Thursday, July 3, 2014

[aaykarbhavan] Judgment and Information




Impose penalty for each offence independently for delay or default in making disclosures- SAT

BEFORE THE SECURITIES APPELLATE TRIBUNAL, MUMBAI
Date of Hearing : 2.7.2014 Date of Decision : 2.7.2014
Appeal No.182 of 2014
Splash Media & Infra Ltd.
Versus
Securities and Exchange Board of India
Mr. Joby Mathew, Advocate for the Appellant.
Mr. Kumar Desai, Advocate with Mr. Mihir Mody and Mr. Pratham V. Masurekar, Advocates for the Respondent.
CORAM : Justice J. P. Devadhar, Presiding Officer A S Lamba, Member
Per : Justice J. P. Devadhar (Oral)
This appeal is filed to challenge adjudication order passed by SEBI on March 25, 2014. Grievance of Appellant is that Adjudicating Officer, in the impugned order has not considered various submissions made by Appellant. Perusal of impugned order shows that composite penalty of Rs. 15 lac has been imposed upon Appellant on ground that Appellant has failed to make disclosures or made disclosures belatedly under Regulations 6(2), 6(4), 7(3) and 8(3) of Securities and Exchange Board of India (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers) Regulations, 1997. Since failure to make disclosure under each regulation constitutes independent offence attracting independent penalty, in the facts of present case, where there are multiple offences it would be just and proper to impose penalty for each offence independently depending upon the delay or default in making disclosures which are mandatory.
2. In this view of the matter we set aside the Adjudication Order dated March 25, 2014 and restore the matter for fresh decision on merits and in accordance with law after considering the submissions made by Appellant.
3. Appeal is disposed of in above terms with no order as to costs.
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Rate of exchange of conversion of each of foreign currency WEF 04.07.2014

Notification No.49/2014-Customs (N.T.)
Dated the 3rd July, 2014
S.O.       (E). – In exercise of the powers conferred by section 14 of the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), and in super session of the notification of the Government of India in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) No.47/2014-CUSTOMS (N.T.), dated the 19th June, 2014 vide number S.O.1565(E), dated 19th June, 2014, except as respects done or omitted to be done before such supersession, the Central Board of Excise and Customs hereby determines that the rate of exchange of conversion of each of the foreign currency specified in column (2) of each of Schedule I and Schedule II annexed hereto into Indian currency or vice versa shall, with effect from 4th July, 2014 be the rate mentioned against it in the corresponding entry in column (3) thereof, for the purpose of the said section, relating to imported and export goods.
SCHEDULE-I
S.No. Foreign Currency Rate of exchange of one unit of foreign currency equivalent to Indian rupees
(1) (2) (3)


               (a)                (b)
    (For Imported Goods) (For Export Goods)

Australian Dollar 56.65 55.10

Bahrain Dinar 162.70 153.70

Canadian Dollar 56.55 55.10

Danish Kroner 11.10 10.75

EURO 82.35 80.40

Hong Kong Dollar 7.75 7.60

Kuwait Dinar 217.65 205.40

New Zealand Dollar 52.90 51.55

Norwegian Kroner 9.80 9.50

Pound Sterling 103.40 101.10

Singapore Dollar 48.30 47.20

South African Rand 5.70 5.40

Saudi Arabian Riyal 16.35 15.45

Swedish Kroner 9.00 8.75

Swiss Franc 67.90 66.05

UAE Dirham 16.70 15.80

US Dollar 60.10 59.10





 
 
SCHEDULE-II
S.No. Foreign Currency Rate of exchange of 100 units of foreign currency equivalent to Indian rupees
(1) (2) (3)


(a) (b)
    (For Imported Goods) (For Export Goods)

Japanese Yen 59.25 57.80

Kenya Shilling 70.00 65.95





 
 
[F.No.468/01/2014-Cus.V]
 
(Akshay Joshi)
Under Secretary to the Government of India
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SC: Guidelines in 498A cases

Posted on 03 July 2014 by Vineet Kumar

Court

Supreme Court of India


Brief

Emphasing the fact that Section 498-A is a cognizable and non-bailable offence which has lent it a dubious place of pride amongst the provisions that are used as weapons rather than shield by disgruntled wives the Supreme Court bench comprising of Justices Chandramauli Kr. Prasad and Pinaki Chandra Ghose issued the following directions to ensure that police officers do not arrest accused unnecessarily and Magistrate do not authorise detention casually and mechanically: (1) All the State Governments to instruct its police officers not to automatically arrest when a case under Section 498-A of the IPC is registered but to satisfy themselves about the necessity for arrest under the parameters laid down above flowing from Section 41, Cr.PC; (2) All police officers be provided with a check list containing specified sub-clauses under Section 41(1)(b)(ii); (3) The police officer shall forward the check list duly filed and furnish the reasons and materials which necessitated the arrest, while forwarding/producing the accused before the Magistrate for further detention; (4) The Magistrate while authorising detention of the accused shall peruse the report furnished by the police officer in terms aforesaid and only after recording its satisfaction, the Magistrate will authorise detention; (5) The decision not to arrest an accused, be forwarded to the Magistrate within two weeks from the date of the institution of the case with a copy to the Magistrate which may be extended by the Superintendent of police of the district for the reasons to be recorded in writing; (6) Notice of appearance in terms of Section 41A of Cr.PC be served on the accused within two weeks from the date of institution of the case, which may be extended by the Superintendent of Police of the District for the reasons to be recorded in writing; (7) Failure to comply with the directions aforesaid shall apart from rendering the police officers concerned liable for departmental action, they shall also be liable to be punished for contempt of court to be instituted before High Court having territorial jurisdiction. (8) Authorising detention without recording reasons as aforesaid by the judicial Magistrate concerned shall be liable for departmental action by the appropriate High Court.


Citation

-


Judgement

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1277  OF 2014
(@SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) No.9127 of 2013)
ARNESH KUMAR ..... APPELLANT
VERSUS
STATE OF BIHAR & ANR.        .... RESPONDENTS
J U D G M E N T
Chandramauli Kr. Prasad 
REPORTABLE
The petitioner apprehends his arrest in a case 
under Section 498-A of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 
(hereinafter called as IPC) and Section 4 of the 
Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961.  The maximum sentence 
provided under Section 498-A IPC is imprisonment 
for a term which may extend to three years and 
fine whereas the maximum sentence provided under 
Page 1
Section  4  of  the  Dowry  Prohibition  Act  is  two 
years and with fine.
Petitioner  happens  to  be  the  husband  of 
respondent no.2 Sweta Kiran.  The marriage between 
them was solemnized on 1
st
  July, 2007. His attempt 
to secure anticipatory bail has failed and hence 
he has knocked the door of this Court by way of 
this Special Leave Petition.
Leave granted.
2
In sum and substance, allegation levelled by 
the wife against the appellant is that demand of 
Rupees eight lacs, a maruti car, an          air-
conditioner, television set etc. was made by her 
mother-in-law and father-in-law and when this fact 
was  brought  to  the  appellant's  notice,  he 
supported  his  mother  and  threatened  to  marry 
another woman.  It has been alleged that she was 
Page 2
3
driven  out  of  the  matrimonial  home  due  to  non-
fulfilment of the demand of dowry.
Denying  these  allegations,  the  appellant 
preferred  an  application  for  anticipatory  bail 
which was earlier rejected by the learned Sessions 
Judge and thereafter by the High Court.
There  is  phenomenal  increase  in  matrimonial 
disputes  in  recent  years.   The  institution  of 
marriage  is  greatly  revered  in  this  country. 
Section  498-A  of  the  IPC  was  introduced  with 
avowed object to combat the menace of harassment 
to a woman at the hands of her husband and his 
relatives.   The  fact  that  Section  498-A  is  a 
cognizable and non-bailable offence has lent it a 
dubious place of pride amongst the provisions that 
are  used  as  weapons  rather  than  shield  by 
disgruntled wives.  The simplest way to harass is 
to  get  the  husband  and  his  relatives  arrested 
under this provision.  In a quite number of cases, 
Page 3
4
bed-ridden grand-fathers and grand-mothers of the 
husbands, their sisters living abroad for decades 
are arrested.  "Crime in India 2012  Statistics" 
published  by  National  Crime  Records  Bureau, 
Ministry of Home Affairs shows arrest of 1,97,762 
persons all over India during the year 2012 for 
offence under Section 498-A of the IPC, 9.4% more 
than the year 2011.  Nearly a quarter of those 
arrested under this provision in 2012 were women 
i.e. 47,951 which depicts that mothers and sisters 
of the husbands were liberally included in their 
arrest  net.   Its  share  is  6%  out  of  the  total 
persons arrested under the crimes committed under 
Indian Penal Code.  It accounts for 4.5% of total 
crimes committed under different sections of penal 
code, more than any other crimes excepting theft 
and hurt.  The rate of charge-sheeting in cases 
under Section 498A, IPC is as high as 93.6%, while 
the conviction rate is only 15%, which is lowest 
across all heads.  As many as 3,72,706 cases are 
Page 4
5
pending trial of which on current estimate, nearly 
3,17,000 are likely to result in acquittal.   
Arrest  brings  humiliation,  curtails  freedom 
and cast scars forever.  Law makers know it so 
also the police.  There is a battle between the 
law makers and the police and it seems that police 
has not learnt its lesson; the lesson implicit and 
embodied in the Cr.PC.  It has not come out of its 
colonial  image  despite  six  decades  of 
independence, it is largely considered as a tool 
of  harassment,  oppression  and  surely  not 
considered  a  friend  of  public.   The  need  for 
caution in exercising the drastic power of arrest 
has been emphasized time and again by Courts but 
has not yielded desired result. Power to arrest 
greatly contributes to its arrogance so also the 
failure of the Magistracy to check it.  Not only 
this, the power of arrest is one of the lucrative 
sources  of  police  corruption.   The  attitude  to 
arrest  first  and  then  proceed  with  the  rest  is 
Page 5
despicable.  It has become a handy tool to the 
police officers who lack sensitivity or act with 
oblique motive.
6
Law Commissions, Police Commissions and this 
Court in a large number of judgments emphasized 
the need to maintain a balance between individual 
liberty  and  societal  order  while  exercising  the 
power of arrest.  Police officers make arrest as 
they believe that they possess the power to do so. 
As the arrest curtails freedom, brings humiliation 
and casts scars forever, we feel differently.  We 
believe  that  no  arrest  should  be  made  only 
because the offence is non-bailable and cognizable 
and therefore,  lawful for the police officers to 
do so.  The existence of the power to arrest is 
one thing, the justification for the exercise of 
it is quite another. Apart from power to arrest, 
the police officers must be able to justify the 
reasons  thereof.   No  arrest  can  be  made  in  a 
routine manner on a mere allegation of commission 
of an offence made against a person.  It would be 
Page 6
prudent  and  wise  for  a  police  officer  that  no 
arrest is made without a reasonable satisfaction 
reached  after  some  investigation  as  to  the 
genuineness of the allegation. Despite this legal 
position,  the  Legislature  did  not  find  any 
improvement.   Numbers  of  arrest  have  not 
decreased.   Ultimately,  the  Parliament  had  to 
intervene and on the recommendation of the 177
Report of the Law Commission submitted in the year 
2001, Section 41 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 
(for short 'Cr.PC), in the present form came to be 
enacted.  It is interesting to note that such a 
recommendation was made by the Law Commission in 
its 152
nd
 and 154
th
7
 Report submitted as back in the 
year  1994.   The  value  of  the  proportionality 
permeates the amendment relating to arrest.  As 
the  offence  with  which  we  are  concerned  in  the 
present appeal, provides for a maximum punishment 
of imprisonment which may extend to seven years 
and  fine,  Section  41(1)(b),  Cr.PC  which  is 
relevant for the purpose reads as follows:
th 
Page 7
8
"41.  When  police  may  arrest  without
warrant.-(1) Any police officer may without
an  order  from  a  Magistrate  and  without  a
warrant, arrest any person – 
(a)x  x  x  x x  x
(b)against  whom  a  reasonable  complaint 
has  been  made,  or  credible  information
has  been  received,  or  a  reasonable
suspicion exists that he has committed a
cognizable  offence  punishable  with
imprisonment for a term which may be less
than seven years or which may extend to
seven years whether with or without fine,
if  the  following  conditions  are
satisfied, namely :-
(i) x x x x x
(ii)  the  police  officer  is  satisfied 
that such arrest is necessary –
(a) to  prevent  such  person  from 
committing any further offence; or
(b) for  proper  investigation  of  the 
offence; or
(c) to prevent such person from causing 
the  evidence  of  the  offence  to
disappear  or  tampering  with  such
evidence in any manner; or 
(d) to prevent such person from making
any inducement,  threat or  promise
to any person acquainted with the
facts of the case so as to dissuade
him from disclosing such facts to
the Court or to the police officer;
or
(e) as unless such person is arrested,
his presence in the Court whenever
required cannot be ensured,
Page 8
9
 
and the police officer shall record while 
making such arrest, his reasons in writing:
Provided  that  a  police  officer  shall,  in 
all cases where the arrest of a person is
not required under the provisions of this
sub-section, record the reasons in writing
for not making the arrest.
X x  x x x x 
From a plain reading of the aforesaid provision, 
it is evident that a person accused of offence 
punishable  with  imprisonment  for  a  term  which 
may be less than seven years or which may extend 
to seven years with or without fine, cannot be 
arrested  by  the  police  officer  only  on  its 
satisfaction that such person had committed the 
offence punishable as aforesaid.  Police officer 
before arrest, in such cases has to be further 
satisfied  that  such  arrest  is  necessary  to 
prevent such person from committing any further 
offence;  or  for  proper  investigation  of  the 
case; or to prevent the accused from causing the 
Page 9
10
evidence  of  the  offence  to  disappear;  or 
tampering with such evidence in any manner; or 
to  prevent  such  person  from  making  any 
inducement, threat or promise to a witness so as 
to dissuade him from disclosing such facts to 
the Court or the police officer; or unless such 
accused person is arrested, his presence in the 
court  whenever  required  cannot  be  ensured. 
These are the conclusions, which one may reach 
based on facts.  Law mandates the police officer 
to  state  the  facts  and  record  the  reasons  in 
writing which led him to come to a conclusion 
covered  by  any  of  the  provisions  aforesaid, 
while making such arrest.  Law further requires 
the  police  officers  to  record  the  reasons  in 
writing for not making the arrest.  In pith and 
core, the police office before arrest must put a 
question to himself, why arrest?  Is it really 
required?   What  purpose  it  will  serve?   What 
object it will achieve?  It is only after these 
questions  are  addressed  and  one  or  the  other 
Page 10
11
conditions as enumerated above is satisfied, the 
power of arrest needs to be exercised.  In fine, 
before arrest first the police officers should 
have  reason  to  believe  on  the  basis  of 
information  and  material  that  the  accused  has 
committed  the  offence.   Apart  from  this,  the 
police officer has to be satisfied further that 
the  arrest  is  necessary  for  one  or  the  more 
purposes envisaged by sub-clauses (a) to (e) of 
clause (1) of Section 41 of Cr.PC.
An  accused  arrested  without  warrant  by 
the  police  has  the  constitutional  right  under 
Article 22(2) of the Constitution of India and 
Section  57,  Cr.PC  to  be  produced  before  the 
Magistrate without unnecessary delay and in no 
circumstances beyond 24 hours excluding the time 
necessary for the journey.  During the course of 
investigation of a case, an accused can be kept 
in detention beyond a period of 24 hours only 
when  it  is  authorised  by  the  Magistrate  in 
Page 11
12
exercise of power under Section 167 Cr.PC.  The 
power to authorise detention is a very solemn 
function.  It affects the liberty and freedom of 
citizens and needs to be exercised with great 
care and caution. Our experience tells us that 
it  is  not  exercised  with  the  seriousness  it 
deserves.  In  many  of  the  cases,  detention  is 
authorised  in  a  routine,  casual  and  cavalier 
manner.   Before  a  Magistrate  authorises 
detention under Section 167, Cr.PC, he has to be 
first satisfied that the arrest made is legal 
and  in  accordance  with  law  and  all  the 
constitutional rights of the person arrested is 
satisfied.  If the arrest effected by the police 
officer  does  not  satisfy  the  requirements  of 
Section 41 of the Code, Magistrate is duty bound 
not  to  authorise  his  further  detention  and 
release the accused.  In other words, when an 
accused is produced before the Magistrate,  the 
police officer effecting the arrest is required 
to furnish to the Magistrate, the facts, reasons 
Page 12
13
and  its  conclusions  for  arrest  and  the 
Magistrate  in  turn  is  to  be  satisfied  that 
condition precedent for arrest under Section 41 
Cr.PC  has  been  satisfied  and  it  is  only 
thereafter that he will authorise the detention 
of  an  accused.   The  Magistrate  before 
authorising  detention  will  record  its  own 
satisfaction,  may  be  in  brief  but   the  said 
satisfaction must reflect from its order.  It 
shall never be based upon the ipse dixit of the 
police officer, for example, in case the police 
officer  considers  the  arrest  necessary  to 
prevent such person from committing any further 
offence or for proper investigation of the case 
or for preventing an accused from tampering with 
evidence or making inducement etc., the police 
officer  shall  furnish  to  the  Magistrate  the 
facts, the reasons and materials on the basis of 
which  the  police  officer  had  reached  its 
conclusion.   Those  shall  be  perused  by  the 
Magistrate while authorising the detention and 
Page 13
only after recording its satisfaction in writing 
that the Magistrate will authorise the detention 
of  the  accused.   In  fine,  when  a  suspect  is 
arrested  and  produced  before  a  Magistrate  for 
authorising  detention,  the  Magistrate  has  to 
address  the  question  whether  specific  reasons 
have been recorded for arrest and if so, prima 
facie those reasons are relevant and secondly a 
reasonable conclusion could at all be reached by 
the  police  officer  that  one  or  the  other 
conditions stated above are attracted.  To this 
limited extent the Magistrate will make judicial 
scrutiny.
14
Another provision i.e. Section 41A Cr.PC 
aimed to avoid unnecessary arrest or threat of 
arrest looming large on accused requires to be 
vitalised.   Section 41A as inserted by Section 
6 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) 
Act, 2008(Act 5 of 2009), which is relevant in 
the context reads as follows:
Page 14
15
"41A.  Notice  of  appearance  before
police  officer.-(1)  The  police
officer  shall,  in  all  cases  where
the  arrest  of  a  person  is  not
required  under  the  provisions  of
sub-section (1) of Section 41, issue
a  notice  directing  the  person
against whom a reasonable complaint
has  been  made,  or  credible
information has been received, or a
reasonable suspicion exists that he
has committed a cognizable offence,
to  appear  before  him  or  at  such
other place as may be specified in
the notice.
(2) Where such a notice is issued to
any person, it shall be the duty of
that person to comply with the terms
of the notice.
(3) Where such person complies and
continues to comply with the notice,
he shall not be arrested in respect
of  the  offence  referred  to  in  the
notice  unless,  for  reasons  to  be
recorded, the police officer is of
the  opinion  that  he  ought  to  be
arrested.
(4) Where such person, at any time,
fails  to  comply  with  the  terms  of
the  notice  or  is  unwilling  to
identify himself, the police officer
may, subject to such orders as may
have  been  passed  by  a  competent
Court in this behalf, arrest him for
the  offence  mentioned  in  the
notice."
Page 15
Aforesaid  provision  makes  it  clear  that 
in all cases where the arrest of a person is not 
required under Section 41(1), Cr.PC, the police 
officer  is  required  to  issue  notice  directing 
the accused to appear before him at a specified 
place and time.  Law obliges such an accused to 
appear before the police officer and it further 
mandates that if such an accused complies with 
the terms of notice he shall not be arrested, 
unless for reasons to be recorded, the police 
office  is  of  the  opinion  that  the  arrest  is 
necessary.  At this stage also, the condition 
precedent for arrest as envisaged under Section 
41 Cr.PC has to be complied and shall be subject 
to  the  same  scrutiny  by  the  Magistrate  as 
aforesaid.  
16
We  are  of  the  opinion  that  if  the 
provisions of Section 41, Cr.PC which authorises 
the police officer to arrest an accused without 
an order from a Magistrate and without a warrant 
Page 16
are scrupulously enforced, the wrong committed 
by  the  police  officers  intentionally  or 
unwittingly would be reversed and the number of 
cases  which  come  to  the  Court  for  grant  of 
anticipatory bail will substantially reduce.  We 
would  like  to  emphasise  that  the  practice  of 
mechanically reproducing in the case diary all 
or most of the reasons contained in Section 41 
Cr.PC  for  effecting  arrest  be  discouraged  and 
discontinued.
Our endeavour in this judgment is to ensure 
that  police  officers  do  not  arrest  accused 
unnecessarily  and  Magistrate  do  not  authorise 
detention casually and mechanically.  In order 
to ensure what we have observed above, we give 
the following direction:
17
(1) All the State Governments to instruct its 
police officers not to automatically arrest 
when a case under Section 498-A of the IPC 
is  registered  but  to  satisfy  themselves 
about  the  necessity  for  arrest  under  the 
Page 17
parameters  laid  down  above  flowing  from 
Section 41, Cr.PC;
(2) All  police  officers  be  provided  with  a 
check list containing specified sub-clauses 
under Section 41(1)(b)(ii);
(3) The police officer shall forward the check 
list duly filed and furnish the reasons and 
materials  which  necessitated  the  arrest, 
while  forwarding/producing  the  accused 
before  the  Magistrate  for  further 
detention;
(4) The Magistrate while authorising detention 
of  the  accused  shall  peruse  the  report 
furnished  by  the  police  officer  in  terms 
aforesaid  and  only  after  recording  its 
satisfaction, the Magistrate will authorise 
detention;
18
(5) The decision not to arrest an accused, be 
forwarded  to  the  Magistrate  within  two 
weeks from the date of the institution of 
Page 18
the  case  with  a  copy  to  the  Magistrate 
which may be extended by the Superintendent 
of police of the district for the reasons 
to be recorded in writing;
(6) Notice  of  appearance  in  terms  of  Section 
41A  of  Cr.PC  be  served  on  the  accused 
within  two  weeks  from  the  date  of 
institution  of  the  case,  which  may  be 
extended by the Superintendent of Police of 
the District for the reasons to be recorded 
in writing;
19
(7) Failure  to  comply  with  the  directions 
aforesaid  shall  apart  from  rendering  the 
police  officers  concerned  liable  for 
departmental  action,  they  shall  also  be 
liable to be punished for contempt of court 
to be instituted before High Court having 
territorial jurisdiction.  
(8) Authorising  detention  without  recording 
reasons  as  aforesaid  by  the  judicial 
Page 19
Magistrate  concerned  shall  be  liable  for 
departmental action by the appropriate High 
Court.
We  hasten  to  add  that  the  directions 
aforesaid shall not only apply to the cases 
under Section 498-A of the I.P.C. or Section 4 
of  the  Dowry  Prohibition  Act,  the  case  in 
hand,  but  also  such  cases  where  offence  is 
punishable with imprisonment for a term which 
may  be  less  than  seven  years  or  which  may 
extend to seven years; whether with or without 
fine.
We direct that a copy of this judgment be 
forwarded to the Chief Secretaries as also the 
Director Generals of Police of all the State 
Governments and the Union Territories and the 
Registrar General of all the High Courts for 
onward  transmission  and  ensuring  its 
compliance. 
20
Page 20
By order dated 31
st
 of October, 2013, this 
Court  had  granted  provisional  bail  to  the 
appellant on certain conditions. We make this 
order absolute. 
In  the  result,  we  allow  this  appeal, 
making our aforesaid order dated 31
st
2013 absolute; with the directions aforesaid.
 October, 
   ………………………………………………………………J
   (CHANDRAMAULI KR. PRASAD)
   ………………………………………………………………J
                 (PINAKI CHANDRA GHOSE)
NEW DELHI,
July 2, 2014. 
21
Page 21


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Posted by: Dipak Shah <djshah1944@yahoo.com>


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