Supreme Court of India (Division Bench (DB)- Two Judge)

Appeal (Crl.), 396 of 2016, Judgment Date: Apr 26, 2016

                                                                  Reportable

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                      CRIMINAL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                      CRIMINAL APPEAL No.  396  OF 2016

                 [Arising out of SLP [Crl.] No.3584 of 2011]

Amal Kumar Jha                                               … Appellant

                                      Vs.

State of Chhatisgarh & Anr.                               … Respondents

                               J U D G M E N T

ARUN MISHRA, J.

      Leave granted.

      The appeal arises out of the order dated 21.1.2011 passed by the  High
Court  of  Chhatisgarh  at  Bilaspur,  thereby  affirming  the  order  dated
29.6.2002 passed by the Sessions Judge and Judicial Magistrate First  Class,
Dharamjaigarh, rejecting the application filed by the accused appellant  for
discharge on the ground  of  requirement  of  sanction  to  prosecute  under
section 197(1) Cr.P.C.
       As  per  the  prosecution  case,  the  appellant  was  in-charge   of
Patthalgaon Hospital, District Raigad where on 1.1.1995 L.T.D. operation  of
Runiabai was conducted by Dr. A.M. Gupta. Thereafter she was sent  home.  As
Runiabai vomited Dr. A.M. Gupta was approached. He  sent  one  Aklu  Ram  to
administer some treatment. However  on  2.2.1995  she  was  brought  to  the
Primary Health Centre, Patthalgaon where she was  admitted  and  died  at  2
p.m. Her post mortem was conducted. After 25 days, First Information  Report
was lodged and ultimately Police filed chargesheet under section  304-A  IPC
on  16.10.1996  in  the  court   of   Judicial   Magistrate   First   Class,
Dharamjaigarh, as against appellant A.K. Jha, Dr. A.M. Gupta and  Aklu  Ram.
Charges under section 304-A were framed as against Dr. A.M.  Gupta  and  the
appellant. Both of them filed an application  for  discharge  under  section
197 Cr.PC on the ground that sanction to prosecute  was  required  and  they
could  not  be  prosecuted  without  previous  sanction.  Vide  order  dated
27.6.2001 passed by the Judicial Magistrate  First  Class,  the  application
filed by Dr. A.M. Garg had been allowed. However, the application  filed  by
the appellant was rejected on the  ground  that  he  was  in-charge  of  the
Primary Health Centre and he failed to provide Government jeep for  shifting
the  patient  Mrs.  Runiabai  to  District  Hospital,  Raigad  whereas   the
appellant himself travelled in  the  jeep  to  attend  an  official  monthly
meeting at Raigad  which  was  District  Headquarters.  The  Primary  Health
Centre did not have  ambulance.  Thus,  negligence  was  attributed  to  the
appellant for not providing the said vehicle for  shifting  the  patient  to
District Hospital, Raigad. A revision was preferred  against  the  rejection
of prayer and thereafter a petition was  filed  under  section  482  Cr.P.C.
before the High Court, the same having  been  dismissed,  the  appellant  is
before us.
      It was vehemently contended by learned counsel appearing on behalf  of
the appellant that the allegations constituted failure to  provide  official
vehicle for shifting the patient to District Hospital, Raigad. As it was  an
act in discharge of official duty, as such the  sanction  to  prosecute  was
necessary. Whereas  the  application  filed  by  Dr.  A.M.  Gupta  had  been
allowed, the prayer made by  the  appellant  has  been  illegally  rejected.
Learned counsel appearing on behalf of the State  supported  the  order  and
contended that  it  was  negligence  on  behalf  of  the  appellant  in  not
providing official vehicle to the patient due to  which  she  could  not  be
shifted to District Hospital,  Raigad  and  died.  Thus,  sanction  was  not
required in the instant case.
      It is apparent from the facts of the instant case that the  allegation
against the appellant is of omission in discharge of official  duty  in  not
providing Government vehicle for shifting the patient  from  Primary  Health
Centre to District Hospital, Raigad; whereas he  himself  travelled  in  the
vehicle in question for  attending  the  monthly  official  meeting  at  the
District Headquarters. In our considered opinion, it was an act or  omission
in discharge of the official duty. The sanction to prosecute was  necessary.
In this case, the accused was acting in discharge of his official duty  when
he refused to provide the official vehicle.  The  refusal  is  directly  and
reasonably connected with his official duty, thus sanction is  required  for
prosecution as provided under section 197(1) Cr.PC. It is not disputed  that
no ambulance was provided to the Primary Health Centre. The question  arises
whether omission to provide the  official  jeep  which  was  not  meant  for
patients, would constitute an omission in  discharge  of  his  duty.  Though
public servant is not entitled to indulge  in  criminal  activities  in  the
course of his duty but the act in question  had  relation  to  discharge  of
official duty of the accused. It was clearly connected  to  the  performance
of his official duty. When such is the  case,  sanction  is  required.  This
Court in Shreekantiah Ramayya Munipalli v. The State  of  Bombay  [1955  (1)
SCR 1177] has observed thus :
“Now it is obvious that if section 197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure  is
construed too narrowly it can never be applied, for of course it is no  part
of an official’s duty to commit an offence and never can  be.    But  it  is
not the duty we have to examine so much as the act, because an official  act
can  be  performed  in  the  discharge  of  official  duty  as  well  as  in
dereliction of it.  The section has content and its language must  be  given
meaning.  What it says is –
      “when any public servant …..  is accused of  any  offence  alleged  to
have been committed by  him  while  acting  or  purporting  to  act  in  the
discharge of his official duty……”
We have therefore first to concentrate on the word ‘offence’.
      Now an offence seldom  consists  of  a  single  act.   It  is  usually
composed of several elements and, as a rule, a whole series of acts must  be
proved before it can be established.  In  the  present  case,  the  elements
alleged  against  the  second  accused  are,  first,  that  there   was   an
“entrustment”  and/or  “dominion”;  second,  that  the  entrustment   and/or
dominion was “in his capacity as a public servant”; third, that there was  a
“disposal”; and fourth, that the  disposal  was  “dishonest”.    Now  it  is
evident that the entrustment  and/or  dominion  here  were  in  an  official
capacity, and it is equally evident that there could  in  this  case  be  no
disposal, lawful or otherwise, save by an act done or purporting to be  done
in an official capacity.   Therefore, the  act  complained  of,  namely  the
disposal, could not have been done in any other way.  If  it  was  innocent,
it was an official act; if dishonest, it  was  the  dishonest  doing  of  an
official act, but in either event the act was official  because  the  second
accused could not dispose of the goods save by  the  doing  of  an  official
act, namely officially permitting their  disposal;  and  that  he  did.   He
actually permitted their release and purported  to  do  it  in  an  official
capacity, and apart from the fact that he did not pretend to act  privately,
there was no other way in which he could have done it.  Therefore,  whatever
the intention or motive behind the act may have been, the physical  part  of
it remained unaltered, so if it was official in the one case it was  equally
official in the other, and the only difference would lie  in  the  intention
with which it was done: in the one event, it would be done in the  discharge
of an official duty and in the other, in the purported discharge of it.
      The act of abetment alleged against him stands on  the  same  footing,
for his part in the abetment was to permit the disposal of the goods by  the
doing of an official act and thus “willfully suffer” another person  to  use
them dishonestly: section 405 of the Indian Penal Code.  In both cases,  the
“offence” in his case would be incomplete without proving the official  act.

      We therefore hold that section 197 of the Code of  Criminal  Procedure
applies and that sanction was necessary, and as there was none the trial  is
vitiated from the start.  We therefore quash the  proceedings   against  the
second accused as also his conviction and sentence.”

      This Court in Matajog Dobey v. H.C. Bhari [1955 (2) SCR 925] has  also
considered when sanction is necessary. This Court has laid down thus :
“Is the need for sanction to be considered  as  soon  as  the  complaint  is
lodged and on the allegations therein contained?  At first sight,  it  seems
as though there is some support for this view in Hori Ram’s  case  and  also
in Sarjoo Prasad v. The King-Emperor (1945) F.C.R. 227.  Sulaiman,  J.  says
that  as  the  prohibition  is   against   the   institution   itself,   its
applicability must be judged in the first instance at the earliest stage  of
institution.  Varadachariar, J.  also  states  that  the  question  must  be
determined with reference to the nature of the allegations made against  the
public servant in the criminal proceeding.  But a  careful  perusal  of  the
later parts of their judgments shows that they did not intent  to  lay  down
any such proposition.  Sulaiman, J. refers (at page 179) to the  prosecution
case as disclosed by the complaint or the police report   and  he  winds  up
the discussion in these words: “Of course, if the case as put forward  fails
or the defence  establishes  that  the  act  purported  to  be  done  is  in
execution of  duty,  the  proceedings  will  have  to  be  dropped  and  the
complaint dismissed on that ground”.    The other learned Judge also  states
at page 185, “At this stage we have only to see  whether  the  case  alleged
against the appellant or sought to be proved against  him  relates  to  acts
done or purporting to be done by him in the execution  of  his  duty”.    It
must be so.  The question may arise at any stage of  the  proceedings.   The
complaint may not disclose that the act constituting the  offence  was  done
or purported to be done  in  the  discharge  of  official  duty;  but  facts
subsequently coming to light on a police or judicial inquiry or even in  the
course  of  the  prosecution  evidence  at  the  trial,  may  establish  the
necessity for sanction.  Whether sanction is necessary or not  may  have  to
be determined from stage to stage.  The necessity may reveal itself  in  the
course of the progress of the case.”
      In Bhappa Singh v. Ram Pal Singh & Ors. 1981 (Supp) SCC 12 this  Court
considered the grant of protection to an officer for official  act  done  in
good faith thus :
“6. In view of the circumstances mentioned in the last paragraph,  there  is
little room for doubt that the Customs party was not out to  commit  dacoity
either in the jewellery shop or the chaubara, that they  also  committed  no
trespass into either of those places, but that the purpose of the  raid  was
to find out if any illegal  activity  was  being  carried  on  therein.  The
presence of two licensed Gold-smiths in the chaubara speaks volumes in  that
behalf. It may further be taken for  granted  that  the  Customs  party  was
manhandled before they themselves resorted to violence,  because  there  was
no reason for them to open fire unless they were resisted  in  the  carrying
out of the raid peacefully.

7. Even though what we have just stated is a general prima facie  impression
that we have formed at this stage  on  the  materials  available  to  us  at
present, it may not be possible to come to a conclusive  finding  about  the
falsity or otherwise of the complaint. But  then  we  think  that  it  would
amount to giving a go-by to Section 108 of the Gold (Control) Act, if  cases
of this type are allowed to be pursued to their  logical  conclusion,  i.e.,
to that of conviction or acquittal. In this view of the  matter  we  do  not
feel inclined to upset the impugned order, even though  perhaps  the  matter
may have required further evidence before quashing of  the  complaint  could
be held to be fully justified. The appeal is accordingly dismissed.”

      In State of Maharashtra v. Dr. Budhikota Subbarao 1993  (3)  SCC  339,
this Court has considered the meaning of the ‘official act’  thus :
“6. Such being the nature of the provision the question is  how  should  the
expression, ‘any offence alleged to have been committed by him while  acting
or purporting to act in the discharge of his official duty’, be  understood?
What does it mean? ‘Official’ according to dictionary, means  pertaining  to
an office. And official act or official duty means an act or  duty  done  by
an officer in his official capacity. In S.B. Saha v. M.S.  Kochar  (1979)  4
SCC 177 it was held: (SCC pp. 184-85, para 17)

“The words ‘any offence alleged to have been committed by him  while  acting
or purporting to act in the discharge of  his  official  duty’  employed  in
Section 197(1) of the Code, are capable of  a  narrow  as  well  as  a  wide
interpretation. If these words are construed too narrowly, the section  will
be rendered altogether sterile, for, ‘it is no part of an official  duty  to
commit an offence, and never can be’. In the wider sense, these  words  will
take under their umbrella every act constituting an  offence,  committed  in
the course of the same transaction in which the official duty  is  performed
or purports to be performed. The right  approach  to  the  import  of  these
words lies between these two extremes. While on the  one  hand,  it  is  not
every  offence  committed  by  a  public  servant  while  engaged   in   the
performance of his official duty, which is entitled  to  the  protection  of
Section 197(1), an act constituting  an  offence,  directly  and  reasonably
connected with his official  duty  will  require  sanction  for  prosecution
under the said provision.”

Use of the expression, ‘official duty’ implies  that  the  act  or  omission
must have been done by the public servant in course of his service and  that
it should have been in discharge of his duty. The section  does  not  extend
its protective cover to every act or omission done by a  public  servant  in
service but  restricts  its  scope  of  operation  to  only  those  acts  or
omissions which are done by a public servant in discharge of official  duty.
In P. Arulswami v. State of  Madras  (1967)  1  SCR  201  this  Court  after
reviewing the authorities right from the days of  Federal  Court  and  Privy
Council held:

“… It is not therefore every offence committed  by  a  public  servant  that
requires sanction for prosecution  under  Section  197(1)  of  the  Criminal
Procedure Code; nor even every act done by him while he is actually  engaged
in the performance of his official duties; but if the act complained  of  is
directly concerned with his official  duties  so  that,  if  questioned,  it
could be claimed to have been done by virtue of the  office,  then  sanction
would be necessary. It is the quality of the act that is  important  and  if
it falls within the scope and range of his official  duties  the  protection
contemplated  by  Section  197  of  the  Criminal  Procedure  Code  will  be
attracted. An offence may be entirely unconnected with the official duty  as
such or it may be committed within the scope of the official duty. Where  it
is unconnected with the official duty there can  be  no  protection.  It  is
only when it is either within the scope of the official duty  or  in  excess
of it that the protection is claimable.”

It has been widened further by extending protection to even  those  acts  or
omissions which are done in purported exercise of  official  duty.  That  is
under the colour of office. Official duty therefore implies that the act  or
omission must have been done by the public servant in course of his  service
and such act or omission must have been performed  as  part  of  duty  which
further must have been official in nature. The  section  has,  thus,  to  be
construed strictly, while  determining  its  applicability  to  any  act  or
omission in course of service. Its operation has  to  be  limited  to  those
duties which are discharged in course of duty. But once any act or  omission
has been found to have been committed by a public servant  in  discharge  of
his duty then it must be given liberal and  wide  construction  so  far  its
official nature is concerned. For instance a public servant is not  entitled
to indulge in criminal activities. To that extent  the  section  has  to  be
construed narrowly and in a restricted manner. But once  it  is  established
that act or omission was done by the public servant  while  discharging  his
duty then the scope of its being official  should  be  construed  so  as  to
advance the objective of the  section  in  favour  of  the  public  servant.
Otherwise the entire purpose of affording protection  to  a  public  servant
without sanction shall stand frustrated. For instance a  police  officer  in
discharge of duty may have to use force which may  be  an  offence  for  the
prosecution of which the sanction may be necessary. But if the same  officer
commits an act in course of service but not in discharge of  his  duty  then
the bar under Section 197 of the Code is not attracted. To  what  extent  an
act or omission performed by a public servant in discharge of his  duty  can
be deemed to be official was explained by this Court  in  Matajog  Dubey  v.
H.C. Bhari AIR 1956 SC 44 thus:

“[T]he offence alleged to have been committed (by  the  accused)  must  have
something to do, or must be related in some manner  with  the  discharge  of
official duty … there must be a reasonable connection between  the  act  and
the discharge of official duty; the act must bear such relation to the  duty
that the accused could lay a reasonable  (claim)  but  not  a  pretended  or
fanciful claim, that he did it in the  course  of  the  performance  of  his
duty.”
                                                         (emphasis supplied)

If on facts, therefore, it is prima facie found that  the  act  or  omission
for which the accused was charged had reasonable connection  with  discharge
of his duty then it must be held to be official to  which  applicability  of
Section 197 of the Code cannot be disputed.”

      In State of  H.P. v. M.P. Gupta 2004 (2) SCC 349 this Court in  regard
to official duty has laid down thus :
“11. Such being the nature of the provision, the question is how should  the
expression, “any offence alleged to have been committed by him while  acting
or purporting to act in the discharge of his official duty”, be  understood?
What does it mean? “Official” according to the dictionary, means  pertaining
to an office, and official act or official duty means an act  or  duty  done
by an officer in his official capacity.”

      In State of Orissa & Ors. v. Ganesh Chandra Jew 2004 (8) SCC  40  this
Court has laid down that protection under section  197  would  be  available
only when the act done by the public servant is  reasonably  connected  with
the discharge of his official duty. This Court has laid down thus :
“7. The protection given under Section 197 is to protect responsible  public
servants against the institution of possibly vexatious criminal  proceedings
for offences alleged to have been committed by them while  they  are  acting
or purporting to act as public servants. The policy of  the  legislature  is
to afford adequate protection to public servants to  ensure  that  they  are
not prosecuted for anything done by them in the discharge of their  official
duties without reasonable cause, and if sanction is granted,  to  confer  on
the Government, if they choose to  exercise  it,  complete  control  of  the
prosecution. This protection has certain limits and is available  only  when
the alleged act done by the public servant is reasonably connected with  the
discharge of his official duty and is not  merely  a  cloak  for  doing  the
objectionable act. If in doing his official duty, he acted in excess of  his
duty, but  there  is  a  reasonable  connection  between  the  act  and  the
performance of the official duty,  the  excess  will  not  be  a  sufficient
ground to deprive the public servant of the protection. The question is  not
as to the nature  of  the  offence  such  as  whether  the  alleged  offence
contained an element necessarily dependent upon the offender being a  public
servant, but whether  it  was  committed  by  a  public  servant  acting  or
purporting to act as such in the discharge of his official capacity.  Before
Section 197 can be invoked, it must be shown  that  the  official  concerned
was accused of an offence alleged  to  have  been  committed  by  him  while
acting or purporting to act in the discharge of his official duties.  It  is
not the duty which requires examination so much  as  the  act,  because  the
official act can be performed both in the discharge of the official duty  as
well as in dereliction of it. The act must fall within the scope  and  range
of the official duties of the public servant concerned. It  is  the  quality
of the act which  is  important  and  the  protection  of  this  section  is
available if the act falls within the scope and range of his official  duty.
There cannot  be  any  universal  rule  to  determine  whether  there  is  a
reasonable connection between the act done and the official duty, nor is  it
possible to lay down any such rule. One safe and sure test  in  this  regard
would be to consider if the omission or neglect on the part  of  the  public
servant to commit the act complained of could have made him  answerable  for
a charge of dereliction  of  his  official  duty.  If  the  answer  to  this
question is in the affirmative, it may be said that such act  was  committed
by the public servant while acting in the discharge  of  his  official  duty
and there was every connection with the act complained of and  the  official
duty of the public servant. This aspect makes it clear that the  concept  of
Section 197 does  not  get  immediately  attracted  on  institution  of  the
complaint case.”

      In K. Kalimuthu v. State by DSP  2005  (4)  SCC  512  this  Court  has
observed that official duty implies that an act or omission must  have  been
done by the public servant within the scope and range of his  official  duty
for protection. This Court has laid down thus :
“12. If on facts, therefore, it  is  prima  facie  found  that  the  act  or
omission for which the accused was charged had  reasonable  connection  with
discharge of his duty  then  it  must  be  held  to  be  official  to  which
applicability of Section 197 of the Code cannot be disputed.

                                  x x x x x

15. The question relating to the need of sanction under Section 197  of  the
Code is not necessarily to be considered as soon as the complaint is  lodged
and on the allegations contained therein. This question  may  arise  at  any
stage of the proceeding. The question whether sanction is necessary  or  not
may have to be determined from stage  to  stage.  Further,  in  cases  where
offences under the Act are concerned, the effect  of  Section  197,  dealing
with the question of prejudice has also to be noted.”
      In Manorama Tiwari & Ors. v. Surendra Nath Rai 2016 (1)  SCC  594,  it
was  held  that  the  appellants  were  discharging  public   duties   while
performing surgery in a  Government  hospital,  hence  prosecution  was  not
maintainable without sanction from the State Government.
      In State of Madhya Pradesh v. Sheetla Sahai & Ors. 2009 (8)  SCC  617,
this Court has laid down thus :
      “59. For the purpose of attracting the provisions of  Section  197  of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, it is not necessary that they  must  act  in
their official capacity but even where public servants  purport  to  act  in
their official capacity, the same would attract the  provisions  of  Section
197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It was  so  held  by  this  Court  in
Sankaran Moitra v. Sadhna Das (2006) 4 SCC 584. The  question  came  up  for
consideration before this Court in Matajog Dobey v. H.C. Bhari AIR  1956  SC
44 wherein it was held: (AIR pp. 48-49, para 17)
“17. Slightly differing tests have been laid down in the  decided  cases  to
ascertain the scope and the meaning  of  the  relevant  words  occurring  in
Section 197 of the Code; ‘any offence alleged to have been committed by  him
while acting or purporting to act in the discharge of  his  official  duty’.
But the difference is only in language and not in substance.
The offence alleged to have been committed must have  something  to  do,  or
must be related in some manner, with the  discharge  of  official  duty.  No
question of sanction can arise under Section 197, unless the act  complained
of is an offence; the only point to determine is whether  it  was  committed
in the discharge of official duty. There must  be  a  reasonable  connection
between the act and the official duty. It does not matter even  if  the  act
exceeds what is strictly necessary for the discharge of the  duty,  as  this
question will arise only at a later stage when the  trial  proceeds  on  the
merits.
What we must find out is whether the  act  and  the  official  duty  are  so
interrelated that one can postulate reasonably  that  it  was  done  by  the
accused in the performance of the official duty, though possibly  in  excess
of the needs and requirements of the situation. In Hori Ram Singh  v.  Crown
1939 FCR 159 Sulaiman, J. observes:
‘The section cannot be confined to only such acts as are done  by  a  public
servant directly in pursuance of his public office, though in excess of  the
duty or under a mistaken belief as to the existence of such duty. Nor is  it
necessary to go to the length  of  saying  that  the  act  constituting  the
offence should be so inseparably connected with  the  official  duty  as  to
form part and parcel of the same transaction.’
The interpretation that found favour with  Varadachariar,  J.  in  the  same
case is stated by him in these terms at p. 56:
‘There must be something in  the  nature  of  the  act  complained  of  that
attaches it to the official character of the person doing it.’
In affirming  this  view,  the  Judicial  Committee  of  the  Privy  Council
observed in Gill case : AIR 1948 PC 128 (IA pp. 59-60)
‘A public servant can only be said to act  or  to  purport  to  act  in  the
discharge of his official duty, if his act is such  as  to  lie  within  the
scope of his official duty. … The  test  may  well  be  whether  the  public
servant, if challenged, can reasonably claim that, what he does, he does  in
virtue of his office.’
Hori Ram case 1939 FCR 159 is referred to with approval in  the  later  case
of Lieutenant Hector Thomas Huntley v. King Emperor 1944  FCR  262  but  the
test laid down that it must be established that the act  complained  of  was
an ‘official’ act appears to us unduly to  narrow  down  the  scope  of  the
protection afforded by  Section  197  of  the  Criminal  Procedure  Code  as
defined and understood in the earlier case.  The  decision  in  Albert  West
Meads v. R. AIR 1948 PC 156 does not carry us any  further;  it  adopts  the
reasoning in Gill case AIR 1948 PC 128.”
60. The said principle has been reiterated by this Court in B. Saha v.  M.S.
Kochar (1979) 4 SCC 177 in the following terms: (SCC pp. 184-85,  paras  17-
18)
“17. The words ‘any offence alleged to have  been  committed  by  him  while
acting or purporting to act in the discharge of his official duty’  employed
in Section 197(1) of the Code, are capable of a narrow as  well  as  a  wide
interpretation. If these words are construed too narrowly, the section  will
be rendered altogether sterile, for, ‘it is no part of an official  duty  to
commit an offence, and never can be’. In the wider sense, these  words  will
take under their umbrella every act constituting an  offence,  committed  in
the course of the same transaction in which the official duty  is  performed
or purports to be performed. The right  approach  to  the  import  of  these
words lies between these two extremes. While on the  one  hand,  it  is  not
every  offence  committed  by  a  public  servant  while  engaged   in   the
performance of his official duty, which is entitled  to  the  protection  of
Section 197(1), an act constituting  an  offence,  directly  and  reasonably
connected with his official  duty  will  require  sanction  for  prosecution
under the said provision. As pointed out by Ramaswami,  J.  in  Baijnath  v.
State of M.P. AIR 1966 SC 220 : (AIR p. 227, para 16)
‘16. … It is the quality of the act that  is  important,  and  if  it  falls
within  the  scope  and  range  of  his  official  duties   the   protection
contemplated  by  Section  197  of  the  Criminal  Procedure  Code  will  be
attracted’.
18. In sum, the sine qua non for the applicability of this section  is  that
the offence charged, be it one of commission or omission, must be one  which
has been committed by the public servant either in his official capacity  or
under colour of the office held by him.” (emphasis in original)”

      In view of the aforesaid discussion, it is  clear  that  the  omission
complained of due to which offence is stated to  have  been  committed,  was
intrinsically connected with discharge of official duty  of  the  appellant,
as such the protection under section  197  Cr.PC  from  prosecution  without
sanction of the competent authority, is available to  the  appellant.  Thus,
he could not have been prosecuted without sanction.  It  would  be  for  the
competent authority to  consider  the  question  of  grant  of  sanction  in
accordance with law. In case sanction is granted  only  then  the  appellant
can be prosecuted and not otherwise. Resultantly, the  impugned  orders  are
set aside, the appeal is allowed.

                                                ……..    ……………………….J.
                                                (V. Gopala Gowda)


New Delhi;                                       ……………………………..J.
April 26, 2016.                                  (Arun Mishra)