11 Chapter 5
11 Chapter 5
Chapter-V
The decision of the Court in Maneka Gandhi's case was one of immense
constitutional significance, as it was the first major decision concerniiig;
personal liberty since the Habeas Corpus case. "Maneka vibrates with
humanism and single-minded judicial dedication to the cause of human rights
in India, still recovering from the trauma of the suspension of civil liberties in
1975-77".^ This case gave the court a good opportunity to show its
partisansliip for Civil liberties and to declare that the "reahty of liberty is not
to be drowned in the hysteria of the hour" and the "hubris of power". It
coiifidently ruled: "Governments come and go, but the fundamental rights of
Rajeev Dhavan, On the Future of Western Law and justice in India. Reflections on the
Predicament of the Post-Emergency Supreme Court", journal of the Bar Council of India,
Vol. 8, No. 1, January-March 1981, pp. 71-7.3.
O. Cliinnappa Reddy, Judicial Process and Social Change, Journal of the Indian Law
Institute, Vol. 25, No. 2, April-June 1983, p. 155.
Upendra Bnxi, The Indian Supreme Court and Politics, Mehr Chand Mahajan Memorial
Law Lectures (Lucknow: Eastern Book Company, 1980), p. 151.
126
4. This was an evidence of the court's affirmation of civil liberties in xinambiguous terms.
5. Ibid. The seven judges' constitutional bench consisted of Beg, C.J., Y.V. Chandrachud
(as he then was), P.N. Bhagwati (as he then was), V.R. Krishna Iyer, N.L. Untawalia, S.
Murtaza Fazal Ali and P.S. KaUsam, JJ.
6. Section 10 (3) reds;
"The passport authorit)' may impound or cause to be impounded or revoke a passport
or travel document -
a)
b)
c) If the passport authority deems it necessary so to do in the interests of the
sovereignt}' and integrity of India, the security of India, friendly relations of India
with any other foreign country, or in the interests of general pubUc".
7. Article 19 of the Constitution of India reads: "Protection of Certain rights regarding
freedom of speech, etc.
(1) All citizens shall have the right -
a) To freedom of speech and expression,
b) To practice any profession, or to carry on any occupation, trade or business.
8. Article 19 (2) of the Constitution of India reads: "Nothing in sub-clause (a) of clause (1)
shall affect the operation of any existing law, or prevent the state from making any law,
in so far as such law imposes reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the right
conferred by the said sub-clause in the security of the state, friendly relations with
foreign states, public order, decency or morality, or in relation to contempt of court,
defamation or incitement to an offence.
(6) Nothing in sub-clause (g) of the said clause shall affect tl\e operation of any existing law
in so far as it imposes, or prevent the state from making any law imposing, in the
interests of the general public, reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the right
conferred by the said sub-clause...."
127
9. Stnte of Punjab v. Sukhpal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35, 45:1990 SSC (Cri) 1: AIR 1990 SC 231:
1990 CriLJ 584.
10. Kubic Darusz vs. Union of India, (1990), 1 SCC 568, 582: 1990 SCC (Cri.) 227: AIR 1990
SC605
128
to maintenance of public order, safety of public life and the welfare of the
economy of the country.^^
It has been said that the history of liberty has largely been the history
of observance of procedural safeguards. The procedural sinews shengthening
the substance of the right to move the court against executive invasion of
personal liberty and the due dispatch of judicial business touching violations
of this great right is stiessed.
Personal liberty is by every reckoning, the greatest of human freedoms
and the law of preventive definition are stiictly constiued and a meticulous
compliance with the procedural safeguards, however technical, is strictly
insisted upon by the courts. The law on the matter did not start on a
clean slate. The power of courts against the harsh incongruities and
unpredictabilities of preventive detention is not merely 'a page of history' but
a whole volume. The compulsions of the primordial need to maintain order in
society, without which the enjoyment of all rights, including the right to
personal liberty, would lose all their meaning are the tiue justifications for the
laws of preventive detention. The pressures of the day in regard to the
imperatives of the security of State and of public order might, it is tiue,
require the sacrifice of the personal liberty of individuals. Laws that provide
for prevention detentioii posit that an individual's conduct prejudicial to the
maintenance of pubUc order or to the security of the State provides grounds
for a satisfaction for a reasonable prognostication of a possible future
manifestation of similar propensities on the part of the offender. This
jurisdiction has been called a jurisdiction of suspicion; but the compulsions of
the very preservatioii of the values of freedom, or democratic society and of
social order might compel a curtailment of individual liberty. "To lose our
countiy by a scrupulous adherence to the written law" said Thomas Jefferson
"would be to lose the law itself, with life, liberty and all those who are
11. Pushpa Devei M. Jatia vs. M.L. Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SCC 367, 395: 1987 SCC (Cri.) 526:
AIR 1987 SC 1748,1987 Cri L] 1888: (1987): 12 ECC 356.
12. Francis Cornlie Mullin v. Admimstraior, Union Territory of Delhi, (1981) 1 SCC 608: 1981
SCC (Cri) 212: AIR 1981 SC 746: (1981) 2 SCR 516:1981 Cri LJ 306:1981 ML) (Cri) 331.
129
enjoying with us, thus absurdly sacrificing the end to the means." This is, no
doubt, the theoretical justification for the law enabling prevention detention.
But the actual manner of administration of the law of prevention
detention is of utinost importance. The law has to be justified by the genius of
its administiation so as to strike the right balance between individual liberties
on the one hand and the needs of an orderly society on the other. But the
realities of executive excesses in the actual enforcement of the law have put
the courts on the alert, ever-ready to intervene and confine the power within
strict limits of the law both substantive and procedural. The paradigms and
value judgments of the maintenance of a right balance are not static but vary
according as the "pressures of the day" and according as the intensity of the
imperatives that justify both the need for and the extent of the curtailment of
individual liberty. Adjustments and readjustments are constantly to be made
and reviewed. No law is an end in itself.
The "tiin that shelters for the night is not journey's end and the law,
like the traveler, must be ready for the morrow".
As to the approach to such laws which deprive personal liberty
without trial, the libertarian judicial faith has made its choice between the
pragmatic view and the idealistic or doctiinaire view. The approach to the
curtailment of personal liberty which is an axiom of democratic faith and of
all civilized life is an idealistic one, for, loss of personal Uberty deprives a man
of all that is worth living for and builds up deep resentments. Liberty belongs
to what correspond to man's inmost self.
Under our Constitution also the mandate is clear and the envoy is left
under no dilemma. The constitutional philosophy of personal hberty is an
idealistic view, the curtailment of liberty for reasons of State's security, public
order, disruption of national economic discipline etc. being envisaged as a
necessary evil to be administered under stiict constitutional restiictions.^^
Detenus to e kept separate from convicts
If any of the persons detained under NSA are at present housed in the
same ward or cell where the convicts are housed, immediate steps must be
taken to segregate them appropriately.^^
Interpretation of Prevention detention legislation
Per Venkataramiah,}.
The law of prevention detention is a hard law and therefore it should
be strictly construed. Care should be taken that the liberty of a person is not
jeopardized unless his case falls squarely within the four corners of the
relevant law.^^
13. Ayyn v. Stnte of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 374, 380 to 382:1989 SCC (Cri) 153: AIR 1989 SC 364:
1989 Cri L] 991.
14. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271: 1982 SCC (Cri) 152; AIR 1982 SC 710: 1982
Cn L] 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
15. Vijay Narain Singh v. State of Bihar, (1984) 3 SCC 14, 35: 1984 SCC (Cri) 361: AIR 1984 SC
1334:1984 Cri LJ 909.
130
16. Raj Kuunir Smgh v. Stale of Bihar, (1986) 4 SCC 407, 413; 1986 SCC (Cri) 481: AIR 1986 SC
2173:1986 CriLJ 2042.
17. Prakash Chandra Mehla v. Commr. and Secy., Govt, of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144,170, 172:
1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
18. Constitution of India, Art. 226, DM. v. Kiilbir CJiand, 1990 Supp SCC 141: 1990 SCC (Cri)
538.
131
19. Geetmder Knur v. State of Punjab, 1985 Supp SCC 388, 390; 1985 SCC (Cri) 474: AIR 1985
SC1409; 1985 Cri LJ1640.
20. Geetmder Kaiir v State nf Punjab, 1985 Supp SCC 388, 391; 1985 SCC (Cri) 474; AIR 1985
SC 1409; 1985 Cri L] 1640.
21. Geetinder Kaur v. State of Punjab, 1985 Supp SCC 388, 391: 1985 SCC (Cri) 474: AIR 1985
SC 1409; 1985 Cri LJ 1640.
22. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271; 1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710: 1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 ML] (Cri) 524.
132
23. Khiidiram Das v. Stale ofV^est Bengal, (1975) 2 SCC 81: 1975 SCC (Cri) 435
24. [SCC p. 87, para 5]
25. Narendm Pursliotum Umrao v. B.B. Gujrat, (1979) 2 SCC 637:1979 SCC (Cri) 557.
133
by ordering their preventive detention and at the same time, in assuring that
the law is not used arbitrarily to suppress the citizen of his right to life and
liberty. The court must therefore be circumspect in striking down the
impugned order of detention where it meets with the requirements of Art.
22(5) of the Constitution.26
Compliance with Art. 22(5) mandatory
It is incumbent on the State to satisfy the court that the detention of the
petitioner/detenu was legal and in conformity not only with the mandatory
provisions of the Act but also strictly in accord with the constitutional
safeguards embodied in Art. 22(5).
When the life and liberty of a citizen is involved, it is expected that the
government will ensure that the constitutional safeguards embodied in Art.
22(5) are strictly observed. The gravity of the evil to the community resulting
from anti-social activities can never furnish an adequate reason for invading
the personal liberty of a citizen, except in accordance with the procedure
estabUshed by the Constitution and the laws. The history of personal Hberty is
largely the history of insistence on observance of the procedural safeguards.^''
Constitutionality of law relating to held, no longer open- Held, cannot he struck
down on a general plea of interference with the liberties of the people if otherxoise
constitutional- Constitution of India, Arts. 245, 246, Schedide VII, List I, Entry 9
and List III Entry 3 - justiciability on a due process method rejected- National
Security Act, 1980 (65 of 1980) as such therefore not unconstitutional - Constitution
of India, Arts. 21 and 14,19 &21 - Interpretation of the Constitution
So long as the preventive detention law is made within the legislative
power arising out of a legislative entry and does not violate any of the
conditions or restrictions on that power, such law cannot be struck down on
the specious ground that it is calculated to interfere with the Uberties of the
people. What is provided for by the Constitution itself cannot be judged
unconstitutional by importing court's notions of what if right and wrong. One
cannot therefore content that preventive detention is basically imperrrussible
under the Indian Constitution.
Though it is now well settled that rights in Part II of the Constitution
are not mutually exclusive and that therefore, a law of prevention detention
under Art. 22 must also satisfy Arts. 14, 19 and 21, it is equally settled that a
law of preventive detention cannot be held unconstitutional for the reason
that it violates Arts. 14,19, 21 and 22. The National Security Act, 1980 which is
in pari material with MISA, 1971 is not unconstitutional on the ground that,
by its very nature, it generally violates Arts. 14,19, 21 and 22.2^
Procedural safeguards available to detenu under Art. 22(5) - Any deviation
therefrom calls for court's interference - Constitution of India, Arts. 22(5) % 32,
226 and 136.
26. Raiendrahimar Nnivnrki Shnh o. State ofGiijnnil, (1988) 3 SCC 153, 160: 1988 SCC (Cri)
575: AIR 1988 SC 1255.
27. Mohinuddin v. D.M., (1987) 4 SCC 58, 63, 64:1987 SCC (Cri) 674: AIR 1987 SC 1977.
28. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271: 1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710; 1982
Cn L] 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
134
29. Ahmedhussmn Cbaikkhussam v. Commr. of Police, Ahmedabad, (1989) 4 SCC 751, 756: 1990
s e c (Cri) 86: AIR 1989 SC 2274:1989 Cn 1J 2312.
30. Abdul Latif Abdul WnJmb Slieikh ;'. B.K. }h,i, (1987) 2 SCC 22:1987 SCC (Cri) 244: AIR 1987
SC 725:1987 Cri LJ 700.
31. COFEPOSA Act, 1974. S. 5. Francis Coralie MuUin v, AdmiiAistrator, Union Territory of
Delhi, (1981) 1 SCC 608:1981 SCC (Cri) 212: AIR 1981 SC 746: (1981) 2 SCR 516: WSl'Cri
LJ 306:1981 ML] (Cri) 331.
135
COFEPOSA Act under which the detenu had been detamed and therefore, it is
not open to the Court under Art. 32 to interfere with the order of detention.^^
Order of detention — Scope of High Court's interference under Art. 226 —
High Court has only to see if the order is based on materials on record and has no
jurisdiction to enquire into adequacy of those materials - COFEPOSA Act, 1974 (52
of 1974), S. 3 -Constitution of India, Arts, 226 and 22.
The High Court in its writ jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is to see whether the order of detention has been passed on any
materials before it If it is found that the order has been based by the detaining
authority on materials on record, then the Court cannot go further and
examine whether the material was adequate or not, which is the function of
an appellate authority or court. It can examine the material on record only for
the purpose of seeing whether the order of detention has been based on no
material The satisfaction mentioned in S. 3 of the Act is the satisfaction of the
detaining authority and not of the court,
In the present case the High Court was not justified in holding that there was
no material on record to prove knowledge of the detenu with the contraband
goods. By implication, the High Court erroneously imported the rule of
criminal jurisprudence that the guilt of an accused must be proved beyond a
reasonable doubt to the law of detention.^^
Detention order challenged by petition under Art. 32 — State informing that
the detenu has since been released — Petition becomes infructuous.^^
Habeas corpus — Filing of another such writ though not barred, the Court
can refuse to admit the writ petition if the matters being raised are under
decision of a Constitution Bench or are such as could be raised earlier-Review
petition may be filed after decision on the constitutional questions.^^
Habeas corpus petition — Detention- order against petitioner revoked and
petitioner already released - Petition becoming infructuoiis - But if a fresh
detention order is passed subsequently and the petitioner is again detained in
pursuance thereof, petitioner is entitled to maintain a fresh petition - Preventive
Detention - Constitutional Rights - National Security Act, 1980 - Res judicata^^
Habeas corpus petition — Burden of proof on the State — Court not justified in
dismissing such a petition merely on ground of imperfect pleadings of the petitioner
It was an improper exercise of power on the part of the High Court in
disallowing the writ petition on the ground of imperfect pleadings. Normally,
writ petitions are decided on the basis of affidavits and the petitioner caimot
be permitted to raise grounds not taken in the petition at the hearing. The
32. Hemlata Kantilal Shah v. State of Maharashh-a, (1981) 4 SCC 6475 658: 1982 SCC (Cri)
16: AIR 1981 SC 8
33. State of Gujarat v. Adam Kasam Bhaya, (1981)4 SCC 216, 218: 1981 SCC (Cri) 823: AIR
1981 SC 2005:1981 Cri LJ 1686: (1981) 22 GLR 1278,
34. Bhim Singh v. State of) & K, 1984 Supp SCC 504:1985 SCC (Cri) 60.
35. Kavita v. State of Maharashtra (II), (1981) 4 SCC 145:1981 SCC (Cri) 808: AIR 1981 SC
2084: 1981 Cri L] 1703,
36. Constitution of India, Art, 32, Ram Jethmalani v. Union of India, (1984) 3 SCC 571:1984
SCC
136
same rule cannot be applied to a petition for grant of a writ of habeas corpus.
It is enough for the detenu to say that he is under wrongful detention, and the
burden lies on the detaining authority to satisfy the court that the detention of
the petitioner detenu was legal and in conformity not only with the mandatory
provisions of the Act but also strictly in accordance with the constitutional
safeguards embodied in Art. 22(5).^^
Habeas corpus petition presented by an advocate on behalf of the detenu —
Registrar and another officer of the Registry knowing language of the detenu directed
to meet the detenu in camera, explain substance and nature of the petition as also
nature of relief sought therein and ascertain if he desires to file tlte petition -
Constitution of India, Art 32.^^
BASIS OF DETENTION
In order that an activity may be to affect adversely the maintenance of
public order, there must be materials to show that there has been a feeling of
insecurity among the general public. If any act of a person
panic or fear in the minds of the members of the public upsetting the even
tempo of life of the communit)', such act must be said to have a direct bearing
on the question of maintenance of public order. The commission of an offence
will not necessarily come within the purview of 'public order'.^^
Public order — Extorting money from shopkeepers of an area by threatening
them and throwing bomb on police party — Held on facts, related to laiv and
order problem - National Security Act, 1980, S. 3(2)
An act whether amounts to a breach of law and order or a breach of
public order solely depeiids on its extent and reach to the society. If the act is
restricted to particular individuals or a group of individuals it breaches the
law and order problem but if the effect and reach and potentiality of the act is
so deep as to affect the community at large and/or the even tempo of the
community then it becomes a breach of the public order. In this case the
respondents can very well proceed with the criminal case under S, 307 of IPC,
execute it agaiiist the appellant and can get him punished if the case is proved
beyond doubt against the appellant.'*"
Public order— Individual actions which do not disturb the even tempo of life in the
society and community or do not cause apprehension in the minds of the residents of
the locality in regard to maintenance of public order, held, cannot amount to inter-
ference with the maintenance of public order - National Security Act, 1980 (65 of
1980), S. 3.«
It cannot be said that the satisfaction of the detaining authority on the
basis of his past terrorist and disruptive activities that if the detenu were to be
37. Mohinuddin v. DM,, (1987) 4 SCC 58, 63:1987 SCC (Cri) 674: AIR 1987 SC 1977.
38. Ram Jethmalani v. Union of India, (1985) 1 SCC 116:1985 SCC (Cri) 39.
39. Pi}'ush Kantilal Mehta v. Commr. of Police, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 322, 329:1989 SCC (Cri)
438: AIR 1989 SC 491:1989 Cri 1.] 956.
40. Gulab Mehra v. State of U.P., (1987) 4 SCC 302, 311, 316: 1987 SCC (Cri) 721: AIR 1987
SC 2332.
41. Bimla Dewan v, Lt.-Governor, (1982) 2 SCC 469:1982 SCC (Cri) 484: AIR 1982 SC 1257:
1982 Cri LJ1737.
137
left at large he would indulge in similar activities in future and thus act in a
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order etc. would not be based
on adequate materials. Public safety ordinarily means security of the pubhc or
their freedom from danger. Public order also implied public peace and
tranquilhty. The terrorist and disruptive activities disrupt public peace and
tranquilUty and affect the freedom of the pubHc from danger to life and
property. Disruption means the act of bursting and tearing as under. Dis-
ruptive means producing or resulting from or attending disruption. Terrorism
means the act of terrorising; unlawful acts of violence committed in an
organized attempt to overthi'ow a government or like purposes. Terrorist
means one who adopts or supports the policy of terrorism. The terrorist and
disruptive activities are naturally disruptive of public peace, tianquilUty and
development.'*^
Pubhc order or law and order — Test to determine
The impact on "public order" and "law and order" depends upon the
nature of the act, the place where it is committed and motive force behind it.
If the act is confined to an individual without directly or indirectly affecting
the tempo of the life of the communit}', it may be a matter of law and order
only. But where the gravity of the act is otherwise and likely to endanger the
public tranquillity, it may fall within the orbit of the pubhc order. What might
be an otherwise simple "law and order" situation might assume the gravity
and mischief of a "public order" problem by reason alone of the manner or
circumstances in which or the place at which it is carried out. Necessarily,
much depends upon the nature of the act, the place where it is committed and
the sinister significance attached to it.
As for example dare-devil repeated criminal acts, open shoot out,
throwing bomb at pubhc places, committing serious offences it public
transport, armed persons going on plundering public properties or terrorizing
people may create a sense of iiisecurity in the pubUc mind and may have an
impact on "pubhc order". Even certain murder committed by persons in
lonely places with the definite object of promoting the cause of the party;
which they belong may also affect the maintenance of 'public order'.^^
Public order or law and order - Substance and not form of language in
detention order to be seen - Verbatim use of statutory language that detenu
acted in the manner prejudicial to the maintenance of pubhc order not
enough.'*'*
'Public order' and 'law and order'- Distinction between - When can
preventive detention measures be resorted to - Activities of theft,
robbery and ornament snatching by use of knives or guns in particular
residential area of a metropolitan city like Delhi consistently for several years
42. State of Punjab \'. Sukiipal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35, 44: 1990 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR 1990 SC
231:1990 Cn LJ 584.
43. Angoori De. Union of India, (1989) 1 SCC 385, 389, 3 1989 SCC (Cri) 164: AIR 1989 SC
371:!S*;CnLJ950,
44. T. Devakiv. Govt, of T.N., (195 SCC 456, 469, 470:1990 SCC (Cri) 348: AIR 1990 SC 1086:
1990 Cri LJ 1140.
138
45. Ashok Kumar v. Delhi Admn., (1982) 2 SCC 403; 1982 SCC (Cri) 451; AIR 1982 SC 1143;
]982Cril.J 1191.
46. Wdsiuddm Ahmed v. DM, (1981) 4 SCC 521, 533, 554: 1982 SCC (Cri) 4; AIR 1981 SC
2166: 1981 Cri LJ1825.
47. Apy Dixit \, State of U.P., (1984) 4 SCC 400; 1984 SCC (Cri) 625: AIR 1985 SC 18.
140
committed by the detenu. Moreover, the said two incidents are of different
kinds altogether. Whereas the first one may fall under clause (i), the second
one falls under clause (iv) of S. 2(d). They are, even if true, not repetitions of
acts or omissions of the same kind. Although the third ground which is based
on the pending Sessions is of the nature of acts or omissions referred to in
clause (0 but the interval between the first and the third grounds is nearly
eight years and cannot therefore make the detenu a habitual offender of the
type falling under-clause (i) of S.2(d).
Per Chinnappa Reddy, J. (concurring)
I entirely agree with my brother Venkataramiah, J, both on the question of
inter-pretation of the provisions of the Bihar Control of Crimes Act, 1981 and
on the question of the effect of the order of grant of bail in the criminal
proceeding arising out of the incident constituting one of the grounds of
detention. PerA.P, Sen, J. (concurring)
The Bihar Act appears to be based on the English Prevention of Crime Act,
1908. But the scheme under the English Act is entirely dif-
ferent where a person has to be charged at the trial of being a habitual
criminal Therefore, the considerations which govern the matter in case of the
English Act do not arise in case of preventive detention under S. 12(2) of the
Act,
The word 'habitually9 means by force of habit. It is the force of habit inherent
or latent in an individual with a criminal instinct, with a criminal disposition
of mind, that makes a person accustomed to lead a life of crime posing danger
to the society in general. If a person with criminal tendencies consistently or
persistently or repeatedly commits or attempts to commit or abets the
commission of offences punishable under Chap. XVI or Chap. XVII of the
Penal Code, he should be considered to be an 'antisocial element'.
It is not required by clauses (i), (ii) and (iv) of S, 2(d) that the nature and
character of the anti-social acts should be the same or similar. What have to be
repetitive are the anti-social acts. It is not possible to accept the view that the
commission of an act referred to in one of the clauses (i), (ii) or (iv) and any
other act or omission referred to in any other of the clauses of S, 2(d) would
not be sufficient to treat a person as an 'anti-social element'.
Section 12(2) should not be confined in its operation against habitual
criminals who have a certain number of prior convictions for offences of the
'characters specified. The definition of 'anti-social element' in S. 2(d) nowhere
requires so.''^
Basis of detention - Public order or law and order - Even a single act or
omission may disturb public order -
But where alleged single act of assault committed on account of business
rivalry, held on facts, the act pertained to disturbance of law and order and
not public order - National Security Act, 1980, S. 3(2)
4cS. Vijay Narain Singh v. State of Bihar, (1984) 3 SCC 14,18,19, 23; 1984 SCC (Cri) 361: AIR
1984 SC 1334:1984 CriLJ 909.
142
The appellant was detained under S. 3(2) of the National Security Act. In the
grounds of detention it was inter alia stated that the appellant used to secure
government conti'acts by terrorising other tenderers, that when the offer of the
complainant-tenderer was accepted the appellant along with his companions
had attacked him by throwing hand-grenade and firing gunshots causing
commotion, ti-affic obstruction and disturbance of public tranquillity (though
the complainant escaped unhurt), that pursuant to FIR of the appellant a
charge-sheet had been put up against him, and that in case of his release on
bail from jail, there was possibility of his again acting in a maimer prejudicial
to the maintenance of public order to prevent which it was necessary to detain
him, The High Court held that the alleged act was intended to teach a lesson
to the complainant and to act as a warning to prospective tenderers in future
who may not dare to avail of the opporturiity to submit their tenders against
that of the appellants and that the impact and reach of the act went beyond
the individual and affected the community of contractors. Accordingly the
High Court upheld the order of detention. Allowing the detenu's appeal the
Supreme Court
The alleged act of assault by firearms, which was confined to the complainant
alone and not to others, infringed law and order. The reach and effect of the
act was not so extensive as to affect a considerable number of members of the
society. The act did not disturb public tranquillity nor did it create any terror
or in the minds of the people of the locality nor did it affect in any manner the
even tempo of the life of the community. The criminal act emanated from
business rivalry between the detenus and the complainant. Therefore such an
act cannot be the basis of subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority to
pass an order of detention on the ground that the impugned act purports to
affect public order. Moreover, no injury caused to the person of the
complainant by the appellants nor any damage was caused to his car though
hand-grenade was alleged to have been thrown on the car.
A solitary act of omission or commission can be taken into
consideration for being subjectively satisfied, by the detaining authority to
pass an order of detention if the reach, effect and potentiality of the act is such
that it disturbs public tianquiUity by creating terror and panic in the society
or a considerable number of the people in a specified locality where the act is
alleged to have been committed. Thus it is the degree and extent of the reach
of the act the society which is vital for considering the question whether a
man has committed only a breach of law and order or has acted in a manner
likely to cause disturbance to public order.^^
Public order — Satisfaction regarding breach of
Absence of allegation regarding disturbance of public order in FIR
lodged in cormection with criminal case against detenu - Held, not material
where detaining authority had additional material, such as supervision note
of police, which satisfied him about apprehension of breach of public order, ^o
49, Subhash Bhandari v. D.M., (1987) 4 SCC 685, 690:1988 SCC (Cri) 36; AIR 1988 SC 74.
50. Alijan Mian v. Distt. Iviagistrate, (1983) 4 SCC 301, 308, 309: 1983 SCC (Cri) 840: AIR
1983 SC 1130:1983 Cri LJ1649.
143
51. State of U.P. v. Hari Shankar Tewari, (1987) 2 SCC 490; 1987 SCC (Cri) 388: AIR 1987 SC
998:1987 Cri LJ 840.
144
detention the detaining authority had stated that by committing this grave
offence in pubHc, in broad daylight, the detenu created a sense of alarm, scare
and a feeling of insecurity in the minds of the public of the area and thereby
acted in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order which
affected even tempo of life of the conmiunity, but mere repetition of these
words in the grounds are not sufficient to inject the requisite degree of quality
and potentiality in the incident in question. Thus the solitary incident as
alleged in the ground of detention is not relevant for sustaining the order of
detention for the pui-pose of the preventing the petitioner from acting in a
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order.52
Public order - Dangerous person under S. 2(c) of Gujarat PASAA
Criminal cases against the detenu under Chapter XVI or XVIIIPC or
Chapter V of Arms Act referred to in grounds of detention, in respect of
which detenu has already been acquitted by court, caimot be taken into
consideration for deciding that the detenu was a dangerous person — Cases
under S, 135 of Bombay Police Act, referred to in the grounds, being not
covered by S. 2(c). of Gujarat PASAA, not relevant - Remaining cases
against, the detenu, referred to in the grounds, being still under investigation
and not yet decided, not sufficient for the detaining authority's satisfaction
that the detenu was a dangerous person — Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social
Activities Act, 1985, S. 2(c).53
Incidents referred to in the grounds relating to private individuals-
Grounds not referring to any dangerous, harmful or adverse act or alarm
which gives rise to a feeling of insecurity for the general public amongst the
persons of a locaHty — Held, on facts, the incidents pertained to disturbance
of law and order — Non-application of mind — Gujarat Prevention of
Anti-Social Activities Act, 1985, Ss. 3(1) and 2(c).
The criminal cases against the detenu mentioned in the grounds of
detention were confined to certain private individuals. There was nothing in
this case to show that the petitioner was a member of a gang engaged in
criminal activities systematically in a particular localit^^ which created a panic
and a sense of insecurity amongst the residents of that particular area in
consideration of which the impugned order was made. The alleged activities
of the detenu did not affect adversely or tend to affect the even tempo of hfe of
the community. They merely related to law and order problem. Their reach
and effect was not so deep as to affect the public at large and they did not in
any way pose a threat to the maintenance of public order. An act may create a
law and order problem but such an act does not necessarily cause an
obstruction to the maintenance of public order. So there has been complete
non-application of mind by the detaining authority before reaching a
subjective satisfaction to make the impugned order of detention.^^
52. T. Devaki v. Govt, of T.N., (1990) 2 SCC 456:1990 SCC (Cri) 348; AIR 1990 SC 1086:1990
Cri LJ1140.
53. Abdul Razak Nannekhan Pathan v. Police Commr., (1989) 4 SCC 43, 49, 50: 1989 SCC
(Cri) 679. .
54. Abdul Razak Nannekhan Pathan v. Police Commr., (1989) 4 SCC 43, 51, 52: 1989 SCC
(Cri) 679.
145
55. Piyush Kantilal Mehta v. Commr. of Police, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 322, 328:1989 SCC (Cr
438: AIR 1989 SC 491:1989 Cri LJ 956.
146
Therefore, the decision in Gulab Mehra cannot be of any avail to the detenu-
petitioner.^^
Such act being calculated to disturb public peace and tranquillity, held,
pertains to public order and not merely law and order.^^
Neither maintenance of public security nor maintenance of law and order can
justify detention under S. 3(2) of National Security Act, 1980 (65 of 1980).58
On facts held, activities of the detenu pertained to disturbance of pubhc order
The agitation on the issue of foreigners in Assam, which has been
going on for years, has taken an ugly and serious turn and the statements of
facts made in second and third paragraphs of the Grounds of Detention in the
prevalent circumstances relate to the maintenance of public order and not
merely law and order.59
Public order — fermenting communal feelings
Actions undermining public faith in poKce administration cause
prejudice to maintenance of public order — Such attempts made at the time of
communal tension affects maintenance of public order.
An order of detention was passed under S. 3(2) of the National Security
Act on April 15, 1988 against the petitioner, who is a bachelor and does not
own any property. In the grounds of detention it was stated that a cow
belonging to Muslims was diverted by some undesirable elements towards
the place where religious celebrations in connection with the Muslim festival
'Shabebarat' was going on in the night of April 2/3,1988. At this the petitioner
came to the stage, got excited and spread the rumour that "the poUce had not
made any arrangements". It was stated that the cow belonged to the Hindus
and had been deliberately sent inside the festival and "other provoking"
things. Due to the aforesaid, the people started running and communal
feelings got aroused. Again on April 9,1988, it was stated, the petitioner had
"provoked some persons" of the Muslim community by saying that "the
administration even now has not allowed to get a loudspeaker fixed here and
all of you are silent, get a loudspeaker on the mosque and we will see. 1 am
with you" and also saying that on the occasion of *Shabebarat? Hindus had
dehberately "sent their cow on the road" for their festive celebrations and the
"people are silent". He had also said about teaching "them" a lesson. It was
stated that due to the "aforesaid bad act" communal feelitigs got aroused in
the city and fear and terror got spread, and in this way the petitioner had
done an act which was "prejudicial to maintenance of public law and order"
and as such there was possibiUty of the petitioner doing such an act, and
therefore, in order to restrain the petitioner from doing so, it was necessary to
detain him. Held:
56. Sharad Kumar Tyagi v. State qfU.R, (1989) 1 SCC 736, 7415 742; 1989 SCC (Cri) 294; AIR
1989 SC 764.
57. Fitrat Raza Khan v. State of U.P., (1982) 2 SCC 449:1982 SCC (Cri) 472: AIR 1982 SC 146:
1982 Cri L] 338.
58. Aidal Singh v. State of 4 SCC 428:1981 SCC (Cri) 848.
59. Dhananjoy Das v. D.M„ (1982) 2 SCC 521: 1982 SCC (Cri) 488; AIR 1982 SC 1315- 198^
Cri LJ1779.
147
The difference between public order and law and order is a matter of degree.
If the morale of the poUce force or of the people is shaken or undermined by
making them lose their faith in the law-enforcing machinery of the State then
prejudice is occasioned to maintenance of public order. Such attempts or
actions which undermine the public faith in the police adnunistration at a
time when communal tensions are high, affects maintenance of public order
and as such conduct is prejudicial. Therefore, the contention that the grounds
of detention were not relevant to the order of detention under the Act carmot
be accepted.^"
Public order or law and order — Act of throwing bomb at election meeting
pertains to pubUc order problem — Hence detention order valid.^^
Public order or law and order —Commission of any criminal offence such as
selling liquor in contravention of Prohibition Act by itself would not affect
public order
There is a wide gap between law and order and public order. The criminal
offence may relate to the field of law and order but such an offence would not
necessarily give rise to a situation of public order. Depending upon peculiar
situations an act which may otherwise have been overlooked as innocuous
might con-stitute a problem of public order. Selling of liquor by the petitioner
would certainly amount to an offence under the Prohibition Act but without
something more would not give rise to a problem of pubic order. Similarly
commission of any other criminal offence, even assault or threat of assault,
would not bring the matter within the ambit of public order.^^
Public order or law and order — Detaining authority's apprehension
regarding breach of public order by the detenu normally not open to judicial
review.
Throwing bomb on a person and assaulting another amongst the large
gathering witnessing a cultural programme at dead of night on one occasion
and opening of gun fire in a thickly populated residential area on another
occasion causing t panic and alarm in the area, held, amounted to breach of
pubUc order as the incidents disturbed the tranquillity and the even tempo of
life of public."^3
Public order or law and order — Detenu alleged to be a bootlegger engaged in
unlawful storing and selling Hquor and causing injuries to irmocent
persons of the locality by using lethal weapons — Six criminal cases
registered against the detenu, of which two cases ended in acquittal? three
cases pending trial and the remaining case pending inquiry - Held, sufficient
and adequate material not available for holding that the alleged prejudicial
activities of the detenu had either affected adversely or likely to affect
60. Shafiq Ahmad v. DM., (1989) 4 SCC 556,564, 565:1989 SCC (Cri) 774: AIR 1990 SC 200.
61- State of U.P. V. Ekhlaq Ahmad, 1987 Supp SCC 68:1987 SCC (Cri)
62. Ahmed hussain Shaikhhussain v, Commr. of Police, Ahmedabad, (1989) 4 SCC 751, 757,
758:1990 SCC (Cri) 86: AIR 1989 SC 2274:1989 Cri L] 2312.
63. Alijan Mian v. Distt. Magistrate, (1983) 4 SCC 301,307:1983 SCC (Cri) 840- AIR 1983 SC
1130:1983 Cri LJ1649.
148
64. Omprakash v, Commr. of Police, 1989 Supp (2) SCC 576:1990 SCC (Cri) 198- AIR 1990
SC496.
65. Jay a Mala v. Home Secy., Govt, of ] & K (1982) 2 SCC 538:1982 SCC (Cri) 502- AIR 198^'
SC 1297: 1982 Cri LJ1777.
66. State of U.P. v. Kamal Kishore Saini, (1988) 1 SCC 287, 295,296:1988 SCC (Cri) 107(2)-
AIR 1988 SC 208:1988 Cri L] 405.
149
Disturbance of public order or law and order - Allegation thai detenu was
caught with foreign liquor without any pass, permit or licence or that detenu
was of high-handed and fierce in nature causing terror to public or allegation
of minor incidents of beating by the detenu — Held, allegations do not
estabUsh disturbance of public order - Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social
Activities Act, 1985, S. 3(1) and (4).
The alleged offence of the detenu being caught with bottles containing
foreigii Hquor without any pass, permit or licence has no bearing on the
question of maintenance of public order.
The allegation of the deteyiu being of highhanded and fierce in nature
may give rise to a question of law and order but, surely, they have nothing to
do with the question of public order. A person may be very fierce by nature,
but so long as the public generally are not affected by his activities or conduct,
the question of maintenance of pubUc order wiU not arise.
The alleged incidents of beating by the detenu do not have any bearing
on the maintenance of 'public order'. The petitioner may be punished for the
alleged offences com-mitted by him but, surely, the acts constituting the
offences cannot be said to have affected the even tempo of the life of the
community. ^8
Public order or law and order problem — Commission of non-cognizable
offence of breaking glass screens of bus and abusing its driver and conductor
alleged in two separate incidents — But in both the incidents the offence was
actually directed against the same person, who was the owner of the bus and
on whose information or complaint the cases were registered against the
detenu — Presence of passengers in the bus at the time of the incident not
alleged - Held on facts, the acts alleged did not affect public order -
National Security Act, 1980, S. 3(2)
The first two grounds which pertain to the commission of non-
cognizable offences have no rational nexus relatable to the maintenance of
public order. The alleged attacks were directed against the same individual
and, even according to the police; they constituted merely offences of a non-
cogi-iizable nature. In the facts of the case, it is difficult to impart to these acts,
67. Angoori Devi v. Union of India, (1989) 1 SCC 385, 388, 391:1989 SCC (Cri) 164: AIR
1989 SC 371:1989 CriLJ 950.
68. Piyush Kantilal Mehta v. Commr, of Police, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 322:1989 SCC (Cri) 438:
AIR 1989 SC491:1989 Cri L] 956.
150
which were liable to be dealt with under the ordinary laws of the land, a
"public order" dimension within the meaning of and for purposes of the
extraordinary law of preventive detention. It is true that the acts themselves,
in relation to their effect on public order, which might otherwise be free from
the vice of affecting public order, might assume a sinister colour and
significance from the circumstances under and the manner in which they are
done. What might be an otherwise simple "law and order" situation might
assume the gravity and mischief of a "pubHc order" problem by reason alone
of the manner or circumstances in which or the place at which it is carried
OUt.69
69. Ayya v. State of U.F., (1989) 1 SCC 374, 377, 378:1989 SCC (Cri) 153: AIR 1989 SC 364:
1989 Cri L] 991.
70. Hemlata Kantilal Shah v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 4 SCC 647, 658:1982 SCC (Cri)
16: AIR 198 ISC 8.
151
criteria for the satisfaction for detention is of course in the domain of the
detaining authority/^
The petitioners were held under S. 3(2) of the National Security Act on
the ground that they addressed members of a community in a language
inciting them to beat the police and PAC men as a result of which the crowd
commenced pelting stones and discharged firearms on the government
officials and the police personnel assembled there causing injuries. It was
contended that there was no material before the District Magistrate on the
basis of which he could form the opinion that the detenus would act in future
In a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. Accepting the con-
tention and allowing the writ and appeals the Supreme Court
Held:
71. Ayya v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 374,382:1989 SCC (Cri) 153: AJR 1989 SC 364:1989
CriLJ991.
72. Fazal Ghosi v. Slate of U.P., (1987) 3 SCC 502:1987 SCC (Cri) 596: AIR 1987 SC 1877:
1987 Cri LJ 1910.
73. K. Arima Kumari v. Govt of A.P., (1988) 1 SCC 296, 303, 304: 1988 SCC (Cri) 116: AIR
1988 SC 227:1988 Cri LJ 411.
[52
74. Raj Kumar Singh v. State of Bihar, (1986) 4 SCC 407, 414: 1986 SCC (Cri) 481: AIR 1986
SC 2173:1986 Cri LJ 2042.
75. Pushpa Devi M. Jatia v, ML. Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SCC 367, 383, 384; 1987 SCC (Cri) 526:
AIR 1987 SC 1748:1987 Cri LJ 1888: (1987) 12 ECC 356.
153
76. Vijay Narain Singh y. State of Bihar, (1984) 3 SCC 14,19, 25. 26:1984 SCC (Cri) 361: AIR
1984 SC 1334:1984 Cri LJ 909.
77. State of Punjab w Sukhpal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35,42 to 44:1990 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR 1990
SC 231:1990 Cri LJ 584.
78. Asha Keshavrao Bhosale v. 'Union of India, (1985) 4 SCC 361, 366: 1985 SCC (Cri) 561:
AIR 1986 SC 283.
79. Saraswathi Seshagiri v. State of Kerala, (1982) 2 SCC 310:1982 SCC (Cri) 423: AIR 1982
SC 1165: 1982 Cri LJ 125L
154
80. State of Gujarat v. Mohd. Ismail }umma, (1981) 4 SCC 609, 611; 1982 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR
1982 SC 683.
81. Shafiq Ahmad v. D.M., (1989) 4 SCC 556, 564, 565:1989 SCC (Cri) 774: AIR 1990 SC 200.
82. State of U.P. v. Hari Singh Thakur, 1987 Supp SCC 190:1988 SCC (Cri) 44: AIR 1987 SC
2080:1987 CriLJ 1923.
83. State of Gujarat v. Mohd. Ismail Jumma, (1981) 4 SCC 609, 612: 1982 SCC (Cri): AIR
1982 SC 683.
84. Devji Vallabhbhai Tandel v. Administrator, (1982) 2 SCC 222: 1982 SCC (Cri) 403: AIR
1982 SC 1029:1982 CriLj 799.
155
further right under Art. 22(5) to make a representation to the officer himself
who made the order of detention.
Under the COFEPOSA Act, an order of detention made by an officer is
h"eated as an order of detention made by the Government itself, although
through the instrumentaUty of an officer empowered under S. 3. Any
government has to function only through human agencies, viz. its officers and
functionaries.
The resultant position emerging from various provisions of the
COFEPOSA Act particularly Ss. 2(a), 3, 8(&) and 11 is that even if an order of
detention is made by a specially empowered officer of the Central
Government or the State Government, as the case may be, the said order will
give rise to the obligations to be fulfilled by the Government to the same
degree and extent to which it will stand obligated if the detention order had
been made by the Government itself. So it is the concerned government that
would constitiite the Detaining Authority under the Act and not the officer
concerned who made the order of detention, and it is to that government the
detenu should be afforded opportunity' to make representation against the
detention order at the earliest opportunity, as envisaged under Art. 22(5) and
not to the officer making the order of detention in order to provide the detenu
an opportunity to make a further representation to the State Government and
thereafter to the Central Goverrunent if the need arises for doing so. Though
by reason of S. 3(1) a specially empowered officer is entitled to pass an order
of detention, his constitutional obligation is only to communicate
expeditiously to the detenu the grounds of detention and also afford him
opportunity to make representation to the appropriate governments against
his detention. The only further duty to be performed thereafter is to place the
representation made by the detenu before the concerned officer or the Minister
empowered under the Rules of Business of the government to deal with such
representation if the detenu addresses his representation to the officer himself.
85. State of Maharashtra v, Sushila Mafatlal Shah, (1988) 4 SCC 490, 501, 507: 1989 SCC
(Cri) 1: AIR 1988 SC 2090:18 EEC 322.
8b. State of Maharashtra v. Sushila Mafatlal Shah, (1988) 4 SCC 490, 501. 1989 SCC (Cri) 1:
AIR 1988 SC 2090:18 EEC 322.
87. Kavita v. State of Maharashh-a (I), (1981) 3 SCC 558, 562, 563; 1981 SCC (Cri) 743: AIR
1981 SC 1641,
157
complained of. It is not that the period of detention must in all circumstances
extend to the maximum period of 12 months as laid down in S. 13 of the Act.*^
Maximum period of one or two years, as the case may be, mentioned in S. 10
of COFEPOSA Act, 1974 will run from the date of actual detention and not
from the date of the order of detention — If the detenu has served a part of the
period of detention, he will have to serve out the balance .^^
Non-mention of period of detention in the order — Held, not fatal to the
order — Detention is taken to be for the maximum prescribed period in such
a situation — r.Af. Prevention of Dangerous Activities of Bootleggers, Drug
Offenders, Forest Offenders, Immoral Traffic Offenders and Slum Grabbers
Act, 1982, Ss. 3(2), 8,10,11 and 13.
The Act nowhere requires the detaining authority to specify the period
for which the detenu is required to be detained. As the detention without trial
is a serious encroachment on the fundamental right of a citizen, legislature
has taken care to avoid a blanket delegation of power to subordinate,
authorities for an indefinite period by providing in S. 3(2) that the delegation
in the initial instance will not exceed a period of three months and it shall be
specified in the order of delegation. But if the State Government on con-
sideration of the situation finds it necessary, it may again delegate the power
of detention to the aforesaid authorities from time to time but at no time the
delegation shall be for a period of more than three months. The period as
mentioned in S. 3(2) of the Act thus refers to the period of delegation and it
has no relevance at all to the period for which a person may be detained.
Therefore, an order of detention is not rendered illegal merely because it does
not specify the period of detention. The scheme as contained in other Acts
providing for the detention of a person without trial, is similar. In the absence
of any period being specified in the order the detenu is required to be under
detention for the maximum period prescribed under the Act, but it is always
open to the State Government to modify or revoke the order even before the
completion of the maximum period of detention. Thus the impugned order of
detention is not rendered illegal on account of the detaining authoritv''s failure
to specify period of detention in the order.^*^
88. Ashok Kumar v. Delhi Admn., (1982) 2 SCC 403:1982 SCC (Cri) 451: AIR 1982 SC 1143:
1982 CriLJ 1191.
89. State of Gujarat v. Adam Kasam Bhaya, (1981) 4 SCC 216, 218: 1981 SCC (Cri) 823: AIR
1981 SC 2005:1981 Cri LJ1686: (1981) 22 GLR 1278^
90. T. Devaki v. Govt of T.N., (1990) 2 SCC 456: 1990 SCC (Cri) 348: AIR 1990 SC lOBo: 1990
Cri LJ 1140.
91. Abdul Razak Abdul Wahab Sheikh v. S.N. Sinha, (1989) 2 SCC 222: 1989 SCC (Cn) 326:
AIR 1989 SC 2265.
158
92. Sunil Fulchand Shah v. Union of India, (1989) 3 SCC 236: 1989 SCC (Cri) 552: AIR 1989
SC 1529:1989 Cri LJ1489: (1989)21ECC19L
93. Prakash Chandra Mehta v. Commr. and Secy., Govt of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144,166:
1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
94. Haridas Amarchand Shah v. K.L Verma, (1989) 1 SCC 250, 253:1989 SCC (Cri) 111; AIR
1989 SC 497: 1989 Cn LJ 983: (1989) 19 ECC 196.
95. lusher Govmdji Shah v. Union of India, (1985) 1 SCC 571: 1985 SCC (Cri) 135: AIR
1985 SC 511: L] 793,
96. M. Mohd. Sulthan v. Jt. Secy, to Govt, of India, (1991) 1 SCC 144: 1991 SCC (Cri) 104:
AIR 1990 SC 2222:1990 Cri LJ 2473,
159
ultra vires and void on ground of lack of certainty and precision as to the
purpose of the detention.
The appellant/petitioner contended that the impugned order of
detention was ultra vires the District Magistrate and void ab initio as there
was clubbing of purposes which displayed lack of certainty and precision on
the part of the detaining authority as to the purpose of detention.
The purpose of the detention is with a view to preventing the appellant
from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. The
prejudicial activities carried on by the appellant answer the description of a
'bootlegger' as defined in S. 2(b) and therefore he comes within the purview of
sub-section (1) of S. 3 of the Act, by reason of sub-section (4) thereof. The
District Magistiate in passing the impugned order has recorded his subjective
satisfaction with respect to the appellant that with a view to preventing him
from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order, it
was necessary to make an order that he be detained. In the accompanying
grounds for detention this is the basis for the formation of his subjective
satisfaction. The extra words added by way of superscription were wholly
umiecessary. In future it would be better for the detaining authorities acting
under Ss. 3(1) and 3(2) of the Act, to avoid such unnecessary verbiage.^''
Detention order challenged on grounds of non-application of mind and
failure to consider representation under S. 8(b) of COFEPOSA Act and
violation of Art 22(5) — Held, grounds not sustainable — COFEPOSA
Act, 1974, S. 8(b). 98
Held, prevention of smuggling of hashish for which detenu detained under S.
3(1) of COFEPOSA Act, 1974 has nexus with the object sought to be achieved
by the Act. ^9
Held, detention order passed mechanically without proper application of
mind — Detenus directed to be released.
Detaining authority being aware of the earUer arrest of the detenu, newspaper
report about the date of such arrest not relevant for the purposes of
subsequent order of preventive detention — Hence mention of incorrect
inconsequential and detention order not vitiated on ground of failure to place
the newspaper report before the detaining authority-
It was submitted that the detenu's arrest in connection with the Bank
dacoit)' case is shown as August 21,1988 when he was actually arrested much
earlier in comiection with the Bank dacoity as appeared in some local new-
spapers but those newspaper reports are not shown to have been placed
before the detaining authority. On this basis, it was argued that the
satisfaction reached by the detaining authority had been vitiated.
97. Rajendrakumar Nat-varlal Shah v. State of Gujarat, (1988) 3 SCC 153: 1988 SCC (Cri)
575; AIR 1988SCI255.
98. Pushpa Devi M. Jatia v. M.L. Wadhawan, 1986 Supp SCC 535: 1987 SCC (Cri) 56: AIR
1987 SC 1156:1987 Cri Lj 1054.
99. lusher Govindji Shah v. Union of India, (1985) 1 SCC 571:1985 SCC (Cri) 135: AIR
1985 SC 511:1985 Cri LJ 793.
160
Held:
The newspaper reports indicating that the detenu was already in
custody could at best be relevant only to show the fact that he was already in
detention prior to the making of the detention order. Those reports were not
relevant for the satisfaction needed to justify making of the detention order.
The detaining authority's satisfaction was to be formed on the basis of
material relevant to show the detenu's activities requiring his preventive
detention with a view to prevent him from acting in a prejudicial to the
maintenance of the public order, i""
Contention that persons apprehended on charge of carrying
contiaband narcotic drugs viz. heroin in cars driven by them did not
implicate the detenu in tiansporting and smuggling of drugs —But facts
showing that persons were well known to the detenu and detenu knowing fully
well that the cars would be used for transporting heroin handed over
the keys of the cars to those persons for that purpose — Held, detention order
not vitiated on ground of non-application of mind — Prevention of Illicit
Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotiopic Substances Act, 1988, S. 3(1). i°^
From the facts it was quote apparent that the so-called factual
misstatements are not mis-statements at all. The High Court rightly held that
the alleged mistakes or infirmities were not so material or serious in nature as
to vitiate the impugned order of detention. It was not possible to say on a
perusal of the grounds that there was no material on which the detaining
authority could have acted. The detention order was not challenged on
ground of inadequacy or insufficiency of the grounds of detention, ^o^
Consequently detention order vitiated by non-application of mind — Gujarat
Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act, 1985, Ss. 3(2) and 6.
The requisite subjective satisfaction, the formation of which is a
condition precedent to passing of a detention order, will get vitiated if
material or vital facts which would have bearing on the issue and weighed the
satisfaction of the detaining authority one way or the other and influenced his
mind are either withheld or suppressed by the sponsoring authority or
ignored and not considered by the detaining authority before issuing the
detention order.
Though as per S. 6 of the Gujarat PASAA the grounds of detention are
severable and the order of detention shall not be deemed to be invalid or
inoperative if one ground or some of the grounds are invalid, the question is
whether the detaining authority was really aware of the acquittal of the detenu
in the two criminal cases mentioned in the grounds of detention, on the date
of passing of the detention order. In the present case at the time of passing the
100. Meera Rani v. Govt, of T.N., (1989) 4 SCC 418, 428: 1989 SCC (Cri) 732: AIR 1989 SC
2027:1989 Cri LI 2190: (1989) 3 Crimes 173.
101. Sved Farooq Mohamniad v. Union, of India, (1990) 3 St C 537, 542: 1990 SCC (Cri) 500:
AIR 1990 SC 1597:1990 Cri L] 1622.
102. Pushpa Devi M. Jatia v. M.L Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SCC 357; 382, 383:1987 SCC (Cri) 526:
AIR 1987 SC 1748:1987 Cri L] 1888: (1987) 12 ECC 356.
161
detention order, the vital fact regarding acquittal of the detenu in two criminal
cases had not been brought to the notice of the detaining authority and on the
other hand they were withheld and the detaining authority was given to
understand that the trial of those cases were pending. The non-placing of the
material facts resulted in non-apphcation of mind of the detaining authority
to the said fact which vitiated the requisite subjective satisfaction, rendering
the impugned detention order invalid. ^"^
Held on facts, order under S. 9(2) passed after considering relevant facts and
circumstances — Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act, 1985, S.
9(2).i04
103. Dharamdas Shamlal Agarwal v. Police Commr., (1989) 2 SCC 370, 375 to 378:1989 SCC
(Cri) 378: AIR 1989 SC 1282:1989 Cri IJ 1130.
104. Abdul Razak Nannekhan .Pathan v. Police Commr., (1989) 4 SCC 435 545 55: 1989 SCC
(Cri) 679.
105. Prakash Chandra Mehta v. Com.mr. and Secy., Govt, of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144,167-
169:1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687,
162
this material; but in the facts of the case the omission to consider the material
assumes materiality. ^^^
Bail applications in pending criminal case and applications to Collector of
Customs made by detenu and his associate in which they had retracted their
earlier confessional statements and recovery of gold and foreign currency not
placed before detaining authority — Held, in absence of relevant material
before the detaining authority, order of detention vitiated by non-apphcation
of m i n d - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S. 3(1), ^"^
Sita Ram Sonami v. State ofRajasthan, 1985 Raj LR 883, reversed
Non-apphcation of mind - Counter-affidavit stating that when detenu
appeared before authorities for recording his statement under S, 108 of
Customs Act, he was detained only after recording his statement, that suffi-
cient grounds for detention existed, that detaining authority formed his
subjective satisfaction after carefully scrutinising all relevant documents and
facts of the case - Accordingly held, detention order not illegal or bad and
nor vitiated by non-application of mind or non-consideration of relevant
materials.^08
Non-application of mind — Detention order verbatim reproduction of dossier
submitted by SSP to the detaining authority (D.M.) requesting detention of
the petitioner-detenu - Record not showing detaining authority's awareness
of the fact that detenu was already in custody in connection with a criminal
case at the time of passing detention order— Held, detention order vitiated
on ground of non-application of mind to the question whether the order was
necessary despite the detenu being already in custody.i''^
Non-application of mind — Detenu an undertrial prisoner arrested in
connection with the incidents referred to in grounds of detention and was
granted bail when detention order was passed — But detention order having
no mention about these facts — Held, detention order vitiated by non-
application of mind on the part of the detaining authority while passing
detention order - National Security Act, 1980, S, 3{2).^^o
Non-apphcation of muid — Separate detention orders made against three
detenus — All grounds of detention similar excepting reference to cases
registered against each of the detenus showing them as 'dangerous persons'
within the meaning ofS. 2(c) of Gujarat PASAA - Copies of the sheet
showing the papers of the secret inquiry against the three detenus
enclosed along with the grounds furnished to each of the detenus - Thus all
106. Ayya v. State ofU.R, (1989) 1 SCC 374, 385: 1989 SGC (Cri) 153; AIR 1989 SC 364: 1989
Cri LJ 991.
107. Sita Ram Somani v. State of Rajasthan, (1986) 2 SCC 86: 1986 SCC (Cri) 104: AIR 1986
SC 1072:1986 Cri LJ 860.
108. Syed Farooq Mohammad v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 537, 545: 1990 SCC (Cri) 500:
AIR 1990 SC 1597:1990 Cri LJ 1622.
109. Jai Singh v. State of J & K (1985) ] SCC 561; 1985 SCC (Cri) 125: AIR 1985 SC 764: 1985
Cri LJ 527,
110. Anant Sakharam Raut v. State of Maharashtra, (1986) 4 SCC 771: 1986 SCC (Cri) 535-
AIR 1987 SC 137.
163
the cases noted in the enclosed sheet taken into consideration against each of
the detenus while each detenu concerned only with a few of the cases and the
remaining cases pertaining to the other detenus — Held, orders of detention
vitiated by non-application of mind and extraneous considerations viz.
incidents other than those shown in the grounds of detention and with which
the detenus had no direct or indirect connection or participation. — As a result
of such extraneous considerations detenus also deprived of making effective
and purposeful representations — Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social Activities
Act, 1985, S, 3(1) - Constihition of India, An. 22(5).i"
Non-application of mind - Supreme-Court's interim order in pending appeal
against High Court's quashing of a previous order of detention, against the
same detenu not considered by detaining authority while making the
impugned subsequent order against him — By the interim order Supreme
Court had permitted the detenu to be at large on condition of his reporting to
the police station daily - Held, non-consideration of the interim order which
constituted a relevant and important material, fatal to the subsequent
detention order on ground of non-application of mind — Plea that the
detaining authority is not supposed to collect court proceedings from
concerned Government departments before making the detention order
strongly deprecated and disallowed — Hence notice under S. 6 and
proceedings under S. 7 of SAFEMA against the detenu fs brother liable to be
quashed — Smugglers and Foreign Exchange Manipulators (Forfeiture of
Property) Act, 1976, Ss. 2(2) (c), Explanation 2(ii), 6 and 7 - COFEPOSA Act,
1974, S. 3(1)
Absence of consideration of the interim order of the Supreme Court,
which is an important document, amounted to application of mind on the
part of the detaining authorit)^ rendering the detention order invalid. The
order of the Court clearly indicated that the Court felt that there was no need
to detain the present respondent's brother pending the appeal If the detaining
authority had considered this order, one cannot state with definiteness which
way his subjective satisfaction would have reacted. This order could have
persuaded the detaining authority to desist from passing the order of
detention since the Court had allowed freedom of movement; or the detaining
authority could still feel that an order of detention is necessary with reference
to other materials which outweigh the effect of the Court's order. In all these
cases, non-application of mind on a vital and relevant material need not
necessarily lead to the conclusion that application of mind on such materials
would always be in favour of the detenu. Application of mind in such cases is
insisted upon to enable the detaining authority to consider one way or the
other, as to what effect a relevant material could have, on the authority that
decides the detention.
The contention that the detaining authority is not required to collect all
material about any court proceedings etc. from different Ministries or
Departments for the purpose of issuance of a detention order, made on behalf
ni. Mehboob Khan Nawab Khan Pathan v. PoHce Commr, (1989) 3 SCC 568- 1989 SCC
(Cri) 655: AIR 1989SCI803.
164
112. Union of India v. Manoharlal Naiang, (1987) 2 SCC 241, 247 252- 1987 SCC (Cri^ 311'
AIR 1987 SC 1472: (1987) 13 IXX: 18, '
113. Jitender I vagi v. Delhi Admn., (1989) 4 SCC 653, 661, 662:1989 SCC (Cri) 787: AIR 1990
SC 487.
'^^- f|)9o''".''' ^ ° ' ' ' ' °^^^' ^^^^"^ " ^ ^ ^ ^^^' ^^^'- ^^^" ^ ^ ^ (^") ^'^^'- ^^^ ^'^^^ SC 1086:
165
detention, it is desirable that any retraction made should also be placed before
detaining authority at the time of passing detention order — But detention
order would not become invaHd merely on failure to place such retraction
before detainiiig authority - Even assuming that the ground relating to the
confessional statement was inadmissible, order of detention shall be deemed
to have been made separately on each of such ground and inadmissibility of
one ground will not vitiate the entire order of detention — COFEPOSA Act,
1974, S. 5-A."5
Non-application of mind - 'Withholding of vital fact that detenu had been
acquitted in the criminal case referred to in grounds of detention, held,
resulted in non-application of mind of the detaining authority to that fact
vitiating the order of detention. ^^^
Dharamdas Shamlal Aganval v. Police Commissioner, (1989) 2 SCC 370:1989 SCC
(Cn) 370, followed.
No chances of detenu's involvement in prejudicial activities in future —
Detention under COFEPOSA for involvement in smuggling activities -
Goods imported ui name of fictitious firms under exemption scheme and sold
in local market in violation of condition of import licence to manufacture
products with them and export within 6 months thus evading export duty
and making profits — Even though term of the licence since expired,
detention order cannot be quashed on ground of no more chances of detenu's
involvement in smuggling activities."''
Allegation made in grounds of detention different from the statement
made in counter-affidavit by detaining authority — Held, amounted to non-
application of mind which rendered the detention Ulegal.^^^
Detention order passed with due application of mind in regard to grant of
bail to the detenu, activities alleged against the detenu grave and prejudicial
to security of the State, grounds not vague but specific and allegation that the
detenu was arrested on the date of passing the detention order but was
lodged in jail after a month unfounded— Held on facts, detention order
valid."9
Whether a single solitary act attiibuted to the detenu warrants an
inference that he will repeat his activity in future also and that his
detention was necessary to prevent him from doing so in future - Held, an
inference in each case will depend on the nature of the act and the
attendant circumstances - Where detenu tiied to export huge amount of
115. Madan Lai Anand v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 81: 1990 SCC (Cri) 51: AIR 1990 SC
176: (1990) 25 ECC 277:1990 Cri LJ 659: (1990) 45 ELT 204.
116. Ramesh v. State of Gujarat, (1989) 4 SCC 124,128:1989 SCC (Cri) 716: AIR 1989 SC 1881-
1989 Cri LJ 2094.
117. Madan Lai Anand v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 81, 94, 95: 1990 SCC (Cri) 51- AIR
1990 SC 176: (1990) 25 KCC 277:1990 Cri LJ 659: (1990) 45 ELT 204.
118. Yumnam Mangibabu Singh v. State of Manipur, (1982) 3 SCC 18' 1982 SCC (Cri) 627-
AIR 1983 SC 300. '
119. Swaran Singh v. State of J&K, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 88, 90: 1989 SCC (Cri) 191' AIR 1989
SC 188:1989 Cri LJ 792.
166
120. Sarasvvathi Seshagiri v. State of Kerala, (1982) 2 SCC 310: 1982 SCC (Cri) 423- AIR 1982
SC 1165:1982 CriLJ 125.1.
121. Ram Baoclian Dubey v, State of Maharashtra, (1982) 3 SCC 383:1983 SCC (Cri) 59(2).
122. Pix'ush Kantilal Mehta v. Commr. of Police, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 32'' 326' 1989'SCC (Cri)
438: AIR 1989 SC 491:1989 Cri LJ 956.
123. Shivaji Atmaji Sawant v. State of Maharashtra, (1986) 2 SCC 112- 1986 SCC (L&S) 209'
AIR 1986 SC 617:1986 Lab IC 585: (1986) 1 LLN 700: (1986) 1 SLR 495.
167
said that there was no material on which the detaining authority could have
based his subjective satisfaction under sub-sec. (1) of S. 3 of the Act.^^^
But detention order would not become invalid merely on failure to place such
retraction before detaining authority — Even assuming that the ground
relating to the confessional statement was inadmissible, order of detention
shall be deemed to have been made separately on each of such ground and
inadmissibility of one ground will not vitiate the entire order of detention —
COFEPOSA Act 1974, S. 5-A - Customs Act, 1962, S. 108. i25
Rehaction - Consideration of- Detenu's letter retracting his confessional
statement — Not received by detaining authority at the time of passing
detention order — Hence non-consideration of detenu's retraction by the
detaining authority caimot be a ground for vitiating the detention order.^^s
Detenu claiming to have communicated the letter of retraction under a
certificate of posting — But only a photostat copy of certificate of posting and
not that of the letter of retraction sent by the detenu along with his
representation to the detaining authority - No letter of reti-action also
received in the files of customs authorities — Held, the presumption that the
letter was posted and in due course reached the addressee, arising from the
certificate of posting is only permissible — On facts held, no letter of
retraction was posted and question of its non-consideration does not arise —
Evidence Act, 1872, Ss. 16 and 114.
The certificate of posting miglU lead to a presumption that a letter
addressed to the concerned authority was posted and in due course reached
the addressee. But, that is only a permissible and not an inevitable
presumption. Neither S. 16 nor S. 114 of the Evidence Act compels the court to
draw a presumption. The presumption may or may not be drawn. On the
facts and circumstances of a case, the court mav refuse to draw the
presumption. On the other hand, the presumption may be drawn initially but
on a consideration of the evidence the court may hold the presumption
rebutted and may arrive at the conclusion that no letter was received by the
addressee or that no letter was ever despatched as claimed. In the circum-
stances of the present case, it is clear that no such letter of retiaction was
posted as claimed by the detenu.^27
When sufficient to snap nexus between the incident and passing of order -
No tixed period - Delay of five months satisfactorily explained - Mala tides
cannot be inferred - Held on facts, detention order not vitiated on ground of
delay - Constitution of India, Art. 22 (5).
124, Pushpa Devi M Jaria v. ML. Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SGC 367, 388, 389:1987 SCC (Cri) 526-
AIR 1987 SC 1748:1987 Cri LJ1888: (1987) 12 ECC 356.
125. Madan Lai Anand v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 81, 91:1990 SCC (Cri) 51- AIR 1990
SC 176: (1990) 25 HCC 277: 1990 Cri LJ 659: (1990) 45 ELT 204.
12(r Raverdy Marc Germain Jules v. State of Maharashtra, (1982) 3 SCC 135- 1982 SCC fCril
638: AIR 1983 SC 311. ' ^ '
127.
L.M.S. Ummu Saleema v. B.B. Gujafal, (1981) 3 SCC 317: 1981 SCC (Cri) 720- AIR 1981
SC 1191:1981 Cri I I 889.
168
128. Shiv Ratan Makim v. Union of India, (1986) 1 SCC 404,408:1986 SCC (Cri) 74- AIR 1986
SC 610:1986 Cri LJ 813.
129. Abdu Salam v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 15, 21, 22:1990 SCC (Cri) 451- AIR 1990 SC
1446:1990 Cri L] 1502: (1990) 48 ELT 162: (1990) 3 Crimes 82.
169
detaining authority showiiig his propensity for acts which were likely to
disturb public order, i^o
There had been delay in passing the detention order and the delay had
not been satisfactorily explained. The ground mentioned in the detention
order could not be a proximate cause for a sudden decision to take action
under the National Security Act and this also vitiates the order.^^i
The appellant-detenu was intercepted at Trivandrum Airport and was
arrested and produced before Chief Judicial Magistrate on January 31,1988 on
charge of smuggliiig of gold. The Magistrate remanded him to judicial
custody till February 12, 1988 when he was granted bail on condition, inter
alia, that he would report before the Superintendent (InteUigence) Air
Customs, Trivandrum on every Wednesday until further orders, and that he
would not change his residence without prior permission of court to
"February 25,1988", The Collector of Customs sent the proposal for detention
on May 27, 1988 along with the draft grounds. In the Screening Committee
meeting held on June 21, 1988 the detenu's case was considered to be fit for
detention under the COFEPOSA Act The impugned order of detention was
thereupon passed on June 25,1988 under S. 3(1) (i) of COFEPOSA Act by the
Home Secretary, Government of Kerala with a view to prevent the appellant
from smuggling gold. It was contended that after the event there was
inordinate delay in passing the detention order which showed that there was
no genuine need for detention of the appellant.
Held:
Where the seemingly long time taken for passing the detention order
after the prejudicial act is the result of full and detailed investigation and
consideration of the facts of the case, the ground cannot be held to be remote
and the detention cannot be held to be bad on that ground. In the present case
it was submitted for the State that as a thorough investigation of the case was
required on the part of the customs authorities both for the proceedings under
the Customs Act and for prosecution in the criminal court, the proposal could
not have been hurried through. These facts have not been shown to be unti'ue.
Considering the given explanation of the period in between the interception
on January 30,1988 and the order of detention on June 25,1988 the nexus was
not snapped and the ground was not rendered stale and the order of
detention was not rendered invalid thereby.^32
Delay in passing detention order - Inordinate and unexplained delay, held
on facts, vitiated the detention order.^33
On facts held, the delay satisfactorily explained - Hence detention order not
vitiated on ground of delay iti its passing. i^J
130. Yogendra Murari y. State of U.R, (1988) 4 SCC 559, 563: 1988 SCC (Cri) 992- AIR 1988
SC 1835:1988 BLJR 592.
13 .\nand Pvakash v. State of U.P., (1990) I SCC 291, 298:1990 SCC (Cri) 96: AIR 1990 SC 51b.
132. M. Ahaniedkutt}' v. Union of India, (1990) 2 SCC 1, 6 to 9:1990 SCC (Cri) 258.
133. Anand Prakash v. State of U.P., (1990) 1 SCC 291; 1990 SCC (Cri) 96: AIR 1990 SC 516
134. K. Aruna Kitmari v. Govt, of A.P., (1988) 1 SCC 296,301:1988 SCC (Cri) 116- AIR 1988
SC 227:1988 Cri LJ 411, y ) • i
170
135.
mtmToi Lj S r °' ^"'^''' "^^'^' ^^^ ^^''- "^' ^^^ ^'^"^ ^^^^ ^'^ ^^^2 sc
171
fast rule can be precisely formulated that would be applicable under all
circumstances and no exhaustive guidelines can be laid down in that behalf. It
follows that the test of proximity is not a rigid or mechanical test by merely
'counting number of months between the offending acts and the order of
detention. However, when there is undue and long delay between the
prejudicial activities and the passing of detention order, the court has to
scrutinise whether the detaining authority has satisfactorily examined such a
delay and afforded a tenable and reasonable explanation as to why such a
delay has occasioned, when called upon to answer and further the court has
to investigate whether the casual connection has been broken in the
circumstances of each case.
Similarly, when there is unsatisfactory and unexplained delay between
the date of order of detention and the date of securing the arrest of the detenu,
such a delay would throw considerable doubt on the genuineness of the sub-
jective satisfaction of the detaining authority leading to a legitimate inference
that the detaining authority was not really and genuinely satisfied as regards
the necessity for detaining the detenu with a view to preventing him from
acting in a prejudicial marmer. T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State of Kerala, (1989) 4
s e c 741, 748, 749:1990 SCC (Cri) 76: AIR 1990 SC 225.
Delay in passing, after arrest — Held, would not vitiate the detention if
adequately explained by the detaining authority to the Court — But detenu
cannot demand such an explanation from the authority — Constitution of
India, Art. 22(5).
Delay ipso facto in passing an order of detention after an incident is not
fatal to the detention of a person, for, in certain cases delay may be
unavoidable and reasonable. What is required by law is that the delay must
be satisfactorily examined by the detaining authority, who is under an
obligation to satisfy the court as to the causes of the delay to show that there
was no infraction of Art. 22(5) of the Constitution. The authority is, however,
in no legal liabiUty to tell or satisfy the detenu as to the causes of the delay.
In the present case the delay has been satisfactorily explained by the
authority in its aftidavit and it has not vitiated the detention. ^36
Having regard to the time taken in tianslating the documents into Hindi
and Gurumukhi, held, there were valid and sufficient reasons for the delay -
COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S. 3(3). "7
Huge quantit)' of heroiii recovered on July 19 - Persons apprehended
examined and their statements recorded on July 20 - Thereafter
samples of the conti-aband drugs taken from each packet sent for chemical
examination - Test reports received by customs deparbnent on September
29, October 13 and November 15 and then screened by customs officials -
After considering all the materials, detention order passed on December 20 -
136.
"^'rt*!!!,?^!',''!,^^''^' ^- ^^''^'^ "^^ Maharashtra, (1981) 4 SCC 647, 655: 1982 SCC (Cri)
16: AIR 1981 SC 8.
137. Sanjay Kumar Aggarwal v. Ur^ion of India, (1990) 3 SCC 3095 317 318-1990 SCC ICn)
473: AIR 1990 SC 1202:1990 Cri LJ1238. - ^lo. iwubCC (Cn)
172
In the circumstances held, the delay of five months in making the order of
detention did not render the detention illegal and bad - Detention order had
been made with promptitude considering the relevant and vital facts
proximate to the passing of the order- Prevention of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic
Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1988, S. 3(1).^^^
The appellant was carrying on the illicit business of importing Indian-
made foreign hquor into Godhra in the State of Gujarat where there is total
prohibition. A Godhra-bound truck carrying such Uquor was intercepted on
December 29/30, 1986 and the driver and cleaner of the ti'uck made
statements on January 4, 1986 impUcating the appellant as the main person.
The appellant thereupon absconded and moved for anticipatory bail on
January 21, 1987 but no orders were passed as the police made a statement
that there was no proposal at that stage to arrest him. On February 2,1987 the
appellant was arrested but later on released on bail. He was prosecuted for
various offences under the Bombay Prohibition Act. After a lapse of five
months i.e. on May 28,1987 the D.M., Godhra passed the impugned order of
detention and the grounds therefor were served on the appellant on May 30
when he was taken into custody. The immediate and proximate cause for the
detention was the aforesaid transportation of foreign liquor on December
29/30, 1986. Incidentally the grounds furnished particulars of two other
crimiiial cases viz. one relating to 142 bottles of foreign liquor recovered from
his residence on July 21, 1982 which had ended in his acquittal, the
prosecution witnesses having turned hostile and the other relating to recovery
and seizure of 24 bottles of foreign liquor from his house on May 30, 1986
which case was still pending. There was also a recital of the fact that he was
continuing his business surreptitiously and he could not be caught easily and
therefore, unless the order of detention was made he would not stop his illicit
business; hence the necessity to detain him under S. 3(2) of the Act. Besides it
was further stated: "In order to safeguard the health of the people of Gujarat,
for public peace and in the iiiterest of the nation, with a view to stop such
anti-national activities ... for the purpose of public order and public peace and
in the interest of the State...". The appellant made a representation against his
detention to the State Government and the Advisory Board on June 8, 1987
which was rejected on June 12,1987.
The appellant/petitioner contended that the inordinate unexplamed
delay of five months in making the impugned order of detention by itself was
sufficient to vitiate the order.
Dismissing the appeal and the writ petition of the detenu:
Held:
Syed Farooq Mohammad v, Union of India, fl990) 3 SCC 537, 543-1990 SCC (Cri) SDO-
AIR 1990 SC1597:1990 CriLJ 1622. ' ^ ^ l^npuu.
173
139. Rajendrakumar Natvarlal Shah v. State of Gujarat, (1988) 3 SCC 153: 1988 SCC (Cri)
575; AIR 1988 SC 1255.
140. Issac Babu v. Union of India, (1990) 4 SCC 135; 1990 SCC (Cri) 564.
174
followed by eight other raids up to the end of May 1988 and again on
September 23, 25 and 29, 1988, but the petitioner was not available and the
order could not be served before October 2,1988, It was stated that during the
period from May to September, 1988 great communal tension was prevailing
in the city, a large number of people were arrested on account thereof, the
entire police force of the city was extremely busy in maintairung law and
order, but the petitioner was all along absconding in order to avoid the
service of the order. In the writ petition under Art. 32, the detention order was
challenged inter aha on ground of inordinate delay in arresting the detenu
pursuant to the detention order vitiated the detention. Accepting the first
contention and consequently allowing the writ petition and quashing the
order of detention.
Held:
Preventive detention is a serious inroad into the freedom of
individuals, Reasoiis, purposes and the maimer of such detention must,
therefore, be subject to closest scrutiny and examination by the courts. There
must be conduct relevant to the formation of the satis-faction having
reasonable nexus with the action of the petitioner which are prejudicial to the
maintenance of pubUc order and existence of relevant material in this regard
is subject to judicial review. Actions based' on subjective satisfaction are
objective indication of the existence of the subjective satisfaction. Such action
should be with speed commensurate with the situation, though it is not the
law that whenever there is some delay in arresting the subjective satisfaction
of the detaining authority must be held to be not genuine or colourable.
Whether there has been unreasonable delay, depends upon the facts and the
circumstances of a particular situation.
If in a situation the person concerned is not available or cannot be
served then the mere fact that the action under S. 7 of the Act had not been
taken, would not be a ground to say that the detention order was bad. Failure
to take action even if there was no scope for action under S. 7 of the Act,
would not be decisive or determinative of the question whether there was
undue delay in serving the order of detention. In this case even though no
warrant under S. 7 had been issued in respect of the property or person of the.
petitioner, it camnot be said that the respondent was riot justified in raising the
plea that the petitioner was absconding. The petitioner has no properly and so
no order under S. 7 could be made.
In this case, however, there was no explanation as.to why no attempts
had been made to contact or arrest the petitioner during the periods between
April 15 to May 12,1988 and again between September 29 to October 2,1988.
That the 'entire police force' was extremely busy in controlling the situation is
not a proper explanation. If the law and order was threatened and prejudiced,
it was not the conduct of the petitioner but because of "inadequacyS or
'inability' of the police force of the cit}' to control the situation. To shift the
blame for public order situation and raise the bogey of the conduct of the
petitioner would not be proof of genuine or real belief about the conduct of
the petitioner but only raising a red herring. Thus, by the conduct of the
respondent authorities, there was undue delav not commensurate with the
175
141. Shqfiq Ahmad v. D.M. (1989) 4 SCC 556: 1989 SCC (Cri) 774: AIR 1990 SC 200.
142 Sved Farooq Mohammad v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 537, 546, 547:199D SCC (Cri)
500: AIR 1990 SC 1597:1990 Cri LJ 1622.
Sharad Kumar Tyagi v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 736, 747: 1989 SCC (Cri) 294: AIR
1989 SC 764: (1989)1 SCR 257.
176
144 M Ahamedkutty v. Union of India, (1990) 2 SCC1,9 to 12; 1990 SCC (Cri) 258.
145. Yogendra Murari v. State of U.P., (1988) 4 SCC 559, 564; 1988 SCC (Cri) 992; AIR 1988
SCC 1835; 1988 BLJR 592.
146. Azra Fatima (Smt) v. Union of India, (1991) 1 SCC 76; 1991 SCC (Cri) 641- MR 1990
SC 1763:1990 CriLJ 1731.
147. Angoori Devi v. Union of India, (1989) 1 SCC 385, 389; 1989 SCC (Cri) 164- AIR 1989
SC 371; 1989 Cri L| 950.
177
whether m such a case there are sufficient materials to place the person under
preventive detention in order to prevent him from acting in a manner
prejudicial to public order or the like in future, i^s
The jurisdiction to make orders for preventive detention is different
from that of judicial tiial in course for offences and of judicial orders for
prevention of offences. Even unsuccessful judicial trial or proceeding would
not operate as a bar to a detention order or render it mala fide. A fortiori
therefore the mere fact that a criminal prosecution can be instituted cannot
operate as a bar against the making of an order of detention. If an order of
detention is made only in order to bypass a criminal prosecution which may
be irksome because of the inconvenience of proving guilt in a court of law, it
would certainly be an abuse of the power of preventive detention and the
order of detention would be bad. But if the object of making the order of
detention is to prevent the commission in future of activities injurious to the
community, it would be a perfectly legitimate exercise of power to make the
order of detention. The court would have to consider all the facts and
circumstances of the case in order to.determine on which side of the line the
order of detention falls.
In the present case, the petitioner detenu was caught in the act of
smuggling gold and the circumstances in which the gold was being smuggled
as also the facts set out in the written statement of the petitioner clearly
indicate that the petitioner was engaged in the activity of smuggling gold.
Therefore, the order of detention cannot be said to have been passed with a
view to subvert, supplement or substitute the criminal law of the land. The
order of detention was passed with a view to preventing the petitioner from
continuing the activity of smuggling and it was therefore a valid order of
detention, Shiv Ratan Makim v. Union of India, (1986) 1 SCC 404, 408, 409:
1986 SCC (Cri) 74: AIR 1986 SC 610:1986 Cri LJ 813.
Liability to criminal prosecution — Possibility of criminal prosecution or
absence of it — Though relevant factor but mere non-consideration thereof
would not vitiate the detention order — Detention may instead be based on
past conduct and antecedent history of the detenu — Detaining authority's
satisfaction about reasonable probability or suspicion of commission of the
prejudicial acts by the detenu sufficient justification for the detention —
Moreover, a grievous crime against commuruty itself justifies preventive
detention - National Security Act, 1980, S.3(2).
Possibility of launching a criminal prosecution or absence of it is not an
absolute bar to an order of preventive detention. Failure of the detaining
authority to consider the possibility of criminal prosecution being launched
before ordering preventive detention may in the circumstances of a case lead
to the conclusion that the detaining authority had not appUed its mind to the
important question as to whether it was necessary to make an order of
preventive detention but it cannot invariably render the order of detention
148. Alijan Mian v. Distt. Magistrate, (1983) 4 SCC 301, 305; 1983 SCC (Cri) 840- AIR 1983
~ SC 1130:1983 Cri LJ 1649.
178
149. State t.f Punjab v. Sukhpal Smgh, (1990) 1 5CC 35, 44 to 46:1990 SCC (Cri) V AIR 1990
SC231:1990CnLJ584
150. Ay}'a v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 374, 383: 1989 SCC (Cri) 153: AIR 1989 SC 364-
1989 Cri 1,1 991.
179
satisfy the Court that it had in mind the question whether prosecution of the
offender was possible and sufficient in the circumstances of the case. The
normal law is that when an isolated offence or isolated offences is or are com-
mitted, the offender is to be prosecuted. Buts if there be a law of preventive
detention empowering the authority to detain a particular offender in order to
disable him to repeat his offences, it can do so, but it will be obligatory on the
part of the detaining authority to formally comply with the provisions of Art.
22(5). In case of professional criminal or international smuggling, preventive
detention instead of criminal prosecution would be justified.i^i
Possibility of detention under criminal law - Held, not an absolute bar to an
order of preventive detention. ^52
A clear distinction has to be drawn between preventive detention in
which anticipatory and precautionary action is taken to prevent the
recurrence of apprehended events, and punitive detention under which the
action is taken after the event has already happened. It is true that the
ordinary criminal process of trial is not to be circumvented and short-
circuited by apparently handy and easier resort to preventive detention. But
the possibility of launching a criminal prosecution cannot be said to be an
absolute bar to an order of preventive detention.^^^
Absence of express views in that regard in counter-affidavit filed by the
detaining authority immaterial where the satisfaction of the authority in this
regard is clearly inferable from the counter-affidavit read as a whole.i^'*
(i) Detenu already in jail
When an incident was such that it created communal tension and the
authorities were apprehensive of the breaking of a communal riot, such
incident in itself may be sufficient and may afford justification for the
satisfaction of the detaining authority for the detention of the detenu in order
to prevent him from indulging in such activity prejudicial to public order
even though, there are no antecedent acts of similar nature or past history of
commission of crime by the detenu.^^^
Detaining authority being aware about these facts, concluding that under the
normal law detenu may be granted bail and in view of his antecedents
regarding drug trafficking, he may be in a position to continue to pursue his
nefarious activities — In the circumstances, order of detention cannot be held
to be illegal merely because it was passed while detenu was already in jail -
151. Hemlata Kantilal Shah v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 4 SCC 647, 656-658: 1982-SCC
(Cri) 16: AIR 198 ISC 8.
152. Saraswathi Seshagiri v. State of Kerala, (1982) 2 SCC 310: 1982 SCC (Cri) 423: AIR
1982 SC 1165:1982 Cri L] 1251.
153. State of Punjab v, Sukhpal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35, 42, 43: 1990 SCC (Cri) 1- AIR 1990
SC 231:1990 Cri LJ 584.
154. L.M.S, Ummu Saleema v. B.B. Gujaral, (1981) 3 SCC 317:1981 SCC (Cri) 720- AIR 1981
SC 1191: (1981) 3 SCR 647:1981 Cri LJ 889.
155. Simla Rani v. Union of India, 4 SCC 509, 513:1989 SCC (Cri) 756: (1989) 3 Crimes 578.
180
156. Azra Fatima (Smt) v. Union of India, (1991) 1 SCC 76: 1991 SCC (Cri) 641: AIR 1990 SC
1763:1990 CriLJ 1731.
181
of detention disclose that the appellants were engaged in activities which are
offences punishable with imprisonment under the Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985. It caimot, therefore, be said that there was
a reasonable prospect of the appellants not being further remanded to
custody on October 13,1988 and their being released from custody at the time
when the order for preventive detention was passed on October 11, 1988. In
the circumstances, the order for detention of the appellants cannot be
sustained and must be set aside and the appellants should be released
forthwith, is^
157. Dharmendra Suganchand Chelawat v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 746, 754, 755; 1990
s e c (Cri) 249: AIR 1990 SC 1196:1990 Cri L] 1232: (1990) 28 ECC12,
158. M. Ahamedkutt}.' v. Union of India, (1990) 2 SCC 1,13:1990 SCC (Cri) 258.
159. Ayya v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 374, 383:1989 SCC (Cri) 153: AIR 1989 SC 364-1989
Cri LJ 991.
182
likely to indulge in the same activities if released on bail. The contention that
the bail application could be opposed if moved or if enlarged the same could
be questioned in a higher court and on that ground the detention order
should be held to be invahd cannot be sustained in this case. It is not the law
that no order of detention can vaHdly be passed against a person in custody
under any circumstances. Therefore, the facts and circumstances of each case
have to be taken into consideration in the context of considering the order of
detention passed iii the case of a detenu who is already in jail.^^o
An order of detention was passed under S. 8 of the National Security
Act against the detenu on May 3,1989. The facts referred to in the grounds of
detention were that on the basis of a complaint of theft of electric wires
lodged on February 15,1989 an FIR was registered against three persons,']',
'S' and'M'. From the house of']' some of the stolen material was recovered
and on his information about the purchaser of such material, the factory of the
detenu was raided. There 'M', stated to be servant of tlie detenu, was found to
be in possession of 20 kg of melted electric wire and that was seized under a
recovery memo. 'M' made a confession statement which was recorded in the
recovery memo itself It was recorded in the recovery memo that 'M' had
stated that he had purchased the aluminium electric wires from 'T' and 'S',
that he had melted and sold the to the detenu and that the said wires could
not be identified after being melted and were used for making utensils
thereafter. The detenu was on May 2, 1989. On the same date the bail
application was moved on his behalf. The detention order stated that the
detenu was likely to be bailed out and was every likelihood that after coming
out of jail he will again indulge in his criminal activities. On this basis the
order stated that the detaining authority was satisfied that the detenu had
been engaged in criminal activities injurious to the maintenance of essential
services and supplies required for public life and that with a view to prevent
him from indulging in such unlawful activities it had become necessary to
keep him under detention.
Held:
The detaining authority though can take into account the possibility of
the detenu being released on bail in the criminal proceedings, has to be
satisfied, having regard to his past activities or by reason of the credible
information or cogent reasons, that if he is enlarged on bail, he would indulge
in such criminal activities. In the present case except the bald statement that
the detenu would repeat his criminal activities after coming out of jail, there is
no credible information or material or cogent reasons apparent on the record
to warrant an inference that the detenu if enlarged on bail would indulge in
such criminal activities which are prejudicial to the maintenance of essential
services. There must be something more than what is found in the record here
to come to the conclusion that this is not a case of solitary incident but a
of the detenu indulgiiig in business of receiving stolen electric wires. On the
160. Sanjay Kumar Aggarwal v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 309: 1990 SCC (Cri) 473: AIR
1990 SC 1202:1990 Cri LJ1238.
183
other hand it appears that the detention order had been made in order to
supplant the criminal prosecution which is not permitted .^^i
Detaining authority's satisfaction regarding- Must be based on his past
activities, credible information or material or cogent reasons - Mere bald
statement of detaining authority not enough - Court can look into the
material on record — - National Security Act, 1980, S, 8.1^2
Section 3 of the National Security Act does not preclude the authority
from making an order of detention against a person while he is in custody or
in jail, but the relevant facts in connection with the making of the order would
make all the difference in every case. The vahdity of the order of detention
has to be judged in every individual case on its own facts. There must be
material apparently disclosed to the detaining authority in each case that the
person against whom an order of preventive detention is being made is
already under custody and yet for compelling reasons, his preventive
detention is necessary.
Every citizeii in this country has the right to have recourse to law. He
has the right to move the court for bail when he is arrested under the ordinary
law of the land. If the State thinks that he does not deserve bail the State could
oppose the grant of bail. He caraiot, however, be interdicted from moving the
court for bail by clamping an order of detention. The possibility of the court
granting bail may not be sufficient. Nor a bald statement that the person
would repeat his criminal activities would be enough. There must also be
credible information or cogent reasons apparent on the record that the detenu,
if enlarged on bail, would act prejudicially to the interest of public order.
In the instant case, there was no material made apparent on record that
the detenu, if released on bail likely to commit activities prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order. The detention order appears to have been made
merely on the ground that the detenu is trying to come out on bail and there
is enough possibility of his being bailed out. The order of detention could not
be justified only on that basis.^^^
The fact that the person sought to be detained is in fact under
detention is a relevant and material factor but is not per se determinative of
the validity of the detention order, nor the fact that a man was not found
guilty in a criminal trial is determinative of the allegations made against him.
The allegations or the incidents leading to his detention have also to be borne
in mind and correlated to the object of a particular Act under which
preventive detention is contemplated. All the relevant factors must be
objectively considered and if there are causal cormections between the facts
alleged and the purpose of detention and if bona fide belief was formed then
there was nothing to prevent the authority from serving an order of
preventive detention even against a person who was in jail custody if there is
161. Anand Prakash v. State of U.P„ 1 SCC 291, 298:1990 SCC (Cri) 96: AIR 1990 SC 516.
162. Anand Prakash v. State of U.P., (1990) 1 SCC 291:1990 SCC (Cri) 96: AIR 1990 SC 516.
163. Shashi Aggarwal v. State of U.R, (1988) 1 SCC 436, 440: 1988 SCC (Cri) 178- AIR 1988
SC 596: (1988) 3 Crimes 184,
184
imminent possibility of his being released and set at liberty if the detaining
authority was duly satisfied. If the person is in detention or is under trial and
his conviction is unlikely but his conduct comes within the mischief of the Act
then the authority is entitled to take a rational view of the matter. The
grounds must be there. The decision must be bona fide. Where a person is
accused of certain offences whereunder he is undergoing trial or has been
acquitted, the appeal is pending and in respect of which he may be granted
bail, the authority may not in all circumstances be entitled to direct preventive
detention and the principle enunciated in Ramesh Yadav must apply; but
where the offences in respect of which the detenu is accused are so interlinked
and continuous in character and are of such nature that these affect
continuous maintenance of essential suppUes and thereby jeopardize the
security of the State, then subject to other conditions being fulfilled, a man
being in detention would not detract from the order being passed for
preventive detention.
In the present case there was no ir\fraction of any procedural
safeguards engrafted in the Act, There was rational subjective satisfaction
arrived at bona fide on the basis of the materials available to the detaining
authority and the materials had rational nexus with the purpose and object of
the detention as contemplated by the Act. The detention order was, therefore,
valid.164
Detaining authority unaware that bail application had been rejected and
thereafter no further application for bail moved by detenu — No fresh and
relevant grounds mentioned justifying the satisfaction that if released detenu
would mdulge in prejudicial activities — Detaining authority merely denying
the specific averment of detenu that no prejudicial activities committed by
him — Criminal case against detenu referred to in grounds but FIR pertaining
to the case not containing detenu's name — Held, subjective satisfaction of
detaining authority not reached on relevant materials — Hence detention
order liable to be set aside.
There must be awareness in the mind of the detaining authority that
the detenu is in custody at the time of service of the order of detention on him
and cogent relevant materials and fresh facts have been disclosed which
necessitate the making of an order of detention. Considering all the facts and
circumstances of the case it must be held that there has been no subjective
satisfaction by the detaining authorit}' on a consideration of the relevant
materials on the basis of which the impugned order of detention has been
clamped on the detenu.i''^
Non-application of mind alleged - Detenu already in jail - Grounds of
detention stating that though High Court had granted a conditional
bail to detenu but instead of availing it, a subsequent application for
moditication of the condition was moved by the detenu but the same was
164. Siiraj Pal Sahu v. State of Maharashtra, (1986) 4 SCC 378: 1986 SCC (Cri) 452- AIR 1986
SC 2177:1986 CriL] 2047.
165. Abdul Razak Abdul Wahab Sheikh v. S.N. Sinha, (1989) 2 SCC 222-1989 SCC (Cri) 326-
AIR 1989 SC 2265.
185
In the present case the detention orders merely referred to the name of
the detenus and the places of their residence, without indicatmg the fact that
166. Alocious Fernandez v. Union of India, (1990) 2 SCC 668:1990 SCC (Cri) 36^).
167. Vijay Kumar v. State of J & K, (1982) 2 SCC 43:1982 SCC (Cri) 348: AIR 1982 SC 1023-
1982 Cri LJ 988:1982 ML] (Cri) 471.
168. Ramesh Yadav v, DM, (1985) 4 SCC 232:1985 SCC (Cri) 514: AIR 1986 SC 315.
186
they were already in jail, one being for a period of roughly two months and
the other for above one month. Therefore, the subjective satisfaction arrived at
clearly discloses a non-apphcation of mind to the relevant facts and the order
is vitiated.169
Detenu already in jail at the time of passing detention order— No reference
made in this regard in detention order or affidavit justifying the order —
Held, detaining authority's awareness about detenu's preexisting
confinement not shown — Hence, detention order vitiated on ground of
non-application of mind. ^^^
Does not vitiate the detention if detaining authority is aware of this fact but
even then is satisfied about necessity of the preventive detention.
The detenu had been called by the Customs Authorities for
investigation. A statement had been made by him under S. 108 of the Customs
Act and thereafter he was taken into custody and produced before the
Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate who remanded him to custody and
directed him to be produced on the following day in the court. By the time the
order of detention came to be made the petitioner was in jail for at the most
one day. Charge-sheet had not been submitted agaiiist him in the criminal
case and he had been remanded to the judicial custody with the direction to
be produced before the Metropolitan Magistrate next day. It was contended
that since the detenu was already in custody, the order of detention was liable
to be quashed. Rejecting the contention, the Supreme Court.
Held:
The fact that the detenu is already in detention does not take away the
jurisdiction of the detaining authority in making an order of preventive
detention. What is necessary in such a is to satisfy the court when detention is
challenged on that ground that the detaining authority was aware of the fact
that the detenu was already in custody and yet he was subjectively satisfied
that his order of detention became necessary. In the facts of the present case,
there was sufficient material to show the same. ^''^
Detaining authority's awareness of this fact as also his satisfaction about
likelihood of recurrence of the prejudicial activities in case of detenu's release
on bail not shown — Held, detention order invalid — National Security Act,
1980, S. 3(2)
There was nothing to show that there was awareness in the mind of the
District Magistiate, the detaining authority, of the fact that the appellant was
in jail at the 'time of clamping of the order of detention, and that the detainiiig
authority was satisfied in considering his antecedents and previous criminal
acts, that there was likelihood of his indulging in criminal activities
169. Merugu Satyanarayana v. State of A.P, (1982) 3 SCC 301: 1983 SCC (Cri) 18: AIR 1982
SC 1543:1982 Cri L] 2357.
170. Devi Lai Mahto v. State of Bihar, (1982) 3 SCC 328:1983 SCC (Cri) 37: AIR 1982 SC 1548:
1982 Cri LJ 2363.
171. Poonam Lata v. M.L. Wadhawan (1987) 4 SCC-48, 59: 1987 SCC (Cri) 685: AIR 1987 SC
2098:1987 Cri L] 1924: (1987) 14 ECC 17.
187
172. Gulab Mehra v. State of U.P., (1987)4 SCC 302, 316, 317: 1987 SCC (Cri) 721: AIR 1987
SC 2332.
173. Binod Singh v. D.M., (1986) 4 SCC 416:1986 SCC (Cri) 490: AIR 1986 SC 2090: 1986 Cri
LJ1959.
188
174. Vijay Kumar v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 57, 70: 1988 SCC (Cri) 293: AIR 1988 SC
934: (1988) 17 ECC 82.
175. Bim Mahato v D.M., (1982) 3 SCC 322:1983 SCC (Cri) 31: AIR 1982 SC 1539:1982 Cri L]
2354.
176. Al-imed-hussain Shaikhhussain v. Commr. of Police, Ahmedabad, (1989) 4 SCC 751, 757:
1990 SCC (Cri) 86: AIR 1989 SC 2274:1989 Cri L] 2312,
189
177. N, Meera Rani v. Cicnt, of T.N., (1989) 4 SCC 418, 428, 429:1989 SCC (Cri) 732: AIR 1989
SC 2027:1989 Cri IJ 2190.
190
178. Yogendra Murari v. State of U.P., (1988) 4 SCC 559, 564: 1988 SCC (Cri) 992: AIR 1988
s e c 1835:1988 BLJR 592.
179. Alijan Mian v. Distt. Magistrate, (1983) 4 SCC 301, 305:1983 SCC (Cri) 840: AIR 1983 SC
1130:1983 Cri LJ1649.
180. Bal Chand Bansal v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 527S 530.531:1988 SCC (Cri) 356: AIR
1175- (1988) 16 ECC 227.
191
181. Bal Chand Bonsai v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 527, 531:1988 SCC (Cri) 356: AIR 1988
SC1175: (1988) 16 ECC 227.
182. Bal Chand Bansal v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 527, 532:1988 SCC (Cri) 356: AIR 1988
SC 1175: (1988) 16 ECC 227.
!83. Yogendra Murari v. State of U.P., (1988) 4 SCC 559, 563, 564: 1988 SCC (Cri) 992: AIR
1988 SC1835:1988 BLJR 592.
192
Detenu already in jail released on bail— Detaining authority aware of this fact
— Detention order valid. ^^'^
Detenu already in jail in connection with a criminal case — Bail application
granted by court — But prior to his release on bail, preventive detention order
passed against him on grounds including the charges made in the pending
criminal case — Vahdity of the detention order must be examined very
carefully in such circumstances
Per Venkataramiah, ].
The law of preventive detention should not be used merely to clip the
wings of an accused who is involved in a criminal prosecution. It is not
intended for the purpose of keeping a man under detention when under
ordinary criminal law it may not be possible to resist the issue of orders of
bail, unless the material available is such as would satisfy the requirements of
the legal provisions authorising such detention. When a person is enlarged on
bail by a competent criminal court, great caution should be exercised in
scrutinising the validity of an order of preventive detention which is based on
the very same charge which is to be tried by the criminal court.
Per A. P. Sen, J.
Merely because there was pending prosecution and the detenu was
already in jail, there is no impediment for his detention if the detaining
authority is satisfied that his being enlarged on bail would be prejudicial to
the maintenance of public order.^^s
Detenu released on bail or acquitted — Facts and circumstances involved in
the criminal proceedings can be taken into account in forming subjective
satisfaction for passing detention order
Even if a prosecution against a person fails or bail is granted an order
of detention could be passed drawing the satisfaction therefor from the facts
and circumstances involved in the criminal proceedings. An offender might
secure an acquittal by intimidating witnesses. It all depends upon the
circumstances of each case. But it is necessary for the detaining authority to
resist the temptation to prefer and substitute, as a matter of course, the easy
expedience of a preventive detention to the more cumbersome one of punitive
detention. Ayya v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 374, 383: 1989 SCC (Cri) 153:
AIR 1989 SC 364:1989 CriYj 991.
Non-application of nund — Detaining authority aware about detenu's
anticipatory bail application — Grounds showing likelihood of recurrence of
anti-social activities by the detenu and compelling necessity of his detention
— Held on facts, non-application of mind by detaining authority not
established - Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act, 1985, S. 3(2).
184. Swaran Singh v. State of J&K, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 88: 1989 SCC (Cri) 191: AIR 1989 SC
188:1989 Cri L] 792.
185. Vijay Narain Singh v. State of Bihar, (1984) 3 SCC 14, 24, 28, 35:1984 SCC (Cri) 361: AIR
1984 SC 1334:1984 Cri LJ 909.
193
186. Rajendrakumar Natvarlal Shah v. State of Gujarat, (1988) 3 SCC153,165; 1988 SCC (Cri)
575: AIR 1988 SC1255.
187. Raverdy Marc Germain Jules v. State of Maharashtra, (1982) 3 SCC 135:1982 SCC (Cri)
638: AIR 1983 SC 311.
138. Angoori Devi v. Uruon of India, (1989) 1 SCC 385, 392:1989 SCC (Cri) 164: AIR 1989 SC
371:1989 Cri LJ 950.
189. Lallubhai Jogibhai Patel v. Union of India, (1981) 2 SCC 427: 1981 SCC (Cri) 463: AIR
1981 SC 728: (1981) 2 SCR 352:1981 Cri LJ 288:1981 MLJ (Cri) 350.
194
as the use of the first person by the Assistant Secretary was a mere clerical
mistake which Government rectified later.^^o
There is an inexorable connection between the obligation on the part of
the detaining authority to furnish the 'grounds' and the right given to the
detenu to have an 'earliest opportunity' to make the representation. Since
preventive detention is a serious inroad on individual liberty and its
justification is the prevention of inherent danger of activity prejudicial to the
community, the detaining authority must be satisfied as to the sufficiency of
the grounds which justify the taking of the drastic measure of preventive
detention. The requirements of Art. 22(5) are satisfied once 'basic facts and
materials' which weighed with the detaining authority in reaching his sub-
jective satisfaction are communicated to the detenu. The test to be applied in
respect of the contents of the grounds for the two purposes are quite different.
For the first, the test is whether it is sufficient to satisfy the authority, for the
second, the test is whether it is sufficient to enable the detenu to make his
representation at the earliest opportunity which must, of course, be a real and
effective opportunity. The court may examine the 'grounds' specified in the
order of detention to see whether they are relevant to the circumstances under
which preventive detention could be supported e.g. security of India or of a
State, conservation and augmentation of foreign exchange and prevention of
smuggling activities, maintenance of public order, etc. and set the detenu at
liberty if there is no rational connection between the alleged activity of the
detenu and the grounds relied upon, say public order. ^^^
190. Kavita v. State of Maharashtra (7), (1981) 3 SCC 558, 565: 1981 SCC (Cri) 743: AIR 1981
SG 1641.
191. Rajendmkumar Natvarlal Shah v. State of Gujarat, (1988) 3 SCC 153,161:1988 SCC (Cri)
575: AIR 1988 SC 1255.
192. Wasiuddin Ahmed v. DM, (1981) 4 SCC 521, 529, 530: 1982 SCC (Cri) 4: AIR 1981
SC2166:1981 Cri LJ1825.
193. K. Aruna Kumari v. Govt, of A.P., (1988) 1 SCC 296, 305, 306: 1988 SCC (Cri) 116: AIR
1988 SC 227:1988 Cri LJ 411.
195
194. Kirit Kumar Chaman Lai Kundaliya v. Union of India, (1981) 2 SCC 436, 441:1981 SCC
(Cri) 471; AIR 1981 SC 1621; (1981) 2 SCR 718; 1981 Cri L) 1267; (1981) 22 GLR1067.
195. Surjeet Smgh v. Union of India, (1981) 2 SCC 359:1981 SCC (Cri) 535: AIR 1981 SC 1153:
(1981) 3 SCR 205:1981 Cri LJ 614,
196
who were available and were put on the job were prepared to work only from
12 noon to 4 p.m. Such an explanation camiot be regarded as constituting
exceptional circumstances justifying the delay. Since the petitioner was
already in judicial custody and no bail had been granted, there was no fear of
his abscondence and no urgency and therefore, the detaining authority could
have kept all the material ready in Urdu and supplied the same to him
immediately after detaining him second time. Moreover, the office noting
neither gave particulars of how many Urdu translators were put on the job
except vaguely stating 'handful of tianslators' were available, nor indicated
whether and if so what efforts were made to avail the services of the
additional Urdu translators who had nothing to do with the observance of
Ramzan fasts.
Further, the alleged exceptional circumstances contemplated by S. 3(3),
COFEPOSA Act were not communicated to the detenu at the time of the
delayed supply of the concerned documents and statements in Urdu
language.
Lastly, Urdu translations of quite a few documents and statements
referred to in the grounds of detention and relied upon by the detaining
authority were not supplied to the detenu at all. The petitioner is a Pakistani
national and Urdu seems to be his mother tongue and a little knowledge of
English figures, ability to read English words written in capital letters and a
smattering knowledge of Hindi or Gujarati would not justify the denial of
Urdu translations to him of the material documents and statements referred
to as incriminating documents in the grounds and relied upon by the
detaining authority in arriving at its subjective satisfaction.
The aforesaid failures on the part of the authorities constituted breach
of Art. 22(5) of the Constitiition read with S. 3(3) of the COFEPOSA Act and
vitiated the continued detention of the petitioner.^^^
Grounds of detention must be explained in the language and script
understandable to the detenu — Detenu specifically stating to be knowing
Arabic language only — Hence, explaining the grounds in Hindi
inconsequential — Averment in the counter-affidavit that the detenu made
his submission iri Hindi before Advisory Board, wholly Inadmissible in
absence of testimony of any reliable witness — In absence of any proof of
explaining the grounds in Arabic, held, continued detention of the detenu
illegal
Orders of detention which touch the valuable rights of citizens and
their liberty are matters of moment and cannot be dealt with in a casual or
routine manner. The iiecessaiy safeguards laid down by the Supreme Court
and enshrined in Art. 22(5) of the Constitution have to be compUed with
however onerous and difficult the task may be. Moreover, with huge
resources at the command of the State, it is not at all difficult for the detaining
196. Ibrahim Ahmad Batti v. State of Gujarat, (1982) 3 SCC 440:1983 SCC (Cri) 66; AIR 1982
SC1500.
198
authority to see that these Uttle things are comphed with so that the detenu
does not complain that the authorities try to play with his liberty.
There is no cogent proof in this case that the detenu who admittedly is
an Arab knew Hindi at all or that the grounds were actually explained and
translated to him. If the detenu did not know Hindi, explaining the grounds
in Hindi to him is absolutely of no consequence. On this ground alone, the
detenu is entitled to be released as his continued detention becomes legally
invaHd.197
197. Nafisa Khalifa Ghanem v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 422:1982 SCC (Cri) 236.
198. Tsering Dolkar v. AdnTinistrator, Union Territory of Delhi, (1987) 2 SCC 69, 73: 1987
SCC (Cri) 275: AIR 1987 SCI 192:1987 Cri LI 988.
199. A. Alangarasamy v. State of T.M., (1987) 3 SCC 159: 1987 SCC (Cri) 477: AIR 1987 SC
1725.
199
200. Kubic Darusz v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 568, 573-578:1990 SCC (Cri) 227: AIR 1990
SC 605.
201. Devji Vallabhbhai Tandel v. Administrator, (1982) 2 SCC 222: 1982 SCC (Cri) 403: AIR
1982 SC 1029:1982 Cri L] 799.
200
202. Devji Vallabhbhai Tandel v. Administrator, (1982) 2 SCC 222: 1982 SCC (Cri) 4.03: AIR
J982SC 1029:1982 Cri L] 799.
203. Biiupinder Singh v. Union of India, (1987) 2 SCC 234:1987 SCC (Cri) 328.
204. Manjit Singh Grewal v. Union of India, 1990 Supp SCC 59: 1990 SCC (Cri) 608(2).
205. Mehdi Mohd. Jowdi v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 2 SCC 358:1981 SCC (Cri) 534: AIR
1981 SC1752:1981 Cri L] 1282.
201
robbed of his liberty and to disable the authorities from manipulating the
grounds of detention. The section has to be Interpreted literally. No relaxation
is permissible. If the original time of 5 days has to be extended, such extension
must be supported by an order recording reasons. If reasons are not so
recorded the order of detention will automatically fail Even if reasons are
recorded they have to inspire confidence in the court and are subject to legal
scrutiny. If the reasons are unsatisfactory courts would still quash the order of
detention, ^o^
Documents and materials mentioned in grounds of detention to be supplied
to the detenu immediately on demand — Explanation for delay of about 28
days in supplying the same not convincing — Hence, continued detention of
the detenu illegal - Constitution of India, Art. 22(5)
A demand for documents should not be taken lightly but the detaining
authority must be prepared to supply at least those materials or documents
which are clearly mentioned in the grounds of detention and he must have
those material ready with him so as to be given to the detenu as and when
asked for, with utmost despatch. The dilatory procedure adopted by the
detaining authority in referring the question of supplying of documents to
various authorities and inviting their comments is condensable. The detenu
cannot make any effective representation unless he gets copies of the docu-
ments which are expressly mentioned in the grounds of detention. In the
present case the explanation given by the detaining authority for delay of
about 28 days in sending the documents to the detenu does not appear to be
satis-factory or convincing. The continued detention of the detenu therefore,
becomes illegal on this ground also. ^07
Grounds of detention must be furnished as soon as practicable and need not
be furnished simultaneously along with the detention order — Grounds
furnished within two days of the detention — Held, delay reasonable and
therefore the detention order not vitiated on ground of such delay alone —
Constitiition of India. Art 22(5) - National Security Act} 1980 (65 of 1980),
S.8.
There is no constitutional imperative that no person shall be detained
under preventive detention law without being informed of the grounds for
such detei"ition. The law is that the detaiiiing authority must, as soon as may
be, i.e. as soon as practicable, communicate to the detenu the grounds on
which the order of detention has been made. That period has been specified
by S. 8 of the Act to mean a period ranging from five to 10 days depending
upon the facts and circumstances of each case.
In the present case the detenu was served with the grounds of
detention within a period of two days, that is, within the period allowed by S.
8 of the Act and that was "as soon as practicable". In absence of any
allegations as to mala tides on the part of the detaining authority or that the
206. Hem Lai! Bhandari v. State of Sikkim, (1987) 2 SCC 9,14: 1987 SCC (Cri) 262: AIR 1987
BC762:]987CriL]718.
207. Naftsa Khalifa Ghanem w Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 422:1982 SCC (Cri) 236,
202
detention was for non-existent grounds, the order of detention is not rendered
invalid merely because the grounds of detention were furnished two days
later. 208
208. Ashok Kumar v, Delhi Admn., (1982) 2 SCC 403:1982 SCC (Cri) 451: AIR 1982 SC 1143:
1982 Cri L] 119.
209. Mohd. Zakir v. Delhi Admn., (1982) 3 SCC 216: 1982 SCC (Cri) 695: AIR 1982 SC 696:
1982 Cri LJ 611.
210. Ashok Kumar v. Union of India, (1988) 1 SCC 541, 546: 1988 SCC (Cri) 193: (1988) 15
i;CC4bl: (1988)1 Crimes 791.
211. Azra Fatima (Smt) v. Union of India, (1991) 1 SCC 76:1991 SCC (Cri) 641: AIR 1990 SC
1763: 1990 Cri LJ 1731.
212. Raghubansh Rai v. State of Bihar, 1990.Supp SCC 613:1991 SCC (Cri) 151.
203
213, Madhu Khanna v. Administrator, Union Territory of Delhi, (1986) 4 SCC 240, 245-1986
s e c (Cri) 426: AIR 1987 SC 48:1987 Cri LJ318.
214, Sunil Dutl v. Union of India, (1982) 3 SCC 405:1983 SCC (Cri) 62: AIR 1982 SC 53.
215, M. Ahamedkutt\' v. Union of India, (1990) 2 SCC 1,12,13:1990 SCC (Cri) 258.
216, Kailash Pandey v. State ofU,R, (1984) 2 SCC 397: 1984 SCC (Cri) 265: AIR 1983 SC 317-
1983 Cri L] 452.
217 Nandagopal Saha v. Union of India, 1987 Supp SCC 576:1988 SCC (Cri) 107(1),
204
218. Poonam Lata v. M.L Wadhawan, (1987) 4 SCC 48,53:1987 SCC (Cri) 685: AIR 1987 SC
2098:1987 Cri L] 1924: (1987) 14 ECC 17.
205
ought to have formed part of the documents suppUed to the deteriu with the
grounds of detention and without them the grounds themselves could not be
said to have been complete. It must therefore, be held that it amounted to
denial of the detenu's right to make an effective representation and that it
resulted in violation of Art. 22(5) rendering the continued detention of the
detenu illegal and entitling the detenu to be set at liberty in this case. 2^9
Documents to be supplied - Only copies of documents on which order
of detention primarily based should be supplied to detenu and not any and
every document. 220
Material document relied upon by detaining authority in forming its
subjective satisfaction - Copy of, not supplied to the detenu - Held, order
of detention rendered void - COFEPOSA Act, 1974 (52 of 1974), S. 3.221
Material document relied upon by detaining authority in forming its
subjective satisfaction - Copy of, not supplied, to the detenu - Held, order
of detention rendered void - COFEPOSA Act, 1974 (52 of 1974), S. 3.222
Non-supply of relevant documents to detenu - Copies of statements
recorded under S. 161, CrPC furnished long after passing of order of
detention and communication of the grounds - Held, order of detention
illegal and bad. 223
Basic facts and materials which influenced the mind of detaiiaing authority
in making detention order must be supplied to the detenu within the time
stipulated in S, 3(3), COFEPOSA Act, 1974 (52 of 1974) - All the documents
and materials relied upon by the detaining authority in passing the order of
detention must be supplied to the detenu, as soon as practicable, to enable
him to make an effective representation.
In the instant case, the materials and documents which were not
supplied to the detenu were evidently a part of those materials which had
influenced the mind of the detaining authority in passing the order of
detention. In other words, they were a part of the basic facts and materials,
and therefore, should have been supplied to the detenu ordinarily within five
days of the order of detention, and, for exceptional reasons to be recorded,
within fifteen days of the commencement of detention as contemplated in S.
3(3) of the COFEPOSA Act.224
Copies of material documents referred to in the grounds of detention cannot
be denied to the detenu on the mere ground that the detenu was already
Documents and materials which form the basis of detention order must be
supplied to the detenu along with grounds of detention — Where grounds
of detention not accompanied by these documents and materials and disposal
of detenu's representation delayed for 25 days, held, continued detention of
the detenu void - Both Arts. 21 and 22(5) must be fully and strictly compUed
with - Goverrmient officials responsible for the lapse resulting in release of
the detenu must be held personally responsible or at least must owe an
explanation— Constitution of India, Arts. 21 and 22(5)
It is of the utmost importance that all the necessary safeguards laid
down by the Constitution under Art. 21 or Art. 22(5) should be compHed with
fully and shictly and any departure from any of the safeguards would void
the order of detention. The law of preventive detention has now to satisfy a
twofold test; (1) that the protection and the guarantee afforded under Art,
22(5) is comphed with, and (2) that the procedure is just and reasonable. If a
procedure under Art. 21 has to be reasonable, fair and just, then the words
'effective representation' appearing in Art. 22(5) must be construed so as to
provide a real and meaningful opportunity to the detenu to explain his case to
the detaining authority in his representation. In this view of the matter, unless
the materials and documents relied on in the order of detention are supplied
to the. detenu along with the grounds, the supply of grounds simpliciter
would give him not a real but merely an illusory opportunity to make a
representation to the detaining authority.
For the above reasons the continued detention of the detenu is void,
whenever a detention is struck down by the High Court or the Supreme
Court, the detaining authority or the officers concerned who are associated
with the preparation of the grounds of detention, must beheld personally
responsible and action should be taken against them for not complying with
the constitutional requirements and safeguards (viz. delay in disposing of the
representation, not supplying the documents and materials reUed upon in the
order of detention pari passu the order of detention, etc. etc.) or, at any rate,
an explanation from the authorities concerned must be called for by the
Central Government so that in future persons against whom serious acts of
smugghng are alleged, do not go scot-free. In the instant case, not only were
the documents and materials not supplied along with the order of detention,
but there has been a delay of about 25 days in disposing of the representation
225. Mehmnissa v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 2 SCC 709:1981 SCC"(Cri) 592: AIR 1981 SC
1861:1981 Cri LI 1283,
226. State of Gujarat v. jat Harun Dadn, (1981) 4 SCC 659; 1982 SCC (Cri) 27: AIR 1981 SC
2238: 1981 Cri LJ1872.
207
of the detenu and no explanation for the same has been given. These are
matters which must be closely examined by the government. 227
Documents forming basis of the grounds of detention not supplied to the
detenus —Detention, held, improper.228
Documents which are only referred to in the grounds of detention must also
be supplied along with the grounds - Constitution of India, Art 22(5).
Once the documents are referred to in the grounds of detention it
becomes the bounden duty of the detaining authority to supply the same to the
detenu as part of the grounds or pari passu the grounds of detention. There is
no particular charm in the expressions 'relied on', 'referred to' or 'based on'
because ultimately all these expressions signify one thing, namely, that the
subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority has been arrived at on the
documents mentioned in the grounds of detention. The question whether the
grounds have been referred to, relied on or based on is merely a matter of
describing the nature of the grounds. This having not been done in the present
case the continued detention of the petitioner must be held to be void .229
Failure to supply the documents and materials forming basis of detention
order to the detenu along with the of detention and unexplained delay of
a month in disposing of the detenu's representation would render continued
detention of the detenu void - Constitution of India, Art 22(5).230
Supply of copies of documents on which detention order is based— Held,
mandatory under National Security Act also, like that under COFEPOSA
Act.231
227. Kamla Kanyalal Khusalini v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 1 SCC 748, 751-753:1981 SCC
(Cri) 287; AIR 1981 SC 814: (1981) 2 SCR 459:1981 Cri LJ 353,
228. Ana Carelina D'Souza v. Union of India, 1981 Supp SCC 53(1): 1982 SCC (Cri) 131: AIR
1981 SC 1620:1981 Cri L] 1277,
229. Kirit Kumar Chaman Lai Kundaliya v. Union of India, (1981) 2 SCC 436:1981 SCC (Cri)
471: AIR 1981 SC 1621: (1981) 2 SCR 718:1981 Cri LJ 1267: (1981) 22 GLR 1067.
230. Virendra Singh v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 4 SCC 562:1981 SCC (Cri) 874: AIR 1981
SC 1909:1981 Cri LJ 1283.
231. Aziz V. Delhi Minn,, (1981) 3 SCC 557:1981 SCC (Cri) 742: AIR 1981 SC 1389:1981 Cri L]
1011.
232. Tararnati Chandulal Sejpa! v. State of Maharashta'a. (1981) 2 SCC 17:1981 SCC (Cri) 314:
AIR 198 ISC 871:1981 Cri L] 445.
233 State of U.P. V. Kamal Kishore Saini, (1988) 1 SCC 287, 2925 296:1988 SCC (Cri) 107(2):
AIR 1988 SC 208:1988 Cri LJ 405.
208
234. Ram Baochan Dubey v. State of Maharashtra, (1982) 3 SCC 383:1983 SCC (Cri)
209
235. State of Punjab v. Jagdev Singh Talwandi, (1984) 1 SCC 596, 603, 606: 1984 SCC (Cri)
135: AIR 1984 SC 444:1984 CriLJ 177,
236. Dina Nath Anand v. Administrator, (1983) 2 SCC 252:1983 SCC (Cri) 388.
237. State of v. Shamsher Singh, 1985 Supp SCC 4165 430: 1935 SCC (Cri) 421: AIR lOS'i SC:
1082:1985 CriLJ 1348.
238. Abdul Sattar Abdul Kadar Shaikh v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 480: 1990 SCC: (Cri)
242.
239. M. Mohd. Sultlian v. Jt. Secy, to Govt of India, (1991) 1 SCC 144: 1991 SCC (Cri) 104:
AIR 1990 SC 2222:1990 Cri LJ 2473.
210
"information" whether his detention was inter aha based on seizures of certain
articles mentioned in the list of grounds of detention and the reply of the
authority to the request were irrelevant.
Further, the Government is not under any Uability to furnish the
detenu with legal information available from legal literature. The Uability of
the detaining authority is only to comply with the requirement of Art, 22(5) of
the Constitution. In the present case, therefore, the "information" sought by
the detenu regarding the provision under which the import of the article in
question (Palladium) is prohibited is untenable, for it is an information on a
question of law and can be obtained from statutes, rules or notifications.
Moreover, the plea that the Goverimient's failure to furnish, him with that
"information" prevented him filing a proper representation is not permissible
on the ground of public policy, for, any detenu may plead that he does not
know whether the entry of the item smuggled by him is restricted.^^o
Copy of State Government's order under s. 3 (3) of NJSL Act, 1980,
authorizing District Magistrate or Commissioner of Police to make order of
detention not required to fee supplied to detenu.
The Act does not provide for supplying a copy of an order under S.
3(3) of the Act. The said order has not been relied upon by the Commissioner
of Police in passing the impugned of detention in the present case. Though by
virtue of the order passed under S. 3(3), the Commissioner of Police could
exercise the powers of the detaining authority under that section, but that has
nothing to do as to the subjective satisfaction of the Commissioner of Police in
making the impugned order of detention. ^41
Documents to be suppUed — Copies of FIRs — Where under S. 173(5), CrPC
all the documents or relevant extiacts thereof on which the prosecution relied
on in criminal cases against the detenu "were supplied to him, held, failure to
furnish copies of FIRs filed against him would not deprive him of his right to
make effective representation. ^42
Failure to furnish copy of a mere forwarding letter which does not form the
basis of grounds of detention would not vitiate the detention order. 243
Failure to supply the documents materials which are only casually or pass-
ingly referred to in the course of narration of the facts in the grounds of
detention and are not relied upon by the detainiaig authority in making
detention order, held5 would not render the detention illegal.244
240. Hemlata Kaniilal Shah v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 4 SCC 6475 654- 1982 SCC (Cri)
16: AIR 198 ISC 8.
241. Jitender Tyagi v. Delhi Admn., (1989) 4 SCC 6539 661:1989 SCC (Cri) 787- AIR 1990 SC
487. '
242. Wasiuddin Ahmed v. D.M, (1981) 4 SCC 521, 531, 532: 1982 SCC (Cri) 4- AIR 1981 SC
2166:1981 Cri IJ 1825.
243. S. Gayathri v. Commr. of Police, (1981) 4 SCC 171: 1981 SCC (Cri) S i r AIR 1981 SC
1672.
244. LM.S. Ummu Saleerna v. B.B. Gujaral, (1981) 3 SCC 317, 320: 1981 SCC (Cri) 720- AIR
1981 SC 1191: (1981) 3 SCR 647:1981 Cri L] 889.
212
245. State of Punjab v, Jagdev Singh Tal-wandi, (1984) 1 SCC 596, 608: 1984 SCC (Cri) 135-
AIR 1984 SC 444:1984 Cn Lj 177.
246. . Asha Keshavrao Bhosale v, Union of India, (1985) 4 SCC 361, 367- 1985 SCC (Cri) 561-
AIR 1986 SC-283.
247 Madan Lai Anand v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 81, 88 to 90- 1990 SCC (Cri) 51- AIR
1990 SC 176: (1990) 25 ECC 277:1990 Cri L] 659: (1990) 45 ELT 204.
248. K. Aruna Kumari v. Govt, of A.P., (1988) I SCC 296, 305, 306: 1988 SCC (Cri) 116- AIR
1988 SC 227:1988 Cri LJ 411.
249. Prakash Chandra Mehia v. Commr. and Secv., Govt of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144 166-
1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
250. Prakash Chandra Mehtd v. Commr, and Sec\., Govt, of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144-167-
1985 SCC (Cn) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
213
The expression 'grounds' in Art. 22(5), and for that matter, in S. 3(3) of
the COFEPOSA Act, includes not only conclusions of fact but all the 'basic
facts' on which conclusions are founded. The basic facts are different from
subsidiary facts or further particulars of the basic facts. If in a case the so-
called 'grounds of detention' communicated to the detenu lack the basic or
primary facts and this deficiency is not made good and communicated to the
detenu within the period specified in S. 3(3), the omission will be fatal to the
vaUdity of the detention. If, however, the grounds communicated are
elaborate and contain all the 'basic facts' but are not comprehensive enough to
cover all the details or of the 'basic facts', such particulars, must be suppUed to
the detenu, if asked for by him with reasonable expedition, within a
reasonable time. What is reasonable time conforming with reasonable
expedition, required for the supply of such details or further particulars, is a
question of fact depending upon the facts and circumstances of the particular
case. In the circumstances of a given case, if the time taken for supply of such
additional particulars, exceeds marginally, the maximum fixed by the statute
for communication of the grounds, it may still be regarded 'reasonable', while
in the facts of another case, even a delay which does not exceed 15 days, may
be unjustified, and amount to an ii\fraction of the constitutional imperative of
affording the earUest opportunity for making the representation.
In the instant case, the grounds supplied to the detenu were elaborate
and full and contained all the 'basic facts', although they did not set out all the
details or particulars of those 'basic facts' relied upon or referred to therein.
There was thus no breach of the first constitutional imperative embodied in
Art. 22(5).
However, there had been a delay of about 17 days (excluding the time
taken for communications in hansit) in the supply of the further particulars of
the basic facts to the detenu. But in the facts and circumstances of the case the
period of 17 days was not an unreasonably long one which could amount to a
denial of the detenu's right to make an effective representation. Several causes
had contributed to this 'delay'. [The Supreme Court after con-the
circumstances found them relevant for condoning the delay and that the
delay of 17 days could not be said to be so unreasonable as to amount to an
infractionof Art. 22(5)].251
Hansmukh v. State of Gujarat, (1981) 2 SCC 175: 1981 SCC (Cri) 387: AIR 1981 SC 28-
(1981) 1 SCR 353:1981 ML] (Cri) 172.
214
substitute its own opinion for that of the authority. In the instant case the
ground of detention was only one, viz, the detenu was acting prejudicial to
the maintenance of supplies of commodity, that is, levy cement, essential to
the community by diverting it.to the open market. The question whether the
deteni was acting in a maimer prejudicial to the maintenance of supplies
essential to the life of the community is a matter of inference to be drawn
from facts. It appears from the grounds, i.e., the facts set out that the detenu
had made a statement admitting that he had diverted 600 bags of levy cement
issued to him for use in the masonry ballast wall along the railway track and
therefore the District Magistrate was justified in coming to the con-elusion
that he (the detenu) was acting in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of
supplies of the commodity essential to the community.252
Reliance inter alia on certain grounds found to be bad and unsustainable
would be fatal to the entire order of detention — National Security Act, 1980
(65 of 1980), Ss. 3 and 8.253
(b) What should be stated in grounds
Criminal cases in which detenu found to be not guilty was acquitted — Held,
cannot form part of the grounds and hence cannot be taken into consideration
- National Security' Act, 1980 (65 of 1980), Ss, 3(2) and 8.254
It is not necessary to mention in the grounds the reaction of the detaining
authority in relation to every piece of evidence separately — Detaining
authorit}^'s view that not much credence could be attached to a particular
document need not be mentioned in the grounds especially when it was
stated in the grounds that the detaining authority formed his opinion after
consideration of that document - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S, 3.255
Mere allegations against the detenu in an FIR, without showing that the
authorities had any vahd reasons to believe those allegations to be true —
Held, cannot constitute a ground even while the case registered on that
complaint pending trial.256
Particular of prejudicial activities need not be specified in the detention order
if subsequently furnished in ground of detention— National Security Act,
1980, S. 3.
A notification dated February 8, 1982 was published in the Gazette
specifying 16 items of supplies and services and which were essential to the
community. An order of detention was passed thereafter under S. 3(2) read
with S. 3(3) of the National Security Act against the respondent without
252. K, Aruna Kumari v. Govt, of A,P., (1988) 1 SCC 296, 305? 306: 1988 SCC (Cri) 116: AIR
1988 SC 227:1988 Cri LJ 411.
253. Simla Dewan v. Lt.-Governor, (1982) 2 SCC 469:1982 SCC (Cri) 484: AIR 1982 SC 1257:
1982 Cri LJ 1737.
254. Simla Dewan v. Lt.-Governor, (1982) 2 SCC 469: 1982 SCC (Cri) 484: AIR 1982 SC 1257:
1982 Cri L] 1737.
255. State of Gujarat \, Sunil Fulchand Shah, (1988) 1 SCC 600, 604: 1988 SCC (Cri) 201: AIR
1988 SC 723: (1988) 16ECC 16: (1988) 1 Crimes 854.
256. Bunla Dewan \. Lt.-Governor, (1982) 2 SCC 469:1982 SCC (Cri) 484: AIR 1982 SC 1257:
1982 Cri L] 1737.
215
257. DM. V. Sarat Mudoi, (1984) 1 SCC 25, 27, 28:1984 SCC (Cri) 21: AIR 1984 SC 43.
258 State of Punjab v. Sukhpal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35, 43:1990 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR 1990 SC
231:1990 Cri LJ 584.
259 Prakash Chandra Mehra v. Commr. and Secy., Govt of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144S
166,167:1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
216
260. Dhananjoy Das v. DM, (1982) 2 SCC 521: 1982 SCC (Cri) 488: AIR 1982 SC 1315: 1982
Cri L] 1779.
261. National Security Act, 1980, S, 3, v. State of U.P., (1983) 4 SCC 537, 539:1984 SCC (Cri)
16: AIR 1984 SC 46:1983 Cri LJ1785,
262. Prakash Chandra Mehta v. Commr. and Secy., Govt, of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144,167:
1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
217
263. Sonain Yongda v. State of Sikkim, (1986)3 SCC 594: 1986 SCC (Cri) 341: AIR 1986 SC
1736:1986 CriLJ 1606.
264. Yogendra Murari v. State of T.P., (1988) 4 SCC 559, 563: 1988 SCC (Cri) 992: AIR 1988
SCC 1835:1988 BLJR 592.
265. Shashi Aggarwal v. State of U.P., (1988) 1 SCC 436, 440: 1988 SCC (Cri) 178: AIR 1988
SC 596: 3 Crimes 184.
266. Gulab Mehra v. State of U.P., (1987) 4 SCC 3025 317: 1987 SCC (Cri) 721: AIR 1987 SC
2332.
267. Wasiuddin Ahmed v. D.M., (1981) 4 SCC 521, 534:1982 SCC (Cri) 4: AIR 1981 SC 2166:
1981 Cri LJ1825.
268. Vijay Narain Singh v. State of Bihar, (1984) 3 SCC 14, 24:1984 SCC (Cri) 361: AIR 1984
SC 1334: 1984 Cri LJ 909.
218
269. Fitrat Raza Khan v. State of U.P., (1982) 2 SCC 449: 1982 SCC (Cri) 472: AIR 1982 SC
146:1982 Cri L] 338.
270, D.M V. Sarat Mudoi, (1984) 1 SCC 25, 28:1984 SCC (Cri) 21: AIR 1984 SC 43.
271 State of Punjab v, Sukhpal Singfi, (1990) 1 SCC 35, 44:1990 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR 1990 SC
231:1990 Cri LJ 584.
272 Anand Prakasfi v. State of U.P., (1990) 1 SCC 291, 296: 1990 SCC (Cri) 96: AIR 1990 SC
516.
219
273. Pushpa Devi M. Jatia v. ML. Wadhawan. (1987) 3 SCC 367, 380:1987 SCC (Cri) 526: AIR
1987 SC 1748:1987 Cri LJ1888: (1987) 12ECC356,
274. Vashisht Narain Karwaria v. State of U.P., (1990) 2 SCC 629, 633, 634; 1990 SCC (Cri)
372: AIR 1990 SC 1272:1990 Cri L] 1311:1990 All LJ 296.
275. State of Maharashtra v. Ramesh Kumar Shobhraj Jain, (1988) 1 SCC 597: 1988 SCC
(Cri) 199: AIR 1988 SC 2138.
220
with the incident stated in the ground and a copy of general diary relating to
the offence were furnished. The averments made in the police reports
unequivocally and clearly spell out that the detenu was a hardened criminal,
having a his control often committing heinous crimes, that many cases against
the detenu were registered in various police stations and that he was in the
habit of committing offences. Question was whether the sponsoring authority
had placed extraneous materials which had influenced the mind of the
detaining while passing the detention order and as such the detention order
was Hable to be quashed. Quashing the detention order.
Held:
The above averments which are extraneous touching the character of
the detenu, though not referred to in the grounds of detention, might have
influenced the mind of the detaining authority to some extent one way or
other in reaching the subjective satisfaction to the decision of directing the
detention of the detenu. Had these extraneous materials not been placed
before the detaining authority, he might or might not have passed this order.
The detention order was suffering from the vice of the consideration of
extraneous materials vitiating the validity of the order. "^^^
Vashisht Narain Karwana v. State of U.P., 1990 Cri LJ NOC 36 (AH), reversed
Extraneous considerations — Affidavit in opposition showing that in arriving
at the subjective satisfaction, detenu's association with a pohtical party
operating in the country — Whether consideration extianeous or irrelevant
which would vitiate the detention order, not considered. 277
(f) Vagueness of grounds
Vague grounds — Particulars about victims and places of offence alleged
against detenu not mentioned in grounds — Held, grounds vague —
Detenu could not make effective representation against his detention —
Hence detention order illegal and bad — Constitution of India, Art. 22(5).^78
Vague grounds violative of Art, 22(5) — Detenu alleged to be a dangerous
person within the meaning of S. 2(c) of Gujarat PASAA — In absence of
particulars regarding the victims and places of the alleged offences, held on
facts, grounds vague — Statement that the alleged activities of the detenu was
coming in the way of maintenance of public order also vague — In the
circumstances detenu not able to make proper and effective representation —
Hence, Art, 22(5) violated - Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act,
1985, Ss. 2(c) and 3(1) - Constitiition of India, Art 22(5).
Article 22(5) requires that the grounds must not be vague but must be
specific, relevant in order to enable the detenu to make an appropriate and
effective representation against the same before the Advisory Board as well as
276. Vashisht Narain Karwaria v. State of U.P., (1990) 2 SCC 629, 633: 1990 SCC (Cri) 372:
AIR 1990 SC 1272:1990 Cri LJ 1311:1990 All L} 296.
277. Merugu Sat\'anaravana v. State of A.P., (1982) 3 SCC 301: 1983 SCC (Cri) 18- AIR 1982
SC 1543:1982 CriLJ 2357,
278. jahangirkhar\ Fazalkhan Pathan v. Police Commr., (1989) 3 SCC 590, 595, 596:1989 SCC
(Cri) 664: AIR 1989 SC 1812: (1989) 3 Crimes 24.
221
before other authorities ir\cluding detaining authority. The grounds and the
averments made in the grounds which were served on the detenu are vague
and as such they are violative of Art. 22(5). ^79
Pushkar Mukherjee v. State ofW.B., (1969) 1 SCC 10; Piyush Kantilal Mehta v.
Commr, of Police, Ahemdahad, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 322, relied on
Vagueness — Allegations should not be vague and general in nahire and
should be supported by particular incidents — On facts held, grounds
vague.2^0
Vagueness — Grounds to be construed in the context of facts.^^^
Vagueness — Absence of particulars or details regarding pendency of
many cases/offences as well as other allegations against detenu made in the
documents furnished along with the sole ground — Held, allegations vague
which prevented the detenu from making effective representation — Con-
stitution of India, Art. 22(5).
No particulars or details had been given in the police report enclosed
with the grounds of detention in regard to the alleged 'many cases/offences9
said to have been registered in various police stations against the detenu and
in regard to the allegations that he was a hardened criminal and had a gang
often committing heinous crimes and that it had become the habit of the
detenu to commit offences. There is therefore force in the submission that the
had been deprived of making an effective and purposeful representation as
envisaged under Art. 22(5). ^82
Vagueness — Facts on which conclusion regarding detention drawn by
detaining authority constitute the grounds — Document containing the
grounds must be read as a whole for ascertaining subjective satisfaction of the
authority — Vagueness of any ground will violate Art, 22(5) and render the
detention order void — But absence of minute details in the grounds will
not denote vagueness — Vagueness to be determined on facts and cir-
cumstances of each case— On facts held, grounds not vague — National
Security Act, 1980 (65 of 1980), S. 3(3) - Constitiition of India, Art. 22(5)
The grounds of detention must be in existence on the date when the
order was passed and the authority concerned has to be satisfied about the
grounds of detentioii on the date of the order and the satisfaction of the
detaining authority must be clear on the face of it from the grounds of
detention itself. The material facts on the basis of which subjective satisfaction
was derived for passing the order of detention become a part and parcel of
the grounds and must be supphed to the detenu. It is the document itself
which will be taken to be the proof of what weighed with the detaining
279. Abdul Razak Nannekhan Pathan v. Police Commr., (1989) 4 SCC 435 50:1989 SCC (Cri)
679
280. Piyush Kantilal Mehta v. Commr. of Police, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 322? 328:1989 SCC (Cri)
438: AIPv 1989 SC 491:1989 Cri LJ 956.
281. Shafiq Alimad v. D.M., (1989) 4 SCC 556:1989 SCC (Cri) 774: AIR 1990SC^00.
282. Vashisht Narain Karwaria v. State of U.P., (1990) 2 SCC 629, 634: 1990 SCC (Cri) 372:
AIR 1990 SC 1272:1990 Cri LJ 1311:1990 All LJ 296.
222
authority while passing the order of detention and for this no extraneous
evidence is admissible.
The Inclusion of an or non-existent ground, among other relevant grounds is
an infringement of the right to be informed, as soon as may be, of the grounds
which led to the subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority and the
inclusion of an obscure or vague ground among clear and definite grounds is
an infringement of the right to be furnished with sufficient particulars to
enable the detenu to make a representation provided under Art. 22(5).
The question whether a particular ground is vague will depend on the facts
and circumstances of each case because vagueness is a relative term; If the
basic facts have been given in a particular case constituting the grounds of
detention which enable the detenu to make an effective representation,
merely because meticulous details of facts are not given will not vitiate the
order of detention. ^83
Vagiteness — Material disclosed vague with reference to the persons affected
or victimised by detenu as also time and place of such victimisation —
Consequently detenu unable to make an effective representation — Held,
detention order vitiated and violative of An. 22 (5). ^84
A.K. Roy V. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152, relied on
Vagueness — Separate incidents of extorting money from shopkeepers
by threatening them and of throwing bomb on police party causing panic
alleged in the grounds — Particular of names of persons who had been
threatened for money and names of witnesses in whose presence threat was
given or alleged bomb was thrown not furnished — Held, grounds vague —
Constitiition of India, Art. 22(5) - National Security Act, 1980, S. 3(2)
The grounds were vague and it was not possible for the detenu to give
an effective representation against the grounds which is one of the
requirements enjoined in Art, 22(5). The police personnel who witnessed the
incidents and those who recorded the FIR could have come forward to give
evidence. In such circumstances, the open statement made in the affidavit of
the Sub-Inspector of Police that the witnesses were afraid of disclosing then-
names and coming forward to give evidence is wholly incredulous and it
cannot be accepted. The prosecution of the appellant for the • substantive
offences can be properly proceeded with in this case. ^85
Ahdid Gaffer v. State ofW.B., (1975) 4 SCC 59:1975 SCC (Cri) 309, followed
Vagueness — Statement of witnesses who had deposed against detenu
supplied to detenu without disclosing their names — Detaining authority-
stating that disclosure of the names might have led to infliction of bodily
injuries or even death of the witnesses - Though " there may be certam
283. Dhananjoy Das v. AM., (1982) 2 SCC 521: 1982 SCC (Cri) 488: AIR 1982 SC 1315: 1982
Cri LJ1779.
284. Ahmedhussain Shaikhhussain v. Commr, of Police, Ahmedabad, (1989) 4 SCC 751, 757,
758:1990 SCC (Cri) 86: AIR 1989 SC 2274:1989 Cri LJ 2312.
285. Gulab Mehra v. State of U.P., (1987) 4 SCC 302S 318:1987 SCC (Cri) 721: AIR 1987 SC^
2332.
223
286. Ahmedhussain Shaikhhussain v. Commr of Police, Ahmedabad, (1989) 4 SCC 751, 758:
1990 SCC (Cri) 86: AIR 1989 SC 2274:1989 Cri LJ 2312.
224
287. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152; AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri L] 340:1982 ML] (Cri) 524.
226
In the present case the two were too remote and not proximate to the
order of detention. In absence of any provision in the National Security Act
similar to S. 5-A of the CQFEPOSA Act it cannot be postulated what view
would have been taken by the detaining authority about the need to detain
the petitioner under S. 3(2) of the Act if he had not taken into account the
and not proximate grounds into consideration in arriving at the subjective
satisfaction. Therefore, the petitioner's detention is unsustainable in law and
accordingly the detention order must be quashed.
Per Desni, ]. (dissenting)
The detaining authority may examine the history of the criminal
activity of the detenu and take into account a continuous course of conduct
showing repeated indulgence into prejudicial activity which may permit an
inference that unless preventive detention is resorted to it would not be
possible to wean away such person from such prejudicial activity, for
ordinarily a single stray incident may not, unless contiary is shown, be
sufficient to invoke the drastic power of preventive detention, However, if
there is a big time lag between the last of the events leading to the detention
order being made and the remote earUer event, the same cannot be tieated as
showing a continuity of criminal activity. But if events in close proximity with
each other are taken into account for drawing a permissible inference that
these are not or spasmodic events but disclose a continuous prejudicial
activit}^ the reference to earlier events camiot be styled as state or remote
which would vitiate the order of detention. The test of proximity is not a rigid
or mechanical test to be blindly appUed by merely counting the number of
months between the offending acts the order of detention. The question is
whether the past activities of the detenu are such that the detaining authority
can reasonably come to the conclusion that the detenu is likely to continue in
his unlawful activities.
288. Kamlakar Prasad Chaturvedi v. Stati- of MP., (1983) 4 SCC 443, 445, 452:1983 SCC (Cri)
848: AIR 1984 SC 211.
289. Pitrat Raza Klian v. State of U.P., (1982) 2 SCC 449:1982 SCC (Cri) 472: AIR 1982 SC 146:
1982 Cri LJ 338.
227
next year — But speeches mentioned in the ground as a part of the continuous
course of conduct brought out by the remaining grounds — Held, allegation
regarding speeches in the ground not too remote to make it irrelevant.^^o
Punitive and state order of detention— Commission of alleged criminal
offences by the detenu about one and a half years back forming basis of
detention order — No explanation given for failure to take action under
preventive detention \a^A^ at the earliest after commission of the offence —
Detenu appearing before magistrate on all dates of hearing in criminal case
pending against him for the alleged offences even after passing the detention
order but no reason given for failure to take him under custody during that
period — Held, the charge too to have any real nexus with the detention and
in the circumstances the detention is punitive rather than preventive in nature
and therefore, vitiated - COFEPOSA Act, 1974 (52 of 1974), S. 3(1). 29i
Alleged incidents about one year old — But proximity between the incidents
existing indicating detenu's criminal propensity — In the circumstances,
held, conclusion of the detaining authority that detenu was habitually
committing or abetting commission of offences, not open to interference by
Court - Bihar Control of Crimes Act, 1981, Ss. 2(d) & 12(2).
Upon the materials the DM in his order of detention under S. 12(2) of
the Bihar Control of Crimes Act, 1981 stated that he was satisfied that the
detenu was an anti-social element and was habitual in committing offences
punishable under Chs. XVI and XVII, IPC and as such his movements and
acts adversely affected the public order. The incidents referred to in the
grounds of detention showing criminal propensity of the detenu had taken
place one year prior to the date of passing of the detention order.
Held:
While adequacy or sufficiency is no ground for a challenge, relevancy
or proximity is relevant in order to determine whether an order of detention
was arrived at irrationally or unreasonably.
In the background of the present case and having regard to the
definition of anti-social element in S. 2(d) of the Bihar Control of Crimes Act,
if an appropriate authority charged with the implementation of the Act comes
to the satisfaction that the detenu is one who is habitually committing or
abetting the commission of offences, such a conclusion is neither irrational nor
unreasonable. Anti-social elements creating havoc have to be taken care of by
law. The power of preventive detention cannot be said to have been used to
clip the 'wings of the accused' who was involved in a criminal prosecution.
The fact that the detenu was in jail had been taken into consideration. All the
relevant documents were in fact supplied and no other document was asked
for. In the facts of this case and having regard to the nature of the offences, the
impugned order cannot be said to be invalid and improper one. There was.
290. Sonam Yongda v. State of Sikkim, (1986) 3 SCC 594: 1986 SCC (Cri) 341: AIR 1986 SC
1736:1986 Cri LJ1606.
291. Harnek Singh v. State of Punjab, (1982) 1 SCC 116:1982 SCC (Cri) 121: AIR 1982 SC 682:
1982 CriLJ 420.
228
292. Raj Kumar Singh v. State of Bihar, (1986) 4 SCC 407, 412 to 415:1986 SCC (Cri) 481: AIR
1986 SC 2173:1986 CriLJ 2042.
293. Rajendra Prasad v. State of U.P., (1981) 4 SCC 558:1981 SCC (Cri) 870: AIR 1982 SC
1256.
294. Vijay Narain Singh v. State of Bihar, (1984) 3 SCC 14, 26, 35: 1984 SCC (Cri) 361: AIR
1984 SC 1334:1984 Cri LJ 909.
229
would be likely to repeat such acts as to warrant his detention. The question
which, therefore, needs to be considered is whether from the past conduct of
the petitioner as set out in the grounds of detention it could reasonably be
inferred that the petitioner would be likely to repeat such acts in the future.
In the present case the evidence would show that the petitioner was
indulging in. the activity of smuggling of gold as a carrier for monetary
consideration. This was a deliberate act on the part of the petitioner and he
had prepared himself for it by obtaining a passport in a false name and
acquiring requisite skill to conceal such a large quantity of gold in his body.
Taking into consideration the circumstances an inference could reasonably be
drawn that unless detained the petitioner would be likely to indulge in
smuggling of goods in future and, therefore, there was a reasonable basis for
the detaining authority to arrive at the requisite satisfaction. ^95
Solitary ground — When not sufficient to sustain detention — Further
grounds cannot be supplemented by filing affidavit — National Security Act,
1980, S. 3(3).
Even one ground may be regarded as sufficient if the activity alleged is
of such a nature that the detaining authority could reasonably infer that the
detenu must be habitually engaged in such activity or there may be other
circumstances set out in the grounds of detention from which the detaining
authority could reasonably be satisfied even on the basis of one ground that
unless the detenu is detained, he might indulge in such activity in future. But
in the instant case the only ground alleged against the petitioner was that he,
along with others, jointly committed murder in broad daylight. No other cir-
cumstances were mentioned. It was difficult to infer from the solitary ground
that the act alleged to have been committed by the petitioner would have
disturbed public order as distinct from law and order or that one single act
committed by the petitioner was of such a character that it could reasonably
be inferred by the detaining authority that if not detained, he would be likely
to indulge in such activity in future. Therefore, the ground of detention given
in support of the order of detention was irrelevant.
The detaining authority cannot by an affidavit filed in court
supplement what is stated in the grounds of detention or add to it. ^96
Solitary incident of smuggling — Facts and circumstances giving rise to
the inference that detenu was member of a smuggling syndicate — Merely
because only one incident coming to light does not mean that it was his
maiden act of smuggling — Held, detaining authority justified in reaching
satisfaction that detenu was engaged in smuggling — COFEPOSA Act, 1974,
S. 4. 297
295. M. Mohd. Sulthan v. Jt. Secy., to Govt, of India, (1991) 1 SCC 144: 1991 SCC (Cri) 104:
AIR 1990 SC 2222:1990 Cri LJ 2473.
296. Ramveer Jatav v. State of U.P. (1986) 4 SCC 762; 1987 SCC (Cri) 10: AIR 1987 SC 63.
297. Shiv Ratan Makim v. Union of India, (1986) 1 SCC 404:1986 SCC (Cri) 74: AIR 1986 SC
610:1986 Cri LJ 813.
230
Sufficiency of, for passing detention order — Quality and nature of the
incidents and not their quantity material — Even one incident may be
sufficient to satisfy the detaining authority — On facts held, subjective
satisfaction arrived at by detaining authority on the basis of two incidents
referred to in the grounds proper. 298
(i) Identical grounds to different detenus
Same ground, different detenu — Identical ground, on which another person
involved in the same transaction, found by Advisory Board as insufficient for
sustaining that person's detention — Held, is a highly relevant circumstance,
though not binding, in the context of detention of the petitioner-detenu —
Failure to place that circumstance before the detaining authority when it
passed order of detention against the petitioner, held, amounted to non-
application of mind — Hence, detention order against the petitioner must be
set aside.299
REPRESENTATION BEFORE APPROPRIATE AUTHORITY/GOVT.
Expeditious consideration of detenu's representation — Detenu's right to
and detaining authority's corresponding obligation in regard to, held, is a
constitutional imperative under Art. 22(5) and is not dependant on any
particular preventive detention legislations which must conform to Art 22(5)
— An unreasonable delay in considering the representation cannot be
justified on the ground that unlike COFEPOSA Act, National Security Act
makes the delay inevitable — Administrative red tapism cannot afford a valid
explanation for such delay — On facts, held, unreasonable and unexplained
delay rendered continued detention of the detenus illegal — Constitution of
India, Art 22(5) - National Security Act, 1980 (65 of 1980), Conservation of
Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (52 of
1974), S. 3(3).30o
The detenu has an independent constitutional right to make his
representation under Art. 22(5) of the Constitution of India. Correspondingly,
there is a constitutional mandate commanding the concerned authority to
whom the detenu forwards his representation questioning the correctness of
the detention order clamped upon him arid requesting for his release, to
consider the said representation within reasonable dispatch and to dispose
the same as expeditiously as possible. This constitutional requirement must
be satisfied with respect but if this constitutional imperative is observed in
breach, it would amount to negation of the constitutional obligation rendering
the continued detention constitutionally impermissible and illegal, since such
a breach would defeat the very concept of liberty — the highly cherished right
— which is enshrined in Art 21.
298. AUjan Mian v. Distt. Magistrate, (1983) 4 SCC 301, 308:1983 SCC (Cri) 840: AIR 1983 SC
1130:1983 Cri LJ1649.
299. Mohd. Shakeel Wahid Ahmed v. State of Maharashtra, (1983) 2 SCC 392: AIR 1983
SC541.
300. Khatoon Begum v. Union of India, (1981). 2 SCC 480:1981 SCC (Cri) 493: AIR 1981 SC
1077: (1981) 3 SCR 137:1981 Cri LJ 606:1981MLJ (Cri) 466.
231
301. R?ma Dhondu Borade v. V.K. Sarqf, (1989) 3 SCC 173, 179, 180: 1989 SCC (CM) 520:
AIR 1989 SC1861: (1989) 2 Cri LJ 653.
302. Phillippa Anne Duke v. State of T.N., (1982) 2 SCC 389:1982 SCC (Cri) 444: AIR 1982 SC
1178:1982 Cri LJ 1389.
303. Raghavendra Singh v. Supdt., Distt. Jail, (1986) 1 SCC 650:1986 SCC (Cri) 60: AIR 1986
SC 356:1986 Cri LJ 493:1986 All LJ 397.
304. Pushpa Devi M, Jatia v. M.L Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SCC 367, 395 to 399:1987 SCC (Cri)
526: AIR 1987 SC 1748:1987 Cri LJ 1888: (1987) 12 ECC 356.
232
305. Vijay Kumar v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 57, 68: 1988 SCC (Cri) 293: AIR 1988 SC
934; 17 ECC 82: (1988) 3 Crimes 50.
306. Sanjay Kumar Aggarwal v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 309, 317:1990 SCC (Cri) 473:
AIR 1990 SC 1202:1990 Cri LJ 1238.
307. Vijay Kumar Dharna v. Union of India. (1990) 1 SCC 606:1990 SCC (Cri) 247: AIR 1990
SC 1184: (1990) 48 ELT159.
308. Devji Vallabhbhai Tandel v. Administrator, (1982) 2 SCC 222:1982 SCC (Cri) 403: AIR
1982 SC 1029:1982 Cri LJ 799.
233
309. State of U.P. v. Zavad Zama Khan, (1984) 3 SCC 505, 5095 511:1984 SCC (Cri) 425: AIR
1984 SC1095.
310. State of Punjab v. Jagdev Singh Talwandi, (1984) 1 SCC 596, 605: 1984 SCC (Cri) 135:
AIR 1984 SC 444:1984 Cri LJ177.
234
311. Abdu Salam v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 15, 18: 1990 SCC (Cri) 451: AIR 1990 SC
1446:1990 Cri LJ 1502: (1990) 48 ELT162: (1990) 3 Crimes 82.
312. Mohinuddin v. D.M., (1987) 4 SCC 58,66, 67:1987 SCC (Cri) 674: AIR 1987 SC 1977.
313. Rahamatullah v. State of Bihar, (1981) 4 SCC 559:1981 SCC (Cri) 871: AIR 1981 SC 2069:
1981 Cri LJ 1698. v^
235
314. Nafisa Khalifa Ghanem v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 422:1982 SCC (Cri) 236.
315. Tara Chand v. State of Rajasthan, (1981) 1 SCC 416: 1981 SCC (Cri) 165: AIR 1980 SC
2133.
316. Raj Kishore Prasad v. State of Bihar, (1982) 3 SCC 10:1982 SCC (Cri) 530: AIR 1983 SC
320.
317. Raverdy Marc Germain Jules v. State of Maharashtra, (1982) 3 SCC 135:1982 SCC (Cri)
638: AIR 1983 SC31L
236
318. Mamma v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 3 SCC 566, 568-570:1981 SCC (Cri) 750: AIR
1981 SC1753; 1981 Cri U1256.
319. Kavita v. State of Maharashtra (I), (1981) 3 SCC 558, 563, 564:1981 SCC (Cri) 743: AIR
1981 SC 1641.
237
320. Kirit Kumar Chaman Lai Kundaliya v. Union of India, (1981) 2 SCC 436:1981 SCC (Cri)
471: AIR 1981 SC 1621: (1981) 2 SCR 718:1981 Cri LJ1267: (1981) 22 GLR1067.
321. Rattan Singh v. State of Punjab, (1981) 4 SCC 481:1981 SCC (Cri) 853: AIR 1982 SC 1.
322. Tara Chand v. State of Rajasthan, (1981) 1 SCC 416: 1981 SCC (Cri) 165: AIR 1980 SC
2133.
238
Government or its officer. That power, in order to be real and effective, must
imply a right in a detenu to make a representation to the Central Government
against the order of detention. Thus, the failure of the State Government to
comply with the request of the detenu for the onward transmission of the
representation to the Central Government has deprived the detenu of his
valuable right to have his detention revoked by that Government. That being
so, the continued detention of the detenu must be held to be illegal and
constitutionally impermissible. 323
Representation for, made by detenu to President and Prime Minister received
in Ministry of Home Affairs after about two months and one week and
disposed of within a week by the Home Ministry — Delay in Secretariats of
President and Prime Minister not explained — Held, part of the delay may be
due to detenu's failure to send the representation direct to the concerned
ministry viz, the Home Ministry but that cannot justify the enormous delay —
In view of unexplained and unduly long delay in disposal of the
representations, further detention of the detenu, held, illegal NSA, 1980,
Ss. 14 & 3. 324
(e) Delay in disposal of representation
Inordinate delay in disposal of, in absence of proper explanation, violates Art
22(5) - Constitution of India, Art, 22(5).
The detenu submitted representation against his detention originally
on January 1,1988 which he got back and resubmitted it on February 2,1988.
It was stated on behalf of the State that the representation dated February 2,
1988 was received in the COFEPOSA section of Ministry of Finance on
February 16,1988 witli a letter dated February 5, 1988 from the Government
of Kerala; that as certain information was not available with the Central
Government, the Collector of Customs, was asked to get a copy of the
representation from the State Government and to send his comments; that
Collector of Customs, informed the Central Government by a telex message
dated March 1,1988 which was received in the COFEPOSA section on March
8, 1988 informing that the representation was not available with the Home
Department; that thereafter a copy of the representation was forwarded to the
Collector of Customs by post on March 8, 1988; that the comments of the
Collector were received back on March 28, 1988; that then the representation
along with the comments were placed before the Joint Secretary, COFEPOSA
section on March 30,1988, who forwarded the same to the Minister of State
for Revenue on the same day and on April 4, 1988 the Minister of State
forwarded his comments to the Finance Minister who considered and rejected
the representation on April 8,1988.
Held:
The representation of the detenu had not been given prompt and
expeditious consideration, and was allowed to lie without being properly
323. Haji Mohd. Akhlaq v. Distt. Magistrate, 1988 Supp SCC 538:1988 SCC (Cri) 886.
324. Raghavendra Singh v. Supdt, Distt, Jail, (1986) 1 SCC 650, 652, 653: 1986 SCC (Cri) 60:
AIR 1986 SC 356:1986 Cri LJ 493:1986 All LJ 397.
239
attended to. The explanation that the delay has occurred in seeking the
comments of the Collector of Customs etc. is not a convincing and acceptable
explanation. The delay of 72 days in the absence of satisfactory explanation is
too long a period for ignoring the indolence on the part of the concerned
authority. Hence, the unexplained delay in disposal of the representation of
the detenu is violative of Art, 22(5) rendering the order of detention invalid.325
Non-disposal of — Request describing as representation made for furnishing
translated copies of the grounds of detention in the language known to the
detenu — Addressed to Chairman, Central Advisory Board sent through Jail
Superintendent — Held, amounted to a representation to the appropriate
government, which was obliged to consider and dispose it of independently
irrespective of reference to the Board — Failure to do so violated Art, 22(5)
and vitiated the detention - Constitution of India, Art 22(5) - COFEPOSA
Act, 1974.
Under Art. 22(5) no proforma for representation has been prescribed.
Opportunity to make a representation comprehends a request for supply of
translated copies. Therefore, the detenu's 'representation' asking for copies of
documents must be held to have amounted to a representation.
Article 22(5) does not say which is the authority to whom
representation shall be made or which authority shall consider it. But it is
indisputable that the representation may be made by the detenu to the
appropriate government and it was mandatory on the part of the appropriate
government to consider and act upon it at the earliest opportunity and failure
to do so would be fatal to the detention order. In the present case though the
representation was addressed to the Chairman, Central Advisory Board the
same was forwarded by the Jail authorities and it must be taken to have been
a representation to the appropriate government which was to consider it
before placing it before the Advisory Board. But there was no consideration
before and even after the Advisory Board considered the case of the detenu. It
is settled law that delay in disposing the representation when inordinate and
unexplained the detention would be bad and the detenu must be ordered to
be released forthwith. Therefore, Art. 22(5) was violated.^26
Non-consideration of representation alleged — Absence of counter-affidavit
by State — Allegation remaining uncontraverted — Continued detention of
detenu, held, illegal and constitutionally impermissible— Detention quashed
- National Security Act, 1980, S. 3(2) - Constitution of India, Art, 22(5). 327
Representation to appropriate authority — Should be disposed of
expeditiously — Delay in disposal should he satisfactorily explained by all the
concerned authorities individually where detaining authority is unable
to personally explain delay at various stages — Inordinate and unexplained
325. T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State of Kerala, (1989) 4 SCC 741, 751: 1990 SCC (Cri) 76: AIR
1990 SC 225.
326. Kubic Darusz v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 568, 578-580: 1990 SCC (Cri) 227: AIR
1990 SC 605.
327. Ranbir Singh v. T. George Joseph, DM, Meerut, 1990 Supp SCC 54:1990 SCC (Cri) 613.
240
328. Mahesh Kumar Chauhan v. Union oi India, (1990) 3 SCC 148:1990 SCC (Cri) 434: AIR
1990 SC1455:1990 Cri LJ1507.
241
329. State of Punjab v. Sukhpal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35,489 49,54:1990 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR 1990
SC 231:1990 Cri LJ584.
330. Raisuddin v. State of U.P., (1983) 4 SCC 537, 540: 1984 SCC (Cri) 16: AIR 1984 SC 46:
1983 Cri LJ1785.
243
331. Vijay Kumar v. State of J & K, (1982) 2 SCC 43:1982 SCC (Cri) 348: AIR 1982 SC 1023:
1982 Cri LJ 988:1982 MLJ (Cri) 471.
332. Sat Pal v. State of Punjab, (1982) 1 SCC 12:1982 SCC (Cri) 46: AIR 1981 SC 2230.
244
333. Aslam Ahmed Zahire Ahmed Shaik v. Union of India, (1989) 3 SCC 277,280 to 282:
1989 SCC (Cri) 554: AIR 1989 SC1403:1989 Cri LJ1447: (1989) 22 ECC 308
334. Abdu Salam v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 15,19,20:1990 SCC (Cri) 451: AIR 1990 SC
1446:1990 Cri LJ 1502: (1990) 48 ELT162: (1990) 3 Crimes 82.
245
make he same or whose authority had not been checked — Such allegation
not made in counter-affidavit — No enquiry made about authority of the
advocate — Held, making of the representation by an advocate failed to
explain the delay in its disposal.
The contention regarding the authority of the advocate to file
representation on behalf of the detenu had not been taken up in the counter-
affidavit and cannot be urged merely at the hearing of the petition. There is
nothing in law which prevents a representation being made by an advocate
on behalf of the detenu, If there was any difficulty on that ground, enquiries
should have been made with the advocate as to what was his authority to
represent the detenu, but no such enquiry had been made in the present case.
Thus, in the present ease, the fact that the representation was made by the
advocate does not explain the delay in dealing with that representation.^^^
Delay in disposal of — Explanation for — That delay caused no prejudice to
the detenu as he had filed a writ petition before High Court against his
detention which had been dismissed — When cannot furnish a good
explanation — Constitution of India, Arts. 32 and 226.
Although the detenu-petitioner had preferred a writ petition before the
High Court, but a special leave petition filed against that decision is pending
in the Supreme Court. Moreover, at the time when the writ petition was
dismissed, the detenu-petitioner had not made any representation to the State
Government at all and hence the dismissal of his writ petition by the High
Court cannot be regarded as any substitute for consideration of his
representation by the State Government which, urilike the court, might be
entitled to go into the factual merits of the grounds forming the basis of
detention order. 3^6
Delay in disposal of — Held on facts, there vsas no laches or negligence on
the part of the detaining authority or the other authorities concerned in
dealing with the less representation of the detenu — Detaining
authority explained the delay and hence detention order not vitiated on
ground of delay. 3^7
Inordinate and unexplained delay in disposal of detenu's representation to
Chief Minister, held rendered continued detention of the detenu illegal and
unconstitutional — Explanation that Chief Minister remained on tour and
busy with important matters of the State not acceptable — Mandate of Art
22(5) explained — Constitution of India, Art. 22(5).
The District Magistrate passed an order of detention against the
appellant under S. 3(2) of the NSA on September 7, 1986. The appellant was
taken into custody or September 8 and grounds of detention were served on
335. Piara Singh v. State of Punjab, (1987) 4 SCC 550, 556:1987 SCC (Cri) 783: AIR 1987 SC
2377.
336. Piara Singh v. State of Punjab, (1987) 4 SCC 550, 556:1987 SCC (Cri) 783; AIR 1987 SC
2377.
337. Madan Lai Anand v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 81, 94:1990 SCC (Cri) 51: AIR 1990
SC 176: (1990) 25 ECC 277:1990 Cri LJ 659: (1990) 45 ELT 204.
246
Held:
The continued detention of the appellant was illegal and he must be set
at liberty forthwith. The representation made by the appellant addressed to
the Chief Minister could not lie unattended to in the Secretariat while the
Chief Minister was attending to other political affairs. Nor could the
Government keep the representation in the Secretariat till the Advisory Board
submitted its report.
In view of the wholly unexplained and unduly long delay in the
disposal of the representation by the State Government the further detention
of the appellant must be held illegal. There was utter callousness on the part
of the State Government to deal with the representation to the Chief Minister.
There was no reason why the representation submitted by the appellant could
not be dealt with by the Chief Minister with all reasonable promptitude and
diligence. The explanation that he remained away from Bombay is certainly
not a reasonable explanation.338
338. Mohinuddin v. D.M., (1987) 4 SCC 58,65 to 68:1987 SCC (Cri) 674: AIR 1987 SC 1977
247
339. Syed Farooq Mohammad v. Union of India, (1990) 3 SCC 537, 547:1990 SCC (Cri) 500:
AIR 1990 SC1597:1990 Cri LJ1622.
340. M. Mohd. Sulthan v. }t. Secy, to Govt, of India, (1991) 1 SCC 144: 1991 SCC (Cri) 104:
AIR 1990 SC 2222:1990 Cri LJ 2473.
341. Vijay Kumar v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 57, 68, 69:1988 SCC (Cri) 293: AIR 1988 SC
934: (1988) 17 ECC 82: (1988) 3 Crimes 50.
342. K. Aruna Kumari v. Govt, of A.P., (1988) 1 SCC 296, 304:1988 SCC (Cri) 116: AIR 1988
SC 227:1988 CriLJ 411.
343. Azra Fatima (Smt) v. Union of India, (1991) 1 SCC 76:1991 SCC (Cri) 641: AIR 1990 SC
1763:1990 Cri LJ 1731.
248
the representation before making the declaration — Held on facts, there was
ample evidence to show consideration of the representation before the
declaration- COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S. 9(1). ^
Delay in considering representation caused in soliciting comments from other
departments and allowing the representation to lie unattended — Held, the
delay would render the detention unconstitutional— Representation must be
taken up for consideration by detaining authority as soon as received and
unless it is absolutely necessary to wait for some assistance, it must be dealt
with continuously until final decision is taken and communicated to the
detenu - Constihition of India, Arts. 22(5) and 226. ^45
Delay in disposal of — Detailed representation challenging detention made
by an association on behalf of detenu disposed of expeditiously — Another
representation made by petitioner on behalf of the detenu, found by High
Court to be second one, mainly concentrating on necessity of keeping the
detenu in a Bombay jail instead of sending him elsewhere and only casually
impugning the detention — On facts, held, delay in disposal of petitioner's
representation did not prejudice detenu's case.^^^
Delay of one and a half months in considering — In absence of satisfactory
explanation fatal to continuance of detention. ^47
Rejection of representation about two months after the date of detention
without any reasonable explanation, held, is sufficient to vitiate detention
order — Representation must be considered by government within a
reasonable time without waiting for opinion of Advisory Board —
Constitution of India, Art 22(5) and (7). 348
Representation — Delay in considering — There is no absolute time factor in
considering representation — Detaining authority returning to India from a
foreign trip three days after receipt of the representation and disposing of the
representation three days thereafter — Held, delay not unreasonable.
The time imperative can never be absolute or obsessive. The occasional
observations made by the Supreme Court that each day's delay in dealing
with the representation must be adequately explained are meant to emphasise
the expedition with which the representation must be considered and not that
it is a magical formula, the slightest breach of which must result in the release
of the detenu. 349
344. Madhu Kharma v. Administrator, Union Territory of Delhi, (1986) 4 SCC 240, 243:
1986 SCC (Cri) 426: AIR 1987 SC 48:1987 Cri LJ 318.
345. Harish Pahwa v. State of U.P., (1981) 2 SCC 710:1981 SCC (Cri) 589: AIR 1981 SC 1126:
(1981) 3 SCR 276:1981 CriLJ 750.
346. Asha Keshavrao Bhosale v. Union of India, (1985) 4 SCC 361, 365:1985 SCC (Cri) 561:
AIR 1986 SC 283.
347. Vinay Kumar Verma v. Union of India, 1986 Supp SCC 528:1987 SCC (Cri) 169.
348. Ashok Kumar v. State of J & K, (1981) 2 SCC 73:1981 SCC (Cri) 329: AIR 1981 SC 851:
1981 CriLJ 439.
349. LM.S. Ummu Saleema v. B.B. Gujarat, (1981) 3 SCC 317:1981 SCC (Cri) 720: AIR 1981 SC
1191: (1981) 3 SCR 647:1981 Cri LJ 889.
249
350. Lallubhai Jogibhai Patel v. Union of India, (1981) 2 SCC 427: 1981 SCC (Cri) 463- AIR
1981 SC 728: (1981) 2 SCR 352:1981 Cri LJ 288:1981 MLJ (Cri) 350.
351. Vijay Kumar v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 57, 675 68:1988 SCC (Cri) 293- AIR 1988
SC 934: (1988) 17 ECC 82: (1988) 3 Crimes 50.
352. Suresh Bhojraj Chelani v. State of Maharashtra, (1983) 1 SCC 382: 1983 SCC (Cri) 202-
AIR 1983 SC 181:1983 Cri LJ 342.
353. Youssuf Abbas v. Union of India. (1982) 2 SCC 380: 1982 SCC (Cri) 440- AIR 1982 SC
1170:1982 Cri LJ 1396.
354. Devi Lai Mahto v. State of Bihar, (1982) 3 SCC 328:1983 SCC (Cri) 37- AIR 1982 SC 1548-
1982 Cri LJ 2363.
250
355. Suryakant v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 2 SCC 202:1981 SCC (Cri) 408: AIR 1980 SC
2130.
356. Sardar Kashmir Singh v. Union of India, 1981 SCC 55:1982 SCC (Cri) 133.
357. Gazi Khan v. State ofRajasthan, (1990) 3 SCC 459: AIR 1990 SC 1361: 1990 Cri LJ1420:
(1990)29ECC5.
358. Piara Singh v. State of Punjab, (1987) 4 SCC 550, 555:1987 SCC (Cri) 783: AIR 1987 SC
2377.
359. Masuma v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 3 SCC 566, 573:1981 SCC (Cri) 750: AIR 1981
SC 1753:1981 Cri LJ 1256.
251
9. ADVISORY BOARD
(a) Constitution of the Board
Board not yet constituted - Passing of detention orders in such situation
deprecated - Constihition of India, Art. 22(4).
360. Salim Rajmohmad Muslim v. State of Gujarat, (1988).3 SCC 476 477- 1988 SCC fCri^
688. ' ' ^ '
361. Iris Fernandes v. Union of India, (1981) 3 SCC 663:1981 SCC (Cri) 788.
362. Fitrat Raza Khan v. State of U.P., (1982) 2 SCC 449:1982 SCC (Cri) 472- AIR 1982 SC146-
1982 Cri LJ 338.
363. Raj Kishore Prasad v. State of BiJiar, (1982) 3 SCC 10:1982 SCC (Cri) 530- AIR 1983 SC
320.
364. Rama Dhondu Boradev. V.K. Sara, (1989) 3 SCC 173,180:1989 SCC (Cri) 520- AIR 1989
SC 1861: (1989)2 Cri LJ 653.
365. S. Gavathri v. Commr. of Police. ('1981U SCC 17.^ /I Q81 c:rr /Tra RI i • A TD i QQI en i ,:rro
252
That an order for preventive detention was passed knowing fully well
that there was no Advisory Board to whom it could be referred to betrays a
casual and indifferent approach to citizens' rights and has to be deprecated. ^^
Constitution of Advisory Board under National Security Act — Held, cannot
be judged with respect to proposed amendment to Art. 22(4) by the
Constitution 44th Amendment— States, however, free to constitute Advisory
Boards according to proposed amendment — National Security Act, 1980, Ss.
9,10 & 11.
The constitutionality S. 9, NSA providing for constitution of Advisory
Boards cannot be judged with reference to Art. 22(4) as it would stand
amended when S. 3 of the Constitution 44th Amendment is enforced.
Of course Parliament is free to amend S, 9 to bring it in line with the
proposed Art. 22(4). So also can the executive appoint members according to
the proposed amendment. The standard of the present Art. 22(4) cannot be
derogated from but can be improved upon. It is hoped that the Parliament
will take the earliest opportunity to amend S. 9 of the NSA by bringing it in
line with S. 3 of the 44th Amendment as the Ordinance did and that, the
Central Government and the State Governments will constitute Advisory
Boards in their respective jurisdictions in accordance with S. 3 of the 44th
Amendment, whether or not S. 9 of the Act is so amended.367
(b) Reference to the Board
Reference to— Statutory requirement to refer the case to the Board mandatory
— Non compliance with the requirement will result in order ceasing to be in
force after the specified period of three months— A.P. Prevention of
Dangerous Activities of leggers, Dacoits, Drug Offenders, Goondas,
Immoral Traffic Offenders and Land Grabbers Act, 1986, S. 10 — Constitution
of India, Art, 22(7).
The case of the appellant was not at all referred to the Advisory Board
as required by S. 10 of the Act and by Art. 22. Section 10 prescribes a period of
three weeks from the date of detention irrespective of whether the person
continues to be in detention or not. Therefore, even though the detenu was
released, if the detention order was in force, his case was required to be
the Advisory Board. This being a mandatory provision and having not been
complied with the detention order even if otherwise it was in force cannot be
said to have been in force after three weeks. ^^^
Detenu's right to make representation against detention order and right to be
heard by Advisory Board — Requirement to apprise detenu of his rights,
mandatory — But failure to do so would not vitiate the detention order where
the detenu, being an enlightened person, is well aware of such rights —
366. Abdul Latif Abdul Wahab Sheikh v. B.K. Jha, (1987) 2 SCC 22, 25:1987 SCC (Cri) 244:
AIR 1987 SC 725:1987 Cri LJ 700.
367. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524
368. SMD. Kiran Pasha v. Govt, of A.P., (1990) 1 SCC 328,343,344:1990 SCC (Cri) 110.
253
Constitution of India, Art 22(5) - National Security Act, 1980 (65 of 1980) S,
8.369
369. Wasiuddin Ahmed v. D.M., (1981) 4 SCC 521, 531:1982 SCC (Cri) 4; AIR 1981 SC 2166:
1981 Cri LJ 1825.
370. SM.D, Kiran Pasha v. Govt, of A.P„ (1990) 1 SCC 328:1990 SCC (Cri) 110.
371. State of Maharashtra v. Sushila Mafatlal Shah, (1988) 4 SCC 490, 501: 1989 SCC (Cri) 1:
AIR 1988 SC 2090:18 EEC 322.
372. State of U.P. v. Hari Singh Thakur, 1987 Supp SCC 190:1988 SCC (Cri) 44: AIR 1987 SC
2080:1987 Cri L] 1923.
373. State of U.P. v. Mahant Singh, (1985) 4 SCC 624, 626: 1986 SCC (Cri) 56: AIR 1986-SC
207:1985 All LJ 1314.
254
374. State of Rajasthan v. Shamsher Singh, 1985 Supp SCC 416, 423-425: 1985 SCC (Cri) 421:
AIR 1985 SC1082:1985 Cri LJ1348.
375. State of A.P. v. Balajangam Subbarajamma, (1989) 1 SCC 193, 203: 1989 SCC (Cri) 75:
AIR 1989 SC 389: (1988) 3 Crimes 729.
376. State of Rajasthan v. Shamsher Singh, 1985 Supp SCC 416,428, 429:1985 SCC (Cri) 421:
AIR 1985 SC 1082:1985 CriLJ 1348.
256
Must forward record of its proceedings along with its report to the State
Government — If the Board fails to forward the record, confirmation of
detention order only on the basis of Board's report would amount to non-
application of mind and violation of Art 21, which would render the
detention order illegal — Prevention of Black marketing and Maintenance of
Supplies of Essential Commodities Act 1980 (7 of 1980), Ss. 11(1) and 12 The
State Government while confirming the detention order under S. 12 of the Act
has not only to peruse the report of the Advisory Board, but also to apply its
mind to the material on record. If the record itself was not before the State
Government, it follows that the order passed by the State Government under
S. 12 of the Act was without due application of mind and the procedure
adopted was not in consonance with the procedure established by law. This is
a serious infirmity in the case which makes the continued detention of the
detenu illegal.377
Failure to forward detenu's letter retracting his confessional statement to the
Board — Held, will not vitiate the detention order where the detenu, a highly
qualified and highly placed person, was himself present before the Board
— Detenu would have informed the Board about the retraction.^''^
Held on the basis of counter-affidavit of the State, necessary materials
despatched to Advisory Board and Central Government — Detenu failed to
clearly aver what material had not been despatched — Hence detention order
not vitiated on ground of non-despatch of materials, A. Alangarasamy v. State
of T.N., (1987) 3 s e c 159:1987 SCC (Cri) 477: AIR 1987 SC1725.
Proceedings before the Board cannot be made public — National Security Act,
1980, Ss, 9,10,11.379
It is not possible to accept the plea that proceedings of the Advisory
Board should be made public. The right to a public trial is not one of the
guaranteed rights under our Constitution as it is under the 6th Amendment of
the American Constitution which secures to persons charged with crimes a
public, as well as a speedy trial. Considering the nature of the inquiry which
the Advisory Board has to undertake, the interests of justice will not be served
better by giving access to the public to proceedings of the Advisory Board.
Carrying on correspondence with the detenus through Government — Held,
justified where the Board consisting of High Court Judges having no
administrative office of its own — No mala fide intention made out.^^o
Writ petition under Art. 32 challenging the detention filed during pendency
of detenu's representation before Advisory Board is maintainable —
Representation — Constitution of India, Art. 32. ^^i
377. Nand Lai Bajaj v. State of Punjab, (1981) 4 SCC 327, 334:1981 SCC (Cri) 841: AIR 1981
SC2041:1981 Cri LJ.1501.
378. Raverdy Marc Germain Jules v. State of Maharashtra, (1982) 3 SCC 135:1982 SCC
(Cri) 638: AIR 1983 SC 311.
379. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
380. Phillippa Anne Duke v. State of T.N., (1982) 2 SCC 389:1982 SCC (Cri) 444: AIR 1982 SC
1178:1982 Cri LJ 1389.
381. Piyush Kantilal Mehta v. Commr. of Police, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 322,325:1989 SCC (Cri)
438: AIR 1989 SC 491:1989 Cri LJ 956.
257
Prabhu Dayal Deorah v, DM, Kamrup. (1974) 1 SCC 103:1974 SCC (Cri) 18,
followed
(ii) Hearing
Proceedings — Hearing — Failure to afford opportunity to detenu to appear
and produce witnesses before the Board within the statutory period of
submission of report by the Board — Held, fatal to the detention — Effect of
amendments of National Security Act — National Security Act 1980, Ss. 11,
14-A (as applicable to Punjab and Chandigarh) — National Security
(Amendment) Act, 1984 - National Security (Second Amendment) Act, 1984
— National Security (Amendment) Act 1987.
It was decided to hold the sitting of the Advisory Board at Indore on
November 12, 1988 which was a week before the mandatory last date for
submitting the report. On November 8,1988 the detenu at Agartala prayed for
postponement of the Board sitting. The State Government informed the Board
on the basis of teleprinter message dated November 8, 1988 received from
Agartala that the detenu was unable to undertake the journey from Agartala
to Indore. Thereafter, the arrangements made to carry the detenu and his
witnesses to Indore by plane were also cancelled by the State Government of
Punjab and the detenu was told through the Inspector-General of Prisons,
Tripura by communication dated November 11, 1988 that the next date of
hearing as fixed by the Board will be intimated. It was contended that
opportunity was not afforded to the detenu to appear and produce his
witnesses before the Advisory Board.
There was a communication gap. Though the Advisory Board is not a
judicial body and is charged with the responsibility of advising the executive
government, but when it advises in favour of the detenu, namely, that there
was no sufficient cause for detention, it would be binding upon the
government under S. 12(2) of the Act to release the detenu forthwith. The
detenu in this case did not have the opportunity to show that there was no
sufficient cause for his detention. Expressing inability to appear once could
not have been treated as the detenu's not desiring to be heard under S. 11(2) of
the Act. In fact he desired to be heard and to produce his witnesses. The result
was that despite the State Government's communication he was deprived of
this opportunity.
As a result of the amendments of the National Security Act applicable
to, the State of Punjab and the U.T. of Chandigarh, on one hand there is
addition to the grounds of detention and on the other, there is extension of the
period during which a person could be detained without obtaining the
opinion of the Advisory Board. There is, however, no amendment as to the
safeguards provided under Art. 22 and Ss. 9, 10 and 11 of the Act. Indeed,
there could be no such amendment. Lex uno ore omnes alloquitur. Law
addresses all with one mouth or voice. Quotiens dubia interpretatio libertatis
est secundum libertatem respondendum erit — Whenever there is a doubt
between liberty and bondage, the decision must be in favour of liberty. State
258
of Punjab v. Sukhpal Singh, (1990) 1 SCC 35, 55? 59: 1990 SCC (Cri) 1: AIR
1990 SC 231:1990 Cri LJ 584.
(iii) Representation by friend/lawyer before Board
Detenu's request for being represented by lawyer must be made before the
Advisory Board and not before Government — On receipt of such request the
Board must take a decision in the matter considering the merits of each case
- Constitution of India, Arts. 22(1) and 21 - COFEPOSA Act} 1974, S. 8(e)
While S. 8(e) disentitles a detenu from claiming as of right to be
represented by a lawyer, it does not disentitle him from making a request for
the services of lawyer. Often adequate legal assistance may be essential for the
protection of right to procedural fairness, which is a part of the fundamental
right guaranteed by Art. 21 of the Constitution, as also right to be heard given
to the detenu under S. 8(e), COFEPOSA Act. Therefore, where a detenu makes
a request for legal assistance, his request would have to be considered on its
own merit in each individual case. In the present case, the Government
merely informed the detenu that he had no statutory right to be represented
by a lawyer before the Advisory Board. Since it was for the Advisory Board
and not for the Government to afford legal assistance to the detenu the latter,
when he was produced before the Advisory Board, could have, if he was so
minded, made a request to the Advisory Board for permission to be
represented by a lawyer. He preferred not to do so. In the special circum-
stances of the present case it cannot be held that the detenu was wrongfully
denied the assistance of counsel so as to lead to the conclusion that procedural
fairness was denied to him.382
Legal assistance in proceedings before Advisory Board — Though detenu has
no right to such assistance, held, he is entitled to make a request in that regard
and the Board is bound to consider the same and take a reasonable decision
— Permitting the detaining authority to be represented by counsel while
denying legal assistance to the detenu despite his requests, held, violative of
Arts. 14 and 21 — Constitution of India, Arts. 14 and 21 — Prevention of
Blackmarketing and Maintenance of Supplies of Essential Commodities Act,
1980 (7 of 1980), S. 11 - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S, 8(e)
Arbitrariness is the very antithesis of Art. 14. The principle of
reasonableness is an essential element of equality and the procedure
contemplated by Art. 21 must answer the test of reasonableness in order to be
in conformity with Art. 14. The history of personal liberty is largely the
history of procedural safeguards for observance of procedural safeguards,
particularly in cases of deprivation of life and liberty is, therefore, of prime
importance to the body politic. It is increasingly felt that in the context of
"deprivation of life and liberty" under Art. 21, the "procedure established by
law" carries with it the inherent right to legal assistance. The right to be heard
before the Advisory Board would be in many cases, of little avail if it did not
comprehend the right to be heard by counsel.
382. Kavita v. State of Maharashtra (I), (1981) 3 SCC 558, 564, 565: 1981 SCC (Cri) 743: AIR
1981 SC 1641.
259
[Ed.: In Phillippa Anne Duke v. State of T.N., (1982) 2 SCC 389, the Court held
that merely allowing some Customs Officers to be present in the corridor so
as to enable them to produce the relevant files whenever required for perusal
383. Nand Lai Bajaj v. State of Punjab, (1981) 4 SCC 327; 1981 SCC (Cri) 841: AIR 1981 SC
2041:1981 CriLJ 1501.
384. Hemlata Kantilal Shah v. State of Maharashtra, (1981) 4 SCC 647, 652- 1982 SCC (Cri)
16: AIR 198 ISC 8.
385. Suresh Bhojraj Chelani v. State of Maharashtra, (1983) 1 SCC 382: 1983 SCC (Cri) 202-
AIR 1983 SC 181:1983 Cri LJ 342.
260
386. Abdul Zabbar v. State of Rajasthan, (1984) 1 SCC 443:1984 SCC (Cri) 106- AIR 1983 SC
505:1983 Cri LJ 853:1983 MLJ (Cri) 526.
387. State of A.P. v. Balajangam Subbarajamma, (1989) 1 SCC 193, 203- 1989 SCC (Cri) 75-
AIR 1989. SC 389: (1989) 21 ECC17:1989 Cri LJ 853. '
261
388. A. K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271: 1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC: 710:
1982 Cri LJ 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
262
389. Devji Vallabhbhai Tandel v. Administrator, (1982) 2 SCC 222:1982 SCC (Cri) 403- AIR
1982 SC 1029:1982 Cri L] 799.
390. Phillippa Anne Duke v. State of T.N., (1982) 2 SCC 389:1982 SCC (Cri) 444: AIR 1982 SC
1178:1982 Cri LJ1389.
391. Tusher Govindji Shah v. Union of India, (1985) 1 SCC 571:1985 SCC (Cri) 135- AIR 1985
SC 511:1985 Cri LJ 793.
263
392. Sharad Kumar Tyagi v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 736:1989 SCC (Cri) 294: AIR 1989 SC
764: (1989)1 SCR 257.
393. Prakash Chandra Mehta v. Commr. and Secy, Govt, of Kerala, 1985 Supp SCC 144,170:
1985 SCC (Cri) 332: AIR 1986 SC 687.
264
the High Court challenging the order of detention against his son. Allowing
the appeal.
Held:
In the facts of the case if the retired Assistant Collector had been
permitted to the detenu his case would have been better placed before the
Advisory Board. Moreover, as the detaining authority had the assistance of
the Deputy Collector of Central Excise and a Superintendent of Central
Excise, who play the role of legal advisers, the Board had no justification to
refuse assistance of the retired Assistant Collector to the detenu. In view of
the position of law and the facts of the case, the refusal by the Advisory Board
to permit the detenu to be assisted by the retired Assistant Collector as a
friend was bad and continued detention of the became vitiated.
The term 'friend' used In the judgments of the Court was more in the
sense of an 'ally' or a 'supporter' than meaning a person known well to
another and regarded with liking, affection and loyalty'. A person not being a
friend in the normal sense could be picked up for rendering assistance within
the frame of the law as settled by the Supreme Court. The Advisory Board
has, of course, to be careful in permitting assistance of a friend in order to
ensure due observance of the policy of law that a detenu is not entitled to
representation through a lawyer. What cannot be permitted directly should
not be allowed to be done in an indirect way.
It is, however, not for the Court to examine and assess what prejudice
had been caused to the detenu on account of assistance by a friend. Matters
relating to preventive detention are strict proceedings and warrant full
compliance with the requirements of law. 394
(iv) Evidence
Evidence — Detenu entitled to present his own evidence oral, or
documentary, to rebut the allegations made against him — National Security
Act, 1980, Ss, 9,10 & 11.
There can be no objection in granting to the detenu the right to lead
evidence in rebuttal before the Advisory Board. Neither the Constitution nor
the National Security Act contains any provision denying to the detenu the
right to his in rebuttal of the allegations made against him. The detenu
therefore offer oral and documentary evidence before the Advisory Board in
order to rebut the allegations which are made against him.
But, if the detenu desires to examine any witnesses, he shall have to
keep them present at the appointed time and no obligation can be cast on the
Advisory Board to summon them. The Advisory Board, like any other
tribunal, is free to regulate its own procedure within the constraints of the
Constitution and statute. It would be open to it, in the exercise of that power,
to limit the time within which the detenu must complete his evidence.^^s
Whether Board considered documentary evidence produced by the detenu —
Affirmative inference drawn from the facts that the Board comprised High
394. Johney D'Couto v. State of T.N., (1988) 1 SCC 116,119 to 121: 1988 SCC (Cri) 70: AIR
1988 SC109; (1988) 63 Com Cas 781:1988 Cri LJ178.
395. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 ML] (Cri) 524.
265
Court Judges and that the detenu himself was a practising advocate — Board
is required to furnish its conclusion only and not the reasons, pleas, evidence
produced by the parties etc. in its report — It is therefore not proper to
conclude from the report that the Board did not consider documentary
evidence.
*
There was no justification to hold that the documentary evidence
produced by the detenu had not been considered by the Board. The Board is
not required to write out a judgment wherein one would expect mention of
the respective pleas, materials produced by the parties, specification of
contentions advanced and reasons for the conclusion as may have been
drawn. What is required is the unbiased and impartial conclusion on the
materials available with reference to the grounds of detention as to whether
the detention order when made and the continued detention of the person
concerned are justified.
The Advisory Board in the instant case was constituted by three Judges
of the High Court, one of them being the Chairman. That would justify the
assumption that the members of the Board by their professional ability and
acumen were capable to assess the matter in a proper way and form an
objective opinion on the basis of materials produced. The detailed conclusion
with reasons given by the Board has also been disclosed. That shows that the
detenu made before the Board very lengthy arguments and cited a number of
authorities in support of his submissions. The detenu in the instant case is a
practising advocate and it can be assumed that such a practising advocate
must have very properly placed his points before the Board. ^^^
(v) Examination and cross-examination of witnesses
Cross-examination — Detenu does not have right to cross-examine the
persons on whose statements the detention is based or the detaining authority
itself - National Security Act, 1980, Ss. 9,10,11.
Regarding a right to the detenu of cross-examination, the primary
question that arises is whether it is an integral and inseparable part of the
principles of natural justice.
A detenu cannot claim the right of cross-examination in the proceeding
before the Advisory Board. The question for consideration of the Board is not
whether the detenu is guilty of any charge but whether there is sufficient
cause for the detention of the person concerned. The proceeding of the
Advisory Board has therefore to be structured differently from the proceeding
of judicial or quasi-judicial tribunals, before which there is a lis to adjudicate
upon.
Also in cases of preventive detention, witnesses would be most
reluctant to testify and often it may harm public interest to disclose their
identity. It is therefore, difficult, in the very nature of things, to give to the
detenu the full panoply of rights which an accused is entitled to have in order
to disprove the charges against him. Just as there can be an effective hearing
396. State of Rajasthan v. Shamsher Singh, 1985 Supp SCC 416, 427, 428:1985 SCC (Cri) 421:
AIR 1985 SC1082:1985 Cri LJ1348.
266
397. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
398. Devji Val-labhbhai Tandel v. Administrator, (1982) 2 SCC 222:1982 SCC (Cri) 403: AIR
1982 SC 1029:1982 Cri LJ 799.
399. Harbans Lai v. ML. Wadhawan, (1987) 1 SCC 151, 155 to 159: 1987 SCC (Cri) 47: AIR
1987 SC 217:1987 Cri LJ 324: (1987) 12 ECC128.
267
400. Vijay Kumar v. Union of India, (1988) 2 SCC 57, 66:1988 SCC (Cri) 293: AIR 1988 SC
934: 17 ECC 82: (1988) 3 Crimes 50.
401. A.K, Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152; AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
402. Satar Habib Hamdani v. K.S. Dilipsinhji, (1986) 1 SCC 544:1986 SCC (Cri) 91: AIR 1986
SC 418:1986 Cri LJ 378: (1986) 8 ECC 133.
403. PhilUppa Anne Duke v. State of T.N.. (1982) 2 SCC 389:1982 SCC (Cri) 444: AIR 1982 SC
1178:1982 Cri LJ 1389.
268
the Advisory Board under S. 16(1) of the J & K Public Safety Act to submit its
report within the prescribed period must be construed strictly inasmuch as
the personal liberty of a person is involved and having regard to the emphasis
which the Constitution has placed, and which emphasis is reflected in the Act,
on the necessity of expeditiously determining whether the detention of the
person concerned should be continued. Any proceedings taken by the
Advisory Board after the expiry of the prescribed period of eight weeks from
the date of detention can be of no consequence in supporting the further
detention of the detenu and the Court cannot grant any adjournment where
the Board is programmed to sit after expiry of the prescribed period. ^04
Advisory Board is required under S, 11 to dispose of within 7 weeks the
matter 'placed before' it by Government within three weeks from the date of
detention under S, 10 of National Security Act, 1980.
Section 10 casts a duty on the appropriate Government to forward to
the Advisory Board within three weeks from the date of detention, the
relevant papers pertaining to the detention. Therefore, the words 'place
before' in that section does not mean anything more than forward to or
submit before the Advisory Board the relevant papers relating to the
detention of the detenu. The Advisory Board is a wholly independent body
which can regulate its schedule of holding meetings and conducting its
business in accordance with the procedure laid down under S. 11 of the Act
which has specified a time limit of seven weeks from the date of detention for
the submission of the Board's report to the appropriate Government, In the
present case, the Advisory Board disposed of the petitioner's case well within
the period of seven weeks specified in S. 11(1), Consideration of the case
beyond three weeks would not therefore, vitiate the detention on the alleged
ground of violation of S. 10. ^os
10. REVOCATION OR CONFIRMATION
(a) Revocation
The meaning of the verb 'revoke*' and its noun seem to signify that
revocation is a process of recall of what had been done.^o^
Revocation of detention order — Duty to exercise power of revocation arises
only when new and relevant facts and circumstances come to light. ^O''
The power of revocation of detention order conferred on the
appropriate Government under S. 11 of the COFEPOSA Act is independent of
the power of confirming or setting aside an order of detention under S. 8(f). It
is an overriding power and is intended to be a check or safeguard against
arbitrary or improper exercise of power of detention by the detaining
authority or the State Government, in addition to the protection under Art.
22(5) available to the detenu by way of making a representation against the
404. Ashok Kumar Binny v, State ofJ&K, (1982) 1 SCC 174:1982 SCC (Cri) 128: AIR 1982 SC
978:1982 Cri LJ 848.
405. Raisuddin v. State of U.P„ (1983) 4 SCC 537, 541, 542:1984 SCC (Cri) 16: AIR 1984 SC
46:1983 Cri LJ 1785.
406. Ibrahim Bachu Bafan v. State of Gujarat (1985) 2 SCC 24, 29: 1985 SCC (Cri) 149: AIR
1985SC697:1985 Cri LJ 533.
407. K. Aruna Kumari v. Govt ofA.R, (1988) 1 SCC 296, 304: 1988 SCC (Cri) 116: AIR 1988
SC 227:1988 Cri LJ 411.
269
408. Sat Pal v. State of Punjab, (1982) 1 SCC12:1982 SCC (Cri) 46: AIR 198 ISC 2230.
270
409. Ibrahim Bachu Bafan v. State of Gujarat, (1985) 2 SCC 24: 1985 SCC (Cri) 149: AIR 1985
SC 697:1985 Cri LJ 533.
410. Sharad Kumar Tyagi v. State of U.P., (1989) 1 SCC 736, 747: 1989 SCC (Cri) 294: AIR
1989 SC 764: (1989)1 SCR 257.
411. State of Maharashtra v. Sushila Mafatlal Shah, 4 SCC 490, 501, 502: 1989 SCC (Cri) 1:
AIR 1988 SC 2090.
271
412. Masuma v. State of Maharashtra. (1981) 3 SCC 566, 571, 572: 1981 SCC (Cri) 750; AIR
1981 SC 1753:1981 Crip 1256.
413. Vijay Kumar v. Unior\ of India, (1988) 2 SCC 57,70,72:1988 SCC (Cri) 293: AIR 1988 SC
934: (1988) 17 ECC 82: (1988) 3 Crimes 50. Bharat v. DM, 1986 Cri LJ1976 (MP),
overruled
272
414. Abdul Latif Abdul Wahab Sheikh v. B.K. Jha, (1987) 2 SCC 11, 25: 1987 SCC (Cri) 244-
AIR 1987 SC 725:1987 Cri LJ 700.
415. Harbanslal v. ML. Wadhawan, (1987) 1 SCC 151,160: 1987 SCC (Cri) 47- AIR 1987 SC
217:1987 Cri LJ 324: (1987) 12 ECC128.
416. Suresh Bhojraj Chelani v. State of Maharashtra, (1983) 1 SCC 382- 1983 SCC (Cri) 202-
AIR 1983 SC 181:1983 Cri LJ 342. '
273
beyond the maximum period will be illegal - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, Ss. 8(f),
9 and 10. «7
Application of mind by confirming authority - Whether deposition of
defence witness not considered by confirming authority — Advisory Board in
its report referring to evidence of the defence witness — Confirming
authority, having considered the report of Advisory Committee, held, cannot
be said to have not applied his mind to the evidence of the defence witness -
Advisory Board not obliged to refer in detail evidence of the defence witness
in its report and hence non-mention of relevant portion of evidence of such
witness in the report would not indicate confirming authority's failure to
consider the same. ^^^
Confirmation or revocation by Government - National Security Act, 1980, Se
12 - If Advisory Board's report is against the detention, State Government is
duty-bound to release the detenu - But if the Board reconmiends the
detention. Government has option either to confirm or to revoke the
detention. 4i9
Detention order passed on September 11 confirmed by State Government
on October 21 — Confirmation having been made beyond the period of 15
days prescribed by S. 3(4) of National Security Act, 1980, held, continued
detention of the petitioner illegal, ^^o
11. ORDER OF DETENTION
Order passed immediately after revocation of the earlier order on the basis
of report of Advisory Board — State Government failing to defend its
action despite two adjournments given by the Court — Held, further
detention of the petitioner would be unconstitutional in the circumstances —
Constitution of India, Arts. 21 and 22. ^21
Basic materials constituting subjective satisfaction in the earlier order of
detention, which was quashed by High Court, considered along with other
materials by detaining authority in drawing subjective satisfaction for
passing the fresh order of detention and not merely for showing the
antecedents of the detenu — Held, fresh order of detention liable to be
quashed - Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act, 1935, S, 3(2).422
Chhagan Bhagivan Kahar v. N.L Kalna, (1989) 2 SCC 318:1988 SCC (Cri) 367,
followed
417. Suresh Bhojraj Chelani v. State of Maharashtra, (1983) 1 SCC 382: 1983 SCC (Cri) 202:
AIR 1983 SC181:1983 Cri LJ 342.
418. Advisory Board. Madhu Khanna v. Administrator, Union Territory of Delhi, (1986) 4
SCC 240,245:1986 SCC (Cri) 426: AIR 1987 SC 48:1987 Cri LJ 318.
4! 9. State of Rajasthan v. Shamsher Singh, 1985 Supp SCC 416,429:1985 SCC (Cri) 421 • AIR
1985 SC 1082:1985 Cri LJ 1348.
420. Ranbir Singh v. T. George Joseph, D.M., Meerut, 1988 Supp SCC 425- 1988 SCC /Cri)
855. " ^ '
421. Mohd, Ibrahim Mohd. Sasin v. State of Maharashtra, 1987 Supp SCC 32:1987 SCC (Cri)
422. Ramesh v. State of Gujarat (1989) 4 SCC 124, 127, 128: 1989 SCC (Cri) 716" AIR 1989
SCISSl; 1989 Cri LJ 2094. '
274
423. Jahanglrkhan Fazalkhan v. Police Commr., (1989) 3 SCC 590, 594 595- 1989 SCC (rri\
664: AIR 1989 SC1812: (1989) 3 Crimes 24. ' " ^'"-''^^"^
275
which had been nullified by the High Court by issuing a prerogative writ of
habeas corpus. Hence the fresh order of detention is Uable to be set aside.424
Fresh order of detention on the same grounds cannot be made under S. 11(2)
read with S, 3 of COFEPOSA Act where previous order quashed by High
Court under Art. 226 - Such afresh order being invalid, subsequent
declaration under S. 9 inconsequential - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, Ss. 11(2), 9
and 3.425
Referring to incident which stituted subject-matter of an earlier order of
detention would vitiate the order. ^26
(a) Affidavit
Affidavit must be filed by the detaining authority who actually passed the
Girder - Mere holder of office of that authority cannot arrogate to substitute
subjective satisfaction of that authority and therefore not competent to file
affidavit justifying the detention - National Security Act, 1980 (65 of 1980),
S. 3. 427
Though normally detaining authority should personally affirm on oath the
stand by him, but this is not an inflexible rule and depends upon
circumstances of each - Where Home Minister who was detaining authority
was not available having ceased to be a minister before filing of affidavit, and
the then Deputy Secretary, Home who was fully conversant with the case had
filed his affidavit and original file was also produced before Court to dispel
any doubt as to subjective satisfaction of detaining authority, held, failure of
detaining authority to file affidavit personally not of much importance —
Detention order- Application of mind - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S. 3.428
Counter-affidavit — Should disclose all such facts and documents as are
relevant for the purposes of the writ petition and necessary for its disposal —
Constitution of India, Art, 32.429
Counter-affidavit in response to writ petition filed by detenu — Should be
filed by detaining authority especially in sensitive cases of detention - But
failure to do so would not ordinarily vitiate the detention in absence of
allegations of mala fides - Constitution of India, Arts. 226 and 32 - Habeas
corpus, writ of.
In matters of a routine nature, if indeed are any matters of a routine
nature in the field of detention, a counter-affidavit may be sworn by a person
424. Chhagan Bhagwan Kahar v. N.L Kalna, (1989) 2 SCC 318? 324:1989 SCC (Cri) 367- AIR
1989 SC1234:1989 Cri LJ1145.
425. Ibrahim Bachu Bafan v. State of Gujarat, (1985) 2 SCC 24:1985 SCC (Cri) 149- AIR
1985 SC 697:1985 Cri LJ 533.
426. Ahmed-hussain Shaikhhussain v, Commr. of Police, Ahmedabad (1989) 4 SCC 751
757:1990 SCC (Cri) 86: AIR 1989 SC 2274:1989 Cri LJ 2312.
427. Biru Mahato v. DM, (1982) 3 SCC 322:1983 SCC (Cri) 31: AIR 1982 SC 1539:1982 Cri LJ
2354.
428. State of Gujarat v. Sunil Fulchand Shah, (1988) 1 SCC 6005 604:1988 SCC fCri^ 201 • AIR
1988 SC 723: (1988) 16 ECC16: (1988)1 Crimes 854. y ) • ^
429. Ram Jethmalani v. Union of India, (1984) 3 SCC 571:1984 SCC (Cri) 451. '
276
who derives his knowledge from the record of the case. However, in. sensitive
matters of the present nature, the detaining authority ought to file his own
affidavit in answer to the writ petition and place the relevant facts before the
court which the court is legitimately entitled to know. However, failure to
furnish the counter-affidavit of the detaining authority may not be of much
consequence, especially if there was no allegation of mala fides against the
detaining authority. In the present case there were no allegations of mala fides
against the D.M., the detaining authority. There are degrees of impropriety
and the line which divides grave impropriety from illegality is too thin to
draw and even more so to judge. Conceivably, there can be cases in which
such impropriety arising out of the failure of the detaining authority,in filing
his own affidavit may vitiate the order of detention. 430
Counter-affidavit - Must be filed by detaining authority himself - Affidavit
of a clerk in the judicial section on behalf of the defaming authority not
acceptable -Detaining authority failing to file the counter-affidavit despite
Supreme Court's specific direction in that regard - In absence of any
explanation or return before the Court to rebut the allegations made by the
detenu in the writ petition, detention order must be set aside.^s^
Counter-affidavit- Should be of the detaining authority - Counter-affidavit
filed by Police S.O. indicates that subjective satisfaction of the detaining
authority was influenced by police personnel.
The detaining authority had not forward to file an affidavit stating
whether he had taken into consideration the fact that the appellant was
already in judicial custody and on considering his past activities he was
subjectively satisfied that if set free or released from jail custody on bail, there
was likelihood of the appellant indulging in criminal activities endangering
public order. On the other hand, the Station Officer of the Police Station, filed
a counter stating that the District Magistrate passed the impugned detention
order when the appellant was already in jail on the apprehension that the
appellant was likely to be on bail in .the near future and if the appellant is
bailed out, the public order problem will become worse.
Held:
This clearly goes to show that the Sub-Inspector had arrogated to
himself the knowledge about the subjective satisfaction of the District
Magistrate on whom the -power is conferred by the Act. The District
Magistrate, the detaining authority in this case, had not to file his affidavit.
The affidavit-in-opposition filed by the Station Officer of Police implies that
he had access to the file of the District Magistrate or he influenced the
decision of the District Magistrate for making the detention order. 432
430. state of v. Jagdev Taiwandi, (1984) 1 SCC 596, 609, 610:1984 SCC (Cri) 135- AIR 1984 SC
4441984 Cri LI 177. ' V ; • mivo^^^
431. Murnia Tuin v. Distt, Magistrate, (1982) 3 SCC 320; 1983 SCC (Cri) 29- AIR 1982 SC 878-
1982 Cri LJ 630(1). ' ^"^=>^°^o.
432. Gukb Mehra v. State of U.P., (1987) 4 SCC 302, 316,317:1987 SCC (Cri) 721: AIR 1987 SC
277
436. Gazi Khan v. State of Rajasthan, (1990) 3 SCC 459,462,463- AIR 1990 SC 1361-1990 Cri T1
1420: (1990) 29 ECC 5. ^
437. Piara Singh v. State of Punjab, (1987) 4 SCC 550, 556: 1987 SCC (Cri) 783: AIR 1987 SC
438. Tsering Dolkar v. Administa-ator, Union Territory of Delhi, (1987) 2 SCC 69- 1987 ^C
(Cri) 275: AIR 1987 SC 1192:1987 Cri LJ 988. ; ^ ^ ^ ^ oy. i w bCC
279
439. Mohinuddin v. D.M, (1987) 4 SCC 58, 63,64:1987 SCC (Cri) 674; AIR 1987 SC1977.
440. Suraj Pal Sahu v. State of Maharashtra, (1986) 4 SCC 378:1986 SCC (Cri) 452- AIR 1986 SC^
2177:1986 Cri LJ 2047. ^ ^ •
441. State of Maharashtra v. Ramesh Kumar Shobhraj Jain, (1988) 1 SCC 597-1988 SCC (Cri)
199: AIR 1988 SC 2138. ' ^ '
442. State of Punjab v. Jagdev Talwandi, (1984) 1 SCC 596, 610:1984 SCC (Cri) 135- AIR 1984
SC 444:1984 Cri LJ 177. '
19851?lOslS C r i W m r ^ ' " ^ ' ' ' ' ' ' '"PP ^ ^ ^ ' ' ' ' '^'•' '^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^"^ 421: AIR
280
Even though the High Court was In error in quashing the order of
detention made against the detenu, he will not be re-arrested and placed in
custody for the rest of the period of detention having regard to the facts that
the detenu was a young boy of 19/20 years and that he had already been in
custody for 5 months and 3 weeks and that no adverse information against
the detenu had come to the notice of the authorities after he was set at liberty
by the High Court.444
State of Bombay v. Purushottam Jog Naik, 1952 SCR 674: AIR 1952 SC 317: 1952
Cri L] 1269 and Emperor v. Vimalbhai Deshpande, ILR 1946 Nag 651: AIR 1946 PC
123: (1946) 2 MLJIO, relied on
Filing of return by State — State counsel requesting adjournment even though
service effected in New Delhi eight days before— Held, such
for filing a return and where the detenu's petition shows a prima facie good
case, detenu entitled to be released provisionally on filing bail bonds —
Constitution of India, Arts. 32 and 72{5).^^
Order wrongly quashed by High Court about 16 months back — While dis-
approving the view taken by the High Court, its judgment and order not
interfered with by Supreme Court because of long lapse of time — Practice
and Procedure.^^
Statement-of detenu recorded under S. 161 CrPC accepting allegations
against himself — Can be relied upon for the purposes of preventive
detention — Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, S. 161.
The detenu's statement recorded under S. 161 CrPC accepting
allegations against himself may noH>e a legally recorded corifession which
can be used as substantive evidence against the accused in the criminal case,
but it cannot be completely brushed aside on that ground for the of his
preventive detention.'^''
13. FACILITIES AND AMENITIES TO
Detenu to be afforded all reasonable facilities and amenities including
meetings with family members.
It must be impressed on the Government that the detenus must be
afforded all reasonable facilities for an existence consistent with human
dignity. There is no reason why they should not be permitted to wear their
own clothes, eat their own food, have interviews with the members of their
families at least once a week and, last but not the least, have reading and
writing material according to their reasonable requirements.
444. state of Maharashtra v. Sushila Mafatlal Shah, (1988) 4 SCC 490- 1989 SCC iCrW l- ATR
1988 SC 2090:18 EEC 322. ' \^n) i. ^n^
445. Tahira Begum v. B.B. Gujral, (1982) SCC 374:1983 SCC (Cri) 57(1).
446. State of U.P. v. Ekhlaq Ahmad, 1987 Supp SCC 68:1987 SCC (Cri) 622
227:' fmlrtlHT ' ' " " " ' '^ ^'^" ^^^^^^' ^^^ ^^^' ^^^'^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^"^ "^^ ^^^ ^988 SC
281
The courts are open to the detenu to determine whether the restraints
imposed upon the detenu in any particular case are excessive and unrelated
to the object of detention. If so, they shall have to be struck down.448
Failure to inform .detenu's members about passing of the order and place of
detention - Held, not fatal to the detention where detenu was already
an undertrial prisoner and his relatives knew the fact as one of them had
visited him in jail within two days of passing the order of detention -
Constitution of India, Art. 21 - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S. 3(1).
The object and purpose of the imperative requirement (as enjoined by
the Supreme Court in A.K. Roy case) of informing the members of the
detenu's household in writing of the passing of the order of detention and
taking in custody of the detenu as also the place of detention immediately
after the detenu is taken in custody pursuant to the order, is that the family
members of the detenu should not be kept in darkness by withholding the
information about the passing of the order of detention and the place of
detention thereby preventing them from having any access and from
rendering any help or assistance to the detenu and similarly the detenu
should not be deprived of the privilege of meeting his relations and getting
any help or assistance. In the present case the family members had sufficient
knowledge about the detention of the detenu by virtue of the mittimus issued
as well as about the place of detention.*^?
Facilities to detenu in jail — Government having no objection to grant the
desired facilities to the detenu - Matter disposed of.^so
DETENTION OF FOREIGNER
Detention of a foreign national — Not justified having regard to the object of
preventive detention as also international law and human rights concept —
International Law - COFEPOSA Act, 1974, S. 3.
Preventive detention of a foreign national who is not resident of the
country involves an element of international law and human rights and the
appropriate authorities ought not to be seen to have been oblivious of its
international obligations in this regard. The Universal Declaration of Human
Rights include the right to life, liberty and security of a person, freedom from
arbitrary arrest and detention; the right to fair trial by an independent and
impartial tribunal; and the right to presume to be an innocent man until
proved guilty. When an act of preventive detention involves a foreign
national, though from the national point of view the municipal law alone
counts in its application and interpretation, it is generally a recognised
principle in national legal system that in the event of doubt the national rule is
to be interpreted in accordance with the State's international obligations.
448. A.K. Roy v. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271; 1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710-1982
CriLJ 340:1982 MLJ(Cri) 524.
449. Union of India v. Vasanbharthi, (1990) 2 SCC 275, 277:1990 SCC (Cri) 317- AIR 1990 ST
1216:1990 Cri LJ1244: (1990)48ELT 169.
m " W^"CH L m ^ o ' ' " " ' * • " ' ' ' " " " ' " ' ''''''"' '''•• "«= = = ^ ' « ) '»•• ^ K
282
There is need for harmonisatior\ whenever possible bearing in mind the spirit
of the Covenants. Crimen trahit personam. The crime carries the person. The
commission of a crime gives the court of the place where it is committed
jurisdiction over the person of the offender. Legal relations associated with
the effecting of legal aid on criminal matters is governed in the international
field either by the norms of multilateral international conventions relating to
control of crime of an international character or by special treaties concerning
legal cooperation. Smuggling may not be regarded as such a crime. The
system of extradition of criminals represents an act of legal assistance by one
State (the requestee) to another State (the requestor) with the aim of carrying
out a criminal prosecution, finding and arresting a suspected criminal in
order to bring him to court or'for executing the sentence. In concluding such
the States themselves on principles of humanitarianism in their, efforts to
contribute to the more effective achievement of the objectives of the correction
and re-education of violators of the law. Where such conventions exist, the
citizens of a State who were convicted to deprivation of freedom in another
signatory State are in accordance with mutual agreement of the States,
transferred to the country of which they are citizens to serve their sentences.
The transfer of the convicted person may take place only after the verdict has
entered into legal force and may be carried out on the initiative of either of the
interested States. The punishment decided upon with regard to a convicted
person is served on the basis of the verdict of the State in which he was
convicted. On the strength of that verdict the competent court of the State of
which the person is a citizen adopts a decision concerning its implementation
and determines. In accordance with the law of Its own State, the same period
of deprivation of freedom as was assigned under the verdict. While
ameliorative practices may be available in case of the foreign national being
criminally prosecuted, tried and punished, no such proceedings are perhaps
possible when he is preventively detained. There May be where while a
citizen and resident of the country deserves preventive detention apart from
criminal prosecution, in case of a foreign national not resident of the country
he may not be justifiably subjected to preventive detention In the event of
which no international legal assistance is possible unlike in case of criminal
prosecution and punishment.^s^
SC 6^5''^'' ^''"'^ ^' ""'''" °^ ^"'^''' ^'^^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^' ^^^' ^^^- ^^^^ ^^^ (C") 227: AIR 1990
452. Plaridel-0-Daysor v. State of T.N., 1988 Supp SCC 535:1988 SCC (Cri) 883.
283
Particular statutes
The detention order during his detention due to prevalence of
Emergency, held, would not operate as estoppel against his right to move the
court after his release for having his detention order quashed in order to
challenge the action taken under Ss. 6 and 7 of the SAFEMA - Smugglers
and Foreign Exchange Manipulators (Forfeiture of Property) Act, 1976. Ss, 6
and 7 - Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974, Ss. 3(1) and 5.453
PARTICULAR STATUTES
[Note: The cross-references below are not exhaustive and the reader is
advised to study the synopsis at pages 2654-55 and follow the approach for
full advantage,]
(a) A. P. Prevention of Dangerous Activities of Bootleggers, Dacoits, Drug
Offenders, Goondas, Immoral Traffic Offenders and Land
Grabbers Act, 1986
S. 2(3) - Afprwal of State gov-eminent - Failure to obtain State Gov-
ernment's approval within statutory period - Held, detention order would
cease to be in force after that period - A. P. Prevention of Dangerous
Activities of Bootleggers, Dacoits, Offenders, Goondas, Immoral Traffic
Offenders, and Land Grabbers Act, 1986, S. 2(3).
The detention order had not been approved by the State Government
within 12 days of its being made as required by S. 3(3) of the AJP, Prevention
of Dangerous Activities of Boot-leggers, Dacoits, Drug Offenders, Goondas,
Immoral Traffic Offenders and Land Grabbers Act. The result is that the order
could not remain in force more than 12 days after making thereof and as such
must be treated as to have ceased to be in force and non-existent thereafter.^54
Legal relations associated with the effecting of legal aid on criminal
matters is governed in the international field either by the norms of
multilateral international conventions relating to control of crime of an
international character or by special treaties concerning legal cooperation.
Smuggling may not be regarded as such a crime.455
Ss. 2(e) and 3(1) - Smuggling - Raw material imported under Duty Exemption
Entitlement Scheme by detenu in the name of two fictitious benami firms
created for that purpose and instead of complying with the condition to
manufacture its product with the raw material and export the product
abroad within six months, the goods disposed of in local market - Held,
activity amounted to smuggling or abetment of smuggling within the
meaning of Ss. 2(e) and 3(1) of COFEPOSA Act read with Ss. 2(39) and ll(o)
of Customs Act - Abeyance order passed against the firm before expiry of the
six-month period cannot be said to be the reason for failure to manufacture
453. Union of India v. Haji Mastan Mirza. (1984) 2 SCC 427,430:1984 SCC (Cri) 271' AIR 1984
SC 681:1984 Cri L] 610: (1984) 2 ECC137. ^ '
454. S.M.D. Kiran Pasha v. Govt, of A.P., 1 SCC 328,343:1990 SCC (Cri) 110
Bihar Control of Crime Act, 1981
455. Kubic Damsz v. Union of India, (1990) 1 SCC 568,581:1990 SCC (Cri) 227: AIR 1990
284
the product when the firms were actually nonexistent and there was neither
any factory nor any manufacturing device - Customs Act, 1962, Ss. 2(39) and
11(0).456
Per Shetty, ].
The order made under S. 3(1) is in the nature of an interim order. It is
subject to the opinion of the Advisory Board under S. 80 of the COFEPOSA
Act.457
In the enforcement of a law relating to preventive detention like the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities
Act, 1974 there is apt to be some delay, between the prejudicial activities com-
plained of under S. 3(1) of the Act and the making of an order of detention.
When a person is detected in- the act of smuggling or foreign exchange
racketeering, the Directorate of Enforcement has to make a thorough
investigation into all the facts with a view to determine the identity of the
persons engaged in these operations which have a deleterious effect on the
national economy. Quite often these activities are carried on by persons
forming a syndicate or having a wide network and therefore this includes
recording of statements of persons involved, examination of their books of
accounts and other related documents. Effective administration and
realisation of the purposes of the Act is often rendered difficult by reason of
the clandestine manner in which the persons engaged in such operations
carry on activities and the consequent difficulties in securing sufficient
evidence to comply with the rigid standards, insisted upon by the courts.
Sometimes such investigation has to be carried on for months together due to
the magnitude of the operations. Apart from taking various other measures
i.e. launching of prosecution of the persons involved for contravention of the
various provisions of the Acts in question and initiation of the adjudication
proceedings, the Directorate has also to consider whether there was necessity
in the public interest to direct the detention of such person or persons under
S. 3(1) of the Act with a view to preventing them from acting in any manner
prejudicial to the conservation and augmentation of foreign or with a view to
preventing them from engaging in smuggling of goods etc. The proposal has
to be cleared at the highest quarter and is then placed before a Screening
Committee. The Screening Committee may meet once or twice a month. If the
Screening Committee approves of the proposal, it would place the same
before the detaining authority. Being conscious that the requirements of Art.
22(5) would not be satisfied unless the 'basic facts and materials' which
weighed with him in reaching his subjective satisfaction, are communicated to
the detenu and the likelihood that the court would examine the grounds
specified in the order of detention to see whether they were relevant to the
circumstances under which the impugned order was passed, the detaining
authority would necessarily insist upon sufficiency of the grounds which
would justify the taking of the drastic measure of preventively detaining the
person.
Hence, a distinction must be drav/n between the delay in making of an
order of detention under a law relating to preventive detention like the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of .Smuggling Activities
Act, 1974 and the delay in complying with the procedural safeguards of Art
22(5) of the Constitution. It has been laid down-by this Court in a series of
decisions that the rule as to unexplained delay in taking action is not
inflexible. Quite obviously, in cases of mere delay in making of an order of
detention under a law like the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and
Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 enacted for the purpose of
dealing effectively with persons engaged in smuggling and foreign exchange
racketeering who, owing to their large resources and influence have been
posing a serious threat to the economy and thereby to the security of the
nation, the courts should not merely on account of delay in making of an
order of detention assume that such delay, if not satisfactorily explained,
must necessarily give rise to an inference that there was no sufficient material
for the subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority that such subjective
satisfaction was not genuinely reached. Taking of such a view would not be
warranted unless the court finds that the grounds are 'state' or illusory or that
there is no real nexus between the grounds and the impugned order of
detention.458
Anil Kumar Bhasin v. Union of India, 1987 Cri L] 1632; Bhupinder Singh v. Union
of India, 1985 DLT493; Anwar Esmail Aibani v. Union of India, Crl Writ No. 375 of
1986, decided on December 11, 1986 (Del); Surinder Pal Singh v. M. L Wadhazuan,
(1987) 2 Crimes 449 (Del) and Ramesh Lai v, Delhi Administration, Cri. Writ No, 43
of 1984, decided on April 16,1984 (Del), overruled
S. 9(1) — Declaration under - Satisfaction of declaring authority — Whether
based on materials or vitiated by non-application of mind
Nothing contained in S. 9 shall affect the power of the appropriate
government in either case to revoke or modify the detention order at any
earlier time. This may imply an obligation on the part of the detaining
authority to place the facts and materials that occurred between the date of
detention and the date of declaration, so as to justify prolongation of the
period of detention. However, since non-furnishing of the copies of the bail
application and the bail order has resulted in violation of Art. 22(5), no
opinion need be expressed on this submission.^ss
The purpose and object of S. 10 is to prescribe not only for the
maximum period but also the method by which the period is to be com-
puted.460
458. Rajendrakumar Natvarlal Shah v. State of Gujarat, (1988) 3 SCC 153 162-1988 SCC ICri)
575: AIR 1988 SC1255. ^ iJo. lo^. iyoB bLL (Lri)
459. M Ahamedkutty v. Union of India, (1990) 2 SCC 1,18-1990 SCC (Cri) 258
461. Poonam Lata v, ML. Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SCC 347, 357: 1987 SCC (Cri) 506: AIR 1987 SC
1987, Cri LJ 1130: (1987) 12 ECC 346.
462. Poonamlata v. ML. Wadhawan, (1987) 3 SCC 347, 359:1987 SCC (Cri) 506: AIR 1987 SC
1383:1987 Cri LJ 1130: (1987) 12 ECC 346.
463. Rajendrakumar Natvarlal Shah v. State of Gujarat, (1988) 3 SCC 153:1988 SCC (Cri) 575:
AIR 1988 SC 1255.
464. Ayub v. S.N. Sinha, (1990) 4 SCC 552,554:1990 SCC (Cri) 664: AIR 1990 SC2069.
287
A conjoint reading of S. 2(b) and S. 3(4) with the explanation annexed thereto
clearly spells out that in order to clamp an order of detention upon a
'bootlegger* under S, 3 of the Act, the detaining authority must not only be
satisfied that the person is a bootlegger within the meaning of S. 2(b) but also
that the activities of the said bootlegger affect adversely or are likely to affect
adversely the maintenance of public order. In the present case the vague
allegations in the grounds of detention that the detenu was the main member
of the gang indulging in bootlegging activities and that the detenu was taking
active part in such dangerous activities, are not sufficient for holding that the
activities affected adversely or were likely to affect adversely the maintenance
of public order in compliance with S. 3(4) of the Act, that the activities of the
detenu had caused harm, danger or alarm or a feeling of insecurity among the
general public or any section thereof or a grave or widespread danger to life,
property or public health as per the explanation to S. 3(4). Therefore, the
impugned order of detention cannot be sustained on the ground that the
detenu was a 'bootlegger'. '^^
S. 2(c) — 'Dangerous person' under — Habitual offender — Who is — Three
crimes registered against the detenu out of which detenu acquitted in respect
of two and the only case pending against him lacking in supporting evidence
— Held, appellant not a habitual offender and hence not a dangerous person
— Gujarat Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act, 1985, S. 2(c) — Words and
Phrases— 'Habitual'
The expression 'habitually' in S. 2(c) of the Gujarat PASA Act is very
significant. A person is said to be a habitual criminal who by force of habit or
inward disposition is accustomed to commit crimes. It implies commission of
such crimes repeatedly or persistently and prima facie there should be a
continuity in the commission of those offences.
Though three cases had been registered against the detenu-petitioner,
he had acquitted in respect of two. Though lengthy counter was filed averring
in general that the detenu was indulging in prejudicial activities but from the
solitary case pending investigation against him it cannot be inferred that the
petitioner was a 'dangerous person' within the meaning of S. 2(c). The
Sessions Judge in his order releasing the petitioner on bail in the pending case
has noted that there was no medical evidence to prove that anyone was
injured in the occurrence alleged in the FIR. If such is the only crime pending
in which the detenu is alleged to have participated, it cannot be said that he
comes within the meaning of 'dangerous person' and the conclusions drawn
by the detaining authority are bereft of sufficient material as required under S.
2(c) of the Act. This betrays non-application of mind by the detaining
authority. Consequently, the grounds on which the detention order is passed,
are irrelevant and non-existing. Therefore, the detention order cannot be
sustained. ^66
465. Rashidmiya v. Police Commr., (1989) 3 SCC 3215 327: 1989 SCC (Cri) 559: AIR 1989 SC
1703.
466. Ayub v. S.N. Sinha, (1990) 4 SCC 552,555,556:1990 SCC (Cri) 664: AIR 1990 SC 2069.
288
467. Rashidmiya v. Police Commr., (1989) 3 SCC 321, 326, 327: 1989 SCC (Cri) 559: AIR 1989
SC1703.
468. Suraj Pal Sahu v. State of Maharashtra, (1986) 4 SCC 378; 1986 SCC (Cri) 452: AIR 1986 SC
2177:1986 Cri LJ 2047.
289
469. Suraj Pal Sahu v. State of Maharashtra, (1986) 4 SCC 378:1986 SCC (Cri) 452: AIR 1986 SC
2177:1936 CriLJ 2047.
290
470. A.K. Royv. Union of India, (1982) 1 SCC 271:1982 SCC (Cri) 152: AIR 1982 SC 710:1982
Cri LJ 340:1982 MLJ (Cri) 524.
471. Jitender Tyagi v. Delhi Admn., (1989) 4 SCC 653:1989 SCC (Cri) 787; AIR 1990 SC487.
291
472. Shafiq Ahmad v. D.M., (1989) 4 SCC 556,565:1989 SCC (Cri) 774: AIR 1990 SC 200.
473. Naib Singh v. State of Punjab, (1983) 2 SCC 454,463,464:1983 SCC (Cri) 536: AIR 1983 SC
855:1983 Cri LJ1345.
474. Union of India v. Haji Mastan Mirza, (1984) 2 SCC 427,423,433:1984 SCC (Cri) 271- AIR
1984 SC 681:1984 Cri LJ 610: (1984) 2 ECC137.