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1978 DIGILAW 241 (BOM)

Balwantrao Anandrao Raut v. Molharrao Rajam Desai & others

1978-11-29

R.A.JAHAGIRDAR

body1978
Judgment - R.A. JAHAGIRDAR, J.:---These two criminal appeals are filed by the original complainant who has failed in his prosecution of respondent No. 1 in both the appeals, hereinafter referred as the accused in Criminal Case Nos. 2229 and 2226 respectively of 1974. Instead of referring to the facts in relation to the appeal numbers, I will mention them with reference to criminal case numbers. The criminal case giving rise to Criminal Appeal No. 1219 of 1976 was in time earlier than the one giving rise to Criminal Appeal No. 1218 of 1976. Fortunately, the facts in both the cases are analogous; common question of law is involved; and the accused in both the cases is the same. 2. In Criminal Case No. 2226 of 1974 the complainant one Laxmanrao Chavan was, at the relevant time, serving as professor in Gokhale College at Kolhapur, which was being run by the "Shikshan Prasarak Mandal, Kolhapur." The accused was the Principal of the said college. The basis of the prosecution was the allegation that the accused had deducted a sum equivalent to Rs. 2341.64 from the salary of the complainant and had misappropriated the same. This apparently amounted to an offence under section 403 of the Indian Penal Code. A charge either as alternative or in addition to, the one mentioned above was also thrown on him for the purpose of establishing an offence punishable under section 409 of the Indian Penal Code that is criminal breach of trust. The charge as framed by the learned trial Magistrate, however, mentions only an offence punishable under section 409 of the Indian Penal Code. It was thus incumbent on the prosecution to prove on the threshold itself that there was entrustment of the amount to the accused in respect of which the accused is said to have committed criminal breach of trust. 3. In Criminal Case No. 2229 of 1974 the amount in respect of which criminal breach of trust was alleged to have been committed by the accused was in the sum of Rs. 3034.64 In that case, the complainant was one Raut who was working as a demonstrator in the same college at Kolhapur. 3. In Criminal Case No. 2229 of 1974 the amount in respect of which criminal breach of trust was alleged to have been committed by the accused was in the sum of Rs. 3034.64 In that case, the complainant was one Raut who was working as a demonstrator in the same college at Kolhapur. The allegations made by the complainant in this case are in substance the same which formed the basis of the prosecution in Criminal Case No. 2226 of 1974 that is, the accused deducted the sum stated above from the salary of the complainant and has committed criminal breach of trust in respect of the same. The amounts so deducted in both the cases, it is alleged by the prosecution, were from the provident fund contributions made by the members of the staff of the college of which the accused was the Principal. 4. I have mentioned above already that the charge framed against the accused was one under section 409 of the Indian Penal Code which relates to criminal breach of trust by a public servant or by banker or merchant or agent. It has not been specified by the complainant in which capacity the accused was entrusted with the amounts in respect of which the criminal breach of trust is alleged to have been committed. If the charge under section 409 of the Indian Penal Code is not established in law it is permissible to convict the accused under section 403 of the Indian Penal Code, that is, for dishonest misappropriation of property. The essential ingredient of the offence under section 403 of the I.P.C. is the dishonest misappropriation or conversion by a person to his own use any moveable property. In other words, it must, in the first place, be shown that the property which did not belong to the accused came in his possession and it was subsequently misappropriated or converted by the accused. In both the cases as already mentioned by me above it was incumbent on the prosecution to show that the deduction of the amounts alleged to have been made from the salaries of the complainants were in fact entrusted to the accused or that the accused came in possession of the same before proceeding to consider whether he had committed offences punishable under section 409 or section 403 of the Indian Penal Code. The complainants and the accused are admittedly the servants of the society which runs the Gokhale College. The college itself is a part of the activities carried on by the society and cannot in law have any independent legal existence. If, there are accounts of the college they must from a part of the accounts of the society. In the Court below both the complainants miserably failed to show that the amounts purported to have been deducted from the salaries of the accompaniments were in fact entrusted to the accused or that he had dominion over the same. The learned trial Magistrate was impressed by the failure of the prosecution to prove the very basic fact without which the prosecution could not proceed any further and was thus obliged to acquit the accused in both the cases by his judgments and orders dated May 28, 1976. It is these orders of acquittal which have been challenged in these two appeals. 5. Mr. Nerlekar, the learned Advocate appearing in support of both the appeal, sought to contend that the learned trial Magistrate was in error in holding that there was no entrustment of the amounts deducted from the salaries of the two complainants to the accused. According to him, whenever the salary of an employee is given to the employee minus the amount which is the employees contribution towards the provident fund, it necessarily follows that the employee has entrusted the amount which is shown to be deducted to the person who is paying the salary. Mr. Nerlekar submits that there is sufficient evidence in these two cases to show that it was the accused who was incharge of the accounts of the college and who was paying the salaries of the staff of the college. He has also invited my attention to some part of the evidence to show that the permission of the accused was necessary even for a member of the staff to get any amount from the provident fund. After going through that part of the evidence which Mr. Nerlekar showed me as relevant for the disposal of appeal, with his assistance, and after hearing Mr. After going through that part of the evidence which Mr. Nerlekar showed me as relevant for the disposal of appeal, with his assistance, and after hearing Mr. Paranjpe, appearing for the accused in both the appeals, I have no hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the prosecution has in both the cases failed to prove that the entrustment of the amounts deducted or purported to have been deducted from the salaries of the complainants were in fact or in law entrusted to the accused. I am not referring to the evidence in details because that consists essentially of the prescribed procedure followed from time to time. The same evidence also shows that the provident fund scheme was implemented at the instance of the society itself. The prosecution has not shown that the deductions made from the salaries of the complainants were at the instance of the accused; on the other hand, the evidence which shows that the provident fund scheme was started and implemented at the instance of the society, was at all material times under the effective control of the society itself. It is true that, according to the arrangement made, the amounts were to be deposited in a bank in the joint name of the concerned member of the staff and the accused, but this was only after the deduction were made. There is abundant evidence to which detailed reference has been made by the learned trial Magistrate in his judgment from paragraph 19 onwards which shown that the society accepted its liability for the payment of provident fund which was due to the members of the staff. There is also evidence to show that the society was in straitened condition for several months or years and the salaries of the members of the staff were not regularly paid. The amounts which were thus due to the members of the staff on account of salary were shown in the books of account as loans due from the society to the members of the staff. At no time, had it been suggested that the amount of salary which was due in practice from the college to a member of the staff of the college when not paid was shown as all loan from the member of the staff to the college. At no time, had it been suggested that the amount of salary which was due in practice from the college to a member of the staff of the college when not paid was shown as all loan from the member of the staff to the college. This mode of accounting discloses that the payment was to be made by the society to the members of the staff of the college through the college. Otherwise it would be inconceivable that the society would show the amounts of the salaries which it has not paid as amounts of loans due from the members of the staff to the society. If the accused was incharge of the amounts which were to be paid to the members of the staff as salaries from which the amounts by way of deduction of the provident fund were to be made the arrangement which is now disclosed from the evidence on record would not have been made. It was ultimately the society which was responsible for the payment of the salary and, therefore, it was the society which alone could have deducted the amount of the provident fund from the salary of the member. In practice, however, after the deductions were made an account might have been opened or was directed to be opened in the joint name of the member of the staff and the accused. That itself is not no indication whatsoever that it was the accused who had right to deduct the amount of the provident fund from the salary or that after such deduction he retained those amounts with him. 6. Mr. Nerlekar has not succeeded, in my opinion, in abolishing this basic factual position which has emerged from the evidence on record and which has been accepted by the learned trial Magistrate. He, however, sought to contend that the maintenance of the separate accounts of the college itself which were audited from time to time is tantamount to the accused being in-charge of the amounts shown in the said accounts. With this object in mind he referred the evidence of P.W. 1 Shahu Shantaram Kurade who was working as Deputy Registrar of the Shivaji University but who had inspected the accounts of the Gokhale College which was one of the affiliated colleges of the Shivaji University. With this object in mind he referred the evidence of P.W. 1 Shahu Shantaram Kurade who was working as Deputy Registrar of the Shivaji University but who had inspected the accounts of the Gokhale College which was one of the affiliated colleges of the Shivaji University. I am unable to spell out from the evidence of this witness the fact of any entrustment of the amounts covered by the accounts the accused. In fact, he himself does not say that the amounts shown in the accounts of the college were under effective control or dominion of the accused. The complainant who is examined himself as P.W. 2 has in examination-in-chief totally failed to present a picture which must have been in his mind before rushing to the Court with such a baseless charge. On the other hand, in the cross-examination he was forced to admit that whenever the entire pay was not paid the balance amount was being credited at the close of the year as loan with the college. But the consolidated receipt were issued by the institution viz. the society. Individual loan receipts were issued earlier by the colleges. It is admitted that the ultimate liability for the amounts of the salaries which were due to the members of the staff of the college was borne by the society itself and not by the college as a legal entity or by the accused who was the Principal of the college in his individual or in any other capacity. 7. One Professor Kanbur who was working as the Head of the Department in Mathematics in the college was examined as P.W. No. 3. He has given a short history of the financial condition of the college. He has mentioned that the Professors of the college were not paid salaries regularly since 1964. His another assertion is that he has seen with his own eyes that on every alternate day the accused used to call the accountant and used to take money from him as advance. I do not see the relevance of this statement to the case which the accused was forced to face. His another assertion is that he has seen with his own eyes that on every alternate day the accused used to call the accountant and used to take money from him as advance. I do not see the relevance of this statement to the case which the accused was forced to face. The accused was put in-charge of the college by the society and if during the course of management of this college he had to take amounts from the accountant who is another worker of the same college, I do not find any sentence in the prosecution of this type. The evidence also discloses that Professor Kanbur was elected as a member of the Managing Committee of the society. He admits having attended several meetings of the mandal and having signed in the minutes book which shows the various resolutions which have been passed. But he is hold enough though mention that none of the resolutions was passed or discussed. But he had no hesitation in endorsing the correctness of the minutes which incorporated those resolutions. I refuse to attach any importance to the deposition of a witness such as this. In any case, he has also like the other prosecution witnesses, failed to prove that it was the accused who has deducted the amounts of the provident fund dues from the salaries of the member, of the staff, of the college and it was he who had retained the said amounts. 8. On the other hand, the evidence of D.W. 2 Shamrao Bhagaji Patil discloses that the provident fund scheme was introduced at the instance of the society. He has also mentioned that in the year 1969, the society took a decision that amount which was to be deducted on account of provident fund was to be deposited in the bank in the joint account of Principal and the concerned servant of the society. In view of this decision, the then Principal of the college (not the accused) wrote two letters in the year 1960 to the Manager of United Commercial Bank to open joint in the names of Principal and concerned staff member. It shows that this accused was only implementing a direction which was given to him by the society; he was bound to implement it like the other members of the staff of the college, as a servant of the society. It shows that this accused was only implementing a direction which was given to him by the society; he was bound to implement it like the other members of the staff of the college, as a servant of the society. The evidence of this witness again shows that the society used to treat the amounts of arrears of salaries as loan from the servants of the society to the society. It may also be noted that this witness further says that ultimately all the arrears of the provident fund were paid by the society in the year 1974. 9. The upshot of this discussion of the evidence led by the parties in both the cases is clearly that the accused was not responsible, in any manner whatsoever, for the deductions made or purported to have been made from the salaries of the members of the staff of the college and he was not in effective control of the amounts which were to be deducted or purported to have been deducted. If in the accounts of the college, it was shown that the amounts were deducted by the college, it was obviously in pursuance of the directive issued by the society. The college had no independent legal existence and could not have, therefore separate independent accounts. The accounts of the college must be deemed to have been part of the accounts of the entire society which alone was legally or otherwise responsible for the payment of the salaries all to the servants of the society including the members of the staff of the college with deductions, if any that had to be made from the salaries. The admission of the complainant in both the cases that the society treated the arrears of the salaries as loans from the members of the staff to the society should have made them realise that it was not the accused who was responsible for the deductions from the salaries the deductions were made from the salaries paid by the society. Despite this, unfortunately both the complainants rushed to the Court with this complaint which did not disclose any basis for prosecution. This is substantially the reasoning underlined the judgments of the learned trial Magistrate in both the cases. I have no hesitation even on independent appraisal of the evidence in endorsing the reasoning containing in the judgments of the Court below. This is substantially the reasoning underlined the judgments of the learned trial Magistrate in both the cases. I have no hesitation even on independent appraisal of the evidence in endorsing the reasoning containing in the judgments of the Court below. Both the prosecutions were hopelessly misconceived and were launched rashly. Both the complaints were rightly dismissed by the learned trial Magistrate who acquitted in both the cases of the offences with which he has been charged. 10. In the result, both these appeals must also be dismissed. The orders of acquittal passed by the learned trial Magistrate of Kolhapur in Criminal Case Nos. 2226 of 1974 and 2229 of 1974 are confirmed. ------