15 October 1987
Supreme Court
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RANJIT THAKUR Vs UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.

Bench: VENKATACHALLIAH,M.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 2630 of 1987


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PETITIONER: RANJIT THAKUR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/10/1987

BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:  1987 AIR 2386            1988 SCR  (1) 512  1987 SCC  (4) 611        JT 1987 (4)    93  1987 SCALE  (2)773  CITATOR INFO :  R          1988 SC1099  (6)  D          1991 SC1617  (10,26,33,34)  R          1992 SC 188  (5)  R          1992 SC 417  (5)

ACT:      Army  Act,  1950/Army  Rules,  1954:  Sections  41  and 130/Rules 106-133-Court  Martial-When proceedings  vitiated- Participation of  officer who  has punished  accused-Whether amounts to bias-Soldier-Refusing to eat food-Whether amounts to disobedience of lawful command.      Constitution of  India, 1950: Articles 32, 136 and 226- Judicial Review-Irrationality and perversity-Extentof.      Administrative Law: Natural Justice-Fair Trial-Judgment only after  due observance  of Judicial  Process-Quantum  of punishment disproportionate  to offence  Whether  conclusive evidence of bias.      Interpretation  of   Statutes:  Procedural  safeguards- Statutory Provisions-How to be construed.

HEADNOTE: %      The appellant, a Signal Man in a Signal Regiment of the Armed Services,  while serving  out a  sentence of  28 days’ rigorous imprisonment  imposed  on  him  by  the  Commanding officer of  the Regiment  respondent No.  4,  for  violating norms for presenting representations to higher officers, was alleged to have committed another offence by refusing to eat his food  on March  29, 1985  when ordered  to do so. He was charged under  section 41(2)  of  the  Army  Act,  1950  for disobeying a lawful command given by his superior officer. A sentence of  rigorous imprisonment  for one year was imposed by a  Summary Court  Martial consisting  of respondent No. 4 and others. He was removed to the civil prison and he served out the sentence.      The  appellant’s   representation  to   the  confirming authority under  section 164  of the Act was rejected by the General officer Commanding on May 24,1985.      The appellant’s  writ petition  challenging proceedings of the  Summary Court-Martial was dismissed in limine by the High Court.

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513      In the  appeal by  special leave,  it was  contended on behalf of  the appellant  that the proceedings of the Court- Martial  were   vitiated  (i)   by  a  non-affording  of  an opportunity to  challenge the  constitution of  the  Summary Court-Martial under section 130(1); (ii) by bias on the part of the  respondent No.  4 who  participated in and dominated the  proceedings;   (iii)  by   awarding  a   punishment  so disproportionate to  the offence  as to  amount in itself to conclusive evidence  of bias and vindictiveness; and (iv) by ignoring that  as the  appellant  was  then  serving-out  an earlier sentence  he could  not be  need to  be  in  active- service so  as to  be amenable  to disciplinary jurisdiction and that  the appellant’s  refusal, while  already serving a sentence, to  accept food  did not  amount  to  disobedience under section  41, of  any  lawful  command  of  a  Superior officer.      Allowing the appeal, ^      HELD: 1.1  The Indian  Army  Act,  1950  constitutes  a special law  in force  conferring a special jurisdiction on. the Court-Martial  prescribing a  special procedure  for the trial of  the offences  under the  Act. The  Act  and  Rules constitute a self-contained Code specifying offences and the procedure for  detention, custody and trial of the offenders by the Court-Martial. [518G-H; 519A]      1.2 The  procedural safeguards  contemplated in the Act must be  considered in  the context  of and corresponding to the plenitude  of the  Summary jurisdiction  of  the  Court- Martial and  the severity of the consequences that visit the person  subject   to  that   jurisdiction.  The   procedural safeguards should  be commensurate  with the  sweep  of  the powers. The  wider the  power, the  greater the need for the restraint in  its exercise  ad correspondingly, more liberal the construction  of the  procedural safeguards envisaged by the Statute. [519B-C I      1.3 Non-compliance  with the  mandate of section 130 is an infirmity  which goes  to the  root of  jurisdiction  and without more, vitiates the proceedings. [519F]      Prithvi Pal  Singh v.  Union of India, AIR 1982 SC 1413 relied on.      Vitarelli v. Seaton, 359 U.S. 535 referred to. 514      2.1 It  is the  essence of  a judgment  that it is made after due observance of the judicial process; that the Court or Tribunal  passing  it  observes,  at  least  the  minimal requirements of  natural justice,  is composed  of impartial persons. acting fairly and without bias and in good faith. A judgment which is the result of bias or want of impartiality is a nullity and the trial ’coram non judice’. [520D-E]      Vassiliades v. Vassiliades, AIR 1945 PC 38 referred to.      2.2 As  to the  tests of the likelihood of bias what is relevant is  the reasonableness  of the apprehension in that regard in the mind of the party. The proper approach for the Judge is  not to  look at  his own  mind  and  ask  himself, however, honestly, "Am I biased"? but to look at the mind of the party before him. [520F]      Allinson v.  General Council  of Medical  Education and Registration,  [1894]   1  Q.B.  750  at  758;  Metropolitan Properties Co. (F.G.C.) Ltd. v. Lannon, [1969] 1. Q.B. 577 d 599; Public Utilities Commission of the District of Columbia v. Pollack,  343 US  451 at 466 and Regina v. Liverpool City Justices, Ex-parte Topping, [1983] 1 WLR 119 referred to.      Having   regard   to   the   antecedent   events,   the participation of  respondent No.  4  in  the  Courts-Martial

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rendered the proceedings Coram non judice. [522B]      3. The  mere circumstance’that the appellant was at the relevant point  of time,  serving a sentence of imprisonment and could  not, therefore, be said to be in ’active service’ does not  detract from  the fact  that he was still a person subject to  the Act,  as is  clear from the second clause of section 41(2) which refers to offences committed when not in ’active  service’,   the  difference  being  in  the  lesser punishment contemplated. [522C-D]      4. Every  aspect of  life of  a soldier is regulated by discipline. Rejection  of food  might, under  circumstances, amount  to   an  indirect  expression  of  remonstrance  and resentment against  the higher authority. To say that a mere refusal to  eat food is an innocent, neutral act might be an over simplification  of the  matter. Mere in-action need not always necessarily be neutral. Serious acts of calumny could be done  in silence.  A disregard  of a  direction to accept food might assume the 515 complexion of disrespect to, and even defiance of authority. But an  unduly harsh and cruel reaction to the expression of the injured  feelings may  he counter-productive and even by itself be subversive of discipline. [522E-F]      In the  instant case,  appellant was perhaps expressing his  anguish   at,  what   he  considered,   an  unjust  and disproportionate punishment for airing his grievances before his superior officers. [522G]      5. Judicial  review generally speaking, is not directed against a  decision, but  is directed  against the "decision making process".  The question  of the choice and quantum of punishment is  within the jurisdiction and discretion of the Court-Martial. But  the sentence has to suit the offence and the offender.  It should  not be vindictive or unduly harsh. It should  not be  so disproportionate  to the offence as to shock the  conscience and  amount in  itself  to  conclusive evidence of  bias. The  doctrine of proportionality, as part of the concept of judicial review, would ensure that even on an aspect which is, otherwise, within the exclusive province of the  Court-Martial, if  the decision of the Court even as to sentence  is an  outrageous defiance  of logic,  then the sentence would  not be immune from correction. Irrationality and perversity  are recognised  grounds of  judicial review. All powers have legal limits. [522G-H; 523A-C]      Council of  Civil Service  Unions v.  Minister for  the Civil Service,  [1984] 3  Weekly Law  Reports  1174  HL  and Bhagat Ram  v. State of Himachal Pradesh, A.I.R. 1983 SC 454 referred to.      In the  instant case,  the punishment  is so strikingly disproportionate as  to call  for and  justify interference. [523G]      The Court  order set  aside. The  writ petition  in the High Court  allowed, and the impugned proceedings of Summary Court-Martial and the consequent order and sentence quashed. Appellant entitled  to be  reinstated with  all monetary and service benefits. [523H, 524A]      (Note: on  point 1.3 the finding is to be read with and subject to the subsequent order dated 10.8.88).

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2630 of 1987. 516      From the Judgment and order dated 3.?.1986 of the Patna

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High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 2823 of 1986.      R.N. Sinha,  M.M. Prasad  Sinha and  P.C. Kapur for the Appellant.      B. Datta,  Additional Solicitor  General, M.S.  Rao, C. Ramesh and C.V.S. Rao for the Respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      VENKATACHALIAH,  J.  This  appeal,  by  special  leave, preferred against  the order  dated July  3,  1986,  of  the Division Bench  of the Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 2823 of 1986  raises a  substantial question  as to the scope and content of  the procedural safe-guards in Section 130 of the Indian Army  Act, 1950 (’Act’) in the conduct of the Courts- Martial.      The High  Court dismissed,  in limine,  the appellant’s writ  petition,   under   Article   226,   challenging   the proceedings dated  March 30,  1985, of  the  Summary  Court- Martial imposing  the punishment  of dismissal  from service and a  sentence of  an year’s  rigorous imprisonment  on the appellant.      2. Appellant,  Ranjit Thakur, joined the Armed Services on September  7, 1972,  and was,  at the  relevant  time,  a Signal  Man   in  "4,   Corps  operating  Signal  Regiment." Apparently, appellant  had not  commended  himself  well  to respondent No.  4, who  was the  commanding officer  of  the regiment. On  March 29, 1985, appellant was already serving- out a  sentence of 28 days’ rigorous imprisonment imposed on him for  violating the  norms for presenting representations to  higher  officers.  Appellant  is  stated  to  have  sent representation complaining  of ill-treatment at the hands of Respondent 4  directly to the higher officers. Appellant was punished for that by Respondent 4. Appellant was held in the Quarter-guard Cell  in handcuffs  to serve  that sentence of rigorous imprisonment.      3. While so serving the sentence appellant is stated to have committed  another offence on March 29, 1985, for which the punishment now impugned was handed down by Respondent 4. The nature  of this offence had better be excerpted from the charge-sheet itself:           "The accused No. 1429055 M Signalman Ranjit Thakur           of 517           4 Corps operating Signal Regiment is charged with-           Army Act Section 41(2)           Disobeying a  lawful command given by his superior           officer Section 41(2)           In that he           at 15.30  hrs. On  29.5.1985 when  ordered  by  JC           10625 lP Sub Ram Singh, the orderly officer of the           same Regiment to eat his food, did not do so." To try  this offence  a Summary  Court Martial was assembled the very  next day  i.e. March  30, 1985. Respondent 4 and 2 others  were  on  the  Court-Martial.  Some  witnesses  were examined. Appellant  is stated  to have  pleaded  guilty.  A sentence of  rigorous imprisonment for one year was imposed, in pursuance  of which  appellant was removed immediately to the civil  prison at  Tejpur  to  serve  out  the  sentence. Appellant has served out the sentence. He was also dismissed from service,  with  the  added  disqualification  of  being declared  unfit   for  any   future  civil  employment.  The representation of  the appellant to the confirming-authority under Section  164 of  the Act  was rejected  by General  of ficer Commanding on 24.5.1985.      The High  Court, however,  persuaded itself to dismiss, in  limine,   appellant’s  writ   petition  challenging  the proceedings of the Summary Court Martial.

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    4. We  have heard  learned counsel  on both  sides. The matter  was  adjourned  on  two  earlier  occasions  on  the submission of the learned Additional Solicitor General, that the question  whether a  lesser punishment was warranted was engaging  the  attention  of  the  appropriate  authorities. Apparently, nothing came out of it. F      The submissions  of  Shri  Sinha,  in  support  of  the appeal, admit of being formulated thus:      (a)  (i)  The  proceedings  of  the  Court-Martial  are                vitiated by  non-compliance with  the mandate                of Section  130(1) of  the Act  in  that  the                Summary Court  Martial did  not afford to the                appellant an  opportunity  to  challenge  its                constitution as required by that section;           (ii) The proceedings  of  the  Court-Martial  were                vitiated by  bias on the part of Respondent 4                who  participated   in  and   dominated   the                proceedings; H 518      (b)  In as much as the appellant was then serving a           sentence of rigorous imprisonment, he was not in           "active service" and that no question of           disobeying any lawful command could at all arise;      (c)  Appellant’s refusal,  while serving  a sentence to           accept food  did not amount to disobedience, under           Section 41,  of any  lawful command  of a superior           officer  in  such  manner  as  to  show  a  wilful           defiance of authority;      (d)  At all  events, the  punishment handed  down is so           disproportionate to  the offence  as to amount, in           itself  to   conclusive  evidence   of  bias   and           vindictiveness.      5. Re: contention (a):      The records  of the  proceedings of the Special Summary Court Martial  do not indicate that the procedural safeguard against bias  contained  in  Section  130  of  the  Act  was complied with. Section 130 provides:           "130(1) At  all  trials  by  general  district  or           summary general  court-martial,  as  soon  as  the           court is  assembled, the  names of  the  presiding           officer and  members shall  be read  over  to  the           accused, who  shall thereupon  be asked whether he           objects to  being tried  by any officer sitting on           the court.           (2)If the accused objects to any such officer, his           objection, and  also  the  reply  thereto  of  the           officer objected  to, shall be heard and recorded,           and the  remaining officers of the Court shall, in           the absence  of the  challenged officer  decide on           the objection."      The proceedings  do not  indicate-this was not disputed at the  hearing-that appellant  was asked whether he objects to be  tried by  any officer,  sitting at the Court-Martial. This, in  our opinion,  imparts a  basic  infirmity  to  the proceedings and  militates against  and  detracts  from  the concept of a fair trial.      The "Act" constitutes a special law in force conferring a special  jurisdiction on  the Court-Martial  prescribing a special procedure  for the  trial of  the offences under the ’Act’. Chapter  VI of the ’Act’ comprising of sections 34 to 68 specify  and define the various offences under the ’Act’. Sections 7] to 89 of Chapter VII specify the various 519 punishments. Rules  106  to  133  of  the  Army  Rules  1954 prescribe the  procedure of,  and before, the Summary Court-

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Martial. The Act and A the Rules constitute a self contained Code, specifying  offences and  the procedure for detention, custody and trial of the offenders by the Courts-Martial.      The procedural safe-guards contemplated in the Act must be considered  in the  context of  and corresponding  to the plenitude of  the Summary  jurisdiction of the Court-Martial and the  severity of  the consequences that visit the person subject to  that jurisdiction.  The  procedural  safe-guards should be  commensurate with  the sweep  of the  powers. The wider the  power, the  greater the need for the restraint in its  exercise   and  correspondingly,   more   liberal   the construction of  the procedural  safeguards envisaged by the Statute.  The   oft-quoted  words   of  Frankfurter,  J.  in Vitarelli v. Seaton, 359 U.S.535 are again worth re-calling;           "... if  dismissal from  employment is  based on a           defined procedure, even though generous beyond the           requirements that bind such agency, that procedure           must        be        scrupulously        observed           ..............................................           This judicially evolved rule of administrative law           is now  firmly established  and,  if  I  may  add,           rightly so.  He that  takes the  procedural  sword           shall perish with that sword. E      "The history  of liberty"  said the  same learned Judge "has largely  been the  history of  observance of procedural safeguards." (318 US 332).      We are  afraid, the  non-compliance of  the mandate  of section 130  is an  infirmity which  goes to the root of the jurisdiction and  without more,  vitiates  the  proceedings. lndeed it  has been  so held  by this  Court in  Prithvi Pal Singh v.  Union of  India, AIR  1982 SC  1413 where Desai, J referring to the purpose of section 130 observed:           "...... .Whenever  an objection is taken it has to           be  recorded.  In  order  to  ensure  that  anyone           objected to  does not  participate in disposing of           the objection .........           ........ This  is a  mandatory requirement because           the officer  objected to cannot participate in the           decision disposing of the objection. H 520           ....... The  provision conferring  a right  on the           accused to object to a member of the Court-Martial           sitting as a member and participating in the trial           ensures that  a charge  of bias  can be  made  and           investigated against  individual members composing           the  Court-Martial.   This  is   pre  eminently  a           rational provision which goes a long way to ensure           a fair trial."      What emerges,  therefore, is  that in  the present case there is  a non-compliance  with the  mandate of section 130 with the  attendant consequence  that the proceedings of the Summary Court-Martial  are  rendered  infirm  in  law.  This disposes of the first limb of the contention (a).      6. The  second limb  of the  contention is  as  to  the effect of  the alleged bias on the part of respondent 4. The test of  real likelihood  of bias  is whether  a  reasonable person, in  possession of  relevant information,  would have thought that bias was likely and is whether respondent 4 was likely to  be disposed  to  decide  the  matter  only  in  a particular way.      It is  the essence  of a judgment that it is made after due observance  of the  judicial process;  that the Court or Tribunal  passing   it  observes,   at  least   the  minimal requirements of  natural justice,  is composed  of impartial persons acting  fairly and without bias and in good faith. A

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judgment which is the result of bias or want of impartiality is  a   nullity  and  the  trial  "coram  non-judice".  (See Vassiliadas v. Vassiliades-AIR 1945 PC 38).      7. As  to the  tests of  the likelihood of bias what is relevant is  the reasonableness  of the apprehension in that regard in the mind of the party. The proper approach for the judge is  not to  look at  his own  mind  and  ask  himself, however, honestly. "Am I biased? "but to look at the mind of the party before him.      Lord Esher  in Allinson  v. General  Council of Medical Education and Registration, l 1894] 1 Q.B. 750 at 758 said:           "The question  is not,  whether in  fact he was or           was not biased. The Court cannot inquire into that           .......... .............  In the administration of           justice, whether by a recognised legal court or by           persons who,  although not  a legal  public court,           are acting in a similar capacity, public 521           policy requires  that, in  order that there should           be no doubt about the purity of the administration           any person  who is to A take part in it should not           be in  such a  position that he might be suspected           of being biased."      In Metropolitan Properties Co. (F.G.C.) Ltd. v. Lannon, [1969] 1 Q.B. 577, at 599, Lord Denning M.R. Observed: B           ". ..  in considering  whether there  was  a  real           likelihood of bias, the court does not look at the           mind of  the justice himself or at the mind of the           chairman of  the tribunal,  or whoever  it may be,           who sits  in a judicial capacity. It does not look           to see  if there  was a  real likelihood  that  he           would, or  did, in  fact favour  one side  at  the           expense of  the other.  The  court  looks  at  the           impression which  would be  given to other people.           Even if  he was  as impartial  as could  be never-           theless if  right minded  persons would think that           in the  circumstances there  was a real likelihood           of bias  on his  part,  then  he  should  not  sit           ....... ". D      Frankfurter J  in Public  Utilities Commission  of  the District of Columbia v. Pollack (343 US 451 at 466) said:           "The judicial  process demands  that a  judge move           within the  frame work of relevant legal rules and           the  court   covenanted  modes   of  thought   for           ascertaining them.  He must  think dispassionately           and submerge  private feeling on every aspect of a           case. There  is a  good deal  of shallow talk that           the judicial  robe does  not change the man within           it. It  does. The fact is that on the whole judges           do lay  aside private  views in  discharging their           judicial  functions.   This  is  achieved  through           training, professional habits, self-discipline and           that fortunate  alchemy by  which men are loyal to           the obligation with which they are interested. But           it is  also true  that reason  cannot control  the           subconscious influence  of feelings of which it is           unaware. When  there is  ground for believing that           such  unconscious  feelings  may  operate  in  the           ultimate judgment  or may not unfairly lead others           to  believe  they  are  operating,  judges  refuse           themselves. They do not sit in judgment .. ".      Referring to  the proper  test, Ackner  LJ in Regina v. Liverpool City  Justices, Ex-parte  Topping [1983] I WLR 119 said: H 522

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         "Assuming therefore, that the justices had applied           the  test   advised  by   Mr.  Pearson-Do  I  feel           prejudiced? then they would have applied the wrong           test, exercised  their  discretion  on  the  wrong           principle  and   the  same   result,  namely,  the           quashing of the conviction would follow."      Thus tested  the conclusion  becomes inescapable  that, having regard to the antecedent events, the participation of Respondent 4  in the Courts-Martial rendered the proceedings coram non-judice.      7. Re:  contention (b):  The mere circumstance that the appellant was,  at the  relevant point  of time,  serving  a sentence of imprisonment and could not therefore, be said to be in  ’active service’  does not detract from the fact that he was  still "a  person subject to this Act." This is clear from the  second clause  of Section  41(2) which  refers  to offences  committed   when  not  in  ’active  service’.  The difference is in the lesser punishment contemplated. We are, therefore, unable  to appreciate  the appositeness  of  this contention of Shri Sinha.      8. Re:  contention (c): The submission that a disregard of an  order to  eat food  does not  by itself  amount to  a disobedience to  a lawful command for purposes of section 41 has to  be examined in the context of the imperatives of the high and  rigorous discipline  to be maintained in the Armed Forces. Every  aspect of  life of  a soldier is regulated by discipline. Rejection  of food  might, under  circumstances, amount  to   an  indirect  expression  of  remonstrance  and resentment against the higher authority. To say that, a mere refusal to  eat food is an innocent, neutral act might be an over-simplification of  the matter.  Mere in-action need not always necessarily be neutral. Serious acts of calumny could be done  in silence.  A disregard  of a  direction to accept food might  assume the complexion of disrespect to, and even defiance  of  authority.  But  an  unduly  harsh  and  cruel reaction to  the expression  of the  injured feelings may be counter-productive and  even  by  itself  be  subversive  of discipline. Appellant was perhaps expressing his anguish at, what  he   considered,  an   unjust   and   disproportionate punishment for  airing his  grievances before  his  superior officers. However,  it is  not necessary  in  this  case  to decide contention  (c) in  view of  our finding on the other contentions.      9.  Re:   contention  (d):  Judicial  review  generally speaking,  is  not  directed  against  a  decision,  but  is directed against the "decision making process". The question of the  choice and  quantum  of  punishment  is  within  the jurisdiction and discretion of the Court-Martial. But the 523 sentence has to suit the offence and the offender. It should not be  A vindictive  or unduly  harsh. It  should not be so disproportionate to  the offence  as to shock the conscience and amount  in itself  to conclusive  evidence of  bias. The doctrine of  proportionality, as  part  of  the  concept  of judicial review,  would ensure  that even on an aspect which is, otherwise,  within the  exclusive province of the Court- Martial, if the decision of the Court even as to sentence is an outrageous  defiance of  B logic, then the sentence would not be  immune from correction. Irrationality and perversity are recognised  grounds of  judicial review.  In Council  of Civil Service  Unions v.  Minister for  the  Civil  Service, [1984] 3 Weekly Law Reports 1174 (HL) Lord Deplock said:           "... Judicial  Review has  I think  developed to a           stage today  when without reiterating any analysis           of the  steps by  which the  development has  come

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         about, one  can conveniently  classify under three           heads the grounds upon which administrative action           is subject  to control  by  judicial  review.  The           first ground l would call ’illegality’. the second           irrationality’   and    the   third    ’procedural           impropriety’. That  is not  to  say  that  further           development on  a case  by case  basis may  not in           course of time add further grounds. I have in mind           particularly the  possible adoption  in the future           of the  principle of  ’proportionality’  which  is           recognised in the administrative law of several of           our  fellow   members  of  the  European  Economic           Community ............................ E      In BhagatRam  v. State of Himachal Pradesh, A.I.R. 1983 SC 454 this Court held:           "It is  equally true that the penalty imposed must           be commensurate with the gravity of the misconduct           and  that  any  penalty  disproportionate  to  the           gravity of  the misconduct  would be  violative of           Article 14 of the Constitution. The point  to note,  and emphasise  is that  all powers have legal limits.      In the  present case  the punishment  is so  strikingly disproportionate as to call for and justify interference. It cannot be allowed to remain uncorrected in judicial review.      10. In  the result,  for  the  foregoing  reasons,  the appeal is  allowed, the  order of  the High Court set aside, the writ  petition preferred  in the  High Court allowed and the impugned proceedings of the 524 Summary  Court-Martial   dated  March   30,  1985,  and  the consequent order  and sentence are quashed. The appellant is entitled to  and shall  be reinstated  with all monetary and service benefits.  There will,  however, be  no order  as to costs. N.P.V.                                      Appeal allowed. 525