Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
SOM PARKASH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF DELHI
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/01/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 989
CITATOR INFO :
F 1974 SC1024 (5)
R 1976 SC 91 (11)
ACT:
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947--s.5(1)(d) and
5(2)--Whether trapping of corrupt officials a polluted
procedure--Whether investigating officers a suspect
species--Whether chemical test reliable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, an Inspector of Central Excise, was charged
under s.161, I.P.C. and S.5(1)(d)read with s.5(2) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act,1947for having accepted a
bribe. He was convicted and sentenced by the Special Judge.
The High. Court confirmed the conviction but reduced the
sentence to one year’s imprisonment.
The allegation against the appellant was that he accepted a
sum of Rs. 50/- as illegal gratification. At the instance
of the complainant the raiding police party passed on to the
appellant currency notes worth Rs. 50 smeared with a
chemical substance. On recovery of the money from his
pocket traces of the chemical substance were found on his
fingers his kerchief and his trouser pocket.
It was contended (i) that trapping of corrupt officials in
the usual course is a polluted procedure (ii) the
investigating officers are a suspect species and (iii) the
chemical test was not reliable.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD: It is not possible to accede to the theory that
the trapping of corrupt officials in the usual course is a
polluted procedure. Our social milieu is so vitiated by a
superstitious belief that any official can be activist by
illegal gratification, so confidential is the technique of
give and take in which the white-collar offender is an adept
and so tough is the forensic problem of proof beyond
reasonable doubt by good testimony in this area that the
only hope of tracking down the tricky officers is by lying
traps and creating statutory Presumptions. Condemnation of
all traps and associate witnesses is neither pragmatic nor
just, nor is it fair to denounce all public servants
indiscriminately. Judicial attitudes have to be
discriminating. An awkward judicial conscience and an alert
critical appraisal are the best tools in this process. [202
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
G; 203 A]
(ii) Courts are aware of the exaggerated criticisms of the
police force as a whole and of the reluctance of the framers
of the Criminal Procedure Code to trust statements recorded
by police investigators, but these are, partly at least, the
hangover of the British past. Today trust begets trust and
the higher officers of the Indian police, especially in the
Special Police Establishment, deserve better credence. [203
D-E]
(iii) The evidence furnished by inorganic chemistry
often outwits the technology of corrupt officials, provided
no alternative reasonable possibility is made out. it is but
meet that science-oriented detection of crime is made a
massive programme of police Work, for in our technological
age nothing more primitive can be conceived of than denying
the discoveries of the sciences as aids to crime suppression
and nothing cruder can retard forensic efficiency than
swearing by traditional oral evidence only thereby
discouraging liberal use of scientific research to prove
guilt. [204 E]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 143 of
1970.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 31st October, 1969 of the Delhi High Court at New Delhi
in Criminal Appeal No. 70 of 1967.
The appellant appeared in person.
H. R. Khanna and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
201
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER J. The appellant, a quondam inspector of
Central Excise, has argued his case with perspicacity and
plausibility, taking liberal advantage of our solicitude for
giving this lay man a lengthy hearing. The charge broadly
stated, is one of corruption falling under s.161,1.P.C. and
S. 5(1)(d), read with s.5(2), of the prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 ; the proof of guilt is built on a trap
laid by the Special Police Establishment, apparently
clinched by processes of chemical detection ; and the uphill
task of the accused is to challenge in this Court, under
art. 136, the concurrent findings upholding his culpability.
Undaunted he has attempted to explain the incriminating
evidence with adroitness worthy of a better cause and has
taken us critically through the testimony of the P. W.s in
an effort to substantiate a credible case for his
exculpation.
Now, the story, P. W. 1, a young man in his late twenties,
had started a small factory in Shadara, called Uma
Engineering Corporation, for making insulated copper cables,
around June, 1965. The whole process, except fitting the
rubber insulation, was done in his premises and for this
latter purpose the semi-finished goods used to be taken to
another factory in Delhi. Insulated coils being dutiable
articles, the Excise authorities had to issue gate passes
for removal of even half finished items. According to a
certain practice that prevailed till a little before the
alleged commission of the offence, when the article was not
fully manufactured, its removal for the completion of the
process was permitted without levy of duty in advance and
gate passes were issued on this basis. However,this was a
doubtful procedure and the accused did insist, at a certain
stage, that even removal for further processing was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
permissible only on payment of duty, thus antagonism P. W. 1
and hampering his business. Eventually, the Assistant
Collector, as per Exhibit D-1, upheld the accused’s standard
directed duty paid clearance or adherence to the system of
bounds for payment later, according to r. 56 A of the
relevant rules. Apart from this, even duty paid finished
goods could not leave the factory premises before a
peroration (c.1. Ex. D-2) was filled in, verified by the
Excise inspector and signed by him. The embryonic
industrialist, P. W. 1, when faced with the insistence on
duty payment made contacts with the accused and was asked to
initiate himself into the magical means of getting things
done through monthly payments of Rs. 100/as "speed money".
Being too virgin for this way to prosperity, P.W. 1 reacted
by making a bee line to Sri Waswani, the Deputy
Superintendent, Central Excise, with little benefit. Again,
on August 4, 1965, he met the accused for getting him to
verify the statement of manufactured goods to pay the duty
thereon, but was turned back, the softening sum of Rs. 100/-
not having been offered.
We now move to the critical phase. On August 6. 1965, P. W.
1 goes to the office of the accused to get clearance of 2
finished bundles of cables. The demand for money is
repeated but by this time P. W. 1 acquires skill in
courtship and bargains for a smaller sum of Rs. 50/.
Whereupon the accused signs the challan for the deposit of
the excise duty on these finished products (vide Ex. P. 4).
The bribe,
202
according to the understanding, is fixed to be paid next day
in the afternoon. At this stage, P. W. 1 changes his mind
and discloses his bosom to the S. P. E. Officers the next
morning at Kotah House (Ex. P. 5).. The Deputy
Superintendent of Police, P. W. 7, swings into action with
professional proficiency. Two officials, P. W. 3 and P. W.
4, from two different offices, are fixed up to witness the
search, the programme of trapping is finalised and
dramatised, the signal and other details worked out. the 5
currency notes making up Rs. 50/smeared with phenolphthalein
powder and the visible chemical reaction when even small
particles thereof are dipped in sodium carbonate solution
demonstrated. The- "raiding party" troops out after these
preliminary operation are put down in Ex. P.- 6.
Now the scene shifts to the factory. The accused arrives,
coca cola is served, the treacherous notes are passed and
put into his gullible pockets by the unsuspecting accused,
and then the sequence of rap on the door, the police
presence, the surrender by the startled appellant of the
tell-tale currency, his hands, kerchief and inner lining of
the trouser pocket betray him when dipped in acidic solution
and the game is up. Such is the prosecution version
substantially testified to by the witnesses. The inexorable
course of the law takes the accused to the special Judge who
convicts him, the High Court affirms the guilt but reduces
the sentence to one year’s imprisonment.
The arguments in this Court, if confined to facts only under
art136, have as much chance as the proverbial camel through
the eye of a needle. The power, extraordinary in amplitude
but exceptional in its exercise, goes into action only to
avert miscarriage of justice and rarely operates to undo
concurrent findings of fact, if perversity is not present.
Yet, the contentions have been ingeniously and hopefully
presented. The basic attack has been on the morally murky
mechanism of criminal trap. Who has not-our legends say,
even rishis have-succumbed to attractive temptation in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
loneliness laid ? And courts have frowned upon evidence
procured by such experiments since the participants are
prone to be over-anxious and under-accrupulous and the
victims are caught morally unawares. Even so, there are
traps and traps. Where you intercept the natural course of
the corrupt stream by setting an invisible contraption its
ethics above board. On the contrary, to test the moral fire
of an officer whose reputation is suspect, if you .lay a
crime mine which explodes when he, in a weak moment, walks
on it the whole scheme is tainted. of course, our social
milieu is so vitiated by a superstitious belief that any
official can be activised by illegal gratification, so
confidential is the technique of give and take in which the
white colour offender is adept and so tough is the forensic
problem of proof beyond reasonable doubt by good testimony
in this area, that the only hope of tracking down the tricky
officers is by laying traps and creating statutory
presumptions. Even Kautilya has stated that "just as fish
moving under water cannot possibly be found out either as
drinking or not drinking water so government servants cannot
be found out while taking money." Ex-cathedra condemnation
203
of all traps and associate witnesses is neither pragmatic
nor just, nor: is it fair to denounce all public servants
indiscriminately. Judicial attitudes have to be
discriminating, as has happened in this case. The High
Court has, after careful study, chosen to accept the
bona fides of the trap and its author Bishnoi, a senior
police official of the S.P.E (P. W. 7). We cannot
accede to the theory that the trapping of corrupt officials,
in the usual course.. is a polluted procedure.
The appellant has cited decisions in support of his plea
that traps. are tainted and trap witnesses are unworthy.
The rulings do not go, so far and merely indicate the need
for caution and corroboration depending on the circumstances
of each case. An awakened judicial conscience and an alert
critical appraisal are the best tools in this. process.
The appellant’s general denunciation of investigating
officers as a suspect species also ill merits acceptance.
The demanding degree of proof traditionally required in a
criminal case and the devaluations suffered by a witness who
is naturally involved in the fruits of his investigative
efforts, suggest the legitimate search for corroboration
from an independent or unfaltering source-human or
circumstantial to make judicial cortitude doubly sure. Not
that this approach casts any pejorative reflection on the
police officer’s integrity, but that the hazard of holding a
man guilty on interested, even if honest, evidence may,
impair confidence in the system of justice. We are aware of
the exaggerated criticisms of the police force as a whole
and of the reluctance of the framers of the Criminal
Procedure Code to trust statements recorded by police
investigators but these are, partly atleast, the hangover of
the British past. To-day, trust begets trust and the higher
officers of the Indian Police, especially in the Special
Police Establishment deserve better credence. We are
certainly inclined not to swallow the evidence of P Ws. 7
and 8 without scrutiny but after having heard the appellant
at length we are prepared to agree with the High Court that
the evidence of P.Ws.7 and 8 are substantially correct..
Even here, we must underscore the importance of the findings
of the: trap experiment, since they go a long way to
underwrite the veracity, of the prosecution story,
Before, considering this facet of the case, we may as well
briefly refer to P. Ws. 1, 3 and 4. P.W. 1 is the main
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
medium for the bribe-giving. He admitted. He admittedly has
animus against the accused. His station, in life does not
dispel suspicion and so we have to be skeptical. His:
deposition has been read again before us and nothing to
brand him a liar has come out. Were the case to hang on his
single testimony the fate of the case might have been
different. There was P. W. 4 who deposed to the receipt
and pocketing of the tainted notes by the. appellant.
Before us it has been argued with vehemence that P. W. 4 was
not credit-worthy as on one or two previous occasions also
he was joined by the police to witness such traps, that his
house itself was. searched by the C.B I., and that he
contradicts the other witnesses in,. respect of some facts.
These points were canvassed before the courts below and were
found, for good reasons, of no consequence in affecting the
veracity of his testimony. P. W. 4 was a gazetted officer--
204
in another department not chosen by P. W. 7, but directed to
go by his ’boss to attend the trap. True, his house was
raided but this was done long after the occurrence, and by
another wing of the C. B. 1. His presence, in the room, at
the time of the alleged passing of the money by Om Prakash
was admitted by the appellant. P. W. 4 had no animus
against the appellant, nor any acquaintance, much less
affinity with Om Parkash. No mortal attach on the integrity
or probability of the testimony of. P. W. 4 none that will
warrant the subversion of the conclusion reached by the
courts below-has been successfully made. The evidence of P.
W. 4 coupled with that of P. W. 1, was itself sufficient to
establish the acceptance of the tainted currency notes by
the appellant from Om Prakash, which was a pivotal fact of
the prosecution case. Then, there was the evidence of P. W.
3, apart from that of the police officers.
But the outstanding circumstances, most damaging to the
accused, ,-flow from the trap. The rival case of the
accused is that no money was .given to him but P. W. 1, who
had to make good his story, placed the notes on the chair
and pretended to the police that he had paid, the accused.
of course, the oral evidence of P. Ws. 1 and 4, by itself,
if believed, as rightly believed by the High Court, proves
the passing of the money to the accused and its production
by him when challenged by P. W. 7. The fact is indisputable
that the hands, the handkerchief and the inner lining of the
trouser pocket of the accused turned violet when dipped in
soda ash solution. From this the State counsel argues .that
on no hypothesis-except that the notes emerged from tile
accused’ pocket or possession can the triple colour change
be accounted for. The evidence furnished by inorganic
chemistry often outwits the technology of corrupt officials,
provided no alternative reasonable possibility is made out.
The appellant offers a plausible theory. P. W. 1 kept the
notes with him and his hands thus carried the powder.
He, .gave a bottle of coke to the accused and the bottle
thus transmitted particles of phenolph-thalein to the
latter’s hands. He (the accused) wiped his face with the
kerchief and put it into his trouser pocket thus
contaminating the lining with the guilty substance.
Moreover, the .inner lining was dipped by P. W. 7 with his
hands which had the powder. Thus, all the three items stand
explained, according to him. These ,recondite possibilities
and likely freak,, have been rejected by both the ,courts
and we are handly persuaded into hostility to that finding,
It is but meet that science-oriented detection of crime is
made a massive programme of police work, for in our
technological age nothing more primitive can be conceived of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
then denying the discoveries of the sciences as aids to
crime suppression and nothing cruder can retard forensic
efficiency than swearing by traditional oral evidence only
,thereby discouraging the liberal use of’ scientific
research to prove -guilt.
One submission made by the appellant remains to be noticed.
He urged that after Ex. D-1, no Excise Inspector could have
given the semi-finished cables free exit and if duty had to
be paid nothing was gained by giving the bribe. Bribes are
not charity but shrewd business and therefore the motive for
P. W. 1 to pay, linked as it was with
205
hope of getting duty-free gate pass, did not exist. This
approach has a flaw. Bribes are paid not only to get
unlawful things done but to get lawful things done promptly
since time means money. Here, we must remember that gate
passes and pro forms have to be signed by the excise
inspector, and signatures can carry a price. While we do
not accept generalisation about corruption in the country,
we may excerpt a couple of foot-notes from Gunnar Myrdal’s
"Asian Drama" only to point out that the modus opperandi of
corrupt officials may take the course of accepting money for
doing what is lawful more quickly. We would, however,
repeat that we dissociate ourselves from any impression that
the book may otherwise give. The foot-notes read
"The London Times (August 5, 1964) reports :
"Many of these instances of bribery are those
in which the citizen pays in order to get what
he is entitled to anyway, and some students of
Indian affairs have argued that this is a
necessary and not harmful lubricant for a
cumbersome administration...... this
corruption is "simply a way that citizens have
found of building rewards into the
administrative structure in the absence of any
other appropriate incentive system."
"As a means of accelerating the sluggish,
meandering circulation of a file within ’a
department this might be all very well; but
speed money, belying the name, actually has
the effect of a brake on administration,
slowing it down even further. Delay will
deliberately be caused in order to invite
payment of a bribe to accelerate it again."
In this very case, on the ill-starred day, duty had been
fully paid and only his signature to the pro forma had to be
appended for which the bribe was sought. We have little
hesitation in taking the view that " speed money" is the
key to getting lawful things done in good time and "
operation signature", be it on a gate pass or a pro forma,
can delay the movement of goods, the economics whereof
induces investment in bribery,
Every pass and pro forma tempts and every discretionary
power induces illicit demands, given a declining ethos where
giving and taking of illegal gratification is looked upon as
an inevitable evil which has come to stay-more and more
inevitable and less and less evil, as the habit catches on.
Producers depend for their rolling capital on quick turn-
over which is clogged when forms and passes to be signed by
officials are issued with purposeful reluctance and official
slow- motion becomes the signal for use of that paper
lubricant which on expanding class of businessmen blessed
with dubious morals consider an, invisible component of the
cost of production and a widening circle of officials gifted
with low key consciences. regard as the unobjectionable art
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
of coking out untaxed additions to their emoluments May be,
this exaggerated version of the situation is but the
folklore of corruption but knocks the bottom of the
appellant’s plea against motive.
To sum up, we see no good ground to over-turn the factual
findings recorded by the trial judge and affirmed on appeal.
206
The Central Law Commission considering white-collar crime as
a serious menace has made are port on the subject,and the
Senthanan Committee has much earlier highlighted the dangers
in this area. ,In this social context judicial severity
cannot err on the high side an we think the "ends of
justice" referred to by the High Court for toning ,down the
sentence is perhaps an error on the side of leniency. If at
’all, intensive efforts to track down bigger corruption must
be made ; but courts cannot slow down because bigger
criminals are not caught ,although public morals is boosted
better by one big fish being caught ,in the criminal not
than by a hundred small fry perishing ashore, However, since
the State has not quarrelled with the reduction of sentence
by way of appeal we leave the matter well alone. ,
The appellant must now surrender to serve the balance term
if any ,because we dismiss the appeal.
P.B. R. Appeal dismissed.
207