SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
State of Haryana
Vs
Suresh
(Arijit Pasayat and D. K. Jain, JJ)
Appeal (Crl.) 248 of 2001
05.06.2007
JUDGMENT
DR. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. Challenge in this appeal is to the judgment of a learned Single Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court allowing the Criminal Appeal filed by the respondent, who was found guilty of offence punishable under Section 18 of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (in short the 'Act') and sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for ten years and to pay a fine of Rs.1, 00, 00/- with default stipulations.
2. The High Court directed acquittal on the ground that there was
non-compliance with the mandatory requirements of Section 50 of the Act.
3. Background facts in a nutshell are as follows. The case of the prosecution
is that on 01.04.1987, the patrolling party consisting of the sub-inspector and
two assistant sub-inspectors and four constables were present at Rohtak. At
about 5.10 a.m. a bus of Haryana Roadways came from Delhi and the same was
stopped by patrolling party. The accused-respondent, Suresh was also one of the
passengers travelling in the bus with an attachi-case. The Sub-Inspector of
Police searched the attache case by taking the same from the hands of the
accused. When the attachi case was searched, a false bottom made of ply-wood
was broken and below it there was a plastic bag containing opium and the same
was recovered by the police. Out of it 10 grams of opium was separated as
sample and parcels of the same and the remaining bulk were prepared and were
sealed with seal bearing inscription RK and a ruqa was sent to the police
station for registration of the case and on the basis of the same, investigation
was taken up and after completion of the investigation a charge-sheet was
filed.
4. In order to prove the guilt of the accused, the prosecution examined five
witnesses.
5. After closure of the evidence of the prosecution, the accused was examined
under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
(in short the 'Code'), and in defence the accused did not examine any witnesses
though he pleaded innocence and false implication.
6. On consideration of the evidence on record, learned Additional Sessions
Judge convicted the accused for the offence under Section 18 of the Act and
sentenced him to undergo rigorous imprisonment for a period of 10 years and to
pay a fine of Rs.1, 00, 000/- and in default of payment of fine, to further
undergo rigorous imprisonment for a period of two years. Accused filed an
appeal before the High Court which as noted above was allowed and conviction
was set aside.
7. In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the appellant-State submitted
that the High Court's judgment is unsustainable in view of several decisions of
this Court taking the view that Section 50 of the Act relates only to a
personal search and not of bags or containers carried by the accused.
8. There is no appearance on behalf of the respondent.
9. The controversy turns round Section 50 of the Act and the same (at the
relevant time) reads as under:
"Conditions under which search of persons shall be conducted:
(1) When any officer duly authorized under Section 42 is about to search any
person under the provisions of Section 41, section 42 or Section 43, he shall,
if such person so requires, take such person without unnecessary delay to the
nearest Gazetted Officer of any of the departments mentioned in Section 42 or
to the nearest Magistrate.
(2) If such requisition is made, the officer may detain the person until he can
bring him before the Gazetted Officer or the Magistrate referred to in
sub-section (1).
(3) The Gazetted Officer or the Magistrate before whom any such person is
brought shall, if he sees no reasonable ground for search, forthwith discharge
the person but otherwise shall direct that search be made.
(4) No female shall be searched by anyone excepting a female."
10. The question, which requires consideration, is what is the meaning of the
words "search any person" occurring in Sub-section (1) of Section 50
of the Act. Learned counsel for the accused has submitted that the word
"person" occurring in Section 50 would also include within its ambit
any bag, briefcase or any such article or container, etc., being carried by
such person and the provisions of Section 50 have to be strictly complied with
while conducting, search of such bag, briefcase, article or container, etc.
Learned counsel for the State has, on the other hand, submitted that there is
no warrant for giving such an extended meaning and the word "person"
would mean only the person himself and not any bag, briefcase, article or
container, etc., being carried by him.
11. The word "person" has not been defined in the Act. Section
2(xxix) of the Act says that the words and expressions used herein and not
defined but defined in the Code of Criminal Procedure have the meanings
respectively assigned to them in that Code. The Code, however, does not define
the word "person". Section 2(y) of the Code says that the words and
expressions used therein and not defined but defined in the Indian Penal Code, 1860 have the meanings respectively
assigned to them in that Code. Section 11 of the Indian Penal Code says that
the word "person" includes any Company or Association or body of
persons whether incorporated or not. Similar definition of the word
"person" has been given in Section 3(42) of the General
Clauses Act, 1897. Therefore, these definitions render no assistance for
resolving the controversy in hand.
12. One of the basic principles of interpretation of Statutes is to construe
them according to plain, literal and grammatical meaning of the words. If that
is contrary to, or inconsistent with, any express intention or declared purpose
of the Statute, or if it would involve any absurdity, repugnancy or
inconsistency, the grammatical sense must then be modified, extended or
abridged, so far as to avoid such an inconvenience, but no further. The onus of
showing that the words do not mean what they say lies heavily on the party who
alleges it. He must advance something which clearly shows that the grammatical
construction would be repugnant to the intention of the Act or lead to some
manifest absurdity (See Craies on Statute Law, Seventh ed. page 83-85). In the
well known treatise - Principles of Statutory Interpretation by Justice G.P.
Singh, the learned author has enunciated the same principle that the words of
the Statute are first understood in their natural, ordinary or popular sense
and phrases and sentences are construed according to their grammatical meaning,
unless that leads to some absurdity or unless there is something in the context
or in the object of the Statute to suggest the contrary (See the Chapter - The
Rule of Literal Construction -page 78 - Ninth ed.). This Court has also
followed this principle right from the beginning. In Jugalkishore Saraf v. Raw
Cotton Co. Ltd. Â S.R. Das, J. said:
"The cardinal rule of construction of statutes is to read the statute
literally, that is, by giving to the words used by the legislature their
ordinary, natural and grammatical meaning. If, however, such a reading leads to
absurdity and the words are susceptible of another meaning the Court may adopt
the same. But if no such alternative construction is possible, the Court must
adopt the ordinary rule of literal interpretation."
13. A catena of subsequent decisions have followed the same line. It,
therefore, becomes necessary to look to dictionaries to ascertain the correct
meaning of the word "person".
14. A bag, briefcase or any such article or container, etc. can, under no
circumstances, be treated as body of a human being. They are given a separate
name and are identifiable as such. They cannot even remotely be treated to be
part of the body of a human being. Depending upon the physical capacity
of a person, he may carry any number of items like a bag, a briefcase, a
suitcase, a tin box, a thaila, a jhola, a gathri, a holdall, a carton, etc. of
varying size, dimension or weight. However, while carrying or moving along with
them, some extra effort or energy would be required. They would have to be
carried either by the hand or hung on the shoulder or back or placed on the
head. In common parlance it would be said that a person is carrying a
particular article, specifying the manner in which it was carried like hand,
shoulder, back or head, etc. Therefore, it is not possible to include these
articles within the ambit of the word "person" occurring in Section
50 of the Act.
15. The scope and ambit of Section 50 of the Act was examined in considerable
detail by a Constitution Bench in State of Punjab v. Baldev Singh  d para
12 of the reports is being reproduced below :
"12. On its plain reading, Section 50 would come into play only in the
case of a search of a person as distinguished from search of any premises etc.
However, if the empowered officer, without any prior information as
contemplated by Section 42 of the Act makes a search or causes arrest of a
person during the normal course of investigation into an offence or suspected
offence and on completion of that search, a contraband under the NDPS Act is
also recovered, the requirements of Section 50 of the Act are not
attracted."
16. The Bench recorded its conclusion in para 57 of the reports and sub-paras
(1), (2), (3) and (6) are being reproduced below :
"57. On the basis of the reasoning and discussion above, the following
conclusions arise:
(1) That when an empowered officer or a duly authorized officer acting on prior
information is about to search a person, it is imperative for him to inform the
person concerned of his right under Sub-section (1) of Section 50 of being
taken to the nearest gazetted officer or the nearest Magistrate for making the
search. However, such information may not necessarily be in writing.
(2) That failure to inform the person concerned about the existence of his
right to be searched before a gazetted officer or a Magistrate would cause
prejudice to an accused.
(3) That a search made by an empowered officer, on prior information, without
informing the person of his right that if he so requires, he shall be taken
before a gazetted officer or a Magistrate for search and in case he so opts,
failure to conduct his search before a gazetted officer or a Magistrate may not
vitiate the trial but would render the recovery of the illicit article suspect
and vitiate the conviction and sentence of an accused, where the conviction has
been recorded only on the basis of the possession of the illicit article, recovered
from his person, during a search conducted in violation of the provisions of
Section 50 of the Act.
(6) That in the context in which the protection has been incorporated in
Section 50 for the benefit of the person intended to be searched, we do not
express any opinion whether the provisions of Section 50 are mandatory or
directory, but hold that failure to inform the person concerned of his right as
emanating from Sub-section (1) of Section 50, may render the recovery of the
contraband suspect and the conviction and sentence of an accused bad and
unsustainable in law."
17. These aspects were highlighted in State of H.P. v. Pawan Kumar  .
18. In view of the aforesaid judgment by a three Judge Bench of this Court, the
acquittal, as directed by the High Court, is clearly unsustainable. However, we
find that other points were urged in support of the appeal before the High
Court, but the High Court allowed the appeal filed by the accused only on the
ground of non-compliance of Section 50 of the Act. It did not examine the other
grounds of challenge. We, therefore, remit the matter to the High Court to hear
the appeal afresh on grounds other than that of alleged non-compliance with
Section 50 of the Act, which, as noted above, has no application to the facts
of the case.
19. The appeal is allowed to the aforesaid extent.