Harish Uppal, Capt. v. Union of India, (SC) BS107205
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

Before:- A. Alagiriswami and C.A. Vaidialingam, JJ.

Writ Petn. No. 456 of 1972. D/d. 27.11.1972.

Capt. Harish Uppal - Petitioner

Versus

Union of India and others - Respondents

A. Army Act, 1950, Section 160 - Revision of sentence - Sentence can be enhanced also by the confirming authority.

[Para 4]

B. Constitution of India, Article 32 - In a petition against sentence awarded to an army officer, the Supreme Court cannot go into the evidence.

[Para 4]

C. Army Act, 1950, Section 157 - Court martial - Power to confirm sentence awarded by court martial - Where two officers are the officers commanding the same division to which a charged officer belongs and one of them has convened the court martial, the other can direct that the findings and sentence be confirmed by the Chief of Army Staff even if he was only officiating and lower in rank than the officer who convened the court martial.

[Para 7]

D. Army Act, 1950, Section 157 - Confirmation of sentence - Natural justice - Hearing - It is not necessary for the confirming authority to give a hearing to the charged officer before confirming the sentence passed after revision of the sentence originally passed.

[Para 8]

Cases Referred :-

A.K. Kraipak v. Union of India, (1970)1 SCR 457.

Purtabpore Co. Ltd. v. Cane Commissioner of Bihar, (1969)2 SCR 807.

JUDGMENT

Alagiriswami, J. :- The petitioner was an officer of the Indian Army who served in Bangla Desh. Only 11th December, 1971 he was in a place called Hajiganj. He was tried before the Summary General Court Marital on the charge of committing robbery at Hajganj by causing fear of instant hurt to the Custodians of the United Bank Ltd., of certain properties belonging to the Bank and also the personal property of the Manager of the Bank as well as of a Chowkidar of the Bank. The Court sentenced the petitioner to be 'cashiered'. This sentence was subject to confirmation under the provisions of Chapter XII of the Army Act. Maj.-Gen. Hira, General Officer Commanding, 23 Mountain Division, of which the petitioner was an officer, passed an order directing the petitioner was brought before the same Court Martial, as had tried him earlier, and he was asked whether he wanted to address the Court. On receiving a reply in the negative, the Court, after considering the observations of the confirming authority, revoked the earlier sentence which they had imposed on the petitioner and sentenced him to be cashiered and to suffer rigorous imprisonment for two years. Brig. B. P. Bhilla, the Officiating General Officer Commanding 23 Mountain Division, referred the finding and sentence for confirmation to the Chief of the Army Staff, who in due course confirmed the finding and the sentence. The present petition is filed under Article 32 of the Constitution for quashing the order passed by the Chief of the Army Staff, after setting aside the order passed by Maj.-Gen. Hira.

2. Shri A. K. Sen appearing on behalf of the petitioner raised four points in support of his contention that the order passed against the petitioner should be quashed.

3. (1) The officer who convened the Summary General Court Marital, which tried the petitioner, was Maj.-Gen. Hira. It was he that directed the revision of the sentence passed on the petitioner. The argument is that this order was in such terms that the Court Marital which revised the sentence was compelled to and was left with no alternative but to enhance the sentence and that this was against all principles of natural justice. Under Section 153 of the Army Act no finding of a Court Martial shall be valid except so far as it may be confirmed as provided under the Act. Under Section 157 the finding and sentences of summary general courts-martial may be confirmed by the convening officer or if he so directs, by an authority superior to him. Under Section 158, a confirming authority may, when confirming the sentence of a court-martial, mitigate or remit the punishment thereby awarded, or commute that punishment for any punishments lower in the scale laid down in Section 71. Under Section 160, any finding or sentence of a court-martial which requires confirmation may be once revised by order of the confirming authority and on such revision, the Court, if so direct by the confirming authority, may take additional evidence. Even after revision the sentence passed by the court-martial would have to be confirmed because of provision of Section 153. The order passed by Maj.-Gen. Hira directing revision of the sentence passed by the court-martial is as follows :

(a) The property of the United Bank Ltd. COMILLA Dist.
(i)Cash in Pakistan Currency Rs. 11,222.91
(ii)28-12 Bore guns Registered No. 027373 and 342 Two with seven cartridges.
(iii)Wall clock One
(iv)Telephone Set Auto TIP (Sky Blue) One
(v)Telephone CB without hand set (Black) One
(vi)Pens (eagle) Two
(vii)Locks with four keys Two
(viii)Winter uniform of peons and guard Two pairs
(b) Personal Property of Shri MAKALAM, Manager, United Bank Ltd. HAJIGANJ Branch :
Wrist Watch (Romer popular) = One
(c) Personal property of Shri Habibullah, Chowkidar, United Bank Ltd., Hajiganj Branch:
PAKISTAN Currency = Rs. 6/-

Sd/-

(RD HIRA)

Maj-Gen.

General Officer Commanding 23 Mtn. Div.

4. It was contended that in the face of such strong observations by the General Officer Commanding the Division the officers constituting the court martial would have felt compelled to enhance the sentence and the revised sentence passed on the petitioner was not the free act of the court martial but one forced on them by the Officer Commanding and that this militates against the principle of natural justice. But it should be remembered that under the provisions of the Army Act set out earlier the confirming authority could himself mitigate or remit the punishment awarded by the court martial or commute that punishment for any lower punishment and, therefore, when a sentence is directed to be revised by the confirming authority it necessarily means that the confirming authority considers that the punishment awarded by the Court martial is not commensurate with the offence and it should, therefore, be revised upwards. To object to this is to object to the provisions of Section 158 itself. A direction by the confirming authority merely showing that the punishment awarded by the Court martial is not commensurate with the offence, would be certainly unexceptionable and would be in accordance with the provisions of law. Instead of baldly stating so the confirming authority in this case has given reasonable as why he considers that the punishment awarded to the petitioner was wholly inadequate. We consider that the reasons given by him cannot be taken exception to. It was urged that the confirming authority proceeded on the basis that in respect of the charges against the petitioner the evidence available was as he had out in his order directing revision and that this was not correct. We must point out that this Court cannot go into the evidence in support of the charge against the petitioner. Indeed the court martial itself could not have set out the evidence against the petitioner; it should have only given the finding and the sentence. Under the provisions of Article 136(2) of the Constitution this Court cannot grant special leave in respect of any judgment, determination or order passed or made by any Court or tribunal constituted by or under law relating to the Armed Forces. In considering a petition filed under Article 32 of the Constitution this Court can only consider whether any fundamental right of the petitioner has been violated and the only Article relevant is Article 21 of the Constitution. There is no doubt that the procedure established by law as required under that Article has been completely followed in this case.

5. It is, however, urged that the decisions of this Court have laid down that the rules of natural justice operate in areas not covered by any law validly made and that they do not supplant the law of the land but supplement it and, therefore, though the procedure established by law may have been followed as required under Article 21 the principles of natural justice should also be followed. The cases relied on are A.K. Kraipak v. Union of India, (1970)1 SCR 457 and Purtabpore Co. Ltd. v. Cane Commissioner of Bihar, (1969)2 SCR 807. This Court in the first decision had pointed out that what particular rule of natural justice should apply to a given case must depend to a great extent on the facts and circumstances of that case, the frame work of the law under which the enquiry is held and the constitution of the tribunal or body of persons appointed for that purpose. It was also pointed out that the Court has to decide whether the observance of that rule was necessary for a just decision and that the rule that enquiries must be held in good faith and without bias and not arbitrarily or unreasonably is now included among the principles of natural justice. There is no analogy between the facts of that case and the present and applying the ratio of that to the facts of this case we are not satisfied that any rule of natural justice has been violated. The latter was a case where the authority competent to pass the order had simply passed an order adopting what the Minister had directed and had not applied his mind. The facts of this case are quite different. The confirming authority while pointing out the facts had left the discretion regarding the punishment to be imposed to the court martial. If the court martial in spite of the direction given by the confirming authority had reaffirmed its original order, the confirming authority could do nothing because it can exercise its power of directing revision only once and that power was already exhausted. Furthermore, when the court martial resassembled to revise its earlier order under the directions of the confirming authority, the petitioner was given the reasons of the confirming officer for requiring revision and asked whether he wanted to address the Court, he replied in the negative. It was open to him to have pointed out to the court martial how the observations of the confirming authority were wrong, how they were not borne out by the evidence on record. Having failed to avail himself of the opportunity accorded to him, the petitioner cannot be now heard to complain that he was not given an opportunity by the confirming authority before he directed revision. The court martial had originally found the petitioner guilty of the charge of robbery, under Section 392 of the Indian Penal Code. There was, therefore, no question of the court martial, when it proceeded to reconsider the matter, of reconsidering the finding of guilty. Therefore, any attempt to question the order of the confirming authority on the basis that he relied upon facts which were not proved for directing revision, is wholly beside the point. And as far as the question of sentence is concerned, one cannot quarrel with the sentiments expressed by the confirming authority. We find ourselves unable, therefore, to agree to petitioner's contention that the order of the confirming authority directing revision is in any way vitiated.

6. (2) We have already held above that the confirming authority, when he directed a revision of the sentence passed on the petitioner, was only exercising the powers conferred on him by Section 160 of the Army Act. He also made it clear that the court martial was not bound by his opinion by stating that should the court martial decide to enhance the sentence the fresh sentence should be announced in open court as being subject to confirmation. Right in the beginning of his order he had also stated 'whilst in no way intending the quantum of punishment to be awarded, the Court should fully take into consideration the following observations'. To hold in the circumstances that the confirming authority should have heard the appellant before he directed the revision of the sentence passed on him would not be a requirement of principle of natural justice. In the circumstances and facts of a case like the present one where the petitioner had an opportunity of putting forward whatever contentions he wanted to rely upon before the court martial, we do not consider that there is any substance in this contention.

7. (3) The contention here was that while the court martial was convened by a Maj-General the officer who directed revision was a Brigadier, and that only the convening officer can confirm or direct revision. This is perhaps the one contention with the least substance put forward on behalf of the petitioner. The contention is based on the words found in Section 157 of the Army Act that the findings and sentences of summary general courts-martial may be confirmed by the convening officer or if he so directs, by an authority superior to him. The words 'convening officer' and 'and authority superior to him' are sought to be contrasted and it is argued that while a confirmation can only be by a convening officer and by no other, the authority superior to him may also confirm showing that in the latter case neither the rank of authority nor the person holding the post is relevant. Section 112 of the Act which deals with the power to convene a summary general court martial shows that this attempted distinction between "authority" and "officer" is without substance. The officer is the authority and the authority is the officer. Both the words refer only to one person. To accept this argument would mean that if the officer who convened the court martial is transferred to a distant place or retires or is dead, the whole procedure would have to be gone through again. A useful comparison will be of decisions under Article 311 of the Constitution where it has been held that the power to deal with an officer under that Article can be exercised even by an authority lower in rank to the authority which originally appointed the officer, if at the relevant period of time that authority was competent to appoint the officer sought to be dealt with. It may be noted that in this case the officer who convened the court martial was a Maj-General Officer Commanding the 23rd Mountain Division, and the officer who directed that the findings and sentence should be confirmed by the Chief of Staff was also the officer commanding the same Division, though he was only officiating and was a Brigadier. The confirmation itself was by the Chief of Army Staff, higher in rank than the convening officer.

8. (4) The contention that Brig. Bhilla should either have given a hearing to the petitioner or the Chief of Army Staff should have given a hearing to the petitioner before confirming the subsequent sentence by the court martial is not a requirement under the Act. While it can be at least said that there is some semblance of reasonableness in the contention that before he ordered what in effect was an upward revision of the sentence passed on the petitioner, he should have been given a hearing, to insist that the confirming authority should give a hearing to the petitioner before it confirmed the sentence passed by the court martial, is a contention which cannot be accepted. To accept this contention would mean that all the procedure laid down by the Criminal Procedure Code should be adopted in respect of the court martial, a contention which cannot be accepted in the face of the very clear indications in the Constitution that the provisions which are applicable to all the civil cases are not applicable to cases of Armed Personnel. It is not a requirement of the principles of natural justice. Indeed when he was informed that the subsequent sentence passed on him had been sent to the Chief of the Army Staff for confirmation it was open to the petitioner to have availed himself of the remedy provided under Section 164 of presenting a petition to the confirming officer, i.e. the Chief of the Army Staff in this case. He does not appear to have done so.

9. We are, therefore, of the opinion that there are no merits in this petition and dismiss it.

Petition dismissed.