Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
SHAMBU NATH MEHRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF AJMER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/03/1956
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1956 AIR 404 1956 SCR 199
ACT:
Burden of Proof-Proof of facts within especial knowledge-
Facts equally within the knowledge of the prosecution and
the accused, if "especially within the knowledge" of the
accused-Illustration, Scope of-Indian Evidence Act (I of
1872), s. 106, Illustration (b).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was put up for trial under s. 420 of the
Indian Penal Code and s. 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act of 1947 for obtaining a total sum of Rs. 23-
12-0 from the Government as T.A., being second class railway
fares for two journeys, one from Ajmer to Abu Road and the
other from Ajmer to Reengus, without having actually paid
the said fares. The prosecution proved from the railway
books and registers that no such second class tickets were
issued at Ajmer on the relevant dates and the same witness
who proved this also proved that tickets were not always
issued and the passengers could pay the fare in the train
and if the second class was fully booked, no further tickets
were issued till the train arrived,in which case passengers
sometimes bought third class or inter-class tickets and
thereafter paid the difference to the guard of the train, if
they could find second class accommodation on the arrival of
the train. There was no proof that one or other -of those
courses were not followed by the appellant and the
prosecution instead of proving the absence of any such
payments, in the same way as it had proved the non-issue of
second class tickets, relied on Illustration (b) to s. 106
of the Evidence Act and contended that it was for the
appellant to prove that he had actually paid the second
class fares.
200
Held, that Illustration (b) to s. 106 of the Evidence Act
had no application, the evidence adduced by the prosecution
did not warrant a conviction and the accused should, having
regard to the long lapse of time, be acquitted.
That s. 106 of the Evidence Act does not abrogate the well-
established rule of criminal law that except in very
exceptional classes of cases the burden that lies on the
prosecution to prove its case never shifts and s, 106 is not
intended to relieve the prosecution of that burden.’ On the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
contrary, it seeks to meet certain exceptional cases where
it is impossible, or disproportionately difficult, for the
prosecution to establish facts which are especially within
the knowledge of the accused and which can be proved by him
without difficulty or inconvenience. But when knowledge of
such facts is equally available to the prosecution if it
chooses to exercise due diligence, they cannot be said to be
especially within the knowledge of the accused and the
section cannot apply.
Attygalle v. Emperor, (A.I.R. 1936 P.C. 169) and Seneviratne
v.B., ([1936] 3 All E.R. 36), referred to.
That illustrations to a section do not exhaust its full
content even as they cannot curtail or expand its ambit, and
in applying s. 106 the balance of convenience, the
comparative labour involved in finding out and proving the
facts and the ease with which the accused can prove them
must be taken into consideration.
That cases coming under ss. 112 and 113 of the Indian
Railways Act to which Illustration (b) to -s. 106 has
obvious application stand on a different footing.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 65 of 1954.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 2nd January 1953 of the Judicial Commissioner’s Court at
Ajmer in Criminal Appeal No. 3 of 1952 arising out of the
judgment and order dated the 4th January, 1952 of the Court
of Sessions Judge at Ajmer in Criminal Appeal No. 300 of
1951.
B.P. Berry and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtar Solicitor-General of India (Porus
A. Mehta and P. G. Gokhale, with him) for the respondent.
1956. March 12. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BOSE J.-The appellant, S.N. Mehra, a Camp Clerk
201
Ajmer, has been convicted of offences under section 420 of
the Indian Penal Code and section 5(2) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 (Act II of 1947). He was sentenced to
two years’ rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 100 on
each count. The substantive sentences are concurrent.
The substance of the offences for which he was convicted
lay in obtaining sums to talling Rs. 23-12-0 from Government
as T.A. for two journeys, one from Ajmer to Abu Road and the
other from Ajmer to Reengus. The money represents the
second class railway fare for these journeys. The
allegation against him is that either he did not travel at
all between those places on the relevant dates, or, if he
did, that he did not pay the fare.
He appealed to the Sessions Judge at Ajmer and was
acquitted. The State filed an appeal against the acquittal
to the Judicial Commissioner of Ajmer’ The learned Judicial
Commissioner accepted the appeal and remanded the case for
retrial before a Special Judge because, by reason of certain
amendments in the law, only a Special Judge could try an
offence under section 5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption
Act at the date of the remand.
The appeal here raises certain questions about sanction
which we do not intend to discuss because, in our opinion,
the evidence adduced does not justify a retrial as no
conviction for those two offences could be based on it.
It was first alleged that the appellant did not travel at
all on the relevant dates and that the burden of proving
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
that he did was on him.
We do not think this issue arises because the charge
assumes that he did travel and there is no evidence before
us to justify even a prima facie inference that he did not.
The charge runs-
"That you, on or about etc ... cheated the Government by
dishonestly inducing the Government to pay you Rs. 62-9-0 on
account of T.A. for the journeys performed on the above-
mentioned days......... "
202
There is no suggestion that the journeys were not performed
and only purported to be; and it would be unfair to permit
the State to go back on what it said in the charge at this
stage, especially after the appellant has entered on his
defence and virtually admitted that he did travel on those
dates; in any case, he has not denied the fact and that
would naturally operate to his disadvantage if the
prosecution were to be allowed to change its position in
this way. We must therefore accept the fact that he did
travel as alleged on the relevant dates, and the only
question that remains is whether he paid the second class
fares which he later claimed, and obtained, from Government
as T.A. for those journeys.
The only proof that is adduced in support of the
allegation that he did not is that no second class tickets
were issued at Ajmer on the relevant dates either for Abu
Road or for Reengus. This is proved by the Booking Clerk
Ram Dayal, P.W. 4. But the same witness proves that tickets
are not always issued and that passengers can pay the fare
on the train; also, if the second class is fully booked no
further tickets are issued till the arrival of the train.
In that case, passengers sometimes buy a third class or an
inter-class ticket and then pay the difference to the
conductor or guard of the train if they are able to find
second class accommodation when the train arrives. There is
no proof that one or other of these courses was not followed
on the dates with which we are concerned. The railway
registers and books would show whether or not any such
payments were made on those dates and the State could have
proved the absence of such payments as easily as it was able
to prove, from the same sort of material, that no second
class tickets were issued. Instead of doing that, the State
contented itself with saying that no second class tickets
were issued and, then relying on Illustration (b) to section
106 of the Evidence Act, it contended that the burden of
proving that the accused did pay the second class fares was
on him.
Illustration (b) runs thus:
"A is charged with travelling on a railway with-
203
out a ticket. The burden of proving that he had a ticket is
on him".
But this is only an illustration and must be read subject to
the section itself and cannot travel beyond it. The section
runs-
"When any fact is especially within the knowledge of any
person, the burden of proving that fact is on him".
The stress, in our opinion, is on the word "especially".
Section 106 is an exception to section 101. Section 101
lays down the general rule about the burden of proof.
"Whoever desires any Court to give judgment as to any legal
right or liability dependent on the existence of facts which
he asserts, must prove that those facts exist".
Illustration (a) says-
"A desires a Court to give judgment that B shall be punished
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
for a crime which A says B has committed.
A must prove that B has committed the crime".
This lays down the general rule that in a criminal case the
burden of proof is on the prosecution and section 106 is
certainly not intended to relieve it of that duty. On the
contrary, it is designed to meet certain exceptional cases
in which it would be impossible, or at any rate
disproportionately difficult, for the prosecution to
establish facts which are "especially" within the knowledge
of the accused and which he could prove without difficulty
or inconvenience. The word
"especially" stresses that. It means facts that are
preeminently or exceptionally within his knowledge. If the
section were to be interpreted otherwise, it would lead to
the very startling conclusion that in a murder case the
burden lies on the accused to prove that he did not commit
the murder because who could know better than he whether he
did or did not. It is evident that cannot be the intention
and the Privy Council has twice refused to construe this
section, as reproduced in certain other Acts outside India,
to mean that the
204
burden lies on an accused person to show that be did not
commit the crime for which he is tried. These cases are
Attygalle v. Emperor(1) and Seneviratne v.
R. (2).
Illustration (b) to section 106 has obvious reference to a
very special type of case, namely to offences under sections
112 and 113 of the Indian Railways Act for travelling or
attempting to travel without a pass or ticket or with an
insufficient pass, etc. Now if a passenger is seen in a
railway carriage, or at the ticket barrier, and is unable to
produce a ticket or explain his presence, it would obviously
be impossible in most cases for the railway to prove, or
even with due diligence to find out, where he came from and
where he is going and whether or not be purchased a ticket.
On the other band, it would be comparatively simple for the
passenger either to produce his pass or ticket or, in the
case of loss or of some other valid explanation, to set it
out; and so far as proof is concerned, it would be easier
for him to prove the substance of his explanation than for
the State to establish its falsity.
We recognise that an illustration does not exhaust the full
content of the section which it illustrates but equally it
can neither curtail nor expand its ambit; and if knowledge
of certain facts is as much available to the prosecution,
should it choose to exercise due diligence, as to the
accused, the facts cannot be said to be "especially" within
the knowledge of the accused. This is a section which must
be considered in a commonsense way; and the balance of
convenience and the disproportion of the labour that would
be involved in finding out and proving certain facts
balanced against the triviality of the issue at stake and
the ease with which the accused could prove them, are all
matters that must be taken into consideration. The section
cannot be used to undermine the well established rule of law
that, save in a very exceptional class of case, the burden
is on the prosecution and never shifts.
Now what is the position here? These journeys
(1) A.I.R. 1936 P.C. 169.
(2) [1936] 3 All E.R. 36, 49.
205
were performed on 8-9-1948 and 15-9-1948. The prosecution
was launched on 19-4-1950 and the appellant was called upon
to answer the charge on 9-3-1951; and now that the case has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
been remanded we are in the year 1956. The appellant, very
naturally, said on 27-4-1951, two and a half years after the
alleged offences:
"It is humanly impossible to give accurate explanations for
the journeys in question after such a lapse of time".
And what of the prosecution? They have their registers and
books, both of the railway and of the department in which
the appellant works. They are in a position to know and
prove his official movements on the relevant dates. They
are in a position to show that no vouchers or receipts were
issued for a second class journey by the guard or conductor
of the trains on those days. This information was as much
within their "especial" knowledge as in that of the
appellant; indeed it is difficult to see how with all the
relevant books and other material in the possession of the
authorities, these facts can be said to be within the
"especial" knowledge of the appellant after such a lapse of
time however much it may once have been there. It would, we
feel, be wrong to allow these proceedings to continue any
longer. The appellant has been put upon his trial, the
prosecution has had full and ample opportunity to prove its
case and it can certainly not complain of want of time to
search for and prepare its material. No conviction could
validly rest on the material so far produced and it would
savour of harassment to allow the continuance of such a
trial without the slightest indication that there is
additional evidence available which could not have been
discovered and produced with the exercise of diligence at
the earlier stages.
We set aside the order of the Judicial Commissioner and
restore the order of the Sessions Judge acquitting the
appellant on both counts of the charge framed against him.
27
206