SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Union of India and another
Versus
Charanjit S. Gill and others
(G.B. Pattanaik, R.P. Sethi and Shivaraj V. Patil, JJ.)
Civil Appeal No. 2865 of 2000 (Arising out of SLP(C) No.
7347 of 1999)
24.04.2000
JUDGMENT
R.P. Sethi, J. - Leave granted.
Finding that the Judge-Advocate was lower in rank to the
accused facing trial before a General Court Martial (hereinafter referred to
as "GCM"), the Division Bench of the High Court set aside the order
of the Trial Court and the entire Court Martial proceedings conducted against
the respondent No. 1. The Bench, however, observed that the quashing of the
proceedings of the GCM will not prevent the authorities concerned to initiate
fresh Court marital proceedings if they are so advised in accordance with law
and also in the light of the judgment delivered. Feeling aggrieved by the
aforesaid judgment the present appeal has been filed with a prayer for
setting aside the impugned judgment and upholding the order of the GCM as well
as the learned Single Judge.
2. The relevant and almost admitted facts for determining
the controversy in this appeal are that the first respondent joined the
Indian Army as a Commissioned Officer in 1971 and was promoted to the rank of
Major in 1984. He was posted at Fort William, Calcutta in April, 1990. While
attached with 235 IWT company, Engineers, the respondent No. 1 was alleged to
have absented himself without leave on four occasions which was an offence
under Section 39(1) of the Army Act. He was also charged under Section 63 of
the Army Act for violation of good order and military discipline. A GCM was
convened by the General Officer Commanding (GOC), Bengal Area by his order
dated 23rd December, 1991. The court martial comprised of Col. Rabinder
Bahadur Singh as Presiding Officer and Col. Kunjachen Puthenveetil Sebastian,
Col. Prakash Nambiar, Col. Mahitosh Deb and Major Kadam Netaji Kesharuo as
Members. Capt. Vashishta Arun Kumar, Dy. Assistant Judge-Advocate General was
appointed as Judge-Advocate in the Court marital proceedings. The respondent
No. 1 was found guilty of four out of five charges by the GCM and was
sentenced to forfeit six months service for the purposes of promotion. The
order of conviction and sentence was, however, made subject to the
confirmation by the Confirming Authority to whom the proceedings were
transmitted by the GCM in terms of Section 153 of the Army Act. The
Confirming Authority felt that the sentence awarded to the respondent No. 1
by the GCM was grossly inadequate and inappropriate which required review.
The order of the Confirming Authority dated 2.5.1992 was conveyed to the GCM
which on 19.5.1992 upon, re-consideration revoked the earlier sentence and
passed a fresh order of sentence of dismissing the respondent No. 1 from
service. This order was also made subject to confirmation by the Confirming
Authority.
3. Aggrieved by the order of conviction and sentence
passed by the GCM, the respondent No. 1 filed writ petition being CO No.
7102(W) of 1992 in the High Court at Calcutta praying therein for quashing
orders dated 23.12.1991, 10.2.1992, 2.5.1992 and 19.5.1992. At the time of
admission of the writ petition a learned Single Judge of the High Court
passed an interim order on 29th May, 1992 directing the appellants not to
confirm the impugned order of dismissal and not to take any steps against
respondent No. 1, without the leave of the Court. The interim order was,
however, vacated by the learned Single Judge on 16.12.1996 allowing the
Confirming Authority to complete the process of confirmation and passing
appropriate orders. Consequently, the GCM proceedings were confirmed on
17.12.1996 and the respondent No. 1 was dismissed from service on 18.12.1996.
The writ petition filed by the first respondent was dismissed by the learned
Single judge on 3rd July, 1997. Feeling aggrieved by the judgment of the
learned Single Judge the respondent No. 1 preferred appeal being MAT No.
2181\97 before the Division Bench which was allowed vide the order impugned in
this appeal.
4. In his writ petition the respondent No. 1 is stated to
have alleged that in the year 1987-88 when he was posted as Garrison Engineer
in Jammu & Kashmir State under the Northern Command, he had pointed out
to the higher authorities some embezzlement instances involving Rs. 22.49
lacs in which Major S.K. Datta and Col. S.C. Gulati were allegedly involved.
He alleged that because of his reporting the case of embezzlement he incurred
animosity of the persons in the higher echelons of the Army. He submitted
that in the year 1990 he had made a direct complaint to the Chief of the Army
Staff, Army Headquarters, New Delhi with regard to the aforesaid embezzlement
which, according to him, generated further feelings of animosity and ill-will
against him. He was attached to 235 IWT Company on 14th September, 1990 and
allegedly not given any duty after attachment to the said unit. On 22nd
October, 1990, the Commanding Officer of 235 IWT Company called upon the
respondent No. 1 to produce the evidence by 25th October, 1990 in connection
with his allegations of embezzlement. At that time the Company to which he
was attached was stationed at Alambazar, near Dakshineswar, just outside
Calcutta and his family was residing at Fort Williams, Calcutta. He was served
with a charge-sheet on 18th November, 1991 signed by the Commanding Officer,
121 Infantry Battalian (TA) which was endorsed by the General Officer
Commanding, Bengal Area. Though the respondent No. 1 was posted to 235 IWT
Company vide order dated 12th September, 1990 he was attached on 23rd March,
1991 under the provisions of Army Instructions 30 of 1986 to 121 Infantry
Battalion (TA) till finalisation of the disciplinary proceedings which had
been initiated against him. The charge-sheet dated 18th November, 1991
disclosed the commission of offences punishable contrary to Sections 39(a)
and 63 of the Army Act. The respondent No. 1 in his petition had prayed for
quashing and setting aside of orders dated 23rd December, 1991 convening the
GCM, order dated 10th February, 1992 finding the respondent No. 1 guilty and
imposition of the sentence by GCM, order dated 2nd May, 1992 exercising the
revisional jurisdiction by the GOC, BA and order dated 19th May, 1992
revising the initial sentence and dismissing the respondent No. 1 from
service. The grounds of challenging the aforesaid orders were as under :
"1. The composition of the
GCM, as determined by the Convening Order dated 23rd December, 1991 was bad
in law because Captain Arun Kumar Vashistha was not qualified to be appointed
as a Judge-Advocate in the said GCM. This ground of challenge is based on two
counts, firstly because no officer of a rank inferior to the accused can be
appointed as a Judge-Advocate in GCM and secondly the participation of the
Judge-Advocate in the proceedings held on 18th and 19th May, 1982 upon
revision was bad since he was not entitled to take part in the proceedings
after 10th February, 1992 when the GCM proceedings had originally stood
concluded.
2. GOC, BA had no jurisdiction to
either convene the GCM vide his order dated 23rd December, 1991 or to pass
the order dated 2nd May, 1992, as he was neither a properly appointed nor a
properly designated Convening Authority for the purposes of convening a GCM
nor could he be deemed considered to be a legally and validly appointed
conforming authority for the purposes of exercising the power under Section
160 of the Army Act. In either event, his act of convening the GCM was
illegal and therefore the proceedings of the GCM on that ground were void ab
initio. Similarly since he did not have any power to act a confirming
authority, he had no jurisdictions to exercise any power under Section 160 of
the Army Act and order revision of the sentence. Reliance was placed upon
Regulation 472 of the Regulations for the Army in support of this contention.
3. The order dated 2nd May, 1992
was bad in law because while exercising revisional jurisdiction under Section
160 of the Army Act, the GOC, BA not only expressed his views and opinion
about the merits of the case but the order amounted to almost a direction
upon the GCM, and the GCM comprising, as it were, of the officers subordinate
to GOC, BA had no option but to revise the sentence, as was desired by GOC,
BA.
4. GOC, BA was also not an
appropriate Convening Authority for the purposes of convening a GCM as the
petitioner was not serving under him. Since the petitioner was serving in the
Head Quarter, Eastern Command, it was only GOC-in-C who could be considered
to be the appropriate convening authority in respect of the petitioner for
convening a GCM. Merely because the petitioner was attached to a unit which
was under the control of GOC, BA, that by itself did not make GOC, BA the
duly appointed convening authority for convening a GCM. Reliance was placed
upon the contents of warrant A-1 appointing GOC, BA and GOC-in-C as
respective convening authorities.
5. The sentence of dismissal for
a minor offence like being absent without leave, and for committing an
offence under Section 63 of the Army Act was highly and grossly
disproportionate to the gravity of the offence. Even if the proceedings of
the GCM and the finding of "guilty" was to be upheld by this Court,
the initial sentence of forfeiture of six months of service for the purpose of
promotion was a reasonable punishment in the facts and circumstances of this
case.
6. Distinction has to be drawn
between "absent from a place" and "absence from duty"
because in the facts and circumstances in which the petitioner was placed,
the petitioner was not allocated or entrusted with any duties and therefore
if he absented from a place, without there being any duty that he was to
perform, Section 39 of the Army Act could not be attracted in his case and
therefore he could not be held guilty of the charges levelled against him.
7. The appropriate Confirming
Authorities have been prescribed in Regulation 472 and even though this
Regulation is not statutory in character and has not been issued under
Section 192 of the Army Act, yet in amounting to an executive instruction has
the force of law and thus supersedes the warrants issued by the Central
Government under Section 164 of the Army Act. The contention is that the
authorities prescribed in Regulation 472 alone are competent to act as
confirming or convening authorities and that the authorities appointed under
the warrants by the Central Government in exercise of the powers vesting in
its under Section 154 have no jurisdiction to act as such.
8. The order dated 17th December,
1996 is bad because it was passed without affording the petitioner an
opportunity of submitting a reconfirmation representation, as was directed by
this Court on 16th December, 1996."
5. None of the grounds found
favour with the learned Single Judge who after hearing dismissed the writ
petition. The respondent No. 1 was, however, given two weeks time to vacate
the accommodation occupied by him upon his giving an undertaking. The appeal
filed against the judgment of the learned Single Judge was allowed holding :
"However, without deciding
any other point we are of the view that a Judge-Advocate being lower in rank
to an accused officer should not be able to take part in the general court
martial proceedings for the above reason."
6. Mr. Rawal, the learned
Additional Solicitor General appearing for the appellants has vehemently
argued that as the Judge-Advocate is only a Legal Advisor and not a member of
the Court Martial, his rank is not material for being appointed as such to
assist the GCM. It is further contended that under the Army Act, Rules and
Regulations made thereunder, there was no obligation for the appellants to
appoint a Judge-Advocate who should have been senior in rank to the accused
on the analogy that the members of the court martial who tried the accused
are required to be of the same or higher rank to the accused officers.
According to him there are separate provisions under the Act, Rules and
Regulations for members and Judge-Advocate at GCM laying down their
eligibility, disqualifications, duties, etc. Relying upon Note 2 attached to
Rule 102, the learned counsel has submitted that the disqualification for
being a Judge-Advocate in court martial is referable to Rule 39(2) alone
which cannot be stretched further to Rule 40(2) of the Rules. It is contended
that the Division Bench of the High Court has not properly interpreted the
provisions of Sections 113 and 129 of the Act and Rules 39, 40 and 102 of the
Army Rules.
7. Appearing for the respondent
No. 1 Mr. Ranjit Kumar, Advocate has submitted that the combined reading of
Rules 39, 40 and 102 makes it clear that if the Judge-Advocate is lower in
rank than the accused facing the trial in GCM, the proceedings are liable to
be quashed. According to him the provisions of Rule 39 read with Rules 40 and
102 of the Army Rules leave no doubt that the Judge-Advocate appointed for
the trial of an officer by the GCM should be a rank not lower than that of
the Officer facing the trial. He has submitted that though, technically the
Judge-Advocate is an Advisor to the prosecution, yet in practice he wields a
great influence upon the verdict of the Court in view of the powers conferred
upon him under the Act and the Rules. He has specifically referred to the
provisions of Rules 60, 61, 62 and 105 of the Rules to emphasise the
importance of the role played by the Judge-Advocate during the trial in a
court martial.
8. In order to appreciate the
rival contentions of the learned counsel for the parties it is necessary to
take note of some of the relevant provisions of the Act, the Rules and the
Regulations made thereunder. The Act was enacted on 20th May, 1950 and
enforced w.e.f. 22nd July, 1950 to consolidate and amend the law relating to
the Government of the regular Army keeping in view the report of the Select
Committee appointed for the purpose. Prior to the enactment of Army Act,
1950, there existed the Indian Army Act, 1911 made and applied by the British
Rulers. Feeling that some of the provisions of the 1911 Act had become out of
date and insufficient for modern requirements after independence, a need for
revision was felt to have become imperative for obvious reasons. However, the
scheme of the Act by and large remained the same as was incorporated in Army
Act, 1911. The Act has been found to be suffering from various drawbacks as
were pointed out by this Court in Lt. Col. Prithi Pal Singh Bedi v. Union of
India and others, 1982(3) SCC 140. This Court hoped and stressed that changes
all over the English speaking democracies would awaken the Parliament to the
changed system as regards the Armed Forces. Merely by joining the Armed
Forces a person does not cease to be a citizen so as to be wholly deprived of
his rights under the Constitution. While dismissing the writ petitions in
that case, this Court noticed with anguish and concern and observed :
"Reluctance of the apex
Court more concerned with civil law to interfere with the internal affairs of
the Army is likely to create a distorted picture in the minds of the military
personnel that persons subject to Army Act are not citizens of India. It is
one of the cardinal features of our Constitution that a person by enlisting
in or entering Armed Forces does not cease to be a citizen so as to wholly
deprive him of his rights under the Constitution. More so when this Court
held in Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration, 1979(1) SCR 394 that even
prisoners deprived of personal liberty are not wholly denuded of their
fundamental rights. In the larger interest of national security and military
discipline Parliament in its wisdom may restrict or abrogate such rights in
their application to the Armed Forces but this process should not be carried
so far as to create a class of citizens not entitled to the benefits of the
liberal spirit of the Constitution. Persons subject to Army Act are citizens
of this ancient land having a feeling of belonging to the civilised community
governed by the liberty-oriented Constitution. Personal liberty makes for the
worth of human being and is a cherished and prizeed right. Deprivation
thereof must be preceded by a judge of unquestioned integrity and wholly
unbiased. A marked difference in the procedure for trial of an offence by the
criminal Court and the court martial is apt to generate dissatisfaction
arising out of this differential treatment. Even though it is pointed out
that the procedure of trial by court martial is almost analogous to the
procedure of trial in the ordinary criminal Courts, we must recall that
Justice William O'Douglas observed :
"[T] that civil trial is
held in an atmosphere conducive to the protection of individual rights while
a military trial is marked by the age-old manifest destiny of retributive
justice. Very expression `court martial' generally strikes terror in the
heart of the person to be tried by it. And somehow or the other the trial is
looked upon with disfavor." In Reid v. Covert, 1 L. Ed. 2d 1148 : 354 US
1(1957) Justice Black observed at page 1174 as under :
Court marshals are typically ad
hoc bodies appointed by a military officer from among his subordinates. They
have always been subject to varying degrees of `command influence'. In
essence, these tribunals are simply executive tribunals whose personnel are
in the executive chain of command. Frequently, the members of the court
martial must look to the appointing officer for promotions, advantageous
assignments and efficiency rings - in short, for their future progress in the
service. Conceding to military personnel that high degree of honesty and
sense of justice which nearly all of them undoubtedly have, the members of a
court martial, in the nature of things, do not and cannot have the
independence of jurors drawn from the general public or of civilian judges.
Absence of even one appeal with
power to review evidence, legal formulation, conclusion and adequacy or
otherwise of punishment is a glaring lacuna in a country where a counterpart
civilian convict can prefer appeal after appeal to hierarchy of Courts.
Submission that full review of finding and\or sentence in confirmation
proceedings under Section 153 is provided for is poor solace. A hierarchy of
Courts with appellate powers each having its own power of judicial review has
of course been found to be counter-productive but the converse is equally
distressing in that there is not even a single judicial review. With the
expending horizons of fair play in action even in administrative decision,
the universal declaration of human rights and retributive justice being
relegated to the uncivilised days, a time has come when a step is required to
be taken for at least one review and it must truly be a judicial review as
and by way of appeal to a body composed of non-military personnel or civil
personnel. Army is always on alert for repelling external aggression and
suppressing internal disorder so that the peace-loving citizens enjoy a
social order based on rule of law; the same cannot be denied to the
protectors of this order. And it must be realised that an appeal from Ceaser
to Ceaser's wife - confirmation proceedings under Section 153 - has been
condemned as injudicious and merely a lip sympathy to form. The core question
is whether at least there should be one appeal to a body composed of
non-military personnel and who would enjoy the right of judicial review both
on law and facts as also determine the adequacy of punishment being commensurate
with the gravity of the offence charged. Judicial approach by people
well-versed in objective analysis of evidence trained by experience to look
at facts and law objectively, fair play and justice cannot always be
sacrificed at the altar of military discipline. Unjust decision would be
subversive of discipline. There must be a judicious admixture of both. And
nothing revolutionary is being suggested. Our Army Act was more or less
modelled on the U.K. Act. Three decades of its working with winds of change
blowing over the world necessitates a second look so as to bring in it
conformity with liberty-oriented Constitution and rule of law which is the
uniting and integrating force in our political society. Even U.K. has taken a
step of far-reaching importance for rehabilitating the confidence of the
Royal Forces in respect of judicial review of decisions of court martial.
U.K. had enacted a Court Martial (Appeal) Act of 1951 and it has been
extensively amended in Court Martial (Appeals) Act, 1968. Merely providing an
appeal by itself may not be very reassuring but the personnel of the
appellate Court must inspire confidence. The court martial appellate Court
consists of the ex officio and ordinary judges of the Court of Appeal, such
of the judges of the Queen's Bench Division as the Lord Chief Justice may
nominate after consultation with the Master of the Rolls, such of the Lords,
Commissioners of Judiciary in Scotland as the Lord Chief Justice generally
may nominate, such Judges of the Supreme Court of the Northern Ireland as the
Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland may nominate and such of the persons
of legal experience as the Lord Chancellor may appoint. The court martial
appellate court has power to determine any question necessary to be determined
in order to do justice in the case before the Court and may authorise a new
trial where the conviction is quashed in the light of fresh evidence. The
Court has also power inter alia, to order production of documents or exhibits
connected with the proceedings, order the attendance of witnesses, receive
evidence, obtain reports and the like from the members of the court martial
or the person who acted as Judge-Advocate, order a reference of any question
to a Special Commissioner for Enquiry and appoint a person with special
expert knowledge to act as an assessor (Halsbury's Laws of England, 4th Edn.,
para 954-955 pp. 458-59). Frankly the appellate Court has power to full
judicial review unhampered by any procedural claptrap.
Turning towards the U.S.A., a reference
to Uniform Code of Military Justice Act, 1950, would be instructive. A
provision has been made for setting up of a court of military appeals. The
Act contained many procedural reforms and due process safeguards not then
guaranteed in Civil Courts. To cite one example, the rights to legally
qualified counsel was made mandatory in general court martial cases 13 years
before the decision of the Supreme Court in Gideon v. Waiwright, 372 US 335
1963. Between 1950 and 1968 when the Administration of Justice Act, 1968 was
introduced, many advances were made in the administration of justice by civil
Courts but they were not reflected in military Court proceedings. To correct
these deficiencies the Congress enacted Military Justice Act, 1968, the
salient features of which are : (1) a right to legally qualified counsel
guaranteed to an accused before any special court martial; (2) a military
judge can in certain circumstances conduct the trial alone and the accused in
such a situation is given the option after learning the identity of the
military judge of requesting for the trial by the judge alone. A ban has been
imposed on command interference with military justice, etc. Ours is still an
antiquated system. The wind of change blowing over the country has not permeated
the close and sacrosanct precincts of the Army, if in civil Courts the
universally accepted dictum is that justice must not only be done but it must
seem to be done, the same holds good with all the greater vigour in case of
court martial where the judge and the accused don the same dress, have the
same mental discipline, have a strong hierarchical subjugation and a feeling
of bias in such circumstances is irremovable. We, therefore, hope and believe
that the changes all over the English-speaking democracies will awaken our
Parliament to the changed value system. In this behalf, we would like to draw
pointed attention of the Government of the glaring anomaly that Courts
martial do not even write a brief reasoned order in support of their
conclusion, even in cases in which they impose the death sentence. This must
be remedied in order to ensure that a disciplined and dedicated Indian Army
may not nurse a grievance that the substance of justice and fair play is
denied to it."
Despite lapse of about two
decades neither the Parliament nor the Central Government appears to have
realised their constitutional obligations, as were expected by this Court,
except amending Rule 62 providing that after recording the finding in each
charge the Court shall give brief reasons in support thereof. The
Judge-Advocate has been obliged to record or caused to be recorded brief
reasons in the proceedings. Even today the law relating to Armed Forces
remains static which requires to be changed keeping in view the observations
made by this Court in Prithi Pal Singh Bedi's case (supra), the
constitutional mandate and the changes effected by other democratic
countries. The time has come to allay the apprehension of all concerned that
the system of trial by court martial was not the arch type of summary and
arbitrary proceedings.
9. In the absence of effective
steps taken by the Parliament and the Central Government, it is the
constitutional obligation of the Courts in the country to protect and
safeguard the constitutional rights of all citizens including the persons
enrolled in the Armed Forces to the extent permissible under law by not
forgetting the paramount need of maintaining the discipline in the Armed
Forces of the country.
10. The court martials under the
Act are not Courts in the strict sense of the term as understood in relation
to implementation of the civil laws. The proceedings before court martial are
more administrative in nature and of the executive type. Such Courts under
the Act, deal with two types of offences, namely, (1) such acts and omissions
which are peculiar to the Armed Forces regarding which no punishment is
provided under the ordinary law of the land, and (2) a class of offences
punishable under the Indian Penal Code or any other legislation passed by the
Parliament. Chapter VI of the Act deals the offences. Sections 34 to 68
relate to the offences of the first description noted hereinabove and Section
69 with civil offences which means the offence triable by an ordinary
criminal Court. Chapter VII provides for punishments which can be inflicted
in respect of offences committed by persons subject to the Act and convicted
by court martial, according to the scale provided therein. Chapter X deals
with court martials. Section 108 provides that for the purposes of the Act
there shall be four kinds of court martials, that is to say,
(a) general court-martial;
(b) district court-martial;
(c) summary general
court-martial; and
(d) summary court-martial.
Court martials can be convened by
persons and authorities as specified in Sections 109, 110, 112 and 118 of the
Act. The procedure of court martials is detailed in Chapter XI of the Act.
Section 129 mandates that every general court-martial shall be attended by a
Judge-Advocate, who shall be either an officer belonging to the department of
Judge-Advocate-General or if no such officer is available, an officer
approved by the Judge-Advocate General or any of his deputies. The accused
has a right to challenge the name of any officer composing the court martial
which obviously means that no such objection can be raised regarding the
appointment of the Judge-Advocate. No findings or sentence of a general,
district or summary general court martial shall be valid except so far as it
may be confirmed as provided under the Act. Under Section 158, the confirming
authority has the power to mitigate or remit the punishment awarded by the
court martial or commute that punishment for any punishment or punishments
lower in the scales laid down in Section 71. Under Section 160 the confirming
authority has the power to direct a revision of the finding of a court
martial and on such revision, the Court, if so directed by the confirming
authority, may take additional evidence. Any person, subject to the Act, who
considers himself aggrieved by any order passed by the Court marital can
present a petition to the officer or authority empowered to confirm any
finding or sentence of such court martial and in that case the confirming
authority may take such steps as may be considered necessary to satisfy
itself as to the correctness, legality or propriety of the order passed or as
to the regularity of any proceedings to which the order relates. There is no
provision for preferring an appeal against the findings of the court martial.
10. In exercise of the powers
conferred by Section 191 of the Act the Central Government have framed the
Rules called the Army Rules, 1954. Chapter V of the Rules deals with the
investigation of charges and trial by court martial. court martials are
convened in term of Rule 37. Rule 39 prescribes ineligibility and
disqualification of officers for court martial. It reads :
"Ineligibility and
disqualification of officers for court martial - (1) An officer is not
eligible for serving on a court martial if he is not subject to the Act.
(2) An officer is disqualified
for serving on a general or district court martial if he -
(a) is an officer who convened
the court; or
(b) is the prosecutor or a
witness for the prosecution; or
(c) investigated the charges
before trial, or took down the summary of evidence, or was a member of a
court of inquiry respecting the matters on which the charges against the
accused are founded, or was the squadron, battery, company, or other
commander, who made preliminary inquiry into the case, or was a member of a
previous court martial which tried the accused in respect of the same
offence; or
(d) is the commanding officer of
the accused, or of the corps to which the accused belongs; or
(e) has a personal interest in
the case."
(3) The provost-marshal or
assistant provost-marshal is disqualified from serving on a general
court-martial or district court-martial.
Rule 40 provides :
"40. Composition of General
court martial - (1) A general court martial shall be composed, as far as
seems to the convening officer practicable, of officers of different corps or
departments, and in no case exclusive of officers of the corpos or department
to which the accused belongs.
(2) The members of a court
martial for the trial of an officer shall be of a rank not lower than that of
the officer unless, in the opinion of convening officer, officers of such
rank are not (having due regard to the exigencies of the public service)
available. Such opinion shall be recorded in the convening order.
(3) In no case shall an officer
below the rank of captain be a member of court martial for the trial of a
field officer."
Rule 44 provides that the order
convening the Court and the names of the Presiding Officer and the members of
the Court shall be read over to the accused and he shall be asked as required
by Section 130 whether he has any objection to being tried by any officer
sitting on the Court. Such objection when raised is required to be disposed
of in accordance with the provisions of Section 130. The accused before
pleading to a charge, may offer a special plea to the jurisdiction of the
Court and if he does so, the Court shall decide it. If the objection
regarding such plea is overruled, the Court shall proceed with the trial and
if such plea is allowed, the Court is required to record its reasons and
report to the convening authority and adjourn the proceedings (Rule 61).
Rules 52, 53, 54, 55 and 56 deal with the recording of the plea of
"guilty" or "not guilty". In case the accused pleads not
guilty, the trial is to commence and after the close of the case of the
prosecution, the Presiding Officer or the Judge-Advocate is required to
explain to the accused that he may make an unsworn statement orally or in
writing giving his account of the subject of charges against him or if he
wishes he may give evidence as witness on oath or affirmation, in disproof of
the charges against him or any person to be charged with him at the same
trial. After the examination of the witnesses, the prosecutor may make a
closing address and the accused or his counsel or the defending officer, as
the case may be, shall be entitled to reply. The Judge-Advocate is authorised
to sum up in open Court the evidence and advise the Court upon the law
relating to the case. Rule 61 provides that the Court shall deliberate on its
finding in closed Court in the presence of the Judge-Advocate and Rule 62
provides the form, record and announcement of finding.
11. Referring to various
provisions of the Act and the Rules as noticed earlier, the learned counsel
appearing for respondent No. 1 has argued that in effect and practice the
Judge-Advocate is the `court' and the `court martial' is the jury for all
practical purposes so far as the trial of the accused is concerned. The argument
may be exaggerated version of the reality but is not totally without
substance inasmuch as the powers exercised by the Judge-Advocate indicate
that though not forming part of the court martial, he is an integral part
thereof particular in court martials which cannot be conducted in his
absence. It cannot be denied that the justice dispensation system in the Army
is based upon the system prevalent in the Great Britain. The position of the
Judge-Advocate is by no means less than that of a Judge-Advocate associated
with a court-martial in that country. The importance of the role of the
Judge-Advocate in U.K. was noticed and considered in R. v. Linzee, 1956(3)
All E.R. (sic).
12. It is true that
Judge-Advocate theoretically performs no function as a Judge but it is
equally true that he is an effective officer of the Court conducting the case
against the accused under the Act. It is his duty to inform the Court of any
defect or irregularity in the charge and, in the constitution of the Court or
in the proceedings. The quality of the advise tendered by the Judge-Advocate
is very crucial in a trial conducted under the Act. With the role assigned to
him a Judge-Advocate is in a position to sway the minds of the members of the
court-martial as his advise or verdict cannot be taken lightly by the persons
composing the Court who are admittedly not law-knowing persons. It is to be
remembered that the court-martials are not part of the judicial system in the
country and are not permanent courts.
13. The importance of role played
by a Judge-Advocate was noticed by this Court in S.N. Mukherjee v. Union of
India, 1990(4) SCC 594 wherein it was held :
"From the provisions
referred to above it is evident that the Judge-Advocate plays an important
role during the course of trial at a general court martial and he is enjoined
to maintain an impartial position. The court martial records its findings
after the Judge-Advocate has summed up the evidence and has given his opinion
upon the legal bearing of the case. The members of the court have to express
their opinion as to the finding by word of mouth on each charge separately
and the finding on each charge is to be recorded simply as a finding of
"guilty" or of "not guilty". It is also required that the
sentence should be announced forthwith in open Court. Moreover Rule 66(1)
requires reasons to be recorded for its recommendation in cases where the
court makes a recommendation to mercy. There is no such requirement in other
provisions relating to recording of findings and sentence. Rule 66(1)
proceeds on the basis that there is no such requirement because if such a
requirement was there it would not have been necessary to make a specific
provision for recording of reasons for the recommendation to mercy. The said
provisions thus negative a requirement to give reasons for its finding and
sentence by the court martial and reasons are required to be recorded only in
cases where the court martial makes a recommendation to mercy. In our
opinion, therefore, at the stage of recording of findings and sentence the
court martial is not required to record its reasons and at that stage reasons
are only required for the recommendation to mercy if the court martial makes
such a recommendation.
As regards confirmation of the
findings and sentence of the court martial, it may be mentioned that Section
153 of the Act lays down that no finding or sentence of a general, district
of summary general court martial shall be valid except so far as it may be
confirmed as provided by the Act. Section 158 lays down that the confirming
authority may while confirming the sentence of a court martial mitigate or
remit the punishment thereby awarded, or commute that punishment to any
punishment lower in the scale laid down in Section 71. Section 160 empowers
the confirming authority to revise the finding or sentence of the court
martial and in sub-section (1) of Section 160 it is provided that on such
revision, the Court, if so directed by the confirming authority, may take
additional evidence. The confirmation of the finding and sentence is not
required in respect of summary court martial and in Section 162 it is
provided that the proceedings of every summary court martial shall without
delay be forwarded to the officer commanding the division or brigade within
which the trial was held or to the prescribed officer; and such officer or
the Chief of the Army Staff or any officer empowered in this behalf may, for
reasons based on the merits of the case, but not any merely technical
grounds, set aside the proceedings or reduce the sentence to any other
sentence which the Court might have passed. In Rule 69 it is provided that
the proceedings of a general court martial shall be submitted by the
Judge-Advocate at the trial for review to the deputy or assistant Judge-Advocate
General of the command who shall then forward it to the confirming officer
and in case of district court martial it is provided that the proceedings
should be sent by the presiding officer, who must, in all cases, where the
sentence is dismissal or above, seek advice of the deputy or assistant
judge-advocate general of the command before confirmation. Rule 70 lays down
that upon receiving the proceedings of a general or district court martial,
the confirming authority may confirm or refuse confirmation or reserve
confirmation for superior authority, and the confirmation, non-confirmation,
or reservation shall be entered in and form part of the proceedings. Rule 71
lays down that the charge, finding and sentence, and any recommendation to
mercy shall, together with the confirmation, non-confirmation of the
proceedings, be promulgated in such manner as the confirming authority may
direct, and if no direction is given, according to custom of the service and
until promulgation has been effected, confirmation is not complete and the
finding and sentence shall not be held to have been confirmed until they have
been promulgated."
13. In view of what has been
noticed hereinabove, it is apparent that if a `fit person' is not appointed
as a Judge-Advocate, the proceedings of the court martial cannot be held to
be valid and its finding legally arrived at. Such an invalidity in appointing
an `unfit' person as a Judge-Advocate is not curable under Rule 103 of the
Rules. If a fit person possessing requisite qualifications and otherwise
eligible to form part of the general court martial is appointed as a
Judge-Advocate and ultimately some invalidity is found in his appointment,
the proceedings of the court martial cannot be declared invalid. A "fit
person" mentioned in Rule 103 is referable to Rules 39 and 40. It is
contended by Shri Rawal, learned ASG that a person fit to be appointed as
Judge-Advocate is such officer who does not suffer from any ineligibility or
disqualification in terms of Rule 39 alone. It is further contended that Rule
40 does not refer to disqualifications. We cannot agree with this general
proposition made on behalf of the appellant inasmuch as Sub-rule (2) of Rule
40 specifically provides that members of a court-martial for trial of an
officer should be of a rank not lower than that of the officer facing the
trial unless such officer is not available regarding which specific opinion
is required to be recorded in the convening order. Rule 102 unambiguously
provides that "an officer who is disqualified for sitting on a court
martial shall be disqualified for acting as a Judge-Advocate in a court
martial". A combined reading of Rules 39, 40 and 102 suggest that an
officer who is disqualified to be a part of court martial is also
disqualified from acting and sitting as a Judge-Advocate at the court
martial. It follows, therefore, that if an officer lower in rank than the
officer facing the trial cannot become a part of the court martial, the
officer of such rank would be disqualified for acting as a Judge-Advocate at
the trial before a GCM. Accepting a plea to the contrary, would be
invalidating the legal bar imposed upon the composition of the Court in
sub-rule (2) of Rule 40.
14. Arguments of the learned ASG,
if analysed critically, and accepted would mean that in effect and essence no
disqualification or eligibility can be assigned to any officer in becoming a
Judge-Advocate. Stretching it further it can be argued that as Rule 40 does
not refer to the ineligibility or disqualification of an officer to be a Judge-Advocate,
even an officer below the rank of a Captain can become a member of the court
martial for the trial of a Field Officer as bar of sub-rule (3) of Rule 40 is
not applicable. Such an interpretation is uncalled for and apparently
contradictory in terms.
15. The purpose and object of
prescribing the conditions of eligibility and qualification along with
desirability of having members of the court martial of the rank not lower
than the officer facing the trial is obvious. The law makers and the rule
framers appear to have in mind the respect and dignity of the officer facing
the trial till guilt is proved against him by not exposing him to humiliation
of being subjected to trial by officers of lower in rank. The importance of
the Judge-Advocate as noticed earlier being of a paramount nature requires
that he should be such person who inspires confidence and does not subject
the officer facing the trial to humiliation because the accused is also
entitled to the opinion and services of the Judge-Advocate. Availing of the
services or seeking advise from a person junior in rank may apparently be not
possible ultimately resulting in failure of justice.
16. It has been argued that as
officers of the same rank or higher in rank than the officers facing the trial
in court martial are not available, an interpretation as rendered by the
impugned judgment would render the holding of court martials impossible. Such
an argument is to be noticed for only being rejected. Sub-rule (2) of Rule 40
itself gives a discretion to the convening officer who is authorised to
appoint a member of the court-martial or Judge-Advocate who is lower in rank
than the officers facing the trial, if he is of the opinion that officer of
such rank is not (having due regard to the exigencies of the public service)
available, subject to a further condition that such opinion is required to be
recorded in the convening order. It implied, therefore, that the provisions
of sub-rule (2) of Rule 40 are not mandatory because they give a discretion to
appoint a member of the court martial or a Judge-Advocate who is lower in
rank than the officer facing the trial under the circumstances specified.
Rule 39, admittedly, has no exception and is thus mandatory.
17. Further relying upon Note 2
mentioned at the foot of Rule 102 providing, "as to disqualification of
a Judge-Advocate CAR 39(2)", the learned ASG submitted that the said
Note having the force of law has been followed by the Army authorities from
the very beginning and thus disqualifications of a Judge-Advocate are
referable to only Rule 39(2) of the Rules. It is contended as the source of
the Rules and the Note thereto is the same, the efficacy of Note 2 cannot be
minimized. They Army authorities, according to the learned ASG have
understood Rules 39, 40 and 102 in this context while making appointments of
the Judge-Advocate.
18. In response to our directions
an affidavit has been filed on behalf of the appellants with respect to :
(a) the authority which had prepared
the Notes appearing in Army Act, 1950 and Army Rules, 1954.
(b) the year in which these Notes
were incorporated in the Army Act, 1950 and Army Rules, 1954.
(c) the authority which had
approved these Notes to be incorporated in the Army Act and the Rules framed
thereunder.
stating therein:
"That Army Act, 1950 was
enacted on the pattern of the Indian Army Act, 1911 and Army Rules, 1954 are
on the pattern of Indian Army Act Rules. Army Rule 89 of Indian Army Act
Rules dealt with disqualifications of Judge-Advocate. It also had note
stating that for disqualification, see the Rule dealing with the Rule pari
materia to Rule 39 of the present Rules that is Army Rules, 1959.
That the Manual of Indian
Military Law, 1937, published by Govt. of India, Ministry of Defence
(Corrected upto 1960) Reprint 1967, also contains Indian Army Act, 1911 with
Notes as well as the Indian Army Act Rules with Notes. Since this was 1967
reprint, in this manual even Army Act, 1950 and Army Rules, 1954 are also
contained.
That in the year 1978 the JAG's
Department compiled the Army Act & Rules in the new Manual with a view to
make it more convenient for reference. Prior to it, as stated above, the
Military Law of the country was outlined in the Manual of Military Law, 1937.
The Manual contained the Indian Army Act, 1911, the Indian Army Act &
Rules and explanatory notes under various Sections and Rules. The passage of
time necessitated revision of the Manual and incorporation of explanatory
notes under the relevant sections and clauses of the Army Act, 1950 and Army
Rules, 1954. it also become necessary to include some other enactments
essential to the subject, and to exclude from the Manual the repealed Indian
Army Act, 1911 and the superseded Indian Army Act Rules. The Manual of
Military Law containing explanatory Notes under the current and operative
Army Act & Rules were issued in 1983.
That as stated above, the Manual
of Military Law issued in 1983 was compiled by the office of Judge-Advocate
General and approved by the Govt. as evident from the preface of the Manual.
That the Notes to Army Act and
Army Rules were appended to Indian Army Act, 1911 and the Indian Army Act
Rules and were followed as explanatory Notes and guidance. These suitably
modified and amended were formally appended to the relevant provisions of the
Army Act, 1950 and Army Rules, 1954 in 1983 after the same were duly approved
by the Govt. That no facts which were not pleaded before Court below have not
been pleaded."
However, no material has been
placed on record to show that the Notes appended to the Rules were duly
approved by the Government.
19. Per contra the respondent No.
1 in his affidavit has submitted that the Notes under Sections and Rules as
are found under various provisions of law compiled by the Army authorities in
the Manual of Military Law do not form part of the Army Act, 1950 and Army
Rules, 1954. The Rules of 1954 are stated to have been borrowed from the
Indian Army Act, 1911 and the Rules framed thereunder. It is contended that the
Notes are not law passed by Parliament and have not been vetted even by the
Ministry of Law & Justice or by the Law Commission. 3t3_
20. It is not disputed that
Section 191 of the Army Act empowers the Central Government to make rules for
the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the Act and Section 192
to make regulations for all or any of the provisions of the Act other than
those specified in Section 191. All Rules and Regulations made under the Act
are required to be published in the official gazette and on such publication
shall have the effect as if enacted in the Act. No power is conferred upon
the Central Government of issuing Notes or issuing orders which could have
the effect of the Rules made under the Act. Rules and Regulations or
administrative instructions can neither be supplemented nor substituted under
any provision of the Act or the Rules and Regulations framed thereunder. The
administrative instructions issued or the Notes attached to the Rules which
are not referable to any statutory authority cannot be permitted to bring
about a result which may take away the rights vested in a person governed by
the Act. The Government, however, has the power to fill up the gaps in
supplementing the rules by issuing instructions if the Rules are silent on
the subject provided the instructions issued are not inconsistent with the
Rules already framed. Accepting the contention of holding Note 2 as
supplementing Rules 39 and 40 would amount to amending and superseding
statutory rules by administrative instructions. When Rule 39 read with Rule
40 imposes a restriction upon the Government and a right in favour of the
person tried by a court-martial to the effect that a person lower in rank
shall not be a member of the court martial or be a Judge-Advocate, the
insertion of Note 2 to Rule 102 cannot be held to have the effect of a Rule
or Regulation. It appears that the `notes' have been issued by the
authorities of the Armed Forces for the guidance of the officers connected
with the implementation of the provisions of the Act and the Rules and not
with the object of supplementing or superseding the statutory Rules by
administrative instructions. After examining various provisions of the Act,
the Rules and Regulations framed thereunder and perusing the proceedings of
the court-martial conducted against the respondent No. 1, we are of the
opinion that the Judge-Advocate though not forming a part of the Court, yet
being an integral part of it is required to possess all such qualifications
and be free from the disqualifications which relate to the appointment of an
officer to the court-martial. In other words a Judge-Advocate appointed with
the court-martial should not be an officer of a rank lower than that of the
officer facing the trial unless the officer of such rank is not (having due
regard to the exigencies of public service) available and the opinion
regarding non-availability is specifically recorded in the convening order.
As in the instant case, Judge-Advocate was lower in rank to the accused
officer and no satisfaction\opinion in terms of sub-rule (2) of Rule 40 was
recorded, the Division Bench of the High Court was justified in passing the
impugned judgment, giving the authorities liberty to initiate fresh
court-martial proceedings, if any, if they are so advised in accordance with
law and also in the light of the judgment delivered by the High Court.
21. Fears have been expressed
that in case the proceedings of the court-martial are quashed on the ground
of the Judge-Advocate being lower in rank than the officer facing trial
before the court-martial, many judgments delivered, orders passed and actions
taken by various court-martials till date would be rendered illegal as
according to appellants a number of court-martials have already been held and
conducted under the assumption of the disqualification not being referable to
Rule 40(2), on the strength of Note 2 attached to Rule 102 of the Rules. In
that event, it is apprehended, a flood-gate of new litigation would be opened
which ultimately is likely to not only weaken the discipline in the Armed
Forces but also result in great hardship to all those whose rights have
already been determined. Such an apprehension is misplaced in view of
"de facto doctrine" born out of necessity as acknowledged and
approved by various pronouncements of the Courts. This Court in Gokaraju
Rangaraju v. State of Andhra Pradesh, 1981(3) SCC 132 applying the de facto
doctrine in a case where the appointment of a Judge was a found to be
invalid, after reference to various judgments and the observations of the
constitutional experts held :
"A Judge, de facto,
therefore, is one who is not a mere intruder or usurper but one who holds
office, under colour of lawful authority, though his appointment is defective
and may later be found to be defective. Whatever be the defect of his title
to the office, judgments pronounced by him and acts done by him when he was
clothed with the powers and functions of the office, albeit unlawfully, have
the same efficacy as judgments pronounced and acts done by a Judge de dure.
Such is the de facto doctrine, born of necessity and public policy to prevent
needless confusion and endless mischief. There is yet another rule also based
on public policy. The defective appointment of a de facto judge may be
questioned directly in a proceeding to which he be a party but it cannot be
permitted to be questioned in a litigation between two private litigants, a
litigation which is of no concern or consequence to the judge except as a
judge. Two litigants litigating their private titles cannot be permitted to
bring in issue and litigate upon the title of Judge to his office. Otherwise
so soon as a judge pronounces a judgment a litigation may be commended for a
declaration that the judgment is void because the judge is no judge. A
judge's title to his office cannot be brought into jeopardy in that fashion.
Hence the rule against collateral attack on validity of judicial
appointments. To question a judge's appointment in an appeal against his
judgment is, of course, such a collateral attack.
We do not agree with the
submission of the learned counsel that the de facto doctrine is subject to
the limitation that the defect in the title of the judge to the office should
not be one traceable to the violation of a constitutional provision. The
contravention of a constitutional provision may invalidate an appointment but
we are not concerned with that. We are concerned with the effect of the
invalidation upon the acts done by the judge whose appointment has been invalidated.
The de facto doctrine saves such acts. The de facto doctrine is not a
stranger to the Constitution or to the Parliament and the Legislatures of the
States. Article 71(2) of the Constitution provides that acts done by the
President or Vice-President of India in the exercise and performance of the
powers and duties of his office shall not be invalidated by reason of the
election of a person as President or Vice-President being declared void. So
also Section 107(2) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (43 of
1951) provides that acts and proceedings in which a person has a participated
as a member of Parliament or a member of the legislature of a State shall not
be invalidated by reason of the election of such person being declared to be
void. There are innumerable other Parliamentary and State legislative
enactments which are replete with such provisions. The twentieth amendment of
the Constitution is an instance where the de facto doctrine was applied by
the constituent body to remove any suspicion or taint of illegality or
invalidity that may be argued to have attached itself to judgments, decrees,
sentences or orders passed or made by certain District Judges appointed
before 1966, otherwise that in accordance with the provision of Article 233
and Article 235 of the Constitution. The twentieth amendment was the
consequence of the decision of the Supreme Court in Chandra Mohan v. State of
U.P., 1967(1) SCR 77, that appointments of District Judges made otherwise
that in accordance with the provisions of Articles 233 and 235 were invalid.
As such appointments had been made in many States, in order to pre-empt
mushroom litigation springing up all over the country, it was apparently
thought desirable that the precise position should be stated by the
constituent body by amending the Constitution. Shri Phadke, learned counsel
for the appellants, argued that the constituent body could not be imputed
with the intention of making superfluous amendments to the Constitution. Shri
Phadke invited us to say that it was a necessary inference from the twentieth
amendment of the Constitution that, but for the amendment, the judgments,
decrees, etc. of the District Judges appointed otherwise than in accordance
with the provisions of Article 233 would be void. We do not think that the
inference suggested by Shri Phadke is a necessary inference. It is true that
as a general rule the Parliament may be presumed not to make superfluous
legislation. The presumption is not a strong presumption and statutes are
full of provisions introduced because abandons cautela non nocet (there is no
harm in being cautious). When judicial pronouncements have already declared
the law on the subject, the statutory reiteration of the law with reference
to particular case does not lead to the necessary inference that the law
declared by the judicial pronouncements was not thought to apply to the
particular cases but may also lead to the inference that the statute-making
body was mindful of the real state of the law but was acting under the influence
of excessive caution and so to silence the voices of doubting Thomases by
declaring the law declared by judicial pronouncements to be applicable also
to the particular cases. In Chandra Mohan case this Court had held that
appointments of District Judges made otherwise than in accordance with
Article 233 of the Constitution were invalid. Such appointments had been made
in Uttar Pradesh and a few other States. Doubts had been cast upon the
validity of the judgments, decrees etc. pronounced by those District Judges
and large litigation had cropped up. It was to clear those doubts and not to
alter the law that the twentieth amendment of the Constitution was made. This
is clear from the Statement of Objects and Reasons appended to the Bill which
was passed as Constitution (20th Amendment) Act, 1966. The statement said :
Amendments of District Judges in
Uttar Pradesh and a few other States have been rendered invalid and illegal
by a recent judgment of the Supreme Court on the ground that such appointments
were not made in accordance with the provisions of Article 233 of the
Constitution...... As a result of these judgments, a serious situation has
arisen because doubt has been thrown on the validity of the judgments,
decrees, orders and sentences passed or made by these District Judges and a
number of writ petitions and other cases have already been filed challenging
their validity. The functioning of the District Courts in Uttar Pradesh has
practically come to a standstill. It is, therefore, urgently necessary to
validate the judgments, decrees, orders and sentences passed or made
heretofore by all such District Judges in those States......"
This position of law was again
reiterated in State of U.P. v. Rafiquddin, 1988(1) SLR 491 : 1987 Supp. SCC
401 wherein it was held :
"We have recorded findings
that 21 unplaced candidates of 1970 examination were appointed to the service
illegally in breach of the Rules. We would, however, like to add that even
though their appointment was not in accordance with the law but the judgments
and orders passed by them are not rendered invalid. The unplaced candidate
are not usurpers of office, they were appointed by the competent authority to
the posts of munsifs with the concurrence of the High Court, though they had
not been found suitable for appointment according to the norms fixed by the
Public Service Commission. They have been working in the judicial service
during all these years and some of them have been promoted also and they have
performed their functions and duties as de facto judicial officers. "A
person who is ineligible to judgeship, but who has nevertheless been duly
appointed and who exercises the powers and duties of the office of a de facto
judge, he acts validly until he is properly removed". Judgment and orders
of a de facto judge cannot be challenged on the ground of his ineligibility
for appointment."
22. In view of this position of
law the judgments rendered by the court-martial which have attained finality
cannot be permitted to be re-opened on the basis of law laid down in this
judgment. The proceedings of any court-martial, if already challenged on this
ground and are pending adjudication in any Court in the country would,
however, be not governed by the principles of `de facto doctrine'. No pending
petition shall, however, be permitted to be amended to incorporate the plea
regarding the ineligibility and disqualification of Judge-Advocate on the
ground of appointment being contrary to the mandate of Rule 40(2). This would
also not debar the Central Government or the appropriate authority in passing
fresh orders regarding appointment of the fit persons as Judge-Advocate in
pending court-martials, if so required.
23. In the light of what has been
stated hereinabove, the appeal is dismissed with the observations and
findings noticed in the preceding paragraph and the judgment of the Division
Bench of the High Court is upheld. No costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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