Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 222 of 1997
PETITIONER:
State of Himachal Pradesh
RESPONDENT:
Pawan Kumar
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/04/2005
BENCH:
CJI R.C. Lahoti, G. P. Mathur & P.K. Balasubramanyan
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
WITH
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.375 OF 2003
State of Rajasthan .. Appellant
-vs-
Bhanwar Lal .. Respondent
G.P. MATHUR, J.
Criminal Appeal No. 222 of 1997
1. In view of difference of opinion between two learned Judges who
heard the appeal, the matter has been placed before this larger bench and the
question for consideration is whether the safeguards provided by Section 50
of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (for short ’the
NDPS Act’ or ’the Act’) regarding search of any "person" would also apply
to any bag, briefcase or any such article or container etc., which is being
carried by him.
2. The essential facts of the case, which are necessary for decision of the
appeal, may be stated in brief. According to the case of the prosecution,
Hukum Singh and Munshi Ram, Head Constables and some police personnel
were checking buses at the bus stand, Mandi in the night of 18.7.1994.
While checking a bus at about 8.45 p.m., they noticed that the accused
Pawan Kumar (respondent herein), who was carrying a bag, Ex.P3, slipped
out from the rear door of the bus and thereafter started running towards
Subzi Mandi side. The police personnel got suspicious and after a chase
apprehended him near the gate of bus stand. They felt smell of opium
emitting from the bag and, therefore, telephonically informed Prem Thakur,
Deputy S.P./S.H.O., P.S. Sadar, Mandi. Prem Thakur came to the spot and
inquired from the accused whether he wanted to be searched by police or by
a Magistrate. The accused disclosed his name and expressed his willingness
to be searched by the police. A search of the accused and the bag being
carried by him was then conducted and 360 gms. of opium wrapped in
polythene was found inside the bag. Two samples of the recovered opium,
each weighing 20 gms. were taken and were sealed separately and a seizure
memo was prepared. On the basis of the Ruka Ex.P8, an FIR was lodged at
the Police Station and thereafter usual investigation followed which
culminated in filing of a charge-sheet against the accused. The leaned
Sessions Judge, Mandi, by the judgment and order dated 26.11.1994
convicted the respondent (accused) under Section 18 of the NDPS Act and
sentenced him to undergo rigorous imprisonment for 10 years and to pay a
fine of Rs.1 lakh. The respondent preferred an appeal against his conviction
and sentence before the High Court of Himachal Pradesh. The High Court
held that the opinion given by the Chemical Examiner regarding the
substance recovered from the bag of the accused could not be treated to be
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opinion of the Chemical Examiner as defined under the Act and the Rules
and, therefore, the same had to be excluded from consideration. It was
further held that the provisions of Section 50 of NDPS Act had not been
complied with while conducting the search of the bag and, therefore,
recovery of opium from the possession of the accused was not established.
On these findings, the appeal was allowed by the judgment and order dated
26.8.1996 and the conviction of the respondent was set aside.
3. The State of Himachal Pradesh preferred the present appeal by special
leave challenging the judgment of acquittal passed by the High Court. The
appeal was initially heard by a Bench of two learned Judges. Hon’ble Y.K.
Sabharwal, J. held that the view taken by the High Court that the report of
the Chemical Examiner could not be taken into consideration was not
correct. The finding recorded by the High Court that the prosecution had
failed to prove that any incriminating substance had been recovered from the
possession of the accused was accordingly reversed. Regarding the
applicability of Section 50 of the NDPS Act, after referring to Namdi
Francis Nwazor v. Union of India & Anr. 1998 (8) SCC 534, His Lordship
held as under :
"The answer to the real question in cases where the
line of separation is thin and fine can be obtained by
applying the test of inextricable connection and then
conclusion reached as to whether the search was that
of a ’person’ or not. If the search is of a bag which is
inextricably connected with the person of the accused,
Section 50 of the NDPS Act will apply, and if it is not
so connected, the provisions will not apply .................
..........\005\005\005\005\005\005\005............. The offending article
was found in the bag which accused/respondent was
carrying. The test of inextricable connection between
the person searched and the object recovered is
demonstrably applicable. It cannot be held that
Section 50 has no application merely because the
offending article was in the bag which the accused
was carrying with him."
Finally it was held as under :
"On this fact situation, it cannot be held that the
search was not of a person but was of a bag. Both are
inextricably connected. It has to be held that the
search was that of the respondent’s person. Clearly,
Section 50 of the NDPS Act was applicable but was
not complied. Therefore, the conviction of the
respondent could not be sustained and the High Court
rightly held that Section 50 had been breached."
Hon’ble Arijit Pasayat, J. expressed agreement with the view that the
report of the Chemical Examiner could not be excluded but on the question
of applicability of Section 50 of NDPS Act held that the said provision was
applicable only in the case of a search of a person and not when search of a
bag which is being carried by a person on his shoulder or back is conducted.
His Lordship accordingly held that having regard to the purport and object
of the NDPS Act, the language of Section 50 cannot be given any strained
meaning so as to frustrate the legislative purpose. It was thus held that there
was no infraction of the requirement of Section 50 and the finding to the
contrary recorded by the High Court was clearly wrong. In view of this
difference of opinion, the appeal has been placed before the present Bench.
4. The controversy turns round Section 50 of the NDPS Act and the
same (at the relevant time) read as under :
"50. Conditions under which search of persons
shall be conducted \026 (1) When any officer duly
authorized under section 42 is about to search any
person under the provisions of Section 41, Section 42
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or Section 43, he shall, if such person so requires, take
such person without unnecessary delay to the nearest
Gazetted Officer of any of the departments mentioned
in section 42 or to the nearest Magistrate.
(2) If such requisition is made, the officer may
detain the person until he can bring him before the
Gazetted Officer or the Magistrate referred to in sub-
section (1)
(3) The Gazetted Officer or the Magistrate before
whom any such person is brought shall, if he sees no
reasonable ground for search, forthwith discharge the
person but otherwise shall direct that search be made.
(4) No female shall be searched by anyone
excepting a female."
5. The question, which requires consideration, is what is the meaning of
the words "search any person" occurring in sub-Section (1) of Section 50 of
the Act. Learned counsel for the accused has submitted that the word
"person" occurring in Section 50 would also include within its ambit any
bag, briefcase or any such article or container, etc., being carried by such
person and the provisions of Section 50 have to be strictly complied with
while conducting search of such bag, briefcase, article or container, etc.
Learned counsel for the State has, on the other hand, submitted that there is
no warrant for giving such an extended meaning and the word "person"
would mean only the person himself and not any bag, briefcase, article or
container, etc., being carried by him.
6. The word "person" has not been defined in the Act. Section 2(xxix)
of the Act says that the words and expressions used herein and not defined
but defined in the Code of Criminal Procedure have the meanings
respectively assigned to them in that Code. The Code of Criminal
Procedure, however, does not define the word "person". Section 2(y) of the
Code says that the words and expressions used therein and not defined but
defined in the Indian Penal Code have the meanings respectively assigned to
them in that Code. Section 11 of the Indian Penal Code says that the word
"person" includes any Company or Association or body of persons whether
incorporated or not. Similar definition of the word "person" has been given
in Section 3(42) of the General Clauses Act. Therefore, these definitions
render no assistance for resolving the controversy in hand.
7. One of the basic principles of interpretation of Statutes is to construe
them according to plain, literal and grammatical meaning of the words. If
that is contrary to, or inconsistent with, any express intention or declared
purpose of the Statute, or if it would involve any absurdity, repugnancy or
inconsistency, the grammatical sense must then be modified, extended or
abridged, so far as to avoid such an inconvenience, but no further. The onus
of showing that the words do not mean what they say lies heavily on the
party who alleges it. He must advance something which clearly shows that
the grammatical construction would be repugnant to the intention of the Act
or lead to some manifest absurdity (See Craies on Statute Law, Seventh ed.
page 83-85). In the well known treatise \026 Principles of Statutory
Interpretation by Justice G.P. Singh, the learned author has enunciated the
same principle that the words of the Statute are first understood in their
natural, ordinary or popular sense and phrases and sentences are construed
according to their grammatical meaning, unless that leads to some absurdity
or unless there is something in the context or in the object of the Statute to
suggest the contrary (See the Chapter \026 The Rule of Literal Construction \026
page 78 \026 Ninth ed.). This Court has also followed this principle right from
the beginning. In Jugalkishore Saraf v. M/s Raw Cotton Co. Ltd. AIR 1955
SC 376, S.R. Das, J. said: \026
"The cardinal rule of construction of statutes is to read
the statute literally, that is, by giving to the words
used by the legislature their ordinary, natural and
grammatical meaning. If, however, such a reading
leads to absurdity and the words are susceptible of
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another meaning the Court may adopt the same. But
if no such alternative construction is possible, the
Court must adopt the ordinary rule of literal
interpretation."
A catena of subsequent decisions have followed the same line. It,
therefore, becomes necessary to look to dictionaries to ascertain the correct
meaning of the word "person".
8. The dictionary meaning of the word "person" is as under :
Chambers’s Dictionary : An individual; a living soul; a human
being;
b: the outward appearance, & c :
bodily form; a distinction in
form; according as the subject of the
verb is the person speaking, spoken to
or spoken of.
Webster’s Third New : An individual human being; a human
International Dictionary body as distinguished from an animal
or thing; an individual having a
specified kind of bodily appearance;
the body of a human being as
presented to public view normally
with its appropriate coverings and
clothings; a living individual unit; a
being possessing or forming the
subject of personality.
Black’s Law Dictionary : In general usage, a human being (i.e.
natural person), though by statute
term may include labour
organizations, partnerships,
associations, corporations.
Law Lexicon : The expression ’person’ is a noun
by P. Ramanatha Aiyar according to grammar and it means a
character represented as on the stage,
a human being; a self-conscious
personality.
9. We are not concerned here with the wide definition of the word
"person", which in the legal world includes corporations, associations or
body of individuals as factually in these type of cases search of their
premises can be done and not of their person. Having regard to the scheme
of the Act and the context in which it has been used in the Section it
naturally means a human being or a living individual unit and not an
artificial person. The word has to be understood in a broad commonsense
manner and, therefore, not a naked or nude body of a human being but the
manner in which a normal human being will move about in a civilized
society. Therefore, the most appropriate meaning of the word "person"
appears to be \026 "the body of a human being as presented to public view
usually with its appropriate coverings and clothings". In a civilized society
appropriate coverings and clothings are considered absolutely essential and
no sane human being comes in the gaze of others without appropriate
coverings and clothings. The appropriate coverings will include footwear
also as normally it is considered an essential article to be worn while moving
outside one’s home. Such appropriate coverings or clothings or footwear,
after being worn, move along with the human body without any appreciable
or extra effort. Once worn, they would not normally get detached from the
body of the human being unless some specific effort in that direction is
made. For interpreting the provision, rare cases of some religious monks
and sages, who, according to the tenets of their religious belief do not cover
their body with clothings, are not to be taken notice of. Therefore, the word
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"person" would mean a human being with appropriate coverings and
clothings and also footwear.
10. A bag, briefcase or any such article or container, etc. can, under no
circumstances, be treated as body of a human being. They are given a
separate name and are identifiable as such. They cannot even remotely be
treated to be part of the body of a human being. Depending upon the
physical capacity of a person, he may carry any number of items like a bag,
a briefcase, a suitcase, a tin box, a thaila, a jhola, a gathri, a holdall, a
carton, etc. of varying size, dimension or weight. However, while carrying
or moving along with them, some extra effort or energy would be required.
They would have to be carried either by the hand or hung on the shoulder or
back or placed on the head. In common parlance it would be said that a
person is carrying a particular article, specifying the manner in which it was
carried like hand, shoulder, back or head, etc. Therefore, it is not possible
to include these articles within the ambit of the word "person" occurring in
Section 50 of the Act.
11. An incriminating article can be kept concealed in the body or
clothings or coverings in different manner or in the footwear. While
making a search of such type of articles, which have been kept so concealed,
it will certainly come within the ambit of the word "search of person". One
of the tests, which can be applied is, where in the process of search the
human body comes into contact or shall have to be touched by the person
carrying out the search, it will be search of a person. Some indication of
this is provided by Sub-section (4) of Section 50 of the Act, which provides
that no female shall be searched by anyone excepting a female. The
legislature has consciously made this provision as while conducting search
of a female, her body may come in contact or may need to be touched and,
therefore, it should be done only by a female. In the case of a bag, briefcase
or any such article or container, etc., they would not normally move along
with the body of the human being unless some extra or special effort is
made. Either they have to be carried in hand or hung on the shoulder or
back or placed on the head. They can be easily and in no time placed away
from the body of the carrier. In order to make a search of such type of
objects, the body of the carrier will not come in contact of the person
conducting the search. Such objects cannot be said to be inextricably
connected with the person, namely, the body of the human being.
Inextricable means incapable of being disentangled or untied or forming a
maze or tangle from which it is impossible to get free.
12. The scope and ambit of Section 50 of the Act was examined in
considerable detail by a Constitution Bench in State of Punjab v. Baldev
Singh 1999 (6) SCC 172 and para 12 of the reports is being reproduced
below :
"12. On its plain reading, Section 50 would come
into play only in the case of a search of a person as
distinguished from search of any premises etc.
However, if the empowered officer, without any prior
information as contemplated by Section 42 of the Act
makes a search or causes arrest of a person during the
normal course of investigation into an offence or
suspected offence and on completion of that search, a
contraband under the NDPS Act is also recovered, the
requirements of Section 50 of the Act are not
attracted."
The Bench recorded its conclusion in para 57 of the reports and sub-
paras (1), (2), (3) and (6) are being reproduced below :
57. On the basis of the reasoning and discussion
above, the following conclusions arise:
(1) That when an empowered officer or a duly
authorized officer acting on prior information is
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about to search a person, it is imperative for him to
inform the person concerned of his right under
sub-section (1) of Section 50 of being taken to the
nearest gazetted officer or the nearest Magistrate
for making the search. However, such information
may not necessarily be in writing.
(2) That failure to inform the person concerned about
the existence of his right to be searched before a
gazetted officer or a Magistrate would cause
prejudice to an accused.
(3) That a search made by an empowered officer, on
prior information, without informing the person of
his right that if he so requires, he shall be taken
before a gazetted officer or a Magistrate for search
and in case he so opts, failure to conduct his search
before a gazetted officer or a Magistrate may not
vitiate the trial but would render the recovery of
the illicit article suspect and vitiate the conviction
and sentence of an accused, where the conviction
has been recorded only on the basis of the
possession of the illicit article, recovered from his
person, during a search conducted in violation of
the provisions of Section50 of the Act.
\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005...
...................\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005
(6) That in the context in which the protection has
been incorporated in Section 50 for the benefit of
the person intended to be searched, we do not
express any opinion whether the provisions of
Section 50 are mandatory or directory, but hold
that failure to inform the person concerned of his
right as emanating from sub-section (1) of Section
50, may render the recovery of the contraband
suspect and the conviction and sentence of an
accused bad and unsustainable in law."
13. The above quoted dictum of the Constitution Bench shows that the
provisions of Section 50 will come into play only in the case of personal
search of the accused and not of some baggage like a bag, article or
container, etc. which he may be carrying.
14. Learned counsel for the State has referred to large number of
decisions of this Court wherein Section 50 was held inapplicable in the case
of search of some baggage or article etc., which was in immediate
possession or was being carried by the accused. We do not consider it
necessary to burden this judgment by referring to all the authorities cited but
would only give a gist of some of the cases which is as under :
I. Abdul Rashid Ibrahim Mansuri v. State of Gujarat 2000 (2) SCC 513
\026 This is a decision by a Three Judge Bench presided over by Dr. A.S.
Anand, C.J., who wrote the opinion of the Court in the Constitution
Bench decision in State of Punjab v. Baldev Singh. In this case four
gunny bags were found in an auto rickshaw which the accused was
driving and there was no other person present. The argument based
on non-compliance of Section 50 as explained in the case of Baldev
Singh was rejected on the ground that the gunny bags were not
inextricably connected with the person of the accused.
II. Madan Lal v. State of H.P. 2003 (7) SCC 465 (para 16) \026 It was held
that Section 50 would apply in the case of search of a persona as
contrasted to search of vehicles, premises or articles.
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III. Gurbax Singh v. State of Haryana 2001 (3) SCC 28 \026 Accused got
down from a train carrying a Katta (gunny bag) on his shoulder.
Held that Section 50 was not applicable.
IV. State of Punjab v. Makhan Singh 2004 (3) SCC 453 \026 The accused
was apprehended while alighting from a bus with a tin box in his hand
in which contraband was found. The High Court acquitted the
accused on account of non-compliance of Section 50. On the finding
that Section will not apply, the judgment of the High Court was
reversed and the accused was convicted.
V. Kanhaiya Lal v. State of M.P. 2000 (10) SCC 380 \026 One kg. of opium
was found in a bag which was being carried by the accused. The
argument based on Section 50 was rejected on the ground that it was
not a case of search of the person of the accused.
VI. Birakishore Kar v. State of Orissa 2000 (9) SCC 541 \026 Accused was
found lying on a plastic bag in a train compartment. Argument based
on Section 50 was rejected on the ground that the accused was sitting
on the plastic bag and it was not a case of the search of the person of
the accused.
VII. Krishna Kanwar v. State of Rajasthan 2004 (2) SCC 608 (para 19) \026
Held, Section 50 applies where search has to be in relation to a person
as contrasted to search of premises, vehicles, articles or bag.
VIII. Sarjudas v. State of Gujarat 1999 (8) SCC 508 \026 The accused were
riding a scooter on which a bag was hanging in which charas was
found \026 Section 50 was held not applicable as it was not a case where
the person of the accused was searched.
IX. Saikou Jabbi v. State of Maharahstra JT 2003 (9) SC 609 \026 Heroine
was found in a bag. It was held that Section 50 was not applicable as
it applies to search of a person.
15. Learned counsel for the respondent has placed strong reliance on
Namdi Francis Nwazor v. Union of India & Anr. 1998 (8) SCC 534 which is
a decision by a Bench of three learned Judges. In this case, the accused had
checked in at the Indira Gandhi International Airport for taking the flight
from Delhi to Lagos. A team of the Narcotics Control Bureau, on
suspicion, decided to check his baggage. At the point of time when the
actual search took place, he was carrying two handbags but nothing
incriminating was found therefrom. He had booked one bag which had
already been checked in and was loaded in the aircraft by which he was
supposed to travel. The bag was brought to the customs counter and on
checking 180 gms. of heroine was found therein. The Bench held that on a
plain reading of Sub-section (1) of Section 50, it applies to cases of search of
a person and not to search of any article in the sense that the article is at a
distant place from where the offender is actually searched. After arriving at
the above finding, the Bench also observed - "We must hasten to clarify that
if that person is carrying a handbag or the like and the incriminating article
is found therefrom, it would still be a search of the person of the accused
requiring compliance with Section 50 of the Act. However, when an article
is lying elsewhere and is not on the person of the accused and is brought to a
place where the accused is found, and on search, incriminating articles are
found therefrom it cannot attract the requirements of Section 50 of the Act
for the simple reason that it was not found on the accused person." The
Bench then finally concluded that on the facts of the case Section 50 was not
attracted. The facts of the case clearly show that the bag from which
incriminating article was recovered had already been checked in and was
loaded in the aircraft. Therefore, it was not at all a search of a person to
which Section 50 may be attracted. The observations, which was made in
the later part of the judgment (reproduced above), are more in the nature of
obiter as such a situation was not required to be considered for the decision
of the case. No reasons have been given for arriving at the conclusion that
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search of a handbag being carried by a person would amount to search of a
person. It may be noted that this case was decided prior to the Constitution
Bench decision in State of Punjab v. Baldev Singh. After the decision in
Baldev Singh, this Court has consistently held that Section 50 would only
apply to search of a person and not to any bag, article or container, etc. being
carried by him.
Another judgment relied upon by the learned counsel for the accused
is Beckodan Abdul Rahiman v. State of Kerala JT 2002 (3) Cri.L.J. 2529
(SC). Here 11 gms of opium was found in a polythene bag which had
been concealed in the fold of dhoti which the accused was wearing. This
was clearly a case of search of a persons, as explained above, and Section 50
was rightly held applicable.
16. There is another aspect of the matter, which requires consideration.
Criminal law should be absolutely certain and clear and there should be no
ambiguity or confusion in its application. The same principle should apply
in the case of search or seizure, which come in the domain of detection of
crime. The position of such bags or articles is not static and the person
carrying them often changes the manner in which they are carried. People
waiting at a bus stand or railway platform sometimes keep their baggage on
the ground and sometimes keep in their hand, shoulder or back. The change
of position from ground to hand or shoulder will take a fraction of a second
but on the argument advanced by learned counsel for the accused that search
of bag so carried would be search of a person, it will make a sharp difference
in the applicability of Section 50 of the Act. After receiving information, an
officer empowered under Section 42 of the Act, may proceed to search this
kind of baggage of a person which may have been placed on the ground, but
if at that very moment when he may be about to open it, the person lifts the
bag or keeps it on his shoulder or some other place on his body, Section 50
may get attracted. The same baggage often keeps changing hands if more
than one person are moving together in a group. Such transfer of baggage at
the nick of time when it is about to be searched would again create practical
problem. Who in such a case would be informed of the right that he is
entitled in law to be searched before a Magistrate or a Gazetted Officer?
This may lead to many practical difficulties. A statute should be so
interpreted as to avoid unworkable or impracticable results. In Statutory
Interpretation by Francis Bennion (Third ed.) para 313, the principle has
been stated in the following manner :
"The court seeks to avoid a construction of an
enactment that produces an unworkable or
impracticable result, since this is unlikely to have
been intended by Parliament. Sometimes however,
there are overriding reasons for applying such a
construction, for example where it appears that
Parliament really intended it or the literal meaning is
too strong."
The learned author has referred to Sheffield City Council v. Yorkshire
Water Services Ltd. (1991) 1 WLR 58 at 71, where it was held as under :
"Parliament is taken not to intend the carrying out of
its enactments to be unworkable or impracticable, so
the court will be slow to find in favour of a
construction that leads to these consequences. This
follows the path taken by judges in developing the
common law. ’\005 the common law of England has not
always developed on strictly logical lines, and where
the logic leads down a path that is beset with practical
difficulties the courts have not been frightened to turn
aside and seek the pragmatic solution that will best
serve the needs of society."
While interpreting a provision in the Finance Act , 1972, Lord
Denning in S.J. Grange Ltd. v. Customs and Excise Commissioners (1979) 2
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All ER 91, observed that if the literal construction leads to impracticable
results, it would be necessary to do little adjustment so as to make the
section workable.
17. As pointed out in State of Punjab v. Baldev Singh, drug abuse is a
social malady. While drug addiction eats into the vitals of the society, drug
trafficking not only eats into the vitals of the economy of a country, but
illicit money generated by drug trafficking is often used for illicit activities
including encouragement of terrorism. It has acquired the dimensions of an
epidemic, affects the economic policies of the State, corrupts the system and
is detrimental to the future of a country. Reference in the said decision has
also been made to some United Nation Conventions against illicit trafficking
in narcotic drugs, which the Government of India has ratified. It is,
therefore, absolutely imperative that those who indulge in this kind of
nefarious activities should not go scot-free on technical pleas which come
handy to their advantage in a fraction of second by slight movement of the
baggage, being placed to any part of their body, which baggage may contain
the incriminating article.
18. It will be useful here to take note of the general law regarding search
and seizure and the effect of any illegality committed during the course of
search on the seizure or recovery made of any incriminating article. In State
of Maharashtra v. Natwarlal Damodardas Soni AIR 1980 SC 593, the Anti-
Corruption Bureau had recovered 100 gold bars each weighing 10 tolas
having foreign markings from the residential premises of the accused,
consequent upon which the custom authorities initiated proceedings in which
he was convicted. The contention raised was that the search and seizure of
the gold by the police was illegal. It was held that the police had powers
under the Code of Criminal Procedure to search and seize the gold if they
had reason to believe that a cognizable offence had been committed in
respect thereof. Assuming arguendo that the search was illegal, then also,
it will not affect the validity of the seizure and further investigation by the
custom authorities or the validity of the trial which followed on the
complaint of the Assistant Collector of Customs.
19. In Radha Kishan v. State of U.P. AIR 1963 SC 822, the recovery of
certain articles was challenged on the ground that the search was made in
contravention of Sections 103 and 165 Cr.P.C. The contention was repelled
thus -
"So far as the alleged illegality of the search is
concerned it is sufficient to say that even assuming
that the search was illegal the seizure of the articles is
not vitiated. It may be that where the provision of Ss.
103 and 165, Code of Criminal Procedure, are
contravened the search could be resisted by the person
whose premises are sought to be searched. It may
also be that because of the illegality of the search the
Court may be inclined to examine carefully the
evidence regarding the seizure. But beyond these
two consequences no further consequence ensues."
20. Again in Shyam Lal v. State of M.P. AIR 1972 SC 886, it was held
that even if the search is illegal being in contravention with the requirement
of Section 165 Cr.P.C. that provision ceases to have any application to the
subsequent steps in the investigation. This question has recently been
examined by a Three Judge Bench of this Court in State v. N.M.T. Joy
Immaculate 2004 (5) SCC 729 and the relevant portion of paragraph 14 and
15.1 are being reproduced below :
"\005\005\005\005.The admissibility or otherwise of a piece
of evidence has to be judged having regard to the
provisions of the Evidence Act. The Evidence Act
or the Code of Criminal Procedure or for that matter
any other law in India does not exclude relevant
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evidence on the ground that it was obtained under an
illegal search and seizure. Challenge to a search and
seizure made under the Criminal Procedure Code on
the ground of violation of fundamental rights under
Article 20(3) of the Constitution was examined in
M.P. Sharma v. Satish Chandra AIR 1954 SC 300 by
a Bench of 8 Judges of this Court. The challenge was
repelled and it was held as under :
"A power of search and seizure is in any system
of jurisprudence an over-riding power of the
State for the protection of social security and
that power is necessarily regulated by law.
When the Constitution makers have thought fit
not to subject such regulation to constitutional
limitations by recognition of a fundamental
right to privacy, analogous to the American
Fourth Amendment, we have no justification to
import it, into a totally different fundamental
right, by some process of strained construction.
Nor is it legitimate to assume that the
constitutional protection under Article 20(3)
would be defeated by the statutory provisions
for searches."
15. The law of evidence in our country is modeled
on the rules of evidence which prevailed in English
Law. In Kuruma v. The Queen 1955 AC 197 an
accused was found in unlawful possession of some
ammunition in a search conducted by two police
officers who were not authorised under the law to
carry out the search. The question was whether the
evidence with regard to the unlawful possession of
ammunition could be excluded on the ground that the
evidence had been obtained on an unlawful search.
The Privy Council stated the principle as under :
"The test to be applied, both in civil and in
criminal cases, in considering whether evidence
is admissible is whether it is relevant to the
matters in issue. If it is, it is admissible and the
Court is not concerned with how it was
obtained".
15.1 This question has been examined threadbare
by a Constitution Bench in Pooran Mal v. Director of
Inspection 1974(1) SCC 345 and the principle
enunciated therein is as under :
"If the Evidence Act, 1872 permits relevancy as
the only test of admissibility of evidence, and,
secondly, that Act or any other similar law in
force does not exclude relevant evidence on the
ground that it was obtained under an illegal
search or seizure, it will be wrong to invoke the
supposed spirit of our Constitution for
excluding such evidence. Nor is it open to us to
strain the language of the Constitution, because
some American Judges of the American
Supreme Court have spelt out certain
constitutional protections from the provisions
of the American Constitution. So, neither by
invoking the spirit of our Constitution nor by a
strained construction of any of the fundamental
rights can we spell out the exclusion of
evidence obtained on an illegal search.
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So far as India is concerned its law of
evidence is modeled on the rules of evidence
which prevailed in English Law, and Courts in
India and in England have consistently refused
to exclude relevant evidence merely on the
ground that it is obtained by illegal search or
seizure. Where the test of admissibility of
evidence lies in relevancy, unless there is an
express or necessarily implied prohibition in the
Constitution or other law evidence obtained as
a result of illegal search or seizure is not liable
to be shut out."
21. In the United States the law regarding illegally obtained evidence has
been stated as under in 29 American Jurisprudence 2d (para 408) :
"408. Generally
In criminal prosecutions, in particular, evidence
is frequently obtained by methods that are morally
reprehensible and offensive to fair dealing, under
circumstances which meet with disapprobation of the
courts, and in many instances, by means that are
illegal. However, it is a rule of the common law that
the admissibility of evidence is not affected by the
illegality of the means by which it is obtained, and if
evidence offered in support of a fact in issue is
relevant and otherwise competent, it is generally
admissible, though it may have been obtained
unethically, wrongfully, or unlawfully, unless its
admission will violate a constitutional guaranty of the
person against whom its admission is sought, or is in
contravention of a statutory enactment of the
jurisdiction. Accordingly, the exclusion of evidence
logically relevant in a criminal prosecution can be
justified only by an overriding public policy expressed
in the Constitution or the law of the land. The
underlying principle admitting evidence wrongfully or
illegally obtained is that the objection to an offer of
proof made upon the trial raises no question other than
competency, relevancy, and materiality, and the court
cannot enter upon the trial of collateral issues as to the
source from which the evidence was obtained. It has
also been said that a far-reaching miscarriage of
justice would result if the public were to be denied the
right to use convincing evidence of a defendant’s guilt
because it had been brought to light through the
excessive zeal of an individual, whether an officer or
not, whose misconduct must be deemed his own act
and not that of the state. \005\005\005.."
The Fourth Amendment of American Constitution guarantees the
"right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects
and against unreasonable searches and seizures." On the basis of the
aforesaid Constitutional provision, the United States Supreme Court in some
earlier decisions laid down the rule that evidence obtained by means of an
unlawful search and seizure by federal officers is not admissible against an
accused in a criminal prosecution in a federal court where timely objection
to the use of such evidence has been made. However, in Stone v. Powell
428 US 465 the aforesaid view was reversed and it was held that the
application of the rule deflects the truthfinding process and often frees the
guilty. The disparity in particular cases between the error committed by the
police officer and the windfall afforded to a guilty defendant by application
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of the rule is contrary to the idea of proportionality that is essential to the
concept of justice. It was observed that although the rule is thought to deter
unlawful police activity in part through the nurturing of respect for Fourth
Amendment values, if applied indiscriminately it may well have the opposite
effect of generating disrespect for the law and administration of justice.
The Court quoted with approval the following point highlighted by Justice
Black, in his dissenting opinion in an earlier decision rendered in Kaufman
v. United States 394 US 237:
"A claim of illegal search and seizure under the
Fourth Amendment is crucially different from many
other constitutional rights; ordinarily the evidence
seized can in no way have been rendered
untrustworthy by the means of its seizure and indeed
often this evidence alone establishes beyond virtually
any shadow of a doubt that the defendant is guilty."
22. The Constitution Bench decision in Pooran Mal v. The Director of
Inspection 1974 (1) SCC 345 was considered in State of Punjab v. Baldev
Singh 1999 (6) SCC 172 and having regard to the scheme of the Act and
especially the provisions of Section 50 thereof, it was held that it was not
possible to hold that the judgment in the said case can be said to have laid
down that the "recovered illicit article" can be used as "proof of unlawful
possession" of the contraband seized from the suspect as a result of illegal
search and seizure. Otherwise, there would be no distinction between
recovery of illicit drugs, etc. seized during a search conducted after
following the provisions of Section 50 of the Act and a seizure made during
a search conducted in breach of the provisions of Section 50. Having regard
to the scheme and the language used, a very strict view of Section 50 of the
Act was taken and it was held that failure to inform the person concerned of
his right as emanating from sub-Section (1) of Section 50 may render the
recovery of the contraband suspect and sentence of an accused bad and
unsustainable in law. As a corollary, there is no warrant or justification for
giving an extended meaning to the word "person" occurring in the same
provision so as to include even some bag, article or container or some other
baggage being carried by him.
23. Coming to the merits of the appeal, the High Court allowed the appeal
on the finding that the report of the Chemical Examiner had to be excluded
and that there was non compliance of Section 50 of the Act. The learned
Judges of this Court, who heard the appeal earlier, have recorded a
unanimous opinion that the report of the Chemical Examiner was admissible
in evidence and could not be excluded. In view of the discussion made
earlier, Section 50 of the Act can have no application on the facts and
circumstances of the present case as opium was allegedly recovered from the
bag, which was being carried by the accused. The High Court did not
examine the testimony of the witnesses and other evidence on merits.
Accordingly, the matter has to be remitted back to the High Court for a fresh
hearing of the appeal.
24. In the result, the appeal is allowed. The judgment and order dated
26.8.1996 of the High Court is set aside. The appeal preferred by the
respondent Pawan Kumar shall be heard afresh by the High Court in the
light of the findings recorded by this Court and in accordance with law.
Criminal Appeal No. 375 of 2003
According to the case of the prosecution, Ram Niwas, SHO Police
Station Pilibanga received information that the accused who was indulged in
smuggling of opium was standing at the bus stand. A police party reached
the main bus stand at about 7.10 p.m. and found the accused standing with
an attachi in his hand. A written notice was then given to the accused that
his attachi-case will be searched as information has been received that the
same contains opium. He was also asked whether he would like the search
to be conducted before a Magistrate or a Gazetted Officer. This fact was
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also mentioned in the notice. The accused said that he did not want to be
searched before any Magistrate or Gazetted Officer and the SHO could carry
on the search. This statement of the accused was signed by him. The
search of the attachi revealed 5 kgs. of opium. After conducting other
formalities and investigation of the case, the accused was put up for trial.
The learned Sessions Judge convicted the accused under Section 8/18 of the
NDPS Act and sentenced him to 10 years RI and a fine of Rs.1 lakh. The
High Court by a very cryptic judgment held that the provisions of Section 50
of the NDPS Act were not complied with as the accused was not informed of
his right to be searched in presence of a Magistrate or a Gazetted Officer and
accordingly allowed the appeal and set aside the conviction and sentence of
the accused.
For the reasons discussed earlier, the view taken by the High Court
cannot be sustained as it was a case of search of an attachi which was
carried by the accused. The appeal is accordingly allowed and the judgment
and order dated 5.10.2001 of the High Court is set aside. The matter is
remitted back to the High Court for a fresh consideration of the appeal on
merits and in accordance with law.