1.NDPS - Procedural Safe Guards
1.NDPS - Procedural Safe Guards
1.NDPS - Procedural Safe Guards
Professor S P Srivastava
National Judicial Academy
State of Punjab vs Balbir Singh
(1993)3 SCC 299
Under Section 41(1) only an empowered Magistrate
can issue warrant for the arrest or for the search in
respect of offences punishable under Chapter IV of
the Act etc., when he has reason to believe that such
offences have been committed or such substances
are kept or concealed in any building, conveyance or
place.
…..continued
If an empowered officer or an authorised
officer under Section 41(2) of the Act carries
out a search, he would be doing so under the
provisions of Cr. PC namely
Sections 100 and 165 Cr. PC. If there is no strict
compliance with Section 100 or Section 165 it
would not vitiate the trial. such failure will
have a bearing on the appreciation of
evidence regarding arrest or seizure as
well as on merits of the case
On prior information, the empowered officer
or an authorised officer while acting under
Section 41(2) or 42 should comply with the
provisions of Section 50 before the search of
the person is made and such person should
be informed that if he so requires, he shall
be produced before a gazetted officer or a
magistrate
The obligation to inform is mandatory. The
language is clear and the provision implicitly
makes it obligatory on the authorised officer
to inform the person to be searched of his
right.
Failure to inform the person to be searched and if
he so requires, failure to take him to the gazetted
officer or the magistrate, would amount to non-
compliance of Section 50.
In cases of chance recovery during normal investigation
by a police officer, Section 50 would not apply.
If the police officer is an empowered officer then from that
stage on ward he should observe the procedure under NDPS
Act. If he is not an empowered officer then he should inform
an empowered officer who would proceed therefrom in
accordance with NDPS Act.
Gurbax Singh v. State of Haryana
(2001) 3 SCC 28
On checking by the staff of a second class
compartment of a train, the appellant, who was
sitting in the compartment became panicky and
left the train carrying a katta (gunny bag) on his
left shoulder.
A Sub-Inspector who was present on platform for
checking smuggling and other antisocial
elements, on suspicion, nabbed him and found
that he was carrying poppy straw weighing 7
kgs. in the bag.
Itwas held that the Police Officer had
neither information, nor knowledge
nor reason to believe that the offence
under the NDPS Act had been
committed and therefore section 50
was not applicable
State of HP vs Sunil Kumar
AIR 2014 SC 2564
In a police check of buses for ticketless travelers,
the accused was seen concealing something under
this clothes.
He was asked to disembark from the bus and on
search ‘charas’ was found in a polythene packet tied
under his belly.
The SC held that there was no prior information nor
bus was being checked for probable recovery of
narcotics, therefore, it was a chance recovery and
Section 50 would not be attracted. ….continued
Continued from previous slide