Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 84 of 2008
PETITIONER:
State of Haryana & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Dinesh Kumar
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/01/2008
BENCH:
C.K. Thakker & Altamas Kabir
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP(C) No.1840 of 2007
With
Civil Appeal No. 85 of 2008
(Arising out of SLP(C) No.14939)
Altamas Kabir,J.
1. Leave granted.
2. These two appeals have been taken up for hearing
and disposal together, inasmuch as, the issues to be
decided in these appeals are common to both, but have
been decided differently by two co-ordinate benches of
the same High Court giving rise to a question of law
which is of great public importance. In these appeals we
are called upon to decide what constitutes \023arrest\024 and
\023custody\024 in relation to a criminal proceeding and the
decision in respect thereof may have a bearing on the
fate of the respondent in this appeal and that of the
appellants in the other appeal in relation to their
recruitment as Constable-Drivers in the Haryana Police.
3. The respondent in the first of these two appeals
and the appellants in the other appeal applied for
appointment as Constable-Drivers under the Haryana
Police and submitted their respective application forms,
which contained two columns, namely, 13(A) and 14, which
read as follows:-
13(A): Have you ever been arrested?
14: Have you ever been convicted by the Court
of any offence?
4. As far as the respondent in SLP(C) No. 1840 of
2007, Dinesh Kumar, is concerned, he answered the said
two queries in the negative. Subsequently, during
verification of the character and antecedents of the
said respondent, it was reported that he had been
arrested in connection with a case arising out of FIR
No. 168 of 13th October, 1994, registered at Kalanaur
Police Station under Sections 323/324/34 Indian Penal
Code. He and his family members were ultimately
acquitted of the charges framed against them on 6th
January, 1998, by the Judicial Magistrate, Ist Class,
Rohtak. The appellant, however, alleged that the
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respondent had concealed these facts from the Selection
Committee and had not correctly furnished the
information in columns 13(A) and 14 of the application
form submitted by him for recruitment to the post in
question.
5. Since, according to the appellants, the respondent
had fai1ed to disclose the aforesaid criminal case,
which had been registered against all his family
members, he was not offered any appointment. The
appeal filed by the respondent was rejected by the
Director General of Police, Haryana, by his order dated
18th November, 2005.
6. Before the High Court, it was contended by the
respondent that in connection with the aforesaid FIR No.
168 dated 13th October, 1994, he had been granted bail on
17th October, 1994 without having been arrested. It was,
therefore, contended on his behalf that since he had not
been actually arrested and the case against him having
ended in acquittal, it must be deemed that no case had
ever been filed against him and hence he had not
suppressed any information by replying in the negative
to the questions contained in columns 13(A) and 14.
7. The rejection of the respondent\022s claim for
appointment as Constable-Driver on the above mentioned
ground was challenged by him before the Punjab and
Haryana High Court in Civil Writ Petition No. 18 of
2006. Taking the view that the appellant had not
suppressed any material while filling up the said
columns 13(A) and 14, the High Court quashed the order
of rejection by the Director General of Police, Haryana
on 18th November, 2005 and directed the appellants herein
to take steps to issue an appointment letter to the
respondent subject to fulfillment of other conditions by
him.
8. In order to arrive at the aforesaid conclusion, the
High Court held that since the petitioner had been
acquitted from the criminal case in question, he had
quite truthfully answered the query in column 14 by
stating that he had never been convicted by any Court
for any offence. The High Court also held that even
column 13(A) had been correctly answered because the
High Court was of the view that the appellant had never
been arrested, though he had obtained bail in connection
with the said case.
9. In the other writ petition filed by Lalit Kumar and
Bhupinder, a co-ordinate Bench of the same High Court
took a different view. In the said matter the
appellants had been involved in a criminal case, being
FIR No.212 dated 3rd November, 2000, registered at Police
Station Sadar, Narwana, for offences punishable under
Sections 148/149/307/325/323 of the Indian Penal Code,
but they had been subsequently acquitted of the said
charges on 10th September, 2001. On behalf of the State,
the same stand was taken that the aforesaid piece of
information had been withheld by the writ petitioners
while filling column 14 of the application form. The
High Court was of the view that since the writ
petitioners had withheld important information it
clearly disentitled them to appointment, as it revealed
that they could not be trusted to perform their duties
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honestly. The High Court, accordingly, dismissed the
writ petitions as being without merit.
10. In the first of the two appeals, the respondent had
not surrendered to the police but had appeared before
the Magistrate with his lawyer of his own volition and
was immediately granted bail. Admittedly, therefore, the
respondent had not surrendered to the police but had
voluntarily appeared before the Magistrate and had
prayed for bail and was released on bail, so that as per
the respondent\022s understanding at no point of time was
he taken into custody or arrested.
11. As to the second of the two appeals, the appellants
in response to the query in column 14, had quite
truthfully answered that they had not been convicted by
any Court of any offence, since they had been acquitted
of the charges brought against them. With regard to
column 13(A), the appellants who had been implicated in
FIR 108 dated 26th May 2002 under Sections 323/324/34
Indian Penal Code of Police Station Nangal Chaudhary,
Mahendergarh, appeared before the Ilaka Magistrate on 7th
June, 2002, and were released on their personal bonds
without being placed under arrest or being taken into
custody. The information disclosed by them was held to
be suppression of the fact that they had been involved
in a criminal case though the tenor of the query was not
to that effect and was confined to the question as to
whether they had been arrested.
12. One of the common questions which, therefore, need
to be answered in both these appeals is whether the
manner in which they had appeared before the Magistrate
and had been released without being taken into formal
custody, could amount to \023arrest\024 for the purpose of the
query in Column 13A. As mentioned hereinbefore, the
same High Court took two different views of the matter.
While, on the one hand, one bench of the High Court held
that since the accused had neither surrendered nor had
been taken into custody, it could not be said that he
had actually been arrested, on the other hand, another
bench of the same High Court dismissed similar writ
petitions filed by Lalit Kumar and Bhupinder, without
examining the question as to whether they had actually
been arrested or not. The said bench decided the writ
petitions against the writ petitioners upon holding that
they had withheld important information regarding their
prosecutions in a criminal case though ultimately they
were acquitted.
13. In order to resolve the controversy that has arisen
because of the two divergent views, it will be necessary
to examine the concept of \023arrest\024 and \023custody\024 in
connection with a criminal case. The expression
\023arrest\024 has neither been defined in the Code of
Criminal Procedure (hereinafter referred to as the
\021Code\022) nor in the Indian Penal Code or any other
enactment dealing with criminal offences. The only
indication as to what would constitute \023arrest\024 may
perhaps be found in Section 46 of the Code which reads
as follows:-
\023Arrest how made \026 (1) In making an arrest
the police officer or other person making
the same shall actually touch or confine the
body of the person to be arrested, unless
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there be a submission to the custody by word
or action.
(2) If such person forcibly resists the
endeavour to arrest him, or attempts to
evade the arrest, such police officer or
other person may use all means necessary to
effect the arrest.
(3) Nothing in this section gives a right to
cause the death of a person who is not
accused of an offence punishable with death
or with imprisonment for life.
{(4) Save in exceptional circumstances, no
woman shall be arrested after sunset and
before sunrise, and where such exceptional
circumstances exist, the woman police
officer shall, by making a written report,
obtain the prior permission of the Judicial
Magistrate of the first class within whose
local jurisdiction the offence is committed
or the arrest is to be made.}\024
14. We are concerned with sub-sections (1) and (2) of
Section 46 of the Code from which this much is clear
that in order to make an arrest the police officer or
other person making the same shall actually touch or
confine the body of the person to be arrested, unless
there be submission to the custody by word or action.
15. Similarly, the expression \023custody\024 has also not
been defined in the Code.
16. The question as to what would constitute \023arrest\024
and \023custody\024 has been the subject matter of decisions
of different High Courts, which have been referred to
and relied upon by Mr. Patwalia appearing for Dinesh
Kumar, respondent in the first of the two appeals.
This Court has also had occasion to consider the said
question in a few cases, which we will refer to
shortly. Reliance was also placed on the dictionary
meaning of the two expressions which will also be
relevant to our decision.
17. Mr. Anoop Chaudhary, learned senior advocate, who
appeared for the State of Haryana, in both the
appeals, submitted that when the respondent in the
first appeal and the appellants in the second appeal
had appeared before the Magistrates and prayed for
bail, it must be understood that they had surrendered
to the custody of the court, as otherwise, the
provisions of Section 439 of the Code would not have
had application. Mr. Chaudhary also submitted that
it did not matter as to whether the accused persons
had been arrested and detained in custody by the
police or not, the very fact that they voluntarily
appeared before the Magistrate and prayed for bail
amounted to arrest of their movements, since
thereafter they were confined to the Court room and
were no longer free to leave the court premises of
their own choice.
18. Mr. Chaudhary submitted that the ordinary
dictionary meaning of \023arrest\024 is to legally restrain
a person\022s movements for the purpose of detaining a
person in custody by authority of law. He submitted
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that in Dinesh Kumar\022s writ petition the High Court
had erred in coming to a finding that he had never
been arrested since he had voluntarily appeared before
the Magistrate and had been granted bail immediately.
19. Opposing Mr. Chaudhary\022s submission, Mr.
Patwalia, relying on various decisions of different
High Courts and in particular a Full Bench decision of
the Madras High Court in the case of Roshan Beevi and
Anr. Vs. Joint Secretary to the Govt. of Tamil Nadu
and Ors. (1984 Criminal Law Journal 134) submitted
that although technically the appearance of the
accused before the Magistrate might amount to
surrender to judicial custody, in actuality no attempt
had been made by anyone to restrict the movements of
the accused which may have led him to believe that he
had never been arrested. It is on a layman\022s
understanding of the principle of \023arrest\024 and
\023custody\024 that prompted the respondent in the first of
the two appeals and the appellants in the second
appeal to mention in column 13(A) that they had never
been arrested in connection with any criminal offence.
20. Mr. Patwalia referred to certain decisions of the
Allahabad High Court, the Punjab High Court and the
Madras High Court which apparently supports his
submissions. Of the said decisions, the one in which
the meaning of the two expressions \023arrest\024 and
\023custody\024 have been considered in detail is that of
the Full Bench of the Madras High Court in Roshan
Beevi\022s case (supra). The said decision was, however,
rendered in the context of Sections 107 and 108 of the
Customs Act, 1962. Sections 107 and 108 of the
Customs Act authorises a Customs Officer empowered in
that behalf to require a person to attend before him
and produce or deliver documents relevant to the
enquiry or to summon such person whose attendance is
considered necessary for giving evidence or production
of a document in connection with any enquiry being
undertaken by such officer under the Act. In such
context the Full Bench of the Madras High Court
returned a finding that \023custody\024 and \023arrest\024 are not
synonymous terms and observed that it is true that in
every arrest there is a custody but not vice-versa. A
custody may amount to \023arrest\024 in certain cases, but
not in all cases. It is in the aforesaid
circumstances that the Full Bench came to the
conclusion that a person who is taken by the Customs
Officer either for the purpose of enquiry or
interrogation or investigation cannot be held to have
come into the custody and detention of the Customs
Officer and he cannot be deemed to have been arrested
from the moment he was taken into custody.
21. In coming to the aforesaid conclusion, the Full
Bench had occasion to consider in detail the meaning
of the expression \023arrest\024. Reference was made to the
definition of arrest in various legal dictionaries and
Halsbury\022s Laws of England as also the Corpus Juris
Secondum. In paragraph 16 of the judgment it was
observed as follows:
\02316. From the various definitions which we have
extracted above, it is clear that the word
\021arrest\022 when used in its ordinary and natural
sense, means the apprehension or restraint or the
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deprivation of one\022s personal liberty. The
question whether the person is under arrest or
not, depends not on the legality of the arrest,
but on whether he has been deprived of his
personal liberty to go where he pleases. When
used in the legal sense in the procedure
connected with criminal offences, an arrest
consists in the taking into custody of another
person under authority empowered by law, for the
purpose of holding or detaining him to answer a
criminal charge or of preventing the commission
of a criminal offence. The essential elements
to constitute an arrest in the above sense are
that there must be an intent to arrest under the
authority, accompanied by a seizure or detention
of the person in the manner known to law, which
is so understood by the person arrested. In this
connection, a debatable question that arises for
our consideration is whether the mere taking into
custody of a person by an authority empowered to
arrest would amount to \021arrest\022 of that person
and whether the terms \021arrest\022 and \021custody\022 are
synonymous.\024
22. Faced with the decision of this Court in Niranjan
Singh vs. Prabhakar (AIR 1980 SC 785) the Full Bench
distinguished the same on an observation made by this
Court that equivocatory quibbling that the police have
taken a man into informal custody but have not
arrested him, have detained him in interrogation but
have not taken him into formal custody, were unfair
evasion of the straightforwardness of the law. This
Court went on to observe further that there was no
necessity of dilating on the shady facet as the Court
was satisfied that the accused had physically
submitted before the Sessions Judge giving rise to the
jurisdiction to grant bail. Taking refuge in the said
observation, the Full Bench observed that the decision
rendered by this Court could not be availed of by the
learned counsel in support of his contentions that the
mere taking of a person into custody would amount to
arrest. The Full Bench observed that mere summoning
of a person during an enquiry under the Customs Act
did not amount to arrest so as to attract the
provisions of Article 22(2) of the Constitution of
India and the stand taken that the persons arrested
under the Customs Act should be produced before a
Magistrate without unnecessary delay from the moment
the arrest is effected, had to fail.
23. We are unable to appreciate the views of the Full
Bench of the Madras High Court and reiterate the
decision of this Court in Niranjan Singh\022s case
(supra). In our view, the law relating to the concept
of \023arrest\024 or \023custody\024 has been correctly stated in
Niranjan Singh\022s case (supra). Paragraphs 7, 8 and
the relevant portion of paragraph 9 of the decision in
the said case states as follows:-
\0237. When is a person in custody, within the
meaning of S. 439 Cr. P.C.? When he is, in
duress either because he is held by the
investigating agency or other police or allied
authority or is under the control of the court
having been remanded by judicial order, or having
offered himself to the court\022s jurisdiction and
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submitted to its orders by physical presence. No
lexical dexterity nor precedential profusion is
needed to come to the realistic conclusion that
he who is under the control of the court or is in
the physical hold of an officer with coercive
power is in custody for the purpose of S.439.
This word is of elastic semantics but its core
meaning is that the law has taken control of the
person. The equivocatory quibblings and hide-
and-seek niceties sometimes heard in court that
the police have taken a man into informal custody
but not arrested him, have detained him for
interrogation but not taken him into formal
custody and other like terminological dubiotics
are unfair evasion of the straightforwardness of
the law. We need not dilate on this shady facet
here because we are satisfied that the accused
did physically submit before the Sessions Judge
and the jurisdiction to grant bail thus arose.
8. Custody, in the context of S.439, (we are not,
be noted, dealing with anticipatory bail under
Se.438) is physical control or at least physical
presence of the accused in court coupled with
submission to the jurisdiction and order of the
court.
9. He can be in custody not merely when the
police arrest him, produces him before a
Magistrate and gets a remand to judicial or other
custody. He can be stated to be in judicial
custody when he surrenders before the court and
submits to its directions...................\024
Sections 107 and 108 of the Customs Act do not
contemplate immediate arrest of a person being
summoned in connection with an enquiry, but only
contemplates surrendering to the custody of the
Customs Officer which could subsequently lead to
arrest and detention.
24. We also agree with Mr. Anoop Chaudhary\022s
submission that unless a person accused of an offence
is in custody, he cannot move the Court for bail under
Section 439 of the Code, which provides for release on
bail of any person accused of an offence and in
custody (Emphasis supplied). The pre-condition,
therefore, to applying the provisions of Section 439
of the Code is that a person who is an accused must be
in custody and his movements must have been restricted
before he can move for bail. This aspect of the
matter was considered in Niranjan Singh\022s case where
it was held that a person can be stated to be in
judicial custody when he surrenders before the Court
and submits to its directions.
25. It is no doubt true that in the instant case the
accused persons had appeared before the concerned
Magistrates with their learned advocates and on
applying for bail were granted bail without being
taken into formal custody, which appears to have
swayed one of the benches of the Punjab and Haryana
High Court to take a liberal view and to hold that no
arrest had actually been effected. The said view, in
our opinion, is incorrect as it goes against the very
grain of Sections 46 and 439 of the Code. The
interpretation of \023arrest\024 and \023custody\024 rendered by
the Full Bench in Roshan Beevi\022s case (supra) may be
relevant in the context of Sections 107 and 108 of the
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Customs Act where summons in respect of an enquiry may
amount to \023custody\024 but not to \023arrest\024, but such
custody could subsequently materialize into arrest.
The position is different as far as proceedings in the
court are concerned in relation to enquiry into
offences under the Indian Penal Code and other
criminal enactments. In the latter set of cases, in
order to obtain the benefit of bail an accused has to
surrender to the custody of the Court or the police
authorities before he can be granted the benefit
thereunder. In Vol.11 of the 4th Edition of Halsbury\022s
\023Laws of England\024 the term \023arrest\024 has been defined
in paragraph 99 in the following terms:-
\02399 Meaning of arrest. Arrest consists in the
seizure or touching of a person\022s body with a
view to his restraint; words may, however, amount
to an arrest if, in the circumstances of the
case, they are calculated to bring, and do bring,
to a person\022s notice that he is under compulsion
and he thereafter submits to the compulsion.\024
26. The aforesaid definition is similar in spirit to
what is incorporated in Section 46 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. The concept was expanded by this
Court in State of Uttar Pradesh vs. Deomen (AIR 1960
SC 1125) wherein it was interalia observed as
follows:-
\023Section 46, Cr.P.C. does not contemplate any
formality before a person can be said to be taken
in custody. Submission to the custody by words
of mouth or action by a person is sufficient. A
person directly giving a police officer by word
of mouth information which may be used as
evidence against him may be deemed to have
submitted himself to the custody of the Police
Officer.\024
27. The sequatur of the above is that when a person,
who is not in custody, approaches the police officer
and provides information, which leads to the discovery
of a fact, which could be used against him, it would
be deemed that he had surrendered to the authority of
the investigating agency.
28. It must, therefore, be held that the views
expressed by the High Court in Dinesh Kumar\022s writ
petition regarding arrest were incorrect, while the
views expressed in the writ petitions filed by Lalit
Kumar and Bhupinder correctly interpreted the meaning
of the expressions \023arrest\024 and \023custody\024. However,
how far the same would apply in the ultimate analysis
relating to the filling up of column 13(A) is another
matter altogether.
29. In our view, the reasoning given in Dinesh
Kumar\022s case in that context is a possible view and
does not call for interference under Article 136 of
the Constitution. Conversely, the decision rendered
in the writ petitions filed by Lalit Kumar and
Bhupinder has to be reversed to be in line with the
decision in Dinesh Kumar\022s case. When the question as
to what constitutes \023arrest\024 has for long engaged the
attention of different High Courts as also this Court,
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it may not be altogether unreasonable to expect a
layman to construe that he had never been arrested on
his appearing before the Court and being granted bail
immediately. The position would have been different,
had the person concerned not been released on bail. We
would, in the facts of these cases, give the benefit
of a mistaken impression, rather than that of
deliberate and wilful misrepresentation and
concealment of facts, to the appellants in the second
of the two appeals as well, while affirming the view
taken by the High Court in Dinesh Kumar\022s case.
30. Accordingly, although, we are of the view that
the legal position as to what constitutes arrest was
correctly stated in the writ petitions filed by Lalit
Kumar and Bhupinder, we confirm the order passed in
Dinesh Kumar\022s case and extend the same benefit to
Lalit Kumar and Bhupinder also.
31. In the result, the Civil Appeal arising out of
SLP(C) No. 1840 of 2007 is dismissed, while the Civil
Appeal arising out of SLP(C)No.14939 of 2007 is
allowed. The Judgment of the High Court dated 22nd
September, 2005, impugned in the said appeal, is set
aside and the concerned respondents are directed to
take steps to issue appointment letters to the
appellants in the said appeals subject to fulfillment
of other conditions by them. It is also made clear
that the appellants will be deemed to have been
appointed as Constable-Drivers with effect from the
date, persons lower in merit to them were appointed.
However, while they will be entitled to the notional
benefits of such continuous appointment, they will be
entitled to salary only from the date of this judgment
on the basis of such notional benefits.
32. The appeals are disposed of accordingly.
33. In the peculiar facts of the case, the parties
will bear their own costs.