Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
YUSUFALLI ESMAIL NAGREE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/04/1967
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 147 1967 SCR (3) 720
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC1162 (15,20,22)
R 1973 SC 157 (21,26)
RF 1975 SC1788 (20)
R 1986 SC 3 (28,144,146)
ACT:
Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (Act 1 of 1872) ss. 7 and 8-Tape
recording-Value-Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 ( Act 5 of
1898) s. 162-Talk recorded on tape in seclusion with police
decoy,-Police Officer in another room-If statement made to
the police.
Constitution of India, Art. 20(3)-Police laid trap-Person
makes incriminating statement not knowing the trap-If
protected.
HEADNOTE:
On report of S, that the appellant had offered a bribe to
’him, which S did not accept, the Police laid a trap. S
called the appellant at his residence and in the room where
they alone were present, the appellant handed over the bribe
to S. In the room a microphone of ’a tape recorder was
concealed and their conversation recorded. The Police offi-
cers and the radio mechanic kept concealed in another room.
S was the only eye-witness to the offer of the bribe and the
tape was kept in the custody of the police inspector but was
not sealed. The appellant was convicted under s. 165A
I.P.C., which the High Court upheld. In appeal, this Court
:-
HELD:The conviction must be upheld.
The contemporaneous dialogue between the appellant and S
formed part of the’ res gestae and is relevant and
admissible under s. 8 of the Indian Evidence Act. The
dialogue is proved by S. The tape record of the dialogue
corroborates his testimony. The process of tape recording
offers an accurate method of storing and later reproducing
sounds. The imprint on the magnetic tape is the direct
effect of the relevant sounds. Like a photograph of a
relevant, incident, a contemporaneous tape record of a
relevant conversation is a relevant fact and is admissible
under s. 7 of the Indian Evidence Act. The time and place
and accuracy of the recording must be proved by a competent
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witness and the voices must be properly identified. One of
the features of magnetic tape recording is the ability to
erase and re-use the recording medium. Because of this
facility of erasure and re-use, the evidence, must be
received with caution. The court must be satisfied beyond
-reasonable doubt that the record has not been tampered
with. [723 H-724 B, D]
Rup Chand v. Mahabir Parshad and Anr. A.I.R. 1956 Punj.
173; Mahindra Nath v. Biswanath Kundu, 67 C.W.N. 191;
approved.
S. Pratap Singh v. The State of Punjab, [1964] 4 S.C.R.
733 and
R. v. Maqsud Ali, [1965] 2 All E.R. 464; followed.
There was other evidence showing that the tape recording was
not tampered with. The fact that the defence did not
suggest any tampering lends assurance to the credibility of
the other evidence. The courts below rightly held that the
tape recorder faithfully recorded and reproduced the actual
conversation. The use of the statements of both S and the
appellant when the trap was laid, was not barred by s. 162
of the
721
Code of Criminal Procedure. ’The appellant was not making a
statement to the sub-inspector of police or to any other
police officer. He was not even aware that any police
officer was listening to him. He was talking to S. No doubt
S was a police decoy assisting the police in their
investigation, but the statement of the appellant to S while
making another offer of a bribe cannot be regarded as a
statement by him to the police. Nor can the words uttered
by S be regarded as a statement to the police. S was
talking to the appellant. He knew that what he said was
being recorded for subsequent use by the police officers.
But he was not speaking to any police officer. There was a
dialogue in which. S and the appellant took part. Each
spoke to the other, but neither made a statement to a police
officer. [724 H; 725 D-F]
Ramkishan Mithanlal Sharma v. The State of Bombay, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 903, 922-23; referred to.
The appellant was not right in claiming protection under
Art. 20(3) of the Constitution against the use of the
statement made by him on the ,-,round that by the active
deception of the police, he, was compelled to be a witness
against himself The appellant was not compelled to be a
witness against himself. He was free to talk or not to
talk. His conversation with S was voluntary. There was no
element of duress, coercion or. compulsion. His statements
were not extracted from him in an oppressive manner or by
force or against his wishes. The fact that the, tape
recording was done without his knowledge is not of itself an
objection to its admissibility in evidence. [726 B-D]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No213 of
1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated’
July 2, 3, 1963 of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal,
No. 1243 of 1962.
B. M. Mistry, Jatendra Mahajan, and J. B. Dadachanji, for
the appellant.
S. G. Patwardhan, R. N. Sachthey, S. P. Nayyar for R. H.-
Dhebar, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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Bachawat, J. In this appeal, the appellant challenges the
legality of his conviction under S. 165-A of the Indian
Penal Code. His wife Rukhanbai was the owner of the two
house properties in ’F’ ward of the Bombay Municipal
Corporation.. The buildings were in a ruinous condition and
she was served with notices under S. 354 of the Bombay
Municipal Corporation Act requiring her to repair and secure
them. The notices were not complied with and prosecutions
under S. 471 of the Act were started against her in the
Presidency magistrate’s court. The summonses issued to her
were served by affixation and on her failure to appear in
court a bailable warrant for her arrest was issued. One
Munir Ahmed Shaikh, a notice clerk attached to ’F’ ward
building department of the Bombay Muni--
722
cipal Corporation, was entrusted with the duty of serving
the warrant. The charge against the appellant was that he
offered to Shaikh on July 18, 1960, a sum of Rs. 25 and on
August 2, 1960, a sum of Rs. 100 as a bribe for not
executing the warrant. The appellant started making
approaches to Shaikh from July 1, 1960. Shaikh reported the
matter to the municipal commissioner who directed N. W.
Naik to investigate into the matter. Naik was the
administrative, officer of the corporation in charge of
investigation of complaints regarding corruption, bribery
and other malpractices. Over the telephone Shaikh arranged
a meeting with the appellant in the evening of July 18, 1960
at the office of the India Metal Co., of which one A. M.
Karachiwala was the proprietor. Naik under the assumed name
of C. J. Mehta went with Shaikh to the office of the India
Metal ,Co. In the presence of Naik, the appellant offered a
bribe of Rs. 25 to Shaikh on July 18, 1960 but Shaikh did
not accept the bribe.
On August 2, 1960 the appellant had a telephone talk with
Shaikh and fixed an appointment at ’Shaikh’s residence in
the evening. Shaikh lodged a complaint with the anti-
corruption Bureau reporting the offer of a bribe of Rs. 25
on July 18 and the appointment at his residence in the
evening_ of August 2. After the complaint was recorded, S.
G. S. I. Mahajan obtained the necessary permission from the
Chief Presidency magistrate to investigate into the offence.
Mahajan decided to lay a trap. ,On a sofa in the outer room
of Shaikh’s residence he set up a microphone which was
connected to a tape recorder in the inner room The
microphone was concealed behind books. Mahajan, a radio
mechanic and other members of his party remained in the
inner room. Shaikh stayed in the outer room. The outer
room and the person of Shaikh were searched and no cash was
found. At the appointed hour, the appellant came to
Shaikh’s residence and was received by Shaikh in the Outer
room. Shaikh and the appellant had an intimate
conversation. The appellant offered :a bribe to Shaikh,
produced ten currency notes of Rs. 10 each and gave them to
Shaikh. When Shaikh gave the pre-arranged signal "Salim pan
lao", Mahajan and other members of his party entered the
outer room and found the currency notes in Shaikh’s short
pocket. The tape recorder was switched on as :Soon as the
appellant arrived and was switched off after the signal was
given. The conversation between Shaikh and the appellant
was recorded in the tape recorder. The tape remained in the
custody of Mahajan. From the shorthand notes made after the
tape was replayed one Yakub prepared a transcription of the
conversation. The accuracy of the transcription is admit-
ted. At the trial of the case, the tape recorder was played
in court.
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723
The special judge for greater Bombay found the appellant
guilty of the offence under S. 165-A of the Indian Penal
Code and sentenced him to simple imprisonment for 18 months
and a fine of Rs. 500, in default further imprisonment for
six months. with the recommendation that he should be
treated as class 1 prisoner. Karachiwalla, the proprietor
of India Metal Co., at whose office the bribe of Rs. 25 was
offered was charged at the trial with aiding and abetting
the commission of the offence under S. 165-A, but was
acquitted. The appellant preferred an appeal to the High
Court. At the commencement of ’the appeal he waived formal
notice for enhancement of the sentence. The High Court
convicted the appellant under s. 165-A on both counts of the
charge separately and sentenced him to rigorous imprisonment
for one year on each count, the sentences to run
concurrently, and a fine of Rs. 250 or in default rigorous
imprisonment for three months on each count. The High Court
decline& to recommend class 1 to the appellant. Subject to
this modification of the sentence, the appeal to the High
Court was dismissed. The appellant has filed this appeal by
special leave.
With regard to the incident of July 18, 1960 the High Court
was not inclined to accept the evidence of Shaikh without
independent corroboration. The High Court found that Shaikh
was substantially corroborated by Naik who had played the
role of a detective. Mr. Mistry argued that Naik was an
accomplice and his evidence should not be accepted without
corroboration. It is not right to say that Naik was an
accomplice. He did not provoke or participate in any crime.
The defence counsel conceded in the High Court that Naik had
no animus for giving false evidence. The High Court found
Naik to be a reliable witness and worthy of credit and we
see no ground for reviewing this conclusion and the
concurrent finding of the courts below that the charge of
the offer of a bribe by the appellant to Shaikh on July 18,
1960 was proved.
Shaikh was the only eye-witness to the offer of the bribe on
August 2, 1960. Mahajan the radio mechanic and other per-
sons who kept themselves concealed in the inner room of
Shaikh’s residence did not witness the offer of the bribe,
nor did they hear the conversation between Shaikh and the
appellant. The High Court was not inclined to accept the
evidence of Shaikh without corroboration. But the High
Court found that his evidence was sufficiently corroborated
by the tape recorder. The appellant handed over Rs 100 to
Shaikh on August 2, 1960. The contemporaneous dialogue
between them formed part of the res gestae and is relevant
and admissible under S. 8 of the Indian Evidence Act. The
dialogue is proved by Shaikh. The tape record of the
dialogue corroborates his testimony. The process
72 4
of. tape, recording offers an accurate method of storing and
later reproducing sounds. The imprint on the magnetic tape
is the direct effect of the relevant sounds. Like a
photograph of a relevant.incident, a contemporaneous tape
record of a relevant conversation is a relevant fact and is
admissible under s. 7 of the Indian Evidence Act.
In Rup Chand v. Mahabir Parshad and another(1), a tape
record of a former statement of a witness was admitted in
evidence to shake the credit of the witness under s. 155(3)
of the Indian Evidence Act. The case was followed in
Manindra Nath v. Biswanath Kundu(2). In S. Pratap Singh v.
The State of Punjab(1), the tape record of a conversation
was admitted in evidence, to corroborate the evidence of
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witnesses who had stated that such a conversation had taken
place. In R. v. Maqsud Ali(4) a tape record of a
conversation was admitted in evidence, though the only
witness who overheard it was not conversant with the
language and could not make out what was said. If a
statement is relevant, an accurate tape record of the
statement is also relevant and admissible. The time and
place and accuracy of the recording must be proved by a
competent witness and the voices must be properly
identified. One. of the features of magnetic tape recording
is the ability to erase and re-use the recording medium.
’Because of this facility of erasure and re-use, the
evidence must be received with caution. The court must be
satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the record has not
been tampered with.
The radio mechanic did not hear the conversation but he
proved that the tape recorded all the sounds produced in the
room where only Shaikh and the appellant were present. The
voices of the appellant and Shaikh were properly identified.
The tape was not sealed and was kept in the custody of
Mahajan. The absence ,of sealing naturally gives rise to
the argument that the recording medium might have been
tampered with before it was replayed. However, it was not
suggested either in the cross examination of the
prosecution witnesses or in the answers under s. 342,
Criminal Procedure Code, that any tampering had taken place
with the Recording. While admitting the accuracy of
material parts of the conversation reproduced by the tape
recorder, the appellant in his examination under s. 342
attempted to explain the conversation and the object of his
visit and-said that-tie had gone to Shaikh’s ’residence for
obtaining repayment of a loan of Rs. 100 which he had
advanced to Shaikh on July 19, 1960. The High Court
rejected the appellant’s explanations. Mr. Mistry was right
in saying that the High Court could-not accept the
inculpatory ,part and reject the exculpatory part of the
appellant’s answers
2,1.5
(1) A.I.R. 1956 Punj. 173.
(3) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 733.
(2) 67 C.W.N. 191.
(4) [1965] 2 All E.R. 464.
72 5
under S. 342. But there was other evidence showing that the
tape recording ’was not tampered with. The fact that the
defence did not suggest any tampering lends assurance to the
credibility of the other evidence. The courts below rightly
held that the tape recorder faithfully recorded and
reproduced the actual conversation.
The appellant had walked into a pre-arranged trap. Mahajan
and other police officers had hidden themselves in the inner
room. Shaikh knew that the police officers were recording
the conversation and was naturally on his guard while
talking to the appellant. The appellant was not aware of
the presence of the police officers. He was lulled into a
sense of security and was off his guard. The offence of the
attempt to bribe Shaikh on July 18, 1960 had already been
committed and reported to the police and was under
investigation on August 2, 1960 when Shaikh and the
appellant met and talked. The evidence of the conversation
was tendered at the trial of the offence committed on July
18, 1960 and of the connected offence committed on August 2,
1960. Mr. Mistry argued that in these circumstances, the
use of the statements of both Shaikh and the appellant on
August 2, 1960, was barred by S. 162 of the Code of Criminal
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Procedure. We are not impressed with this argument. The
appellant was not making a statement to Mahajan or to any
other police officer. He was not even aware that any police
officer was listening to him. He was ’talking to Shaikh.
No doubt Shaikh was a police decoy assisting the police in
their investigation, but the statement of the appellant to
Shaikh while making another offer of a bribe cannot be
regarded as a statement by him to the police. Nor can the
words uttered by Shaikh be regarded as a statement to the
police. Shaikh was talking to the appellant. He knew that
what he said was being recorded for subsequent use by the
police officers. But he was not speaking to any police
officer. There was a dialogue in which Shaikh and the
appellant took part. Each spoke to the other but neither
made a statement to a police officer. The case of Ramkishan
Mithanlal Sharma v. The State of Bombay(1) shows that where
identification parades are directed and supervised by
police, officers and held in their presence and the panch
witnesses take a minor part in the matter, the statements of
the identifiers may be regarded as statements to the police
officers. In the present case, the police officers set the
stage for the drama in which the actors were Shaikh and the
appellant. The officers hid themselves in the inner room
and took no part in the drama. Neither of them can be
regarded as having made a statement to a police officer as
contemplated by S. 162.
Counsel claimed protection under Art. 20(3) of the Constitu-
(1) [1955] S.C.R.903,922-23.
726
tion against the use of the statements made by the appellant
on August 2, 1960. He argued that by the active deception
of the police, the appellant was compelled to, be a witness
against himself. Had the appellant known that the police
had arranged a trap, he would not have talked as he did.
Compulsion may take many forms. A person accused of an
offence may be subject to physical or mental torture. He
may be starved or beaten and a confession may be extorted
from him. By deceitful means he may be induced to believe
that his son is being tortured in an adjoining room and by
such inducement he may be compelled to make an incriminating
statement. But we cannot say that in this case the
appellant was compelled to be a witness against himself. He
was free to talk or not to talk. His conversation with
Shaikh was voluntary. There was no element of duress,
coercion or compulsion. His statements were not extracted
from him in an oppressive manner or by force or against his
wishes. He cannot claim the protection of Art. 20(3). The
fact that the tape recording was done without his knowledge
is not of itself an objection to its admissibility in
evidence. In saying so, the Court does not lend its
approval to the police practice of tapping telephone wires
and setting up hidden microphones for the purpose of tape
recording.
The High Court rightly convicted the appellant of the
offence under s. 165A of the Indian Penal, Code. Counsel
pleaded for reduction of the sentence. The appellant is
sixty years old. He is suffering from cardiac troubles. He
was removed to jail from the hospital in an ambulance on
July 29, 1963. He remained in jail until December 12, 1963
when he was released on bail. Having regard to these and
other circumstances, we reduce the substantive sentence of
imprisonment to the period of imprisonment already undergone
by him. With this modification of the sentence, the appeal
is dismissed.
Y.P. Appeal
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dismissed.
727