Thursday, 14, May, 2026
 
 
 
Expand O P Jindal Global University
 
  
  
 
 
 

P.T.Mathai vs State Of Kerala
2025 Latest Caselaw 4220 Ker

Citation : 2025 Latest Caselaw 4220 Ker
Judgement Date : 19 February, 2025

Kerala High Court

P.T.Mathai vs State Of Kerala on 19 February, 2025

                                            2025:KER:15500

        IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

                          PRESENT

        THE HONOURABLE MR.JUSTICE P.G. AJITHKUMAR

 WEDNESDAY, THE 19TH DAY OF FEBRUARY 2025 / 30TH MAGHA,

                            1946

               CRL.APPEAL NO. 640 OF 2008

AGAINST THE JUDGMENT DATED 29.02.2008 IN CC NO.47 OF 2003

      OF THE ENQUIRY COMMISSIONER & SPECIAL JUDGE,

                     THIRUVANANTHAPURAM

APPELLANT/ACCUSED:

         P.T.MATHAI
         FORMERLY SECRETARY, GOVERNMENT SERVANTS,
         CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY LTD.NO.Q.169, MANTHUKA,
         PATHANAMTHITTA.

         BY ADVS.
         SRI.B.KRISHNA KUMAR
         SRI.DINESH THANKAPPAN
         SRI.A.CHANDRA BABU


RESPONDENT/COMPLAINANT:

         STATE OF KERALA
         REPRESENTED BY THE PUBLIC PROSECUTOR,
         HIGH COURT OF KERALA, KOCHI-31.
                                                           2025:KER:15500
                                     2
Crl.Appeal No.640 of 2008

              SMT REKHA S, SR PUBLIC PROSECUTOR
              SRI A RAJESH, SPL PUBLIC PROSECUTOR (VIG)



       THIS      CRIMINAL   APPEAL       HAVING    COME   UP    FOR    FINAL
HEARING     ON     19.02.2025,   THE       COURT    ON    THE   SAME    DAY
DELIVERED THE FOLLOWING:
                                                             2025:KER:15500
                                       3
Crl.Appeal No.640 of 2008

                       P.G. AJITHKUMAR, J.
      -----------------------------------------------------------
                    Crl.Appeal No.640 of 2008
      -----------------------------------------------------------
            Dated this the 19th day of February, 2025

                                JUDGMENT

The appellant was the accused in C.C.No.47 of 2003 on

the files of the Court of Enquiry Commissioner and Special

Judge, Thiruvananthapuram. He was tried on a charge for

offences punishable under Sections 13(1)(c) and (d) read with

Section 13(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (PC

Act) and Sections 409, 420, 468 and 471 of the Indian Penal

Code, 1860 (IPC). The Special Court convicted the appellant

for all those offences and sentenced him to undergo

imprisonment and pay fine. The said judgment of conviction

and sentence is under challenge in this appeal filed under

Section 374(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

(Code).

2. The prosecution was initiated based on the

allegation that while the appellant was working as the

Secretary of the Government Servants Co-operative Bank Ltd.

2025:KER:15500

No.Q.169, Manthuka, by misusing his position as a public

servant, created false documents to the effect that

Rs.20,000/- was remitted towards the loan account

No.1374/1994, which was availed by his wife, PW19 by

pledging gold and misappropriated such an amount. Further,

Rs.28,600/- entrusted with him by Sri.George Kurian and

Rs.14,860/- entrusted with him by PW23 for closing gold loans

availed by them were misappropriated by him. He after creating

false documents evidencing payment of those amounts in the

bank, released the respective pledged gold ornaments. The Bank

sustained loss of the aforementioned amounts.

3. Based on the said allegations, a charge was framed

and read over. The appellant pleaded not guilty. Hence, the

prosecution has examined PWs.1 to 28 and produced Exts.P1

to P68. This case was tried along with C.C.Nos.43, 45 and 48

of 2003 of the Special Court, Thiruvananthapuram, since the

transactions were similar in nature, and the accused was

common. The Special Court, based on the said evidence,

convicted the appellant in all the four cases.

2025:KER:15500

4. Heard the learned counsel for the appellant and the

learned Special Public Prosecutor (Vigilance).

5. The appellant assails the impugned judgment on

various grounds. However, at the time of hearing, the learned

counsel for the appellant stressed mainly on the contention

that the offence under Sections 13(1)(c) and (d) read with

Section 13(2) of the PC Act is not established. The submission

of the learned counsel is that even admitting that the

appellant was the Secretary of the Government Servants Co-

operative Bank Ltd., Manthuka, the prosecution cannot

canvass for the position that he was a public servant coming

within the purview of Section 2(c) of the PC Act.

6. Clause (ix) of Section 2(c) of the PC Act takes in its

fold the president, secretary or other office-bearer of a

registered co-operative society engaged in agriculture,

industry, trade or banking, which is receiving or having

received any financial aid from the Central Government or a

State Government or from any corporation established by or

under a Central, Provincial or State Act. The President, 2025:KER:15500

Secretary or other office-bearer of such a co-operative society

alone is a public servant for the purpose of the PC Act. The

Apex Court in State of Maharashtra v. Brijlal Sadasukh

Modani [(2016) 4 SCC 417] held that even a sprinkle of aid

to the co-operative society is enough to bring an employee of

the co-operative society within the definition of 'public

servant'.

7. There is no allegation in the final report or evidence

to prove that the Government Servants Co-operative Bank

Ltd. No.Q.169, Manthuka obtained or obtains any financial aid

from the Central Government or a State Government or from

any corporation established by or under a Central, Provincial

or State Act. Since the prosecution did not allege that the

Government Servants Co-operative Bank Ltd., Manthuka

obtained any aid from either the Central or State Government

and there is absolutely no evidence to prove the fact that the

conviction of the appellant for the offence punishable under

Sections 13(1)(c) and (d) read with Section 13(2) of the PC

Act is unsustainable.

2025:KER:15500

8. Insofar as the offences of creating forged

documents for the purpose of providing loans in the proxy

names and to misappropriate the amounts of such loans,

sufficient evidence has been adduced by the prosecution. The

documents pertaining to the loans were all in the handwriting

of the appellant. The authorship of such documents, and also

the official documents concerning the loan transactions in

question is not successfully challenged even. When, such

overwhelming evidence, both documentary and oral, is

available in order to prove receipt of such amounts by the

appellant, but the same were not remitted in the bank, the

irresistible conclusion is that the appellant misappropriated

the said amounts. In the circumstances, it can further be held

that the documents in relation to such repayments were

forged, attracting penal provisions under Sections 468 and

471 of the IPC. The findings of the Special Court that the

appellant has committed the offences punishable under

Sections 409, 420, 468 and 471 of the IPC are therefore not

liable to be interfered with.

2025:KER:15500

9. Accordingly, the appellant is found not guilty and

acquitted of the offence punishable under Sections 13(1)(c)

and (d) read with Section 13(2) of the PC Act. Consequential

sentence is set aside. His conviction for the offences under

Sections 409, 420, 468 and 471 of the IPC is confirmed.

10. The learned counsel for the appellant would submit

that the appellant suffered a stroke and had to undergo

treatment for a long period. He is now aged 74 years and ailing

of so many diseases. It is further submitted that a major portion

of the amount said to have been misappropriated from the Co-

operative Bank was repaid. Moreover, the entire immovable

property belonging to the appellant has been kept under

attachment. Accordingly, it is submitted that there would not be

any loss to the Co-operative Bank.

11. The submission of the learned Special Public

Prosecutor is that the offence committed by the appellant is

very serious and involved several similar instances. Therefore,

there is no justification for any interference with the order of

sentence.

2025:KER:15500

12. Having considered the facts and circumstances of

the case, including the present age and physical condition of

the appellant, as are borne out from the records, I am of the

view that sentences imposed on the appellant can be modified

and reduced.

13. Accordingly, the appellant is sentenced to undergo

rigorous imprisonment for a period of six months each for the

offences under Sections 409, 420, 468 and 471 of the IPC.

Besides imprisonment, the appellant has to pay a fine of

Rs.5,000/- with a default sentence of two months under each

of Sections 409, 420, 468 and 471 of the IPC. Terms of

substantive sentence shall run concurrently.

14. The appellant is convicted and sentenced in eight

cases, including the present one. The cases are C.C.Nos.43,

44, 45, 46 and 48 of 2003 of the Special Court,

Thiruvananthapuram and C.C.Nos.150 and 177 of 2003 of the

Chief Judicial Magistrate's Court, Pathanamthitta. The offences

involved in all these eight cases were committed while the

appellant was functioning as the Secretary of the Government 2025:KER:15500

Servants Co-operative Bank Limited, Manthuka. Different final

reports were filed with respect to distinct instances of

misappropriation. Since all the offences were committed by

the appellant in the capacity as Secretary of the said Co-

operative Bank and in quick succession, the offences form

part of a series of transactions.

15. The Apex Court in Mohanan Nair P.N. v. State of

Kerala [(2017) 14 SCC 719] held that when the allegations

constituted a single transaction between the same parties for

a block period, and split up by the prosecution, presumably

for its convenience, into different cases, it is appropriate to

order to run sentences imposed in all the cases concurrently,

invoking the provisions under Section 427(1) of the Code. A

similar view was taken by the Apex Court in Vicky @ Vikas v.

State (Govt. of NCT of Delhi) [(2020) 11 SCC 540] also.

Identical are the circumstances in these cases also. Therefore,

I am of the view that the said proposition can be applied to

these cases. Hence, it is ordered that the terms of substantive

sentence imposed on the appellant in this case and C.C.Nos.

2025:KER:15500

43, 44, 45, 46 and 48 of 2003 of the Special Court,

Thiruvananthapuram and C.C.Nos.150 and 177 of 2003 of the

Chief Judicial Magistrate's Court, Pathanamthitta shall run

concurrently. The appellant shall appear before the Court of

Enquiry Commissioner and Special Judge, Thiruvananthapuram

on or before 21.04.2025 for undergoing sentence. That court

shall inform the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate,

Thiruvananthapuram once the appellant is committed to jail.

The appeal is allowed in part as above.

Sd/-

P.G. AJITHKUMAR, JUDGE

scl/dkr

 
Download the LatestLaws.com Mobile App
 
 
Latestlaws Newsletter
 

Publish Your Article

 

Campus Ambassador

 

Media Partner

 

Campus Buzz

 

LatestLaws Guest Court Correspondent

LatestLaws Guest Court Correspondent Apply Now!
 

LatestLaws.com presents: Lexidem Offline Internship Program, 2026

 

LatestLaws.com presents 'Lexidem Online Internship, 2026', Apply Now!

 
 

LatestLaws Partner Event : IJJ

 

LatestLaws Partner Event : Smt. Nirmala Devi Bam Memorial International Moot Court Competition

 
 
Latestlaws Newsletter