04 January 1972
Supreme Court
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S. L. GOSWAMI Vs STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

Case number: Appeal (crl.) 69 of 1969


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PETITIONER: S.   L. GOSWAMI

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

DATE OF JUDGMENT04/01/1972

BENCH: REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN BENCH: REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN PALEKAR, D.G.

CITATION:  1972 AIR  716            1972 SCR  (3) 948  1972 SCC  (3)  22

ACT: Evidence-Burden  of Proof in criminal case-Prosecution  must establish  ingredients  of offence before burden  shifts  ti accused-Accused’s  burden  discharged  if  reasonable  doubt created against prosecution case.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant was Professor and Head of the  Department  of Pharmacology   and  Therapeutics  in  the  Medical   College Jabalpur.   In  connection  with a research  project  to  be carried out by him in collaboration with the Atomic  Energy- Commission  a  Double Distillation Apparatus  was  purchased from  Messrs S. K. Biswas and Co. Calcutta for Rs. 450/-  in September  1964.  In  1965 the  Indian  Council  of  Medical Research  entrusted  him with another research  project  for which  he  required a Double Distillation  apparatus  of  10 litres  capacity.  An order for the supply of the  same  was Placed  with Messrs Goverdhandas Desai Pvt.   Ltd.   Bombay. They  were  asked  to send their  acceptance  and  bills  in triplicate immediately.  Messrs Goverdhandas aforesaid  sent their acceptance and bills in triplicate for Rs. 969710.   A draft for that sum was issued by the Accounts officer Indian Council of Medical Research in favour of Messrs Goverdhandas and  was received by the appellant on April 12,  1965.   The appellant  thereafter wrote to Messrs Goverdhandas  that  he did  not want the apparatus as shown in the sketch shown  by them but wanted it according to the original order placed by him.  Messrs Goverdhandas replied expressing their inability to  supply the same.  In May 1965 the appellant happened  to be  in Bombay.  He asked Messrs Goverdhandas to  accept  the draft  for  Rs. 969 in their favour and to  issue  a  bearer cheque for the same amount to him so that he could  purchase the apparatus required by him in Bombay.  A receipt for  the draft was given to the appellant by Messrs Goverdhandas  and he  issued a receipt for the cheque to them.  The  appellant was  subsequently tried for misappropriation of the  amount. According  to  the  prosecution  he  did  not  purchase  any apparatus  in  Bombay  and continued to  use  the  apparatus earlier purchased from Calcutta.  According to the appellant however, he contracted one Rasiklal Shah (DW3). a partner of Messrs  Scientific  Sales Syndicate who after  a  telephonic conversation  wrote to him a letter introducing one  D’Souza

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who  could  supply  the  apparatus  to  the  appellant.  The appellant  claimed  that  he purchased  the  apparatus  from D’Souza. obtained a receipt for the amount paid and  brought the  apparatus  to Jabalpur and used it in  his  laboratory. The bill given to the appellant by D’Souza bore the name  of M.B.  Corporation.  An apparatus Art.  A was seized  by  the police,  from the appellant’s laboratory which according  to the  prosecution  was the apparatus purchased  in  1964  but according to the appellant was the one purchased in  Bombay. The appellant produced before the investigating officer  the letter  written by Rasiklal Shah as well as other  documents connected,  according to him, with the purchase.  ’Me  trial court convicted the appellant of offences under ss., 409 and 420 I.P.C. and s. 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption  Act. The  High Court dismissed his appeal.  This Court in  appeal by special leave, HELD  :  ’The  onus of proving all  the  ingredients  of  an offence is always upon the prosecution and at no stage  does it  shift to the accused.  It is no part of the  prosecution duty  to  somehow hook the crook.  Even in cases  where  the defence of the accused does not appear to be credible  949 or  is  palpably false that burden does not become  any  the less.  it  is only when this burden is discharged  that it will  be  for  the  accused to  explain  or  controvert  the essential  elements  in  the prosecution  case  which  would negative it.  It is not however for the accused even at  the initial stage to prove something which has to be  eliminated by  the  prosecution  to establish the  ingredients  of  the offence  with  which  he is charged, and even  if  the  onus shifts upon the accused and the accused has to establish his plea,  the standard of proof is not the same as  that  which rests  upon the prosecution.  Where the onus shifts  to  the accused,  and the evidence on his behalf  probabilities  the plea he will be entitled to the benefit of reasonable doubt. [954 C-E] In  the present case the High Court itself held that it  was not possible on the evidence of the prosecution witnesses to hold  that the apparatus Art.  A could be identified as  the one purchased in September 1964.  The oral evidence produced by the appellant to the effect that a new apparatus had been purchased in 1965 was wrongly rejected by the courts  below. The  evidence  of  DW3 regarding the  enquiry  made  by  the appellant  for  a  double  distillation  apparatus  and  his sending  D’Souza  with  a  plant  which  conformed  to   the specifications given by the appellant and sending it with  a covering  letter  could  not be assailed and  had  not  been rejected  by the High Court.  There was no  suggestion  that this letter was fabricated or got up sub equently.  Once the genuineness  of the letter sent by DW3 to the appellant  was believed it corroborated his plea., Once the probability  of the  accused’s  plea  is established he must  be  given  the benefit  of  doubt.  The appellant had at the  very  initial stage  even  before  the  F.I.R.  was  issued  produced  the original  receipt  and  given  a copy of  the  same  to  the investigating officer.  This will indicate that the bill and the receipt were genuine.  The appellant was not responsible if  no such firm as M.B. Corporation actually existed and  a spurious  bill (assuming that it was so) was given  to  him, [958 G.H; 962 D; 963 B-D] On the facts and circumstances of the case the appellant had established  his  plea and the courts below  were  wrong  in holding that he had failed to discharge the burden of  proof that lay upon him.

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JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No, 69  of 1969. Appeal  by Special Leave from the judgment and  order  dated January  24,  1969  of  the Madhya  Pradesh  High  Court  in Criminal Appeal No. 942 of 1968. A.   S. R. Chari, R.  Nagaratnam, S. K.  Mehta, K. L.  Mehta and K.    R. Nagaraja, for the appellant. I.   N. Shroff and M. N. Shroff for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by P.   Jaganmohan Reddy, J.The appellant who was Professor and Head  of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics  in the  Medical College, Jabalpur, has been convicted  by  the Special  Judge, Jabalpur under s. 5(1)(d) read with s.  5(2) of  the Prevention of Corruption Act to one year’s  rigorous imprisonments  and  a fine of Rs. 1 000 and  in  default  to undergo  rigorous  imprisonment for three  months.   He  was further convicted of offence@ 13-L736Sup CI/72 950 under  ss. 409 and 420 I.P.C. and was awarded  sentences  of six months rigorous imprisonment in respect of each of them. All  the  sentences were directed to run  concurrently.   An appeal  against  this conviction and sentence  to  the  High Court  of Madhya Pradesh was dismissed.  This appeal  is  by special leave. Shortly  stated  the  case of the prosecution  is  that  the appellant who was employed in the Medical College, Jabalpur, with  the  permission of the Government  of  Madhya  Pradesh given  on  December 20, 1962, accepted  a  grant-in-aid  for carrying out a research project entitled "Study of Manganese in Health and Disease by Neutron Activation Analysis".  This Research Project was to be carried on in collaboration  with the Atomic Energy Commission of the Government of India  for three  years  1963-64, 1964-65 and 1965-66.   The  appellant began his research work in July 1963 and sometime thereafter on  September  30, 1964, an instrument for  distillation  of water  known  as  the  Stadler  Still  Double   Distillation Apparatus  was purchased from Messrs S. K. Biswas &  Company of  Calcutta a firm of scientific instruments  manufacturers and  dealers of Calcutta, for Rs. 450.  On April  11,  1964, the Indian Council of Medical Research known as the 1.C.M.R. entrusted  him  with  the research  project  on  "Effect  of Hypoxia and Decompression on Body Temperature as function of Adaptation  to Hypoxia at various altitude".  The terms  and conditions  of grant-in-aid were mentioned in  the  circular letter Ext.  P-32 dated April 11, 1964, and were current for the  years  1965-66  and, 1966-67.   For  this  project  the appellant  wanted  to purchase another  double  distillation apparatus  and  after inquiry from several firms  placed  an order  with Messrs Goverdhandas Desai Private  Ltd.   Bombay (hereinafter called ’Messrs Goverdhandas’) as per Ext.   P-5 dated  February 20, 1965 for a double  distillation  appara- tus,  horizontal  type, Double Stage,  capacity  10  litres, pyrex  glass  for Rs. 890 and asked them to  inform  him  of their acceptance telegraphically and send triplicate  bills in advance.  Messrs Goverdhandas sent wire Ext.  P-6 and the advance bills Exts.  P-8, P-9, and P-10 to the appellant  on March  3,  1965.  This apparatus was entered  in  the  stock register  of the 1.C.M.R. Hypoxia Enquiry as per Ext.   P-44 in  accordance with the details shown in the bills  and  the triplicate  bills for Rs. 969.10 inclusive of sales-tax  and packing and freight charges were presented for payment.   It may  be  mentioned at this stage that the appellant  was  on

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leave  from  February 9, 1965 to March 20, 1965  because  of heart  trouble  and the inquiry and the  order  were  placed during   that   period.   A  draft  in  favour   of   Messrs Goverdhandas   was  subsequently  issued  by  the   Accounts Officer, 1.C.M.R. and was received by the appellant on April 12, 1965.  On the same day the appellant wrote a letter Ext. P-16 to Messrs Goverdhandas saying that he did not want  the appar atus as shown in the sketch sent by them but wanted it  951 according   to  the  original  order  placed  by  him.    He therefore. requested them to expedite the order urgently  as he  had,  received  the payment against the  bills  and  was withholding the same for want of apparatus.  As the firm was not  able to supply the apparatus as per the  specifications the  order was cancelled by letter Ext.  P-17’  dated  April 24,  1965.  Thereafter the appellant was in  Bombay  between May  15,  1965  and May 25, 1965 where he  had  zone  for  a medical check-up and was staying in the M.L.As. Rest  House. On  May  17,  1965, he met Mr. Patel a  Director  of  Messrs Goverdhandas  and asked him into receive the draft and  give him  a  cheque  in  order to  enable  him  to  purchase  the apparatus he wanted from the Bombay market.  This was agreed to,  and accordingly the draft was handed over to Mr.  Patel and a receipt Ext.  P-24 was obtained from him on behalf  of Messrs  Goverdhandas.  At the same time the  appellant  also passed  a  receipt for the bearer cheque which  he  received from  Mr.  Patel for the same amount.  On the same  day  the appellant  telephoned to one Rasiklal Shah a partner of  the Scientific  Sales Syndicate D.W. 3 and enquired  whether  he could   supply   the   distillation   plant   as   per   the specifications  given by him.  D.W. 3 said he did  not  have it.   Later, however, one D’souza a broker who  was  sitting with  D.W. 3 at the time informed him that he  could  supply the  instrument  wanted by the appellant.  D.W.  3  says  he tried to ring the appellant back but could not get any reply so  he  sent  D’souza  with the  apparatus  along  with  the introductory letter copies of which are Ext.  P-70 and D-  1 3.  According to the appellant on the same day the man  sent by  Rasiklal Shah is said to have brought the apparatus  the cost of which was Rs. 989.35. The appellant paid the  money, obtained a receipt and brought it to Jabalpur. The crucial question in this case is whether the accused  as alleged by the prosecution did not buy another apparatus for which  he had received a draft from the I.C.R. But  in  fact has  been  carrying  on  the  work  with  the   distillation apparatus  purchased from Messrs S. K. Biswas &  Company  in September 1964, for the project for which he was receiving a grant-in-aid  from  the  Atomic  Energy  Commission  of  the Government of India, by pretending that it is the  apparatus which he had purchased in Bombay.  By this device it is said the  appellant has misappropriated the amount of  the  draft sent by the 1.C.M.R. There are in this case certain undisputed facts which are:- (1)  That a double distillation apparatus was purchased  for the  project of the Atomic Energy Commission from Messrs  S. K.  Biswa’s & Company on September 30, 1964, and in  respect of  which  entries were made in the stock  register  of  the Atomic Energy Commission. 952 (2)  That  the order for the purchase of the  second  double stage distillation plant was placed with Messrs Goverdhandas which was accepted by them on March 3, 1965.  This firm  had along  with the acceptance sent a packing note and bills  in triplicate on the strength of which a claim was made to  the 1.C.M.R.  which  issued a demand draft in favour  of  Messrs

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Goverdhandas.    The  demand  draft  was  received  by   the appellant on April 12, 1965.  Chokasey P.W. 21 made  entries in the stock register of the 1.C.M.R. that the apparatus was received  as soon as the Us were received and submitted  for payment. (3)  The  appellant on the same day, i.e. April 12, 1965  as indicated  in  Ext.  P-16 had informed  Messrs  Goverdhandas that the sketch sent by them wag not in accordance with  the original order and while informing them that he had received payment  against  the bills asked them  urgently  to  inform whether   they  could  supply  the  apparatus  as  per   the specifications. (4)  That  inasmuch as Messrs Goverdhandas could not  supply the  apparatus  as  per the  specifications  the  order  was cancelled on April 24, 1965 by letter Ext.  P-17. (5)  That  the appellant went to Bombay on May 17, 1965  and handed  over  the  demand draft issued by  the  I.C.M.R.  in favour  of Messrs Goverdhandas to Mr. Patel and  obtained  a receipt  from him.  The appellant also obtained from  Messrs Goverdhandas  a bearer cheque for the same amount for  which he gave a receipt to Mr. Patel and cashed the cheque. It  appears  from the first information  report  Ext.   P-46 dated   August   12,  1966,  that  during  the   course   of investigation on information received through a source  Shri Shyam  Biharilal Shrivastava, Deputy Superintendent  of  the Special  Police Establishment, Jabalpur, came to  know  that the  appellant  the Head of the Pharmacology  Department  in charge  of  the Research Laboratory had placed an  order  on February  20 1965 for purchasing a  distillation  apparatus, horizontal  type,  double stage, capacity  10  litres  pyrex valued at Rs. 969-10 from Messrs Goverdhandas in  connection with  research of ’Hypoxia Enquiry’ entrusted to him by  the I.C.M.R., New Delhi, and he had, written to the said firm to send bill in advance.  On receiving three copies of the bill from  the firm, it was shown in the stock register that  the said  distillation  apparatus was received when in  fact  no such  type of apparatus was at all purchased from  the  said firm.   He  then  sent two copies of the said  bill  to  the I.C.M.R.New Delhi and acquired a demand draft for Rs. 969-10 from  it.  What the prosecution has not disclosed either  in the F.I.R. or in the chargesheet filed against the appellant is that the appellant during the course of the investigation had stated that he had in fact purchased the 953 double  stage  distillation plant in Bombay on  May  17,1965 from  out of the account of the bearer cheque received  from Messrs Goverdhandas in exchange for the demand, draft handed over  to their Mr. Patel.  Nor did the  prosecution  mention either  the fact that the appellant had obtained  a  receipt from Messrs Goverdhandas for the demand draft handed over to them  or that he had given a receipt for the  bearer  cheque obtained in exchange by him from Messrs Goverdhandas.  There was also no mention in the said document that the  appellant had  handed  over a copy of the receipt for payment  of  Rs. 989-35  for the purchase of the other apparatus on  May  17, 1965, to the investigating officer and had informed him that Rasiklal  Shah  had sent some one with the  apparatus  along with the introductory letter dated May 17, 1965.  It is  not as  if  the  investigating  officer  had  not  verified  the information  given by the appellant that Rasiklal  Shah  had given  such  a  letter, because a copy of  that  letter  was seized from the Scientific Sales Syndicate, even before  the F.I.R.  was issued and the charge-sheet was filed.   It  was only  after the accused had made an application  during  the trial on September 16, 1968, for summoning Rasiklal Shah and

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requesting  the  Court to call for the copy  of  the  letter seized by R. N. Dube, Deputy Superintendent of Police,  from Rasiklal  Shah  under  a seizure memo,  that  the  copy  was produced  by the prosecution.  The accused in his  statement under  s.  342 of the Code of  Criminal  Procedure  produced another  copy  of this letter as well as the bill  with  the original receipt a copy of which had been handed over to the investigating  officer  even before the F.I.R.  was  issued. Once   these  facts  had  come  to  the  knowledge  of   the investigating  officer, it was his duty to have placed  them before the Court.  In the absence of such a disclosure it is contended by the learned advocate for the appellant that for the  prosecution to bring home the offence to the  appellant beyond a reasonable doubt, it should also establish that the appellant  did not in fact purchase the apparatus  and  that the said documents were spurious and got up for the  purpose of  the  defence.  The burden of establishing  this,  it  is averred,  is  also  upon the prosecution and  not  upon  the defence  because  unless the probability  of  the  appellant having  purchased  the  apparatus is  eliminated,  the  case against  the  appellant  cannot be said  to  be  established beyond a reasonable doubt. It  may,  however, be pointed out that in  determining  this question  the Special Judge as well as the High Court  seem to  have laid greater emphasis on the fact that the  accused had  not  proved  that he had  purchased  the  apparatus  as contended  by him.  While no doubt the question whether  the accused purchased the apparatus in Bombay with the money  he got  under  the draft issued by the I.C.M.R.  in  favour  of Messrs Goverdhandas may have to be 954 established  by the accused, he can take full  advantage  of the   circumstances  in  the  prosecution  case  itself   to probabilise his plea that he did.  The High Court posed  the question for determiation as follows :               "Thus,  the  short,  question  that  fell  for               determination by the Special Judge was whether               the amount received back by the appellant from               Messrs   Goverdhandas  Desai  of  Bombay   was               utilised  or  not  by him  in  purchasing  the               apparatus  as stated by him and sought  to  be               proved  by  him, burden of which fact  was  on               him, through his defence witnesses." This approach both of the Special Judge as well as the  High Court is not altogether correct one.  In our view, the  onus of proving all the ingredients of an offence is always ;upon the  prosecution  and  at  no stage does  it  shift  to  the accused.   It is no part of the prosecution duty to  somehow hook  the  crook.  Even in cases where the  defence  of  the accused does not appear to be credible or is Palpably  false that  burden does not become any the less.  It is only  when this burden is discharged that it will be for the accused to explain   or  controvert  the  essential  elements  in   the prosecution case which would negative it.  It is not however for the accused even at the initial stage to prove something which  has to be eliminated by the prosecution to  establish the ingredients of the offence with which he is charged, and even if the onus shifts upon the accused and the accused has to establish his plea, the standard of proof is not the same as  that which rests. upon the prosecution.  Where the  onus shifts  to  the  accused, and the  evidence  on  his  behalf probabilises the plea he will be entitled to the benefit  of reasonable doubt. In  this  case the prosecution seeks to establish  the  case against  the appellant by showing-(1) that there is no  firm

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by the name of M.B. Corporation from which the appellant  is said  to have purchased the apparatus on May 17,  1965;  and (2)   that  the  distillation  apparatus  which  was   first purchased  in September 1964 is the same as Article A  which the  Special  Police  had  seized and  not  that  which  the appellant  alleges  he  had  purchased  and  (3)  that   the apparatus  purchased in September 1964 which had been  shown as  broken on February 1, 1965 and written off has  been  in fact  not  broken  but  has been  entered  as  such  in  the registers fraudulently. The evidence on behalf of the prosecution can be  classified under three main heads Firstly with regard to the entry in the stock register  that the double distillation apparatus purchased in separate 1964 was broken and written off;  955 Second   that  the distillation apparatus purchased  in  May 1965  was the one which was being used in the Laboratory  by the appellant and is the same as Article A which was  seized by the Special Police  and Thirdly,  that there was no firm by the name of M.B.  CorPo- ration  from which the accused is alleged to have  purchased the subsequent distillation plant on May 17, 1965, and  that he did not in reality purchase it. The first allegation is sought to be established by  Kamlesh Grover  P.W.  22, who was working on the  post  of  Research Assistant  In  the  Pathology  Department  of  the   Medical College,  Jabalpur  from October 1, 1964  to  September  30, 1965.   The  witness was posted from October 1,  1965  as  a Senior  Scientific Assistant in the research of  the  Atomic Energy Commission and from December 15, 1965 in the  HyPoxia Enquiry  and was working under the appellant.  According  to her,  although  it  was  not part of  her  duties,  she  was required to do clerical work as there were no other  persons and  that as the appellant told her that some  articles  had been broken and the persons who were working previously  had not  made  entries  she should make the same as  she  was  a Research Assistant.  Because of this, she made the entry and as  far  as she could remember it, that entry  was  made  on September  19, 1966.  Till this stage she made no  assertion that  she was asked to do something which to  her  knowledge was false.  The learned Advocate for the prosecution however put  her  a question which we think is in the  nature  of  a cross-examination  designed to support the  allegation  that she did not make the entry willingly.  This was :               "Question:-Whether  Dr. Goswami asked  you  to               sign thereon or not ?               Answer:-Dr.  Goswami asked me to sign thereon,               but I refused to sign." Even  then  she said that the appellant asked her to  get  a copy  made thereon because the breakage register was for  be sent  and  accordingly she made the entry which was  in  her handwriting  and she signed thereon.  It was then  that  she said that. the appellant had asked her to put the same  date in  her signature, on which he told her that  the  apparatus was  broken.   She identified the appellant’s  initials  and asserts that she prepared the breakage register on September 19,  1966.   This  evidence  does  not  establish  that  the distillation apparatus was not in fact broken.  However,  in cross-examination  she  was  asked  whether  she  saw,   the distillation  apparatus,  before  she was  deputed  to  the. Hypoxia Enquiry and her answer, was that she 956 does  not remember and then said: "Wait for a  minute",  and after  trying to recollect her memory she answered that  she

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saw the apparatus.  But she does not know whether there  was any  monogram  on  that apparatus and claims  that  she  can identify  if two or three apparatuses of the same  type  are kept  because of their being old or new.  Again she says  if two  or three apparatuses are kept, it will be difficult  to identify.  When asked whether she kept a note of it anywhere in respect of the breakage or was speaking from memory,  she said  that she had not kept a note thereof any-.  where  but remembered  it  because  the  appellant  had  returned  from foreign  tour  at  that  time,  and  had  joined  on  Monday September  11,  1966.   She  said  that  Shri  Dube,  Deputy Superintendent  of  Police made enquiry from  her  in  March 1967,  which she stated was on the basis of the note in  her diary  Ext.   D-9 that on September 19, 1966  the  appellant called her in his room and asked her to prepare accounts  of the  articles  of the Atomic Energy Come mission.   She  had told Dube, Deputy Superintendent of Police, about the  note- book.   This  was in direct contradiction  of  her  previous denial  that  she had kept a note of it.   Her  evidence  in respect of this note-book was not accepted by both the Trial Court  as well as the High Court.  It would appear that  she having entered in the register that the apparatus was broken and  written  off  is really anxious  to  exculpate  herself because she was probably made to believe that it was in fact not  broken  and  she was made to  do  something  which  was untrue.  This anxiety dominates her evidence which read as a whole  does not inspire confidence and gives the  impression that she was trying to put a sinister interpretation of what may  appear to have been probably true.  For  instance,  she says that she realised that she had to make an entry of  the article as broken and thought over it very much.  After that she started to note down in her note book and told this fact to  some  other men in the Department in the  general  talk. She  informed Mr. Rao, Dr. Goswami and Dr. Harshwardhan  who were  sitting there.  Though she first admits that  she  did not  tell them that the appellant had got an entry  made  by her in the stock register and got breakage register prepared by her, she later says that she told them that  distillation plant  was shown as broken.  It was then that the  appellant called her in the office and said that breakage register was to be prepared and sent to the Atomic Energy Commission  and asked  her  to prepare the register and make  entry  in  the stock register.  None of the witnesses named by her  however say anything about her having informed them. That the distillation apparatus purchased in September  1964 was  the  same as Article A has been spoken  to  by  several witnesses with which we will presently deal.  But before  we do  so, it is necessary to notice that according  to  Nirodh Ranjan  Ghosb  P.W.  13, Manager of Messrs S.  K.  Biswas  & Company a similar apparatus 957 as  the  one  supplied by them to  the  appellant  could  be purchased  also  in Bombay, so that the probability  of  the accused  having  purchased  a  similar  apparatus  with  the markings  of Messrs S. K. Biswas & Company in Bombay  cannot be  ruled  out.  This witness, however, does  not  say  that Article  A  is  the  same as the  one  which  his  firm  had supplied.   It  may  be  mentioned that  Mr.  Dube  who  was investigating the offence against the accused had written  a letter  to Messrs.  S. K. Biswas & Company on  December  30, 1966,  enquiring  whether  the type  of  the  stadler  still supplied by them was available in the Bombay market, whether they were supplied to M/s M. B. Corporation, Nagar Niwas  C. P. Tank Road, Bombay-47 for sale and whether some body  from their  firm  could identify the apparatus  supplied  to  the

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Jabalpur  Medical  College.   In  answer  to  these  queries Messrs.   Biswas & Company wrote to Dube that they  had  not supplied  the  type  of  stadler still  to  Messrs.   M.  B. Corporation  which  however may be available in  the  Bombay market  and  that  it  was  not  possible  to  identify  the apparatus supplied to the Jabalpur Medical College. Even  the High Court, after considering the evidence of  Dr. Rajkumar  Gupta, P.W. 15, working as a Demonstrator  in  the Medical  College, under the appellant since the  year  1958, Shri  A.  S. Venkat Subbarao P.W. 16  working  as  Assistant Professor in the Department of Pharmacology Medical College, during  the  relevant period, and Dr. Harshwardhan  P.W.  19 working  as Demonstrator in the Department  of  Pharmacology during  the relevant time observed that all these  witnesses have  admitted that they are unable- to identify the  double distillation  apparatus from another apparatus of  the  same quality  and same markings.  There is also the  evidence  of other  witnesses,  namely, B. P. Namdeo P.W. 20  a  research scholar,  M. L. Chokasey, P.W. 21 a Laboratory Assistant  in the Research Scheme & a Lower Division Clerk, Jamund  Prasad Khare  P.W. 23 a Laboratory Assistant, and Rashid Khan  P.W. 24  a Laboratory Assistant who said that they  were  working during the relevant period in the research work entrusted to the  appellant  by  the  Atomic  Energy  Commission  of  the Government of India and the I.C.M.R. These witnesses deposed about having seen Article A in the Laboratory, first in  the Laboratory opposite to the appellant’s room,, though one  of them  Chokasey P.W. 21 said that be saw it in the  verandah, which was later shifted into another room.  Chokasey says he did  not  disclose to any body and only did so when  he  re- ceived  the summons and gave his evidence.  If so,  how  did the police came to know is difficult to understand.   Though we   do  not pay much attention to this incongruity, we  are referring to   it because the High, Court while dealing with the evidence of D.  W. 2 rejected it merely on the ground as will be seen when we     discuss  that evidence and  at  the same time accepted the 958 eviddence  of this witness, That this witness. had a  grouse against appellant because he had asked for a certificate  of character  which the appellant is said to have given to  him but  says  thereafter  it  was snatched  from  him  and  the appellant  called for his explanation.  It was suggested  to him  he  was  making  a false  statement  that  a  character certificate  was  given  to  him  by  the  appellant.   This suggestion  appears  to  be justified is  evident  from  his admission.  He also admits that the appellant had written  a letter to Dr. Relen when he was working with him, which  was shown  to  him  by  Dr. Relen.   That  letter  is  from  the Superintendent,  Medical  College,  asking  for   Chokasey’s explanation.  It says               "Your  former employer in the I.C.M.R.  Scheme               who  is the Professor of Pharmacology as  well               reports   that  you  had  been  indulging   in               derogatory activities against him in the sense               that you were typing the application on behalf               of  Shri J.P. Khare while in this  office  and               from the typewriter of this office.               Please  let  me  know why you  should  not  be               strictly  warned.   Your  explanation   should               reach to this office within 24 hours from  the               date of receipt of this memo." Jamuna  Prasad Khare P.W. 23 was working in  the  Department from  august  5,  1964 to October 30,  1965,  but  the  work started  only three or four months thereafter that  is  from

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November  or  December.   He  says  that  the   distillation apparatus received from Messrs.  Biswas & Company was  there upto  May-June 1965.  This witness on his own admission  was dismissed by  the appellant and was given service  by  the Dean  of  the  Medical College.  The appellant  had  made  a complaint  against him to the Director of  Medical  Services and was unemployed when Dube made enquiry of him. about  the double distillation apparatus.  Even though he wrote to  the I.C.M.R.  about the termination of his services he  admitted that he did not write anything therein regarding this double distillation apparatus. The  other witnesses also are not in a position to  identify the  apparatus as the one which was purchased  in  September 1964.   In our view, when as clearly admitted by the  senior members  of  the staff working in the Laboratory  for  quite some  time that they could not identify that Article  A  was the  same  as  that purchased in  September  1964,  it  is difficult  to believe that there two witnesses or any  other witnesses  could  have done so, particularly when  the  High Court  itself held that it was not possible on the  evidence of  the three witnesses to which we have referred  that  the apparatus  could  be  identified, as the  one  purchased  in September 1964. On   the  other  hand  there  is  the  evidence  of  A.   S. Venkatsubbarao  P-W. l6 which clearly indicates  that  there was another double  959 distillation  apparatus  apart  from  Article  A,  the  one, purchased  in, September 1964.  In the  examination-in-chief itself,  the witness says that from 1964 till the  apparatus was  packed during the period one more  double  distillation apparatus wad received in the Department to the best of- his knowledge for  ’Me apparatus was in use few days till it was packed  and taken away.  The apparatus was packed,  when  it was seized and that it is Article.  This admission not  only negatives  the  prosecution  case  that  no  apparatus   was purchased  in  May  1965 as alleged by  the  appellant,  but definitely  probabilises it.  That apart, there  is  another circumstance which goes to support the statement of P.W.  16 that  there was another double distillation apparatus  which is  not the same as the one purchased in September 1964  and which could, be Article A. It  is  seen  that  the apparatus  which  was  purchased  in September   1964  though  it  was  said  to  be   a   double distillation apparatus it cost only Rs. 486-62 but a similar distillation  apparatus said to have been purchased  in  May 1965  by  the  appellant cost Rs.  969-10.   If  these  two, apparatuses  are similar, then the cost of the one  said  to have been purchased in May 1965 has doubled within one  year which,  prima facie, raises doubts about the genuineness  of the transaction.  A closer scrutiny however would show  that the  apparatus  purchased  in September  1964  from  Messrs. Biswas & Company may not be of the same capacity as the  one said  to  have been purchased in May 1965 which  is  of  ten litre capacity.  From, a comparative statement of quotations from  different companies,, Ext.  P-38, it is apparent  that the  quotation  called  in  1965  was  for  a   distillation apparatus horizontal type capacity 10 litres for which, M/s. Unique  Trading  Corporation,  Bombay,  quoted  Rs.   925/-, Messrs.    Goverdhandas  Rs.  890/-  and  M/s.    Scientific Instrument  Company  Ltd., Allahabad Rs.  1229/-  duty  free price and Rs. 1920/,- duty paid, for which an import licence was  requested.. From Ext.  P-28-Extracts of order  register of  Messrs Goverdhandas it also appears that the price of  a single stage distillation apparatus was Rs. 450/- which  was

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the  one that was cancelled on April 24,.  1965.   Evidently Messrs.   Goverdhandas  wanted  to  sell  two  single  stage distillation apparatuses and it was because of this that the appellant had cancelled the order. We  have already seen that what was purchased from Biswas  & Company  was  a  stadler  still,  quickfit  type  of  double distillation, automatic with special type clamp.  But  there is  nothing  to show from Ext.  P-49A that it was for  a  10 litre  capacity.  Nor is there any other evidence as  fairly admitted  by the learned advocate for the  prosecution  from which  we  can  ascertains what was  the  capacity  of  that apparatus  or that of, Article A. This would leave a  lacuna in the prosecution case and probablise the appellant’s 960 -contention that the apparatus Article A is not the same  as that  ,purchased earlier for the Atomic  Energy  Commission, but is the one which he purchased in Bombay in 1965. It  is  contended by Mr. Chari for the  appellant  that  the evidence  of the prosecution must be, read in the light  of the  intense feeling of dislike and hostility  exhibited  by the  Dean of the Medical College, against the appellant  due to enmity and jealousy in his having been given projects  of national importance.  He has referred to certain evidence to show  that at every stage the Dean has been  concerned  with the  investigation.  It is not necessary to go into all  the minute  details of this controversy except to touch  on  the broad features. It is in evidence that initially the grant-in-aid was  routd through  the  Dean in 1963-64 and 1964-65,  but  later  from 1965-66  it was given direct to the appellant.   The  reason for  this  was explained by Durgacharan Chopra,  P.W.  1  1, Under Secretary to the Government of India in the Department of  Atomic Energy with headquarters at Bombay to be  due  to some trouble between the Dean and the appellant, because  of which they had decided to place the grant at the disposal of the appellant for the year 1965-66. Besides, Dr. Barat D.W. 1 whose evidence will be dealt  with latter  in his letter to Dr. Subramanian, Ext.   D-15,  says that  the appellant was treated badly.  He said that he  had leant  that the appellant was physically obstructed  by  the College  Chowkidar  when he tried to  return  the  equipment belonging  to the witness, in which the appellant  sustained minor  injuries  which he saw when he came to him  with  the apparatus.   He also says in that letter that Dr.  Chowdhary rang  him up in the evening of Monday on February 14.  1967, that Dr. Subramanian did not want the removal and return  of the  articles by the appellant saying that he cannot  under- stand  when the articles did not belong to  the  Government, and  were loaned to the appellant through him, and asks  why they  could  not be removed by the appellant  when  a  legal notice was served on him.  We have already noticed how after the  appellant  dismissed Khare P.W. 23 he  was  immediately employed  by the Dean.  All this would indicate  that  there has been a great deal of ill-will and hostility between  the appellant and the Dean. Apart from viewing the prosecution evidence in the light  of this  background,  there  is  the  defence  evidence.   This evidence  has  been summarily rejected, and,  in  our  view, without  any cogent reasons.  Dr. Barat D.W. 1 says that  he was the one who had started the research of the I.C.M.R. and Atomic  Energy Commission Projects.  He is a member  of  the executive  council  of  the Jabalpur  University  and  is  a consulting  physician.  He says that after the sudden  death of Professor Dr. Wahi from coronery heart 961

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trouble, the appellant started getting pain in the chest and he consulted him.  He had taken his E.C.G. and referred  him to  Dr. Datey, President of Cardiological Society  of  India for  a thorough check-up.  As there was some abnormality  he was  asked to go for another check-up to Bombay  from  where the appellant returned after his second check-up, some  time in  the month of May 1965.  The witness had sent his car  to bring the appellant from station and to take him to  Medical College  and the appellant had dropped in at his  place  to see  him  on  his  way to the  Medical  College.   When  the appellant came to see him two packages were lying in his car on  the  black seat by his side and the witness asked  him what those were.  The appellant told him that he had  bought some  apparatus’.   It appears that in the High  Court  some interpolation was made in this evidence which would indicate that  the  appellant had showed him  "a lass  distillation apparatus".    We   are   not  now   concerned   with   this interpolation,  but  as the evidence was recorded  it  shows that  the appellant had told the witness that he had  bought some apparatus.  After a week or two when the witness  went to  the  Medical  College  to  see  the  appellant  in   his Department he enquired from the appellant as to what he  had bought  and the appellant showed him a  double  distillation apparatus with some modification for triple distillation and the  apparatus  appeared to be new.  The witness  also  says that  the  appellant complained to him about  the  treatment given  to him by the Dean of the Medical College Dr.  B.  H. Choudhary.   On  hearing  this  complaint  the  witness  had written to the Director of Health Services, Madhya  Pradesh, Ext.   D-15,  and  forwarded a copy of  the  letter  to  the appellant for his information.  The High Court thought  that this  evidence is not direct evidence to show that really  a double distillation apparatus was purchased by the appellant in  Bombay.   With  this  bare  comment  his  evidence   was discarded, and we think, without justification, because  it is  difficult to understand how and what D.W.1 has  said  is not  direct  evidence.  What he saw, what he  observed,  and what  he  was told by the appellant when that  is  in  issue cannot, but be direct evidence. Similarly  another  witness Hamidullah Khan  D.W.2  who  was supplying  animals  for the experiments and who had  made  a clamp  for  the double distillation  apparatus  in  October- November  1964  (which  is the one obtained  from  Biswas  & Company)  was characterised as a purely chance  witness  and there  is  nothing  in  his  examination  to  show  how  the appellant happened to know that he had seen the apparatus in a  broken  condition or that he is likely to be  a  possible defence witness in this case.  This witness had gone to  the Medical  College  during the period when the  appellant  was laid up with a heart attack which was about the 1st week  of February  1965.  He says it was then that he saw the  double distillation  apparatus lying in a broken condition.   After the appellant came back from 962 Bombay in the last week of May 1965 he had again been to the Hypoxia  Laboratory  and saw the appellant fixing  a  double distillation  apparatus which was opened from  packing.   We have gone through the cross-examination of this witness  and we  find that there is nothing in that evidence which  would make it unacceptable.  There is no question of this  witness being a chance witness.  He was not only directly connected with  the  Department,  but had also made a  clamp  for  the double   distillation   apparatus  and  was   visiting   the appellant’s  office.  When asked about the broken  distilla- tion  apparatus he said that he came to know from a part  of

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the apparatus which was still attached to the clamp that  it was  broken.   From  the mere fact that  he  said  that  the appellant  had told him that day in the morning that he  was cited as a witness though he did not tell him what the case was,  his  evidence has been disbelieved.  We do  not  think that  this by itself is such as to destroy  the  substantive part of his evidence. In  any case the evidence of Rasiklal Shah D.W. 3  regarding the enquiry made by the appellant for a double  distillation apparatus  and  his  sending  D’souza  with  a  plant  which conformed to the specifications given by the appellant  and sending it with a covering letter cannot be assailed, and in fact  has not been rejected by the High Court.   It  however observed  that his evidence was not direct evidence  on  the point that a double distillation apparatus was purchased  by the  appellant on May 17, 1965.  It is true that D.W. 3  did not  know  whether in fact the appellant had  purchased  the double  distillation  apparatus.  But that he did  send  one through  D’souza with a covering letter cannot be  gainsaid. The  letter  which is an important piece of evidence  is  as follows :               "Sub Standler   Quickfit    type    Double               Distillation extra strong Pyres SKB.               We  refer to your telephonic talk and have  to               inform  you  that we are out of stock  of  the               above  cited item, but the  other party  is               having, who is coming with this letter to you,               with the Apparatus, if it serves your purpose,               you may buy the same directly from him against               cost, for Rs. 989.35 nett. only.               We  are really sorry to learn from your  phone               message  that  you are not keeping  well,  and               hope, you will be all right very soon." Nothing  has  been  urged  why this  letter  should  not  be accepted  in  evidence.  There is no suggestion  or  whisper that  it  was fabricated or got up subsequently.   Once  the genuineness of the letter sent by D.W. 3 to the appellant is believed,  it  corroborates  his  plea  that  he  did   make enquiries from Rasiklal Shah, and that Rasiklal Shah 963 had  sent a person with the apparatus for which he paid  the amount  and obtained a receipt.  It was urged  that  neither D’souza nor J. R. Patel who gave the receipt were  examined. We have had occasion to observe earlier that the standard of proof which the accused may adduce in support of his plea in defence is not the same which the prosecution is required to adduce.   Once  the. probability of the  accused’s  plea  is established, we must give him the ’benefit of doubt.   There is nothing to show that the accused fabricated the  receipt. As  we  have  pointed out, the appellant  had  at  the  very initial  stage, even before the F.I.R. was issued,  produced the  original  receipt and gave a copy of the  same  to  the investigating  officer.  This would indicate that  the  bill and the receipt were genuine. The  prosecution,  however,  has  sought  to  establish   by evidence  that there was no such firm as  M.B.  Corporation. But  the  appellant is not responsible if  a  spurious  bill (assuming  that it was so) was given to him or that he  knew that it was spurious.  This cannot therefore affect the case of   the  appellant  that  he  had  purchased   the   double distillation apparatus on May 17, 1965 and paid for it.   In fact he paid for it about Rs. 20/- more than he got from the demand  draft.  If he wanted to misappropriate the money  by producing a bogus receipt, he could have got the receipt for the  exact  amount of the draft.  It may be  mentioned  that

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Taneja  Bansilal  P.W. 14 Director-General of  the  I.C.M.R. also  admitted  that  the appellant had  come  to  Delhi  in connection  with the purchase of the apparatus and told  him that the apparatus was purchased from some firm, whose  name he  did  not  remember, but it was not the  firm  of  Messrs Goverdhandas.    In  the  circumstances  the  plea  of   the appellant is substantiated. No  doubt in this case the prosecution has established  that the appellant has drawn a bill and obtained a draft for  Rs. 969-10  before the apparatus was supplied.  But this  is  an irregularity  and does not show that he had no intention  of purchasing  the  apparatus or to misappropriate  the  money. Academicians    are   not   generally   known   for    their administrative sagacity or for being conversant with all the complicated  technical rules.  We do not by this  intend  to imply that the rules and instructions should not be complied with,  but  when it is apparent from the evidence  that  the appellant  had  no  clerical staff to  assist  him  and  was anxious  to  carry on his research work, any lapse  on  this account does not make him criminally liable. The appellant, in our view, has been the victim of suspicion probably due to the unfriendliness, hostility and enmity  of the  Dean of the Medical College, which ultimately  resulted in  his  being,  it  we  may  say  so,  subjected  to   this prosecution ’which must have 964 caused  him  great  distress  and  anguish  apart  from  the Department  being deprived of his services in a project  of national importance. We  have  no  hesitation  in holding  that  the  accused  is innocent.   The  appeal is allowed and the  convictions  and sentences in respect of the several offences are set  aside. The  bail bond will be cancelled.  The fine if paid will  be refunded. G.C.                                   Appeal allowed. 965