Puranlal Lakhanpal Vs. Union of India
[1957] INSC 57 (24 May 1957)
ACT:
Preventive Detention-Order continuing such
detention beyond three months-Validity-Opinion of Advisory Board, if a prerequisite
-'Such detention', meaning of-Constitution of India, Art. 22(4)(a) -Preventive
Detention Act, 1950 (Act IV of 1950) as amended by the amending Act of 195I
(No. IV of 1951), s. II(I).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was arrested under s. 3 Of the
Preventive Detention Act, 1950 (lV Of 1950) as amended by the amending Act Of
1951. The grounds of his detention were communicated to him as required by s. 7
Of the Act and his case was thereafter put up before the Advisory Board
constituted under s. 8 of the Act. The Board reported that there was sufficient
reason for his detention and thereupon the Central Government acting under s.11
(1) of the Act confirmed the order of detention and directed that such
detention should continue for a period of twelve months from the date of
detention. The appellant challenged the validity of this order by an
application to the Punjab High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution for a
writ of habeas corpus and contended that sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act was
constitutionally invalid as it contravened the provision of Art.
22(4)(a) of the Constitution. The High Court
found against him. The same point was canvassed in appeal to this Court and it
was contended that the expression 'such detention' occurring in sub-cl. (a) of
cl. (4) of Art. 22 referred to detention for a period longer than three months
mentioned in cl. (4) Of the Article and s. 11(1) of the Act, in so far as it
permitted detention for more than three months without a specific report from
the Advisory Board that there was sufficient cause for detention for more than
three months, was ultra vires. It was contended on behalf of the Union of India
that the expression ,such detention' referred to 'preventive detention'
occurring in the first line of cl.
(4) of Art. 22 and what an Advisory Board
contemplated by sub-cl. (a) of that clause was intended to do was only to give
its opinion as to whether there was sufficient cause for the detention itself
and not as to the period of detention.
Held (per Bhagwati, jafer Imam, S. K. Das and
J. L. Kapur Jj. Sarkar J. dissenting). The contention advanced on behalf of the
respondent was correct and the appeal must fail. The expression 'such
detention' in Art. 22(4)(a) of the Constitution refers to preventive detention
and not to any period for which such detention should continue and s.
11(1) of the Preventive Detention Act does
not contravene the provision of Art. 22(4)(a) of the Constitution, 461 The true
scope and effect of cl. (4) of Art. 22 must be judged in the light of the
entire scheme envisaged by Art.
22 and so understood, it becomes clear that
the Constitution could not have intended that while the determination of the
necessity of preventive detention should be left to the Executive, the determination
of the period for which such detention should continue should be left to the
Advisory Board. In the very nature of things any decision as to the period of
such detention can be taken only by the detaining authority upon which has been
placed the responsibility for the detention. The reference to the Advisory
Board is intended to be a safeguard against any possible misuse of its power by
the Executive and affords a machinery for the review of its decision on the
basis of the representation made by the detenu, the grounds of detention or the
report of any Officer who may have passed the order. It is not a limitation on
the Executive's discretion as to the discharge of its duties connected with
preventive detention.
A. K. Gopalan v. The State of Madyas, (1950)
S.C.R. 88, referred to.
An examination of the scheme of the Act shows
that its provisions are in conformity with the relevant provisions of the
Constitution. While the Act authorises detention for more than three months, it
does provide for a reference of the order of detention to the Advisory Board
and it is only after the Advisory Board has made its report that the Government
can fix the period of detention under s. 11(1) of the Act. Makhan Singh
Tarsikka v. State of Punjab, (1952) S.C.R. 368 and Dattatreya Moreshway
Pangaykar v. State of Bombay, (1952) S.C.R. 612, referred to.
Held further, that where the appropriate
authority refuses to disclose any facts or particulars as to dates, persons and
place, on the ground that such disclosure would be against public interest,
under cl. (6) of Art. 22, the person in detention cannot be heard to say, apart
from the question of mala fides, that the grounds did not disclose the
necessary facts or particulars or that in the absence of such facts or particulars
he was not in a position to make an effective representation. In the present
case the grounds gave him a sufficient opportunity to make an effective
representation.
Lawrence Joachim Joseph D'Souza v. The State
of Bombay, (1956) S.C.R. 382 and State of Bombay v. Atma Ram Sridhay Vaidya,
(1951) S.C.R. 167, relied on.
The test of the mala fides of the Executive
in passing an order of preventive detention is whether the Executive in making
such order was actuated by any ulterior purposes other than those mentioned In
the order of detention.
462 Per Sarkar, J.-The expression 'such
detention in Art.
22(4)(a) of the Constitution means detention
for a period longer than three months and cannot mean detention simpliciter.
The object of Art. 22(4) is to impose a limitation on the power which the
Parliament and the State Legislatures have, under Art. 246 of the Constitution,
to enact laws for preventive detention by making such detention, where it is to
be extended beyond three months, dependent on the opinion of an Advisory Board.
There is nothing in the language of Art.
22(4) to show that the safeguard the Constitution intended to provide by the
opinion of the Advisory Board is available in other cases of detention.
A. K. Gopalan v. The State of Madras, (1950)
S.C.R. 88.
referred to.
It cannot be said that since the Act provides
for the obtaining of the opinion of the Advisory Board as to the sufficiency of
the cause for detention, that opinion, in view of Art. 22(4)(a), necessarily is
as to the sufficiency of the cause for detention for more than three months.
Where the statute does not contain the
provision that the Advisory Board must report that in its opinion there is a
sufficient cause for detention for more than three months, as required by Art.
22(4)(a) of the Constitution, the lacuna cannot be deemed to be cured by
implication. A statute which authorises detention for a period longer than
three months without making a provision that the opinion of the Advisory Board
must be obtained that there is sufficient cause for detention for a period
longer than three months is to that extent invalid.
Makhan Singh Tarsikka v. The State of Punjab,
(1952) S.C.R. 368 and Dattalreya Moreshwar Pangarkay v.The State of Bombay,
(1952) S.C.R. 612, considered.
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 96 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgments
and orders dated September 24, 1956, of the Circuit Bench of the Punjab High
Court at Delhi and dated September 26, 1956, of the Punjab High Court at
Chandigarh in Criminal Writ No. 128-D of 1956.
Appellant in person.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India,
and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1957. May 24. BY THE COURT.-We dismiss the
appeal by a majority of 4 to 1 (A. K. Sarkar J. dissenting) for reasons to be
recorded later.
463 1957. September 17. The Judgment of
Bhagwati, Jafer Imam, S. K. Das and J. L. Kapur JJ. was delivered by S. K. Das
J.
Sarkar J. delivered a separate judgment.
S. K. DAS J.-This is an appeal by special
leave, and the appellant is Puran Lal Lakhanpal.'6n July 21, 1956, the
Government of India in the Ministry of Rome Affairs passed an order of
preventive detention against the appellant in which it was stated, inter alia,
that with a view to preventing the appellant from acting in a manner
prejudicial to the security of India and the relations of India with foreign
powers, it was necessary to make an order against the appellant. The order then
concluded-" Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers vested in the
Central Government by cl. (a) (i) of sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of the Preventive Detention
Act, 1950 (Act No. IV of 1950), as amended, the Central Government hereby
orders that the said Shri Puran Lal Lakhanpal, son of Shri Diwan Chand Sharma,
be detained." The appellant was arrested and taken in custody on the same
date On July 24, 1956, the grounds of detention were communicated to the
appellant under s. 7 of the Preventive Detention Act, No. IV of 1950,
hereinafter referred to as the Act. The case of the appellant was then sent to
an Advisory Board constituted under s. 8 of the Act, and the Advisory Board
having reported that there was, in its opinion, sufficient Gause for detention
of the appellant, the Central Government confirmed the order of detention on
August 20, 1956, and stated further that the appellant ",shall continue in
detention for a period of twelve months from the date of his detention".
This order was passed under sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act.
Before that date, however, the appellant
moved the Punjab High Court as also this Court challenging the legality of his
detention and asked for the :issue of a writ in the nature of a writ of habeas
corpus. The petition to this Court was dismissed and as nothing turns upon that
petition, no further reference need be 464 made to it. In the petition to the
Punjab High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution, the appellant was
permitted to urge an additional ground to the effect that sub-s. (1) of s. 11
of the Act was unconstitutional inasmuch as it offended against Art. 22(4)(a)
of the Constitution. This constitutional point was referred to and decided by a
Division Bench of the Punjab High Court by an order dated September 24, 1956.
The High Court held that sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act was neither repugnant
to nor inconsistent with the provisions of Art. 22(4) of the Constitution. A
single Judge of the High Court then dealt with the petition of the appellant on
merits and dismissed it by an order dated September 26, 1956. The appellant then
moved the Punjab High Court unsuccessfully for leave to appeal to this Court.
He then moved this Court, and obtained
special leave to appeal from the aforesaid orders of the Punjab High Court
dated September 24, and September 26, 1956, respectively.
We heard the appellant, who argued his case
ill person, on May 22, 23 and 24, 1957. At the conclusion of the arguments on
the last day of the term before the commencement of the vacation, we intimated
to the appellant the majority decision of the Court that his appeal was
dismissed, but stated that reasons for the decision would be given later. These
reasons we now propose to give in the paragraphs that follow.
The first and foremost point which the
appellant has urged in support of his appeal is the constitutional point, that
is, the validity of sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act. The argument of the
appellant is that sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act does not conform to the
constitutional mandate given by subcl. (a) of cl. (4) of Art. 22 of the
Constitution.
Therefore, our primary duty is " to lay
the Article of the Constitution which is invoked beside the statute which is
challenged and to decide whether the latter squares with the former ".
Article 22 of the Constitution, in so far as it is relevant for our purposes,
is in these terms:
"22.
(1)..................................................
(2)...................................................
465 (3) Nothing in clauses (1) and (2) shall
apply(a) to any person who for the time being is an enemy alien ; or (b) to any
person who is arrested or detained under any law providing for preventive
detention.
(4) No law providing for preventive detention
shall authorise the detention of a person for a longer period than three months
unless(a) an Advisory Board consisting of persons who are, or have been, or are
qualified to be appointed as, Judges of a High Court has reported before the
expiration of the said period of three months that there is in its opinion
sufficient cause for such detention:
Provided that nothing in this sub-clause
shall authorise the detention of any person beyond the maximum period
prescribed by any law made by Parliament under sub-clause (b) of clause (7); or
(b) such person is detained in accordance with the provisions of any law made
by Parliament under sub-clauses (a) and (b) of clause (7).
(5) When any person is detained in pursuance
of an order made under any law providing for preventive detention, the
authority making the order shall, as soon as may be, communicate to such person
the grounds on which the order has been made and shall afford him the earliest
opportunity of making a representation against the order.
(6) Nothing in clause (5) shall require the
authority making any such order as is referred to in that clause to disclose
facts which such authority considers to be against the public interest to
disclose.
(7) Parliament may by law prescribe(a) the
circumstances under which, and the class or classes of cases in which, a person
may be detained for a period longer than three months under any law providing
for preventive detention without obtaining the opinion of an Advisory Board in
accordance with the provisions of sub-clause (a) of clause (4);
(b) the maximum period for which any person
may in any class or classes of cases be detained under any law providing for
preventive detention; and 466 (c) the procedure to be followed by an Advisory
Board in an inquiry under sub-clause (a) of clause (4)." Section 11 of the
Act, which is challenged as unconstitutional states :
" 11. (1) In any case where the Advisory
Board has reported that there is in its opinion sufficient cause for the detention
of a person, the appropriate Government may confirm the detention order and
continue the detention of the person concerned for such period as it thinks
fit.
(2) In any case where the Advisory Board has
reported that there is in its opinion no sufficient cause for the detention of
the person concerned, the appropriate Government shall revoke the detention
order and cause the person to be released forthwith." Now, the point taken
by the appellant is this. According to him, the expression such detention'
occurring in sub-cl. (a) of cl. (4) of Art. 22 refers not merely to the
original order of preventive detention but to the detention of a person for a
period longer than three months; therefore, the Advisory Board when it makes .
its report is required under the Sub-clause to record its opinion that there is
sufficient cause not merely for the original order of detention but also for
detention of that person for a period longer then three months. It is contended
that such an opinion was not recorded by the Advisory Board in the present
case, and Sub-s. (2) of s. 10 of the Act merely required the report of the
Advisory Board to specify its opinion as to whether or not there was sufficient
cause for the detention of the appellant. The appellant's contention is that
sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act, in so far as it permits the appropriate
Government to continue the detention of the person concerned beyond a period of
three months without a specific report from the Advisory Board that there is
sufficient cause for his detention for more than three months, is ultra vires;
because it does not conform to sub-cl. (a) of
cl. (4) of Art. 22, nor does it give effect to the true meaning of the
expression 'such detention' occurring in the ;aid subclause.
467 On behalf of the respondent, the argument
is that the expression 'such detention' occurring in sub-cl. (a,) of cl.
(4) of Art. 22 refers back to 'preventive
detention' occurring in the first line of el. (4), and under the said subclause
the Advisory Board is to give its opinion as to whether there is sufficient
cause for the detention of the person concerned; there is no duty cast on the
Advisory Board to determine the period of detention, and the failure of the
Advisory Board to state in its report that there is sufficient cause for the
detention of the person concerned for more than three months is no violation of
the constitutional mandate contained in the said sub-clause.
We have to determine the correctness or
otherwise of these rival contentions. No decision directly deciding the point
at issue has been brought to our notice. There are, however, certain
observations made in A. K. Gopalan v. The State of Madras (1), with regard to
the meaning and effect of subcl. (a) of cl. (4) of Art. 22, to which a
reference must now be made. At page 117 of the report, Kania C. J. said:
" Article 22(4) opens with a double
negative. Put in a positive form it will mean that a law which provides for
preventive detention for a period longer than three months shall contain a
provision establishing an advisory board, (consisting of persons with the
qualifications mentioned in sub-clause (a)), and which has to report before the
expiration of three months if in its opinion there was sufficient cause for
such detention. This clause if it stood by itself and without the remaining
provisions of Article 22, will apply both to the Parliament and the State
Legislatures.
The proviso to this clause further enjoins
that even though the advisory board may be of the opinion that there was
sufficient cause for such detention, i.e., detention beyond the period of three
months, still the detention is not to be permitted beyond the maximum period,
if any, prescribed by Parliament under Article 22(7)(b). Again the whole of
this sub-clause is made inoperative by Art. 22(4)(b) in respect of an Act of
preventive detention passed by Parliament under clauses (7)(a) and (b) Inasmuch
as the impugned Act is an Act of the (1) [1950] S.C.R. 88, 117.
60 468 Parliament purported to be so made,
clause 22(4) has no operation and may for the present discussion be kept
aside." His Lordship was considering the Act of 1950 previous to the
amendments subsequently made therein from 1951 onward, and the observations
appear to establish the following three points: first, clause (4) of Art. 22,
put in affirmative form, has reference to a law which provides for preventive
detention and authorises detention for a period longer than three months;
second, the expression 'such detention' has again reference to such a law
providing for detention beyond a period of three months; and lastly, el. (4) of
Art. 22 had no application to the Act of 1950 as it then stood. We shall
presently show that the first and the second points do not really support the
appellant's contention, and the last had particular reference to ss. 9 and 12
of the Act of 1950, as it then stood. The appellant has, however, pointed out
that under the Act as it now stands, every order of detention has to be placed
before the Advisory Board (a. 9 of the Act) and the Advisory Board has to
report about every order of detention (s. 10 of the Act). Though under s. II A
of the Act the maximum period for which any person may be detained in pursuance
of a detention order which has been confirmed under s. 11, is twelve months
from the date of detention, the Act now contains no provisions as to the
circumstances under which, or the class or classes of cases in which, a person
may be detained for a period longer than three months without obtaining the
opinion of the Advisory Board; therefore, the argument of the appellant is that
the last point made by the observations of Kania C.J. is no longer valid in
view of the amendments made in the Act of 1950. We have proceeded in this case
on the footing that sub-cl. (a) of el. (4) of Art. 22 applies to the Act as it
stands after the amendments, and even on that footing there is, in our opinion,
no inconsistency between that sub-clause and the impugned provisions of the
Act, as we shall presently explain.
In his dissentient judgment in Gopalan's case
(supra), Fazl Ali J., made the following observations with 469 regard to cl.
(4) of Art. 22. Said his Lordship at pages 170 and 171 of the report :
" In connection with the first point,
the question arises as to the exact meaning of the words I such detention'
occurring in the end of clause (4)(a). Two alternative interpretations were put
forward: (1) 'such detention' means preventive detention; (2) 'such detention'
means detention for a period longer than three months. If the first interpretation
is correct, then the function of the advisory board would be to go into the
merits of the case of each person and simply report whether there was
sufficient cause for his detention. According to the other interpretation, the
function of the advisory board will be to report to the Government whether
there is sufficient cause for the person being detained for more than three
months. On the whole, I am inclined to agree with the second interpretation.
Prima facie, it is a serious matter to detain a person for a long period ( more
than three months) without any enquiry or trial. But article 22(4) (a) provides
that such detention may be ordered on the report of the advisory board. Since
the report must be directly connected with the object for which it is required,
the safeguard provided by the article, viz., calling for a report from the
advisory board, loses its value, if the advisory board is not to apply its mind
to the vital question before the Government, namely, whether prolonged
detention (detention for more than three months) is justified or not. Under
article 22 (4) (a), the advisory board has to submit its report before the
expiry of three months and may therefore do so on the eighty-ninth day. It
would be somewhat farcical to provide, that after a man has been detained for
eighty-nine days, an advisory board is to say whether his initial detention was
justified. On the other hand'. the determination of the question whether
prolonged detention (detention for -more than three months) is justified must
necessarily involve the determination of the question whether the detention was
justified at all, and such an interpretation only can give real meaning and
effectiveness to the provision. The provision being in the nature of a 470
protection or safeguard, I must naturally lean towards the interpretation which
is favourable to the subject and which is also in accord with the object in
view." These observations, it is urged, support the appellant's
contention.
Patanjali Sastri J. (as he then was) took a
view different from that of Fazl Ali J. in Gopalan's case (supra), and made the
following observations at pages 209 and 210 of the report:
" It was argued that the words I
sufficient cause for such detention' in sub-clause (a) of clause (4) had
reference to the detention beyond three months mentioned in clause (4) and that
this view was supported by the language of sub clause (a) of clause (7) whereby
Parliament is authorised to prescribe the circumstances under which and the
class or classes of cases in which a person may be detained for a period longer
than three months without the opinion of an advisory board. In other words,
learned counsel submitted, the combined effect of clauses (4) and (7) was that
no person could be detained for a period over three months without obtaining
the opinion of an advisory board that there was sufficient cause for detention
for the longer period, except in cases where Parliament passed a law authorising
detention for such period even without the opinion of an advisory board. Thus,
these two clauses were concerned solely with the duration of the preventive
detention, and so was the advisory board which those clauses provided for that
purpose. I am unable to accept this view. I am inclined to think that the words
'such detention' in sub-clause (a) refer back to the preventive detention
mentioned in clause (4) and not to detention for a longer period than three
months. An advisory board, composed as it has to be of Judges or lawyers, would
hardly be in a position to judge how long a person under preventive detention,
say, for reasons connected with defence, should be detained. That must be a
matter for the executive authorities, the Department of Defence, to determine,
as they alone are responsible for the defence of the country and have the
necessary data for taking a decision on the point. All that an 471 advisory board
can reasonably be asked to do, as a safeguard against the misuse of the power,
is to judge whether the detention is justified and not arbitrary or mala fide.
The fact that the advisory board is required to make its report before the
expiry of three months and so could submit it only a day or two earlier cannot
legitimately lead to an inference that the board was solely concerned with the
issue whether or not the detention should continue beyond that period. Before
any such tribunal could send in its report a reasonable time must elapse, as
the grounds have to be communicated to the person detained, he has to make his
representation to the detaining authority which has got to be placed before the
board through the appropriate departmental channel. Each of these steps may, in
the course of official routine, take sometime, and three months' period might
well have been thought a reasonable period to allow before the board could be
required to submit its report." These observations are undoubtedly against
the contention of the appellant.
It is necessary to consider the whole scheme
of Art. 22 in order to appreciate the true scope. and effect of cl. (4).
Article 22 provides for protection against
arrest and detention in certain cases. Clauses (1) and (2) refer to arrest and
detention in certain circumstances and provide for certain safeguards. Clause
(3) then states, inter alia, that nothing in cls. (1) and (2) shall apply to
any person who is arrested or detained under any law providing for " preventive
detention"; in other words, a law relating to " preventive
detention" is put in a special category and is dealt with in clauses (4)
to (7). The power to legislate laws of preventive detention is given to
Parliament and the State Legislatures by the Constitution. This power, however,
is not absolute, but is controlled by the provisions of cls. (4), (5), (6) and
(7) of Art. 22. The maximum period of detention is not prescribed by the
Constitution, but Parliament may by law prescribe such a period. The Constitution
contemplates that any law which authorises detention for more than three months
should be subject to certain safeguards, 472 as provided in cl. (4) of Art. 22
which directs that the case of a detained person under any law authorising
detention for more than three months must be the subject of a report by an
Advisory Board. The Advisory Board is to report whether there is sufficient
cause for such detention.
If the Advisory Board reports that the
detention is justified, then only the detaining authority determines the period
of detention. On the other hand, if the Advisory Board reports that the
detention is not justified, the detained person must be released. Clause (4) of
Art. 22 does not state that the Advisory Board has to determine whether the
person detained should be detained for more than three months. What it has to
determine is whether the detention is at all justified. The setting up of an
Advisory Board to determine whether such detention is justified is considered
as a sufficient safeguard against arbitrary detention under any law of
preventive detention which authorises detention for more than three months. The
matter before the Advisory Board is the subject of detention of the person
concerned and not for how long he should be detained.
Clause (7) of Art. 22 is an exception to cl.
(4) of that Article. It authorises Parliament alone to pass a law of preventive
detention authorising detention of a person for more than three months without
obtaining the opinion of an Advisory Board so long as the circumstances under
which and the class or classes of cases in which a person may be detained for a
longer period than for three months are set out in the enacted law. The
Constitution evidently does not contemplate detention of the person for a
period of three months or less as sufficiently serious to have the safeguard of
a report by an Advisory Board to the effect that there is sufficient cause for
detention. Under the Constitution an Advisory Board is to be set up for all
cases of detention under a law authorising detention for more than three
months. When the -case of a detained person is placed before the Advisory Board
under such law it must be assumed that the Advisory Board knows that if it
reports that the detention is justified, the detenu may be detained for more
than three 473 months and up to the maximum period provided by the law.
The expression " such detention" in
Art. 22 (4) (a) refers to preventive detention and not to how long the person
is to be detained.
Moreover, it is clear that clause (4) lays
down prohibition against any law providing for detention for more than three
months without a provision foran Advisory Board, and cl.' (5) provides for
furnishing the grounds of detention and affording an opportunity of making a
representation against the order of detention. But these safeguards are subject
to cls. (6) and (7). Under the former, facts, the disclosure of which the
detaining authority considers against the public interest, are not required to
be furnished. Under the latter, Parliament may prescribe the circumstances
under and the class or classes of cases in which a person may be detained for a
period longer than three months without obtaining the opinion of an Advisory
Board. The Constitution has therefore in one case given discretion to the
Executive not to furnish facts in certain circumstances and in the other case
left it to Parliament to prescribe cases or classes of cases in which reference
to the Board need not be made. Therefore, both the furnishing of grounds and
the report of the Board are, in a sense, limited safeguards.
Considering the circumstance that the
detention is of a preventive nature, the Executive has necessarily to consider
whether a person should be detained and the period for which he should be
detained. It could not have been the intention to give the power of determining
the necessity of detention of a particular person to the Executive, and leave
to another authority-the Board in this case-to say whether the detention should
be for three months or more. In the very nature of things the decision as to
the period of detention must be of the detaining authority, because it is the
authority upon which responsibility for detention has been placed. The
reference to the Board is only a safeguard against Executive vagaries and
high-handed action and is a machinery devised by the Constitution to review the
decision of the Executive 474 on the basis of a representation made by the
detenu, the grounds of detention, and where the order is by an officer, the
report of such officer. It is not a limitation on the Executive's discretion as
to the discharge of its duties connected with preventive detention.; it is a
safeguard against misuse of power.
What then is the scheme of the Act under our
consideration ? An order of detention is made under s. 3 of the Act. If the
order is made by any officer under sub-s. (2) of s. 3, a report has to be
submitted to the State Government to which the officer is subordinate and the
order does not remain in force for more than twelve days unless in the meantime
it has been approved by the State Government. Under s. 7 of the Act, the
grounds of detention have to be communicated to the detenu, as soon as may be
but not later than five days from the date of detention. Section 8 relates to
the constitution of an Advisory Board. Under s. 9 in every case where a
detention order has been made under the Act, the appropriate Government shall,
within thirty days from the date of detention under the order, place before the
Advisory Board the grounds on which the order has been made and the
representation, if any, made by the detenu. Section 10 prescribes the procedure
of the Advisory Board and lays down that the Advisory Board must submit its
report to the appropriate Government within ten weeks from the date of detention.
Sub-s. (2) of s. 10 states that the report of the Advisory Board shall specify
in a separate part thereof the opinion of the Advisory Board as to whether or
not there is sufficient cause for the detention of the person concerned.
Then comes s. I I which we have already
quoted in extensor The scheme of the Act has been explained in several decisions
of this Court. In Makhan Singh Tarsikka v. State of Punjab (1), it was stated
that whatever might be the position under the Preventive Detention Act of 1950,
before it was amended in 1951, under the Act as amended in 1951, the Government
must determine what the period of detention should be only after the Advisory
Board to which the case (1)) [1932] S.C.R. 368, 370.
475 is referred reports that the detention is
justified. Patanjali Sastri C. J. observed:
" It is, therefore, plain that it is
only after the Advisory Board, to which the case has been referred, reports
that the detention is justified, the Government should determine what the
period of detention should be and not before. The fixing of the period of
detention in the initial order itself in the present case was, therefore, contrary
to the scheme of the Act and cannot be supported." In Dattatreya Moreshwar
Pangarkar v. State of Bombay(1) Mukherjea J. (as he then was) said:
" It is now settled by a pronouncement
of this Court that not only it is not necessary for the detaining authority to
mention the period of detention when passing the original order under s. 3(1)
of the Preventive Detention Act, but that the order would be bad and illegal if
any period is specified, as it might prejudice the case of the detenu when it
goes up for consideration before the Advisory Board. The Advisory Board again
has got to express its opinion only on the point as to whether there is
sufficient cause for detention of the person concerned. It is neither called
upon nor is it competent to say anything regarding the period for which such
person should be detained. Once the Advisory Board expresses its view that
there is sufficient cause for detention at the date when it makes its report,
what action is to be taken subsequently is left entirely to the appropriate
Government and it can under s. 11 (1) of the Act i confirm the detention order
and continue the detention of the person concerned for such period as it thinks
fit'. In my opinion, the words 'for such period as it thinks fit' presuppose
and imply that after receipt of the report of the Advisory Board the detaining
authority has to make up its mind as to whether the original order of detention
should be confirmed and if so, for what further period the detention is to
continue. Obviously, that is the proper stage for making an order or decision
of this description as the (1) [I952] S.C.R. 612, 626, 61 476 investigation
with regard to a particular detenu such as is contemplated by the Preventive
Detention Act is then at an end and the appropriate Government is in full
possession of all the materials regarding him." At page 637 of the report,
the learned Judge further said:
" Under the Constitution, the detention
of a ,person under any law providing for preventive detention cannot be for a
period of more than three months unless the Advisory Board is of the opinion
that there is sufficient cause for the detention of the person concerned. The
Constitution itself has specified the maximum limit of the initial detention
and detention for a period longer than three months can only be made on the
basis of the report of the Advisory Board." In view of these observations,
it is quite clear what the scheme of the Act is. The Act authorises a possible
detention of more than three months; the order of detention is therefore
referred to the Advisory Board, and it is only when the Advisory Board makes
its report that the appropriate Government fixes the period of detention under
sub-s. (1) of s. 11 of the Act.
For all these reasons, we hold that Sub-s.
(1) of s. 11 of the Act does not contravene any of the provisions of Art. 22
and is accordingly valid.
We now proceed to give our reasons with
regard to those points on merits which have been urged before us by the
appellant. The appellant has contended that the grounds of detention
communicated to him are all vague, except ground No. 2, and that the grounds so
communicated did not give him an opportunity of making an effective
representation, a right guaranteed to him under el. (5) of Art. 22. The grounds
except ground No. 2 were these:
"1. That since the last two yars you are
in constant touch with foreign correspondents in India and representatives of
foreign countries to whom you have been spreading reports and information about
conditions in the State of Jammu and Kashmir which are false and calculated to
prejudice the relations of 477 India with foreign powers and also to prejudice
the security of the State.
3. That you are in constant touch with
certain persons in Pakistan and Pakistani occupied part of Jammu and Kashmir
who are hostile to India and you are assisting these persons in their
activities which are prejudicial to the security of India.
4.That you are receiving financial assistance
from persons in Pakistan and Pakistani occupied part of Jammu and Kashmir for
supporting and furthering your aforesaid prejudicial activities.
5.That you are in regular connection with
persons in India who are engaged in promoting false propaganda against India in
relation to Kashmir and have been attending their secret meetings for planning
action and propaganda in relation to Kashmir prejudicial to the security of
India.
6. The Central Government is satisfied that
you are likely to act in a manner prejudicial to the security of India and in a
manner prejudicial to the relations of India with foreign powers and with a
view to prevent you from so acting has passed the order for your
detention." The same document which communicated the grounds of detention
to the appellant also contained the following statement in paragraph 7: "
The Central Government is satisfied that it is against the public interest to
disclose to you any facts or particulars as to dates, persons and places and
the nature of your activities and the assistance received or otherwise than
those which have been already mentioned." The argument of the appellant is
that by refusing to disclose any facts or particulars as to dates, persons and
places, the detaining authority has really deprived the appellant of the
valuable right guaranteed to him under cl. (5). This contention of the
appellant is concluded by the recent decision of this Court in Lawrence Joachim
Joseph D'Souza v. The State of Bombay (1). It (1) [1956] S.C.R. 382.
478 was held therein that the right of the
detenu to be furnished with facts or particulars was subject to the limitation
mentioned in cl. (6) and even if the grounds communicated were not as precise
and specific as might have been desired, the appropriate authority had the
right to withhold such facts or particulars, the disclosure of which it considered
to be against the public interest. Such a privilege having been exercised in
the present case, the appellant cannot be heard to say, apart from the question
of malafides, that the grounds did not disclose the necessary facts or
particulars, or that in the absence of such facts or particulars, he was not in
a position to make an effective representation. In The State of Bombay v. Atma
Ram Sridhar Vaidya(1) this Court has unanimously held that under s. 3 of the
Act, it is the satisfaction of the appropriate authority which is necessary for
an order of detention, and if the grounds, on which the appropriate authority
has said that it is so satisfied, have a rational connection with the objects
which are to be prevented from being attained, the question of satisfaction
cannot be challenged in a court of law except on the ground of malafides. It
has been further held by the majority that cl. (5) of Art. 22 confers two
rights on the detenu, namely, first, a right to be informed of the grounds on
which the order of detention has been made, and secondly, to be afforded the
earliest opportunity to make a representation against the order. If grounds
which have a rational connection with the objects mentioned in s. 3 are
supplied, the first condition is complied with. But the right to make a
representation implies that the detenu should have such information as will
enable him to make a representation and if the grounds supplied are not sufficient
to enable the detenu to make a representation, he can rely on the second right.
The second right, however, is again subject to the right of privilege given by
cl. (6) and as has been pointed out in Lawrence D'Souza's case, (supra), the
obligation to furnish grounds and the duty to consider whether the disclosure
of any facts involved therein is against public interest, are both (i) [1951]
S.C.R. 167.
479 vested in the detaining authority and not
in any other.
As in Lawrence D'Souza's case (supra), it is
unnecessary in the present case to consider the theoretical contention as to
whether or not Art. 22(6) of the Constitution overrides the constitutional
right to be furnished grounds under Art.
22(5) to the extent of denying all the
particulars and leaving the grounds absolutely vague. We are of the opinion
that in the present case the grounds furnished to the appellant, though not as
precise and definite as might be desired, gave him a sufficient opportunity of
exercising his right under cl. (5) of Art. 22 of the Constitution.
With regard to ground No. 2, the appellant,
has urged the following points. Ground No. 2 communicated to the appellant is
in these terms:
" 2. That you addressed a Press
Conference at New Delhi on the 18th day of February, 1956, which was attended
by a large body of Press Correspondents of foreign countries and that you made
a speech (copy of contents of which is hereto annexed) containing various false
statements about the conditions of the people of Kashmir. The combined effect
of these statements is prejudicial to the security of India and to the
relations of India with foreign powers. Extracts of such statements are given
below: (then follow the extracts)." It is argued (1) that detention on
this ground is more punitive than preventive; (2) that it is not relevant to
the objects for which the appellant has been detained, namely, the security of
India and her relations with foreign powers;
and (3) that there are verbal inaccuracies in
reciting the ground, with particular reference to what happened at the Press
Conference on February 18, 1956. We have considered each one of these arguments
and are of the view that not one of them has any substance. Firstly, the ground
no doubt relates to what happened on February 18, 1956; that does not, however,
mean that the detention of the appellant is punitive in character. What the
appellant is likely to do in future must, to a large extent, 480 be inferred
from his past conduct. Secondly, we think that the ground has a rational
connection with the objects which the appellant has to be prevented from
attaining. The objects of the appellant's detention are to prevent him from
acting in a manner prejudicial to (1) the security of India and (2) her
relations with foreign powers. Both these object,%, we think, come within the
ground in question.
Thirdly, the verbal inaccuracies relied on by
the appellant are all so inconsequential in nature that we do not think it
necessary to state them in detail. By way of an example, it may be stated that
in the extract enclosed with the ground, there is a statement to this effect:
"it would be no exaggeration to state that were a plebiscite to be held
there today, over 90% of Kashmiris would vote against -India etc." In his
actual statement, however, the appellant said: "It would not be an
exaggeration to state that were a plebiscite to be held there today, over 90%
of Kashmirs would vote against India etc." The only difference between the
two is that instead of the word 'not', the word 'no' has been used in the
extract; otherwise, there is no difference between the two statements. Such
verbal differences are not inaccuracies at all, and we are unable to accept the
contention of the appellant that the detaining authority did not apply its mind
to the grounds communicated to him.
Lastly, the appellant has raised the question
of mala fides.
This question has been considered at great
length by the learned Judge of the Punjab High Court who dealt with the
petition of appellant. The appellant referred in his affidavit to some of his
activities from 1954 onwards and to certain events which happened between 1954
and 1956. He also referred to certain statements alleged to have been made by
the Prime Minister and the Home Minister, and he averred that both of them were
annoyed with him for his activities and therefore the order of detention was
not bona fide. We are unable to accept this contention. We agree with the
learned Judge of the High Court that the activities of the appellant and the
events of 1954 to 1956 referred to by the appellant, do not in any way 481 show
that the order of detention made against the appellant was made for any
ulterior purpose or for purposes other than those mentioned in the detention
order. On the question of mala fldes, it is not a relevant consideration
whether the activities of the appellant were liked or disliked by the
authorities concerned. The only relevant consideration is if the order of
detention was made for ulterior purposes or purposes other than those mentioned
in the detention order.
On the materials placed before us, we
unhesitatingly hold that no mala fides have been established.
These are our reasons for the order which we
passed on May 24, 1957, dismissing the appeal.
SARKAR J.-This appeal arises out of an
application for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus. In my view the appeal can
be disposed of on one ground, and in this judgment I propose to deal with that
ground alone.
On July 21, 1956, the appellant was taken
into custody under an order of detention passed against him by the Government
of India under the Preventive Detention Act, 1950 (Act, IV of 1950). On July
24, 1956, the appellant was served with the grounds on which the order of
detention had been passed as required by the Act. The appellant thereafter made
a representation against the order which was con sidered by the Advisory Board,
constituted under the Act. On August 22, the appellant was served with another
order made by the Government of India wherein it was stated that the Advisory
Board bad reported that there was in its opinion, sufficient cause for the
detention of the appellant. This order further stated that in view of the
report of the Advisory Board the Government of India confirmed the detention
order earlier made against the appellant and that the appellant should continue
in detention for a period of 12 months from the date of his detention. The
appellant challenged the legality of these orders of detention and moved the
High Court of Punjab for the issue 482 of an appropriate writ for his release.
The petition was dismissed by the High Court. Hence this appeal.
The petitioner challenges the validity of the
orders of detention on the ground that the provision of the Preventive Detention
Act, 1950, under which they were made is ultra vires the Constitution. I have
come to the conclusion that this objection to the Act is sound and that is why
I do not find it necessary to discuss the other contentions raised by the
appellant.
The contention of the petitioner is based on
Art. 22(4)(a) of the Constitution. The relevant portion of the article is set
out below:
(4) No law providing for preventive detention
shall authorise the detention of a person for a longer period than three months
unless(a) an Advisory Board consisting of persons who are, or have been, or are
qualified to be appointed as, Judges of a High Court has reported before the
expiration of the said period of three months that there is in its opinion
sufficient cause for such detention :
Provided that nothing in this sub-clause
shall authorise the detention of any person beyond the maximum period
prescribed by any law made by Parliament under sub-clause (b) of clause (7); or
(b) such person is detained in accordance with the provisions of any law made
by Parliament under sub-clauses (a) and (b) of clause (7).
.......................................................
(7) Parliament may by law prescribe(a) the
circumstances under which, and the class or classes of cases in which, a person
may. be detained for a period longer than three months under any law providing
for preventive detention without obtaining the opinion of an' Advisory Board in
accordance with the provisions of sub-clause (a) of clause (4);
(b) the maximum period for which any person
may in any class or classes of cases be detained under any law providing for
preventive detention; ............................
483 The position, therefore, is that unless
Parliament by law otherwise prescribes, the provisions of cl. (4)(a) of Art.
22 have to be complied with by any law
providing for preventive detention. Parliament -has passed no law prescribing
otherwise. The Preventive Detention Act, 1950, has, therefore, in order to be
constitutional to satisfy Art.
22(4)(a). The appellant's contention is that
it does not do this. Though the words used are somewhat obscure, it is fairly
clear, as was accepted at the Bar, that the required provision for the report
of the Advisory Board has to be made in the law authorising preventive
detention and it is not by the force of Art. 22(4)(a) itself that that report
has to be obtained.
The present Act authorises a maximum period
of detention of 12 months from the date of detention. It is therefore a law
providing for preventive detention and it authorises the detention of a person
for a longer period than three months.
It must hence contain provisions satisfying
sub-cl. (a) of el. (4) of Art. 22 if it is intended to detain a person under it
for a period longer than three months. It has to provide that if under it
detention for a period longer than three months is to be ordered then an
Advisory Board, constituted as specified, must report that there is in its
opinion sufficient cause for such detention. So much is not in dispute. The
difficulty is caused by the words " such detention ". The appellant
contends that they mean detention for a period longer than three months and
therefore an Act authorising preventive detention for more than three months
has to provide that the Advisory Board must report that there is sufficient
cause for detention for a period longer than three months. The Act in this case
does make provisions for the constitution of the Advisory Board and for
submitting all cases of detention irrespective of their periods of detention to
it for its opinion as to whether or not there is sufficient cause for
detention, but it does not provide that where it is intended to detain a person
for a period longer than three months then the Advisory Board must report that
there was sufficient 62 484 cause for detention for a period longer than three
months.
The provision for the opinion of the Advisory
Board is contained in s. 10(2) of the Act which is in the following terms:
S. 10(2).-The report of the Advisory Board
shall specify in a separate part thereof the opinion of the Advisory Board as
to whether or not there is sufficient cause for the detention of the person
concerned.
If therefore the appellant is right in his
contention that the words " such detention " mean detention for a
longer period than three months then the provisions of the Act authorising
detention for more than three months must be held to be ultra vires. The
question is, what do these words mean? As a matter of pure construction of the
language used in sub-cl. (a) it seems tome that the words " such detention
" must mean detention for a longer period than three months.
The word "such" means, of the kind
or degree already described. Of the meanings of the word" such" given
in the Oxford Dictionary this I find to be the only one appropriate in the
present context. Learned counsel for the respondent did not suggest any other
meaning. Now what is the kind or degree of detention that is earlier described
in the clause ? The only kind that 1 find is detention for a longer period than
three months. That being so, I feel compelled to accept the appellant's
contention.
The learned Solicitor-General opposing the
appeal contended that the words "such detention " were capable of two
meanings, namely, detention simpliciter and detention for a period longer than
three months. He advanced certain reasons why of the two possible constructions
the first one should be accepted. I will come to the reasons later.
Before doing so I wish to state that I am
unable to agree that the words " such detention " are capable of two
meanings. Clause (4) contemplates a law of preventive detention but does not
authorise such law. Such a law is within the legislative competence of the
Parliament and the State legislatures : See Art. 246 of the Constitution, item
9 of list I and item 3 of list III in the Seventh Schedule 485 to the
Constitution.Having contemplated such a law, what cl. 4 proceeds to do is to
lay down that, that law shall not authorise the detention of a person for a
longer period than three months unless the Advisory Board has reported that
there is in its opinion sufficient cause for such detention.
It only imposes a limitation on the power to
pass laws authorising preventive detention. This is what Das J. said in A. K.
Gopalan v. The State of Madras (1). He there said (p. 324), it articles 21 and
22 have put a limit on the power of the State given under Art. 246 read with
the legislative lists". Therefore the only object that cl. (4) purports to
deal with is detention for a period longer than three months under a law of
preventive detention the existence of which it assumes. Hence the words "
such detention " must necessarily refer to detention for a period longer
than three months. There is nothing else to which it can refer. Preventive
detention without reference to the period of it is not in contemplation of cl.
(4) at all. A law for preventive detention is mentioned. The words " such
detention " cannot possibly refer to that law. That law may, no doubt,
provide for detention for a shorter period but such shorter detention is not
mentioned in the clause nor really in its contemplation at all. So no question
of the words " such detention " referring to the shorter detention arises.
But suppose the learned Solicitor-General was
right in his contention that the words, in the context they are used, are
capable of referring both to preventive detention simpliciter and to preventive
detention for a period longer than three months, are there reasons for
preferring the first of the two alternative constructions ? I am unable to find
any.
The learned Solicitor-General said that if
the words were referable only to a detention for a period longer than three
months then people detained for a shorter period would be deprived of the
safeguard of the opinion of the Advisory Board and lose the chance of being set
free if it expressed the view that there was no sufficient cause for detention.
That no doubt would be so. But I find (i)
[1950] S.C.R. 88.
486 nothing in the language of cl. (4) to
show that such a safeguard was intended. If the language does not support such
an intention, then of course this argument must fail, however much the court
may like the safeguard to be provided in all cases of detention. If it was the
intention of the Constitution to provide such a safeguard it would not have
required that the report of the Advisory Board should be made before the expiry
of the three months. That is what Fazl Ali, J., said in Gopalan's case (1) at
page 171 :
" Under Art. 22 (4) (a), the Advisory
Board has to submit its report before the expiry of three months and may therefore
do so on the eighty-ninth day. It would be somewhat farcical to provide, that
after a man has been detained for eighty-nine days, an advisory board is to say
whether his intial detention was justified. " As the Constitution could
not have contemplated the situation mentioned by Fazl Ali, J., it could not
have intended that all cases of detention irrespective of their periods must
also be placed before the Advisory Board. It follows that it did not mean to
provide the safeguard referred to by the learned Solicitor-General. In fact,
all the other learned Judges who heard Gopalan's case (1), excepting Patanjali
Sastri, J., expressed the same view. I set out below what they said:
Kania, C.J., (page 118 of the Report):
"Reading article 22 clauses (4) and (7)
together it appears to be implied that preventive detention for less than three
months, without an advisory board, is permitted under the Chapter on
Fundamental Rights, provided such legislation is within the legislative
competence of the Parliament or the State Legislature, as the case may be.
" Mahajan, J., (p. 228):
" If the intention of the Constitution
was that a, law made on the subject of preventive detention had to be tested on
the touchstone of reasonableness, then it would not have troubled itself by
expressly making provision in article 22 about the precise scope of the
limitation subject to which such a law could be made (1) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
487 and by mentioning the procedure that the
law dealing with that subject had to provide. Some of the provisions of article
22 would then have been redundant, for instance, the provision that no
detention can last longer that three months without the necessity of such
detention being examined by an advisory board.
Again at p. 237:
" Clause (4) of article 22
enjoins.................. that no law can provide for preventive detention for
a longer period than three months without reference to an advisory board.
" Mukherjea, J., (p. 281):
" Preventive detention can be provided
for by law for reasons connected with six different matters specified in the
relevant items in the legislative lists, and whatever the reasons might be,
there is a provision contained in article 22 (4) (a) which lays down that
detention for more than three months could not be permitted except with the
sanction of the advisory board. " Das, J., (p. 326):
"In short, clause (4) of article 22
provides a limitation on the legislative power as to the period of preventive
detention. Apart from imposing a limitation on the legislative power, clause
(4) also prescribes a procedure of detention for a period longer than three
months by providing for an advisory board." The learned Solicitor-General
then contended that Art. 22 dealt both with preventive detention and other
kinds of detention. Thus clauses (1) & (2) dealt with other kinds of
detention while clause (4) and the remaining clauses of the article dealt with
preventive detention. Clause (3) said that nothing in clauses (1) and (2) shall
apply to a person detained under any law providing for preventive detention.
The learned Solicitor-General contended that
the words " such detention " in clause (4) were intended to refer to
preventive detention without reference to its duration as distinguished from
the other kinds of detention referred to in clauses (1) and (2). He sought to
reinforce his argument by contending that preventive detention 488 for a period
longer than three months was not a separate kind of preventive detention and
therefore the words " such detention " referred to the only kind of
preventive detention mentioned in the article, namely, preventive detention
simpliciter and without any reference to the period of detention. I am again
unable to agree. It is true that the detention contemplated in the words "
such detention " is preventive detention. Clauses (4) to (7) of the
article deal with preventive detention alone and with no other kind of
detention. Therefore, in these clauses there was no necessity of distinguishing
preventive detention as such from other kinds of detention and of using the
word "such for marking this distinction. So read the words such detention
" really mean such preventive detention. The question then arises, which
preventive detention? The answer must be, one variety of preventive detention
as distinguished from other varieties.
It is also true that preventive detention for
a period longer than three months is none the less preventive detention and is
not another kind of detention. At the same time preventive detention for a
period longer than three months is not the same thing as preventive detention
for a shorter period. It is quite conceivable that with regard to different
periods of detention permissible under a law relating to preventive detention
different provisions may be made.
Preventive detention certainly interferes
with a person's liberty. It is an inroad on his freedom. It may be that the
makers of the Constitution having given the legislatures power to enact laws
providing for preventive detention interfering with a person's liberty did not
think it fit to provide any limitation on such power when such detention, was
to be for a relatively shorter period but thought it fit to restrict the power
in the case of detention for what they conceived to be a long period. If such
was the intention, then the makers of the' Constitution would obviously make a
distinction between preventive detention for a shorter period and preventive
detention for a longer period. To say that there is no distinction between
these kinds of preventive detention is to assume that the makers of the
Constitution, never 490 its opinion sufficient cause existed for a detention
for a longer period or not, the report, when made, must necessarily be taken to
have expressed such an opinion and the article therefore must be deemed have
been complied with. This argument, of course., assumes that the words "
such detention " mean detention for a period longer than three months.
It assumes that the article requires that
where the law of preventive detention authorises a detention for a longer
period it is necessary to obtain the opinion of the Advisory Board that there
is sufficient cause for detention for such period. Now there is nothing in the
article to prevent an Act authorising preventive detention providing for the
opinion of the Advisory Board being obtained as to there being sufficient cause
for the detention in any case of detention. Such a provision in a law of
preventive detention would be perfectly legal. The present Act in fact contains
such a provision. Therefore, it cannot be said that whenever a law provides for
an opinion of the Advisory Board being obtained as to the sufficiency of the
cause for detention, the opinion in view of Art. 22(4)(a) necessarily is as to
the sufficiency of the cause of detention for a period longer than three
months. Besides, if, as the present argument assumes, it is obligatory in a law
authorising preventive detention for a period longer than three months to
provide for a, report of the Advisory Board statin expressly its opinion as to
the sufficiency of the cause for the detention for the period mentioned, I am
unable to appreciate that such an obligation is satisfied by not making the
required provision but by showing that by necessary implication the required
opinion is deemed to have been given, even though in fact it may not have been
given. The question is not what the report is to be seemed to have stated nor
even what it has in fact stated, but what the statute should provide. If the
statute has not made the obligatory provision it must be held to be bad. It
would be a strange argument to say that it must be good because though it did
not contain the required provision it must in view of the Constitution be
deemed to contain it, 489 intended to make the distinction. For such an
assumption I find no justification. Indeed, what I have read from the judgment
of this Court in Gopalan's case, would show that the distinction between
preventive detention simpliciter and preventive detention for a period longer
than three months was in the mind of the makers of the Constitution, for it is
there said that no reference to the Advisory Board is contemplated by the
Constitution excepting in a case of detention for a period longer than three
months.
The present argument of the learned
Solicitor-General is on the basis that one of the possible constructions of the
words " such detention " is detention for a period longer than three
months. That being so, and the word " such " meaning in the ordinary
English language, of the kind already described, even if two kinds of
detention, namely, preventive detention simpliciter and detention for other
reasons, have been earlier mentioned, the kind mentioned nearest to the word
"such" must be the kind intended by it.
Therefore again the words " such
detention " must be taken as referring to detention for a period longer
than three months. Indeed cl. (4) and the other clauses have nothing to do with
other kinds of detention than preventive detention. The word " such "
cannot therefore seek to make a distinction from a thing occurring in a wholly
separate provision of the article, namely, clauses (1) and (2). That being so,
I am unable to agree that the words " such detention " refer to
preventive detention simpliciter.
I now turn to another question that arose. It
was said that Art. 22 (4) (a) applies only to a law which authorises detention
for more than three months; that it is such a law alone which must provide for
the opinion of the Advisory Board being obtained. It was contended that,
therefore, whenever a law authorising preventive detention provides for a
reference to the Advisory Board, it necessarily provides for a report as to
whether there is sufficient cause for a detention for a period longer than
three months, and that being so, no matter whether any provision had been made
that the Advisory Board must state whether in 491 It was then said that as it
is not for the Advisory Board to decide the period of detention to be ordered
there can be no point in providing that its opinion, whether there were
sufficient cause for detention for a period longer than three months or not,
should be obtained. It seems to me that whether there is any point in obtaining
such opinion or not it is wholly irrelevant to enquire. If the language of the
Constitution requires such opinion to be obtained, it has to be obtained. I
have stated that the language indubitably requires such opinion to be obtained.
The language cannot have a different meaning because, otherwise, the provision
would be without any point at all. Furthermore, I am unable to see why if the
Government fixes the period of detention, it is unnecessary where the period is
to exceed three months to provide for the opinion of an independent body being
obtained as to whether there is sufficient cause for detention for that period.
In my view it is eminently reasonable to make such a provision. When a person's
liberty is to be curtailed for a longer period, a safeguard may be considered
necessary which it may not be when the curtailment contemplated is for a
comparatively shorter period.
I will repeat that the reasonableness of such
a provision is implicit in what I have read from the judgment in Gopalan's case
(1). It is said there that it is only in the case of detention for a period
longer than three months that the Constitution requires a provision that the
Advisory Board's opinion should be obtained. This view is clearly brought out
by Fazl Ali, J., when he said in that case at page 171:
"Prima facie, it is a serious matter to
detain a person for a long period (more than three months) without any enquiry
or trial. But article 22(4)(a) provides that such detention may be ordered on
the report of the advisory board. Since the report must be directly connected
with the object for which it is required, the safeguard provided by the
article, viz., calling for a report from the advisory board, loses its value,
if the advisory board is not to apply its mind (1) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
63 492 to the vital question before the
Government, namely, whether prolonged detention (detention for more than three
months) is justified or not." I have so long discussed the question
whether the words " such detention " mean preventive detention
simpliciter or preventive detention for a period longer than three months as a
question of construction with. out reference to the authorities. In fact, there
is no conclusive authority on the point, but some have been referred to. These
I now proceed to consider.
The first case referred to is Gopalan's case
(1). That was also a case concerned with the issue of a writ of habeas corpus,
and it turned on the very Act that is before the Court now, as it stood in
1950. At the date the order for detention in that case was made the Act
provided that in certain class of cases a person might be detained for a period
longer than three months without obtaining the opinion of the Advisory Board in
accordance with the provisions of Art. 22(4)(a). Such a provision is sanctioned
by el.
(7)(a) of that article. The order for
detention made in that case was of a kind where reference to the Advisory Board
was not obligatory. That being so, it was not necessary for the court in that
case to decide the precise meaning of the words " such detention ".
None the less, how. ever, three of the learned judges indicated their views on
the question and the other three do not seem to have dealt with it. Kania, C.
J., expressed the opinion that the words "such detention" meant
detention beyond the period of three months. Referring to the proviso to
sub-cl. (4)(a), he stated (p. 117):
" The proviso to this clause further
enjoins that even though the advisory board may be of the opinion that there
was sufficient cause for such detention, i.e., detention beyond the period of
three months, still the detention is not to be permitted beyond the maximum
period, if any, prescribed by Parliament under article 22(7)(b)." The
learned Chief Justice therefore was of the view that under Art. 22(4)(a) the
Advisory Board had to be (1) [1950] S.C.R. 88. 493 of the opinion that there
was sufficient cause for detention beyond the period of three months. Mr.
Justice Fazl Ali expressed himself more clearly on the subject and said (pp. 170-171):
" In connection with the first point,
the question arises as to the exact meaning of the words " such detention
" occurring in the end of clause (4)(a). Two alternative interpretations
were put forward: (1) it such detention " mans preventive detention; (2)
".such detention" means detention for a period longer than three
months. If the first interpretation is correct then the function of the
advisory board would be to go into the merits of the case of each person and
simply report whether there was sufficient cause for his detention. According
to the other interpretation, the function of the advisory board will to be
report to the Government whether there is sufficient cause for the person being
detained for more than three months. On the whole, I am inclined to agree with
the second interpretation.
Prima,' facie, it is a serious matter to
detain a person for a longer period (more than three months) without any
enquiry or trial. But article 22(4)(a) provides that such detention may be
ordered on the report of the advisory board. Since the report must be directly
connected with the object for which it is required, the safeguard provided by
the article, viz., calling for a report from the advisory board, loses its
value, if the advisory board is not to apply its mind to the vital question
before the government, namely whether prolonged detention (detention for more
than three months) is justified or not. Under article 22(4)(a), the advisory
board has to submit its report before the expiry of three months and may
therefore do so on the eighty-ninth day. It would be somewhat farcical to
provide, that after a man has been detained for eighty-nine days, an advisory
board is to say whether his initial detention was justified. On the other hand,
the determination of the question whether prolonged detention (detention for
more than three months) is justified must necessarily involve the determination
of the question whether the detention was justified at all, an such an
interpretation only 494 can give real meaning and effectiveness to the
provision.
The provision being in the nature of a
protection or safeguard, I must naturally lean towards the interpretation which
is favourable to the subject and which is also in accord with the object in
view." Patanjali Sastri, J., preferred the other view but he realised that
the view taken by Fazl Ali, J., was also a possible view. He expressed himself
in these words on the subject (at page 210):
"I am inclined to think that the words
"such detention" in sub-clause (a) refer back to the preventive
detention mentioned in clause (4) and not to detention for a longer period than
three months. An advisory board, composed as it has to be of Judges or
lawyers-, would hardly be in a position to judge how long a person under
preventive detention, say, for reasons connected with defence, should be
detained.
That must be a matter for the executive
authorities, the Department of Defence, to determine, as they alone are
responsible for the defence of the country and have the necessary data for
taking a decision on the point. All that an advisory board can reasonably be
asked to do, as a safeguard against the misuse of the power, is to judge whether
the detention is justified and not arbitrary or mala fide.
The fact that the advisory board is required
to make its report before the expiry of three months and so could submit it
only a day or two earlier cannot legitimately lead to an inference that the
board was solely concerned with the issue whether or not the detention should
continue beyond that period. Before any such tribunal could send in its report
a reasonable time must elapse, as the grounds have to be communicated to the
persons detained, he has to make his representation to the detaining authority
which has got to be placed before the board through the appropriate departmental
channel. Each of these steps may, in the course of official routine, take some
time, and three months' period might well have been thought a reasonable period
to allow before the board could be required to submit its report, 495 Assuming,
however, that the words "such detention" had reference to the period
of detention, there is no apparent reason for confining the enquiry by the
advisory board to the sole issue of duration beyond three months without
reference to the question as to whether the detention was justified or not.
Indeed, it is difficult to conceive how a tribunal could fairly judge whether a
person should be detained for more than three months without at the same time
considering whether there was sufficient cause for the detention at all. I am
of opinion that the advisory board referred to in clause (4) is the machinery
devised by the Constitution for reviewing orders for preventive detention in
certain cases on a consideration of the representations made by the persons
detained. This is the view on which Parliament has proceeded in enacting the
impugned Act as will be seen from sections 9 and 10 thereof, and I think it is
the correct view. It follows that the petitioner cannot claim to have his case
judged by any other impartial tribunal by virtue of article 21 or
otherwise." For the reasons earlier stated I prefer to accept the view
expressed by Mr. Justice Fazl Ali.
The next case referred to is Makhan Singh
Tarsikka v. The State of Punjab (1). This was also a case for the issue of a
writ of habeas corpus for the release of a person detained under the same Act
as it stood in July 1951. In this case the first order for detention, that is
to say the order made before the reference to the Advisory Board itself fixed
the period of detention. It was held that that was illegal because the Act made
it plain that it is only after the Advisory Board to which the case has been
referred reports that the detention is justified, the Government should
determine what the period of detention should be and not before. The fixing of
the period of detention in the initial order in, the present case was,
therefore, contrary to the scheme of the Act and cannot be supported. On this
ground the petition for the issue of a writ was allowed.
This case was obviously not (1) [1952] S.C.R.
368. 496 concerned with Art. 22(4)(a) and does not in any manner decide the
question before me. I am, therefore, unable to find any assistance from it.
Lastly, reference was made to Dattatreya
Moreshwar Pangarkar v. The State of Bombay(1). That again was concerned with an
application for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus and also turned on the
present Preventive Detention Act. There, after the initial order for detention
which did not mention any period, the case had been referred to the Advisory
Board which reported that there was sufficient cause for detention and then the
Government issued an order stating that it confirmed the detention order issued
against the detenu.
The question was whether this confirmatory
order was in terms of s. II (1)(a) of the same Act as in this case as it stood
in 1952. That section provided that where the advisory board had reported that
there was sufficient cause for detention, the Government might continue the
detention for such period as it .thought fit. It was contended that the section
required the period of detention to be mentioned in the confirmatory order and
as the confirmatory order did not specify the period it was bad and did not
justify the detention. It was held that such omission did not invalidate the
order. Again it will be seen that this case was not concerned with Art.
22(4)(a). We were referred to certain observations of Mr. Justice Mukherjea in
this case in support of the proposition that the words " such detention
" in Art. 22(4)(a) meant detention simpliciter. These observations are set
out below (pp. 626-27):
" It is now settled by a pronouncement
of this court that not only it is not necessary for the detaining authority to
mention the period of detention when passing the original order under section
3(1) of the Preventive Detention Act, but that the' order would be bad and
illegal if any period is specified, as it might prejudice the case of the
detenu when it goes up for consideration before the Advisory Board.
The Advisory Board again has got to express
its opinion (1) (1952] S.C.R. 612.
497 only on the point as to whether there is
sufficient cause for detention of the person concerned. It is neither called
upon nor is it competent to say anything regarding the period for which such
person should be detained. Once the Advisory Board expresses its view that
there is sufficient cause for detention at the date when it makes its report,
what action is to be taken subsequently is left entirely to the appropriate
Government and it can under section 11(1) of the Act confirm the detention
order and continue the detention of the person concerned for such period as it
thinks fit." It was sought to be argued that Mukherjea, J., intended to
say that all that the Advisory Board was required to do was to express its
opinion on the question of justification of the detention simpliciter. This may
be so, but Mr. Justice Mukherjea was construing the Preventive Detention Act
which admittedly made that provision. He was not saying that Art.
22(4)(a) also said the same thing. Indeed
what I have read earlier from his judgment in Gopalan's case (1) would show
that his view about Art. 22(4)(a) was otherwise. Again the learned Judge was
not concerned with the question whether the relevant provision of the Preventive
Detention Act was ultra vires the Constitution. Furthermore, for the reasons
earlier stated, the fact that the Government decides the term of detention does
not indicate that it is not intended that when detention for a period longer
than three months is contemplated, it is not necessary to obtain the opinion of
the Advisory Board as to whether there was sufficient cause for detention for
the period. Reference was also made to the following portion of the judgment of
Mahajan, J. (2), occurring at p. 637 of the report:
"Under the Constitution, the detention
of a person under any law providing for preventive detention cannot be for a
period of more than three months unless the Advisory Board is of the opinion
that there is sufficient cause for the detention of the person concerned."
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 88, (2) [1952] S.C.R. 612.
498 It was suggested that the learned Judge
indicated that all that was necessary was for the law to provide for an opinion
of the Advisory Board as to the justification of the detention itself
irrespective of whether it was to be for a period longer than three months. It
is clear that here Mahajan, J., was not considering the meaning of the words
" such detention". He was not concerned with deciding whether these
words meant detention simpliciter or detention for a period longer than three
months. His observations in Gopalan's case(1) that I have earlier set out,
would in my view indicate that the Advisory Board is required to give an
opinion as to whether detention for a longer period than three months is
justified or not. It cannot therefore be said that Mahajan, J., held the view
that the words " such detention " in Art. 22(4)(a) mean simply
preventive detention.
I therefore come to the conclusion that there
is nothing either in Makhan Singh's case (2) or Dattatreya Moreshwar
Paugarkar's case (3) which takes a view contrary to that which I have taken.,
In the result I would allow the appeal.
(1) [195o] S.C.R. 88.
(3) [1952] S.C.R. 612 (2) [1952] S.C.R. 368.
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