Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAFFER HUSSEIN DASTGIR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/09/1969
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
SIKRI, S.M.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1934 1970 SCR (2) 332
1969 SCC (2) 872
CITATOR INFO :
D 1983 SC 446 (9)
ACT:
Indian Evidence Act, 1872, s. 27--Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was charged under s. 379/34 I.P.C. for
committing theft of a parcel containing diamonds along with
the, two other persons. ln the course of investigation the
police went to a newspaper office where they learnt that one
of the. co-accused had come to put in advertisement
respecting the recovery of the diamonds, stating that it was
in his possession, and left ’an address with the newspaper.
The police could not trace that co-accused, but later, as a
result of information furnished by the appellant to the
police and the panchas the police were taken to a place
where the diamonds were discovered from that other co-
accused. On the question whether the statement of the
appellant was admissible in evidence against him under s. 27
of the Indian Evidence Act,
HELD: The statement was not admissible.
Under s. 25 of the Evidence Act no confession made by an
accused to a police officer can be admitted in evidence
against him. An exception to this is however provided by s.
26 which makes a confessional statement made before a
Magistrate admissible in evidence against an accused
notwithstanding the fact that he was in custody of the
police when he made the incriminating statement. Section 27
is a proviso to s, 26 and makes admissible so much of the
statement of the accused which leads to the discovery of a
fact deposed to by him and connected with the crime,
irrespective of the question whether it is confessional or
otherwise. The essential ingredient of the section is that
the information given by the accused must lead to the
discovery of the fact ’which is the direct outcome of
such information. Secondly, only such portion of the
information given as is distinctly connected with the said
recovery is admissible against the accused. Thirdly, the
discovery of the fact must relate to the commission of
some offence. The embargo. on statements of the accused
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before the police will not apply if all the above conditions
are fulfilled. If an accused’ charged with a theft of
articles or receiving stolen articles, within the meaning of
s. 411 I.P.C.. states to the police. ’I will show you the
articles at the place where 1 have kept them’ and the.
articles are actually found there, there can be no doubt
that the information given by him led to the discovery of a
fact i.e. keeping of the articles by the accused at the
place mentioned. The discovery of the fact deposed to in
such a case is not the discovery of the articles but the
discovery of the fact that the articles were kept by the
accused at a particular place. In principle there is no
difference between the above statement and that made by the
appellant in this case which in effect is that ’I will show
you the. person to whom 1 have given the diamonds exceeding
200 in number’. The only difference between the two
statements is that a ’named person’ is substituted for ’the
place’ where the article is kept. In neither case are the
articles or the diamonds the fact discovered. [338 C--H]
In the present case, the police had learnt earlier that
the other accused had the custody of the diamonds.
Therefore, the statement of the appel-
333
lant that the other accused had the custody of the diamonds
would not be something unknown to the police so as to
constitute ’a fact deposed to as discovered in consequence
of information received’ from the appellant. The discovery,
if any, merely related to the whereabouts of the other
accused. There was no discovery of any fact deposed to by
the appellant within the meaning of s. 27. If the police
had not gone to the office of the newspaper and had not
learnt of the complicity of the other accused with the
crime, the statement of the appellant would amount to
information received from him relating to the discovery of
the diamonds in the custody of that other accused. [343 B]
Pulukuri Katayya v. King Emperor, 76 I.A, 65 and K.
Chinnaswamy Reddy v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1963] 3
S.C.R. 412, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 84 Of
1968.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated Febru‘ary 9, 12, 1968 of the Bombay High Court in
Criminal Appeal No. 541 of 1966.
A.S.R. Chari, T.H. Sardar and M. 1. Khowaja, for the
appellant.
B.D. Sharma, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. The appellant along with two other persons were
prosecuted on a charge under s. 379/34 of the Indian Penal
Code committing theft .of a valuable parcel of diamonds from
the person of one Wadilal C. Mehta in a railway train
between Masjid Bander and Byculla railway stations on
November 9, 1965 in furtherance of their common intention.
One of these two other persons (hereinafter described as
accused No. 2) was acquitted by the Chief Presidency
Magistrate but the appellant and accused No. 3 were each
sentenced to undergo rigorous ’imprisonment for l 2 months.
In appeal to the High Court the conviction of the appellant.
was altered to one under s. 411 and the sentence was reduced
to one of nine months’ rigorous imprisonment. The appellant
has come up to this Court by special leave his main
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contention being that a statement ascribed to him as having
been made to the police was artificial and false and in any
event there was no discovery of any fact made as a result of
that statement to render it admissible in evidence against
him under s. 27 of the Indian Evidence Act.
The case for the prosecution was as follows. Mehta who
had about 215 pieces of diamonds in paper packets wrapped in
a silk handkerchief in the inside breast-pocket of his
garment got into a local train at Masjid Bander along with a
companion at about 8 p.m. on 9th November 1965. As the
compartment which they wanted to board was already full of
passengers, he and his
334
companion had to stand in the passage outside the
compartment where there were many other persons already
standing including .accused 2 and 3. Taking exception to
the posture of accused No. 2 who was in close contact Mehta
asked him to stand erect and at the same time happened to
notice a piece of his silk handkerchief lying on the floor
of the compartment. Feeling his garment the realised that
his pocket had been picked and the packet of diamonds had
disappeared. Mehta and his companion caught hold of accused
2 and 3 and searched their persons but to no purpose. At
Byculla railway station they were dragged out of the train
on to the platform by Mehta and his companion but the
former managed to get free and slip, back into the train.
On shouts being raised the train was brought to a halt but
the two accused could not be found. Mehta went on to
Victoria Terminus Railway station and lodged a complaint
there about the happening. He was shown a number of
photographs kept at the police station and he pointed out
therefrom three of the persons resembling the suspects
concerned in the theft of his diamonds. The police
immediately got busy and on the basis of some information
received started looking for the appellant but were not
able to trace him that night. The next morning (10-11-1965
the complainant went to the V.T. Railway station once more
and identified the photographs of accused No. 2. The
appellant was arrested at 12.30 p.m. on November 10, 1965
and accused No. 2 was apprehended very shortly thereafter.
Both the them were brought to the C.I.D. office for
interrogation. Apparently being familiar
with the modus operandi of pick pockets the police went
round the offices of several newspapers in Bombay and at
the office of Bombay Samachar Press S.I. Guad was told by
Pawri, the advertisement manager of the Bombay Samachar,
that two persons had come to their office on that day at
about 11 a.m. for ’the purpose of putting in an
advertisement about the recovery of a packet of diamonds.
S.I. Guad learnt from Pawri the name and address of one D.S.
Parekh as one of the two persons who had earlier interviewed
Pawri for the insertion of the advertisement. Attempts to
contact Parekh by S.I. Gaud were however unsuccessful. On
the morning of 11th November 1965 the appellant made a
statement before Inspector Mokasi and S.I. Graud and this
was recorded in the presence of panchas. The portion of the
statement with which we are concerned reads:
"It will point out one Gaddi alias
Ramsingh of Delhi at Bombay Central Railway
station at/II Class Waiting Hall to whom I
have given a packet containing diamonds of
different sizes more than 200 in number."
The appellant thereafter led the police and the panchas
to the Said waiting hall and there from among a crowd of
people the
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335
appellant pointed out accused No. 3 to the police. D.S.
Parekh was also there. The appellant is alleged to have
repeated there the same statement which he had made earlier
at the police station. Accused No. 3 produced a handkerchief
containing a packet in which 211 diamonds were found. Both
accused No. 3 and D.S. Parekh were put under arrest. The
diamonds were identified by Mehta as a portion of those
which he had lost on the night of 9th November. An
identification parade was held by a Justice of the Peace at
4.15 p.m. at which Mehta and his companion identified the
appellant as also accused 2 and 3 as being persons who were
standing in the passage outside the first class compartment
of the local train when Mehta’s pocket was picked.
The High Court came to the conclusion that the
complicity of the appellant with the crime alleged rested
only on two pieces of evidence brought forward at the trial.
The first was his identification by Mehta and his companion
at the identification parade to the effect that he was
present in the train on the material date and at the
material hour. By itself this means nothing because there
were a number of other persons who were standing in the
passage at the same time and there is no suggestion--and
indeed there could be none-- that any of these persons were
connected with the crime. To fasten the guilt on the
appellant the prosecution had to rely on the evidence
furnished by the statement alleged to have been made by the
appellant to the police and the panchas in consequence
whereof he was said to have led the police party to the
Bombay Central railway station waiting hail and to the
discovery of the diamonds from accused No. 3. As the
statement of the accused recorded above was in the nature of
a confession it would come under the embargo of section 26
of the Evidence Act unless it can be brought within the
ambit of s. 27 of the Evidence Act. which reads:
"Provided that, when any fact is deposed
to as discovered in consequence of information
received from a person accused of any offence,
in the custody of a police officer, so much
of such information, whether it amounts to a
confession or not, as relates distinctly to
the fact thereby discovered, may be proved."
In order that the section may apply the prosecution must
establish that the information given by the appellant led to
the discovery of some fact deposed to by him. It is evident
that the discovery must be of some fact which the police had
not previously learnt from other sources and that the
knowledge of the fact was first d.erived from information
given by the accused. If the police had no information
before of the complicity of accused No. 3 with the crime and
had no idea as to whether the diamonds would
336
be found’ with him and the appellant had made a statement to
the police that he knew where the diamonds were and would
lead t,hem to the person who had them, it can be said that
the discovery of the diamonds with the third accused was a
fact deposed to be the appellant and .admissible in evidence
under s. 27. However, if it be shown that the police
already knew that accused No. 3 had got the diamonds but
did not know where the said accused was to be found, it
cannot be said that the information given by the appellant
that accused No. 3 had the diamonds and could be pointed out
in a large crowed at the waiting hall led to the discovery
of a fact proving his complicity with any crime within the
meaning of s. 27. The ,fact deposed to him would at best
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lead to the discovery of the whereabouts of accused No. 3.
Under section 25 of the Evidence Act no confession made
by an accused to a police officer can be admitted in
evidence against him. An exception to this is however
provided by section 26 which makes a confessional statement
made before a Magistrate admissible in evidence against an
accused notwithstanding the fact that he was in the custody
of the police when he made the incriminating statement.
Section 27 is a proviso to section 26 and makes admissible
so much of the statement of the accused which leads to the
discovery of a fact deposed to by him and connected with
the: crime, irrespective of the question whether it is
confessional or otherwise. The essential ingredient of the
section is that the information given by the accused must
lead to the discovery of the, fact which is the direct
outcome of such/nformation. Secondly, only such portion of
the/nformation given as is distinctly connected with the
said recovery is admissible against the accused. Thirdly,
the discovery of the fact must relate to the commission of
some offence. The embargo, on statements of the accused
before the police will not apply if all the above conditions
are fulfilled. If an accused charged with a theft of
articles or receiving stolen articles, within the meaning of
s. 411 I.P.C. states to the police, ’I will show you the
articles at the place where I have kept them’ and the
articles are actually found there, there can be no doubt
that the information given by him led to the discovery of a
fact i.e. keeping of the articles by the accused at the
place mentioned. The discovery of the fact deposed to in
such a ease is not the discovery of the articles but the
discovery of the fact that the articles were kept by the
accused at a particular place. In principle there is no
difference between the above statement and that made by the
appellant in this ease which in effect is that ’I will show
you the person to whom I have given the diamonds exeeding
200 in number". The only difference between the two
statements is that a "named person" is substituted for the
place’ where the article is kept. In neither case are the
articles or the diamonds the fact discovered.
337
The section was considered by the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council in Pulukuri Kotayya v. King Emperor(1). A
question there arose as to what’ part of a statement of the
accused leading to the recovery of a knife in a murder case
was admissible in evidence. The statement read:
"About 14 days ago., I Kotayya and
people of my party lay in wait for Sivayya and
others at about sunset time at the corner of
Pulipad tank. We all beat Boddupati China
Sivayya and Subbayya to. death. The re-
maining persons Pullayya, Kotayya and Narayana
ran away. Dondapati Ramayya who was in our
party received blows on his hands. He had a
spear in his hands. He gave it to me then. I
hid it and my stick in the rick of
Venkatanarasu in the village. I will show if
you come. We did all this at the instigation
of Pulukuri Kotayya."
The Board held that the whole of the statement except the
passage "I hid it (a spear) and my stick in the rick of
Venkatanasrasu in the village. I will show if you come" was
inadmissible. Holding that the extent of the information
admissible must depend on the exact nature of the fact
discovered to. which such information was required to relate
the Judicial Committee pointed out that "the fact
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discovered embraces the place from which the object is
produced and the knowledge of the accused as to this, and
the information given must relate distinctly to the fact."
The Board was careful to observe that "information as to
past user, or the past history of the object produced was
not related to its discovery in the setting in which it was
discovered."
This Court had to consider the scope of s. 27 of the
Evidence Act in K. Chinnaswamy Reddy v. State of Andhra
Pradesh(2). There the appellant was convicted under s. 411
I.P.C. by an Assistant Sessions Judge. He was tried
along with another person who was convicted under ss. 457
and 380 I.P.C. A house had been burgled and valuable
articles stolen. During the course of investigation the
police recovered 17 ornaments on the information given by
the appellant. The other accused had also given information
on the basis of which another stolen ornament was recovered.
The Assistant Sessions Judge came to the conclusion that the
other accused had actually committed house breaking and had
removed the ornaments from the house burgled and had handed
over 17 of them to the appellant. He also came to the
conclusion that the l 7 ornaments recovered at the instance
of the appellant were in his possession and he therefore
found him guilty under s. 411 I.P.C. On appeal the Sessions
Judge held that the appellant had not been proved to be in
possession of the 17 orna-
(1) 76 I.A. 65.
(2) (1963) 3 S.C.R. 412.
338
ments which were recovered at his instance from a garden.
According to the Sessions Judge the full statement of the
appellant that "he would show the place where he had hidden
them (the ornaments)" was not admissible against him. The
Sessions judge held that the part of the statement of the
appellant which related to his having hidden the ornaments
was inadmissible. There was a criminal revision to the High
Court and re-trial was ordered and it was against that order
that the appeal to this Court was directed. Overruling the
interpretation of the Sessions Judge, this Court held that
the whole of the statement related distinctly to the
discovery of the ornaments and was admissible under s. 27 of
the Evidence Act. It was said:
"These words (namely, where he had hidden
them) having nothing to. do with the past
history of the crime and are distinctly
related to the actual discovery that took
place by virtue of that statement."
The contention that in a case where the offence consisted of
possession even the words "where he had hidden them" would
be inadmissible as it amounted to an admission by the
accused that he was in possession of them was rejected on
the ground that if the statement related distinctly to the
fact thereby discovered it would be admissible in evidence
irrespective of the question as to. whether it amounted to a
confession or not. There can be no doubt that the portion
of the alleged statement of the appellant extracted by us
would be admissible in evidence.
The question still remains as to whether the said
statement was really a discovery of a fact disposed to or
weather there was no discovery within the meaning of section
27 of the Evidence Act because the police was already in
possession of the fact that the accused No. 3 was a person
who had the diamonds. In order to find out the extent of
the knowledge of the police as to the whereabouts of the
diamonds it is necessary to look at the testimony of S. 1.
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Gaud and Pawri, the advertisement manager, of the Bombay
Samachar. Gaud stated at the trial that he had taken up the
investigation at about 11 p.m. on the night of 9th November
1965 and after going to V.T. Railway station he had gone to
Kamathipura 6th lane to trace the appellant on the basis of
some information received at the railway station. He learnt
the next day about the identification of the photograph of
the second accused by the complainant and arrested the
appellant at 12.30 p.m. and the second accused at 1 p.m. on
the same day. The same afternoon he visited different
newspaper establishments including that of Bombay Samachar
Press and received information from the advertisement
manager, Pawri in consequence whereof he went to find D.S.
Parekh. He did not succeed in tracing him and continuing
the interrogation of the appellant and the second
339
accused he called panchas on the morning of 11th November
to, have the statement of the appellant recorded.
Thereafter he went to the Bombay Central railway station and
there found the diamonds with the accused No. 3 pointed out
to him by the appellant. In cross-examination he said that
he had contacted Pawri. at 3 p.m. on loth November but he
had not asked Pawri to produce the advertisement material
nor was the same shown to him. His testimony was that he
had only asked for the name and address of the person who
had given him the advertisement material and Pawri had done
so from memory. He denied having’ seen any letter or any
advertisement material at Pawri’s office. He also denied
that he had told Pawri not to publish the advertisement. It
is to be noted that Police Inspector Mokashi examined before
S.I. Gaud at the trial had stated in his examination-inchief
that at 2.30 p.m. on 10-11-1965 he had asked Gaud to
visit different newspaper establishments including Bombay
Samachar to find out whether the appellant had sent anyone
there to surrender the diamonds as unclaimed.
Pawri’s evidence was that two persons had come to see
him on November 10, 1965 for the purpose of putting in an
advertisement relating to the finding of a packet of
diamonds. According to Pawri the two persons had given him a
text of an advertisement to b.e published along with a
covering letter signed by one and counter-signed by the
other and that the third accused was one of the persons who
had met him at his office and that the covering letter as
well as the advertisement material had been’ signed by both
the persons who had met him. The charges for advertisement
amounting to Rs. 40 had been paid by one of them and a
receipt taken. One of the two persons had also produced a
card of Dawood Suleman attached to the covering letter in
response to a request for identification. The letter dated
10-11-1965 shows that it was addressed to the manager,
Bombay Samachar signed by Ramsingh Santram and Dawood
Suleman Ghanchi and the text of it:
"We have found diamond packets on
(platform) No. 3 of Masjid Bunder station at
eight o’clock at night on the date 9-11-1965.
A public notice in respect thereof is sent
herewith. Please publish the same on the
first page of the issue dated 11
-11-1965,
Thursday."
The text of the statement meant for insertion
in the newspaper ran:
"A diamond packet has been found at Bombay
Central Railway station on 9-11-65. Please
contact Bombay Samachar by proving identity
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and paying the charges for the public notice."
340
Below the above were the words:
’Care of’ Anand Savarorup Samma,
Market, West Malad.
Ramsingh Santram
Dawood Suleman Ghanchi Ghoghari Mohalla
136, Niaz Building Ground Floor,
Bombay-3.
Pawri stated that Bombay Central railway station had been
written by him after scoring out Masjid Bunder. In cross-
examination he said that the two persons had brought the
diamonds and wanted to leave the same at the newspaper
office but this was declined. They had come to the office
at about 11 a.m. and seen a director before meeting the
witness. The advertisement was to. be published on the
morning of 11th but this was not done because the police had
given instructions to the contrary. The police had gone to
their office in the afternoon when he had to1d them what had
taken place in the morning.
In view of the evidence of Pawri and Mokashi it is not
possible to accept the testimony of Gaud. It is incredible
that Guad who had gone to the newspaper office specially for
the purpose of finding out whether anybody had approached
the newspaper people to surrender the diamonds would not ask
Pawri in detail about the persons who had met him or what
they had told him or what they had done about the
publication of the finding of the diamonds. Pawri’s
definite statement was that he had told the police all that
had happened in the morning. In our view, Pawri must have
shown Gaud the advertisement material, the covering letter
with the card and the names of the two persons and the
address of one of them. He could not possibly have failed
to tell Gaud that the two persons who had come to him had
even offered to hand over the diamonds. There is no
positive evidence as to whether Gaud had asked the Bombay
Samachar people not to insert the advertisement on the
morning of the 11th. But. nothing turns on that. It was
11.0’clock in the morning when Parekh and accused No. 3 had
gone to the newspaper office and it was about 3 in the
afternoon that Gaud met Pawri for the purpose of making
enquiries. Gaud’s statement that Pawri had given him
Parekh’s address from memory cannot be accepted. Besides it
is absurd to suggest that Gaud would not have asked Pawri to
show him the documents made over by Parekh and accused No. 3
or that there would have been any reluctance on the part of
Pawri to tell Gaud about it when he knew that the police
were making investigations about a packet of diamonds picked
from the pocket of someone who had lodged a complaint with
the police.
341
In our view Gaud must have learnt that Parekh and or
accused No. 3 had the custody of the diamonds. Therefore
the statement of the appellant that accused No. 3 had the
custody of the diamonds would not be something unknown to
the police so as to constitute "a fact deposed to as
discovered in consequence of the information received" from
the appellant. The discovery, if any, merely related to the
whereabouts of accused No. 3. There was no discovery of any
fact deposed to by the appellant within the meaning of s.
27. If the police had not gone to the office of the Bombay
Samachar and had not learnt of the complicity of the third
accused with the crime, the statement of the appellant would
amount to information received from him relating to the
discovery of the diamonds in the custody of accused No. 3.
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the result although the statement. might otherwise have
been admissible in evidence, that there was no discovery of
a fact connecting the appellant with the receipt of the
diamonds which were stolen within the meaning of s. 27 of
the Evidence Act because the police already knew that the
third and or the fourth accused had the diamonds. The appeal
must be allowed and the appellant directed to be set at
liberty.
Y.P. Appeal allowed.
L3SupCI/70--10
342