Skip to content
How to use Judgment tools
  1. Click Tools to open PDF, Print, Tag, Note, Favourite, and CiteSignal.
  2. Use Brief & Ask in the toolbar for the AI Brief and case chat.
  3. Jump to sections with the pills below the help bar.

Narasingha Choudhury Vs. State

Narasingha Choudhury vs State

Disposition Revision allowed Court Orissa Decided Sep 21, 1990
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/533379

For advocates & juniors · 7-day free trial

Brief this judgment before chambers

Stop skimming 50 pages - get an 18-section AI Brief on this case, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial, no card required.

  • 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
  • Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
  • Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
  • Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases

No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account

Citation
Court
Orissa High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Criminal Revision No. 596/86
Subject
Electricity
Disposition
Revision allowed

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

- LABOUR & SERVICES Pay Scale:[Tarun Chatterjee & R.M. Lodha,JJ] Fixation - Orissa Service Code (1939), Rule 74(b) Promotion - Government servant, by virtue of Rule 74(b), gets higher pay than what he was getting immediately before his promotion - Circular Dated 19.3.1983 modifying earlier Circular Dated 18.6.198...

Key legal issue
Electricity
Outcome / disposition
Revision allowed
Acts & sections
Indian Electricity Act, 1910 - Sections 28 and 41

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Narasingha Choudhury

Advocate S.D. Das, Adv.

Respondent

State

Advocate H.K. Jena, Adv.

Legal References

Acts
Indian Electricity Act, 1910 - Sections 28 and 41
Reported In
71(1991)CLT717; 1991CriLJ1025

Excerpt

- labour & services pay scale:[tarun chatterjee & r.m. lodha,jj] fixation - orissa service code (1939), rule 74(b) promotion - government servant, by virtue of rule 74(b), gets higher pay than what he was getting immediately before his promotion - circular dated 19.3.1983 modifying earlier circular dated 18.6.1982 resulting in reduction of pay of employee on promotion held, it is not legal. statutory rules cannot be altered or amended by such executive orders or circulars or instructions nor can they replace statutory rules. - his appeal against the conviction and sentence having failed, he has preferred this revision. 'business' involves the concept of a commercial activity and hence the act complained of must be supply of energy to the public by way of a commercial activity. advocate has not been able to show any other provision under which the act complained of against the petitioner is punishable or if it becoming an offence......both the courts found the charge to be proved and hence convicted the petitioner.2. the sole submission urged by mr. das, the learned counsel appearing for the petitioner, is that neither section 28 nor section 41 has any application to the facts of the case and that accepting the prosecution case in toto to be true, no offence under the sections is made out. section 28, so far as is relevant, provides that a person other than a licencee shall not engage in the business of supplying energy to the public except with the previous sanction of the state government and in accordance with such conditions as the state government may fix in this behalf and that any agreement to the contrary shall be void. section 41 prescribes a penalty for contravention of section 28 and provides that any person who engages in the business of supplying energy in violation of section 28 is punishable with fine which may extend to three thousand rupees, and in the case of a continuing contravention, with daily fine which may extend to three hundred rupees. the essence of illegal conduct to which exception is taken under section 28 is that the person who is not a licencee must have engaged in the business of supplying energy to the public. 'business' involves the concept of a commercial activity and hence the act complained of must be supply of energy to the public by way of a commercial activity. since it is the admitted case of all the witnesses that the petitioner had taken connection from his rice mill to his own godown, cow-shed and the electric motor, both the ingredients of section are conspicuously absent as the petitioner was not involved in any business of supplying energy and that too, to the public. section 41 being a penalty section for violation of section 28, no offence can be said to have been committed so as to be punishable since section 28 itself has no application.3. the learned addl. govt. advocate has not been able to show any other provision under which the.....

Full Judgment

ORDER

L. Rath, J.

1. The petitioner was convicted Under Section 41 of the Indian Electricity Act for having violated the provisions of Section 28 of the Act and was sentenced to fine of Rs. 1000/-, in default to undergo SI for three months. His appeal against the conviction and sentence having failed, he has preferred this revision. The allegation which the petitioner faced during the trial was that he had taken electric connection from his rice mill to a godown, cow-shed and an electric motor for which he had no authority. Both the courts found the charge to be proved and hence convicted the petitioner.

2. The sole submission urged by Mr. Das, the learned counsel appearing for the petitioner, is that neither Section 28 nor Section 41 has any application to the facts of the case and that accepting the prosecution case in toto to be true, no offence under the Sections is made out. Section 28, so far as is relevant, provides that a person other than a licencee shall not engage in the business of supplying energy to the public except with the previous sanction of the State Government and in accordance with such conditions as the State Government may fix in this behalf and that any agreement to the contrary shall be void. Section 41 prescribes a penalty for contravention of Section 28 and provides that any person who engages in the business of supplying energy in violation of Section 28 is punishable with fine which may extend to three thousand rupees, and in the case of a continuing contravention, with daily fine which may extend to three hundred rupees. The essence of illegal conduct to which exception is taken Under Section 28 is that the person who is not a licencee must have engaged in the business of supplying energy to the public. 'Business' involves the concept of a commercial activity and hence the act complained of must be supply of energy to the public by way of a commercial activity. Since it is the admitted case of all the witnesses that the petitioner had taken connection from his rice mill to his own godown, cow-shed and the electric motor, both the ingredients of Section are conspicuously absent as the petitioner was not involved in any business of supplying energy and that too, to the public. Section 41 being a penalty Section for violation of Section 28, no offence can be said to have been committed so as to be punishable since Section 28 itself has no application.

3. The learned Addl. Govt. Advocate has not been able to show any other provision under which the act complained of against the petitioner is punishable or if it becoming an offence. In that view of the matter, it must be held that no case was made out by the prosecution of an offence having been committed by the petitioner and hence his conviction and sentence are set aside.

4. In the result, the revision is allowed.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial