17 January 1974
Supreme Court
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ARVIND MOHAN SINHA Vs AMULYA KUMAR BISWAS & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (crl.) 114 of 1970


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PETITIONER: ARVIND MOHAN SINHA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: AMULYA KUMAR BISWAS & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/01/1974

BENCH: CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. BENCH: CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. DWIVEDI, S.N.

CITATION:  1974 AIR 1818            1974 SCR  (3) 133  1974 SCC  (4) 222  CITATOR INFO :  D          1979 SC1271  (8)

ACT: Probation of   offenders Act. 20 of 1958--Whether applies to offences  under Customs Act, 1962, and offences  under  Part XII-A.  Defence of India Rules, 1962. Defence  of India Rules, 1962, r. 1261 and  126P--’Gold’  if includes smuggled gold.

HEADNOTE: on the question (1) whether the Probation of Offenders  Act, 1958,  applies to offences under Customs Act, 1962,  and  to those under Part XII-A of the Defence of India Rules,  1962, relating  to Gold Control, and (2) whether under the  scheme of the Gold    Control   Rules,   smuggled   gold   is   not comprehended under r. 126p. HELD:(1)  These  are  mostly  economic  offences  which   in conceivable cases,may pose    a grave threat to the  economy and the security of the country.  They are fundamentally  of a different genre and are calculated to involve consequences of  a far reaching character as compared with  the  offences under the general law of crimes.  But every contravention of the  Customs Act or the Gold Control Rule., cannot,  without more, be assumed to be fraught with consequences of national dimensions.   The  words  of s. 4(1)  of  the  Probation  of Offenders Act are wide and would include even offences under the  Customs  Act  and  the  Gold  Control  Rules.    Though r.126p(2)  (ii) of the Defence of India Rules  prescribes  a minimum  sentence  of  6  months,  it  cannot  override  the provisions of the Probation of Offenders Act. [136G] (a) The Probation of Offenders Act is a reformative  measure and  its  object  is to reclaim amateur  offenders  who,  if spared  the  indignity  of incarceration,  can  be  usefully rehabilitated  in  society.  A jail term would  normally  be enough to wipe out the stain of guilt but the sentence which society  passes on convicts is relentless.  In  recalcitrant cases  punishment  has  to  be  deterrent  so  that   others similarly  minded  may  warn themselves of  the  hazards  of taking  to  a career of crime.  But the novice,. as  in  the present  case, who strays into the path of crime  ought,  in the  interest  of society, to be treated as  being  socially sick.  The ignominy commonly associated with a jail term and

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the  social stigma which attaches to convicts  often  render the  remedy worse than the disease.  Crimes are  not  always rooted  in criminal tendencies and their origin may  lie  in psychological  factors induced by hunger, want and  poverty. The Act recognises the importance of environmental influence in the commission of crimes and prescribes a remedy  whereby the  offender can be reformed and rehabilitated in  society. An attitude of social defiance and recklessness which  comes to a convict who, after a jail term, is apt to think that he has  nothing  more to lose or fear, may breed  a  litter  of crime.  The object of the Act is to nip that attitude in the bud. [137A] Ratan lal v. State of punjab, [1964] 7 S.C.R. 676 and  Isher Das v. The State of punjab, A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1295, followed. (b)  There  is  no foundation for the  fear  that  offenders released  on  probation may hold the society to  ransom  and that  society  may  therefore  look  upon  the  release   of offenders on probation as the triumph of criminals over  the weaknesses  of  law.  An offender released on  probation  is convicted but not forthwith sentenced in the sense of  penal laws.   Section  4(1) of the Act provides  that  instead  of sentencing  the offender "at once" the court may direct  his release  on his entering into a bond to receive  a  sentence when  called upon during the probationary period and in  the mean time to keep the peace and be of good behaviour.   Thus it   is  only  in  a  limited  sense,  though   a   socially significant, sense, that the Act constitutes an exception to the  broad  and  general principle of criminal  law  that  a sentence shall follow on conviction.  The discretion  vested in-  the  trial  court  in this behalf  must  of  course  be exercised according to rules of reason and justice depending on  the circumstances of each case. but the  Magistrate  had called for the report of the Probation Officer and it was 134 on  the  basis  of that report  that  the  respondents  were released  on  probation and the High Court has up  held  the exercise  of  that  discretion.   There  is  no  reason   to interfere  with  the concurrent factual  evaluation  of  the circumstances of the case. [137G] Jai  Narain  V. The Municipal Corporation of  Delhi,  A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2607. referred (2)  The  High Court erred in holding that  the  legislature could not have intended that a     person  in possession  of smuggled   gold   should  make  a  declaration   in   regard thereto.[140A] (a)  Under r. 1261 of the Gold Control Rules (of Defence  of India  Rules)  every  person  must,  within  the  stipulated period,  make a declaration to the administrator as  to  the quantity,  description and other prescribed  particulars  of gold  owned by him.  Failure or omission to do  so,  without reasonable  cause,  is  made  punishable  by  r.  126(1)(i). Possession of gold in contravention of any provision of Part XII-A   .is  made  punishable  by  Rule  126P(2)(ii).    The definition of ’Gold’ in r. 126A (d) is couched in wide terms and  it does not make any distinction between smuggled  gold and gold lawfully possessed. [140G] (b)  The  intention  of the  legislature  must  be  gathered primarily and principally from the words used by it and  the definition  of ’gold’ carves out no exception in  favour  of smuggled  gold.  It would be surprising that the  obligation to  declare gold should be imposed on lawful  possessors  of gold but should leave untouched the possession by  smugglers or their agents of gold smuggled into the country. [140B] (c)  Under the definition Gold means gold and it should  not be  read as ’gold means gold but shall not include  smuggled

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gold’.   To put such a construction on the definition is  to coin a new definition and therefore to legislate. [140C] (d)  The word ’gold’ is used at several places in  the  Gold Control   Rules  and  it  is  a  well  recognised  rule   of construction  that  the same word should  receive  the  same meaning  in collocation. it is manifest from  the  language, intendment  and scheme of these Rules that the  word  ’gold’ covers not only gold which is lawfully possessed but gold in any  form  or  shape  and  whether  possessed  lawfully   or otherwise.[140D] K.  Vishnumoorthi v. State of Mysore & Anr., 1971  (2)  Mys. L. J. 261, approved.

JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeals Nos.  114 & 115 of 1970 From the Judgment and Order dated the 28th November, 1969 of the  Calcutta High Court in Criminal Revision Case Nos.  635 and 636 of 1969. S. N. Prasad and S. P. Nayar, for the appellant. The respondents did not appear (in Cr.  A. 114 & 115/70). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHANDRACHUD,  J.-These appeals are brought by leave  granted by the High Court of Calcutta under Article 134(1)(c) of the Constitution. Cr.   A.  No.  114 of 1970: On May 29, 1968  gold  bars  and sovereigns  bearing  foreign markings were seized  from  the respondents by customs officers, Calcutta.  Respondents were charged  under section 135, Customs Act, 1962 for  being  in possession  of goods which they had reason to believe to  be liable  to confiscation under section 111 of that  Act.   It was alleged that the goods were imported into India  without the  requisite permit and without payment of duty  and  were therefore liable to confiscation under section 111(d) of the Customs Act.  The respondents were also charged under  Rules 126P(1)(i)  and 126P(2)(ii) of the Defence of  India  Rules, 1962,  for failure to make a declaration in respect  of  the gold found in their possession. 135 The  respondents  pleaded guilty to the  charges  but  cited facts   in  extenuation  of  the  offences.    The   learned Presidency  Magistrate, 8th Court, Calcutta, convicted  them of the offences of which they were charged but he  directed, on the faith of a report made by the Probation Officer, that they should be released under section 4(1) of the  Probation of  Offenders  Act, 1958 on their executing a  bond  of  Rs. 1000/-  each with one surety in like amount, undertaking  to appear and receive the sentence whenever called upon and  to keep  peace  and be of good behaviour for a  period  of  two years.   Respondents  are  young boys  normally  engaged  in agriculture.   To  us  they seem to  be  carriers  who  were carrying the gold for a small tip but the learned Magistrate believed their defence that they had purchased the gold  for the  marriage of the sister of one of them.  The gold  which was of the value of about Rs. 7800/- was already confiscated in the proceedings under the Customs Act. The  appellant, an Assistant Collector of Customs, filed  on behalf of the Department a revision application (No. 635  of 1969) in the High Court of Calcutta against the judgment  of the  learned  Magistrate.  Later, it was converted  into  an appeal  under  section 11(2) of the Probation  of  Offenders Act, The  High  Court  disposed  of three  matters  by  a  common

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judgment  which  is  reported in  Aravinda  Mohan  Sinha  v. Prohlad  Chandra Samanta(1) Two out of these are before  us; the third, Criminal Appeal No. 113 of 1970 is reported to be unready.    The  High  Court  held  in  the   matter   under consideration that though Rule 126P(2)(ii) of the Defence of India  Rules prescribes a minimum sentence  of  imprisonment for  a term of not less than 6 months", it  cannot  override the  provisions  of  the  Probation  of  Offenders  Act  and therefore  it  was competent to the  learned  Magistrate  to release the respondents under that Act. The only question in this appeal is whether the Probation of Offenders  Act,20 of 1958, can apply to offences  under  the Customs  Act,  1962  and to those under  Part-XII-A  of  the Defence of India Rules, 1962, intituled "Gold Control". Section 135(b)(ii) of the Customs Act, 1962, under which the respondents have been convicted prescribes a punishment of 2 years imprisonment or fine or both for acquiring  possession of  or for being in any way concerned in  carrying,  keeping etc. any goods which a person knows or has reason to believe to  be  liable  to confiscation under  section  111.   Under section  111(d), goods imported contrary to any  prohibition imposed by or under the Customs Act or by any other law  are liable  to  confiscation.   The  offence  committed  by  the respondents  consists in their being in possession of or  in purchasing  the  gold  bearing foreign  markings  which  was evidently imported into India without a valid permit  issued by  the Reserve Bank of India, an act prohibited by  section 8(1)  of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947.  On  the prosecution leading evidence to establish the ingredients of this offence, respondents pleaded guilty to the charge. (1)  A. I. R. 1970 Cal. 437. 136 Rule 126P(1)(i) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962 provides to the extent material that whoever omits or fails to make a declaration  as required by Rule 126 1 without a  reasonable cause shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year or a fine or with both.  The relevant part  of Rule 126 I provides that every person shall  within the specified period make a declaration to the Administrator in  the  prescribed form as to the quantity of  gold,  other than  ornaments  owned by him.  Rule 126P  (2)(ii)  provides that whoever has in his possession or under his control  any quantity of gold in contravention of the provisions of  Part XII-A   ("Gold   Control"),   shall   be   punishable   with imprisonment  for a term of not less than 6 months  and  not more than 2 years and also with fine.  Respondents had  made no  declaration of the gold in their possession and  pleaded no  reasonable  cause for omitting to do so.   They  pleaded guilty to these charges as well. The Probation of Offenders Act, 1958, received the assent of the  President  on  May 16, 1958 and was  published  in  the Gazette  of  India on May 19, 1958.  Section 3  of  the  Act confers  power  on the court to  release  certain  offenders after admonition.  Under section 4(1):               "When  any  person is found guilty  of  having               committed an offence not punishable with death               or  imprisonment  for life and  the  Court  by                             which the person is found guilty is of   opinion               that,  having regard to the  circumstances  of               the  case including the nature of the  offence               and  the  character  of the  offender,  it  is               expedient to release him on probation of  good               conduct,   then,   notwithstanding    anything               contained in any other law for the time  being

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             in force, the Court may, instead of sentencing               him at once to any punishment, direct that  he               be released on his entering into a bond,  with               or  without. sureties, to appear  and  receive               sentence when called upon during such  period,               not  exceeding three years, as the  Court  may               direct, and in the meantime to keep the  peace               and be of good behaviour." We are unable to accept the appellant’s contention that  the probation  of  Offenders  Act can  have  no  application  to offences consisting of the contravantion of the Customs  Act or  the "Gold Control" Rules contained in Part XII-A of  the Defence of India Rules, 1962.  True, that these offences are fundamentally  of  a different genre and are  calculated  to involve consequences of a far-reaching character as compared with  offences under the general law of Crimes.   These  are mostly economic offences which in conceivable cases may pose a  grave  threat  to the economy and  the  security  of  the country.  But every contravention of the Customs Act or  the "Gold Control" Rules cannot, without more, be assumed to  be fraught with consequences of national dimensions.  The broad principle  that  punishment  must  be  proportioned  to  the offence  is  or ought to be of  universal  application  save where  the statute bars the exercise of judicial  discretion either in awarding punishment or in releasing an offender on probation in lieu of sentencing him forthwith.  The words of section 4(1) of the Probation of offenders Act are wide  and would  evidently include offences under the customs Act  and the Gold Control Rules. 137 The Probation of Offenders Act is a reformative measure  and its  object is to reclaim amateur offenders who,  if  spared the   indignity   of   incarceration,   can   be    usefully rehabilitated  in society.  A jail term should  normally  be enough to wipe out the stain of guilt but the sentence which the society passes on convicts is relentless.  The  ignominy commonly  associated with a jail term and the social  stigma which  attaches  to convicts often render the  remedy  worse than the. disease and the very purpose of punishment  stands in  the danger of being frustrated.  In recalcitrant  cases, punishment  has  to be deterrent so  that  others  similarly minded  may  warn themselves of the hazards of taking  to  a career of crime.  But the novice who strays into the path of crime ought, in the interest of society, be treated as being socially  sick.   Crimes are not always rooted  in  criminal tendencies and their origin may lie in psychological factors induced  by  hunger,  want and poverty.   The  Probation  of Offenders  act  recognises the importance  of  environmental influence  in  the  commission of crimes  and  prescribes  a remedy   whereby   the   offender  can   be   reformed   and rehabilitated  in society.  An attitude of  social  defiance and recklessness which comes to a convict who, after a  jail term,is apt to think that he has no more to lose or fear may breed  a  litter of crime.  The object of the  Probation  of Offenders Act is to nip that attitude in the bud.   Winifred A.  Elkin describes probation as a system which  provides  a means  of re-education without the necessity of breaking  up the offender’s normal life and removing him from the natural surroundings of his home.  Edwin E. Sutherland raises it  to a status of a convicted offender.2 The   probationary  system  in  our  country  is   sometimes described as a boon of political freedom but that does  less than  justice to true history.  The Dharmashastras  did  not ordain similar punishment for similar offences  irrespective of the antecedents and the physical and mental condition  of

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the  offender.3 Dr. P. K. Sen has pointed out in his  Tagore Law  Lectures on "Penology Old and New"  (1943)  (p.110)that the directions given by the ancient law-givers in the matter of  punishment compare favourably with the  advanced  modern systems   as   regards  the  relevance  of   the   objective circumstances  attendant on the commission of the crime  and the subjective limitations of offenders.  Probationary  laws were   passed  by  several  erstwhile  provinces  prior   to Independence  but their provisions were  seldom  enforced-in practice.   Section  562, Code of Criminal  Procedure,  also contains  a provision enabling the court to release  certain offenders on probation of good conduct instead of sentencing them at once. There is no foundation for the fear that offenders  released on probation may hold the society to ransom and the  society may  therefore  look  upon  the  release  of  offenders   on probation as the triumph of criminals over the weaknesses of law, An offender released on probation is convicted but  not forthwith  sentenced in the sense of penal laws.  Under  the disposition made by the court the sentence is suspended (1)  English Juvenile Courts (1938) page 162. (2)  Principles of Criminology, 4th Edn. (1947) page 383. (3)  History  of Dharmashastra by Dr. P. V. Kane, Vol.   III p. 392 (1946 Ed.). 138 during  the  period of probation.  Section 4(1) of  the  Act provides that instead of sentencing the offender "at  once", the court may direct his release on his entering into a bond to   "receive   sentence  when  called  upon"   during   the probationary  period and in the meantime to keep  the  peace and  be of good behaviour.  Thus it is. only in  a  limited, though   a   socially  significant,  sense  that   the   Act constitutes as exception to the broad and general  principle of  criminal law embodied, for example, in sections  245(2), 258(2),   306(2)  and  section  309(2),  Code  of   Criminal Procedure, that a sentence shall follow on a conviction. The  provisions  of the Act are indeed of  such  beneficence that in Ratan Lal v. States of Punjab(1) this Court remanded a  matter to the High Court with a direction that  the  High Court or the Sessions Court should consider whether the  Act should  not be applied to an accused who was convicted on  a date  prior  to the date on which the Act was  brought  into operation  in  the particular area and even  though  such  a prayer was not made to the Sessions Court or in revision  to the  High  Court and could not, of course, be  made  in  the trial  court.  Subba Rao J. who gave the  majority  judgment said : "The Act is a milestone in the Progress of the modern liberal trend of reform in the field of Penology.  It is the result of the recognition of the doctrine that the object of criminal law is more to reform the individual offender  than to  Punish  him." Raghubar Dayal J. dissented on  the  point whether  the  Act  could be applied to an  accused  who  was convicted before it came into force. In  Isher  Das  v. The State of Punjab(2)  the  trial  court released  on Probation an offender who was  convicted  under section  7(1)  of the Prevention of Food  Adulteration  Act, 1954.  The High Court set aside that order and sentenced the accused  to  imprisonment for six months and a fine  of  Rs. 1000/-.   In default of the payment of fine the accused  was ordered  to undergo imprisonment for a further period  of  a month and a half.  Setting aside the order of the High Court this  Court  restored  that  of  the  Magistrate  with   the observation that though adulteration of food was a menace to public health, the application of the Probation of Offenders act  could not be excluded in cases of persons found  guilty

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of food adulteration. In Jai Narain v. The, Municipal Corporation of Delhi,(3) the principle laid down in Isher Das’s case was affirmed but  on the  facts  of  the case this Court refused  to  release  on probation  an  offender who was convicted  for  adulterating Patisa’  by  using  a  non-permitted  coal  tar  dye.   This decision  only  shows that whether the benefit  of  the  Act should be extended in any particular case must depend on the circumstance of that case. There  can therefore be no legal impediment in applying  the provisions  of  the  Probation  of  offenders  Act  to   the respondents.  Whether (1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 676.   (2) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1295. (3) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2607. 139 on  the facts and circumstances of the case the  respondents may be released on probation cannot be put in issue at  this late  stage because it was neither urged in the trial  court nor before the High Court that by reason of the  antecedents or the propensities of the respondents it was not  expedient to  extend to them the benefit of the Act.   The  discretion vested  in the trial court in this behalf must of course  be exercised  according to rules of reason and justice but  the learned  Magistrate  had  called  for  the  report  of   the Probation  Officer  and it was on the basis of  that  report that  the respondents were released on probation.  The  High Court has upheld the exercise of that discretion and we  see no   reason  to  interfere  with  the   concurrent   factual evaluation  Of’ the circumstances of the case.   Accordingly we confirm the judgment of the High Court. Criminal Appeal No. 115 of 1970 On  June 27, 1968 three bars of foreign gold were  found  on the  ,person  of the respondent.  He pleaded guilty  at  the trial  whereupon  the  learned  Presidency  Magistrate,  6th Court,  Calcutta  convicted him under section  135,  Customs Act, 1962 and under Rules 126 P (1)(i) and 126 P (2)(ii)  of the  Defence  of  India Rules,  1962.   The  respondent  was sentenced to pay a fine of Rs. 150 for the offence under the Customs Act and a fine of Rs. 100 for the offence under Rule 126  P  (1)(i).  No separate sentence was  imposed  for  the offence under Rule 126 P(2)(ii). In   appeal  the  High  Court  of  Calcutta  confirmed   the conviction  and sentence under the Customs  Act.   Regarding the contravention of the two Rules, the High Court held that no declaration need have been made by the respondent to  the Administrator,  as the gold of which the respondent  was  in possession  was  smuggled  gold  and  not  "  legal"   gold. According to the High Court "the legislature never  expected that  smuggled  gold  would be declared".   The  High  Court therefore  set aside the conviction and sentence imposed  on the  respondent  for  contravention of  the  "Gold  Control" Rules. Part XII-A "Gold Control" (consisting of Rules 126A to 126Z) was inserted in the Defence of India Rules, 1962 by G. S. R. 89  dated January 9, 1963.  Rule 126A (d) defines  gold  for the purposes of Part XIIA thus ;               "gold"   means  gold,  including  its   alloy,               whether  virgin. melted, remelted, wrought  or               unwrought, in, any shape or form, of a  purity               of not less than nine carats and includes  any               gold coin (whet-her legal tender or not),  any               ornament and any other article of gold;" Some  of the other Rules in Part XIIA provide as follows  to the  extent  material.  Under Rule 126,  every  person  must within  the  stipulated  period make a  declaration  to  the

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Administrator  as  to the quantity,  description  and  other prescribed  particulars  of gold owned by  him,  Failure  or omission, without reasonable cause, to make such a  declara- tion is made punishable by Rule 126 P (1)(i).  Possession of gold in contravention of any provision of Part XIIA is  made punishable by Rule, 126 P(2)(ii), 140 We  see no justification in the scheme of the Rules for  the view  taken  by  the High Court that smuggled  gold  is  not comprehended  within  Rule 126P of the Gold  Control  Rules. The definition of "gold" in Rule 126A (d) is couched in wide terms and it does not make any distinction between  smuggled gold and gold lawfully possessed.  The High Court says  that the  legislature  could not have intended that a  person  in possession  of  smuggled gold should make a  declaration  in regard  thereto.  The intention of the legislature  must  be gathered primarily and principally from the words used by it and  the  definition of "gold" carves out  no  exception  in favour of smuggled gold.  Secondly, if the intention of  the legislature  as  reflected  in the scheme of  a  law  is  to control  the  meaning  of the words  used  in  a  particular Section  or  Rule,  it strikes us .as  surprising  that  the obligation  to  declare  gold should be  imposed  on  lawful possessors of gold but should leave untouched the possession by  smugglers  or  their agents of gold  smuggled  into  the country.   Under the definition contained in Rule 126A  (d), "gold means gold" and no rule of statutory construction  can permit  the  definition to be altered materially  so  as  to read: "Gold means gold but shall not include smuggled gold". To  put such a construction on the definition is to ,coin  a new definition and therefore to legislate. The  word "gold" is used at several places in Part XIIA  and it  is a well-recognised rule of construction that the  same word should receive the same meaning in a collocation.  Rule 126A  (c)(ii) defines a dealer .as a person who  carries  on the business of buying, selling, supplying etc. gold for the purpose of making ornaments.  Rule 126 B(1)(a) provides that a  dealer shall not make or manufacture any article of  ,old other than ornament; sub-clause (b) provides that a  refiner shall not make or manufacture any article of gold other than primary  gold; sub-clause (c) provides that no other  person shall  make or manufacture any article of gold,  unless  the dealer,  refiner or such other person is authorised  by  the Administrator to make or manufacture such an article.   Rule 126C provides that no dealer shall make and no person  shall place any order for making an ornament containing gold of  a purity   exceeding   14  carats.   Rule  126D   contains   a prohibition  on loans being granted on the security of  gold unless  such gold is included in a. declaration  made  under Rule 1261.  Rule 126F requires every dealer ;and refiner  to submit  a return in regard to the gold in his possession  of control.  Under Rule 126G dealers and refiners must keep  an account  of  the  gold bought or sold by  them.   Rule  126H provides  that  no  dealer ,or refinery shall  have  in  his possession or under his control any gold which has not  been included in the return which he is required to submit  under the Rules.  Rule 1261, with which we are directly  concerned in this case, provides that every person other than a dealer or  a  refiner, shall within the stipulated  period  make  a declaration  to  the  Administrator  as  to  the.  quantity, description  and  other  particulars  of  gold  other   than ornament),  owned by him.  Clause (3) of this Rule  provides (that no person who is required to make a declaration  shall acquire any gold other than ornament except by succession or under  a  permit granted by the  Administrator.   Rule  126L

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confers  power under the authority of the  Administrator  to seize  any gold in respect of which the provisions  of  Part XIIA are contravened.  Under Rule 126 M gold thus 141 seized  is liable to confiscation.  Rule 126P  (1)(i)  makes failure  or  emission to make a declaration as  required  by Rule  1261  punishable.   Rule  126P  (2)  (ii)   prescribes punishment  for possession of gold in contravention  of  the provisions of Part XIIA. It is manifest from the language, intendment and the  scheme of  these  Rules that the word "gold" covers not  only  gold which  is lawfully possessed but gold in any form  or  shape and  whether  possessed  lawfully  of  otherwise.   In   the economic  context  in  which Part  XIIA  was  inserted  into Defence  of  India Rules in 1963, it is impossible  to  hold that  the legislature wanted to regulate the possession  and control  of  gold lawfully possessed as  distinguished  from smuggled gold.  It seems to us clear that the prohibition in regard  to the manufacture of articles of gold  would  apply even to articles made out of smuggled gold and. it would  be no defence for a dealer, refiner or for any other person  to say that he had not contravened the provisions of Rule  126B because he had made an article out of smuggled gold.  Such a defence,  we  suppose,  would  be all  the  worse  for  him. Similarly,  it  would be no defence to a charge  under  Rule 126D  to  say  that a loan was advanced  on  the  pledge  of smuggled  gold.   The various Rules which we  have  set  out above make it clear that the object of introducing Part XIIA is,  as shown for example by Rule 126H, that if any gold  is acquired a declaration has to be made in regard thereto,  no matter  how  or  by  what means  it  is  acquired.   We  are therefore  unable  to  agree with the High  Court  that  the respondent  was  not  liable  to  make  under  Rule  1261  a declaration  as  to  the gold in  his  possession  and  that therefore  Rule 126P is not attracted.  The view taken by  a learned  single  Judge  of the High Court of  Mysore  in  K. Vishnumoorthi  v. State of Mysore & Anr.(1) that  "gold"  as defined  in  Part  XIIA includes smuggled gold  is,  in  our opinion,  correct.   We are not concerned in  this  case  to determine  whether on the particular facts of the  case  the Mysore  High Court was right in refusing to apply section  4 of the ’Probation of Offenders Act to the case before it. The   order  of  the  learned  Magistrate   convicting   and sentencing  the respondent under section 135 of the  Customs Act  as also under Rule 126P of the Defence of  India  Rules must therefore be restored. V.P.S.                               Appeals allowed. (1) [1971] 2 Mys.  L. J. 261. 142