Article 20
Article 20
SYNOPSIS
1. Ex post facto 346
laws-meaning
2. Ex post facto 346
laws-clause (1)
3. Ex-post facto 348
laws and the
US Constitution
4. Ex post facto 349
rule-
applicability to
procedural
laws
5. Article 20 and 350
U.N. Charter
6. Enhanced 350
punishment
prohibited
7. Civil liability not 351
affected
8. Law in force- 351
meaning
9. Double 351
jeopardy
10. Other statutory 352
provisions
11. Same offence 352
12. Double 353
jeopardy and
issue estoppel
13. Lack of 354
jurisdiction-
effect of
14. Proceedings 354
before
departmental
authorities
15. Clause (3)-self- 355
incrimination
16. Clause (3)- 355
three
requirements
17. Compulsion- 356
essential
requirements
18. Tape recorded 357
statements
19. To be a 358
witness-
meaning of
20. Search and 358
seizure
21. Accused of an 358
offence-
meaning of
22. Anti-terrorism 359
enactments-
special
provisions
23. Illustrative 360
cases
24. Article 20(3) 361
and Sec.161
Cr.P.C
25. Protection even 361
before trial
26. Self- 361
incrimination-
meaning of
COMMENTS
This Article consists of three clauses. Clause (1)
deals with ex post facto laws, clause (2) with the
rule against double jeopardy and the third clause
with the prohibition against self-incrimination.
These clauses are now dealt with in seriatim.
Law in force-meaning
Article 20(1) refers to the law in force at the time
of commission of the offence. It refers to the law
which was actually in operation and will not apply
to laws which are deemed to be in force by legal
fiction.35
Under Section 24 of the General Clauses Act,
notifications, rules, etc. of a repealed enactment
will be deemed to have been re-enacted under
the new enactment unless and until they are
superseded by another notification, rule, etc.
Thus, regulations made under the Mines Act,
1923 would be deemed to continue under the
Mines Act, 1952. Consequently, prosecution
launched under the old enactment will not be
affected by the new law and the bar of Article
20(1) will not apply.36 For custom to have the
colour of a rule or law, it is necessary for the
party claiming it, to plead and thereafter prove
that such custom is ancient, certain and
reasonable. Custom being in derogation of the
general rule is required to be construed strictly.
The party relying upon a custom is obliged to
establish it by clear and unambiguous
evidence.37
Double jeopardy
The provisions of clause (2) are based on the
doctrine of double jeopardy. Under the American
Constitution and the English Common Law, no
person can be prosecuted twice for the same
offence whether he is convicted or acquitted. It is
based on the well established rule of English law
and is expressed in the maxim " nemo debet bis
vexari"-a man must not be put twice in peril for
the same offence.
In the US Constitution,38 the 5th amendment has
incorporated this principle in 1791 and the
relevant portion reads as under:
"Nor shall any person be subject for the
same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of
life or limb"
Same offence
The word "offence" has not been defined in the
Constitution and hence, as per Article 367, the
definition of this word in Section 3(38) of the
General Clauses Act, 1897 will apply. The word
is defined to mean "an act or omission made
punishable by any law for the time being in
force".43Article 20(2) will operate only where the
accused is sought to be prosecuted and
punished for "the same offence". If the accused
is tried for distinct offences, the protection under
Article 20(2) will not apply. Thus, when a person
was initially charged under Section 409 of the
Indian Penal Code, it will not bar prosecution
under Section 105 of the Insurance Act. The
Supreme Court quoted Willoughby44: "Cases
may occur in which the same act may render the
actor guilty of two distinct offences; ....... In such
cases, the accused cannot plead the trial and
acquittal, or the conviction or punishment for one
offence as a bar to a conviction for the other" and
also referred to Section 26 of the General
Clauses Act. It was further observed that the
construction placed on Article 20(2) and the said
Section 26 was precisely in line with Section 403
of the former Criminal Procedure Code
(corresponds to Section 300 of the present
code).45 A person who was punished under
Section 107(8) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878
can be proceeded for criminal conspiracy under
Section 120-B of the Indian Penal Code.
Conspiracy is a distinct offence from the crime
that is the object of the conspiracy as the
conspiracy precedes the commission of the crime
and is complete before the crime is attempted or
complete.46
The emphasis is on the words "same offence". It
is now well settled that where there are two
distinct offences made up of different ingredients,
the bar under Section 26 of the General Clauses
Act, 1897 or for that matter, the embargo under
Article 20 of the Constitution has no application,
though the offences may have some overlapping
features. The crucial requirement of either
Article 20 of the Constitution or Section 26 of the
General Clauses Act, 1897 is that the offences
are the same or identical in all respects.47
Offences under the Wild Life Protection Act, 1972
and the Indian Penal Code do not constitute the
same offence.48 An original trial under Sections
399 and 400, IPC and Section 3 of TADA will not
bar the subsequent trial under the Arms Act,
1959.49 So far as concurrent proceedings
initiated both under the Army Act and the Central
Rules are concerned, they are unexceptionable.
These two proceedings operate in two different
fields though the crime or the misconduct might
arise out of the same act. The court-martial
proceedings deal with the penal aspect of the
misconduct while the proceedings under the
Central Rules deal with the disciplinary aspect of
the misconduct. The two proceedings do not
overlap.50
Double jeopardy and issue estoppel
The principle of issue-estoppel is different from
the principle of double jeopardy or autrefois
acquit as embodied in Section 403 of the
Criminal Procedure Code. The principle of issue-
estoppel is a different principle, viz., where an
issue of fact has been tried by a competent court
on a former occasion and a finding has been
reached in favour of an accused, such a finding
would constitute an estoppel or res judicata
against the prosecution not as a bar to the trial
and conviction of the accused for a different or
distinct offence but as precluding the reception of
evidence to disturb that finding of fact when the
accused is tried subsequently even for a different
offence which might be permitted by the terms of
Section 403(2), Cr.P.C. 1898 (corresponding to
Section 300 of Cr.P.C., 1973).51
The manifestation of the rule against double
jeopardy is contained in Section 26 of the
General Clauses Act, 1897, Section 300 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 and Section
71 of the Indian Penal Code.52
Lack of jurisdiction-effect of
The protection of Article 20(2) will be available
only if the first trial was before a court of
competent jurisdiction. If the court did not have
jurisdiction, the entire procedure would be null
and void and there would be no valid prosecution
and punishment for the same offence.53
Clause (3)-self-incrimination
This clause is also based on the 5th amendment
to the US Constitution made in 1791. The
relevant part reads as follows:-
"nor shall be compelled in any criminal
case could be a witness against himself
......".
Compulsion-essential requirements
Broadly stated, the guarantee in Article 20(3) is
against "testimonial compulsion". But there is no
reason to confine it to the oral evidence of a
person standing his trial for an offence when
called to the witness stand. The protection
afforded to an accused is so far as it is related to
the phrase "to be a witness" is not merely in
respect of testimonial compulsion in the court-
room but may well extend to compelled testimony
previously obtained from him.63
"Compulsion", in the context of Article 20(3),
must be what in law is called "duress", which has
been explained to be compulsion to do an act by
injury, unlawful imprisonment, threat of being
killed or put to grievous bodily harm. Compulsion
is a physical act and not the state of mind of the
person making the statement, except where the
mind has been so conditioned by some
extraneous process as to render the statement
involuntary and extorted. There is no compulsion
when a police officer, investigating a crime
against a certain individual, asks him to do a
certain thing. The fact that a person was in police
custody when he made the statement is not a
foundation for an inference that he was
compelled to make the statement. The mere
questioning of an accused by a police officer,
resulting in a voluntary statement, which may
ultimately turn out to be incriminatory, is not
compulsion.64
A confessional statement (referring to the
relationship of the accused with other accused
persons and several seized Articles) was made
voluntarily and was not hit by Article 20(3).65
There is no necessity for an accused person to
enter the witness-box and it is not correct to state
that a criminal trial compels a person to be a
witness against himself and is therefore violative
of Article 20(3). There is no compulsion when an
accused voluntarily gives evidence in his
defense.66
However, the Supreme Court surprisingly held
that a person could not be compelled to give a
blood sample for analysis as no adverse
inference can be drawn against him for such
refusal.67 At the same time, the court upheld the
requirement of an accused giving his
handwriting, thumb impression, and allowing his
photographs to be taken.68 Similarly Section 27
of POTA enabling a police officer investigating a
case to seek directions through the Chief Judicial
or Chief Metropolitan Magistrate for obtaining a
sample of hand writing, fingerprint, photograph or
saliva, etc. of any accused involved in a terrorist
activity was upheld. The fact that permission has
to be granted by a court shows that it is not
automatic and the Court has the discretion to turn
down the request if it is based on a wrong
premise.69
The protection under Article 20(3) is only against
the person being compelled to be a witness
against himself. It does not mean that he need
not give information on matters which do not tend
to incriminate him.70
Compelled testimony will cover not only evidence
procured by physical threats or violence but by
psychic torture, atmospheric pressure (sic),
environmental coercion, tiring interrogative
prolixity, overbearing and intimidatory methods
and the like - not legal penalty for violation.71
In the sensational fodder scam in the Animal
Husbandry Department of Bihar, an accused was
charged with misappropriation of funds and
issuing fake bills for supplies that had never been
made. The accused was granted a pardon by a
Special Judge on the condition that he made a
full and complete disclosure of all illegalities.
Strangely, on the basis of this disclosure, the
Income Tax Department issued a show cause
notice as to why prosecution should not be
initiated against him under Sections 277 and 278
of the Income Tax Act, 1961 for having filed false
income tax returns. The Supreme Court pointed
out that unless he made a full and complete
disclosure, the available evidence would have
been lost in the fodder scam. But if he made a
full and complete disclosure, the accused was to
face prosecution under the Income Tax Act,
1961. The court observed that Article 20(3)
enjoins that no person should be compelled to be
a witness against himself. Even though the
pardon granted by the Special Judge would not
extend to income tax prosecutions, it was a fit
case where the Government should consider not
to prosecute the accused under the Income Tax
Act, 1961.72 The Supreme Court has wrongly
referred to this clause as Article 20(2). Apart
from this error, it is submitted that the decision is
incorrect. The court held that continued
prosecution under the Income Tax Act would
amount to forcing the appellant to give evidence
against himself and risk the pardon being
cancelled. It could have directed that the income
tax prosecution be stayed till the end of the trial
in which pardon had been granted and thereafter
the accused was at liberty to apply for quashing
the prosecution under the Income Tax Act.
'To be a witness'
means imparting knowledge in
respect of relevant facts by an oral
statement or a statement in writing,
made or given in Court or otherwise
.
(iv) 'To be a witness' in its ordinary
grammatical sense means giving oral
testimony in Court. Case law has gone
beyond this strict literal interpretation of the
expression which may now bear a wider
meaning, namely, bearing testimony in
court or out of court by a person accused
of an offence, orally or in writing.
Accused of an offence-meaning of
To bring a statement within the prohibition of
Article 20(3), the person accused must have
stood in the character of an accused person at
the time he made the statement. It is not enough
that he should become an accused any time after
the statement has been made.76 This expression
includes within its ambit, only a person against
whom a formal accusation relating to the
commission of offence had been leveled which,
in the normal course, may result in prosecution.
A person who makes a statement before the
Customs Officer when he was not accused of
any offence under the Customs Act cannot
invoke the provisions of Article 20(3). A person
will be an accused person only when a complaint
is made against him under Section 135 of the
Customs Act.77 A person interrogated during
investigation under Customs Act or FERA is not
an accused person under Article 20 (3),78 but a
person served with a summons under FERA was
held to be an accused person.79 The earlier
decisions were distinguished on the ground that
none of them had occasion to consider the
meaning of the word "accused" or "accused
person" as occurring in Criminal Procedure
Code.80 A person arrested by an officer of the
Railway Protection Force and questioned is not a
person accused of an offence, unless a formal
accusation is made against him in a FIR or a
formal complaint.81 Persons against whom
notices for contempt proceedings have been
issued are not accused of any offence.82
If a person has not been accused of any offence
and the evidence taken from him under
compulsion ultimately leads to an accusation
against him that case would not be covered by
Article 20(3).83 But where a FIR is filed against a
person, Article 20(3) applies.84 This Article does
not afford any protection to witnesses but only to
those who are accused of an offence.85
A general enquiry and investigation into the
affairs of the company thus contemplated cannot
be regarded as an investigation, which starts with
an accusation contemplated in Art.20(3) of the
Constitution.86
Illustrative cases
In the following circumstances, the Supreme
Court has held that the provisions of Article
20(3) will not apply:--
Self-incrimination-meaning of
This expression will only cover information based
upon the personal knowledge of the person
giving the information and not the mere process
of producing documents in court which may
throw light on the issues in controversy. At the
same time, if self-incriminatory information is
given by the accused voluntarily and without any
threat, Article 20(3) is not attracted. An accused
cannot be compelled to disclose documents
which are self-incriminatory and based on his
knowledge.6
Article 20(3) strikes at confessions and self-
incriminations but leaves untouched other
relevant facts.7
1. Fletcher v. Rock, 3 L Ed 162 : 10 US (6
Cranch) 87 (1810).
"Bill of Attainder"
means a legislative act that imposes
punishment on a particular individual
without a hearing or trial