Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 594 of 2002
Appeal (crl.) 720 of 2002
Appeal (crl.) 721 of 2002
Appeal (crl.) 731 of 2002
Appeal (crl.) 828 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Bharatbhai @ Jimi Premchandbhai
RESPONDENT:
State of Gujarat
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/10/2002
BENCH:
Y.K.Sabharwal & H.K. Sema.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Y.K. Sabharwal, J.
Deceased Raghunath Yadav was convicted and sentenced by the
Sessions Court at Varanasi for the murder of father of Brijesh Singh who
is one of the absconding accused in the present case. While on bail in
appeal, Raghunath Yadav, apprehending danger to his life, came to
reside at Mehsana in the State of Gujarat. On 14th June, 1992,
Raghunath Yadav was murdered at Mehsana.
In TADA case Nos.1, 2 3 and 7 of 1996, twelve accused were tried
by the Designated Judge, Ahmedabad for offences under Sections 302,
397, 307, 120B IPC, Section 3(1), 3(3), 3(4) and 5 of the Terrorist And
Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (for short ’TADA Act’) and
under Section 25(1)(a) and (b) of the Arms Act.
The charge-sheet against accused Nos.1 to 3 was filed on 6th April,
1993, against accused Nos. 4 to 6 on 1st July, 1994, against accused Nos.
7 to 11 on 15th April, 1996 and against accused No.12 on 26th November,
1996. The charges were that the accused persons and the absconding
accused Sharifkhan Azizkhan Pathan, Daud Ibrahim Meman,
Brijeshsinh Bholansinh, Radayanarayansinh alias Harinarayansinh alias
Bhulansinh Thakur, Unita Prajapati, deceased accused Sunil Savat and
Abdullatif Abdul Vahab Shaikh had hatched a conspiracy to commit
murder of Raghunath Yadav and thereby, committed criminal acts
punishable under Section 120-B of the Indian Penal Code; as per the
above conspiracy on 14th June, 1992, accused Nos. 1, 3, 4, 8, 9 and the
absconding accused Radayanarayansinh @ Harinarayansinh @
Bhuvansinh Thakur and Brijeshsinh Bhuvansinh @ Ravinathsinh Thakur
had gone to S.T. Bus stand, Mehsana and after obtaining information
about the identification of the deceased as a part of the conspiracy made
firing with the pistol and caused murder of Raghunath Yadav and created
an atmosphere of terror and fear at the said place and then fled away in
the vehicles and, thus, committed offences punishable under Section 302
read with Section 120B IPC and under Sections 3(1) and 3(3) of TADA
Act read with Section 120B IPC; while fleeing away from Mehsana after
firing and committing murder as aforesaid, Police Sub-Inspector, Zala who
tried to arrest the accused was fired at by the accused causing him
injuries and had run away taking the Government Maruti Gypsy with them
and, thus, committing offence punishable under Sections 307, 120B IPC
and under Sections 3(1), 3(3), 3(4) and 5 of the TADA Act read with
Section 120B IPC and Section 397 read with Section 120B IPC.
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The Designated Court, by the impugned judgment and order
convicted and sentenced accused Nos. 4 Subhashsinh @ Mahesh
Shobhnathsinh Thakur, accused No.5 Abdul Khuddarsh Abdulgani
Shaikh, accused No.7 Bharat Premchandbhai Patel, accused No.8
Ramdularsinh Ramdharisinh Thakur and accused No.9 Shitalaprasad
Devjansinh Thakur for offences punishable under Sections 120B, Section
302 read with Section 120B, Section 307 read with Section 120B, Section
397 read with Section 120B IPC and offence under Sections 3(1), 3(3) of
the TADA Act read with Section 5 read with Section 120B IPC. All of them
have been sentenced to undergo life imprisonment for offence under
Section 120B, offence under Section 302 read with Section 120B IPC and
fine of Rs.500/- each and further imprisonment of one month for default in
payment of fine. For other offences, varying punishments have been
awarded. Accused No.12 died during trial and the remaining were
acquitted.
The convicted accused have preferred these appeals under Section
19 of TADA Act. We have perused the record and heard Mr. Yashank
Adhyaru for accused No.7 (Crl.A. No.594/2002), Mr. Ranjit Kumar for
accused No.9 (Crl.A. No.720/2002), Mr. V.S. Kotwal for accused No.8
(Crl.A.No.731/2002), Mr. U.R. Lalit for accused No.4 (Crl.A. No.721/2002),
Mr. Sushil Kumar for accused No.5 (Crl.A. No.828/2002) and Mr.
Mahendra Anand for the respondent.
The conviction of the appellants is primarily based on the two
confessional statements. One made by accused No.7 Bharatbhai and
the other by accused No.8 Ramdularsinh Thakur. These statements were
recorded by Mr. A.S. Bhatia, Superintendent of Police (PW18) under
Section 15 of TADA Act. In respect of the conviction of accused Nos.4, 5
and 9 which is also based mainly on these confessional statements,
according to the prosecution, there is also sufficient corroborative
evidence against them.
The fate of the entire case rests on the legality of the confessional
statements. If the confessional statements are held as inadmissible, the
prosecution case against all the appellants will fail. It has not been
disputed and, in our opinion, rightly, by Mr. Anand, learned counsel for the
respondent-State that in case the confessional statements are held
inadmissible and, therefore, discarded, it would not be possible to sustain
the conviction of the appellants. The learned counsel has, however,
strenuously urged that no provision of the TADA Act or rules framed
thereunder has been violated in recording of the confessional statement
and submitted that the confessional statements of accused Nos. 7 and 8
have been rightly relied upon by the Designated Court in convicting all the
appellants. The facts leading to the recording of the confessional
statements and what is contained therein may be briefly noticed.
Raghunath Yadav was murdered on 14th June, 1992. Accused
No.7 was arrested on 13th December, 1995. His remand had been
obtained upto 29th December, 1995. He was produced before PW18 A.S.
Bhatia, on 27th December, 1995 at 7.30 p.m. PW18 is competent to
record the confessional statement under Section 15 of the TADA Act. The
accused was told by PW18 that he was not legally bound to give
confession and the same shall be used against him. The accused stated
that still on his own and without any sort of pressure, threats or
mental/physical harassment, he intended to give the confessional
statement. The confessional statement was, however, not recorded on
27th December, 1995. He was given time to think over. His confessional
statement was recorded on the next date, i.e., 28th December from 10.45
upto 1145 hours.
Similar is the position in respect of the confessional statement of
accused No.8 Ramdularsinh Thakur. He was first produced before PW18
at 8 p.m. on 27th December, 1995. The confession was recorded on 28th
December from 1145 upto 1215 hours. His arrest was also on 13th
December, 1995. His remand was obtained upto 29th December, 1995.
The english translated typed copy of the confessional statement of
PW7 runs into 35 pages whereas that of PW8 runs into 12 pages.
The identical statement of accused Nos.7 and 8 that were recorded
on 27th December, 1995 read as under :
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"In connection with the Mehsana City police
station Cr.R. No.I-197/92 for the offence
punishable under sections 147, 148, 149, 307,
397, 120-B of the Indian Penal Code and under
section 25(i)B, A and u/s 3 of the TADA Act, I
have been arrested by the police on 13/12/95,
and a remand has been obtained upto 29/12/95.
Since I intend to voluntarily give my
confessional statement as regards the facts of
this offence known to me and the parts which I
did play therein, I have been today produced
before you. I have been given understanding by
you that I am legally not bound to give this
confession and that the same shall be used
against me. Still, however, I on my own and
without any sort of pressure, threats or
mental/physical harassment, intend to give this
confessional statement.
I state that I have been given sufficient time
to think over giving this confessional statement by
you, and after due and thoughtful consideration, I
have been produced before you to give this
confessional statement."
The first paragraph of the statement of accused No.7 that was
recorded on 28th December, 1995 reads as under :
"Upon being personally interrogated, I state that I
am residing at the above address for the last one
and half years and doing the work of filing share
issues forms, purchase and sale of shares,
purchase and sale of small big properties and
playing cards (gambling). Since I am fond of
gambling since my childhood, I also gain or lose
money in it."
In respect of accused No.8 that paragraph reads as under :
"Upon being interrogated personally, I state that I
am residing at the above address and running a
flour mill. My wife and children are residing at the
above address of my native place and they are
doing the agriculture work and I many times go to
my native place once or twice in a year. I am
residing here since last 19 years and I have
studied upto Std.7 in Hindi medium. I know,
understand and speak Gujarati language very
will."
In the confessional statement, accused No.7 has given a detailed
account as to how he came in contact with the absconding accused and
the other accused persons; how and when they had been coming to his
house and making telephone calls; his going to Ahmedabad Airport with
Bachchisinh in the car of Sunil Savat to receive Subhashsinh Thakur who
came from Delhi along with Brijeshsinh Thakur. That was on 10th June,
1992. Sunil Savat, Brijeshsinh Thakur and Bachchinsinh came to his
house from hotel and Sunil Savat had talked to Daud at Dubai and told
him to make all arrangements. The talks were in code words. Thereafter,
after five minutes, a phone call was received from Abdul Latif who talked
with Sunil Savat. Latif stated that he will make all the arrangements. All
persons went to the house of uncle of Subhashsinh named S.D. Thakur.
Subhashsinh introduced all with him PSI S.D. Thakur and talked with
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him as regards their going to Mehsana on the next day. S.D. Thakur
gave the name and address of another ’Bhaiya’ to Subhashsinh.
Thereafter all went to the house of Latif where Sharifkhan and Abdul
Khudarsh accused No.5 were also present. As per the talk between Sunil
Savant and Latif, since murder of one ’Bhaiya’ was to be committed at
Mehsana, Latif told that arrangements of car and persons shall be made
by him and that two cars and persons would reach the hotel. Sunil
Savant told him to come to the hotel on the next day at about 6.30 hours
in the morning. He went there at about 7.00 a.m. All 6 persons were
ready at the Natraj Hotel. After some time two cars sent by Latif came to
hotel out of which one was Maruti 1000 of metallic blue colour wherein
Abdul Khudarsh, Sunil Savant, Brijeshsing and one boy out of the two sat.
It was told that car should stop at Nandsan Hotel. Latif’s persons came in
the Maruti Fronti wherein Subhashsinh and two other persons sat. He
and Bachchisinh were in Hyundai car. Bachchisinh was having the
address of Anupam Cinema and, therefore, their car was kept ahead
where Ramdularsinh (accused No.8) met them. On finding Ramdularsinh
on road, Bachchisinh was dropped there and he (accused No.7) returned
home in the Hyundai car. Bachchisinh and Ramdularsinh sat in the
Maruti Fronti car which had followed the car of accused No.7 from the
hotel. After taking Ramdularsinh, they went in the Maruti Fronti to take
S.D. Thakur. From there, all were to gather at Nandasan Hotel. He did
not see as to which weapons were kept in which car. At 4.30 p.m. in the
evening, Sunil Savant and Brijeshsinh Thakur came to his house in a
frightened condition. Sunil Savant informed accused no.7 that "he has
been finished, but quandary (lafada) occurred, many bullet shots were
fired, everything has been disturbed, we left the cars and returned." Sunil
Savant talked to Daud and informed him about this incident and also
informed that the work is over and the cars were left there only. He also
talked about the incident with Latif over telephone in Hindi. Latif told him
that whatever has happened, has already happened, don’t worry. He also
stated about going to the house of S.D. Thakur with Subhashsinh and
others on the next day and Subhashsinh informing his uncle that the work
is over. He has further stated about going to Nepal with Sunil Savant and
Bachchisinh. He has also made statement about the boys of Mumbai
having accepted ’supari’ for N.G. Patel for a big amount and his being
frightened on that account.
At the end the confession reads that "The above facts as narrated
by me are true and correct". It has been signed by accused No.7. The
signatures of PW18 appear below the words ’Before me’.
In the same manner as above, the confessional statement of
accused No.8 at the end records that "The above facts as narrated by me
are true and correct which has been read over to me". It has also been
signed by the accused. The signatures of the Superintendent of Police
(PW18) appear in a similar fashion as above.
Accused No.8 has, inter alia, stated that he had not known
Brijeshsinh Thakur but heard his name and had got the information that
he has been doing the activities of murders etc. in Banaras, Lucknow and
the surrounding areas. He knew Subhashsinh Thakur for the last 4-5
years and also accused No.9 for the past 10-12 years; the
disputes/quarrels between Yadav’s of the Dhavarhara village of
Brijeshsinh and Thakurs were going on since years. At about 12
midnight, accused No.9 came to his house and informed him that they
have to go to Mehsana next day in the morning and on asking for the
purpose for going there, accused No.9 stated that he will tell him the next
day morning. On the next day morning Subhashsinh Thakur came in
Maruti Fronti car and with him, he went to accused No.9 who told him that
to take revenge of the murder of father of Brijeshsinh, the murder of
Raghunath Yadav is to be committed and accused No.8 knows him and,
therefore, he should identify him at Mehsana. Accused No.8 agreed to go
with accused No.9 to Mehsana. In that car, Subhashsinh and accused
NoS.8 and 9 were sitting. In another car that was following them 6-7
persons were sitting. On reaching Mehsana, they went to bus stand;
there was rush at sugarcane juice stall. On his asking as to where is
Yadavji, he was told that he was getting his beard shaved in the nearby
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cabin. On looking into the cabin, he found that Raghunath Yadav was
getting his beard shaved. He told Subhashsinh as to the person who was
getting shaved was Raghunath Yadav. After showing Raghunath Yadav,
he and accused No.9, after consulting Subhashsinh left the bus stand and
Subhashsinh and other persons in the car waited there. He and accused
No.9 came to Ahmedabad after taking a jeep from Mehsana Highway bus
stand where they reached by taking a rickshaw. The passenger and the
jeep driver were discussing on the way that firing had taken place at
Mehsana S.T. bus stand. Therefore, we knew that Subhashsinh and his
other companions had made firing.
The confessional statement recorded under Section 15 of TADA
Act by a Police Officer authorized therein is admissible in evidence. It is
also no more res integra that a confession recorded under Section 15 is a
substantive piece of evidence [State through Superintendent of
Police, CBI/SIT v. Nalini & Ors. (1999) 5 SCC 253]; [Devender Pal
Singh v. State of NCT of Delhi & Anr. (2002) 5 SCC 234] and
Ravinder Singh @ Bittu v. The State of Maharashtra JT 2002 (4) SC
470].
The maker of a confessional statement can be convicted solely on
the basis of his confessional statement made under Section 15 of the
TADA Act. That statement is also substantive evidence against his co-
accused. Against the co-accused, though taken as substantive evidence
as a rule of prudence, to get support, the Court would look upon
corroborative evidence as well.
Thus, the fate of not only the accused but the co-accused as well
hinges on the confessional statement recorded by a Police officer under
Section 15 of the TADA Act. Such a statement cannot be recorded in a
mechanical manner. All the safeguards provided in the Act and the Rules
have to be strictly adhered to. There can be no room for any latitude in
the matter and manner of recording of a confessional statement. Any
material discrepancy will be fatal unless satisfactorily explained by the
prosecution. The burden of proving confessional statements always
remains on the prosecution. It is for the prosecution to prove that the
confessional statement that is being relied upon was voluntary, truthful
and all safeguards were complied with while recording it. The burden of
proving such confessional statement on the prosecution cannot be
lightened by urging that the confession was not retracted or challenged
except in the cross-examination of the witnesses. Undoubtedly, when the
confession is duly recorded and is proved to be voluntary and truthful,
then it can be taken to be the most reliable piece of evidence coming from
the accused himself and made sole basis of conviction in the manner
stated earlier, confession being an admission of the guilt.
The conviction in the present case is based mainly, if not entirely,
on the strength of what is stated in the confessional statements made by
accused Nos.7 and 8. The confessional statements have been recorded
by a police officer. It was not contended for the State that the conviction
could be supported even if the confessions were inadmissible.
The admissibility in evidence of confessional statements made by
an accused before a police officer has for long been an anathema to the
rule of law. The police has, ordinarily, been suspect of using third degree
methods in obtaining confession. Section 25 of the Evidence Act
stipulates that no confession made to a police officer, shall be proved as
against a person accused of any offence. Section 26 provides that no
confession made by any person whilst he is in the custody of a police
officer, unless it be made in the immediate presence of a Magistrate, shall
be proved as against such person. Section 24 provides that a confession
made by an accused person is irrelevant in a criminal proceeding, if the
making of the confession appears to the Court to have been caused by
any inducement, threat or promise, having reference to the charge
against the accused person, proceeding from a person in authority and
sufficient in the opinion of the Court, to give the accused person grounds,
which would appear to him reasonable, for supposing that by making it he
would gain any advantage or avoid any evil of a temporal nature in
reference to the proceedings against him. Article 20(3) of the Constitution
of India provides that no person accused of any offence shall be
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compelled to be a witness against himself.
In Kartar Singh v. State of Punjab [(1994) 3 SCC 569], a serious
challenge was made to the constitutional validity of Section 15 of the
TADA Act which contained a drastic departure from the existing
provisions of the Evidence Act, in particular Section 25 thereof, and
provided that notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian Evidence
Act, 1872, but subject to the provisions of that section, a confession made
by a person before a police officer not lower in rank than a
Superintendent of Police and recorded in the manner provided in the
section shall be admissible in the trial of such person or co-accused,
abettor or conspirator for an offence under the TADA Act or rules made
thereunder. The co-accused, abettor or conspirator is required to be
charged and tried in the same case together with the accused for the
applicability of Section 15(1) of the TADA Act. Section 15 (2) stipulates
that the police officer shall, before recording any confession under
Section 15(1), explain to the person making it that he is not bound to
make a confession and that, if he does so, it may be used as evidence
against him and such police officer shall not record any such confession
unless upon questioning the person making it, he has reason to believe
that it is being made voluntarily. Thus, this provision was made in
consonance with Article 20(3) of the Constitution as the compulsion on an
accused to make a statement against him has been interdicted by the
Constitution.
In Kartar Singh’s case, it was contended that the procedure
prescribed in the TADA Act is the antithesis of the just, fair and
reasonable procedure. A blistering attack was made on the validity of
Section 15. It was, inter alia, contended that the existing Codes of law
which have a life history of more than a century proceed on the footing
that police confessions are untrustworthy and, thus, Section 15 gives a
death-knell to the very basic principle hitherto recognized and followed
that a confession made before a police officer under any circumstance as
well as a confession to a Magistrate or a third party while in police
custody is totally inadmissible and that such a confession cannot be
proved as against a person accused of any offence. It was contended in
the said case that oppressive behaviour and excessive naked abuse and
misuse of power by the police in extorting confession by compelling the
accused to speak under the untold pain by using third degree methods
with diabolical barbarity in utter violation of human rights, cannot be lost
sight of or consigned to oblivion and the courts would not be justified by
showing a volte-face and turning a blind eye to the above reality and
drawing a legal presumption that the confession might have been
obtained by a police officer not lower in rank than a Superintendent of
Police in terms of Section 15(1) only in accordance with the legally
permissible procedure. The counsel castigated the conduct of the police
officers in whisking away the accused either on arrest or on obtaining
custody from the court to an unknown destination or unannounced
premises for custodial interrogation in order to get compulsory self-
incriminating statement as a source of proof to be produced before a
court of law. Examples were cited where on several occasions, this Court
have ordered exemplary compensation to the victims at the hands of the
police officials. It was submitted therein that the police officer is inherently
suspect of implying coercion to obtain confession and, therefore, the
confession made to police officer should totally be excluded from
evidence. The emphasis was more on the police culture rather than on
the person, the contention being that the climate was still not conducive
for effecting a drastic change by investing the police officer with a power
to record confession and then make it admissible in evidence. It was
submitted that without bringing about a change in the outlook of the
police, such a drastic departure was not justified.
The challenge to the constitutional validity of Section 15 almost
succeeded as seems clear from the observations that were made in the
majority opinion in Kartar Singh’s case while upholding the constitutional
validity of Section 15. The observations are :
"Though we at the first impression thought of
sharing the view of the learned counsel that it
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would be dangerous to make a statement given to
a police officer admissible (notwithstanding the
legal position making the confession of an
accused before the police admissible in some
advanced countries like United Kingdom, United
States of America, Australia and Canada etc.)
having regard to the legal competence of the
legislature to make the law prescribing a different
mode of proof, the meaningful purpose and object
of the legislation, the gravity of terrorism
unleashed by the terrorists and disruptionists
endangering not only the sovereignty and integrity
of the country but also the normal life of the
citizens, and the reluctance of even the victims as
well as the public in coming forward, at the risk of
their life, to give evidence hold that the
impugned section cannot be said to be suffering
from any vice of unconstitutionality. In fact, if the
exigencies of certain situations warrant such a
legislation then it is constitutionally permissible as
ruled in a number of decisions of this Court
provided none of the fundamental rights under
Chapter III of the Constitution is infringed."
The two learned Judges, however, expressed the minority opinion
that Section 15 is unconstitutional.
While upholding the validity of Section 15, a note of caution was
added in Kartar Singh’s case in the following terms :
" we state that there should be no breach of
procedure and the accepted norms of recording
the confession which should reflect only the true
and voluntary statement and there should be no
room for hyper criticism that the authority has
obtained an invented confession as a source of
proof irrespective of the truth and creditability as it
could be ironically put that when a Judge
remarked , ’Am I not to hear the truth’, the
prosecution giving a startling answer, ’No Your
Lordship is to hear only the evidence’."
(Emphasis is ours)
In the same context, while laying down the guidelines so as to
ensure that the confession obtained in the pre-indictment interrogation by
a police officer not lower in rank than a Superintendent of Police is not
tainted with any vice but is in strict conformity with the well-recognised
and accepted aesthetic principles and fundamental fairness, the
Constitution Bench also said that :
"Though it is entirely for the court trying the
offence to decide the question of admissibility or
reliability of a confession in its judicial wisdom
strictly adhering to the law, it must, while so
deciding the question should satisfy itself that
there was no trap, no track and no importune
seeking of evidence during the custodial
interrogation and all the conditions required are
fulfilled."
(emphasis is ours)
Before basing conviction on confessional statement, it is necessary
to examine whether all conditions for recording of confession have been
fulfilled or not. The requirements of Section 15 have already been noticed
earlier. In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 28 of the TADA
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Act, the Central Government has made the Terrorist and Disruptive
Activities (Prevention) Rules, 1987. Rule 15 relates to recording of
confession made to police officers. It reads as under :
"15. Recording of confession made to police
officers.(1) A confession made by a person
before a police officer and recorded by such
police officer under Section 15 of the Act shall
invariably be recorded in the language in which
such confession is made and if that is not
practicable, in the language used by such police
officer for official purposes or in the language of
the Designated Court and it shall form part of the
record.
(2) The confessions so recorded shall be shown,
read or played back to the person concerned and
if he does not understand the language in which it
is recorded, it shall be interpreted to him in a
language which he understands and he shall be
at liberty to explain or add to his confession.
(3) The confession shall, if it is in writing, be
(a) signed by the person who makes the
confession; and
(b) by the police officer who shall also certify
under his own hand that such confession
was taken in his presence and recorded by
him and that the record contains a full and
true account of the confession made by the
person and such police officer shall make a
memorandum at the end of the confession
to the following effect :-
’I have explained to (name) that he is not
bound to make a confession and that, if he does
so, any confession he may make may be used as
evidence against him and I believe that this
confession was voluntarily made. It was taken in
my presence and hearing and recorded by me
and was read over to the person making it and
admitted by him to be correct, and it contains a
full and true account of the statement made by
him.
Sd/- Police Officer."
(4) Where the confession is recorded on any
mechanical device, the memorandum referred to
in sub-rule (3) in so far as it is applicable and a
declaration made by the person making the
confession that the said confession recorded on
the mechanical device has been correctly
recorded in his presence shall also be recorded in
the mechanical device at the end of the
confession.
(5) Every confession recorded under the said
Section 15 shall be sent forthwith to the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate or the Chief Judicial
Magistrate having jurisdiction over the area in
which such confession has been recorded and
such Magistrate shall forward the recorded
confession so received to the Designated Court
which may take cognizance of the offence."
What is required to be examined is whether requirements of
Section 15 of the TADA Act and the aforesaid Rule 15 when recording the
confessional statements in question, have been complied or not. Let us
examine whether requirements of Rule 15 have been complied by PW18
when he recorded confessional statements of accused Nos.7 and 8. One
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of the requirements of Rule 15(3)(b) is making of a memorandum at the
end of the confession. It is not in dispute that Rule 15(3)(b) has not been
complied with in as much as the memorandum at the end of the
confession has not been appended. PW18, the police officer who
recorded the confession, admitted in his deposition that such a
memorandum was not made. The core question is its effect on the
admissibility of confession.
Learned counsel for the appellants contend that it is fatal to the
case of the prosecution. In absence of such a memorandum, the
confession is inadmissible and cannot be relied upon and the conviction,
impugned in the present appeals, being based only on confession is liable
to be upturned is the contention. On the other hand, counsel for the
respondent would submit that though no memorandum, as required by
Rule 15(3)(b), has been made and appended by PW18, but in substance
the rule has been complied with. The contention is that the deposition of
PW18 in Court shows that he was satisfied that the confession was
voluntarily made and, therefore, the absence of the memorandum is only
a defect of form and not of substance. Hence, the non-making of
memorandum in the present case is of no consequence is the contention.
In the aforesaid light, the vital question to be determined is can the
defect of non-making and appending of memorandum, as required by
Rule 15(3)(b), be cured by oral deposition of the Superintendent of Police
who recorded the confession, while appearing as a witness in court. In
other words, can oral evidence in Court be a substitute for a
memorandum to be made under Rule 15(3)(b) is the point for
determination.
The significance of the confessional statement has already been
noticed earlier. It is such that the fate of not only the accused but co-
accused, abettor and conspirator depends upon it. It can result in the
hanging of accused and co-accused etc. Relying on it, punishment upto
death penalty can be imposed on the maker as also on others. First of
all, let us remind ourselves of the observations that have stood test of
time as made in the off-quoted decision of Privy Council in Nazir Ahmad
v. King-Emperor [AIR 1936 PC 253] holding that where a power is given
to do a certain thing in a certain way, the thing must be done in that way
or not at all. Other methods of performance are necessarily forbidden.
In S.N. Dube v. N.B. Bhoir & Ors. [(2000) 2 SCC 254], the trial
court had taken the view that the officer recording confession did not write
the certificates and the memorandums in the same form and terms as are
prescribed by Rule 15 of the Rules framed under the TADA Act and the
same were, therefore, inadmissible. Counsel for the accused submitted
before this Court that the certificates and the memorandums having not
been recorded in identical terms and as Rule 15 is mandatory, the trial
Court was right in holding the confessions inadmissible for non-
compliance with that mandatory requirement. While considering the
question whether the certificate and the memorandum are required to be
written in the same form and terms as required by the Rule, this Court
held that :
"Writing the certificate and making the
memorandum are thus made mandatory to prove
that the accused was explained that he was not
bound to make a confession and that if he made
it, it could be used against him as evidence, that
the confession was voluntary and that it was
taken down by the police officer fully and
correctly. These matters are not left to be proved
by oral evidence alone. The requirement of the
rule is preparation of contemporaneous record
regarding the manner of the recording the
confession in the presence of the person making
it. Though giving of the statutory warning,
ascertaining the voluntariness of the confession
and preparation of a contemporaneous record in
the presence of the person making the confession
are mandatory requirements of the rule, we see
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no good reason why the form and the words of
the certificate and memorandum should also be
held mandatory. What the mandatory
requirements of a provision are cannot be
decided by overlooking the object of that
provision. They need not go beyond the purpose
sought to be achieved. The purpose of the
provision is to see that all formalities are
performed by the recording officer himself and by
others to ensure full compliance with the
procedure and seriousness of recording a
confession. We fail to appreciate how any
departure from the form or the words can
adversely affect the object of the provision or the
person making the confession so long as the
court is able to conclude that the requirements
have been substantially complied with. No public
purpose is likely to be achieved by holding that
the certificate and memorandum should be in the
same form and also in the same terms as are to
be found in Rule 15(3)(b). We fail to appreciate
how the sanctity of the confession would get
adversely affected merely because the certificate
and the memorandum are not separately written
but are mixed up or because different words
conveying the same thing as is required are used
by the recording officer. We hold that the trial
court committed an error of law in holding that
because the certificates and memorandums are
not in the same form and words they must be
regarded as inadmissible. Having gone through
the certificates and the memorandums made by
Shinde at the end of the confessions what we find
is that he had mixed up what is required to be
stated in the certificate and what is required to be
stated in the memorandum. He has stated in
each of the certificates and the memorandums
that he had ascertained that the accused was
making the confession willingly and voluntarily
and that he was under no pressure or enticement.
It is further stated therein that he had recorded
the confession in his own handwriting (except in
case of A-7 whose confession was recorded with
the help of a writer). He has also stated that it
was recorded as per the say of the accused, that
it was read over to the accused completely, that
the accused had personally read it, that he had
ascertained thereafter that it was recorded as per
his say and that the confession was taken in his
presence and recorded by him. It is true that he
has not specifically stated therein that the record
contains "a full and true account of the confession
made". The very fact that he had recorded the
confession in his own handwriting would imply
that it was recorded in the certificates and
memorandums that the confession was recorded
as per the say of the accused, that it was read
over to him fully, that the accused himself
personally read it and that he had ascertained
that it was recorded as per his say, that would
mean that it contains "a full and true account of
the confession" and that the contents were
admitted by the accused. Thus, while writing the
certificate and the memorandum what Shinde has
done is to mix up the two and use his own words
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to state what he had done. The only thing that we
find missing therein is a statement to the effect
that he had explained to the accused that he was
not bound to make a confession and that if he did
so the confession might be used as evidence
against him. Such a statement instead of
appearing at the end of the confession in the
memorandum appears in the earlier part of the
confession in the question and answer form.
Each of the accused making the confession was
explained about his right not to make the
confession and the danger of its being used
against him as evidence. That statement appears
in the body of the confession but not at the end of
it. Can the confession be regarded as not in
conformity with Rule 15(3)(b) only for that
reason? We find no good reason to hold like that.
We hold that the trial court was wrong in holding
that there was a breach of Rule 15(3) and,
therefore, the confessions were inadmissible and
bad."
(emphasis is ours)
Thus, what has been laid in the aforesaid case is that the writing of
certificate and making the memorandum are mandatory and these
matters are not left to be proved by oral evidence alone. The requirement
of the Rule is preparation of contemporaneous record regarding the
manner of recording the confession in the presence of the person making
it. This Court, while holding that making of the memorandum is a
mandatory requirement of the Rule, further held that what was not
mandatory was the form and words of the certificate and memorandum.
Thus, the making of certificate and memorandum was held to be
mandatory but not form thereof.
In the present case, admittedly no such memorandum has been
prepared. That mandatory requirement is sought to be fulfilled by oral
deposition of PW18. Reliance has been placed on the testimony of PW18
when he stated that :
"I again asked him that, whether he is giving this
confession under any threat, pressure or
temptation and he replied no. I was, therefore,
satisfied that he voluntarily wanted to give his
statement and thereafter his statement came to
be recorded. From the statement recorded it
appeared to me that the averments made by him
were absolutely true."
The first part of the aforesaid deposition relates to stage prior to
actual recording of the confession and the latter part that has been
underlined by us relates to stage after recording of the actual confession.
According to Rule 15(3)(b), the satisfaction to be recorded is about the
confession having been made voluntarily. The memorandum to be
recorded at the end of the confession requires the recording officer to
state that "I believe that this confession was voluntarily made". For the
present, assuming that oral testimony in Court can be a substitute of
memorandum, what has been deposed in Court by PW18 is not the belief
that the confession was voluntarily made but "it appeared to me that the
averments made by him were absolutely true". Hopefully the officer knew
difference between the words ’voluntary’ and ’truth’. None explained what
PW18 meant. In Chandran v. The State of Tamil Nadu [(1978) 4 SCC
90] in the memorandum that had been made instead of certifying that the
officer believed that confession was voluntarily made, the Magistrate had
stated that "I hope that the statement was made voluntarily". It was
noticed that although the Magistrate was examined as a witness at the
trial, no attempt was made by the prosecution to establish from his word
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of mouth that the use of the word "hope" by him was inadvertent or
accidental. The confession was, therefore, excluded from consideration.
At the cost of repetition, we may again note that in Dube’s case, it
was held that writing the certificate and making the memorandum are
mandatory; these matters are not left to be proved by oral evidence alone;
the requirement of the rule is preparation of contemporaneous record
regarding the manner of recording the confession and the preparation of
contemporaneous record in the presence of the person making the
confession are mandatory requirement but forming and words are not
mandatory. Unlike present case, Dube was a case where certificate and
memorandum had been prepared though not using exactly same words
as required by the Rule. In the present case, PW18 admits that no such
document was made and appended at the end of the confession. The
contemporaneous record has to support the deposition in Court. If the
recording officer without contemporaneous record is allowed to depose
later after lapse of several years in Court, it would be too hazardous to
rely on such testimony as, ordinarily, an officer is likely to depose in court
what was left out to be recorded in documents as per mandatory
provisions of the Act and the Rules, once he knows that he had made
vital omission. If the contemporaneous record shows that in substance
though not in form, the requirements of the Rule were fulfilled, the defect
of form can be cured by oral deposition made, may be after many years,
on the basis of the contemporaneous record. The importance of fulfilling
all the requirements of the provision while recording confessional
statements has already been noticed. As already noticed, the fate of not
only the accused but others also hinges on such a confession recorded
by a Police officer. Further what heavily weighed with the Constitution
Bench when it upheld the constitutional validity of Section 15, is that all
requirements in respect of recording of confessional statements will be
fulfilled which would act as safeguard to the accused.
The making of certificate and memorandum is not an empty
formality of the Rule. It is required to be made at the end of the
confession. The officer certifies the manner in which the statement was
given by the accused and was recorded. The satisfaction as per Rule
15(3)(b) of recording officer has substantial relevance on the aspect of
voluntary nature of confession, which is the heart of confession for it
being made the basis of conviction.
In Chandran (supra) this Court held that the law peremptorily
requires that after recording the confession of the accused, the Magistrate
must append at the foot of the record a memorandum certifying that he
believes that the confession was voluntarily made. It was further held that
the reason for requiring compliance with this mandatory requirement at
the close of the recording of confession, appears to be that it is only after
hearing the confession and observing the demeanour of the person
making it, that the Magistrate is in the best position to append the
requisite memorandum certifying the voluntariness of the confession
made before him. If, the Magistrate recording a confession of an accused
person produced before him in the course of police investigation, does
not, on the face of the record, certify in clear, categorical terms his
satisfaction or belief as to the voluntary nature of the confession recorded
by him, nor testifies orally, as to such satisfaction or belief, the defect
would be fatal to the admissibility and use of the confession against the
accused at the trial. As earlier noticed in the said case, the memorandum
had been made and the Magistrate in the memorandum appended by him
at the foot of the confession had merely expressed a ’hope’ that the
confession was voluntarily made. Even in his oral evidence at the trial,
the Magistrate did not vouch for the voluntariness of the confession. He
did not say that use of the word ’hope’ by him in the memorandum was
due to some accidental slip or heedless error. Under these
circumstances, the confessional statement was excluded from
consideration. It can, thus, be seen that this was a case where a
memorandum was appended but with using different language as
abovenoticed. The argument that the preliminary satisfaction before
recording of confession about its voluntary nature can be substitute for
recording satisfaction after recording of confession was not accepted
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holding that there was no requirement to record satisfaction at the earlier
stage whereas there was such a requirement of satisfaction being
appended at the foot of the confession.
In Ayyub v. State of U.P. [(2002) 3 SCC 510], while considering
the contention that the police officer, who recorded the confessional
statement, had not certified that he believed that the confession was
voluntarily made, this Court held that as the confession made under
Section 15 of the TADA Act is made admissible in evidence, the strict
procedure laid down therein for recording confession is to be followed.
Any confession made in defiance of these safeguards cannot be accepted
by the court as reliable evidence. The confession should appear to have
been made voluntarily and the police officer who records the confession
should satisfy himself that the same had been made voluntarily by the
maker of that statement. The recorded confession must indicate that
these safeguards have been fully complied with. The confession was
held to be inadmissible evidence as the recorded confessional statement
did not show that the officer who recorded the statement had followed the
guidelines. After noticing that under Article 20(3) of the Constitution, the
accused person has the protection of being compelled to be witness
against himself, the Court held that "As the confession made under
Section 15 of the TADA Act is made admissible in evidence, the strict
procedure laid down therein for recording confession is to be followed.
Any confession made in defiance of these safeguards cannot be accepted
by the court as reliable evidence the police officer who records the
confession should satisfy himself that the same has been made
voluntarily by the maker of that statement. The recorded confession must
indicate that these safeguards have been fully complied with."
Let us now consider the case of State of Maharashtra v. Bharat
Chaganlal Raghani & Ors. [(2001) 9 SCC 1] on which strong reliance
was placed by the learned counsel for the respondent-State in support of
the contention that if there is oral evidence in Court showing substantial
compliance with Rule 15(3), the confession cannot be discarded for want
of preparation of memorandum. It appears that that was not a case
where memorandum was not prepared at all, but was a case where the
contention for the accused was that the mandate of Rule 15(3) had not
been complied with because the recording officer has not made the
memorandum in the form specified therein and, therefore, confessional
statement cannot be held admissible in evidence and relied upon as a
piece of evidence against the accused person. Under these
circumstances, the Court held that though the memorandum was not
recorded as desired by the Rule but, at the same time, from the questions
put by the recording officer to the accused, the trial court was satisfied
and so was this Court that the confessional statements were made
voluntarily without any threat, inducement or pressure and strictly in
accordance with the mandate of the TADA Act as interpreted by this
Court from time to time. That does not appear to be a case where the
memorandum was not prepared at all.
In Sharafat Hussain Abdul Rahaman Shaikh & Ors. v. State of
Gujarat & Anr. [(1996) 11 SCC 62], the conviction of the appellant was
primarily based on confessions of each of them. Allowing the appeal and
setting aside the judgment of conviction passed by the Designated Court
and citing with approval Chandran’s case (supra), this Court held that :
"4. Admittedly, in none of the four confessions
(Ext. 72, 73, 75 and 76), with which we are
concerned in this appeal, such a memorandum
finds place. The question, therefore, that falls for
our consideration is what is the value of such a
memorandum and, for that matter, the effect of
absence thereof. The answer to this question has
been given by this Court in Chandran v. State of
T.N. while dealing with sub-section (4) of Section
164 Cr.P.C., which lays down the procedure to be
followed by a Magistrate in recording a
confession and is pari material with the above-
quoted Rule 15(3), with the following words :
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(SCC p.101, para 31)
’But the law does peremptorily require that after
recording the confession of the accused, the
Magistrate must append at the foot of the record
a memorandum certifying that he believes that
the confession was voluntarily made. The reason
for requiring compliance with this mandatory
requirement at the close of the recording of the
confession, appears to be that it is only after
hearing the confession and observing the
demeanour of the person making it, that the
Magistrate is in the best position to append the
requisite memorandum certifying the
voluntariness of the confession made before him.
If, the Magistrate recording a confession of an
accused person produced before him in the
course of police investigation, does not, on the
face of the record, certify in clear, categorical
terms his satisfaction or belief as to the voluntary
nature of the confession recorded by him, nor
testifies orally, as to such satisfaction or belief,
the defect would be fatal to the admissibility and
use of the confession against the accused at the
trial.’
(emphasis supplied)
5. Apart from the fact that PW6 did not give any
certificate, in accordance with the earlier quoted
Rule 15(3) of his satisfaction or belief about the
voluntariness of the confessions after the same
were recorded, it is also an admitted fact that
while being examined as a witness he did not
testify about his such satisfaction or belief.
Resultantly, in view of the above-quoted
observations of this Court, with which we are in
complete agreement, the confessions allegedly
made by the four appellants cannot be pressed
into service to prove the charges leveled against
them. Since there is no other evidence on record
from which it could be said that the appellants are
guilty of the offences for which they were charged
and convicted the appeal must succeed."
Learned counsel for the State submitted that the observations in
para 5 above show that by oral evidence in court, prosecution can show
that Rule 15(3)(b) was complied with. While making this submission what
is being missed by the learned counsel is that facts of the case do not
show, one way or the other, about the existence of contemporaneous
record. As noticed above, in Chandran’s case there was
contemporaneous record in the form of memorandum itself though using
different words. Sharafat Hussain’s case is not a decision which holds
that without contemporaneous record, oral evidence can be led to
establish the fulfillment of mandatory requirement of the Rule.
It may also be stated that harsher the consequences, the stricter is
the need to comply with the requirement of the Rules.
In view of aforesaid discussion, our conclusions are as follows :
A. Writing the certificate and making the memorandum under Rule
15(3)(b) is mandatory.
B. The language of the certificate and the memorandum is not
mandatory.
C. In case the certificate and memorandum is not prepared but the
contemporaneous record shows substantial compliance of what is
required to be contained therein, the discrepancy can be cured if
there is oral evidence of recording officer based on such
contemporaneous record.
D. In absence of contemporaneous record, discrepancy cannot be
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cured by oral evidence based on memory of the recording officer.
In the present case, admittedly Rule 15(3)(b) has not been
complied. No memorandum as required was made. There is also no
contemporaneous record to show the satisfaction of the recording officer
after writing of confession that the confession has been voluntarily made.
The confession of accused No.7 does not even state that it was read over
to him. Thus, confessional statements are inadmissible and cannot be
made basis of upholding the conviction. Once confessional statements
are excluded the conviction cannot be sustained.
Further, in view of the above, oral evidence could not be led to
show compliance of Rule 15(3)(b). That apart, as earlier noticed, in fact,
even oral evidence of PW18 does not satisfy the requirement of the Rule.
For the reasons aforesaid, we set aside the impugned judgment of
the Designated Court, allow the appeals and direct the appellants to be
set free forthwith, if not required in any other case.