Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHAMPALAL PUNJAJI SHAH
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/08/1981
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1675 1982 SCR (1) 299
1981 SCC (3) 610 1981 SCALE (3)1161
CITATOR INFO :
R 1983 SC 361 (2,19)
RF 1983 SC 465 (17)
RF 1985 SC 231 (2)
F 1987 SC 149 (9)
RF 1992 SC1701 (32,36,53)
ACT:
Customs Act, section 135-Gold bars with foreign
markings discovered in the house of accused-Trial delayed
for many years by action of accused-Delay-Whether a
mitigating circumstance in according sentence.
Delayed trial Whether violative of fundamental right
under Article 21 of Constitution-Principles to be taken into
consideration in considering delayed trials.
HEADNOTE:
Under the present system of criminal justice an accused
person resolutely minded to delay the day of reckoning, may
quite conveniently and comfortably do so, if he can but
afford the cost involved, by journeying back and forth
between the court of first instance and the superior Courts
at frequent interlocutory stages, by filing applications to
quash investigations, complaints and charges on all
imaginable grounds. Delay is a known defence tactic.
All this is not to say that the responsibility for
delaying criminal trials should always be laid at the door
of the rich and the reluctant accused. Delays caused by
tardiness, indifference and somnolence or the deliberate
inactivity of prosecuting agencies are not uncommon or
unknown. As a result of the delaying tactics of prosecuting
agencies an accused person may be seriously jeopardised in
the conduct of his defence. In such a situation it may be
possible to infer infringement of the right to life and
liberty guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constitution. Denial
of a speedy trial may lead to an inference of prejudice and
denial of justice.
Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar, [ 1979] 3 SCR
169, referred to.
In deciding whether there has been denial of the right
to speedy trial, the court is entitled to take into
consideration whether the defendant himself was responsible
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for a part of the delay. whether he was prejudiced in the
preparation of his defence by reason of the delay and
whether the delay was unintentionally caused by reason of
overcrowding of the Court’s docket or under staffing of
prosecutors and so forth. Though in India the right of
speedy trial is not an expressly guaranteed constitutional
right it is implicit in the right to fair trial which is a
part of the right to life and liberty guaranteed by Article
of the Constitution. While a speedy trial is an implied
ingredient of a fair trial the converse is not necessarily
true. A delayed trial is not necessarily an unfair trial.
The question whether conviction should be quashed on
grounds of delayed trial depends upon the facts and
circumstances of a case. If it is shown to the
300
satisfaction of the Court that the accused had been
prejudiced in the conduct of his defence and thus had been
denied adequate opportunity to defend himself the conviction
would have to be set aside. There would, on the contrary, be
no justification to quash a conviction on the ground of
delayed trial unless it is shown that there are
circumstances entitling the court to raise a presumption
that the accused had been prejudiced. [304 B-C]
In the instant case in a surprise raid on the house of
the respondent, Central Excise officers discovered a large
quantity of gold bars with foreign markings concealed in the
false bottom of a steel almirah, the keys of which were
found with him.
On a charge for offences under section 120B I.P.C. read
with section 135 Customs Act and rule 126P(2)(ii) and (iv)
of the Defence of India Rules 1962, the Additional Chief
Presidency Magistrate convicted the respondent and variously
sentenced him under different counts with imprisonment and
fine. On appeal the High Court acquitted him.
^
HELD: Although it is settled law that circumstantial
evidence must be of a conclusive nature and circumstances
must not be capable of a duality of explanations, the Court
is not bound to accept any exaggerated, capricious or
ridiculous explanation which may suggest itself to a highly
imaginative mind. The three circumstances established in the
instant case were: (1) presence of the respondent in the
flat at the time of the raid by Central Excise officers and
recovery of gold slabs with foreign markings from the steel
almirah: (2) recovery from his person of a bunch of eight
keys which fitted the almirah and (3) recovery of a bunch of
three keys from his person, one of which fitted the lock
hanging from the inside handle of the door of the flat. The
explanation fancied by the High Court that the steel almirah
in the flat was not shown to have been specially made and
that the keys of a similar almirah could well fit it and
that perhaps was how the keys recovered from the respondent
did fit the almirah in the flat, was a wholly unreasonable
explanation in the circumstances of the case. This was not
the plea of the respondent, nor did he make any such
suggestion to the prosecution witnesses. [306 FG & CD]
Notwithstanding the fact that the case is based on
circumstantial evidence and this is an appeal against
acquittal and that this Court is exercising extraordinary
but exceptional jurisdiction under Article 136 of the
Constitution, interference with the judgment of the High
Court in the instant case is imperative hesitation to do
which would lead to miscarriage of justice. [307 C]
The respondent being himself responsible for a fair
part of the delay, could not complain that there was
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violation of his fundamental right to life and liberty
guaranteed under Article 21; nor has he shown how he was
prejudiced in the conduct of his defence by reason of the
delay. [307 E]
Nor again would the fact that there was a long lapse of
time since the commission of the offence or that the
respondent was preventively detained for over two years be
of any avail to him because the offence was one which
jeopardised the country s economy. It is impossible to take
a casual or light view of
301
such an offence. It is only where the offence is of a
trivial nature as for example, a simple assault or theft of
a trilling amount that the Court might hesitate to send the
accused back to jail after a long lapse of time; but the
nature of the offence and the stakes involved in this case
do not merit any sympathy being shown to the respondent.
[307 G-H]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
126 of 1975.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 19th/20th February, 1974 of the Bombay High Court
in Criminal Appeal No. 1549 of 1971.
O. P. Rana and R. N. Poddar for the Appellant.
Ram Jethmalani and Miss Rani Jethmalani for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. It is one of the sad and
distressing features of our criminal justice system that an
accused person, resolutely minded to delay the day of
reckoning, may quite conveniently and comfortably do so, if
he can but afford the cost involved, by journeying back and
forth, between the Court of first instance and the superior
Courts, at frequent interlocutory stages. Applications
abound to quash investigations, complaints and charges on
all imaginable grounds, depending on the ingenuity of client
and counsel. Not infrequently, as soon as a court takes
cognizance of a case requiring sanction or consent to
prosecute, the sanction or consent is questioned as
improperly accorded, so soon as a witness is examined or a
document produced, the evidence is challenged as illegally
received and many of them are taken up to the High Court and
some of them reach this Court too on the theory that ’it
goes to the root of the matter’. There are always petitions
alleging ’assuming the entire prosecution case to be true,
no offence is made out’. And, inevitably proceedings are
stayed and trials delayed. Delay is a known defence tactic.
With the passage of time, witnesses cease to be available
and memories cease to be fresh. Vanishing witnesses and
fading memories render the onus on the prosecution even more
burdensome and make a welter weight task a heavy weight one.
Sure, we do not mean to suggest that the responsibility for
delaying criminal trials is always to be laid at the door of
the rich and the reluctant accused. We are not unmindful of
the delays caused by the tardiness and tactics of the
prosecuting
302
agencies. We know of trials which are over delayed because
of the indifference and somnolence or the deliberate
inactivity of the prosecuting agencies. Poverty-struck, dumb
accused persons, too feeble to protest, languish in prisons
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for months and year on end awaiting trial because of the
insensibility of the prosecuting agencies. The first
Hussainara case (Hussainara Khatoon & Ors. v. Home
Secretary, State of Bihar, Govt. Of Bihar, Patna)(1) was one
like that. Sometimes when the evidence is of a weak
character and a conviction is not a probable result, the
prosecuting agencies adopt delaying tactics to keep the
accused persons in incarceration as long as possible and to
harass them. This is a well known tactic in most conspiracy
cases. Again, an accused person may be seriously jeopardised
in the conduct of his defence with the passage of time.
Witnesses for the defence may become unavailable and their
memories too may fade like those of the witnesses for the
prosecution. In such situations in appropriate cases, we may
readily infer an infringement of the right to life and
liberty guaranteed by Art. 21 of the Constitution. Denial of
a speedy trial may with or without proof of something more
lead to an inevitable inference of prejudice and denial of
justice. It is prejudice to a man to be detained without
trial. It is prejudiced to a man to be denied a fair trial.
A fair trial implies a speedy trial. In Hussainara Khatoon
v. State of’ Bihar(1), this Court said (at p. 179).
"Speedy trial is of the essence of criminal
justice and there can be no doubt that delay in trial
by itself constitutes denial of justice. It is
interesting to note that in the United States, speedy
trial is one of the constitutionally guaranteed rights.
The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution provides that"
’In all criminal prosecutions, the accused
shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public
trial’. So also Article 3 of the European
Convention on Human Rights provides that:
’every one arrested or detained-shall be
entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to
release pending trial’.
We think that even under our Constitution, though
speedy trial is not specifically enumerated as a
fundamental right,
303
it is implicit in the broad sweep and content of
Article 21 as R interpreted by this Court in Maneka
Gandhi v. Union of India(1). We have held in that case
that Article 21 confers a fundamental right on every
person not to be deprived of his life or liberty except
in accordance with the procedure prescribed by law and
it is not enough to constitute compliance with the
requirement of that Article that some semblance of a
procedure should be prescribed by law, but that the
procedure should be ’reasonable, fair and just’. If a
person is deprived of his liberty under a procedure
which is not ’reasonable, fair and just’, such
deprivation would be violative of his fundamental right
under Article 21 and he would be entitled to enforce
such fundamental right and secure his release. Now
obviously procedure prescribed by law for depriving a
person of his liberty cannot be ’reasonable, fair or
just’ unless that procedure ensures a speedy trial for
determination of the guilt of such person. No procedure
which does not ensure a reasonable, quick trial can be
regarded as ’reasonable, fair or just’ and it would
fall foul of Article 21. There can, therefore, be no
doubt that speedy trial and by speedy trial we mean
reasonably expeditious trial, is an integral and
essential part of the fundamental right to life and
liberty enshrined in Article 21".
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What is the remedy if a trial is unduly delayed ? In
the United States, where the right to a speedy trial is a
constitutionally guaranteed right, the denial of a speedy
trial has been held to entitle an accused person to the
dismissal of the indictment or the vacation of the sentence.
But in deciding the question whether there has been a denial
of the right to a speedy trial, the Court is entitled to
take into consideration whether the defendant himself was
responsible for a part of the delay and whether he was
prejudiced in the preparation of his defence by reason of
the delay. The Court is also entitled to take into
consideration whether the delay was unintentional, caused by
over-crowding of the Court’s docket or under-staffing of the
Prosecutors. Strunk v. United States(2) is an instructive
case on this point. As pointed out in the first Hussainara
case, (supra) the right to a speedy trial is not an
expressly guaranteed constitutional right in India but is
implicit in the right
304
to a fair trial which has been held to be part of the right
to life and liberty guaranteed by Art. 21 of the
Constitution. While a speedy trial is an implied ingredient
of a fair trial, the converse is not necessarily true. A
delayed trial is not necessarily an unfair trial. The delay
may be occasioned by the tactic or conduct of the accused
himself. The delay may have caused no prejudice whatsoever
to the accused. The question whether a conviction should be
quashed on the ground of delayed trial depends upon the
facts and circumstances of the case. If the accused is found
to have been prejudiced in the conduct of his defence and it
could be said that the accused had thus been denied an
adequate opportunity to defend himself, the conviction would
certainly have to go. But if nothing is shown and there are
no circumstances entitling the Court to raise a presumption
that the accused had been prejudiced there will be no
justification to quash the conviction on the ground of
delayed trial only.
In the present case, in the beginning, three persons,
Champalal Punjaji Shah, Poonam Chand and Mohan Lal were
charged by the learned Additional Chief Presidency
Magistrate 8th Court, Esplanade, Bombay, with offences under
S. 120B of the Indian Penal Code read with 135 of the
Customs Act and rule 126P (2) (ii) and (iv) of the Defence
of India Rules, 1962, 135(a) and (b) and (i) of the Customs
Act and rule 126P (2) (ii) and rule 126P (2) (iv) of the
Defence of India Rules. After some evidence had been led by
the prosecution, the Public Prosecutor filed an application
before the learned Magistrate requesting permission to
withdraw from the prosecution against accused no. 2, Poonam
Chand. Permission was granted and thereafter Poonam Chand
was examined by the prosecution as their witness. After some
vicissitudes, necessitated by the respondent Champalal
Punjaji Shah taking the matter to the higher courts, the
trial finally concluded and by a judgment dated December 13,
1971 the learned Magistrate acquitted Mohan Lal, accused no.
3 but convicted accused no. 1, Champalal Punjaji Shah under
various heads of the charge and sentenced him to suffer
imprisonment for various terms ranging from two years to
four years and to the payment of fine of Rs. 10,000 on each
of different counts. The substantive sentence of
imprisonment were directed to run concurrently. On appeal,
the respondent was acquitted by the High Court. The State of
Maharashtra has filed the present appeal against the
judgment of the High Court of Bombay after obtaining special
leave from this Court under Art. 136 of the Constitution.
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The brief facts of the case may now be stated. On May
30, 1965, on information received, P.W. 4, the
Superintendent of
305
Central Excise, and P.W. 1, the Deputy Superintendent of
Central Excise, accompanied by other Central Excise officers
and two panchas, Savalram Ganpat Bhagat (P.W. 7) and another
went to fiat no. 14 on the first floor of a building known
as Vidya Vihar on Tulsi Pipe Road, Dadar, Bombay. The flat
had two doors, one away from the staircase, locked from the
outside and another near the staircase and closed from
inside. P.W. 1 pressed the calling bell and the door was
opened by Poonam Chand. Another person was sitting on a sofa
inside the room. He was accused no. 1. On seeing the Central
Excise officers accused no. 1 got up and went towards them.
PW 1 told the accused that he was authorised to search the
room and showed them the authorisation given to him by PW 4.
The room was then searched. The rear side of the entrance
door had a handle from which was hanging a ’Tiger’ brass
lock. Besides the sofa there was a steel almirah. PW 1 asked
accused no. 1 to open the almirah. Accused no. 2 Poonam
Chand then took out a bunch of keys from the pocket of his
trousers and opened the almirah. There were eight drawers in
the steel almirah. These drawers contained some documents.
It was noticed that the two bottom drawers had false
bottoms. When the false bottoms were pulled out and
searched, they were found to contain 11 jackets in each of
which there were 100 slabs of gold weighing 10 tolas each.
The total quantity of gold found secreted in the almirah was
11,000 tolas. The gold slabs had foreign markings on them. A
key was also found in that almirah and this key was found to
fit the ’Tiger’ lock which was hanging from the inner handle
of the front door of the flat. Thereafter accused no. 1’s
person was searched and some documents and two bunches of
keys, one containing eight keys and the other containing
three keys were found. The bunch of eight keys was found to
fit the steel almirah from which the slabs of gold were
recovered. Two of the three keys of the other bunch were
obviously keys of a scooter while the third key was found to
fit the ’Tiger’ lock which was on the handle of the back of
the front door of the flat. Thereafter a panchnama was
prepared. During the course of the investigation it was
found that . the flat was taken on a ’leave and licence’
basis by accused no. 3. After the investigation was
completed a complaint was filed for the various offences
mentioned by us at the outset.
The case of the respondent was that he had purchased a
scooter from Mohan Lal and had gone to the flat of Mohan Lal
that night for completing some negotiations. When he was
coming from the building he was dragged into flat no. 14 by
the Customs
306
officers. He had nothing to do with the flat nor did he have
anything to do with the gold found in the flat. The bunch of
eight keys was not found on his person as alleged by the
prosecution. The bunch of three keys was on his person but
two out of the three keys were of the scooter purchase by
him from accused no. 3. Shri Jethmalani, learned counsel for
the respondent initially challenged the reception of the
evidence of Poonam Chand into the record but desisted from
doing so when we told him that he might confine himself to
the rest of the evidence which appeared to us to be
sufficient to hold the respondent guilty of the offence with
which he was charged. The three outstanding circumstances
established against the respondent and not disputed before
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us by the learned counsel for the respondent were (1) the
presence of the respondent in the flat at the time of the
raid by the Central Excise officers and the recovery of the
gold slabs of foreign origin from the steel almirah and (2)
the recovery of the bunch of eight keys from his person
which keys fitted the almirah from which the gold slabs were
recovered and (3) the recovery of a bunch of three keys from
his person one of which fitted the lock which was hanging
from the inside handle of the door of the flat. To any mind,
unassailed by "some light, airy, unsubstantial doubt that
may flit through the minds of any of us about almost
anything at sometime or other(’)" these circumstances should
be sufficient to draw an inference of guilt. The High Court
however thought that the steel almirah in the flat was not
shown to have been specially made and that the keys of a
similar almirah could well fit it and that was perhaps how
the keys recovered from the accused did fit the almirah in
the flat. That of course was not the plea of the accused nor
was it a suggestion made to the prosecution witnesses. We
agree with the submission that circumstantial evidence must
be of a conclusive nature and circumstances must not be
capable of a duality of explanations. It does not however
mean that the Court is bound to accept any exaggerated,
capricious or ridiculous explanation which may suggest
itself to a highly imaginative mind. It is well to remember
that the Evidence Act considers a fact as "proved" when,
after considering the matters before it, the Court either
believes it to exist, or considers its existence so probable
that a prudent mind ought under the circumstances of the
particular case, to act upon the supposition that it exists.
It is also
307
worthy of remembrance that a Court may presume the existence
of A any fact which it thinks likely to have happened,
regard being had to the common course of natural events,
human conduct and public and private business in their
relation to the facts of the particular case. We are
unhesitatingly of the view that the explanation fancied by
the High Court was a wholly unreasonable explanation in the
circumstances of the case. Shri Jethmalani reminded us first
that we were considering circumstantial evidence, second we
were dealing with an appeal against acquittal and third we
were exercising our extraordinary but exceptional
jurisdiction under Art. 136. Indebted as we are to him, for
his forceful presentation of the reasons against
interference with the judgment of the High Court, we think
that, interference in this case is imperative and hesitation
to interfere will lead to a miscarriage of justice.
Shri Jethmalani also urged that the trial of the
respondent was considerably delayed, that there was thus a
violation of the fundamental right to life and liberty
guaranteed under Art. 21 of the Constitution and that was a
sufficient ground to entitle the accused to a dismissal of
the complaint against him. We have earlier discussed the
relevant principles which should guide us in such
situations. In this case the accused himself was responsible
for a fair part of the delay. He has also not been able to
show cause how he was prejudiced in the conduct of his
defence by reason of the delay, Shri Jethmalani then
suggested that the long lapse of time since the commission
of the offence should be taken into account by us and we
should refuse to interfere with the order of acquittal or at
any rate we should not send the accused back to prison
particularly in view of the fact that the accused was
preventively detained for over two and nearly three years on
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the basis of the very acts complained of in this particular
case. We are afraid we are unable to agree with Shri
Jethmalani. The offence is one which jeopardises the economy
of the country and it is impossible to take a casual or a
light view of the offence. It is true that where the offence
is of a trivial nature such as a simple assault or the theft
of a trifling amount, we may hesitate to send an accused
person back to jail as it would not be in the public
interest or in the interest of anyone to do so. But the
offences with which we are concerned and the stakes involved
clearly show that sympathy in this case would be misplaced.
We therefore, set aside the judgment of the High Court and
restore that of the learned Additional Chief Presidency
Magis-
308
trate, 8th Court, Esplanade, Bombay. The respondent will
surrender forthwith. The gold slabs will stand confiscated
to the Central Government. The appeal is allowed.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
309