Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AMBA LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/10/1960
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 264 1961 SCR (1) 933
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC 44 (38)
D 1974 SC 859 (29,41,44)
D 1975 SC2288 (13)
ACT:
Evidence--Customs authorities recovering articles suspected
to have been smuggled--Accused pleading articles brought
from Pakistan at time of Partition--Burden of proof--Imports
Exports Control Act, 1947(10 of 1947), s. 3--Sea Customs
Act, 1878 (8 of 1878) ss. 19, 167(8) and 178-A--Land Customs
Act, 1924 (19 of 1924), ss. 5 and 7--Indian Evidence Act,
1872 (1 of 1872), s. 106.
934
HEADNOTE:
The appellants house was searched on June 22, 1951, by the
Customs authorities and ten articles were recovered
therefrom. In the inquiry before the Collector the
appellant stated that the first five articles had been
brought by him in 1947 from Pakistan after-partition and
that with respect to the other five articles he was a bona
fide purchaser thereof. The Collector held that the
appellant had failed to establish his case and held that the
goods were imported into India in contravention Of S. 3,
Import Export Control Act read with ss. 19 and 167(8), Sea
Customs Act and ss. 4 and 5 Land Customs Act read with S. 7
thereof. This decision was upheld on appeal by the Central
Board of Revenue and by the Central Government on revision.
The appellant contended that: (i) the onus of proving that
the first five articles were smuggled goods was on the
department which it had failed to discharge, and (2) even if
the other five articles which he purchased were smuggled
goods he was not concerned with their importation.
Held, that the onus was on the authorities to establish that
the first five articles were imported into India after March
1948, when the customs barrier was put up for the first time
between India and Pakistan, and that the authorities having
failed to adduce any evidence to prove this fact the
appellant could not be held guilty of any of the offences
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charged. The onus did not shift by virtue Of S. 178A, Sea
Customs Act or s. 5, Land Customs Act, as the former section
was not in operation at the relevant time and the latter
section was not applicable to the facts of this case ; nor
did the onus shift by virtue of s. 106, Evidence Act, as
that section could not be used to undermine the well
established rule that the burden was on the prosecution and
never shifted.
Shambu Nath Mehra v. The State of Ajmer, [1956] S.C.R. 199,
followed.
With respect to the other five articles even if the
appellant was right in his contention that he was not
concerned in their importation he was liable to the penalty
under s. 7(1)(c), Land Customs Act, 1924, for keeping the
articles knowing them to be smuggled goods.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 153 of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated November 3, 1954,
of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ No. 253-D of 1954.
Veda Vyasa, S. K. Kapur, K. K. Jain and Ganpat Rai, for the
appellant.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, H. R.
Khanna and T. M. Sen, for the respondents.
935
1960. October 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SUBBA RAO J.-This appeal by certificate is directed against
the order of the High Court of Judicature of the State of
Punjab dismissing the petition filed by the appellant under
Art. 226 of the Constitution.
The facts giving rise to this appeal may be briefly stated.
The appellant is at present a resident of Barmer in the
State of Rajasthan. But before 1947 he was living in a
place which is now in Pakistan. On June 22, 1951, the
Deputy Superintendent, Land Castoms Station, Barmer,
conducted a search of the appellant’s house and recovered
therefrom the following ten articles :
------------------------------------------------------------
Articles seized. Weight Estimated
value.
------------------------------------------------------------
Rs.
1. Silver slab. 2600 tolas 5,200/-
2. 29 Sovereigns 2,262/-
(King Ed. VII).
3. 9 pieces of gold
bullion 201 tolas
and 9 mashas. 22,193/-
4. 4 pieces of silver
bullion 114 tolas. 230/-
5. Uncurrent silver
coins numbering 575. 865/-
6. Gold bars. 49 tolas and
9 mashas 5,475/-
7. 255 Phials of liquid
gold. 9,875/-
8. Torches 23.
9. Playing cards 3 Dozens
400/-
10.Glass beads 48 packets.
-------
Total... 46,500/-
------------------------------------------------------------
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On July 14, 1951 the Assistant Collector, Ajmer, gave
notice’ to the appellant to show cause and explain why the
goods seized from him should not be confiscated under s.
167(8) of the Sea Customs Act and s. 7 of the Land Customs
Act. The appellant in his reply
936
stated that items to 5 supra were brought by him from
Pakistan after the partition of the country in 1947 and that
items 6 to 10 were purchased by him bonafide for value in
Barmer. On October 27, 1951, the appellant appeared before
the Collector of Central Excise, who made an enquiry, and
admitted before him that items 6 to 10 were smuggled goods
from Pakistan, but in regard to the other items be reitera-
ted his plea that he originally brought them from Pakistan
in the year 1947. The Collector of Central Excise held that
the appellant bad failed to establish that items 1 to 5 had
been brought by him to India in the year 1947 and he also
did not accept the plea of the appellant in regard to items
6 to 10 that he was a bonafide purchaser of them. In the
result he held that all the goods were imported into India
in contravention of, (i) s. 3 of the Import Export Control
Act read with ss. 19 and 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, (ii)
ss. 4 and 5 of the Land Customs Act read with s. 7 thereof.
He made an order of confiscation of the said articles under
s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act and s. 7 of the Land
Customs Act; but under s. 183 of the Sea Customs Act he
gave him an option to redeem the confiscated goods within
four months of the date of the order on payment of a sum of
Rs. 25,000. In addition he imposed a penalty of Rs. 1,000
and directed the payment of import duty leviable on all the
items together with other charges before the goods were
taken out of customs control. Aggrieved by the said order,
the appellant preferred an appeal to the Central Board of
Revenue. The Central Board of Revenue agreed with the
Collector of Central Excise that the onus of proving the
import of the goods in question was on the appellant. In
regard to items 1 to 5, it rejected the plea of the
appellant mainly on the basis of a statement alleged to have
been made by him at the time of seizure of the said
articles. In the result the appeal was dismissed. The
revision filed by the appellant to the Central Government
was also dismissed on August 28, 1953. Thereafter the
appellant filed a writ petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court
937
of Punjab but it was dismissed by a division bench of the
High Court on November 3, 1954. Hence this appeal.
It would be convenient to deal with this appeal in two
parts-one in regard to items 1 to 5 and the other in regard
to items 6 to 10.
The decision in regard to items 1 to 5 turns purely on the
question of onus. The Collector of Central Excise as well
as the Central Board of Revenue held that the onus of
proving the import of the goods lay on the appellant. There
is no evidence adduced by the customs authorities to
establish the offence of the appellant, namely, that the
goods were smuggled into India after the raising of the
customs barrier against Pakistan in March 1948. So too, on
the part of the appellant, except his statement made at the
time of seizure of the goods and also at the time of the
inquiry that he brought them with him into India in 1947, no
other acceptable evidence has been adduced. In the
circumstances, the question of onus of proof becomes very
important and the decision turns upon the question on whom
the burden of proof lies.
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This Court has held that a customs officer is not a judicial
tribunal and that a proceeding before him is not a
prosecution. But it cannot be denied that this relevant
provisions of the Sea Customs Act and the Land Customs Act
are penal in character. The appropriate customs authority
is empowered to make an inquiry in respect of an offence
alleged to have been committed by a person under the said
Acts, summon and examine witnesses, decide whether an
offence is committed, make an order of confiscation of the
goods in respect of which the offence is committed and
impose penalty on the person concerned ; see ss. 168 and
171A of the Sea Customs Act and ss. 5 and 7 of the Land
Customs Act. To such a situation, though the provisions of
the Code of Criminal Procedure or the Evidence Act may not
apply except in so far as they are statutorily made
applicable, the fundamental principles of criminal
jurisprudence and of natural justice must necessarily apply.
If so, the burden of proof is on the customs authorities and
they have to
938
bring home the guilt to the person alleged to have committed
a particular offence under the said Acts by adducing
satisfactory evidence. In the present case no such evidence
is forthcoming; indeed there is no tittle of evidence to
prove the case of the customs authorities. But it is said
that the onus shifted to the appellant for three reasons,
namely, (i) by reason of the provisions of s. 178A of the
Sea Customs Act; (ii) by reason of s. 5 of the Land Customs
Act; and (iii) by reason of s. 106 of the Evidence Act.
Section 178A of the Sea Customs Act does not govern the
present case, for that section was inserted in that Act by
Act No. XXI of 1955 whereas the order of confiscation of the
goods in question was made on January 18, 1952. The section
is prospective in operation and cannot govern the said
order.
Nor does s. 5 of the Land Customs Act apply to the present
case. Under s. 5(1) of the said Act, "Every person desiring
to pass any goods by land, out of or into any foreign
territory shall apply in writing for a permit for the
passage thereof, to the Land Customs Officer incharge of a
land customs Station By sub-s. (2) of s. 5 of the said Act,
if the requisite duty has been paid or the goods have been
found by the Land Customs Officer to be free of duty, the
Land Customs Officer is empowered to grant a permit. Under
sub-s. (3) thereof, " Any Land Customs Officer, duly
empowered by the Chief Customs authority in this behalf, may
require any person in charge of any goods which such Officer
has reason to believe to have been imported, or to be about
to be exported, by land from, or to, any foreign territory
to produce the permit granted for such goods; and any such
goods which are dutiable and which are unaccompanied by a
permit or do not correspond with the specification contained
in the permit produced, shall be detained and shall be
liable to confiscation." This section has no bearing on the
question of onus of proof. This section obviously applies
to a case where a permit is required for importing goods by
land from a foreign country into India and it empowers the
Land Customs Officer, who has reason to believe that any
939
goods have been imported by land from any foreign territory,
to demand the permit and to verify whether the goods so
imported correspond with the specification contained in the
permit. If there was no permit or if the goods did Dot
correspond with the specification contained in the permit,
the said goods would be liable to be detained and
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confiscated. The application of this section is conditioned
by the legal requirement to obtain a permit. If no permit
is necessary to import goods into India, the provisions of
the section cannot be attracted. In the present case the
customs barrier was established only in March, 1948, that
is, after the said items of goods are stated by the appel-
lant to have been brought into India.
We cannot also accept the contention that by reason of the
provisions of s. 106 of the Evidence Act the onus lies on
the appellant to prove that he brought the said items of
goods into India in 1947. Section 106 of the Evidence Act
in terms does not apply to a proceeding under the said Acts.
But it may be assumed that the principle underlying the said
section is of universal application. Under that section,
when any fact is especially within the knowledge of any
person, the burden of proving that fact is upon him. This
Court in Shambu Nath Mehra v. The State of Ajmer (1), after
considering the earlier Privy Council decisions on the
interpretation of s. 106 of the Evidence Act, observed at p.
204 thus:
"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."
If s. 106 of the Evidence Act is applied, then, by analogy,
the fundamental principles of criminal jurisprudence must
equally be invoked. If so, it follows that the onus to
prove the case against the appellant is on the customs
authorities and they failed to discharge that burden in
respect of items 1 to 5. The order of confiscation relating
to items 1 to 5 is set aside.
Before closing this aspect of the case, some observations
have to be made in respect of the manner in
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 199.
940
which the statement given by the appellant when the goods
were seized was used against him by the customs authorities.
It would be seen from the order of the Collector of Central
Excise as well as that of the Central Board of Revenue that
they had relied upon the statement alleged to have been made
by him at the time the search was made in his house in order
to reject his case that he brought some of the items of
goods into India in the year 1947. The appellant in his
reply to the show-cause notice complained that his statement
was taken in English, that he did not know what was recorded
and that his application for inspection and for the grant of
a copy of his statement was not granted to him. It does not
appear from the records that he was given a copy of the
statement or that he was allowed to inspect the same. In
the circumstances we must point out that the customs
authorities were not justified to rely upon certain, alleged
discrepancies in that statement to reject the appellant’s
subsequent version. If they wanted to rely upon it they
should have given an, opportunity to the appellant to
inspect it and, at any rate, should have supplied him a copy
thereof.
Coming to items 6 to 10, we have no reason to reject, as we
have been asked to do, the statement made in the order of
the Collector of Central Excise dated October 27, 1951, that
the appellant accepted that items 6 to 10 were smuggled
goods from Pakistan. It would have been better if the
customs authorities had taken that admission in writing from
the appellant, for that would prevent the retraction of the
concession on second thoughts. That apart, it is more
satisfactory if a body entrusted with functions such as the
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customs authorities are entrusted with takes that precaution
when its decision is mainly to depend upon such admission.
But in this case, having regard to the circumstances under,
and the manner in, which the said concession was made, we
have no reason to doubt the correctness of the statements of
fact in regard to this matter made in the orders of the
customs authorities. If so, it follows that the finding of
the customs authorities that the appellant purchased the
said items, which were smuggled goods, should
941
prevail. The order of confiscation of these five items
will, therefore, stand.
Even so, it is contended by the learned counsel for the
appellant that the customs authorities went wrong in
imposing a penalty on him under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs
Act. The said section reads:
" If any goods, the importation or exportation of which is
for the time being prohibited or restricted by or under
Chapter IV of this Act, be imported into or exported from
India contrary to such prohibition or
restriction............ such goods shall be liable to con-
fiscation; and
any person concerned in any such offence shall be liable to
a penalty not exceeding three times the value of the goods,
or not exceeding one thousand rupees."
The appellant’s argument is that though he purchased the
said smuggled goods he is not concerned with the importation
of the goods contrary to the prohibition or restriction
imposed by or under Ch. IV of the Sea Customs Act. The
’offence consists in importing the goods contrary to the
prohibition and, therefore, the argument proceeds, a person,
who has purchased them only after they were imported, is not
hit by the said section. There is some force in this
argument, but we do not propose to express our final view on
the matter as the appellant is liable to the penalty under
s. 7(1)(c) of the Land Customs Act, 1924. The said section
reads:
" Section 7 (1): Any person who-
(c)aids in so passing or conveying any goods, or, knowing
that any goods have been so passed or conveyed, keeps or
conceals such goods, or permits or procures them to be kept
or concealed,
shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding, where the goods
are not dutiable, fifty or, where the goods or any of them
are dutiable, one thousand rupees, and any dutiable goods in
respect of which the offence has been committed shall be
liable to confiscation."
In this case the finding is that the appellant with the
120
942
knowledge that the goods had been smuggled into India kept
the goods, and, therefore, he was liable to penalty under
that section. We hold that the penalty was rightly imposed
on him.
It is then contended that the Collector of Central Excise
had no jurisdiction to impose conditions for the release of
the confiscated goods. The Collector of Central Excise in
his order says, " In addition the import duty leviable on
all these items together with other charges, if any payable,
should be paid and necessary formalities gone through before
the goods can be passed out of Customs Control ". In Shew.
pujanrai Indrasanrai Ltd. v. The Collector of Customs (1), a
similar question arose for consideration of this Court.
There by an impugned order the Collector of Customs imposed
two conditions for the release of the confiscated goods,
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namely, (1) the production of a permit from the Reserve Bank
of India in respect of the gold within four months from the
date of despatch of the impugned order, and (2) the pay-
ment of proper customs duties and other charges leviable in
respect of the gold within the same period of four months.
This Court held, agreeing with the High Court, that the
Collector of Customs had no jurisdiction to impose the said
two conditions. The learned Additional Solicitor General
concedes that the said decision applies to the present case.
We do not, therefore, express any view whether that decision
can be distinguished in its application to the facts of the
present case. On the basis of the concession we hold that
the conditions extracted above, being severable from the
rest of the order, should be deleted from the said order of
the Collector of Central Excise.
Learned counsel for the appellant then argues that the
option given in the said order to the appellant to redeem
the confiscated goods for home consumption within four
months of the order on payment of Rs. 25,000 was based upon
the validity of the confiscation of all the ten items and,
as this Court now holds that confiscation was bad in respect
of items 1
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 821.
943
to 5, the amount of the penalty of Rs. 25,000 should
proportionately be reduced. There is justification for this
contention. But we cannot reduce the amount, as under s.
183 of the Sea Customs Act the amount has to be fixed by the
concerned officer as he thinks fit. But as the basis of the
order partially disappears, we give liberty to the appellant
to apply to the customs authorities for giving him an option
to redeem the confiscated goods on payment of a lesser
amount, having regard to the changed circumstances.
In the result, the appeal is allowed in part and the order
of the Collector of Central Excise is accordingly modified
in terms of the finding given by us. As the parties
succeeded and failed in part, they are directed to bear
their own costs.
Appeal partly allowed.