Case Law (SC) -- The fundamental right guaranteed under Article 22(1) of the Constitution provides that no person shall be arrested/detained in custody without being informed through written grounds of arrest which must be provided as soon as possible. The failure of the witness to respond to the questions put to them by the ED would not be sufficient in itself for the Investigating Officer to arrested u/s 19 of the PMLA Act.
Questions:-
1. Whether the failure of the
appellants to respond to the questions put to them by the ED would not be
sufficient in itself for the Investigating Officer to arrested u/s 19 of the Prevention
of Money Laundering Act?
2. How the ED is required to ‘inform’ the arrested person of the
grounds for his/her arrest?
Holding:
25. We may also note that the
failure of the appellants to respond to the questions put to them by the ED
would not be sufficient in itself for the Investigating Officer to opine that
they were liable to be arrested under Section 19, as that provision
specifically requires him to find reason to believe that they were guilty of an
offence under the Act of 2002. Mere non-cooperation of a witness in response to
the summons issued under Section 50 of the Act of 2002 would not be enough to
render him/her liable to be arrested under Section 19. As per its replies, it
is the claim of the ED that Pankaj Bansal was evasive in providing relevant
information. It was however not brought out as to why Pankaj Bansal’s replies
were categorized as ‘evasive’ and that record is not placed before us for
verification. In any event, it is not open to the ED to expect an admission of
guilt from the person summoned for interrogation and assert that anything short
of such admission would be an ‘evasive reply’. In 7 (2008) 1 SCC 728 23 Santosh
S/o Dwarkadas Fafat vs. State of Maharashtra8 , this Court noted that custodial
interrogation is not for the purpose of ‘confession' as the right against
self-incrimination is provided by Article 20(3) of the Constitution. It was
held that merely because an accused did not confess, it cannot be said that he
was not co-operating with the investigation. Similarly, the absence of either
or both of the appellants during the search operations, when their presence was
not insisted upon, cannot be held against them.
26. The more important issue
presently is as to how the ED is required to ‘inform’ the arrested person of
the grounds for his/her arrest. Prayer (iii) in the writ petitions filed by the
appellants pertained to this. Section 19 does not specify in clear terms as to
how the arrested person is to be ‘informed’ of the grounds of arrest and this
aspect has not been dealt with or delineated in Vijay Madanlal Choudhary
(supra). Similarly, in V. Senthil Balaji (supra), this Court merely noted that
the information of the grounds of arrest should be ‘served’ on the arrestee,
but did not elaborate on that issue. Pertinent to note, the grounds of arrest
were furnished in writing to the arrested person in that case. Surprisingly, no
consistent and uniform practice seems to be followed by the ED in this regard,
as written copies of the grounds of arrest are furnished to arrested persons in
certain parts of the country but in other areas, that practice is not followed
and the grounds of arrest are either read out to them or allowed to be read by
them.
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28. No doubt, in Vijay
Madanlal Choudhary (supra), this Court held that non-supply of the ECIR in a
given case cannot be found fault with, as the ECIR may contain details of the
material in the ED’s possession and revealing the same may have a deleterious
impact on the final outcome of the investigation or inquiry. Having held so,
this Court affirmed that so long as the person is ‘informed’ of the grounds of
his/her arrest, that would be sufficient compliance with the mandate of Article
22(1) of the Constitution.
29. In this regard, we may
note that Article 22(1) of the Constitution provides, inter alia, that no person who is
arrested shall be detained in custody without being informed, as soon as may
be, of the grounds for such arrest. This being the fundamental right guaranteed
to the arrested person, the mode of conveying information of the grounds of
arrest must necessarily be meaningful so as to serve the intended purpose. It
may be noted that Section 45 of the Act of 2002 enables the person arrested
under Section 19 thereof to seek release on bail but it postulates that unless
the twin conditions prescribed thereunder are satisfied, such a person would
not be entitled to grant of bail. The twin conditions set out in the provision
are that, firstly, the Court must be satisfied, after giving an opportunity to
the public prosecutor to oppose the application for release, that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the arrested person is not guilty of the
offence and, secondly, that he is not likely to commit any offence while on
bail. To meet this requirement, it would be essential for the arrested person
to be aware of the grounds on which the authorized officer arrested him/her
under Section 19 and the basis for the officer’s ‘reason to believe’ that
he/she is guilty of an offence punishable under the Act of 2002. It is only if
the arrested person has knowledge of these facts that he/she would be in a
position to plead and prove before the Special Court that there are grounds to
believe that he/she is not guilty of such offence, so as to avail the relief of
bail. Therefore, communication of the grounds of arrest, as mandated by Article
22(1) of the Constitution and Section 19 of the Act of 2002, is meant to serve
this higher purpose and must be given due importance.
30. We may also note that the
language of Section 19 of the Act of 2002 puts it beyond doubt that the
authorized officer has to record in writing the reasons for forming the belief
that the person proposed to be arrested is guilty of an offence punishable
under the Act of 2002. Section 19(2) requires the authorized officer to forward
a copy of the arrest order along with the material in his possession, referred
to in Section 19(1), to the Adjudicating Authority in a sealed envelope. Though
it is not necessary for the arrested person to be supplied with all the
material that is forwarded to the Adjudicating Authority under Section 19(2),
he/she has a constitutional and statutory right to be ‘informed’ of the grounds
of arrest, which are compulsorily recorded in writing by the authorized officer
in keeping with the mandate of Section 19(1) of the Act of 2002. As already
noted hereinbefore, It seems that the mode of informing this to the persons
arrested is left to the option of the ED’s authorized officers in different
parts of the country, i.e., to either furnish such grounds of arrest in writing
or to allow such grounds to be read by the arrested person or be read over and
explained to such person.
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33. The second reason as to
why this would be the proper course to adopt is the constitutional objective
underlying such information being given to the arrested person. Conveyance of
this information is not only to apprise the arrested person of why he/she is
being arrested but also to enable such person to seek legal counsel and,
thereafter, present a case before the Court under Section 45 to seek release on
bail, if he/she so chooses. In this regard, the grounds of arrest in V. Senthil
Balaji (supra) are placed on record and we find that the same run into as many
as six pages. The grounds of arrest recorded in the case on hand in relation to
Pankaj Bansal and Basant Bansal have not been produced before this Court, but
it was contended that they were produced at the time of remand. However, as
already noted earlier, this did not serve the intended purpose. Further, in the
event their grounds of arrest were equally voluminous, it would be well-nigh
impossible for either Pankaj Bansal or Basant Bansal to record and remember all
that they had read or heard being read out for future recall so as to avail
legal remedies. More so, as a person who has just been arrested would not be in
a calm and collected frame of mind and may be utterly incapable of remembering
the contents of the grounds of arrest read by or read out to him/her. The very
purpose of this constitutional and statutory protection would be rendered
nugatory by permitting the authorities concerned to merely read out or permit
reading of the grounds of arrest, irrespective of their length and detail, and
claim due compliance with the constitutional requirement under Article 22(1)
and the statutory mandate under Section 19(1) of the Act of 2002.
34. We may also note that the
grounds of arrest recorded by the authorized officer, in terms of Section 19(1)
of the Act of 2002, would be personal to the person who is arrested and there
should, ordinarily, be no risk 30 of sensitive material being divulged therefrom,
compromising the sanctity and integrity of the investigation. In the event any
such sensitive material finds mention in such grounds of arrest recorded by the
authorized officer, it would always be open to him to redact such sensitive
portions in the document and furnish the edited copy of the grounds of arrest
to the arrested person, so as to safeguard the sanctity of the investigation.
35. On the above analysis,
to give true meaning and purpose to the constitutional and the statutory
mandate of Section 19(1) of the Act of 2002 of informing the arrested person of
the grounds of arrest, we hold that it would be necessary, henceforth, that a
copy of such written grounds of arrest is furnished to the arrested person as a
matter of course and without exception. The decisions of the Delhi High
Court in Moin Akhtar Qureshi (supra) and the Bombay High Court in Chhagan
Chandrakant Bhujbal (supra), which hold to the contrary, do not lay down the
correct law. In the case on hand, the admitted position is that the ED’s
Investigating Officer merely read out or permitted reading of the grounds of
arrest of the appellants and left it at that, which is also disputed by the
appellants. As this form of communication is not found to be adequate to fulfil
compliance with the mandate of Article 22(1) of the Constitution and Section
19(1) of the Act of 2002, we have no hesitation in holding that their arrest
was not in keeping with the provisions of Section 19(1) of the Act of 2002.
Further, as already noted supra, the clandestine conduct of the ED in
proceeding against the appellants, by recording the second ECIR immediately
after they secured interim protection in relation to the first ECIR, does not
commend acceptance as it reeks of arbitrary exercise of power. In effect, the
arrest of the appellants and, in consequence, their remand to the custody of
the ED and, thereafter, to judicial custody, cannot be sustained.
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