P. Venkatachala Udayan
v.
Executive Officer, Rasipuram Panchayat Board
(High Court Of Judicature At Madras)
Criminal Revision No. 740 Of 1948 & Criminal Revision No. Petn. No. 697 Of 1948 | 14-07-1949
(1) The petitioner, a ryot living within Rasipuram Panchayat limits, has been convicted under Sections 212 and 194 (1) (b), Madras Local Boards Act, 1920, for installing a five horse power motor and a pump set in R. S. No. 25/5 (Moolai well) in Koneripatti village within the Rasipuram Panchayat limits without having been granted a license by the Panchayat and has been fined Rs. 100. Mr. V. V. Srinivasa Aiyangar, for the petitioner, urged six reasons for quashing the conviction. I need consider only two of them as either of them ia enough to quash the conviction. The first is that S. 194 (1) (b) will apply only to installations in premises for the purpose of industries and factories, the minor head under which this section comes, and will have no possible application to a pump installed in a field-well for irrigation purposes. The learned Crown prosecutor agreed. On this ground alone the petitioners conviction must be quashed. All the considerations of inconvenience to neighbours by this petitioners drawing away by means of his pump all the subsoil water are irrelevant for the purpose of this criminal case.
(2) The next contention was that under Section 212 (11), Local Boards Act, the application for the license must be deemed to have been allowed as the page 1 of 2 P. Venkatachala Udayan vs. Executive Officer, Rasipuram Panchayat Board (14. 07. 19. . . 6/19/2007 petitioner applied for a license on 10th September 1946, and orders on it were not communicated to him within thirty days. The order of refusal was only on 12th February 1947. Such cataleptic sleeps over petitions are the very things disapproved of and provided in Section 212 (11). The lower Courts went wrong in stating that the thirty days given in Section 212 (11) were not sufficient to consult the Health Officer and others and so the provision in Section 212 (11) must be ignored. The provision is a mandatory one passed by the Legislature after mature consideration. It is not for Magistrates to ignore it and stretch a point against a person accused of a criminal offence and fine him. It is only the legislature which can amend it and extend the time if it deems it. And why should it do so when thirty days are ample in all conscience to pass orders on such applications, and cars and air mail make communication quicker So the petitioner must be deemed to have been granted the license for the pump for that year even if one was required and must be acquitted on that ground also.
(3) In the end, I set aside the conviction and sentence, acquit the petitioner, and order the fine if paid, to be refunded.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties K. Sankara Shastri, V.V. Srinivasa Iyengar, Advocates.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE PANCHAPAKESA AYYAR
Eq Citation
AIR 1950 MAD 38
LQ/MadHC/1949/179
HeadNote
Local Government — Madras Local Boards Act, 1920 (2 of 1920) — Ss. 212 and 194 — Installation of pump in field-well for irrigation purposes without license — Conviction under S. 194 (1) (b) — Propriety of — Held, S. 194 (1) (b) will apply only to installations in premises for the purpose of industries and factories, and will have no possible application to a pump installed in a field-well for irrigation purposes — Hence, conviction quashed — Further, application for license must be deemed to have been allowed as orders on it were not communicated to petitioner within thirty days — Hence, petitioner must be deemed to have been granted the license for the pump for that year even if one was required and must be acquitted — Fine, if paid, to be refunded — Penal Code, 1860, S. 33