Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SODHI SUKHDEV SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/11/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 493 1961 SCR (2) 371
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC 395 (10)
D 1964 SC 72 (50)
RF 1964 SC1118 (4,8,9)
F 1964 SC1658 (10)
R 1964 SC1823 (26)
R 1966 SC1164 (14)
RF 1970 SC 214 (14)
RF 1975 SC 865 (17,28,29,30,31,33,42,50,69,76
O 1982 SC 149 (59,61,67,68,69,74,76,848,917,
F 1987 SC 331 (40)
ACT:
Evidence--Production of documents--"Affairs of State",
meaning of--Privileged documents--Scope of--Ministerial
certificate, if and when conclusive--Collateral evidence to
find nature of document--Court’s power--Inspection of
documents--Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of 1908), O. 14,
r. 14, 19(2), O. 14, r. 14--Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of
1872), ss. 123, 162.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent who was a District and Sessions Judge in the
erstwhile State of Pepsu was removed from service on April
7, 1953 by an order passed by the President of India who was
then in charge of the administration of the State. A
representation made by the respondent on May 18, 1955, was
considered by the Council of Ministers of the State as in
the meantime the President’s rule had come to an end, and
its views were expressed in the form of a Resolution dated
September 28, 1955; but before taking any action it invited
the advice of the Public Service Commission. On receipt of
the report of the Public Service Commission, the Council of
Ministers considered the matter again on March 8, 1956, and
its views were recorded in the minutes of the proceedings.
On August 11, 1956, the representation made by the
respondent was considered over again by the Council and a
final conclusion was reached in respect of it. In
accordance with the said conclusion an order was passed
which was communicated to the respondent to the effect that
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he might be re-employed on some suitable post. On May 5,
1958, the respondent instituted a suit against the State of
Punjab for a declaration that the removal of his service on
April 7, 1953, was illegal, and filed an application under
O. 14, r. 4, and O. 11, r. 14, of the Code of Civil
Procedure for the production of certain documents, which
included the proceedings of the Council of Ministers dated
September 28, 1955, March 8, 1956, and August 11, 1956, and
the report of the Public Service Commission. The State
objected to the production of the said documents claiming
privilege under s. 123 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, and
the Chief Secretary of the State filed an affidavit giving
reasons in support of the claim. The question was whether
having regard to the true scope and effect of the provisions
of ss. 123 and 167 of the Act the claim of privilege raised
by the State was sustainable.
Held, that the documents dated September 28, 1955, March 8,
1956, and August II, 1956, which embodied the minutes of
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the meetings of the Council of Ministers indicating the
advice which the Council ultimately gave to the Rajpramukh,
were expressly saved by Art. 163(3) of the Constitution of
India and fell within the category of documents relating to
" affairs of State " within the meaning of s. 123 of the
Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
Accordingly, they were protected under s. 123, and as the
head of the department, the Chief Secretary, did not give
permission for their production, the Court cannot compel the
State to produce them.
Held, further (Subba Rao, J., dissenting), that the report
of the Public Service Commission being the advice tendered
by it, was also protected under s. 123 of the Act.
Held, also (Kapur, J., dissenting), that the words "records
relating to affairs of State " in s. 123 cannot be given a
wide meaning so as to take in every document pertaining to
the entire business of State, but should be confined only to
such documents whose disclosure may cause injury to the
public interest.
The second clause of s. 162 refers to the objections both as
to the production and admissibility of the document and
entitles the court to take other evidence in lieu of
inspection of the document in dealing with a privilege
claimed or an objection raised under s. 123, to determine
the validity of the objections.
Case law reviewed.
Per Sinha, C. J., Gajendragadkar and Wanchoo, jj.Though
under ss. 123 and 162 the Court cannot hold an enquiry into
the possible injury to public interest which may result from
the disclosure of the document in question, the matter being
left for the authority concerned to decide, the Court is
competent to hold a preliminary enquiry and determine the
validity of the objection to its production and that
necessarily involves an enquiry into the question as to
whether the document relates to affairs of State under s.
123. Where s. 123 confers mide powers on the head of the
department to claim privilege on the ground that the
disclosure may cause injury to public interest, scrupulous
care must be taken to avoid making a claim for such a
privilege on the ground that the disclosure of the document
may defeat the defence raised by the State. The
apprehension that the disclosure may adversely affect the
head of the department or the Minister in charge of the
department or even the Government in power, or that it may
provoke public criticism or censure in the Legislature,
should not weigh in the mind of the head of the department
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and the sole test which should determine his decision is
injury to public interest and nothing else.
The privilege under S. 123 should be claimed generally by
the Minister in charge who is the political head of the
department concerned ; if not, the Secretary of the
department should
373
make the claim, and the claim should always be made in the
form of an affidavit. When the affidavit is made by the
Secretary, the Court may in a proper case, require an
affidavit of the Minister himself. The affidavit should
show that each document in question has been carefully read
and considered, and the person making the affidavit is
satisfied that its disclosure would lead to public injury.
If there are series of documents included in a file it
should appear from the affidavit that each one of the
documents, whose disclosure is objected to, has been duly
considered by the authority concerned. The affidavit should
also indicate briefly within permissible limits the reason
why it is apprehended that their disclosure would lead to
injury to public interest.
If the affidavit produced in support of the claim’ for
privilege is found to be unsatisfactory a further affidavit
may be called, and in a proper case the person making the
affidavit whether he is a Minister or the Secretary should
be summoned to face cross-examination on the relevant
points.
The provisions of O. 11, r. 19(2), of the Code of Civil
Procedure must be read subject to s. 162 of the Indian
Evidence Act and where a privilege is claimed at the stage
of inspection under O. 11, r. 19(2), of the Code, the Court
is precluded from inspecting the privileged document in view
of s. 162 of the Act.
Per Kapur, J.-The words of s. 123 of the Act are very wide
and cover all classes of documents which may fall within the
phrase " affairs of State ", some noxious and others inno-
cuous, and may even appear to be unduly restrictive of the
rights of the litigant but if that is the law the sense of
responsibility of the official concerned and his sense of
fair play has to be trusted. Under that section discretion
to produce or not to produce a document is given to the head
of the department and the court has not the power to
override the ministerial certificate against production.
The words " or take other evidence to enable it to determine
on its admissibility" in s. 162 on their plain language do
not apply to production and the taking of evidence must have
reference to admissibility. The section does not entitle
the court to take other evidence i.e., other than the
document, to determine the nature of the document or the
reasons impelling the head of the department to withhold the
production of the document.
It is permissible for the Court to determine the collateral
facts whether the official claiming the privilege is the
person mentioned in s. 123, or to require him to file a
proper affidavit or even to cross-examine him on such
matters which do not fall within the enquiry as to the
nature of the document or nature of the injury. He may also
be cross-examined as to the existence of the practice of the
department to keep documents of the class
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secret but beyond that the ministerial discretion should be
accepted and it should neither be reviewed nor overruled.
Per Subba Rao, J.-(1) " Records relating to affairs of
State" in s. 123 of the Act mean documents of State whose
production would endanger the public interest; documents
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pertaining to public security, defence and foreign relations
are documents relating to affairs of State; unpublished
documents relating to trading, commercial or contractual
activities of the State are not, ordinarily, to be
considered as documents relating to affairs of State, but in
special circumstances they may partake of that character and
it is a question of fact in each case whether they relate to
affairs of State or not in the sense that if they are
disclosed public interest would suffer.
(2) Under no circumstances can a court inspect such a docu-
ment or permit giving of secondary evidence of its contents.
(3) Under s. 162 the Court has overriding power to disallow
a claim of privilege raised by the State, but in its discre-
tion, the court will exercise its power only in exceptional
circumstances when public interest demands. The said claim
shall be made by an affidavit filed by the Minister in
charge of the department concerned describing the nature of
the document in general and broadly the category of public
interest its non-disclosure purports to serve. Ordinarily,
the court shall accept the affidavit of a Minister, but in
exceptional circumstances, when it has reason to believe
that there is more than what meets the eye, it can examine
the Minister and take other evidence to decide the question
of privilege.
(4) The disclosure of the report of the Public Service Com-
mission may expose the Government if the latter ignores a
good advice, but such an exposure is certainly in public
interest and in a conflict between the administration of
justice and the claim of privilege by the State, the claim
must be overruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 337 of 1960.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 19, 1960, of the Punjab High Court in Civil Revision
No. 596 of 1959.
N. S. Bindra and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
Gopal Singh, for the respondent.
H. M. Seervai, Advocate-General for the State of
Maharashtra and R. H. Dhebar, for the Intervener.
1960. November 15. The judgment of B. P. Sinha, C. J., P.
B. Gajendragadkar, J. and K. N. Wanchoo, J. was delivered by
P. B. Gajendragadkar, J. J. L. Kapur, J. and K. Subba Rao,
J., delivered separate judgments.
375
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This appeal raises for our decision a
question of law of general importance under ss. 123 and 162
of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, (hereafter called the
Act). Originally the same point had been raised in another
civil appeal before this Court, Civil Appeal No. 241 of
1955. The said appeal was the result of a dispute between
Dowager Lady Dinbai Dinshaw Petit on the one hand and the
Union of India and the State of Bombay on the other. Having
regard to’ the importance of the point raised by the said
appeal a Division Bench of this Court before whom it first
came for hearing directed that it should be placed for
disposal before a Constitution Bench, and accordingly it was
placed before us. The appellant and the respondent in the
present appeal then applied for permission to intervene
because the same point arose for decision in this appeal as
well; that is how this appeal was also placed before us to
be heard after the Bombay appeal. After the Bombay appeal
was heard for some days parties to the said appeal amicably
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settled their dispute and a decree by consent was passed.
In the result the point of general importance raised by the
said appeal fell to be considered in the present appeal; and
so the appellant and the respondent in the said appeal asked
for permission to intervene in the present appeal, and we
directed that the arguments urged by Mr. Viswanatha Sastri
and Mr. Seervai, for th appellant and the State of Bombay
respectively, should be treated as arguments urged by
interveners in the present appeal. Mr. Bindra, who appears
for the appellant State of Punjab in the present appeal, and
Mr. Gopal Singh who represents the respondent Sodhi Sukhdev
Singh, have substantially adopted the arguments urged by Mr.
Seervai and Mr. Sastri respectively and have also addressed
us on the special facts in their appeal; that is how the
point of law in regard to the scope and effect of ss. 123
and 162 of the Act has to be decided in the present appeal.
This appeal has been brought to this Court by special leave
granted by this Court, and it arises from a suit filed by
the respondent against the appellant on May 5, 1958. It
appears that the respondent was
376
a District and Sessions Judge in the erstwhile State of
Pepsu. He was removed from service on April 7, 1953, by an
order passed by the President of India who was then in
charge of the administration of the said State. The
respondent then made a representation on May 18, 1955. This
representation was considered by the Council of Ministers of
the said State on September 28, 1955, because in the
meantime the President’s rule had come to an end and the
administration of Pepsu was entrusted to the Council of
Ministers. The Council expressed its views in the form of a
Resolution on the representation of the respondent; but
before taking any action it invited the advice of the Public
Service Commission. On receiving the said advice the
Council again considered the said representation on March 8,
1956, and views on the merits of the representation were
expressed by the Members of the Council. These were
recorded in the minutes of the proceedings. Finally, on
August 11, 1956, the representation was considered over
again by the Council, and it reached a final conclusion in
respect of it. In accordance with the said conclusion an
order was passed which was communicated to the respondent.
The order read thus: " Reference his representation dated
the 18th May, 1955, against the order of his removal from
service; the State Government have ordered that he may be
re-employed on some suitable post ".
After this order was communicated to him the respondent
filed the present suit against the appellant and claimed a
declaration, inter alia, that his removal from service on
April 7, 1953, was illegal, void and inoperative and prayed
’for the recovery of Rs. 62,700-6-0 as arrears of his
salary., The appellant disputed the respondent’s claim on
several grounds. Issues were accordingly framed by the
trial judge on January 27, 1959. Meanwhile the respondent
had filed an application under O. 14, r. 4 as well as O. 11,
r. 14 of the Civil Procedure Code for the production of
documents mentioned in the list annexed to the application.
The trial court issued notice against the appellant for the
reduction of the said documents.
377
In reply to the notice Mr. E. N. Mangat Rai, Chief Secretary
of the appellant, made an affidavit claiming privilege under
s. 123 of the Act in respect of certain documents whose
production had been ordered, and gave reasons in support of
the claim. On the same day Mr. Mangat Rai made another
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affidavit in which he gave reasons for claiming similar
privilege in respect of certain other documents. The
statements made in these affidavits were challenged by the
respondent who submitted a counter affidavit. After the
affidavits had thus been filed by the parties the trial
court heard their arguments on the question of privilege,
and on August 27, 1959, it upheld the claim of privilege
made by the appellant for the production of some documents,
and accepted the reasons given by Mr. Mangat Rai in support
of the said claim of privilege.
The respondent then moved the High Court of Punjab under s.
115 of the Code of Civil Procedure and Art. 227 of the
Constitution for the quashing of the said order. The
petition for revision (C. R. 596 of 1959) first came up for
decision before D. K. Mahajan, J., at Chandigarh. The
learned judge took the view that the question raised by the
petition was of considerable importance, and so he ordered
that the papers should be placed before the learned Chief
Justice to enable him to direct that the matter be decided
by a larger Bench. Thereupon the petition was placed for
decision before Dulat and Dua, JJ., who, after hearing the
parties, reversed the order under revision in respect of
four documents, and directed that the said documents be
produced by the appellant. The appellant then applied to
the High Court for a certificate under Art. 133 but its
application was dismissed. It then came to this Court and
applied for and obtained special leave to challenge the
validity of the order passed by the Punjab High Court; and
in the appeal the only question which has been urged before
us is that having regard to the true scope and effect of the
provisions of as. 123 and 162 of the Act the High Court was
in error in refusing to uphold the claim of
48
378
privilege raised by the appellant in respect of the
documents in question.
The question thus posed will naturally have to be answered
on a fair and reasonable construction of the two statutory
provisions of the Act. It has, how ever, been very
strenuously urged before us by Mr. J. Seervai that before
proceeding to construe the said provisions it is necessary
that the Court should bear in mind the historical background
of the said provisions. His argument is that ss. 123 and
162 as they were enacted in the Act in 1872 were intended to
introduce in India the English Law in regard to what is
commonly described as the Crown privilege in the same form
in which it obtained in England at the material time; and so
he has asked us to determine in the first instance what the
true state of English Law was in or about 1872 A. D.
In order to decide this question three representative
English decisions must be considered. In Home v. Lord F. C.
Bentinck (1) the Court was dealing with a claim-made by H
who had sued the president of the enquiry for a libel
alleged to be contained in the report made by him. It
appears that H was a commissioned officer in the Army and
the Commander-in-Chief of the said Army had directed an
assemblage of commissioned military officers to hold an
enquiry into the conduct of H. According to H the said
report contained libellous matter, and so he had sued the
president of the enquiry. At the trial H desired that the
report submitted by the court of enquiry should be produced
and this request was resisted by the defendant on the ground
that the document in question was a privileged commu-
nication. This plea was upheld. Dallas, C. J., referred to
the precedents relevant to the decision of the point, and
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observed that the basis of the said precedents was that the
disclosure would cause danger to the public good. He then
considered the nature of the enquiry which had been directed
against H, and observed that in the course of the enquiry a
number of persons may be called before the court and may
give information as witnesses which they would not choose to
(1) 1820) 2 Brod. & B. 130 : 129 E. R. 907 .
379
have disclosed ; but, if the minutes of the court of enquiry
are to be produced on an action brought by the party, they
reveal the name of every witness and the evidence given by
each. Not only this but they also reveal what has been said
and done by each member of the existing court of enquiry;
and, according to ,the learned judge, the reception of the
said minutes would tend directly to disclose that which is
not permitted to be disclosed; and so, independently of the
character of the court the production of the report was
privileged on the broad rule of public policy and
convenience that matters like those covered by the report
are secret in their nature and involve delicate enquiry and
the names of persons who ought to stand protected.
The next decision to which our attention has been invited is
Smith v. The East India Company (1). In that case the
dispute with which the Court was concerned had arisen with
respect to a commercial transaction in which the East India
Company bad been engaged with a third party; and privilege
was claimed in regard to the correspondence which had been
carried oil by the defendant with the Board of Control. It
was held that the said correspondence was, on the ground of
public policy, a privileged communication, and so the
Company were not bound to produce or set forth the contents
of it in answer to a bill of discovery filed against them by
the third party in relation to the transaction to which it
referred. Lord Lyndhurst upheld the claim of privilege not
because the correspondence purported to be confidential nor
because it was official, but because of the effect of the
provisions of c. 85 of Act 3 & 4 W. 4 on which the claim of
privilege was founded. It was noticed that the Company had
been prohibited from carrying on any commercial transactions
except for the purpose of winding up their affairs or for
the purposes of the Government of India; and it was held
that the result of the relevant provisions, and particularly
of is. 29 was that the Directors of the East India Company
were required to make communication of all their
(1) [1841] 1 Ph.50: 41 E.R. (Chancery) 550.
380
acts, transactions and correspondence of every description
to the Board of Control. That is why a claim for privilege
in respect of the said correspondence was upheld. This
decision shows that a claim for privilege could have been
made even for correspondence which had reference to a
commercial transaction in circumstances similar to those in
that case.
The last decision on which considerable reliance has been
placed by Mr. Seervai is the case of Beatson v. Skene (3).
It may incidentally be pointed out that Chief Baron
Pollock’s observations in this judgment are frequently cited
in judicial decisions where the question of privilege falls
to be considered. In that case the plaintiff had been a
general who commanded a corps of irregular troops during the
war in Crimea. Complaint having been made about the
insubordination of troops the corps was placed under the
superior command of V. Thereupon the plaintiff resigned his
command. V directed S to inspect and report upon the state
of the corps, and referred S for information to the
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defendant who was a Civil Commissioner. The defendant, in a
conversation with S, made a defamatory statement respecting
the conduct of the plaintiff. The plaintiff brought an
action against the defendant for slander. The defence set
up against the plaintiff’s claim was that what had passed
between the defendant and S was a privileged communication.
The jury had found a verdict for the defendant. A new trial
was claimed by the plaintiff, inter alia, on the ground that
the learned judge had declined to compel the production of
certain documents. It appeared that the Secretary for War
had been subpoenaed to produce certain letters written by
the plaintiff to him and also the minutes of the court of
enquiry as to the conduct of S in writing the letter to V.
The plea for a new trial was rejected on the ground that the
Court was of the opinion that the non-production of the said
documents furnished no ground for a new trial. There was a
difference of opinion among the members of the Court on the
question as to whether Bramwell, J., was justified in
upholding the claim of privilege., Pollock,
(3) (1860) 5 H. & N. 838: 157 E.R. 1415.
381
C. B., Bramwell, B., and Wilde, B., held that the claim
for privilege was properly upheld, whereas Martin, B., took
a contrary view.
Dealing with the claim made that the production of the
documents would be injurious to the public service Pollock,
C. B., observed that the general public interest must be
considered paramount to the individual interest of a suitor
in a Court of Justice, and he posed the question: How is
this to be determined ? Then Pollock, C. B., proceeded to
observe that the question must be determined either by a
presiding judge or by the responsible servant of the Crown
in whose custody the paper is; and he remarked that the
judge would be unable to determine it without ascertaining
what the document is and why the publication of it would be
injurious to public service-an enquiry which cannot take
place in private, and which taking place in public may do
all the mischief which it is proposed to guard against. He
further held that " the administration of justice is only a
part of the general conduct of the affairs of any State or
nation, and we ’think is (with respect to the production or
non-production of a State paper in a Court of Justice)
subordinate to the general welfare of the community".
Martin, B., however, was of the opinion that whenever the
judge is satisfied that the document may be made public
without prejudice to the public service the judge ought to
compel its production notwithstanding the reluctance of the
head of the department to produce it. It would thus be seen
that according to the majority view the question as to
whether any injury to public interest would be caused by the
production of the document could not be determined by the
Court, because such an enquiry would tend to defeat the very
purpose for which privilege is claimed, whereas, according
to the minority view it was for the Court to hold an enquiry
and determine whether any injury would follow the production
of the document.
Mr. Seervai contends that these decisions correctly
represent the legal position in regard to the Crown
privilege in England in the second half of the Nineteenth
Century, and, according to him, when the
382
Indian Evidence Act was drafted by Sir James Fitzjames
Stephen he intended to make provisions in the Act which
would correspond to the said position in the English Law.
In other words, the argument is that ss. 123 and 162 are
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intended to lay down that, when a privilege is claimed by
the State in the matter of production of State documents,
the total question with regard to the said claim falls
within the discretion of the head of the department
concerned, and he has to decide in his discretion whether
the document belongs to the privileged class and whether its
production would cause injury to public interest. It is in
the light of this background that Mr. Seervai wants us to
construe the relevant sections of the Act.
In support of this argument Mr. Seervai has also referred us
to the draft prepared by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen at the
instance of Lord Coleridge for adoption by the English
Parliament, and has relied on Art. 112 in the said draft.
Art. 112 provides, inter alia, that no one can be compelled
to give evidence relating to any affairs of State, or as to
official communications between public officers upon public
affairs, unless the officer at the head of the department
concerned permits him to do so. It also refers to some
other matters with which we are not concerned. This part of
Art. 112 as framed by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen seems to
include the provisions of ss. 123 and 124 of the Act. It is
significant that there is nothing in this Article which
corresponds to s. 162 of the Act. Mr. Seervai concedes that
the draft prepared by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen was not
adopted by Parliament, and even now there is no statutory
law of evidence in England; even so, he contends that the
intention which Sir James Fitzjames Stephen had in drafting
the relevant sections of the Indian Evidence Act must have
been similar to his intention in drafting Art. 112, and that
is another fact which we may bear in mind in construing the
relevant sections of the Act. We ought, however, to add
that though Mr. Seervai elaborately argued this part of his
case he fairly conceded that recourse to extrinsic aid in
interpreting a statutory provisions would be justified only
383
within well recognised limits; and that primarily the effect
of the statutory provisions must be judged on a fair and
reasonable construction of the words used by the statute
itself.
Let us now turn to s. 123. It reads thus:
" No one shall be permitted to give any evidence derived
from unpublished official records relating, to any affairs
of State, except with the permission of the officer at the
head of the department concerned, who shall give or withhold
such permission as he thinks fit."
This section refers to evidence derived from unpublished
official records which have a relation to any affairs of
State, and it provides that such evidence shall not be
permitted to be given unless the head of the department
concerned gives permission in that behalf. In other words,
as a result of this section a document which is material and
relevant is allowed to be withheld from the Court, and that
undoubtedly constitutes a very serious departure from the
ordinary rules of evidence. It is well known that in the
administration of justice it is a principle of general
application that both parties to the dispute must produce
all the- relevant and material evidence in their possession
or their power which is necessary to prove their respective
contentions; that is why the Act has prescribed elaborate
rules to determine relevance and has evolved the doctrine of
onus of proof. If the onus of proof of any issue is on a
party and it fails to produce such evidence, s. 114 of the
Act justifies the inference that the said evidence if
produced would be against the interest of the person who
withholds it. As a result of s. 123 no such inference can
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be drawn against the State if its privilege is upheld. That
shows the nature and the extent of the departure from the
ordinary rule which is authorised by s. 123.
The principle on which this departure can be and is
justified is the principle of the overriding and paramount
character of public interest. A valid claim for privilege
made under s. 123 proceeds on the basis of the theory that
the production of the document in
384
that, where a conflict arises between public interest and
private interest, the latter must yield to the former. No
doubt the litigant whose claim may not succeed as a result
of the non-production of the relevant and material document
may feel aggrieved by the result, and the Court, in reaching
the said decision, may feel dissatisfied; but that will
not .affect the validity of the basic principle that public
good and interest must override considerations of private
good and private interest. Care has, however, to be taken
to see that interests other than that of the public do not
masquerade in the garb of public interest and take undue
advantage of the provisions of s. 123. Subject to this
reservation the maxim silus populi est supreme les which
means that regard for public welfare is the highest law is
the basis of the provisions contained in s. 123. Though s.
123 does not expressly refer to injury to public interest
that principle is obviously implicit in it and indeed is its
sole foundation.
Whilst we are discussing the basic principle underlying the
provisions of s. 123, it may be pertinent to enquire whether
fair and fearless administration of justice itself is not a
matter of high public importance. Fair administration of
justice between a citizen and a citizen or between a citizen
and the State is itself a matter of great public importance;
much more so would the administration of justice as a whole
be a matter of very high public importance ; even so, on
principle, if there is a real, not imaginary or fictitious,
conflict between public interest and the interest of an
individual in a pending case, it may reluctantly have to be
conceded that the interest of the individual cannot prevail
over the public interest. If social security and progress
which are necessarily included in the concept of public good
are the ideal then injury to the said ideal must on
principle be avoided even at the cost of the interest of an
individual involved in a particular case. That is why
Courts are and ought to be vigilant in dealing with a claim
of privilege made under s. 123.
If under s. 123 a dispute arises as to whether the
385
evidence in question is derived from unpublished official
records that can be easily resolved ; but what presents
considerable difficulty is a dispute as to whether the
evidence in question relates to any affairs of State. What
are the affairs of State under s. 123 ? In the latter half
of the Nineteenth Century affairs of State may have had a
comparatively narrow content. Having regard to the notion
about governmental functions and duties which then obtained,
affairs of State would have meant matters of political or
administrative character relating, for instance, to national
defence, public peace and security and good neighbourly
relations. Thus, if the contents of the documents were such
that their disclosure would affect either the national
defence or public security or good neighbourly relations
they could claim the character of a document relating to
affairs of State. There may be another class of documents
which could claim the said privilege not by reason of their
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contents as such but by reason of the fact that, if the said
documents were disclosed, they would materially affect the
freedom and candour of expression of opinion in the determi-
nation and execution of public policies. In this class may
legitimately be included notes and minutes made by the
respective officers on the relevant files, opinions
expressed, or reports made, and gist of official decisions
reached in the. course of the determination of the said
questions of policy. In the efficient admit of public
affairs government may reasonably treat such a class of
documents as confidential and urge that its disclosure
should be prevented on the ground of possible injury to
public interest. In other words, if the proper functioning
of the public service would be impaired by the disclosure of
any document or class of documents such document or such
class of documents may also claim the status of documents
relating to public affairs.
It may be that when the Act was passed the concept of
governmental functions and their extent was limited, and so
was the concept of the words " affairs of State "
correspondingly limited; but,. as ’is often
386
said, words are not static vehicles of ideas or concepts.
As the content of the ideas or concepts conveyed by
respective words expands, so does the content of the words
keep pace with the said expanding content of the ideas or
concepts,, and that naturally tends to widen the field of
public interest which the section wants to protect. The
inevitable consequence of the change in the concept of the
functions of the State is that the State in pursuit of its
welfare activities undertakes to an increasing extent
activities which were formerly treated as purely commercial,
and documents in relation to such commercial activities
undertaken by the State in the pursuit of public policies of
social welfare are also apt to claim the privilege of
documents relating to the affairs of State. It is in
respect of such documents that we reach the marginal line in
the application of s. 123; and it is precisely in
determining the claim for privilege for such border-line
cases that difficulty arises.
It is, however, necessary to remember that where the
Legislature has advisedly refrained from defining the
expression " affairs of State " it would be inexpedient for
judicial decisions to attempt to put the said expression
into a strait jacket of a definition judicially evolved.
The question as to whether any particular document or a
class of documents answers the description must be
determined in each case on the relevant facts and
circumstances adduced before the Court. " Affairs of State
", according to Mr. Seervai, are synonymous with public
business and he contends that s. 123 provides for a general
prohibition against the production of any document relating
to public business unless permission for its production is
given by the head of the department concerned. Mr. Seervai
has argued that documents in regard to affairs of State
constitute a genus under which there are two species of
documents, one the disclosure of which will cause no injury
to public interest, and the other the disclosure of which
may cause injury to public interest. In the light of the
consequence which may flow from their disclosure the two
species of documents can be described as innocuous and
noxious respectively. According to Mr. Seervai the effect
of s. 123
387
is that there is a general prohibition against the pro-
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duction of all documents relating to public business subject
to the exception that the head of the department can give
permission for the production of such documents as are
innocuous and not noxious. He contends that it is not
possible to imagine that the section contemplates that the
head of the department G. would give permission to produce a
noxious document. It is on this interpretation of s. 123
that Mr. Seervai seeks to build up similarity between s. 123
and the English Law as it was understood in 1872. In other
words, according to Mr. Seervai the jurisdiction of the
Court in dealing with a claim of privilege under s. 123 is
very limited and in most of the cases, if not all, the Court
would have to accept the claim without effective scrutiny.
On the other hand it has been urged by Mr. Sastri that the
expression " documents relating to any affairs of State "
should receive a narrow construction; and it should be
confined only to the class of noxious documents. Even in
regard to this class the argument is that the Court should
decide the character of the document and should not hesitate
to enquire, incidentally if necessary, whether its
disclosure would lead to injury to public interest. This
contention seeks to make the jurisdiction of the Court wider
and the field of discretion entrusted to the department
correspondingly narrower.
It would thus be seen that on the point in controversy
between the parties three views are possible. The first
view is that it is the head of the department who decides to
which class the document belongs; if he comes to the
conclusion that the document is innocuous he will give
permission to its production; if, however, he comes to the
conclusion that the document is noxious he will withhold
such permission; in any case the Court does not materially
come into the picture. The other view is that it is for the
Court to determine the character of the document, and if
necessary enquire into the possible consequences of its
disclosure; on this view the jurisdiction of the Court is
very much wider. A third view which does not
388
accept either of the two extreme positions would be that
the Court can determine the character of the document, and
if it comes to the conclusion that the document belongs to
the noxious class it may leave it to the head of the
department to decide whether its production should be
permitted or not ; for it is not the policy of s. 123 that
in the case of every noxious document the head of the
department must always withhold permission. In deciding the
question as to which of these three views correctly
represents the true legal position under the Act it would be
necessary to examine s. 162. Let us therefore, turn to that
section.
Section 162 reads thus:
" A witness summoned to produce a document shall, if it is
in his possession or power, bring it to Court,
notwithstanding any objection which there may be to its
production or to its admissibility. The validity of any
such objection shall be decided on by the Court.
The Court, if it sees fit, may inspect the document, unless
it refers to matters of State, or take other evidence to
enable it to determine on its admissibility."
The first clause of s. 162 requires that a witness summoned
to produce a document must bring it to the Court and then
raise an objection against either its production or its
admissibility. It also authorises the Court, and indeed
makes it its obligation, to decide the validity of either or
both of the said objections. It is significant that the
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objections to the production or admissibility of evidence
specified in s. 162 relate to all claims of privilege
provided by the relevant sections of Chapter IX of Part III
of the Act. Section 123 is only one of such privileges so
that the jurisdiction given to the Court to decide the
validity of the objections covers not only the objections
raised under s. 123 but all other objections as well. Take
for instance the privilege claimed under s. 124 of the Act
which provides that no public officer shall be compelled to
disclose communications made to him in official confidence
when he considers he considers that the public interest
389
would suffer by the disclosure. It is clear, and indeed it
is not. disputed, that in dealing with an objection against
the production of a document raised under s. 124 the Court
would have first to determine whether the communication in
question has been made in official confidence. If the
answer to the said question is in the negative then the
document has to be produced ; if the said answer is in the
affirmative then it is for the officer concerned to decide
whether the document should be disclosed or not. This
illustration brings out the character and the scope of the
jurisdiction conferred on the Court dealing with an
objection raised under s. 162.
The second clause of s. 162 in terms refers to the objection
as to the admissibility of the document. It seems to us
that this clause should be construed to refer to the
objections both as to the production and the admissibility
of documents; otherwise, in the absence of any limitation on
its power the Court would be justified in exercising its
authority under, and discharging its obligation imposed by,
cl. 1 of s. 162 by inspecting the document while holding an
enquiry into the validity of the objection raised against
its production under s. 123, and that would be inconsistent
with the material provision in cl. 2 of s. 162. That is why
we hold that the second clause covers both kinds of
objections. In other words, admissibility in the context
refers both to production and admissibility. It may be
added that " matters of State " referred to in the second
clause are identical with " affairs of State " mentioned in
s. 123.
Reading this clause on this assumption what is its effect ?
It empowers the Court to inspect the document while dealing
with the objection; but this power cannot be exercised where
the objection relates to a document having reference to
matters of State and it is raised under s. 123. In such a
case the Court is empowered to take other evidence to enable
it to determine the validity of the objection. Mr. Seervai
contends that the first part of cl. 2 which deals with the
inspection of the document is confined to the objection
relating to the production of the document,
390
and on that basis he contends that since inspection is not
permissible in regard to the document falling under s. 123
the Court can do nothing else but record its approval to,
and uphold the validity of, the objection raised by the head
of the department. In regard to the objection as to the
admissibility of the said document, however, he concedes
that the Court can take other evidence, if necessary, and
then determine its validity. According to him, such
evidence would be necessary and permissible when the
objection to admissibility is based for instance on want of
stamp or absence of registration. In our opinion, this con-
struction though ingenious is not supportable on a plain and
grammatical construction of the clause read as a whole; it
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breaks up the clause artificially which is plainly not
justified by rules of grammar. We are satisfied that the
Court can take other evidence in lieu of inspection of the
document in dealing with a privilege claimed or an objection
raised even under s. 123. If the privileged document cannot
be inspected the Court may well take other collateral
evidence to determine its character or class. In other
words, the jurisdiction conferred on the Court to deal with
the validity of an objection as to the production of a docu-
ment conferred by the first clause is not illusory or
nominal ; it has to be exercised in cases of objections
raised under s. 123 also by calling for evidence permissible
in that behalf. It is perfectly true that in holding an
enquiry into the validity of the objection under s. 123 the
Court cannot permit any evidence about the contents of the
document. If the document cannot be inspected its contents
cannot indirectly be proved ; but that is not to say that
other collateral evidence cannot be produced which may
assist the Court in determining the validity of the
objection.
This position would be clear if at this stage we consider
the question as to how an objection against the production
of document should be raised under S. 123. it is well
settled and not disputed that the privilege should not be
claimed under s. 123 because it is apprehended that the
document if produced would defeat the defences raised by the
State. Anxiety
391
to suppress a document may be natural in an individual
litigant and so it is checked and kept under control by the
provisions of s. 114 of the Act. Where, however, s. 123
confers wide powers on the bead of the department to claim
privilege on the ground that the disclosure may cause injury
to public interest scrupulous care must be taken to avoid
making a claim for such a privilege on the ground that the
disclosure of the document may defeat the defence raised by
the State. It must be clearly realised that the effect of
the document on the ultimate course of litigation or its
impact on the head of the department or the Minister in
charge of the department, or even the government in power,
has no relevance in making a claim for privilege under s.
123. The apprehension that the disclosure may adversely
affect the head of the department or the department itself
or the Minister or even the government, or that it may
provoke public criticism or censure in the Legislature has
also no relevance in the matter and should not weigh in the
mind of the head of the department who makes the claim. The
sole and the only test which should determine the decision
of the head of the department is injury to public interest
and nothing else. Since it is not unlikely that extraneous
and collateral purposes may operate in the mind of the
person claiming the privilege it is necessary to lay down
certain rules in respect of the manner in which the
privilege should be claimed. We think that in such cases
the privilege should be claimed generally by the Minister in
charge who is the political head of the department concern-
ed; if not, the Secretary of the department who is the
departmental head should make the claim; and the claim
should always be made in the form of an affidavit. When the
affidavit is made by the Secretary the Court may, in a
proper case, require an affidavit of the Minister himself.
The affidavit should show that each document in question has
been carefully read and considered, and the person making
the affidavit is satisfied that its disclosure would lead to
public injury. If there are a series of documents included
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in a file it should appear from the affidavit that each one
of the documents, whose disclosure is objected to, has been
392
duly considered by the authority concerned. The affidavit
should also indicate briefly within permissible limits the
reason why it is apprehended that their disclosure would
lead to injury to public interest. This last requirement
would be very important when privilege is claimed in regard
to documents which prima, facie suggest that they are
documents of a commercial character having relation only to
commercial activities of the State. If the document clearly
falls within the category of privileged documents Do serious
dispute generally arises; it is only when Courts are dealing
with marginal or border-line documents that difficulties are
experienced in deciding whether the privilege should be
upheld or not, and it is particularly in respect of such
documents that it is expedient and desirable that the
affidavit should give some indication about the reasons why
it is apprehended that public interest may be injured by
their disclosure.
It is conceded by Mr. Seervai that if the affidavit produced
in support of the claim for privilege is found to be
unsatisfactory a further affidavit may be called, and in a
proper case the person making the affidavit whether be is a
Minister or the Secretary should be summoned to face cross-
examination on the relevant points. Mr. Seervai, however,
contends that the object of such cross-examination must be
limited to test the credibility of the witness and nothing
more. We do not see why any such a limitation should be
imposed on cross-examination in such a case. It would be
open to the opponent to put such relevant and permissible
questions as he may think of to help the Court in
determining whether the document belongs to the privileged
class or not. It is true that the scope of the enquiry in
such a case is bound to be narrow and restricted ; but the
existence of the power in the Court to hold such an enquiry
will itself act as a salutary check on the capricious
exercise of the power conferred under s. 123; and as some of
the decisions show the existence of this power is not merely
a matter of theoretical abstraction (Vide for instance,
Ijjat Ali Talukdar v. Emperor (1)).
(1) [1944] 1 Cal. 410.
393
Thus our conclusion is that reading ss.123 and 162 together
the Court cannot hold an enquiry into the possible injury to
public interest which may result from the disclosure of the
document in question. That is a matter for the authority
concerned to decide; but the Court is competent, and indeed
is bound, to hold a preliminary enquiry and determine the
validity of the objections to its production, and that
necessarily involves an enquiry into the question as to
whether the evidence relates to an affair of State under s.
123 or not.
In this enquiry the Court has to determine the character or
class of the document. If it comes to the conclusion that
the document does not relate to affairs of State then it
should reject the claim for privilege and direct its
production. If it comes to the conclusion that the document
relates to the affairs of State it should leave it to the
head of the department to decide whether he should permit
its production or not. We are not impressed by Mr.
Seervai’s argument that the Act could not have intended that
the head of the department would permit the production of a
document which belongs to the noxious class. In our
opinion, it is quite Conceivable that even in regard to a
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document falling within the class of documents relating to
affairs of State the head of the department may legitimately
take the view that its disclosure would not cause injury to
public interest. Take for instance the case of a document
which came into existence quite some time before its
production is called for in litigation; it is not unlikely
that the head of the department may feel that though the
character of the document may theoretically justify his
refusing to permit its production, at the time when its
production is claimed no public injury is likely to be
caused. It is also possible that the head of the department
may feel that the injury to public interest which the dis-
closure of the document may cause is minor or insignificant,
indirect or remote; and having regard to the wider extent of
the direct injury to the cause of justice which may result
from its non-production he may
394
decide to permit its production. In exercising his
discretion under s. 123 in many cases the head of the
department may have to weigh the pros and cons of the
problem and objectively determine the nature and extent of
the injury to public interest as against the injury to
the administration of justice. That is why we think it is
not unreasonable to hold that s. 123 gives discretion to the
bead of the department to permit the production of a
document even though its production may theoretically lead
to some kind of injury to public interest. While construing
ss. 123 and 162, it would be irrelevant to consider why the
enquiry as to injury to public interest should not be within
the jurisdiction of the Court, for that clearly is a matter
of policy on which the Court does not and should not
generally express any opinion.
In this connection it is necessary to add that the nature
and scope of the enquiry which, in our opinion, it is
competent to the Court to hold under s. 162 would remain
substantially the same whether we accept the wider or the
narrower interpretation of the expression "affairs of
State". In the former case the Court will decide whether
the document falls in the class of innocuous or noxious
documents; if it finds that the document belongs to the
innocuous class it will direct its production; if it finds
that the document belongs to the noxious class it will leave
it to the discretion of the head of the department whether
to permit its production or not. Even on the narrow con-
struction of the expression "affairs of State" the Court
will determine its character in the first instance; if it
holds that it does not fall within the noxious class which
alone is included in the relevant expression on this view an
order for its production will follow; if the finding is that
it belongs to the noxious class the question about its
production will be left to the discretion of the head of the
department. We have already stated how three views are
possible on this point. In our opinion, Mr. Seervai’s
contention which adopts one extreme position ignores the
effect of s. 162, whereas the contrary position which is
also extreme in character ignores the provisions of s. 123.
The view
395
which we are disposed to take about the authority and
jurisdiction of the Court in such matters is based on a
harmonious construction of s. 123 and s. 162 read together;
it recognises the power conferred on the Court by cl. (1) of
s. 162, and also gives due effect to the discretion vested
in the head of the department by s. 123.
It would thus be clear that in view of the provisions of s.
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162 the position in India in regard to the Court’s power and
jurisdiction is different from the position under the
English Law as it obtained in England in 1872. It may be
true to say that in prohibiting the inspection of documents
relating to matters of State the second clause of s. 162 is
intended to repel the minority view of Baron Martin in the
case of Beatson (1). Nevertheless the effect of the first
clause of s. 162 clearly brings out the departure made by
the Indian Law in one material particular, and that is the
authority given to the Court to hold a preliminary enquiry
into the character of the document. That is why we think
that the arguments so elaborately and ingeniously built up
by Mr. Seervai on the basis of the background of the Indian
Evidence Act breaks down in the light of the provisions of
s. 162. We may add that in substance and broadly stated the
consensus of judicial opinion in this country is in favour
of this conclusion. (Vide: e.g., Kaliappa Udayan v. Emperor
(2); R. M. D. Chamarbaugwala v. Y. R. Parpia (3); Governor-
General in Council v. H. Peer Mohd. Khuda Bux & Ors. (4);
The Public Prosecutor, Andhra v. Venkata Narasayya (5); and
ljjat Ali Talukdar v. Emperor (6)). Therefore we think it
is unnecessary to refer to these decisions in detail or to
examine the reasons given by them in support of the
conclusion reached by them.
There are, however, two decisions which have struck a note
of dissent, and so it is necessary to examine them. In W.
S. Irwin v. D. J. Reid (7) it appears that the Court was
incidentally dealing with
(1) (1860) 5 H. & N. 838 ; 157 E. R. 1415.
(2) A.I.R. 1937 Mad. 492.
(3) A.I.R. 1950 Bom. 230.
(4) A.I.R. 1950 East Punjab 228.
(5) A.I.R. 1957 Andhra 486.
(6) I.L.R. [1944] 1 Cal- 410.
(7) (192I) I.L.R- 48 Cal. 304-
396
the scope and effect of s. 123 of the Act. In that case the
plaintiff was one of the members of the committee, known as
the Champaran Agrarian Enquiry Committee, and as such member
he had effected a settlement between the indigo planters and
the tenants about the partial refund of tawan or
remission of sarabeshi. The defendant Irwin wrote three
letters to the members after the settlement which taken
together would import that his consent to the settlement was
obtained by misrepresentation and all facts were not
disclosed to him. Thereupon Reid filed a suit claiming Rs.
50,000 as damages against Irwin for making the said
defamatory statements which according to him greatly injured
his credit and reputation and had brought him into public
odium and contempt. It appears that at the trial an attempt
was made to compel the production of the minutes of the com-
mittee. The, said attempt failed because the Government of
Bihar and Orissa claimed privilege under s. 123. In appeal
it was urged that the privilege should not have been upheld,
but the appellant’s plea was not accepted by the Court.
"The public officer concerned", observed Mookerjee, A. C.
J., "and not the judge is to decide whether the evidence
referred to shall be given or withheld. If any other view
were taken the mischief intended to be avoided would take
place as the judge could not determine the question without
ascertaining the contents of the document, and such enquiry,
if it did take place, must, for obvious reasons take place
in public". In support of this decision the learned judge
referred to some English decisions; amongst them was the
case of Beatson v. Skene (1). It would be noticed that in
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making these incidental observations the Court has not
considered the true effect of the provisions of s. 162.
Indeed no reference was made to the said section and the
matter does not appear to have been seriously argued and
naturally, because the point was not directly raised for
decision. In this connection we ought to point out that in
a subsequent decision of the said High Court in Ijjat Ali
Talukdar’s case (2) a contrary view has been
(1) (1860) 5 H. & N. 838: 157 E.R. 1415.
(2) I.L.R. [1944] I Cal. 410.
397
taken and it is the subsequent view which has prevailed in
the Calcutta High Court thereafter.
In Khawaja Nazir Ahmad v. The Crown (1) the High Court of
Judicature at Lahore has held that when a privilege is
claimed under s. 123 the Court simply gives effect to the
decision of the head of the department by adding its own
command to it but the Court. has no power to examine the
document in order to verify the correctness of the
allegations or the grounds on which the privilege is
claimed. Abdur Rahman, J., who delivered the judgment of
the Bench in that case, has considered the relevant Indian
and English decisions, and has based his conclusion
substantially on the judgment of the House of Lords in
Duncan v. Cammell Laird & Co. Ltd. (2), to which we will
presently refer. The learned judge appears to have con-
strued s. 162 in the manner suggested by Mr. Seervai. In
fact Mr. Seervai’s argument was that the construction placed
by Abdur Rahman, J. on s. 162 had not been considered by the
other Indian decisions when they brushed aside his
conclusion. "I feel convinced", said Abdur Rahman, J.,
"that the objection as to the production of the document,
apart from its admissibility (for want of registration or
contravening the rule as to when secondary evidence of a
document can be admitted-if the document is merely a copy
and not original) can only be decided by its inspection by
the Court, followed, as it must necessarily. have been, by
an order of production, although not in the sense of its
contents having been disclosed to the party summoning the
document at any rate at that stage". We have already
indicated our reasons for not accepting this artificial
construction of the second clause in s. 162. This decision
also has been dissented from by a Full Bench of the Lahore
High Court in Governor-General in Council v. H. Peer Mohd.
Khuda Bux & Ors. (3) and the view taken by the Full Bench in
that case prevails in the Punjab High Court ever since.
In the course of arguments before us a large number of
English decisions have been cited by the learned
(1) (1945) I.L.R. 26 Lah. 219. (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
(3) A.I.R. 1950 East Punjab 228.
398
counsel appearing for both the parties. Having regard to
the fact that our decision ultimately rests, as it must, on
the construction of the relevant provisions of the Act, we
do not think it necessary to refer to all the cases to which
our attention was drawn; we propose to confine ourselves to
three decisions which have made a substantial contribution
to the discussion of the problem, and which represent three
distinct and different trends of judicial opinion on the
point with which we are dealing.
The first case to which we would refer is the decision of
the Privy Council in Robinson v. State of South Australia In
that case the appellant had brought an action in the Supreme
Court of South Australia against the respondent State
claiming damages for alleged negligence in the care of wheat
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placed in the control of the State under the Wheat Harvests
Acts, 1915-17. Upon an order for discovery the respondent
State, by an affidavit made by a civil servant, claimed
privilege in respect of 1892 documents tied in three
bundles, and stated to be State documents comprising
communications between officers administering the department
concerned. There was exhibited to the affidavit a minute by
the responsible Minister stating, inter alia, that the
disclosure of the documents would be contrary to the
interests of the State and of the public. The claim for
privilege had been upheld by the Australian Courts but it
was rejected by the Privy Council which held that the minute
was inadequate to support the claim; it was too vague in the
circumstances of the case, and was not a statement on oath
showing that the Minister had himself considered each of the
documents, or indicating the nature of the suggested injury
to the interests of the public. The Privy Council,
therefore, directed that the Supreme Court of South
Australia should exercise its power under O. 31, r. 14, sub-
r. (2), to inspect the documents, because it thought that
the said course was less likely to cause delay than an order
for a further and better affidavit of documents. The
litigation in that case had been preceded by another
litigation, and on the
(1) [1931] A.C. 704.
399
facts thus disclosed the Privy Council was satisfied that
the action in question was one of a large number which were
then pending, and against which a similar relief was
claimed, all being alike dependent for success upon the
establishment of the same facts. That is how full discovery
by the respondent had become "the immediately vital issue
between the parties".
Dealing with the merits of the privilege the Privy Council
cited with approval Taylor’s observation that "the principle
of the rule is concern for public interest, and the rule
will accordingly be applied no further than the attainment
of that object requires"(1). Lord Blanesburgh, who
delivered the judgment of the Board observed that "it cannot
be assumed that documents relating to trading, commercial or
contractual activities of the State can never be claimed to
be protected under this head of privilege", but he added
that "the cases in which this is so must, in view of the
sole object of the privilege, and especially in time of
peace, be rare indeed". Then he referred to the fact that
in view of the increasing extension of State activities into
the spheres of trading business and commerce, and of the
claim of privilege in relation to the liabilities arising
therefrom which were frequently put forward, it is necessary
for the Courts to remember that while they must duly
safeguard genuine public interests they must see to it that
the scope of the admitted privilege is not, in such
litigation, extended. The judgment then proceeds to add
that in truth the fact that documents if produced might have
any such effect upon the fortunes of the litigation is of
itself a compelling reason for their production-one only to
be overborne by the gravest considerations of State policy
or security. Then the power of the Court to call for the
production of documents for which privilege was claimed was
examined in the light of previous decisions, and in the
light of the provisions of O. 31, r. 14, sub-r. (2).
"Where, as in the present case", it was observed, "the State
is not only sued as defendant under the authority of
statute, but is in the suit bound to give discovery, there
seems little, if any,
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(1) Taylor on "Evidence", s.939.
400
reason why the Court in relation to this privileged class of
its documents should have any less power than it has to
inspect any other privileged class of its documents,
provided of course, that such power be exercised so as not
to destroy the protection of the privilege in any case in
which it is found to exist". The procedure which should be
adopted in claiming the privilege was then considered, and
it was held that the affidavit produced, which in its sweep
covered no fewer than 1892 documents in number, was of the
vaguest generality and as such unsatisfactory. The Privy
Council then considered the question as to whether a further
opportunity should be given to the State to make a better
affidavit but it thought that it would be inexpedient to
adopt such a course because it ,would involve further
serious delay, "without, it may be, advancing any further
the final solution to the question at issue". That is why
the Supreme Court was asked to exercise its power under the
relevant rule to inspect the documents and then decide
whether the privilege should be upheld or not. It is
significant that even when giving such a direction their
Lordships took the precaution of adding that the judge, in
giving his decision as to any document, will be careful to
safeguard the interest of the State and will not, in any
case of doubt, resolve the doubt against the State without
further enquiry from the Minister. It only remains to add
that so far as Australia is concerned it does not appear
that there is any statutory provision corresponding to s.
162 of the Act, and so, even after this judgment was
pronounced by the Privy Council, Courts in India have not
given effect to the operative part of the order in regard to
the inspection of the document by Courts having regard to
the statutory prohibition imposed by s. 162 in that behalf.
This pronouncement of the Privy Council was subsequently
criticised by the House of Lords in Duncan & Anr. v. Cammell
Laird & Co. Ltd. (1). It appears that the submarine Thetis
which had been built up by the respondents under contract
with the Admiralty was undergoing her submergence tests in
Liverpool Bay, and, while engaged in the operation of a
401
trial drive, sank to the bottom owing to the flooding of her
two foremost compartments and failed to return to the
surface with the result that all who were in her, except
four survivors were overwhelmed. This unfortunate accident
gave rise to a large number of actions against the
respondents for damages for negligence. Pending the trial
of the said claims the plaintiffs wanted discovery of
certain specified documents to which the defendants
objected, and the objection of the defendants was supported
by Mr. Alexander who was the First Lord of the Admiralty ’in
his affidavit made in that behalf. The documents to the
production of which an objection was thus raised included
(either in original or as a copy) the contract for the hull
and machinery of the Thetis and other letters and reports.
The Master before whom the objection was raised refused to
order inspection. His decision was confirmed by Hilbery,
J., sitting in Chambers, and the Court of Appeal unanimously
confirmed the judge’s order. The plaintiffs, however, were
given leave to appeal to the House of Lords; that is how the
matter reached the House of Lords.
Viscount Simon, L. C., who pronounced a composite judgment
on behalf of himself and on behalf of Lord Thankerton, Lord
Russel of Killowen and Lord Clauson, exhaustively considered
the whole law on the subject of Crown Privilege; and in his
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speech he made the categorical statement that in his opinion
the Privy Council was mistaken in regarding the Australian
rule of procedure as having any application to the subject-
matter and in ordering the inspection of the documents which
were in question before the Privy Council. Viscount Simon
began his speech with the consideration of the previous
decisions of the House of Lords, and held that the matter in
substance was concluded by previous authorities in favour of
upholding the objections. He observed that the common law
principle is well established that, where the Crown is a
party to a suit, discovery of documents cannot be demanded
from it as a matter of right, though in practice, for
reasons of fairness and. in the
51
402
interests of justice, all proper disclosure and production
would be made. As a result of the examination of the
several decisions Viscount Simon deduced the principle which
has to be applied in such cases in these words: "Documents
otherwise relevant and liable to production must not be
produced if the public interest requires that they should be
withheld. This test may ’be found to be satisfied either
(a) by having regard to the contents of the particular
document, or (b) by the fact that the document belongs to a
class which, on grounds of public interest, must as a class
be with held from production". In this connection he stated
that public interest may be damnified where disclosure would
be injurious to national defence, or to good diplomatic
relations, or where the practice of keeping a class of
documents secret is necessary for the proper functioning of
the public service. Then he proceeded to examine the
question as to whether when objection has been duly taken
the judge should treat it as conclusive; and his answer was
that an objection validly taken to production on the ground
that this would be injurious to public interest is
conclusive; but, of course, he proceeded to make pertinent
observations for the guidance of those who are entrusted
with the power to make a claim. It would be noticed that
even this decision would not be of material assistance to us
because, as we have repeatedly pointed out, our decision
must ultimately rest on the relevant statutory provisions
contained in the Indian Evidence Act; and so, the conclusion
that a valid certificate issued by the Minister in charge is
conclusive may not be strictly applicable to a claim for
privilege similarly made by a Minister in charge in India.
As we have already indicated, the preliminary enquiry
contemplated by the first clause of s. 162 has to be held by
the Court, and it is after the Court has found in favour of
the character of the document pleaded by the State that the
occasion arises for the head of the department to exercise
his discretion conferred by s. 123. Incidentally, we may
point out that Lord Thankerton and Lord Russel of Killowen,
who were parties to this
403
decision, were also parties to the decision of the Privy
Council in the case of Robinson (1).
In regard to the decisions in the cases of Robinson (1) and
Duncan (2 ) respectively, it may be permissible to make one
general observation. In both these cases the nature of the
documents for which privilege was claimed, the time at which
the dispute arose and the other surrounding circumstances
were very unusual and special though in different ways, and
so, as often happens, the shift in emphasis from one aspect
of the same principle to another and the strong language
used took colour from the nature of the special facts.
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Incidentally we may also add that the epilogue to the
decision in Robinson’s case (1) illustrates what untoward
consequences may follow from an-erroneous decision or a
miscalculation as to the injury to public interest which may
be caused by disclosure.*
Nearly five years after the judgment in Duncan’s case (2)
was pronounced, the Crown Proceedings Act (10 & 11 Geo. 6,
c. 44) was passed in 1947, and the Crown Privilege
recognised under the common law of England is now regulated
by s. 28 of the said Act. Section 28 which deals with
discovery provides in substance that subject to the rules of
court in any civil proceedings there specified the Crown may
be required by the Court to make discovery of documents and
produce documents for inspection, and that in such
proceedings the Crown may also be required to answer
interrogatories. This legislative invasion of the Crown’s
prerogative is, however, subject to the proviso that the
said section shall be without prejudice to any rule of law
which authorises or requires the withholding of any document
or the refusal to answer any question on the ground that the
disclosure of the document or the answering of the question
would be injurious to public interest. It would be noticed
that s. 28 read with the proviso confers on the Courts
specified by it powers which are much narrower than
(1) [1931] A.C. 704. (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
*For a graphic account of the aftermath of the enquiry held
by the Supreme Court of South Australia, pursuant to the
Privy Council’s decision in Robinsons’s case (i), see "Law
and Orders" by Sir C. K. Allen, 2nd Ed.,P. 374, foot-note
5a.
404
those which are conferred on the Indian Courts under
cl. 1 of s. 162 of the Act.
In the decision in Duncan’s case (1) Viscount Simon had
assumed that the law as laid down by the said decision was
equally applicable to Scotland. This assumption has been
seriously challenged by another decision of the House of
Lords in Glasgow Corporation v. Central Land Board (2). In
that case Viscount Simonds has referred to a large number of
earlier decisions dealing with the relevant law as it is
administered in Scotland and commented on the decision in
Duncan’s case (1) by saying that the observations in the
said case, in so far as they relate to the law of Scotland
must be regarded as obiter dicta. "In the course of the
present appeal", added Lord Simonds, "we have had the
advantage of an exhaustive examination of the relevant law
from the earliest times, and it has left me in no doubt that
there always has been, and is now, in the law of Scotland an
inherent power of the Court to override the Crown’s
objections to produce documents on the ground that it would
injure the public interest to do so", though he added that "
very rarely in recent times has this inherent right been
exercised". Lord Radcliffe, who agreed with the conclusion
of the House with some reluctance, has made strong comments
on the plea of privilege which is raised on behalf of the
Crown in such matters. Adverting to the contention that the
public interest may be injured by the production of the
document Lord Radcliffe observed that more than one aspect
of the public interest may have to be surveyed in reviewing
the question whether a document which would be available to
a party in a civil suit between private parties is not to be
available to the party engaged in a suit with the Crown.
According to Lord Radcliffe it was not unreasonable to
expect that the Court would be better qualified than the
Minister to measure the importance of such principles in
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application to the particular case that is before it. It is
on that assumption that the Scottish Law has reserved to the
Courts the duty of making some assessment of the relative
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) (1956) Soots Law Times Reports 41.
405
claims of the different aspects of public interest where
production of a document is objected to by the Crown. Then,
in his characteristic style Lord Radcliffe has observed "I
should think it a very great pity indeed if a power of this
kind, a valuable power, came to be regarded as a mere ghost
of theory having no practical substance, and the Courts
abdicated by disuse in the twentieth century a right of
control which their predecessors in the earlier centuries
have been insistent to assert". The learned law Lord has
also made some strong comment on the formula which has been
evolved by Viscount Simon in Duncan’s case (1), and had
stated, that the phrase "necessary for the proper
functioning of the public service" is a familiar one, and I
have a misgiving that it may become all too familiar in the
future". The result of this decision appears to be that in
Scotland, where the common law doctrine of the Crown
Privilege is not strictly enforced, a privilege can be
claimed by the Minister on grounds set forth by him in his
affidavit. The certificate would be treated as very strong
presumptive evidence of the claim made but the Court would
nevertheless have inherent power to override the said
certificate. It is unnecessary for us to consider the true
nature and effect of this power because in India in this
particular matter we are governed by the provisions of s.
162 which confer power on Courts to determine the validity
of the objection raised under s. 123, and so there would be
no occasion or justification to exercise any inherent power.
Though we do not propose to refer to the other decisions to
which our attention was invited, we may incidentally observe
that the decision in Duncan’s case (1) has been followed by
English Courts, but sometimes the learned judges have
expressed a sense of dissatisfaction when they are called
upon to decide an individual dispute in the absence of
relevant and material documents. (Vide: Ellis v. Home Office
(2)). Before we part with this topic we may also indicate,
that it appears that in the long history of reported
judicial decisions only on three occasions the right to
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) [1953] 2 All E. R. 149.
406
inspect documents has been either theoretically asserted or
actually exercised in England. In Hennessy v. Wright (1),
Field, J., observed that he would consider himself entitled
to examine privately the documents to the production of
which the Crown objected, and to endeavour by this means and
that of questions addressed to the objector to ascertain
whether the fear of injury to public service was the real
motive in objecting. In point of fact, however, the learned
Judge did not inspect the documents. From the judgment of
the Court of Appeal in Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ltd. v. Anglo-
Persian Oil Co., Ltd. (2), it appears that Scrutton, J., had
inspected the documents to the production of which an
objection was raised. The learned judge has, however, added
that having seen the documents he thought that the.
government may be right in the view that they ought not to
be produced to others, and that he would not take the res-
ponsibility of ordering them to be produced against the
wishes of the government. In Spigelmann v. Hocker & Anr.
(3), Macnaghten, J., inspected the document to the
production of which an objection was raised. The result of
these decisions is that in England a valid certificate
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issued by the Minister in support of the privilege claimed
is conclusive; while in Scotland, though it would normally
be treated as such, Courts reserve to themselves an inherent
right to revise or review the certificate in a proper case.
It now remains to consider whether the High Court was right
in holding that the privilege claimed by the appellant in
respect of the four documents in question was not justified,
and that takes us to the consideration of the relevant facts
in the present appeal. The documents of which discovery and
inspection were claimed are thus described by the
respondent:
(1) Original order passed by Pepsu Government on September
28, 1955, on the representation dated May 18, 1955,
submitted by Sodhi Sukhdev Singh;
(2) Original order passed by the Pepsu Government
(1) (1888) 21 Q.B. 509. (2) [1916] 1 K.B. 822.
(3) (1933-34) 1 Times L.R. 87.
407
on March 8/9, 1956, reaffirming the decision passed on
September 28, 1955, referred to above;
(3) Original order passed by the Pepsu Government in their
cabinet Meeting dated August 11, 1956, revising their
previous order on the representation of Sodhi Sukhdev Singh
dated May 18, 1955; and
(4) Report of the Public Service Commission on the
representation of Sodhi Sukhdev Singh dated May 18, 1955,
after the Pepsu Government’s decision on September 28, 1955.
In dealing with this question and in reversing the order
passed by the trial court by which the privilege had been
upheld, the High Court has purported to apply the definition
of the expression "affairs of State" evolved by Khosla, J.,
as he then was, in the case of Governor-General in Council
v. H. Peer Mohd. Khuda Bux & Ors. (1): "It is, therefore,
sufficiently clear", said the learned judge, "that the
expression "affairs of State" as used in s. 123 has a
restricted meaning, and on the weight of authority, both in
England and in this country, I would define "affairs of
State" as matters of a public nature in which the State is
concerned, and the disclosure of which will be prejudicial
to the public interest or injurious to national defence or
detrimental to good diplomatic relations". It is this
definition which was criticised by Aft. Seervai on the
ground that it purported to describe the genus, namely,
affairs of State, solely by reference to the characteristics
of one of its species, namely, documents whose disclosure
was likely to cause injury to public interest. Having
adopted this definition the High Court proceeded to examine
whether any injury would result from the disclosure of the
documents, and came to the conclusion that it was difficult
to sustain the plea that the production of the documents
would lead to any of the injuries specified in the
definition evolved by Khosla, J. On this ground the High
Court allowed the contention of the respondent and directed
the State to produce the documents in question.
We have already held that in dealing with the
(1) A.I.R. 1950 East Punjab 228.
408
question of privilege raised under s. 123 it is not a part
of the Court’s jurisdiction to decide whether the disclosure
of the given document would lead to any injury to public
interest;, that is a matter for the head of the department
to consider and decide. We have also held that the
preliminary enquiry where the character of the documents
falls to be considered is within the jurisdiction and
competence of the Court, and we have indicated how within
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the narrow limits prescribed by the second clause of a. 162
such an enquiry should be conducted. In view of this
conclusion we must hold that the High Court was in error in
trying to enquire into the consequences of the disclosure;
we may add that the decision of the High Court suffers from
the additional infirmity that the said enquiry has been
confined only to the specified classes of injury specified
by Khosla, J., in his definition which cannot be treated as
exhaustive. That being so, we think the appellant is
justified in complaining against the validity of the
decision of the High Court.
Let us then consider whether the documents in question do
really fall within the category of documents relating to
"affairs of State". Three of the documents the discovery of
which the respondent claimed are described as original
orders passed by the Pepsu Cabinet on the three respective
dates. It is difficult to understand what was exactly meant
by describing the said documents as original orders passed
on those dates; but quite apart from it the very description
of the documents clearly indicates that they are documents
relating to the discussions that took place amongst the
members of the Council of Ministers and the provisional
conclusions reached by them in regard to the respondent’s
representation from time to time. Without knowing more
about the contents of the said documents it is impossible to
escape the conclusion that these documents would embody the
minutes of the meetings of the Council of Ministers and
would indicate the advice which the Council ultimately gave
to the Rajpramukh. It is hardly necessary to recall that
advice given by the
409
Cabinet to the Rajpramukh or the Governor is expressly saved
by Art. 163, sub-art. (3), of the Constitution; and in the
case of such advice no further question need to be
considered. The same observation falls to be made in regard
to the advice tendered by the Public Service Commission to
the Council of Ministers. Indeed it is very difficult to
imagine how advice thus tendered by the Public Service
Commission can be excluded from the protection afforded by
s. 123 of the Act. Mr. Gopal Singh attempted to argue that
before the final order was passed the Council of Ministers
had decided to accept the respondent’s representation and to
reinstate him, and that, according to him, the respondent
seeks to prove by calling the two original orders. We are
unable to understand this argument. Even if the Council of
Ministers had provisionally decided to reinstate the
respondent that would not prevent the Council from
reconsidering the matter and coming to a contrary conclusion
later on, until a final decision is reached by them and is
communicated to the Rajpramukh in the form of advice and
acted upon by him by issuing an order in that behalf to the
respondent. Until the final order is thus communicated to
the respondent it would be open to the Council to consider
the matter over and over again, and the fact that they
reached provisional conclusions on two occasions in the past
would not alter the character of the said conclusions. The
said conclusions, provisional in character, are a part of
the proceedings of the Council of Ministers and no more.
The report received by the Council from the Public Service
Commission carries on its face the character of a document
the disclosure of which would lead to injury of public
interest. It falls in that class of document which "on
grounds of public interest must as a class be withheld from
production". Therefore, in our opinion, the conclusion
appears inescapable that the documents in question are
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protected under s. 123, and if the head of the department
does not give permission for their production, the Court
cannot compel the appellant to produce them. We should have
52
410
stated that the two affidavits made by the Chief Secretary
in support of the plea of the claim of privilege satisfied
the requirements which we have laid down in our judgment,
and no comment can be effectively made against them. The
argument that in its pleadings the appellant accepted the
description of the respondent that the document contained
orders is hardly relevant or material. The affidavits show
what these documents purport to be and that leads to the
inference which irresistibly follows from the very descrip-
tion of the documents given by the respondent himself in his
application by which he called for their production and
inspection.
Before we part with this appeal we may incidentally refer to
another point which was argued at some length before us by
both the learned counsel for interveners. Mr. Viswanatha
Sastri contended that the provisions of s. 162 can be
invoked only where a witness has been summoned to produce a
document and a privilege is claimed by him in respect of it.
According to him the said provisions cannot be invoked where
the Court is called upon to decide the validity of the claim
of privilege at the stage of inspection of the documents.
In other words, where the State is a party to the suit and
an application for inspection of documents is made against
it by its opponent, and a claim for privilege is put forward
by the State, the Court is entitled under 0. 11, r. 19, sub-
a. (2), to inspect the documents for the purpose of deciding
as to the validity of the claim of privilege. That is the
clear provision of 0. 11, r. 19, sub-r. (2), and the power
conferred on the Court by the said provision is not subject
to s. 162 of the Act. This position is seriously disputed
by Mr. Seervai.
The procedural law in regard to discovery, production and
inspection of documents is contained in 0. 11, rr. 12, 21.
It is true that 0. 11, r. 19, sub-r. (2) provides that in
dealing with a claim of privilege "it shall be lawful for
the Court to inspect the document for the purpose of
deciding the validity of the claim of privilege". The
question is, what is the effect of this provision when it is
considered along with s. 162 of the Act ?
411
Before briefly indicating our conclusion on this point we
may observe that this contention does not appear to have
been raised in any judicial decisions to which our attention
was drawn. Indeed it appears generally to have been assumed
that in the matter of deciding a claim for privilege made by
the State the provisions of s. 162 of the Act would apply
whether the said claim is made at the earlier stage of
inspection or later when evidence is formally tendered.
That, however, is another matter.
It is true that s. 162 in terms refers to a witness who is
summoned to produce a document and provides for the
procedure which should be adopted and the powers which
should be exercised in dealing with a privilege claimed by
such a witness; but there is no doubt that the provisions of
the Act are intended to apply to all judicial proceedings in
or before any Court; that in terms is the result of s. 1 of
the Act, and the proceedings before the Court under 0. 11,
r. 19, are judicial proceedings to which prima facie s. 162
would. apply. Similarly, s. 4, sub-s. (1), of the Code of
Civil Procedure provides, inter alia, that in the absence of
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any specific provisions to the contrary nothing in the Code
shall be deemed to limit or otherwise affect any special or
local law in force; that is to say, in the absence of any
provisions to the contrary the Evidence Act would apply to
all the proceedings governed by the Code. Besides, it would
be very strange that a claim for privilege to which 0. 1 1,
r. 19 sub-r. (2), refers is allowed to be raised under a.
123 of the Act, whereas, the procedure prescribed by the Act
in dealing with such a claim by s. 162 is inapplicable. If
s. 123 of the Act applies and a claim for privilege can be
raised under it, prima facie there is no reason why s. 162
should not likewise apply.
But apart from these general considerations the relevant
scheme of the Code of Civil Procedure itself indicates that
there is no substance in the argument raised by Mr. Sastri.
Order 27 prescribes the procedure which has to be adopted
where suits are filed by ,or against the government; a
plaint or written statement proposed to be filed by the
government has to be
412
signed under r. 1 by such person as the government may by
general or special order appoint in that behalf, which means
that the government can only act through its agent duly
appointed in that behalf. The Minister who is the political
head of the department or the Secretary who is its
administrative head is not the government; and so whenever
the government sues or is sued and makes its pleadings it
always acts through its duly authorised agents. The scheme
of the relevant rules of 0. 27 is consistent with this
position.
Section 30 of the Code empowers the Court either on its own
motion or on an application of a party to issue summonses to
persons whose attendance is required either to give evidence
or produce document, and to order that any fact may be
proved by an affidavit. Order 4, r. 5, contemplates that,
at the time of issuing the summons, the Court has to
determine whether the summons should be for the settlement
of issues only or for the final disposal of the suit; and
the relevant form of the summons (No. 1 in First Schedule,
Appendix B) shows that in the case of a suit against the
government of a State a summons can be issued to compel the
attendance of any witness and the production of any
document. This shows that where the State is a party a
summons may have to be issued to its appropriate officer
calling upon him to produce the documents for inspection.
The provisions of rr. 14, 15 and 16 of 0. 11 show that
affidavits have to be filed by the parties, and the filing
of affidavits which is permitted by 0. 19 is undoubtedly one
mode of giving evidence. Order 16, r. 1, provides for the
issue of a summons to persons whose attendance is required
inter alia to produce documents; and r. 21 of the said order
expressly provides that where any party to a suit is
required to give evidence or to produce a document the
provisions as to witnesses shall apply to him so far as are
applicable. Thus there can be little doubt that where a
privilege is claimed at the stage of inspection and the
Court is required to adjudicate upon its validity, the
relevant provisions of the Act
413
under which the privilege is claimed as well as the pro-
visions of s. 162 which deal with the manner in which the
said privilege has to be considered are equally applicable;
and if the Court is precluded from inspecting the privileged
document under the second clause of s. 162 the said
prohibition would apply as much to a privilege claimed by
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the State through its witness at the trial as a privilege
similarly’ claimed by it at the stage of inspection. It is
hardly necessary to point out that a contrary vie* would
lead to this manifestly unreasonable result that at the
stage of inspection the document can be inspected by the
Court, but not at the subsequent stage of trial. In our
opinion, the provisions of 0. 11, r. 19, sub-r. (2), must,
therefore, be read subject to s. 162 of the Act.
The result is that the appeal is allowed, the order passed
by the High Court set aside and that of the trial court
restored with costs throughout.
KAPUR, J.-I have read the judgment prepared by my learned
brother Gajendragadkar, J., and agree with the conclusion
but in my opinion the Court cannot take other evidence in
regard to the nature of document, for which privilege is
claimed, and my reasons are these:
In India the law of privilege in regard to official
documents is contained in s. 123 of the Indian Evidence Act
which has to be read with s. 162 of that Act. The various
kinds of privileges claimable under the Evidence Act are
contained in Chapter IX, two sections amongst these are ss.
123 and 126, the former dealing with state privilege
relating to "affairs of State" and the latter with
communications with a legal adviser. In s. 123 the opening
words are "no one shall be permitted " and in the latter "no
barrister etc., shall at any time be permitted In the other
sections dealing with privilege the opening words are "no
person shall be compelled This difference in language
indicates that the legislature intended to place the
privilege of the State in regard to official documents on a
different footing than-the other forms of privileges
mentioned in the
414
Act in so far as it put a ban on the court permitting any
evidence of the kind mentioned in. s. 123 from being given,
so that if, unwittingly any evidence mentioned therein was
sought to be given, the court would not permit it unless the
other conditions were satisfied.
In s. 123 the provision is against the giving of evidence
which is derived from unpublished official records relating
to any affairs of State except when the head of the
department concerned in his discretion gives permission for
the evidence to be given. The important words are
"derived", "unpublished" and "affairs of State". The word
"derived" means coming out of the source and therefore
refers to original as well as secondary evidence of
documents whether oral or documentary. The words "
unpublished official records" are not very difficult of
interpretation and must depend upon the circumstances of
each case. If the record is shown to have already been
published, it ceases to be an unpublished record. But the
difficulty arises as to the meaning of the words "affairs of
State", because the ban is put on evidence derived from
official documents relating to affairs of State. At the
time when the Indian Evidence Act was enacted, affairs of
State were confined to governmental or political activities
of Government, but with the expanding of the activities of
the State, which, because of the changed concept of the
State, comprise also socioeconomic, commercial and
industrial activities the words "affairs of State" must
necessarily have a much wider meaning than it originally
had. But the language of the sections remains the same and
so also the limitation on the giving of evidence derived
from such documents and therefore what was considered to be
within the discretion of the head of the department to
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disclose or not to disclose still remains within his
discretion and merely because the scope of the words
"affairs of State" had been extended, the extent of the
discretion has not thereby decreased or become limited and
the words "who shall give or withhold such permission as he
thinks fit" indicate that the discretion to remove the ban
vests in the head of the department and no one else.
415
The real difficulty arises in the interpretation of the
words "affairs of State". What are they? How is the
meaning of the words to be determined and by whom? When a
claim is made by a proper authority in a proper form, is
that conclusive of the nature of the document or has the
court to proceed to determine the efficacy of the claim by
taking other evidence as to its nature or the effect of its
disclosure. It was contended that the decision, whether the
document belongs to the category falling within the
expression "affairs of State" or not has to be of the court
and not of the official mentioned in the section. In a way
that is correct because the conduct of the trial must always
remain in the hands of the court but what is implied in the
contention raised was that the court must first decide
whether the document belongs to the class comprised in the
expression "affairs of State" and then the official
concerned may give or withhold his consent. It was also
submitted that in order to enable the court to determine the
validity of the claim of privilege the official concerned,
when making the claim, may have to state the nature of the
document or at least the nature of the injury to the public
interests or to the efficient working of the public service,
as the case may be, which the disclosure of the document or
evidence derived therefrom would result in.
Section 162 of the Evidence Act was relied upon in support
of the above contention. That section applies to all
documents in regard to which claim of privilege of any kind
may be claimable including that falling under s. 123 and
therefore the language of s. 162 had necessarily to be wide.
It has been described as not being clear by Bose, J., as he
then was, in Bhaiya Saheb v. Ram Nath Bampratap Bhadupote
(1). The section requires a witness summoned to produce a
document to bring it to the court in spite of any objection
which he may take to it& production or to its admissibility
and the court is empowered to decide both the questions. It
is the next part which is relied upon in support of the
contention that the court can
(1) I.L.R. [1940] Nag. 240, 247.
416
take other evidence to decide both the questions of
production and the question of admissibility. The words are
"the court, if it sees fit may inspect the document, unless
it refers to matters of State,. or take other evidence to
enable it to determine on its admissibility". It was argued
that this part of the section empowered the court to take
other evidence not only to decide the question of
admissibility of the document but also its production. The
language of this part of the section does not lend support
to this contention because it gives discretion to the court
to inspect the document or take other evidence to enable it
to determine the admissibility of the document. The
interposing of the words "unless it refers to matters of
State", has reference to privilege under s. 123 and
therefore it disentitles the court to inspect the document.
The sequence envisaged by the section is that a witness
summoned to produce a document is bound to bring it to the
court. He may then take objection to its production under
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any of the sections, viz., 121 to 131 or he may object to
its admissibility and both these objections have to be
decided by the court. Then comes the second part of the
section. If the document refers to "matters of State"-there
is no distinction in the meaning of the word "matters" and
"affairs of State"-then the court may not inspect the
document, but if the document is not of that class, then the
court can inspect it and if it finds any objection to the
admissibility, it may take other evidence to determine its
admissibility. To take a concrete case, if a document is
produced which is compulsorily registerable and it is not so
registered, it would not be admissible in evidence under s.
49 of the Registration Act, but evidence may be led as to
its admissibility for certain purposes, e.g., s. 53-A of the
Transfer of Property Act. If it refers to that class of
documents then the second, part of s. 162 becomes
applicable, i.e., the, court may inspect the document which
will help it in deciding the question of privilege and
admissibility. But if a claim is properly made by a proper
official on the ground that it refers to matters of State,
the court will stay its hands and refrain from inspecting
it.
417
The words "or to take...... its admissibility" on their
plain language do not apply to production and consequently
the taking of evidence must have reference to the
admissibility of the document.
All the High Courts in India are in accord that the Supreme
court will not inspect the document if it relates to matters
of State. If that is so it would be difficult to sustain
the contention that it can decide the question whether the
matter relates or does not relate to affairs of State. If
the original cannot be inspected, no other evidence can be
produced as to its contents. The effect of this prohibition
is not only as if the document had been destroyed, but as if
it never existed. If that is the position, then it becomes
difficult to see how the question of its production can be
decided by the court by taking other evidence or how the
court can decide whether a particular document falls within
the prohibition imposed by s. 123 of the Evidence Act. In
this connection the words of Lord Kinnear in The Lord
Commissioner of the Admiralty v. Aberdeen Steam Trawling &
Fishing Co., Ltd. (1) are quite apposite. It was there
said:
"I think it is not improbable that even if an officer of the
department were examined as a witness, we should not get
further forward, because the same reasons which induced the
department to say that the report itself ought not to be
produced might be thought to preclude the department from
giving explanation required".
If the court cannot inspect the document, if no secondary
evidence can be given as to its contents and if the
necessary materials and the circumstances which would
indicate the injury to the public interests or detriment to
the proper functioning of the services cannot be before the
court it cannot be in a position to decide whether the
document relates to affairs of State or not and the logical
conclusion would be that the court is debarred from
overruling the discretion of the head of the department
concerned, because the court cannot say whether the
disclosure or non-disclosure would be detrimental or not.
If, on the other
(1) (1909) S.C. 335, 343.
53
418
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hand, the contention is accepted that the court can decide
by taking other evidence as to whether the document relates
to the affairs of State then the discretion to ban its
production by the head of the department must necessarily
become illusory. If the court takes upon itself the task of
deciding the nature of the document, then it will be taking
upon itself the very grave duty of deciding a vital question
as to what are the affairs of State without having the
necessary material before it or without knowing the exigen-
cies of the public service or the effect of the disclosure
of the State secret or how far the disclosure will injure
the public interests and- it may thus unwittingly become the
instrument of giving publicity to something which the head
of the department considered injurious to the public
interests, the law having given to the head of the
department concerned to make this determination’ No doubt
the discretion is wide and covers all classes of documents
which may fall within the phrase "affairs of State", some
noxious and others innocuous and may even appear to be
unduly restrictive of the rights of the litigant but if that
is the law the sense of responsibility of the official
concerned and his sense of fair play has to be trusted. The
second. part of s. 162 therefore cannot be said to permit
the taking of other evidence, ie., other than the document
to determine the question of its production when it is of
the category falling under s. 123. That part does not
entitle the court to determine the nature of the document or
the adequacy of the reasons which impelled the proper
official to claim privilege. It would be relevant Co quote
the observations of Isaacs, J., in Marconi’s Wireless
Telegraph, Co. v. The Common. wealth
"I distinctly adverted to the necessary fact that: the right
of discovery given, to the litigant for the furtherance of
public justice must be subject to the still higher
consideration of the general welfare that the order to make
proper discovery does not destroy the privilege of public
interest, and, that the ground of, public policy may
intervene and’, prevent the injury, to
(1) (1913) 16 C.L.R. 178, 201.
419
the community which coercive ’disclosure might produce. If
that were not so, every gun in every fort and every safe in
the Treasury would be open through the medium of the Court
to the observation of any ,plaintiff of any nationality who
could make a prima facie case of the infringement to which
it was relevant. One of the authorities to which I referred
in that connection was the judgment of Turner, L. J. in
Wadeer v. East India Co., 8 D.M. & G., 182 at p. 191 and
that, judgment is, I think, of great value in this case
also".
It will be helpful to refer to the law on the subject in
England as laid down in English cases because the basis of
the Indian Law is the law of that country. The question of
privilege has been described by Viscount Simon L. C., in
Duncan v. Cammell Laird & Co., Ltd. (1) as a question of
high constitutional importance because it involves a claim
by the Executive Government to restrict the material which
might otherwise be available for the court trying the case
and this description was repeated by the House of Lords in
the Scottish case Corporation of Glasgow v. Central Land
Board (2). It may be the material which a party to the
litigation may desire in its own interest and without which
equal justice may be prejudiced. The question of privilege
may not only arise in cases where the State is party to the
suit but may equally arise where the contestants in a suit
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are private parties and whether as a party to the suit or
not the State may decline to produce a document. In Dun-
can’s case (1) the privilege of the crown, though it was
described as not a happy expression, was upheld on the
ground that the interest of the State must not be put in
jeopardy by the production of a document which would injure
it and which is also a principle to be observed in
administering justice, "quite unconnected with the interests
or claims of the particular parties in litigation and,
indeed, is a rule upon which the Judge if necessary, insist
even though no objection is taken at all." The sort of
grounds to afford justification for. withholding the
documents-were,given by Viscount Simon as follows.-
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) 1956 S.C. I (H.L.),
420
"It would not be a good ground that, if they were
produced the consequences might involve the department or
the government in Parliamentary discussion or in public
criticism, or might necessitate the attendance as witnesses
or otherwise of officials who have pressing duties
elsewhere. Neither would it be a good ground that
production might tend to expose a want of efficiency in the
administration or tend to lay the department open to claims
for compensation. In a word, it is not enough that the
minister or the department does not want to have the
document produced. The minister, in deciding whether it is
his duty to object, should bear these considerations in
mind, for he ought not to take the responsibility of with-
holding production except in cases where the public interest
would otherwise be damnified e.g. where disclosure would be
injurious to national defence, or to good diplomatic
relations or where the practice of keeping a class of
documents secret is necessary for the proper functioning of
the public service."
Thus the documents, which are protected from production, are
those the production of which would be prejudicial to the
public interests or those which belong to that class which
as a matter of practice, are kept secret for the proper
maintenance of the efficient working of the public service.
Objection has been taken to the authority of this rule
enunciated by Viscount Simon L. C., on the ground that it is
in serious conflict with another principle that the proper
administration of justice is also a matter of public
interest, i. e., "fiat justitia ruat caelum" but as was said
by Viscount Simonds in Glasgow Corporation v. Central Land
Board (1), "The paramountcy of the public interest has been
recognized and preserved". This principle, which was re-
enunciated by Viscount Simon, L. C., had been the law of
England for over a century before Duncan’s case (2). In
Earl v. Vass (3) it was held that public officers are not
entitled or compellable to produce written communications
made by them officially relative to the character and
conduct of a party applying
(1) 1956 S.C. 1 (H.L.). (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
(3) (1822) 1 Sh. Sc. App. 229.
421
for a public office when the production is demanded in an
action for damages against the writer. Lord Eldon L. C., at
p. 230 observed:-
"I apprehend, in all cases in which it has been held, upon
the principle of public policy, that you shall not be
compellable to give evidence of, or produce s such
instruments-that is, wherever it is held you are not on
grounds of public policy, to produce them-you cannot produce
them and that it is the duty of the judge to say you shall
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not produce them......"
Lord Eldon referred with approval to the decision in Home v.
Lord William Bentinck (1) which was of the year 1820. The
principle there laid down was that production of instruments
and papers must be shut out if it was against public policy.
At p. 919 the learned Chief Justice said:-
"It seems therefore that the reception of the minutes would
tend directly to disclose that which is not permitted to be
disclosed; and therefore, independently of the character of
the court, I should say, on the broad rule of public policy
and convenience that these matters, secret in their nature,
and involving delicate enquiry and the names of persons,
stand protected".
The injury to public service was recognized in Beatson v.
Skene (2) where Pollock, Q. B., said:
"It appears to us, therefore, that the question, whether the
production of the documents would be injurious to the public
service, must be determined, not by the Judge but by the
head of the department having the custody of the papers; and
if he is in attendance and states that in his opinion the
production of the document would be injurious to the public
service, we think the Judge ought not to compel the
production of it. The administration of justice is only a
part of the general conduct of the affairs of any State or
Nation, and we think is (with respect to the production or
non-production of a State paper in a Court of Justice)
subordinate to the general welfare of the community. If
indeed, the head of the
(1) (1820) 2 Brod. &B. 130: 129 E.R. 907.
(2) (1860) 5 H. & N. 838: 157 E.R. 1415.
422
department does not attend personally to say that the
production will be injurious but sends the documents to be
produced or not as the Judge may think proper, or as was the
case in Dickson v. The Earl of Wilton beford Lord Campbell
(reported in Foster and Finla son’s N. P. Rep., p. 425),
where a subordinate was sent with the document with
instructions to object but nothing more, the case may be
different."
Martin B. did not entirely agree with the view of the other
three learned Barons and he was of the opinion that if the
document could be produced without prejudice to public
service he ought to compel its production notwithstanding
the reluctance of the head of the department to produce it.
It was pointed out by Pollock, C. B., that this might apply
to extreme cases and "extreme cases throw little light on
the practical rules of life".
In Smith v. East India Company (1) which related to a
commercial transaction as to the liability to pay freight a
similar privilege was upheld. It was argued that
communications between officials and communications between
Directors and Board of Control were official correspondence
and were privileged. On appeal the Lord Chancellor held
that in order that superintendence and control should be
exercised effectively and for the benefit of the public it
was necessary that unreserved communication should take
place between the East India Company and the Board of
Control.
In Homer v. Ashford (2) which was of the year 1825,Best, C.
J., said:-
"The first object of the law is to promote public interest;
the second to preserve the rights of individuals".
In this connection it may not be out of place to recall the
striking language of Knight Bruce, V. C., quoted at p. 401
of Macintosh v. Dun (3) in the judgment of Lord
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Macnaughten:-
"Truth like other good things, may be loved unwisely-may be
pursued too keenly-may cost too
(1) (1841) 1 Ph. 50: 41 E.R. 550.
(2) (1825) 3 Bing. 322; 130 E.R. 537, 539.
(3) (1908) A. C. 390.
423
much". And then he points out that the meanness and the
mischief of prying into things which are regarded as
confidential, with all the attending consequences, are "too
great to pay for truth itself."
Thus the law as stated in these old English cases shows that
what was injurious to the public interest or prejudicial to
the proper functioning of the public services was not to be
disclosed and if the objection was based on these grounds it
must prevail. As to who was to determine this, the judge or
the official, Pollock C. B. decided in favour of the
official because the enquiry could not be held in private
and if it was held in public the mischief would have been
done. Beatson v. Skene (1).
It was with this background of the state of the English law
that Sir James Fitzjames Stephen drafted the law of evidence
which was enacted into the Indian Evidence Act (Act 1 of
1872).
Scrutton, T., in Asiatic Petroleum Company Ltd. v. Anglo-
Persian Oil Company Ltd. (2) which was a case between
private parties inspected the document to the production of
which objection was taken, and having seen it he said that
he would not take the responsibility of ordering it to be
produced against the wishes of the Government. When the
matter was taken in appeal, Swinfen Eady, L. J., was of the
opinion that the rule was not confined to documents of
political or administrative character. The foundation of
the rule was that the information cannot be disclosed
without injury to the public interest and not that the
document was confidential or official, and that if the
production would be injurious to the public service, the
general public interest must be considered paramount to the
individual interest of the suitor. This was a document
which was written by the defendants, who owned a pipeline
from Persia to their refinery in the Persian Gulf, to their
agents in Persia which contained confidential information
from the Board of Admiralty.
The Scottish cases have also upheld the privilege of. the
Crown in regard to production although it has
(1) (1860) 5 H. & N. 838; 157 E.R. 1415.
(2) [1916] 1 K. B. 822.
424
been stated that the inherent power of the court to itself
see the document and to override but not to review the
certificate of the official of the department concerned has
always existed in Scottish courts. In Duncan’s case (1)
Viscount Simon, L. C., quoted with approval the observation
of Lord Dunedin, the Lord President in the Lord
Commissioners of the Admiralty v. The Aberdeen Steam
Trawling & Fishing Co., Ltd. (2). That was a case where a
Government department objected to the production of the
document on the ground that the production would be
prejudicial to public services and it was held that the view
of the government department was final and the court will
refuse production even in action in which the Government
department was a party. The objection there was taken on an
affidavit. At p. 340, the Lord President (Dunedin) said:-
"It seems to me that if a public department comes forward
and says that the production of a document is detrimental to
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the public service,, it is a very strong step indeed for the
Court to overrule that statement by the department. The
Lord Ordinary has thought that it is better that he should
determine the question. I do not there agree with him,
because the question of whether the publication of a
document is or is not detrimental to the public service
depends so much upon the various points of view from which
it may be regarded, and I do not think that the Court is in
possession of these various points of view. In other words,
I think that, sitting as Judges without other assistance, we
might think that something was innocuous, which the better
informed officials of the public department might think was
noxious. Hence, I think the question is really one for the
department, and not for your Lordships".
And Lord Kinnear agreed with Lord Dunedin and at p. 343
said:-
"I agree that we cannot take out of the hands of the
Department the decision of what is or what is not
detrimental to the public service. There are only two
possible courses. We must either say that it is a good
(1) [1942] A.C. 624, (2) (1909) S.C. 335, 343.
425
ground of objection or we must overrule it altogether. I do
not think that we should decide whether it would be
detrimental to the public service or not; and I agree with
what both your Lordships have said as to the position of the
Court in reference to that question. We do not know the
conditions under which the production of the document would
or would not be injurious to the public service. I think it
is not improbable that even if an officer of the Department
were examined as a witness we should not get further for-
ward, because the same reasons which induced the Department
to say that the report itself ought not to be produced might
be thought to preclude the Department from giving the
explanations required. A department of Government, to which
the exigencies of the public service are known as they
cannot be known to the Court, must, in my judgment,
determine a question of this kind for itself, and therefore
I agree we ought not to grant the diligence."
In a later Scottish case Henderson v.M’Gown (1) where in a
suit between private parties income-tax returns were sought
to be produced, the court held that it had the power, in the
exercise of its discretion, to order production of documents
in the custody of a public department in spite of its
objection but in the circumstances it did not order
production as it was unnecessary. Lord Johnston said at p.
826:-
"That is not to say that the court never can and never will
overrule such a statement but merely that it would be a very
strong step, and therefore a step for which the Court would
require very grave justification. The Admiralty and the War
Office are charged with the duty of providing for the safety
of the realm, and, if either say that the production of a
document in their hands would be prejudicial to the public
interest, I think that we should naturally implicitly accept
the statement. But there are distinctions between public
departments. The interest of such a department as the
Inland Revenue is that the public should be able to rely on
all returns to them and
(1) (1916) S.C. 821.
54
426
communications made to them being treated as confidential.
This also is the public interest."
The latest Scottish case relied upon is a decision of the
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House of Lords in Glasgow Corporation v. Central Land Board
(1). In that case privilege was claimed by the Central Land
Board on the ground that its production would adversely
affect the public interests. The question for decision was
whether Scottish courts were bound to give effect to the
certificate of the Secretary of State or whether the court
had an inherent jurisdiction not to review the certificate
but to override it. The House of Lords was of the opinion
that Duncan’s case (2) did not affect the Law of Scotland
and the Scottish courts possessed the inherent power to
override the objections of the Minister and it did not
exclude the court from making an order of production but in
that case the power was not exercised. Viscount Simonds, L.
C., said at p. 10 that Duncan’s case (2) had settled that
according to the Law of England an objection validly taken
to production of documents on the ground that this would be
injurious to the public interest is conclusive but to cite
the case of Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty (3 ) as
authoritative without regard to the earlier cases and the
later case of Henderson v. M’Gown (4) must give an imperfect
view of the law of Scotland. But even in Scotland the power
had been rarely, very rarely, exercised by the courts; its
exercise had been refused even where the result had been the
prejudice of the private individual and the paramountcy of
the public interest had been recognised and preserved. (p.
II). Lord- Normand observed that for a 100 years the
uniform track of authority asserted the inherent power of
the court to disregard the crown’s objection but the power
had been seldom exercised; only the courts had emphatically
said that it must be used with the greatest caution and only
in special circumstances. In this connection Lord Normand
said at p. 16:-
"It was also a firmly established rule that the courts could
not dispute the certificate and that the
(1) 1956 S.C. 1 (H.L.). (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
(3) (1909) S.C. 335, 343. (4) (1916) S.C. 821.
427
question whether production would be contrary to public
interest was for minister or the department concerned."
Lord Radcliffe in his speech said that Duncan’s case ought
not to be treated as a decision which affected the law of
Scotland. Dealing with the case before the court and the
power reserved to the court to overrule the crown objection
he said at p. 18:-
"I do not understand that the existence of the power
involves that in Scotland, any more than in England, it is
open to the court to dispute with the minister his view that
production would be contrary to the public interest is well
founded or to arrive at a view, contradictory of his that
production would not in fact be at all injurious to that
interest. If weight is given to the argument that the
Minister in forming his view may have before him a range of
considerations that is not open to the Court and that he is
not under any obligation to set out these considerations in
public, I think that it must follow that the Minister’s view
must be accepted by the Court as incapable of being
displaced in by its own opinion". The view expressed in
Admiralty Commissioners v. Aberdeen(1) was dissented from.
After referring to another aspect of public interest that
impartial justice should be done in the courts of law, not
least between citizen and Crown, the Lord Normand observed:
"If in the past the power to disregard the objection has
hardly ever been exercised, that has been due, I think, to a
very proper respect for the Crown’s position and to a
confidence that objections of this nature would not be
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advanced, or at any rate persisted in, unless the case was
one in which production would involve material injury to the
public welfare".
Thus, as was said by Lord Normand, there is a difference
between the law of England and the law of Scotland on an
important constitutional question. But in practice the
difference was little as the exercise of the inherent power
by the Scottish Courts had been rare.
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) (1909) S.C. 335. 343.
428
As the Privy Council judgment in Robinson’s case (1) was
from Australia it will be useful to refer to two Australian
cases:-
In Marconi’s Wireless Telegraph Company Limited v. The
Commonwealth(2) where inspection was claimed of wireless
telegraphic apparatus, Isaacs, J., in his minority judgment
at p. 205 enunciated the following propositions which are
relevant for the purpose of the present case:-
"(1) The rule of exclusion of State secrets applies,
necessarily without distinction to the facts, documents and
other objects. This was admitted by Mr. Irvine, and is
established by such cases as B. v. Watson 2 Stark, 116 at p.
148; B. v. Hardy 24 St. Tri. 199, at col. 753; R. v. Watson
32 St. Tri. 1, at cols. 100-101.
(2)The rule proceeds on the same grounds whether the parties
called on to produce the documents, &c., are or are not
parties to the suit, that is, on the grounds of the
prejudice to the public interests, which production would
occasion (per Turner, L. J. in Wadeer’s case S. D. M. & G.,
1882; Admiralty Commissioners v. Aberdeen Trawling Co.
(1909) Sess. Ca., 335.
(3) The right to protection depends upon the "character" of
the documents, &c. (ib.).
(4) If the documents, &c., are prima facie private, as
where they are in private hands then in the absence of
Ministerial claim for protection, the Court, in case of
objection by the private defendant on the ground of public
policy, will ascertain their character that is, whether they
are really governmental and, if they are, the next
succeeding paragraph applies: Smith v. East India Company I
Ph. 50.
(5) If the documents, & are of a political that is, a
governmental "character", then even in the absence of any
Ministerial claim for protection, it is the duty of the
Court, on objection by private person holding them, to
ascertain whether public prejudice will or may ensue from
production, and, if it appears that public policy requires
confidence between the objector and the Government, they are
presumed
(1) [1931] A.C. 704. (2) (1913) 16 C.L.R. 178, 201.
429
prima facie to be confidential: Smith v. East India Company
I Ph. 50 and per Wills, J. in Hennessy v. Wright 21 Q.B.D.
509, 518-519.
(6) If either by proof or undisplaced presumption
confidence is required, then it is a rule of law, not of
discretion, that the documents shall be excluded: Marks v.
Beyfus 25 Q.B.D. 494 at pp. 498-500; Stace v Griffith L.R. 2
P. C., 420 at p. 428.
(7) If the documents, &c., are in fact "State documents",
that is, "in possession of a government department", and the
Minister having custody of them assures the Court that
public prejudice will or may ensue from production, that, in
the absence of what are called extreme cases and are
practically negligible, is conclusive evidence of their,
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character, that is, that they are confidential public
documents, and that such prejudice will or may ensue, and
the Court must act upon it: Stace v. Griffith L.R. 2 P.C.
420 at p. 428; Beatson v. Skene 5 H. & N. 838; The
Bellerophon 44 L. J. Adm. 5; Hughes v. Vargas 9 R. 661;
Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol. XI, p. 85; Taylor on
Evidence, 10th ed., pp. 673, 674; Powell on Evidence, 9th
ed., p. 273. Conclusiveness in such a case is not unique.
Even a private claim for privilege in an ordinary affidavit
of documents is (with certain exceptions immaterial here),
taken as conclusive with respect even to the grounds stated
for claiming privilege; See Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol.
XI, p. 61 and Morris v. Edwards 15 App. Cas. 309."
The learned Judge dealing with the matter of privilege in
public interest and the principles based on prevention of
injury to the community observed at p. 203:
"Such a doctrine is inherent in all systems of law; for the
first requirement of every organised society is to live, and
so far as possible to live securely, and the next is to live
with the greatest advantage to the community at large ; and
to these essentials the strict administration of justice in
particular cases amongst members must yield."
Thus the principle is that private inconvenience must yield
to public ;interest; in other words Fiat justitia
430
ruat coelum is not always the right of a suitor because the
proper maxim applicable is salus populi suprema est lex
which transcends all other considerations. The majority of
the Court in that case had held that there was nothing to
warrant the conjecture that the inspection could disclose
anything that could reasonably be called secret in any sense
of the word. The matter was taken to the Privy Council but
special leave to appeal was refused. The Lord Chancellor
there said:-(See Griffins case, 36 C.L.R. 378, 386)
"Of course the Minister’s statement or certificate must be
conclusive on a particular document. How can it be
otherwise?........................ If the Minister certifies
quite specifically, his certificate is to be taken as
conclusive. The ground on which special leave to appeal was
refused in that case appears to have been that, having
regard to the form of the order, which carefully limited the
right of inspection and reserved liberty to apply, it was
not a convenient case in which to raise a great question of
principle."
In Griffin v. The State of South Australia (1) objection to
the production for inspection of documents was upheld on the
ground that the statement of the Attorney General for the
State that their production for inspection would be
prejudicial to the public interest is conclusive. That was
a case in which inspection of documents was sought in an
action brought in the High Court of Australia by the
plaintiff against the State of South Australia to recover
damages for negligent storage of wheat. Knox, C. J., in the
course of his judgment referred to the observations of the
Lord Chancellor in Marconi’s case, (2) which have been
quoted above. Isaacs, J., reiterated his previous opinion.
Starke, J., was doubtful and he was of the opinion that
there was no reason why the courts should not use the power
confided in them for discovery. If some real doubt was
established as to the accuracy of the Minister’s statement
there was no reason for refusing the power in a proper case
particularly when the commercial activities of the
Government were becoming more and more extensive and
(1) (1925) 36 C.L.R. 378,
(2) (1913) 16 C.L.R. 178,201.
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431
the sphere of political and administrative action
correspondingly wider. He was also of the opinion that the
courts should be able to fully protect the public interests
and do nothing to imperil them. The learned Judge in that
particular case was not fully satisfied with the affidavit
of the Minister.
The matter of privilege in Australia was taken to the
Privy Council in Robinson v. State of South Australia
(1). This case arose out of an action similar to
Griffin’s case (2) and a similar privilege was claimed.The
Privy Council was of the opinion that the Minister’s minute
was inadequate to support the claim of privilege but it had
not been lost by the inefficiency of the form in which it
was claimed and the matter was a proper one for the court to
exercise its power of inspection for which privilege was
sought in order to determine whether their production will
be prejudicial to public interest or to the efficient
working of the public services.
Lord Blanesburgh said at p. 714:-
" As the protection is claimed on the broad principle of
State policy and public convenience, the papers protected,
as might have been expected, have usually been public
official documents of a political or administrative
character. Yet the rule is not limited to these documents.
Its foundation is that the information cannot be disclosed
without injury to the public interests and not that the
documents are confidential or official, which alone is no
reason for their nonproduction: See Asiatic Petroleum Co. v.
Anglo-Persian Oil (1916) 1 K. B. 822, 829-830 and Smith v.
East India Co. 1 Ph. 50."
and at p. 715 it was observed:-
"It must not be assumed from these observations of the Lord
Justice that documents relating to the trading, commercial
or contractual activities of a State can never be claimed to
be protected under this head of privilege. It is
conceivable that even in connection with the production of
such documents there may be "some plain overruling
principles of public interest concerned which cannot be
disregarded"."
(1) [1931] A.C. 704.
(2) (1925) 36 C.L.R. 378.
432
After referring to various cases that have been set out
above the Privy Council was of the opinion that the court
was entitled to prescribe in any particular case the manner
in which the claim of privilege should be made. It may
accept unsworn testimony of the Minister in one case but in
another where the circumstances seems to be to so require
call for an affidavit from him. It may be that objection
merely on ground of public policy may not be sufficient but
it ought to appear that the mind of a responsible Minister
had been brought to bear on the question of expediency in
the public interest of giving or refusing the information
asked for. This would be a guarantee that the opinion of
the Minister which the court is asked to accept is one which
has not been expressed inadvisedly or as a matter of mere
departmental routine but is one put forward with the
solemnity necessarily attaching to the sworn statements and
that the privilege could not be asserted in relation to
documents the contents of which had already been published.
In that particular case the Minister had merely stated that
he had considered this mass of documents and not that he had
read them and considered each one of them. Lord Blanesburgh
said at p. 722:-
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"In view specially of the fact that the documents are
primarily commercial documents he should have condescended
upon some explanation of the particular and far from obvious
danger or detriment to which the State would be exposed by
their production. Above all, and especially in view of the
last paragraph of the minute, the claim was one which should
have been put forward under the sanction of an oath by some
responsible Minister or State official."
Continuing it was observed that there may be some among the
scheduled documents to which privilege may be genuinely
attached and to give inspection of which without more would
destroy the protection of the privilege and therefore it
would or might be contrary to public interest to deprive the
State of opportunity of regularising its claim to
protection. The Board would have given this advice had it
not been for the fact that it would have involved serious
delay
433
without advancing further the final solution of the
question. The case was therefore remitted to the Supreme
Court with a direction that it was a proper one for the
exercise by that court of the power of inspecting documents.
The Privy Council was careful to add that the Judge in
giving his decision as to, any document would safeguard the
interests of the State and would not resolve the doubt
against the State without further enquiring from the
Minister. In that case also the paramountcy of the
consideration of public interest was recognized but as the
privilege was not properly claimed and the document related
to commercial activities of the State and it would have
involved unnecessary prolongation of the action the Privy
Council remitted the case for the court to exercise its
power of inspection under the Rules and Orders of the court
but with the further direction of safeguarding the interest
of the State.
In Duncan v. Cammell Laird & Co. (1), the Court of Appeal
held that the affidavit of the First Lord of Admiralty was
conclusive if it stated that such production would be
contrary to public interest, and the order for production
was therefore refused. Du Parcq, L. J., pointed out that
the Privy Council case (Robinson’s case (2)) was not the
final word on the subject in regard to production. The
House of Lords in appeal did not agree with the judgment of
the Privy Council and it is significant that two of the
seven Law Lords in the House of Lords were parties to the
Privy Council judgment. The House of Lords held that the
affidavit of the Minister was conclusive and that inspection
of a document by a court in private would be communicating
with one party to the exclusion of the other and it accepted
the principle that if it was prejudicial to the public
interests or the document belonged to that class of
documents which are kept secret for the proper functioning
of the public services the production of the document would
be refused. It was recognized in that case that it is the
Judge who is in control of the trial and not the executive
but the proper ruling for the judge to give
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) [1931] A.C. 704.
55
434
would be that an objection validly taken to the production
on the ground of its being injurious to public interest is
conclusive.
The English cases which were decided after the pronouncement
of the House of Lords in Duncan’s case (1) naturally
followed the decision of the House of Lords. In Ellis v.
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Home Office (2) where a prisoner who had been attacked in
jail by another prisoner who was a mental case asked for
certain reports and privilege was claimed, the privilege was
upheld but it was said that although it was essential that
Government department should be entitled to claim privilege
against disclosure of documents on the ground of public
interest the ambit of privileges should be carefully
scrutinized and each document should be examined. It may be
mentioned that in that case Devlin, J., felt grave concern
about the claim of this privilege because the result was
that documents were to be treated as destroyed and no
secondary evidence could be led and this concern of the
trial judge was shared by the Court of Appeal. In Broome v.
Broome (3) which was a defended suit for divorce, the wife
wanted certain documents of the Soldiers’, Sailors’ and
Airmen’s Families Association but the Secretary of State
issued a certificate in which he stated that the production
would not be in public interest. It was held that Crown
privilege from disclosure attached to all documents
irrespective of where they originated or in whose custody
they reposed provided that they had emanated from or came
into the possession of some servant of the Crown.
In Auton v. Rayner & Ors. (4) it was pointed out at page 572
that the sole concern of the Minister was whether the
interests of the State in the sphere for which he was
responsible would be affected and therefore the documents or
evidence should be withheld from the court. It was added
that the Minister should accept and recognize that the
proper administration of justice would be impeded or may be
unattainable if any document or any evidence was withheld.
In that case an action was brought against the
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) [1953] 2 All E.R. 149.
(3) [1955] 1 All E.R. 201. (4) [1958] 3 All E.R. 566.
435
defendants, one of whom was a Police Officer, charging them
with conspiracy to injure and defraud him, false
imprisonment and malicious prosecution. The documents
required by the plaintiff were reports made by the Police
Officer to his superior officers and the communication which
passed between the Metropolitan Police Force and other
police force and the Secretary of State swore an affidavit
indicating that the document should be withheld from
production and that he had formed an impartial judgment that
in the public interest and for the proper functioning of the
public services the document should be withheld. ’The Court
of Appeal held that the determination of the Secretary of
State ought reasonably to be accepted and that the affidavit
was, in the circumstances, conclusive.
The law in England may thus be summed up:--
(1) That a document need not be produced for inspection
either on discovery or at the trial when objection is taken
by the Minister that disclosure of the document would be
contrary to public policy or detrimental to public interest
or services. This privilege attaches irrespective of where
the document originates or in whose custody it is provided
it emanated from or came into possession of some servant of
the crown;
(2) the privilege can be claimed or waived by the authority
of the Minister or the head of the department;
(3) secondary evidence may not be given of a document for
which privilege is established;
(4) official correspondence per se is not privileged on the
ground of its being confidential or official nor is it a
valid ground that production would involve the Government in
criticism or expose ’want of efficiency in the
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administration or open up claims to compensation but the
ground for privilege is that the production would be
detrimental to the interest of the public or interfere with
the efficient working of the public service or it belongs to
class of documents which it is the practice of the
department to keep secret;
(5) the minister’s objection may be conveyed by a letter or
by the official who attends at a trial but
436
the court may require an affidavit by or the attendance of
the Minister;
(6) before a privilege is claimed it is desirable that each
document should be examined by the department concerned and
inspection permitted of all documents which cannot harm the
public interest;
(7) if a minister claims privilege the court will accept
his statement and ought not to examine the document to see
if the objection is well founded;
(8) public interest must not be put in jeopardy by the
production of a document which could injure it and the court
should, if necessary, prohibit the production even though no
objection has been taken by the Government department.
It may be pointed out that the privilege was expressly
reserved when by the Civil Proceedings Act, 1947, the Crown
was made liable to. give discovery in civil proceedings.
It is no doubt true and it must be recognized that the
administration of public justice is also a part of public
interest but as was pointed out by Viscount Simon L. C. in
Duncan’s case (1) the interest of the State is the interest
of the citizen and if the former suffers the interest of the
litigant also suffers and therefore public interest
transcends the individual interest of a citizen. In
Duncan’s case (1) it was emphasised that the Minister in
deciding whether it was his duty to object should bear in
mind the considerations which justify withholding
production, i.e., the public interest would otherwise be
damnified, i.e., the disclosure would be injurious to
national defence, or to good diplomatic relations or where
the practice of keeping a class of documents secret is
necessary for the pro-per functioning of the public service.
And that is the safeguard which both in England and India
the law seems to have found sufficient for the protection of
an individual’s rights. Even in Scotland where the inherent
right of the courts to override official discretion has been
recognized the occasions for the exercise of that power have
indeed been rare and even in the
(1) [1942) A.C. 624.
437
latest case Glasgow Corporation v. Land Board (1) that
position was reiterated.
Although the consensus of opinion in India is that under the
second part of s. 162 the court will not inspect the
document if it relates to matters of State yet there is a
track of decision which has taken the view that it is not
for the head of the department claiming the privilege but
for the court to decide whether the document falls within
the category mentioned in s. 123. But in some other cases a
different view has been taken. A reference to cases which
fall on both sides of the line will be helpful.
In Irwin v. Reid (2) Mukherjea, A. C. J., held that the
language of s. 123 showed that the court cannot be invited
to discuss the nature of the document and the public
official concerned and not the court is to decide whether
the evidence referred to shall be given or withheld. "If
any other view were taken, the mischief intended to be
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averted would take place, as the judge could not determine
the question without ascertaining the contents of the
document, and such inquiry, if it did take place must, for
obvious reasons, take place in public: Beatson v. Skene (3),
Hennessy v. Wright (4), Jehangir v. Secretary of State (5).
The result practically is, that if the objection is raised
by a proper authority the court cannot compel disclosure by
primary or by secondary evidence."
The Lahore High Court in Khawja Nazir Ahmad v. Emperor (6)
held that the head of the department who is in possession of
the documents is the sole judge of the fact whether the
documents should be protected from production on the ground
of their being related to affairs of State and therefore
though the decision would be that of the court, it would
have to rule in favour of the privilege claimed by the head
of the department. It was also held that the interests of
the State must not be put in jeopardy by production of
documents which would injure them and that was a principle
to be observed in administering justice and
(1) (1956) S.C. 1 (H. L.) (2) (1921) I.L.R. 48 Cal. 304.
(3) (1860) 5 H. & N. 838; 157 E.R. 1415.
(4) (1888) 21 Q.B.D. 509.
(5) (1903) 6 Bom. L.R. 131, 160.
(6) I.L.R. (1945) Lah. 219.
438
indeed a rule on which the judge should insist even though
no objection is taken at all. In that case there were
certain confidential files of the Special Enquiry Agency
containing notes, correspondence etc., relating to the case
and containing a record of statements of various persons and
a proper affidavit had been filed by the head of the
department stating that the production would be injurious to
public interests. Abdul Rahman, J., said "I feel convinced
in my mind that the objection as to its production apart
from its admissibility (e.g., for want of registration or
contravening the rule as to when secondary evidence of a
document can be admitted-if the document is merely a copy
and not original) can only be decided by its inspection by
the Court followed as it must necessarily have been by an
order for its production, although not in the sense of its
contents having been disclosed to the party summoning the
document at any rate at that stage. If the Court is
debarred under the statute from inspecting it, I cannot see
how the objection as to its production can otherwise be
decided". In I. M. Lal v. Secretary of State (1) this
privilege was upheld. In that case it was held that s. 162
divided the privilege of documents into two categories. At
p. 212 Abdul Rashid, J. (as he then was) observed:-
"The Court can inspect documents for the purpose of deciding
the question of privilege only if those documents do not
refer to matters of State. In other words an exception is
made in respect of documents that refer to matters of State.
Such documents cannot be inspected by the Court while all
other documents for which privilege is claimed are open to
inspection by the Court for the purpose of deciding the
validity of the objection regarding privilege."
The Bombay High Court in re Mantubhai Mehta in construing
ss. 123, 124 and 162 has held that the officer summoned to
produce the document is bound ’to bring it and if he takes
objection to its production it is for the court to decide
whether the objection is well founded or not but the court
is not entitled to inspect it. This track of reasoning
suffers from the
(1) A.I.R. 1944 Lah. 209. (2) I.L.R. [1945] Bom. 122.
439
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same difficulty that has been pointed out that without
looking at the document and taking into consideration the
wide words of s. 123 it becomes difficult to hold that the
court can decide as to whether the document relates to
"affairs of State" and whether it should or should not be
produced. In that Bombay judgment the learned Judge
referred to the observations of Viscount Simon, L.C., in
Duncan’s case (1). Besides the learned Judge also referred
to s. 124 the effect of which is not the same as of s. 123
of the Evidence Act. Bhagwati J. (as a Judge of the Bombay
High Court) in R.M.D. Chamarbaghwala v. Y. R. Parpia (2)
held that the court cannot inspect the document in order to
determine whether they are unpublished official records
relating to any affairs of State, but its jurisdiction to
determine is not taken away by s. 162 and it is for the
court to decide the question of production by taking all the
circumstances into consideration barring inspection of the
document. The learned Judge mainly referred to Robinson’s
case (3) and it appears that the learned Judge was not
satisfied as to the documents being unpublished but the
criterion he laid down was that only such documents are
privileged which relate to affairs of State and the
disclosure of which would be detrimental to public interest.
The question really is the same as to who is to decide whe-
ther it is "matters" of "affairs of State".
The Calcutta High Court in a later judgment in Ijjat Ali
Talukdar v. Emperor (4) took a contrary view different from
its older view and held that the court is to decide whether
conditions precedent to ss. 123 & 124 have been established.
That was a case under the Excise Act and the Excise
Commissioner was called upon to produce certain documents.
The Commissioner claimed privilege under s. 123 on the
ground that the files contained unpublished official records
relating to affairs of State and Das J., as he then was, was
of the opinion that the occasion for claiming privilege
under s. 123 arose when it was sought to give evidence
derived from unpublished official records
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) A.I.R. 1950 Bom. 230.
(3) [1931] A.C. 704. (4) I.L.R. [1944] 1 Cal. 410.
440
relating to any public affairs which was a condition
precedent. He then referred to s. 124 of the Evidence Act.
The second part of s. 162 provided the method or means to
enable the court to decide the question, namely, by
inspecting the document or by taking other evidence.
Although the court was disentitled from inspecting the
document, the duty of deciding the question was still on the
court. At p. 419 the learned Judge observed:-
"In case of documents relating to affairs of State it may be
difficult for the Court to decide the question, yet it need
not be necessarily impossible for the Court to do it.
Ordinarily no difficulty will arise, because heads of
departments or public officers are not expected to act
capriciously and ordinarily the Court will accept their
statement. If necessary, the Court will require the officer
to claim the privilege in the manner indicated in the
Judgment of Lord Blanesburgh in the Australian case. If,
however, the Court finds that an over-zealous officer is
capriciously putting forward a claim of privilege, the Court
will decide, as best as it can, by the means available to
it, whether the claim is well founded."
As has already been said above the second part does not
afford the means or methods to the Court to decide the
question of privilege. The only method is inspection and
that is denied to the court in cases falling under s. 123.
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The second case which is on the other side of the line is
the judgment of Bose J., as he then was, in Bhaiya Saheb v.
Ramnath Rampratap Bhadupote (1). In that case the learned
Judge was of the opinion that the insertion of the words
"unless it refers to matters of State" in the middle of the
paragraph seemed to indicate that the court might not
inspect the document in respect of which the privilege was
claimed until it had opportunity of determining upon its
admissibility and for that purpose it could take other
evidence which meant evidence other than the document
produced. This line of reasoning is similar to that adopted
in Ijjat Ali’s (2) case.
(1) I.L.R. [1940] Nag. 240, 247.
(2) I.L.R. [1944] 1 Cal. 410.
441
The Andhra Pradesh High Court in Public Prosecutor, Andhra
v. Damera Venkata Narsayya (1) was of the opinion that when
an objection under s. 123 is taken the court has no power to
inspect the document but may take other evidence for the
purpose of deciding the objection and if it comes to the
conclusion that the evidence will be derived from the
unpublished records relating to the affairs of the State the
objection will have to be upheld and it will be left to the
head of the department to give or withhold the permission
and the criterion for the head of the department was whether
or not the disclosure would cause injury to public interest
and he was the sole judge of the matter with which the court
cannot interfere. This case does not support the contention
of the respondent.
The Patna High Court in Lakhuram Hariram v. The Union of
India (2) held that the head of the department must first
examine the document and he may then raise an objection but
he is not absolved from the obligation of appearing in court
and satisfying the court that the objection taken is valid
and the court may require him to give an affidavit or
further questions may be put in regard to the validity of
the claim but the court is not entitled to inspect the docu-
ment.
A. P. Srivastava, J., in Tilka & Ors. v. State, (3) held
that under s. 162 of the Evidence Act the court may inspect
a document unless it relates to affairs of State and in such
a case it will have to take other evidence relating to the
nature of the document.
The words of s. 123 are very wide; and the discretion to
produce or not to produce a document is given to the head of
the department and the court is prohibited from permitting
any evidence to be given which is derived from any
unpublished documents relating to affairs of State. Section
162 does not give the power to the court to call for other
evidence which will indicate the nature of the document or
which will
(1) I.L.R. [1957] And. Prad. 174.
(2) A.I.R. 1960 Pat. 192.
(3) A.I.R. 1960 All. 543.
56
442
have any reference to the reasons impelling the head of the
department to withhold the document or documents. In the
very nature of things when the original cannot be looked at
and no secondary evidence is allowable the court will only
be groping in the dark in regard to the nature of the
document or the evidence. The correct way of looking at the
Indian statute, therefore, is to interpret in the manner
which is in accord with the English law, i.e., the court has
not the power to override ministerial certificate against
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production.
It is permissible for the court to determine the collateral
facts whether the official claiming the privilege is the
person mentioned in s. 123, or to require him to file proper
affidavit or even to cross-examine him on such matters which
do not fall within the enquiry as to the nature of the
document or nature of the injury but he may be cross-
examined as to the existence of the practice of the
department to keep documents of the class secret but beyond
that ministerial discretion should be accepted and it should
neither be reviewed nor overruled.
For these reasons I concur in the decision that this appeal
must be allowed.
SUBBA RAO, J.-I have perused the judgments prepared by my
learned brethren, Kapur and Gajendragadkar, JJ. I agree
with them in maintaining the claim of privilege in regard to
the three items described as "original orders" passed by the
PEPSU Government, but regret my inability to agree with them
in regard to the report of the Service Commission.
This appeal raises the question of the scope and content of
the law of privilege attached to affairs of State and the
procedure to be followed for ascertaining it. The facts are
fully stated in the said judgments and I need not restate
them; but I would prefer to give my own reasons for my
conclusion.
It would be convenient at the outset to clear the ground.
The arguments at the Bar have covered a wide field, but we
are not concerned here with the law of privilege pertaining
to the field of discovery and inspection of documents. We
are called upon only to decide its
443
scope during the trial of a suit when a witness, who is
summoned to produce a document, claims privilege on the
ground that the document relates to affairs of State. I
should not be understood to have expressed any opinion on
the difficult question whether when the defendant is a
State, the Court is not entitled to inspect the documents
under 0. XI, rule 19(2), Code of Civil Procedure.
The question falls to be considered on a true construction
of two of the provisions of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872
(hereinafter called the Act), namely, ss. 123 and 162. They
read:
Section 123: "No one shall be permitted to give any evidence
derived from unpublished official records relating to any
affairs of State, except with the permission of the officer
at the head of the department concerned, who shall give or
withhold such permission as he thinks fit."
Section 162: "A witness summoned to produce a document
shall, if it is in his possession or power, bring it to
Court, notwithstanding any objection which there may be to
its production or to its admissibility. The validity of any
such objection shall be decided on by the Court.
The Court, if it sees fit, may inspect the document, unless
it refers to matters of State, or take other evidence to
enable it to determine on its admissibility.
If for such a purpose it is necessary to cause any document
to be translated, the Court may, if it thinks fit, direct
the translator to keep the contents secret, unless the
document is to be given in evidence; and if the interpreter
disobeys such direction, he shall be held to have committed
an offence under section 166 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of
1869)."
The relevant parts of the foregoing sections may be
summarized thus-. Section 123 prohibits the giving of any
evidence derived from unpublished official records relating
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to affairs of State except with the permission of the
officer at the head of the department; while s. 162 enjoins
on a witness summoned to produce a document to bring it to
Court and empowers
444
the Court to decide on the validity of any objection raised
in respect of its production or admissibility. The argument
of the Advocate-General is that the words "affairs of State"
mean "the business of State", and, therefore, evidence
derived from any unpublished official document relating to
that business cannot be given as evidence except with the
permission of the head of the department concerned, and
that the Court under s. 162 of the Act must automatically
accept the affidavit filed by the head of the department
claiming such a privilege. Learned counsel for the
respondent, on the other hand, defines the words "affairs of
State" only to take in documents whose production would be
against public interest, confines the power of the head of a
department to permit or withhold the user of such a document
in evidence, and sustains the Court’s power to decide the
question of privilege in respect of such a document on
relevant materials without inspecting the document.
The crucial words in s. 123 are, "unpublished official
records relating to any affairs of State". Under that
section no one shall be permitted to give any evidence
derived from such records except with the permission of the
officer at the head of the department concerned. The words
"affairs of State" have not been defined. Though in s. 123
the words used are &’affairs of State", in s. 162 the words
used are "matters of State". There does not appear to be
any practical difference between the two sets of words. In
Shorter Oxford Dictionary, III edition (1956), "matter" has
been defined as "a thing, affair, concern" and "affairs of
State" as "public business". These Dictionary meanings do
not help to decide the content of the said words. The
content of the said words, therefore, can be gathered only
from the history of the provision. It has been acknowledged
generally, with some exceptions, that the Indian Evidence
Act was intended to and did in fact consolidate the English
Law of Evidence. It has also often been stated with
justification that Sir James Stephen has attempted to
crystallize the principles contained in Taylor’s work into
substantive propositions. In case of doubt or
445
ambiguity over the interpretation of any of the sections of
the Evidence Act we can with profit look to the relevant
English common law for ascertaining their true meaning. In
English common law the words "affairs of. State" do not
appear. The basis of the doctrine of Crown privilege is the
injury to the public interests. The Judicial Committee in
Robinson v. State of South Australia (1) says at p. 714,
"The principle of the rule is concern for public interest,
and the rule will accordingly be applied no further than the
attainment of that object requires." The House of Lords in
Duncan v. Cammell Laird & Co. (2) restated the same idea
when it observed that the State should not withhold the
production of documents except in cases where the public
interest would otherwise be damnified.
The earlier decisions of the English courts indicate that
the Crown privilege was sustained only in regard to
documents pertaining to matters of administration, defence,
and foreign relations whose disclosure would be against the
public interest: see Home v. Lord F. C. Bentinck (3), Smith
v. The East India Company (4) and Beatson v. Skene, (5).
The decisions of the High Courts in India over a long period
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of time consistently gave the same meaning to the said
words. It may also be stated that in and about the time
when the Evidence Act was passed, the concept of a welfare
State had not evolved in India and as such the words
"affairs of State" could not have been, at that time,
intended to take in the commercial or the welfare activities
of the State. But when the words are elastic there is no
reason why they should not :be so construed as to include
such activities also, provided the condition of public
injury is also satisfied. It is, therefore, clear that the
words "affairs of State" have acquired a secondary meaning,
namely, those matters of State whose disclosure would cause
injury to the public interest.
(1) [1931] A.C. 704. (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
(3) (1820) 2 Brod. & B. 130: 129 E.R. 907.
(4) (1841) 1 Ph. 50; 41 E.R. (Chancery) 550.
(5) (1860 5 H. &. N. 838.
446
The learned Advocate-General contends that this
construction, if accepted, would give a meaning to the
provisions of s. 123 of the Act which would be contrary to
its tenor. He classifies documents relating to "affairs of
State" into noxious and innocuous documents, and contends
that documents, whose disclosure would affect the public
interest, are noxious documents and that if the records
which relate to the affairs of State mean only noxious
documents, the said construction would bring out a result
directly opposite to that contemplated by the section. When
the section intends to prohibit the disclosure of noxious
documents, the argument proceeds, the construction enables
their disclosure if the head of the department permits it.
Shortly stated, his contention is that the expression
"affairs of State", that is, business of State, is the genus
and the document, the disclosure of which is against the
public interest, is the species, and that the head of the
department is only empowered to permit the disclosure of
documents falling outside the said species. This argument
is apparently logical and rather attractive, but it is an
oversimplification of the problem and is based upon a
disregard of the legislative history and the long track of
decisions of this country. If accepted, it enlarges the
scope of the said privilege to such an extent that in effect
and substance the control of the admissibility of documents
shifts from the Court to the State or its subordinate
officers, for every document relating to the business of
State would be a privileged document unless the head of the
department in his discretion permits the giving of evidence
derived therefrom. Nor can I accept the construction that
an absolute privilege is attached to every noxious document,
i.e., to every State document the disclosure of which may
cause injury to the public interest. This is giving too
narrow a meaning to the words "public interest". If the
non-disclosure of a particular State document is in public
interest, the impartial and uneven dispensation of justice
by Courts is also in public interest. They are indeed two
aspects of public interest. There is no conflict or
dichotomy between the two. In particular
447
circumstances one aspect may be paramount and in a different
set of circumstances the other may be given precedence. In
the last analysis, it is the question of balancing of the
two aspects having regard to the circumstances of a
particular case. The head of a department may as well
permit the disclosure of a document even if ordinarily its
disclosure affects public interest, if in his opinion the
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counter-balancing circumstances are in favour of disclosure
rather than non-disclosure. I cannot, therefore, give a
wide meaning to the words "records relating to affairs of
State" so as to take in every unpublished document pertain-
ing to the entire business of State, but confine them only
to such of the documents whose disclosure would be injurious
to public interest.
The next question is, who is empowered to decide the said
question whether a particular document relates to affairs of
State ?-whether it is the Court or the State. That is found
in s. 162 of the Act. The learned Advocate-General contends
that the first part of s. 162 makes a distinction between
the production of a document and the admissibility of a
document and that the first limb of the second part of the
section provides for the production of a document and the
second limb for its admissibility. He illustrates his
argument thus: privilege may be raised in respect of
production of a document on the ground that it pertains to
matters of State, or on the ground that it is inadmissible
for want of registration deficiency of stamp, or similar
other defects. The first clause of the second part of s.
162, the argument proceeds, enables the Court to inspect a
document when the objection is to its production unless the
document refers to a matter of State, and the second clause
thereof empowers the Court to take evidence only when the
objection is not to its production but to its admissibility.
If this contention be accepted, it will lead to an anomaly,
for grammatically construed the two limbs of the second part
can be applied only to the question of admissibility and in
that event, on the hypothesis suggested by the learned
counsel, the Court will be entitled to look into a document
even if it relates to a
448
matter of State if the objection is only to its production
and not to its admissibility. The more reasonable
construction of the section is to give a wider meaning to
the word "admissibility" so as to comprehend both production
as well as admissibility, for the question of admissibility
arises only after the document is produced and a party seeks
to get it admitted in evidence. In this view, the second
part of s. 162 can only mean that when an objection is
raised either to the production or to the admissibility of a
document, a Court can inspect the document and if it thinks
necessary other evidence may be taken to decide on the
objection raised. By the express terms of the section the
Court is precluded from inspecting a document if it refers
to matters of State. But in other respects the jurisdiction
of the Court to decide on the objection raised is not
different from that it possesses in respect of other
privileged documents.
If so understood there cannot be any ambiguity in the scope
of s. 162 of the Act. It says in express terms that when an
objection is raised to the production of a document or to
its admissibility, the validity of any such objection shall
be decided by the court. The second part of the section
states the material on the basis of which such an objection
can be decided. It can either inspect the document or take
other evidence to enable it to decide the validity of any
objection raised. The only limitation in the case of a
document referring to matters of State is that the court
cannot inspect it. It is implicit in the limitation that in
the case of documents pertaining to matters of State the
court is precluded not only from inspecting the documents
but also from permitting parties to adduce secondary
evidence of their contents. "The other evidence" must
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necessarily be de hors the contents of the documents.
Even in England there is no divergence of view on the
question who has to decide, when an objection to the
production of a document is raised on the ground of
privilege, the validity of the objection. In Robinson’s
case (1), the Judicial Committee observed at p. 716 thus:
(1) [1931] A.C. 704.
449
"The result of the discussion has been...............
wherein effect he concludes that the Court has in those
cases always had in reserve the power to inquire into the
nature of the documents for which protection is sought, and
to require some indication of the nature of the injury to
the State which would follow its production. The existence
of such a power is in no way out of harmony with the reason
for the privilege provided that its exercise be carefully
guarded so as not to occasion to the State the mischief
which the privilege, where it exists, is designed to guard
against."
The House of Lords in Duncan’s case (1), also recognized
this power though it whittled down its scope by holding that
the judge had to accept automatically the affidavit filed by
a minister. Viscount Simon, L. C., states at p. 642 as
follows:
"Although an objection validly taken to production, on the
ground that this would be injurious to the public interest,
is conclusive, it is important to remember that the decision
ruling out such documents is the decision of the
judge................ It is the judge who is in control of
the trial, not the executive, but the proper ruling for the
judge to give is as above expressed."
On the other hand, in Scotland the inherent right of courts
to override official discretion is recognized. The House of
Lords in Glasgow Corporation v. Land Board (2) gave a clear
exposition of the law of that country. Viscount Simonds
derives the principle of the court’s power from the fact
that the fair administration of justice between subject and
subject and the Crown is a public interest of higher order
and the protection is the care of the courts. Lord
Radcliffe finds it on the doctrine that the interest of the
Government for which the minister should speak with
authority does not exhaust the public interest, for another
aspect of that interest is seen in the need that impartial
justice should be done in courts of law. These judgments of
the high authority also recognized the fact that it is the
court that has to decide an objection
(1) [1942] A.C. 624. (2) (1956) S.C. (H.L.) 1.
57
450
raised by the State on the ground of privilege. There is a
strong current of Indian decisions taking the same view: see
Khawja Nazir Ahmad v. Emperor (1), re Mantubhai Mehta (2),
B. M. D. Chamarbaugwala v.Y. R. Parpia (3 ), Lijat Ali
Talukdar v. Emperor Bhaiya Saheb v. Ramnath Rampratap
Bhadupote Public Prosecutor, Andhra v. Damera Venkata
Narasayya Lakhuram Hariram v. The Union of India Tilka v.
State (8). In a few cases a different view is expressed.
It may, therefore, be stated without contradiction that the
preponderance of authority is in favour of a court deciding
the question of State privilege.
Some objections are raised in decided cases in England and
restated in Duncan’s case (9) against conferring such a
power on courts. Apart from the fact that the statute
expressly confers such a power, there are no merits in the
objections raised. The objections are: (i) the judges are
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not well qualified to appreciate the highly technical
matters which may arise with regard to some kinds of State
secrets; (ii) if a judge is allowed to decide on evidence
the question of privilege, it may prejudice a fair trial;
and (iii) it is a first principle of justice that the judge
should have no dealings on the matter in hand with one
litigant save in the presence of and to the equal knowledge
of the other. The objections raised have no substance. The
first objection, if accepted, disqualifies a judge from
deciding complicated technical questions that arise before
him. A judge is trained to look at things objectively and
can certainly decide, without inspecting the documents on
the material supplied whether the production of a document
will affect the public interest having regard to the
circumstances of each case. Nor are there any merits in the
second objection. In the words of Sir C. K. Allen, a judge
worthy of his office can put out of his mind all issues
except those which are raised and decided by the forensic
process. It is common place that a judge is trained to
decide a case only on
(1) I.L.R. [1945] Lah. 219. (2) I.L. R. [1945] BOM. 122.
(3) A.I.R. 1950 Bom. 230. (4) I.L.R. [1944] 1 Cal. 410.
(5) I.L.R. (1940] Nag. 240. (6) I.L.R. [1957] P. 174.
(7) A.L.R. 1960 Pat. 192. (8) A.I.,R. 1960 All, 543,
(9) [1942) A.C. 624.
451
the admissible evidence actually adduced before him and not
on any extraneous considerations. The third objection also
has no basis in fact. So long as a judge takes care to rule
out any question on the contents of a document in respect
whereof privilege is claimed, he can certainly decide the
question in the presence of both the parties. The
objections have, therefore, no substance. On the other
hand, there is every reason why the duty to decide on the
question of State privilege must be left to a judge and not
to the State. That is the reason why the legislature
rightly conferred that power on the court. A judge is as
much a part of a department of the State as an executive
officer. But unlike the executive officer, a judge is
trained to decide cases objectively not only between indi-
viduals inter se but also between the State and individuals.
He can, therefore, be trusted to decide impartially on the
question whether the production of a document in a case will
affect the public interest. State documents in a
secretariat, I presume, will be’ looked into by many
officers dealing with the said documents, sometimes from the
lowest to the highest in the department. It would be
unrealistic to suggest that the disclosure of a State
document to any one of those officers would not affect the
public interest whereas the decision of its character by a
judge would do so. It is, therefore, the duty of the court,
whenever an objection is raised on the ground of State
privilege to decide on relevant evidence whether the
document relates to affairs of State.
Even if the wide construction of the words "affairs of
State", namely, business of State, be accepted, the result
will not be different. The section says that no one shall
be permitted to give any evidence derived from unpublished
official records relating to affairs of State, except with
the permission of the officer at the head of the department
concerned. The expression "affairs of State" in its
ordinary significance is of the widest amplitude and will
mean the entire business of State. It takes in the routine
day-to-day administration and also highly confidential acts
involving defence and foreign relations, and also in modern
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times
452
the multifarious activities of a welfare State. The object
of the section is simply to prohibit the use of undisclosed
documents of State in evidence by persons who in the course
of their duties deal with or look into those documents,
without the permission of the officer at the head of the
department concerned. The words used in the section "as he
thinks fit" confer an absolute discretion on the head of the
department to give or withhold such permission. The section
does not lay down that the head of the department concerned
should refuse permission only if the disclosure injures
public interests, though ordinarily he may refuse permission
on such matters affecting the State. One can visualize a
situation when the officer in exercise of his absolute
discretion refuses to give permission for the use of not
only noxious documents but even of innocuous ones. The only
limitation on his power is his reason and experience. The
absolute discretion is capable of giving rise to mistake or
even conscious abuse. The section does not really involve
any doctrine of State privilege but is only a rule of
commonsense and propriety. If the officer gives permission,
there is an end of the matter; but, if he refuses, the party
affected may take out necessary summons to the State
Government to produce the document. The State Government
may depute one of its officers to produce the document in
court. Then only the occasion for raising the question of
privilege arises and s. 162 governs that situation. An
overriding power in express terms is conferred on a court
under s. 162 of the Act to decide finally on the validity of
the objection raised on the ground of privilege. The court
will disallow the objection if it comes to the conclusion
that the document does not relate to affairs of State or
that the public interest does not compel its non-disclosure,
or that the public interest served by the administration of
Justice in a particular case overrides all other aspects of
public interest. This conclusion flows from the fact that
in the first part of s. 162 of the Act there is no
limitation on the scope of the court’s decision, though in
the second part the
453
mode of enquiry is hedged in by conditions. In England, in
the absence of a provision or a rule of common law similar
to that of s. 162, there was room for conflict of views on
the scope of the court’s power. On the other hand, in
Scotland the common law corresponding to s. 162 was invoked
and the House of Lords recognized the inherent power of the
Court to reject a claim of Privilege if the Court comes to a
conclusion that the paramount interest of the administration
of justice demands or compels such a disclosure. Section
162 of the Act in terms confers a similar power on courts
and though it may have to be used with circumspection, it is
a real and effective power. There is no conflict between s.
123 and s. 162 of the Act: the former confers a power on a
head of a department to withhold permission from the stand-
point of State administration, whereas s. 162 recognizes the
overriding power of a court in the interest of higher public
interest to overrule the objection of privilege.
The next point is, what is the procedure to be followed by a
judge for deciding on the said objection? When an officer
of the State is summoned as a witness to produce a document,
if the State seeks to take a plea of privilege then it is
the duty of the minister in charge of the department
concerned to file an affidavit at the first instance. The
affidavit so filed shall ex facie show that the minister
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concerned has read and considered each of the documents in
respect of which the privilege is claimed. It shall also
contain the general nature of the document and the
particular danger to which the State would be exposed by its
production. If the court is not satisfied with the contents
of the affidavit, to enable it to decide whether the
document in question refers to the affairs of State, it can
summon the minister to appear as a witness. In effect and
substance the said procedure has been suggested in
Robinson’s case (1) at p. 722. The same procedure is also
indicated in Duncan’s case (2) at p. 638. In the second
case above referred, Viscount Simon L.C. says at p. 638
thus:
(1) (1931] A.C. 704. (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
454
"If the question arises on subpoena at the hearing it is not
uncommon in modern practice for the minister’s objection to
be conveyed to the court, at any rate in the first instance,
by an official of the department who produces a certificate
which the minister has signed, stating what is necessary. I
see no harm in that procedure, provided it is understood
that this is only for convenience and that if the court is
not satisfied by this method, it can request the minister’s
personal attendance."
It may be suggested that this procedure may cause some
inconvenience to the minister concerned. But if one
realizes that every act of the exercise of the right of
privilege detracts from the fair disposal of a case before
the court and that the administration of justice is also
part of the general conduct of the affairs of any State and
that its impartiality and purity are as important as any
other public interests, one will also appreciate that the
requirement of the personal attendance of a minister, if
necessary, to support his affidavit would be to a large
extent a guarantee against unjust objections that may other-
wise be raised. It is suggested that an affidavit of the
head of a department, such as the Secretary, would do as
well as that of a minister, but there is an essential
distinction between a Secretary and a minister: the former
may be frequently tempted to take the opposite view,
particularly in cases where a claim against the State seems
to him to be harsh or unfair, while the latter, being the
political head subject to parliamentary control, may be
expected, if he carefully scrutinizes a particular document,
not to take such objection which obstructs the cause of
justice unless absolutely necessary. I would, therefore,
hold that the affidavit which states that a particular
document relates to affairs of State must be sworn to only
by a minister in charge of the department wherefrom the
document or documents are summoned.
The next point is, what are the well established rules which
help the court to decide whether a particular document
pertains to affairs of State or not? The following relevant
rules may be extracted from
455
the decision of the Judicial Committee in Robinson’s case
(1): (1) the privilege is a narrow one most sparingly to be
exercised; (2) the principle of the rule is concern for
public interest and the rule will accordingly be applied no
further than the attainment of that object requires; (3) as
the protection is claimed on the broad principle of State
policy and public convenience, the papers protected, as
might have been expected, have usually been public official
documents of a political or administrative character; (4)
its foundation is that the information cannot be disclosed
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without injury to the public interests and not that the
documents are confidential or official, which alone is no
reason for their non-production; (5) even in the case of
documents relating to the trading, commercial or contractual
activities of a State, it is conceivable that there may be
some plain overruling principle of public interest.
concerned which cannot be disregarded; though in times of
peace such cases must be very rare. The House of Lords in
Duncan’s case (2) has laid down the following negative and
positive tests for deciding the question of privilege of the
State. The negative tests are: (1) it is not a sufficient
ground that the documents are State documents or official or
marked confidential ; (2) it would not be a good ground
that, if they were produced, the consequences might involve
the department or the government in parliamentary discussion
or in public criticism, or might necessitate the attendance
as witnesses or otherwise of officials who have pressing
duties elsewhere; (3) neither would it be good ground that
production might tend to expose a want of efficiency in the
administration or tend to lay the department open to claims
of compensation. The positive test is, where the public
interest would otherwise be damnified, for example, where
disclosure would be injurious to national defence, or to
good diplomatic relations, or where the practice of keeping
a class of documents secret is necessary for the proper
functioning of the public service. The last test has given
rise to mild but definite protests within the limits of
judicial propriety by the learned judges who
(1) [1931] A.C. 704. (2) [1942] A.C. 624.
456
had the occasion to deal with the question of privilege and
to vehement protests from jurists. Sir C. K. Allen, in his
book "Law and Orders" (2nd edition), has observed at p. 384
thus:
"Everybody is agreed that public security and foreign
relations are necessary heads of privilege. Both are wide
in scope, and it is doubtful whether any other ’head’ needs
to be specified.................. It would be of great
advantage if statute could put an end to the pernicious
doctrine that privilege can be claimed for classes of
documents."
The argument of the learned Advocate-General is based upon
an apprehension, which in my view is unfounded, that the
court may always refuse the affidavit of a minister and
insist on his personal attendance. The unpublished
documents relating to defence, foreign relations and other
documents of great public importance rarely come before
municipal courts. Occasionally documents of day-to-day
administration of the State may be relevant evidence, but
very often documents pertaining to mercantile or welfare
activities of the State would be summoned to establish a
particular claim. In the case of documents of undoubted
public importance, when the minister swears to an affidavit
that in his discretion their production is against public
interest, it may reasonably be expected that the judge would
accept the statement. But the real difficulty is in the
case of other documents, where the interests of private
individuals and the State come into conflict, the judge
should be in a position to examine the minister and others
to ascertain by evidence collateral to the contents of the
documents whether the assertion of the minister is justi-
fied.
The aforesaid discussion yields the following propositions:
(1) under s. 162 of the Evidence Act the court has the
overriding power to disallow a claim of privilege raised by
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the State in respect of an unpublished document pertaining
to matters of State; but in its discretion, the court will
exercise its power only in exceptional circumstances when
public interest demands, that is, when the public interest
served by the
457
disclosure clearly outweighs that served by the non-
disclosure. One of such instances is where the public
interest served by the administration of justice in a
particular case overrides all other aspects of public
interest. (2) The said claim shall be made by an affidavit
filed by the minister in charge of the department concerned
describing the nature of the document in general and broadly
the category of public interest its non-disclosure purports
to serve. (3) Ordinarily the court shall accept the
affidavit of a minister, but in exceptional circumstances,
when it has reason to believe that there is more than what
meets the eye, it can examine the minister and take other
evidence to decide the question of privilege. (4) Under no
circumstances can a court inspect such a document or permit
giving of secondary evidence of its contents. (5) Subject to
the overriding power of the court to disallow the claim of
privilege in exceptional cases, the following provide
working rules of guidance for the courts in the matter of
deciding the question of privilege in regard to unpublished
documents pertaining to matters of State: (a) "records
relating to affairs of State" mean documents of State whose
production would endanger the public interest; (b) documents
pertaining to public security, defence and foreign relations
are documents relating to affairs of State; (e) unpublished
documents relating to trading, commercial or contractual
activities of the State are not, ordinarily, to be
considered as documents relating to affairs of State; but in
special circumstances they may partake of that character;
(d) in cases of documents mentioned in (c) supra, it is a
question of fact in each case whether they relate to affairs
of State or not in the sense that if they are disclosed
public interest would suffer.
Bearing the aforesaid principles in mind, I shall construe
the nature of the documents in respect of which privilege is
claimed in the present appeal. The so called order of the
PEPSU Government is really the minutes recorded in the
course of cabinet discussions. Under Art. 163(3) of the
Constitution, the question
58
458
whether any, and if so what, advice was tendered by
ministers to the Governor shall not be inquired into in any
court. In view of the constitutional protection, and the
reason underlying such protection, I hold that in the
present case the district court was right in sustaining the
claim of privilege in regard to the said document.
In regard to the report of the Service Commission, on the
assumption that it is a relevant document, I cannot see how
public interest suffers by its disclosure. Service
Commission is a statutory body constituted with definite
powers conferred on it under the Constitution. Under Art.
320(3)(c) of the Constitution the State Public Service
Commission shall be consulted on all disciplinary matters
affecting a person serving under the Government of a State.
This is one of the constitutional protections conferred on
public servants. I cannot visualize how public interest
would suffer if the report submitted by the Service
Commission to the Government is disclosed, and how the
disclosure of such a report prevents the Service Commission
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from expressing its views on any other case in future passes
my comprehension. It may expose the Government if it
ignores a good advice; but such’ an exposure is certainly in
public interest. The Constitution does not put a seal of
secrecy on the document; nor, in my view, public interest
demands such secrecy. In a conflict between the
administration of justice and the claim of privilege by the
State, I have no hesitation to overrule the claim of
privilege.
Before closing, I must notice one fact. In this case, the
Chief Secretary filed an affidavit. But, in my view, the
minister should have done it. The respondent did not object
to this either in the district court or in the High Court.
In the circumstances, I would not reject the claim of
privilege on the basis of this procedural defect.
In the result, I would allow the appeal in respect of the
minutes of the cabinet and dismiss it in other respects. As
the parties have succeeded and failed in part, I direct them
to bear their own costs throughout.
459
BY COURT: In accordance with the opinion of the majority,
this appeal is allowed, the order passed by the High Court
is set aside and that of the trial court restored with costs
throughout.
Appeal allowed.