29 August 1989
Supreme Court
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DURAND DIDIER Vs CHIEF SECRETARY, UNION TERRITORY OF GOA

Bench: PANDIAN,S.R. (J)
Case number: Appeal Criminal 533 of 1989


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PETITIONER: DURAND DIDIER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: CHIEF SECRETARY, UNION TERRITORY OF GOA

DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1989

BENCH: PANDIAN, S.R. (J) BENCH: PANDIAN, S.R. (J) NATRAJAN, S. (J)

CITATION:  1989 AIR 1966            1989 SCR  (3)1025  1990 SCC  (1)  95        JT 1989 (3)   507  1989 SCALE  (2)449

ACT:     Narcotic   Drugs   and  Psychotropic   Substances   Act, 1985--Sections 2(xiv), (xxii), 8, 18, 20, 21 and 27.     Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Rules,  1985: Schedules I, II and III.     Narcotic Drug or psychotropic substance--’Small  quanti- ty---What   is--’For  personal  consumption   ’--Burden   of proof----On whom.     Contrabands--Seizure-Omission to send samples in  suffi- cient quantity for analysis--Effect of.     Evidence--Difference  between  the  narcotic  drugs  and substances--Chemical Analyst’s evidence--Value of.     Search   and  seizure--Seizure  of   contrabands--Pancha witnesses  residing in the same area but not in vicinity  of the seizure--Admissibility and value of evidence.

HEADNOTE:     The appellant is a foreign national. At Colva, on seeing a  police  party on patrol he accelerated the speed  of  his motor  cycle  ignoring the signal given  by  Assistant  Sub- Inspector  of Police (P.W. 7) and in that process lost  con- trol  over the vehicle and fell down. Thereafter he  immedi- ately  stood up and removed a paper wrapping from  his  pant pocket and threw it away which on verification was found  to contain  a small quantity of brown sugar. The appellant  was taken to the nearby police post along with the  motor-cycle. A hand bag attached to the motor-cycle was opened and  exam- ined  in  the presence of two pancha witnesses  and  it  was found that there was brown sugar hidden in the Camera  case, Ganja  oil in the steel container, and opium in the  shaving cream  tube, torch light and shoe. All the  substances  were weighed  and  seized under a panchnama and sample  of  these contrabands  divided  into  three categories  were  sent  to Chemical Analyst (PW. 6) who found that one sample contained 16.8%  w/w of Morphine (an alkaloid extracted  from  opium), and the other sample contained a dark brown 1026 sticky substance having odour similar to that of extract  of cannabis. The quantity of the substance namely a dark  brown soft mass having characteristic colour of opium found in the third sample was not sufficient to carry out further  analy-

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sis.     The appellant was consequently prosecuted for possession of prohibited drugs under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop- ic  Substances Act, 1985. The Sessions Judge  convicted  him under Sections 21, 20(b)(ii) and 18 of the Act and imposed a sentence of 10 years rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 1,00,000 and in default to undergo rigorous imprisonment for one year. The High Court dismissed the appeal of the  appel- lant  and confirmed the sentence passed by the  Trial  Court but  modified  the  default sentence from one  year  to  six months.     In  this appeal challenging the correctness of the  con- viction  it was contended on behalf of the  appellant  that: (i) in the absence of any injury on the person of the appel- lant,  the case of the prosecution that the  appellant  fell down  from his vehicle is hardly acceptable (ii) the  pancha witnesses were not the respectable inhabitants of the local- ity  therefore the seizure of the contrabands was in  viola- tion of the provisions relating to search and seizure; (iii) the  omission to send sufficient representative quantity  of the  contrabands for analysis affected the veracity  of  the prosecution case; (iv) the omission to include the owner  of the motor-cycle (PW-5) as an accused and the non-examination of the person at whose instance the vehicle was lent to  the appellant  affected the prosecution case; and (v) since  the appellant was in possession of these drugs or substances  in a small quantity for his personal consumption he was  liable to be punished only under section 27(a) of the Act. Dismissing the appeal,     HELD:  1.  If  a person is thrown off or  fails  from  a speeding  vehicle he may sustain injuries either serious  or simple  or  escape sometimes unhurt but it  depends  on  the speed of the vehicle, the manner of fall, the nature of  the soft and the surface of the earth etc. In the instant  case, the evidence and other connected facts lead to the inference that  the  appellant had fallen down  immediately  after  he attempted to speed up the vehicle and was caught hold of  by the  police.  Therefore it is right that the  appellant  was caught by the police under the circumstances as put forth by the  prosecution and the appellant however  escaped  unhurt. [1031H; 1032A-D] 2.  If  pancha witnesses are not respectables  of  the  same locality 1027 but from another locality, it may amount only to an  irregu- larity,  not affecting the legality of the  proceedings  and that  it is a matter for Courts of fact to consider and  the Supreme Court would not ordinarily go behind the finding  of facts concurrently arrived at by the Courts below. [1032G-H; 1033A-B]     Sunder Singh v. State of U.P., [1956] Cr. L.J. 801;  Tej Bahadur  v. State of U.P., [1970] 3 S.C.C. 779 and State  of Punjab  v. Wasson Singh and Ors., [1981] 2 S.C.R.  615;  ap- plied.     2.1  In the instant case, the appellant was  secured  in the  midnight near the Police Out Post. It  is  indisputably shown  that the pancha witnesses are not outsiders  but  are residents  of  the same area where the Police  Out  Post  is situated. The fact that these two witnesses are not residing in the vicinity of the seizure, does not disturb the accept- ance of the evidence relating to the seizure of the  contra- bands  and other articles. Except making some  bare  sugges- tions that both the witnesses were regular and  professional witnesses,  nothing  tangible has been brought  out  in  the cross-examination to discredit the testimony. [1033C-E]

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   3. In the instant case, the omission to send  sufficient quantity  of  samples of contrabands for analysis  does  not affect  the intrinsic veracity of the prosecution case.  The testimony  of the Chemical Analyst and her opinion  recorded in the unimpeachable document lend assurance to the case  of the prosecution that the contrabands seized from the posses- sion of the appellant were prohibited drugs and  substances. [1033F-H]     4.  The  Medical  Officer is not expected  to  know  the differences  in  the legal parlance as  defined  in  section 2(xiv) and (xxii) and specified under Schedules I to III  of the  Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances  Rules  1985 made under the Act. Therefore, the admission of the Chemical Analyst  that she does not know the difference  between  the narcotic  drugs and psychotropic substances by itself is  no ground for ruling out her evidence. [1034A-B]     5.  There  is absolutely no material to  hold  that  the owner  of the motor-cycle was in any way connected with  the seizure  of the contrabands or he has committed any  indict- able  offence though the vehicle belonged to him.  The  non- examination  of the person at whose instance the owner  lent his motor-cycle to the appellant does not in any way  affect the prosecution case. [1034C-D] 1028     6.  Section  27(a) of the Act  provides  punishment  for illegal  possession in small quantity for personal  consump- tion  of  any narcotic drug or psychotropic  substance.  The expression  ’small  quantity’ occuring in  that  section  is explained  under Explanation I there of as such quantity  as may  be specified by the Central Government by  Notification in the Official Gazette. [1035A-B]     In  the  instant case, the penal provisions  of  section 27(a)  has no role to play as the prohibited drugs and  sub- stances possessed by the appellant were far in excess of the quantity mentioned in Column 3 of the table under the  rele- vant Notification. [1036D]     Even if a person is shown to have been in possession  of a  small  quantity of a narcotic drug or  psychotropic  sub- stance,  the burden of proving that it was intended for  the personal  consumption  of such person, and not for  sale  or distribution,  lies on such person as per Explanation  2  of Section 27 of the Act. [1036E]     The very fact that the appellant in the instant case had kept these drugs and substances in many ingeniously  devised places of concealment in the camera, shaving tube, torch and shoes  would  indicate that the appellant  was  having  full knowledge  that the drugs he carried were  prohibited  drugs and that he was having them in violation of law.  Therefore, the sentence of 10 years rigorous imprisonment and the  fine of  Rs.1,O0,000 with the default clause as modified  by  the High Court does not call for interference. [1036F; 1037D]

JUDGMENT:     CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 533 of 1989.     From the Judgment and Order dated 31.8.88 of the  Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 24 of 1988. Govind Mukhoty and V.B. Joshi for the Appellant.     Anil Dev Singh, C.K. Sucharita and Ms. A. Subhashini for the Respondent. The following order of the Court was delivered Special leave granted. The  appellant who is a French national has  preferred  this

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appeal 1029 under  Article 136 of the Constitution of  India  canvassing the  correctness  of  his  conviction  under  Sections   21, 20(b)(ii)  and  18 of the Narcotic  Drugs  and  Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (for brevity hereinafter referred to as the  ’Act’) and the sentence of 10 years rigorous  imprison- ment in addition to pay a fine of Rs. 1,00,000 in default to undergo rigorous imprisonment for one year inflicted by  the Court of Sessions Judge, South Goa, Margao and confirmed  by the High Court of Bombay, Panaji Bench (Goa) with a  modifi- cation  of the default sentence from one year to six  months on  the  indictment that the appellant on 7.12.87  at  about 0.40  hours at Colva was found in possession  of  prohibited drugs/namely  51 gms. of brown sugar, 45 gins. of ganja  oil and  55  gms. of opium all worth  approximately  Rs.  13,465 without valid documents.     Adumberated in brief, the relevant facts of the prosecu- tion case giving rise to this appeal are as follows.     On 6th December, 1987 at about 11.00 p.m. the  Assistant Sub Inspector of Police, Shri Laxman Mahalsekar (PW-7) while along  with his police party was on his patrol duty  at  the 3rd ward of Colva, saw the appellant speeding up his  motor- cycle, bearing Registration No. GDK 851 ignoring his  signal to stop. The appellant in such attempt, presumably to escape from being nabbed by the police lost control over the  vehi- cle and fell down. No sooner he stood up and removed a paper wrapping  from  his pant pocket and threw it away.  PW-7  on entertaining  suspicion  over the conduct of  the  appellant verified  that wrapping to contain small quantity  of  brown sugar  and then he took the appellant along with his  motor- cycle  to the nearby Police Out Post. A handbag,  bluish  in colour with red strips had been attached to the  motorcycle. When  the said bag was opened with a key handed over by  the appellant  and examined in the presence of two  pancha  wit- nesses, namely Francis Xavier D’Silva (PW 1) and one  Connie D’Silva (not examined), it was found to contain some person- al belongings such as wearing apparels, a pair of shoes  and a  canvas bag. Inside the bag, there was one  shaving  cream tube, one camera, a torch and four plastic rolls. There  was also  one plastic bag containing contraceptives.  The  torch was  found to contain two bundles of plastic  material  each one  containing a small piece of blackish substance.  Inside the  cream tube, four bandies wrapped in a plastic  material were  found.  Each of the bundle contained small  pieces  of blackish substance. There was also one more bundle of  plas- tic  material concealed in the shoes which when  opened  was found  to contain small piece of blackish substance  similar to  the one found in the torch as well in the shaving  cream tube. The 1030 camera  was found in a box in which there were five  packets of  plastic  material with some powder of  yellowish  colour i.e.  brown sugar. According to PW-7, there were 50 gms.  of brown sugar hidden in the camera case, 45 gms. of Ganja  oil in  the steel container and 55 gms. of opium in the  shaving cream  tube, torch light and shoes. All the  materials  were weighed and seized under a panchnama (Ex. P. 1) attested  by PW 1 and Connie D’Silva. The appellant was arrested and kept under  medical treatment and observation. Samples  of  these articles  were sent to Chemical Analyst (PW-6) who  has  de- posed that she received three envelopes Ex.1 to 3. According to  her,  the envelope marked Ex.1 contained  1.57  gms.  of substance  which on analysis was found to contain 16.8%  w/w of Morphine (which is an alkaloid extracted from opium  i.e.

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conversion of opium). The quantity of the substance namely a dark  brown soft mass having characteristic colour of  opium found  in  the envelope Ex. 2, weighing 2.45  gms.  was  not sufficient  to carry out further analysis. The substance  in envelope  Ex. 3 weighing 2.97 gms. on analysis was found  to contain  a dark brown sticky substance having odour  similar to that of extract of cannabis. PW-6 gave her report  (Ex.P- 3) dated 8.2.88. PW-7, after receiving Ex. P-3 and  complet- ing  the investigation charge-sheeted the accused under  the provisions  of the Act on the ground that the appellant  was in possession of prohibited drugs without a valid licence or permit or authorisation in violation of Section 8 punishable under the penal provisions of the Act.      The defence of the appellant is one of total denial. As pointed  out in the earlier part of this judgment  both  the Trial Court and the Appellate Court have concurrently  found the accused guilty.      Mr.  Govind Mukhoty, learned senior advocate  appearing on  behalf  of the appellant directed  a  manifold  scathing attack on the prosecution case raising the following conten- tions:                   1.  The absence of any visible  injury  on               the person of the appellant while  apprehended               belies the prosecution version that the appel-               lant  had  fallen  down from  the  vehicle  on               accelerating the speed;                    2. The fact that the Investigating  Offi-               cer did not deliberately join with him respec-               tive  inhabitants of the locality i.e.  within               the vicinity of the Police Out Post to witness               the seizure but  had taken pain to secure PW-1               and Connie D’Silva who were  residing far away               from the place of seizure and who seem to               1031               have  been readily willing and obliging to  be               pancha witnesses devalues the evidence regard-               ing the seizure of the contrabands and more so               it is in violation of the salutary  provisions               of  law prescribing the procedure to  be  fol-               lowed before making the search and seizure;                 3.  PW-7  sent only three samples  from  the               alleged  seized substances--that too in  small               quantity instead of sending sufficient  repre-               sentative  quantity from each of  the  packets               seized for assay. Therefore, in the absence of               scientific test of all the substances found in               each of the packets, no safe conclusion can be               arrived  that  the  entire  substances  seized               under  various  packets  were  all  prohibited               drugs;                 4.  The  admission of PW-6 in  her  evidence               that she does not know the difference  between               the narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances               militates against the evidentiary value of her               opinion under Exh. P-3.                 5.  The non-inclusion of PW-5, the owner  of               the  motor-cycle  as an accused and  the  non-               examination  of Cavin at whose  instance  PW-5               lent the vehicle are fatal to the  prosecution               case;                 6. Even assuming but not conceding that  the               prosecution  version  is  acceptable  in   the               absence of any evidence that the appellant was               carrying  on with the nefarious trade of  pro-               hibited drugs either as a ’peddler’ or  ’push-

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             er’,  the  appellant  would be  liable  to  be               punished within the mischief of Section  27(a)               of the Act, since the attending  circumstances               present in this case indicate that the  appel-               lant  was in possession of the drugs in  small               quantity only for his personal consumption.     We  shall  now  examine the  contentions  seriatim  with reference to the evidence available on record.     There is no denying the fact that the appellant had been taken  into police custody on the early hours of 7.12.87  by PW-7  along with the motor-cycle involved in this case.  The submission  of  Mr. Mukhoty is that in the  absence  of  any injury  on  the  person of the appellant, the  case  of  the prosecution that the appellant fell down from his vehicle is hardly  acceptable.  No doubt if a person is thrown  off  or falls  down from a speeding vehicle he may sustain  injuries either  serious or simple or escape sometimes unhurt but  it depends on the speed of the 1032 vehicle, the manner of fall, the nature of the soil and  the surface  of the earth etc. In the present case, evidence  of PWs 4 and 7 is that the appellant on seeing the police party accelerated  the speed ignoring the signal given by PW-7  to stop and it was only during the course of this attempt,  the appellant  fell down from the motor-cycle at a  place  where the street lights i.e. the fluorescent tube lights and bulbs were on and thereafter immediately stood up. The evidence on these  two witnesses and the other connected facts  lead  to the inference that the appellant had fallen down immediately after  he attempted to speed up the vehicle and  was  caught hold of by the police. It is not the case of the prosecution that  the appellant sped away to some distance and then  had fallen  down  from the speeding vehicle. PW-3,  the  Medical Officer  attached  to Hospicio Hospital speaks to  the  fact that  when  she examined the appellant on 8.12.87  at  about 8.00 p.m., the appellant complained of bodyache, nosia  etc. but PW-3 does not whisper of having seen any visible  injury on the person of the appellant. After carefully scanning the evidence  of  PWs 4 and 7 coupled with the recovery  of  the articles Nos 1 to 14, we unhesitatingly hold that the appel- lant was caught by the police under the circumstances as put forth  by the prosecution and the appellant however  escaped unhurt.  Hence  in the light of the above evidence,  we  are constrained to hold that this submission made by the learned defence counsel does not merit consideration.     After  the  appellant was secured by  the  police,  PW-7 directed  PW-4 to bring two pancha  witnesses.  Accordingly, PW-4  brought two witnesses from a place which is  according to  PW-7 is within a distance of 1 KM and according to  PW-5 at five minutes walking distance. Much argument was advanced by the learned defence counsel that these two witnesses were not the respectable inhabitants of that locality; that  they were  readily willing and obliging witnesses to  the  police and  that  there is deliberate violation  of  the  statutory safeguard. This argument cannot be endured for more than one reason to be presently stated. The appellant was secured  in the midnight near the police out post. It clearly transpires from the records that these two witnesses are not  outsiders but residents of the same area, namely Colva. Except  making some  bare suggestions that both the witnesses were  regular and  professional  witnesses,  nothing  tangible  has   been brought out in the cross-examination to discredit the testi- mony  of PW-1. This Court, while considering a similar  con- tention  in Sunder Singh v. State of U.P., [1956]  Crl.  Law Journal  801 and Tej Bahadur v. State of U.P., [1970] 3  SCC

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779  has observed that if pancha witnesses are not  respect- ables of the same locality but from another locality, it may amount only to an 1033 irregularity, not affecting the legality of the  proceedings and  that it is a matter for Courts of fact to consider  and the Supreme Court would not ordinarily go behind the finding of facts concurrently arrived at by the Courts below.     See  also State of Punjab v. Wasson Singh and Five  Oth- ers, [1981] 2 SCR 615.     When  such  is the view, expressed by this  Court  on  a number of occasions, we are unable to appreciate the submis- sion of the learned counsel that the prosecution case is  in violent  disregard of the procedure relating to  search  and seizure.  The question that PW-1 and other pancha  witnesses are  not the inhabitants of the locality does not  arise  in the present case because it is indisputably shown that  they are  the residents of the same Colva area where  the  Police Out Post is situated. The fact that these two witnesses  are not  residing in the vicinity of the seizure, in  our  view, does  not  disturb the acceptance of the  evidence  of  PW-1 relating  to the seizure of the contrabands and other  arti- cles.  With regard to the drawing up of the  panchnama,  the defence has come forward with two diametrically contradicto- ry suggestions in that, the suggestion made to PW-1 is  that he  only subscribed his signatures on some papers  whilst  a new  story,  suggested to PW-7 is that  the  panchanama  was fabricated  around the 5th of January 1988 in order to  save one Ramesh, brother of PW-5 from being prosecuted in connec- tion with this seizure. To establish the seizure of all  the articles  including the contrabands, the  prosecution  rests its  case not only on the testimony of PW-1 but also on  the evidence of PWs 5 and 7 whose evidence is amply corroborated by the towering circumstances attending the case.     From  the  records, it is found that  PW-7  divided  the contrabands into three categories and sent the samples  from each of the categories for analysis. No doubt, it would have been  appreciable, had PW-7 sent  sufficient  representative quantity from each of the packets but however this  omission in  the present case does not affect the intrinsic  veracity of the prosecution case. PW-6 has fairly stated that she was able  to thoroughly assay only the substances found  in  two envelopes  marked as Ex. P-1 and P-3 and the  substances  in envelop  Ex.  P-2 was not sufficient to  carry  out  further analysis though it was a dark brown soft mass having charac- teristic  of odour of opium. The testimony of PW-6  and  her opinion  recorded  in the unimpeachable document  (Ex.  P-3) lend  assurance  to  the case of the  prosecution  that  the contrabands seized from the possession of the appellant were prohibited drugs and substances. 1034     The criticism levelled by the learned defence counsel is that the evidence of PW-6 is not worthy of acceptance  since she  has  admitted  that she does not  know  the  difference between the narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances. This attack,  in our view, does not assume any  significance  be- cause  as  rightly pointed out by Mr. Anil  Dev  Singh,  the learned  senior  advocate for the  respondent,  the  Medical Officer is not expected to know the differences in the legal parlance as defined in Section 2(xiv) and (xxii) and  speci- fied  under Schedules 1 to III in accordance with  the  con- cerned  Narcotic  Drugs and Psychotropic  Substances  Rules, 1985 made under the Act and so this ground by itself, in our view, is no ground for ruling out the evidence of PW-6.     Yet  another attack by the defence that the omission  on

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the  part of the prosecution to include PW-5 as  an  accused and to examine Cavin as a witness has to be mentioned simply to be rejected as devoid of any merit, as there is absolute- ly  no material to hold that PW-5 was in any  way  connected with the seizure of the contrabands or he has committed  any indictable  offence though the vehicle belonged to him.  The non-examination  of  Cavin at whose instance PW-5  lent  his motorcycle  to the appellant does not in any way affect  the prosecution case.     For  the discussions made above, we see no force in  the contentions 1 to 5.     Lastly, we have to consider the legal submission made by Mr.  Mukhoty that the appellant was in possession  of  these drugs  or  substances in a small quantity for  his  personal consumption  and as such he would be punishable  only  under Section  27(a) of the Act providing imprisonment for a  term which  may extend to one year or with fine or with both.  He further pleaded that the appellant is neither an  ’uncrowned king  of  the mafia world’ nor a ’peddler’ nor  a  ’pusher’; that he being a foreigner by prolonged and continuous use of drugs has become a drug-dependent and that he had all  symp- toms  of  an addict and exhibited sufferance  of  withdrawal symptoms  on discontinuing the drug which, it seems, he  was taking  on  his own as borne out from the testimony  of  the Medical  Officers (PWs 2 and 3) under whose observation  the appellant has been kept for some days. Incidentally, he  has added  that though ignorance of law is not an excuse and  it cannot  be permitted to be pleaded, yet this Court may  take note  of  the  fact that the appellant who  is  a  foreigner should  have been lacking awareness of the stringent  provi- sions of the Act. Firstly,  let  us  examine whether the  offence  would  fail within the 1035 mischief of Section 27(a) of the Act. This section  provides punishment  for  illegal possession in  small  quantity  for personal  consumption of any narcotic drug  or  psychotropic substance. The expression ’small’ quantity occuring in  that section  is  explained under Explanation I annexed  to  that Section which reads thus:               "For  the  purposes  of  this  section  ’small               quantity’ means such quantity as may be speci-               fied by the Central Government by notification               in the Official Gazette."     In  compliance  with this explanation, the  Ministry  of Finance (Department of Revenue) has issued notification  No. S.O. 827(E) dated November 14, 1985 published in the Gazette of India, Extra., Part II Section 3(ii) dated 14th  November 1985 which notification reads thus:               "In exercise of the powers conferred by Expla-               nation (1) of Section 27 of the Narcotic Drugs               and  Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (61  of               1985)  and  in  partial  modification  of  the               notification of the Government of India in the               Ministry  of  Finance, Department  of  Revenue               No.S.O.  825(E), dated the 14th November  1985               the  Central Government hereby  specifies  the               quantity  mentioned in Column 3 of  the  Table               below,  in relation to the narcotic drug  men-               tioned  in the corresponding entry  in  column               (2) of the said Table, as ’small quantity’ for               the purposes of that section.               TABLE               Serial   No.    Name  of  the  Narcotic   Drug               Quantity

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             1                                            2               3               1.             Heroin   or    drug    commonly               250 milligrams                           known as Brown Sugar or                           smack               1036               2.                Hashish      or       Charas               -- 5 grams               3.                                       Opium               -- 5 grams               4.                                     Cocaine               -125 milligrams               5.                                       Ganja               -- 500 grams     Coming  to the case on hand, the appellant was found  to be in possession of the narcotic drugs or substances far  in excess  of the quantity mentioned in column 3 of  the  table under the notification. According to the prosecution, he was in possession of 51 grams of brown sugar, 45 grams of  Ganja oil and 55 grams of opium.     In  view of the above position, it cannot  be  contended that  the  prohibited drugs and substances seized  from  the appellant’s possession were in small quantity so as to bring him only within the mischief of Section 27(a) of the Act.     It  may  not be out of place to mention that even  if  a person is shown to have been in possession of a small  quan- tity  of  a  narcotic drug or  psychotropic  substance,  the burden  of  proving that it was intended  for  the  personal consumption of such person and not for sale or distribution, lies  on such person as per Explanation 2 of Section  27  of the Act.     Thirdly, the very fact that the appellant had kept these drugs  and substances in many ingeniously devised places  of concealment  in  the camera, shaving tube, torch  and  shoes would indicate that the appellant was having Fuji  knowledge that the drugs he carried were prohibited drugs and that  he was having them in violation of law. We,  for the above reasons, see no merit in this  contention also.     The  Trial  Court while inflicting  the  punishment  has expressed its view about the drug menace spreading in Gao as follows:               "The spreading of the drugs in Gao is becoming               day  by  day a terrible menace which  is  com-               pletely  destroying  the  very  fiber  of  our               society being also instrumental in  subverting               the tender soul of our young generation  which               is being badly contaminated by such danger  in               a very alarming               1037               provisions  calling for severe  punishment  in               case of illegal possession and  transportation               of  drugs meant for personal  consumption  and               eventual trade."     With  deep concern, we may point out that the  organised activities  of the underworld and the clandestine  smuggling of  narcotic  drugs and pyschotropic  substances  into  this country and illegal trafficking in such drugs and substances have  led to drug addiction among a sizable section  of  the public,  particularly the adolescents and students  of  both sexes  and the menace has assumed serious and alarming  pro- portions in the recent years. Therefore, in order to  effec- tively control and eradicate this proliferating and  booming devastating  menace, causing deleterious effects and  deadly

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impact  on  the society as a whole, the  Parliament  in  its wisdom,  has made effective provisions by  introducing  this Act 81 of 1985 specifying mandatory minimum imprisonment and fine. As we have now rejected the plea of the defence  hold- ing  that the penal provisions of Section 27(a) has no  role to play as the prohibited drugs and substances possessed  by the  appellant were far in excess of the quantity  mentioned in  Column 3 of the table under the notification,  the  sen- tence of 10 years rigorous imprisonment and the fine of  Rs. 1,00,000  with  the default clause as modified by  the  High Court does not call for interference. In the result, the appeal is dismissed. T.N.A.                                    Appeal dismissed. 1038