Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (crl.) 438 of 2000
PETITIONER:
ARIVAZHAGAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE, REPRESENTED BY INSPECTOR OF POLICE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/03/2000
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & M.B. Shah
JUDGMENT:
Thomas J.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
Leave granted.
Has the accused a right to examine a myriad of witnesses
and has the court any power to prune down the list of such
witnesses? Such a question arose when the appellant
submitted a list of 267 witnesses for the defence when the
trial reached that stage. The trial Court was not disposed
to allow him to examine all the persons mentioned in the
list and directed him to limit the number to the minimum
necessary. As the appellant was not willing to reduce the
number of witnesses he approached the High court to help
him. But the advantage he got from the High court was only
marginal and it did not satisfy him. Hence, he filed the
Special Leave Petition. After hearing Shri Sushil Kumar,
learned senior counsel for the appellant we felt that the
appeal can be disposed of without the aid of arguments of
the respondents and so we did not issue notice to them.
The factual background in which the situation reached
the above stage is the following: Appellant and three
persons are now being arraigned before the Special Court at
Chennai for facing a charge for the offence under Section
13(1)© of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1988 (for short
the PC Act) read with Section 109 of the Indian Penal
Code. Prosecution examined a number of witnesses by
summoning 41 persons. When the case reached the stage
envisaged in Section 243(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure (for short the Code) he submitted a list of
defence witnesses. As we mentioned earlier the number of
witnesses shown in the list was so much that even a marathon
legal proceeding would not be sufficient to exhaust the
entire list.
The Special Judge made a scrutiny of the list and
dissected the names into four divisions. The first division
consisted of names shown as No. 1 to 8. The second
division consisted of names shown as No. 9 to 117 in the
list. The third division consisted of name figuring in the
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list as No. 118 to 177. The fourth division consisted of
names of 178 to 267 witnesses.
The Special Judge permitted persons shown as Nos. 4 and
8 in the first division to be examined as he found them
alone in the said division as necessary witnesses and the
others were found unnecessary for the purpose of defence
plea. Regarding the second division the Special Judge
stated thus:
Witness Nos.9 to 117 have been cited as witnesses to
speak about the masonry works, wood works, painting works
etc. Instead of examining the huge number of witnesses,
examination of one or two engineers will be sufficient and
it would save the time also.
About the third division learned Special Judge observed
that since all of them were cited only to speak about the
agriculture and business income of the accused the
appellant can advisedly confine to ten witnesses in that
division. Regarding the last division in the list learned
special judge observed thus:
List of witness Nos.178 to 267 have been cited as
witnesses to speak about the loans, gifts, etc. Such a huge
list may not be necessary in view of Section 134 of the
Indian Evidence Act. However, the accused could examine any
10 witnesses from them.
Learned single judge of the High Court felt that from
the first division mentioned above the appellant can examine
witnesses shown as Nos. 6 and 7 also and from the remaining
divisions the appellant can choose ten more persons. The
petition filed in the High Court was disposed of in the
following terms:
The Special court is directed to permit the petitioner
to examine witnesses 1,4 to 7 and also 10 more witnesses in
the list of witnesses 118 to 267, in addition to the
witnesses already permitted to be examined. The order of
the Special Court is modified as stated above. The criminal
revision case is disposed of accordingly.
Mr. Sushil Kumar, learned senior counsel contended that
once the trial court has proceeded from the stage envisaged
in sub-section (1) of Section 243 and passed over to the
next stage contemplated in sub-section (2) he has no power
to sift and select witnesses from the list submitted by
accused. We may record, in fairness to learned senior
counsel, that he candidly conceded that no accused can claim
a right to examine any number of witnesses on the defence
side. This was stated by the learned counsel when we asked
him hypothetically- whether the accused can file a list of
ten thousand names as witnesses and ask the court to permit
him to examine all of them.
Section 5(1) of the P.C. Act requires the Special Judge
to follow the procedure prescribed by the court for trial of
warrant cases by magistrates. Chapter XIX of the Code
contains the provisions for such trial and Section 243 falls
within the said chapter. (The corresponding provisions in
the old Criminal Procedure Code were sub-sections (8) to
(10) of Section 251-A.) It is not disputed before us that a
court has the power to refuse to summon any person as a
witness on any of the three different grounds: (1) If any
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witness is cited for the purpose of vexation; (2) If any
witness is cited for causing delay; (3) If any witness is
cited for defeating the ends of justice. In fact Section
243(2) of the Code incorporates such powers of the court.
In the present case it was the ground of delay which the
Special Judge countenanced as the ground for pruning down
the massive list of witnesses presented by the appellant.
No doubt the time which would consume for completely
examining all the 267 witnesses on the defence side would be
unimaginably long if a court is compelled by law to exhaust
such a whopping list in its full swing. The criminal trial
would only limp badly and procrastination would be the
inevitable consequence. Normally no court would mind if the
list contains only a handful of names because the court
would not then bother much about the delay factor. But when
the list contains such a crowd of names of witnesses the
court will certainly make a serious exercise to ascertain
whether examination of all those witnesses is necessary in
the interest of justice even at the risk of such
procrastination.
Shri Sushul Kumar, learned senior counsel first
contended that the position envisaged in Section 243(1) of
the Code without the interjection of Section 22 of the P.C
Act has a different perception, and therefore, once the
court decided to call upon the accused to enter on his
defence there is no discretion vested with the trial judge
to vivisect the list for the purpose of eliminating certain
names therefrom. In order to understand the said contention
we would extract Section 243 in its virgin form as it is
incorporated in the Code.
243. Evidence for defence. -
(1) The accused shall then be called upon to enter upon
his defence and produce his evidence; and if the accused
puts in any written statement, the Magistrate shall file it
with the record.
(2) If the accused, after he had entered upon his
defence, applies to the Magistrate to issue any process for
compelling the attendance of any witness for the purpose of
examination or cross-examination, or the production of any
document or other thing, the Magistrate shall issue such
process unless he considers that such application should be
refused on the ground that it is made for the purpose of
vexation or delay or for defeating the ends of justice and
such ground shall be recorded by him in writing.
Provided that, when the accused has cross-examined or
had the opportunity of cross-examining any witness before
entering on his defence, the attendance of such witness
shall not be compelled under this section, unless the
Magistrate is satisfied that it is necessary for the ends of
justice.
Section 22 of the P.C. Act has amended sub-section (1)
of Section 243 of the Code in its application to the trial
of offences under the P.C. Act. When Section 243(1) of the
Code is re-read with the aforesaid changes it would run as
follows:
The accused shall then be required to give in writing
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at once or within such time as the court may allow, a list
of persons (if any) whom he proposes to examine as his
witnesses and of the documents (if any) on which he proposes
to rely, and he shall then be called upon to enter upon his
defence and produce his evidence, and if the accused puts in
any written statement the magistrate shall file it with the
record.
The position of an accused who is involved in a
under the P.C. Act is trial more cumbered than an accused
in other cases due to legislative curbs. One of them is
envisaged in Section 22 of the P.C. Act. The court is not
obliged to direct an accused involved under the P.C. Act to
enter upon his defence until the Special Court has the
occasion to see the list of his witnesses and also the list
of his documents to be adduced in evidence on the defence
side. An accused in other cases has to be called upon to
enter on his defence irrespective of whether he would
propose to adduce defence evidence because it is a choice to
be exercised by him only after he is called upon to enter on
his defence. But the accused under P.C. Act need be called
upon to enter on his defence only after the trial judge has
occasion to peruse the names of the witnesses as well as the
purpose of examination of each one of them, and also the
nature of the documents which he proposed to adduce as his
evidence.
In this context it would be pertinent to examine the
purpose behind it for the Parliament to make the aforesaid
change as for the accused who gets involved in offences
under the P.C. Act. A glance at the short legislative
history on this aspect would reveal the purpose when Section
7-A was introduced in the erstwhile P.C. Act by Act 40 of
1964. That section is pari materia with Section 22 of P.C.
Act of 1988. Section 7-A was intended to be absorbed in the
corresponding provision (Section 251-A) of the old Code
whenever the trial was for offences under P.C. Act of 1947.
But it must be remembered that Parliament enacted the
present Code in the year 1973 and even then the legislature
did not incorporate the wording in Section 7-A of the old
P.C. Act of 1947 in Section 243(1) of the Code but allowed
that provision to be read in consonance with the different
procedure prescribed for offences under the erstwhile P.C.
Act. Now in the P.C. Act of 1988 also the legislature
retained those alterations as indicated in Section 22
thereof.
Act 40 of 1964, through which Section 7A was introduced
in the erstwhile P.C. Act, was passed by the Parliament on
the basis of Bill No.67/64. It was mentioned in the
Statement of Objects and Reasons of the said Bill, inter
alia, thus:
The Committee on Prevention of Corruption was appointed
in 1962 to review the problem of corruption and to suggest
measures to combat it. The Committee has made various
suggestions for dealing with the problem and has, inter
alia, recommended certain changes in the law to ensure
speedy trial of cases of bribery, corruption and criminal
misconduct, and to make the law otherwise more effective.
The Bill is intended to give effect to such of these
recommendations that have been accepted.
It is thus noticeable that one of the main objects
sought to be achieved through insertion of Section 7A was
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speedy trial for cases relating to the problem of
corruption. When we read Section 22 of the PC Act which
requires a particular procedure to be followed relating to
the filing of list of witnesses and documents for the
defence, it must be borne in mind that the legislative
intent for the aforesaid change in the procedure is mainly
for achieving expeditiousness of the trial. It is true that
the concept of speedy trial must apply to all trials, but in
the trials for offences relating to corruption the pace must
be accelerated with greater momentum due to a variety of
reasons. Parliament expressed grave concern over the
rampant ever-growing corruption among public servants which
has been a major cause for the demoralisation of the
society. When corrupt public servants are booked they try
to take advantage of the delay proned procedural trammels of
our legal system by keeping the penal consequences at bay
for a considerable time. It was this reality which impelled
the Parliament to chalk out measures to curb procrastinating
procedural clues. Section 22 of the P.C. Act is one of the
measures evolved to curtail the delay in corruption cases.
So the construction of Section 243(1) of the Code as
telescoped by Section 22 of the PC Act must be consistent
with the aforesaid legislative intent.
The purpose of furnishing a list of witnesses and
documents to the Court before the accused is called upon to
enter on his defence is to afford an occasion to the court
to peruse the list. On such perusal, if the court feels
that examination of at least some of the persons mentioned
in the list is quite unnecessary to prove the defence plea
and the time which would be needed for completing the
examination of such witnesses would only result in
procrastination, it is the duty of the court to short list
such witnesses. We may also add that if the court feels
that the list is intended only to delay the proceedings, the
court is well within its powers to disallow even the whole
of it.
Learned senior counsel made an endeavour to find support
to his contention from the decision of a Constitution Bench
of this Court in Ronald Wood Mathams vs. State of West
Bengal [1955 SCR 216]. In that case an accused filed a list
of 15 witnesses to be examined for the defence. Though the
trial court issued summons to those witnesses whose summons
did not return served, and the court passed an order that no
further process need be issued to those witnesses. The case
ended in conviction of the accused and hence it was
contended before the Supreme Court that the trial of the
appellants had been vitiated by reason of the fact that they
had no reasonable opportunity to examine their witnesses and
that their convictions were accordingly bad. The finding of
the Supreme Court in this regard was that it is essential
that rules of procedure designed to ensure justice should be
scrupulously followed and courts should be jealous in saying
that there is no breach of them. There is nothing in the
decision to help the appellant to have an interpretation in
consonance with his contention.
In this case, the High Court as per the impugned order
has further enlarged the number of witnesses to be examined
on the defence side. As it is, the appellant cannot
complain now that he did not get the opportunity to adduce
his evidence. At any rate, we do not think it necessary to
interfere with the impugned orders as the pruning exercise
undertaken by the trial court and the High Court was within
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the limits permitted by law.
Nevertheless, we would add after the appellant
completes his evidence in accordance with the permission now
granted as per the impugned orders, it is open to the
appellant to convince the trial court that some more persons
need be examined in the interest of justice, if the
appellant then thinks that such a course is necessary. The
trial court will then decide whether it is essential for a
just decision of the case to examine more witnesses on the
defence side. If the Court is so satisfied, the Special
Judge can permit the appellant to examine such additional
witnesses the examination of whom he considers essential for
a just decision of the case or he can exercise the powers
envisaged in Section 311 of the Code in respect of such
witnesses. We cannot, at present, oversee the situation as
to how the trial court could then reach such a satisfaction.
Hence we leave it to the trial court to do the needful at
the appropriate stage.
With the above observations we dispose of the appeal.