Karnail Singh Vs The State

High Court Of Punjab And Haryana At Chandigarh 5 May 1966 Criminal Revision No. 223 of 1966 (1966) 05 P&H CK 0002
Bench: Single Bench
Result Published
Acts Referenced

Judgement Snapshot

Case Number

Criminal Revision No. 223 of 1966

Hon'ble Bench

Shamsher Bahadur, J

Advocates

N.S. Bhatia, for the Appellant; R.N. Pandit, for the Respondent

Final Decision

Dismissed

Acts Referred
  • Opium Act, 1878 - Section 9

Judgement Text

Translate:

Shamsher Bahadur, J.@mdashThis rule is directed against the judgment of the learned Sessions Judge, Barnala, who affirmed the order of the Chief Judicial Magistrate declining to accede to the request of the accused for re-examination by the Chemical Examiner of a representative sample of the opium said to have been recovered from his possession.

2. The facts which have been very carefully summarised by the learned Sessions Judge are these. The petitioner Karnail Singh is being prosecuted u/s 9 of the Opium Act for having been found in possession of 500 grams of illicit opium. It is common ground that the Chemical Examiner has already submitted his report about a portion of the opium sent to him for examination. When the case was ripe for arguments on 15th of February, 1966, the petitioner made an application that the "remaining bulk of opium be sent to the Chemical Examiner for ascertaining if the same was opium or not". This application was dismissed by Mr. Gaur, Chief Judicial Magistrate, on 15th February, 1966, for the simple reason that there was no provision in law to justify the prayer which was made by the accused. Before the learned Sessions Judge, it was argued that the petitioner was entitled to re-examination by the Chemical Examiner on account of the presumption which has to be raised u/s 10 of the Opium Act. This section says-

In prosecutions u/s 9, it shall be presumed, until the contrary is proved, that all opium for which the accused person is unable to account satisfactorily is opium in respect of which he has committed an offence under this Act.

Now, the opium which is said to have been found in possession and the petitioner is the subject-matter of prosecution and it shall be presumed to be opium unless he is able to account satisfactorily that what was recovered from him was not opium. A representative sample was sent to the Chemical Examiner and his report is before the Court. How can it be argued that the remaining bulk ought to be examined by the Chemical Examiner before the accused is in a position to rebut the presumption mentioned in section 10 ? If the contention of the petitioner were to be accepted, every particle of the recovered article will have to be subjected to chemical examination a proposition which the learned counsel himself does not support. The learned Sessions Judge relied on a recent Calcutta judgment of Gopalpur Tea Co. Ltd. Vs. Corporation of Calcutta, wherein it was held that the doctrine of representative sample does not mean that the contents of all the 25 bags of tea recovered from the possession of the accused in that case must first be mixed up together and thereafter the representative sample should be taken. In that case out of 25 bags of tea which had been recovered from the possession of the petitioner, only one bag was selected at random and sent for examination to ascertain whether there was any adulteration. The facts of the present case are much stronger than those in the case decided by P.B. Mukharji J. Here out of the bulk quantity of opium a portion was sent to the Chemical Examiner and a report has been submitted about it. There is no justification for the accused either in law or principle to ask for a re-examination. If such a request were to be accepted in principle, the entire bulk of recovered opium would have to be examined by the appropriate functionary.

3. In this view of the matter, there is no force in this petition which fails and is dismissed.

Petition dismissed.

From The Blog
Case Study: How an Indian Startup Founder Incorporated in Delaware
Nov
12
2025

Court News

Case Study: How an Indian Startup Founder Incorporated in Delaware
Read More
ITAT Ahmedabad Rules in Favor of Woman: Tax Notice on ₹51 Lakh Property Purchase Quashed
Nov
12
2025

Court News

ITAT Ahmedabad Rules in Favor of Woman: Tax Notice on ₹51 Lakh Property Purchase Quashed
Read More