Saturday, September 19, 2015

[aaykarbhavan] Judgments and Information, C L IG S T R [4 Attachments]






No trademark protection to Kitkat : European Court; CCI rattles floor under e-commerce firms

No trademark protection to Kitkat : European Court; CCI rattles floor under e-commerce firms

 


SEBI revises disclosure formats under amended Insider Trading Regulations

SEBI revises formats for disclosure under Insider Trading Regulations, aligns them​ with amended 2015 Regulations; Advises stock exchanges to put in place adequate systems and issue necessary guidelines for implementing the revised disclosure formats; Also advises them to make necessary amendments to the relevant bye-laws, rules and regulations as applicable for immediate implementation of revised formats : SEBI

Click here to read more.

SEBI commissions Investor Survey, 2015 to collect information on investment behaviour

SEBI commissions a household survey study titled as "SEBI Investor Survey 2015"; Survey aims at collection of information on socio-economic parameters, savings and investment behavior, reasons for non-investment in securities market, relation of risks with investment behavior, impact of investor education programs, impact of regulatory policies etc,. : SEBI

Click here to read more.

P. Satyanarayana Murthy vs. Dist. Inspector of Police (Supreme Court)

COURT:
CORAM: , ,
SECTION(S): ,
GENRE:
CATCH WORDS: ,
COUNSEL:
DATE: September 14, 2015 (Date of pronouncement)
DATE: September 17, 2015 (Date of publication)
AY: -
FILE: Click here to download the file in pdf format
CITATION:
Acche Din For Corrupt Babus: Mere possession and recovery of currency notes from an accused is not sufficient to establish an offense under the Prevention of Corruption Act. Proof of demand of illegal gratification is essential. Its absence is fatal to the complaint
Rs. 3.8 crore was found in cash from a Rajasthan's mines department official
The prosecution claimed that a complaint was lodged against the accused (then the Assistant Director, Commissionerate of Technical Education), that he demanded illegal gratification Rs. 1000 for renewing of the recognition of the complainant's typing institute. A trap was laid pursuant to which phenolphthalein powder was applied on currency notes which were handed over by the complainant to the accused. The accused was intercepted and apprehended with the money in his hands. The currency notes tallied with those which had been decided to be used in the trap operation. The fingers of the hands of the accused, when dipped in the sodium carbonate solution, also turned pink. The pocket of the shirt of the accused also turned pink when rinsed in sodium carbonate solution. The trail court and the High Court convicted the accused. Before the Supreme Court the accused claimed that even assuming without admitting that the recovery of the tainted notes from the appellant had been established, sans the proof of demand which is a sine qua non for an offence both under Sections 7 and 13 of the Act, the appellant's conviction is unsustainable. HELD by the Supreme Court allowing the appeal:
(i) The statutory prescription of Sections 7 and 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1988 is that the prosecution has to prove the charge there under beyond reasonable doubt like any other criminal offence and that the accused should be considered to be innocent till it is established otherwise by proper proof of demand and acceptance of illegal gratification, which are vital ingredients necessary to be proved to record a conviction. The mere recovery by itself, would not prove the charge against the accused and in absence of any evidence to prove payment of bribe or to show that the accused had voluntarily accepted the money knowing it to be bribe, conviction cannot be sustained.
(ii) Mere possession and recovery of currency notes from an accused without proof of demand would not establish an offence under Sections 7 as well as 13(1)(d)(i)&(ii) of the Act. In the absence of any proof of demand for illegal gratification, the use of corrupt or illegal means or abuse of position as a public servant to obtain any valuable thing or pecuniary advantage cannot be held to be proved. The proof of demand is an indispensable essentiality and of permeating mandate for an offence under Sections 7 and 13 of the Act. Qua Section 20 of the Act, which permits a presumption as envisaged therein, it has been held that while it is extendable only to an offence under Section 7 and not to those under Section 13(1)(d) (i)&(ii) of the Act, it is contingent as well on the proof of acceptance of illegal gratification for doing or forbearing to do any official act. Such proof of acceptance of illegal gratification, it was emphasized, could follow only if there was proof of demand. Axiomatically, in absence of proof of demand, such legal presumption under Section 20 of the Act would also not arise.
(iii) The proof of demand of illegal gratification, thus, is the gravamen of the offence under Sections 7 and 13(1) (d)(i)&(ii) of the Act and in absence thereof, unmistakably the charge therefor, would fail. Mere acceptance of any amount allegedly by way of illegal gratification or recovery thereof, dehors the proof of demand, ipso facto, would thus not be sufficient to bring home the charge under these two sections of the Act.
(iv) As a corollary, failure of the prosecution to prove the demand for illegal gratification would be fatal and mere recovery of the amount from the person accused of the offence under Sections 7 or 13 of the Act would not entail his conviction thereunder.
(v) On facts, qua the aspect of demand, when the complainant did hand over to the appellant the renewal application, the latter enquired from the complainant as to whether he had brought the amount which he directed him to bring on the previous day, whereupon the complainant took out Rs. 500/- from the pocket of his shirt and handed over the same to the appellant. Though, a very spirited endeavour has been made by the learned counsel for the State to co-relate this statement of PW1- S to the attendant facts and circumstances including the recovery of this amount from the possession of the appellant by the trap team, identification of the currency notes used in the trap operation and also the chemical reaction of the sodium carbonate solution qua the appellant, we are left unpersuaded to return a finding that the prosecution in the instant case has been able to prove the factum of demand beyond reasonable doubt. Even if the evidence of PW1- S. Udaya Bhaskar is accepted on the face value, it falls short of the quality and decisiveness of the proof of demand of illegal gratification as enjoined by law to hold that the offence under Section 7 or 13(1)(d)(i)&(ii) of the Act has been proved (A. Subair vs. State of Kerala (2009)6 SCC 587 and State of Kerala and another vs. C.P. Rao (2011) 6 SCC 450 followed)

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P. Satyanarayana Murthy vs. Dist. Inspector of Police (Supreme Court)

by editor
Mere possession and recovery of currency notes from an accused without proof of demand would not establish an offence under Sections 7 as well as 13(1)(d)(i)&(ii) of the Act. In the absence of any proof of demand for illegal gratification, the use of corrupt or illegal means or abuse of position as a public servant to obtain any valuable thing or pecuniary advantage cannot be held to be proved. The proof of demand is an indispensable essentiality and of permeating mandate for an offence under Sections 7 and 13 of the Act. Qua Section 20 of the Act, which permits a presumption as envisaged therein, it has been held that while it is extendable only to an offence under Section 7 and not to those under Section 13(1)(d) (i)&(ii) of the Act, it is contingent as well on the proof of acceptance of illegal gratification for doing or forbearing to do any official act. Such proof of acceptance of illegal gratification, it was emphasized, could follow only if there was proof of demand. Axiomatically, in absence of proof of demand, such legal presumption under Section 20 of the Act would also not arise. As a corollary, failure of the prosecution to prove the demand for illegal gratification would be fatal and mere recovery of the amount from the person accused of the offence under Sections 7 or 13 of the Act would not entail his conviction thereunder



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GOODS AND SERVICE TAX REPORTS (GSTR) HIGHLIGHTS


ISSUE DATED 21.9.2015

Volume 34 Part 4


SUPREME COURT


F Payment through Cenvat credit account when facility for payment of duty in instalments withdrawn, permissible : Jayaswal Neco Ltd. v. CCE p. 294

F Existence of alternative remedy not bar to exercise writ jurisdiction : D. R. Enterprises Ltd. v. Assistant Collector of Customs p. 308

F Assessee not establishing that imported web printing machine generated more than 36,000 compomiste impressions of copies per hour, not entitled to concessional rate of duty : D. R. Enterprises Ltd. v. Assistant Collector of Customs p. 308





HIGH COURT


F Case of arithmetics and ordinary verification not involving any process of interpretation or application of provision of law ; appeal dismissed : Commissioner of Customs and Central Excise v. Balaji Steel Corporation Ltd. (T & AP) p. 290





CESTAT ORDERS


F Where authorisation to file appeal issued in favour of Assistant Commissioner in respect of adjudicating order by Joint Commissioner ; appeal dismissed on technical grounds : Deepak F. Shah v. CCE (Trib.-Ahd) p. 243

F Credit of duty paid on inputs used in manufacture of finished goods allowable : Deepak F. Shah v. CCE (Trib.-Ahd) p. 243

F Removal of finished goods under parallel invoices without payment of duty, penalty imposable : Deepak F. Shah v. CCE (Trib.-Ahd) p. 243

F Review proceedings not substitute for show cause to recover erroneous refund : Ispat Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs (Trib.-Mum) p. 258

F Certificate of chartered accountant and cost accountant's inference not a reasonable rebuttal of statutory presumption of unjust enrichment : Ispat Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs (Trib.-Mum) p. 258





STATUTES AND NOTIFICATIONS


F Notifications :
Customs Act, 1962 : Notification under section 14(2) : Rates of basic duty on specified goods : Amendments p. 65

Customs Tariff Act, 1975 : Notification under section 9A(1) and (5) : Anti-dumping duty on import of caustic soda from Korea RP p. 75

Anti-dumping duty on import of flax fabric from China and Hong Kong p. 70

Anti-dumping duty on import of flexible slabstock polyol from China, Korea, Chinese Taipei and Brazil : Rescission p. 80

Anti-dumping duty on import of potassium carbonate from European Union, China, Korea RP and Taiwan p. 72

Anti-dumping duty on import of purified terephthalic acid from China, European Union, Korea RP and Thailand p. 66

Anti-dumping duty on import of PVC flex films from China PR : Amendments p. 79


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