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[Cites 15, Cited by 24]

Supreme Court of India

Municipal Corporation Of Delhi vs Jagdish Lal Son Of Radhakishan & Anr on 27 May, 1969

Equivalent citations: 1970 AIR, 7 1970 SCR (1) 579, AIR 1970 SUPREME COURT 7, 1969 MADLJ(CRI) 1

Author: V. Ramaswami

Bench: V. Ramaswami, J.C. Shah, S.M. Sikri

           PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF DELHI

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
JAGDISH LAL SON OF RADHAKISHAN & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/05/1969

BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:
 1970 AIR    7		  1970 SCR  (1) 579
 1969 SCC  (3) 389
 CITATOR INFO :
 D	    1972 SC1407	 (20)


ACT:
Prevention  of Food Adulteration Act 1964 (37 of  1964),  s.
20--Municipality  authorizing Municipal Prosecutor  to	file
complaint   on	its  behalf-Accused   acquitted-Municipality
whether 'complainant' within meaning of s. 417(3) of Code of
Civil  Procedure-Whether competent to file  application	 for
special leave to appeal.



HEADNOTE:
A complaint under s. 7 read with s. 16 of the Prevention  of
Food   Adulteration   Act,  1964  was  filed   against	 the
respondent.   It was filed by the Municipal  Prosecutor	 who
had been authorised to file such complaints by a  resolution
passed	by  the	 appellant corporation under s.	 20  of	 the
aforesaid  Act.	  On  the  respondent  being  acquitted	 the
appellant corporation filed an application in the High Court
for  special  leave to appeal under s. 417 of  the  Code  of
Criminal Procedure.  The application was allowed.  When	 the
appeal	came  up  for hearing a	 preliminary  objection	 was
raised	by  the respondent that the  complaint	having	been
filed by the Municipal Prosecutor the corporation was not  a
'complainant' within the meaning of s. 417(3) of the Code of
Criminal  Procedure  and therefore special leave  to  appeal
should	not  have been granted.	 The High Court	 upheld	 the
preliminary objection and dismissed the appeal.	 By  special
leave the corporation appealed to this Court.
HELD  :	 (i)  Under  s. 476(1)(h)  of  the  Delhi  Municipal
Corporation  Act  the person competent	to  institute  legal
proceedings  is the Commissioner.  However the present	case
was  governed  not  by that provision but by s.	 20  of	 the
Prevention  of	Food Adulteration Act, 1964  which  provides
that a prosecution under that Act may be instituted "by	 the
Central	 Government  or	 the State  Government	or  a  local
authority or a person authorised in this behalf, by  general
or  special  order by the Central Government  or  the  State
Government  or	a local authority".  Section 2(vii)  of	 the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act defines a "local  autho-
rity"  to  mean	 "in the case of a local  area	which  is  a
municipality, the municipal board or municipal corporation".
The Delhi Municipal Corporation was a local authority within
the meaning of s. 20, [581 H; 582 C, G-H; 584 A]
(ii)The	 Municipal  Prosecutor	had  filed  the	  complaint
against	 the respondent under authority given to him by	 the
resolution of the Delhi Municipal Corporation under s. 20 of
the  Prevention	 of  Food Adulteration Act.  in	 filing	 the
complaint  the	said prosecutor was not acting	on  his	 own
personal behalf but was acting as an agent authorised by the
Delhi Municipal Corporation to file the complaint.  It	must
therefore  be  deemed  in  law	that  the  Delhi   Municipal
Corporation was the 'complainant' in the case, for according
to the Latin maxim.  "One who does an act through another is
deemed in law to do it himself." [583 H; 584 C-D]
Being  thus  the  complainant  in  the	case  the  appellant
Corporation could properly file the application under s. 417
of  the Code of Criminal Procedure. [Case remanded  to	High
Court for disposal according to law.] [584 E]
580
Ballavdas  Agarwala v. J. C.  Chakravarty, [1962]  3  S.C.R.
739  and  Nazir Ahmad v. King Emperor, 63 I.A. 372  as	381,
referred to.



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 8 of 1966.

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated April 29, 1965 of the Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench at Delhi in Criminal Appeal No. 164-D of 1962. Bishan Narain, K. K. Raizada and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the appellant.

Sardar Bahadur and Yougindra Khushalani, for respondent No.

1. R. N. Sachthey, for respondent No. 2.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Ramaswami, J. On August 29, 1960 Shri Sham Sundar Mathur, Municipal Prosecutor of the Delhi Municipal Corporation filed a complaint in the court of Magistrate First Class against the respondent, Jagdishlal under S. 7 read with S. 16 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 (37 of 1954). In the said complain Shri Sham Sundar Mathur said that lie was competent to file the complaint under S. 20 of the aforesaid Act in accordance with a resolution passed by the Corporation in its meeting held on December 23, 1968. By his order dated April 30, 1962 the learned Magistrate acquitted the respondent. The Delhi Municipal Corporation made an application to the High Court asking for special leave under s. 417 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to appeal against the order of acquittal. The application was

-ranted on September 3, 1962. When the appeal came up for hearing a preliminary objection was raised on of the respondent that the only person competent to file the appeal was the complainant, Shri Sham Sundar Mathur. But the leave application was not filed by him and, therefore, the Municipal Corporation was not competent to prosecute the appeal. It was contended that only the complainant was competent to present an application for special leave under S. 417(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. As the complainant in this case was Shri Sham Sundar Mathur the appeal could not be filed by the Delhi Municipal Corporation. The High Court upheld the preliminary objec- tion of the respondent and dismissed the appeal by its order dated April 29, 1965. This appeal is brought by special leave on behalf of the Delhi Municipal Corporation against the judgment of the High Court dated April 29, 1965 in Cr. Ar. No. 163-D of 1962.

Section 20 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 states :

581
" (1) No prosecution for an offence under this Act shall be instituted except by, or with the written consent of, the Central Government or the State Government or a local authority or a person authorised in this behalf, by general or special order, by the Central Government or the State Government or a local authority :
Provided that a prosecution for an offence under this Act may be instituted by a purchaser referred to in section 12, if he produces in court a copy of the report of the public analyst along with the complaint. Section 417, sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure after its amendment by Act 26 of 1955 provide :
" (1) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (5), the State Government may, in any case, direct the Public Prosecutor to present an appeal to the High Court from an original or appellate order of acquittal passed by any Court other than a High Court.
(2)If such an order of acquittal is passed in any case in which the offence has been investigated by the Delhi Special Police Establishment constituted under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946 (XXXV of 1946), the Central Government may also direct the Public Prosecutor to present an appeal to the High Court from the order of acquittal.
(3)If such an order of acquittal is passed in any case instituted upon complaint and the High Court, on an application made to it by the complainant in this behalf, grants special leave to appeal from the order of acquittal, the complainant may present such an appeal to the High Court.

The principal question to be determined is whether the com- plaint dated August 29, 1960 was instituted by the Delhi Municipal Corporation. It is argued on behalf of the respondent that the complaint petition was not made and signed by the person competent under the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957 to exercise powers of the, Corporation in the matter of institution of legal proceedings. In our opinion there is substance in this contention. The only provision under the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1965 which confers power to institute legal proceedings is s. 476(1) (h) which states 582 "(1) The Commissioner may-

(h)institute and prosecute any suit or other legal proceeding, or with the approval of the Standing Committee withdraw from or compromise any suit or any claim for any sum not exceeding five hundred rupees which has been instituted or made in the name of the Corporation or of the Commissioner;

It is clear that the phrase "other legal proceedings" includes the power to institute a complaint before a Magistrate and hence it is the Commissioner alone who could exercise the power as there is no other provision in the Act which confers such power on anyone else. This view is supported by the decision of this Court in Bailavdas Agarwala v. J. C. Chakravarty(1) in which it was pointed out that a complaint under The Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923 as applied to the Municipality of Howrah, would only be filed by the au thorities mentioned therein and not by an ordinary citizen. Section 537 of that Act provided that the Commissioners may institute, defend or withdraw from legal proceedings under the Act; under s. 12 the Commissioners can delegate their functions to the Chairman, and the Chairman may in his turn delegate the same to the Vice-Chairman or to any municipal officer. It was observed in that case that the machinery provided in the Act must be followed in enforcing its provisions, and it was against the tenor and scheme of the Act to hold that s. 537 was merely enabling in nature. The principle invoked in that case was that adopted by the Privy Council in Nazir Ahmad v. King Emperor (2) viz. : that where a power is given to do a certain thing in a certain way, the thing must be done in that way or not at all. It was, therefore, held that if a legal proceeding was instituted under the Municipal Act in question, it must be done in accordance with the provisions of the Act and not otherwise.

But the question presented for determination in the present appeal is somewhat different. Under s. 20 of Act 37 of 1954 the prosecution for the offence may be instituted either (a) by the Central Government or the State Government or a local authority or (b) a person authorised in that behalf by general or special order by the Central Government or the State Government or a local authority. Section 2(vii) of Act 37 of 1954 defines a "local authority" to mean "in the case of a local area which is a (1) [1962] 3 S.C.R. 739.

(2) 63 I.A. 372 at 381.

583

pality, the municipal board or municipal corporation." A complaint under s. 20 of the Act may, therefore, be instituted either by the Municipal Corporation or by a person authorised in its behalf by general or special order by the Municipal Corporation. The Resolution of the Delhi Municipal Corporation dated December 23, 1958 reads as follows "Subject : Authorising the Municipal Prosecutor and the Assistant Municipal Prosecutor to launch Prosecutions under section 20 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954. The area under the jurisdiction of the Delhi Municipal Corporation has been declared a "local area" under s. 2(vii) of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act vide Chief Commissioner's Notification No, F.32(30) 58-M and PH(i) dated 13th June, 1958 published in the Delhi Gazette (Part IV) dated 26th June, 1959 and consequently the Municipal Corporation of Delhi is the Local Authority for that area within the meaning of section 2(vii) of the said Act. Section 20 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 contemplates the appointment of persons who shall be authorised to institute prosecutions under this Act by the Local Authority concerned.

Shri Sham Sundar Mathur, M.A., LL.B., Municipal Prosecutor and Shri Bankey Behari Tawkley, Assistant Municipal Prosecutor were authorised by the erstwhile Delhi Municipal Committee tinder the above section."

"Shri Vijay Kumar Malhotra moved the following resolution, which was seconded by Shri Prem Sagar Gupta Resolved that the recommendations of the Commissioner vide letter No. 139/Legal/58 dated 1-12-58 regarding authorising the Municipal prosecutor and the Assistant Municipal Prosecutor to launch prosecutions under section 20 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 be approved. The resolution was carried."

In the present case Shri Sham Sundar Mathur, Municipal Prosecutor filed the complaint under s. 20 of Act 37 of 1954 under L14Sup.C.I/69-8 584 the authority given to him by the resolution of the Municipal Corporation. Since the Municipal Corporation, Delhi, is a local authority within the meaning of S. 20 of Act 37 of 1954 and since it conferred authority on the Municipal Prosecutor the complaint was properly filed by Sham Sundar Mathur. The question is whether the Delhi Municipal Corporation or Shri Mathur was the complainant within the -meaning of S. 417(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It was argued on behalf of the respondent that the complainant was Shri Sham Sundar Mathur, the Municipal Prosecutor and the Delhi Municipal Corporation was not competent to make an application for special leave under s. 417(3), Cr. P.C. We are unable to accept this argument as correct. It is true that Shri Sham Sundar Mathur filed the complaint petition on August 29, 1960. But in filing the complaint Shri Mathur was not acting on his own personal behalf but was acting as an agent authorised by the Delhi Municipal Corporation to file the complaint. It must, therefore, be deemed in the contemplation of law that the Delhi Municipal Corporation was the complainant in the case. The maxim qui per alium facit per seipsum facere videtur (he who does an act through another is Jeemed in law to do it himself) illustrates the general doctrine on which the law relating to the rights and liabilities of principal and agent depends. We are, therefore, of opinion that Shri Mathur was only acting in a representative capacity and that the Delhi Municipal Corporation was the complainant within the meaning of S. 417(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure and the petition for special leave and the appeal petition were properly instituted by the Delhi Municipal Corporation. For these reasons we allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the High Court dated April 9, 1965 and direct that the appeal should be remanded to the High Court for being heard afresh and disposed of according to law.

G.C.					 Appeal allowed.
585