LAWS(PAT)-1958-8-10

STATE Vs. THAKUR ADITYA NARAIN SINGH

Decided On August 06, 1958
STATE Appellant
V/S
THAKUR ADITYA NARAIN SINGH Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This is a reference by the learned Additional District Magistrate, Dhanbad, for enhancement of the sentence passed on Thakur Aditya Narain Singh and Ramnath Dubey. They were prosecuted under Section 69 of the Mines Act (Act XXXV of 1952). The prosecution case was that Thakur Aditya Narain Singh, the owner of the colliery, and his agent Ramnath Dubey, had run the Madhudih Colliery, Dhanbad, without a qualified manager. Section 17 of the Mines Act lays down that every mine shall be under one manager who shall have the prescribed qualifications and shall be responsible for the control, management & direction of the mine, and the owner or agent of every mine shall appoint himself or some person, having such qualifications, to be such manager. Section 69 of the Act provides the penalty for the person responsible for running the colliery in the event of is failure to appoint a manager as required under Section 17 of the Act. The punishment is imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months or fine which may extend to five hundred rupees, or both, and, if contravention is continued after conviction, a further fine may be imposed which may extend to one hundred rupees for each day on which the contravention is so continued. On 31-3-1954, the accused person appeared before the learned Magistrate trying the case and pleaded guilty to the charge. The learned Magistrate, accordingly, found them guilty under Section 69 of the Mines Act and ordered them to pay a fine of Rs. 200/- each, in default, to undergo simple imprisonment for two months each. In view of the plea of the accused persons, the learned Magistrate did not think it necessary to investigate as to whether the accused had committed the offence and, if so whether there were circumstances which might extenuate the offence.

(2.) It appears that thereafter the Mines Department made an application before the Additional District Magistrate under Sections 435 and 438, Code of Criminal Procedure, for reference of the case against Thakur Aditya Narain Singh and Ramnath Dubey to this court for enhancement of the sentence passed upon them, as the sentence of fine of Rs. 200/-, each was considered to be inadequate, the contravention of the provisions of Section 17 having been continued for a period of nearly five months. The learned Additional District Magistrate has accordingly made the reference to this court recommending the award of a higher penalty on the two accused persons.

(3.) Mr. Baldeva Sahay who appears against the reference, has contended that there is no justification for the imposition of any higher penalty even in terms of Section 69 of the Mines Act. Section 69 in itself does not lay down any particular standard which should guide the court in passing a sentence for contravention of the provisions of Section 17, but it lays down that if the contravention is continued after conviction then a further fine of Rs. 100/-for each day of the contravention continued may be imposed. In the present case, if there was such further contravention, it was proper for the Mines authority to bring the matter to the notice of the court for imposition of the additional penalty laid down in that section. Learned counsel for the State has, however, urged that the reference should be accepted as the clause providing for additional penalty under Section 69 is not really invoked in the present case. That clause may be construed as a provision for further fine for continued contravention after conviction in the same proceeding or it may even be that once an accused person has been convicted for contravention of the provisions of Section 17, in the subsequent prosecution that order may be brought to the notice of the court to be taken into account for a higher penalty. But that construction is not relevant in the present case because here the reference is for enhancing the sentence, in view of the fact that the learned Magistrate should have considered the failure to appoint the manager for a period of five months. It was not merely a technical offence where the owner of the mine failed to appoint a manager for sometime which might be an offence of a simple nature. In the present case, the offence was almost deliberate and the owner of the mine had run the colliery without a manager to make* larger profits out of it in utter disregard of the safety of the miners and other persons who had to go down to die pit to raise coal out of the colliery. The contention of the learned counsel for the State may be correct and it may well be that the learned Magistrate, who tried the case, could have-imposed a higher sentence. As it is, however, the fact remains that he thought it proper in his discretion to impose a fine of Rs. 200/- on each accused and now we have to see whether the sentence, in the circumstances disclosed in the case, is so inadequate and necessarily to call for its enhancement by this court in its revisional jurisdiction.