Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
BAI RADHA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/11/1968
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1396 1969 SCR (2) 799
1969 SCC (1) 43
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 886 (6)
ACT:
Suppression of Immoral Traffic in Women and Girls Act (104
of 1956), ss. 15(1) and (2)--Trial ending in
conviction--Provisions of s. 15 disregarded during
investigation--No prejudice to accused--Effect on trial.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was convicted for offences punishable under
ss. 3(1) and 4(1) of the Suppression of Immoral Traffic in
Women and Girls Act, 1956. The special police officer
conducted a raid on the appellant’s house which was
being kept as a brothel and recovered marked currency
notes from the appellant. He took with him two persons to
witness the search but they were not inhabitants of the
locality as required by s. 15(2) of the Act. After the
search he prepared a document. It did not satisfy the
requirements of s. 15(1) as it did not contain any ground on
which he formed the belief that an offence under the Act
was being committed in the premises and that a search of the
premises with warrant cannot be made without undue delay.
On the question whether the trial was illegal as there was a
violation of s. 15(1) and (2).
HELD: The Act being a special one a search under the Act
must comply with s. 15. Investigating agencies ought not
to disregard the special safeguards such as those in s.
15(1) and (2) provided by the Legislature, but the trial
itself would not be vitiated if there was noncorrosive with
such directions unless thereby some prejudice is caused
to the accused. The court however, has to be very careful
in weighing the evidence where there has been such non-
observance of the provisions. [803 G--H; 805 E-G]
(a) Though the recording of reasons may be a necessary
condition for making a search, jurisdiction to make a
search is not derived therefrom. The power to search is
conferred by statute. Therefore, omission to record
reasons before the search or even thereafter in a proper
way, would not by itself affect the validity of the search.
[803 A-B] State of Rajasthan v. Rehman, [1960] 1 S.C.R.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
991, followed. (b) Under s. 5(2) Criminal Procedure Code,
all proceedings including investigation of offences under
any law, have to be conducted in accordance with the
procedure laid down in the Code except to the extent of
any specific provision contained in a special Act. Under
the Suppression of Immoral Traffic Act there Tim no
provision dealing with the effect of contravention of s.
15. Therefore, the law with regard to the effect of an
irregular search under s. 165 of the Code would apply.
Where a trial has taken p1ace, under s. 537 of the Code a
defect or an illegality in the investigation has no
bearing on the result of the trial unless the irregularity
or illegality is Shown to have brought about a miscarriage
of justice. Since the non-observance of the provisions of
s. 15(2) of the Act in the present case, is a mere
irregularity, the conviction of the appellant could not be
set aside as it was not shown that the irregularity caused
any failure of justice. [804 B--C; 805 B, E, H--806 B]
800
H.N. Rishbud & Inder Singh v. State of Delhi, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 1150 and State of U.P.v. Bhagwati Kishore Joshi,
[1964] 3 S.C.R. 71, followed.
Delhi Administration v. Ram Singh, [1962] 2 S.C.R. 694
and Public Prosecutor, Andhra Pradesh v. U. Nageswararao
A.I.R. 1965 A.P. 176, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.1 (N) of
1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated October 12, 13, 1966 of the Gujarat High Court in
Criminal Appeal No. 390 of 1965.
B. Datta, for the appellant.
H.R. Khanna and B.D. Sharma, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. The sole point which arises for decision in
this appeal by special leave is whether the trial became
illegal by reason of the search not having been conducted
strictly in accordance with the provisions of s. 15 of the
Suppression of Immoral Traffic in Women & Girls Act, 1956
(Act CIV of 1956), hereinafter called the "Act".
The facts need not be stated in detail. The appellant
and two other persons were tried for various offences under
the provisions of the Act, the charge substantially against
her being that she was keeping a brothel in her house and
knowingly lived on the earnings of the prostitution of women
and girls. All the three accused persons were acquitted by
the magistrate. The State preferred an appeal to the High
Court against the appellant and the third accused only. The
High Court set aside the order of acquittal in respect of
the appellant and convicted her for offences punishable
under ss. 3(1) and 4(1) of the Act. She was sentenced to
suffer rigorous imprisonment for one year and to pay a fine
of Rs. 200/-, (in default to suffer further rigorous
imprisonment for six months) and to suffer rigorous
imprisonment for six months on the second count, the
sentences of imprisonment being concurrent.
The prosecution case was that on receiving complaints from
several residents of the locality a raiding party was
organised.The services of a decoy witness Kishan Taumal were
requisitioned and he agreed to work as the punter. After
ascertaining that he had no money he was given Rs. 8/- in
all. That amount included a currency note of Rs. 5/- and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
three currency notes of Re. 1/- each, the numbers of notes
having been noted down in the first part of the panchnama.
The punter was instructed to hand over the amount for the
charges that would have to be
801
paid for having sexual intercourse with any girl or woman in
the appellant’s house. He was, however, only to engage
himself in talk not the actual act. A panch witness Prem
Singh Hiraji was also to accompany the raiding party. The
raid was ultimately made according to the original plan and
Kishan, the punter managed to engage a women in conversation
in a room in the house of the appellant. The raiding party
found that she had opened the buttons of her blouse and she
was found with her clothes in such a disordered condition
that it was apparent that she was getting ready to have
sexual intercourse with Kishan; but on seeing the police
party she got up and dressed herself. The seven currency
notes i.e. one five rupee note and two of one rupee
currency notes were recovered from the appellant which were
marked and had been given by Kishan. Sub-sections (1) & (2)
of s. 15 of the Act provide as follows:
"(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in
any other law for the time being in force,
whenever the special police officer has
reasonable grounds for believing that an
offence punishable under this Act has been or
is being committed in respect of a woman or
girl living in any premises, and that such
search of the premises with warrant cannot be
made without undue delay, such officer may,
after recording the grounds of his belief,
enter and search such premises without a
warrant,
(2) Before making a search under sub-section
(1) the special police officer shall call upon
two or more respectable inhabitants (at least
one of whom shall be a woman) of the locality
in which the place to be searched is situate,
to attend and witness the search, and may
issue an order in writing to them or any of
them so to do."
What has been stressed greatly by learned counsel for the
appellant is that the Act being a special Act its provisions
should have been strictly followed. It is pointed out that
the panch witness Prem Singh was not an inhabitant of the
locality in which the p1ace to be searched was situate.
Another panch witness had also been taken who was a woman
(Bai Shanta) to satisfy the requirement of sub-s. (2) of s.
15 but she also was not an inhabitant of the locality where
the house of the appellant was situate. It has been pointed
out that in Public Prosecutor, Andhra Pradesh v. Uttaravalli
Nageshwararao(1) it was held by Shar fuddin Ahmed J., that
the Act being a special piece of legislation enacted with a
specific purpose all the directions contained in s. 15 were
mandatory. According to the learned judge while the
recording of
(1) A.I.R, 1965 A.p. 176.
802
reasons for proceeding without obtaining the search warrant
might not be done, which was a matter of discretion, so far
as the requisition of the services of the respectable
inhabitants was concerned the direction was mandatory and
the legislature by insisting on the presence of one woman
mediator at the time of search had undoubtedly chosen to
safeguard the interests of the persons with whom the Act was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
intended to deal. In that case the services of a woman
mediator had not been requisitioned at all. The search was
held to be altogether illegal with the result that the
accused person in that case was acquitted and his acquittal
was upheld by the High Court.
In the present case two main defects have been pointed
out in the matter of.search; one is that the special police
Officer Shri Mankad has been found both by the Magistrate’
and the High Court to have prepared the document Ext. 8/A
long after the search. As found by the High Court this
document contained reproduction of s. 15(1) and it hardly
contained any ground on which the police officer had formed
the belief with regard to the matters stated in sub-s.. (1
). The other point which has been pressed on behalf of the
appellant relates to contravention of sub-s. (2) inasmuch as
the panch witnesses were not inhabitants of the locality in
which the appellant’s house was situate. The High Court was
of the view that power to conduct the search was derived
from the statute and not from the recording of reasons and
therefore the search was not rendered illegal, in the
present case, on account of contravention of s. 15(1) of the
Act. On the second point it was held that there was no
provision in law which rendered the evidence of the panch
witnesses inadmissible even though s. 15(2) had been
contravened. The High Court did not agree with the decision
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court that the directions
contained in sub-s. (2) were of a mandatory nature.
Our attention has been drawn to State of Rajasthan v.
Rehman(1) in which a Deputy Superintendent of Central Excise
who had received information that the respondent in that
case had. cultivated tobacco but had not paid the excise
duty, went to search his house. He was obstructed, while
making the search with the result that he fell down and was
injured. The respondent was prosecuted under s. 353. Indian
Penal Code. It was held that s. 165 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure was applicable to such a search and the search
being in contravention of that section it was illegal. The
respondent. therefore had been rightly acquitted In this
case bowever. it was observed that the recording of reasons
under s. 165 did not confer on the officer
[1969] I.S.C.R. 991
803
jurisdiction to make search though it is a necessary
condition for doing so. Jurisdiction or power to make a
search was conferred by the statute and not derived from the
recording of reasons. these observations are sufficient to
dispose of the first point which has been pressed about tile
omission to record the reasons before the search or even
thereafter m a proper way. This case cannot be of much
assistance to the appellant because no question is involved
m tile present case of any public servant having been
obstructed in the course of a search conducted under s. 165
of the Criminal Procedure Code. The trial of the appellant
was for contravention of certain provisions of the Act ann
the search was made in respect of those offences. The trial
having taken place the question of the applicability of s.
537 of the Criminal Procedure Code will at once arise. If
the non-observance of the provisions of s. 15 (2) is not an
illegality but is a mere irregularity then the sentence
cannot be set aside unless it can be shown that such
irregularity has caused failure of justice. As will be
presently seen we are of the opinion that non-compliance
with the directions contained in s. 15(2) in the matter of
search would only be an irregularity and not such an
illegality which will vitiate the trial. The decision in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
Delhi Administration v. Ram Singh(1) which concerned
offences committed under the Act and on which reliance has
been placed on behalf of the appellant involved a different
point. There the police officer who had entered the
premises where the offences were alleged to be committed was
not a special police officer who alone is authorised to do
the various things mentioned in the provisions of the Act.
It was observed that the Act created new offences and
provided for the forum before which they would be tried.
Necessary provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure had
been adopted fully or with modification. As the Act
provided machinery to deal with the offences created the
necessary implication must be that the new machinery was to
deal with those offences in accordance with the provisions
of the special Act. The entire police work in connection
with the purposes of the Act within a. certain area had been
put in the charge of a special police officer. According to
the majority judgment in that case, only the special. police
officer was competent to investigate and as the
investigation had been conducted by a regular police officer
who did not come within the category of a special police
officer the order of the magistrate quashing the charge-
sheet was upheld. This case certainly supports one part of
the submission of the counsel for the appellant that the Act
is a complete Code with respect to what has to be done under
it. In that sense it would be legitimate to say that a
search which is to be conducted under the Act must comply
with the provisions contained in s. 15; but it cannot be
held that if a search is not
(1) [1962] 2 S .C.R. 694.
804
carried out strictly in accordance with the provisions of
that section the trial is rendered illegal. There is hardly
any parallel between an officer conducting a search who has
no authority under the law and a search having been made
which does not strictly conform to the provisions of s. 15
of the Act. The principles which have been settled with
regard to the effect of an irregular search made in exercise
of the powers under s. 165 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
would be fully applicable even to a case under the Act where
the search has not been made in strict compliance with its
provisions. It is significant that there is no provision in
the Act according to which any search carried out in
contravention of s. 15 would render the trial illegal. In
the absence of such a provision we must apply the law which
has been laid down with regard to searches made under the
provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code.
Now in The State of Uttar Pradesh v. Bhagwati Kishore
Joshi(1) this Court had to deal with a case where a booking
clerk was stated to have committed an offence of criminal
breach of trust. A Sub-Inspector of police made some
investigation and submitted a report but this was done
without obtaining the order of a magistrate. Subsequently
the permission of the magistrate was obtained to investigate
into the case as required; by s. 5A of the Prevention of
Corruption Act. After making further investigation he
submitted a charge sheet. The respondent in that case was
tried and convicted under s. 5(2) of that Act. It was held
by this Court (by the majority) that there was a
contravention of s. 5A of the Prevention of Corruption Act
at the first stage of investigation when the requisite
permission of the magistrate had not been obtained but after
the permission had been given there was practically a de
novo. investigation. Therefore the accused not having been
prejudiced by the illegality committed by the police, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
conviction could not be set aside on the ground of mere
irregularity or illegality in the matter of investigation.
The following passage at p. 84 may be usefully reproduced
:--
"The High Court set aside the conviction
on the ground that there was a breach of the
mandatory safeguards of the Act in that the
first stage of the investigation . was
contrary to the provisions of the Act. But it
did not consider the other question whether
the said breach caused prejudice to the
accused in the matter of his trial. In doing
so, the High Court ignored the provisions of
s. 537 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
Having carefully gone through the record for
the reasons aforesaid, we are satisfied that
no such prejudice has
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 71.
805
been caused to the accused. He had a fair
trial ’and had his full say."
It is abundantly clear that s. 537 of the Cr.P.C. would be
applicable to the proceedings in the present, case. Section
5(2) of the Code provides that all offences under the Indian
Penal Code shall be investigated, inquired into, tried and
otherwise dealt with according to the provisions of the
Cr.P.Code. All offences under any other law shall be
similarly investigated etc. according to the same provisions
but subject to any enactment regulating the manner or place
of investigating, inquiring into, trying or otherwise
dealing with such offences. According to s. 22 no court
inferior to that of a magistrate as defined in clause (c) of
s. 2 shall try any offence under ss. 3 to 8 of the Act.
Thus all proceedings ’including investigation had to be
conducted in accordance with the procedure laid down in the
Criminal Procedure Code except to the extent of the specific
provisions contained in the Act. No such provision has been
brought to our notice nor indeed has it been contended that
s. 537 of the Code of Criminal Procedure would not govern
the investigation, inquiry or trial of the offences with
which the appellant was charged. The ratio of the decision
in the case of Bhagwati Kishore Joshi(1) must be followed
and in the absence of any prejudice having been shown by
non-compliance with the provisions of sub-ss. (1) and (2) of
s. 15 of the Act, the order of the High Court must be
upheld.
In conclusion it may be observed that the investigating
agencies cannot and ought not to show complete disregard of
such provisions as are contained in sub-ss. (1) and (2) of
s. 15 of the Act. The legislature in its wisdom provided
special safeguards owing to the nature of the premises which
have to be searched involving inroads on the privacy of
citizens and handling of delicate situations in respect of
females. But the entire proceedings and the trial do not
become illegal and vitiated owing to the non-observance of
or non-compliance with the direction contained in the
aforesaid provisions. The court, however, has to be very
careful and circumspect in weighing the evidence where there
has been such a failure on the part of the investigating
agency but unless and until some prejudice is shown to have
been caused to the accused person or persons the conviction
and the sentence cannot be set aside. It may not be out of
place to reiterate what was said in H.N. Rishbud and Inder
Singh v. The State of Delhi(2), that a defect or an
ii.legality in the investigation, however serious, has no
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
direct bearing on the competency or the procedure relating
to cognizance or trial of an offence and that
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 71.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R, 115 .
4 Sup CI/69 19
806
whenever such a situation arises, s. 537 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure is attracted and unless the irregularity
or the illegality in the investigation or trial can be shown
to have brought about a miscarriage of justice, the result
is not affected.
For the above reasons this appeal fails and it is dismissed.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
807