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Sardul Singh Caveeshar Vs. The State of Bombay [1957] INSC 54 (23 May 1957) 1957 Latest Caselaw 54 SC

Judges:

Full Judgement

Sardul Singh Caveeshar Vs. The State of Bombay [1957] INSC 54 (23 May 1957) JAGANNADHADAS, B. SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. CITATION: 1957 AIR 747 1958 SCR 161 ACT: Evidence--Conspiracy-Criminal breach of trust-Proof of bogus character of transactions-Intention of accused-Evidence of criminal acts outside the period of conspiracy-Admissibility-Indian Evidence Act (I of 1872), SS. 10, 14. HEADNOTE: A conspiracy to commit criminal breach of trust in respect of the funds of a company by utilising the same to purchase the controlling block of shares of the company itself for the benefit of the appellants was alleged to have been entered into between December 1, 1948, and January 31, 1949. It was the prosecution case that the modus operandi was to screen the utilisation of these funds by showing them as having been advanced for legitimate purposes and invested on proper security but in fact utilizing the same for payment to the appellants. One of the main issues was whether the loans by way of advance of the funds of the company on January 20, I949, were genuine transactions or bogus or make believe, and the question was whether the evidence relating to the further transactions entered into outside the period of the conspiracy in 1949 and I950 with a view to the screening of the original transactions, was admissible in law. Held: (1) In relation to the main purpose of the prosecution viz., proof of the bogus character of the transactions of January, I949, the transactions of I949 and I95o entered into outside the period of conspiracy must, having regard to the ramifications, be taken to be integrally connected and relevant to make out their bogus character, though such evidence may necessitate reference to and narration of the acts of the conspirators beyond the period of conspiracy. (2) The conduct of each individual co-conspirator including his acts, writings and statements irrespective of the time to which it relates can be relied on by the prosecution to show the criminality of the intention of the individual accused with reference to his proved participation in the alleged conspiracy to rebut a probable defence that the participation, though proved, was innocent. Such evidence is admissible under s. 14 Of the Indian Evidence Act. Makin v. The Attorney General for New South Wales, L. R. (1894) A.C. 57, relied on. 162 Per Jagannadhadas J.-Under s. 10 of the Indian Evidence Act the evidence of acts, statements or writings of a coconspirator either under trial or not on trial but outside the period of conspiracy would not be admissible against the other conspirators in proof of the specific issue of the existence of the conspiracy on the authority of Mirza Akbar v. The King Emperor, (1940) L.R. 67 I.A. 336. CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 53 to 56 of 1957. Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated November 21, 1956, of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeals Nos. 861-864 of 1956 arising out of the judgment and order dated June 1, 1956, of the Court of the Additional Sessions Judge for Greater Bombay at Bombay in Sessions Case No. 27/111 Sessions 1955. A. S. R. Chari and M. S. K. Sastri, for the appellants. K.J. Khandalawala, Porus A. Mehta and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent. 1957. May 23. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by JAGANNADHADAS J.-These are appeals by special leave by four persons, who along with one Ramniklal Keshavlal Jhaveri (since acquitted) were committed for trial in the Court of the Sessions Judge of Greater Bombay, on charges of conspiracy to commit criminal breach of trust of the funds of the Jupiter General Insurance Co. Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the Jupiter) and in pursuance of the said conspiracy of having committed criminal breach of trust, some of them being directors and agents of the said company. They were alternatively charged for commission of the offence of criminal breach of trust by some of them as directors and the others for abetting the commission of the criminal breach of trust committed by the directors. The trial before the Sessions Judge was with the aid of a jury. All of them except Jhaveri were found guilty, appellants in Criminal Appeals Nos. 53 and 54, Sardul Singh Caveeshar and Parmeshwar Nath Kaul, by a majority verdict and appellants in Criminal Appeals 163 Nos. 55 and 56, Vallabhdas Pulchand Mehta and Charucharan Guha, by an unanimous verdict. The verdictsof the jury were accepted by the Sessions Judge who sentenced the appellants as follows: Appellant Sardul Singh Caveeshar to rigorous imprisonment for three years and a fine of Rs. 2,500. Appellant Parmeshwar Nath Kaul to rigorous imprisonment for five years and a fine of Rs. 5,000. Appellant Vallabhdas Phulchand Mehta to rigorous imprisonment for five years and a fine of Rs. 5,000. Appellant Charucharan Guha to rigorous imprisonment for three years and a fine of Rs. 2,500. The charge of conspiracy related to the period from December 1, 1948, to January 31, 1949, and comprised 'in all eight persons of whom two Lala Shankarlal Hiralal Bansal (hereinafter referred to as Lala Shankarlal) and Saubhagyachand Umedchand Doshi (hereinafter referred to as Doshi) died before commencement of the trial. One Lala Ram Sharandas alias Ramsharan Lala Haricharan Mahajan (hereinafter referred to as Mahajan) was also a party to the conspiracy. But for some reason or other, the trial against him was separated. The persons who were on trial in the present case are the following. 1.Parmeshwar Nath Kaul, accused No. 1 and appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 54 of 1957 (hereinafter referred to as Kaul). 2.Vallabhdas Phulchand Mehta, accused No. 2 and appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 55 of 1957 (hereinafter referred to as Mehta). 3.Ramniklal Keshvlal Jhaveri, accused No. 3 and since acquitted by the Sessions Judge (hereinafter referred to as Jhaveri). 4.Charucharan Guha, accused No. 4 and appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 56 of 1957 (hereinafter referred to as Guha). 5.Sardul Singh Caveeshar, accused No. 5 and appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 53 of 1957 (hereinafter referred to as Caveeshar). Lala Shankarlal, who was residing at No. 16, Bara Khamba Road, New Delhi, was the managing director 164 of the Tropical Insurance Co. Ltd., New Delhi (hereinafter referred to as the Tropical). He was also a director of the Punjab Central Bank. He had also floated and was controlling a company called the Delhi Swadesi Co-operative Stores (hereinafter referred to as the Delhi Stores). He was also a leader of the Forward Bloc in the year 1948. Accused No. 1, Kaul, is a barrister and was in Lahore till the partition of the country. In December, 1948, he was in Delhi. Accused No. 2 Mehta, at all material times was the manager of the Bombay Office (General) of the Tropical. Mahajan, at all material times was the secretary of the Tropical. He was also a director-in-charge of the Delhi Stores. Accused No. 3, Jhaveri, was a Bombay solicitor and at all material times was carrying on his profession as a solicitor in Bombay. Doshi was till his death, a solicitor in Bombay and was carrying on his profession as such. Accused No. 4, Guha, was in December, 1948, an accountant of the Tropical. Accused No. 5, Caveeshar, was the managing director of the Peoples Insurance Co. He was also the managing director of the New Hindustan Bank. He was for some time a member of the All India Congress Committee. He was also a leading member of the Forward Bloc. The case for the prosecution is that Lala Shankarlal who was the brain behind the conspiracy and who at the time was the managing director and had the control of the Tropical, which by then was financially in a tottering condition, planned along with his confederates to obtain the control of the Jupiter, which at the time was in a sound financial position, by acquiring the controlling block of shares of the Jupiter and utilising the funds of the Jupiter itself for the acquisition of such shares. By the date of the conspiracy the Jupiter had investments of the face value of Rs. two crores. It had 165 issued 1,24,966 ordinary shares of Rs. 100 -each of which Rs. 15 per share was called up. It had also issued cumulative preference shares. Rai Bahadur Girdharilal Bajaj (hereinafter referred to as Bajaj) and Tulsiprasad Khaitan (hereinafter referred to as Khaitan) were at the time, i.e., in 1948, in control of the Jupiter. These persons owned through the New Prahlad Mills Ltd. the controlling block of shares of the Jupiter i.e., about 63,000 shares of the Jupiter, between themselves and their nominees. After negotiations, conducted first through certain persons called Mayadas and Chopra and then, through one Naurangrai, a bargain was settled with Khaitan for the purchase of this controlling block of shares at Rs. 53 per share for a sum of Rs. 33,39,000. Out of this amount a sum of Rs. 5,39,000 was to be paid over to Bajaj and Khaitan directly in cash and only Rs. 28,00,000 would be shown as the price for the purchase of the shares. The arrangement was that on receipt of the cash of Rs. 5,39,000 the management of the Jupiter was to be handed over to Lala Shankarlal and his group and that the balance of the money due of Rs. 28 lakhs was to be paid over to Khaitan on or before January 20, 1949. In default of such payment within the prescribed time, Lala Shankarlal, representing the Tropical, should pay to Khaitan a sum of Rs. 5 lakhs as damages for breach. In pursuance of this agreement Rs. 4,85,000 were paid over to Bajaj on or about December 29, 1948, and a formal agreement dated December 29, 1948, was entered into, incorporating the above terms. On that very day Bajaj and other directors of Khaitan group held a meeting and allotted 1,250 shares straightaway to Lala Shankarlal and four of his nominees viz., Kaul, Mehta, Jhaveri and Doshi, each 250 shares, as qualifying shares for each. They confirmed the transfer of these shares by a resolution and co-opted Lala Shankarlal, Kaul, Mehta, Jhaveri and Doshi as directors and themselves resigned their respective offices as directors. Thereafter Khaitan resignned his position as managing director of the Jupiter and at the same meeting, Lala Shankarlal was appointed in his place as the managing director of the Jupiter. 166 The. transfer of 61,750 shares for the sum of Rs. 28,15,000 to be paid to Bajaj and Khaitan before January 20, 1949, was brought about in the following way. At the meeting of some of the new directors of the Jupiter dated January 11, 1949, it was decided to sell the Jupiter's securities of the face value -of Rs. 15 lakhs at the market rate and to obtain an overdraft accommodation for Rs. 14 lakhs with the Punjab National Bank on the pledge of the Government securities of the Jupiter. At the same meeting a loan of Rs. 25,15,000 purported to have been granted to Caveeshar by way of an equitable mortgage on an alleged application by him dated January 4, 1949, relating to his properties at Delhi soLight to be given as security on the basis of an alleged valuation report of a firm of surveyors. There was another alleged resolution authorising the director for purchase of plots of Delhi Stores for Rs. 2,60,000. It may be mentioned that this Delhi Stores was under the control of Lala Shankarlal and, according to the prosecution, was a defunct Organisation at the time. The plan envisaged by these resolutions was that cash was to be taken out from the Jupiter partly by sale of securities and partly by pledge of securities and that money was to be shown as having been a loan to Caveeshar on the security of his Delhi properties and a further amount as having been invested for the purchase of plots of the Delhi Stores. Lala Shankarlal was to receive these amounts on behalf of Caveeshar and the Delhi Stores, and pay over the cash that would thus come into his hands to Bajaj and Khaitan as per the agreement. This appears-accordina to the prosecution case-to have been actually done in the following way. The safe custody account of the entire holdings of the securities of the Jupiter with the Bank of India was closed by a resolution of the new directors of the Jupiter dated January 11, 1949, and these securities were taken over into the personal custody of Mehta. Thereafter securities of the value of Rs. 30 lakhs were offered for sale through a broker who ultimately could sell only shares of the value of Rs. 15 lakhs. For the remaining Rs. 15 lakhs an. overdraft was raised with the Punjab 167 National Bank on the application of Lala Shankarlal and on the pledge of some of the Government securities of the Jupiter. The sale of securities realised Rs. 13,99,768 and on the pledge of securities a sum of Its. 14,21,812 was obtained, making up a total of Rs. 28,21,580. Rs. 28,15,000 out of it was shown as having been received by the Bank of India and credited in the cash-credit account of the New Prahlad Mills Ltd. It is thus that Khaitan received the balance of the money due under the agreement of December 29, 1948. To prove this case a considerable body of prosecution evidence was given consisting of quite a large number of details. It is necessary to set out the salient features thereof in broad outline as alleged and sought to be proved by the prosecution. This may be dealt with conveniently with reference to three periods, the first comprising the period of conspiracy as mentioned in the charge i.e., December 1, 1948, to January 31, 1949, the second, relating to the period from February 1, 1949, to the end of December, 1949, and the third, the period covering the year 1950. First period : December 1, 1948 to January 31, 1949. The negotiations for the purchase of the controlling block of shares of the Jupiter were carried on from about December 10, 1948. From 10th to 20th the negotiations were through one Mayadas, introduced to Lala Shankarlal by one Chopra. Mayadas was given. a letter of authority on December 15, 1948, by Lala Shankarlal, as the managing director of the Tropical, authorising him to buy for the Tropical the controlling block of shares of the Jupiter at the maximum rate of Rs. 49 per share with the promise of brokerage of Rs. 40,000 on completion of the transaction. Chopra also was acting with Mayadas as broker. These persons were dropped and the further negotiations from the 20th onwards were carried on through one Naurangrai known to Lala Shankarlal for about 40 years. Through him the purchase of the controlling block. of shares numbering 63,000 was agreed to be purchased at Rs. 53 per share. The total purchase value was Rs. 33,39,000. Khaitra asked for advance payment of Rs. 5,39,000 in 168 cash and intimated that agreement would be made mentioning only Rs.28 lakhs as the purchase price. Naurangrai was placed in possession of funds of Rs. 5,39,000 on his executing a pro-note dated December 23, 1948, (Ex. Z-4) for the said amount in favour of the Tropical by two cheques signed by Lala Shankarlal, one for Rs. one lakh on December 22, 1948 (Ex. Z-1) and another for Rs. 4,39,000, dated December 23, 1948, (Ex. Z-3). These amounts were deposited by Naurangrai in his bank account with the Bikanir Bank at Delhi. On December 26, Lala Shankarlal and Naurangrai and Khaitan met at Bombay and further details were discussed on the 26th and 27th. Khaitan insisted on previous payment of Rs. 5,39,000. Lala Shankarlal asked for the list of securities and shares, the valuation report and the balance sheet of the Jupiter. Naurangrai returned back to Delhi, drew Rs. 5 lakhs by way of cash from his bank account and paid therefrom a sum of Rs. 4,85,000 to Bajaj at Ghaziabad. He came back to Bombay and informed Khaitan of the same. Thereupon the agreement, Ex. Z-171, was executed on December 29, 1948. The agreement was to the following effect. The Tropical was to pay the balance of Rs. 28,54,000 on or before January 20, 1949, and on such payment the Jupiter's shares numbering 63,000 were to be delivered over. The shareholder directors belonging to the Khaitan group should resign and nominees of the Tropical should be appointed as directors in their place. If the Tropical failed to pay within the stipulated time, a sum of Rs. 5 lakhs by way of damages was to be paid to Khaitan group and if the Khaitan group failed to carry out their obligations damages of Rs. 2 lakhs were to be paid. Subsequent to this agreement it was ascertained that Khaitan had agreed to pay Naurangrai a commission of Rs. 39,000. Lala Shankarlal undertook to pay the same and to that extent the amount payable by January 20, was understood to be reduced. Therefore, the sum payable under the agreement with the above adjustment was Rs. 28,15,000. The agreement was signed both by Khaitan on behalf of the New prahlad Mills Ltd., which owned the controlling block 169 of shares of the Jupiter and Lala Shankarlal on behalf of the Tropical. On the very same date a meeting of the then Board of directors of the Jupiter was called. At this meeting 1,250 shares were transferred in the names of Lala Shankarlal, Kaul, Mehta, Jhaveri and Doshi, 250 shares for each, in order to qualify them for becoming directors. Transfer of these shares was confirmed by resolution. It is the prosecution case that for these transfers no money was paid by the transferees concerned. At that meeting the various persons who constituted the previous directors tendered their resignations in successive stages. At each stage the resignations were accepted by the rest of the preexisting directors and new directors of Lala Shankarlal's group were co-opted. In the net result the entire Khaitan group of directors made way for the new Lala Shankarlal group of directors and Lala Shankarlal became the managing director. Thereafter there was the first meeting of the new directorate of the Jupiter on January 4, 1949. On that date Kaul was appointed director-in-charge. A new Life subcommittee consisting of Mehta, Jhaveri and Doshi was appointed as also a new finance sub-committee consisting of Lala Shankarlal, Kaul and Mehta, to review the investment position of the company and to invest the company's moneys upon such securities, shares and stocks, in such manner as the committee thought fit. A power of attorney was granted to Lala Shankarlal as the managing director. Kaul and Mehta were authorised individually to operate upon %%II the banking accounts in the name of the company with all the banks. Three policyholder directors as also the general manager, Joel, resigned and their resignations were accepted. This was followed by another meeting of the new directorate on January 11. At that meeting the Board passed a number of resolutions about some of which there is considerable controversy and with reference to which there is the evidence of one Subramaniam for the prosecution. One of the undisputed resolutions of that meeting was to withdraw a letter written by the previous general-manager, Joel, dated January 3, 1949. By that letter (Ex. Z-30), Joel had written to the Bank 22 170 of India, Safe Custody Department, instructing the bank that till further advice, they should not transfer any of the securities held by the bank on behalf of the company. On January ll, 1949, a copy of this resolution was sent to the bank under the signature of Mehta for their information. By another letter of the same date sent by the sub-manager, one Baxi, (Ex. Z-32) the bank was instructed to close the safe custody account and to hand over the entire holdings of the securities of the Jupiter to Mehta. Accordingly all the securities were brought into the office of the Jupiter and kept in a steel cupboard. Two of the disputed resolutions of January II, were resolutions Nos. 7 and 8, one for sale of securities of the Jupiter of the face value of Rs. 15 lakhs at the market rate, and the other for an overdraft account of Rs. 14 lakhs with the Punjab National Bank on pledge of the Government securities of the Jupiter. After the entire shares and securities were withdrawn from the safe custody of the bank, Kaul contacted one Jagirdar, a sub-broker working in the firm of Messrs. Harkisondas Laxmidas, share brokers, and authorised them by letter (Ex. Z-36) dated January 13, 1949, to sell three per cent. conversion loan 1946 of the face value of Rs. 30 lakhs at the best market rate. The brokers sold on the 13th and 14th securities of the face value of Rs. 15 lakhs and told Kaul that the market was dropping and that further sale of those securities was not feasible. The sale of securities of the face value of Rs. 15 lakhs realised a sum of Rs. 13,99,788. Kaul, on behalf of the Jupiter, opened a current account on January 13, in the Punjab National Bank, Bombay. On the 15th, Kaul, on behalf of the Jupiter, sent two letters, one to the Punjab National Bank and another to the Bank of India, stating that they were forwarding per bearer Government securities of the face value of Rs. 14 lakhs and Rs. I lakh respectively and instructed those banks to deliver them to Messrs. Harkisondas Laxmidas against payment and the proceeds to be credited to the account of the company. The above sale proceeds were accordingly paid into the respective banks and the securities were delivered over to the respective parties on January 17, 171 It is the prosecution case that meanwhile Lala Shankarlal approached the Punjab National Bank, Kashmere Gate Branch, Delhi, on January 17, 1949, for the purpose of raising a loan on Government promissory notes. He opened a cashcredit account on the pledge of securities of the face value of Rs. 15 lakhs and passed a promissory note in favour of the bank for the said amount. A loan of Rs. 14 lakhs was then granted and a demand draft dated January 17, for that amount in favour of the Jupiter on the Punjab National Bank, Currimjee House Branch, Bombay, was issued. A list of securities pledged with the bank for the purpose has been put in evidence. The demand draft was brought to Bombay and credited into the account of the Jupiter in the Currimjee House Branch of the Punjab National Bank at Bombay on January 18. Thus by the sale and the pledge of the Jupiter's own securities, a sum of Rs. 27,99,768 was raised and kept available for use. On January 19, Mehta wrote to the Punjab National Bank, Currimjee House Branch, Bombay, to pay a sum of Rs. 28,15,000 to the Bank of India where the New Prahlad Mills Ltd. (Khaitan) had got 61,394 Jupiter's shares lying in cash. credit account and to take delivery of those shares on behalf of the Tropical and to debit Rs. 28,15,000 from the Tropical account with them. On the same date, Mehta, wrote also to the Bank of India, requesting it to deliver 61,394 shares of the Jupiter to the Punjab National Bank, Currimjee House Branch, Bombay, with relevant transfer deed against payment of Rs. 28,15,000 with reference to Khaitan's earlier instructions to the Bank by his letter dated January 3, 1949 (Ex. Z-44). On the 19th, Mehta issued a cheque for Rs. 75,000 on the Indian Bank, Tropical account and deposited the same in the Punjab National Bank, Currimjee House Branch, Bombay, Jupiter account. This cheque was credited into that account on the 20th. On the same day, i.e., 19th, Mehta wrote a letter to the Punjab National Bank, Illaco House Branch, Bombay, in which the Jupiter had its account to transfer the account into the Punjab National Bank., Currimjee House Branch, where, on the 13th, Kaul 172 opened a current account for the Jupiter. Now with this deposit the money to the credit of the Jupiter in the Punjab National Bank, Currimjee House Branch, was Rs. 28,74,768. According to the prosecution it was in reality out of this amount that Khaitan was ultimately paid on January 20, by a cheque for Rs. 28,15,000 as against the transfer of the stipulated number of shares. It is the prosecution case that this payment was camouflaged by certain apparent intermediate transactions. The prosecution case relating to this may now be stated. From January 18 to 20, 1949, five cheques were issued on the Jupiter account in the Punjab National Bank which were all deposited into the account of the Tropical in the Punjab National Bank as follows: 1.A cheque for Rs. 2,55,050, dated January 18, 1949, signed by Kaul on behalf of the Jupiter in favour of the Delhi Stores and endorsed in favour of the Tropical by Guha, purporting to be the director of the Delhi Stores, which according to the prosecution, he was not. This was again endorsed by Mehta on behalf of the Tropical in order to put it into the Tropical account. 2.Two cheques dated January 19, 1949, for Rs. 14,36,000 and Rs. 1,42,450, on the Jupiter account of the Punjab National Bank in favour of the Tropical or order. These cheques are alleged to be written by Guha and signed by Kaul on behalf of the Jupiter, and endorsed on the reverse by Mehta on behalf of the Tropical for deposit in the Tropical account of the Punjab National Bank. Two cheques dated January 20, 1949, for Rs. 8,96,000 and Rs. 36,000, on the Jupiter account of the Punjab National Bank in favour of the Tropical or bearer. Both the cheques were written by Guha and signed by Kaul on behalf of the Jupiter. All these five cheques were deposited into the Tropical account of the Punjab National Bank by a pay-in-slip dated January 20, 1949, alleged to be in the handwriting of Guha and signed by him on the 19th. The total of these cheques comes to Rs. 27,65,700. As a result of 173 the previous instructions given on January 19, by Mehta, to the Punjab National Bank, the Bank paid on January, 20, a sum of Rs. 28,15,000, from the Tropical account to the Bank of India and took delivery of 61,394 shares of the Jupiter from the Bank of India and the Punjab National Bank then held those shares for the Tropical in the Tropical account and Khaitan was paid on the last date stipulated. It would appear that including the 1,250 qualifying shares previously transferred, the shares transferred by Khaitan fell short of the 63,000 shares, by 356 shares, but the deficit appears to have been made up very shortly thereafter. Now, according to the prosecution, this payment of the Jupiter's money for the purchase of the Jupiter's shares was by means of ex facie payment from funds of the Tropical in the Punjab National Bank which were brought up to the requisite level by the deposit of five cheques as specified above in relation to a scheme of camouflaged payment to be gathered from certain resolutions of the new directorate of the Jupiter as they now appear from its resolutions of January 11 and 20, 1949 and later confirmed on January 22. By resolution No. 5, as it now appears, a loan of Rs. 25,15,000 was granted to Caveeshar on his application dated January 4, and the valuation report of N. C. Kothari of Messrs. Master Sathe and Bhuta, surveyors. This loan was on the equitable mortgage of Caveeshar's properties in Delhi, the conditions being, a marketable title, period of loan three years, and other usual clauses in mortgage deeds. The resolution authorised Kaul to advance the above loan on the said terms and get all necessary documents executed and registered at Delhi during the course of next eleven months. Resolution No. 6 authorised the purchase of certain plots in Delhi said to belong to Delhi Stores for a sum of Rs. 2,60,000. On January 20, there was another meeting of the new directorate of the Jupiter at which the minutes of the meeting of January 11, were read and adopted. Resolution No. 10 thereof confirmed the payment of Rs. 25,10,650 to Caveeshar on equitable 174 mortgage of his properties as per the previous resolution No. 5 of January 11. Resolution No. 11 thereof confirmed the purchase of plots from the Delhi Stores and the payment of Rs. 2,55,050 therefor. Resolution No. 9 confirmed the sale of the Jupiter's securities of the face value of Rs. 15 lakhs' and resolution No. 12 confirmed the pledge of the Jupiter's securities of the face value of Rs. 15 lakhs for cash credit account with the Punjab National Bank for Rs. 14 lakhs. Now, on January 22, 1949, there purported to be, according to the prosecution case, a meeting of the Board of directors of the Tropical including Lala Shankarlal. Resolution No. 11 thereof confirmed the purchase of 63,000 shares of the Jupiter on behalf of the Tropical for Rs. 28,15,000. Resolution No. 12 thereof confirmed the transfer of 48,399 shares out of the above 63,000 shares to the Delhi Stores as agreed to by then. By resolution No. 13, sale of the headoffice building of the Tropical and certain plots of land belonging to the Tropical to Caveeshar at Rs. 23,50,000 and Rs. 6,50,000 respectively as per agreement with Caveeshar by the managing director, Lala Shankarlal, on December 23, 1948, was confirmed. By resolution No. 14, plots of land and building in Chandni Chowk, Delhi, sold by the managing director, Lala Shankarlal, at a cost of Rs. 2,60,000 to the Delhi Stores, was approved and confirmed. It is alleged that the resolutions of the Jupiter at the meetings dated 11th and 20th above noticed and of the Tropical dated the 22nd disclosed the scheme of camouflaging which has been resorted to screen the fact that the payment for the purchase of the Jupiter's shares was directly out of the Jupiter's amount. This, according to the prosecution, indicates in its broad outline the manipulations resorted to for the above purposes. There is also evidence let in on behalf of the prosecution of a number of relevant details such as the presence or absence of the requisite entries and papers in the various books of account and other records of the concerned organisations, the Jupiter, the Tropical and the Delhi Stores. Evidence has also been given to show which of the accused was directly a 175 party to which of the various steps. Direct evidence of some of the ex-employees of the Jupiter, in particular of one Subramaniam and of another Rege, has, according to the prosecution, considerable bearing on the events that happened during this period, which would, if accepted, go to indicate the devious and dishonest basis of the above alleged manipulations. In addition to the above it would appear that some of the shareholders who came to know about these transactions sent notices through solicitors to the new directorate of the Jupiter and to some of the accused persons, in particular Lala Shankarlal and Kaul, individually warning them against the illegal and improper dealings with the funds of the company. It is also in evidence that two of the solicitors, Sethia and Joshi, filed a suit against the new directors on January 19, 1949, for an injunction restraining the directors from disposing of the Jupiter's securities so as to enable the Tropical to have the finances for the purchase of the controlling block of the Jupiter's shares. It is the suggestion of the defence that these notices were followed up by institution of a suit at the instance of Khaitan himself, and that ultimately after the money was paid on the 20th within the time, they were dropped. Evidence has also been given for the prosecution about the financial condition and property holdings of the Tropical, of the Delhi Stores, as also of Caveeshar to show that none of them were in any such position as to justify the various transactions put through in their names. In particular, evidence has been given that Caveeshar had no such property as could possibly justify a loan of about Rs. 25 lakhs on his security and that the alleged valuation report was non-existent or bogus. Evidence was also given that the Delhi Stores was a defunct company whose only assets were (1) 39,750 shares of the Tropical of the book value of Rs. 10 per share which had no market quotation, (2) other shares of book value of Rs. 16,879, and (3) cash in the bank of Rs. 133-14-6, and (4) book debts of Rs. 93,40,414. As against these debts it is said that the Delhi Stores had liability to sundry creditors to the extent of Rs. 1,40,259-3-8. The above, 176 in broad outline, is the nature of the evidence-relating to the first period. Secondperiod : February 1, 1949, to the end of December, 1949. Now, we may take up the evidence relating to the second period commencing from February, 1949, to the end of December, 1949. The background relating to this period, according to the prosecution is, that Lala Shankarlal and his other co-conspirators were fully aware of the necessity of showing the transactions of January, 1949, as no longer outstanding as early as possible, so as to escape direct scrutiny there into by the end of the calendar year and it is said that therefore they made some further manipulations with a view to show the moneys advanced to Caveeshar and the Delhi Stores as having been returned before the end of the year. The events which led up to this may now be noticed. On May 25, 1949, there was a meeting of the new directorate of the Jupiter at which Lala Shankarlal informed the directors that Caveeshar was repaying his loan of Rs. 25 lakhs and odd and out of that amount a sum of Rs. 14 lakhs might be invested in purchasing 40,000 shares of the Tropical and Rs. II lakhs on the equitable mortgage of the Tropical's headoffice building. Ultimately, however, this contemplated loan of Rs. 11 lakhs to the Tropical on the equitable mortgage of its head-office building did not materialise for one reason or other. Thereafter, according to the prosecution, there were brought into existence, five transactions, from May 25 to December 31, 1949, which have been referred to in the evidence as follows: Rs. 1.Raghavji loan (5-11-1949) which resulted in repayment of 4,00,000 2.Fresh Caveeshar loan (5-11-1949) which resulted in repayment of 5,30,000 3.Misri Devi loan (20-12-1949) which resulted in repayment of 1,00,000 4. Purchase of 54,000 Tropical shares (25-5-1949 to 20-12-1949) which resulted in repayment of 14,00,000 177 5.Transfer of Caveeshar from the Tropical to Jupiter account of balance (31-12-1949) which resulted in repayment of 80,650 Total... 25,10,650 In order to appreciate these transactions, it is necessary to set out a few more details. Raghavji's son, Chandrakant, was a member of the Forward Bloc, of which Lala Shankarlal was one of the leaders. Chandrakant had close political associations with Lala Shankarlal. Raghavji was a gentleman about 80 years old and a resident of Cutch and had a few properties at that place. According to the prosecution, Chandrakant was persuaded to permit his father's name to be used for the purpose of advancing some moneys on the footing of an equitable mortgage by deposit of title deeds of his father's property in Cutch. At a meeting of the Jupiter's directorate dated November 5, 1949, a loan for Rs. 5 lakhs on the equitable mortgage of Raghavji's properties was sanctioned subject to valuation report and certain terms and conditions specified therein. Notwithstanding that the loan was to be advanced on proper valuation report and other terms, it is the prosecution case and evidence, that this sum of Rs. 5 lakhs was disbursed as follows: Rs. 3 lakhs in cash from the Jupiter's funds and Rs. 2 lakhs as having been received back from Caveeshar and paid over in cash to Raghavji. The payment of these Rs. 2 lakhs was really by book adjustment showing Rs. 2 lakhs as having been paid by the Tropical to Caveeshar out of the moneys of Caveeshar with the Tropical and this amount as having been paid into the Jupiter's account by Caveeshar and paid again out of it to Raghavji. Out of the other Rs. 3 lakhs taken in cash from the Jupiter, Rs. 2 lakhs it is said was not paid to Chandrakant but was shown as having been paid by Caveeshar into the Jupiter's account in reduction of the debt owing from him to the Jupiter. The net result of these adjustments was that Rs. 4 lakhs out of the Caveeshar loan with the Jupiter was shown as reduced. What 23 178 became of the other Rs. one lakh is not quite clear. The next transaction is Caveeshar's fresh loan. At the same meeting of the Board of directors of the Jupiter dated November 5, 1949, whereat Raghavji's loan for Rs. 5 lakhs was sanctioned, a further loan of Rs. 5,30,000 was authorised to be advanced to Caveeshar against pledge of shares of the People's Insurance Co., the period of repayment being mentioned as two years. This transaction merely meant a book adjustment reducing the loan outstanding against Caveeshar and a fresh loan to that extent on a different security. This transaction further reduced the original indebtedness of Caveeshar to the Jupiter by this amount. The third item is the Misri Devi loan. At a meeting of the Board of directors of the Jupiter dated December 20, 1949, an application for loan of Rs. 5 lakhs from Misri Devi shown as the daughter of Lala Dwaraka Das (though she was also the wife of Lala Shankarlal) was said to have been considered and a loan in her favour for Rs. 5 lakhs on the security of her property in New Delhi was sanctioned subject to marketable title, period of three years, and other usual clauses. In anticipation of having to advance this loan a sum of Rs. 2 lakhs appears to have been sent on November 2 2, 1949, by Kaul, from the Jupiter's account in the Punjab National Bank, Bombay, to its account at Delhi. Again on December 27, 1949, Kaul appears to have sent a further sum of Rs. 2 lakhs from the Jupiter's account in the Punjab National Bank, Bombay, to its account at Delhi, by telegraphic transfer. Towards this loan a cheque on the Jupiter's account with the Punjab National Bank at Delhi for Rs. 4 lakhs payable to self or bearer was given and a sum of Rs. one lakh was shown as having been received by the Jupiter from Caveeshar through his Tropical account and shown as paid to Misri Devi. This reduced the Caveeshar loan due to the Jupiter by another Rs. one lakh. At the same meeting of December 20, a resolution was placed on record showing that at the instance of Lala Shankarlal, a bargain was arranged on behalf of the Jupiter for purchase of 54,000 shares of the Tropical instead of 40,000 shares as previously contemplated in the resolution of the 179 directors dated May 25, 1949, for the sum of Rs. 14 lakhs and purchase on this footing was confirmed. The payment of Rs. 14 lakhs by the Jupiter to the Tropical was adjusted by showing the Tropical as having paid Rs. 14 lakhs to Caveeshar and Caveeshar as having paid back to the Jupiter a sum of Rs. 14 lakhs out of the original loan of Rs. 25 lakhs and odd.,,,, Thus in all, by these four transactions the original' Caveeshar's loan on the security of the alleged properties of Caveeshar was reduced by Rs. 24,30,000 leaving a balance of Rs. 80,650. This amount was adjusted by book entries on December 31, showing a transfer of the said amount from his Tropical account towards credit of the Jupiter account. Thus, by December 31, 1949, the entire amount of Rs. 25 lakhs and odd advanced to Caveeshar in January, 1949, on the security of his properties in Delhi was shown as having been wiped out leaving a fresh loan against him on November 5, 1949, for a sum of Rs. 5,30,000 on the security of the shares of the Peoples Insurance Co. It may be recalled here that for the payment of Rs. 28,15,000 to Khaitan on January 20, 1949, the original source of cash, according to the prosecution case, was the sum of Rs. 25,15,000 granted by way of loan to Caveeshar and Rs. 2,60,000 paid to the Delhi Stores for purchase of plots of the Delhi Stores. Out of this the original Caveeshar loan was, by the end of 1949, shown as having been completely wiped out as above stated. So far as the purchase of plots of the Delhi Stores is concerned, it would appear that though in fact the Delhi Stores had no such plots to sell, this transaction was shown as put through in the following way. The resolution of the Board of directors of the Tropical dated January 22, 1949, showed certain plots of land and the building 'in Chandni Chowk, Delhi, belonging to the Tropical, as having been sold to the Delhi Stores for the price of Rs. 2,60,000. Putting these two resolutions together, it would appear that the drawing' out of Rs. 2,60,000 from the Jupiter's funds by virtue of the relevant resolution dated January 11, 1949, was substantially the payment 180 of Rs. 2,60,000 by the Jupiter for the alleged purchase of plots of land and building in Chandni Chowk which belonged to the Tropical. It does not appear that in its ultimate effect this transaction invited serious scrutiny and comment and there is nothing on the record to show that any further attempt was made to camouflage this transaction by fresh transactions. Now in addition to these transactions during this second period there is the evidence given by the prosecution of a number of other details during this period. Of these the most important is that which relates to a notice sent on May 13, 1949, by an ex-employee of the Jupiter, Rege, through solicitors to Lala Shankarlal and Kaul, alleging fraud in respect of purchase of 63,000 Jupiter's shares from Khaitan. This was followed up by him by a misfeasance petition dated August 10, 1949, in the High Court of Bombay against all the directors of the Jupiter, and this in its turn led, according to the prosecution, to certain intimidating actions against Rege said to have been taken by Lala Shankarlal, Kaul and Mehta, as a result of which Rege, it is said, was coerced into withdrawing his petition followed by the ultimate dismissal of that petition by, order dated September 15, 1949. During this period there were also acute differences between the directors on one side and the brokers, Chopra and Mayadas, on the other for the brokerage of Rs. 40,000 to which, according to them, they were entitled for the original negotiations carried out through them with the Khaitan group for purchase of the controlling block of the Jupiter's shares. It is also said that during this period various ante-dated entries, vouchers and other documents were brought into existence in order to show an appearance of regularity with reference to the transactions during the period of conspiracy in December, 1948, and January, 1949. There are also certain letters of this period found or seized from the office of the Tropical of the dates of August 10, December 21 and 22, 1949, purporting to have been written, the first by Kaul to Lala Shankarlal and the second and third by Guha to Lala Shankarlal. These letters, if true, 181 are revealing, but are of course evidence only against themselves. It is of some importance for the prosecution case against Caveeshar to notice that there are also two letters of this period alleged to be from Caveeshar to Chopra dated March 17 and 30,1949, the first authorising Chopra to arrange for negotiations to purchase the controlling block of shares of the Empire of India Life Assurance Co. Ltd. and the second offering to bring about a settlement in connection with the claim by Chopra and Mayadas for commission relating to the purchase of the Jupiter's shares. Third period: During the year 1950. The events of the third period as alleged by the prosecution and in respect of which the prosecution has given evidence may now be stated. The main argument on behalf of the appellants before us relates to the admissibility of the evidence relating to this period. The background for the events of this period was-according to the prosecution-the situation that arose from the strong attitude taken by the auditors in the course of their audit of the affairs of the Jupiter for the year 1949, which was taken up at the commencement of 1950. The transactions of the Jupiter during the year 1949 which came under their scrutiny are said to have aroused their concern and this led them to probe into the circumstances relating to the original Caveeshar loan in January, 1949, to the tune of Rs. 25,10,650. On January 6, 1950, the auditors sent a letter to the Jupiter demanding inspection of the documents relating to the said loan of Caveeshar. This was followed up by a further letter dated February 6, from the auditors requesting for production of the copy of the mortgage deed, valuation report and all other documents and papers relating to this Caveeshar loan as also for the inspection of papers and documents relating to (1) Raghavji loan, (2) Fresh Caveeshar loan, (3) Misri Devi loan, and (4) purchase of 54,000 Tropical shares for Rs. 14 lakhs. In that letter of February 6, the auditors stated as follows: 182 "We consider the above transactions mostly unconscionable and we fail to understand how any responsible management could sell Government securities and invest the proceeds in a huge lot of shares in Tropical Insurance Co. Ltd. and large advances on shares of Peoples Insurance Co. Ltd., loans on properties in Cutch etc. We do not see the basis on which nearly Rs. 26 per share of Rs. 10 was paid for purchase of Tropical Insurance Company's shares. We consider the position extremely serious and shall therefore thank you to immediately send a copy of this report to the Superintendent of Insurance and also appraise the shareholders of the contents of this report forthwith." No reply thereto having been received, the auditors sent a copy of their letter of February 6, to each of the directors of the Jupiter individually with a forwarding letter on February 14, 1950. The next five months were taken upaccording to the prosecution -in the attempt of the directors of the Jupiter to put off or to evade the auditors by involving them in a good deal of correspondence, oral explanation, personal meetings, and so forth but without the production of the various documents called for excepting only a few. This resulted in a letter from the auditors to the Jupiter dated July 24, 1950, enclosing their draft report to the shareholders setting out their criticisms of the transactions of the directors for the year 1949, and stating that only a cancelled pronote of Caveeshar and a receipt by him were shown to them in respect of the mortgage loan of Rs. 25,10,650 to Caveeshar. This, according to the prosecution, was followed up by feverish activities of the directors to bring about the screening by repayment, of the transactions from May to December, 1949, viz., (1) Caveeshar fresh loan, (2) Raghavji loan, (3) Misri Devi loan and (4) purchase of the Tropical shares. Repayment of Caveeshar fresh loan of Rs. 5,30,000 to the Jupiter, was done by raising money by sale of the Tropical securities and paying that money to the Jupiter in discharge of Caveeshar's fresh loan. It appears that the Tropical securities of the face value of 183 Rs. 6 lakhs were pledged with the Grindlays Bank, New Delhi, for an overdraft account of the Tropical. It is said that these Tropical securities were got released from the Grindlays Bank by substituting for them the Jupiter's securities of the face value of Rs. 5,30,000. The prosecution case is that Kaul, lifted these Jupiter's securities and gave them to Mehta and that Mehta flew to Delhi, handed over these securities to the Grindlays Bank (presumably as belonging to the Tropical) and got released the previously pledged Tropical securities. The Tropical securities so released appear to have been sold on September 12, 1950, and to have realised Rs. 5,01,592-1-2. That amount is said to have been deposited in the Tropical's account with the Indian Bank. On September 14, Mehta is said to have drawn a cheque for Rs. 5,30,000 on the Indian Bank in favour of the Jupiter and sent it with a covering letter to the Jupiter stating that it was repayment by Caveeshar of his loan of Rs. 5,30,000 which had been given to him by the Jupiter as per the Jupiter's resolution dated November 5, 1949. The necessary book entries are said to have been made, and a receipt for Rs. 5,30,000 is said to have been sent to Caveeshar. On October 27, 1950, Mehta is said to have brought a sum of Rs. 17,158-12-0 in cash to the room of Kaul in the Jupiter's office and to have paid in cash to the accountant of the Jupiter in the presence of Kaul and Guha. This amount was credited on that date in the Jupiter's account as payment of interest due on the two loans to the Jupiter by Caveeshar. Thus the further Caveeshar's loan was shown to have been completely repaid with interest by entries in the Jupiter's books dated September 14 and October 27, 1950. This was followed up by the inclusion of narration in the report of the Jupiter for the year 1949 that the loans advanced to Caveeshar with interest thereon were fully paid back to the Jupiter and that all documents pertaining to the said loans were returned to Caveeshar. The further adjustments for repayment of Raghavji loan and Misri Devi loan and in respect of the purchase of 54,000 Tropical shares by the Jupiter in December, 1949, are said to be connected with the attempts 184 of the accused to acquire the controlling block of shares of the Empire of India Life Assurance Co. Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the Empire of India) in order to utilise the funds thereof for these adjustments. The details of how the controlling block of shares of that Company were negotiated for and acquired are not necessary to be gone into in detail for the purposes of this case and the same may be mentioned in broad outline. It is part of the prosecution case that anticipating the trouble that was likely to arise from the transactions of 1948 and 1949 with the auditors, Lala Shankarlal and other directors conceived an idea as early as in March and May, 1949, to purchase the controlling block of shares of the Empire of India from one Ramratan Gupta. There appear to have been some unfruitful negotiations in this behalf for nearly a year. But finally by October 5, 1950, an agreement was executed under which a sum of Rs. 10 lakhs was to be paid in advance to Ramratan Gupta and another sum of Rs. 33 lakhs and odd within thirty days thereafter and the controlling block of shares of the Empire of India of 2,618 were to be handed over to one Damodar Swarup Seth, a nominee of Lala Shankarlal. This amount of Rs. 43 lakhs and odd is said to have been paid up by means of a number of cheques as follows: Rs. 1.On October 5, 1950(i) Cheque by Damodar Swarup Seth (Ex. Z-10) for.... 8,00,000 (ii) Cheque by Bhudev Sanghi in favour of Damodar Swarup Seth (Ex. Z-11) for... 2,00,000 Total of I 10,00,000 11. On October 16,1950, six chequesby Damodar Swarup Seth in favour of Rs. (i) Reyer Mills Ltd. for.... 10,55,844 (ii) Laxmi Ratan Cotton Mills for.... 8,06,895 185 (iii) Premkumar Gupta for...... 6,71,787 (iv) Stores India Ltd. for.... 36,799 (v) Gulabchand Jain for.. 97,500 (vi) Biharilal Ramcharan for5,04,072 III. On October 27, 1950(i) Cheque by Damodar Swarup Seth (Ex. Z-13) for 2,08,650 Total of II & III 33,81,547 The total of the first two cheques is Rs. 10 lakhs which was paid as advance. Tee total of the remaining seven cheques comes to Rs. 33,81,547 which was shown as consideration for the purchase of 2,618 shares of the Empire of India. Thus, on the payment of Rs. 31,72,897 on October 16, 1950, by means of the six cheques above mentioned, the controlling block of 2,618 shares of the Empire of India was handed over to Damodar Swarup Seth. It is the case of the prosecution that Damodar Swarup Seth was able to draw these various cheques of the total value of over Rs. 43 1/2 lakhs because certain securities of the Jupiter set out in Ex. Z-47 of the face value of Rs. 48,75,000 were withdrawn from the Jupiter in pursuance of letters written by Kaul and Guha and lifted away and handed over without due authority to Damodar Swarup Seth who opened a cash credit account with the Punjab National Bank on the strength of those securities. Having thus secured the controlling block of shares of the Empire of India in October, 1950, it is the prosecution case, that hurried steps were taken to show, that the Raghavji loan and Misri Devi loan advanced by the Jupiter towards the end of 1949 were paid back with interest to the Jupiter in cash, and that the Tropical shares Which were shown as having been purchased by the Jupiter in 1949 were sold away and realised the cash for which they were purchased. On October 17, 1950, the day next after the purchase of the controlling block of shares of the Empire of India, one Roshanlal Kohli, a broker, is said to have offered to the Empire of India to sell from the 24 186 Jupiter its securities of the face value of Rs. 20 lakhs. On October 19, 1950, Roshanlal Kohli, purporting to act for the Jupiter wrote to the Empire of India that for the purchase an advance payment of Rs. 20 lakhs is to be made. This was followed by a reply from the Empire of India agreeing to the same and an actual payment of the amount by two bearer cheques issued by the Empire of India, one for Rs. 15 lakhs dated October 26, 1950, and the other for Rs. 5 lakhs dated October 27, 1950. No entry is said to have been made in the Jupiter's records as to the receipt of this amount though an entry of such payment was made in the records of the Empire of India. But it is said that this amount of Rs. 20 lakhs was utilised for adjusting the Raghavji loan as well as the purchase of the Tropical shares by the Jupiter. It is the prosecution evidence that Rs. 14 lakhs out, of Rs. 15 lakhs obtained on the bearer cheque of October 26 was paid in cash into the Jupiter account with the Punjab National Bank, Bombay, on October 26 itself showing the same as the sale proceeds of 54,000 Tropical shares which the auditors had objected to as being an unconscionable investment. The actual payment was made into the Jupiter account of the Punjab National Bank, Bombay, by one Bhagwan Swarup and another Bhudev Sanghi. A letter was obtained, signed by Bhudev Sanghi (a nephew of Lala Shankarlal) (Ex. Z-152) that 54,000 Tropical shares belonging to the Jupiter were sold by him as a broker, and that the sale proceeds thereof were credited that day into the account of the Jupiter in the Punjab National Bank at Bombay and the corresponding entries were made in the investment register of the Jupiter. It is said that notwithstanding this transaction the Tropical shares remained in the safe custody account of the Jupiter in the Bank of India right up to January 2, 1951, when on receipt of a letter dated January 2,1951 (Ex. Z-293) by Kaul to the Bank of India, they delivered all his shares. These Tropical shares appear to have been delivered over to a clerk of the Jupiter and handed over by him to Guha. It is said that these shares are now no longer traceable. The other 187 bearer cheque for Rs. 5 lakhs drawn from the funds of the Empire of India, it is said, came into the Jupiter account as follows and purported to be repayment of Raghavji loan. A sum of Rs. 5,18,388-14-3 was put in cash on October 27, 1950, into the Comilla Bank purporting to show it as sent by Raghavji in repayment of the mortgage loan taken by him from the Jupiter with interest thereon. There is a receipt issued by Kaul to Chandrakant, son of Raghavji, showing that Rs. 5,18,388-14-3 was received in full repayment of the mortgage loan. An entry was also made in the Jupiter's cash book that interest was paid up-to-date. With regard to the repayment of Misri Devi loan in the books of the Jupiter there is an entry dated October 7, 1950, showing a sum of Rs. 1,25,000 as withdrawn from the Imperial Bank. On the same date there is another entry showing a sum of Rs. 4,25,000 as withdrawn from the Bank of India, Bombay. On that very day, i.e., October 7, two cheques totalling Rs. 5,50,000 were deposited with the Punjab National Bank, Bombay. Kaul purported to send a letter to Lala Shankarlal informing him that the amount of Rs. 5,50,000 was being sent for the purchase of land and building belonging to Sir Sobha Singh. The Punjab National Bank, Bombay, was instructed to transfer the above mentioned sum to their branch at Tropical Building at Delhi to the credit of the account of the Jupiter. All this was done between October 7 and 10. On October 10, a memo was received from the Punjab National Bank, Tropical Building, Delhi, informing that the sum of Rs. 5,50,000 had been received by them. The next day, i.e., on October 11, a cheque for Rs. 5,50,000 was drawn on that Bank by Lala Shankarlal in his capacity as the managing , director of the Jupiter. On the reverse of this cheque an endorsement was made by Lala Shankarlal. It is the suggestion of the prosecution that cash was obtained on it and that a demand draft for the said amount was obtained from the Grindlays Bank in favour of the Jupiter on behalf of Misri Devi (wife of Lala Shankarlal) on October 12. This draft was signed on the reverse by Kaul. It was 188 received in Bombay and was deposited in the Jupiter's account in the Bank of India. Misri Devi loan was for Rs. 5 lakhs and a sum of Rs. 18,062-8-0 was by then due as interest thereupon. On October 16, entries were made in the cash book of the Jupiter showing that the loan of Misri Devi for Rs. 5 lakhs with interest was recovered. The excess payment of Rs. 31,937-8-0 was shown in the first instance as credited to suspense account and thereafter as having been refunded to Misri Devi on October 18. Thus the Misri Devi loan was shown in the books as having been also completely repaid. Thus by these various adjustments and manipulations, the four transactions, viz., (1) Caveeshar fresh loan on the security of the Peoples Insurance Company's securities, (2) Raghavji's loan on the security of his properties in Cutch, (3) Misri Devi's loan on the security of her building in New Delhi, and (4) purchase of 54,000 Tropical shares by the Jupiter, which were all strongly objected to along with the original Caveeshar loan of Rs. 25 lakhs and odd, were shown as realised back in actual cash by October 27, 1950. A letter was then written by the solicitors of the Jupiter under instructions of Kaul to the auditors to attend on October 28, 1950, at the office of the Jupiter and to verify the accounts and moneys received from the repayments of the loans and from the sale of the Tropical shares. On October 29, the auditors went to the office of the Jupiter and verified the same and were satisfied that the moneys were received. The repayment of these various loans and the sale of the Tropical shares shown as having been realised in actual cash would of course also clear up the objections which the auditors raised as regards the original Caveeshar loan on account of the requisite papers relating thereto not being forthcoming. The auditors, having thus been satisfied, signed the audit certificate and the report of the Jupiter for the year ending 1949, and appended a note that they had objected to certain loans and purchases and that these loans had been recovered and that the shares had been sold and the moneys received. 189 On October 23, 1950, a. general body meeting of the shareholders of the Jupiter was held at which Lala Shankarlal, Kaul, Mehta, Guha and Caveeshar, were present and the final report of the auditors and the reply of the directors to the original objections of the auditors were read. The directors asserted at the meeting that imaginary mistakes and nervous suspicion was all that the auditors had found in respect of their management for the year and that the events of the last 12 months were a complete refutation of the fear, suspicion and bias of the auditors. It is now necessary to trace the distribution of the lot of 63,000 shares of the Jupiter which were purchased by Lala Shankarlal and his group from Khaitan. It may be recalled that on January 20, 1949, only 61,061 shares which stood in the name of the New Prahlad Mills were handed over. The remaining 1,939 shares which stood in the names of others (presumably also belonging to the group of Khaitan) were transferred partly before and partly after, making up 63,000 shares. Out of these, 250 shares each were transferred at the outset as qualifying shares, in the names of Lala Shankarlal, Kaul, Mehta, Jhaveri and Doshi, totalling 1,250. These transfers were confirmed by the resolution of the directors of the Jupiter dated December 29, 1948. Another 250 shares were transferred in the name of Sarat Chandra Bose on January 20, 1949, but it would appear that he did not accept the same then and intimated his non-acceptance some time much later. On August 31, 1949, 37,949 shares were transferred to the name of Delhi Stores and 14,601 shares were transferred in the name of the Tropical and two further lots of 4,475 each were transferred in the names of Lala Shankarlal and Caveeshar. On September 13, 1950, out of the lot of 37,949 shares standing in the name of the Delhi Stores, 4,000 shares were kept standing in the name of the Delhi Stores and the balance of 33,949 were distributed as follows: 3025 shares in the name of Lala Shankarlal 3025 shares in the name of Caveeshar 50 shares in the name of Kaul 7075 shares in the name of Mehta 190 7500 shares in the name of Chandulal Ratanchand Shah, an employee of the Tropical 7500 shares in the name of Himatlal F. Parikh, an employee of the Tropical 5774 shares in the name of Himatlal Harilal Shah. Out of the lot of 14,601 shares kept in the name of the Tropical 7,500 shares were transferred to the name of one Baburam and 7,101 shares were transferred to the name of Kaul. Out of another lot of 409 shares which were purchased, 339 shares were transferred to the name of Kaul. Thus the position of the distribution of the purchased Jupiter's shares as on September 13, 1950, was as follows: 7750 shares in the name of Lala Shankarlal 7740 shares in the name of Kaul 7325 shares in the name of Mehta 7500 shares in the name of Caveeshar 4000 shares in the name of the Delhi Stores 7500 shares in the name of Chandulal Ratanchand 7500 shares in the name of Himatlal F. Parikh 5774 shares in the name of Himatlal Harilal Shah 7500 shares in the name of Baburam 250 shares in the name of Jhaveri 250 shares in the name of Doshi 250 shares in the name of Sarat Chandra Bose 70 shares in the name of the Tropical. 63,409 Total. This makes a total of 63,409 shares comprising 63,000 shares of the controlling block which were originally purchased from Khaitan group and 409 shares subsequently purchased which has nothing to do with the present case. It may be noticed that no shares were transferred in the name of Guha and that very substantial number of shares were transferred in the names of the various other accused. It may also be noticed that three persons who are not accused in the case, viz., Chandulal Ratanchand, Himatlal F. Parikh, Himatlal Harilal Shah, had also very substantial number of shares transferred to them. 191 The case of the prosecution is that for the transfer of all these shares in the names of the various accused no money was paid by them and that it was the distribution amongst themselves of the major portion of the original acquisition of 63,000 shares which, according to the prosecution case, were in fact purchased by utilising the very funds of the Jupiter over which they obtained the control. This, according to the pro. secution, completes the chain of misappropriation by the various accused. Since the appeals before the High Court and before us are against the convictions and sentences based on the acceptance of the verdict of the jury against each of the accu

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