In Hem Raj Sharma v. State of Himachal Pradesh, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh quashed a trial court order confiscating an Alto car used to transport commercial quantities of contraband, ruling that Sections 60(3) and 63(2) of the NDPS Act provide explicit statutory protection to innocent owners. The Court established that a confiscation order passed in “hot haste”—simultaneously with a sentencing hearing and without affording the registered owner a mandatory one-month notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard—violates the principles of natural justice (audi alteram partem) and is legally unsustainable.
- Factual Background and Confiscation Challenge
The petitioner challenged an order from the Special Judge, Kullu, which directed the confiscation of his vehicle (an Alto car) used by two convicts—one of whom was the petitioner’s employee—to transport drugs. The petitioner argued that he was never an accused in the trial, was cited merely as a prosecution witness (PW-4), and had no knowledge or connivance regarding the illicit use of his car by the driver. The State contended that since the vehicle was admittedly owned by the petitioner and used in a drug offense, it was case property liable for automatic confiscation under Section 60.
- Statutory Protection for Innocent Owners
The Court emphasized that Section 60(3) of the NDPS Act explicitly carves out an exception in favor of innocent owners. Under this provision:
- A conveyance used for carrying drugs is liable to confiscation unless the owner proves it was used without their knowledge, permission, or connivance.
- The owner must also show that they (and their agents) took all reasonable precautions against such illicit use.
- Since the prosecution’s own record indicated the vehicle was unilaterally misused by the driver without the owner’s complicity, the absolute liability of confiscation did not apply.
- Procedural Mandate under Section 63(2)
The High Court identified a severe procedural lapse in the trial court’s actions, noting that it had ignored the procedural safeguards embedded in Section 63(2). The law mandates that:
- No order of confiscation shall be made until the expiry of one month from the date of seizure.
- The Court must provide a meaningful opportunity of hearing to any person claiming a right to the article or conveyance.
- The purpose of this notice is to allow the owner to produce evidence establishing their lack of knowledge or connivance.
- Violation of Natural Justice
The Court found that the trial court acted arbitrarily by passing the confiscation order as a “postscript” to the sentencing hearing for the primary convicts. By failing to issue a show-cause notice to the petitioner, the trial court condemned him unheard, causing great prejudice to a party who had even testified on behalf of the prosecution to help prove the guilt of the accused.
- Final Outcome
Finding the trial court’s order to be in direct violation of statutory mandates and the rule of audi alteram partem, the High Court allowed the revision petition. The order dated August 12, 2025, was quashed and set aside, subject to the final outcome of the appeal filed by the convicts against their primary conviction.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 318
Hem Raj Sharma V. State of Himachal Pradesh (D.O.J. 27.05.2026)
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