Full Judgment Text
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO.46 OF 2008
ASHIQ HUSSAIN FAKTOO ...PETITIONER
VERSUS
UNION OF INDIA & ORS. ...RESPONDENTS
JUDGMENT
RANJAN GOGOI, J.
1. The writ petitioner has been convicted by this Court by
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its judgment and order dated 30 January, 2003 passed in
Criminal Appeal No.889 of 2001 under Section 3 of the Terrorist
and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (hereinafter referred
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to as “TADA Act”) and under Section 302 read with Section 120B of
the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (hereinafter referred to as “IPC”). He
has been sentenced, inter alia , to undergo imprisonment for life.
The review petitions filed by the writ petitioner as also by the
co-accused (Mohd. Shafi Khan @ Mussadiq Hussain) against the
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aforesaid judgment dated 30 January, 2003 i.e. Review Petition
(Criminal) No.478 of 2003 and Review Petition (Criminal) No.1377
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of 2003 have been dismissed by order dated 2 September, 2003 of
this Court. Curative Petition filed by the co-accused (Mohd. Shafi
Khan @ Mussadiq Hussain) i.e. Curative Petition (Criminal) No.23 of
2004 in Review Petition (Criminal) No.1377 of 2003 in Criminal
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Appeal No.889 of 2001 has also been dismissed by order dated 2
February, 2005 of this Court. Thereafter, this writ petition under
Article 32 of the Constitution of India has been filed by the present
accused writ petitioner making the following prayers:
(a) Issue a writ in the nature of habeas corpus or
other similar direction, order or writ to the
Respondents thereby commanding them to
produce the petitioner before this Hon'ble
Court and thereafter forthwith release him
from illegal custody; and
(b) grant any other or further reliefs as this
Hon'ble Court may deem fit and proper in the
facts and circumstances of the case and in the
interests of justice.”
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2. Notwithstanding the prayers made, extracted above, in
essence, the writ petition seeks interference with the order of
conviction and the sentence imposed on the petitioner by this Court
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by its judgment and order dated 30 January, 2003 passed in
Criminal Appeal No.889 of 2001.
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3. The Bench initially hearing the present writ petition had
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passed an order dated 24 September, 2014 to the following effect:
“We have been apprised by Mr. Jethmalani as
the writ petition was filed, no application for review
was filed. We are of the considered opinion if the
present writ petition is converted to a review petition
and heard in the open Court on the fundamental
principles of review as well as the maxim ex debito
justitiae , the cause of justice would be subserved
and accordingly we direct the Registry to convert the
present writ petition to a review petition and list
before the appropriate Bench in open Court as
expeditiously as possible.
Ordered accordingly”
Subsequently the matter has been referred to a larger
Bench. This is how we are in seizen of the matter.
4. As already noted review petitions were filed by the
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present writ petitioner as also by the co-accused (Mohd. Shafi Khan
@ Mussadiq Hussain) and the same were dismissed by this Court
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by order dated 2 September, 2003 the said fact was not brought
to the notice of the Court while the order dated 24.09.2013 was
rendered.
5. Shri Ram Jethmalani, learned Senior Counsel appearing
for the writ petitioner has urged that the sole basis of the conviction
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of the writ petitioner is the alleged confession made by him. Shri
Jethmalani has urged that the same is not a confession in law
inasmuch as nowhere in the said statement the accused implicates
himself with the alleged offence(s) in any manner. Neither the
confession has been put to the accused in the course of his
examination under the provisions of Section 313 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973, nor there is any corroboration to the
alleged confession. Shri Jethmalani has further urged that Section
15 of the TADA Act makes a confession made to a Police Officer, not
lower in rank than a Superintendent of Police, admissible in the
trial of such person. Section 15 of the TADA Act, therefore, works
as an exception to Section 25 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
However, in the instant case, the confession was recorded while the
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accused was in police custody and, therefore, would not be
admissible under Section 26 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. The
provisions of Section 15 of the TADA Act are not in exception to
what has been laid down in Section 26 of the Indian Evidence Act,
1872. It is also urged that the confession recorded is contrary to
the provisions of Rule 15 of the TADA Rules read with the
guidelines laid down by this Court in para 263 of the judgment in
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Kartar Singh Vs. State of Punjab . On the aforesaid grounds, Shri
Jethmalani has submitted that a manifest miscarriage of justice
has been occasioned by the conviction of the accused writ petitioner
| d the sentence im<br>principle of ex de | |
| ou<br>Re | t the decision of<br>gistrar, Supreme C |
petitions in matters of convictions recorded under the TADA Act are
required to be heard in open Court.
6. Shri R.S. Suri, learned Senior Counsel appearing for the
Union of India has questioned the maintainability of the present
writ petition on the ratio of the law laid down by this Court in Rupa
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Ashok Hurra Vs. Ashok Hurra and another . Drawing the attention
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of the Court to the relevant paragraphs of the report in Rupa Ashok
Hurra (supra) Shri Suri has urged that neither a writ petition under
Article 32 of the Constitution of India nor a second review petition
would be maintainable. It is also submitted that invoking the
principles of ex debito justitiae, this Court in Rupa Ashok Hurra
(supra) had carved out an exception permitting the Court to have a
1 (1994) 3 SCC 569
2 (2014) 9 SCC 737
3 (2002) 4 SCC 388
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re-look at its concluded judgments on twin grounds i.e. (1) the
order being in infraction of the principles of natural justice; and (2)
or an order which shakes the integrity of the justice delivery system
by an association of the judge with the subject matter or the
litigating parties which may have escaped the attention of the
learned Judge.
7. On merits, Shri Suri has submitted that what has been
urged by Shri Jethmalani is not at all legally tenable and all the
issues raised have been duly considered by this Court in its
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judgment dated 30 January, 2003 passed in Criminal Appeal
No.889 of 2001. Shri Suri has further submitted that principle of
open court hearing laid down by the Constitution Bench in Mohd.
Arif alias Ashfaq (supra) is only in cases of death penalty cases
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either under the IPC or the TADA Act. The reference to TADA cases
in paragraph 40 of the report in Mohd. Arif alias Ashfaq (supra) has
to be understood accordingly.
8. Having heard the learned counsels for the parties we are
of the view that on the strength of the Constitution Bench judgment
in Rupa Ashok Hurra (supra) the present writ petition would not be
maintainable. It would also not be maintainable as a review
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petition inasmuch as Review Petition (Criminal) No.478 of 2003
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filed by the writ petitioner has been dismissed by this Court on 2
September, 2003. Open Court hearing of review petitions in terms
of the judgment of this Court in Mohd. Arif alias Ashfaq (supra) is
available as of right only in death sentence cases.
9. The principle of ex debito justitiae invoked on behalf of
the accused writ petitioner to attract the jurisdiction of this Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution of India to set the accused writ
petitioner at liberty, in our considered view, has been elaborately
dealt with in the concurring judgment of Umesh C. Banerjee, J. in
Rupa Ashok Hurra (supra) and holding that the doctrine of ex debito
justitiae would prevail over procedural law but would be applicable
only in a situation where the order of this Court had been passed
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without notice or where the order has the effect of eroding the
public confidence in the justice delivery system. Paragraph 69 of
the report in Rupa Ashok Hurra (supra) containing the view of
Umesh C. Banerjee, J. may be usefully extracted herein below:
“69. True, due regard shall have to be
had as regards opinion of the Court in Ranga
Swamy [(1990) 1 SCC 288] but the situation
presently centres around that in the event of there
being any manifest injustice would the doctrine of
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ex debito justitiae be said to be having a role to play
in sheer passivity or to rise above the ordinary
heights as it preaches that justice is above all. The
second alternative seems to be in consonance with
time and the present phase of socio-economic
conditions of the society. Manifest injustice is
curable in nature rather than incurable and this
Court would lose its sanctity and thus would belie
the expectations of the founding fathers that justice
is above all. There is no manner of doubt that
procedural law/procedural justice cannot overreach
the concept of justice and in the event an order
stands out to create manifest injustice, would the
same be allowed to remain in silentio so as to affect
the parties perpetually or the concept of justice
ought to activate the Court to find a way out to
resolve the erroneous approach to the problem? Mr
Attorney-General, with all the emphasis in his
command, though principally agreed that justice of
the situation needs to be looked into and relief be
granted if so required but in the same breath
submitted that the Court ought to be careful enough
to tread on the path, otherwise the same will open
up a Pandora’s box and thus, if at all, in rarest of
the rare cases, further scrutiny may be made. While
it is true that law courts have overburdened
themselves with the litigation and delay in disposal
of matters in the subcontinent is not unknown and
in the event of any further appraisal of the matter
by this Court, it would brook no further delay
resulting in consequences which are not far to see
but that would by itself not in my view deter this
Court from further appraisal of the matter in the
event the same, however, deserves such an
additional appraisal — the note of caution sounded
by Mr. Attorney-General as regards opening up of a
Pandora’s box, strictly speaking, however, though
may be very practical in nature but the same
apparently does not seem to go well with the
concept of justice as adumbrated in our
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Constitution. True it is, that practicability of the
situation needs a serious consideration more so
when this Court could do without it for more than
50 years, which by no stretch of imagination can be
said to be a period not so short. I feel it necessary,
however, to add that it is not that we are not
concerned with the consequences of reopening of
the issue but the redeeming feature of our justice
delivery system, as is prevalent in the country, is
adherence to proper and effective administration of
justice in stricto. In the event there is any
affectation of such an administration of justice
either by way of infraction of natural justice or an
order being passed wholly without jurisdiction or
affectation of public confidence as regards the
doctrine of integrity in the justice delivery system,
technicality ought not to outweigh the course of
justice — the same being the true effect of the
doctrine of ex debito justitiae . The oft-quoted
statement of law of Lord Hewart, C.J. in R. v.
Sussex Justices, ex p McCarthy [(1924) 1 KB 256]
that it is of fundamental importance that justice
should not only be done, should manifestly and
undoubtedly be seen to be done, had this doctrine
underlined and administered therein. In this
context, the decision of the House of Lords in R. v.
Bow Street Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate, ex p
Pinochet Ugarte (No. 2)[(1999) 1 All ER 577(HL)]
seems to be an epoch-making decision, wherein
public confidence in the judiciary is said to be the
basic criterion of the justice delivery system — any
act or action even if it is a passive one, if erodes or
is even likely to erode the ethics of judiciary, the
matter needs a further look.”
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10. The principle of ex debito justitiae is founded on a recognition
of a debt that the justice delivery system owes to a litigant to
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correct an error in a judicial dispensation. Its application, by the
very nature of things, cannot be made to depend on varying
perceptions of legal omissions and commissions but such
recognition of the debt which have the potential of opening new
vistas of exercise of jurisdiction to relook concluded cases, must
rest on surer foundations which have been discerned and expressed
in Rupa Ashok Hurra (supra). Frantic cries of injustice founded on
perceived erroneous application of law or appreciation of facts will
certainly not be enough to extend the frontiers of this jurisdiction.
11. The opinion of Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri, J. with regard
to the situations in which an aggrieved litigant would be entitled to
relief under the doctrine of ex debito justitiae has been set out in
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paragraph 51 of the report which may be reproduced herein below:
“Nevertheless, we think that a petitioner is
entitled to relief ex debito justitiae if he establishes
(1) violation of the principles of natural justice in
that he was not a party to the lis but the judgment
adversely affected his interests or, if he was a party
to the list, he was not served with notice of the
proceedings and the matter proceeded as if he had
notice, and (2) where in the proceedings a learned
judge failed to disclose his connection with the
subject-matter or the parties giving scope for an
apprehension of bias and the judgment adversely
affects the petitioner.” (para 51)
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12. The said jurisdiction because of its very nature has attracted
the terminology of curative jurisdiction. The procedural steps with
| tions invoki<br>s, have also | |
| gard to filing and disposal of applicat<br>risdiction, termed as curative petitions<br>paragraphs 52 and 53 of the report<br>adri, J. in Rupa Ashok Hurra (supra) w<br>der XLVIII of the Supreme Court Rules<br>. The present writ petition under Art<br>India by no stretch of reasoning w<br>rmissible categories of post convictio | t<br>s |
law as laid down by this Court. The doctrine of ex debito justitiae
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being circumscribed by the judgment of this Court in Rupa Ashok
Hurra (supra) it is for the petitioner to exhaust the said remedy, if is
he so inclined and so advised. Merely because in the
comprehension of the writ petitioner the judgment of this Court is
erroneous would not enable the Court to reopen the issue in
departure to the established and settled norms and parameters of
the extent of permissible exercise of jurisdiction as well as the
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procedural law governing such exercise. We, therefore, hold that
the present writ petition is not maintainable and is accordingly
dismissed subject to the observations as above.
……….....................,J.
( RANJAN GOGOI )
……….....................,J.
( PRAFULLA C. PANT )
……….....................,J.
( A.M. KHANWILKAR )
NEW DELHI
AUGUST 30, 2016.
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