Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 446-449 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Zahira Habibulla H Sheikh and Anr.
RESPONDENT:
State of Gujarat and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/04/2004
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP(Crl.)Nos. 538-541/2004)
WITH
CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS.450-452/2004
(Arising out of SLP (Crl.)Nos. 1039-1041/2004)
ARIJIT PASAYAT,J
Leave granted.
The present appeals have several unusual features and
some of them pose very serious questions of far reaching
consequences. The case is commonly to be known as "Best
Bakery Case". One of the appeals is by Zahira who claims to
be an eye-witness to macabre killings allegedly as a result
of communal frenzy. She made statements and filed affidavits
after completion of trial and judgment by the trial Court,
alleging that during trial she was forced to depose falsely
and turn hostile on account of threats and coercion. That
raises an important issue regarding witness protection
besides the quality and credibility of the evidence before
Court. The other rather unusual question interestingly
raised by the State of Gujarat itself relates to improper
conduct of trial by the public prosecutor. Last, but not the
least that the role of the investigating agency itself was
perfunctory and not impartial. Though its role is perceived
differently by the parties, there is unanimity in their
stand that it was tainted, biased and not fair. While the
accused persons accuse it for alleged false implication, the
victims’ relatives like Zahira allege its efforts to be
merely to protect the accused.
The appeals are against judgment of the Gujarat High
Court in Criminal Appeal No. 956 of 2003 upholding acquittal
of respondents-accused by the trial Court. Along with said
appeal, two other petitions namely Criminal Miscellaneous
Application No. 10315 of 2003 and Criminal Revision No. 583
of 2003 were disposed of. The prayers made by the State for
adducing additional evidence under Section 391 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (in short the ’Code’), and/or
for directing retrial were rejected. Consequentially, prayer
for examination of witnesses under Section 311 of the Code
was also rejected.
In a nutshell the prosecution version which led to
trial of the accused persons is as follows:
Between 8.30 p.m. of 1.3.2002 and 11.00 a.m. of
2.3.2002, a business concern known as "Best Bakery" at
Vadodara was burnt down by an unruly mob of large number of
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people. In the ghastly incident 14 persons died. The attacks
were stated to be a part of retaliatory action to avenge
killing of 56 persons burnt to death in the Sabarmati
Express. Zahira was the main eye-witness who lost family
members including helpless women and innocent children in
the gruesome incident. Many persons other than Zahira were
also eye-witnesses. Accused persons were the perpetrators of
the crime. After investigation charge sheet was filed in
June 2002.
During trial the purported eye-witnesses resiled from
the statements made during investigation. Faulty and biased
investigation as well as perfunctory trial were said to have
marred the sanctity of the entire exercise undertaken to
bring the culprits to books. By judgment dated 27.6.2003,
the trial Court directed acquittal of the accused persons.
Zahira appeared before National Human Rights Commission
(in short the ’NHRC’) stating that she was threatened by
powerful politicians not to depose against the accused
persons. On 7.8.2003 an appeal not up to the mark and
neither in conformity with the required care, appears to
have been filed by the State against the judgment of
acquittal before the Gujarat High Court. NHRC moved this
Court and its Special leave petition has been treated as a
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India, 1950
(in short the ’Constitution’). Zahira and another
organisation - Citizens for Justice and Peace filed SLP
(Crl.) No. 3770 of 2003 challenging judgment of acquittal
passed by the trial Court. One Sahera Banu (sister of
appellant-Zahira) filed the afore-noted Criminal Revision
No. 583 of 2003 before the High Court questioning the
legality of the judgment returning a verdict of acquittal.
Appellant-State filed an application (Criminal Misc.
Application NO.7677 of 2003) in terms of Sections 391 and
311 of the Code for permission to adduce additional evidence
and for examination of certain persons as witness. Criminal
Miscellaneous Application No. 9825 of 2003 was filed by the
State to bring on record a document and to treat it as
corroborative piece of evidence. By the impugned judgment
the appeal, revision and the applications were dismissed and
rejected.
The State and Zahira had requested for a fresh trial
primarily on the following grounds:
When a large number of witnesses have turned hostile it
should have raised a reasonable suspicion that the witnesses
were being threatened or coerced. The public prosecutor did
not take any step to protect the star witness who was to be
examined on 17.5.2003 specially when four out of seven
injured witnesses had on 9.5.2003 resiled from the
statements made during investigation. Zahira Sheikh - the
Star witness had specifically stated on affidavit about the
threat given to her and the reason for her not coming out
with the truth during her examination before Court on
17.5.2003.
The public prosecutor was not acting in a manner
befitting the position held by him. He even did not request
the Trial court for holding the trial in camera when a large
number of witnesses were resiling from the statements made
during investigation.
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The trial court should have exercised power under
section 311 of the Code and recalled and re-examined
witnesses as their evidence was essential to arrive at the
truth and a just decision in the case. The power under
Section 165 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (in short the
’Evidence Act’) was not resorted to at all and that also had
led to miscarriage of justice.
The public prosecutor did not examine the injured
witnesses. Exhibit 36/68 was produced by the public
prosecutor which is a statement of one Rahish Khan on the
commencement of the prosecution case, though the prosecution
was neither relying on it nor it was called upon by the
accused, to be produced before the Court. The said statement
was wrongly allowed to be exhibited and treated as FIR by
the public prosecutor.
Statement of one eye-witness was recorded on 4.3.2002
by P1 Baria at SSG Hospital, Vadodara disclosing names of
five accused persons and when he was sought to be examined
before the Court, summons were issued to this person on
27.4.2003 for examination on 9.5.2003. It could not be
served on the ground that he had left for his native place
in Uttar Pradesh. Therefore, fresh summons were issued on
9.6.2003 for recording his evidence on the next day i.e. on
10.6.2003, giving only one day time. When it could not be
served, then summons were issued on 13.6.2003 for remaining
present before the Court on 16.6.2003. It could not be also
served for the same reasons. Ultimately, the public
prosecutor gave purshis for dropping him as witness and
surprisingly the same was granted by the Trial court. This
goes to show that both the public prosecutor as well as the
court were not only oblivious but also failed to discharge
their duties. An important witness was not examined by the
prosecutor on the ground that he, Sahejadkhan Hasankhan (PW-
48) was of unsound mind. Though the witness was present, the
public prosecutor dropped him on the ground that he was not
mentally fit to depose. When such an application was made
by the prosecution for dropping on the ground of mental
deficiency it was the duty of the learned trial Judge to at
least make some minimum efforts to find out as to whether he
was actually of unsound mind or not, by getting him examined
from the Civil Surgeon or a doctor from the Psychiatric
Department. This witness (PW-48) has received serious
injuries and the doctor Meena (PW-9) examined him. She has
not stated in her evidence that he was mentally deficient.
The police has also not reported that this witness was of
unsound mind. During investigation also it was never stated
that he was of unsound mind. His statement was recorded on
6.3.2002.
Sahejadkhan Hasankhan - the witness was unconscious
between 2nd - 6th of March 2002. When he regained
conscious, his statement was recorded on 6.3.2002. He gave
names of four accused persons i.e. A-5, A-6, A-8 and A-11.
This witness has also filed an affidavit before this Court
in a pending matter narrating the whole incident. This
clearly shows that the person was not of unsound mind as was
manipulated by the prosecution to drop him.
In the case of one Shailun Hasankhan Pathan summons
were issued on 9.6.2003 requiring his presence on 10.6.2003
which could not be served on him. He disclosed the names of
three accused persons i.e. A-6, A-8 and A-11. This witness
was also surprisingly treated to be of deficient mind
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without any material and even without taking any efforts to
ascertain the truth or otherwise of such serious claims.
Similarly, one injured eye-witness Tufel Habibulla
Sheikh was not examined, though he had disclosed the names
of four accused i.e. A-5, A-6, A-8 and A-11. No summons was
issued to this witness and he was not at all examined.
Another eye witness Yasminbanu who had disclosed the
names of A-5,A-6 and A-11 was also not examined. No reason
whatsoever was disclosed for non-examination of this
witness.
The affidavit filed by different witnesses before this
Court highlighted as to how and why they have been kept
unfairly out of trial. Lalmohamad Khudabax Shaikh (PW 15)
was hurriedly examined on 27.5.2003 though summons was
issued to him for remaining present on 6.6.2003. No reason
has been indicated as to why he was examined before the date
stipulated.
Strangely the relatives of the accused were examined as
witnesses for the prosecution obviously with a view that
their evidence could be used to help the accused persons.
According to the appellant-Zahira there was no fair
trial and the entire effort during trial and at all relevant
times before also was to see that the accused persons got
acquitted. When the investigating agency helps the accused,
the witnesses are threatened to depose falsely and
prosecutor acts in a manner as if he was defending the
accused, and the Court was acting merely as an onlooker and
there is no fair trial at all, justice becomes the victim.
According to Mr. Sibal, learned counsel appearing for
the appellant Zahira, the High Court has not considered the
stand taken by the appellant and the State of Gujarat in the
proper perspective. Essentially, two contentions were raised
by the State before the High Court, in addition to the
application filed by the appellant-Zahira highlighting
certain serious infirmities in the entire exercise
undertaken. The State had made prayers for acceptance of
certain evidence under Section 391 of the Code read with
Section 311 of the Code. So far as the acceptance of
additional evidence is concerned, the same related to
affidavits filed by some injured witnesses who on account of
circumstances indicated in the affidavits were forced not to
tell the truth before the trial Court, making justice a
casualty. The affidavits in essence also highlighted the
atmosphere that prevailed in the trial Court. The affidavits
in fact were not intended to be used as the evidence. A
prayer was made that the witnesses who had filed affidavits
before this Court should be examined, so that the truth can
be brought on record. The High Court surprisingly accepted
the extreme stand of learned counsel for the accused persons
that under Section 386 of the Code the Court can only peruse
the record of the case brought before it in terms of Section
385(2) of the Code and the appeal has to be decided on the
basis of such record only and no other record can be
entertained or taken into consideration while deciding the
appeal. It was the stand of learned counsel for the accused
before the High Court that by an indirect method certain
materials were sought to be brought on record which should
not be permitted. The High Court while belittling and
glossing over the serious infirmities and pitfalls in the
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investigation as well as trial readily accepted the said
stand and held that an attempt was being made to bring on
record the affidavits by an indirect method, though they
were not part of the record of the trial Court. It further
held that no one including the State can be allowed to take
advantage of its own wrong and thereby make capricious
exercise of powers in favour of the prosecution to fill in
the lacuna, overlooking completely the obligation cast on
the Courts also to ensure that the truth should not become a
casualty and substantial justice is not denied to victims as
well. With reference to these conclusions it was submitted
that the High Court did not keep in view the true scope and
ambit of Section 391 as also the need or desirability to
resort to Section 311 of the Code and virtually rendered
the provisions otiose by nullifying the very object behind
those provisions. The conclusion that the appeal can be
decided only on the basis of records brought before the High
Court in terms of Section 385(2) would render Section 391 of
the Code and other allied powers conferred upon Courts to
render justice completely nugatory.
Further, after having held that the affidavits were not
to be taken on record, the High Court has recorded findings
regarding contents of those affidavits, and has held that
the affidavits are not truthful and false. Unfortunately,
the High Court has gone to the extent of saying that the
appellant-Zahira has been used by some persons with oblique
motives. The witnesses who filed affidavits have been termed
to be of unsound mind, untruthful and capable of being
manipulated, without any material or reasonable and concrete
basis to support such conclusions. In any event, the logic
applied by the High Court to discard the affidavits of
Zahira and others that they have fallen subsequently into
the hands of some who remained behind the curtain, can be
equally applied to accept the plea that accused or persons
acting at their behest only had created fear on the earlier
occasion before deposing in Court by threats, in the minds
of Zahira and others. After having clearly concluded that
the investigation was faulty and there were serious doubts
about the genuineness of the investigation, it would have
been proper for the High Court to accept the prayer made for
additional evidence and/or re-trial. Abrupt conclusions
drawn about false implication not only cannot stand the test
of scrutiny but also lack judicious approach and objective
consideration, as is expected of a Court.
Section 391 of the Code is intended to sub-serve the
ends of justice by arriving at the truth and there is no
question of filling of any lacuna in the case on hand. The
provision though a discretionary one is hedged with the
condition about the requirement to record reasons. All these
aspects have been lost sight of and the judgment, therefore,
is indefensible. It was submitted that this is a fit case
where the prayer for retrial as a sequel to acceptance of
additional evidence should be directed. Though, the re-trial
is not the only result flowing from acceptance of additional
evidence, in view of the peculiar circumstances of the case,
the proper course would be to direct acceptance of
additional evidence and in the fitness of things also order
for a re-trial on the basis of the additional evidence.
It was submitted by the appellants that in view of the
atmosphere in which the case was tried originally there
should be a direction for a trial outside the State in case
this Court thinks it so appropriate to direct, and evidence
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could be recorded by video conferencing so that a hostile
atmosphere can be avoided. It is further submitted that the
fresh investigation should be directed as investigation
already conducted was not done in a fair manner and the
prosecutor did not act fairly. If the State’s machinery
fails to protect citizen’s life, liberties and property and
the investigation is conducted in a manner to help the
accused persons, it is but appropriate that this Court
should step in to prevent undue miscarriage of justice that
is perpetrated upon the victims and their family members.
Mr. Rohtagi, learned Additional Solicitor General
appearing for the State of Gujarat in the appeal filed by it
submitted that the application under consideration of the
High Court was in terms of Section 311 and Section 391 of
the Code. Though the nomenclature is really not material,
the prayer was to permit the affidavits to be brought on
record, admit and take additional evidence of the persons
filing the affidavits by calling/re-calling them in addition
to certain directions for re-trial if the High Court felt it
to be so necessary after considering the additional
evidence. Though there was no challenge to Zahira’s locus
standi to file an appeal, it is submitted that prayer for
re-hearing by another High Court and/or for trial outside
the State cannot be countenanced and it is nobody’s case
that the Courts in Gujarat cannot do complete justice and
such moves do not serve anybody’s purpose.
There is no proper reason indicated by the High Court
to refuse to take on record the affidavits and the only
inferable reason as it appears i.e. that the affidavits were
also filed in this Court in another proceeding is no reason
in the eye of law. Admissibility of material is one thing
and what is its worth is another thing and relates to
acceptability of the evidence. Since they were relevant,
being filed by alleged eye-witnesses, there was no basis for
the High Court to discard them. Even if the appellant-Zahira
has taken different stands as concluded by the High Court,
it was obligatory for the Court to find out as to what is
the correct stand and real truth which could have been
decided and examined by accepting the prayer for additional
evidence. The High Court has, without any material or
sufficient basis, come to hold that the FIR was manipulated,
and the fax message referred to by the State could also have
been manipulated. There is no basis for coming to such a
conclusion. There was no material before the trial Court to
conclude that the FIR was lodged by one Rahish Khan, though
the statement of appellant-Zahira was anterior in point of
time. The stand of the State was that it was relying on
Zahira’s version to be the FIR. The State had filed the
application for acceptance of additional evidence as it was
of the view that the FIR registered on the basis of Zahira’s
statement was an authentic one and no evidence aliunde was
necessary. In the absence of even any material the abrupt
conclusion about manipulation and the other conclusions of
the High Court are perverse and also contradictory in the
sense that after having said that affidavits were not to be
brought on record it went on to label it as not truthful.
The High Court should not have thrown out the application as
well as the materials sought to be brought on record even at
the threshold and yet gone on to surmise on reasons, at the
same time, professing to decide on its correctness.
The stands taken before the High Court to justify
acceptance of additional evidence and directions for retrial
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were re-iterated.
Mr. Sushil Kumar, learned senior counsel for the
accused submitted that it is not correct to say that
application under Section 391 of the Code was not admitted.
It was in fact admitted and rejected on merits. It is also
not correct to say that the investigation was perfunctory.
The affidavits sought to be brought on record were
considered on their own merits. While Zahira’s prayer was
for fresh investigation, the State’s appeal in essence was
for fresh trial. The four persons whose affidavits were
pressed into service were PWs 1, 6, 47 and 48. They were
examined as PWs and there was no new evidence. There can be
no re-examination on the pretext used by the State for re-
trial. The original appeal filed by the State was Appeal no.
956 of 2003. There was first an amendment in September 2003,
and finally in December 2003. The stand got changed from
time to time. What essentially was urged or sought for,
related to fresh trial on the ground that investigation was
not fair. The stand taken by the State in its appeal is also
contrary to evidence on record. Though one of the grounds
seeking fresh trial was the alleged deficiencies of the
public prosecutor in conducting the trial and for not
bringing on record the contradictions with reference to the
statements recorded during investigation, in fact it has
been done. There was nothing wrong in treating statement of
Rahish Khan as the FIR. The High Court has rightly concluded
that Zahira’s statement was manipulated as if she had given
information at the first point of time which is belied by
the fact that it reached the concerned Court after three
days. The High Court after analysing the evidence has
correctly come to the conclusion that the police manipulated
in getting false witnesses to rope in wrong people as the
accused. Irrelevant and out of context submissions are said
to have been made, and grounds taken and reliefs sought for
by Zahira in her appeal.
Mr. KTS Tulsi, learned senior counsel also appearing
for the accused persons in the appeal filed by the State
submitted that in Section 311 the key words are "if his
evidence appears to it to be essential to the just decision
of the case". Therefore, the Court must be satisfied that
the additional evidence is necessary and it is not possible
to arrive at a just conclusion on the basis of the records.
For that purpose it has to apply its mind to the evidence
already on record and thereafter decide whether it feels any
additional evidence to be necessary. For that purpose, the
Court has to come to a prima facie conclusion that an appeal
cannot be decided on the basis of materials existing on
record. Therefore, before dealing with an application under
Section 391 the Court has to analyse the evidence already
existing. Since the High Court in the instant case has
analysed the evidence threadbare and come to the conclusion
that the trial was fair and satisfactory and a positive
conclusion has been arrived at after analysing the evidence,
the question of pressing into service Section 391 of the
Code does not arise.
In essence three points were urged by Mr. Tulsi. They
are as follows:
For the purpose of exercise of power under Section 391
of the Code, the Court has to come to a conclusion about the
necessity for additional evidence which only could be done
after examining evidence on record. In other words the Court
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must arrive at a conclusion that the existing material is
insufficient for the purpose of arriving at a just decision.
The High Court has undertaken an elaborate exercise for
the purpose of arriving at the conclusion as to whether
additional evidence was necessary after examining every
relevant aspect. It has come to a definite conclusion that
the trial of the case was fair, satisfactory and neither any
illegalities were committed nor any evidence was wrongly
accepted or rejected. The extraneous factors have been kept
out of consideration as these may have influenced the
witnesses in changing their evidence and giving a go by to
substantive evidence tendered in Court. A need for giving
finality to trial in criminal proceedings is paramount as
otherwise prejudice is caused to the accused persons and in
fact it would be a negation of the fundamental rule of law
to make the accused to undergo trial once over which has the
effect of derailing system of justice. Elaborating the
points it is submitted that if the Court feels that
additional evidence is not necessary after analysing the
existing evidence and the nature of materials sought to be
brought in, it cannot be said that the Court has acted in a
manner contrary to law. In fact, the High Court has felt
that extraneous materials are now sought to be introduced
and it is not known as to whether the present statement of
the witnesses is correct or what was stated before the trial
Court originally was the truth. The Court analysed the
evidence of the material witnesses and noticed several
relevant factors to arrive at this conclusion. The necessity
and need for additional evidence has to be determined in the
context of the need for a just decision and it cannot be
used for filling up a lacuna. Reference is made to the
decisions of this Court in Jamatraj Kewalji Govani v. The
State of Maharashtra (1967 (3) SCR 415) and Mohanlal Shamji
Soni v. Union of India and Another (1991 Supp (1) SCC 271).
The High Court has also come to definite conclusion that the
submissions of the State and the Sahera cannot be accepted
because non-examination of certain persons was on account of
the circumstances indicated by the trial Court and that
conclusion has been arrived at after analysing the factual
background. There is no guarantee, as rightly observed by
the High Court, that the subsequent affidavits are true. On
the contrary, in the absence of any contemporary grievance
having been made before the Court about any pressure or
threat, the affidavits and the claims now sought to be made
have been rightly discarded.
Right from the inception of the judicial system it has
been accepted that discovery, vindication and establishment
of truth are the main purposes underlying existence of
Courts of justice. The operating principles for a fair trial
permeate the common law in both civil and criminal contexts.
Application of these principles involve a delicate judicial
balancing of competing interests in a criminal trial, the
interests of the accused and the public and to a great
extent that of the victim have to be weighed not losing
sight of the public interest involved in the prosecution of
persons who commit offences.
In 1846, in a judgment which Lord Chancellor Selborne
would later describe as "one of the ablest judgments of one
of the ablest judges who ever sat in this court". Vice-
Chancellor Knight Bruce said:
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"The discovery and vindication and
establishment of truth are main purposes
certainly of the existence of Courts of
Justice; still, for the obtaining of
these objects, which, however valuable
and important, cannot be usefully
pursued without moderation, cannot be
either usefully or creditably pursued
unfairly or gained by unfair means, not
every channel is or ought to be open to
them. The practical inefficacy of
torture is not, I suppose, the most
weighty objection to that mode of
examination.. Truth, like all other good
things, may be loved unwisely - may be
pursued too keenly - may cost too
much."
The Vice-Chancellor went on to refer to paying "too great a
price... for truth". This is a formulation which has
subsequently been frequently invoked, including by Sir
Gerard Brennan. On another occasion, in a joint judgment of
the High Court, a more expansive formulation of the
proposition was advanced in the following terms: "The
evidence has been obtained at a price which is unacceptable
having regard to prevailing community standards."
Restraints on the processes for determining the truth
are multi-faceted. They have emerged in numerous different
ways, at different times and affect different areas of the
conduct of legal proceedings. By the traditional common law
method of induction there has emerged in our jurisprudence
the principle of a fair trial. Oliver Wendell Holmes
described the process:
"It is the merit of the common law that
it decides the case first and determines
the principle afterwards ... It is only
after a series of determination on the
same subject-matter, that it becomes
necessary to "reconcile the cases", as
it s called, that is, by a true
induction to state the principle which
has until then been obscurely felt. And
this statement is often modified more
than once by new decisions before the
abstracted general rule takes its final
shape. A well settled legal doctrine
embodies the work of many minds, and has
been tested in form as well as substance
by trained critics whose practical
interest is to resist it at every
step."
The principle of fair trial now informs and energises
many areas of the law. It is reflected in numerous rules and
practices. It is a constant, ongoing development process
continually adapted to new and changing circumstances, and
exigencies of the situation - peculiar at times and related
to the nature of crime, persons involved - directly or
operating behind, social impact and societal needs and even
so many powerful balancing factors which may come in the way
of administration of criminal justice system.
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As will presently appear, the principle of a fair trial
manifests itself in virtually every aspect of our practice
and procedure, including the laws of evidence. There is,
however, an overriding and, perhaps, unifying principle. As
Deane J put it:
"It is desirable that the requirement
of fairness be separately identified
since it transcends the content of more
particularized legal rules and
principles and provides the ultimate
rationale and touchstone of the rules
and practices which the common law
requires to be observed in the
administration of the substantive
criminal law".
This Court has often emphasised that in a criminal case
the fate of the proceedings cannot always be left entirely
in the hands of the parties, crimes being public wrongs in
breach and violation of public rights and duties, which
affect the whole community as a community and harmful to the
society in general. The concept of fair trial entails
familiar triangulation of interests of the accused, the
victim and the society and it is the community that acts
through the State and prosecuting agencies. Interests of
society is not to be treated completely with disdain and as
persona non grata. Courts have always been considered to
have an over-riding duty to maintain public confidence in
the administration of justice - often referred to as the
duty to vindicate and uphold the ’majesty of the law’. Due
administration of justice has always been viewed as a
continuous process, not confined to determination of the
particular case, protecting its ability to function as a
Court of law in the future as in the case before it. If a
criminal Court is to be an effective instrument in
dispensing justice, the Presiding Judge must cease to be a
spectator and a mere recording machine by becoming a
participant in the trial evincing intelligence, active
interest and elicit all relevant materials necessary for
reaching the correct conclusion, to find out the truth, and
administer justice with fairness and impartiality both to
the parties and to the community it serves. Courts
administering criminal justice cannot turn a blind eye to
vexatious or oppressive conduct that has occurred in
relation to proceedings, even if a fair trial is still
possible, except at the risk of undermining the fair name
and standing of the judges as impartial and independent
adjudicators.
The principles of rule of law and due process are
closely linked with human rights protection. Such rights can
be protected effectively when a citizen has recourse to the
Courts of law. It has to be unmistakably understood that a
trial which is primarily aimed at ascertaining truth has to
be fair to all concerned. There can be no analytical, all
comprehensive or exhaustive definition of the concept of a
fair trial, and it may have to be determined in seemingly
infinite variety of actual situations with the ultimate
object in mind viz. whether something that was done or said
either before or at the trial deprived the quality of
fairness to a degree where a miscarriage of justice has
resulted. It will not be correct to say that it is only the
accused who must be fairly dealt with. That would be turning
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Nelson’s eyes to the needs of the society at large and the
victims or their family members and relatives. Each one has
an inbuilt right to be dealt with fairly in a criminal
trial. Denial of a fair trial is as much injustice to the
accused as is to the victim and the society. Fair trial
obviously would mean a trial before an impartial Judge, a
fair prosecutor and atmosphere of judicial calm. Fair trial
means a trial in which bias or prejudice for or against the
accused, the witnesses, or the cause which is being tried is
eliminated. If the witnesses get threatened or are forced to
give false evidence that also would not result in a fair
trial. The failure to hear material witnesses is certainly
denial of fair trial.
While dealing with the claims for the transfer of a
case under Section 406 of the Code from one State to another
this Court in Mrs. Maneka Sanjay Gandhi and Anr. v. Ms. Rani
Jethmalani (1979 (4) SCC 167), emphasised the necessity to
ensure fair trial, observing as hereunder:
"Assurance of a fair trial is the first
imperative of the dispensation of justice and
the central criterion for the court to
consider when a motion for transfer is made
is not the hypersensitivity or relative
convenience of a party or easy availability
of legal services or like mini-grievances.
Something more substantial, more compelling,
more imperilling, from the point of view of
public justice and its attendant environment,
is necessitous if the Court is to exercise
its power of transfer. This is the cardinal
principle although the circumstances may be
myriad and vary from case to case. We have to
test the petitioner’s grounds on this
touchstone bearing in mind the rule that
normally the complainant has the right to
choose any court having jurisdiction and the
accused cannot dictate where the case against
him should be tried. Even so, the process of
justice should not harass the parties and
from that angle the court may weigh the
circumstances.
A more serious ground which disturbs us
in more ways than one is the alleged absence
of congenial atmosphere for a fair and
impartial trial. It is becoming a frequent
phenomenon in our country that court
proceedings are being disturbed by rude
hoodlums and unruly crowds, jostling, jeering
or cheering and disrupting the judicial
hearing with menaces, noises and worse. This
tendency of toughs and street roughs to
violate the serenity of court is obstructive
of the course of justice and must surely be
stamped out. Likewise, the safety of the
person of an accused or complainant is an
essential condition for participation in a
trial and where that is put in peril by
commotion, tumult or threat on account of
pathological conditions prevalent in a
particular venue, the request for a transfer
may not be dismissed summarily. It causes
disquiet and concern to a court of justice if
a person seeking justice is unable to appear,
present one’s case, bring one’s witnesses or
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adduce evidence. Indeed, it is the duty of
the court to assure propitious conditions
which conduce to comparative tranquility at
the trial. Turbulent conditions putting the
accused’s life in danger or creating chaos
inside the court hall may jettison public
justice. If this vice is peculiar to a
particular place and is persistent the
transfer of the case from that place may
become necessary. Likewise, if there is
general consternation or atmosphere of
tension or raging masses of people in the
entire region taking sides and polluting the
climate, vitiating the necessary neutrality
to hold detached judicial trial, the
situation may be said to have deteriorated to
such an extent as to warrant transfer. In a
decision cited by the counsel for the
petitioner, Bose, J., observed :
.... But we do feel that good
grounds for transfer from
Jashpurnagar are made out because
of the bitterness of local communal
feeling and the tenseness of the
atmosphere there. Public confidence
in the fairness of a trial held in
such an atmosphere would be
seriously undermined, particularly
among reasonable Christians all
over India not because the Judge
was unfair or biased but because
the machinery of justice is not
geared to work in the midst of such
conditions. The calm detached
atmosphere of a fair and impartial
judicial trial would be wanting,
and even if justice were done it
would not be "seen to be done". (G.
X. Francis v. Banke Behari Singh,
AIR 1958 SC 309)
Accepting this perspective we must
approach the facts of the present case
without excitement, exaggeration or eclipse
of a sense of proportion. It may be true that
the petitioner attracts a crowd in Bombay.
Indeed, it is true of many controversial
figures in public life that their presence in
a public place gathers partisans for and
against, leading to cries and catcalls or
’jais’ or ’zindabads’. Nor is it unnatural
that some persons may have acquired, for a
time a certain quality of reputation,
sometimes notoriety, sometimes glory, which
may make them the cynosure of popular
attention when they appear in cities even in
a court. And when unkempt crowds press into a
court hall it is possible that some pushing,
some nudging, some brash ogling or angry
staring may occur in the rough and tumble
resulting in ruffled feelings for the victim.
This is a far cry from saying that the peace
inside the court has broken down, that calm
inside the court is beyond restoration, that
a tranquil atmosphere for holding the trial
is beyond accomplishment or that operational
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freedom for judge, parties, advocates and
witnesses has creased to exist. None of the
allegations made by the petitioner, read in
the pragmatic light of the counter-averments
of the respondent and understood
realistically, makes the contention of the
counsel credible that a fair trial is
impossible. Perhaps, there was some rough
weather but it subsided, and it was a storm
in the tea cup or transient tension to
exaggerate which is unwarranted. The
petitioner’s case of great insecurity or
molestation to the point of threat to life
is, so far as the record bears out, difficult
to accept. The mere word of an interested
party is insufficient to convince us that she
is in jeopardy or the court may not be able
to conduct the case under conditions of
detachment, neutrality or uninterrupted
progress. We are disinclined to stampede
ourselves into conceding a transfer of the
case on this score, as things stand now.
Nevertheless, we cannot view with
unconcern the potentiality of a flare up and
the challenge to a fair trial, in the sense
of a satisfactory participation by the
accused in the proceedings against her. Mob
action may throw out of gear the wheels of
the judicial process. Engineered fury may
paralyse a party’s ability to present his
case or participate in the trial. If the
justice system grinds to a halt through
physical manoeuvres or sound and fury of the
senseless populace the rule of law runs
aground. Even the most hated human anathema
has a right to be heard without the rage of
ruffians or huff of toughs being turned
against him to unnerve him as party or
witness or advocate. Physical violence to a
party, actual or imminent, is reprehensible
when he seeks justice before a tribunal.
Manageable solutions must not sweep this
Court off its feet into granting an easy
transfer but uncontrollable or perilous
deterioration will surely persuade us to
shift the venue. It depends. The frequency of
mobbing manoeuvres in court precincts is a
bad omen for social justice in its wider
connotation. We, therefore, think it
necessary to make a few cautionary
observations which will be sufficient, as we
see at present, to protect the petitioner and
ensure for her a fair trial.
A criminal trial is a judicial examination of the
issues in the case and its purpose is to arrive at a
judgment on an issue as a fact or relevant facts which may
lead to the discovery of the fact issue and obtain proof of
such facts at which the prosecution and the accused have
arrived by their pleadings; the controlling question being
the guilt or innocence of the accused. Since the object is
to mete out justice and to convict the guilty and protect
the innocent, the trial should be a search for the truth and
not a bout over technicalities, and must be conducted under
such rules as will protect the innocent, and punish the
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guilty. The proof of charge which has to be beyond
reasonable doubt must depend upon judicial evaluation of the
totality of the evidence, oral and circumstantial and not by
an isolated scrutiny.
Failure to accord fair hearing either to the accused or
the prosecution violates even minimum standards of due
process of law. It is inherent in the concept of due process
of law, that condemnation should be rendered only after the
trial in which the hearing is a real one, not sham or a mere
farce and pretence. Since the fair hearing requires an
opportunity to preserve the process, it may be vitiated and
violated by an overhasty stage-managed, tailored and
partisan trial.
The fair trial for a criminal offence consists not only
in technical observance of the frame and forms of law, but
also in recognition and just application of its principles
in substance, to find out the truth and prevent miscarriage
of justice.
"Witnesses" as Benthem said: are the eyes and ears of
justice. Hence, the importance and primacy of the quality of
trial process. If the witness himself is incapacitated from
acting as eyes and ears of justice, the trial gets putrefied
and paralysed, and it no longer can constitute a fair trial.
The incapacitation may be due to several factors like the
witness being not in a position for reasons beyond control
to speak the truth in the Court or due to negligence or
ignorance or some corrupt collusion. Time has become ripe to
act on account of numerous experiences faced by Courts on
account of frequent turning of witnesses as hostile, either
due to threats, coercion, lures and monetary considerations
at the instance of those in power, their henchmen and
hirelings, political clouts and patronage and innumerable
other corrupt practices ingenuously adopted to smoother and
stifle truth and realities coming out to surface rendering
truth and justice, to become ultimate casualties. Broader
public and societal interests require that the victims of
the crime who are not ordinarily parties to prosecution and
the interests of State represented by their prosecuting
agencies do not suffer even in slow process but irreversibly
and irretrievably, which if allowed would undermine and
destroy public confidence in the administration of justice,
which may ultimately pave way for anarchy, oppression and
injustice resulting in complete breakdown and collapse of
the edifice of rule of law, enshrined and jealously guarded
and protected by the Constitution. There comes the need for
protecting the witness. Time has come when serious and
undiluted thoughts are to be bestowed for protecting
witnesses so that ultimate truth is presented before the
Court and justice triumphs and that the trial is not reduced
to mockery. The State has a definite role to play in
protecting the witnesses, to start with at least in
sensitive cases involving those in power, who has political
patronage and could wield muscle and money power, to avert
trial getting tainted and derailed and truth becoming a
casualty. As a protector of its citizens it has to ensure
that during a trial in Court the witness could safely depose
truth without any fear of being haunted by those against
whom he has deposed. Some legislative enactments like the
Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987
(in short the ’TADA Act’) have taken note of the reluctance
shown by witnesses to depose against dangerous criminals-
terrorists. In a milder form also the reluctance and the
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hesitation of witnesses to depose against people with muscle
power, money power or political power has become the order
of the day. If ultimately truth is to be arrived at, the
eyes and ears of justice have to be protected so that the
interests of justice do not get incapacitated in the sense
of making the proceedings before Courts mere mock trials as
are usually seen in movies.
Legislative measures to emphasise prohibition against
tampering with witness, victim or informant have become the
imminent and inevitable need of the day. Conducts which
illegitimately affect the presentation of evidence in
proceedings before the Courts have to be seriously and
sternly dealt with. There should not be any undue anxiety to
only protect the interest of the accused. That would be
unfair as noted above to the needs of the society. On the
contrary, the efforts should be to ensure fair trial where
the accused and the prosecution both get a fair deal. Public
interest in the proper administration of justice must be
given as much importance if not more, as the interests of
the individual accused. In this courts have a vital role to
play.
The Courts have to take a participatory role in a
trial. They are not expected to be tape recorders to record
whatever is being stated by the witnesses. Section 311 of
the Code and Section 165 of the Evidence Act confer vast and
wide powers on Presiding Officers of Court to elicit all
necessary materials by playing an active role in the
evidence collecting process. They have to monitor the
proceedings in aid of justice in a manner that something,
which is not relevant, is not unnecessarily brought into
record. Even if the prosecutor is remiss in some ways, it
can control the proceedings effectively so that ultimate
objective i.e. truth is arrived at. This becomes more
necessary where the Court has reasons to believe that the
prosecuting agency or the prosecutor is not acting in the
requisite manner. The Court cannot afford to be wishfully or
pretend to be blissfully ignorant or oblivious to such
serious pitfalls or dereliction of duty on the part of the
prosecuting agency. The prosecutor who does not act fairly
and acts more like a counsel for the defence is a liability
to the fair judicial system, and Courts could not also play
into the hands of such prosecuting agency showing
indifference or adopting an attitude of total aloofness.
The power of the Court under Section 165 of the
Evidence Act is in a way complementary to its power under
Section 311 of the Code. The section consists of two parts
i.e (i) giving a discretion to the Court to examine the
witness at any stage and (ii) the mandatory portion which
compels the Court to examine a witness if his evidence
appears to be essential to the just decision of the Court.
Though the discretion given to the Court is very wide, the
very width requires a corresponding caution. In Mohan Lal v.
Union of India (1991 Supp (1) SCC 271) this Court has
observed, while considering the scope and ambit of Section
311, that the very usage of the word such as, ’any Court’
’at any stage’, or ’any enquiry or trial or other
proceedings’ ’any person’ and ’any such person’ clearly
spells out that the Section has expressed in the widest
possible terms and do not limit the discretion of the Court
in any way. However, as noted above, the very width requires
a corresponding caution that the discretionary powers should
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be invoked as the exigencies of justice require and
exercised judicially with circumspection and consistently
with the provisions of the Code. The second part of the
section does not allow any discretion but obligates and
binds the Court to take necessary steps if the fresh
evidence to be obtained is essential to the just decision of
the case - ’essential’, to an active and alert mind and not
to one which is bent to abandon or abdicate. Object of the
Section is to enable the Court to arrive at the truth
irrespective of the fact that the prosecution or the defence
has failed to produce some evidence which is necessary for a
just and proper disposal of the case. The power is exercised
and the evidence is examined neither to help the prosecution
nor the defence, if the Court feels that there is necessity
to act in terms of Section 311 but only to subserve the
cause of justice and public interest. It is done with an
object of getting the evidence in aid of a just decision and
to uphold the truth.
It is not that in every case where the witness who had
given evidence before Court wants to change his mind and is
prepared to speak differently, that the Court concerned
should readily accede to such request by lending its
assistance. If the witness who deposed one way earlier comes
before the appellate Court with a prayer that he is prepared
to give evidence which is materially different from what he
has given earlier at the trial with the reasons for the
earlier lapse, the Court can consider the genuineness of the
prayer in the context as to whether the party concerned had
a fair opportunity to speak the truth earlier and in an
appropriate case accept it. It is not that the power is to
be exercised in a routine manner, but being an exception to
the ordinary rule of disposal of appeal on the basis of
records received in exceptional cases or extraordinary
situation the Court can neither feel powerless nor abdicate
its duty to arrive at the truth and satisfy the ends of
justice. The Court can certainly be guided by the metaphor,
separate the grain from the chaff, and in a case which has
telltale imprint of reasonableness and genuineness in the
prayer, the same has to be accepted, at least to consider
the worth, credibility and the acceptability of the same on
merits of the material sought to be brought in.
Ultimately, as noted above, ad nauseam the duty of the
Court is to arrive at the truth and subserve the ends of
justice. Section 311 of the Code does not confer any party
any right to examine, cross-examine and re-examine any
witness. This is a power given to the Court not to be merely
exercised at the bidding of any one party/person but the
powers conferred and discretion vested are to prevent any
irretrievable or immeasurable damage to the cause of
society, public interest and miscarriage of justice.
Recourse may be had by Courts to power under this section
only for the purpose of discovering relevant facts or
obtaining proper proof of such facts as are necessary to
arrive at a just decision in the case.
Section 391 of the Code is another salutary provision
which clothes the Courts with the power to effectively
decide an appeal. Though Section 386 envisages the normal
and ordinary manner and method of disposal of an appeal, yet
it does not and cannot be said to exhaustively enumerate the
modes by which alone the Court can deal with an appeal.
Section 391 is one such exception to the ordinary rule and
if the appellate Court considers additional evidence to be
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necessary, the provisions in Section 386 and Section 391
have to be harmoniously considered to enable the appeal to
be considered and disposed of also in the light of the
additional evidence as well. For this purpose it is open to
the appellate Court to call for further evidence before the
appeal is disposed of. The appellate Court can direct the
taking up of further evidence in support of the prosecution;
a fortiori it is open to the Court to direct that the
accused persons may also be given a chance of adducing
further evidence. Section 391 is in the nature of an
exception to the general rule and the powers under it must
also be exercised with great care, specially on behalf of
the prosecution lest the admission of additional evidence
for the prosecution operates in a manner prejudicial to the
defence of the accused. The primary object of Section 391 is
the prevention of guilty man’s escape through some careless
or ignorant proceedings before a Court or vindication of an
innocent person wrongfully accused. Where the Court through
some carelessness or ignorance has omitted to record the
circumstances essential to elucidation of truth, the
exercise of powers under Section 391 is desirable.
The legislative intent in enacting Section 391 appears
to be the empowerment of the appellate court to see that
justice is done between the prosecutor and the persons
prosecuted and if the appellate Court finds that certain
evidence is necessary in order to enable it to give a
correct and proper findings, it would be justified in taking
action under Section 391.
There is no restriction in the wording of Section 391
either as to the nature of the evidence or that it is to be
taken for the prosecution only or that the provisions of the
Section are only to be invoked when formal proof for the
prosecution is necessary. If the appellate Court thinks that
it is necessary in the interest of justice to take
additional evidence it shall do so. There is nothing in the
provision limiting it to cases where there has been merely
some formal defect. The matter is one of the discretion of
the appellate Court. As re-iterated supra the ends of
justice are not satisfied only when the accused in a
criminal case is acquitted. The community acting through the
State and the public prosecutor is also entitled to justice.
The cause of the community deserves equal treatment at the
hands of the Court in the discharge of its judicial
functions.
In Rambhau and Anr. v. State of Maharashtra (2001 (4)
SCC 759) it was held that the object of Section 391 is not
to fill in lacuna, but to subserve the ends of justice. The
Court has to keep these salutary principle in view. Though
wide discretion is conferred on the Court, the same has to
be exercised judicially and the Legislature had put the
safety valve by requiring recording of reasons.
Need for circumspection was dealt with by this Court in
Mohanlal Shamji Soni’s case (supra) and Ram Chander v. State
of Haryana (1981 (3) SCC 191) which dealt with the
corresponding Section 540 of Code of Criminal Procedure,
1898 (in short the ’Old Code’) and also in Jamatraj’s case
(supra). While dealing with Section 311 this Court in
Rajendra Prasad v. Narcotic Cell thr. Its officer in Charge,
Delhi (1999 (6) SCC 110) held as follows:
"It is a common experience in criminal
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courts that defence counsel would raise
objections whenever courts exercise
powers under Section 311 of the Code or
under Section 165 of the Evidence Act,
1872 by saying that the court could not
"fill the lacuna in the prosecution
case". A lacuna in the prosecution is
not to be equated with the fallout of an
oversight committed by a Public
Prosecutor during trial, either in
producing relevant materials or in
eliciting relevant answers from
witnesses. The adage "to err is human"
is the recognition of the possibility of
making mistakes to which humans are
prone. A corollary of any such laches or
mistakes during the conducting of a case
cannot be understood as a lacuna which a
court cannot fill up.
Lacuna in the prosecution must be
understood as the inherent weakness or a
latent wedge in the matrix of the
prosecution case. The advantage of it
should normally go to the accused in the
trial of the case, but an oversight in
the management of the prosecution cannot
be treated as irreparable lacuna. No
party in a trial can be foreclosed from
correcting errors. If proper evidence
was not adduced or a relevant material
was not brought on record due to any
inadvertence, the court should be
magnanimous in permitting such mistakes
to be rectified. After all, function of
the criminal court is administration of
criminal justice and not to count errors
committed by the parties or to find out
and declare who among the parties
performed better".
Whether a retrial under Section 386 or taking up of
additional evidence under Section 391 is the proper
procedure will depend on the facts and circumstances of each
case for which no straight-jacket formula of universal and
invariable application can be formulated.
In the ultimate analysis whether it is a case covered
by Section 386 or Section 391 of the Code the underlying
object which the Court must keep in view is the very reasons
for which the Courts exist i.e. to find out the truth and
dispense justice impartially and ensure also that the very
process of Courts are not employed or utilized in a manner
which give room to unfairness or lend themselves to be used
as instruments of oppression and injustice.
Though justice is depicted to be blind-folded, as
popularly said, it is only a veil not to see who the party
before it is while pronouncing judgment on the cause brought
before it by enforcing law and administer justice and not to
ignore or turn the mind/attention of the Court away from the
truth of the cause or lis before it, in disregard of its
duty to prevent miscarriage of justice. When an ordinary
citizen makes a grievance against the mighty administration,
any indifference, inaction or lethargy shown in protecting
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his right guaranteed in law will tend to paralyse by such
inaction or lethargic action of Courts and erode in stages
faith inbuilt in judicial system ultimately destroying the
very justice delivery system of the country itself. Doing
justice is the paramount consideration and that duty cannot
be abdicated or diluted and diverted by manipulative red
herrings.
The Courts at the expense of repetition we may state,
exist for doing justice to the persons who are affected. The
Trial/First Appellate Courts cannot get swayed by abstract
technicalities and close their eyes to factors which need to
be positively probed and noticed. The Court is not merely to
act as a tape recorder recording evidence, overlooking the
object of trial i.e. to get at the truth. It cannot be
oblivious to the active role to be played for which there is
not only ample scope, but sufficient powers conferred under
the Code. It has a greater duty and responsibility i.e. to
render justice, in a case where the role of the prosecuting
agency itself is put in issue and is said to be hand in
glove with the accused, parading a mock fight and making a
mockery of the criminal justice administration itself.
As pithily stated in Jennison v. Backer (1972 (1) All
E.R. 1006), "The law should not be seen to sit limply,
while those who defy it go free and, those who seek its
protection lose hope". Courts have to ensure that accused
persons are punished and that the might or authority of the
State are not used to shield themselves or their men. It
should be ensured that they do not wield such powers which
under the Constitution has to be held only in trust for the
public and society at large. If deficiency in investigation
or prosecution is visible or can be perceived by lifting the
veil trying to hide the realities or covering the obvious
deficiencies, Courts have to deal with the same with an iron
hand appropriately within the framework of law. It is as
much the duty of the prosecutor as of the Court to ensure
that full and material facts are brought on record so that
there might not be miscarriage of justice. (See Shakila
Abdul Gafar Khan (Smt.) v. Vasant Raghunath Dhoble and Anr.
(2003 (7) SCC 749).
This Court in Vineet Narian v. Union of India (1998
(1) SCC 226) has directed that steps should be taken
immediately for the constitution of able and impartial
agency comprising persons of unimpeachable integrity to
perform functions akin to those of the Director of
Prosecution in England. In the United Kingdom, the Director
of Prosecution was created in 1879. His appointment is by
the Attorney General from amongst the members of the Bar and
he functions under the supervision of Attorney General. The
Director of Prosecution plays a vital role in the
prosecution system. He even administers "Witness Protection
Programmes". Several countries for example Australia,
Canada and USA have even enacted legislation in this regard.
The Witness Protection Programmes are imperative as well as
imminent in the context of alarming rate of somersaults by
witnesses with ulterior motives and purely for personal gain
or fear for security. It would be a welcome step if
something in those lines are done in our country. That would
be a step in the right direction for a fair trial.
Expression of concern merely in words without really the
mind to concretise it by positive action would be not only
useless but also amounts to betrayal of public confidence
and trust imposed.
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Though it was emphasised with great vehemence by Mr.
Sushil Kumar and Mr. KTS Tulsi that the High Court dealt
with the application under Section 391 of the Code in detail
and not perfunctorily as contended by learned counsel for
the appellants; we find that nowhere the High Court has
effectively dealt with the application under Section 391 as
a part of the exercise to deal with and dispose of the
appeal. In fact the High Court dealt with it practically in
one paragraph, i.e. Paragraph 36 of the judgment accepting
the stand of learned counsel for the accused that the
consideration of the appeal has to be limited to the records
sent up under Section 385(2) of the Code for disposal of the
appeal under Section 386. This perception of the powers of
the appellate Court and misgivings as to the manner of
disposal of an appeal per se vitiates the decision rendered
by the High Court. Section 386 of the Code deals with the
manner and disposal of the appeal in the normal or ordinary
course. Section 391 is in the nature of exception to Section
386. As was observed in Rambhau’s case (supra) if the stand
of learned counsel for the accused as was accepted by the
High Court is maintained, it would mean that Section 391 of
the Code would be a dead letter in the statute book. The
necessity for additional evidence arises when the Court
feels that some evidence which ought to have been before it
is not there or that some evidence has been left out or
erroneously brought in. In all cases it cannot be laid down
as a rule of universal application that the Court has to
first find out whether the evidence already on record is
sufficient. The nature and quality of the evidence on record
is also relevant. If the evidence already on record is shown
or found to be tainted, tailored to suit or help a
particular party or side and the real truth has not and
could not have been spoken or brought forth during trial, it
would constitute merely an exercise in futility, if it
considered first whether the evidence already on record is
sufficient to dispose of the appeals. Disposal of appeal
does not mean disposal for statistical purposes but
effective and real disposal to achieve the object of any
trial. The exercise has to be taken up together. It is not
that the Court has to be satisfied that the additional
evidence would be necessary for rendering a verdict
different from what was rendered by the trial Court. In a
given case even after assessing the additional evidence, the
High Court can maintain the verdict of the trial Court and
similarly the High Court on consideration of the additional
evidence can upset the trial Court’s verdict. It all depends
upon the relevance and acceptability of the additional
evidence and its qualitative worth in deciding the guilt or
innocence of the accused.
Merely because the High Court permits additional
evidence to be adduced, it does not necessarily lead to the
conclusion that the judgment of the trial Court was wrong.
That decision has to be arrived at after assessing the
evidence that was before the Trial Court and the additional
evidence permitted to be adduced. The High Court has
observed that question of accepting application for
additional evidence will be dealt with separately, and in
fact dealt with it in a cryptic manner practically in one
paragraph and did not think it necessary to accept the
additional evidence. But at the same time made threadbare
analysis of the affidavits as if it had accepted it as
additional evidence and was testing its acceptability. Even
the conclusions arrived at with reference to those
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affidavits do not appear to be correct and seem to suffer
from apparent judicial obstinacy and avowed determination to
reject it. For example, to brand a person as not truthful
because a different statement was given before the trial
Court unmindful of the earliest statement given during
investigation and the reasons urged for turning hostile
before Court negates the legislative intent and purpose
of incorporating Section 391 in the Code. The question of
admission of evidence initially or as additional evidence
under Section 391 is distinct from the efficacy, reliability
and its acceptability for consideration of claims in the
appeal on merits. It is only after admission, the Court
should consider in each case whether on account of earlier
contradiction before Court and the testimony allowed to be
given as additional evidence, which of them or any one part
or parts of the depositions are creditworthy and acceptable,
after a comparative analysis and consideration of the
probabilities and probative value of the materials for
adjudging the truth. To reject it merely because of
contradiction and that too in a sensitised case like the one
before Court with a horror and terror oriented history of
its own would amount to conspicuous omission and deliberate
dereliction of discharging functions judiciously and with a
justice-orientated mission. In a given case when the Court
is satisfied that for reasons on record the witness had not
stated truthfully before the trial Court and was willing to
speak the truth before it, the power under Section 391 of
the Code is to be exercised. It is to be noted at this stage
that it is not the prosecution which alone can file an
application under Section 391 of the Code. It can also be
done, in an appropriate case by the accused to prove his
innocence. Therefore, any approach without pragmatic
consideration defeats the very purpose for which Section 391
of the Code has been enacted. Certain observations of the
High Court like, that if the accused persons were really
guilty they would not have waited for long to commit
offences or that they would have killed the victims in the
night taking advantage of the darkness and/or that the
accused persons had saved some persons belonging to the
other community were not only immaterial for the purpose of
adjudication of application for additional evidence but such
surmises could have been carefully avoided at least in order
to observe and maintain the judicial calm and detachment
required of the learned Judges in the High Court. The
conclusions of the High Court that 65 to 70 persons
belonging to the attacked community were saved by the
accused or others appears to be based on the evidence of the
relatives of the accused who were surprisingly examined by
prosecution. We shall deal with the propriety of examining
such persons, infra. These aspects could have been, if at
all permissible to be done, considered after accepting the
prayer for additional evidence. It is not known as to what
extent these irrelevant materials have influenced the
ultimate judgment of the High Court, in coming with such a
strong and special plea in favour of a prosecuting agency
which has miserably failed to demonstrate any credibility by
its course of action. The entire approach of the High Court
suffers from serious infirmities, its conclusions lopsided
and lacks proper or judicious application of mind.
Arbitrariness is found writ large on the approach as well as
the conclusions arrived at in the judgment under challenge,
in unreasonably keeping out relevant evidence from being
brought on record.
Right from the beginning, the stand of the appellant-
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Zahira was that the investigating agency was trying to help
the accused persons and so was the public prosecutor. If the
investigation was faulty, it was not the fault of the
victims or the witnesses. If the same was done in a manner
with the object of helping the accused persons as it appears
to be apparent from what has transpired so far, it was an
additional ground just and reasonable as well for accepting
the additional evidence.
In the case of a defective investigation the Court has
to be circumspect in evaluating the evidence and may have to
adopt an active and analytical role to ensure that truth is
found by having recourse to Section 311 or at a later stage
also resorting to Section 391 instead of throwing hands in
the air in despair. It would not be right in acquitting an
accused person solely on account of the defect; to do so
would tantamount to playing into the hands of the
investigating officer if the investigation is designedly
defective. (See Karnel Singh v. State of M.P. (1995 (5) SCC
518).
In Paras Yadav and Ors. v. State of Bihar (1999 (2) SCC
126) it was held that if the lapse or omission is committed
by the investigating agency or because of negligence the
prosecution evidence is required to be examined de hors such
omissions to find out whether the said evidence is reliable
or not. The contaminated conduct of officials should not
stand on the way of Courts getting at the truth by having
recourse to Sections 311, 391 of the Code and Section 165 of
the Evidence Act at the appropriate and relevant stages and
evaluating the entire evidence; otherwise the designed
mischief would be perpetuated with a premium to the
offenders and justice would not only be denied to the
complainant party but also made an ultimate casualty.
As was observed in Ram Bihari Yadav v. State of Bihar
and Ors. (1998 (4) SCC 517) if primacy is given to such
designed or negligent investigation, to the omission or
lapses by perfunctory investigation or omissions, the faith
and confidence of the people would be shaken not only in the
Law enforcing agency but also in the administration of
justice in the hands of Courts. The view was again re-
iterated in Amar Singh v. Balwinder Singh and Ors. (2003 (2)
SCC 518).
It is no doubt true that the accused persons have been
acquitted by the trial Court and the acquittal has been
upheld, but if the acquittal is unmerited and based on
tainted evidence, tailored investigation, unprincipled
prosecutor and perfunctory trial and evidence of
threatened/terrorised witnesses, it is no acquittal in the
eye of law and no sanctity or credibility can be attached
and given to the so-called findings. It seems to be nothing
but a travesty of truth, fraud on legal process and the
resultant decisions of Courts - coram non judis and non est.
There is, therefore, every justification to call for
interference in these appeals.
In a country like us with heterogeneous religions and
multiracial and multilingual society which necessitates
protection against discrimination on the ground of caste or
religion taking lives of persons belonging to one or the
other religion is bound to have dangerous repercussions and
reactive effect on the society at large and may tend to
encourage fissiparous elements to undermine the unity and
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security of the nation on account of internal disturbances.
It strikes at the very root of an orderly society, which the
founding fathers of our Constitution dreamt of.
When the ghastly killings take place in the land of
Mahatama Gandhi it raises a very pertinent question as to
whether some people have become so bankrupt in their
ideology that they have deviated from everything which was
so dear to him. When large number of people including
innocent and helpless children and women are killed in a
diabolic manner it brings disgrace to the entire society.
Criminals have no religion. No religion teaches violence and
cruelty-based religion is no religion at all, but a mere
cloak to usurp power by fanning ill feeling and playing on
feelings aroused thereby. The golden thread passing through
every religion is love and compassion. The fanatics who
spread violence in the name of religion are worse than
terrorists and more dangerous than an alien enemy.
The little drops of humanness which jointly make
humanity a cherished desire of mankind had seemingly dried
up when the perpetrators of the crime had burnt alive
helpless women and innocent children. Was it their fault
that were born in the houses of persons belonging to a
particular community? The still, said music of humanity had
become silent when it was forsaken by those who were
responsible for the killings.
"Little drops of
Water, little grains of sand
Make the mighty ocean
And the pleasant land,
Little deeds of kindness,
Little words of love
Help to make earth happy
Like the heaven above"
Said Julia A.F. Cabney in "Little Things".
If one even cursorily glances through the records of
the case, one gets a feeling that the justice delivery
system was being taken for a ride and literally allowed to
be abused, misused and mutilated by subterfuge. The
investigation appears to be perfunctory and anything but
impartial without any definite object of finding out the
truth and bringing to book those who were responsible for
the crime. The public prosecutor appears to have acted more
as a defence counsel than one whose duty was to present the
truth before the Court. The Court in turn appeared to be a
silent spectator, mute to the manipulations and preferred to
be indifferent to sacrilege being committed to justice. The
role of the State Government also leaves much to be desired.
One gets a feeling that there was really no seriousness in
the State’s approach in assailing the Trial Court’s
judgment. This is clearly indicated by the fact that the
first memorandum of appeal filed was an apology for the
grounds. A second amendment was done, that too after this
Court expressed its unhappiness over the perfunctory manner
in which the appeal was presented and challenge made. That
also was not the end of the matter. There was a subsequent
petition for amendment. All this sadly reflects on the
quality of determination exhibited by the State and the
nature of seriousness shown to pursue the appeal. Criminal
trials should not be reduced to be the mock trials or shadow
boxing or fixed trials. Judicial Criminal Administration
System must be kept clean and beyond the reach of whimsical
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political wills or agendas and properly insulated from
discriminatory standards or yardsticks of the type
prohibited by the mandate of the Constitution.
Those who are responsible for protecting life and
properties and ensuring that investigation is fair and
proper seem to have shown no real anxiety. Large number of
people had lost their lives. Whether the accused persons
were really assailants or not could have been established by
a fair and impartial investigation. The modern day ’Neros’
were looking elsewhere when Best Bakery and innocent
children and helpless women were burning, and were probably
deliberating how the perpetrators of the crime can be saved
or protected. Law and justice become flies in the hands of
these "wanton boys". When fences start to swallow the
crops, no scope will be left for survival of law and order
or truth and justice. Public order as well as public
interest become martyrs and monuments.
In the background of principles underlying Section 311
and Section 391 of the Code and Section 165 of the Evidence
Act it has to be seen as to whether the High Court’s
approach is correct and whether it had acted justly,
reasonably and fairly in placing premiums on the serious
lapses of grave magnitude by the prosecuting agencies and
the Trial Court, as well. There are several infirmities
which are tell tale even to the naked eye of even an
ordinary common man. The High Court has come to a definite
conclusion that the investigation carried out by the police
was dishonest and faulty. That was and should have been per
se sufficient justification to direct a re-trial of the
case. There was no reason for the High Court to come to the
further conclusion of its own about false implication
without concrete basis and that too merely on conjectures.
On the other hand, the possibility of the investigating
agency trying to shield the accused persons keeping in view
the methodology adopted and outturn of events can equally be
not ruled out. When the investigation is dishonest and
faulty, it cannot be only with the purpose of false
implication. It may also be noted at this stage that the
High Court has even gone to the extent of holding that the
FIR was manipulated. There was no basis for such a
presumptive remark or arbitrary conclusion.
The High Court has come to a conclusion that Zahira
seems to have unfortunately for some reasons after the
pronouncement of the judgment fallen into the hands of some
who prefer to remain behind the curtain to come out with the
affidavit alleging threat during trial. It has rejected the
application for adducing additional evidence on the basis of
the affidavit, but has found fault with the affidavit and
hastened to conclude unjustifiably that they are far from
truth by condemning those who were obviously victims. The
question whether they were worthy of credence, and whether
the subsequent stand of the witnesses was correct needed to
be assessed, and adjudged judiciously on objective standards
which are the hallmark of a judicial pronouncement. Such
observations if at all could have been only made after
accepting the prayer for additional evidence. The disclosed
purpose in the State Government’s prayer with reference to
the affidavits was to bring to High Court’s notice the
situation which prevailed during trial and the reasons as to
why the witnesses gave the version as noted by the Trial
Court. Whether the witness had told the truth before the
Trial Court or as stated in the affidavit, were matters for
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assessment of evidence when admitted and tendered and when
the affidavit itself was not tendered as evidence, the
question of analysing it to find fault was not the proper
course to be adopted. The affidavits were filed to emphasise
the need for permitting additional evidence to be taken and
for being considered as the evidence itself. The High Court
has also found that some persons were not present and,
therefore, question of their statement being recorded by the
police did not arise. For coming to this conclusion, the
High Court noted that the statements under Section 161 of
the Code were recorded in Gujarati language though the
witnesses did not know Gujarati. The reasoning is erroneous
for more reasons than one. There was no material before the
High Court for coming to a finding that the persons did not
know Gujarati since there may be a person who could converse
fluently in a language though not a literate to read and
write. Additionally, it is not a requirement in law that the
statement under Section 161 of the Code has to be recorded
in the language known to the person giving the statement.
As a matter of fact, the person giving the statement is not
required to sign the statement as is mandated in Section 162
of the Code. Sub-section (1) of Section 161 of the Code
provides that the competent police officer may examine
orally any person supposed to be acquainted with the facts
and circumstances of the case. Requirement is the
examination by the concerned police officer. Sub-section (3)
is relevant, and it requires the police officer to reduce
into writing any statement made to him in the course of an
examination under this Section; and if he does so, he shall
make a separate and true record of the statement of each
such person whose statement he records. Statement made by a
witness to the police officer during investigation may be
reduced to writing. It is not obligatory on the part of the
police officer to record any statement made to him. He may
do so if he feels it necessary. What is enjoined by the
Section is a truthful disclosure by the person who is
examined. In the above circumstance the conclusion of the
High Court holding that the persons were not present is
untenable. The reasons indicated by the High Court to
justify non-examination of the eye-witnesses is also not
sustainable. In respect of one it has been said that
whereabouts of the witness may not be known. There is
nothing on record to show that the efforts were made by the
prosecution to produce the witness for tendering evidence
and yet the net result was ’untraceable’. In other words,
the evidence which should have been brought before the Court
was not done with any meticulous care or seriousness. It is
true that the prosecution is not bound to examine each and
every person who has been named as witness. A person named
as a witness may be given up when there is material to show
that he has been gained over or that there is no likelihood
of the witness speaking the truth in the Court. There was no
such material brought to the notice of the Courts below to
justify non-examination. The materials on record are totally
silent on this aspect. Another aspect which has been
lightly brushed aside by the High Court is that one person
who was to be examined on a particular date was examined
earlier than the date fixed. This unusual conduct by the
prosecutor should have been seriously taken note of by the
Trial Court and also by the High Court. It is to be noted
that the High Court has found fault with DCP Shri Piyush
Patel and has gone to the extent of saying that he has
miserably failed to discharge his duties; while finding at
the same time that police inspector Baria had acted fairly.
The criticism according to us is uncalled for. Role of
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Public Prosecutor was also not in line with what is expected
of him. Though a Public Prosecutor is not supposed to be a
persecutor, yet the minimum that was required to be done to
fairly present the case of the prosecution was not done.
Time and again, this Court stressed upon the need of the
investigating officer being present during trial unless
compelling reasons exist for a departure. In the instant
case, this does not appear to have been done, and there is
no explanation whatsoever why it was not done. Even Public
Prosecutor does not appear to have taken note of this
desirability. In Shailendra Kumar v. State of Bihar and
Ors. (2001 (8) Supreme 13), it was observed as under:
"In our view, in a murder trial it is sordid
and repulsive matter that without informing
the police station officer-in-charge, the
matters are proceeded by the court and by the
APP and tried to be disposed of as if the
prosecution has not led any evidence. From
the facts stated above, it appears that
accused wants to frustrate the prosecution by
unjustified means and it appears that by one
way or the other the Addl. Sessions Judge as
well as the APP have not taken any interest
in discharge of their duties. It was the
duty of the sessions judge to issue summons
to the investigating officer if he failed to
remain present at the time of trial of the
case. The presence of investigating officer
at the time of trial is must. It is his duty
to keep the witnesses present. If there is
failure on part of any witness to remain
present, it is the duty of the court to take
appropriate action including issuance of
bailable/non-bailable warrants as the case
may be. It should be well understood that
prosecution can not be frustrated by such
methods and victims of the crime cannot be
left in lurch."
A somewhat an unusual mode in contrast to the lapse
committed by non-examining victims and injured witnesses
adopted by the investigating agency and the prosecutor was
examination of six relatives of accused persons. They have
expectedly given a clean chit to the accused and labeled
them as saviors. This unusual procedure was highlighted
before the High Court. But the same was not considered
relevant as there is no legal bar. When we asked Mr.
Rohtagi, learned counsel for the State of Gujarat as to
whether this does not reflect badly on the conduct of
investigating agency and the prosecutor, he submitted that
this was done to show the manner in which the incident had
happened. This is a strange answer. Witnesses are examined
by prosecution to show primarily who is the accused. In this
case it was nobody’s stand that the incident did not take
place. That the conduct of investigating agency and the
prosecutor was not bona fide, is apparent and patent.
So far as non-examination of some injured relatives are
concerned, the High Court has held that in the absence of
any medical report, it appears that they were not present
and, therefore, held that the prosecutor might have decided
not to examine Yasminbanu because there was no injury. This
is nothing but a wishful conclusion based on presumption.
It is true that merely because the affidavit has been filed
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stating that the witnesses were threatened, as a matter of
routine, additional evidence should not be permitted. But
when the circumstances as in this case clearly indicate that
there is some truth or prima facie substance in the
grievance made, having regard to background of events as
happened the appropriate course for the Courts would be to
admit additional evidence for final adjudication so that the
acceptability or otherwise of evidence tendered by way of
additional evidence can be tested properly and legally
tested in the context of probative value of the two
versions. There cannot be straight-jacket formula or rule of
universal application when alone it can be done and when,
not. As the provisions under Section 391 of the Code are by
way of an exception, the Court has to carefully consider the
need for and desirability to accept additional evidence. We
do not think it necessary to highlight all the infirmities
in the judgment of the High Court or the approach of the
Trial Court lest nothing credible or worth mentioning would
remain in the process. This appears to be a case where the
truth has become a casualty in the trial. We are satisfied
that it is fit and proper case, in the background of the
nature of additional evidence sought to be adduced and the
perfunctory manner of trial conducted on the basis of
tainted investigation a re-trial is a must and essentially
called for in order to save and preserve the justice
delivery system unsullied and unscathed by vested interests.
We should not be understood to have held that whenever
additional evidence is accepted, re-trial is a necessary
corollary. The case on hand is without parallel and
comparison to any of the cases where even such grievances
were sought to be made. It stands on its own as an exemplary
one, special of its kind, necessary to prevent its
recurrence. It is normally for the Appellate Court to decide
whether the adjudication itself by taking into account the
additional evidence would be proper or it would be
appropriate to direct a fresh trial, though, on the facts of
this case, the direction for re-trial becomes inevitable.
Prayer was made by learned counsel for the appellant
that the trial should be conducted outside the State so that
the unhealthy atmosphere which led to failure of miscarriage
of justice is not repeated. This prayer has to be
considered in the background and keeping in view the spirit
of Section 406 of the Code. It is one of the salutory
principles of the administration of justice that justice
should not only be done but it should be seen to be done.
However, a mere allegation that there is apprehension that
justice will not be done in a given case or that general
allegations of a surcharged atmosphere against a particular
community alone does not suffice. The Court has to see
whether the apprehension is reasonable or not. The state of
mind of the person who entertains apprehension, no doubt is
a relevant factor but not the only determinative or
concluding factor. But the Court must be fully satisfied
about the existence of such conditions which would render
inevitably impossible the holding of a fair and impartial
trial, uninfluenced by extraneous considerations that may
ultimately undermine the confidence of reasonable and right
thinking citizen, in the justice delivery system. The
apprehension must appear to the Court to be a reasonable
one. This position has been highlighted in Gurcharan Das
Chadha v. State of Rajasthan (1966 (2) SCR 678), and K.
Ambazhagan v. The Superintendent of Police and others etc.
(JT 2003 (9) SC 31).
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Keeping in view the peculiar circumstances of the case,
and the ample evidence on record, glaringly demonstrating
subversion of justice delivery system with no congeal and
conducive atmosphere still prevailing, we direct that the
re-trial shall be done by a Court under the jurisdiction of
Bombay High Court. The Chief Justice of the said High Court
is requested to fix up a Court of Competent jurisdiction.
We direct the State Government to appoint another Public
Prosecutor and it shall be open to the affected persons to
suggest any name which may also be taken into account in the
decision to so appoint. Though the witnesses or the victims
do not have any choice in the normal course to have a say in
the matter of appointment of a Public Prosecutor, in view of
the unusual factors noticed in this case, to accord such
liberties to the complainants party, would be appropriate.
The fees and all other expenses of the public prosecutor
who shall be entitled to assistance of one lawyer of his
choice shall initially be paid by the State of Maharashtra,
who will thereafter be entitled to get the same reimbursed
from the State of Gujarat. The State of Gujarat shall ensure
that all the documents and records are forthwith transferred
to the Court nominated by the Chief Justice of the Bombay
High Court. The State of Gujarat shall also ensure that the
witnesses are produced before the concerned Court whenever
they are required to attend that Court. Necessary protection
shall be afforded to them so that they can depose freely
without any apprehension of threat or coercion from any
person. In case, any witness asks for protection, the State
of Maharashtra shall also provide such protection as deemed
necessary, in addition to the protection to be provided for
by the State of Gujarat. All expenses necessary for the
trial shall be initially borne by the State of Maharashtra,
to be reimbursed by the State of Gujarat.
Since we have directed re-trial it would be desirable
to the investigating agency or those supervising the
investigation, to act in terms of Section 173(8) of the
Code, as the circumstances seem to or may so warrant. The
Director General of Police, Gujarat is directed to monitor
re-investigation, if any, to be taken up with the urgency
and utmost sincerity, as the circumstances warrant.
Sub-section (8) of Section 173 of the Code permits
further investigation, and even de hors any direction from
the Court as such, it is open to the police to conduct
proper investigation, even after the Court took cognizance
of any offence on the strength of a police report earlier
submitted.
Before we part with the case it would be appropriate to
note some disturbing factors. The High Court after hearing
the appeal directed its dismissal on 26.12.2003 indicating
in the order that the reasons were to be subsequently given,
because the Court was closing for winter holidays. This
course was adopted "due to paucity of time". We see no
perceivable reason for the hurry. The accused were not in
custody. Even if they were in custody, the course adopted
was not permissible. This Court has in several cases
deprecated the practice adopted by the High Court in the
present case.
About two decades back this Court in State of Punjab
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v. Jagdev Singe Talwandi (AIR 1984 SC 444) had inter alia
observed as follows :
"We would like to take this
opportunity to point out that serious
difficulties arise on account of the
practice increasingly adopted by the
High Courts of pronouncing the final
order without a reasoned judgment. It
is desirable that the final order which
the High Court intends to pass should
not be announced until a reasoned
judgment is ready for pronouncement.
Suppose, for example, that a final order
without a reasoned judgment is announced
by the High Court that a house shall be
demolished, or that the custody of a
child shall be handed over to one parent
as against the other, or that a person
accused of a serious charge is
acquitted, or that a statute is
unconstitutional or, as in the instant
case, that a detenu be released from
detention. If the object of passing
such orders is to ensure speedy
compliance with them, that object is
more often defeated by the aggrieved
party filing a special leave petition in
this Court against the order passed by
the High Court. That places this Court
in a predicament because, without the
benefit of the reasoning of the High
Court, it is difficult for this Court to
allow the bare order to be implemented.
The result inevitably is that the
operation of the order passed by the
High Court has to be stayed pending
delivery of the reasoned judgment."
It may be thought that such orders are passed by this
Court and, therefore, there is no reason why the High Courts
should not do the same. We would like to point out that the
orders passed by this Court are final and no further appeal
lies against them. The Supreme Court is the final Court in
the hierarchy of our Courts. Orders passed by the High Court
are subject to the appellate jurisdiction of this Court
under Article 136 of the Constitution and other provisions
of the concerned statutes. We thought it necessary to make
these observations so that a practice which is not a very
desirable one and which achieves no useful purpose may not
grow out of and beyond its present infancy. What is still
more baffling is that written arguments of the State were
filed on 29.12.2003 and by the accused persons on 1.1.2004.
A grievance is made that when the petitioner in Criminal
Revision No.583 of 2003 wanted to file notes of arguments
that were not accepted making a departure from the cases of
the State and the accused. If the written arguments were to
be on record, it is not known as to why the High Court
dismissed the appeal. If it had already arrived at a
particular view there was no question of filing written
arguments.
The High Court appears to have miserably failed to
maintain the required judicial balance and sobriety in
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making unwarranted references to personalities and their
legitimate moves before competent courts - the highest court
of the nation, despite knowing fully well that it could not
deal with such aspects or matters. Irresponsible
allegations, suggestions and challenges may be made by
parties, though not permissible or pursued defiantly during
course of arguments at times with the blessings or veiled
support of the Presiding Officers of Court. But, such
besmirching tacts, meant as innuendos or serve as surrogacy
ought not to be made or allowed to be made, to become part
of solemn judgments, of at any rate by High Courts, which
are created as Court of record as well. Decency, decorum and
judicial discipline should never be made casualties by
adopting such intemperate attitudes of judicial obstinacy.
The High Court also made some observations and remarks about
persons/constitutional bodies like NHRC who were not before
it. We had an occasion to deal with this aspect to certain
extent in the appeal relating to SLP (Crl.) Nos. 530-
532/2004. The move adopted and manner of references made, in
para no. 3 of the judgment except the last limb (sub-para)
is not in good taste or decorous. It may be noted that
certain reference is made therein or grievances purportedly
made before the High Court about role of NHRC. When we asked
Mr. Sushil Kumar who purportedly made the submissions before
the High Court, during the course of hearing, he stated that
he had not made any such submission as reflected in the
judgment. This is certainly intriguing. Proceedings of the
court normally reflect the true state of affairs. Even if it
is accepted that any such submission was made, it was not
proper or necessary for the High Court to refer to them in
the judgment, to finally state that no serious note was
taken of the submissions. Avoidance of such manoeuvres would
have augured well with the judicial discipline. We order the
expunging and deletion of the contents of para 3 of the
judgment except the last limb of the sub-para therein and it
shall be always read to have not formed part of the
judgment.
A plea which was emphasised by Mr. Tulsi relates to the
desirability of restraint in publication/exhibition of
details relating to sensitive cases, more particularly
description of alleged accused persons in the
print/electronic/broadcast medias. According to him, "media
trial" causes indelible prejudice to the accused persons.
This is sensitive and complex issue, which we do not think
it proper to deal in detail in these appeals. The same may
be left open for an appropriate case where the media is also
duly and effectively represented.
If the accused persons were not on bail at the time of
conclusion of the trial, they shall go back to custody, if
on the other hand they were on bail that order shall
continue unless modified by the concerned Court. Since we
are directing a re-trial, it would be appropriate if same is
taken up on day-to-day basis keeping in view the mandate of
Section 309 of the Code and completed by the end of December
2004.
The appeals are allowed on the terms and to the extent
indicated above.
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