IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SINDH AT KARACHI
Criminal Acquittal Appeal No.72 of 2013
Present:
Mr. Justice Naimatullah Phulpoto
Mr. Justice Rasheed Ahmed Soomro
Appellant: The
State through Ms. Abida Parveen
Channer Special Prosecutor ANF
Respondent: Nemo
Date of hearing: 27.08.2018
Date
of announcement: 29.08.2018
J U D G M E
N T
NAIMATULLAH PHULPOTO,
J.-- Respondent/accused Rafaqat
Ali son of Akbar Ali was tried by learned Special Judge-I (CNS), Karachi, in
Special Case No.802/2011. On conclusion of trial, vide judgment dated 14.11.2012, respondent/accused was acquitted of the charge
in the above case. Case of
co-accused Rafaqat Ali son of Amanat Ali was kept on dormant file. Hence the State has
filed instant criminal acquittal appeal against respondent/accused.
2. Brief facts leading to the filing of the appeals are that ANF officials headed by Inspector Tahir Bhatti stopped Car No.RA-377, near Tool Plaza, Super Highway, Karachi on 20.08.2011 at 0630 hours and arrested driver Rafaqat Ali son of Akbar Ali and Rafaqat Ali son of Amanat Ali and secured cocaine out of their respective possession weighing 1300 grams and 1200 grams each total 2500 grams. Thereafter, accused and case property were brought to P.S. ANF Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Karachi and Case/FIR No.04 of 2011 was registered against the accused under sections 6/9(c) of the Control of Narcotics Substances Act, 1997. After usual investigation challan was submitted against the accused under the above referred sections.
3. Trial
court framed charge against respondent/accused Rafaqat
Ali son of Akbar Ali, to which the appellant did not plead guilty and claimed to
be tried.
4. At
trial, prosecution examined two witnesses, who produced the relevant record.
Thereafter, prosecution side was closed.
5. Statement of accused was
recorded under section 342, Cr.PC in which accused
claimed false implication in this case and denied the prosecution allegations.
6. Learned
trial Court, after hearing the learned counsel for the parties and assessment
of evidence available on the record, vide judgment dated 14.11.2012, recorded acquittal of the
accused/respondent, hence this acquittal appeal is filed by State/Special Prosecutor
ANF.
7. Ms. Abida Parveen
Channer, Special Prosecutor ANF, mainly contended
that evidence of ANF officials was confidence inspiring. ANF officials had
recovered 2500 grams cocaine from possession of respondents/accused persons Rafaqat Ali son of Akbar Ali and Rafaqat
Ali son of Amanat Ali from a Toyota Corolla Car. It
is further argued that evidence of ANF officials was corroborated by the positive
report of chemical expert but trial court disbelieved the evidence of ANF
officials without assigning sound reason. Special Prosecutor ANF further argued
that provisions of Section 103, Cr.PC are not
attracted in narcotics cases and evidence of ANF officials was as good as
private persons. Lastly, argued that prosecution witnesses had no enmity with
the respondents/accused to foist narcotic substance upon them and prayed for
converting the acquittal to conviction.
8. It may be observed that several times notices were issued to
the respondents through ANF officials for service,
even NBWs were issued but always returned unexecuted. Today NBW is returned
unexecuted with the endorsement that respondents/accused are residing at
District Gujrat, Punjab, SI Waheed
Malik expressed his inability to execute NBW against respondents/accused.
9. The facts of the case as well as evidence produced
before the trial Court find an elaborate mention in the judgment dated 17.03.2016
passed by the trial Court and, therefore, the same may not be reproduced here
so as to avoid duplication and unnecessary repetition.
10. It appears that trial court vide judgment dated 14.11.2012
acquitted the accused/respondent mainly for the following reasons:
The evidence of the prosecution that
consists of two witnesses of the same raiding party is not confidence inspiring
for the reasons: that despite availability
private persons, none was taken as attesting witness to the proceedings of the
memo aforesaid; the fact that private persons were asked to become witness and
they refused, does not match the legal position that allows initiation of legal
action against such refusal, and since no notice is served upon such persons by
the seizing officer and no particulars of such persons are given anywhere in
the record, the same carries no weight; the packet cocaine is said to have been
secured from the fold of shalwar of the accused, such
fact carries improbability for the obvious reasons that there was no reason for
the accused to keep hidden such packet in such manner since there was sufficient
place in the car for keeping the same concealed; the seizing officer admitted
in his statement that there was an army personnel with the raiding party at the
relevant time while such fact is nowhere mentioned in the record of the
prosecution including the calendar of the witnesses thereof; on the other hand,
the accused stated on oath that he and other accused were in the car with two
others who let free by the officer concerned for his own reasons; the crime
stuff was not secured from his possession and that they were
apprehended/arrested and brought to the police station one day prior to the
date shown as that of their such arrest and recovery etc;
the SPP did not specifically challenge in the cross-examination he conducted
against such statement of accused, such part thereof, but made a general
suggestion that accused made a false statement, which the accused denied; the
expert report though positive, against the crime stuff aforesaid, does not
serve the purpose of the prosecution, for the same, in its solitary state, can
hardly become a basis for conviction against the accused at hand; in these
circumstances, it is hard to hold that the accused is proved guilty of the
charge aforesaid beyond shadow of any reasonable doubt; the settled law that a
single circumstance that leads the court to doubt the guilt of the accused
makes the case as of acquittal and that a chain of culprits may be let free in
order to prevent punishment to an innocent person, do/does apply very much in
the instant case; the under discussion point therefore, stands answered as
above accordingly.
11. In our considered view, the trial court
has assigned sound reasons for recording the acquittal in favour
of the respondent/accused. It is a matter of record that private persons were present
but they were not associated as mashirs of arrest and
recovery. Trial court has rightly held that there was sufficient space in the
vehicle but it was not understandable as to why accused had kept cocaine in the
fold of shalwar. It has also come on record that an Army
personnel was in the company of the raiding party but neither he was cited
witness nor examined before the trial court. Safe custody of the cocaine at ANF
police station and its transit to the chemical examiner have also not been established
as held by the Honourable Apex Court in the case of IKRAMULLAH AND OTHERS V/S. THE STATE (2015
SCMR 1002). Relevant portion is reproduced as under:-
5. In the
case in hand not only the report submitted by the Chemical Examiner was legally
laconic but safe custody of the recovered substance as well as safe
transmission of the separated samples to the office of the Chemical Examiner
had also not been established by the prosecution. It is not disputed that the
investigating officer appearing before the learned trial court had failed to
even to mention the name of the police official who had taken the samples to
the office of the Chemical Examiner and admittedly no such police official had
been produced before the learned trial Court to depose about safe custody of
the samples entrusted to him for being deposited in the office of the Chemical
Examiner. In this view of the matter the prosecution had not been able to
establish that after the alleged recovery the substance so recovered was either
kept in safe custody or that the samples taken from the recovered substance had
safely been transmitted to the office of the Chemical Examiner without the same
being tampered with or replaced while in transit.
12. In the case of State versus Government Sindh through Advocate General Sindh, Karachi versus Sobharo (1993 SCMR 585) Honourable Supreme Court has laid down the principle that in the case of appeal against acquittal while evaluating the evidence distinction is to be made in appeal against conviction and appeal against acquittal. Interference in the latter case is to be made when there is only gross misreading of evidence, resulting in miscarriage of justice. Relevant portion is reproduced as under:-
14. We are fully satisfied with appraisal of evidence done by the trial Court and we are of the view that while evaluating the evidence, difference is to be maintained in appeal from conviction and acquittal appeal and in the latter case interference is to be made only when there is gross misreading of evidence resulting in miscarriage of justice. Reference can be made to the case of Yar Muhammad and others v. The State (1992 SCMR 96). In consequence this appeal has no merits and is dismissed.
13. We have come to the conclusion that trial court has examined the evidence deeply and has assigned sound reasons while recording the acquittal. Trial court has rightly mentioned in the judgment that there are number of discrepancies in the prosecution case; the prosecution of case was doubtful and its benefit has been extended in favour of accused. Prosecution had miserably failed to prove its case against accused/respondent.
14. For what has been discussed above, we are of the considered view that impugned acquittal/judgment dated 14.11.2012 is based upon valid and sound reasons and is entirely in consonance with the law laid down by the Honourable Supreme Court of Pakistan. Neither, there is misreading, nor non-reading of material evidence or misconstruction of facts and law. Judgment of the trial court is neither perverse nor capricious. No interference is required by this Court. Resultantly, the appeal against acquittal is without merit and the same is dismissed.
J U D G E
J U D G E
Gulsher/PS