A complaint filed against a public servant cannot be forwarded without any sanction obtained.

A complaint filed against a public servant cannot be forwarded without any sanction obtained.
2021 ICO 106
High Court of Kerala
Decided on 15-02-2021
Justice R Narayana Pisharadi
Shailaja P
Vs.
Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Bureau

Case Numbers: Crl.Rev.Pet. No.1547 of 2016


Equivalents : 2021 (2) KHC 11 :: 2021 (1) KLD 294 :: 2021 (2) KLT 294 :: 2021 (2) KLJ 278


For Petitioner:  T G Rajendran (Adv.)


For Respondent : A Rajesh (Spl. PP)


Refers to :-



Headnotes

A. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 - Sections 13(1)(c),(d) and 19 - Special Judge forwarding complaint for conducting preliminary enquiry and after considering the report dismissing the complaint. Complainant cannot challenge the dismissal order without challenging order of Special Judge ordering preliminary enquiry. (Paras 13 and 14)


B. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 - Section 19 and Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 - Section 156(3) - A complaint filed against a public servant alleging commission of an offence cannot be forwarded by the court for investigation in the absence of sanction obtained by the complainant. (Para 22)


C. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 - Sections 13(1)(c),(d) and 19 - Sanction for prosecution - Grant of sanction by the competent authority is a sine qua non for taking cognizance of the offence. (Para 24) D. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 - Sections 13(1)(c),(d) and 19 - Complaint before special judge against Public Servants  Special Judge cannot act on such complaint without any sanction under Section 19(1). (Para 25)


E. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 - Section 19 - Sanction for prosecution  Scope of Section 19 after amendment  Examined. Conditions to be satisfied by a private person to get sanction for prosecution  Enumerated. (Para 27) F. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 - Sections 13(1)(c),(d) and 19 - When the complaint did not disclose commission of any offence, Special Judge can reject the complaint . Dismissal of the complaint at pre-cognizance stage is not contemplated by law. (Para 32)


ORDER
R Narayana Pisharadi,J.

1.  The revision petitioner is said to be a human rights activist. She was  the complainant before the Court of the Enquiry Commissioner and Special  Judge, Thalassery.
2.  The petitioner filed Annexure-I complaint before the Director of  Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Bureau (VACB). The complaint was with  regard to the corrupt practices conducted by the officers of the  Malanadu Rubber and Other Agricultural and Processing Co-operative  Society (for short 'the Society') in relation to the procurement of  copra/coconut.
3.  Annexure-I complaint was forwarded by the Director of VACB to the  Inspector of Police, VACB, Kasaragod unit. After conducting a surprise  check and verification of records, the Inspector of Police submitted  Annexure-II report to the Director  of VACB. This report contained the  details of the irregularities noticed during the surprise check and also  some recommendations.
4.  The Director, VACB forwarded Annexure-II report to the Government. As  per the direction of the Government, a vigilance enquiry was conducted  by the Dy.S.P, VACB, Kasaragod unit. He submitted Annexure-IV enquiry  report stating that the enquiry did not yield any direct evidence to  prove the allegations.
5.  The petitioner then filed a writ petition as W.P.(C) No.13750/2015  before this Court for quashing Annexure-IV vigilance enquiry report and  for issuing a direction to the VACB to conduct a fresh enquiry in the  matter. As per Annexure-VI judgment, this Court closed the writ petition  granting liberty to the petitioner to invoke appropriate remedies in  accordance with law.
6.  Thereafter, the petitioner filed Annexure-VII complaint in the Court of  the Enquiry Commissioner and Special Judge, Thalassery against the  Secretary, President and the Directors of the Society, the Office  Manager of KERAFED, the Joint Registrar of the Co-operative Societies  and a private person, alleging commission of the offences punishable  under Sections 13(1)(c) and 13(1)(d) read with 13(2) of the Prevention  of Corruption Act, 1988 (for short 'the Act') and under Sections 465,  468, 409, 420 and 120B of the Indian Penal Code.
7.  Learned Special Judge forwarded Annexure-VII complaint to the Dy.S.P,  VACB for conducting preliminary enquiry. A preliminary enquiry report  was filed in the court stating that a detailed enquiry was conducted at  the time of the vigilance enquiry and there are no grounds for taking  any action against the accused persons based on the allegations made by  the complainant.
8.  Learned Special Judge considered the allegations in Annexure-VII  complaint and also the findings in the vigilance enquiry report and  found that the allegations made in the complaint are proved to be not  tenable by the vigilance enquiry conducted and apart from the  allegations made in the complaint, there are no materials before the  court to hold that misappropriation of funds was committed by the  accused persons. Accordingly, as per Annexure-VIII order, the learned  Special Judge dismissed the complaint.
9. The petitioner has filed this revision petition challenging the legality and propriety of Annexure-VIII order.
10. Heard the learned counsel for the petitioner and the learned Public Prosecutor.
11.  Learned counsel for the petitioner has not made any submissions before  this Court based on the allegations contained in Annexure-VII complaint.  Therefore, it is not necessary here to narrate the allegations in the  complaint in detail. Suffice it to state that the allegations in  Annexure-VII complaint are with regard to the misconduct, malpractices  and misappropriation of money committed by the officers in connection  with procurement of copra/coconut by the Society.
12.  Learned counsel for the petitioner has challenged the legality and  propriety of Annexure-VIII order on the following grounds:
(1)  Learned Special Judge should have treated Annexure-VII complaint as a  protest complaint. The complaint should not have been forwarded to the  VACB for conducting any preliminary enquiry.
(2)  Learned Special Judge should have examined the complainant on oath and  proceeded further under Chapter XV of the Code of Criminal Procedure,  1973 (for short 'the Code').
(3)  Dismissal of the complaint by the learned Special Judge is illegal and  improper. The complaint could have been dismissed only under Section 203  of the Code and it could have been dismissed only after examination of  the complainant on oath and after taking further steps, if necessary.
13.  When the petitioner filed the complaint in the court, the learned  Special Judge passed an order directing the VACB to conduct a  preliminary enquiry. The petitioner did not then challenge that order.  Having failed to challenge the order passed by the court for conducting  preliminary enquiry, it is futile for the petitioner now to contend that  no such order should have been passed by the court.
  14. Even if it is accepted that, in view of the vigilance enquiry  conducted earlier it was not necessary for the court to direct a  preliminary enquiry to be made, it did not cause any prejudice to the  petitioner. It appears that the Dy.S.P, VACB did not conduct any  separate preliminary enquiry but made a report to the court adopting the  findings in Annexure-IV vigilance enquiry report.
15. Even otherwise, in the light of the decision of the Apex Court in Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh AIR  2014 SC 187 :: 2013 (4) KLJ 686 :: 2013 ICO 2124, it cannot be found  that any illegality or impropriety was committed by the learned Special  Judge in passing an order to conduct a preliminary enquiry. Inspite of  making reference to Annexure-IV vigilance enquiry report in the  complaint, it is not known whether the petitioner had produced copy of  that report before the court along with the complaint.
16.  All persons arrayed as accused in the complaint, except one, were  public servants. On receiving the complaint, the learned Special Judge  could not have forwarded it under Section 156(3) of the Code for  investigation, in the absence of any sanction under Section 19(1) of the  Act obtained by the complainant.
17.  Section 19(1) of the Act (as it stood before the amendment by Act 16 of  2018) provided that no Court shall take  cognizance of an offence  punishable under Sections 7, 10, 11, 13 and 15 alleged to have been  committed by a public servant, except with the previous sanction of the  competent authority.
18. In Anil Kumar v. Aiyappa : (2013) 10 SCC 705 :: 2013 ICO 1934, the Apex Court has held as follows:  
When  a Special Judge refers a complaint for investigation under Section  156(3) Cr.P.C, obviously, he has not taken cognizance of the offence  and, therefore, it is a pre-cognizance stage and cannot be equated with  post cognizance stage. ....... We may now examine whether, in the above  mentioned legal situation, the requirement of sanction is a  pre-condition for ordering investigation under Section 156(3) Cr.P.C,  even at a pre-cognizance stage. ...... Once it is noticed that there was  no previous sanction, as already indicated in various judgments  referred to hereinabove, the Magistrate cannot order investigation  against a public servant while invoking powers under Section 156(3)  Cr.P.C.
19. Having regard to the ratio of the judgment in Anil Kumar (supra), in Narayana Swamy v. State of Karnataka AIR  2016 SC 4125 :: 2016 ICO 1020, the Apex Court held that an order   directing further investigation under Section 156(3) of the Code cannot  be passed in the absence of valid sanction under Section 19(1) of the  Act.
20. In Manju Surana v. Sunil Arora  : (2018) 5 SCC 557 :: 2018 ICO 499, the question that was considered  was whether prior sanction for prosecution against a public servant was  required before setting in motion even the investigative process under  Section 156(3) of the Code. The Apex Court referred the question to be  decided by a Larger Bench.
21. A Division Bench of this Court, in Muhammed v. State of Kerala :  2019 (1) KHC 239: 2019 (1) KLT 156 :: 2019 (1) KLJ 536 :: 2018 ICO  2492, has held that until a final decision is taken in the reference in  Manju Surana (supra), the dictum laid down in Anil Kumar (supra) would hold the field.
22.  Therefore, as per the law as it stood at the time when the learned  Special Judge passed Annexure-VIII order and as it stands now, a  complaint filed against a public servant alleging commission of an  offence specified in Section 19(1) of the Act cannot be forwarded by the  court under Section 156(3) of the   Code for investigation in the  absence of sanction under Section 19(1) of the Act obtained by the  complainant.
23.  Learned counsel for the petitioner has contended that the Special Judge  should have examined the petitioner/complainant on oath and proceeded  further under the provisions of Chapter XV of the Code. When the  Magistrate or the Special Judge applies his mind to the facts or  allegations in the complaint with a view to proceed under the provisions  of Chapter XV of the Code, he takes cognizance of the offence. In other  words, the contention of the petitioner is that the learned Special  Judge should have taken cognizance of the offences alleged against the  accused in the complaint.
24.  Learned Special Judge could not have taken cognizance of the offences  under the Act in the absence of sanction under Section 19(1) of the Act.  The provision contained in Section 19(1) of the Act is couched in  mandatory terms and forbids the court from taking cognizance of any  offence mentioned therein against a public servant except with the  previous sanction of the competent authority. Grant of sanction by the  competent  authority under Section 19(1) of the Act is a sine qua non  for  taking cognizance of the offence. The language employed in sub-  section (1) of Section 19 admits of no equivocation and operates  as a  complete and absolute bar to any Court taking cognizance of any offence  mentioned therein against a public servant except with the previous  sanction of the competent authority (See Nanjappa v. State of Karnataka : AIR 2015 SC 3060 :: 2015 ICO 1460).
25.  When a complaint is filed before the Magistrate, ordinarily, he has got  two options. The Magistrate may either forward the complaint to the  police under Section 156(3) of the Code for investigation or he may take  cognizance of the offence and proceed under the provisions of Chapter  XV of the Code. In the instant case, as already found, in view of the  decision in Anil Kumar (supra), in the absence of sanction under Section  19(1) of the Act, the learned Special Judge could not have forwarded  the complaint under Section 156(3) of the Code for investigation. In  view of the bar under Section 19(1) of the Act, he could not have taken  cognizance of the offences under the Act and proceeded further. In such  circumstances, even assuming that the allegations in the complaint filed  by the petitioner and the findings in the vigilance enquiry report,  prima facie, disclosed commission of offences under the Act by the  accused persons, the learned Special Judge could not have acted upon  such complaint without any sanction under Section 19(1) of the Act  obtained by the petitioner.
26.  At this juncture, it is relevant here to take notice of the provisos to  Section 19(1) of the Act inserted by amendment as per Act 16 of 2018.  The first proviso to Section 19(1) of the Act states that, no request  can be made by a person, other than a police officer or an officer of an  investigating agency or other law enforcement authority, to the  Government or the competent authority for previous sanction for taking  cognizance by the court of any of the offences specified in that  provision unless such person has filed a complaint in a competent court  about the alleged offences for which the public servant is sought to be  prosecuted and the court has not dismissed the complaint under Section  203 of the Code and directed the complainant to obtain sanction for  prosecution against the public servant for further proceeding. The  second proviso to Section 19(1) of the Act states that, in case of any  request from any such person, the Government or the competent authority  shall not accord sanction to prosecute a public servant without  providing an opportunity of being heard to the concerned public servant.  
27.  Therefore, after the amendment of Section 19(1) of the Act, which came  into effect from 26.07.2018, in order to get sanction for prosecution, a  private person has to satisfy two conditions. The first condition is  that he should have filed a complaint in the competent court alleging  the offences for which the public servant is sought to be prosecuted.  The second condition is that the court has not dismissed such complaint  under Section 203 of the Code but directed him to obtain sanction for  prosecution against the public servant. In such a situation, the law now  also provides an opportunity to the public servant concerned of being  heard in the matter of granting sanction for prosecution.
28.  However, there is merit in the contention of the learned counsel for  the petitioner that the learned Special Judge should not have dismissed  the complaint under Section 203 of the Code without proceeding under the  provisions of Chapter XV of the Code.
29. In Mehmood v. Khazir  : AIR 2015 SC 2195 :: 2015 ICO 1802, the Supreme Court has held as  follows:  If the complaint, on the face of it, does not disclose the  commission of any offence, the Magistrate shall not take cognizance  under Section 190(1)(a) of Cr.P.C. The complaint is simply to be  rejected.
30. In Biju Purushothaman v. State of Kerala [2008 (3) KHC 24: 2008 (3) KLT 85 :: 2008 (2) KLJ 625 :: 2008 ICO 4399], this Court has held as follows:
The  power of dismissal of the complaint is not available to the Magistrate  at the threshold. If after perusing the complaint, the Magistrate is of  opinion that the averments therein do not at all spell out any offence,  then he should definitely possess the power to throw away the complaint  and terminate the matter then and there. This power is not dismissal but  rejection. The Magistrate can, in such a case, reject the complaint.  .... If the complaint on the face of it does not at all make out any  offence, then the Magistrate may reject the complaint. This power of  rejection at the precognizance stage is inherent in any Magistrate and  the said power should not be mistaken for the power of dismissal  available to the Magistrate under Section 203 Cr.P.C since the latter  power of dismissal is one which can be exercised only at the post  cognizance stage.
31.  In Raju Puzhankara v. Kodiyeri Balakrishnan [2008 (2) KHC 318: 2008 (2)  KLT 467 :: 2008 ICO 11837], this Court has held as follows:  
There  is a power in every Magistrate to reject the complaint even at the  pre-cognizance stage if the complaint on the face of it does not make  out the offence alleged in the complaint. In such a case, the law does  not oblige the Magistrate to proceed to Section 200 Cr.P.C or the  subsequent sections in Chapter XV of Cr.P.C and thereby take cognizance  of the alleged offence the ingredients of which are not even averred in  the complaint. In such a case, the Magistrate undoubtedly has the power  to reject the complaint at the threshold.
32.  In the instant case, the learned Special Judge did not take cognizance  of the offences alleged in the complaint. The complainant was not  examined on oath and no further steps were taken. Learned Special Judge  only considered the allegations in  the complaint and the findings made  in the vigilance enquiry report and found that the allegations in the  complaint were proved to be not tenable. In other words, the learned  Special Judge was of the view that the complaint did not disclose  commission of any offence alleged in the complaint. In such a situation,  the learned Special Judge should not have dismissed the complaint but  he should have rejected it. Dismissal of the complaint at that stage is  not contemplated by law. However, the error committed by the learned  Special Judge in passing an order dismissing the complaint instead of  rejecting it is not sufficient to set aside Annexure-VIII order. The  revision petition is liable to be dismissed.
33.  Consequently, the dismissal of Annexure-VII complaint by the learned  Special Judge as per Annexure-VIII order, shall be treated as rejection  of the complaint. With the above observation, the revision petition is  dismissed.