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Recoveries under Section 27 of IEA
« »19-Dec-2025
Source: Supreme Court
Why in News?
The Supreme Court, in Shaik Shabuddin v. State of Telangana (2025), held that articles recovered from the accused during a personal search cannot be classified as discoveries under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA).
- The Court clarified that Section 27 applies only when the accused has concealed an object and its discovery is a direct result of disclosure.
What Was the Background of Shaik Shabuddin v. State of Telangana (2025) Case?
- The case stemmed from the killing of a woman, after being dropped near a village by her husband one morning, she went missing and could not be contacted.
- Her body was found the next day in bushes along a nearby road.
- The prosecution alleged that three accused followed her, raped her in an isolated area, and slit her throat to eliminate evidence.
- They were charged under Sections 302 and 376D read with Section 34 IPC, along with provisions of the SC/ST Act.
- They were convicted under Sections 302 and 376D read with Section 34 IPC, along with provisions of the SC/ST Act.
- The trial court awarded death penalty, which the High Court converted to life imprisonment without remission, relying significantly on alleged confessional statements, and supposed Section 27 recoveries.
- The Supreme Court was called upon to evaluate whether such recoveries and disclosures were legally valid.
What were the Court's Observations?
- The Court held that the materials “recovered” were already in the possession of the accused at the time of arrest.
- These were handed over during a routine personal check, not discovered from any concealed location.
- Therefore, Section 27 did not apply because:
- There was no prior concealment.
- Discovery was not a consequence of disclosure.
- The Court observed that “There was no concealment as such… on an arrest, when the material objects could have been seized from the body of the accused on a mere search by the police, the attempt to convert it into a recovery under Section 27 cannot at all be accepted.”
- While upholding the conviction, the Court modified the sentence from life imprisonment without remission to 25 years' imprisonment without remission.
What is Section 27 of IEA?
About:
- Section 27 of the IEA created a limited exception to the rule that confessions made to police are inadmissible.
- It permitted only that portion of an accused’s statement to be proved which distinctly relates to a fact discovered as a result of the information given.
Key Provisions of Section 27 of IEA:
- Applies only when the accused is in police custody.
- Permits proving only that part of the information which directly leads to the discovery of a relevant fact (e.g., a weapon, stolen property).
- The rationale is that discovery lends credibility to that part of the statement.
Requisite Essentials to Invoke Section 27 of IEA:
- This was laid down in the case of Preumal Raja @ Perumal v. State Represented by the Inspector of Police (2023) where the Court held the following:
- Firstly, there should be a discovery of fact. The facts should be relevant as a consequence of information received from the accused person.
- Secondly, the discovery of such a fact must be deposed to. This means that the fact should not already be known to the police.
- Thirdly, at the time of receipt of information, the accused should be in custody of the police.
- Lastly, only so much information as relates distinctly to fact thereby discovered is admissible.
- This words fact discovered would include the following:
- The “place” from where the object is produced.
- The knowledge of the accused as to this.
Provision in the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023:
- The content of IEA Section 27 is now included as a proviso to Section 23 of the BSA (Confessions to Police).
- This proviso keeps the same rule:
Only the part of the accused’s statement that directly leads to discovery is admissible.
