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Tuesday, July 5, 2022

EVOLUTION OF CRIMINAL MISAPPROPRIATION WITH TIME PASSAGE

 

CRIMINAL MISAPPROPRIATION SECTION 386

The next issue before us is, to consider whether the prosecution has established the charge of misappropriation in this case. The Learned Trial Judge after analyzing the evidence had proceeded to discharge the Accused-Appellant from the count of cheating which is the 1ST count in the Indictment. Since the two counts in the Indictment are alternative counts, I see no reason for the trial judge to record a discharge in the 1ST count, since the court had the discretion to convict the accused for either of the offences.  The second count is one under section 386 of the Penal Code, read with the provisions of section 5 of the Offences against Public Property Act No 12 of 1982.

 

Section 386 of the Penal Code reads as follows;

"Whoever dishonestly misappropriates or converts to his own use any movable property shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine or with both."

 In a case of Criminal Misappropriation actus reuse comprise three facets namely,

 a. There should be misappropriation or conversion of the property by the accused

 b. The properly must be movable property

 c. The property should belong to a person other there the accused

The requisite mens rea of this offence derives from the element of dishonesty and it was considered as an initial innocent taking of the property followed by a guilty state of mind at a later stage in a series of decided cases including Kanavadipillai Vs. Koswotte (1914) 4 Balasingham's Notes 74, Peiris Vs. Anderson (1928) 6 Times of Ceylon Reports 49 and Gratiaen Perera 61 NLR 522, until it was overturned in the case of Attorney General Vs. Menthis 61 NLR 561.

 In the case of Menthis Sinnethamby J observed that

"The Penal Code departed in this respect from the English law and made it an offence to misappropriate property even if the original possession was honest. Explanation 2, it seems to me, was merely intended to emphasize the difference between the law in England and under the Code but it does not postulate that in order to constitute criminal misappropriation the initial taking must always be honest. Indeed it suggests that an initial dishonest taking also amounts to criminal misappropriation for it states that a person who finds property and takes it "for the purpose of protecting it for, or of restoring it to, the owner, does not take or misappropriate it dishonestly", thereby suggesting that if the finder does not take it for such a purpose he will be guilty of the offence.

 The main provisions of Section 386 make dishonest misappropriation at any stage an offence; Explanation 2 only provides for a special case where the initial taking is honest and its intended to protect the finder of property not in the possession of anyone so long, and only so long, as his continued possession of that property is honest. If, of course, the property taken was in the possession of some person the resulting offence would be theft. In my opinion, therefore in order to constitute misappropriation under our law it is not necessary that there should be an innocent initial taking. If the initial taking of the property not in the possession of anyone is dishonest then too the offence is made out. In regard to this, I agree with the view expressed by Justice Moseley in Salgado V. Mudali Pulle (supra).

 " However when going through the judgment of the Learned High Court Judge I observe that instead of considering the legal provisions required to be established a charge under section 386, the trial judge had proceeded to consider the requirement to establish a charge under section 388 a charge under Criminal Breach of Trust. Whilst discussing the provision of section 388 of the Penal Code Learned Trial Judge had applied the evidence led in the trial for the legal requirement in a charge of Criminal Breach of Trust and concluded that the Accused had used or disposed of that property in violation of any legal contract expressed or implied which he has made touching the discharge of such trust (Page 29 and 30 of the Judgment).

 In the absence of consideration under section 386 of the Penal Code, whether the Accused-Appellant "dishonestly misappropriated or converts to his own use" the said money, specially in the light of documents marked P-14 and ~- t 9 I observe that it is unsafe to conclude that the available material is sufficient to convict the Accused-Appellant for the second count

 

 

 

Walgamage v/s The Attorney-General SC Appeal No. 38 of 90 & CA No. 126 of 85 & MC Matara No. 5 of 8  Decided On, 10 July 1991

 
Special leave to appeal was granted in this case in view of conflicting decisions (in A.G. v. Menthis,(1) and Ranasinghe v. Wijendra,(2) and the decisions cited therein) upon the question whether to constitute the offence of criminal misappropriation or criminal breach of trust it is essential that the initial taking be innocent.

The Appellant was convicted of criminal breach of trust, in respect of a sum of Rs. 50,000/- while being employed as Manager of a Rural Bank. The Rural Bank accepted savings deposits, and granted small loans, and also carried on the business of a pawn broker. According to prescribed operating procedures, its cash balance at any given time should not have exceeded Rs. 5,000/-. If the Bank required cash, a sum not exceeding Rs. 5,000/- at a time was obtained from the Multi-Purpose Co-operative Society ("M.P.C.S.") within whose premises it functioned.

The Bank's cashier would make an oral request for cash to the Appellant, who would prepare a voucher for that purpose, and submit it to the Credit Manager of the M.P. C .S. The latter was expected to satisfy himself that cash was actually required, and would then authorize a cheque to be drawn for the stipulated amount, in the name of the Appellant. A cheque would then be prepared, and duly signed, and delivered to the Appellant, who would endorse it; his endorsement would be authenticated by the Accountant, and the cheque would then be presented to the cashier of the M.P.C.S., who would pay cash. The Appellant was expected to hand over the cash to the cashier of the Bank.

Fourteen vouchers for Rs. 5,000/- each were prepared by the Appellant, at times when the cashier had not required cash, and had made no request for cash; the Credit Manager had approved the vouchers and sanctioned payment without due care. Fourteen cheques for Rs. 5,000/- each had been issued, and in respect of ten of these, the M.P.C.S. cashier had paid cash to the Appellant, which he had not handed over to the Bank's cashier. The Appellant was found guilty by the High Court of Matara of criminal breach of trust under section 391 of the Penal Code, and was sentenced to two years R.I., and a fine of Rs. 50,000/- (in default 1 1/2 years R.I.). The Court of Appeal while upholding the conviction, suspended the prison sentence for a term of five years, and affirmed the fine and default sentence, with appropriate directions to the High Court.
ENTRUSTED PROPERTY MUST BE CLEAR
If there was an "entrustment", it was not merely of the cheque but also of the cash obtained in exchange.

 In King u. Kabeer,(3) a jail guard was entrusted with a railway warrant, and instructed to accompany a prisoner who had served his sentence to the railway station, to receive a train ticket in exchange for the warrant, and to give him the ticket. Having obtained the ticket the jail guard sold it. De Sampayo, J., upheld an acquittal on a charge of criminal breach of trust in respect of the warrant. The trust in respect of the railway warrant was to deliver it to the proper officer at the railway station and to receive a ticket in exchange; although it was true that he had failed to perform the further duty of handing the ticket to the prisoner, that had no immediate connection with the trust in respect of the warrant. That case is distinguishable: there was no charge of criminal breach of trust in respect of the ticket, and in any event, the ticket was not "entrusted" by the prison authorities, but handed over by a third party, the railway officer.

In the present case, the Bank had an arrangement with the M.P.C.S. whereby the latter would provide cash to designated officers of the Bank. The M.P.C.S., through one or more of its officers, provided cash, and as part of its internal procedure (and it is immaterial whether this was made known to the Bank or not) first issued a cheque through one officer, and cash upon presentation of the cheque to another officer. That transaction cannot be separated into two distinct components: the delivery of a cheque subject to a "trust", and the delivery of cash in exchange for the cheque, free of such "trust". In pursuance of an arrangement with the Bank, the M.P.C.S. through its officers caused cash to be delivered to the Appellant, and it was part of the arrangement that this sum was "entrusted" to the Appellant to be handed over to the Bank's cashier. It is true that the officers of the M.P.C.S. did not themselves, personally, "entrust" the cash; they were no more than the hands which delivered the cash, there being an entrustment by the legal person, namely the M.P.C.S., whose business organization they served.



It is possible that the Appellant had no dishonest intention on the first occasion (and perhaps even on the second) when he obtained cash in this way; it may well be that he obtained cash in anticipation of requests by the Bank's cashier in order to expedite the Bank's business, by immediately responding to a request for cash without having to spend time in going through the process of approval, documentation, and payment. But the sum obtained on the first occasion was not actually paid to the Bank's cashier. Hence it is reasonable to conclude that at least on the subsequent occasions, he had a dishonest intention at the outset. Learned President's Counsel submitted that the Prosecution evidence thus established the offence of cheating; and that criminal breach of trust had not been made out because
(a) there had been no initial taking bereft of a dishonest intention, and

(b) there had been no entrustment: because a trust implies confidence reposed by one person in another, and it is of the essence of confidence that it must be freely given and that there must be a true consent; there is no true consent, if consent is obtained as a result of a trick.In support of his contention that the initial taking must be innocent, and that a dishonest intention must be formed subsequently, learned President's Counsel advanced three arguments. He conceded that ex facie section 386 does not impose such a requirement, but only that a dishonest intention must exist at the time of misappropriation or conversion to the offender's own use. Insistence upon an initial innocent taking amounts to adding a further ingredient, namely "whoever having obtained possession of any movable property without a dishonest intention thereafter dishonestly misappropriates or converts to his own use such movable property . . ." His first submission was that in respect of offences against property there are clear lines of demarcation in the Penal Code between those where the victim is in possession at the time the offence is committed (such as theft and cheating) and those where the victim is out of possession the offender being already in possession (such as criminal misappropriation and criminal breach of trust); all these offences are intended to be self-contained without any overlapping, so that the same act could not constitute both cheating and criminal misappropriation. He urged that "it is an established principle that criminal laws must be construed narrowly or in favorem vitae aut libertatis'', citing Maxwell (Interpretation of Statutes, 12th Edition, p. 245):

"Similarly, statutes dealing with jurisdiction and procedure are, if they relate to the infliction of penalties, strictly construed: compliance with procedural provisions will be stringently exacted from those proceeding against the person liable to be penalised, and if there is any ambiguity or doubt it will, as usual, be resolved in his favour. This is so even though it may enable him to escape upon a technicality." Secondly he contended that the Indian Courts had consistently taken this view; the decision in Rajendra v. State of Uttar Pradesh,(4) cited in the Court of Appeal judgment was not in line with the Indian trend.

In support of these two contentions reference was made to the observations of Weeramantry, J., in Ranasinghe v. Wijendra (Supra)

"This indeed would appear to be the understanding of this offence in India as well. Thus Ratanlal & Thakore begin their comment on this section with the observation that:

 "criminal misappropriation takes place when the possession has been innocently come by, but where, by a subsequent change of intention, or from the knowledge of some new fact with which the party was not previously acquainted, the retaining becomes wrongful and fraudulent. The offence consists in the dishonest misappropriation or conversion, either permanently or for a time, of property which is already without wrong in the possession of the offender."

 The authors go on to point out that in this, respect the Penal Code is at variance with the English law according to which the intention of the accused only at the time of obtaining possession is taken into account.So also the original texts of the Penal Law of India by Sir Hari Singh Gour himself would appear to draw this distinction. It is there stated:

 

"The question whether the act is theft or misappropriation depends upon when the dishonesty began - was it before or after the thing came into possession. This is a point of division as much between the two offences of theft and criminal misappropriation in the Code, as between criminal misappropriation and a civil wrong under English law." This absence of wrongful initial taking is stressed again for he observes in a later passage that in theft the initial taking is wrongful but in criminal misappropriation it is indifferent and may even be innocent but becomes wrongful by a subsequent change of intention or from knowledge of some new fact with which the party was not previously acquainted. The word "indifferent" in this passage would appear to refer to a neutral state of mind - that is where the doer has not affirmatively formed a wrongful intention at the time of taking.

Later editions of this celebrated work by other editors seem to depart however from the view of the distinguished author, for the 8th edition states that it is difficult to say that misappropriation cannot be committed if the accused had a dishonest intention at the moment of taking possession of the article. I would prefer on this point to follow the view expressed by Sir Hari Singh Gour himself. "(pp 42-43)"

Thirdly he urged that the cursus curiae in Sri Lanka was to regard innocent initial taking as an indispensable ingredient of criminal misappropriation, except for a brief interlude of ten years between A. G. v. Menthis and Ranasinghe v. Wijendra (Supra) this was the view expressed by professor G. L. Peiris (Offences under the Penal Code, p 460).

Neither the Penal Code nor any other statute lays down a principle of interpretation that the there is no offences in the Penal Code must be presumed not to overlap. It is because the Criminal Procedure Code of 1898 recognized that there may be such overlapping that section 180(2) (corresponding to section 175(2) of the present Code of Criminal Procedure Act) provided that:

"If the acts alleged constitute an offence falling within two or more separate definitions of any law in force for the time being by which offences are defined or punished the person accused of them maybe charged with and tried at one trial for each of such offences . ."

The first illustration to that section demonstrates that the same act could constitute the offence of causing hurt as well as of using criminal force. The principle that penal statutes are to be strictly construed does not apply where a statute is clear and unambiguous. I am therefore of the view that the suggested principles of interpretation cannot be applied so as to introduce an additional ingredient into the definition of an offence. It is unnecessary to consider when and how those principles could be utilized to resolve an ambiguity, because we are here concerned not with an ambiguity but with the imposition of an additional ingredient through interpretation.

It is true that at the time the Penal Code was enacted in India larceny in English law did not include cases where property was taken without a dishonest intention; probably the offence of criminal misappropriation was intended to cover such cases. However, the definition actually adopted to give effect to that intention covers not only such cases, but extends also to cases where a dishonest intention existed at the outset. Illustrations (b), (c) and (f) to explanation 2 to section 386 are against learned President's Counsel's contention that criminal misappropriation deals with cases where the offender is already in possession, for they show that a person who finds property not in the possession of any one, and immediately misappropriates it is guilty of that offence. This explanation, is not an exception to, or an extension of, the section, but namely illustrates the principle contained therein. It serves to emphasise that all that is required is dishonesty at the time of the act of misappropriation or conversion.

The position in India is by no means consistent. Gour's view has not been acted upon in many instances. Cases referred to in the Commentaries on the Indian Penal Code include the following:
false representation and take the possession is misappropriation
"A Hindu girl having picked up a gold necklet and made it over to a sweeper girl, the accused, the brother of the finder, represented to the latter that the necklet belonged to a person of his acquaintance and thus got possession of it from her. On inquiry by a police constable a few hours later, he repeated the representations, but afterwards gave up the necklet. These representations were found to be untrue to the knowledge of the accused. It was held that he had committed this offence (criminal misappropriation)." Ram Dayal,(
1886) P.R. No. 24 1886).
By mistake received a article and appropriate is misappropriation
"Where money is paid to a person by mistake, and such person, either at the time of the receipt or at any time subsequently, discovers the mistake, and determines to appropriate the money, that person is guilty of criminal misappropriation." Shamsooudur,(
(1870) 2 N.W.P. 475).
Article hand over voluntary by A but B swap with some other article is misappropriation
"A and B were about to travel by the same train from Benares City. A had a ticket for Ajudhia. B had two tickets for Benares Cantonment. A voluntarily handed over her ticket to B in order that he might tell her if it was right. B under the presence of returning A's ticket, substituted therefore one of his own, and kept A's ticket. It was held that the offence committed by B was that of criminal misappropriation rather than that of cheating." Raza Husain,(
(1905) 25 A.W.N. 9, 2 Cr.L. 394).

"Even though the accused when they induced the complainant to part with certain properties had the intention of deceiving him, a subsequent misappropriation by them of the property to their own use would amount to criminal breach of trust. The fact that there was a complete offence of cheating when the property was received would not prevent the accused being guilty of the offence of criminal breach of trust." Mc Iver,(
(1935) 69 M.L.J. 681).

[Ratanlal and Thakore, Law of Crimes, 22nd ed, pp 1040, 1041, 1045, 1051, Gour, Penal Law of India, 10th ed, pp 3450, 3459, 34601 in view of such decisions it is not surprising that the present edition of Gour's work (at p. 3453) states

Who asked the article and run then its criminal misappropriation
"The argument that criminal misappropriation cannot be committed if the accused had dishonest intention at the time of taking possession of the article, cannot be accepted."

The first of the local cases relied on as establishing a cursus curiae is Stickney v. Sinnatamby,( (1886) 5 Tam b 112). There, upon being asked for his gun by the accused, the complainant voluntarily parted with it. The accused ran away with it. It was held that the accused was wrongly convicted of theft and that he could not be convicted of cheating as there was no dishonest or fraudulent inducement to the complainant to deliver the gun. The conviction was altered to criminal misappropriation.

Article came by automatic but refused to returned

In Peries v. Anderson  (1928) 6 Times 49 ) the Appellant gave his chauffeur an identifiable 25-cent coin, and sent him to a boutique to buy cigarettes. The chauffeur placed the coin on the table, whereupon it rolled into the drawer, but the salesman denied receipt of the money and refused to give the cigarettes. When this was told to the Appellant, he insisted on searching the drawer, and found the coin; he then took the salesman to the Police Station, using some degree of force or compulsion. The Appellant was charged for that offence, and the question was whether he could justify the arrest of the salesman on the basis that the salesman had committed a cognisable offence. It was held that the salesman had not committed theft as "there was no taking of the property from (the chauffeur); ... there was nothing dishonest in the manner in which he acquired possession of it, but the dishonesty occurred when he denied the receipt of the money. This offence therefore was dishonest misappropriation."
what is the situation if initial taking is dishonest
These decisions are not authority for the principle that if a dishonest intention exists at the time possession is acquired, there can be no conviction for criminal misappropriation.In Georgesy v. Saibo,(11) the payee of a cheque, having endorsed it, put it into an envelope with a letter addressed to his banker requesting that the proceeds be placed to his credit. The accused having come into possession of the cheque, endorsed it in favour of a Chetty who thereupon paid him the amount of the cheque, less his commission. The accused was found guilty under section 394 of dishonestly receiving stolen property. It was held in appeal that there was no definite evidence that the cheque had been stolen, for it might have been lost in the post. Faced with an imminent acquittal, Counsel suggested that the Court should consider whether the accused could be convicted of criminal misappropriations. Middleton, j., having held that on the evidence the only inference was that the accused had come dishonestly by the cheque, observed:
"Now all the cases which have been decided by the Indian Courts point to the conclusion that in order to constitute the offence of criminal misappropriation there must be first an innocent possession . . . and then a subsequent change of intention. If I find that the man dishonestly came by the cheque, as I do, although that would put him in a worse position morally than if he had come by it in such a way as would make him amenable under section 386, yet I am bound to confess that it is impossible to meet the weight of authority that has been put before me, and to say that the original misappropriation constitutes an offence under section 386."

However, neither the names nor the references of the Indian decisions are set out in the judgement. In Kanavadipillai v. Koswatta,(
(1914) 4 Bal. N.C. 74 ) the accused asked a boutique keeper for a box of matches, and having obtained it, gave a five rupee note. The boutique keeper said he had no change and gave back the note. The accused took the note and the box of matches to the railway station, there got the note changed, and was returning when he met the constable and the complainant. Although it was observed that he should not have been convicted of criminal misappropriation, as that offence requires an initial innocent acquisition of possession, yet it was held on the facts that there was no appropriation or conversion to his own use by the accused, nor an intention to cause wrongful loss to the complainant. These two decisions do not discuss the provisions of section 386, and state the proposition that criminal misappropriation requires an initial innocent possession almost as if it were axiomatic. Georgesy v. Saibo Supra) referred to this proposition only in reference to the invitation to convict the accused on a different charge, and Kanavadipillai v. Koswatta (Supra) could have been determined, on the facts, without any reliance on this proposition.
On the other hand, in R. v. Suppaiya,(13) it was held that a servant who receives money on behalf of his master and enters the amount received in his master's book, but afterwards denies the receipt of the money is guilty of criminal breach of trust. Although the judgment does not consider whether the dishonest intention should have been formed after receiving the money, yet the contention for the prosecution on appeal was that "the original taking was with dishonest intention." Clearly, the Court did not consider this to negative criminal misappropriation. In the sixth volume of the Ceylon Law Review there is a note of a decision that:
prior knowledge of real owner is not nessassary
"It is not enough in a case of criminal misappropriation of property to say that the accused must have known at the time he took the property that it belonged to the complainant. There must be undoubted proof of such knowledge on the part of the accused. "(
4. S.C. 61 P.C. Chilaw 29737; 4. 3. 1910. 6 C.L. Revision 137. 153)

Thus it can hardly be said that by 1960 there was a clear, definite and consistent line of authority on this point. In Gratiaen Perera v. The Queen-(
1960) 61 NLR 5225) Sinnetamby, J., stated that

"the authorities seem to suggest that there must be an initial honest possession followed by a dishonest conversion" but it was not necessary to decide the point; when it did become necessary, a week later, he held in A. G. v. Menthis, (Supra) that if the initial taking of property, not in the possession of anyone, was dishonest, the offence was made out.

In Ranasinghe v. Wijendra
(1970) 74 NLR 38  Weeramantry, J., distinguished A.G. v. Menthis  (1960) 61 NLR 561 as applicable only to the taking of property not in the possession of anyone. Relying on Georgesy v. Saibo(11) and Kanavadipillai v. Koswatte,(12) and Gour's views as to the demarcation between theft and criminal misappropriation, he held that for the latter offence an initial innocent taking was essential. R v. Suppaiya (Supra) does not appear to have been cited.

 

With much respect to that distinguished Judge, I regret that I am unable to agree. The plain language of section 386 imposes no such requirement; the Penal Code does not contain any rigid demarcation between offences; the cursus curiae in India and Sri Lanka does not reveal an emphatic and uniform insistence on such a requirement. Section 388 is even plainer: it refers to an ingredient of "entrustment" (which is anterior to and distinct from the dishonest misappropriation, conversion, use or disposal which is another ingredient), but does not require that there be an innocent intention at the time of entrustment. The Appellant's first contention therefore fails.

The Appellant's second contention is based upon the assumption that the M.P. C. S. and its officers were induced to entrust each cheque to him by a trick. The arrangement between the Bank and the M.P.C.S. was that upon a voucher being submitted, a cheque would be issued to the Appellant; the M.P.C.S. was not required to inquire into the motives of the Appellant or whether the Bank actually needed cash; the operative cause of each cheque being entrusted to the Appellant was the submission of vouchers in due form. Thus even if it be correct that an entrustment induced by a trick will not satisfy section 388 - and I express no opinion as to whether that is an inflexible rule - that question does not arise here. "Entrustment" does not contemplate the creation of a trust with all the technicalities of the law of trust; it includes the delivery of property to another to be dealt with in accordance with an arrangement made either then or previously. That was the case here.
I therefore dismiss the appeal and affirm the order of the Court of Appeal.