Nandini Satpathy v. P.L. Dani, AIR 1978 SC 1025

FACTS IN BRIEF :- This case questioned the constitutional dimensions of the failure to answer in interrogation by the police. The case expounded the precincts of Article 20(3) of the Constitution and Section 161(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Cr.P.C). The Appellant was a former chief minister of Orissa who was directed to appear at the Vigilance Police Station, Cuttack for being examined in connection with a case registered under the Prevention of Corruption Act. Certain questions were asked from her, which she refused to answer, terming them self-incriminatory. Upon her refusal, she was charged with the offences under the Indian Penal Code for refusing to assist the public officer in performance of his duty. This act of the police was challenged by the Appellant, calling to enforce her ‘right of silence’. Thus the following issues arose for consideration before the Supreme Court

1. Whether a person likely to be accused of crimes i.e. a suspect, entitled to the right to keep silence as available to the accused of an offence?  

2. Whether the bar against self-incrimination operates merely with reference to a particular accusation in regard to which the police investigator interrogates, or does it extend also to other pending or potential accusations outside the specific investigation which has led to the questioning?  

3. Does the constitutional shield of silence swing into action only in court or can it barricade the ‘accused’ against incriminating interrogation at the stages of police investigation also?  

4. What is the ambit of the cryptic expression ‘compelled to be a witness against himself’ occurring in Article 20(3) of the Constitution? Does ‘compulsion’ involve physical or like pressure or duress of an unlawful texture or does it also cover the crypto-compulsion or psychic coercion, given a tense situation or officer in authority interrogating an accused person, armed with power to insist on an answer?  

5. Does being ‘a witness against oneself’ include testimonial tendency to incriminate or probative probability of guilt flowing from the answer?  
 

6. What are the parameters of Section 161(2) of the Criminal Procedure Code? Does tendency to expose a person to a criminal charge embrace answers which have an inculpatory impact in other criminal cases actually or about to be investigated or tried?  

7. Does ‘any person’ in Section 161 Criminal Procedure Code include an accused person or only a witness?  

8. When does an answer self-incriminate or tend to expose one to a charge? What distinguishing features marks off nocent and innocent, permissible and impermissible interrogations and answers? Is the setting relevant or should the answer, in vacuo, bear a guilty badge on its bosom?  

9. Does mens rea form a necessary component of Section 179 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), and if so, what is its precise nature? Can a mere apprehension that any answer has a guilty potential salvage the accused or bring into play the exclusionary rule?  

10. Where do we demarcate the boundaries of benefit of doubt in the setting of Section 161(2) Cr.P.C. and Section 179 IPC?  
 

ARGUMENTS:- It was argued before the Supreme Court that if it was permissible in law to obtain evidence from the accused person by compulsion, what was the need to tread the hard path of laborious investigation and prolonged examination of other men, materials and documents? It was well said that an abolition of this privilege would be an incentive for those in charge of enforcement of law “to sit comfortably in the shade rubbing red pepper into a poor devil’s eyes rather than to go about in the sun hunting up evidence”. Therefore it was requested before the Court to strike a balance between the needs of law enforcement on one hand and the protection of the citizen from oppression and injustice at the hands of the law-enforcement machinery on the other hand.
 

JUDGMENT:- The Court held that ‘any person supposed to be acquainted with the facts and circumstances of the case’ included an accused person who filled that role because the police supposed him to have committed the crime and must, therefore, be familiar with the facts. The supposition may later prove a fiction but that did not repel the Section. Therefore the Court declared that suspects, though not yet formally charged but embryonically were accused on record, could also swim into the harbour of Article 20(3).
 

The Court observed that a constitutional provision received its full semantic range and so it followed that wider connotation was to be imparted to the expressions ‘accused of any offence’ and ‘to be witness against himself’. In Article 20(3), the expression ‘accused of any offence’ must, therefore, mean formally accused in praesenti and not in futuro. The expression ‘to be witness against himself’ meant more than the court process. Any giving of evidence, any furnishing of information, if likely to have an incriminating impact, answered the description of being witness against oneself. Not being limited to the forensic stage by express words in Article 20(3), the Court construed the expression to apply to every stage where furnishing of information and collection of materials took place.  
The Court also observed;  
 

 ‘Compelled testimony’ was evidence procured not merely by physical threats or violence but by psychic torture, atmospheric pressure, environmental coercion, tiring interrogative prolixity, overbearing and intimidatory methods and the like – not legal penalty for violation. So, the legal perils following upon refusal to answer or answer truthfully could not be regarded as compulsion within the meaning of Article 20(3).  

 “The prospect of prosecution may lead to legal tension in the exercise of a constitutional right, but then, a stance of silence is running a calculated risk. On the other hand, if there is any mode of pressure, subtle or crude, mental or physical, direct or indirect, but sufficiently substantial, applied by the policeman for obtaining information from an accused strongly suggestive of guilt, it becomes ‘compelled testimony’, violative of Article 20(3). Frequent threats of prosecution if there is failure to answer may take on the complexion of undue pressure violating Article 20(3). Legal penalty may by itself not amount to duress but the manner of mentioning it to the victim of interrogation may introduce an element of tension and tone of command perilously hovering near compulsion.  

 Accused is entitled to keep his mouth shut if the answer sought has a reasonable prospect of exposing him to guilt in some other accusation actual or imminent, even though the investigation under way is not with reference to that.  

 The right to consult an advocate of his choice shall not be denied to any person who is arrested. This does not mean that person who is not under arrest or custody can be denied that right. The spirit and sense of Article 22(1) is that it is fundamental to the rule of law that the services of a lawyer shall be available for consultation to any accused person under circumstances of near custodial interrogation.  

 In determining the incriminatory character of an answer the accused is entitled to consider - and the Court while adjudging will take note of - the setting, the totality of circumstances, the equation, personal and social, which have a bearing on making an answer substantially innocent but in effect guilty in import. However, fanciful claims, unreasonable apprehensions and vague possibilities cannot be the hiding ground for an accused person. He is bound to answer where there is no clear tendency to criminate.  
 

FOR COMMON MAN:- The judgment is significant for all the citizens on the account of the following that is lays;  
1. The protection of Article 20(3) is available even at the police interrogation stage. In simple words even a suspect accused has a right to remain silent while being interrogated by the police for gathering information about the offence.  

2. The accused not only has a right to remain silent against interrogations pertaining to the offence in question but also against questions which might have incriminatory effect as regards any other offence.  

3. Elements of compulsive interrogation include not only physical threats or violence but also psychic torture, atmospheric pressure, environmental coercion, tiring interrogative prolixity, overbearing and intimidatory methods.  

4. The manner of mentioning legal consequences to the victim of interrogation in case of failure to answer may introduce an element of tension and tone of command perilously hovering near compulsion.  

5. The accused has the right to consult his lawyer even at the police interrogation stage.


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