19 March 1971
Supreme Court
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HARIVANSH LAL MEHRA Vs STATE OF MAHARASHTRA


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PETITIONER: HARIVANSH LAL MEHRA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MAHARASHTRA

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/03/1971

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. MITTER, G.K. REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN

CITATION:  1971 AIR 1130            1971 SCR  113  1971 SCC  (2)  54

ACT: Prevention of Corruption Act 2 of 1947, s. 5(2) read with s. 5(1)  (d)--Official sending goods from Goa to  Bombay  after Goa  had become Part of Indian territory without payment  of customs  duty--No  offence is committed because  no  customs duty was leviable--Duty can be levied only by law and not by administrative instructions.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant was convicted of a charge under a. 5(2)  read with a. 5(1)   (d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act.  The allegation against him was    that by utilizing his position as  a  government servant he sent various articles  such  as Radios,  Transistors,  Clothes  etc.,  from  Goa  to  Bombay without  paying customs duty thereon.  Against the order  of the  High Court maintaining his conviction appeal was  filed in  this Court.  The question for consideration was  whether any customs duty was leviable on goods alleged to have  been sent  by  the appellant to Bombay from Goa  which  when  the goods were sent, had become a part of India. HELD:     Goa  was  liberated  on December  20,  1961.   The twelfth  amendment  to the Constitution which  received  the assent  of the President on 27th March 1962 made Goa a  part of India.  All territories that this country may acquire  in whatever manner become a part of India in view of Art.  1(3) (c). [115G-116C] According  to the prosecution the goods complained  of  were all sent from Goa to Bombay after March 27, 1962.  There was no  statute or statutory rule to show that any customs  duty had been imposed on the goods transferred from Goa to  other parts of India after December 20, 1961.  The trial court and the High Court wrongly held that certain customs duties were leviable  because of some administrative  instructions.   No tax  or duty can be levied or collected except by  authority of  law.   Moreover  no  administrative  instructions   were produced before the court, privilege being strangely claimed for   them  on  the  ground  that  they  were   confidential documents. [116C-F] The  notification  issued  in 1950 declaring  Goa  to  be  a foreign  territory and thus bringing the exports  from  that country to India within the purview of the Land Customs Act,

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could  not continue to have legal effect after Goa became  a part of India, for it then ceased to be a foreign territory. [116G] Section 5 of the Indian Tariff Act 1934 as it stood in  1950 empowered  the Government to declare any  territory  outside India  as  a  foreign  territory for  the  purpose  of  that provision.  That provision did not empower the government to declare any part of India as a foreign territory.  Once  Goa became  a  part of India the Government was  incompetent  to declare  that territory as a foreign territory.  Nor did  it appear that any such declaration was made after December 20, 1961. [117C-D] There was thus no legal basis for holding that the appellant had  utilised his official position to evade  customs  duty. His appeal must accordingly be allowed. [117E-G] 8--1 S.C. India/71 114

JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION  Criminal Appeal No. 80  of 1967. Appeal  from the judgment and order dated April 17, 1967  of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 1210 of 1965. A.S.R. Chari, M. J. Mirchandani, K. K. Jain, H. K. Puri and R.   Nagratnam, for the appellant. P.   K.  Chatterjee, B. D. Sharma and S. P. Nayar,  for  the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Hegde,  J.-The  appellant and one R. B.  Mathur  were  tried before  the learned Special Judge for Greater  Bombay  under various  charges including a charge of  conspiracy.   Mathur was  acquitted  and  the appeal against  his  acquittal  was unsuccessful.   The  appellant  was also  acquitted  of  all charges  excepting  a charge under Section  5(2)  read  with Section  5(1) (d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act.   For that   offence   he  was  sentenced   to   suffer   rigorous imprisonment for two years and pay a fine of Rs. 5,000, in., default  to  suffer further rigorous imprisonment  for  four months.   The  substance of the charge under  which  he  was convicted  is  that  he  by  utilizing  his  position  as  a Government  servant  sent various articles such  as  Radios, Transistors, Clothes etc., from Goa to Bombay without paying customs  duty.   He  was also held  guilty  of  sending  his personal  articles  in the vehicles engaged  by  the  postal department  without  paying  any charge.   The  trial  court supported its conclusion on a further ground namely that the assets  of the appellant were more than that he  could  have acquired by his known sources of income. The  charges framed against the appellant made no  reference to  the  fact that his assets were more than that  he  could have acquired by his known sources of income.  In appeal the learned.  judges  of  the High Court did not  go  into  that aspect of the case.  Nor was that aspect of the case pressed before us at the hearing.  Therefore it is not necessary  to go into that aspect.  Even otherwise that accusation appears to  be without any solid basis.  The learned Judges  of  the High  Court  also did not go into the  allegation  that  the appellant  utilised  his official position  in  sending  his personal  goods  in  the  vehicles  engaged  by  the  postal department.  The accusation is that the appellant sent  some of  his  goods  in  the  vehicles  engaged,  by  the  postal department  from Panjim in Goa to Margoa or  Sawanthwadi  or Belgaum.   These places are not very far from  Panjim.   The

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High Court held that the offence committed by the  appellant in  that  regard  if  true, is of  a  technical  nature  and therefore it thought it unnecessary to examine the  evidence relating to the same.  Evidently in its view the accusation                             115 regarding  the  sending  of some articles  in  the  vehicles engaged  by the postal department was of a  trifling  nature and  therefore  riot worth examining.  But  the  High  Court agreed  with the trial (court that the appellant was  guilty of  evading  payment  of  customs duty  and  he  did  so  by utilizing  his official position.  In order to ,examine  the correctness of this finding, it is necessary to set out  the material facts. In  1961, the appellant was working as a Senior  Superinten- ,dent  of Post Offices at Jaipur.  On December 20, 1961  Goa was liberated by the Indian Army.  Thereafter the  appellant was  ,deputed  as a Special Duty Officer to  Goa.   He  took charge  in Goa on December 25, 1961.  He assumed  additional charge  as Director of Posts and Telegraphs on May 11,  1962 and he held that office till August 11, 1962.  Thereafter he went back to Jaipur.     It  is  alleged  that  during   the period of appellant’s stay in Goa, he  made large  purchases of certain luxury articles.  Utilising his official position in  the  Posts and Telegraphs department  at  profits.   The prosecution  relied  in  support  of  that  charge  on  four different instances.  Voluminous evidence was led in support of the prosecution case.  But it is not necessary to go into that  evidence as in our opinion the charge under which  the appellant  was  convicted is without any legal  basis.   The learned  Counsel for the appellant, Mr. A. S. R.  Chari  has assailed the judgments of the High Court and the trial court on various grounds.  He contended that the evidence  adduced in,  support  of  the prosecution  case  is  unreliable  and insufficient  to suport the conviction of the appellant.  He also raised various legal pleas in support of the appeal. He contended  that as the Prevention of Corruption Act was  not in  force in Goa at the relevant time, the  appellant  could not  have  been held guilty of an offence  under  that  Act. According to him, the investigation of this case was illegal as  the  required sanction had not been obtained.   But  the most important plea taken by him is that no custom duty  was leviable  on  the  articles said to have been  sent  by  the appellant  from Goa to Bombay and as such the entire  fabric of  the prosecution case must fall to the ground.  There  is force  in  this contention.  Hence it is  not  necessary  to examine the other contentions. As mentioned earlier Goa was liberated on December 20, 1961. Twelfth  amendment  to our Constitution which  received  the assent    of  the  President on 27th March 1962 made  Goa  a part of India. It became a Union Territory. The amendment in question  is deemed to have come into force on December 20, 1961.  Hence Goa must be considered as a part of India from December  20, 1961 and indisputably at any rate  from  March 27, 1962.  Article 1 of our Constitution says :               "  1. India, that is Bharat, shall be a  Union               of States.               116               2.    The  states and the territories  thereof               shall be as specified in the First Schedule.               3.    The territory of India shall comprise-               (a)   the territories of the States ;               (b)   the  union territories specified in  the               First Schedule, and               (c)   such   other  territories  as   may   be               acquired."

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All  the  territories  that  this  country  may  acquire  in whatever  manner become part of India in view of  Article  1 (3)  (c).   Further  in the case of Goa  by  means  of  12th amendment  to the Constitution, the same is included in  the 1st Schedule.  Therefore there is no room for the contention that  Goa was not a part of India during the relevant  time. It may be noted that according to the prosecution the  goods complained  of were all sent from Goa to Bombay after  March 27, 1962. This takes us to the question whether there is any liability to  pay  customs duty when someone sent goods  from  Goa  to Bombay  in  1962.  No statute or statutory rule  was  placed before,  the  Court to show that any customs duty  had  been imposed on the goods transmitted from Goa to other parts  of India  after December 20, 1961.  The only witness who  spoke about  the liability to pay customs duties on the  goods  in question  is  P. W. 56 Shaikh, the  Dy.   Superintendent  of Central  Excise.   According to him customs  duty  on  those articles  was  leviable because  of  certain  administrative instructions.  But be refused to place those  administrative instructions before the court.  He claimed privilege on  the ground that they are confidential documents a strange claim. Stranger  still  is  that the trial court  appears  to  have accepted  that  plea.   No  tax or duty  can  be  levied  or collected except by authority of law.  Hence no customs duty was leviable on the basis of any administrative instruction. Every  levy  of  customs  duty or  any  other  tax  must  be sanctioned,  by law.  It is surprising that both  the  trial court  as  well as the High Court were of the  opinion  that certain  customs  duties  were  leviable  because  of   some administrative  instructions.  It appears that there  was  a notification  issued in the year 1950 declaring Goa to be  a foreign  territory and thus bringing the exports  from  that country  to  India within the purview of Land  Customs  Act. But that notification cannot continue to have a legal effect after  Goa  became a part of India.  On becoming a  part  of India   Goa   ceased  to  be  a  foreign   territory.    The notification in question must have been issued under Section 5  of the Indian Tariff Act, 1934 as it stood in 1950  (that section has been repealed now).  That section read:               "Where  a customs duty at any rate  prescribed               by or under this Act or any other law for  the               time being in force is               117               leviable  on any articles when imported  into,               or  any article when exported from, a port  in               India   the   Central   Government   may,   by               notification  in the official gazette,  direct               that a duty of customs at the like rate               shall  be  leviable on any such  article  when               imported  or exported, as the case may be,  by               land  from or to any territory  outside  India               which it may, by, a like notification, declare               to  be foreign territory for the  purposes  of               this section." The  notification under this section could have been  issued only  in respect of any territory outside India and  not  in respect of any part of India.  That provision empowered  the Government  to  declare  any territory outside  India  as  a foreign territory for the purposes of that provision.   That provision did not empower the Government to declare any part of India as a foreign territory.   But it gave power to  the Central Government not to treat    any   territory   outside India  as  a  foreign territory for  the  purposes  of  that provision.    To  illustrate  the  position,   the   Central

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Government could not have declared either Delhi or Bombay as a  foreign  territory  but it could have  treated  Nepal  or Bhutan  as not a foreign territory for the purposes of  that provision.   Once Goa became part of India,  the  Government was  incompetent  to  declare that territory  as  a  foreign territory.  Nor does it appear that any such declaration was made after December 20, 1961. Unfortunately the High Court allowed itself to be influenced by what it says the practical considerations.  It is  likely that there were considerable foreign goods in Goa which  had been  imported into that territory before it was  liberated, may be even without paying customs duty and those goods were available  for  being transmitted to other parts  of  India. But  this circumstance does not change the position in  law. It  is  not  necessary  for us  to  consider  whether  after integration  of Goa, the Government could have  imposed  any duty on the goods that were sent from Goa to other parts  of India.  Suffice it to say that our attention was not invited to  any  law  imposing  such duties.   That  being  so,  the conclusion  that  the appellant had  utilised  his  official position to evade customs duty must fail. In the result this appeal is allowed and the conviction  and sentence  imposed on the appellant are set aside.  He is  on bail.   His bail bond do stand cancelled, and fine  if  paid refunded. G, C. Appeal allowed. 118