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[Cites 15, Cited by 13]

Supreme Court of India

Mohd. Mumtaz vs Nandini Satpathy And Ors on 20 December, 1986

Equivalent citations: 1987 SCR (1) 680, 1987 SCC (1) 279, AIR 1987 SUPREME COURT 863, 1987 (1) SCC 269, 1987 CRIAPPR(SC) 57, 1987 ALLAPPCAS (CRI) 51, 1987 CALLJ 79, 1987 CURCRIJ 121, 1987 SCC(CRI) 63, 1987 IJR 298.2, 1987 CALCRILR 79, 1987 JT 28, 1987 BLJR 216, 1987 (1) CRI LC 588 AND 594, 1987 ALLCRIC 44 AND47, 1987 (1) SCC 269 AND 279, 1987 BLJR 216 AND 220, 1987 SCC(CRI) 63 AND 73, 1987 JT 28 AND 32, 1986 4 SUPREME 508, (1987) SC CR R 214, 1987 CALCRILR 47, (1987) 1 SCJ 232, (1987) 1 CRILC 588, (1987) 4 SUPREME 508, (1987) SIM LC 83, (1987) CRILC 111, (1987) ALLCRIR 181, (1987) ALLCRIC 44

Author: E.S. Venkataramiah

Bench: E.S. Venkataramiah, P.N. Bhagwati, V. Khalid, G.L. Oza

           PETITIONER:
MOHD. MUMTAZ

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
NANDINI SATPATHY AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT20/12/1986

BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
KHALID, V. (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
NATRAJAN, S. (J)

CITATION:
 1987 SCR  (1) 680	  1987 SCC  (1) 279
 JT 1987 (1)	28


ACT:
    Criminal  Procedure	 Code,	1973:  ss.321  &  329--Nolle
prosequi-Withdrawal from prosecution--Right of public prose-
cutor--Charge  framed  against	accused--Withdrawal  whether
legal.



HEADNOTE:
    Section  321  Criminal Procedure Code, 1973	 empowers  a
Public	Prosecutor incharge of a case to withdraw  with	 the
consent	 of the court from the prosecution of any person  in
respect	 of any one or more of the offences for which he  is
tried, at any time before the judgment is pronounced.
    Respondent No.1 Ex-Chief Minister of Orissa, was alleged
to  have misappropriated a huge sum, said to have been	col-
lected	by District Congress Committees from various  compa-
nies  for  publication of their	 advertisements	 in  party's
souvenirs  before  the 1971 General Elections.	A  case	 was
registered  by	the Vigilance Department against her  and  a
charge-sheet submitted. The Addl. Chief Judicial  Magistrate
framed charges under ss.406,467,471 and 120 of the IPC.
    After  the 1980 General Election, the  State  Government
took  a policy decision to withdraw cases against  political
leaders	 who  were subjected to victimisation.	The  Special
Public	Prosecutor  on being satisfied that  the  charge  of
criminal breach of trust would fail against respondent	No.1
filed a petition under s.321 Cr.P.C. and sought the  permis-
sion  of the court in public interest for withdrawal of	 the
case, when the case was posted for consideration of charge.
    After  making an objective assessment of the  merits  of
the  application and being satisfied that the withdrawal  of
the  prosecution would in no way affect any public  interest
or  improve any public confidence the Addl.  Chief  Judicial
Magistrate granted consent to withdraw from the prosecution.
The  appellant's revision petition having been dismissed  by
the High Court he appealed by special leave to this Court.
Dismissing the appeal the Court,
692
HELD: Per Oza, J. (Bhagwati C.J.I. and Oza, J.)
    I. Once a charge has been framed against the accused  on
the  basis that there was ground for presuming that  he	 had
committed the offence charged against him, the Public Prose-
cutor  cannot  make an application for withdrawal  from	 the
prosecution  and the Magistrate cannot give his	 consent  to
such withdrawal on the ground that there was insufficient or
no evidence to sustain the prosecution. [698H-699B]
    2. The charge of criminal breach of trust framed against
respondent No. 1, however, was totally groundless. There was
nothing on record to indicate that the entrustment of  funds
to  her was for the specific purpose of being utilised	only
for  the  purpose of publication of  advertisements  in	 the
souvenirs.  It was not the case of the prosecution that	 any
of these amounts were handed over by any of the companies to
her. The entrustment of these amounts, if at all, was to the
souvenir  committee of the All India Congress Committee	 and
respondent  No. 1 could not be charged for utilising any  of
these  amounts for the purpose other than that for which  it
was  entrusted	to her. The charge against  her,  therefore,
could not he sustained. [699E-G]
    Instead  of permitting the prosecution to  he  withdrawn
under  s.321 the charge framed against respondent No.  1  is
quashed under s.239 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
[699H-700A]
Per Venkataramiah, J.
    I.I.  Consent  can he given under s.321 of the  Code  of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 for withdrawal from the prosecution
of a case at any time before the judgment is pronounced. The
framing	 of the charge cannot be an impediment to give	con-
sent to such withdrawal.
    1.2.  In  the instant case, the  Public  Prosecutor	 had
applied his mind to the case before applying for  withdrawal
and  the  Chief Judicial Magistrate had	 not  committed	 any
error  in giving his consent to such withdrawal.  The  order
was, therefore, fully justified."
    2. The decision in State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh  Pandey,
[1957]	SCR 279, interpreting s.494 of the Code of  Criminal
Procedure,  1898  and  the decision in R.K.  Jain  v.  State
through	 Special Police Establishment & Ors., [1980]  3	 SCR
982,  interpreting s.321 of the Code of Criminal  Procedure,
1973 do not call for any reconsideration.[694C-E]
693
Per Khalid, J.
    I.	Order of withdrawal passed by the  Additional  Chief
Judicial Magistrate is upheld. [695D]
    2.	Consent	 can  be given under s.321 of  the  Code  of
Criminal Procedure for withdrawal from the prosecution of  a
case, not only when the charge is not framed but even  after
the  charge is framed and at any time before  the  judgment.
[694H-695A]
    3. Section 239 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 is
not attracted to the facts of the case for the propriety  of
the charge framed was not at issue. [695B, C]
    Sheo  Nandan Paswan v. State of Bihar,  Criminal  Appeal
No. 241 of 1983 decided on 20th December 1986, applied.
    State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey, [1957] SCR 279	 and
R.K. Jain v. State, [1980] 3 SCR 982, referred to.
Per Natarajan, J.
    1.	The consent given by the Additional  Chief  Judicial
Magistrate  to the Special Public Prosecutor for  withdrawal
of  the prosecution suffers from no error of law, patent  or
latent. [701G]
    2.	There  is no material in the case to show  that	 the
Special	 Public	 Prosecutor was influenced by  any  improper
motives	 for  filing the application for withdrawal  of	 the
prosecution  or	 that he had acted against his will  at	 the
behest of anyone else. The Additional Chief Judicial  Magis-
trate  had bestowed judicial consideration over	 the  matter
and had thereafter passed a reasoned order. Not only he	 but
also  the High Court had found after a careful	scrutiny  of
relevant factors and circumstances, that the application for
withdrawal  of	the prosecution made by the  Special  Public
Prosecutor  fully satisfied the tests laid down by  the	 Su-
preme Court inasmuch as the Public Prosecutor had not  exer-
cised  his  executive function improperly and also  had	 not
attempted to interfere with the normal course of justice for
illegitimate reasons or purposes. [700D-E, 701.E-F]
    State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey, [1957] SCR 279	 and
R.K. Jain v. State, [1980] 3 SCR 982, referred to.



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.49 of 1983.

694

From the Judgment and Order dated May 14, 1981 of the Orissa High Court in Crl. R. No. 21 of 1981.

V.J. Francis for the Appellant.

Anil B. Divan, D.P. Singh, G.S. Chatterjee, R.K. Mehta, Salaman Khurshid, L.R. Singh and Vinoo Bhagat for the Re- spondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VENKATARAMIAH, J: I agree that this appeal has to be dismissed. I am of the view that the decision in The State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey, [1957] SCR 279 interpreting section 494 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 and the decision in R.K. Jain etc. v. State through Special Police Establishment and Others, [1980] 3. SCR 982 interpreting section 321 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 do not call for any reconsideration. I am in full agreement with the views expressed in these decisions. I am satisfied that the Public Prosecutor had applied his mind to the case before applying for withdrawal and the Chief Judicial Magis- trate has not committed any error in giving his consent to such withdrawal. Such consent can be given at any time before the judgment is pronounced. The framing of the charge cannot be an impediment to give consent to such withdrawal as it is evident from section 321(b) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.

The appeal is, therefore, dismissed.

KHALID, J: I have just received (at 3.45 p.m. on 19th December, 1986) a draft Judgment by Oza. J. in the above case. I agree with the conclusion that the appeal has to be dismissed, but not, with respect, with the reasoning con- tained in the Judgment. Since the case is listed for Judg- ment on 20th December, 1986, I do not have time to write a detailed Judgment.

The question to be decided in this appeal is the scope of Section 321 of Criminal Procedure Code. Oza, J. has set aside the permission granted by the Court to withdraw the prosecution under Section 32 1, Criminal Procedure Code, but allowed the appeal quashing the charge framed against re- spondent No. 1 under Section 239 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. I regret to state that I cannot re-concile myself with this approach. A cursory. glance at Section 32 1 will satisfy anyone that consent can be given for withdrawal from the prosecution of a case, 695 not only when the charge is not flamed, but even after the charge is framed and at any time before the Judgment. This appeal along with Criminal Appeal No. 48 of 1983 were directed to be posted before a Constitution Bench to consider the scope of Section 32 1, Criminal Procedure Code. That being so, I do not think it proper to abandon that pursuit and take refuge under Section 239 of Criminal Proce- dure Code.

In a separate Judgment to be pronounced by me in Crimi- nal Appeal No. 241 of 1983, I have outlined the scope of Section 321 of Criminal Procedure Code. What is to be decid- ed in this case is whether the order passed by the MagiS- trate under Section 32 1, Criminal Procedure Code, is proper or not. We are not called upon to consider the propriety of the charge framed and then examine the evidence and see whether the accused should be discharged or the charge framed should be upheld.

I adopt the reasons given by me in Criminal Appeal No. 241 of 1983, relying upon the decision reported in [1957] SCR 279 (State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey) and in [1980] 3 SCR 982 (R.K. Jain v. State) and uphold the order of withdrawal passed by the Additional Chief Judicial Magis- trate, Bhubaneswar, and upheld by the High Court in revi- sion, and dismiss the appeal.

OZA, J: [For himself and on behalf of Bhagwati CJ.] The present appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment of the High Court of Orissa dated 14th May 1981 in Criminal Revision No. 21 of 1981 arising out of an order dated 20th September, 1980 passed by Additional Chief Judi- cial Magistrate, Bhubaneswar allowing an application filed by the Special Public Prosecutor wherein he prayed for withdrawal from the prosecution of the Vigilance Case No. 33 of 1977 against Respondent No. 1 By the impugned judgment, the High Court dismissed Criminal Revision filed by the appellant-petitioner and confirmed the order passed by Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate.

The Vigilance Department submitted a charge-sheet against respondent No. 1 on the allegation that All India Congress Party some time before the General Election of the Parliament in the year 1971 set out a programme to raise funds for publication of Souvenir on behalf of the said party by each of the District Congress Committees under different provincial Congress Committees to educate people about the policy and programme of the Congress Party and the achievements in 696 the context of 1971 Elections. It was alleged that the Souvenir Committee was formed and huge amount was collected from different companies at Delhi and Bombay for publication of advertisements in the Souvenirs. It is further alleged that Smt. Nandini Satpathy respondent No. 1 misappropriated a sum of Rs. 1,02,200 out of this amount collected from the companies and did not take steps for asking the Companies' advertisements for publication in the Souvenirs. It is alleged that forgery was committed and Shri Ramanath Panda, respondent No. 2 was also alleged to have participated with respondent No. 1 in misappropriation of the aforesaid amount. On the information of Shri Shyamsunder Mohapatra, Ex-Member of Parliament, a case was registered by the Vigi- lance Department and ultimately a charge-sheet was submitted against respondent Nos. 1 and 2. Shri B.M. Patnaik the then Advocate General of Orissa was appointed as a Special Public Prosecutor to conduct the case. By order dated 27.9. 1979, the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate framed charges under Sections 406, 467, 471 and 120 of the I.P.C. against respondent No. 1 and under Section 406 read with Section 34- of the I.P.C. against respondent No. 2.

After the General Elections of May/June, 1980, Shri Patnaik resigned from the office.Of Advocate General and also informed the State Government that he was not inclined to continue as Special Public Prosecutor in the case against Smt. Nandini Satpathy. In fact, though the case had been fixed on a number of dates between July and November, 1980 Shri Patnaik did 'not appear in the case on any one of these dates.

Thereafter respondent No. 4 who had been appointed as Special Public Prosecutor to conduct the cases of the Vigi- lance Department under Section 24(6) of the Code of Criminal Procedure was instructed by the Government in the Vigilance Department to take charge of this case. On 5.11.80, Shri P.K. Mohanty, Advocate sent a letter to the then Advocate General Shri Gobind Das requesting him for withdrawal of this .case and by letter dated 6.11. 1980 the learned Advo- cate General Shri Gobind Das forwarded this letter of Shri P.K. Mohanty, Advocate to the Chief Secretary who endorsed the letter to Inspector General (Vigilance) asking him for his comments. I.G. of Police (Vigilance) suggested that it would be proper to obtain the views of the Law Department, and after receipt of the comments of I.G. of Police (Vigi- lance) the Chief Secretary referred the matter to the Law Department for advice and the Legal Remembrancer after considering the legal position regarding the withdrawal of the prosecution observed as under:

697
"As it sometimes happens, Political leaders are subjected to victimisation. Resort is had to law courts to harass politi- cal rivals. In view of the law laid down by the Supreme Court Government may take a policy decision to curb such political victimisation through law Courts and direct with- drawal irrespective of the question whether or not there is sufficient evidence in support of the prosecution. The instant case is one instituted against Smt. Nandini Satpathy, Ex-Chief Minister of Orissa.' It is possi- ble for Government to take notice of the intense political rivalry between Smt. Nandini Satpathy, on the one hand and the erstwhile leaders of Janta Party on the other hand that motive behind institution of such cases was political vic- timisation rather than vindication of the law. Government may suggest withdrawal of such cases to the concerned Public Prosecutor."

On the receipt of this opinion from the law Department, the file was endorsed by the Chief Secretary to the Law Minister and the Law Minister endorsed the file to the Chief Minister. After considering the matter from all angles, the Chief Minister passed an order dated 13.11.1980 that the case be withdrawn. By letter dated 15.11.1980, the I.G. (Vigilance) communicated the decision of the Government to withdraw the prosecution to the Special Public Prosecutor Shri Dibakar Bhuyan and requested him to take necessary action in the matter. After respondent No. 4 was put in charge of the case, he examined the case diary and the connected papers and on being satisfied that the charge of criminal breach of trust would fail against Smt. Nandini Satpathy, he filed an application under Section 32 1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure for withdrawal from the prosecu- tion on, having found that the charged amounts in this case are contributions to Souvenir Committee of the All India Congress Committee and that none of the members of the Central Souvenir Committee has complained of any dishonest use or fraud or injury or wrongful loss to the Committee or AICC for such non-utilisation of the funds and that the offences charged would ultimately depend upon the proof of dishonest intention or fraud or wrongfUl loss to the' Cen- tral Souvenir Committee or to the AICC. On 16.12. 1980 the Special Public Prosecutor made an application for additional ground to be added in the application for withdrawal and the additional ground alleged was that in public interest and in the changed circumstances, the State Government desired to withdraw from the prosecution.

698

After consideration of the case, the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate by order dated 20th December, 1980 recorded his consent and permitted the Special Public Prose- cutor to withdraw from the prosecution. Thereafter one Mohd. Mumtaz, the present appellant who was not a party to these proceedings filed a revision petition in the High Court of Orissa challenging the order of the Additional Chief Judi- cial Magistrate permitting withdrawal of the case. But by an order dated 14.5.81 the High Court dismissed the revision petition. Hence this appeal by special leave. The F.I.R. in this case was lodged by one Shyamsunder Mohapatra against respondents Nos. 1 and 2 alleging that in January and February 1971 certain companies had issued 49 cheques in the names of Presidents of the District Congress Committees of Orissa totalling Rs.1,08,200 for advertise- ments to be published in Souvenirs to be brought out in each district by the respective District Congress Committee. These cheques were deposited in the account of Chairman, Souvenir Committee in Canara Bank, Bhubaneswar. It is al- leged that respondent No. 1 misappropriated the amount by drawing. in favour of self-bearer 9 cheques aggregating to Rs.95,000 and two bearer cheques aggregating to Rs.32,854 in the name of respondent No. 2. It was alleged that neither advertisements were published nor the amounts returned to the companies. It is significant to note that Shri Shyamsun- der Mohapatra was neither an office-bearer of the U.P.C.C. nor of the A.I.C.C. Admittedly he was neither a member of the Central Souvenir Committee to which the money was en- trusted for transmission to the State or the District Con- gress Committee nor was he in any manner connected with any of the companies which paid the money for publication of the advertisements. Shri Shyamsunder Mohapatra lodged the com- plaint when respondent No. 1 was not the Chief Minister of the State. He had been suspended from the Congress Party for his anti-party activities when respondent No. 1 was the President of the U.P.C.C. and the Chief Minister of Orissa. It is significant that these monies were paid by various companies in the name of All India Souvenir Committee and there is no material to indicate how the All India Souvenir Committee transferred these cheques to the respective State Congress Committees or the District Congress Committees. There is no complaint also from any one of the companies that the monies paid by them were not utilised for the purpose for which they were given or were utilised for a different purpose without their consent.

Now it is difficult to appreciate how the learned Special Public 699 Prosecutor could make an application for withdrawal from the prosecution and the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate gave his consent to such withdrawal on the ground that there is no evidence to sustain the prosecution when a charge was already framed against respondent No. 1 on the basis that in the opinion of the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate who framed the charge there was ground for presuming that re- spondent No. 1 had committed the offences charged against her. There can therefore be no doubt that the withdrawal from the prosecution could not be permitted on the ground that there was insufficient' or no evidence to sustain the prosecution. But since entire record is before us and the matter has been argued at great length on :he basis of the material on record we propose to consider whether the charge was rightly framed and if we take the view that on the basis of the material on record no charge could be framed we must quash the charge against respondent No. 1.

It is clear from the material on record that various companies all over India gave monies by way of cheques to the Souvenir Committee of the All India Congress Committee. We will assume for the purpose. of argument that these amounts were given by the companies for the purpose of publication of advertisements in the souvenir which were entitled to be brought out by each District Congress Commit- tee, but there is no material on record at all to show that when these amounts were distributed by the All India Con- gress Committee to the respective provincial Congress Com- mittees and by the provincial Congress Committees in their turn to the respective District Congress Committees, the entrustment of these amounts by the All India Congress Committee was expressed to be for the specific purpose of publication of advertisements in the souvenirs. When there is nothing to indicate that the entrustment of these amounts to respondent No. 1 was for the specific purpose of being utilised only for the purpose of publication of advertise- ments in the souvenirs, it is difficult to see how any charge of criminal breach of trust can be sustained against respondent No. 1. It is not the case of the prosecution that any of these amounts were handedover by any of the companies to respondent No. 1. The entrustment of these amounts, if at all, was to the Souvenir Committee of the All India Congress Committee and respondent No. 1 could not therefore possibly be charged for utilising any of these amounts for a purpose other than that for which it was entrusted to her. We are therefore of the view that the charge framed against re- spondent No. 1 was totally groundless and we would therefore quash it.

We accordingly dismiss the appeal but instead of permitting the 700 prosecution to be withdrawn under Section 321 we quash the charge framed against respondent No. 1 under Section 239 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.

NATARAJAN, J: This is a case where the Special Public Prosecutor (Vig.) C.D. Cuttack had filed a petition under Section 321 Cr.P.C. and sought the permission of the Court for withdrawal of the case against the first respondent when the case was posted for consideration of charge. Under Section 321 Cr.P.C. a Public Prosecutor or Assistant Public Prosecutor incharge of a case may, with the consent of the court, at any time before the judgment is pronounced, with- draw from the prosecution of any person either generally or in respect of any one or more of the offences for which he is tried.

In this case the Special Public Prosecutor had set out in paras 5 and 6 of his application the relevant materials which had prevailed upon him to seek withdrawal of prosecu- tion of the case, after obtaining the consent of the Court, to subserve the interests of justice better. There is no material in the case to show that the Special Public Prose- cutor was influenced by any improper motives for filing the application for withdrawal of the prosecution or that he had acted against his will at the behest of any one else. The learned Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate has bestowed judicial consideration over the matter and has thereafter passed a reasoned order. While giving his consent for the withdrawal of the prosecution the learned Magistrate has borne in mind the principles laid down by this Court in R.K. Jain v. State, [1980] 3 SCR 982 which has followed the earlier decision of this Court in State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey, [1957] SCR 279. Before passing the order, the learned Magistrate has been fully alive to the responsibili- ty of the Court before it grants consent to an application made under Section 321 Cr.P.C. The portion extracted below from the order of the learned Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate fully reveals this position :--

"While mentioning the facts in the petition, I have already indicated the reasons for which the prosecutor does not want to prosecute. Now the Court has to consider whether consent should be given or not. The discretion as to whether consent should be given to withdraw is with the court but it should be exercised judiciously and on correct legal principles. It is not to be given as a matter of course nor the court shall surrender its own inde- pendence of judgment."
701

After making an objective assessment of the merit of the application, the learned Additional Chief Judicial Magis- trate held that the withdrawal of the prosecution "would in no way affect any public interest or improve any public confidence" and concluded as follows:-

"Considering all these circumstances if the public prosecutor most judiciously thought it proper to withdraw from the case in my opin- ion, the court should be not a stumbling block by disallowing its consent. I feel it just and proper to allow the petition".

The order of the learned Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate was affirmed, after a careful scrutiny by a learned Judge of the Orissa High Court in Crl. Rev. No. 21 of 1981 filed in the High Court. The learned Judge observed that the ratio laid down in R.K. Jain v. State (supra) "would not justify entertaining this application when a public prosecutor in his application had indicated that the evidence already collected did not support the prosecution and there was no prospect of a conviction and the appropri- ate authority had taken the view that the prosecution in the broad ends of justice need not continue".

It may be thus seen that not only the learned Magistrate but also the High Court has found, after a careful scrutiny of relevant factors and circumstances, that the application for withdrawal of the prosecution made by the Special Public Prosecutor fully satisfied the tests laid down by this Court in State of Bihar v. Ram Naresh Pandey (supra) reiterated in R.K. Jain v. State (supra) for its being allowed viz. that the executive function of the public prosecutor in applying for withdrawal of the prosecution has not been improperly exercised and that it is not an attempt to interfere with the normal course of justice for illegitimate reasons or purposes.

The appellant has failed to establish in this appeal that the consent given by the learned Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate to the Special Public Prosecutor for withdrawal of the prosecution suffers from any error of law, patent or latent. Consequently, the appeal fails and has, therefore, to be dismissed.

P.S.S.						      Appeal
dismissed.
702