Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE ASSISTANT COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, RAJAMUNDRY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DUNCAN AGRO INDUSTRIES LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/08/2000
BENCH:
R.P.Sethi, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Is it necessary to comply with the precautions
envisaged in Section 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
(for short the Code) when Customs officers record
statement under Section 108 of the Customs Act? A Division
Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court held that it is
necessary if the statements were to be used against the
maker thereof and that view was followed by a Single Judge
of the same High Court in the present case which resulted in
refusal of leave to appeal when an order of acquittal was
challenged in the High Court. This appeal, by special
leave, is against the said order of refusal passed by the
Single Judge.
Certain companies which engaged in manufacturing
cigarettes, along with some of their Directors were
prosecuted before the Court of a Special Judge (Economic
Offences) at Hyderabad for offences under different clauses
of Section 9(1) of the Central Excise Act and under Section
120B of the Indian Penal Code. The trial judge after
holding inquiry framed charges against the respondents for
the aforesaid offences and proceeded with the trial but in
the end he acquitted all of them. The gist of the
allegations against them is that the respondent company,
which engaged in the manufacture of cigarettes during the
period between 1.9.1981 and 30.11.1985, removed large
quantities of cigarettes from their factories at Biccavolu
without accounting them and without paying excise duty. The
further allegation is that large quantities of cigarettes
were concealed in their godowns without accounting them and
in the above process a very huge amount of central excise
duty was evaded fraudulently. Such acts were done by the
respondent pursuant to the criminal conspiracy hatched and
perpetrated by them.
The Special Judge, after a detailed trial, found the
respondent not guilty and acquitted him. The appellant
filed an appeal before the High Court of Andhra Pradesh and
moved for leave to appeal. Learned Single Judge who heard
the petition for leave felt that he is bound by the earlier
decision rendered by a Division Bench of the same High Court
in N.S.R. Krishna Prasad vs. Collector of Customs {1992
(57) ELT 568 (AP)}. According to the said decision, any
inculpatory statement recorded by the authorities under
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Section 108 of the Customs Act without following and
complying with the constraints prescribed in Section 164 of
the Code would be inadmissible evidence in a trial against
the maker of that statement. What the learned Single Judge
has stated on that score is the following:
Since the Excise Officers who have recorded the
statements from the accused in this case have not
administered the warning to the accused as required under
section 164 sub- section (2) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, non-compliance of the mandatory provision
contained in 164 sub-section (2) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure renders the statements inadmissible in evidence as
held by the Division Bench. Therefore, those statements are
inadmissible against the makers thereof or against the co-
accused.
The Division Bench of the High Court in L.S.R.
Krishna Prasads case (supra), whose decision the learned
Single Judge followed, has held thus:
It, therefore, follows that unless the empowered
authority under Section 108 of the Customs Act administers
the caution or the warning embodied under Section 164(2)
Cr.P.C. before recording a statement of confessional
nature, from the person summoned, the statement so recorded
will be inadmissible in evidence for any purpose.
On the above premise learned Single Judge excluded all
the confessional statements from consideration. The
remaining evidence was found to be insufficient to establish
the guilt of the respondent. Learned Single Judge declined
to grant leave to appeal by observing: As the prosecution
has failed to make out a case to grant leave to file appeal
against the order of acquittal passed by the trial court,
the petition for leave to file the appeal is dismissed and
consequently the appeal is also dismissed. If the view
adopted by the learned Single Judge regarding the
application of Section 164 of the Code to Section 108 of the
Customs Act is erroneous, the High Court should have granted
leave to appeal.
Incidentally, we may point out that the Union of India
had challenged the decision in N.S.R. Krishna Prasad
(supra) before this Court. A two Judge Bench of this Court
has set aside the said decision on the premise that the
challenge made before the High Court in that case was not
sustainable in a writ petition. However, this Court did not
express any opinion on the merits of the case and the
question of law was left open. So in this appeal, by
special leave, we are only disposed to consider the
sustainability of the legal position adumbrated by the
Division Bench in N.S.R. Krishna Prasad regarding.
Section 108 of the Customs Act reads thus: 108.
Power to summon persons to give evidence and produce
documents.-(1) Any gazetted officer of custom shall have
power to summon any person whose attendance he considers
necessary either to give evidence or to produce a document
or any other thing in any inquiry which such officer is
making in connection with the smuggling of any goods.
(2) A summons to produce documents or other things may
be for the production of certain specified documents or
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things or for the production of all documents or things of a
certain description in the possession or under control of
the person summoned. (3) All persons so summoned shall be
bound to attend either in person or by an authorised agent
as such officer may direct; and all persons so summoned
shall be bound to state the truth upon any subject,
respecting which they are examined or make statements and
produce such documents and other things as may be required:
Provided that the exemption under Section 132 of the
Code of Civil procedure, 1908(5 of 1908), shall be
applicable to any requisition for attendance under this
section. (4) Every such inquiry aforesaid shall be deemed
to be a judicial proceeding within the meaning of section
193 and section 228 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
It must be remembered that Section 171A of the Sea
Customs Act, 1878 (which enactment has been repealed by the
Sea Customs Act) corresponds to Section 108 of the Customs
Act. In this context we may point out that Section 14 of
the Central Excise Act is practically the same as Section
108 of the Customs Act. So the decision rendered by this
Court under the other corresponding provisions will be of
much advantage to discern how the scope of the provisions
has been understood by this Court earlier.
Section 164 of the Code deals with recording of
confession and statements. The provision empowers a
judicial magistrate to record any confession or statements
made to him during the course of an investigation under
this Chapter or under any other law for the time being in
force or at any time afterwards before the commencement of
the inquiry or trial. It must be pointed out that the power
conferred by the said provision could be exercised only by a
judicial magistrate. Even a police officer on whom power of
a magistrate has been conferred is forbidden from recording
a confession. Sub-sections (2) and (4) deal with procedure
which such magistrate has to follow while recording
inculpatory statements made by persons.
Section 108 of the Customs Act does not contemplate
any magisterial intervention. The power under the said
Section is intended to be exercised by a gazetted officer of
the Customs Department. Sub-section (3) enjoins on the
person summoned by the officer to state the truth upon any
subject respecting which he is examined. He is not excused
from speaking the truth on the premise that such statement
could be used against him. The said requirement is included
in the provision for the purpose of enabling the gazetted
officer to elicit the truth from the person interrogated.
There is no involvement of the magistrate at that stage.
The entire idea behind the provision is that the gazetted
officer questioning the person must gather all the truth
concerning the episode. If the statement so extracted is
untrue its utility for the officer gets lost.
In this context we bear in mind that a confession made
to a police officer can be recorded by him without any of
the constraints incorporated under Section 164 of the Code.
But the safety of the confessor who makes such confession to
the police officer is that the same is forbidden from use in
evidence. The ban contained in Section 25 of the Evidence
Act is an absolute ban. But it must be remembered that
there is no ban in regard to the confession made to any
person other than a police officer, except when such
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confession was made while he is in police custody. The
inculpatory statement made by any person under Section 108
is to non-police personnel and hence it has no tinge of
inadmissibility in evidence if it was made when the person
concerned was not then in police custody. Nonetheless the
caution contained in law is that such a statement should be
scrutinised by the court in the same manner as confession
made by an accused person to any non-police personnel. The
court has to be satisfied in such cases, that any
inculpatory statement made by an accused person to a
gazetted officer must also pass the tests prescribed in
Section 24 of the Evidence Act. If such a statement is
impaired by any of the vitiating premises enumerated in
Section 24 that statement becomes useless in any criminal
proceedings.
As early as in 1968 this Court had considered the
scope of the statement made under Section 171A of the Sea
Customs Act in Haroon Haji Abdulla vs. State of Maharashtra
{AIR 1968 SC 832 = 1968 (2) SCR 641}. Hidayatullah, J. (as
he then was) made the following observations:
These statements are not confessions recorded by a
Magistrate under Section 164 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure but are statements made in answer to a notice
under sec.171-A of the Sea Customs Act. As they are not
made subject to the safeguards under which confessions are
recorded by Magistrates they must be specially scrutinised
to finding out if they were made under threat or promise
from some one in authority. If after such scrutiny they are
considered to be voluntary, they may be received against the
maker and in the same way as confessions are received, also
against a co-accused jointly tried with him.
In Ramesh Chandra Mehta vs. State of West Bengal {AIR
1970 SC 940 = 1969 (2) SCR 461} it was held that when an
inquiry is being conducted under Section 108 of the Customs
Act, and a statement is given by a person against whom the
inquiry is being held it is not a statement made by a person
accused of an offence and the person who gives the statement
does not stand in the character of an accused person. This
was followed by this Court in Percy Rustomji Basta vs. The
State of Maharashtra {AIR 1971 SC 1087 = 1971 (1) SCC 847}.
It was a case in which the appellant was convicted under
Section 135 of the Customs Act and 120-B of the IPC. The
question which this Court considered in that case was
whether Section 24 of the Evidence Act was a bar to the
admissibility of a statement given by the accused of
offences under the Customs Act. This Court repelled the
contention based on Section 24 of the Evidence Act and the
facts.
A three Judge Bench of this Court has again reiterated
the same position in Harbans Singh Sardar Lenasingh and anr.
vs. The State of Maharashtra (AIR 1972 SC 1224). It was
again followed in Veera Ibrahim vs. The State of
Maharashtra {AIR 1976 SC 1167 = 1976(3) SCR 672}. Another
three Judge Bench in Poolpandi etc. etc. vs.
Superintendent, Central Excise and ors. {AIR 1992 SC 1795 =
1992 (3) SCC 259} took the same view.
It is unfortunate that the Division Bench of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court has not addressed itself of the
above well settled legal position when learned Judges of the
Bench (Ramanujula Naidu and Panduranga Rao, JJ) held that
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the statement recorded under Section 108 of the Customs Act
without complying with Section 164 of the Code will be
inadmissible in evidence for any purpose.
We hold that a statement recorded by customs officers
under Section 108 of the Customs Act is admissible in
evidence. The court has to test whether the inculpating
portions were made voluntarily or whether it is vitiated on
account of any of the premises envisaged in Section 24 of
the Evidence Act. Such an exercise can be made only after
the appeal is regularised by granting leave to appeal.
Since leave was declined on a wrong interpretation of law we
have to interfere with the impugned order.
We, therefore, allow this appeal and set aside the
impugned order. Leave applied for will stand granted.
Resultantly, the appeal filed in the High Court will stand
regularised. Now the High Court is to dispose of the appeal
in accordance with law. As this is an old matter we direct
the Registrar of the High Court of Karnataka to include the
appeal in the hearing list, as expeditiously as possible.