Full Judgment Text
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 618 OF 2012
Mukhtiar Singh .... Appellant(s)
Versus
State of Punjab .... Respondent(s)
J U D G M E N T
R.K. Agrawal, J.
1) This appeal has been filed against the judgment and
order dated 28.07.2011 passed by the High Court of Punjab
and Haryana at Chandigarh in Criminal Appeal No. 852-SB of
JUDGMENT
2002 whereby the High Court disposed of the appeal filed by
the appellant herein against the judgment and order dated
03.05.2002 passed by the Special Judge, Patiala in C.C. No.
20 T/2001/11.4.97 by affirming the conviction while reducing
the sentence.
1
Page 1
2) Brief facts:
(a) Mukhtiar Singh-the appellant herein was posted as
| atiala at | the rele |
|---|
Singh-the complainant approached the appellant herein in his
office and requested for a copy of Jamabandi of his land for
the year 1992-93. As per the prosecution, the appellant
herein agreed to supply the copy provided he was paid Rs.
600/-. The complainant was asked by the appellant herein to
come along with the money on the next day.
(b) The complainant (PW-6), who was not willing to pay the
bribe to the appellant herein, disclosed the entire incident
before one Bakhshish Singh (PW-8) and requested for his help.
JUDGMENT
On 06.09.1996, Bakhshish Singh and Arjan Singh lodged a
written complaint to the Deputy Superintendent of Police,
Vigilance Bureau, Patiala.
(c) On the abovesaid complaint, a trap was laid and
currency notes in the denomination of Rs. 500/- and Rs.
100/- smeared with phenolphthalein powder and after duly
recording their numbers were handed over to the complainant.
2
Page 2
After following the due procedure, the raiding party along with
Arjan Singh (PW-6) and Bakhshish Singh (PW-8) reached the
spot. When the complainant went inside the office along with
| ound the | appella |
|---|
chair and on seeing them; the appellant herein asked the
complainant if he had brought the money. Arjan Singh
responded in affirmative and handed over the currency notes
to the appellant herein which was kept by the
appellant-accused in his right hand side upper drawer of the
table. The appellant-accused handed over the copy of the
jamabandi after obtaining the signature of the complainant.
(d) The shadow witness-Bakhshish Singh came out of the
office of the appellant-accused and signaled in a specific
JUDGMENT
manner. Thereupon, the investigating officer-Shri Amar Nath,
DSP, Vigilance Bureau along with the raiding party and the
official witness-Kewal Krishan (PW-5) went inside the office of
the appellant-accused. The money was recovered and the
handwash of the appellant-accused was taken which turned
pink. After following the necessary formalities, a First
Information Report (FIR), being No. 58 dated 06.09.1996 came
3
Page 3
to be registered under Sections 7 and 13(2) of the Prevention
of Corruption Act, 1988 (in short ‘the PC Act’).
(e) The Special Judge, Patiala, vide order dated 03.05.2002
| T/20 | 01/11.4 |
|---|
appellant-accused under Section 13(1)(d) read with Sections
13(2) and 7 of the PC Act and was sentenced to undergo
rigorous imprisonment (RI) for 2 (two) years each under
Section 7 and Section 13(2) of the Act with the direction that
sentences shall run concurrently.
(f) Being aggrieved by the order dated 03.05.2002, the
appellant-accused preferred a Criminal Appeal being No.
852-SB of 2002 before the High Court. The High Court, by
order dated 28.07.2011, confirmed the order of conviction
JUDGMENT
passed by the Special Judge while reducing the sentence of
imprisonment from two years to one year for each of the two
offences.
(g) Being aggrieved by the order dated 28.07.2011, the
appellant-accused preferred this appeal by way of special leave
before this Court.
4
Page 4
3) Heard the arguments advanced by learned counsel for
the parties and perused the records.
Rival submissions:
| for the | appella |
|---|
before this Court that the High Court ought to have
appreciated that the copy of the Jamabandi of the land of the
complainant was prepared on 04.09.1996 and there was no
occasion for the appellant-accused to have demanded the
money from the complainant to pay the amount of illegal
gratification. It is further submitted that the complainant did
not collect the copy of the Jamabandi on 04.09.1996 but later
on he connived with the police personnel (vigilance) and came
to his office on 06.09.1996 in order to frame the appellant in a
JUDGMENT
fabricated case. Learned counsel further contended that the
complainant was annoyed with the appellant because he had
supplied a copy of the Jamabandi of the land of the
complainant to his adopted son-Nirmal Singh to whom the
complainant did not wish to give anything out of his property.
5
Page 5
5) Learned counsel for the appellant-accused further
submitted that the alleged recovery of money and the hand
wash of the appellant-accused are all made up stories.
| ), Head | Consta |
|---|
stated before the Court that there was no entry to show the
deposit of the nip containing hand wash solution of the
appellant-accused on 06.09.1996 in Register No. 19 as well as
there was no entry in the field register to show that the
solution was sent for chemical examination. Learned counsel
further contended that the manner in which the raid was
conducted and the recovery was made is also very doubtful.
He also pointed out various discrepancies in the manner of
recovery stating that the money was taken from the drawer of
JUDGMENT
the table by the investigation officer (IO) whereas Rajwant
Singh (PW-9) stated to have taken out the same from the
drawer by the appellant-accused.
6) Learned counsel for the appellant-accused finally
contended that the complainant and Bakhshish Singh (PW-8)
are highly interested persons and their testimony as to
demand as well as acceptance of the bribe money is highly
6
Page 6
doubtful. The discrepancies inherent in the prosecution case
are not sufficient to bring home the guilt of the
appellant-accused.
| for the r | esponde |
|---|
the above contentions submitted that the demand and
acceptance by and recovery from the accused of the bribe
money have been proved beyond any manner of doubt and
even otherwise the incriminating currency notes having been
proved to have been recovered from the custody of the accused
in terms of Section 20(1) of the PC Act which were accepted by
him as a motive or reward for issuance of copy of the
jamabandi. He further submitted that it was not proved by
the appellant-accused that the copy of the Jamabandi was
JUDGMENT
delivered to the complainant on 04.09.1996. In fact, the
register wherein the signature of the appellant was obtained as
token of delivery of copy of the Jamabandi is the relevant piece
of evidence for that purpose.
8) With regard to the claim that the complainant nursed a
grudge against the appellant-accused for having supplied a
copy to his adopted son-Nirmal Singh, it was submitted that
7
Page 7
the matter between Nirmal Singh and the complainant has
already been compromised and also nothing on record was
brought by learned counsel for the appellant-accused to show
| amaband | i was a |
|---|
Nirmal Singh by him.
9) Learned counsel for the respondent-State further
submitted with regard to the contention that no entry was
made to show the deposit of hand wash solution that the test
of phenolphthalein sodium carbonate is not the requirement of
law and any discrepancy pertaining to the same is of no
consequence. It was also submitted that the recovery of the
tainted currency notes from the custody of the
appellant-accused has been proved by direct evidence.
JUDGMENT
Learned counsel for the respondent-State finally submitted
that the courts below have rightly convicted the
appellant-accused under the provisions of the PC Act and
there is no scope of interference by this Court.
8
Page 8
Discussion:
10) For appreciating the rival submissions made by learned
counsel for the parties, it is relevant to quote the relevant
| t which a | re as un |
|---|
“7. Public servant taking gratification other than legal
remuneration in respect of an official act. – Whoever,
being, or expecting to be a public servant, accepts or obtains
or agrees to accept or attempts to obtain from any person,
for himself or for any other person, any gratification
whatever, other than legal remuneration, as a motive or
reward for doing or forbearing to do any official act or for
showing or forbearing to show, in the exercise of his official
functions, favour or disfavour to any person or for rendering
or attempting to render any service or disservice to any
person, with the Central Government or any State
Government or Parliament or the Legislature of any State or
with any local authority, corporation or Government
company referred to in clause (c) of section 2, or with any
public servant, whether named or otherwise, shall be
punishable with imprisonment which shall be not less than
three years but which may extend to seven years and shall
also be liable to fine.
Explanations . – (a) “Expecting to be a public servant”. If a
person not expecting to be in office obtains a gratification by
deceiving others into a belief that he is about to be in office,
and that he will then serve them, he may be guilty of
cheating, but he is not guilty of the offence defined in this
section.
(b) “Gratification”. The word “gratification” is not restricted to
pecuniary gratifications or to gratifications estimable in
money.
(c) “Legal remuneration”. The words “legal remuneration” are
not restricted to remuneration which a public servant can
lawfully demand, but include all remuneration which he is
permitted by the Government or the organization, which he
serves, to accept.
(d) “A motive or reward for doing”. A person who receives a
gratification as a motive or reward for doing what he does
not intend or is not in a position to do, or has not done,
comes within this expression.
JUDGMENT
9
Page 9
(e) Where a public servant induces a person erroneously to
believe that his influence with the government has obtained
a title for that person and thus induces that person to give
the public servant, money or any other gratification as a
reward for this service, the public servant has committed an
offence under this section.
| onduct b<br>aid to co | y a publ<br>mmit the |
|---|
(i) by corrupt or illegal means, obtains for himself
or for any other person any valuable thing or
pecuniary advantage; or
(ii) by abusing his position as a public servant,
obtains for himself or for any other person any
valuable thing or pecuniary advantage; or
(iii) while holding office as a public servant, obtains
for any person any valuable thing or pecuniary
advantage without any public interest; or
(e) if he or any person on his behalf, is in possession or has,
at any time during the period of his office, been in
possession for which the public servant cannot satisfactorily
account, of pecuniary resources or property disproportionate
to his known sources of income.
Explanation. – For the purposes of this section, “known
sources of income” means income received from any lawful
JUDGMENT
10
Page 10
| also be liab<br>where | le to fine.<br>public |
|---|
11) There is no denying the fact that on 06.09.1996, a trap
was laid on the complaint filed by the complainant and the
JUDGMENT
appellant-accused was caught red-handed by the Vigilance
Department, Patiala. Due procedure was followed while
conducting the trap wherein Bakhshish Singh (PW-8) was
nominated as a shadow witness who accompanied the
complainant-Arjan Singh (PW-6), who was handed over the
currency notes of denomination of Rs. 500/- and Rs. 100/-
duly smeared with phenolphthalein powder and after
11
Page 11
recording their numbers. When both of them went inside the
office, the appellant-accused, who was sitting on a chair, on
seeing them, asked the complainant if he had brought the
| eplied po | sitively, |
|---|
took from him six hundred rupees and put them in the right
hand side upper drawer of his table and handed over to him
the copy of Jamabandi after obtaining his signature on a
Register where the complainant signed and put the date as
06.09.1996. The shadow witness came out of the office of the
accused and signaled in a specific manner. Thereupon, DSP
Amar Nath along with other members of the raiding party went
inside the office of the accused. A glass of water was
requisitioned and sodium carbonate was added to the water.
JUDGMENT
When fingers of both the hands of the accused were made to
be washed in the solution, the colour of the solution turned
light pink and the numbers of the currency notes also tallied
and they were taken into possession by investigating team.
After carrying out necessary formalities, the accused was
arrested.
12
Page 12
12) In order to prove the manner of investigation and various
aspects relating to the prosecution one Kewal Krishan was
examined as PW-5. PW-5 is the official witness and was
| aid. Ba | lbir Sing |
|---|
clerk of the office of the Deputy Commissioner, Patiala
deposed before the court that the appellant-accused was
working under him and he used to receive writings of the
accused. On this basis, he identified the writing and signature
of the accused on the copy of the Jamabandi. The
complainant, in his deposition, narrated the whole incident
before the court. PW-5 completely corroborated with the
statement of the complainant-Arjan Singh (PW-6). Though
learned counsel for the appellant-accused pointed out the
JUDGMENT
flaws in the process, no discrepancy was found with respect to
the material aspects of the matter such as recovery of the
incriminating currency notes, their identity or the credibility of
the witnesses. When witness is examined on oath at length, it
is quite possible for him to make some discrepancies. No true
witness can possibly escape from making some discrepant
details. An objection was raised by learned counsel for the
13
Page 13
appellant-accused that the copy of the Jamabandi stood
prepared on 04.09.1996 and thus, there was no occasion for
the appellant-accused to ask for the illegal gratification on
| piece of | evidence |
|---|
was the Ujrat Register wherein signatures of the complainant
were obtained as a token of delivery of copy of Jamabandi but
no attempt was made on behalf of the appellant-accused to get
the said Register produced on record. The said entry bears
the date as 04.09.1996 in the relevant column but signatures
of the complainant regarding receipt thereof were obtained on
the said entry by the appellant-accused at the time of trap,
that is, on 06.09.1996. Even otherwise, the demand,
acceptance and recovery of the incriminating currency notes
JUDGMENT
from the accused have been sufficiently proved. The objection
that reliability of the trap was impaired as the solution
collected in the phial was not sent to the Chemical Examiner
is too puerile for acceptance. This point was considered by this
Court in State of U.P. vs. Zakaullah (1998) 1 SCC 557
wherein it was held as under:-
14
Page 14
| ndled the<br>sserted | bribe mon<br>that |
|---|
appellant-accused might have got in touch with the
phenolphthalein powder when he was caught hold by the
investigating officer and, thus, finding on conviction cannot be
recorded on the basis of the phenolphthalein sodium
carbonate test. In the case on hand, there is no evidence on
record to show that the investigating officer shook hands with
the appellant-accused or caught his hands and, as such there
was no occasion for the phenolphthalein powder being
transferred from the hands of the investigating officer to those
JUDGMENT
of the accused. Even otherwise, the recovery of the tainted
currency notes from the custody of the appellant-accused has
been proved by direct evidence.
13) It was also brought to the notice of the court that the
complainant-Arjan Singh nursed a grudge against the
appellant-accused for having supplied a copy of the
15
Page 15
Jamabandi to Nirmal Singh- adopted son of the complainant
and the present case is the outcome of the said grudge only.
In view of the above, it was stated before the court by learned
| dent-Sta | te that t |
|---|
aforesaid Nirmal Singh and the complainant was compromised
and even otherwise no material on record has been placed to
show that a copy of the Jamabandi was supplied to Nirmal
Singh by the appellant-accused. The contention is
misconceived. Moreover, the said suit has no relevance at all
with the instant case as it was filed on 16.01.1997, i.e., much
later than the date of incident of 06.09.1996.
14) It may also be mentioned here that Head Constable
Gurcharan Singh (PW-1) has categorically stated in his
JUDGMENT
deposition that the sealed nip of hand-wash of the
appellant-accused was also deposited with him on 06.09.1996
along with other case properties and he made the entry thereof
in the relevant register. Though he was not cross-examined
on this aspect, it was he who made the entry and he should
have been confronted with the said entry if learned counsel for
the appellant-accused thought that there was some
16
Page 16
discrepancy in it and if the appellant-accused wanted to take
benefit thereof. In fact, there was no such discrepancy as
deposit of sealed nip of hand-wash of the appellant-accused
| the regis | ter. |
|---|
15) The premise to be established on the facts for drawing
the presumption is that there was demand, payment and
acceptance of gratification. Once the said premise is
established, the inference to be drawn is that the said
gratification was accepted “as motive or reward” for doing or
forbearing to do any official act. So the word “gratification”
need not be stretched to mean reward because reward is the
outcome of the presumption which the court has to draw on
the factual premise that there was payment of gratification.
JUDGMENT
This will again be fortified by looking at the collocation of two
expressions adjacent to each other like “gratification or any
valuable thing”. If acceptance of any valuable thing can help to
draw the presumption that it was accepted as motive or
reward for doing or forbearing to do an official act, the word
“gratification” must be treated in the context to mean any
payment for giving satisfaction to the public servant who
17
Page 17
received it. In the case on hand, from the facts on record, it is
proved beyond doubt that the appellant-accused asked for the
money to do a particular act and actually accepted the same.
| nded and | , therefo |
|---|
reason to disagree with the findings of the trial court and the
High Court.
16) In a decision of this Court in State of Punjab vs. Madan
Mohan Lal Verma (2013) 14 SCC 153 it was held as under:-
“11. The law on the issue is well settled that demand of
illegal gratification is sine qua non for constituting an offence
under the 1988 Act. Mere recovery of tainted money is not
sufficient to convict the accused when substantive evidence
in the case is not reliable, unless there is evidence to prove
payment of bribe or to show that the money was taken
voluntarily as a bribe. Mere receipt of the amount by the
accused is not sufficient to fasten guilt, in the absence of any
evidence with regard to demand and acceptance of the
amount as illegal gratification. Hence, the burden rests on
the accused to displace the statutory presumption raised
under Section 20 of the 1988 Act, by bringing on record
evidence, either direct or circumstantial, to establish with
reasonable probability, that the money was accepted by him,
other than as a motive or reward as referred to in Section 7
of the 1988 Act. While invoking the provisions of Section 20
of the Act, the court is required to consider the explanation
offered by the accused, if any, only on the touchstone of
preponderance of probability and not on the touchstone of
proof beyond all reasonable doubt. However, before the
accused is called upon to explain how the amount in
question was found in his possession, the foundational facts
must be established by the prosecution. The complainant is
an interested and partisan witness concerned with the
success of the trap and his evidence must be tested in the
same way as that of any other interested witness. In a proper
JUDGMENT
18
Page 18
case, the court may look for independent corroboration
before convicting the accused person. (Vide Ram Prakash
Arora v. State of Punjab , T. Subramanian v. State of T.N. ,
State of Kerala v. C.P. Rao and Mukut Bihari v. State of
Rajasthan .)”
| Court has | held as |
|---|
“23. We do not have the slightest hesitation in accepting the
broad submission of Mr Rai that demand of illegal
gratification is a sine qua non to constitute the offence under
the Act. Further mere recovery of currency notes itself does
not constitute the offence under the Act, unless it is proved
beyond all reasonable doubt that the accused voluntarily
accepted the money knowing it to be bribe. In the facts of the
present case, we are of the opinion that both the ingredients
to bring the Act within the mischief of Sections 7 and 13(1)
( d )( ii ) of the Act are satisfied.”
18) It is a settled principle of law laid down by this Court in a
number of decisions that once the demand and voluntary
acceptance of illegal gratification knowing it to be the bribe are
proved by evidence then conviction must follow under Section
JUDGMENT
7 of the PC Act against the accused. Indeed, these twin
requirements are sine qua non for proving the offence under
Section 7 of the PC Act. In the light of our own re-appraisal of
the evidence and keeping in view the abovesaid principle in
mind, we have also come to a conclusion that twin
requirements of demand and acceptance of illegal gratification
were proved in the case on hand on the basis of evidence
19
Page 19
adduced by the prosecution against the appellant and hence
the appellant was rightly convicted and sentenced for the
offences punishable under Section 7 read with Section 13(1)( d )
and Section 13(2) of the Act.
Conclusion:
19) On the face of the specific and positive evidence which
cannot be said to be inherently improbable, the plea of the
appellant-accused that the prosecution case is fit to be
rejected on the ground of improbability does not appeal to us.
The courts below, in our opinion, have rightly rejected the
defence evidence. Therefore, in our opinion, the prosecution in
this case has proved the guilt of the appellant-accused beyond
all reasonable doubt.
JUDGMENT
20) For the reasons stated above, this appeal fails and the
same is dismissed.
..…………….………………………J.
(J. CHELAMESWAR)
.
…....…………………………………J.
(R.K. AGRAWAL)
NEW DELHI;
JULY 5, 2016.
20
Page 20