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2025 (4) TMI 1603 - AT - FEMA


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal under Section 19 of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 ("the Act of 1999") are:

  • Whether the appellant was involved in contravention of Section 3(a), (b), and (c) of the Act of 1999 relating to hawala transactions;
  • Whether the impugned order relying on statements retracted shortly after recording, loose sheets, and seized documents was legally sustainable;
  • Whether the denial of cross-examination of witnesses whose statements were relied upon violated principles of natural justice;
  • Whether the delay of 11 months in passing the impugned order was fatal to its validity;
  • The appropriateness and quantum of penalty imposed on the appellant and his employee under the said provisions of the Act.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Involvement of the appellant in hawala transactions and contravention of Section 3(a), (b), and (c) of the Act of 1999

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 3 of the Act prohibits certain foreign exchange dealings without authorization. Contravention of these provisions attracts penalties. The Enforcement Directorate conducted searches under Section 37 of the Act.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal found that the appellant's business and residential premises were searched, and various documents including notebooks, loose sheets, telephone diaries, and Indian currency were seized. Statements of the appellant and his employee, Shri Mahendra Jain, were recorded. The appellant initially admitted involvement in hawala transactions but retracted his statement shortly thereafter.

Key evidence and findings: The recovered notebook was maintained in the appellant's handwriting and contained day-to-day details of hawala business transactions, showing receipts and payments with overseas counterparts. The appellant explained some entries but admitted personal details. The employee's statement corroborated the hawala business. The appellant's retraction alleged coercion but did not explain the nature of threat, and accepted certain details.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal held that while retracted statements generally cannot be relied upon, they may be considered if corroborated by independent evidence. Here, the notebook and the employee's statement provided such corroboration. Loose sheets alone were not relied upon, but the notebook was considered a business account book, supporting the finding of contravention.

Treatment of competing arguments: The appellant contended that reliance on retracted statements and loose sheets was impermissible. The Tribunal distinguished loose sheets from the notebook and relied on corroborative evidence. The appellant's retraction was not accepted as complete or credible given the acceptance of personal details and lack of explanation for coercion.

Conclusions: The Tribunal upheld the finding of contravention of Section 3(a), (b), and (c) of the Act by the appellant based on the totality of evidence.

Issue 2: Reliance on retracted statements and loose sheets as evidence

Relevant legal framework and precedents: It is settled that retracted confessions or statements are generally not relied upon unless corroborated by other evidence. The Tribunal referred to the Supreme Court judgment in Vinod Solanki v. Union of India (2008) 16 SCC 537, which held that retracted statements can be used as corroborative evidence.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the appellant's retraction was immediate but partial, and the statements were corroborated by the notebook and the employee's statements. The loose sheets were not relied upon, thus avoiding conflict with precedents like L.K. Advani v. CBI, which disallowed reliance on loose sheets alone.

Key evidence and findings: The notebook was handwritten by the appellant and contained detailed accounts of hawala transactions. The employee's statement supported the existence of hawala business. The retraction telegram was considered but found insufficient to negate the other evidence.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that retracted statements may be used as corroborative evidence and found the impugned order's reliance on such material valid.

Treatment of competing arguments: The appellant's argument that reliance on retracted statements and loose sheets was illegal was rejected because the Tribunal did not rely solely on loose sheets and found corroboration for the retracted statements.

Conclusions: Reliance on retracted statements was upheld due to corroboration, and loose sheets were not relied upon, thus the evidence was legally admissible.

Issue 3: Denial of cross-examination of witnesses whose statements were relied upon

Relevant legal framework and precedents: The adjudication proceedings under the Act are quasi-judicial and not criminal trials; hence, strict rules of evidence and formal cross-examination are not mandatory. The Tribunal referred to the FERA Board judgment in M. Ameer v. Director of Enforcement and the Supreme Court ruling in State of Madhya Pradesh v. Chintaman Sadashiva, which emphasize that natural justice requires a fair opportunity to explain but not necessarily formal cross-examination.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that statements of Shri Abhilash Vasa and Shri Aftab Alam were recorded during investigation, not before the adjudicating authority, and thus cross-examination was not obligatory. The appellant was given copies of statements and opportunity to comment. The Tribunal also clarified that it did not rely on these statements in its final order.

Key evidence and findings: The appellant's request for cross-examination was denied on the ground that such proceedings do not equate to criminal trials and do not require formal cross-examination.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that natural justice requires a fair and reasonable opportunity to comment but not formal cross-examination in quasi-judicial proceedings.

Treatment of competing arguments: The appellant argued violation of natural justice due to denial of cross-examination. The Tribunal rejected this, relying on established precedents distinguishing adjudication from criminal trials.

Conclusions: Denial of cross-examination did not violate principles of natural justice in the facts of this case.

Issue 4: Delay in passing the impugned order

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Delay in adjudication orders can be fatal if it results in prejudice or violates principles of natural justice. The appellant contended that an 11-month delay after hearing was fatal.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal did not find any merit in this contention as no prejudice was demonstrated due to delay. The impugned order was passed after due consideration of evidence and submissions.

Key evidence and findings: The record showed delay but no adverse effect on the appellant's rights or fairness of proceedings.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that delay per se is not fatal unless it causes prejudice.

Treatment of competing arguments: The appellant's argument was not supported by evidence of prejudice; thus, it was rejected.

Conclusions: Delay in passing the order did not vitiate the impugned order.

Issue 5: Quantum and appropriateness of penalty imposed

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Penalties under the Act are discretionary and must be proportionate to the gravity of contravention. The Tribunal considered the facts and the appellant's role in the hawala business.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Special Director imposed a total penalty of Rs. 14 crores on the appellant and Rs. 1.8 crores on his employee. The Tribunal found that the appellant was receiving commission for facilitating hawala transactions but did not own the business directly. The employee was salaried and not directly involved in hawala dealings.

Key evidence and findings: The appellant earned commission of 10 to 15 paise per dollar. The employee was paid a monthly salary of Rs. 15,000. No direct evidence showed the employee's independent involvement in hawala.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal reduced the penalty on the appellant to Rs. 1.4 crores in total (Rs. 40 lakhs under Section 3(c), Rs. 60 lakhs under Section 3(a), and Rs. 40 lakhs under Section 3(b)). For the employee, the penalty was reduced to Rs. 2.8 lakhs in total.

Treatment of competing arguments: The appellant sought reduction of penalty; the respondent sought confirmation. The Tribunal balanced the evidence and imposed proportionate penalties.

Conclusions: The penalty was modified to a reasonable amount reflecting the appellant's actual role and the employee's limited involvement.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"It is trite law that evidence brought on record by way of confession which stood retracted must be substantially corroborated by other independent and cogent evidence, which would lend adequate assurance to the court that it may seek to rely thereupon."

"The adjudication proceedings under the Act cannot be equated with a criminal trial. In these proceedings, there is no criminal court, no prosecution in the real sense of the term and no accused of any criminal offence. The strict rules of Evidence or the Code of Criminal Procedure, are not applicable to such proceedings."

"Natural justice is fast becoming the most unnatural and artificial justice... No natural justice requires that there should be a kind of a formal cross examination. Formal cross examination is procedural justice. It is governed by rules of evidence. It is the creation of Courts and not a part of natural justice but of legal and statutory justice."

"The appellant was receiving commission of 10 to 15 paise per dollar for facilitating hawala transactions and was not the owner of the business. The penalty imposed must be proportionate to the role played."

The Tribunal concluded that the appellant was involved in hawala transactions in contravention of Section 3(a), (b), and (c) of the Act of 1999, that reliance on retracted statements was permissible due to corroboration, denial of cross-examination did not violate natural justice, delay in order was not fatal, and the penalty imposed was excessive and was accordingly reduced to a reasonable sum.

 

 

 

 

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