien over them in respect of a sub of Rs. 53
lacs having been paid by it to the Income Tax authorities in India for and on
behalf of Hungerford and for which the company had filed a suit and had a
receiver appointed' to 'obtain possession of them.
There is, however, no doubt that ,these share
certificates were with the company on May 27, 1965, for, even according to
affray, when Varma saw him on that day complaining that the company had parted
with those share certificates to Mundra, he produced them before Varma for his
inspection.
According to him, Varma at that stage brought
out a typed receipt "to show that be had inspected the shares". His
case was that he objected to the word "received" in that receipt and
wanted instead the word "inspected", but. Varma declined to alter the
receipt and thereupon be wrote out the words "shares with me" with a
view to clarify that the shard certificates were still in his custody and not
with Mundra.
He denied his having delivered them to Varma,
or Varma having entrusted them to him, or his having promised to hand them over
to M/s Sanderson & Morgan, and alleged that Hoon later on made an
interpolation marked (3) in the said receipt to give a false twist to hi said
endorsement and to show that the said certificates were entrusted to 'him by
Varma. Since the share certificates remained all along in the possession of the
company, the police. seized them, 7 6 Later on from Hormusji. We may note that
Jaffray in his deposition did not mention the indemnity bond though it had been
,executed at the same time when the said receipt was executed.
The Presidency Magistrate, 3rd Court, held by
his order ,dated January 5, 1967 that the appellant had failed to make out a
prima facie case, and he could not, therefore, recommend ,the issue of process.
His order records two main reasons why he thought that no prima facie case was
made out. The first was that though, according to him, the receipt, if
believed, would establish entrustment, it could not be given "even its
face value", since Varma, the central figure, had failed to give evidence.
Though in England at that time, he could have flown to India for the purpose of
giving evidence. He discarded his affidavit' as acceptance of such evidence was
not permissible either under sec. 60 or sec. 32 of the Evidence Act. He also
discarded the evidence of Majumdar on the ground that sec. 60 required the
,best evidence and such best evidence would have been that of Varma, had he
been examined. Besides, Majumdar's evidence, according to him, contained
"some points of obvious absurdities", in that Jaffray's insistence
that an indemnity bond should be Signed by both Varma and Hoon indicated that
he could not have parted with the share certificates before Hoon had signed
'that bond.
The case together with the report went back
to theChief 'Presidency Magistrate. By his order dated February 15, 1967,
"the Chief Presidency Magistrate held that "it cannot be said that
the share scripts in question were entrusted to accused No. and accordingly
therefore the suggested charges Cannot be brought against any of the accused
persons". The reasons he gave for his order were: (1) that though entrustment
of share certificates, was stated in para 5 of the complaint, it was no where
stated that it was done on the strength of the receipt, (2) that the receipt
was introduced in the case "in a curious way", in that, it was
brought on record by Hoon, who was not present either at the time when Varma
wrote out the portion marked (3) in the receipt, or when he entrusted the said
share certificates to Jaffray, and that he (Hoon) had "very carefully
avoided that issue in his statement", and (4) that though Hoon had the
,,opportunity to examine Varma, he failed to do so.
Reason No. I was actually incorrect. Para 3
of the complaint, dated January 5, 1966 clearly asserts that Varma entrusted
the said share certificates to Jaffray and to record that entrustment wrote the
note [portion marked (3) in the receipt and that Jaffray also for that purpose
made his endorsement that 'the said share certificates were with him.
Reason No. 2 is understandable. It is
difficult to appreciate how the Magistrate 77 could remark that Hoon either
introduced the receipt "in a curious way" or that he "avoided
the issue carefully Ad mittedly, Hoon was not present at the time of the
execution of the receipt or the alleged entrustment of the share certificates
to affray. Obviously, he could not depose to those two facts from his personal
knowledge. There was accordingly no question of his avoiding the issue. These
observations, therefore, could not have been justifiably made. As for the third
reason, Varma was, no doubt not examined. The question is whether at that
preliminary stage when the only consideration was whether a prima facie case of
entrustment was made out or not, it was necessary for Varma to be called from
England to give evidence ? Besides examining himself, the appellant had
examined Majumdar, who claimed to be an eye-witness to the delivery of the said
share certificates to Varma and Varma's entrustment of them to, Jaffray, the
execution of the receipt and the bond by Varma, and finally, Jaffray's
assurance to hand them over later when called for. Strangely, the learned
Magistrate did not discuss Majumdar's evidence, nor the two documents nor the
evidence of Chaudhary, nor the letter written by M/s Sanderson & Morgan on
that very day to Hoon of their not having been given the share certificates by
Jaffray.
The revision application filed by the
appellant against the order of dismissal was rejected by the High Court. The
High court gave two grounds for dismissing that application :
firstly, the failure of the complainant to
explain how the said 707 share certificates got into possession of the Company,
which failure made the story of Varma about delivery to him and entrustment by
him to Jaffray of the said share certificates "open to criticism";
secondly, his failure to explain the reasons for furnishing, the indemnity bond
on behalf of Hungerford. The High Court was of the view that these two
circumstances were "the most unusual cercuinstances which could be
inconsistent with the prosecution story of entrustment and of criminal misappropriation
and cheating". It noted the omission to examine Varma and also the refusal
by the Magistrate to consider Verma's affidavit. According to the High Court,
however, this was "not an important aspect of the case. The really
important aspect are (sic) provided by the two most unusual circumstances that
I have referred to above. Unless those circumstances could be sufficiently
explained to the satisfaction of the court, no process could be issued. And
those circumstances were not explained." It is clear from these remarks
that unlike the Magistrate, the High Court did not attach much importance to
the omission to examine Verma although he was said to be the author of the
entrustment. what appears to have mainly weighed with the 78 High Court were the
"two most unusual circumstances", namely the omission to explain the,
initial possess-ion of the said share ,certificates by the Company and the
omission to explain why the indemnity bond had to be executed.
With respect to the High Court, the fact that
the said 70' ,share certificates were initially with the Company was never in
,issue between the parties. The issue between them was whether on May 27, 1965
Jaffray and Rodewald had delivered them to Varma, and whether Varma, in his
turn had handed them over to Jaffray's personal custody to be returned to him
later on that day. Therefore, the question as to, bow and in what
circum,stances the said share certificates were in possession of the Company
was totally irrelevant. Equally irrelevant were the reason why the indemnity
bond was executed first by Varma and the by the appellant. In any case, the
reasons for executing it were not. Par to seek. The Company claimed a lien on
those share ,.Certificates on account of its having satisfied the tax
liabilities of Turner family as recited in the bond itself. As further recited
in the bond, Mundra also claimed those shares by virtue of the ,said decree in
his favour. According to the appellant, Jaffray and Rodewald, therefore,
insisted that, the liquidators of Hunger ford should execute the said bond to
cover the company against any risk arising from the said claims. Besides, there
was no question of the appellant having to explain how the said share,
certificates were in possession of. the company, for, on that aspect the.
parties were never at variance. So far as the bond was concerned, both the
appellant and wit.
Majumdar had deposed that it had been
executed at the insistence of Jaffray and Rode wald. Therefore, these two
circumstances, the failure to explain ,which the High Court characterised as
the most unusual circumstances, were on record and since the parties were not
at issue ,on the first and the bond itself recited the reasons for its
execution, there was no question of the appellant and his witnesses having
failed to explain them.
Under sec. 190 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, a magistrate can take cognizance of an offence, either on receiving
a ,complaint or on a police report or on information' otherwise received. Where
a complaint is presented before 'him, he can under sec. 200 take cognizance of
the offence made out therein and has then to examine the complainant and his
witnesses. The object of such examination is to ascertain whether there is
prima facie case 'against the person accused of the offence in the complaint
and to prevent the issue of process on a complaint which is either false or
vexatious or intended only to harass such a person.
Such examination is provided therefore to
find ouwhether there is or not sufficient ground for proceeding. Under 79 sec.
202, a magistrate, on receipt of a complaint, may postpone the issue of process
and either inquire into the case himself or direct an inquiry lo be made by a
magistrate subordinate to him or by a police officer for ascertaining its truth
or falsehood. Under sec. 203, he may dismiss the complaint; if, after taking
the statement of the complainant and his witnesses and the result of the
investigation, if any, under sec. 202, there is in his judgment "no
sufficient ground for proceeding". The words 'sufficient ground used also
in sec. 209 have been construed to mean ,the satisfaction that a prima faice
case is made out against the person accused by the evidence of witnesses
entitled to a reasonable degree of credit, and not sufficient ground for the
purpose of conviction. [see R. G. Ruia v. Bombay(1)].
In Vadilal Panchal v. Ghadigaonkar(2) this
Court considered the scheme of sees. 200 to 203 and held that ,he inquiry
envisaged there is for ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the complaint, that
is, for ascertaining whether there is evidence in support of the complaint so
as to justify the issue of process. The section does not say that a regular
trial of adjudging the truth or otherwise of the person complained against
should take place at that stage, for, such a person can be called upon to
answer the accusation made against him only when a process has been issued and
he is on trial. Sec. 203 consists of two parts. The first part lays down the
materials which the magistrate must consider, and the second part says that if
after considering those materials there is in-his judgment no sufficient ground
for proceeding, 'he may dismiss the complaint. In Chandra Deo Singh v. Piokash
Chandra Bose,(1) where dismissal of a complaint by the Magistrate at the stage
of sec. 202 inquiry was set aside, this Court laid down that the test was
whether there was sufficient ground for proceeding and not whether there was
sufficient ground for conviction, and observed (p. 653) that where there was
prima facie evidence, even though the person charged of an offence in the
complaint might have a defence, the matter had to be left to be decided by the
appropriate form at the appropriate stage and issue of a process could not be
refused. Unless, therefore, the Magistrate finds that the evidence led before
him is self contradictory, or intrinsically untrustworthy, process cannot be
refused if that evidence makes out a prima facie case. In a revision against
such a refusal, the High Court also has to apply the same test. The question,
therefore, is whether while applying this test the Chief Presidency Magistrate
was right in refusing process and the High Court in revision could confirm such
a refusal.
(1)[1958] S.C.R. 618.
(3) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 639.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 1.
8 0 As earlier stated, there were before the
Magistrate, besides the evidence of the appellant and wit. Majumdar, who
claimed to be an eye-witness, the receipt and the indemnity bond. Over' and
above this, there was the evidence of Chaudhary, who had gone to Jaffray to
obtain the share certificates armed with Varma's letter and the letter of M/s
Sanderson & Morgan which prima facie supported the case of entrustment. The
receipt prima facie showed that Varma at first 'received' the share
certificates from Jaffray and the endorsement thereunder admittedly written by
Jaffray, namely, "shares with me", seemed to indicate that Varma, as
the complaint alleged, had left them with Jaffray to be subsequently handed
over to M/s Sanderson & Morgan on behalf of Hungerford. The evidence of
Majumdar and Hoon was that Jaffray had demanded an indemnity bond, that the
bond was signed first by Varma and later at his instance by Hoon.
Prima facie, such a bond containing both
indemnity and undertakings could not have been executed unless the share
certificates had been delivered to Varma as stated in the receipt. Once It was
shown through these two documents that the share certificates were delivered,
the endorsement of Jaffray below the receipt, namely, "shares with me"
was capable of being construed as Varma having, left the share certificates
with Jaffray lo be handed over to him or on his behalf when called for.
As against the case of entrustment, Jaffray's
case, as set out earlier, was that the word 'receive& in the receipt was
wrongly used by Varma and that he had insisted that Varma should use the word
'inspected', for, he had allowed Varma the inspection of the share certificates
only and had not delivered them to him and made the said endorsement to make
that position clear. That undoubtedly was his defence. But reading the two
documents one is bound to ask himself whether Varma and Hoon were likely to
execute the bond if Varma had merely inspected and not received the share
certificates. It would also prima facie appear that if faffray had only given
their inspection, he would not have allowed Varma to prepare the receipt in the
words in which it was couched. In any event, with the word 'received' in it, he
would not have written out the endorsement which was capable of showing that
the shares were with him because after executing the receipt Varma had left
them in his personal custody.
In support of the High Court's order counsel
for the respondents argued that there was no reference of the receipt in the
protest application, dated May 7, 1966, that likewise, there was no reference
therein of the indemnity bond, that there were contradictions in the versions
of Varma and Hoon as to when the appellant signed that bond, that the said
share certificates were 81 tinder attachment, and therefore, Jaffray, was not
likely to deliver them to Varma, that Majumdar did not mention entrustment in
his evidence, that the letter of Varma to Jaffray said to have been carried by
Chaudhry when he went to take delivery of the said share certificates was not
produced, and lastly, that though Hoon had complained that the police had not
given him an opportunity to examine Varma, he failed to produce him before the
Magistrate, though he had both time and opportunity to do so. In addition, Mr.
Chatterjee, appearing for Jaffray, Rodewald and Horniusji argued that so far as
Hormusji was concerned, there was no evidence against him except the bare
allegation of conspiracy, that the,indemnity bond intrinsically contradicted
the case of delivery of the shares to Varma and their entrustment to Jaffray
inasmuch as according to that document delivery was to be made to M/s.
Sanderson & Morgan and not to, Varma, and finally, that the evidence at
best showed that it was a case of promise to deliver and its breach and not one
of entrustment and breach of trust.
We refrain at this stage to express our views
on these contentions lest such views might later on affect one party or the
other. Nevertheless, we are bound to say that both the receipt and the
indemnity bond, whether referred to in the protest application or not, were
before the Magistrate and were marked by him as documents 2 and 5. They were
also before the High Court. Over and above these two documents, there was the
evidence of Majumdar, Hoon and Chaudhary, according to which the two documents were
executed on May 27, 1965 when Varma went to the Company's office to obtain
delivery of the said shares. It is true that Varma was not examined though, if
examined, he would have been the principal witness. It is also true that his
affidavit in his absence could not constitute admissible evidence.
Despite that omission, there was evidence,
both oral and documentary, supported by contemporaneous letters of M/s
Sanderson & Morgan, demanding the said share certificates from Jaffray
personally. It may be that much could be said on both the sides. But it was
certainly not a case of there being no prima facie case or the evidence being
so selfcontradictory or intrinsically untrustworthy that process could properly
be refused. This follows from the fact that neither the Chief Presidency
Magistrate nor the High Court expressed the view that the evidence, either of
the appellant or of Majumdar or, of Chaudhary, was false or intrinsically
unbelievable. Indeed, both the Chief Presidency Magistrate and the High Court
founded their orders of dismissal mainly on the ground of omission to examine
Varma without considering whether despite that omission there was other
evidence on record which made out a sufficient ground for proceeding with the
case. At the stage of sec. 202 7-L348Sup.C.I./73 82 inquiry what a complainant
has to make out is such a sufficient ground. He need not necessarily produce at
that stage all the evidence available to him. Merely because the appellant did not
examine Varma, (however important he was) because that would have meant
bringing him to India from England at considerable cost, could not be a ground
for throwing out his complaint,, even though such of the other evidence he led
was capable of making out a prima facie case.
There is no gainsaying that although
respondent Mundra held only minority shares, he was and continues to be in a
position to control the management of Turner Morrison & Co. without having
to pay the price of the rest of the shares by reason only of the said 707 share
certificates being in possession of that company and therefore unavailable to
Hungerford to deliver them to him. He had, therefore, sufficient interest, to
say the least, to bring about such a position that Hungerford would not be in a
position to deliver the said shares and he could continue to have control if
the company without owning the majority shares and without paying for them. It
was, therefore, not totally improbable that jaffray had at first thought that
the indemnity bond sufficiently safeguarded the interests of the company even
against a possible plaint who Mundra might make in respect of the said 707
shares, and therefore, delivered them to Varma. The evidence on record and the
circumstances of the case would suggest that he probably changed his mind later
on possibly at the instance of Mundra, who, as aforesaid, was interested in
withholding the delivery of the said 707 share certificates, and handed them
over to Hormusji instead of to Varma. We mention these circumstances as
possibilities only which might have to be considered at a later stage and not
as our conclusions in these proceedings.
As regards respondent Rodewald, Mr.
Chatterjee drew our attention to an order dated April 10, 1967 by which the
Court discharged the rule against him. Mr. Chatterjee argued that no separate
special leave petition having been filed against that order, the appeal so far
as Rodewal is concerned has to be dismissed. We find, however, that the appeal
was against all the four accused, including Rodewald.
The special leave granted on September 16,
1968 was also against all of them. The special leave Was against the judgment
and order of the High Court dated December 7, 1967 by which the revision filed
by the appellant against all the four accused was rejected. That being so, and
the special leave petition being against all the four accused, it must include
the order dated April 10, 1967. There was, therefore, no necessity of a
separate application for special leave against that order.
In our view. there was sufficient evidence
before the Chief Presidency Magistrate which made out a prima facie case, and
83 even if much could be said on 'both the sides, it was not a case of refusal
of process.
For the reasons aforesaid the order of dismissal
passed by the Chief Presidency Magistrate and its confirmation by the High
Court cannot be sustained. Consequently, the High Court's judgment and order
has to be set aside and the appeal allowed. We direct the Chief Presidency
Magistrate to issue the process and proceed with the case.
SHELAT, J., This appeal arises out of the
counter complaint, dated June 18, 1966, filedby Jaffray charging offences under
secs. 467, 471, 193, 474 and 109, Penal Code against appellant Hoon, Varma and
Majumdar. Though the complaint gives the impression as if the whole of the said
receipt dated May 27, 1965 was alleged to be a fabricated document, Jaffray's
de-position before the Magistrate makes clear that according to him, the body
of the receipt and his own endorsement thereon were genuine and that only the
portion said to be falsely fabricated was the writing on it marked '3'
purporting to be in Varma's handwriting but written out subsequently by Hoon
with a view to give a false twist to the said endorsement. Jaffray's case was
that on May 27, 1965, when Varma came to the office of Turner Morrison &
Co. he brought out 707 shares in question for Varma's inspection, that those
shares were never handed over by him or "received" by Varma, that he
made the said endorsement only to show that they were in his possession but
that with a view to make out a false case of entrustment to him by Varma, Hoon
subsequently wrote out the said portion marked '3'. Jaffray prayed in the
complaint that the Chief Presidency Magistrate should direct police
investigation under S. 156(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. However, on
January 25, 1966, the Chief Presidency Magistrate directed judicial inquiry by
the Presidency Magistrate, 3rd Court, Calcutta. The Magistrate accordingly held
an inquiry in which Jaffray gave, as aforesaid, his deposition. On January 5,
1967 the Magistrate reported that a prima facie case was made out and process
should issue. The case together with the said report went back to the Chief
Presidency Magistrate, who on the record of evidence before him accepted the
said report and ordered issue of process but only against Hoon. He also held
that s. 195(1) (c) of the Code did not come in the way of Jaffray filing a
private complaint as the said receipt alleged to be a false document was 84
produced before the police during their investigation into the other complaint
filed by Hoon against Jaffray and others, which investigation was not a
proceeding before any Magistrate. Hoon thereupon filed a revision application
before the High Court for quashing the said order. The only argument urged in
the High Court on behalf of Hoon was that the complaint by Jaffray was barred
under s. 195 (1) (c) of the Code, as the alleged forged document, i.e., the
receipt, had been produced in a judicial inquiry. The High Court turned down
the contention holding that the receipt was produced by Hoon in the course of
inquiry by the police ordered in his complaint under s. 156(3) of the Code and
was then seized by them. There was thus, according to the Hi& Court no
production of a fabricated document in a judicial proceeding, the document
having been long ago produced before and seized by the police before a judicial
inquiry was held in that case. The contention urged on behalf of Hoon having
thus been rejected. the High Court dismissed the revision. It is this order
which has been challenged in this appeal.
Mr. Chagla for the appellant wanted to go
into the merits of the case, but we prevented him from doing so, as the arguments
before the High Court were confined only to the question of the applicability
of s. 195(1)(c) of the Code.
Mr. Chagla thereupon urged two contentions :
(1) that though it was true that Hoon had produced the said receipt (document
2) before the police in the course of investigation by them ordered by the
Chief Presidency Magistrate under s. 156(3) of the Code in the matter of Hoon's
complaint, those proceedings before the police were part and parcel of the
proceedings before the Chief Presidency Magistrate and therefore production of
the receipt there was production before the Magistrate; (2)) that even before
that, the receipt had been produced before the High Court and that having been
done, it was the High Court alone who could cause a complaint to be filed under
s. 195(1) (c) of the Code and not Jaffray. According to Mr. Chagla, after the
decree in Mundra's suit No. 600 of 1961 was passed, Hungerford took out
execution proceedings claiming therein that Turner Morrison & Co. should be
made to hand over to the liquidators of Hungerford the said 707 share
certificates to enable them to satisfy the said decree by delivering all the
2,295 shares (including the 707 shares in dispute) to Mundra against payment of
price thereof by Mundra. Those proceedings were opposed by Turner Morrison
& Co. on the ground that they did not lie against it as it was not a party
to that suit. As 'against that contention, Hoon, as one of the liquidators of
Hungerford, filed a counter-affidavit claimingentrustment of the said shares to
Jaffray by Varma and annexed to that affidavit copies of the said receipt and
the indemnity bond. It was during the hearing of that matterthat Hoon showed
the 85 original of the receipt to counsel for Turner Morrison & Co.
to satisfy him that the copy annexed to his
affidavit was genuine. Counsel for the company thereupon inspected it and found
the copy to be a correct copy. It would thus appear that what was produced
'before the High Court was a copy of the said receipt, the original not having
been "produced" before, the Court, but was shown to counsel to
prevent any contention that the copy was not a correct or genuine one.
The question, therefore is whether on either
of the two grounds urged by Mr. ChagJa, Jaffray's complaint can be said to be
barred by s. 195 (1) (c) of the Code.
The relevant part of sec. 195(1) provides no
court shall shall take cognizance :
"(c) of any offence described in section
463 or punishable under section 471, section 475 or section 476 of the same
Code, when such offence is alleged to have, been committed by a party to any
proceeding in any Court in respect of a document produced or given in evidence
in such proceeding, except on the complaint in writing of such Court, or of
some other Court to which such Court is subordinate." Cl. (c) falls into
two parts. The first part provides that the offence in respect of which the
complaint in question is filed must be one under s. 463 or 471 or 475 or 476 of
the Penal Code. The second part provides that such an offence must be alleged
to have been committed by a party to any proceeding in any court in respect of
a document produced or given in evidence in such proceeding. If both those
requirements are there, then no court is to take cognizance of such an offence
except on a complaint filed by such court or a court subordinate to it.
On the first limb, of Mr. Chagla's argument,
the question arises whether Hoon can be said to have "produced" or
tendered in evidence they said receipt before, the Chief Presidency Magistrate
? there is no question that the receipt was ever tendered in evidence by Hoon.
It was produced by him before the police in the course of the investigation by
them ordered by the Magistrate under s. 156(3) of the Code and was then seized
by them. The receipt formed part of the record of The case which went to the
Chief Presidency Magistrate together with the report of the police recommending
discharge of Jaffray and others who were accused in that case of criminal
breach of trust and cheating. But the contention of Mr. Chagla was that though
the receipt was not tendered in evidence, it was nevertheless 'produced', an
expression which has a wide connotation. There Mr. Chagla is 86 right, for, a
document can be said to have been produced in a court when it is not only
produced, for the purpose of being tendered in evidence, but also for some
other purpose.
[cf. In re, Gopal Sidheshwar(1)] on the
footing, therefore, that Hoon 'produced' the receipt, the question still would
be whether he produced it in a proceeding before a court.
Mr. Chagla's argument was that it was
produced in a proceeding before the Court of the Chief Presidency Magistrate
'because the investigation by the police was one ordered by him under s. 156(3)
of the Code and therefore that investigation was part of the proceedings in his
Court.
Such a proposition does not appear to be
correct. Firstly, the police authorities have under ss. 154 and 156 of the,
Code a statutory right to investigate into a cognizable offence without
requiring any sanction from a judicial authority, [cf. King Emperor v. Khwaja
Nazir Ahmad(2)] and even the High Court has no inherent power under s. 561A of
the Code to interfere with the exercise of that statutory power. It is true
that the Chief Presidency Magistrate had under s. 156(3) ordered in the present
case an investigation by the police. But once that was done, the inquiry by the
police was of the same nature and character as the one which the police had the
power to conduct under sub-secs.(1) and (2) of that section. Indeed sub sec.
(3) expressly states that an investigation ordered by a Magistrate would be an
investigation "as above-mentioned", i.e., an investigation made by a
police officer in his statutory right under sub-sections (1) and (2). That
being so, once an investigation by the police is_ordered by a magistrate, the
magistrate cannot place any limitations on or direct the officer conducting it
as to how to conduct it. Secondly, it is well settled that before a Magistrate
can be said to have taken cognizance of an offences under s. 190(1) (a) of the
Code, he must have not only applied his mind to the contents of the complaint
presented before him, but must have done so for the purpose of proceeding under
s. 200 and the provisions following that section. But where he has applied his
mind only for ordering an investigation under s. 156(3) or issuing a warrant
for purposes of investigation. he, cannot be said to have taken cognizance of
the offence. See R. R. Chari v. U.P.(8); also Jamuna Singh v. Bhadai Sah(4) The
Chief Presidency Magistrate having not even taken cognizance of the offence but
having applied his mind for the purpose only of directing a police
investigation under s. 156(3), no proceeding could be said to have commenced
before him, of which the inquiry by the police could be said to be part and
parcel. Further, it cannot be said that the police officeracting under s.
156(3) was a delegate of the Chief Presidency Magistrate or that the (1) [1907]
9 Bom. L.R. 735. (2) 71 I.A. 203. (3) [1951] S.C.R. 312, 320-21 (4) [1964] 5
S.C.R. 37.
87 investigation by him was an investigation
'by or on behalf of the, Magistrate. Production of the receipt by Hoon in the
course of such an investigation was therefore not production in a proceeding
before the Chief Presidency Magistrate so as to attract the ban under s. 195
(1) (c).
The first limb of Mr. Chagla's argument,
therefore cannot be accepted.
In support of the second limb of his
argument, Mr. Chagla relied on the affidavit of S. K. Ganguli, the solicitor of
Hungerford, dated March 26, 1969, according to which during the course of the
said execution proceedings taken out by Hungertord he had produced in the High
Court the receipt and the said indemnity bond for inspection by counsel of
Mundra and Turner Morrison & Co. in the presence of Rodewald who also,
along with counsel, inspected the two documents.
Obviously, the originals of the receipt and
the bond were produced in the Court to satisfy counsel that copies of these
documents annexed to the affidavit of Hungerford tallied with the originals and
were correct. Since the copies were used as annexures to the affidavit, they
certainly can be said to have been produced in the proceedings before the
Court. But it cannot be said that their originals were produced in those
proceedings, since they were only shown to counsel for the limited purpose of
satisfying them that the copies were correct copies. It was nobody's case that
those copies were fabricated documents.
Jaffray's case was that it was part of the
original receipt which was fabricated rendering the whole of it a false
document. Apart from this difficulty, the offence charged against Hoon in
Jaffray's complaint was not the user of the receipt in the proceedings before
the High Court, but its production and user by Hoon during the investigation of
Hoon's complaint by the police. To that Mr. Chagla's argument was that once a
document alleged to be forged is used in any proceeding before any court at any
time, s. 195 (1) (c) would at once be attracted and would be a bar against a
complaint by a party complaining of its fraudulent user in any later
proceeding. Such a proposition, in the first place, is not warranted by the
language of cl. (c) of s. 195(1). That clause in clear terms says that in
respect of any of the offences enumerated there, no cognizance can be taken of
a private complaint when such offence is said to have been committed by a party
to a proceeding in a court in respect of a document produced or tendered in
evidence in that proceeding extent on a complaint by such court. The words
"such court" mean the very court before which a party to a proceeding
in that court has produced or tendered in evidence a document in respect of
which the offence is alleged to have been committed. Cl. (c), in other words,
means that it is that court before which there is a proceeding and a party to
such a proceeding is said to have 88 committed an offence in respect of a
document produced or tendered in evidence by him, on whose complaint the
offence can be taken cognizance of. The object and purpose of s.
195(1)(c) is that it is the court before
which an offence is alleged to have been committed in respect of a document produced
in a proceeding before it 'by., a party to such proceeding, which should file
or cause to be filed a complaint and not a private party.
Assuming, however, that Hoon had
produced-,the receipt, alleged to be a forged document, in the proceeding
before the High Court, a complaint in respect of that offence by or at the
instance of the High Court could be taken cognizance, of by the Magistrate. But
no one moved the High Court to do so in those proceedings and so such complaint
was ever filed. In the second place, if we were to accept Mr., Chagla's
proposition, it would have far reaching consequences which the legislature
while en:acting clause (c) could never have contemplated. if the High ,Court
alone could have filed or caused to be filed a complaint be-cause the document
was at one time produced before, it, then no other court where it is produced
subsequently can file a complaint even if the forged document is produced or
tendered in evidence in a proceeding before it. If the High Court, in the case
stated above, were to consider it inexpedient to file a complaint, a party to a
proceeding before the High Court can go on producing ad seriatim that document
in several subsequent proceedings in several different courts with complete
impunity because the High Court has in respect of the proceeding before it
refrained from causing a complaint to be filed against that party.
Surely, such a consequence could never have
been contemplated when cl. (c) was enacted. The proper construction of that
clause, therefore, is that when a party to a proceeding before any court
produces or tenders in evidence a document in respect of which an offence,
e.g., s. 471 read with s. 467, is alleged to have been committed, it is that
court before which the document is produced or tendered in evidence which can
file a complaint regarding such an offence and a magistrate cannot take
cognizance of such an offence except upon a complaint by such court or a court
subordinate to it. On this construction ,the contention urged by Mr. Chagla
must fail.
In the result, the appeal fails and is
dismissed.
KHANNA, J.-I agree so far as criminal appeal
No. 213 of 1968 is concerned. 1, however, express my inability to agree with
the proposed judgment in criminal appeal No. 214 of 1968.
In my. opinion, both the appeals should be
dismissed.
89 Nirmaljit Singh Hoon appellant is a
co-liquidator along with S. Varma and Frank Goldstein of Hungerford Investment
Trust Limited (in voluntary liquidation). On January 5, 1966 the appellant
filed a complaint under sections 120B, 406 and 420 Indian Penal Code in the
court of Chief Presidency Magistrate Calcutta against four persons. Out of them
the first two accused, D. M. Jaffray and C. H. Rodewald, were the directors of
Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd., while A. J.
Hormusji was the secretary of that company.
The fourth accused was Haridas Mundhra. According to the appellant's allegation
Hungerford Investment Trust Limited was the registered holder of 51 per cent of
shares of Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd. Haridas Mundhra accused had option to
purchase those shares for Rs. 86,60.000. On May 27, 1965 S. Varma, one of the
liquidators of Hungerford Investment Trust Limited, was stated to have received
707 ordinary share scrips, the details of which were given, of Turner Morrison
& Co. Ltd. from the directors of Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd.
According to the, appellant, Varma preferred
not to carry those share scrips with him and entrusted them with. blank
transfer deeds to Jaffray accused for safe custody. Varma thereafter asked the
solicitors of his Company, M/s.
Sanderson & Morgan, to take delivery of
the share scrips from Jaffray, but JaffTay accused on one pretext or the other
declined to give the shares. Jaffray accused was further stated to have in
violation of his trust and in conspiracy with the other accused disposed of 707
shares by delivering them illegally to Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd. with the
object of dishonestly converting them to the use and benefit of the accused
persons and also with a view to defeat the appellant's right to recover Rs.
86,60,000 from Haridas Mundhra accused.
The above complaint was sent by the Chief
Presidency Magistrate to the police for investigation under sub-section (3) of
section 156 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The police registered a case and
after investigation submitted a report that it was a false case. The
complainant thereafter filed objections against the police report before the
Chief Presidency Magistrate on May 7, 1966. The complaint was thereafter sent
on June 18, 1966 to a Presidency Magistrate for judicial enquiry. In the course
of that enquiry the appellant examined four witnesses. Sachindra Mohan (PW 1),
P. N. Chowdhry (PW 2), Hoon 90 appellant (PW 3) and N. K. Majumdar (PW 4).
Affidavit of Varma, who was in the United Kingdom, was also filed.
Reliance was also placed upon receipt dated
May 27, 1965 which readsas follows :
Document-2 Document 2/1. Recived from Turner
Morrison ; Co. Ltd., Calcutta the following Shares Certificates covering 707
Ordinary Shares of Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd., 1. Share Certificate No. 19
fir 3 ordinary shares Nos.
1452, 1593 & 1594.
2. Share Certificate No. 28 for 695 ordinary
shares Nos.
1601-2295.
3 Share Certificate No. 29 for 3 ordinary
shares Nos.
1455. 1597 & 1598.
4. Share Certificate No. 75 for 3 ordinary
shares Nos.
1453, 1595 & 1596 5. Share Certificate
ND. 76 for 3 ordinary share Nos.
1454, 1599 & 1600 Sd/S. Varma S. VARMA)
Liquidator Hungerford Investment Trust Ltd.
Shares with me.
Sd/D. N. Jaffray." It may be stated that
the above receipt also contains the following words :
"Dear Mr. Jaffray, I do not want to
carry these with me. Hence leaving meantime with you personally for delivering
to me later." These words, according to a complaint filed by Jaffray were
inserted subsequently and a criminal case under section 474 Indian Penal Code
is pending against Hoon appellant on that account. Criminal appeal No. 213 filed
by Hoon in respect of that prosecution has been disposed of separately today.
Reliance by Hoon was also placed upon the
following indemnity bond " Indemnity & Warranty Bond dated 27-5 65
INDEMNITY & WARRANTY In consideration of handing over the 707 shares of
Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd. with blank transfers to Sanderson & Morgan,
as per original letter of Hopwood, Hilbery & Co., dated the 9th December
1964 the Liquidators hereby indemnify Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd., Calcutta
that they will have no objection to be enjoined with the old Liquidators and
the Executors of the deceased Turners for the claim of approximately Rs.
53,00,000/(Rupees fifty three lakhs), which has been paid by Turner Morrison
& Co. Ltd., Calcutta 91 by way of taxes for the Turner family, and
furthermore the new Liquidators undertake that they will assist Turner Morrison
& Co. Ltd., Calcutta in every way in the recovery of these amounts from the
Estates of the Turner family and the old Liquidators of Hungerford Investment
Trust Ltd.
The new Liquidators further guarantee that
they will cause these shares to be produced whenever required in terms of Suit
600 and without jeopardising the rights of Mr. Haridas Mundhra arising out of
that decree.
Lastly, the Liquidators indemnify the Directors
of Turner Morrison & Co.Ltd., Calcutta against any claims of tax
authorities or any Government body and others should it arise by virtue of the
delivery of these shares by them.
(Sd.) ILLEGIBLE Liquidators.
Hungerford Investment Trust Ltd."
Calcutta, 27th July, 1965 According to the complainant-appellant, the above
indemnity bond also contains the following endorsement of Jaffray
"Accepted For & On Behalf of Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd.
Sd/D. M. Jaffray Directors 27-5-65 The
Presidency Magistrate in his report dated January 5, 1966 observed that no
prima facie case of entrustment had been made out, Reference was made to the
fact that Varma, who was the central figure, had not made any statement during
the course of enquiry. Varma's affidavit was held to be not admissible. The
Chief Presidency Magistrate agreed with the Presidency Magistrate and dismissed
the complaint.
In revision the High Court declined to
interfere with the order of the Chief Presidency Magistrate. Reference was made
by the High Court also ;to the non-examination of Varma during the judicial
enquiry.
Mr. Chagla has contended in this Court on
behalf of the appellant, that there is prima faice case to show that 707 ,hare
scripts were handed over to Varma on May 27, 1965 and thereafter were entrusted
by Varma to Jaffray. The refusal of Jaffray 92 to make over those shares to the
liquidators of Hungerford Investment Trust Limited or their Solicitors,
according to Mr. Chagla, amounts to criminal breach of trust. The said offence,
it is staated, has been committed by Jaffray in conspiracy with the other
accused. The above stand has been controverted by Mr. Mukherjee on behalf of
the State of West Bengal as well as by Mr. Chatterjee on behalf of Jaffray,
Rodewald and Hormasji respondents.
After giving the matter my consideration, I
am of the view that no prima facie case for entrustment of the share scripts in
question to Jaffray accused has been proved.
It is common case of the parties that the 707
share scripts question were before May 27, 1965 in the custody of Turner
Morrison & Co. Ltd. The case of the appellant is that on morning of May 27,
1965 Varma accompanied by Majumdar(PW 4) met Jaffray and Rodewald and asked for
the delivery of 707 share scrips. Those 707 share scrips were then handed ,over
to, Varma by Rodewald accused. Varma thereupon signed typed receipt reproduced
above. As Varma had some luncheon appointment he did not want to carry the
share scrips with himself. Share scrips were thereupon left with Jaffray.
Jaffray then wrote on the receipt the words
"Shares with me" and put his signature underneath. It is further the
case of the appellant that the, indemnity bond dated May 27, 1965 was also
executed by Varma and Hoon petitioner and the same was accepted by Jaffray accused.
In order to show the entrustment of shares to Jaffray, Mr. Chagla has relied
upon the affidavit of Varma. Varma, as stated earlier, did not appear in the
course of the judicial enquiry which was held by the Presidency Magistrate. He,
however, chose to send his affidavit from United Kingdom. The courts below
declined to take that affidavit into consideration and. in my opinion, they
were justified in doing so. According to section 510A of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, the evidence ,of any person whose evidence is of a formal character
may be given by affidavit and may, subject to all just exceptions, be read in
evidence in any inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this ,Code. This
section was inserted by the Code of Criminal Procedure Amendment Act (26 of 1955)
and its object is to accelerate the disposal of cases. Provision is accordingly
made for the filing of an affidavit of a witness whose evidence is of a formal
character. If, however, the evidence of a person is not of a formal character,
but goes to the very root of the matter as in the present case, no resort can
be made to the provisions of the above section. It would appear from the resume
of facts given above 'that the case of the petitioner is that the share,,
scrips in question were before May 27, 1965 in the custody of Turner Morrison
93 Co. and were on the morning of May 27, 1965 handed over by Rodewald to Varma
when Varma met Jaffray and Rodewald in the office of Turner Morrison & Co.
It is further stated that Verma because of a luncheon appointment left those
shares with Jaffray. Varma, in the circumstances, would have been the most
important witness to depose, about the handing over of the share scrips to him
by Rodewald and the entrustment of those share scrips immediately thereafter to
Jaffray.
Verma was not examined during the course of
enquiry and this fact resulted in serious infirmity in the evidence adduced by
the petitioner. Resort was accordingly had to the filing of the affidavit of
Verma. As the evidence of Varma was not of a formal character, his affidavit
could plainly be not admitted in evidence.
Reliance has then been placed by Mr. Chagla
on the statement of Majumdar PW who is alleged to have accompanied Varma when
the latter not Jaffray and Rodewald in the office of TurnerMorrison & Co.
on the morning of May 27, 1965. The statement of Majumdar reads as under
"I know Mr. Hoon and Mr. Varma, and also Mr.Jaffray and also other accused
persons.
On 27-5-65 I went to the office of Mr. Turner
Morrison with Mr. Varma. Varma wanted delivery of 707 shares from accused Nos.
1 and 2. Accused No. 1 agreed to deliver them back if an indemnity bond was
signed. He signed a bond. He wanted also Mr. Hoon's signature on that bond.
Document No. 5 is the copy of that bond. Varma also signed document 2/ 1. He
did not take them. He left them with accused No. I to be sent through Sanderson
& Morgan. Accused No. I wrote document 2/2.
Mr. Varma writes document No. 2/3. Mr. Hoon
also signed the document No. 5 as we informed him of accused No. 1's request."
The above statement of Majumdar, in my opinion, belies the stand taken by the
appellant that the share scrips were delivered to Varma and he thereafter
entrusted them to Jaffray. According to the statement of Majumdar, Jaffray
agreed to deliver the share scrips to Varma if an indemnity bond was executed.
Varma then signed a bond but Jaffray wanted the signature of Hoon also on the
bond. As Hoon was, admittedly not present with Verma at that time, the
condition imposed by Jaffray for handing over of the share scrips to Varma was
obviously not satisfied at that time.
Majumdar has accordingly deposed that Varma
did not take the share scrips and left them with Jaffray accused. It may be
that the evidence of Majumdar may show that Jaffray 94 was guilty of not honouring
his assurance in so far as he declined to send share scrips to Sanderson &
Morgan after the indemnity bond had been signed by Hoon, but it is difficult to
hold on tile basis of statement of Majumdar that the share scrips in question
were first delivered by Jaffray and Rodewald accused to Varma and were
thereafter entrusted by Varma to Jaffray.
So far as P. R. Chowdhry (PW 2) is
concerned., his statement ,does not reveal entrustment of share scrips.
According to this witness, he asked for 707 share scrips from affray but the
latter declined to hand over those share scrips to the witness and stated ,that
he would send them through the Solicitor. The demand of share scrips by the
witness and the promise of Jaffray to send the share scrips to the Solicitor
would not show that there had been earlier entrustment of the share scrips to
Jaffray. On the contrary, the demand could have been made even without the
alleged entrustment of the share scrips. The same remarks also apply to letter
dated May 27, 1965 sent by M/s.Sanderson & Morgan to Jaffray. In that
letter a demand was made for 707 share scrips and it was mentioned that
indemnity bond had been executed on that account. What is significant, however,
is that there was no reference in that letter to, any entrustment of the share
scrips.
Reference has been made by, Mr. Chagla to
civil litigation in respect of the share scrips. The said litigation had
admittedly nothing to do with the alleged entrustment of share scrips in
,question with which we are concerned in the present case. No help can
consequently be derived from the decision in the civil case.
Our attention was also invited to the
statement dated November 14, 1966 made by Jaffray in his case against Hoon and
others under section 474 Indian Penal Code. It is, however, open to question
whether the said statement of Jaffray can be utilised in this case when that
statement is not a part of the record of this case. No process has so far been
issued to Jaffray and his statement has not been recorded in this case.
Assuming, for the sake of argument, that the statement of Jaffray in the other
case can be referred to in the present case, the statement can be of no avail
to the appellant because there is no indication in the statement of any
entrustment of the share scrips.
The next piece of evidence relied upon by Mr.
Chagla is receipt dated May 27, 1965 which has been reproduced above.
According to this document, Varma issued the
receipt about his having received the 707 share scrips in question. The document
also bears the writing of Jaffray that the shares were with 95 him. If shares
remained with Jaffray, the occasion of Varma issuing a receipt in respect of
those shares could not arise. The receipt in question is of an ambiguous
character and, in the absence of any oral evidence, it is difficult to infer
from the receipt that the shares in question were first received by Varma and
thereafter were entrusted by Varma to Jaffray. The best person to explain what
seems to be an inconsistency in the receipt between the writing of Varma and
the endorsement of Jaffray was Varma himself.
Varma, as stated above, was not examined as a
witness. The other person who was present at that time was Majumdar and the
statement of Majumdar goes against the stand taken by the appellant about the
delivery of share scrips to Varma and the entrustment of those share scrips
thereafter to Jaffray.
Lastly, reliance has been placed upon
indemnity bond dated May 27, 1965 which has been reproduced above. There is
nothing in the indemnity bond to show that the share scrips were handed over to
Varma. On the contrary, the indemnity bond according to its plain language was
executed because of the. contemplated handing over of the share scrips to
Sanderson & Morgan. It seems that it was because of the non-mention of the
handing over of the share scrips to Varma in the indemnity bond that there was
no reference to the said bond in the complaint filed by the appellant.
An enquiry or investigation is ordered under
section 202 of the Code of Criminal Procedure by a magistrate on receipt of a
complaint for the purpose of ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the
complaint. If the magistrate before whom the complaint is made or to whom it
has been transferred, after considering the statement on oath of. the
complainant and his witnesses and the result of enquiry or investigation under
section 202 is of the opinion that there is no sufficient cause for proceeding,
he may for reasons to be recorded briefly, dismiss the complaint. If, on the
contrary, the magistrate taking cognizance of the offence is of the. opinion
that there is sufficient cause for proceeding, he should issue process against
the accused in accordance with section 204 of the Code. It may be that the
evidence which is required to be adduced by the complainant at that stage may
not be sufficient for recording a finding of conviction, but that fact would
not absolve the complainant who wants the magistrate to issue a process against
the accused person from leading some credible evidence as may prima facie show
the commission of the offence.
In the present case the Presidency
Magistrate, the Chief Presidency Magistrate and the, High Court took the view
that there was no sufficient cause for proceeding on the complaint 96 filed by
the appellant. I find no sufficient ground to interfere in this appeal under
section 136 of the Constitution with the said concurrent finding. No credible
material has, in my opinion, been brought on record by the appellant as may
show prima facie that there was entrustment of the share scrips in question to
the accused.
The appeal consequently fails and is
dismissed.
ORDER In view of the majority judgment, the
appeal is allowed and the High Court's judgment and order is set aside. We
direct the Chief Presidency Magistrate to issue the process and to proceed with
the same.
V.P.S.
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