30 January 1987
Supreme Court
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TARSEM LAL Vs STATE OF HARYANA

Bench: OZA,G.L. (J)
Case number: Appeal Criminal 208 of 1978


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PETITIONER: TARSEM LAL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF HARYANA

DATE OF JUDGMENT30/01/1987

BENCH: OZA, G.L. (J) BENCH: OZA, G.L. (J) DUTT, M.M. (J)

CITATION:  1987 AIR  806            1987 SCR  (2) 115  1987 SCC  (2) 648        JT 1987 (1)   334  1987 SCALE  (1)193

ACT:     Prevention  of  Corruption Act, 1947, s.5(2)  and  s.161 Indian Penal Code, 1860--Accused a patwari--Demanding  money for supply of copies from revenue record--Defence that money received  for deposit in small savings scheme--Defence  ver- sion disbelieved-Conviction and sentence upheld.

HEADNOTE:     The  appellant,  who was a Patwari, had  been  demanding money  for supply of copies from the revenue record  to  the complainant who needed them in connection with the execution of  a sale deed. The bargain was settled for  Rs.200.  Rs.50 were  paid in advance and therefore copies were  given,  but the  appellant  was to receive the balance of  Rs.  150  for which the complainant had promised to pay it on the date  of registration and accordingly on the date of registration  it was fixed up that the appellant will be available at the tea stall  near the Tehsil where this amount will be  paid.  The complainant  brought  the conduct of the  appellant  to  the notice of the Sub-Divisional Officer who sent a complaint to the Police Station, on the basis of which first  information report was lodged.     As the concerned Police Officers were not available, the Sub Divisional Officer himself laid a trap. The  complainant handed  over the currency notes initialled by the  Sub-Divi- sional Officer to the appellant. On receiving a signal,  the Sub-Divisional  Officer and the witnesses reached there  and on personal search currency notes of Rs. 150 were  recovered from the person of the appellant.     The appellant was prosecuted and convicted under  s.5(2) of  the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 and sentenced  to rigorous imprisonment for two years and fine of Rs. 150  and also  under  s.  161 of the Indian Penal  Code  to  rigorous imprisonment for one year and a fine of Rs. 100. The plea of the  appellant that the Government wanted to  collect  money from  the  land  holders for small savings  scheme  and  the Patwaris were instructed to collect this amount was rejected by the Special Judge. 116 The appeal of the appellant was dismissed by the High Court.     In further appeal to this Court, on behalf of the appel-

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lant it was contended that the copies of the revenue  record which  were needed by the complainant had already been  sup- plied  to  him and the sale deed was registered  before  the trap  and  that  the appellant had received  the  money  for depositing the same under the small savings scheme on behalf of the complainant. Partly allowing the appeal,     HELD: 1. The conviction of the appellant under s.5(2) of the  Prevention  of Corruption Act, 1947 and s. 161  of  the Indian  Penal Code is maintained. However, his  sentence  as regards sentence of imprisonment is reduced to the  sentence already  undergone but the sentence of fine  is  maintained, [120D-E]     2.  The explanation given by the appellant was  that  he had received the amount to be deposited in the small savings scheme on behalf of the complainant. He had neither made any note of this fact nor given any receipt to the  complainant. The  Sub-Divisional  Officer was a Revenue Officer  and  the appellant  being a Patwari was his subordinate.  The  normal conduct of the appellant would have been to tell him as soon as  he arrived for search that in fact he had received  this amount for depositing it under the small savings scheme. The conduct of the appellant in not coming out with this  expla- nation instantaneously goes a long way to make his  explana- tion  just  an after thought specially  when  Sub-Divisional Officer  conducted the search and recovered the amount  from his  person. The Courts below were right in discarding  this explanation of the appellant. [119G-H;120A-B]     3.  Where the receipt of the amount and Rs  recovery  is not  disputed  it  is not necessary for  this  Court  to  go through the evidence and examine it afresh. [119E]

JUDGMENT:     CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 208 of 1978.     From  the  Judgment and Order dated 23.12. 1977  of  the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 259  of 1974 M.R. Sharma, C.M. Sharma and H.K. Puri for the Appellant. 117 Harbans  Lal, I.S. Goel and C.V. Subba Rao for the  Respond- ent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     OZA,  J.  This appeal has been filed  by  the  appellant after  the grant of special leave by this Court against  his conviction  under Sec. 5(2) of the Prevention of  Corruption Act  and sentence to rigorous imprisonment for 2  years  and fine of Rs. 150 and also under Sec. 161 of the Indian  Penal Code  and rigorous imprisonment for one year and a  fine  of Rs.  100 awarded by Special Judge, Ambala and maintained  by the  High  Court of Punjab & Haryana by its  judgment  dated 23.12. 1977.     According to the prosecution Shri M.G. Devasahayam P.W.4 Sub-Divisional  Officer-,  Jagadhri  had  sent  a  complaint against the appellant to the Station House Officer, Jagadhri on  7.6.1972  on the basis of which  the  first  information report  was  recorded  at Police Station  about  4  P.M.  on 7.6.1972. The Sub-Divisional Officer has received an  appli- cation from one Gian Singh complainant about the conduct  of the  appellant.  It was alleged by Gian Singh P.W.2  in  the complaint  that the appellant who was a Patwari  of  Bambhol Circle,  had been demanding money for supply of copies  from the  revenue  record and Gian Singh needed those  copies  in

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connection with the execution of a sale-deed. Gian Singh was to  purchase  land form Brij Bhushan who was to  act  as  an Attorney for his mother. It was alleged that for this Rs.200 were  settled out of which Rs.50 were paid and Rs. 150  were to  be paid on the date of the sale-deed. The copies of  the documents required were obtained after Rs.50 were paid.  The sale-deed was to be executed on 7.6.72 and therefore on this date  (Gian Singh and Brij Bhushan approached the  Sub-Divi- sional Officer with an application making these  allegations against the appellant. The Sub-Divisional Officer  attempted to contact the Deputy Superintendent of Police and the  Sub- Inspector  of  Police incharge of the  Police  Station  con- cerned,  but  when none of them were  available  he  himself decided to lay a trap. It is alleged that Gian Singh  P.W.2, Brij  Bhushan P.W.3, Raj Kumar and Mangal Singh P.W.  1  had gone to the house of the Sub-Divisional Officer at 2.40 P.M. on 7.6.1972. Gian Singh narrated the whole story and  stated that he had promised to pay he appellant Rs. 150 on the date on  which  the sale deed was to be executed.  Rs.  150  were produced by Gian Singh which included a 100 rupee note and 5 notes  of Rs. 10 each. Their number were noted and the  Sub- Divisional  Officer initialled the currency notes  and  were given  to Gian Singh and a trap was laid. Brij  Bhushan  was asked to act as a witness. Gian Singh 118 and  Brij  Bhushan therefore reached the  canteen  near  the Tehsil.  The  Sub-Divisional Officer, Raj Kumar  and  Mungal Singh went to Tensil premises in a Jeep and waited near  the tea stall for a signal. On receiving the signal they reached there and on personal search currency notes of Rs. 150  were recovered  from the person of the appellant. On these  facts the appellant was prosecuted and was convicted and sentenced as  mentioned above. The facts are not disputed.  The  money has been recovered from the possession of the appellant  and it  is  also not disputed that he received this  money  from Gian Singh. Even before the High Court these facts were  not disputed. The plea taken by the appellant was that the Govt. wanted  to  collect money from the land  holders  for  small savings schemes and the Patwaris were instructed to  collect this  amount. Appellant also examined some defence to  indi- cate  that  such circulars were issued to the  Patwaris  and they  were  collecting the amounts to be  deposited  in  the small savings schemes and on this basis they received appre- ciation and those who could not collect sufficient amount to meet  the  target also received remarks.  It  was  contended before  the High Court and also before this Court that  this amount the appellant had received as a deposit for the small savings  scheme  and which was ultimately recovered  by  the Sub-Divisional  Officer. It was also contended that in  fact the  copies of the revenue record which were needed by  Gian Singh had already been supplied to him and in fact the  sale deed was registered on 7th June before this trap and  there- fore  it  was alleged that Rs. 150 were paid as  alleged  by appellant and it was on this basis contended that the expla- nation given by the appellant that he had received the money to be deposited under the small savings scheme appear to  be reasonable.     It  is significant that when the Sub-Divisional  Officer on  getting  the signal reached the  canteen  alongwith  the witnesses  and conducted the search it was not the stand  of the appellant that he had received the money for small scale deposits  as it is apparent that if the money  was  received for  that  purpose, as soon as  the  Sub-Divisional  Officer reached the canteen with the witnesses and wanted to  search the  appellant,  appellant would have immediately  came  out

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with  this  explanation. Learned counsel for  the  appellant frankly conceded that this was not the case of the appellant that  he came out with this explanation on the spot at  that time. This is not his case even in the statement recorded at the  trial  nor such a suggestion was put to anyone  of  the prosecution witnesses in the course of cross examination. In view of this it could not be disputed that this  explanation has  been given as an after thought and this itself goes  to show that this explanation is just as an imagination. 119     There  appears to be some controversy about the fact  as to  whether the Patwaris were directed to collect funds  for small savings schemes and in this respect the learned  Trial Court  also  examined the Tehsildar as a Court  witness  and after considering all the evidence disregarded the  explana- tion  given  by the appellant in respect of the  money  (Rs. 150) recovered from his person.     The  learned Trial Court after considering  the  defence evidence  and the evidence of the Tehsildar did  not  accept the  defence version and convicted the appellant. The  Trial Court  also considered the evidence of P.W .5 Jeet  Ram  who was  the  keeper of the tea stall who was  examined  by  the prosecution  but he turned ’hostile’ and supported  the  de- fence version.     Learned  counsel  for  the appellant  went  through  the evidence  in  detail and attempted to contend  that  as  the copies of the documents had already been received there  was no  occasion for Gian Singh to pay Rs.150. According to  the prosecution  the bargain was settled for Rs.200. Rs.50  were paid  in  advance and therefore copies were  given  but  the appellant  was to receive the balance of Rs. 150  for  which Gian Singh had promised to pay it on the date of the  regis- tration  and accordingly on the date of registration it  was fixed  up  that the appellant will be available at  the  tea stall near the Tehsil where this amount will be paid and  it was  because  of this that Gian Singh  appreached  the  Sub- Divisional  Officer  with the complaint. In fact  where  the receipt of the amount and its recovery is not disputed it is not necessary for us to go through the evidence and  examine it  afresh, although learned counsel went through  the  evi- dence  in  detail. The only question is as  to  whether  the Courts below were fight in rejecting the explanation of  the appellant  for receipt of Rs. 150. The explanation given  by the  appellant  which was seriously pressed by  the  learned counsel  for  the appellant was that he  had  received  this amount to be deposited in the small savings scheme on behalf of Gian Singh but it is significant that neither he had made any  note of this fact nor given any receipt to Gain  Singh. Apart  from  it it is significant  that  the  Sub-Divisional Officer who was a revenue officer and the appellant being  a Patwari  was  his  subordinate. The normal  conduct  of  the appellant would have been to tell him as soon as he  arrived for  search that in fact he had received this amount  to  be deposited  in the small savings scheme. It is impossible  to believe  that if the appellant had received this amount  for being  deposited in the small savings scheme he  would  have not  opened his mouth and permitted the search and  recovery of  this  amount  from his pocket to be  done  by  the  Sub- Divisional Officer and allowed the matter to be 120 handed over to the Police and still would not have come  out to  say what he chose to say at the trial. This  conduct  of the  appellant in not coming out with this  explanation  in- stantaneously goes a long way to make this explanation  just an after thought specially when Sub-Divisional Officer  con-

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ducted the search and recovered this amount from his person. In this view of the matter therefore in our opinion both the Courts  below were fight in discarding this  explanation  of the appellant. We therefore see no substance in this conten- tion advanced on behalf of the appellant.     Learned counsel ultimately contended that this appellant a  Patwari  who  had faced the trial and  pendency  of  this appeal  for about 14 years will now have to go to  jail  for serving  out  a part of this sentence which remained  to  be served.  It is no doubt true that having been convicted  for these  offences the appellant is bound to lose his  service. It  was also stated that he had served out some sentence  of the  imprisonment also. The incident is of 1972 and  we  are now  in 1987. In view of these circumstances in our  opinion the  sentence  of  the imprisonment  already  undergone  and sentence  of  find imposed by Hon’ble the Trial  Court  will meet  the  ends of justice. Consequently  appeal  is  partly allowed.  The conviction of the appellant under Sec.5(2)  of the Prevention of Corruption Act and Sec. 161 of the  Indian Penal  Code is maintained. However his sentence  as  regards sentence of imprisonment is reduced to the sentence  already undergone  but the sentence of fine is maintained. He is  on bail.  His bail bond shall be cancelled if he had  not  paid the  amount  of fine he shall do so within  one  month  from today. A.P.J.                                          Appeal   al- lowed. 121