Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 103 of 2003
PETITIONER:
Saikou Jabbi
RESPONDENT:
State of Maharashtra
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/12/2003
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & ARIJIT PASAYAT.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J
The appellant, a Gambian national, was apprehended around mid-
night of 17.9.1993 at the Sahara Airport Bombay for carrying heroin in
his baggage in ET Flight No. 661. Ashok Thaker, (PW-1) an intelligence
officer attached to the Narcotic Bureau screened the baggage and seizure
was made of the heroine weighing about 1 kg. which was concealed in a
suitcase. After recording the statement accused was taken for alleged
contravention of various provisions of the Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (for short the ’Act’) and also under
the Customs Act, 1962 (in short the ’Customs Act’). He was charged for
offence punishable under Sections 21, 23, 28 and 29 of the Act and also
Sections 135(1)(a)(ii) of the Customs Act. Accused pleaded innocence.
He was tried in the Court of Special Judge for Greater Bombay who found
that there was non-compliance with the requirement of Section 50 of the
Act as he was not made aware of his right to be searched before a
gazetted officer or a Magistrate before the search was conducted. It was
also held that the requirement of Section 42(2) to submit the gist of
information to higher officer immediately was also not established. The
accused was acquitted of all the charges. The prosecuting agency filed
an appeal before the Bombay High Court which by the impugned judgment
held the accused guilty for offences punishable under Section 8(c) read
with Section 21 of the Act for which custodial sentence of 10 years
imprisonment and fine of Rs.1 lakh for default stipulation was awarded.
Further for offence relatable to Sections 28 read with Section 23 of the
Act a similar sentence was awarded. Though he was convicted under
Section 135(1)(a)(ii) of the Customs Act, but no separate sentence was
awarded. The High Court held that Section 50 was not attracted to the
facts of the case. Similarly, it was held that there was compliance of
requirements of Section 42(2) of the Act.
Said judgment of the High Court is under challenge in this appeal.
In support of the appeal, learned counsel appearing for the
appellant submitted that the trial Court was justified in holding that
the accusations were not established against the appellant.
Unfortunately, the High Court had on an erroneous reading of Sections 42
and 50 came to hold that there was compliance with the requirements of
the said provisions. The seized articles were sent for chemical
examination on 23.9.1993. This was in violation of Section 55 of the
Act.
Learned counsel for the respondent-State submitted that the High
Court was justified in its conclusion and correct interpretation of the
relevant provisions of the Act have been made. Further, the plea that
there was any prejudice to the accused on account of delayed dispatch
was not taken before the courts below. In any event, the investigating
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officer categorically stated that the seized articles were kept in safe
custody. There was not even any material brought on record to doubt the
statement.
Before dealing with rival submissions, it is appropriate to take
note of the factual background noticed by the trial Court and the High
Court.
During the night between 17.9.1993 and 18.9.1993 PW-1 attached to
Narcotic Control Bureau (in short ’NCB’) Office, received information
that the accused, a Gambian national, was likely to smuggle heroin in
his baggage by ET flight 661, scheduled to arrive at 0645 hours that
night. He received the information when he was at the airport. He
reduced the same to writing (Exh. 16-A) and placed it before his
immediate superior Assistant Director, Mr. S.C. Rohatgi, who was present
at the Airport. Mr. Rohatgi perused it and put his signature and asked
the officer to act upon the said information. At the Airport, he called
two panchas and kept a watch at the X-ray machine counter. One Mr.
Karanjla, who was a security officer, was Screen Machine Operator at the
relevant time. When the accused placed three baggages for screening, the
security officer gave signal to PW-1. On the monitor of the screening
machine PW-1 noticed green dense patches/spot when a blue coloured
caravan make zipper suitcase was put. All the 3 baggages of the accused
were placed on the screening machine. PW-1 as well as the security
officer suspected concealment of contraband in blue coloured suitcase.
The three baggages of the accused were therefore, kept separately near
the counter. PW-1 the intelligence officer, who was also an empowered
officer disclosed his identity to the accused and his intention to
search his baggages. This officer along with the accused, panchas and 3
baggages of the accused went to the Air Traffic Room of Air India for
the purpose of search of those baggages. In that room PW-1 took charge
of the travel document of the accused consisting of his passport, ticket
etc. Accused opened blue coloured suitcase with his keys. The same was
filled with old and new garments and one bed sheet. Two polythene bags
containing brown powder were found in the folds of bed sheet. Small
quantity of the brown powder was taken out for the purpose of testing
which, when tested on testing kit, answered positive for heroin. Both
the polythene bags were emptied in one big polythene bag. The total
quantity of powder found in the said bags weighed 990 grams. Three
samples were drawn in separate small polythene bags. Those bags were
sealed by heating and were put in separate paper bags which were closed.
All these samples packets were sealed with office seal bearing No.03-NCB
in the presence of panchas whose signatures were obtained after putting
particulars and marked S-1, S-2 and S-3. Sample packets were also signed
by PW-1 as well as the accused. The remaining quantity of powder was
separately sealed with the seal of N.C.B. and the signatures of the
panchas and the accused were taken on the labels. The seizure panchnama
(Exh. 17) was prepared. The panchnama was singed by both the panchas as
well as PW-1. One copy of the said panchnama was handed over to the
accused which he acknowledged by putting his signature on the seizure
panchnama. The blue suitcase, the contraband and the bed sheet were
seized. Other two suitcases were returned to the accused. The travel
documents and foreign currency worth 201 US $ and 700 Francs recovered
in personal search of the accused were also seized under the panchnama.
Thereafter, the accused along with the contraband and samples was
brought to the N.C.B. Office. A note about the interception, search and
seizure was prepared by the officer, (Exh. 17-A). The same was placed
before his superior officer Mr. S.C. Rohatgi along with seizure
panchnama and the muddemal property. Summons were served to the accused
under Section 67 of the Act and his statement was recorded by PW.1 on
18.9.1993 in which the accused admitted the recovery of 990 grams of
heroin from his suit case. The same was marked as (Exh.18). His further
statement was recorded on 19.9.1993 as per (Exh.19). The accused was
arrested on 19.9.1993.
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On 23.9.1993, sample packet marked as S-1 was handed over to the
Dy. Chief of the Laboratory and Chemical Analyst’s Report from the
Laboratory dated 26.10.1993 was received (as per Exh.21), according to
which the sample was of heroin (diacetylmorphine). After the
investigation was completed complaint was filed. The Special Judge
framed charges against the accused under Section 8(c) read with Sections
21, 23, 28 and 29 of the Act and under Section 135(1)(a)(ii) of the
Customs Act. Separate charge under Section 8(c) of the Act read with
Section 21 of the Act was also framed against the accused. As the
accused pleaded not guilty, prosecution led evidence of two witnesses.
PW-1, as noted above Ashok Thaker, who had received the information,
conducted the search and also investigated the case. The other witness
examined was panch PW-2 Ankush Yerunkar, who was panch to the search and
seizure of the contraband from the accused. He fully supported the
prosecution case. The prosecution has also produced on record the
relevant documents like copy of the information reduced to writing,
Seizure panchnama, Chemical Analyst’s Report etc.
The first aspect which needs to be considered is whether there was
any non-compliance of Sections 42 and 50 of the Act as pleaded. So far
as these two provisions are concerned, they read as follows:
"Section 42: Power of entry, search, seizure and
arrest without warrant or authorization:
(1) Any such officer (being an officer superior in
rank to a peon, sepoy or constable) of the
departments of central excise, narcotics, customs,
revenue intelligence or any other department of the
Central Government including para-military forces or
armed forces as is empowered in this behalf by
general or special order by the Central Government,
or any such officer (being an officer superior in
rank to a peon, sepoy or constable) of the revenue,
drugs control, excise, police or any other department
of a State Government as is empowered in this behalf
by general or special order of the State Government,
if he has reason to believe from persons knowledge or
information given by any person and taken down in
writing that any narcotic drug, or psychotropic
substance, or controlled substance in respect of
which an offence punishable under this Act has been
committed or any document or other article which may
furnish evidence of the commission of such offence or
any illegally acquired property or any document or
other article which may furnish evidence of holding
any illegally acquired property which is liable for
seizure or freezing or forfeiture under Chapter VA of
this Act is kept or concealed in any building,
conveyance or enclosed place, may between sunrise and
sunset,-
(a) enter into and search any such building,
conveyance or place;
(b) in case of resistance, break open any
door and remove any obstacle to such entry;
(c) seize such drug or substance and all
materials used in the manufacture thereof and any
other article and any animal or conveyance which he
has reason to believe to be liable to confiscation
under this Act and any document or other article
which he has reason to believe may furnish evidence
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of the commission of any offence punishable under
this Act or furnish evidence of holding any illegally
acquired property which is liable for seizure or
freezing or forfeiture under Chapter VA of this Act;
and
(d) detain and search, and, if he thinks
proper, arrest any person whom he has reason to
believe to have committed any offence punishable
under this Act.
Provided that if such officer has reason to
believe that a search warrant or authorization cannot
be obtained without affording opportunity for the
concealment or evidence or facility for the escape of
an offender, he may enter and search such building,
conveyance or enclosed place at any time between
sunset and sunrise after recording the grounds of his
belief.
(2) Where an officer takes down any information in
writing under sub-section (1) or records grounds for
his belief under the proviso thereto, he shall within
seventy-two hours send a copy thereof to his
immediate official superior.
Section 50: Conditions under which search of persons
shall be conducted-
(1) When any officer duly authorized under Section 42
is about to search any person under the provisions of
Section 41, section 42 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) When an officer duly authorized under section
42 has reason to believe that it is not possible to
take the person to be searched to the nearest
Gazetted Officer or Magistrate without the
possibility of the person to be searched parting with
possession of any narcotic drug or psychotropic
substance, or controlled substance or article or
document, he may, instead of taking such person to
the nearest Gazetted Officer or Magistrate, proceed
to search the person as provided under section 100 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973(2 of 1974).
(6) After a search is conducted under sub-section
(5), the officer shall record the reasons for such
belief which necessitated such search and within
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seventy-two hours send a copy thereof to his
immediate official superior."
Now comes the question whether there was non-compliance of Section
50 of the Act.
A bare reading of Section 50 shows that it only applies in case of
personal search of a person. It does not extend to search of a vehicle
or a container or a bag, or premises. (See Kalema Tumba v. State of
Maharashtra and Anr. (JT 1999 (8) SC 293), The State of Punjab v. Baldev
Singh (JT 1999 (4) SC 595), Gurbax Singh v. State of Haryana (2001(3)
SCC 28). The language of Section 50 is implicitly clear that the search
has to be in relation to a person as contrasted to search of premises,
vehicles or articles. This position was settled beyond doubt by the
Constitution Bench in Baldev Singh’s case (supra). Above being the
position, the contention regarding non-compliance of Section 50 of the
Act is also without any substance.
In the case at hand the contraband articles were suspected to be
hidden in the blue suitcase of the accused, and was not in his physical
possession. The suitcase was put on the screening machine. This cannot
be equated to be a recovery made from the person of the accused by a
personal search.
In Birakishore Kar v. State of Orissa (2001 (9) SCC 541) it was
held that when there was a recovery from a plastic bag belonging to the
accused on which he was found sitting on railway compartment, Section 50
was not applicable. Baldev’s case (supra) was referred to hold that
Section 50 in case of search comes into play only in case of search by a
person as distinguished from search from any premises etc. The position
was also highlighted recently in Madan LaL & Anr. v. State of Himachal
Pradesh (2003 AIR SCW 3969). Above being the position the High Court was
justified in holding that Section 50 had no application.
So far as compliance with Section 42(2) is concerned, the
statement of PW-1 to the effect that he had informed his superior
remained unshaken and there was even no cross-examination to point out
any falsity in the said statement. The note of intelligence information
was placed on record vide Exh. 16-A to substantiate the testimony of PW-
1. That being so the High Court was justified in holding that the
provisions of Section 42(2) had been complied with.
Coming to the plea regarding non-compliance of Section 55 of the
Act, as rightly submitted by learned counsel for the respondent-State,
there was not even any argument advanced on that score before the trial
Court and the High Court. Even otherwise also the evidence of the
investigating officer about safe custody of the contraband articles have
not been challenged or shaken in the cross-examination. That being the
position we are not inclined to accept the plea that there was non-
compliance with the requirements of Section 55 of the Act.
Looked at from any angle, the appeal is sans merit, deserves
dismissal, which we direct.