Rakesh Sha V The State of West Bengal Watermark 1538870
Rakesh Sha V The State of West Bengal Watermark 1538870
Rakesh Sha V The State of West Bengal Watermark 1538870
IN
Present :
Hon’ble Justice Moushumi Bhattacharya
&
Hon’ble Justice Prasenjit Biswas.
Rakesh Sha
vs
The State of West Bengal
Delivered on : 25.08.2023.
Moushumi Bhattacharya, J.
1. The present application has been filed under section 439 of The Code of
N.D.P.S. Act, 1985. The petitioner prays for bail upon being charged under the
(NDPS Act). The petitioner was arrested on 31.3.2023 and the charge-sheet was
filed on 1.7.2023. The petitioner filed several applications for bail before the
learned Special Court under the NDPS Act, Jalpaiguri; all of which were
since charges are still to be framed and there are 15 prosecution witnesses who
are to be examined. The petitioner does not have any confidence of the trial
counsel is on section 36A(4) of the NDPS Act read with the proviso. Counsel
submits that the I.O submitted the charge-sheet on 30.6.2023 without the
CFSL / Chemical Examination Report. Counsel submits that the learned Trial
the order dated 1.7.2023. Counsel relies on a line in the charge-sheet stating
4. Learned counsel for the Prosecution submits that the charge-sheet dated
the learned Trial Court for conducting further investigation in terms of section
173(8) of the Cr.P.C. Counsel places emphasis on the fact that the investigation
in the present case was completed within 180 days time frame and no further
5. Section 36A of the NDPS Act relates to offences triable by Special Courts.
Section 36A(4) is pari materia to section 167(2) of the Cr.P.C. and requires
investigation to be completed within the stipulated time period of 180 days. The
only difference is that the time frame of 90 days under section 167(2) of the
punishable under the specific provisions of the NDPS Act as provided under
6. The proviso to section 36A(4) of the NDPS Act is relevant for this case
7. It would be evident from the above that the proviso clearly indicates that
in the event of the investigation not being completed within 180 days :
i) The Special Court may extend the period beyond 180 days but up to a
ii) On the requirement of the Public Prosecutor indicating the progress of the
investigation, and
iii) On the specific reasons for the detention of the accused beyond the period
of 180 days.
The points i, ii and iii are not disjunctive and should be read in continuity.
8. A plain reading of the proviso to section 36A(4) indicates that the Special
Court is required to consider point (ii) and (iii), apply its mind and pass a
judicial order on the Report of the Public Prosecutor on what has been brought
before the Court. The order of the Special Court must reflect the basis for
allowing or rejecting the prayer for extension of time beyond 180 days for
9. The case of the Prosecution rests on the line contained in the charge-
office of the Director of State Drugs Control and Research Laboratory (SDCRL).
This, in our view, is not an answer to the specific mandate of the proviso to
charge-sheet upon obtaining the Examination Report does not conform to the
VERDICTUM.IN
5
statutory mandate under the proviso to section 36A(4) of the Act. The rigours of
proviso to section 36A(4) of the NDPS Act was held to be a condition precedent
The State of West Bengal; 2023 OnLine Cal 313. In that decision, the Special
Bench also took judicial notice of the systemic reasons for the failure to obtain
Reports from the Central and State Forensic Laboratories and the fundamental
that the steps required to obtain the analysis report does not require continued
detention of an accused.
10. The reliance of the Prosecution on section 173(8) of the Cr.P.C. is also
not tenable for the following reason. Section 173(8) of the Cr.P.C. permits
11. The petitioner, before us, on the other hand, has been charged for
commission of an offence under the NDPS Act which requires the Trial Court to
take cognizance of the offence committed under the Act. This means that the
investigation for establishing the charges under the NDPS Act. The Chemical
Examination Report therefore becomes the most vital piece of evidence which is
“further evidence” under section 173(8) of the Cr.P.C. where the presumption is
of new evidence and the Laboratory Report in an NDPS case where the report
forms the fulcrum of the charge-sheet on which the Trial Court is to take
Maharashtra; 2021 SCC OnLine Bom 3051 a Single Bench of the Bombay High
Court held that the Magistrate cannot form an opinion and take cognizance of
the commission of the offence under the Act without the Chemical Analysis
Report.
13. The fact that the charge-sheet was submitted within 180 days without
charge-sheet will be filed in future with the Examination Report is beyond the
the NDPS Act is an exercise in futility and raises the presumption of the I.O
filing a cipher only for the sake of closing the first window of the 180 days
under the proviso to 36A(4) of the Act. Moreover, the material placed before us
36A(4).
14. The Prosecution has thus failed on both counts, that is on the statutory
Rs.10,000/-(Rupees ten thousand only) with two sureties of like amount each,
one of who must be local, to the satisfaction of the learned Judge, Special
Court (under NDPS Act) 1st Court, Jalpaiguri. The petitioner shall not induce
witnesses or influence them or tamper with the evidence. The petitioner shall
report to the I.O of the concerned Police Station once every fortnight and shall
not leave the local limits of the local Police Station without leave of the learned
Special Court (Under NDPS Act), 1st Court at Jalpaiguri. The petitioner shall
also make himself available for the trial as and when the petitioner is required.
18. CRM (NDPS) 552 of 2023 is accordingly allowed and disposed of in terms
of the above.
I agree.