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Thursday, April 6, 2017

whether after transfer of a disciplinary proceeding, as per the mandate enshrined under Section 36B(1) of the Advocates Act, 1961 (for brevity, “the Act”) to the Bar Council of India (BCI) from the State Bar Council, can the BCI, instead of enquiring into the complaint and adjudicating thereon, send it back to the State Bar Council with the direction to decide the controversy within a stipulated time. = Once a complaint is made by a litigant, it has to follow a definite procedure and is required to be dealt with as per the command of the Act to conclude the disciplinary proceeding within a period of one year from the date of receipt of the complaint or the date of initiation of the proceedings at the instance of the State Bar Council. On many an occasion, it has come to the notice of this Court that disciplinary authority of the State Bar Council is not disposing of the complaint within the stipulated period, as a consequence of which the proceeding stands transferred to the BCI. The responsibility to deal with the disciplinary proceedings is cast on the State Bar Council which constitutes its disciplinary committee. Every member of the Disciplinary Committee is aware that the proceeding has to be concluded within one year. The complainant and the delinquent advocate are required to cooperate. Not to do something what one is required to do, tantamount to irresponsibility and the prestige of an institution or a statutory body inheres in carrying out the responsibility. One may not be always right in the decision but that does not mean to be shirking away from taking a decision and allow the matter to be transferred by operation of law to the BCI. A statutory authority is obliged to constantly remind itself that the mandate of the statute is expediency and the stipulation of time is mandatory. It will not be erroneous to say that the Disciplinary Committee is expected to perform its duty within a time frame and not to create a blameworthy situation. It is better to remember offering an explanation to one’s own conscience is like blaming everything on “accident”. When duties are given by law, duties are required to be performed. In view of the aforesaid, we allow the appeal, set aside the order passed by the Disciplinary Committee of the BCI and remand the matter to the Disciplinary Committee of the BCI to decide the same in accordance with law within a period of three months from the date of receipt of copy of this judgment. Registry is directed to send a copy of this judgment to all the Secretaries of each of the State Bar Council, who in turn can apprise the members of the State Bar Council so that appropriate steps are taken. There shall be no order as to costs.

                                 REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 8307 OF 2015



Ajitsinh Arjunsinh Gohil                ...   Appellant(s)

                                   Versus

Bar Council of Gujarat and Anr.              ...  Respondent(s)




                               J U D G M E N T


Dipak Misra, J.


      The singular issue that is required to be addressed in this appeal  is
whether after transfer of a disciplinary  proceeding,  as  per  the  mandate
enshrined under Section 36B(1) of the  Advocates  Act,  1961  (for  brevity,
“the Act”) to the Bar Council of India (BCI) from  the  State  Bar  Council,
can the BCI, instead  of  enquiring  into  the  complaint  and  adjudicating
thereon, send it back to the State Bar Council with the direction to  decide
the controversy within a stipulated time.  It is interesting  to  note  that
Mr. Preet Pal Singh, the learned counsel for  BCI  would  concede  that  the
said statutory authority has no such power. Mr. D.N.  Ray,  learned  counsel
appearing for the Gujarat State Bar Council  would  propound  with  all  the
thrust at his command that BCI has unfettered jurisdiction to pass  such  an
order inasmuch as it is the  apex  statutory  body  under  the  Act  and  it
possesses plenary powers and, in any case, the  language  of  the  statutory
provision does not create any impediment  for  the  same.  Mr.  Anup  Kumar,
learned counsel  for  the  appellant,  as  is  expected,  concurs  with  the
proponement of Mr. Singh and further  submits  that  the  time  consumed  in
disposal of the disciplinary authority has put the appellant in a  situation
of misery and, therefore, this Court should  quash  the  initiation  of  the
disciplinary proceedings so that efflux of time can  give  the  appellant  a
healing touch and put an end to the agony he has already endured.
2.    In such a situation, thinking it apposite,  the  Court  appointed  Mr.
M.L. Lahoty, learned counsel, as the friend  of  the  Court,  who  submitted
with immense assurance that  acceptance  of  the  stand  of  the  State  Bar
Council would  not  only  run  counter  to  the  language  employed  by  the
legislature but shall cause immense violence to the same  and  the  duty  of
this Court is to give full meaning to the legislative intendment.
3.    We may, in brief, state the factual  score.  The  appellant,  who  was
enrolled as an Advocate with the Bar Council of Gujarat, got elected to  the
post of Secretary of Gandhinagar Bar Association in  2007  and  subsequently
he was elected as the  President  of  the  Bar  Association  in  2008.   One
                          Mr. P.D. Kanani, who was the Secretary of the  Bar
Association due to differences leveled false  allegations  and  filed  false
civil and criminal cases against the  appellant  and  also  wrote  a  letter
dated 04.09.2008 in this regard to the Secretary,  Bar  Council  of  Gujarat
alleging that he was denied access to certain records and the  accounts  and
there was misappropriation of huge  amount  of  the  Bar  Association.   The
differences and the misunderstanding between  the  appellant  and  Mr.  P.D.
Kanani was resolved and a settlement was arrived at between the  parties  on
18.09.2008 and the book of accounts and other records were  handed  over  by
the appellant to Mr. Kanani.
4.     When everything appeared to have been put to rest,  after  expiry  of
one year and three months, Bar Council of Gujarat vide its  B.C.  Resolution
No. 176 of 2009 dated 06.12.2009 resolved to call for  an  explanation  from
the appellant with regard to complaint preferred  by  Mr.  P.D.  Kanani  and
further putting forth an allegation that it  had  received  a  letter  dated
01.06.2010 from the Registrar, High Court  of  Gujarat  regarding  complaint
against the appellant.   On  the  basis  of  letter  dated  01.06.2010,  Bar
Council of Gujarat took  suo  motu  cognizance  against  the  appellant  and
referred the matter  to  Disciplinary  Committee  III.   The  complaint  was
registered as DC Case No. 25/2010.
5.    It is worthy to note that  the  Bar  Council  of  Gujarat  decided  to
conduct trial of D.C. case No. 25/2010 along  with  D.C.  Case  No.  15/2010
before the Disciplinary Committee No. I.  The  case  of  the  appellant  was
again  transferred  to  Disciplinary  Committee  No.  XII   and   again   to
Disciplinary Committee No. IX.
6.    As the factual matrix would depict,  the  appellant,  upon  filing  of
application, was granted time to file  his  written  arguments  but  without
waiting for the reply of the appellant, the Bar Council of Gujarat vide  its
order dated 17.05.2011 decided D.C. Case No. 15/2010 against  the  appellant
and directed removal of the name of the appellant from roll of  Bar  Council
of Gujarat and imposed costs of Rs.50,000/-.  However, as no order could  be
passed in D.C. Case No. 25/2010 during the statutory  period,  subsequently,
the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of Gujarat vide  letter  dated
24.08.2011, transferred the D.C. Case No.  25/2010  to  the  BCI  which  was
registered as BCI Tr. Case No. 197/2011.
7.    The appellant contended before the Disciplinary Committee of  the  BCI
that there was no such letter dated 01.06.2010 purported to  be  written  by
the Registrar (Inspection), High Court of Gujarat  on  the  basis  of  which
cognizance against appellant had been  taken.  The  Disciplinary  Committee,
after hearing the  appellant,  vide  order  dated  20.06.2015  remanded  the
matter to the Bar Council of Gujarat with a  direction  to  dispose  of  the
case within a period of one  year.    Being  aggrieved,  the  appellant  has
filed the present appeal.
8.    As  indicated  earlier,  Mr.  Anup  Kumar,  learned  counsel  for  the
appellant submitted that the Disciplinary Committee of  the  BCI  could  not
have remanded the matter to the Disciplinary Committee of  the  Bar  Council
of Gujarat as  the  same  is  not  permissible  in  a  case  that  has  been
transferred to the BCI by operation of law under Section 36B(1) of the  Act.

9.    Mr. Ray, learned counsel for the respondent No. 1, in his turn,  would
contend that if the language employed in Section 36B(1)  and  Section  36(2)
are read in juxtaposition, it is abundantly clear that  the  power  to  deal
with the proceedings upon transfer by the BCI is different, for the  statute
confers plenary power on the BCI and such plenary powers in  its  ambit  and
sweep would include the power to remand.  He would emphasise  on  the  words
“may dispose of the same as if it were a proceeding  withdrawn  for  inquiry
under sub-section (2) of section 36” and on that  basis  propound  that  the
said words confer wi8de jurisdiction on the BCI  and  do  not  restrict  its
jurisdiction only to decide the matter.

10.   To  appreciate  the  rival  submissions  raised  at  the  Bar,  it  is
necessary to keenly scrutinize various provisions of the Act and  the  rules
framed by the BCI.  Prior to that, it has to be kept in mind  that  the  Act
was brought into force to amend and consolidate the law  relating  to  legal
practitioners and to provide for the constitution of  Bar  Councils  and  an
All-India Bar.  The statement of objects and reasons of  the  Act  describes
the main features, which are as follows:-
“The main features of the Bill are, -

1. The establishment of an All India  Bar  Council  and  a  common  roll  of
advocates, and advocate on the common roll having a  right  to  practice  in
any part of the country and in any Court, including the Supreme Court;

2. The integration of the bar into a single  class  of  legal  practitioners
know as advocates;

3.  The prescription  of  a  uniform  qualification  for  the  admission  of
persons to be advocates;

4.  The division of advocates into  senior  advocates  and  other  advocates
based on merit;

5.  The creation of autonomous Bar Councils, one for the whole of India  and
on for each State.

Following the recommendations of the All India Bar  Committee  and  the  Law
Commission, the Bill recognized the continued existence of the system  known
as the dual system now prevailing in the High Court of Calcutta and  Bombay,
by making suitable provisions in that behalf: It would, however, be open  to
t he two High Courts, if they so desire, to discontinue this system  at  any
time.

The Bill, being a comprehensive measure,  repeals  the  Indian  Bar  Council
Act, 1926, and all other laws on the subject.”

11.   Section 2(e) defines “Bar Council of India” as follows:-
“Bar Council of India” means the Bar Council  constituted  under  Section  4
for the territories to which this Act extends.”

12.   Section 3 deals with State Bar  Councils.   Section  4  provides  that
there shall be Bar Council for the territories to which this Act extends  to
be known as the Bar Council  of  India  and  stipulates  who  shall  be  the
members of the said Bar Council.  Section 6 enumerates the functions of  the
State Bar Councils.  Section 6(1)(c) empowers  the  State  Bar  Councils  to
entertain and determine cases of misconduct against advocates on  its  roll.
Section 7 engrafts the functions of the Bar Council  of  India.   Section  9
deals with the Disciplinary Committees. The said  provisions  is  reproduced
below:-

“Section 9. Disciplinary Committees. –

(1) A Bar Council shall constitute  one  or  more  disciplinary  committees,
each of which shall consist of three persons of whom two shall be  a  person
co-opted by the Council from amongst its members and the other  shall  be  a
person co-opted by the  Council  from  amongst  advocates  who  possess  the
qualifications specified in the proviso to sub-section (2) of Section 3  and
who are not members of the Council, and the senior-  most  advocate  amongst
the members of a disciplinary committee shall be the Chairman thereof.

(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), any  disciplinary
committee constituted prior to the commencement of the Advocates  (Amendment
) Act, 1964, (21 of 1964) may dispose of the proceeding  pending  before  it
as if this section had not been amended by the said Act.”

13.   Chapter V contains the heading “Conduct  of  Advocates”.   Section  35
deals with punishment of advocates for misconduct.  Section 35(1) lays  down
that where on receipt of a complaint or otherwise a State  Bar  Council  has
reason to believe  that  any  advocate  on  its  roll  has  been  guilty  of
misconduct, it shall  refer  the  case  for  disposal  to  its  disciplinary
committee.  Section 35(1A) empowers the State Bar Council to may  either  of
its own motion or on application  made  to  it  by  any  person  interested,
withdraw a proceeding pending before its disciplinary committee  and  direct
the inquiry to be made by any other disciplinary  committee  of  that  State
Bar Council.  Sub-section (3) of Section 35 provides for  nature  of  orders
to be passed by the disciplinary committee of  a  State  Bar  Council.   The
said provisions reads as follows:-
“Section 35(3) ?The disciplinary committee of  a  State  Bar  Council  after
giving the advocate concerned and the Advocate- General  an  opportunity  of
being heard, may make any of the following orders, namely:-

dismiss the complaint or,  where  the  proceedings  were  initiated  at  the
instance of the State Bar Council, direct that the proceedings be filed;

reprimand the advocate;

suspend the advocate from practice for such period as it may deem fit;

remove the name of the advocate from the State roll of advocates.”

14.   Section 36 deals with  the  disciplinary  powers  of  Bar  Council  of
India.  The said provision is as follows:-

“Section 36. Disciplinary powers of Bar Council of India-


(1) Where on receipt of a complaint or otherwise the Bar  Council  of  India
has reason to believe that any advocate whose name is  not  entered  on  any
State roll has been guilty of professional or other misconduct, it shall  be
refer the case for disposal to its disciplinary committee.


(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in  this  Chapter,  the  disciplinary
committee of the Bar Council of India may either of its own motion or  on  a
report by any State Bar Council or an application made to it by  any  person
interested,  withdraw  for  inquiry  before  itself  any   proceedings   for
disciplinary action against any advocate  pending  before  the  disciplinary
committee of any State Bar Council and dispose of the same.


(3) The disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India disposing of  any
case under this section, shall observe, so far  as  may  be,  the  procedure
laid down in Section 35, the references  to  the  Advocate-General  in  that
section being construed as references to the Attorney-General of India.


(4) In disposing of any proceedings  under  this  section  the  disciplinary
committee of the  Bar  Council  of  India  may  make  any  order  which  the
disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council  can  make  under  sub-section
(3) of section, 35  and  where  any  proceedings  have  been  withdrawn  for
inquiry before the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of  India]  the
State Bar Council concerned shall give effect to any such order.”


15.   Section 36B that has come into force w.e.f.  31.01.1974  provides  for
disposal of disciplinary proceedings.   The  said  provision  is  reproduced
hereinbelow:-


“Section 36B. Disposal of disciplinary proceedings-

(1) The disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council shall dispose  of  the
complaint received by it under Section 35 expeditiously  and  in  each  cash
the proceedings shall be concluded within a period  of  one  year  from  the
date of the receipt of the complaint  or  the  date  of  initiation  of  the
proceedings at the instance of the State Bar Council, as the  case  may  be,
failing which such proceedings shall stand transferred to  the  Bar  Council
of India which may dispose of the same as if it were a proceeding  withdrawn
for inquiry under sub section (2) of section 36.

(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in  sub  section  (1)  where  on  the
commencement of the Advocates (Amendment)  Act,  1973,  any  proceedings  in
respect of any disciplinary matter against an  advocate  is  pending  before
the disciplinary  committee  of  a  State  Bar  Council,  that  disciplinary
committee of the State Bar Council  shall  dispose  of  the  same  within  a
period of six months from the date of such complaint, or, as  the  case  may
be, the date of initiation of the proceedings at the instance of  the  State
Bar Council, whichever is later, failing which such other  proceeding  shall
stand transferred to the Bar  Council  of  India  for  disposal  under  sub-
section.”

16.   Relying on the said provision, it is urged by learned counsel for  the
appellant that if any disciplinary proceeding against a delinquent  advocate
initiated under Section 35 of the Act is not concluded within  a  period  of
one year, by operation of law, the same stands transferred to  BCI  and  BCI
is authorized to dispose of the same as if it were  a  proceeding  withdrawn
for inquiry under sub-section (2) of Section 36 of the Act  and,  therefore,
the State Bar Council ceases to have jurisdiction.  Emphasis has  also  been
laid on the language employed in sub-section (2) of  Section  36  that   the
BCI has the authority either of its own or on a  report  by  any  State  Bar
Council or an application made to it by the Disciplinary  Committee  of  the
person interested to withdraw for enquiry before itself any  proceeding  for
disciplinary action against the advocate.  Stress is laid  on  the  language
used in sub-section (4) of Section 36 to  highlight  that  the  Disciplinary
Authority of the BCI is entitled to make  an  order  that  the  Disciplinary
Committee of a State Bar Council can make under sub-section (3)  of  Section
35 and further where any proceeding has been withdrawn  for  inquiry  before
the Disciplinary Committee of the  BCI,  the  State  Bar  Council  concerned
shall give effect to any such order.
17.   Learned counsel would further urge that if the  interpretation  sought
to be placed by the appellant is accepted, the  BCI  would  be  overburdened
with original proceedings from various State Bar Councils and  the  mischief
sought to be corrected under Section  36B(1)  of  the  Act,  namely,  timely
disposal of the complaint, would defeat the statutory purpose.
18.   Learned Amicus Curiae submits that  once  a  case  is  transferred  by
operation of law, it is obligatory on its part to decide  the  same  on  its
merits, for the language employed  under  sub-section  (1)  of  Section  36B
encapsulates two concepts, namely, (i) transfer of  proceedings  on  failure
to conclude the same within one year, and (ii) the BCI is to dispose of  the
same as if it were the proceedings withdrawn for enquiry  under  sub-section
(2) of Section 36.  Elaborating further, he  would  urge  that  there  is  a
transfer by operation of law and the disposal has to be done as if it  is  a
proceeding withdrawn for  enquiry  under  sub-section  (2)  of  Section  36.
According to  learned  counsel,  once  by  operation  of  law  the  case  is
transferred, it has to be disposed of by the BCI and the manner of  disposal
will not confer jurisdiction on it to send back the case to  the  State  Bar
Council.
19.   In this context, it is appropriate to refer to Section 37 of  the  Act
that provides for  appeal  to  the  BCI.   It  stipulates  that  any  person
aggrieved by an order passed by the Disciplinary Committee of  a  State  Bar
Council may prefer an appeal to the BCI  within  60  days  of  the  date  of
communication of the order to him and further such appeal shall be heard  by
the Disciplinary Committee of the  BCI  which  may  pass  such  other  order
including the order varying  the  punishment  awarded  by  the  Disciplinary
Committee of the State Bar Council as it deems fit.
20.   Section 42 of the Act that deals with the power  of  the  Disciplinary
Committee.  The Disciplinary Committee of a Bar Council has the same  powers
as are vested in a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure in  respect
of certain matters that pertain to enquiry.  It has been highlighted by  the
learned counsel for the respondent No. 1 that  all  proceedings  before  the
Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council shall be  deemed  to  be  judicial
proceeding within the meaning of Sections 193 and 228 of  the  Indian  Penal
Code, 1860 and every such Disciplinary Committee shall be  deemed  to  be  a
civil court for the purposes of Sections 480, 482 and 485  of  the  Code  of
Criminal Procedure.  Learned counsel has drawn our attention to  sub-section
(3) of Section 42 which reads as follows:-
“For the purposes of exercising any of the powers conferred  by  sub-section
(1),  a  disciplinary  committee  may  send  to  any  civil  court  in   the
territories to which this Act extends, any summons  or  other  process,  for
the attendance of a witness or the production of a document required by  the
committee or any commission which it desires to issue, and the  civil  court
shall cause such process to be served or such commission to  be  issued,  as
the case may be, and may enforce any such process as if it  were  a  process
for attendance or production before itself.”

21.   Relying on the  said  provisions,  it  is  contended  by  the  learned
counsel for the 1st respondent that the BCI has plenary powers  to  pass  an
order as it feels appropriate and in certain cases of statutory transfer  or
transferred by operation of law, is not remanded, there  would  be  enormous
practical difficulties and injustice is likely to be  caused  and  sometimes
due to delinquent advocate.  In  essence,  the  submission  of  the  learned
counsel for the said respondent is that after transfer of inquiry,  the  BCI
is not mandatorily commanded by law to complete  the  enquiry  and  pass  an
order as provided under Section  35(3)  of  the  Act.   He  has  also  drawn
inspiration from Section 49 that confers power on the  BCI  for  discharging
the functions under the Act.  It is urged by him that  Rule  18(5)  of  Part
VII of the Bar Council of India contemplates  an  order  of  remand  if  the
language used is properly appreciated.  Rule 18(5) reads as follows:-
“Rule 18(5). On a consideration of the report of  a  State  Bar  Council  or
otherwise the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India shall  pass
such orders as it considers proper.”

22.   Thus, the question, as posed  earlier,  fundamentally  centres  around
the jurisdiction of the BCI.  As is discernible from the  language  employed
in Section 36B(1), the transfer takes place by operation of  law.  There  is
a further command to BCI to dispose it  off  as  if  it  were  a  proceeding
withdrawn for enquiry under  sub-section  (2)  of  Section  36.   Thus,  the
jurisdiction for conducting the enquiry and disposal  of  the  complaint  is
conferred on the BCI by the mandate of the Act.  The context, the  intention
and the purpose is clear  as  crystal.  The  BCI  is  required  to  exercise
original jurisdiction that was to be exercised by the State Bar Council.
23.   To understand the language employed in a statutory provision, one  may
recapitulate what Chinnappa Reddy, J. had to say in Reserve  Bank  of  India
v. Peerless General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd. and others[1] :-
“33. Interpretation must depend on the text and the context.  They  are  the
bases of interpretation. One may well  say  if  the  text  is  the  texture,
context is  what  gives  the  colour.  Neither  can  be  ignored.  Both  are
important.  That  interpretation   is   best   which   makes   the   textual
interpretation match the contextual. A statute  is  best  interpreted   when
we  know  why  it was enacted. …”

24.   Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. (as  His  Lordship  then  was)  in   Atma  Ram
Mittal v. Ishwar Singh Punia[2], emphasizing on the intention of  Parliament
or, in other words, the will of the people, observed:-

“9.  … Blackstone tells us that the fairest  and  most  rational  method  to
interpret the will of the legislator is by exploring his intentions  at  the
time when the law was made, by signs most natural and  probable.  And  these
signs are either the words, the context,  the  subject-matter,  the  effects
and consequence, or the spirit and reason  of  the  law.  (emphasis  by  the
court) See Commentaries on the Laws of England (facsimile  of  1st  Edn.  of
1765, University of Chicago Press, 1979, Vol. 1, p. 59).  Mukherjea,  J.  as
the learned Chief Justice then was, in Poppatlal Shah v. State of  Madras[3]
said that each word, phrase or sentence was to be construed in the light  of
purpose of the Act itself. But words must be construed with  imagination  of
purpose behind them said Judge Learned Hand, a long time  ago.  It  appears,
therefore, that though we are concerned with seeking of  intention,  we  are
rather looking to the meaning of the words that  the  legislature  has  used
and the true meaning of what words as  was  said  by  Lord  Reid  in  Black-
Clawson International Ltd. v. Papierwerke Waldhof-Aschaffenburg A.G.[4].  We
are clearly of the opinion that having regard to the language we  must  find
the reason and the spirit of the law. …”


25.   In S. Gopal Reddy v. State of A.P.[5], the Court observed:-
“It is a well-known rule of interpretation of statutes  that  the  text  and
the context of the entire Act must be looked into while interpreting any  of
the expressions used in a statute. The courts must look to the object  which
the statute seeks to achieve while interpreting any  of  the  provisions  of
the Act. A purposive approach for interpreting the Act is necessary.”

26.   In High Court  of  Gujarat  and  another  v.  Gujarat  Kishan  Mazdoor
Panchayat and  others[6]  while  discussing  about  the  importance  of  the
context, the Court stated thus:-
“38. In The Interpretation and Application of Statutes  by  Reed  Dickerson,
the author at p. 135 has  discussed  the  subject  while  dealing  with  the
importance of context of the statute in the following terms:

“… The essence of the language is to  reflect,  express,  and  perhaps  even
affect  the  conceptual  matrix  of  established  ideas  and   values   that
identifies the culture to which it belongs. For this  reason,  language  has
been called ‘conceptual map of human experience’.”


27.   The aforesaid authorities give stress on textual  interpretation  that
would  match  context  and  further  to  explore  the   intention   of   the
legislature.  The  authorities  further  emphasise  the  words  have  to  be
understood regard being had to the purpose behind it and hence, the  concern
with the intention is basically to decipher the meaning  of  the  word  that
the legislature has placed on it.  When the language employed under  Section
36B(1) and Section 36 are read in juxtaposition, there remains no  scintilla
of doubt that the legislature desired that the disciplinary proceedings  are
to be put an end to within a particular time frame by the State Bar  Council
and if that is not done, the whole thing gets transferred to the BCI,  which
is obliged to cause an enquiry.  Thus understood, there can be no  trace  of
doubt that the original jurisdiction  to  deal  with  the  complaint  stands
transferred to the BCI.  Once the original jurisdiction is  transferred,  to
rely upon the language that the BCI may dispose of would include any  manner
of disposal which would include a remand, cannot be  thought  of.   That  is
neither  the  legislative  intendment  nor  the  legislative  purpose.   The
legislature, as  we  find,  never  intended  a  complaint  made  against  an
Advocate either  from  the  perspective  of  the  complainant  or  from  the
delinquent to be transferred to BCI, again to be sent back.
28.   At this stage, we think it  appropriate  to  state  that  there  is  a
distinction between an appellate jurisdiction which the BCI exercises  under
Section 37 and  the  original  jurisdiction  under  Section  36B(1).   While
exercising the appellate jurisdiction, the BCI can remand the matter to  the
State Bar Council.  In this context, reference to  a  three-Judge  Bench  in
Narendra Singh v. Chhotey Singh and another[7], would be apt.  In  the  said
case, the question arose with  regard  to  ambit  and  jurisdiction  of  the
Disciplinary Committee of the BCI hearing an  appeal  against  an  order  of
Disciplinary Committee of  a  State  Bar  Council  made  under  Section  35.
Dealing with the same, the Court held:-
“8. … appellate body enjoys very wide jurisdiction because it  is  competent
to pass any order as it may deem fit. This jurisdiction of widest  amplitude
takes within its sweep the power to vary the punishment  which  would  imply
enhancement  of  punishment  and  the  only  obligation,  while  varying  or
enhancing the punishment, on the appellate body is to hear  the  person  who
is likely to be prejudicially affected by such an order.”

29.   The Court thereafter  addressed  the  issue  of  scope  and  ambit  of
jurisdiction of a quasi-judicial body whose jurisdiction is defined in  such
as “as it deems fit”.  It referred to the authorities in  Raja  Ram  Mahadev
Paranjype v. Aba Maruti Mali[8] and R v.  Boteler[9]  and  opined  that  the
discretionary jurisdiction has to be exercised keeping in view  the  purpose
for which it is conferred, the object sought to be achieved and the  reasons
for granting such wide discretion.  A reference was made to the decision  in
O.N. Mahindroo v. District Judge, Delhi[10]  wherein  this  Court  has  held
that dealing with an appeal under Section 38, the jurisdiction of the  Court
was not restricted, for the Court is dealing with an appeal not only on  law
but also on appeal on facts.  In the said decision, examining the  amplitude
of power including the power to review, the Court observed:-
“Such powers may be exercised in a suitable case for or against an  advocate
even after the matter  has  gone  through  the  hands  of  the  Disciplinary
Committee at some stage or even through this Court. These matters  are  also
not governed by the analogy of autrefois convict or autrefois acquit in  the
Code of  Criminal  Procedure.  Disciplinary  proceedings  against  a  lawyer
involve not only the  particular  lawyer  but  the  entire  profession.  The
reputation of the legal profession is the sum total  of  the  reputation  of
the  practitioners.  The  honour  of  the  lawyer  and  the  purity  of  the
profession are the primary considerations and they are intermixed.”

      After so stating, the Court observed that  a  disciplinary  proceeding
against a member of a  profession  whose  services  are  made  available  to
society as a whole is to be involved  as  between  the  profession  and  its
erring manner and not  between  the  complainant  and  delinquent  advocate.
Emphasis has been laid on the said aspect to determine the  jurisdiction  of
the bodies set up to carry out the purposes of the Act.
30.   Thereafter, the Court adverted to the facts  of  the  case  and  found
that the Disciplinary  Committee  of  the  Bar  Council  of  India  was  not
satisfied with reference to the disposal of third  head  of  charge  by  the
Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar Council,  and  merely  remanded  the
matter to the Disciplinary Committee of the  State  Bar  Council  to  assign
reasons for its decision.  The  said  direction,  as  the  Court  held,  was
certainly within the powers of the appellate body as it had jurisdiction  to
decide an appeal ‘as it deems fit’,  and  while  so  deciding,  it  was  not
hedged in by the technical rule of appeal against acquittal.
31.   Learned counsel for the 1st respondent would  submit  that  the  words
“pass such orders as it considers appropriate” would  clothe  the  BCI  with
the jurisdiction to remand the matter to the State  Bar  Council.   We  have
already  referred  to  the  statutory  scheme  and  the  purposes   of   the
legislation.  As has been held in Narendra Singh  (supra)  the  disciplinary
authority can remand the  matter  in  exercise  of  appellate  jurisdiction.
There can be no shadow of doubt that  the  BCI,  while  exercising  original
jurisdiction on transfer of  a  complaint,  cannot  exercise  the  appellate
jurisdiction.  Therefore, the order passed by the disciplinary authority  by
placing reliance on its rules is wholly unsustainable.
32.   Having expressed our opinion, ordinarily we would  have  proceeded  to
record the formal part of the judgment.  But a significant  aspect  deserves
to be addressed.  It pertains to  the  nobility  of  legal  profession.   In
Sanjiv Dutta, Dy. Secretary, Ministry  of  Information  &  Broadcasting,  In
re[11], the Court, taking note of various  instances  which  deserve  to  be
described  as  unfortunate,  both  for  the   legal   profession   and   the
administration of justice, observed thus:-
“The legal profession is a solemn and serious  occupation.  It  is  a  noble
calling and all those who belong to it are its honourable members.  Although
the  entry  to  the  profession  can  be  had  by   acquiring   merely   the
qualification of technical competence, the honour as a professional  has  to
be maintained by its members by their exemplary conduct both in and  outside
the court. The legal profession is different from other professions in  that
what the lawyers do, affects not only an individual but  the  administration
of justice which is the foundation of  the  civilised  society.  Both  as  a
leading member of the intelligentsia of the society  and  as  a  responsible
citizen, the lawyer has to conduct himself as a model  for  others  both  in
his professional and in his private and  public  life.  The  society  has  a
right to expect of him such ideal behaviour.”

33.   The Court further stated:-
“If the profession is to survive, the judicial system has to  be  vitalised.
No service will be too small in making the system efficient,  effective  and
credible. The casualness and indifference with which some  members  practise
the profession are certainly not calculated to achieve that  purpose  or  to
enhance the prestige either of the profession or  of  the  institution  they
are serving. If people lose confidence in the profession on account  of  the
deviant ways of some of its members, it is not  only  the  profession  which
will suffer but also the administration of justice as a whole.  The  present
trend unless checked is likely to lead to a stage when the  system  will  be
found wrecked from within before it is wrecked from outside.”

34.   With the aforesaid observations, the Court  expected  that  aberration
will be less.  Though the said observations had its impact,  the  misconduct
on the part of some Advocates still continues.
35.   In Sudha v. President, Advocates Association, Chennai and  others[12],
the Court, while dealing with the directions issued by  the  High  Court  of
Madras regarding the management of Madras High Court Advocates  Association,
noted various facts, adverted to  the  resolutions  passed  by  the  Tellers
Committee,  devices  adopted  by  the  Committee  constituted  for  peaceful
meeting, and observed:-
“Many a time it is noticed that those who are not  lawyers  get  entry  into
the Association room by putting on merely black  coat  as  at  the  time  of
election the feelings are running high. Such elements take  undue  advantage
of the situation and bring a bad name to the Association of  the  advocates.
Therefore, to deter such elements the amendments have been  carried  out  in
the  bye-laws.  Those  amendments  carried  out  in  the  bye-laws  of   the
Association can hardly be  regarded  as  against  the  legal  fraternity  in
general and as against junior members of the Bar in particular.”

36.   In the context of the said case, the two-Judge Bench felt  obliged  to
say:-
“The legal profession is different from other professions in that  what  the
lawyers do, affects  not  only  an  individual  but  the  administration  of
justice which is the foundation of the civilised society. Both as a  leading
member of the intelligentsia of the society and as an  intelligent  citizen,
the lawyer has to conduct  himself  as  a  model  for  others  both  in  his
professional and in his private and public life.”


37.   The aforesaid expression  shows  nature  of  the  profession  and  the
expectation from the society from the members of the legal profession.
38.   In Dhanraj Singh Choudhary v. Nathulal Vishwakarma[13],  it  has  been
observed that an Advocate’s attitude towards dealing with his client has  to
be  scrupulously  honest  and  fair  and  the  punishment  for  professional
misconduct has twin objectives – deterrence and correction.
39.   Having noted these  authorities,  we  may  recapitulate  what  Krishna
Iyer, J. had to say in V.C. Rangadurai v. D. Gopalan and others[14]:-
“5. Law’s nobility as a  profession  lasts  only  so  long  as  the  members
maintain their commitment to integrity and service to the community.”

40.    In  this  regard,  a  speech  from  Eulogy   of   Judges   by   Piero
Calamandrei[15] would be seemly:-
“The difference between the true lawyer and those men who consider  the  law
merely a trade is that the latter seek to find ways to permit their  clients
to violate the moral standards of society without over-stepping  the  letter
of the law, while the former look for principles which will  persuade  their
clients to keep within the limits of the spirit of the law in  common  moral
standards.”

41.   We have a purpose in referring to  the  aforesaid  pronouncements.   A
lawyer is treated as a part of the  noble  profession  and  expected  as  an
elite  member  of  the  society,  to  be  professionally   responsible   and
constantly remind himself that his services are rendered  to  the  consumers
of justice.  As has been held  in  Pandurang  Dattatraya  Khandekar  v.  Bar
Council of Maharashtra, Bombay and ohters[16], an advocate stands in a  loco
parentis towards the litigants. He has a paramount duty to  his  client  and
client is entitled to receive disinterested, sincere and  honest  treatment.


42.   Once a complaint is made by a litigant, it has to  follow  a  definite
procedure and is required to be dealt with as per the command of the Act  to
conclude the disciplinary proceeding within a period of one  year  from  the
date of  receipt  of  the  complaint  or  the  date  of  initiation  of  the
proceedings at the instance of the State Bar Council.  On many an  occasion,
it has come to the notice of this Court that disciplinary authority  of  the
State Bar Council is not disposing of the complaint  within  the  stipulated
period, as a consequence of which the proceeding stands transferred  to  the
BCI.  The responsibility to deal with the disciplinary proceedings  is  cast
on the State Bar  Council  which  constitutes  its  disciplinary  committee.
Every member of the Disciplinary Committee is aware that the proceeding  has
to be concluded  within  one  year.   The  complainant  and  the  delinquent
advocate are required  to  cooperate.  Not  to  do  something  what  one  is
required to do, tantamount  to  irresponsibility  and  the  prestige  of  an
institution or a statutory body inheres in carrying out the  responsibility.
 One may not be always right in the decision but that does not  mean  to  be
shirking away from taking a decision and allow the matter to be  transferred
by operation of law to  the  BCI.   A  statutory  authority  is  obliged  to
constantly remind itself that the mandate of the statute is  expediency  and
the stipulation of time is mandatory.  It will not be erroneous to say  that
the Disciplinary Committee is expected to perform its  duty  within  a  time
frame and not to create a blameworthy situation.  It is better  to  remember
offering an explanation to one’s own conscience is like  blaming  everything
on “accident”.  When duties are given by law,  duties  are  required  to  be
performed.

43.   In view of what we have stated above, we think it  will  be  advisable
that the State Bar Councils  take  a  periodical  stock  of  cases  in  each
meeting with regard to the progress of the Disciplinary Committee, find  out
the cause of delay and guide themselves to act with expediency so  that  the
Council, as a statutory body, does its duty as commanded under the Act.

44.   In view of the aforesaid, we allow the appeal,  set  aside  the  order
passed by the Disciplinary Committee of the BCI and  remand  the  matter  to
the Disciplinary Committee of the BCI to decide the same in accordance  with
law within a period of three months from the date  of  receipt  of  copy  of
this judgment.  Registry is directed to send a copy of this judgment to  all
the Secretaries of each of the State Bar Council, who in  turn  can  apprise
the members of the State Bar Council so that appropriate  steps  are  taken.
There shall be no order as to costs.




                                             .............................J.
                                                               [Dipak Misra]



                                             ............................ J.
                                                             [A.M.
Khanwilkar]

New Delhi
April 06, 2017


-----------------------
[1]    (1987) 1 SCC 424
[2]    (1988) 4 SCC 284
[3]    AIR 1953 SC 274
[4]    1975 AC 591
[5]    (1996) 4 SCC 596
[6]    (2003) 4 SCC 712
[7]     (1983) 4 SCC 131
[8]    1962 Supp. 1 SCR 739; AIR 1962 SC 753
[9]    (1864) 33 LJMC 101 : 122 ER 718
[10]   (1971)  3 SCC 5
[11]    (1995) 3 SCC 619
[12]    (2010) 14 SCC 114
[13]    (2012) 1 SCC 741
[14]    (1979) 1 SCC 308
[15]    Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1946), p.45.
[16]    (1984) 2 SCC 556

-----------------------
31


Medical Negligence - under sec.304 A I.P.C.= quashed - The purpose of holding a professional liable for his act or omission, if negligent, is to make life safer and to eliminate the possibility of recurrence of negligence in future. The human body and medical science, both are too complex to be easily understood. To hold in favour of existence of negligence, associated with the action or inaction of a medical professional, requires an in-depth understanding of the working of a professional as also the nature of the job and of errors committed by chance, which do not necessarily involve the element of culpability. After discussing the entire law on the subject, this Court concluded as follows: “48. We sum up our conclusions as under: (1) Negligence is the breach of a duty caused by omission to do something which a reasonable man guided by those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs would do, or doing something which a prudent and reasonable man would not do. The definition of negligence as given in Law of Torts, Ratanlal & Dhirajlal (edited by Justice G.P. Singh), referred to hereinabove, holds good. Negligence becomes actionable on account of injury resulting from the act or omission amounting to negligence attributable to the person sued. The essential components of negligence are three: “duty”, “breach” and “resulting damage”. (2) Negligence in the context of the medical profession necessarily calls for a treatment with a difference. To infer rashness or negligence on the part of a professional, in particular a doctor, additional considerations apply. A case of occupational negligence is different from one of professional negligence. A simple lack of care, an error of judgment or an accident, is not proof of negligence on the part of a medical professional. So long as a doctor follows a practice acceptable to the medical profession of that day, he cannot be held liable for negligence merely because a better alternative course or method of treatment was also available or simply because a more skilled doctor would not have chosen to follow or resort to that practice or procedure which the accused followed. When it comes to the failure of taking precautions, what has to be seen is whether those precautions were taken which the ordinary experience of men has found to be sufficient; a failure to use special or extraordinary precautions which might have prevented the particular happening cannot be the standard for judging the alleged negligence. So also, the standard of care, while assessing the practice as adopted, is judged in the light of knowledge available at the time of the incident, and not at the date of trial. Similarly, when the charge of negligence arises out of failure to use some particular equipment, the charge would fail if the equipment was not generally available at that particular time (that is, the time of the incident) at which it is suggested it should have been used. (3) A professional may be held liable for negligence on one of the two findings: either he was not possessed of the requisite skill which he professed to have possessed, or, he did not exercise, with reasonable competence in the given case, the skill which he did possess. The standard to be applied for judging, whether the person charged has been negligent or not, would be that of an ordinary competent person exercising ordinary skill in that profession. It is not possible for every professional to possess the highest level of expertise or skills in that branch which he practices. A highly skilled professional may be possessed of better qualities, but that cannot be made the basis or the yardstick for judging the performance of the professional proceeded against on indictment of negligence. (4) The test for determining medical negligence as laid down in Bolam vs. Friern Hospital Management Committee (1957) 1 WLR 582 at p. 586 holds good in its applicability in India. (5) The jurisprudential concept of negligence differs in civil and criminal law. What may be negligence in civil law may not necessarily be negligence in criminal law. For negligence to amount to an offence, the element of mens rea must be shown to exist. For an act to amount to criminal negligence, the degree of negligence should be much higher i.e. gross or of a very high degree. Negligence which is neither gross nor of a higher degree may provide a ground for action in civil law but cannot form the basis for prosecution. (6) The word “gross” has not been used in Section 304-A IPC, yet it is settled that in criminal law negligence or recklessness, to be so held, must be of such a high degree as to be “gross”. The expression “rash or negligent act” as occurring in Section 304-A IPC has to be read as qualified by the word “grossly”. (7) To prosecute a medical professional for negligence under criminal law it must be shown that the accused did something or failed to do something which in the given facts and circumstances no medical professional in his ordinary senses and prudence would have done or failed to do. The hazard taken by the accused doctor should be of such a nature that the injury which resulted was most likely imminent. (8) Res ipsa loquitur is only a rule of evidence and operates in the domain of civil law, specially in cases of torts and helps in determining the onus of proof in actions relating to negligence. It cannot be pressed in service for determining per se the liability for negligence within the domain of criminal law. Res ipsa loquitur has, if at all, a limited application in trial on a charge of criminal negligence.” Applying the law laid down in Jacob Mathew’s case (supra), we are of the view that this is not a case where the appellant should face trial especially when 20 years have already elapsed. The only allegation against the appellant is that she left the patient. We must remember that the appellant was a Surgeon on Call. She came to the hospital when she was called and examined the patient. As per her judgment, she could find no evidence of bleeding or injury and, therefore, she had noted that a Physician be called. Thereafter, she left the hospital at about 11.00 p.m. True it is that she did not wait for the Physician to come, but it can be assumed that she would have expected that the Physician would come soon. This may be an error in judgment but is definitely not a rash and negligent act contemplated under Section 304-A IPC. It is nobody’s case that she was called again by the Nursing staff on duty. If the condition of the patient had worsened between 11.00 p.m. and 5.00 a.m., the next morning, the Nursing staff could have again called for the appellant, but they did not do so. Next morning, the doctor on Emergency Duty, Dr. Mohod attended upon the patient but, unfortunately, he died.= In view of the above discussion, we are of the view that no case of committing a rash and negligent act contemplated under Section 304-A IPC is made out against the appellant. Her case is similar to that of Dr. Mohod who has been discharged. We, accordingly, allow the appeal, set aside the judgment dated 18.06.2014, passed by the learned Single Judge of the High Court of Bombay, Nagpur Bench in Criminal Application (APL) No.354 of 2012 and quash the criminal proceedings initiated against the appellant vide order dated 28.02.2001, passed by the Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Court No.6, Amravati in Regular Criminal Case No. 310 of 1999 in FIR Crime No.317 of 1997. Pending application(s), if any, stand(s) disposed of.

                                                                  REPORTABLE
                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 636 OF 2017
                [Arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 7186 of 2014]


Dr. Sou Jayshree Ujwal Ingole                       . . . . Appellant(s)

                                   Versus

State of Maharashtra & Anr.                  . . . Respondent(s)

                               J U D G M E N T

Deepak Gupta, J.
      Leave granted.

2.    The appellant herein is a doctor and has challenged  the  Order  dated
18.06.2014 passed by the High Court of Judicature of  Bombay,  Nagpur  Bench
in Criminal Application (APL) No. 354 of 2012, whereby  the  petition  filed
by  the  appellant  under  Section  482  CrPC  for  quashing  the   criminal
proceedings initiated against her under Section 304-A IPC was dismissed.

3.    Briefly stated the facts of the case are that  one  Shrikrishna  Gawai
(hereinafter referred to as the  ‘deceased’)  was  admitted  on  account  of
injuries suffered in a road accident, in the  Irvin  Hospital,  Amravati  on
29.08.1997 for medical treatment.  It is the admitted case  of  the  parties
that the deceased was suffering from Haemophilia, a disease in  which  there
is impairment of blood clotting.  Therefore, special attention was  required
to be paid during the treatment of the patient.   It is  not  disputed  that
one Dr. Manohar Mohod was on duty as  an  Emergency  Medical  Officer.    On
29.08.1997 the patient was treated both by the appellant and Dr. Mohod.   On
30 & 31.08.1997, the deceased was  attended  upon  by  Dr.  Dhirendra  Wagh.
Thereafter also, the deceased remained in the Hospital under  the  treatment
of the appellant and Dr. Mohod.

4.    Dr. Mohod, the Emergency Medical Officer attended  upon  the  deceased
on 05.09.1997 at 9.00 p.m. and found that he was  suffering  from  abdominal
pain and, thereafter, a call was sent to the appellant, who was  Surgeon  on
Call.   It is not disputed that the appellant went to the Hospital on  being
called.  She attended upon the deceased and made a note that a Physician  be
called.    Thereafter,  she  left  the  Hospital.    In   the   morning   on
06.09.1997, the condition of the deceased worsened and he died.

5.    The main allegation against the appellant is that after having  called
for a Physician, she did not wait in the hospital and did  not  attend  upon
the patient, especially when the patient  was  suffering  from  Haemophilia.
The Physician, Dr. Avinash Choudhary, who is accused No. 1, did not turn  up
in the hospital.  Even next morning on  06.09.1997,  when  Dr.  Mohod  again
attended upon the deceased, the Physician  Dr.  Choudhary  was  not  present
and, unfortunately, the patient died.    Thereafter, a complaint was  lodged
in the police station,  wherein  it  was  alleged  by  the  brother  of  the
deceased that the deceased died as a  result  of  negligence  of  the  three
doctors.   The complaint was investigated as Crime No.  317  of  1997  which
was initially filed against Dr. Avinash Choudhary only but,  later  on,  the
names of the appellant Dr. Jayshree Ujwal Ingole and Dr. Manohar Mohod  were
also included.

6.    A separate Departmental Enquiry was also  carried  out  and,  in  that
enquiry, all the three doctors  were  held  negligent  in  performing  their
duties.  Dr. Mohod was debarred from an annual increment  as   penalty;  the
appellant Dr. Jayshree  Ingole  was  permanently  prohibited  from  entering
Irvin Hospital, Amravati, and Dr. Avinash  Choudhary  was  transferred.   It
would be pertinent to mention that Dr. Mohod was discharged in the  criminal
case on the ground that no case of negligence was made out against him.

7.    The appellant herein filed a petition for quashing the charge  against
her, but this petition was rejected by the learned Single Judge of the  High
Court of Bombay at Nagpur mainly on the ground  that  the  question  whether
inaction of the appellant in leaving the deceased at about  11.00  p.m.  and
not waiting for the Physician to turn up, amounted to a rash  and  negligent
act on her behalf, would be decided during trial.

8.    We have heard learned counsel for the parties.   Learned  counsel  for
the appellant has placed reliance on the judgment of  this  Court  in  Jacob
Mathew v. State of Punjab & Anr.[1], wherein this Court held that the  court
should be circumspect before  instituting  criminal  proceedings  against  a
medical professional.  This Court has held that negligence comprises of  (i)
a legal duty to exercise due care on the part of the  party  complained  of;
(ii) breach of the said duty ; and (iii) consequential damage.  It was  held
that in  cases  where  negligence  is  alleged  against  professionals  like
doctors  the  court  should   be   careful   before   instituting   criminal
proceedings.  It is not possible for any doctor to assure or guarantee  that
the result of treatment would invariably be positive.   The  only  assurance
which a professional can give is that he is  professionally  competent,  has
requisite  skill  and  has  undertaken  the  task  entrusted  to  him   with
reasonable care.  It would be pertinent  to  quote  the  following  relevant
observations made in Jacob Mathew’s  case (supra):

26. No sensible professional would intentionally commit an act  or  omission
which would result in loss or injury to  the  patient  as  the  professional
reputation of the person is at stake. A single failure may cost him dear  in
his career. Even in civil jurisdiction, the rule of  res  ipsa  loquitur  is
not of universal application and has to be applied  with  extreme  care  and
caution to the cases of professional negligence and in  particular  that  of
the doctors. Else it would be counter-productive. Simply because  a  patient
has not favourably responded to a  treatment  given  by  a  physician  or  a
surgery has failed, the doctor cannot be held liable per se by applying  the
doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.

xxx         xxx        xxx

28. A medical practitioner faced with  an  emergency  ordinarily  tries  his
best to redeem the patient out of his suffering. He does not  gain  anything
by  acting  with  negligence  or  by  omitting  to  do  an  act.  Obviously,
therefore, it will be for the complainant to clearly  make  out  a  case  of
negligence before a  medical  practitioner  is  charged  with  or  proceeded
against criminally. A surgeon with shaky hands under fear  of  legal  action
cannot perform a successful  operation  and  a  quivering  physician  cannot
administer the end-dose of medicine to his patient.
29. If the hands be trembling with the dangling fear of  facing  a  criminal
prosecution  in  the  event  of  failure  for  whatever  reason  —   whether
attributable to himself or not, neither can  a  surgeon  successfully  wield
his  life-saving  scalpel  to  perform  an  essential  surgery,  nor  can  a
physician  successfully  administer  the  life-saving  dose   of   medicine.
Discretion being the better part of valour,  a  medical  professional  would
feel better advised to leave a terminal patient to his own fate in the  case
of emergency where the chance of success may be 10%  (or  so),  rather  than
taking the risk of making a last ditch effort  towards  saving  the  subject
and facing a criminal prosecution if his effort fails. Such timidity  forced
upon a doctor would be a disservice to society.
30. The purpose of holding a professional liable for his  act  or  omission,
if negligent, is to make life safer and  to  eliminate  the  possibility  of
recurrence of negligence in future. The  human  body  and  medical  science,
both are too  complex  to  be  easily  understood.  To  hold  in  favour  of
existence of negligence,  associated  with  the  action  or  inaction  of  a
medical professional, requires an in-depth understanding of the  working  of
a professional as also the nature of the job  and  of  errors  committed  by
chance, which do not necessarily involve the element of culpability.

After discussing the entire law on the  subject,  this  Court  concluded  as
follows:

“48. We sum up our conclusions as under:
(1) Negligence is the breach of a duty caused by omission  to  do  something
which a reasonable man  guided  by  those  considerations  which  ordinarily
regulate the conduct of human affairs would do, or doing something  which  a
prudent and reasonable man would not do. The  definition  of  negligence  as
given in Law of Torts, Ratanlal & Dhirajlal (edited by Justice G.P.  Singh),
referred to  hereinabove,  holds  good.  Negligence  becomes  actionable  on
account  of  injury  resulting  from  the  act  or  omission  amounting   to
negligence attributable to the person  sued.  The  essential  components  of
negligence are three: “duty”, “breach” and “resulting damage”.
(2) Negligence in the context of the medical  profession  necessarily  calls
for a treatment with a difference. To infer rashness or  negligence  on  the
part of a professional, in particular a  doctor,  additional  considerations
apply.  A  case  of  occupational  negligence  is  different  from  one   of
professional negligence. A simple lack of care, an error of judgment  or  an
accident, is not proof of negligence on the part of a medical  professional.
So long as a doctor follows a practice acceptable to the medical  profession
of that day, he cannot be  held  liable  for  negligence  merely  because  a
better alternative course or method  of  treatment  was  also  available  or
simply because a more skilled doctor would not  have  chosen  to  follow  or
resort to that practice or procedure which the  accused  followed.  When  it
comes to the failure of taking precautions, what has to be seen  is  whether
those precautions were taken which the ordinary experience of men has  found
to be sufficient; a failure to  use  special  or  extraordinary  precautions
which might have prevented the particular happening cannot be  the  standard
for judging the alleged negligence. So also, the  standard  of  care,  while
assessing the practice as adopted, is  judged  in  the  light  of  knowledge
available at the time of the  incident,  and  not  at  the  date  of  trial.
Similarly, when the charge of negligence arises out of failure to  use  some
particular equipment, the  charge  would  fail  if  the  equipment  was  not
generally available at that particular  time  (that  is,  the  time  of  the
incident) at which it is suggested it should have been used.
(3) A professional may be held liable for  negligence  on  one  of  the  two
findings: either he was not  possessed  of  the  requisite  skill  which  he
professed to have possessed,  or,  he  did  not  exercise,  with  reasonable
competence in the given case, the skill which he did possess.  The  standard
to be applied for judging, whether the person charged has been negligent  or
not, would be that of  an  ordinary  competent  person  exercising  ordinary
skill in that profession. It is  not  possible  for  every  professional  to
possess the highest level of expertise or skills in  that  branch  which  he
practices.  A  highly  skilled  professional  may  be  possessed  of  better
qualities, but that cannot be made the basis or the  yardstick  for  judging
the performance of the  professional  proceeded  against  on  indictment  of
negligence.
(4) The test for determining medical negligence as laid down  in  Bolam  vs.
Friern Hospital Management Committee (1957) 1 WLR 582 at p. 586  holds  good
in its applicability in India.
(5) The jurisprudential concept of negligence differs in civil and  criminal
law. What may be negligence in civil law may not necessarily  be  negligence
in criminal law. For negligence to amount to  an  offence,  the  element  of
mens rea must  be  shown  to  exist.  For  an  act  to  amount  to  criminal
negligence, the degree of negligence should be much higher i.e. gross or  of
a very high degree. Negligence which  is  neither  gross  nor  of  a  higher
degree may provide a ground for action in civil  law  but  cannot  form  the
basis for prosecution.
(6) The word “gross” has not been used in  Section  304-A  IPC,  yet  it  is
settled that in criminal law negligence or  recklessness,  to  be  so  held,
must be of such a high degree as to be  “gross”.  The  expression  “rash  or
negligent act” as  occurring  in  Section  304-A  IPC  has  to  be  read  as
qualified by the word “grossly”.
(7) To prosecute a medical professional for negligence  under  criminal  law
it must be shown that the accused did something or failed  to  do  something
which in the given facts and circumstances no medical  professional  in  his
ordinary senses and prudence would have done or failed  to  do.  The  hazard
taken by the accused doctor should be of  such  a  nature  that  the  injury
which resulted was most likely imminent.
(8) Res ipsa loquitur is only a rule of evidence and operates in the  domain
of civil law, specially in cases of torts and helps in determining the  onus
of proof in actions relating to negligence. It cannot be pressed in  service
for determining per se the liability for negligence  within  the  domain  of
criminal law. Res ipsa loquitur has, if at all,  a  limited  application  in
trial on a charge of criminal negligence.”

9.    Applying the law laid down in Jacob Mathew’s case (supra), we  are  of
the view that this is not a case  where  the  appellant  should  face  trial
especially when  20  years  have  already  elapsed.    The  only  allegation
against the appellant is that she left the patient.  We must  remember  that
the appellant was a Surgeon on Call.  She came to the hospital when she  was
called and examined the patient.  As per her judgment,  she  could  find  no
evidence of bleeding  or  injury  and,  therefore,  she  had  noted  that  a
Physician be called.  Thereafter, she left the hospital at about 11.00  p.m.
  True it is that she did not wait for the Physician to come, but it can  be
assumed that she would have expected that the  Physician  would  come  soon.
This may be an error in judgment but is definitely not a rash and  negligent
act contemplated under Section 304-A IPC.  It is nobody’s case that she  was
called again by the Nursing  staff  on  duty.    If  the  condition  of  the
patient had worsened between 11.00 p.m. and 5.00  a.m.,  the  next  morning,
the Nursing staff could have again called for the appellant,  but  they  did
not do so.  Next morning, the doctor on Emergency Duty, Dr.  Mohod  attended
upon the patient but, unfortunately, he died.

10.   In the facts and circumstance of this case, it  cannot  be  said  that
the appellant is guilty of criminal negligence.  At best it is an  error  of
judgment.

11.   In view of the above discussion, we are of the view that  no  case  of
committing a rash and negligent act contemplated under Section 304-A IPC  is
made out against the appellant.  Her case is similar to that  of  Dr.  Mohod
who has been discharged.  We, accordingly, allow the appeal, set  aside  the
judgment dated 18.06.2014, passed by the learned Single Judge  of  the  High
Court of Bombay, Nagpur Bench in Criminal Application (APL) No.354  of  2012
and quash the criminal proceedings  initiated  against  the  appellant  vide
order dated 28.02.2001, passed by  the  Judicial  Magistrate,  First  Class,
Court No.6, Amravati in Regular Criminal Case No. 310 of 1999 in  FIR  Crime
No.317 of 1997.   Pending application(s), if any, stand(s) disposed of.


................................J.
(MADAN. B. LOKUR)



................................J.
(DEEPAK GUPTA)

New Delhi,
April 06, 2017.


ITEM NO.1A               COURT NO.5               SECTION IIA
(For judgment)
               S U P R E M E  C O U R T  O F  I N D I A
                       RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS

Petition(s) for Special Leave to Appeal (Crl.)  No(s).  7186/2014

(Arising out of impugned final judgment and order dated  18/06/2014  in  CRA
No. 354/2012 passed by the High Court of Bombay at Nagpur)

DR. Sou JAYSHREE UJWAL INGOLE                   Petitioner(s)

                                VERSUS

STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ANR.                     Respondent(s)

Date   :   06/04/2017         This    petition    was    called    on    for
      pronouncement of judgment today.

For Petitioner(s)      Mr. Shirish K. Deshpande, AOR
                       Mr. Mohit Gautam, Adv.

For Respondent(s)      Mr.Gagan Sanghi, Adv.
                       Mr. Rameshwar Prasad Goyal, AOR

                   Mr. Nishant Ramakantrao Katneshwarkar, AOR

      Hon'ble Mr. Justice Deepak Gupta pronounced  the  reportable  judgment
of the  Bench  comprising  Hon'ble  Mr.  Justice  Madan  B.  Lokur  and  His
Lordship.

      The appeal is allowed in terms of the signed reportable judgment.



(Meenakshi Kohli)                            (Sharda Kapoor)
Court Master (SH)                           Court Master (NS)
             [Signed reportable judgment is placed on the file]
                           -----------------------
[1]

      [2]    (2005) 6 SCC 1,


“allocation of shares as regards to the properties found to be joint family properties”.= On the date of death of Fuchan Mahto, his son Mithu Sao did not have any male issue. However, the joint family in question can be understood to have continued with Mithu Sao as the 'Karta' and the property continued to belong to the joint family. ; Thus after 1961 Puniya Devi being the widow of Fuchan Mahto had 1/8th plus 1/72th share in the joint family property, namely, 10/72th share. Puniya Devi died in the year 1967 leaving behind her daughter Ugni Devi and the children of her predeceased son Mithu Sao. Ugni Devi will be entitled to receive one-half share of Puniya Devi i.e. half of 10/72th share i.e. 10/144th share. The remaining 10/144th share that would go to the branch of Mithu Sao will have to be divided amongst 8 heirs of Mithu Sao, namely, the widow and the seven children.- In view of the above, it will be necessary to modify the decree passed by the learned trial Court as affirmed by the High Court by holding that the appellants – defendants are entitled to 38.1% share in the joint family property instead of 37.5% as ordered by the courts below.

                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1110 OF 2006


RAM NATH SAO @ RAM NATH SAHU
SINCE DECEASED THR. L.RS.&
ORS.                                 ...APPELLANTS

                            VERSUS

GOBERDHAN SAO SINCE DECEASED
THR. LRS. & ORS.                ...RESPONDENTs


                                  JUDGMENT

RANJAN GOGOI, J.


1.          The appellants are the defendants in a partition suit  filed  by
the respondents, as plaintiffs,  seeking  partition  of  various  properties
specifically mentioned in Schedule 'B' and Schedule 'C' of the plaint.
2.          At the outset, the following genealogical  table  is  being  set
out to enable a clear and easy understanding of the facts and  the  findings
with regard to the entitlement of the parties that would be  arrived  at  in
the course of the deliberations that follow.
|Fuchan Mahto – died 1940                                              |
|Wife Puniya Devi – died 1967                                          |
|!                                                                     |
|------------------------------------                                  |
|!                                !                                    |
|     |Mithu Sao (son)      |Ugni Devi (daughter)                     | |
|     |(died 1961)          |(died 1995)                              | |
|     |!                    |!                                        | |
|     |!                    |–-------------------------------         | |
|     |!                    |!         !            !                 | |
|     |!                    |                                         | |
|     |!                    |                                         | |
|     |!                    |                                         | |
|     |!                    |                                         | |
|     |                     |Jagar-  |Parasnath        |Dharamnath    | |
|     |                     |nath    |(Appellants)     |              | |
|     |                     |        |                 |              | |
|     |          !                                     |              | |
|     |–------------------------------                 |              | |
|     |!                              !                |              | |
|       Temni (1st wife)            |Bilaso Devi (2nd Wife)          | |
|!                                  |!                               | |
|–---------------------             |–-------------------------      | |
|!          !         !             |!         !       !      !      | |
|Ramnath    |Kashinath  |Buchwa     |Govardhan |Jagdish|Baldeo |Sarita | |
|(Appellants)                       |(Respondents)                   | |
|                |          |        |          |       |       |       | |

3.          The case of the respondents  plaintiffs  is  that  Fuchan  Mahto
(died in 1940), the common ancestor of the parties had a son Muthu  Sao  who
died in the year 1961.  Mithu Sao had two wives, namely,  Temni  (1st  wife)
and Bilaso Devi (2nd wife).  At the time of  the  filing  of  the  suit  for
partition Temni (1st wife) was no more. The defendants in the suit  Ramnath,
Kashinath Buchwa are the sons and daughter  of  Mithu  Sao  and  Temni  (1st
wife) whereas the plaintiffs Govardhan, Jagdish, Baldeo and Sarita  are  the
sons and daughter of Mithu Sao and Bilaso Devi (2nd  wife),  who  is  a  co-
plaintiff.
4.          According to the plaintiffs,  they  along  with  the  defendants
constituted a joint  Hindu  Mitakshra  family  which  owned  ancestral  land
recorded  under  Khata  No.19  of  village  Lapanga  in  the   district   of
Hazaribagh.  It is the case of the plaintiffs that  the  joint  family  also
acquired lands in several other  villages  in  the  name  of  one  or  other
members of the joint  family.  According  to  the  plaintiffs,  the  parties
continued  in  joint  possession  of  the  properties,  both  ancestral  and
subsequently acquired.  As the members of  joint  family  had  increased  it
became inconvenient to continue to remain  joint.   Hence  the  suit  for  a
decree of partition was filed.
5.          The defendants contested the suit, inter  alia,  on  the  ground
that there was no  unity  of  title  and  possession  between  the  parties.
According to the defendants, after the death of Mithu sao in the  year  1961
or even before his death there was disruption in the family  on  account  of
the fact that Mithu Sao had married twice.  There were  serious  differences
in the family and the children of the first wife Temni separated from  Mithu
Sao.  It is the case of the defendants that after the  death  of  Mithu  Sao
the children of first wife and second wife again separated.  The  defendants
pleaded that as there was no joint family in existence both the parties  had
separate earnings and only the ancestral lands of Khata No.19 are  available
for partition, major portion of which had been acquired  by  the  Government
and compensation amount had been  evenly  distributed  amongst  the  parties
according to their respective shares.   According  to  the  defendants,  the
other items of the Schedule property are self-acquired properties which  are
not liable to be partitioned.
6.          The learned trial  Court  decreed  the  suit  holding  that  the
plaintiffs are entitled to the extent of 63-1/2 paise share in the  Schedule
'B' property; items 1 to 8 of village Labaga in Schedule 'C';  items  1  and
2 of village Rasda in Schedule 'C'; and items 1 to 8 of  village  Hafuwa  in
Schedule 'C' properties and 12 paise share in the  properties  mentioned  in
Item No.9 of village Hafuwa in  Schedule  'C'  properties.   The  defendants
appellants, on the other hand, were found to be entitled  to  the  remaining
37-1/2 paise in the Schedule 'B' property  and  items  1  to  8  of  village
Labaga; items 1 and 2 of village Rasda; and items 1 to 8 of  village  Hafuwa
in Schedule 'C' properties.   By the said decree which has been affirmed  in
appeal by the High Court, so far as the property mentioned in item  No.9  of
Schedule 'C' is concerned, 12 and 11 paise share therein in  favour  of  the
plaintiffs and department have been granted.   As  the  said  property  i.e.
item No.9 of Schedule 'C' pertain to  23 paise share of  the  five  sons  of
Muthu Sao in property purchased by  them  along  with  other  persons  by  8
different sale deeds, the said property is not the  subject  matter  of  the
present appeal in  its truncated form, as indicated earlier.
7.          This Court while issuing notice in the present  appeal  confined
the area of scrutiny to the question of “allocation of shares as regards  to
the properties found to  be  joint  family  properties”.   In  view  of  the
aforesaid limited notice, the  issue  with  regard  to  the  shares  of  the
respective parties in the joint family properties  alone  will  have  to  be
determined  in  the  present  appeal  and  no  question  of  reopening   the
concurrent  findings  of  the  learned  forums  below  with  regard  to  the
existence of joint family and the holding of properties jointly can arise.
8.          We have heard the learned counsels for the parties.
9.          Fuchan Mahto died in the year 1940.  At the time of  his  death,
the Hindu Women's Rights to Property Act, 1937 (hereinafter referred  to  as
“the 1937 Act”) was in force.   Section  3(2)  of  the  1937  Act  which  is
relevant for the present case provided as follows:
“3(2) When a Hindu governed by any  school  of  Hindu  law  other  than  the
Dayabhaga school or by customary law dies having at the time  of  his  death
an interest in a Hindu joint family property, his widow  shall,  subject  to
the provisions  of sub-section (3), have in the property the  same  interest
as he himself had.”

10.         Under Section 3(2) of the 1937  Act,  on  the  death  of  Fuchan
Mahto his widow/wife Puniya Devi became entitled to a  share  in  the  joint
family  property.   However,  the  share  of  Puniya   Devi   would   remain
undetermined till such time when there is a partition in the  family.   This
is what has been held by this Court in Potti  Lakshmi  Perumallu  vs.  Potti
Krishna Venamma[1].  The relevant paragraph in  the  said  judgment  to  the
above effect is extracted below:
“According to the theory underlying the Hindu law the widow  of  a  deceased
Hindu is his surviving half and, therefore, as long as she is alive he  must
be deemed to continue to exist in her person. This surviving half had  under
the Hindu law texts no right to claim a partition of  the  property  of  the
family to which her husband belonged.  But the Act  of  1937  has  conferred
that right upon her.  When the Act says that she will have  the  same  right
as her husband had it clearly  means  that  she  would  be  entitled  to  be
allotted the same share as her husband would have been entitled  to  had  he
lived on the date on which she claimed partition.”

11.         On the date of death of Fuchan Mahto, his son Mithu Sao did  not
have any  male  issue.   However,  the  joint  family  in  question  can  be
understood to have continued with Mithu Sao as the 'Karta' and the  property
continued to belong to the joint family.  The above view would find  support
from the decision of this Court in Gowli Buddanna v. Commissioner of  Income
Tax, Mysore, Bangalore[2], relevant portion of which is extracted below:

Property of a joint family therefore  does  not  cease  to  belong  to  the
family merely because the family is represented by a single  coparcener  who
possesses rights which an owner of property may possess.   In  the  case  in
hand the property which yielded the income originally belonged  to  a  Hindu
undivided family.  On the death of Buddappa  the  family  which  included  a
widow and females born in the family was represented by Buddanna  alone  but
the property still continued to belong to that undivided family  and  income
received therefrom was taxable as income of the Hindu undivided family.”

12.         The position, therefore, prior to the coming into force  of  the
Hindu Succession Act, 1956 was that the joint family continued on the  death
of Fuchan Mahto with Mithu Sao as the sole coparcener and the  joint  family
properties continued to belong to the family  and  furthermore  Puniya  Devi
continued to have a share in the property.
13.         At this  stage,  the  provisions  of  Section  6  of  the  Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 will require  a  specific  notice  which  is  extracted
below:

“6.         Devolution of interest in coparcenary  property.-  when  a  male
Hindu dies after the commencement of this Act, having at  the  time  of  his
death an interest in a Mitakshara coparcenary property, his interest in  the
property shall devolve by survivorship upon the  surviving  members  of  the
coparcenary and not in accordance with this act:

Provided that, if the deceased had left  him  surviving  a  female  relative
specified in class-1 of the Schedule or a male relative  specified  in  that
class who claims through such female relative, the interest of the  deceased
in the Mitakshara coparcenary property  shall  devolve  by  testamentary  or
intestate succession, as the  case  may  be,  under  this  Act  and  not  by
survivorship.

      Explanation.1 – For the purposes of this section, the  interest  of  a
Hindu Mitakshara coparcener shall be deemed to be the share in the  property
that would have been allotted to him if a  partition  of  the  property  had
taken place immediately before his death, irrespective  of  whether  he  was
entitled to claim partition or not.

      Explanation 2.- Nothing contained  in  the  proviso  to  this  section
shall be construed as enabling a person who has separated himself  from  the
coparcenary before the death of the deceased or any of his  heirs  to  claim
on intestacy a share in the interest referred to therein.”

14.         After the death of Mithu Sao in the  year  1961,  following  the
provisions of Section 6 of  the  Hindu  Succession  Act,  1956,  a  notional
partition just before the death of Mithu  Sao  will  have  to  be  presumed.
There would, therefore, be 8 sharers in the joint family properties and  the
share of each one of them would be as follows:
|Mithu Sao             |1/8                  |
|Bilaso Devi (wife)    |1/8                  |
|Puniya Devi(mother)   |1/8                  |
|Ramnath (son)         |1/8                  |
|Kashinath (son)       |1/8                  |
|Goverdhan (son)       |1/8                  |
|Jagdish (son)         |1/8                  |
|Baldeo (son)          |1/8                  |

            Insofar as Bilso Devi, the wife of Mithu Sao is  concerned,  she
would be entitled to 1/8th share of the joint  family  properties  upon  the
notional partition being given effect to.  The  share  of  the  widow  of  a
Hindu male coparcener following a notional partition has been recognized  by
this Court in Gurupad Khandappa Magdum versus Hirabai Khandappa  Magdum  and
others[3]. Paragraph 9 and 14 of the  report  in  Gurupad  Khandappa  Magdum
(supra) may be usefully noted herein below:
“9.         The next step, equally important  though  not  equally  easy  to
work out,  is  to  find  out  the  share  which  the  deceased  had  in  the
coparcenary property because after all, the plaintiff has a  1/6th  interest
in that share. Explanation 1 which contains the formula for determining  the
share of the deceased creates a fiction by providing that the interest of  a
Hindu Mistakshara coparcener  shall  be  deemed  to  be  the  share  in  the
property that would have  been  allotted  to  him  if  a  partition  of  the
property had taken place immediately before his death. One must,  therefore,
imagine a state of affairs in which a little prior to Khandappa's  death,  a
partition of the coparcenary property was effected  between  him  and  other
members of the coparcenary. Though the plaintiff, not  being  a  coparcener,
was not entitled to demand partition yet, if a partition were to take  place
between her husband and his two sons, she would be  entitled  to  receive  a
share equal to that of a son. (see Mulla's Hindu  Law,  Fourteenth  Edition,
page 403, para 315). In a partition between  Khandappa  and  his  two  sons,
there would be four sharers in the coparcenary property,  the  fourth  being
Khandappa's wife, the plaintiff. Khandappa would have therefore got a  1/4th
share in the coparcenary property on the hypothesis of a  partition  between
himself and, his sons.
                                xxx  xxx  xxx
14.         The interpretation which we are placing upon the  provisions  of
section  6   its  proviso  and  explanation  I  thereto  will  further   the
legislative intent in regard to the  enlargement  of  the  share  of  female
heirs, qualitatively  and  quantitatively.  The  Hindu  Law  of  Inheritance
(Amendment) Act, 1929 conferred  heirship  rights  on  the  son's  daughter,
daughter's daughter and  sister  in  all  areas  where  the  Mitakshara  law
prevailed. Section 3 of the Hindu Women's  Rights  to  Property  Act,  1937,
speaking broadly, conferred upon the Hindu widow the right  to  a  share  in
the joint family property as also a right to demand partition like any  male
member of the family. The Hindu Succession Act,  1956  provides  by  section
14(1) that any property  possessed  by  a  female  Hindu,  whether  acquired
before or after the commencement of the Act, shall be held by her as a  full
owner thereof and not as a limited owner. By restricting  the  operation  of
the fiction created  by  Explanation  I  in  the  manner  suggested  by  the
appellant, we shall be taking a retrograde step, putting  back  as  it  were
the clock of social reform which has enabled the Hindu Woman to  acquire  an
equal status with males in matters  of  property.  Even  assuming  that  two
interpretations of Explanation I are reasonably  possible,  we  must  prefer
that interpretation which will further the intention of the legislature  and
remedy the injustice from which the  Hindu  women  have  suffered  over  the
years.”
                                                       [underlining is ours]

15.         Next aspect of the case is with regard to  the  1/8th  share  of
Mithu Sao and the devolution of the said share to the surviving  members  of
the joint family.  In this regard, it can be  held  without  any  difficulty
that under the proviso to Section 6 of the Hindu Succession  Act,  1956  the
share of Mithu Sao in the joint family property  (1/8th)  would  devolve  by
intestate succession, in the absence of a will, in the following manner.
|Bilaso Devi    |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Puniya Devi    |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Ramnath        |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Kashinath      |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Goverdhan      |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Jagdish        |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Baldeo         |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Buchwa Devi    |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |
|Sarita         |_1__     |=   |_1__         |
|               |8x9      |    |72           |


16.         Thus after 1961 Puniya Devi being the widow of Fuchan Mahto  had
1/8th plus 1/72th share  in  the  joint  family  property,  namely,  10/72th
share.  Puniya Devi died in the year 1967 leaving behind her  daughter  Ugni
Devi and the children of her predeceased son Mithu Sao.  Ugni Devi  will  be
entitled to receive one-half share of  Puniya  Devi  i.e.  half  of  10/72th
share i.e. 10/144th share.  The remaining 10/144th share that  would  go  to
the branch of Mithu Sao will have to be divided amongst  8  heirs  of  Mithu
Sao, namely,  the  widow  and  the  seven  children.   Thus,  the  aforesaid
10/144th share would devolve in the following manner.
|Bilaso Devi      |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Ramnath          |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Kashinath        |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Goverdhan        |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Jagdish          |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Baldeo           |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Buchwa Devi      |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |
|Sarita           |_1_    |x |_10_   |=  |_10_  |
|                 |8      |  |144    |   |1152  |

17.         Consequently the share of  each  of  the  parties  would  be  as
follows:
|Bilaso Devi |_1_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |14.76%  |
|            |8    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Ramnath     |_1_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |14.76%  |
|            |8    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Kashinath   |_1_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |14.76%  |
|            |8    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Goverdhan   |_1_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |14.76%  |
|            |8    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Jagdish     |_1_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |14.76%  |
|            |8    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Baldeo      |_1_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |14.76%  |
|            |8    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Buchwa Devi |_0_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |2.25%   |
|            |0    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Sarita      |_0_  |+|_1__ |+    |_10_ |= |2.25%   |
|            |0    | |72   |     |1152 |  |        |
|Ugni Devi   |_10_ | |     |     |     |= |6.94%   |
|            |144  | |     |     |     |  |        |

            Thus calculated the share of the appellants would be :
14.76 (Ramnath) + 14.76 (Kashinath) + 2.25 (Buchwa Devi)  +  6.94  (LRs.  of
Ugni Devi) = 38.1%

18.         In view of the above, it will be necessary to modify the  decree
passed by the learned trial Court as affirmed by the High Court  by  holding
that the appellants – defendants are entitled to 38.1% share  in  the  joint
family property instead of 37.5% as ordered by the courts below.

19.         The appeal consequently  is  allowed  to  the  extent  indicated
above and with the aforesaid  modification  of  the  decree  passed  by  the
learned trial Court as affirmed by the High Court.

                                                     ....................,J.
                                    (RANJAN GOGOI)


                                                     ....................,J.
                                    (ASHOK BHUSHAN)

NEW DELHI
APRIL 06, 2017.

                                                     -----------------------
[1]   (1965) 1 SCR 26
[2]   (1966) 3 SCR 224
[3]   (1978) 3 SCC 383

whether the offence is “murder” or “culpable homicide not amounting to murder”, on the facts of a case, it will be convenient for it to approach the problem in three stages. The question to be considered at the first stage would be, whether the accused has done an act by doing which he has caused the death of another. Proof of such causal connection between the act of the accused and the death, leads to the second stage for considering whether that act of the accused amounts to “culpable homicide” as defined in Section 299. If the answer to this question is prima facie found in the affirmative, the stage for considering the operation of Section 300 of the Penal Code, is reached. This is the stage at which the court should determine whether the facts proved by the prosecution bring the case within the ambit of any of the four clauses of the definition of “murder” contained in Section 300. If the answer to this question is in the negative the offence would be “culpable homicide not amounting to murder”, punishable under the first or the second part of Section 304, depending, respectively, on whether the second or the third clause of Section 299 is applicable. If this question is found in the positive, but the case comes within any of the exceptions enumerated in Section 300, the offence would still be “culpable homicide not amounting to murder”, punishable under the first part of Section 304, of the Penal Code.”

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA


                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDITION


                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 87 OF 2008


      Devendra Nath Srivastava                           … Appellant


            Versus


      State of U.P.                                      …Respondent


                                    WITH


                     CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS. 88-90 OF 2008


      Preeti Srivastava                                  … Appellant


                                   Versus


      Devendra Nath Srivastava and Anr.            …Respondents












                               J U D G M E N T




      Prafulla C. Pant, J.




   1.  These  appeals  are  directed  against  judgment  and   order   dated
      24.08.2007, passed by the  High  Court  of  Judicature  at  Allahabad,
      Lucknow Bench, in Criminal Appeal No. 201 of 2007 whereby  said  Court
      has disposed of Capital Reference No. 2 of 2007  along  with  criminal
      appeals filed by appellant Devendra Nath  Srivastava  arising  out  of
      judgment and order dated  18.01.2007  passed  by  Additional  Sessions
      Judge/Special Judge (E.C. Act) Gonda, relating to  conviction  of  the
      appellant under Section 302 of Indian Penal Code (for short “IPC”)  in
      Sessions Trial No. 258 of 2005.  By the impugned order passed  by  the
      High Court, conviction of the appellant under Section 302 IPC has been
      set aside, instead he is convicted under Section 304 Part I  IPC,  and
      sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for ten years and to  pay  fine  of
      ?10,000/-,  in  default  to  under   further   six   months   rigorous
      imprisonment


   2.  Prosecution  story,  in  brief,  is  that  appellant  Devendra   Nath
      Srivastava got married to Madhu Srivastava (deceased)  on  04.03.1994.
      The couple had four children.   On  12.05.2005  at  about  7.30  p.m.,
      complainant  Shailender  Kumar  Srivastava,  who  is  nephew  of   the
      appellant, heard cries of the appellant’s children and rushed  to  the
      house of his uncle (appellant), where he saw the appellant  assaulting
      his wife with brick.  On  seeing  PW-6  and  others  coming  from  the
      neighbourhood, the appellant ran away.  The  appellant’s  wife  (Madhu
      Srivastava) was taken by PW-6 Shailender Kumar Srivastava to  District
      Hospital after arranging an ambulance.  However, the doctors  declared
      her brought dead.


   3. A First Information Report (Ex. A-9) was got lodged by PW-6 at  Police
      Station Kotwali City Gonda on the  very  day  at  about  21.45  hours.
      Crime No. 169 of 2005 was registered based on  the  said  F.I.R.   The
      Investigating Officer, after interrogating the  complainant,  went  to
      the spot and got sealed the dead body of the deceased and prepared the
      inquest Report (Ex. A-1).  On 13.05.2005 PW-7 Dr.  Rajkumar  conducted
      autopsy, and opined that the deceased had died of asphyxia on  account
      of ante mortem injuries.  In  all,  nine  ante  mortem  injuries  were
      recorded in the post mortem examination report (Ex. A-10).  Meanwhile,
      the appellant was arrested, and on his pointing out  recovery  of  the
      brick used in the crime was made.  The blood-stained shirt  and  pants
      of the appellant were also taken into  possession  by  the  police  in
      respect of which memo (Ex. A-13) was prepared.   After  completion  of
      investigation, a charge sheet was submitted by  Investigating  Officer
      Rajender Prasad Singh (PW-8) against the appellant for his trial.


   4. It appears that the case was committed to the court  of  Sessions  for
      trial.  On 10.08.2005 learned Sessions Judge, Gonda framed  charge  in
      respect of offence  punishable  under  Section  302  IPC  against  the
      appellant-accused  Devendra  Nath  Srivastava  to  which  the  accused
      pleaded not guilty and claimed to be tried.  On this, prosecution  got
      examined PW-1 Vijay Kumar Chaurasia, PW-2 Rampher Jaiswal, PW-3 Sadhna
      Srivastava,  PW-4  Virender  Singh,  PW-5  Preeti   Srivastava,   PW-6
      Shailender Kumar Srivastava (informant), PW-7 Dr.  Rajkumar  and  PW-8
      Incharge Inspector Rajender Prasad Singh (Investigating Officer).
   5. The prosecution evidence was put to the accused under Section  313  of
      Criminal Procedure Code (Cr.P.C.), in response  to  which  he  pleaded
      that at the time of incident he had gone to his native village to give
      medicines to his mother.  Thereafter, on behalf of  the  defence  DW-1
      Shyam Rang and DW-2 Chandermukhi were got examined.  The  trial  court
      in its wisdom got summoned court witness Adesh Kumar  Srivastava  (CW-
      1), the eldest son of the deceased who was minor.  His  statement  was
      recorded on 16.11.2006.  Thereafter, this additional evidence was also
      put to the accused under Section 313 Cr.P.C.


   6. After hearing the parties, the trial court found that  the  charge  in
      respect of offence punishable under Section 302 is proved against  the
      accused, and convicted him accordingly.  The parties were  heard  also
      on sentence and the trial court awarded death sentence to the convict,
      and submitted the record to the High Court  vide  judgment  and  order
      dated 18.01.2007, for affirmation of the sentence.
   7. Aggrieved by the judgment and order of the  trial  court  the  convict
      preferred appeal (Criminal Appeal No. 201 of 2007) to the High  Court.
      He further got submitted another appeal (Criminal Appeal  No.  237  of
      2007) from jail.  Both these appeals were clubbed  together  with  the
      Reference made by the Court of Sessions, and disposed of  together  by
      the High Court  vide  common  judgment  and  order  dated  24.08.2007,
      impugned before us.  The High Court held that the incident  had  taken
      place after altercations between the deceased and the accused, who was
      drunk, and the homicidal death is caused by the appellant, and the act
      is covered under Section 304 Part I IPC, and  not  under  Section  302
      IPC.  Accordingly,  the  High  Court  set  aside  the  conviction  and
      sentence under Section  302  IPC  recorded  by  the  trial  court  and
      convicted the appellant under Section 304 Part I IPC and sentenced him
      to undergo ten years rigorous imprisonment and to pay fine of ?10,000/-
      , in default to undergo further six months rigorous imprisonment.


   8. Convict Devendra Nath Srivastava and victim’s sister Preeti Srivastava
      moved this Court through separate Special Leave Petitions  challenging
      the order passed by the High Court.  Criminal Appeal No.  87  of  2008
      has arisen out of the Special Leave Petition filed by the convict, and
      Criminal Appeal Nos. 88-90 of 2008 have  arisen  out  of  the  Special
      Leave Petitions filed by Preeti Srivastava, sister of the deceased.


   9. We have heard learned counsel for the parties at  length  and  perused
      the record of the case.


  10. Before further discussion, we think it just and proper to mention  the
      ante mortem injuries recorded by PW-7  Dr.  Rajkumar  in  the  autopsy
      report (Ex. A-10).  The same are reproduced as under: -
           “(1)  Lacerated wound 5 cm x 4 cm x bone deep on  back  of  left
                 ear.  Clotted blood seen in the wound.


           (2)   Multiple red contusion in area of 10 cm x  8  cm  on  left
                 side of face.




           (3)   Lacerated wound 3 cm x 1 cm x bone  deep  just  below  the
                 left mandible and 2.5 cm on  left  to  the  chin.   Clotted
                 blood seen in the wound.




           (4)   Lacerated wound 1.5 cm x .5 cm x bone  deep  on  the  chin
                 surrounded by red contusion in the area of 4 cm x 3 cm.




           (5)   Lacerated wound 2 cm x 1 cm x muscle deep on right side of
                 forehead adjacent to the right eyebrow.  Blood  clots  seen
                 in the wound.




           (6)   Incised wound 6 cm x 1 cm x muscle deep on  left  side  of
                 neck 7 cm below the left ear.




           (7)   Red contusion 5 cm x 3 cm across the trachea on the  front
                 of neck.




           (8)   Red contusion with abrasion in the area of 13 cm  x  5  cm
                 along right collar bone.




           (9)   Red contusion with abrasion 3 cm x 2 cm  on  top  of  left
                 shoulder joint.”



            PW-7 Dr. Raj Kumar has stated that on internal examination  both
      upper and lower jaws’ bones found broken and some  portions  of  upper
      and lower teeth were also found broken.  He further found  hyoid  bone
      fractured and both lungs blocked.  These observations are also made in
      the autopsy report.  It has been opined by the  said  Medical  Officer
      that Madhu Srivastava (deceased) died of strangulation with the  above
      mentioned ante mortem injuries.


  11. The medical evidence, discussed above, clearly establishes that  Madhu
      Srivastava (wife of the appellant Devendra Nath Srivastava)  has  died
      homicidal death.  Now, we have to examine whether  the  appellant  has
      caused the death of his wife, as suggested by the prosecution, or not.


  12. On perusal of the evidence on record, it  is  clear  that  PW-1  Vijay
      Kumar Chaurasia, PW-2 Rampher Jaiswal, PW-3  Sadhna  Srivastava,  PW-4
      Virender Singh  and  PW-6  Shailender  Kumar  Srivastava  have  turned
      hostile to prosecution, but on  careful  scrutiny  of  their  evidence
      there is no difficulty in finding the ring of truth in the prosecution
      story.  PW-1 Vijay Kumar Chaurasia though states in his examination-in-
      chief that before  the  incident  he  had  no  acquaintance  with  the
      appellant, but has proved the inquest report (Ex. A-1) in  the  cross-
      examination stating that he witnessed the inquest  proceedings.   PW-2
      Rampher Jaiswal in his examination-in-chief, denies  his  presence  at
      the time of the incident, but in cross-examination  this  witness  has
      proved that the brick, allegedly used in the crime, was  recovered  on
      pointing out of the accused Devendra Nath Srivastava.  He  proved  his
      signatures in the recovery memo.  PW-6 Shailender Kumar Srivastava has
      stated that he is the nephew of the deceased and the accused,  but  he
      does not know how his aunt (Madhu Srivastava) died.   He  has  further
      stated that the accused and the deceased had strained  relations.   In
      the cross-examination he admits that he gave written report  (Ext.  A-
      26) to the police, soon after the incident on 12.05.2005.  He  further
      stated that he took Madhu Srivastava (in  injured  condition)  to  the
      hospital at about 8.50 p.m. where she was declared brought dead.


  13. PW-5 Preeti Srivastava, sister of the deceased, has  stated  that  the
      deceased was married  to  appellant  Devendra  Nath  Srivastava.   She
      further stated that the  appellant  was  Field  Inspector  with  Khadi
      Gramodyog Board.  She further disclosed that she used  to  live  at  a
      distance of some 1-1.5 kilometers away from the house of the appellant
      and his family.  She further told that there were four  children  born
      out of the wedlock  between  the  deceased  and  the  appellant.   She
      further stated that the appellant used to torture the  deceased  after
      taking alcohol.  She has proved the letters Exs. A-2, A-3, A-4 and A-5
      written by the deceased to  her  father  complaining  about  the  ill-
      treatment meted out to her by the appellant.  In all these letters, it
      is specifically mentioned by the deceased that  the  appellant  was  a
      drunkard and used to  beat  her  after  getting  drunk.   PW-5  Preeti
      Srivastava has further stated that there had been  litigation  between
      the deceased and the appellant,  but  it  terminated  with  compromise
      entered between the parties in 2003 (Ex. A-8).


  14. PW-8 Inspector Rajendra Prasad Singh, the Investigating  Officer,  has
      stated that  during  interrogation  he  recovered  brick  (Ex.  I)  on
      pointing out of the accused.  He has further  stated  that  the  blood
      stained pantaloons and the  shirt  of  the  accused  were  taken  into
      possession, and memo (Ex. A-13) was prepared, and  sent  for  chemical
      analysis along with other blood stained articles including  the  blood
      stained piece of floor collected from the spot as also the clothes  of
      the deceased (Ex. 2, 3, and 4).  Forensic  Science  Laboratory  report
      dated 14.10.2005 (Ex. A-27) shows that in the blood stained clothes of
      the accused contained human blood.  It further  discloses  that  human
      blood was also found in the piece of cement floor and the  clothes  of
      the deceased.


  15. Statement of CW-1 Adesh Kumar Srivastava, eight years old  eldest  son
      of the appellant and the deceased, does not support prosecution but it
      can be easily gathered that after he lost his mother, he does not want
      to lose his father.  At one stage he says his mother fell on a  brick,
      and then discloses that she had fallen from  the  staircase.   At  the
      end, he states that at the time of the incident he was playing at  the
      boundary of the house.


  16. Though the defence witnesses DW-1 Shyam  Rang  and  DW-2  Chandermukhi
      have attempted to say that Devendra Nath  Srivastava  (appellant)  had
      gone to village on the day of the incident to give  medicines  to  his
      mother, but there is nothing to  corroborate  on  the  record  if  any
      medicine is purchased from any chemist by the appellant.  It  is  also
      not clear as to what was the ailment of his mother, and since when she
      was unwell.  In our opinion, the trial court and the High  Court  have
      rightly disbelieved these two witnesses.


  17. On re-appreciation  of  entire  evidence  and  having  considered  the
      submissions of learned counsel for the parties, we agree with the view
      taken by the High Court  that  it  is  clearly  established  from  the
      evidence on record that the appellant caused homicidal  death  of  his
      wife, after quarrel between the two.  It is established on the  record
      that the appellant was a drunkard.  The First Information  Report  was
      lodged by none other than  the  appellant’s  own  nephew,  immediately
      after the incident.  There is no version put forward by the  appellant
      as to how his wife died homicidal death in his house.  Considering the
      facts and circumstances of the case, it  appears  that  the  appellant
      acted in a fit of anger.  It is nobody’s case that the  appellant  had
      any concubine.  Rather statement of PW-5 Preeti Srivastava shows  that
      suit for restitution of conjugal rights, filed by the  appellant,  was
      decided in terms of compromise, and they started living together  with
      their children.


  18. As to whether the act on the part of  the  appellant  constitutes  the
      offence punishable under Section 302 IPC or Section 304 Part I IPC, we
      are of the view that the incident has occurred after  quarrel  between
      the appellant and the deceased which is not a planned act.  It is also
      established that the appellant was a drunkard.  In our opinion, in the
      facts and circumstances of the case, the view taken by the High Court,
      that the appellant has committed offence punishable under Section  304
      Part I IPC, requires no interference.


  19. In State of Andhra Pradesh v. Rauavarapu Punnayya & another [(1977)  1
      Supreme Court Reports 601  at  606][1],  this  Court,  explaining  the
      scheme of Penal Code relating to culpable homicide, has laid down  the
      law as under:-
           “In the scheme of the Penal Code, “culpable homicide”  is  genus
           and “murder” its specie. Every “murder” is  “culpable  homicide”
           but not vice-versa. Speaking generally, “culpable homicide” sans
           “special characteristics of murder”, is “culpable  homicide  not
           amounting to murder”. For  the  purpose  of  fixing  punishment,
           proportionate to the gravity of this generic offence,  the  Code
           practically recognises three degrees of culpable  homicide.  The
           first is, what may be called, “culpable homicide  of  the  first
           degree”. This is the greatest form of culpable  homicide,  which
           is defined in Section 300 as “murder”. The second may be  termed
           as “culpable homicide of the second degree”. This is  punishable
           under the first part of Section 304. Then,  there  is  “culpable
           homicide of the third  degree”.  This  is  the  lowest  type  of
           culpable homicide and the punishment provided for it  is,  also,
           the lowest among the punishments provided for the three  grades.
           Culpable homicide of this degree is punishable under the  second
           part of Section 304.”


  20. In the same case, i.e. State of Andhra Pradesh v. Rauavarapu  Punnayya
      & another (supra), this Court has further  observed  at  page  608  as
      under: -

           “……….whenever a court is confronted with  the  question  whether
           the offence is “murder” or “culpable homicide not  amounting  to
           murder”, on the facts of a case, it will be convenient for it to
           approach the  problem  in  three  stages.  The  question  to  be
           considered at the first stage would be, whether the accused  has
           done an act by doing which he has caused the death  of  another.
           Proof of such causal connection between the act of  the  accused
           and the death, leads to the second stage for considering whether
           that act of  the  accused  amounts  to  “culpable  homicide”  as
           defined in Section 299. If the answer to this question is  prima
           facie found in the affirmative, the stage  for  considering  the
           operation of Section 300 of the Penal Code, is reached. This  is
           the stage at which the court should determine whether the  facts
           proved by the prosecution bring the case within the ambit of any
           of the four clauses of the definition of “murder”  contained  in
           Section 300. If the answer to this question is in  the  negative
           the  offence  would  be  “culpable  homicide  not  amounting  to
           murder”, punishable under  the  first  or  the  second  part  of
           Section 304, depending, respectively, on whether the  second  or
           the third clause of Section 299 is applicable. If this  question
           is found in the positive, but the case comes within any  of  the
           exceptions enumerated in Section 300, the offence would still be
           “culpable homicide not amounting to  murder”,  punishable  under
           the first part of Section 304, of the Penal Code.”
  21. In view of the above discussion of facts and law, we are in  agreement
      with the conviction and sentence recorded against the appellant by the
      High Court.  Therefore,  the appeals are dismissed.




                                             .........................J.
                                                               [N.V. Ramana]






                                          .........................J.
                                                          [Prafulla C. Pant]
      New Delhi;
      April 6, 2017.




      -----------------------
[1] (1976) 4 SCC 382