LAWS(SC)-1959-5-54

S. GANGOLI Vs. THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH

Decided On May 14, 1959
S. Gangoli Appellant
V/S
The State of Uttar Pradesh Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) ARE the appellants S. Gangoli and P. R. Chaudhri (hereafter called appellants 1 and 2 respectively) public servants under s. 2 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 (Act II of 1947) (hereinafter called the Act) ? That is the short question which arises for our decision in the present appeal. That question arises in this way.

(2.) CHAUDHRI had been posted as Assistant Permanent Way Inspector, Sultanpur, East Indian Railway, in March, 1948, in the Lucknow E.I.R. Division. Gangoli was posted as Assistant Pay Clerk in the Lucknow E.I.R. Division during the same period. The case against the appellants was that they had committed an offence under s. 120B of the Indian Penal Code and s. 5(2) read with Sections 5(1)(c) and 5(1)(d) of the Act. It appears that in accordance with the Pay Commission's Report a sum of Rs. 16,685 was entrusted to appellant No. 2 by the railway department to be disbursed among Class IV staff working under appellant No. 1. This payment had to be made in the presence of, and was to be attested by, appellant No. 1. According to the prosecution both the appellants had entered into a criminal conspiracy to misappropriate a part of the said government amount entrusted to appellant No. 2 by paying to the respective members of Class IV staff lesser amounts than those to which they were entitled and by making entries in the pay -sheets which purported to show that the due amounts had been paid to them. In accordance with this conspiracy payment was made on March 11, 1948, in a running train between Faizabad and Chilbila and the entries in the pay -sheets show that the whole of the amount of Rs. 16,591 had been paid to 216 employees. The entries also show that the payment had been made by appellant No. 2 and the same had been attested by appellant No. 1. In fact the whole amount had not been disbursed to the employees who in all were paid Rs. 1,555 less. In this manner the two appellants had misappropriated the sum of about Rs. 1,555 and had falsified the pay -sheets in pursuance of their conspiracy.

(3.) BOTH the appellants denied the charges. They pleaded that they had not entered into any conspiracy and it was their suggestion that they had been falsely implicated in the present case. Appellant No. 1 pleaded that the case against him had been started, and false evidence had been secured by H. N. Das with the aid of Shambu because relations between him and Das were not friendly. Appellant No. 2 pleaded that he had been falsely implicated because, contrary to the suggestion of the police, he had refused to implicate appellant No. 1. According to them the evidence adduced by the prosecution was interested and false, and the documents produced by it were either fabricated or irrelevant.