Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. P. SHARMA AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SATISH CHANDRA, DISTRICT MAGISTRATE,DELHI, AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/03/1954
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
HASAN, GHULAM
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1954 AIR 300 1954 SCR 1077
CITATOR INFO :
D 1960 SC 756 (9)
RF 1961 SC 29 (21,22,25)
D 1961 SC1808 (1,4,8,9,11,13,14,19,21,22,31)
RF 1965 SC1251 (27,38)
E 1970 SC 940 (12,14)
D 1972 SC 591 (22)
F 1973 SC1196 (18)
F 1974 SC 348 (9,24)
RF 1976 SC1167 (3)
R 1978 SC1025 (31,38)
RF 1980 SC 185 (4)
RF 1981 SC 379 (62,66,87)
ACT:
Constitution of India, arts. 19(1)(f) and 20(3)-Search
warrant issued under s. 96(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure (Act V of 1898)-Whether ultra, vires art.
19(1)(f)-Search and seizure of
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documents under ss. 94 and 96 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure Whether compelled production thereof--Within the
meaning of art. 20(3).
HEADNOTE:
Held, that the provision for the search warrant under
the first alternative of a. 96(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure does not offend art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution.
A search and seizure is only a temporary interference with
the right to hold the property searched and the articles
seized. Statutory recognition in this behalf is a necessary
and reasonable restriction and cannot per se be considered
to be unconstitutional.
A compelled production of incriminating documents by a
person against whom a First Information Report has been made
is testimonial compulsion within the meaning of art. 20(3)
of the Constitution. But a search and seizure of a document
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under the provisions of as. 94 and 96 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure is not a compelled production thereof
within the meaning of art. 20 (3) and hence does not offend
the said Article.
A power of search and seizure is, in any system of
jurisprudence, an overriding power of the State for the
protection of social security and that power is necessarily
regulated by law. When the Constitution makers have thought
fit not to subject such regulation to constitutional
limitations by recognition of the fundamental right to
privacy, analogous to the American Fourth Amendment, there
is no justification for importing into it, a totally
different fundamental right by some process of strained
construction.
Scope and connotation of art. 20(3) explained.
John Lilburn’s Case (3 State Trials 1315), Boyd v.
United States (116 U.S. 616), Weeks v. United States, (232
U.S. 383), Felix Gould v. United States (255 U.S. 298),
Entick v. Carrington (19 State Trials 1030), Hale v. Henkel
(201 U.S. 43), and Satya Kinkar Boy v. Nikhil Chandra
Jyotishopadhaya (A.I.R. 1951 cal. 104) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION PETITIONS Nos. 372 and 375 of 1953.
Original petition under article 32 of the Constitution of
India for the enforcement of fundamental right.
Veda Vyas, and Daulat Ram Kalia (S. K. Kapur and Ganpat
Rai, with them) for the petitioners.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor General for India (Porus A. Mehta
and A. M. Chatterjee, with him) for the respondents.
1954 March 15. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by JAGANNADHADAS J.
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JAGANNADHADAS J.-These two applications are for relief
under article 32 of the Constitution arising out of similar
and connected set of facts and are dealt with together.
They’arise under the following circumstances. The Registrar
of the Joint Stock Companies, Delhi State, lodged
information with the Inspector General, Delhi Special Police
Establishment, to the following effect. Messrs. Dalmia
Jain Airways Ltd. was registered in his office on the 9th
July, 1946, with an authorised capital of Rs. 10 crores and
went into liquidation on the 13th June, 1952. An
investigation into the affairs of the company was ordered,
by the Government and the report of the inspector appointed
under section 138 of the Indian Companies Act indicated that
an organised attempt was made from the inception of the
company to misappropriate and embezzle the funds of the
company-and declare it to be substantial loss, and to
conceal from the shareholders the true state of affairs by
submitting false accounts and balance-sheets. Various
dishonest and fraudulent transactions were also disclosed
which show that false accounts with fictitious entries and
false records were being maintained and that dishonest
transfers of moneys had been made. It was accordingly
alleged that offences under sections 406, 408, 409,’418,
420, 465, 467, 468, 471 and 477(a) of the Indian Penal Code
had been committed. It was also stated that Seth R. K.
Dalmia who was the Director and Chairman of Dalmia Jain
Airways Ltd. has been controlling certain other concerns,
viz., (1) Dalmia Cement & Paper Marketing Co., Ltd., (2)
Dalmia Jain Aviation Ltd. now known as Asia Udyog Ltd., and
(3) Allen Berry & Co., Ltd., through his nominees- and that
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all these concerns were utilised in order to commit the
frauds. It was further stated therein by the Registrar of
Joint Stock Companies that to determine the extent of the
fraud, it was necessary to get hold of books not only of
Dalmia Jain Airways Ltd. but also of the allied concerns
controlled by the Dalmia group, some of which are outside
the Delhi State. Lists of the offices and places in which
and of the persons in whose custody the records may be
available were furnished. Speedy
140
1080
investigation was asked for. This information was recorded
by the Special Police on the 19th November, 1953, as the
First Information Report. On the basis thereof an
application was made to the District Magistrate, Delhi,
under section 96 of the Criminal Procedure Code, for the
issue of warrants for the search of documents and in the
places, as per schedules furnished. Permission to
investigate in respect of some of the non-cognisable
offences mentioned in the First Information Report was also
asked for. On the same day, the District Magistrate ordered
investigation of the offences and issued warrants for
simultaneous searches at as many as 34 places. The searches
were made on the 25th November, 1953, and subsequent days
and a voluminous mass of records was seized from various
places. The petitioners pray that the search warrants may
be quashed as being absolutely illegal, and ask for return
of the documents seized. In Petition No. 372 of 1953 there
are four petitioners of whom the second is the Delhi Glass
Works Ltd., and the first the Deputy-General Manager
thereof, the third its Secretary and the fourth a
shareholder therein. In Petition No. 375 of 1953 there are
five petitioners of whom the first is Messrs. Allen Berry &
Co., Ltd., second Asia Udyog Ltd., the third Shri R. K.
Dalmia, the fourth the Secretary and General Attorney of the
third and the fifth a shareholder of petitioners Nos. I and
2, and an officer of petitioner No. 2. It will be seen that
the petitioners in both the petitions belong to the four
concerns, namely, (1) Delhi Glass Works Ltd’ , (2) Messrs.
Allen Berry & Co., Ltd., (3) Asia Udyog Ltd., and (4) Dalmia
Jain Airways Ltd. The last three are stated- to be Dalmia
concerns but it does not appear from the records placed
before us what exact connection Delhi Glass Works Ltd. has
with them. However, it is admittedly one of the places for
which a search warrant was asked for and against which the
First Information Report appears to have been lodged. In
the petitions various questions were raised. But such of
them which raise only irregularities and illegalities of the
searches and do not involve any constitutional violation are
matters which may
be more appropriately canvassed before the High Court on
applications under article 226 of the Constitution and we
have declined to go into them. The petitioners have,
therefore, confined themselves before us to two grounds on
which they challenge the constitutional validity,of the
searches. The contentions raised are that the fundamental
rights of the petitioners under article 20(3) and article
19(1)(f) have been violated by the searches in question.
So far as the contention based on article 19(1)(f) is
concerned we are unable to see that the petitioners have any
arguable case. Article 19(1)(f) declares the right of all
citizens to acquire, hold and dispose of property subject to
the operation of any existing or future law in so far as it
imposes reasonable restrictions, on the exercise of any of
the rights conferred thereby, in the interests of general
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public. It is urged that the searches and seizures as
effected in this case were unreasonable and constitute a
serious restriction on the right of the various petitioners,
inasmuch as their buildings were invaded, their documents
taken away and their business and reputation affected by
these largescale and allegedly arbitrary searches and that a
law (section 96(1), Cr.P.C.) which authorises such searches
violates the constitutional guarantee and is invalid. But,
a search by itself is not a restriction on the right to hold
and enjoy property. No doubt a seizure and carrying away is
a restriction of the possession and enjoyment of the
property seized. This, however, is only temporary and for
the limited purpose of investigation. A search and seizure
is, therefore, only a temporary interference with the right
to hold the premises searched and the articles seized.
Statutory regulation in this behalf is necessary and
reasonable restriction cannot per se be considered to be
unconstitutional. The damage, if any caused by such
temporary interference if found to be in excess of legal
authority is a matter for redress in other proceedings. We
are unable to see how any question of violation. of article
19(1) (f) is involved in this case in respect of the
warrants in question which purport to be , under the first
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alternative of section 96(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code.
The only substantial question, therefore, that has been
raised is the one relating to article 20(3) which runs as
follows:
"No person accused of any offence shall be compelled to
be a witness against himself."
The argument urged before us is that a search to obtain
documents, for investigation into an offence is a compulsory
procuring of incriminatory evidence from the accused himself
and is, therefore, hit by article 20(3) as unconstitutional
and illegal. It is not disputed that, prima facIe, the
article in question has nothing to indicate that it
comprehends within its scope, the prohibition of searches
and seizures of documents from the custody of an accused.
But it is urged that this is necessarily implied therein by
certain canons of liberal construction which are applicable
to the interpretation of constitutional guarantees. In
support of this line of argument great reliance has been
placed upon American decisions in which similar questions
were canvassed. The argument on behalf of the petitioners
is presented in the following way. The fundamental
guarantee in article 20(3) comprehends within its scope not
merely oral testimony given by an accused in a criminal case
pending against him, but also evidence of whatever character
compelled out of a person who is or is likely to become
incriminated thereby as an accused. It, therefore, extends
not only to compelled production of documents by an accused
from his possession, but also to such compelled production
of oral or documentary evidence from any- other person who
may become incriminated thereby as an accused in future
proceedings. If this view of the content of article 20(3)
is accepted, the next step in the argument presented is that
a forcible search and seizure of documents is, for purposes
of constitutional protection of this guarantee, on the same
footing as a compelled production of the said documents by
the person from whom they are seized. This chain of
reasoning, if accepted in its entirety, would render
searches and seizures of documents and any
1083
statutory provisions in that behalf illegal and void, as
being in violation of the fundamental right under ArtiCle
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20(3). The question thus raised is of farreaching
importance and requires careful consideration.
Article 20(3) embodies the principle of protection
against compulsion of self-incrimination which is one of the
fundamental canons of the British system of criminal
jurisprudence and which has been adopted by the American
system and incorporated as an article of its Constitution.
It has also, to a substantial extent, been recognized in the
Anglo Indian administration of criminal justice in this
country by incorporation into various statutory provisions.
In order, therefore, to arrive at a correct appraisal of the
scope and content of the doctrine and to judge to what
extent that was intended to be recognised by our
Constitution-makers in article 20(3), it is necessary to
have a cursory view of the origin and scope of this doctrine
and the implications thereof as understood in English law
and in American law and as recognized in the Indian law.
In English law, this principle of protection against
self-incrimination had a historical origin. It resulted
from a feeling of revulsion against the inquisitorial
methods adoPted and the barbarous sentences imposed, by the
Court of Star Chamber, in the exercise of its criminal
jurisdiction. This came to a head in the case of John
Lilburn(1) which brought about the abolition of the Star
Chamber and the firm recognition of the principle that the
accused should not be put on oath and that no evidence
should be taken from him. This principle, in course of
time, developed into its logical extensions, by way of
privilege of witnesses against self-incrimination, when
called for giving oral testimony or for production of
documents. A change was introduced by the Criminal Evidence
Act of 1898 By making an accused a competent witNess on his
own behalf, if he applied for it. But so far as the oral
testimony -of witnesses and the production of documents are
concerned, the protection against
(1) 3 State Trials 1315,
self-incrimination continued as before. (See Phipson on
Evidence, 9th Edition, pages 215 and 474).
These principles, as they were before the statutory
change in 1898, were carried into the American legal system
and became part of its common law. (See Wigmore on Evidence,
vol. VIII, pages 301 to 303). This was later on
incorporated into their Constitution by virtue of the Fifth
Amendment thereof. The language of the Fifth Amendment was
considered by the American Courts as being wide enough to
cover all the aspects of the principle of protection against
self incrimination as administered under the English common
law including oral testimony of witnesses and production of
documents. (See Willis on Constitutional Law, pages 518 and
519). In course of time further extensions of that
privilege were recognised by the courts relating to searches
and seizures. It came to be held that unreasonable searches
and seizures of documents fell equally within the mischief
of the Fourth and the Fifth Amendments [Boyd v. United
States(1)]and that documents or other evidence so obtained
were inadmissible in evidence [ Weeks v. United States(2)].
In the Indian law the extent to which this protection is
recognised appears from the various relevant statutory
provisions from time to time. Section III of Act XV of 1852
recognised that an accused in a criminal proceeding was not
a competent or compellable witness to give evidence for or
against himself This provision was repealed by the Evidence
Act I of 1872. But meanwhile the Criminal Procedure Code of
1861 in sections 204 and 203 thereof respectively provided
that no oath shall be administered to the accused and that
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it shall be in the discretion of the Magistrate to examine
him. The Criminal Procedure Code of 1872 by section 250
thereof made a general questioning, of the accused, after
the witnesses for the prosecution had been examined,
compulsory and section 345 thereof provided that no oath or
affirmation shall be
(1) 116 U.S. 6i6.
(2) 232 U.S. .383.
1085
administered to the accused person These features have been
continued in the later Codes of Criminal Procedure and have
been incorporated into section 342 of the present Criminal
Procedure Code of 1898. The only later statutory change, so
far, in this behalf, appears to be that brought about by
section 7 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. By
virtue of that section an accused is a competent witness on
his own application in respect of offenses under that Act.
So far as witnesses are concerned, section III of Act XV of
1852 also declared the protection of, witnesses against
compulsion to answer incriminating questions. Shortly
thereafter in 1855, this protection was modified by section
32 of Act II of 1855 which made him compellable to answer
even incriminating questions but provided immunity from
arrest or prosecution on the basis of such evidence or any
other kind of use thereof in criminal proceedings except
prosecution for giving false evidence. This position has
been continued under section 132 of the Evidence Act I of
1872 which is still in force. So far as documents are
concerned, it does not appear that the Indian statutory law
specifically recognised protection against production of
incriminating documents until Evidence Act I of 1872 was
enacted which has a provision in this behalf in section 130
thereof. It is not quite clear whether this section which
excludes parties to a suit applies to an accused. Thus so
far as the Indian law is concerned it may be taken that the
protection against self-incrimination continues more or less
as in the English common law, so far as the accused and
production of documents are concerned, but that it has been
modified as regards oral testimony of witnesses, by
introducing compulsion and providing immunity from
prosecution on the basis of such compelled evidence.
Since the time when the principle of protection against
self-incrimination became established in English law and in
other systems of law which have followed it, there has been
considerable debate as to the utility thereof and serious
doubts were held in some quarters that this principle has a
tendency to defeat justice. In support of the principle it
is claimed that the protection’
1086
of accused against -self-incrimination promotes active
investigation from external sources to find out the truth
and proof of alleged or suspected crime instead of extortion
of confessions on unverified suspicion. (See Wigmore on
Evidence, Vol. VIII, page 309). It is also claimed that
that privilege in its application to witnesses as regards
oral testimony and production of documents affords to them
in general a free atmosphere in which they can be persuaded
to come forward to furnish evidence in courts and be of
substantial help in elucidating truth in a case, with
reference to material within their knowledge and in their
possession. (See Wigmore on Evidence, Vol. VIII, page 307).
On the other hand, the opinion has been strongly held in
some quarters that this rule has an undesirable effect on
social interests and that in the detection of crime, the
State is confronted with overwhelming difficulties as a
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result of this privilege. It is said this has become a
hiding place of crime and has outlived its usefulness and
that the rights of accused persons are amply protected
without this privilege and that no innocent person is in
need of it. (See Wigmore on Evidence, Vol.VIII, pages 314
and 315) Certain passages at pages 441 and 442 of Vol. I of
Stephen’s History of the Criminal Law of England are also
instructive in this context and show a similar divergence of
opinion.
In view of the above background, there is no inherent
reason to construe the ambit of this fundamental right as
coprising a very wide range. Nor would it be legitimate to
confine it to the barely literal meaning of the words used,
since it is a recognized doctrine that when appropriate a
constitutional provision has to be liberally construed, so
as to advance the intendment thereof and to prevent its
circumvention. Analysing the terms in which this right has
been declared in our Constitution, it may be said to consist
of the following components. (1) It is a right pertaining to
a person " accused of an offence (2) It is a protection
against compulsion to be a witness"; and (3) It is a
protection against such compulsion resulting in his giving
evidence " against himself ". The oases with which we are
concerned have been
1087
presented to us on the footing that the persons against
whom the search warrants were issued, were all of them
persons against whom the First Information Report was lodged
and who were included in the category of accused therein and
that therefore they are ’persons" accused of an offence"
within the meaning of article 20(3) and also that the
documents for whose search the warrants were issued, being
required for investigation into the alleged offences, such
searches were for incriminating material. It may be noticed
that some of the accused enumerated in the First Information
Report are incorporated companies. But no question has been
raised before us that the protection does not apply to
corporations or to documents belonging to them ’-a question
about which there has been considerable debate in the
American Courts. On the above footing, therefore, the only
substantial argument before us on this part of the case was
that compelled production of incriminating documents from
the possession of an accused is compelling an accused to be
a witness against himself. This argument accordingly raises
mainly the issue relating to the scope and connotation of
the second of the three components above stated
Broadly stated the guarantee in article 20(3) is against
"testimonial compulsion ". It is suggested that this is
confined to the oral evidence of a person standing his trial
for an offence when called to the witness-stand. We can see
no reason to confine the content of the constitutional
guarantee to this barely literal import. So to limit it
would be to rob the guarantee of its substantial purpose and
to miss the substance for the sound as stated in certain
American decisions. The phrase used in article 20(3) is "
to be a witness." A person can " be a witness " not merely
by giving oral evidence but also. by producing documents or
making intelligible gestures as in the case of a dumb
witness (see section 119 of the Evidence Act) or the like.
" To be a witness " is nothing more than " to furnish
evidence ", and such evidence can be furnished through the
lips or by production of a thing or of a document or in
other modes. So far as
141
1088
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production of documents is concerned, no doubt section 139
of the Evidence Act says that a person producing a document
on summons is not a witness. But that section is meant to
regulate the right of cross-examination. It is not a guide
to the connotation of the word " witness", which must ’be
understood in its natural sense, i.e., as referring to a
person who furnishes evidence. Indeed, every positive
volitional act which furnishes evidence is testimony, and
testimonial compulsion connotes coercion which procures the
positive volitional evidentiary acts of the person, as
opposed to the, negative attitude of silence or submission
on his part. Nor is there any reason to think that the
protection in respect of the evidence so procured is
confined to what transpires at the trial in the court room.
The phrase used in article 20(3) is "to be a witness" and
not to "appear as a witness": It follows that the protection
afforded to an accused in so far as it is related to the
phrase "to be a witness’ is not merely in respect of
testimonial compulsion in the court room but may well extend
to compelled testimony previously obtained from him. It is
available therefore to a person against whom a formal
accusation relating to the commission of an offence has been
levelled which in the normal’ course may result in
prosecution. Whether it is available to other persons in
other situations does not call for decision in this case.
Considered in this light the guarantee under article
20(3) would be available in the present cases to these
petitioners against whom a First Information Report has been
recorded as accused therein. It would extend to any
compulsory process for production of evidentiary documents
which are reasonably likely to support a prosecution against
them. The question then that arises next is whether search
warrants for the seizure of such documents from the custody
of these persons are unconstitutional and hence illegal on
the ground that in effect they are tantamount to compelled
production of evidence. It is urged that both search and
seizure of a document and a compelled production thereof on
notice or summons serve the same purpose of being
1089
available as evidence in a prosecution against the person
Concerned, and that any other view would defeat or weaken
the Protection afforded by the guarantee of the fundamental
right. This line, of argument is not altogether without
force and has the apparent support of the Supreme Court of
the United States of America in Boyd V. United States(1).
The question there which came up for consideration was
in fact the converse, namely, whether a compulsory
production of documents on the facts of that case amounted
to search and seizure. There are dicta in that decision to
the effect that a compulsory production of a man’s private
papers is a search and seizure since it affects the sole
object thereof and that by this process the court extorts
from the party his private books and papers to make him
liable for penalty. It is necessary, therefore, to examine
this decision rather closely in order to determine how far
it can be a safe guide for our purpose. The question
therein arose under the following circumstances. In an Act
to amend the, Customs Revenue Laws, there was a provision
which enabled the Government Attorney to make a written
motion to the court for the issue of a notice to the
opposite-party for production of papers in his possession.
The motion could be made if in the Attorney’s opinion those
books contain materials which will prove an alleged fact in
support of a charge of defrauding the revenues, involving
penalty and forfeiture of merchandise to which the fraud
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relates. It is also provided by the said section that if
the court in its discretion allows the motion in which is
set out the fact sought to be proved and calls upon the
defendant to produce the documents, and the defendant fails
or refuses to produce them without any proper and
satisfactory explanation, the allegation of fact sought to
be proved by such production may be deemed to have been
confessed. The question that thereupon arose was whether an
order for production made by the court under that section
did not violate the constitutional rights declared by the
Fourth and Fifth Amendments of the
(1) 116 U.S. 616.
1090
American Constitution. These amendments are as follows:
Amendment IV.
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects against unreason. able searches
and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall
issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or
affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be
searched, and the persons or things to be seized. "
Amendment V.
"No person......... shall be compelled in any criminal.
case, to be a witness against himself;............ "
On the facts of the above case, there was no difficulty in
holding that the production of documents in response to the
motion granted by the court was a compelled production of
incriminating evidence and that it violated the Fifth
Amendment. The minority judgment brought this out clearly
in the following passage:
"The order of the court under the statute is in effect a
subpoena duces tecum; and though the penalty for the witness
failure to appear in court with the criminating papers is
not fine and imprisonment, it is one which may be made more
severe, namely, to have the charges against him of a
criminal nature taken for confessed and made the foundation
of the judgment of the court. That this is within the
protection which the Constitution intended against
compelling a person to be a witness against himself is, I
think, quite clear. "
The majority Judges, how ever, went one step further and
said as follows:
"The compulsory production of a man’s private papers is
search and seizure.
and again thus
" We have been unable to perceive that the seizure of a
man’s private books and, papers to be used in evidence
against him is substantially different from compelling him
to be a witness against himself.
1091
Thus in the view. that the order for production was
tantamount to search and seizure and that in the case it was
for a purpose prohibited by the Fifth Amendment, they held
that the Fourth Amendment prohibiting unreasonable searches
was also violated. The minority Judges, however, did not
accept this view and pointed out that there was an essential
difference between the seizure of a document on search I and
the production of a document. But even otherwise, it would
appear on a careful consideration of the decision that the
majority were at pains to make out that, in the
circumstances of the case the order for production would
amount to "an unreasonable search and seizure" and is hence
unconstitutional as violating the Fourth and Fifth
Amendments. The case, therefore, does not lend support for
any general doctrine that a search and’ seizure in all
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circumstances is tantamount to a compelled production in
violation of the Fifth Amendment’. That decision itself
expressly recognizes the legality of various kinds of
searches and indeed the Fourth Amendment itself shows it.
Thus what that decision really established was that the
obtaining of incriminating evidence by illegal search and
seizure is tantamount to the violation of the Fifth
Amendment. It was in this light that subsequent cases have
also understood this decision. [See Felix Gouled v. United
States(1)].
Boyd’s case(2) has relied on the famous judgment of
Lord Camden in Entick v. Carrington(3), and learned counsel
for the petitioners has also relied on it strenuously before
us. Wigmore in his Law of Evidence, Vol. VIII, page 368,
has shown how some of the assumptions relating to it in
Boyd’s case(1), were inaccurate and misleading. While no
doubt Lord Camden refers to the principle of protection
against self-accusation with great force, in his
consideration of the validity of general search-warrants,
that case does not treat a seizure on a search warrant as
ipso facto tantamount to self-incrimination. All that was
said
(1) 253 U.S. 298; 65 Law. Edn. 647 at 651 and 653.
(2) 116 U.S. 616.
(3) 19 State Trials 1030.
1092
was that the legal philosophy underlying both is the same,
as appears from the following passage
"It is very certain, that the law obligeth no man to
accuse himself; because the necessary means of compelling
self-accusation, falling upon the innocent as well as the
guilty, would be both cruel and unjust; and it should seem,
that search for evidence is disallowed upon the same
principle. There too the innocent would be confounded with
the guilty."
It may be noted that Lord Camden’s judgment shows, by an
elaborate dissertation, that the search warrant therein
under consideration was unauthorised and illegal. Thus even
the above dictum has reference only to an illegal search.
It is, therefore, impossible to derive from Boyd’s
case(1) support for the proposition that searches and
seizures, in general, are violative of the privilege of
protection against self-incrimination. Nor is it possible
to import that doctrine with its differentiation between
legal and illegal searches into our Constitution because we
have nothing in our Constitution corresponding to the Fourth
Amendment enabling the courts to import the test of
unreasbnableness or any analogous criterion for
discrimination between legal and illegal searches.
In the arguments before us strong reliance has also been
placed on the provision of sections 94 and 96 of the
Criminal Procedure Code in support of the broad proposition
that a seizure of documents on search is in the
contemplation of law a compelled production of documents.
The sections run as follows:
" 94(1). Whenever any court, or in any place beyond the
limits of the towns of Calcutta and Bombay, any officer in
charge of a’ police-station considers that the production of
any document or other thing is necessary or desirable for
the purposes of any investigation, inquiry, trial or other
proceeding under this Code by or before such court or
officer, such court may issue a summons, or such officer a
written order, to the person in whose possession or power
such document or thing is believed to be, requiring him to
attend
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(1) 116 U.S. 616.
1093
and produce it, or to produce it, at the time and place
stated in the summons or order.
............................."
"96(1). Where,any Court has reason to believe that a
person to whom a summons or order under section 94 or a
requisition under section 95, subsection (1), has been or
might be addressed will not or would not produce the
document or thing as required by such summons or
requisition,
or where such document or thing is not known to the court
to be in the possession of any person,
or where the court considers that the purposes of any
inquiry, trial or other proceeding under this Code will be
served by a general search or inspection,
it may issue a search-warrant; and the person to whom
such warrant is directed, may search or inspect in
accordance therewith and the provisions hereinafter
contained.
.........................."
It is pointed out that the procedure contemplated is that
normally there should be a summons or notice for production
under section 94 and it is only if there is no compliance
therewith or if the Magistrate is satisfied about the
likelihood of non-compliance that a search warrant is to be
issued. It is, therefore, urged that these provisions
themselves show that in law search and seizure is a
substitute for compelled production on summons. There has
been some debate before us whether section 94 applies to an
accused person and whether there is any element of
compulsion in it. For the purpose of this case it is
unnecessary to decide these points. We may assume without
deciding that the section is applicable to the accused as
held by a Full Bench of the Calcutta High Court in a recent
case in Satya Kinkar Boy v. Nikhil Chandra Jyotisho-
padhaya(1). We may also assume that there is an element of
complusion implicit in the process contemplated by section
94 because, in any case, no compliance results in the
unpleasant consequence of invasion of one’s premises and
rummaging of one’s
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Cal 101.
1094
private papers by the minions of law under a search warrant.
Notwithstanding these assumptions we are unable to read
sections 94 and 96(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code as
importing any statutory recognition of a theory that search
and seizure of documents is compelled production thereof.
It is to be noticed that section 96(1) has three
alternatives and that the requirement of previous notice or
summons and the non-compliance with it or the likelihood of
such noncompliance is prescribed only for the first
alternative and not for the second or the third. A "general
search" and a "search for a document or a thing not known to
be in possession of any particular person" are not
conditioned by any such requirement. Indeed in cases
covered by the second alternative such a requirement cannot
even be contemplated as possible. .It would, therefore,
follow, on the theory propounded, that some at least of the
searches within the scope of the second and third
alternatives in section 96(1) would fall outside the
constitutional protection of article 20(3)-an anomalous
distinction for which no justification can be found on
principle.
A consideration of the history of Indian statutory
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legislation relating to searches does not support the theory
propounded. The provisions for searches are to be found in
the successive Codes of Criminal Procedure. In the earliest
Code, Act XXV of 1861, there appears no provision for
issuing summons or notices for production of documents, but
there was only a provision for the issue of a search warrant
by a Magistrate under section 114. thereof, which is in the
following terms:
"When a Magistrate shall consider that the production of
any thing is essential to the conduct of an enquiry into an
offence known or suspected to have been committed, he may
grant his warrant to search for such thing; and it shall be
lawful for the officer charged with the execution of such
warrant to search for such thing in any house or place
within the jurisdiction of such Magistrate. In such case
the Magistrate may specify in his warrant the house or
place, or part thereof, to which only the search shall
extend.
1095
There was also section 142 of the said Code which vested
in an officer in charge of police station with the power to
make a search suo moto in certain circumstances.. In the
next Criminal Procedure Code, Act I of 1872, the relevant
provisions were in sections 365, 368 and 379. Section 379
was more or less a repetition of section 142 of the previous
Code (Act XXV -of 1861) vesting power in a police officer to
make a suo moto search. Section 365 appears to be the
earliest statutory provision for the issue of a summons,
either by a police officer or by a court for the production
of a document required for investigation. This was followed
by section 368 relating to the issue of search warrants
which was in the following terms:
"When a Magistrate considers that the production of
anything is essential to the conduct of an inquiry into an
offence known or suspected to have been committed or to the
discovery of the offender,
or when he considers that such inquiry or discovery
will be furthered by the search or inspection of any house
or place,
he may grant his search-warrant; and the officer
charged with the execution of such warrant may search or
inspect any house or place witiin the jurisdiction of the
Magistrate of the District.
The Magistrate issuing such warrant may, if he sees
fit, specify in his warrant the house or place, or part
thereof, to which only the search or inspection shall
extend; and the officer charged with the execution of such
warrant shall then search or inspect only the house, place
or part so specified. "
It will be noticed that even when the procedure of
summons for production of documents was introduced, as above
in section 365 the provision for the issue of a search-
warrant in section 368 had absolutely nothing to do with the
question of non-compliance by the concerned person with the
summons for production. It is only in the next. Criminal
Procedure Code, Act X of 1882 that the provisions, sections
94 and 96, appear which correspond to the present sections
94 and 96 of Act V of 1898, linking up to some extent the
issue of
142
1096
search warrants with non-compliance or likelihood of non-
compliance .with a summons to produce. It may be mentioned
in passing that the provision for the issue of general
search warrants appears for the first time in the Procedure
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Code of 1882 and even there the issue, of such general
warrants is not based on noncompliance with a previous
summons for production. it is, therefore, clear that there
is no basis in the Indian law for the assumption that a
search or seizure of a thing or document is in itself to be
treated as compelled production of the same. Indeed a
little consideration will show that the two are essentially
different matters for the purpose relevant to the present
discussion. A notice to produce is addressed to the party ,
concerned and his production in compliance Therewith
constitutes a testimonial act by him within the’ meaning of
article 20(3) as above explained. But search warrant is
addressed to an officer of the Government, generally a
police officer. Neither the search nor the seizure are
’acts of the occupier of the searched premises. They are
acts of another to which he is obliged to submit and are,
therefore, not his testimonial acts in any sense. Even in
the American decisions there is a strong current of judicial
opinion in support of this distinction. In Hale v.
Henkel(1), Justice MeKenna in his dissenting judgment makes
the following observations:
"Search implies a quest by an officer of the law; a,
seizure contemplates a forcible dispossession of the
owner............. The quest of an officer acts upon the
things themselves,-may be secret, intrusive, accompanied by
force. The service of a subpoena is but the delivery of, a
paper to a party,-is open and aboveboard. There is no
element of trespass or force in it."
A power of search and seizure is in any system of
jurisprudence’an overriding power of the State for the
protection of social security and that power is necessarily
regulated by law. When -the Constitution makers have thougt
fit not to subject such regulation to Constitutional
limitations by recognition of a
(1) 201 U.S. 43; 50 Law. Edn. 652.
1097
fundamental right to privacy, analogous to the American
Fourth Amendment, we have no justification to import it,
into a totally different fundamental right. by some process
of strained construction. Nor is it legitimate to assume
that the constitutional protection under article 20(3) would
be defeated by the statutory provisions for searches. It is
to be remembered that searches of the kind we are concerned
with are’ under the authority of a Magistrate (excepting,in
the limited class of cases falling under section 165 of the
Criminal Procedure Code). Therefore, issue of a search war-
rant is normally the judicial function of the Magistrate.
When such judicial function is. interposed between the
individual and the officer’s authority for search, no
circumvention thereby of the fundamental right is to be
assumed. We are not unaware that in the present set up of
the Magistracy in this country, it is not infrequently that
the exercise of this judicial function is liable to serious
error, as is alleged in the present case. But the existence
of scope for such occasional error is no ground to assume
circumvention of the constitutional guarantee.
We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that the
searches with which we are concerned in the present cases
cannot be challenged as illegal on the ground of violation
of any fundamental rights and.that these applications are
liable to be dismissed.
As stated at the outset, we have dealt only with the
constitutional issues involved in this case leaving the
other allegations as to the high-handedness and illegality
of the searches open to be raised and canvassed before ’the
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High Court on appropriate applications. But we cannot help
observing that on those allegations and on the material that
has come within our notice, there appears to be scope for
serious grievance on the side of the petitioners, which
requires scrutiny.
We accordingly dismiss these applications but without
costs.
1098