Nazir Ahmad Bhatt Vs. State of Delhi
(From the Judgment and Order dated 22.2.2001 of the Additional Sessions Judge Court, New Delhi in S.C. No. 2 of 2000)
(From the Judgment and Order dated 22.2.2001 of the Additional Sessions Judge Court, New Delhi in S.C. No. 2 of 2000)
Mr. Anoop Chaudhary, Senior Advocate, Mr. D.S. Mehra and Mr. K.L. Janjani, Advocates with him for the Respondent.
Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987
Sections 4 and 19 – Indian Penal Code, 1860 – Sections 120B, 419, 468 and 471 – Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 – Section 463 – Terrorist and disruptive activities – Confessional statement – Procedure for recording of – Reliability of such statement – Proof as to whether such statement was made voluntarily or on the compulsion of police – Seizure of documents and tapes containing exhortations for liberation of Kashmir and carrying out activi-ties targeted against the sovereignty and territorial integrity of India from the residence of accused appellant – Resultant arrest of the appellant – Confessional statement recorded by deputy commissioner of police – On the basis of such confessions, police recovering stickers and leaflets containing such exhorta-tions – Accused convicted and sentenced to five years’ imprison-ment – By the time the appeal came up before the Supreme Court, accused had undergone the full sentence – Contention before the court that since the accused was not administered a caution at the time of recording of the confession that he was not bound to make any such confession, the confession was not valid and the conviction based on such confession was also bad in law. Held, there was no requirement that the confessor should be adminis-tered with a caution, every day the officer met him. It was enough that the caution was administered, before the accused made the confessional statement. Accused, when produced before the magistrate, did not state that he was made to sign any document without his consent or that he did not make a confession as recorded. There was no material to show that the statement made was not voluntary. Seizure of stickers and other materials after the confession did lend assurance to the court that the confes-sion contained only the truth. No ground or reason for upsetting the conviction passed by the designated court. Appeal dismissed.
Thus, it is clear that what was required by law for compliance with as precautionary measures have been complied with by PW-4. Of course, the witness PW-4 has deposed in court that he ex-plained to the confessor even on 18th itself that he was not bound to make such confession. (Para 9)
Resort to section 463 of the Code is unnecessary on the facts of this case because PW-4 had administered the caution to the con-fessor on 19.4.1995, before proceeding to record the confession, that the confessor is not bound to make such a confession. There is no requirement that the confessor should be administered with such caution every day, the officer meets him. It is enough that the caution is administered before the accused made the confes-sional statement. (Para 9)
Appellant did not make a mention to the additional chief metro-politan magistrate before whom he was produced on 19.4.1995 that he was made to sign any document without his consent or that he did not make a confession as recorded. (Para 12)
He never had any complaint that he was physically or even mental-ly tortured by the police at any time. He thought of retracting from the confession only during trial of the case and not at any previous stage. (Para 12)
From all the above board circumstances, we are inclined to believe that confession was voluntarily made by him. The seizure of the stickers and other materials from his house would only lend assurance to the court that the confession contained only the truth. (Para 13)
We do not find any good reason to upset the conviction passed by the designated court under TADA. (Para 14)
1. The manager of a bank had undergone the entire term of impris-onment to which he was sentenced by a designated judge under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (‘TADA’ for short). He still persists in challenging the convic-tion and sentence presumably because the consequence of it would entail dislodgment from his office in the bank. He was found having involved in disruptive activities ranging to defying the sovereignty and territorial integrity of India. On the strength of the aforesaid finding, the designated judge convicted him under section 4 of TADA and sentenced him to rigorous imprison-ment for 5 years besides a fine of Rs. 5, 000/-. He was also convicted on other counts of offences such as sections 120B, 419, 468 and 471 of the Indian Penal Code, for which he was sentenced to imprisonment for lesser terms. As he completed his sentence by undergoing the term of imprisonment imposed under section 4 of TADA, he is deemed to have undergone the sentences imposed under the other counts as well because of the direction that the sentence of imprisonment under all the different counts shall run concurrently.
2. This appeal under section 19 of TADA is, therefore, as of his statutory right and his senior counsel (Shri Sushil Kumar) has tenaciously pursued it despite the advantage that he need not now go back to jail. But as the fall out of the conviction would visit him with dire consequences for his service tenure, learned senior counsel did not spare any effort to get him exonerated. We heard the arguments with all seriousness with which learned coun-sel projected them.
3. Appellant belonged to the State of Jammu & Kashmir. Though he joined Jammu & Kashmir Bank at the lower tier, he was also able to reach the position of manager of the bank. During the relevant period, he was manager of the Delhi branch (Connaught Place) of the aforesaid bank. A raid was conducted by the police at his residence on 12.4.1995, as a sequel to some sleuth information which the police succeeded in extracting from one Mohd. Yakub who was arrested at Srinagar on 2.1.1995. In the raid, police recov-ered an audio cassette, some stickers and two floppies. According to the prosecution, those materials contained exhortations made by leaders of secessionists organisations for liberation of Kashmir from India. They are produced before us for our scrutiny. We have noticed that the stickers contained such exhortations inscribed in English. The writings in other materials are in Urdu but we did not have the advantage of getting the authenticated translation of them. Nonetheless, we are not disposed to convict a person merely because some stickers and leaflets etc., contain-ing exhortations for liberation of Kashmir, were found in his house unless it is shown that he had a part in making or using such material.
4. The prosecution, however, relied on a confession attributed to the appellant as recorded by a deputy commissioner of police (PW-4). That confession is sought to be admitted under section 15 of TADA. If the contents of the documents styled as confession can be acted on as voluntary and genuine, it would provide evidence for the disruptive activities said to have been perpetrated by the appellant. According to the appellant, he was picked up by the police on 8th April, 1995 was detained in illegal custody and the statement attributed to him was not in fact made by him. He was made to sign some documents, the contents of which were not even read out to him, according to the appellant.
5. Exhibit P-25 is the document containing the confessional statement of the appellant. The relevant portions of it are the following : Appellant was told by one Maulana Masood Azhar that his house at Srinagar was raided by security forces because of his links with Harkat-Ul-Ansar(a terrorist organisation) and he escaped from being caught. Later, one Mohd. Asraf Dhar told him that he was a worker of the terrorist organisation and he was as-signed the task of raising funds for carrying out the activities connected with the liberation of Kashmir. It was the said Mohd. Asraf Dhar who gave him audio cassette containing inflammatory speeches of Maulana Masood Azhar exhorting the Muslim to fight against Indian people for seperating Jammu and Kashmir from the rest of India. After hearing the speeches from the cassette, appellant agreed to work for Harkat-Ul-Ansar. A code name was given to the appellant as “Abid”. Money would be despatched to him through “Hawala”, for the various operations planned by Harkat-Ul-Ansar. He was to exchange message with Mohd. Asraf Dhar. A total of Rs. 25 lakhs was received by him from Sharjah in about seven instalments through Hawala for being used in connec-tion with terrorist activities. He was allowed to take Rs. 25 thousand for his personal expenses. He also got other floppies as well as literature of Harkat-Ul-Ansar containing anti-India propaganda. The confession further narrates some more activities involving money transactions for the use of the same disruptive activities.
6. If one reads exhibit P-25 he cannot but form the irresistible impression that activities were targeted against the sovereignty and territorial integrity of India vis-a-vis the State of Jammu and Kashmir. Hence, it is unnecessary to ponder over the question whether exhibit P-25 would really amount to disruptive activi-ties. None can even doubt, reading exhibit P-25, that it amounts to disruptive activities as defined in section 4 of TADA. It is not necessary to cogitate over the question whether exhibit P-25 is admissible in evidence as section 15 of TADA has removed the lid of inadmissibility, if the confession was made to a police officer not lower in rank than a superintendent of police. There is no dispute that PW-4 was holding such a rank during April 1995.
7. Therefore, Shri Sushil Kumar learned senior counsel, focused on the reliability of the said confession . The first point raised against the confession is that, when appellant was pro-duced before PW-4 on 18.4.1995, he did not administer a caution to him that he was not bound to make any such confession. Rule 15 of the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Rules (for short ‘the Rules’) was cited before us which contained regulations for recording confession under section 15 of TADA. Sub-rule (3) of the rules says, inter alia, that the police officer who records the confession shall make a memorandum at the end of the confession to the following effect :
“I have explained to (name) that he is not bound to make a confession and that, if he does so, any confession he may make may be used as evidence against him and I believe that this confession was voluntarily made. It was taken in my presence and hearing and recorded by me and was read over to the person making it and admitted by him to be correct, and it contains a full and true account of the statement made by him.”
8. These is no dispute that a memorandum to the above effect has been appended to the confession signed by PW-4. But learned senior counsel submitted that mere appendage of such a memorandum is insufficient, as the caution envisaged in the rule should really have been administered to the appellant, i.e. he was not bound to make a confession and that if he did so, the confession could be used against him. Learned counsel pointed out that, in the minutes recorded by PW-4 on 18-4-1995, there was no mention about administering a caution to the appellant that he was not bound to make a confession. Nonetheless, PW-4 recorded in the said minute that he cautioned the appellant, that the confession could be used against him during trial and that the appellant replied that he fully understood the consequence of making a confession. On 19.4.1995, PW-4 asked him the question whether he was aware that he was not bound to make a confession to which the appellant answered in the affirmative, then only he proceeded further and recorded the confession.
9. Thus, it is clear that what was required by law for compliance with as precautionary measures have been complied with by PW-4. Of course, the witness PW-4 has deposed in court that he ex-plained to the confessor even on 18th itself that he was not bound to make such confession. Learned senior counsel for the state contended that the court can regard the said evidence for satisfying itself that there was no such non-compliance. Section 463 of the Code of Criminal Procedure enables the court to take evidence in regard to any non-compliance and to act on such evidence, if the court is satisfied that such non-compliance has not injured the accused in his defence on the merits. In our view, resort to section 463 of the Code is unnecessary on the facts of this case because PW-4 had administered the caution to the confessor on 19.4.1995, before proceeding to record the con-fession, that the confessor is not bound to make such a confes-sion. There is no requirement that the confessor should be admin-istered with such caution every day, the officer meets him. It is enough that the caution is administered before the accused made the confessional statement.
10. Learned senior counsel then adopted an alternative attack on the confessional statement basing on a guideline laid down by this Court in Kartar Singh v. State of Punjab1 (1994 (3) SCC 569). A constitution bench of this Court was considering the constitutional validity of section 15 of TADA and learned judges of the bench, upheld its validity in the aforesaid decision. However, certain guidelines were formulated for com-pliance by the officers to ensure that confession is not tainted with any vice. Guideline no. 2, to which focus is made by the senior counsel, reads thus:
“The person from whom a confession has been recorded under sec-tion 15(1) of the Act, should be produced before the chief metro-politan magistrate or the chief judicial magistrate to whom the confession is required to be sent under rule 15(5) along with the original statement of confession, written or recorded on mechani-cal device without unreasonable delay.”
11. In order to drive his point home, learned senior counsel contended that it is for the prosecution to show that everyone of the guidelines has been complied with by the police officer. Learned senior counsel for the state submitted that it is open to the court to presume that official acts have been regularly performed and hence, it is for the party who wants to show non-compliance of any official duty, to satisfy the court about the lapse. In the present case, we do not propose to enter on a dis-cussion regarding the aforesaid question of burden of proof because, there is material on record to show that appellant was produced before the additional chief metropolitan magistrate for the purpose of verification of the statement attributed to the appellant. PW-38, the investigating officer said so in his evi-dence. Nothing has been shown to us for disbelieving the afore-said evidence.
12. Learned senior counsel for the appellant then made an endea-vour to show that PW-4 had only copied the statement prepared by the investigating officer under section 161 of the Code of Crimi-nal Procedure and secured the signature of the appellant thereon. We do not have any material to think that PW-4 did so as contend-ed by the learned counsel. In this context, we may point out that, appellant did not make a mention to the additional chief metropolitan magistrate before whom he was produced on 19.4.1995 that he was made to sign any document without his consent or that he did
not make a confession as recorded by PW-4.
We have to bear in mind the answer, given by the appellant to a question put by the trial judge during examination under section 313 of the Code, after bringing his attention to exhibit PW-4/B. That document is dated 18.4.1995 and it shows that appellant gave his consent to make a confessional statement before the senior officer. Appellant owned exhibit PW-4/B though he explained that he signed it at the instance of the investigating officer. This means, appellant was told in advance about the possibility of recording his confession. He never had any complaint that he was physically or even mentally tortured by the police at any time. He thought of retracting from the confession only during trial of the case and not at any previous stage.
13. From all the above board circumstances, we are inclined to believe that confession was voluntarily made by him. The seizure of the stickers and other materials from his house would only lend assurance to the court that the confession contained only the truth.
14. We do not find any good reason to upset the conviction passed by the designated court under TADA. We, therefore, confirm the conviction. We need not vex our mind about the quantum of sen-tence because, as pointed out earlier, appellant has already undergone the period of imprisonment covered by the sentence.
15. In the result, we dismiss this appeal.