16 August 1963
Supreme Court
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STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH Vs SINGHARA SINGH AND OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (crl.) 31 of 1962


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PETITIONER: STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SINGHARA SINGH AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/08/1963

BENCH: SARKAR, A.K. BENCH: SARKAR, A.K. HIDAYATULLAH, M. SHAH, J.C.

CITATION:  1963 AIR  358            1964 SCR  (4) 485  CITATOR INFO :  O          1966 SC 538  (10)  R          1974 SC1940  (18)  RF         1975 SC 261  (6)  R          1977 SC 164  (8)  D          1979 SC1055  (16)  RF         1986 SC2204  (6)  RF         1991 SC1538  (7)

ACT: Criminal  Procedure-Evidence-Respondents  accused  of   mur- der--Magistrate not empowered to record a confession records a confession-Records of confession not held to be admissible by  the  trial Court-The Magistrate gives oral  evidence  of confession-The  records used to refresh  his  memory-Whether the oral evidence is admissible-Code of Criminal  Procedure, 1898 (Act 5 of 1898), ss. 164, 364, 533-Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), ss. 74, 80  and 159.

HEADNOTE: By sub-sec. (1) of s. 164 of the Code of Criminal  Procedure it   was   provided,   "Any   Presidency   Magistrate,   any Magistrate  of  the first class and any  Magistrate  of  the second  class  specially empowered in this behalf  by  State Government  may, if he is not a police -officer  record  any statement  or  confession made to him in the  course  of  an investigation under this Chapter or under any other law  for the time being in force or at any time afterwards before the commencement  of  the inquiry or trial." In a case  where  a confession had been recorded under s. 164(1) by a Magistrate of the second class not specially empowered, Held,  the confession had not been recorded under s. 164  of the  Code and the record could not be put in evidence  under ss. 74 and 80 of the Evidence Act to prove confession. Oral evidence of the Magistrate to prove the confession  was not admissible.  If a statute has conferred a power to do an act and had laid down the method in which that power has  to be exercised, it accessorily prohibits the doing of the  act in any other manner than that which has been prescribed. Taylor  v. Taylor, (1875) 1 Ch.  D. 426 and Nazir  Ahmed  v. King Emperor, L.R. 63 I.A. 372. A Magistrate recording a confession under s. 164 of the Code

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is  bound to follow the procedure laid down in it.   Section 533 of the Code does not show that the procedure  prescribed by  s. 164 of the Code was not mandatory.  The object of  s. 164  of  the  Code  was not  to  give  the  prosecution  the advantage  of ss. 74 and 80 of the Evidence Act so that  the only result of the disregard of these pre-provisions was  to deprive the prosecution of that advantage.  Nazir Ahmed case was rightly decided. Nazir  Ahmed  v.  King Emperor, L.R. 63 I.A.  372  Rao  Shiv Bahadur  Singh  v. State of Vindhya Pradesh,  [1954]  S.C.R. 1908  and Deep Chand v. State of Rajasthan, [1962] 1  S.C.R. 662. The principle of Nazir Ahmed’s case which dealt with the re- cording  of a confession by a Magistrate of the first  class without complying with the procedure laid down in s. 164  of the  Code  also  covers the present case.   When  a  statute confers a power on. 486 certain  judicial  officers,  that power  can  obviously  be exercised  only by those officers and no other  officer  can exercise it. Case law reviewed. Ashraf  v. State, I.L.R. [1960] 2 All.  488,  distinguished. Ram Sanchi v. State A.I.R. 1963 All. 308 and Ghulam  Hussain v. The King, L.R. 77 I.A. 65, distinguished. Brij  Bushan  Singh v. King Emperor, L.R. 73  I.A.   Bhubori Sahu  v. The King, L. R. 76 I.A. 147 Emperor v. Ram  Naresti I.L.R.  [1939] All 377.  Re: Natesan, A.LR. 1960  Mad.  433. Willie  Slaney v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1955]  2  S.C.R. 1140.

JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 31  of 1962. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated May,  31,  1961,  of the Allahabad High  Court  in  Criminal Appeals Nos. 2017 and 2109 of 1960 and Reference No. 142  of 1960. C.   B.  Agarwala,  G.  C. Mathur and C.  P.  Lal,  for  the appellant. Nuruddin Ahmed and V. D. Misra, for the respondents. August 16, 1963.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SARKAR  J.--On  March 20, 1959, Raja Ram, a  shopkeeper,  of Afzalgarh  in  the State of Uttar Pradesh  was  murdered  by gunshot  in  his shop.  Seven persons  including  the  three respondents,  Singhara Singh, Bir Singh and Tega Singh  were prosecuted for this murder.  The learned Additional Sessions judge  of Bijnor before whom the trial was  held,  convicted the respondent Singhara Singh of the murder under S. 302  of the  Indian  Penal  Code and sentenced  him  to  death.   He convicted  the  respondents  Bir Singh  and  Tega  Singh  of abetment of the murder under S. 302 read with ss. 120B,  109 and  114 of the said Code and sentenced Bir Singh  to  death and  Tega Singh to imprisonment for life.  He acquitted  the other accused persons. The  respondents  appealed from the conviction to  the  High Court  at Allahabad and the State from the  acquittal.   The High  Court  had  also before it  the  usual  reference  for Confirmation  of  the sentences of death.   The  High  Court allowed the appeals of the respondents, dismissed the appeal of the State and rejected the, reference.  The State has now filed this appeal against the judgment of the High Court  by special leave.  This Court however granted the leave

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487 only so far as the judgment of the High Court concerned  the three  respondents.  We are not, therefore,  concerned  with the other accessed persons and the order acquitting them  is no more in question. The  only  point  argued  in  this  appeal  was  as  to  the admissibility of certain oral evidence.  It is conceded that if that evidence was not admissible, then there is no  other evidence  on  which the respondents can  be  convicted.   In other words, it is not in dispute that if that evidence  was not  admissible  the High Court’s  decision  acquitting  the respondents  cannot  be  questioned.  It  is  therefore  not necessary to state the facts in detail. Now,  the  evidence with which this case  is  concerned  was given by a learned magistrate, Mr. Dixit, of confessions  of guilt  made to him by the respondents and purported to  have been  recorded by him under s. 164 of the Code  of  Criminal Procedure.   The  terms of that section  and  certain  other sections  of  the Code on the interpretation of  which  this case depends, are as follows:               S.    164  (1) Any Presidency Magistrate,  any               Magistrate   of  the  first  class   and   any               Magistrate  of  the  second  class   specially               empowered  in  this behalf by the  State  Gov-               ernment  may,  if he is not  a  police-officer               record any statement or confession made to him               in  the course of an investigation under  this               Chapter  or under any other law for  the  time               being  in  force  or at  any  time  afterwards               before  the  commencement of  the  inquiry  or               trial.               (2)   Such  statements  shall be  recorded  in               such of the manners hereinafter prescribed for               recording evidence as is, in his opinion, best               fitted  for  the circumstances  of  the  case.               Such confessions shall be recorded and  signed               in  the  manner provided in section  364,  and               such  statements or confessions shall then  be               forwarded  to the Magistrate by whom the  case               is to be inquired into or tried.               (3)   A Magistrate shall, before recording any               such confession, explain to the person  making               it  that he is not bound to make a  confession               and  that  if  he does so it may  be  used  as               evidence  against him and no Magistrate  shall               record   any  such  confession  unless,   upon               questioning  the  person  making  it,  he  has               reason               488               to believe that it was made voluntarily;  and,               when he records any confession, he shall  make               a memorandum at the foot of such record to the               following effect:                I  have  explained to (name) that he  is  not               bound  to  make a confession and that,  if  he               does  so,  any confession he may make  may  be               used  as  evidence against him and  I  believe               that this confession was voluntarily made.  It               was taken in my presence and hearing, and  was               read over to the person making it and admitted               by  him to be correct, and it contains a  full               and true account of the statement made by him.               (Signed) A.B. Magistrate.               S.364 (1) Whenever the accused is examined  by               any  Magistrate, or by any Court other than  a

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             High  Court  for a Part A State or  a  Part  B               State the whole of such examination, including               every  question  put to him and  every  answer               given  by him, shall be recorded in  full,  in               the  language in which he is examined, or,  if               that  is not practicable, in the  language  of               the Court or in English; and such record shall               be  shown or read to him, or, if he  does  not               understand   the  language  in  which  it   is               written,  shall  be interpreted to  him  in  a               language which he understands, and he shall be               at liberty to explain or add to his answers.               (2)   When  the whole is made  conformable  to               what  he  declares is the  truth,  the  record               shall  be  signed  by  the  accused  and   the               Magistrate  or judge of such Court,  and  such               Magistrate  or judge shall certify  under  his               own hand that the examination was taken in his               presence  and  hearing  and  that  the  record               contains  a  full  and  true  account  of  the               statement made by the accused.                (3)  In cases in which the examination of the               accused    is  not recorded by the  Magistrate               or  judge himself, he shall be bound,  as  the               examination  proceeds,  to make  a  memorandum               thereof  in the language of the Court,  or  in               English, if he is sufficiently acquainted with               the latter.language; and such memorandum shall               be  written  and signed by the  Magistrate  or               judge with his own hand, and shall be  annexed               to  the record. If the Magistrate or judge  is               unable to make a memo-               489               randum as above required,, he shall record the               reason of  such, inability               (4)Nothing in this section shall all be deemed               to  apply  to, the examination of  an  accused               person under section 263 or in the course of a               trial held by a Presidency Magistrate ,               S. 533     (1)  If any Court, before  which  a               confession  or other statement of  an  accused               person  recorded or purporting to  be-recorded               under section..164 or section 364 is  tendered               or  has been received in evidence, finds  that               any  of  the  provisions  of  either  of  such               sections  have not been complied with  by  the               Magistrate  recording the statement, it  shall               take  evidence that such person duly made  the               statement   recorded;   and,   notwithstanding               anything contained in the Indian Evidence Act,               1872,  section 91 such Statement shall be  ad-               mitted,  if  the  error has  not  injured  the               accused as to his defence on the merits.               (2)   The provisions of this section apply  to               Courts of Appeal, Reference and Revision. A confession duly recorded under s. 164 would no doubt be  a public document under s. 74 of the Evidence Act which  would prove  itself  under  s. 80 of that  Act.   Mr.  Dixit,  who recorded  the  confession in this case was  a  second  class magistrate  and the prosecution was unable to prove that  he had  been  specially empowered by the  State  Government  to record  a statement or confession under s. 164 of the  Code. The trial, therefore, proceeded on the basis that he had not been so empowered.  That being so, it was rightly held  that the  confessions had not been recorded under s. 164 and  the

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record  could not be put in evidence under ss. 74 and 80  of the Evidence Act to prove them.  The prosecution,  thereupon called  Mr.  Dixit to prove these  confessions,  the  record being  used only to refresh his memory under s. 159  of  the Evidence Act.  It is the admissibility of this oral evidence that is in question. The Judicial Committee in Nazir Ahmed v. The King Emperor(1) held  that  when a magistrate of the first class  records  a confession  under s. 164 but does not follow  the  procedure laid  down in that section, oral evidence of the  confession is inadmissible.  Nazir Ahmed’s(1) case natu- (1) L.R. 63 I.A. 372. 32-2 S. C. India /64 490 rally  figured  largely in the arguments presented  to  this Court  and the Courts below.  The learned trial  Judge  fol- lowing  Ashrafi  v. The State(1) to which we  will  have  to refer  latter,  held  that  Nazir  Ahmed’s  case(2)  had  no application where, as in the present case, a magistrate  not authorised to do so purports to record a confession under s. 164,  and  on that basis admitted the  oral  evidence.   The learned  judges of the High Court observed that the  present case  :was  governed  by  Nazir  Ahmed’s  case(2)  and  that Askarfis  case(1) had no application because it dealt  "with the question of identification parades held by  Magistrates, There was no occasion to discuss the question of confessions recorded before Magistrates." In this view of the matter the learned  judges  of the High Court held  the  oral  evidence inadmissible  and acquitted the respondents.  It would  help to clear the ground to state that it had not been argued  in Nazir  Ahmed’s  case(2)  that s. 533 of  the  Code  had  any operation  in  making any oral evidence admissible  and  the position  is  the same in the present case.  It  would  not, therefore, be necessary for us to consider whether that sec- tion  had  any effect in this case in  making  any  evidence admissible. In  Nazir  Ahmed’s case(2) the Judicial  Committee  observed that  the  principle  applied in Taylor v.  Taylor(3)  to  a Court,  namely, that where a power is given to do a  certain thing  in a certain way, the thing must be done in that  way or  not  at all and that other methods  of  performance  are necessarily forbidden, applied to judicial officers making a record  under  s. 164 and, therefore, held  that  magistrate could  not give oral evidence of the confession made to  him which  he had purported to record under s. 164 of the  Code. It  was  said that otherwise all the precautions  and  safe- guards laid down in ss. 164 and 364, both of which had to be read together, would become of such trifling value as to  be almost idle and that "it would be an unnatural  construction to  hold  that any other procedure was permitted  than  that which  is  laid down with such minute particularity  in  the sections themselves." The  rule adopted in Taylor v. Taylor(3) is well  recognised and is founded on sound principle.  Its result is (1)  I.L.R. [1960] 2 All. 488. (2)  L.R. 63 IA. 372. (3)  [1875] 1 Ch.  D.  426, 431. 491 that if a statute has conferred a power to do an act and has laid  down  the  method  in  which  that  power  has  to  be exercised,  it necessarily prohibits the doing of th act  in any  other manner than that which has been prescribed.   The principle  behind the rule is that if this were not so,  the statutory provision might as well not have been enacted.   A magistrate, therefore, cannot in the course of investigation

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record  a  confession except in the manner laid down  in  s. 164.  The power to record the confession had obviously  been given  so that the confession might be proved by the  record of  it  made  in  the manner laid down.   If  proof  of  the confession  by  other  means  was  permissible,  the   whole provision of s. 164 including the safeguards contained in it for  the  protection of accused persons  would  be  rendered nugatory.    The  section,  therefore,  by   conferring   on magistrates  the power to record statements or  confessions, by  necessary  implication,  prohibited  a  magistrate  from giving  oral evidence of the statements or confessions  made to him. Mr.  Aggarwala  does  not  question  the  validity  of   the principle  but says that Nazir Ahmed’s case(1)  was  wrongly decided  as the principle was not applicable to  its  facts. He  put his challenge to the correctness of the decision  on two  grounds, the first of which was that the principle  ap- plied  in Taylor v. Taylor(2) had no application  where  the statutory  provision conferring the power was not  mandatory and  that  the provisions of s. 164 were  not  mandatory  as would appear from the terms of s. 533. This contention seems to us to be without foundation.  Quite clearly, the power conferred by s. 164 to record a statement or  confession  is  not one which must  be  exercised.   The Judicial  Committee  expressly  said  so  in  Nazir  Ahmed’s case(3) and we did not understand Mr. Aggarwala to  question this part of the judgment.  What he meant was that s. 533 of the Code showed that in recording a statement or  confession under  s. 164, it was not obligatory for the  magistrate  to follow the procedure mentioned in it.  Section 533 says that if  the court before which a statement or confession  of  an accused person purporting to be recorded under s. 164 or  s. 364  is  tendered,  in  evidence, "finds  that  any  of  the provisions of either of such sections have (1) L.R. 63 I.A. 372. (2) [1875] 1 Ch. 426. 492 riot  been complied with by -the magistrate  recording  the’ statements  it  shall take evidence, that such  person  duly made  the  statement recorded."  Now a statement  would  not have been "duly made" unless the procedure for, make in  it, laid down in s. 164 had been followed. What s. 533 therefore does  is to permit oral evidence to be given to  prove  that the procedure laid down in s. 164 had,in fact-been  followed when the court finds that the record produced before it does not show that was so. If the oral evidence establishes  that the procedure had been followed, then only can the record be admitted.   Therefore, far from showing that  the  procedure laid down in s. 164 is not intended to be obligatory, s. 533 really  emphasises that procedure has to be  followed.   The section  only  permits  oral  evidence  to  prove  that  the procedure had actually been followed in certain cases  where the record which ought to show that does not on the face  of it do so. The  second  ground on which Mr.  Aggarwala  challenged  the decision in Nazir Ahmed’s case(1) was that the object of  s. 164  of the Code is to permit a record being kept so  as  to take  advantage  of ss. 74 and 80 of the  Evidence  Act  and avoid the inconvenience of having to call the magistrate  to whom the statement or confession bad been made, to prove it. The  contention  apparently  is that the  section  was  only intended  to  confer  a  benefit  on  the  prosecution  and, therefore,   the  sole  effect  of  the  disregard  of   its provisions  would  be  to deprive the  prosecution  of  that benefit,  for  it cannot then rely on ss. 74 and 80  of  the

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Evidence  Act  and  has to prove  the  confession  by  other evidence  including  the  oral evidence  of  the  magistrate recording  it.  It was, therefore, said that  the  principle adopted  in  Nazir  Ahmed’s case(1) had  no  application  in interpreting s. 164. A similar argument was advanced in Nazir Ahmed’s case(1) and rejected  by the judicial Committee.  We respectfully  agree with that view.  The section gives power to make a record of the  confession  made  by an accused which may  be  used  in evidence  against  him  and at the  same  time  it  provides certain  safeguards  for his protection by laying  down  the procedure subject to which alone the record may be made  and used in evidence.  The (1) L.R. 631. 372. 493 record,  if duly made, may no doubt be admitted in  evidence without  further  proof but if it had not been so  made  and other  evidence was admissible to prove that the  statements recorded had been made, then the creation of the  safeguards would  have been futile.  The safeguards were obviously  not created for nothing and it could not have been intended that the  safeguards  might at the will of  the  prosecution,  be bypassed.   That is what would happen if oral  evidence  was admissible  to  prove a confession purported  to  have  been recorded  under s. 164.  Therefore it seems to us  that  the object  of  s.  164  was not to  give  the  prosecution  the advantage  of  ss.  74 and 80 of the  Evidence  Act  but  to provide for evidence being made available to the prosecution subject to due protection of the interest of the accused. We have to point out that the correctness of the decision of Nazir Ahmed’s case(1) has been accepted by this Court in  at least two cases, namely, Rao Shiv Bahadur Singh v. The State of   Vindhya   Pradesh(2)  and  Deep  Chand  v.   State   of Rajasthan(3).   We have found no reason to take a  different view. Mr. Aggarwala then contended that Nazir Ahmed’s case(1)  was distinguishable.   He  said  that  all  that  the   Judicial Committee  decided  in  Nazir Ahmed’s case  was  that  if  a Presidency Magistrate, a Magistrate of the first class or  a Magistrate  of the second class specially empowered in  that behalf  records a statement or confession under s.  164  but the  procedure  laid  down in it is not  complied  with,  he cannot  give  oral  evidence  to  prove  the  statement   or confession.  According to Mr. Aggarwala, it does not  follow from  that  decision that a Magistrate of a class  not  men- tioned  in  the  section, for example a  magistrate  of  the second class not specially empowered by the State Government cannot give oral evidence of a confession made to him  which he had purported to record under s. 164 of the Code. It is true that the Judicial Committee did not have to  with a  case  like  the present one where a  magistrate  ’of  the second  class  not  specially"empowered  had  purported  -to record a confession under s. 164.  The principle applied (1) L.R. 63 I.A. 372.     (2)  [1954] S.C.R.  1098. (3)  [1962] 1. S.C.R. 662. 494 in  that  decision  would however  equally  prevent  such  a magistrate  from  giving oral evidence  of  the  confession. When a statute confers a power on certain judicial officers, that  power  can  obviously  be  exercised  only  by   those officers.  No other officer can exercise that power, for  it has not been given to him.  Now the power has been conferred by  s.  164  on  certain  magistrates  of  higher   classes. Obviously,  it  was  not intended to  confer  the  power  on magistrates  of  lower  classes.  If,  therefore,  a  proper

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construction  of  s.  164,  as  we  have  held,  is  that  a magistrate  of a higher class is prevented from giving  oral evidence  of  a confession made to him because  thereby  the safeguards  created for the benefit of an accused person  by s. 164 would be rendered nugatory, it would be an  unnatural construction  of the section to hold that  these  safeguards were  not thought necessary and could be ignored, where  the confession  had been made to a magistrate of a  lower  class and that such a magistrate was, therefore, free to give oral evidence  of the confession made to him.  We cannot  put  an interpretation  on  s. 164 which produces the  anomaly  that while  it  is not possible for higher class  magistrates  to practically  abrogate the safeguards created in s.  164  for the benefit of an accused person it is open to a lower class magistrate to do so. We, therefore, think that the  decision in  Nazir Ahmed’s case(1) also covers the case in  hand  and that on the principles there applied, here too oral evidence given  by  Mr. Dixit of the confession made to him  must  be held inadmissible. It remains now to notice some of the decisions on which  Mr. Aggarwala relied in support of his contention.  First of all we have to refer to Asharfis case(1).  That was a case which was  concerned  with  the memorandum  of  an  identification parade prepared by a magistrate of the first class.  It  was observed  in  that  case  that  Nazir  Ahmed’s  case(2)  was authority  for  the  proposition  that  where  a  magistrate belongs to a class mentioned in s. 164, be must act in terms of  it  or not at all, but where the  proceedings  are  held before  any other magistrate the statement is one under  the unwritten  general  law  and  Nazir  Ahmed’s  case  had   no application.   It was also observed that  an  identification memorandum  was a statement recorded under s. 164  when  the record was (1) L.R. 63 I.A. 372.     (2) I L.R. [1960] 2 All. 488. 495 made  by a magistrate of a class mentioned in it  but  where the memorandum was prepared by a magistrate of another class it  was  not  a  record made  under  that  section  and  the magistrate making the record can give oral evidence in proof of the statements in the memorandum.  We are not very  clear as to what exactly was intended to be laid down in this case about s. 164.  Furthermore it does not appear to us from the report how the observations referred to above were necessary for  the decision of the case, for, as earlier  stated,  the identification memorandum considered there had been prepared by a magistrate of the first class.  It is not necessary for us  in  this  judgment  to  decide  whether  or  how  far  a memorandum  of  identification  proceeding  is  a  statement recorded under s. 164 and we do not wish to be understood as lending  our support to the view expressed on that  question in  Asharfis case(1).  We think it enough to state that  for the  reasons earlier mentioned, we are unable to  share  the view-if  that was the view expressed in Asharfi’s  case-that where  a statement or confession is made in tile  course  of investigation  to a magistrate not belonging to one  of  the classes  mentioned in s. 164, he can prove the statement  or confession by oral evidence.  We may state here that a later judgment  of  the same High Court has expressed  some  doubt about  the  correctness  of that case:  see  Ram  Sanchi  v. State(2). The  next case to which reference was made by Mr.  Aggarwala was Ghulam Hussain v. The King(3).  That case dealt with the question whether a statement recorded under s. 164 which did not amount to a confession, could be used against the  maker as  an admission by him within ss. 18 to 21 of the  Evidence

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Act and it was held,, that it could.  The Judicial Committee observed  that  "the  fact that an admission is  made  to  a Magistrate while he, is functioning under s. 164 of the Code of  Criminal Procedure cannot take it outside the  scope  of the Evidence Act." That case only held that the relevancy of a  statement recorded under s. 164 had to be decided by  the provisions, of the Evidence Act.  We have nothing to do with any  question  as to relevancy of  evidence.   The  question before (1)  I.L.R. [1960] 2 All. 488. (2) A.I.R. [1963] All. 308.      (3)  L.R. 77 I.A. 65. 496 us  is whether a confession which is relevant can be  proved by  oral evidence in view of the provision of s. 164 of  the Code.   The question dealt with in Ghulam Hussain’s  case(1) was  quite  different and that case has no  bearing  on  the question before us. It is clear that the observation quoted earlier from  Ghulam Hussain’s  case(1)  does  not as argued  by  Mr.  Aggarwaia, support  the  contention that where a  confession  has  been purported  to be recorded under s. 164 but by  a  magistrate who  is not one of those mentioned in it, the  Evidence  Act can  still be called in aid to admit oral evidence to  prove the confession.  All that the judicial Committee did in that case  was  to  hold that an admission in  a  statement  duly recorded under s. 164 was substantive evidence of the  facts stated  in it under ss. 18 to 21 of the Evidence  Act.   The Judicial  Committee made that observation for  this  purpose only  and  to  reject an argument that  the  cases  of  Brij Bhushan  Singh v. King Emperor(2), and Bhuboni Sahu  v.  The King(3)  showed  that the admission made  in  the  statement recorded  under s. 164 could not be used against an  accused person  as  substantive evidence of the  fact  stated.   The judicial  Committee  pointed out that "In  these  cases  the Board was considering whether a statement made by a  witness under s. 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure could be used against  the  accused as substantive evidence of  the  facts stated,  and it was held that such a statement could not  be used in that way." Another  case cited was Emperor v. Ram Naresh(4).  What  had happened there was that two accused persons walked into  the court of a magistrate and wanted to make a confession.   The magistrate called a petition-writer and the accused  persons dictated  an application to him and that was taken  down  by the  petition-writer and signed by them.  That petition  was admitted  in evidence under s. 21 of the Evidence  Act.   It was  held, and we think rightly, that Nazir Ahmed’s  case(5) did  not  prevent the petition being  admitted  in  evidence because it only forbade certain oral (1) L.R. 77 I.A. 65.      (2) L.R. 73 I.A.I. (3)   L.R. 76 I.A. 147..   (4)  I.L.R. [1939] All. 377. (5)  L.R. 63 I.A. 372. 497 evidence being given.  This case turned on wholly  different facts and is of no assistance. We  may  also  refer  to, In re Natesan  (1)  where  it  was observed  that the decision in Nazir Ahmed’s  case(2)  might require reconsideration in view of the observations of  this Court  in Willie Slaney v. The State of  Madhya  Pradesh(3). The actual decision in In re Natesan(4) does not affect  the question  before  us  and  with  regard  to  the   aforesaid observation  made  in it we think it enough on  the  present occasion to say that we are unable to accept it as correct. We  think  that the High Court in the present  case  rightly rejected the oral evidence of Mr. Dixit.

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The result is that the appeal fails and is dismissed. Appeal dismissed.