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2015 DIGILAW 1459 (KER)

Pareed Musaliyar v. State of Kerala

2015-10-16

DAMA SESHADRI NAIDU

body2015
JUDGMENT : Dama Seshadri Naidu, J. 1. In relation to a hooch tragedy, the respondent authorities registered a crime in Crime No. 361/2010 on the file of Wandoor Police Station for the offence under Sections 302,307, 201 read with Section 34 IPC and Section 57(A) of the Abkari Act and investigated the crime. During the course of the investigation, based on the alleged confession made by one of the accused in the crime, the Police seized the petitioner's vehicle, a Tempo Traveler bearing Registration No. KL7-BC-4141, though the petitioner himself is not an accused. Later, after the initial seizure, the authorities confiscated the vehicle, as part of which the third respondent passed Exhibit P5 order under Section 67B of the Abkari Act (the 'Act' for brevity). 2. Aggrieved, when the petitioner appealed against Exhibit P5, the second respondent, through Exhibit P6 order, negatived the petitioner's claim and confirmed the findings of the third respondent. The fact, however, remains that in the light of the interim custody obtained by the petitioner initially after providing a cash deposit of Rs. 3,00,000/-, the vehicle was in the custody of the petitioner by the time the appellate authority passed the order, and continued to be in his possession. 3. Assailing Exhibit P6 order in appeal rendered by the second respondent, the petitioner has filed the present writ petition. 4. The learned counsel for the petitioner, haying drawn my attention to Exhibit P6 order in appeal, has strenuously contended that the impugned orders of both the primary authority and the appellate authority do not contain any reasons why the petitioner's vehicle has been confiscated. According to him, the order of confiscation has been confirmed in appeal on mere surmises and conjectures. 5. In elaboration of his submissions, the learned counsel has submitted that the confiscating authorities have not given the petitioner the benefit of Section 37(c) of the Act. Summing up his submissions, the learned counsel has singularly contended that in the absence of either active connivance or conscious knowledge on the part of the petitioner as the owner of the vehicle, his vehicle, the source of his livelihood, could not have been confiscated. 6. Summing up his submissions, the learned counsel has singularly contended that in the absence of either active connivance or conscious knowledge on the part of the petitioner as the owner of the vehicle, his vehicle, the source of his livelihood, could not have been confiscated. 6. In support of his submissions, the learned counsel has placed reliance on Circle Inspector (Excise), Neyyattinkara v. Mukundan, 1975 KHC 129, Rajesh K. v. Sub Inspector of Police, Palakkad and Others, 2015 (4) KHC 253, Ravichandran v. Excise Inspector, 2015 (1) KLT 218 , and Asst. Excise Commissioner v. Paulson, 2009 (1) KLT 959 . 7. The learned Government Pleader, on his part, has submitted that the petitioner's vehicle was seized in connection with a crime which involved the loss of human life: the hooch tragedy. He has further submitted that mere assumption that the petitioner had no knowledge about the use of his vehicle for an illegal purpose could not exonerate him from the, statutory consequences under the Act. Once it is established that the petitioner's vehicle has been used for transporting illicit liquor, the consequences have to follow, contends the learned Government Pleader. 8. In elaboration of his submissions, the learned Government Pleader has contended that, to take benefit of Section 67C of the Act, the owner of the vehicle has to discharge a very heavy evidentiary burden. In other words, it is for the petitioner to explain that despite his best care and caution to ensure that the vehicle had not been put to any illegal use, somebody else without his knowledge had used, rather misused, the vehicle, in the first place. 9. Regarding the authorities relied on by the learned counsel for the petitioner, the learned Government Pleader would contend that the ratio laid down in those judgments does not apply to the facts of the present case. 10. Heard the learned counsel for the petitioner and the learned Government pleader, apart from perusing the record. 11. Indeed, it is unfortunate that the rapacious and ruinous lure of lucre of certain unscrupulous persons has led to a liquor tragedy resulting in loss of human life. The enormity of an offence, still, calls for a sober application of the law. First, the petitioner's vehicle had not been seized flagrante delicto--in the very act of committing the offence. 11. Indeed, it is unfortunate that the rapacious and ruinous lure of lucre of certain unscrupulous persons has led to a liquor tragedy resulting in loss of human life. The enormity of an offence, still, calls for a sober application of the law. First, the petitioner's vehicle had not been seized flagrante delicto--in the very act of committing the offence. In other words, the petitioner's vehicle was not seized while it was actually carrying any alleged contraband. 12. In fact, the contention of the learned counsel for the petitioner that the vehicle was seized based on the confession of an accused in a crime with which the petitioner has nothing to do; the respondents have not contradicted it. A perusal of Exhibit P7 makes it manifestly clear that the second respondent has confirmed the order of the primary authority on the premise that the petitioner as the owner of the vehicle had failed to discharge his evidentiary burden--the burden that he had no knowledge of somebody else's putting his vehicle to an illegal use. 13. Indeed, the second respondent has held that the petitioner has grossly failed to establish that he has taken the best care and caution regarding the use of his vehicle. However, Exhibit P7, I am afraid, falls short of a speaking order. It has only recorded that the petitioner has failed to discharge his burden that he has no knowledge. 14. I, nevertheless, hasten to add that there is sufficient strength in the contention of the learned Government Pleader that the mere absence of knowledge cannot absolve the owner of a vehicle from the legal liability. In other words, as the use of the vehicle is within the special knowledge of the owner, the burden is squarely placed on the said owner to establish that he has taken every care while using the vehicle or letting some other person use the vehicle. It is, thus, all the more essential to ensure that the vehicle is not used for any prohibited purposes. Accordingly, the statute employs the expression knowledge not in the negative sense, but in the positive sense: the lack of knowledge is despite the best effort. 15. It is, thus, all the more essential to ensure that the vehicle is not used for any prohibited purposes. Accordingly, the statute employs the expression knowledge not in the negative sense, but in the positive sense: the lack of knowledge is despite the best effort. 15. When the facts in the present case are examined, it is indisputable that the petitioner's vehicle was seized only on the strength of the confession made by an accused in a crime in which the petitioner is not an accused. This Court in Mukundan (supra) has held that confiscation which follows a confession must be of a thing that belonged to the very person who confessed. According to the learned Division Bench, it will be strange to read the section as providing for confiscation of things belonging to a third person. In the present instance, the confiscation, without contradiction, has led to the confiscation of a third party's vehicle. 16. The ratios laid down in Ravichandran (supra), and Rajesh K. (supra) have underlined the importance of Section 67C(2) of the Act. 17. In fact, Ravichandran (supra), a learned single Judge of this Court has adumbrated the scope of Section 67C of the Act to the effect that it prohibits confiscation, if the use of the vehicle for commission of the offence is without the knowledge or connivance of the owner or the person in charge of the vehicle, and if each of them has taken all reasonable and necessary precautions against such use. 18. His Lordship goes on to observe that the power of confiscation can be exercised only if the authorized officer is satisfied that the vehicle has been used for commission of offence with the knowledge or connivance of the owner himself or the person in charge of the vehicle or that the owner or the person in charge of the vehicle had not taken all reasonable and necessary precautions against such use. 19. 19. Further, Ravichandra (supra) tellingly observes that even in the absence of any evidence from the owner, the authorized officer is duty bound to consider all the relevant aspects to satisfy that the vehicle has been used for commission of the offence with the knowledge or connivance of the owner himself or the person in charge of the vehicle or that the owner or the person in charge of the vehicle has not taken all reasonable and necessary precautions against such use. 20. The confiscation of a vehicle, it is held, being a very serious matter involving drastic civil consequences and social stigma, the authorities are duty bound to exercise the power of Confiscation with a high degree of care, caution and circumspection. 21. In Rajesh (supra), this Court has further observed that once it is not established that the owner of the vehicle has knowledge or that he has connived with the persons who are illegally transporting any contraband, merely because his vehicle was involved in the offence, the owner of the vehicle cannot be penalized. 22. In Paulson (supra), a learned Division Bench of this Court has held that the confiscation of a vehicle under Section 67B should be the vehicle that has been actually used for carrying the contraband. I do not see any direct application for the ratio of the said judgment to the case on hand. As the record reveals, the vehicle was seized at a later point of time based on the confession of an accused. In the first place, it cannot be said with certainty that it is the same vehicle that has been used for any illegal purpose. Assuming that it has been used, the entire basis was only a confession. This Court in Mukundan (supra), to repeat, has emphatically held that there should not be any confiscation of a third party's vehicle based on a confession of an accused. Under these circumstances, I find merit in the contention of the learned counsel for the petitioner that Exhibit P7 is unsustainable. I, therefore, set aside Exhibit P7 and direct the respondents to release forthwith the cash security lying with them on account of the initial interim release of the vehicle. No order as to costs.