Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 11, Cited by 200]

Supreme Court of India

Nand Kishore Prasad vs State Of Bihar And Ors on 19 April, 1978

Equivalent citations: 1978 AIR 1277, 1978 SCR (3) 708, AIR 1978 SUPREME COURT 1277, 1978 3 SCC 366, 1978 LAB. I. C. 1106, 1978 2 LABLN 278, 1978 SERVLJ 591, 1978 BLJ 364, 1978 U J (SC) 395, 1978 2 SERVLR 46, 1978 BLJR 280, 1978 2 LABLJ 84

Author: Ranjit Singh Sarkaria

Bench: Ranjit Singh Sarkaria, P.S. Kailasam

           PETITIONER:
NAND KISHORE PRASAD

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/04/1978

BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
KAILASAM, P.S.

CITATION:
 1978 AIR 1277		  1978 SCR  (3) 708
 1978 SCC  (3) 366


ACT:
Constitution  of India, 1950-Art. 226-Interference  by	High
Courts,	 only when an impugned order suffers from any  error
of law or of no evidence.



HEADNOTE:
The  appellant	a Bench Clerk and one Trilok  Prasad  Sinha,
Fines  Clerk were tried for various offences under  sections
120B,  409, 466, 474 and 477A I.P.C. for embezzlement  of  a
sum  of Rs. 1068/- being fines recovered by the	 Police	 and
remitted  to  the  Court through Money	Orders.	  The  Trial
Magistrate    discharged them.	A departmental enquiry	was,
thereafter, instituted against him and on the inquiry report
submitted  by  the  Sub	 Divisional  Officer,  Sararam,	 the
District  Magistrate  who  was the  authority  competent  to
appoint	 and  remove the appellant, held : "The	 conduct  of
Nand   Kishore	 Prasad	 is  highly   suspicious   but	 for
insufficient  evidence	proceedings against him	 has  to  be
dropped."  Thereafter,	the Commissioner of  Patna  Division
called upon the appellant to show cause why he should not be
dismissed   from  service  and	after  perusing	 the   reply
submitted  by  the  appellant  reversed	 the  order  of	 the
District  Magistrate and directed removal of  the  appellant
from  service.	 An  appeal made to  the  Board	 of  Revenue
failed.	  The Writ Petitions filed in the Patna High  Court,
against	 the said orders were dismissed holding	 that  since
there was some evidence albeit not sufficient for conviction
in a criminal Court, it could not be quashed in	 proceedings
under the Art. 226 of the Constitution.
Dismissing the appeal by certificate, the Court
HELD  :	 1.  Two  principles  as  crystallised	by  judicial
decisions are to be born in mind, while dealing with a	case
of  the	 present  type.	  The  first  is  that	disciplinary
proceedings  before  a	domestic tribunal are  of  a  quasi-
judicial  character.  Therefore, the minimum requirement  of
the  rules  of natural justice is that the  tribunal  should
arrive at its conclusion on the basis of some evidence, i.e.
evidential  material which with some degree of	definiteness
points	to  the guilt of the delinquent in  respect  of	 the
charge against him.  Suspicion cannot be allowed to take the
place  of  proof  even in domestic  inquiries.	 The  second
principle,  which is a corollary from the first, is that  if
the  disciplinary inquiry has been conducted fairly  without
bias  or  predilection,	 in  accordance	 with  the  relevant
disciplinary  rules and the Constitutional  provisions,	 the
order passed by such authority cannot be interfered with  in
proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution, merely on
the  ground  that it was based on evidence  which  would  be
insufficient  for conviction of the delinquent on  the	same
charge at a criminal trial. [713 D-G]
Union of India v. H. C. Goel A.I.R. 1964 SC 364 referred to.
2.   (a)  In  the  instant case :-It was not a	case  of  no
evidence,  but of evidence which was not adequate enough  to
carry  conviction at a criminal trial.	The High Court	was,
therefore, right in holding that the impugned orders did not
suffer	 from  any  error  of  law  which  may	warrant	  an
interference   in   proceedings	 under	Art.  226   of	 the
Constitution. [715G]
(b)  A conjoint reading and analysis of the impugned  orders
of  the Commissioner and the Member, Board of Revenue  would
show that they purport to rest on these primary facts :
	      a.    Fine   amounting  to  Rs.  1,068/-	 was
	      realised	by the Police and sent to the  Court
	      of  the Magistrate, Sasaram, by money  orders,
	      where it was received on September 4, 1950.
	      b.    When  this	fine was  imposed,  and	 the
	      aforesaid	 money	orders	were  received,	 the
	      appellant (Nand Kishore Prasad) was the  Bench
	      Clerk
	      709
	      of the Magistrate. The fine records were	with
	      him  and it was he who used to issue  distress
	      warrants for realisation of outstanding  fine.
	      But  after  4-9-1950 he did not  take  further
	      action  for recovery of the fine in  question,
	      or  for  ensuring that the  convicts  suffered
	      imprisonment  in	default of payment  of	fine
	      inflicted on them by the	Court.
		    A  "receipt"  (money order	coupon)	 has
	      been produced "indicating that the  Petitioner
	      (Nand   Kishore  Prasad)	had  received	this
	      amount".
      "It  is clear from the circumstances  of
	      the case that the money realised	  was	 not
	      deposited....  I	see no reason  to  interfere
	      with the order of	   discharge" (passed by the
	      Commissioner  holding that the amount  of	 Rs.
	      1,068/-	had  been  embezzled  between	Nand
			    Kishore Prasad, Bench Clerk, and Triloki Prasa
d
	      Sinha, Fines Clerk). [714A-D]
(c)  While   it	 is  true  that	 the  impugned	orders	 are
unjustifiably brief it is not correct that they are  totally
bereft of reference to or discussion of evidence.  There  is
in  the	 impugned orders a specific reference to  the  money
order  coupon which the Member of the Board of	Revenue	 has
termed as 'receipt'.  Indeed, the main-stay of the  impugned
orders	is  the	 circumstantial evidence  furnished  by	 the
conduct	 of the appellant in not taking further	 action	 for
the realisation of the fine. [714 H, 715 A]
(d)  It	 is  true  that the impugned  orders  do  not  fully
measure	  up   to  the	devoutly   desired   standard	viz.
desirability  of writing a self-contained speaking order  in
disciplinary  proceedings.  Nevertheless, they do contain  a
bald and general allusion to the primary facts and a cryptic
inference therefrom.  As there was no specific reference  to
or  discussion of the evidence, the High Court examined	 the
record of the disciplinary tribunal not with a view to	make
out or reconstruct a new case, but only to see whether there
was  some  evidence of the primary fact relied upon  by	 the
domestic tribunal in support of its conclusion. There is  no
impropriety in the course adopted by the High Court. [715 A-
C]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2313 (N) of 1968.

From the Judgment and Order dated 28th day of July 1966 of the Patna High Court in Misc. Judl. Case No. 1273 of 1974. A. B. N. Sinha, S. K. Sinha and K. K. Sinha for the Appellant.

R. C. Prasad for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SARKARIA, J. This is an appeal by certificate under Article 133 (1) (a) and (b) of the Constitution from a Judgment dated July 28, 1966 of the Patna High Court, dismissing the appellant's writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution, for impugning an Order of his removal from Government service.

The facts are as follows :-

The appellant, Nand Kishore Prasad, was appointed as a ministerial servant by the District Magistrate, Shahabad, in his office at Arrah on June 16, 1930. He was confirmed in service in the year 1933.
710
In 1950, the appellant was transferred to Sasaram as a Bench Clerk in the Court of Shri R. Singh, Judicial Magistrate. His normal duty was to aid and assist the Court by putting up cases for hearing and disposal.
In April 1952, he was transferred from Sasaram to Buxer as an Election Clerk. On September 16, 1954, the Sub- Divisional Officer, B Sasaram, summoned the appellant and asked him to explain the outstanding fine of Case No. 886- C/104 T.R. of 1950 (The State v. Sarju Chaubbe & Ors.), decided by Shri R. Singh, Magistrate, Sasaram, on April 26, 1950.
Three Money Order coupons, two for Rs. 500/- each and one for Rs. 68/-, were sent by the Police Sub-Inspector of Kargahar to the C Magistrate, Shri R. Singh. These amounts represented the fine recovered from the persons who were convicted in the aforesaid case. The appellant was confronted with those Money Order coupons which purported to bear the initials of the appellant, and was asked to trace if the money had been credited to the Government. The appellant inspected the records and found an entry in the Fine Register of the D Court relating to the year 1951 which was to the effect, that an appeal arising out of the case, in question, had been allowed and the fine remitted. 'The appellant brought that entry to the notice of the then Magistrate, Shri M. P. Singh, and submitted a written report to the Sub-Divisional Officer, stating that the initials on the Money Order coupons were not his and he had never received the amounts. The' appellant further mentioned that he had discovered the aforesaid entry in the Fine Register.
At the relevant time, one Triloki Prasad Sinha was the Fines Clerk in the Court at Sasaram and the entry, in question, in the Fine Register was in his hand-writing. Triloki Prasad Sinha admitted that this entry of remission was in his hand- writing, but alleged that he had made it on the basis of an extract of the order of the Appellate Court, transmitted to him by the appellant. The appellant-denied that he had sent any such extract or information to the Fines Clerk and alleged that, according to the practice of the office, appellate judgments were transmitted to the Fines Clerk, in original, by all the Courts, regularly.
On January 26, 1955, the appellant was suspended from service. On February 1. 1955, the Magistrate in-charge of Fines, Sasaram, lodged a First Information Report in the local Police Station for prosecution of Triloki Prasad Sinha and the appellant in respect of offences under Sections 120- B, 409, 466, 468, 474 and 477(A) of the Indian Penal Code. After investigation, the Police submitted a charge-sheet in the Court of the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Sasaram, against both Triloki Prasad Sinha and the appellant. The Trial Magistrate, after making an inquiry under Chapter XVII of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, discharged both the accused persons, holding-(i) that there was nothing direct against Nand Kishore Prasad (appellant herein) to show that he had sent a 711 false or wrong extract to the Fines Clerk, "except the statements of a co-accused exculpating himself which is of little worth", and (ii) that "this accused cannot be connected with the receipt of the money", i.e. the Money Orders in question.
On February 29, 1956, after his discharge by the Criminal Court, the appellant submitted his joining report to the Sub-Divisional Officer, Buxer, and prayed for permission to join duty. No orders were passed on that application of the appellant, for a couple of months. His suspension was continued and on July 31, 1956, a Departmental inquiry was instituted against him on these charges :--
"(1) Dishonestly receiving Rs. 1,068/- being the fine money collected and sent by three M.0s. by the S.I. of Police, Kargahar, in respect' of Criminal Case No. GR 886/TR 104 on 4-9-50 to the Court of Shri R. Singh, Judicial Magistrate, Sasaram, of whom he was the Bench Clerk.
(2) Issuing an incorrect extract of order of the Appellate Court in Criminal Appeal No. 65 of 1950 to Sliri Triloki Prasad, the then Fine Clerk, and conspiring with Shri Triloki Prasad and misappropriating Rs. 1,068/- sent by the S.I. of Police, Kargabar on 4-9-50".

The inquiry was held by the Sub-Divisional Officer, Sasaram who, after concluding it, submitted his report to the District Magistrate, Sasaram, who was the authority competent to appoint and remove the appellant from service. The District Magistrate, ultimately, by his order, dated March 19, 1950, held: "The conduct of Shri Nand Kishore Prasad is highly suspicious but for insufficient evidence proceeding against him has to be dropped". This order of the District Magistrate was communicated to the appellant as per Memo. No. 278, dated April 19, 1960.

More than two months thereafter, a letter, dated June 29, 1960, was sent by the P.A. to the Commissioner of Patna Division, calling upon the appellant to show cause as to why he should not be dismissed from service. To this "show- cause" letter, the appellant submitted a detailed reply, representing inter alia, that since the Magistrate had found him not guilty, in the absence of fresh or further evidence showing that he had received the Money Orders, it would be violative of the elementary principles of natural justice, to punish him in the departmental proceedings by using a portion only of the judgment of the Court of law. He extracted copiously from the judgment of the Magistrate to show that the charges against him were baseless. He reiterated that he had not received the amount of the Money Orders, and the initials on the Money Order coupons were not his.

The Commissioner reversed the order of Lb(,, District Magistrate and directed removal of the appellant from service. Since a good 712 deal of argument before us centres around the legality of the Commissioner's order, dated October 8, 1960, it will be worthwhile to quote its material portion in extenso :

"Although from the evidence recorded against this Clerk it appears that there was no direct independent proof of embezzlement by him, yet, in my opinion, there is strong suspicion against this clerk which has also been indicated sufficiently clearly by the then trying Court, Shri A. K. Sinha, Magistrate, 1st Class, Sasaram, while passing an order of discharge against him under Section 207A of Cr. P.C. in the Criminal case against him. The Court observed as follows :
"One may suspect him about it, if at all, a Bench Clerk as he was, as the M.O. coupons purport to bear the like of his initials, but that is not enough for justifying a criminal action against him. The case is not raised beyond a stage. of suspicion, if at an, as against this accused."
"It is evident that the amount of the fine was realised and sent to the Magistrate and it was received by Shri Nand Kishore Prasad. The fine records were with Shri Nand Kishore Prasad and Shri Triloki Prasad Sinha. and between them the amount of Rs. 1,068/was embezzled. Shri Nand Kishore Prasad appears to be thoroughly unreliable and the punishment in respect of his conduct should be deterrent in nature.
"Accordingly........ I hereby order that Shri Nand Kishore Prasad be discharged from service."

The appellant went in Revision to the Board of Revenue against the Commissioner's Order. The Board on August 31, 1963, by a short order, dismissed the Revision and affirmed the order passed by the Commissioner. This order of the Board of Revenue was communicated to him on February 14, 1964.

On September 23, 1964, the appellant moved the High Court at Patna by a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution, challenging his removal from service. The learned Judges of the High Court while observing that the Commissioner's Order was somewhat cryptic and did not make a specific and pointed reference to the evidence against the writ petitioner, noted that the Commissioner had drawn his conclusion about the guilt of the petitioner "from the fact that the petitioner was in actual charge of the fine record and it was his duty to take necessary action for realization of the fine until due payment thereof". The H High Court further observed that "the mere fact that the Commissioner has not discussed in detail the circumstantial evidence against the petitioner, was not a sufficient ground for setting aside the im-

713

pugned order, because this aspect has been more elaborately referred to in the impugned order of the Board of Revenue. The High Court concluded that since there was some evidence- albeit not sufficient for conviction in t criminal court-in support of the impugned order, it could not be quashed in proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution. In the result, the writ petition was dismissed.

Learned counsel for the appellant contends that the impugned orders are based merely on suspicions and conjectures, and not on any evidence whatever, and as such, are bad in law. It is submitted that the High Court had over-stepped its writ jurisdiction inasmuch as it reappraised the evidence, and reconstructed the case as if it were itself a domestic tribunal, reviewing in appeal the orders of the Commissioner and the Board of Revenue.

As against this, counsel for the Respondent submits that the High Court had. examined the evidence on the record of the domestic tribunal, not to make out a new case, but to satisfy itself that the impugned orders were based on circumstantial evidence which had been cryptically alluded to by the Commissioner and more elaborately mentioned by the Member of the Board of Revenue in the impugned order. Before dealing with the contentions canvassed, we may remind ourselves of the principles, in point, crystallised by judicial decisions. The first of these principles is that disciplinary proceedings before a domestic tribunal are of a quasi-judicial character; therefore, the minimum requirement of the rules of natural justice is that the tribunal should arrive at its conclusion on the basis of some evidence, i.e. evidential material which with some degree if definiteness points to the guilt of the delinquent in respect of the charge against him. Suspicion cannot be allowed to take the place of proof even in domestic inquiries. As pointed out by this Court in Union of India v. H. C. Goel(1) , the principle that in punishing the guilty scrupulous care must be taken to see that the innocent are not punished, applies as much to regular criminal trials as to disciplinary enquiries held under the statutory rules." The second principle, which is a corollary from the first, is, that if the disciplinary inquiry has been conducted fairly without bias or predilection, in accordance with the relevant disciplinary rules an the Constitutional provisions, the order passed by such authority cannot be interfered with in proceedings under Article 226 of the Con- stitution, merely on the ground that it was based on evidence which would be insufficient for conviction of the delinquent on the same charge at a criminal trial. The contentions in the instant case resolve into the narrow issue : Whether the impugned orders do not rest on any evidence whatever,' but merely on suspicions, conjectures and surmises.

(1 I.R. 1964 S.C. 364.

11-315SCI/78 714 A conjoint reading and analysis of the impugned orders of the Commissioner and the Member, Board of Revenue would show that they purport to rest on these primary facts :-

(a) That fine amounting to Rs. 1,068/- was realised by the Police and sent to the Court of the Magistrate, Sasaram, by money orders, where it was received on September 4, 1950.
(b) When this fine was imposed, and the aforesaid money orders. were received, the appellant (Nand Kishore Prasad) was the Bench Clerk of the Magistrate. The fine records were with Nand Kishore Prasad and it was he who used to issue distress warrants for realisation of outstanding fine.

But after 4-9-1950, he did not take further action for recovery of the fine in question, or for ensuring that the convicts suffered imprisonment in default of payment of fine inflicted on them by the Court.

(c) A "receipt" (money order coupon) has been produced "indicating that the petitioner (Nand Kishore Prasad) has received this amount".

(d) "It is clear from the circumstances of the case that the money reallied was not deposited. I see no reason to interfere with the order of discharge" (passed by the Commissioner holding that the amount of Rs. 1068/- had been embezzled between Nand Kishore Prasad, Bench Clerk, and Triloki Prasad Sinha, Fines Clerk).

It wilt be noticed that the recovery of the fine and its remittance to the Court as per money order (as set out in

(a) above) was never disputed by the appellant. He only disputed that the initials on the money order coupons purporting to be his, were not executed by him. His implied defence was that somebody who had received the amount of the money orders, had forged his (appellant's) initials on the Money Order Coupon. On this point, at the criminal trial of the appellant'. a handwriting expert was examined, who stated that no definite opinion could be given as to whether these initials were executed by Nand Kishore Prasad. The Magistrate, therefore, gave the appellant benefit of doubt on this point. But the disciplinary Tribunals (i.e. the Commissioner and the Member, Board of Revenue) have, presumably on examining the disputed initials on the Money Order Coupon (called "receipt" in the impugned order of the Board) couple with the circumstance (b), mentioned above, unanimously reached the finding that the amount of the aforesaid Money Order was received by Nand Kishore Prasad. From the appellant's conduct in not taking any action thereafter for realisation of the fine in question, they concluded that he did not do so because the fine bad been realised and the amount had been embezzled by him. It was urged before us that since the impugned orders do not specifically refer to any evidence or discuss it, they should be taken to be based on no evidence, whatever. While it is true that the impugned orders are unjustifiably brief, it is not correct that they are totally bereft of all reference to or discussion of evidence. There is in the 715 impugned orders a specific reference to the Money Order coupon which the Member of the Board of Revenue has termed as a "receipt". Indeed, the main-stay of the impugned orders is the circumstantial evidence furnished by the conduct of the appellant, in not taking any further action for the realisation of the fine.

The desirability of writing a self-contained speaking order in disciplinary proceeding culminating in an order of removal of the delinquent from service, cannot be over- emphasised. It is true that the impugned orders do not fully measure upto this devoutly desired standard. Nevertheless, they do contain a bald and general allusion to the primary facts, and a cryptic inference therefrom. There is no specific reference to or discussion of the evidence. The High Court, therefore, examined the record of the disciplinary tribunal, not with a view to make out or reconstruct a new case, but only to see whether there was some evidence of the primary facts relied upon by the domestic tribunal in support of its conclusion. We do not see any impropriety in the course adopted by the High Court. On examination of the Tribunal's record, 'he High Court found that there was oral and documentary evidence before the disciplinary tribunal; that at all times material to the imposition, realisation and receipt of the fine amounts in question, all the fine record,; in the Court of the Magistrate, Sasaram, used to remain. with the Bench Clerk, i.e., the appellant. The Inquiry Officer had examined three witnesses, namely : Triloki Prasad Sinha, Rang Bahadur Singh and Kalka Prasad. The evidence of Triloki Prasad Sinha was certainly of an accomplice character, but the evidence of Ran- Bahadur Singh, who was the Fines Clerk before Triloki Prasad Sinha, and of the Head Clerk Kalka Prasad, did not suffer from such a flaw. From their evidence, it was clear that in actual practice all the fine records, were being maintained by the Bench Clerk, and it was he who used to take all necessary steps, including the preparation and issue of distress warrants for realisation of outstanding fine. The Fines clerk made entries in the Fines Register in accordance with the intimation sent by the Bench Clerk. This practice continued till March 1951, when Mr. Gorden, the then District Magistrate directed that all fine records must be made over to the Fines Clerk by May 14, 1951. The fine amounts in question, were evidently recovered in execution of a distress-warrant, issued by the Magistrate. In view of what has been said above, it is clear that this was not a case of no evidence, but of evidence which was not adequate enough to carry conviction at a criminal trial. The High Court was, therefore, right in holding that the impugned orders did not suffer from any error of law which may warrant an interference in proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution.

In the result, the appeal meets with failure and is dismissed without any order as. to costs.

S.R.					Appeal dismissed.
716