Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Vs. State of
Bihar & Ors [1965] INSC 176 (7 September 1965)
07/09/1965 SARKAR, A.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION: 1966 AIR 740 1966 SCR (1) 709
CITATOR INFO :
F 1967 SC 908 (6) R 1970 SC 814 (7) R 1970 SC
852 (8) F 1970 SC1228 (3,4) RF 1971 SC 530 (233,237) RF 1971 SC2486 (8,15) RF
1972 SC 655 (8) R 1972 SC 739 (12) R 1972 SC1256 (8,27) R 1972 SC1656 (5) R
1972 SC1749 (7) RF 1972 SC1924 (15) R 1972 SC2259 (6) R 1973 SC 295 (7) F 1973
SC 844 (1) F 1973 SC1062 (4) RF 1973 SC1091 (2) R 1974 SC 156 (4) R 1974 SC 255
(7) RF 1974 SC1336 (12) F 1975 SC 134 (6) R 1975 SC 953 (9) RF 1975 SC1215 (5)
F 1976 SC 780 (5) E 1976 SC1207 (33,116,123,144,361,363,473) D 1977 SC1027 (23)
R 1980 SC 494 (10) RF 1980 SC 898 (42) R 1981 SC2166 (21,22) RF 1982 SC1315
(11,20,36) RF 1985 SC 18 (6,15) F 1985 SC1416 (126) RF 1986 SC 872 (119) R 1987
SC 998 (5,6) R 1987 SC1748 (11) R 1987 SC2332 (15) RF 1988 SC 208 (8) RF 1989
SC 364 (12) R 1989 SC 764 (13) RF 1990 SC 496 (9) RF 1990 SC1086 (18) RF 1992
SC 687 (8) RF 1992 SC 979 (7)
ACT:
Defence of India Rules, 1962, r.
30(1)(b)-"Public order" and "law and order", difference
between-Scope of rule.
Constitution of India, 1950, Art.
359(1)-President's Order suspending rights under Arts. 21 and 22-Right to move
Supreme Court under Art. 32-Effect on.
HEADNOTE:
Rule 30(1)(b) of the Defence of India Rules,
1962, provided that a State Government might, if it was satisfied with respect
to a person that with a view to preventing him from acting in a manner
prejudicial, inter alia to "public safety and maintenance of public
order" it is necessary to do so, order him to be detained. A Disrict
Magistrate to whom the power of the Government of the State of Bihar had been
delegated under s. 40(2) of the Defence of India Act, 1962, ordered the
detention of the petitioner under -the rule.
The order stated that the District Magistrate
was satisfied, that with a view to prevent the petitioner from acting in any
manner prejudicial to the "public safety and the maintenance of law and
order," it was necessary to detain him. Prior to the making of the order
the District Magistrate had, however, recorded a note stating that having read
the report of the Police Superintendent that the petitioner's being at large
was prejudicial to "public safety and maintenance of public order",
he was satisfied that the petitioner should be detained under the rule. The
petitioner moved this Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution for a writ of
habeas corpus directing his release from detention, contending that : (i)
though an order of detention to prevent acts prejudicial to public order may be
justifiable an order to prevent acts prejudicial to law and order would not be
justified by the rule; (ii) the order mentioned a notification which did not
contain the necessary delegation; (iii) the District Magistrate acted beyond
his jurisdiction by considering the danger not only in his district but in the
entire State; and (iv) all the conditions mentioned in the rule must be
cumulatively applied before the order of detention could be made. The
respondent-State raised a preliminary objection that the President of India had
made an Order under Art. 359(1) that the right of a person to move any court
for the enforcement of the rights conferred by Arts. 21 and 22 shall remain
suspended for the period during which the proclamation of emergency under Art.
352 was in force, if such person had been deprived of any such rights under the
Defence of India Act or any rule made there under, and that therefore, this
Court was prevented from entertaining the petition.
HELD : (Per Full Court) : (i) The petition
was maintainable.
Per Sarkar, J. : The order of the President
does not form a bar to all applications for release from detention under the
Act or the Rules. Where a person was detained in violation of the mandatory
provisions of the Defence of India Act his right to move the Court was not
suspended. Since the petitioner contended that the order of detention was not
justified by the Act or Rules and was therefore against the provisions of the
Act, the petitioner was entitled to be heard. [716 G; 717 A-B] 710 Per
Hidayatullah and Bachawat, JJ. : The net result of the President's Order is to
stop all claims to enforce rights arising from laws other than the Defence of
India Act and the Rules, and the provisions of Art. 22 at variance with the
Defence of India Act and the Rules are of no avail. But the deprivation must be
in good faith under the Defence of India Act or any rule or order made
thereunder. The President's Order does not say that even if a person is
proceeded against in breach of the Defence of India Act or the Rules or mala
fide he cannot move the Court to complain that the Act and the Rules under colour
of which some action was taken, do not warrant it. It follows, therefore. that
this Court acting under Art. 32 on a petition for the issue of a writ of habeas
corpus must not allow breaches of the Defence of India Act or the Rules to go
unquestioned, as Art. 359 and the President's Order were not intended to
condone an illegitimate enforcement of the Defence of India Act. [731 B, E, F;
733 B-C] Per Raghubar Dayal, J. : This Court can investigate whether the
District Mazistrate exercised the power under r. 30 honestly and bona fide, or
not, that is, whether he ordered detention on being satisfied as required by r.
30. [748 H] Per Mudholkar, J. : Before an entry into the portals of this Court
could be denied to a detenu, he must be shown an order under r. 30(1) of the
Defence of India Rules made by a competent authority stating that it was
satisfied that the detenu was likely to indulge in activities which would be
prejudicial to one or more of the matters referred to in the rule. If the
detenu contends that the order, though it purports to be under r. 30(1), was
not competently made, this Court has the duty to enquire into the matter. Upon
an examination of the order, if the Court finds that it was not competently
made or was ambiguous, it must exercise its power under Art. 32, entertain the
petition thereunder and make an appropriate order. [755 H; 756 A-B] Makhan
Singh v. State of Punjab, [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797 followed.
(ii) Per Sarkar, Mdayatullah, Mudholkar and
Bachawat JJ. :
The petitioner should be set at liberty.
Per Sarkar J. : The order detaining the
petitioner would not be in. terms of the rule unless it could be said that the
expression "law and order" means the same thing as "Public
order". What was meant by maintenance of public order was the prevention
of disorder of a grave nature, a disorder which the authorities thought was
necessary to prevent in view of the emergent situation created by external
aggression; whereas, the expression "maintenance of law and order"
may mean prevention of disorder of comparatively lesser gravity and of local
significance only. [718 B, D, E] Courts are only entitled to look at the face
of the order, because the satisfaction which justifies the order under the rule
is the subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority. If on its face an
order of detention is in terms of the rule, ordinarily, a court is bound to
stay its hands and uphold the order. When an order is on the face of it not in
terms of the rule, a court cannot enter into an investigation whether the order
of detention was :In fact in terms of the rule. So the State cannot be heard to
say of prove that an order was in fact made to prevent acts prejudicial to
public order though the order does not say so. It is not a case where the order
is only evidence of the detention having been made under the rule. The order is
conclusive as to the state of the mind of the person who made it and no
evidence is admissible to prove that state of mind. Extraneous evidence such as
the note made by the District Magistrate was not admissible lo prove that the
rule had been complied with. [718 G-H; 718 B-D 720 G; 722 BC] 711 is not taking
too technical a view, but is a matter of substance. If a man can be deprived of
his liberty under a rule by the simple process of the making of an order, he
can only be so deprived if the order is in terms of the rule.
If for the purpose of justifying the
detention such compliance by itself is enough, a non-compliance must have a
contrary effect A more reference in the detention order to the rule is not
sufficient to show that by "law and order" what was meant was public
order". [719 F-G: 720 A-C] The order no doubt mentions another ground of
detention, namely, prevention of acts prejudicial to public safety, and in so
far as it did so, it was clearly within the rule. But the order has
notwithstanding this to be held illegal, though it mentioned a ground on which
a legal order of detention could have been based, because, it could not be said
in what manner and to what extent the valid and invalid grounds operated an the
mind of the authority concerned and contributed to the creation of subjective
satisfaction. [722 E; G-11] Shibban Lal Saksena v. State of U.P. [1954] S.C.R.
418, followed.
Per Hidayatullah and Bachawat, JJ. : The
satisfaction of the detaining authority cannot be subjected to objective tests
and courts are not to exercise appellate powers over such authorities and an
order proper on its face, passed by a competent authority in good faith, would
be a complete answer to a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. But when from
the order itself circumstances appear which raise a doubt whether the officer
concerned had not misconceived his own powers, there is need to pause and
enquire. The enquiry then 'Is, not with a view to investigate the sufficiency
of the materials but into the officer's notions of his power.
If the order passed by him showed that he
thought his powers were more extensive than they actually were, the order might
fail to be a good order. No doubt. what matters is the substance; but the form
discloses the approach of the detaining authority to the serious question and
the error in the form raises the enquiry about the substance. When the liberty
of the citizen is put within the reach of authority and the scrutiny by courts
is barred, the action must comply not only with the substantive requirements of
law but also with those forms which alone can indicate that the substance has
been committed with. [739 H; 740 B-C, E; 741 C; F] The District Magistrate
acted to "maintain law and order" and his order could not be read
differently even if there was an affidavit the other way. If he thought in
terms of "public order" he should have said so in his order, or
explained how the error arose. A mere reference to his earlier note was not
sufficient and the two expressions cannot be reconciled by raising an air of
similitude between them. The contravention of law always affects order but
before it can be said to affect public order, it must affect the community or
the public at large. One has to imagine three concentric circles, the largest
representing "law and order", the next representing "public
order" and the smallest representing "security of State". An act
may affect "law and order " but not "public order," just as
an act may affect "public order" but not "security of the
State". Therefore, by using the expression "maintenance of law and
order" the District Magistrate was widening his own field of action and
was adding a clause to the Defence of India Rules. [740 E-F, H; 746 B-E; 747 D,
E] The order on its face shows two reasons, but it was not certain that the
District Magistrate was influenced by one consideration and not both, because,
it was not oven to the Court to enquire into the material on which the District
Magistrate acted, or to examine the reason-,; to see whether his action fell
within the other topic. namely. public safety. [746 F-G] 712 Per Mudholkar J. :
The use of the expression "maintenance of law and order" in the
impugned order makes it ambiguous on its face and therefore the order must be
held to be had. No doubt the order also refers to public safety. But then the
questions arise : What is it that weighed with the District Magistrate, the
apprehension regarding public safety or an apprehension regarding maintenance
of law and order? Was the apprehension entertained by the District Magistrate
that the petitioner, if left at large, was likely to do something which will
imperil the maintenance of public order generally, or was it that he
apprehended that the petitioner's activities may cause disturbances in a
particular locality ? His order, which was the only material which could be
considered, gave no indication on those questions. The expression "law and
order" does not find any place in the rule and is not synonymous with
"public order". "Law and order" is a comprehensive
expression in which would be included not merely public order but matters such
as public peace, tranquility, orderliness in a locality or a local area and
perhaps other matters. [756 H; 757 A, C, D, F] Per Raghubar Dayal J.
(dissenting) : The District Magistrate made the impugned order on his being
satisfied that it was necessary to do so with a view to prevent the petitioner
from acting in a manner prejudicial to public safety and maintenance of public
order. The impugned order was therefore valid and consequently, the petitioner
could not move this Court for the enforcement of his rights under Arts. 21 and
22 in view of the President's Order under Art.
359(1). [755 B-C] The detaining authority s
free to establish that any defect in the detention order is of form only and
not of substance it being satisfied of the necessity to detain the person for a
purpose mentioned in r. 30, though the purpose has been inaccurately stated in
the detention order. The existence of satisfaction does not depend on what is
stated in the order and can be established by the District Magistrate by his
affidavit. His omission to refer to "maintenance of public order"
does not mean that he was not so satisfied, especially when his note refers to
the petitioner being at large to be prejudicial to public safety and the
maintenance of public order. The petitioner's affidavit and rejoinder show that
the District Magistrate was satisfied of the necessity of detaining the
petitioner to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to the public
order, because of the setting of events that happened on that date.
"Maintenance of law and order" may
be an expression of wider import than "public order", but in the context
in which it was used in the detention order and in view of its use generally,
it should be construed to mean maintenance of law and order in regard to
maintenance of public tranquility.
[749 C-D; 750 C-D; 751 C, F-G] Sodhi Shamsher
Singh v. State of Pepsu, A.I.R. 1954 S.C.
276, referred to.
Even if the expression "maintenance of
law and order" in the impugned order be not construed as referring to
"maintenance of public order" the impugned order cannot be said to be
invalid in view of its being made with a double objective, that is, with the
object of preventing the petitioner from acting prejudicially to the public
safety and the maintenance of law and order. His satisfaction with respect to
any of the purposes mentioned in r. 30(1) which would justify his ordering the
detention of a person is sufficient for the validity of the order. There is no
room for considering that be might not have passed the order merely with one
object in view, the object being to prevent him from acting prejudicially to public
safety. It is not a case where his satisfaction was based on two grounds one of
which is irrelevant or non-existent. There does not appear to be any reason why
the District Magistrate would not have passed the order of 713 detention
against the petitioner on the satisfaction that it was necessary to prevent him
from acting prejudicially to public safety. [752 H; 753 B-D; 754 A-Di (iii) Per
Sarkar, Hidayatullah, Raghubar Dayal and Bachawat, JJ. The delegation was
valid.
Per Sarkar J. : In spite of the mistake in
the order as to the Notification delegating the power, evidence could be given
to show that the delegation had in fact been made, because, the mistake did not
vitiate the order. To admit such evidence would not be going behind the face of
the order, because, what is necessary to appear on the face of the order is the
satisfaction of the Authority of the necessity for detention for any of the
reasons mentioned in r. 30(1) (b), and not his authority to make the order.
[721 D, F-G] Per Hidayatullah, Raghubar Dayal and Bachawat JJ. : There was only
a clerical error in mentioning the wrong notification and being a venial fault
did not vitiate the order of detention. Also, s. 40(2) does not require the
imposition of any conditions but only permits it. [737 F; 738 A; 741 G; 748 D]
(iv) Per Hidayatullah, Raghubar Dayal and Bachawat, JJ. :
There was nothing wrong in the District
Magistrate taking a broad view of the petitioner's activities so as to weigh
the possible harm if he was not detained. Such a viewing of the activities of a
person before passing the order against him does not necessarily spell out
extra-territoriality, but is really designed to assess properly the
potentiality of danger which is the main object of the rule lo prevent. [737
G-H; 748 D] (v) Per Hidayatullah, Raghubar Dayal, Mudhilkar and Bachawat, JJ.
It is not necessary that the appropriate authority should entertain an
apprehension that the person to be detained is likely to participate in every
one of the activities referred to in the rule. [739 F; 748 D; 756 F]
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 79
of 1965.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of
India for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
The petitioner appeared in person.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and S. P. Varma, for
the respondents.
Sarkar J., Hidayatullah J. (on behalf of
himself and Bachawat J.) and Mudholkar J. delivered separate concurring
Judgments. Raghubar Dayal J. delivered a dissenting Opinion.
Sarkar, J. Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, a member of
the Lok Sabha, has moved the Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution for a writ
of habeas corpus directing his release from detention under an order passed by
the District Magistrate of Patna.
The order was purported to have been made
under r. 30(1)(b) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962.
Dr. Lohia, who argued his case in person,
based his claim to be released on a number of grounds. I do not propose to deal
with all these grounds for I have come to the conclusion that he is entitled to
be released on one of them and to the discussion of 714 that ground alone I
will confine my judgment. With regard to his ,other grounds I will content
myself only with the observation that as at present advised, I have not been
impressed by them.
The order of detention runs thus : "Whereas
1, J. N. Sahu, District Magistrate, Patna, am satisfied that with a view to
preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the public safety and
the maintenance of law and order, it is necessary to make an order that he be
detained. Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred by clause (b) of
sub-rule (1) of rule 30 of the Defence of India Rules, 1962 read with
Notification No.180/COW I hereby direct that Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia be arrested
and detained in the Contra Jail Hazaribagh, until further orders." Now the
point made by Dr. Lohia is that this order is not in terms of the rule under
which it purports to have been made and, therefore, furnishes no legal
justification for detention.
The reason why it is said that the order is
not in terms of the rule is that the rule does not justify the detention of a
person to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of
law and order while the order directs detention for such purpose. It is
admitted that the rule provides for an order of detention being made to prevent
act prejudicial to the maintenance of public order, but it is said that public
order and law and order are not the same thing, and, therefore, though an order
of detention to prevent acts prejudicial to public order might be justifiable,
a similar order to prevent acts prejudicial to law and order would not be
justified by the rule. It seems to we that this contention is well founded.
Before proceeding to state my reasons for
this view, I have to dispose of an argument in bar advanced by the respondent
State. That argument is that the petitioner has, in view of a certain order of
the President to which I will presently refer, no right to move the Court under
Art. 32 for his release. It is said that we cannot, therefore, hear Dr.
Lohia's application at all. To appreciate
this contention, certain facts have to be stated and I proceed to do so at
once.
Article 352 of the Constitution gives the
President of India a power to declare by Proclamation that a grave emergency
exists whereby the security of India is threatened inter alia by external
aggression. On October 26, 1962, the President issued a Proclamation under this
article that such an emergency existed. This presumably was done in view of
China's attack on the north eastern frontiers of India in September 1962. On
the same day as the 715 Proclamation was made, the President passed the Defence
of India Ordinance and rules were then made thereunder on November 5, 1962. The
Ordinance was later, on December 12, 1962, replaced by the Defence of India
Act, 1962 which however continued in force the rules made under the Ordinance.
On November 3, 1962, the President made an order under Art. 359(1) which he was
entitled to do, declaring "that the right of any person to move any court
for the enforcement of the rights conferred by article 21 and article 22 of the
Constitution shall remain suspended for the period during which the
Proclamation........ is in force, if such person has been deprived of any such
rights under the Defence of India Ordinance, 1962 or any rule or order made
thereunder." There is no doubt that the reference in this Order to the
"Defence of India Ordinance, 1962" must, after that Ordinance was
replaced by the Act, as earlier stated, be understood as a reference to the
Act: see Mohan Chowdhury v. The Chief Commissioner, Tripura(1). I should now
state that the Proclamation is still in force.
It is not in dispute that the present
petition has been made for the enforcement of Dr. Lohia's right to personal
liberty under Arts. 21 and 22. These articles in substance-and it should
suffice for the present purpose to say no more--give people a certain personal
liberty. It is said by the respondent State that the President's Order under
Art.
359(1) altogether prevents us from
entertaining Dr. Lohia's petition and, therefore, it should be thrown out at
once.
This would no doubt, subject to certain
exceptions to which a reference is not necessary for the purposes of the
present judgment, be correct if the Order of November 3, 1962 took away all
rights to personal liberty under Arts. 21 and 22.
But this, the Order does not do. It deprives
a person of his right to move a court for the enforcement of a right to such
personal liberty only when he has been deprived of it by the Defence of India
Act-it is not necessary to refer to the Ordinance any more as it has been
replaced by the Act-or any rule or order made thereunder. If he has not been so
deprived, the Order does not take away his right to move a court. Thus if a
person is detained under the Preventive Detention Act, 1950 , his right to move
the Court for enforcement of his rights under Arts. 21 and 22 remains intact.
That is not a case in which his right to do so can be said to have been taken
away by the President's Order.
This Court has in fact heard applications
under Art. 32 challenging a detention under (1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 442.
7 16 that Act : see Rameshwar Shaw v.
District Magistrate of Burdwan(1). If any person says, as Dr. Lohia does, that
he has been deprived of his personal liberty by an order not made under the Act
or the Rules there is nothing in the President's Order under Art. 359(1) to
deprive him of his right to move the Court under Art. 32. The Court must
examine his contention and decide whether he has been detained under the Act or
the Rules and can only throw out his petition when it finds that he was so detained,
but not before then. If it finds that he was not so detained, it must proceed
to hear his petition on its merits. The right under Art. 32 is one of the
fundamental rights that the Constitution has guaranteed to all persons and it
cannot be taken away except by the methods as provided in the Constitution, one
of which is by an order made under Art.
359. The contention that an order under that
article has not taken away the constitutional right to personal liberty must be
examined.
Mr. Verma said that Smith v. East Elloe Rural
District Council(1) supported the contention of the respondent State. I do not
think so. That case turned on an entirely different statute. That statute
provided a method of challenging a certain order by which property was compulsorily
purchased and stated that it could not be questioned in any other way at all.
It was there held that an action to set aside the order even on the -round of
having been made mala fide, did not lie as under the provision no action was
maintainable for the purpose. That case is of no assistance in deciding the
question in what circumstance a right to move the court has been taken away by
the entirely different provisions that we have to consider. Here only a right
to move a court in certain circumstances has been taken away and the question
is, has the court been moved on the present occasion in one of those
circumstances ? The President's Order does not bar an enquiry into that
question. Apart from the fact that the reasoning on which the English case is
based, has no application here, we have clear observations in judgments of this
Court which show that the Order of the President does not form a bar to all
applications for release from detention under the Act or the Rules. I will
refer only to one of them. In Makhan Singh v. The State of Punjab (3) it was
said, "If in challenging the validity of his detention order, the detenu
is pleading any right outside the rights specified in the Order, his right to
move any court in that behalf is not suspended" and by way of illustration
of this proposition, a case where a (1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 921.
(2) [1956] L.R. A.C. 736.
(3) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797.
717 person was detained in violation of the
mandatory provisions of the Defence of India Act was mentioned. That is the
present case as the petitioner contends that the order of detention is not
justified by the Act or Rules and hence is against its provisions. The
petitioner is entitled to be heard and the present contention of the respondent
State must be held to be ill founded and must fail.
I now proceed to consider the merits of Dr.
Lohia's contention that the Order detaining him had not been made under the
Defence of India Rules. I here pause to observe that if it was not so made,
there is no other justification for his detention; none is indeed advanced. He
would then be entitled to his release.
I have already stated that the Proclamation
of Emergency was made as the security of India was threatened by external
aggression. That Proclamation of emergency was the justification for the Act.
The Act in fact recited the Proclamation in its preamble. Section 3 of the Act
gave the Central Government power to make rules providing for the detention of
persons without trial for various reasons there mentioned. Rule 30(1) (b) under
which the order of detention of Dr. Lohia was made was framed under s. 3 and is
in these terms : "The Central Government or the State Government, if it is
satisfied with respect to any particular person that with a view to preventing
him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of India and civil
defence, the public safety, the maintenance of public order, India's relations
with foreign powers, the maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part of
India, the efficient conduct of military operations or the maintenance of
supplier, and services essential to the life of the community, it is necessary
to do so, may make an order(a)........ (b) directing that he be detained."
As I have said earlier, the order was made by the District Magistrate, Patna,
to whom the power of the Government of the State of Bihar in this regard had
been duly delegated under s. 40(2) of the Act.
Under this rule a Government can make an
order of detention against a person if it is satisfied that it is necessary to
do so to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial, among other things to
public safety and the maintenance of public order. The detention order in this
case is based on the ground that it was necessary to make it to prevent Dr. Lohia
from acting in any manner prejudicial to public safety and the maintenance of
law and order. I will, in discussing the contention of Dr. Lohia, proceed on
the basis as if the order directing detention was only for preventing him from
acting in a manner prejudicial to the 718 maintenance of law and order. I will
consider what effect the inclusion in the order of detention of a reference to
the necessity for maintaining public safety has, later. The question is whether
an order could be made legally under the rule for preventing disturbance of law
and order. The rule does not say so. The order, therefore, would not be in
terms of the rule unless it could be said that the expression "law and
order" means the same thing as "public order" which occurs in
the rule. Could that then be said? I find no reason to think so. Many of the
things mentioned in the rule may in a general sense be referable to the
necessity for maintaining law and order. But the rule advisedly does not use
that expression.
It is commonplace that words in a statutory
provision take their meaning from the context in which they are used. The
context in the present case is the emergent situation created by external
aggression. It would, therefore, be legitimate to hold that by maintenance of
public order what was meant was prevention of disorder of a grave nature, a
disorder which the authorities thought was necessary to prevent in view of the
emergent situation. It is conceivable that the expression "maintenance of
law and order" occurring in the detention order may not have been used in
the sense of prevention of disorder of a grave nature. The expression may mean
prevention of disorder of comparatively lesser gravity and of local
significance only.
To take an illustration, if people indulging
in the Hindu religious festivity of Holi become rowdy, prevention of that
disturbance may be called the maintenance of law and order.
Such maintenance of law and order was
obviously not in the contemplation of the Rules.
What the Magistrate making the order exactly
had in mind, by the use of the words law and order, we do not know. Indeed, we
are not entitled to know that for it is well-settled that courts cannot enquire
into the grounds on which the Government thought that it was satisfied that it
was necessary to make an order of detention. Courts are only entitled to look
at the face of the order. This was stressed on us by learned counsel for the
respondent State and the authorities fully justify that view, If, therefore, on
its face an order of detention is in to of the rule, a court is bound to stay
its hands and uphold the order. I am leaving her out of consideration a
contention that an order good on the face of it is bad for reasons dehors it,
for example, because it had been made mala fide. Subject to this and other
similar exceptions--to which I have earlier referred and as to 719 which it,,
is unnecessary to say anything in the present context and also because the
matter has already been examined by this Court in a number of cases court
cannot go behind the face of the order of detention to determine its validity.
The satisfaction of the Government which
justifies the order under the rule is a subjective satisfaction. A court cannot
enquire whether grounds existed which would have created that satisfaction on
which alone the order could have been made in the mind of a reasonable person.
If that is so,-and that indeed is what the respondent State contends.-it seems
to me that when an order is on the face of it not in terms of the rule, a court
cannot equally enter into an investigation whether the order of detention was
in fact, that is to say, irrespective of what is stated in it, in terms of the
rule. In other words, in such a case the State cannot be heard to say or prove
that the order was in fact made, for example, to prevent acts prejudicial to
public order which would bring it within the rule though the order does not say
so. To allow that to be done would be to uphold a detention without a proper
order. The rule does not envisage such a situation. The statements in the
affidavit used in the present case by the respondent State are, therefore, of
no avail for establishing that the order of detention is in terms of the rule.
The detention was not under the affidavit but under the order. It is of some significance
to point out that the affidavit sworn by the District Magistrate who made the
order of detention does not say that by the use of the expression law and order
he meant public order.
It was said that this was too technical a
view of the matter; there was no charm in words used. I am not persuaded by
this argument. The question is of substance.
If a man can be deprived of his liberty under
a rule by the simple process of the making of a certain order, he can only be
so deprived if the order is in terms of the rule. Strict compliance with the
letter of the rule is the essence of the matter. We are dealing with a statute
which drastically interferes with the personal liberty of people, we are
dealing with an order behind the face of which a court is prevented from going.
I am not complaining of that.
Circumstances may make it necessary. But it
would be legitimate to require in such cases strict observance of the rules. If
them is any doubt whether the rules have been strictly observed, that doubt
must be resolved in favour of the detenu. It is certainly more than doubtful
whether law and order means the same as public order. I am not impressed by the
argument that the 720 reference in the detention order to r. 30(1) (b) shows
that by law and order what was meant was public order. That is a most
mischievous way of approaching the question. If that were right, a reference to
the rule in the order might equally justify all other errors in it. Indeed it
might with almost equal justification then be said that a reference to the rule
and an order of detention would be enough. That being so, the only course open
to us is to hold that the rules have not been strictly observed. If for the
purpose of justifying the detention such compliance by itself is enough, a non-compliance
must have a contrary effect.
Carltona Ltd. v. Commissioners of Works(1) is
an interesting case to which reference may be made in this connection. It turned
on a statutory Regulation empowering a specified authority to take possession
of land for the purposes mentioned in it in various terms but which term-, did
not include the expression " national interest". Under this Regulation
possession of certain premises of the Carltona Company was taken after serving
a notice on it that was being done "in the national interest". It was
contended by the Carltona Company that it had been illegally deprived of the
possession of its premises because the notice showed that possession was not
being taken in terms of the Regulation. This contention failed as it was held
that the giving of the notice was not a prerequisite to the exercise of the
powers under the Regulation and that the notice was no more than a notification
that the authorities were exercising the powers. It was said that the notice
was useful only as evidence of the state of the mind of the writer and, that
being so, other evidence was admissible to establish the fact that the
possession of the premises was being taken for the reasons mentioned in the
Regulation.
Our case is entirely different. It is not a
case of a notice. Under r. 30(1) (b) a person can be detained only by an order
and there is no doubt that the order of detention has to be in writing. It is
not a case where the order is only evidence of the detention having been made
under the rule. It is the only warrant for the detention. The order further is
conclusive as to the state of the mind of the person who made it; no evidence
is admissible to prove that state of mind. It seems to me that if the Carltona
case was concerned with an order which alone resulted in the dispossession, the
decision in that case might well have been otherwise. I would here remind, to
prevent any possible misconception, that I am not considering a case where (1)
[1943) 2 All E.R. 560.
721 the order is challenged on the ground of
mala fides or other similar grounds to which I have earlier referred.
Before leaving this aspect of the case, it is
necessary to refer to two other things. The first is a mistake appearing in the
order of detention on which some argument was based by Dr. Lohia for quashing
the order. It will be remembered that the order mentioned a certain
Notification No. 180/CW.
The Notification intended to be mentioned
however was one No. 1 1 15/CW and the Notification No. 180/CW had been mentioned
by mistake. It was under Notification No. II 15/CW that the power of the State
Government to make an 'order of detention was delegated to the District
Magistrate under the provisions of s. 40(2) of the Act to which I have earlier
referred. The reference to the notification was to indicate the delegation of
power. The Notification actually mentioned in the order did not, however,
contain the necessary delegation. The result was that the order did not show on
its face that the District Magistrate who had made it had the necessary
authority to do so. This mistake however did not vitiate the order at all.
Nothing in the rules requires that an order of detention should state that the
authority making it has the power to do so. It may be that an order made by an
authority to whom the Government's power has not been delegated, is a nullity
and the order can be challenged on that ground. This may be one of the cases
where an order good on its face may nonetheless be illegal.
When the power of the person making the order
is challenged, the only fact to be proved is that the power to make the order
had been duly delegated to him. That can be proved by the necessary evidence,
that is, by the production of the order of delegation. That would be a case
somewhat like the Carltona case. In spite of the mistake in the order as to the
Notification delegating the power, evidence can be given to show that the
delegation had in fact been made. To admit such evidence would not be going
behind the face of the order because what is necessary to appear on the face of
the order is the satisfaction of the authority of the necessity for the
detention for any of the reasons mentioned in r. 30 (1) (b) and not the
authority of the maker of the order.
The second thing to which I wish to refer is
that it appeared from the affidavit sworn by the District Magistrate that prior
to the making of the order, he had recorded a note which raja in these words :
"Perused the report of the Senior S. P. Patna for detention of Dr. Ram
Manohar Lohia, M.P. under rule 30(1) (b) of the Defence of India Rules, on the
ground that his being at .
C. 1.165-3 722 large is prejudicial to the
public safety and maintenance of public order. From the report of the Sr. S.
P., Patna, I am satisfied that Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, M.P. aforesaid be
detained under rule 30(1)(b) of the Defence of India Rules.
Accordingly, I order that Dr. Ram Manohar
Lohia be detained.......... am unable to see that this note is of any
assistance to the respondent State in this case. It is not the order of
detention. The respondent State does not say that it is. I have earlier stated
that extraneous evidence is not admissible to prove that the rule has been
complied with though the order of detention does not show that,.
Indeed, this note does not even say that the
District Magistrate was satisfied that it was necessary to make an order of
detention to prevent Dr. Lohia from acting in a manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order. It only says that the Superintendent of Police reported
that he was so satisfied. The satisfaction of the Superintendent of Police
would provide no warrant for the detention or the order; with it we have
nothing to do.
For these reasons, in my view, the detention
order if it had been based only on the ground of prevention of acts prejudicial
to the maintenance of law and order, it would not have been in terms of r.
30(1)(b) and would not have justified the detention. As I have earlier pointed
out, however, it also mentions as another ground for detention, the prevention
of acts prejudicial to public safety. In so far as it does so, 'it is clearly
within the rule. Without more, we have to accept an order -made on that ground
as a perfectly legal order. The result then is that the detention order
mentions two grounds -one of which is in terms of the rule while the other is
not. What then is the effect of that ? Does it cure the illegality in the order
that I have earlier noticed ? This question is clearly settled by authorities.
In Shibban Lal Saksena v. The State of Uttar Pradesh(1) it *as held that such
an order would be a bad order, the reason being that it could not be said in
what manner and to what extent the valid and invalid grounds operated on the
mind of the authority concerned and contributed to the creation of his
subjective satisfaction which formed the basis of the order. The-order has,
therefore, to be held illegal though it mentioned a ground on which a legal
order of detention could have been based.
I should also point out that the District
Magistrate has not said in his affidavit that he would have been satisfied of
the necessity of the detention order only (1) [1954] S.C.R. 418.
723 for the reason that it was necessary to
detain Dr. Lohia to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to public
safety.
In the result, in my view, the detention
order is not under the Rules. The detention of Dr. Lohia under that order is
not legal and cannot be justified. He is entitled to be set at liberty and I
would order accordingly.
Hidayatullah, J. Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, M.P.,
has filed this petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution asking for a writ of
habeas corpus for release from detention ordered by the District Magistrate,
Patna, under Rule 30(1)(b) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962. He was arrested
at Patna on the night between 9th and 10th August, 1965. As it will be
necessary to refer to the terms of the order served on him it is reproduced
here "ORDER No. 3912 C. Dated, Patna, the 9th August 1965 Whereas 1, J. N.
Sahu, District Magistrate, Patna, am satisfied with respect to the person known
as Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, Circuit House, Patna, that with a view to preventing
him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the public safety and the
maintenance of law and order, it is necessary to make an order that he be
detained.
Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers
conferred by clause (b) of sub-clause (i) of rule 30 of the Defence of India
Rules, 1962, read with Notification No. 180/ CW, dated the 20th March, 1964, of
the Government of Bihar, Political (Special) Department, I hereby direct that
the said Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia be arrested by the police wherever found and
detained in the Central Jail, Hazaribagh, until further orders.
Sd/J. N. Sahu, 9-8-1965 District Magistrate,
Patna. Sd/Ram Manohar Lohia. 10th August-1.40." Dr. Lohia was lodged in
the Hazaribagh Central Jail at 3-30 p.m. on August 10, 1965. He sent a letter
in Hindi together with an affidavit sworn in the jail to the Chief Justice,
which was received on August 13, 1965, in the Registry of this Court. Although
the petition was somewhat irregular, this Court issued a rule and as 724 no
objection has been taken on the ground of form we say nothing more about it.
In his affidavit Dr. Lohia stated that he was
arrested at midnight on August 9, 1965 and was told that it was on charges of
arson but later was served with the order of detention and that in this way his
arrest for a substantive offence was turned into preventive detention. He
further stated that the order of detention showed that he was to be detained in
Bankipur Jail but the name of the Jail was scored out and "Central Jail,
Hazaribagh" was substituted which led him to conclude that typed orders of
detention were kept ready and that the District Magistrate did not exercise his
mind in each individual case. He contended that his detention under Rule 30 (1)
(b) was illegal because, according to him, that rule dealt with prejudicial
activities in relation to the defence of India and civil defence and not with
maintenance of law and order of a purely local character. He alleged that the
arrest was mala fide and malicious; that it was made to prevent him from
participating in the House of the People which was to go into Session from
August 16 and particularly to keep him away from the debate on the Kutch issue.
He further alleged that he had only addressed a very large gathering in Patna
and had disclosed certain things about the Bihar Government which incensed that
Government and caused them to retaliate in this manner and that detention was
made to prevent further disclosures by him.
In answer to Dr. Lohia's affidavit two
affidavits were filed on behalf of the respondents. One affidavit, filed by the
District Magistrate, Patna, denied that there was any malice or mala fides in
the arrest of Dr. Lohia. The District Magistrate stated that he had received a
report from the Senior Superintendent of Police, Patna, in regard to the
conduct and activities of Dr. Lohia and after considering the report he had
ordered Dr. Lohia's detention to prevent him from acting in any manner
prejudicial to the public safety and maintenance of public order. He stated
further that he was fully satisfied that the forces of disorder "which
were sought to be let loose if not properly controlled would envelop the whole
of the State of Bihar and possibly might spread in other parts of the country
which would necessarily affect the problem of external defence as well in more
ways than one". He said that the report of the Senior Superintendent of
Police, Patna, contained facts which he considered sufficient for taking the
said action but he could not disclose the contents of that report in the public
interest. He sought to correct, what he called, a slip in the order passed by
him, by stating that notification No. 11155C, dated 11th August 725 1964, was
meant instead of the notification mentioned there.
He stated further that as the disturbance was
on a very large scale it was thought expedient to keep ready typed copies of
detention orders and to make necessary alterations in them to suit individual
cases, at the time of the actual issuance of the orders, and that it was
because of this that the words "Central Jail Hazaribagh" were
substituted for "Bankipur Jail". He denied that he had not considered
the necessity of detention in each individual case. He repudiated the charge
that the arrest was made at the instance of Government and affirmed that the
action was taken on his own responsibility and in the discharge of his duty as
District Magistrate and not in consultation with the Central or the State
Governments. He denied that the arrest and detention were the result of anger
on the part of any or a desire to prevent Dr. Lohia from circulating any
damaging information about Government. The District Magistrate produced an
order which, he said, was recorded before the order of detention. As we shall
refer to that order later it is reproduced here "9.8.65.
Perused the report of the Senior S.P., Patna,
for detention of Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, M.P., under rule 30 (1) (b) of the
Defence of India Rules, on the ground that his being at large is prejudicial to
the public safety and maintenance of public order. From the report of the Sr.
S.P., Patna, I am satisfied that Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, M.P., aforesaid be
detained under rule 30(1)(b) of the D.-fence of India Rules. Accordingly, I
order that Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia be detained under rule 30(1)(b) of the Defence
of India Rules read with Notification No. 180/CW dated 20.3.64 in the
Hazaribagh Central Jail until further orders.
Send four copies of the warrant of arrest to
the Sr. S.P., Patna, for immediate compliance. He should return two copies of
it after service on the detenu.
Sd/J. N. Sahu, District Magistrate,
Patna".
The second affidavit was sworn by Rajpati
Singh, Police Inspector attached to the Kotwali Police Station, Patna. He
stated in his affidavit that the order was served on Dr. Lohia at 1-40 A.M. on
August 1O, 1965 and not at midnight.
He denied that Dr. Lohia was arrested earlier
or that at the time of his arrest, he was informed 7 26 that the arrest was for
an offence or offences of arson. He admitted, however, that he, had told him
that cases of arson and toot had taken place. He affirmed that there was no
charge of arson against Dr. Lohia.
Dr. Lohia filed a rejoinder affidavit and in
that affidavit he stated that the internal evidence furnished by the order
taken with the counter affidavits disclosed that his arrest and detention were
patently illegal. He pointed out that while Rule 30(1)(b) provided that
detention could be made for the maintenance of public order, the order stated
that Dr. Lohia was arrested for maintenance of law and order. He characterised
the counter affidavits as full of lies and narrated other facts intending to
show that there was a conspiracy to seal his mouth so that disclosures against
the Bihar Government might not be made. This represents the material on which
the present petition is based or opposed.
The petition was argued by Dr. Lohia in
person though he was receiving assistance in constructing his arguments. His
contentions are that he is not being detained under the Defence of India Rules
but arbitrarily; that even if he is being detained under the said Rules the law
has been flagrantly violated; that the order passed against him is mala fide;
and that the District Magistrate did not exercise the delegated power but went
outside it in various ways rendering detention illegal.
On behalf of the State a preliminary
objection is raised that the application itself is incompetent and that by the
operation of Art. 359 read with the President's Order issued under that Article
on November 3, 1962, Dr. Lohia's right to move the Supreme Court under Art. 32
of the Constitution is taken away during the period of emergency proclaimed
under Art. 352 as long as the President's Order continues. On merits it is
contended on behalf of the State of Bihar that the petition, if not barred,
does not make out a case against the legality of the detention; that this Court
cannot consider the question of good faith and that the only enquiry open to
this Court is whether there is or is not an order under Rule 30(1)(b) of the
Defence of India Rules 1962. If this Court finds that there is such an order
the enquiry is closed because the petition must then be considered as
incompetent. The State Government admits that the words of Rule 30(1)(b) and s.
3 of the Defence of India Act were not used in the order of detention but
contends that maintenance of public order and maintenance of law and order do not
indicate different things and that the area covered by maintenance of law and
order is the same if not smaller than the area covered by the expression
maintenance of public 727 order. We shall go into the last contention more
elaborately after dealing with the preliminary objection.
Questions about the right of persons detained
under the Defence of India Rules to move the Court have come up frequently
before this Court and many of the arguments which are raised here have already
been considered in a series of cases. For example, it has been ruled in Mohan
Choudhury v. Chief Commissioner, Tripura(1) that the right of any person
detained under the Defence of India Rules to move any court for the enforcement
of his rights conferred by Arts. 21 and 22 of the Constitution remains
suspended in view of the President's Order of November 3, 1962. It has also
been ruled that such a person cannot raise the question that the Defence of
India Act or the Rules are not valid because, if allowed to do so, that would
mean that the petitioner's right to move the court is intact. Other questions
arising from detentions under the Defence of India Rules were further
considered in Makhan Singh v. The State of Punjab(1). It is there pointed out
that, although the right of the detenu to move the Court is taken away that can
only be in cases in which the proper detaining authority passes a valid order
of detention and the order is made bona fide for the purpose which it
professes. It would, therefore, appear from the latter case that there is an
area of enquiry open before a court will declare that the detenu has lost his
right to move the court. That area at least embraces an enquiry into whether
there is action by a competent authority and in accordance with Defence of
India Act and the Rules thereunder. Such an enquiry may not entitle the court
to go into the merits of the case once it is establish-Id that proper action
has been taken, for the satisfaction is subjective, but till that appears the
court is bound to enquire into the legality of the detention. It was contended
that Makhan Singh's(2) case arose under Art.
226 and that what is stated there applies
only to petitions under that article. This is a misapprehension. The ruling
made no difference between the Art. 32 and Art. 226 in the matter of the bar
created by Art. 359 and the President's Order. What is stated there applies to
petitions for the enforcement of Fundamental Rights whether by way of Art. 32
or Art. 226.
Mr. Verma appearing for the State of Bihar,
however, contends that the area of the enquiry cannot embrace anything more
than finding out whether there is an order of detention or not and the moment
such an order, good on its face, is produced all enquiry into good faith,
sufficiency of the reasons or the legality or illegality (1) [1964] 3 S.C.R.
442.
(2) [1964) 4 S.C.R. 797.
728 of the action comes to an end, for to go
into such matters is tantamount to allowing the petitioner to move the court
which the President's Order does not permit. He contends that the courts' power
to issue a writ of habeas corpus in such cases is taken away as completely as
if cl. (2) of Art.
32 made no mention of the writ of habeas
corpus. According to him, an order under Rule 30(1)(b) proper on its face, must
put an end to enquiry of any kind. In view of this objection it is necessary to
state the exact result of the President's Order for this has not been laid down
in any earlier decision of this Court.
The President declared a state of grave
emergency by issuing a Proclamation under Art. 352 on October 26, 1962. This
Proclamation of Emergency gave rise to certain extraordinary powers which are
to be found in Part XVIII of the Constitution, entitled Emergency Provisions.
Article 358 suspended the provisions of Art. 19 during the Emergency and Art.
359 permitted the suspension of the enforcement of the rights conferred by Part
111. That article reads :
"359. Suspension of the enforcement of
the rights conferred by Part III during emergencies (1) Where a Proclamation of
Emergency is in operation, the President may by order declare that the right to
move any court for the enforcement of such of the rights conferred by Part III
as may be mentioned in the order and all proceedings pending in any court for
the enforcement of the rights so mentioned shall remain suspended for the
period during which the Proclamation is in force or for such shorter period as
may be specified in the order.
(2) An order made as aforesaid may extend to
the whole or any part of the territory of India.
(3) Every order made under clause (1) shall,
as soon as may be after it is made, be laid before each House of
Parliament." The President issued an order on November 3, 1962. The Order
reads :
"ORDER New Delhi, the 3rd November,
1962.
G.S.R. 1454.-In exercise of the powers
conferred by clause (1) of article 359 of the Constitution, the President
hereby declares that the right of any person to move any court for the
enforcement of the rights conferred by article 21 and article 22 of the
Constitution shall remain suspended for the period during which the
Proclamation of Emergency issued under clause (1) of article 352 thereof on the
26th October, 1962, is in force, if such person has been deprived of any such
rights under the Defence of India Ordinance, 1962 (4 of 1962) or any rule or
order made thereunder.
No. F. 4/62-Poll(Spl.) V. VISWANATHAN,
Secy." As a result of the above Order the right of any person to move any
court for the rights conferred by Arts. 21 and 22 of the Constitution remains
suspended, if such person is deprived of any such rights under the Defence of
India Ordinance 1962 ('now the Defence of India Act, 1962) or any rule or order
made thereunder. No doubt, as the article under which the President's Order was
passed and also that Order say, the right to move the court is taken away but
that is in respect of a right conferred on any person by Arts. 21 and 22 and
provided such person is deprived of the right under the Defence of India
Ordinance (now the Act) or any rule or order made thereunder. Two things stand
forth.
The first is that only the enforcement in a
court of law of rights conferred by Arts. 21 and 22 is suspended and the second
is that the deprivation must be under the Defence of India Ordinance (now the
Act) or any rule or order made thereunder. The word "thereunder"
shows that the authority of the Defence of India Act must be made out in each
case whether the deprivation is by rule or order.
It, therefore, becomes necessary to inquire
what are the rights which are so affected ? This can only be found out by
looking into the content of the Arts. 21 and 22. Article 21 lays down that no
person is to be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to
procedure established by law. This article thinks in terms of the ordinary laws
which govern our society when there is no declaration of emergency and which
are enacted subject to the provisions of the Constitution including the Chapter
on Fundamental Rights but other than those made under the powers 7 30 conferred
by the Emergency Provisions in Part XVIII. When the President suspended the
operation of Art. 21 he took away from any person dealt with under the terms of
his Order, the right to plead in a court of law that he was being deprived of
his life and personal liberty otherwise than according to the procedure
established by the laws of the country. In other words, he could not invoke the
procedure established by ordinary law. But the President did not make lawless
actions lawful. He only took away the fundamental right in Art. 21 in respect
of a person proceeded against under the Defence of India Act or any rule or
order made thereunder. Thus a person so proceeded could not claim to be tried
under the ordinary law or bring an action under the ordinary law. But to be
able to say that the right to move the court for the enforcement of rights
under Art. 21 is suspended, it is necessary to establish that such person has
been deprived of any such right under the Defence of India Act or any rule or
order made thereunder, that is to say, under the authority of the Act.
The action of the authorities empowered by
the Defence of India Act is not completely shielded from the scrutiny of
courts. The scrutiny with reference to procedure established by laws other than
the Defence of India Act is, of course, shut out but an enquiry whether the
action is justified under the Defence of India Act itself is not shut out. Thus
the State Government or the District Magistrate cannot add a clause of their
own to the Defence of India Act or even the Rules and take action under that
clause. Just as action is limited in its extent, by the power conferred, so
also the power to move the court is curtailed only when there is strict
compliance with the Defence of India Act and the Rules. The Court will not
enquire whether any other law is not followed or breached but the Court will
enquire whether the Defence of India Act or the Rules have been obeyed or not.
That part of the enquiry and consequently the right of a person to move the
court to have that enquiry made, is not affected.
The President's Order next refers to Art. 22.
That Article creates protection against illegal arrest and detention.
Clause (1) confers some rights on the person
arrested.
Clause (2) lays down the procedure which must
be followed after an arrest is made. By cl. (3) the first two clauses do not
apply to an alien enemy or to a person arrested or detained under any law
providing for preventive detention.
Clauses (4), (5), (6) and (7) provide for the
procedure for dealing with persons arrested or detained under any law providing
for preventive detention, and lay down the minimum or compulsory requirements.
The provisions of Art. 22 would have applied to arrest and detentions under the
Defence of India 731 Act also if the President's Order had not taken away from
such a person the right to move any court to enforce the protection of Art. 22.
The net result of the President's Order is to
stop all claims to enforce rights arising from laws other than the Defence of
India Act and the Rules and the provisions of Art. 22 at variance with the
Defence of India Act and the Rules are of no avail. But the President's Order
does not say that even if a person is proceeded against in breach of the
Defence of India Act or the Rules he cannot move the court to complain that the
Act and the Rules, under colour of which some action is taken, do not warrant
it. It was thus that this Court questioned detention orders by Additional
District Magistrates who were not authorised to make them or detentions of
persons who were already in detention after conviction or otherwise for such a
long period that detention orders served could have had no relation to the
requirements of the Defence of India Act or the Rules. Some of these cases
arose under Art. 226 of the Constitution but in considering the bar of Art. 359
read with the President's Order, there is no difference between a petition
under that article and a petition under Art. 32. It follows. therefore, that
this Court acting under Art. 32 on a petition for the issue of a writ of habeas
corpus, may not allow claims based on other laws or on the protection of Art.
22, but it may not and, indeed, must not, allow breaches of the Defence of
India Act or the Rules to go unquestioned. The President's Order neither says so
nor is there any such intendment.
There is, however, another aspect which needs
to be mentioned here. That is the question of want of good faith on the part of
those who take action and whether such a plea can be raised. This topic was
dealt with in Makhan Singh's case(1). At page 828 the following observation is
to be found :"Take also a case where the detenu moves the court for a writ
of Habeas Corpus on the ground that his detention has been ordered mala fide.
It is hardly necessary to emphasise that the exercise of a power mala fide is
wholly outside the scope of the Act conferring the power and can always be
successfully challenged. It is true that a mere allegation that the detention
is mala fide would not be enough; the detenu will have to prove the mala fides.
But if the mala fides are alleged, the detenu cannot be precluded from
substantiating his plea on the ground of the bar created by Art. 359(1) and the
Presi(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797.
732 dential order. That is another kind of
plea which is outside the purview of Art. 359(1)." Mr. Verma, however,
contends on the authority of Smith v. East Elloe Rural District Cormical &
Others(1) that the validity ,of the orders under the Defence of India Rules
1962 cannot be challenged on the ground of bad faith when the action is
otherwise proper. That case dealt with the Acquisition of Land (Authorization
Procedure) Act 1946 (9 & 10 Geo 6 Ch. 49). Paragraph 15 ( 1 ) of Part IV of
Schedule to that Act provided "If any person aggrieved by a compulsory purchase
order desires to question the validity thereof.... on the ground that the
authorization of a compulsory purchase thereby granted is not empowered to be
granted under this Act he may, within six weeks from the date on which notice
of the confirmation or making of the make an application The appellant more
than six weeks after the notice had been published brought an action, claiming
inter alia that the order was made and confirmed wrongfully and in bad faith on
the part of the clerk. Paragraph 16 of that Act provided "Subject to the
provisions of the last foregoing para.graph, a compulsory purchase order shall
not ...... be questioned. in any legal procceding whatsoever The House of Lords
(by majority) held that the jurisdiction of the court was ousted in such wise
that even questions of bad faith could not be raised. Viscount Simonds
regretted that it should be so, but giving effect to the language of paragraph
16, held that even an allegation of bad faith was within the bar of Paragraph
16. Lord Morton of Henryton, Lord Reid and Lord Somervill of Harrow were of
opinion that Paragraph 15 gave no such opportunity. Lord Radcliffe dissented.
The cited case can have no relevance here
because the statute provided for ouster of courts' jurisdiction in very different
circumstances. Although this Court has already stated that allegations of bad
faith can be considered, it may be added that where statutory powers are
conferred to take drastic action against the life and liberty of a citizen,
those who exercise it may not depart from the purpose. Vast powers in the
public interest are granted but under strict conditions. If a person, under
colour of exercising (1) [1956] A.C. 736.
733 the statutory power, acts from some
improper or ulterior motive, he acts in bad faith. The action of the authority
is capable of being viewed in two ways. Where power is misused but there is
good faith the act is only ultra vires but where the misuse of power is in bad
faith there is added to the ultra vires character of the act, another vitiating
circumstance. Courts have always acted to restrain a misuse of statutory power
and the more readily when improper motives underlie it. The misuse may arise
from a breach of the law conferring the power or from an abuse of the power in
bad faith. In either case the courts can be moved for we do not think that Art.
359 or the President's Order were intended to condone an illegitimate
enforcement of the Defence of India Act.
We now proceed to examine the contentions of
Dr. Lohia by which he claims to be entitled to have the order of the District
Magistrate set aside. It is convenient to begin with the allegation of want of
good faith. Dr. Lohia alleges that there was a conspiracy between the Central
Government, the State of Bihar, the Senior Superintendent of Police and the
District Magistrate, Patna, to stifle his disclosures against the Bihar
Government, the Chief Minister and others. He also alleges that he was arrested
for a substantive offence under the Indian Penal Code but the arrest has been
converted into preventive detention to avoid proof in a court of law. He says
that he was about to leave Patna and if the train was not late he would have
gone away and he hints that his detention was made to prevent him from taking
part in the Session of Parliament. The District Magistrate and the Inspector of
Police deny these allegations. The District Magistrate has given the background
of events in which he made the order on his responsibility. On reading the
affidavits on both sides, we are satisfied that the contentions of Dr. Lohia
are illfounded and that the order of detention was made by the District
Magistrate in good faith.
There is no dispute that the District
Magistrate was duly authorized to act under Rule 30 of the Defence of India
Rules, 1962. Dr. Lohia, however, says that the order is in flagrant disregard
of the requirements of the Defence of India Act, 1962 and the Rules. For this
purpose he bases his argument on three circumstances (i) that the District
Magistrate acted outside his jurisdiction as created by Notification No.
11155-C dated 11-8-1964 published in the Bihar Gazette Extra dated August 11,
1964;
(ii) that the District Magistrate's order is
defective because he purports to derive power from notification No. 180 of March
20, 1964 which had been rescinded; and (iii) the District Magistrate purports
to act to maintain law and order when he can only act to maintain public order
under the Defence of India Act and the Rules there under.
We shall now consider these grounds of
objection. Before we do so we may read the provisions of the Defence of India
Act and the Rules to which reference may be necessary.
The first part of the Defence of India Act we
wish to read is the long title and the preamble. They are:
"An Act to provide for special measures
to ensure the public safety and interest, the defence of India and civil
defence and for the trial of certain offences and for matters connected
therewith.
WHEREAS the President has declared by
Proclamation under clause (1) of article 352 of the Constitution that a grave
emergency exists whereby the security of India is threatened by external
aggression;
AND WHEREAS it is necessary to provide for
special measures to ensure the public safety and interest, the defence of India
and civil defence and for the trial of certain offences and for matters
connected therewith;
We may next read section 3 which confers
power to make rules:
"3. Power to make rules.
(1) The Central Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette, make such rules as appear to it necessary
or expedient for securing the defence of India and civil defence, the public
safety, the maintenance of public order or the efficient conduct of military
operations, or for maintaining supplies and services essential to the life of
the community." Then by way of illustration and without prejudice to the
generality of the powers conferred by sub-s. (1), certain specific things are
mentioned for which provision may be made by rules. Clause 15 provides :
73 5 "(15) Notwithstanding anything in
any other law for the time being in force,(i) the apprehension and detention in
custody of any person whom the authority empowered by the rules to apprehend or
detain (the authority empowered to detain not being lower in rank than that of
a District Magistrate) suspects, on grounds appearing to that authority to be
reasonable, of being of hostile origin or of having acted, acting, being about
to act or being likely to act in a manner prejudicial to the defence of India
and civil defence, the security of the State, the public safety or interest,
the maintenance of public order, India's relations with foreign States, the
maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part or area of India or the
efficient conduct of military operations, or with respect to whom that
authority is satisfied that his apprehension and detention are necessary for
the purpose of preventing him from acting in any such prejudicial manner, (ii)
the prohibition of such person from entering or residing or remaining in any
area, (iii) the compelling of such person to reside and remain in any area, or
to do or abstain from doing anything, and (iv) the review of orders of
detention passed in pursuance of any rule made under sub-clause (1);" We
need not trouble ourselves with the other clauses. Section 44 next provides :
"44. Ordinary avocations of life to be
interfered with as little as possible.
Any authority or person acting in pursuance
of this Act shall interfere with the ordinary avocations of life and the
enjoyment of property as little as may be consonant with the purpose of
ensuring the public safety and interest and the defence of India and civil
defence." By virtue of the powers conferred by s. 3 of the Defence of
India Ordinance, 1962 (now the Act), the Defence of India Rules 1962 were
framed. Part IV of these Rules is headed "Restriction of Movements and
Activities of Persons" and it consists of Rules 25-30, 30-A, 30-B and
31-34. These rules provide for various 7 36 subjects such as "Entering enemy
territory" (Rule 25), "Entering India" (Rule 26),
"Information to be supplied by persons entering India" (Rule 27) or
"Leaving India" (Rule 28), "Regulation of Movement of Persons
within India" (Rule 29), "Powers of photographing etc. of suspected
person" (Rule 31), "Control and winding up of certain
organisations" (Rule 32), provisions for "Persons captured as
prisoners" (Rule 33) and "Change of name by citizens of India"
(Rule 34). We are really not concerned with these rules but the headings are
mentioned to consider the argument of Dr. Lohia on No' (1) above. Rule 30 with
which we are primarily concerned consists of eight sub-rules. We are concerned
only with sub-rule (1). That rule reads :
"30. Restriction of movements of
suspected persons, restriction orders and detention orders.(1) The Central
Government or the State Government, if it is satisfied with respect to any
particular person that with a view to preventing him from acting in any manner
prejudicial to the defence of India and civil defence, the public safety, the
maintenance of public order, India's relations with foreign powers, the
maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part of India, the efficient conduct
of military operations or the maintenance of supplies and services essential to
the life of the community, it is necessary so to do, may make an order(a) (b)
directing that he be detained;
Under s. 40 (2) of the Defence of India Act,
the State Government may by order direct that the powers conferred by the Rules
may be exercised by any officer or authority in such circumstances and under
such conditions as may be specified in the direction. A special limitation was
indicated in S. 3 (15) of the Act, where authority is given for making rules in
connection with the apprehension and detention in custody of persons, that the
delegation should not be made to an officer -below the rank of a District
Magistrate.
By virtue of these various powers the State
Government issued a notification on March 20, 1964 authorising all District
Magistrates to exercise the powers of Government under Rule 30 (1) (b).
737 That notification was later rescind-Id by
another notification issued on June 5, 1964. A fresh notification (No. 11155-C)
was issued on August 11, 1964. This was necessary because of a mistake in the
first notification.
The new notification reads :
"No. 11155-C.-In exercise of the powers
conferred by sub-section (2) of section (40) the Defence of India Act, 1962
(Act 51 of 1962), the Governor of Bihar is pleased to direct that the powers
exercisable by the State Government under clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of rule 30
of the Defence of India Rules, 1962, shall be exercised by all District
Magistrates within their respective jurisdictions.
By order of the Governor of Biharc M. K. Mukharji
Secretary to Government".
Dr. Lohia contends that the District
Magistrate in his affidavit says that he apprehended danger not only in his
district but in the whole of Bihar State and even outside and hence he has not
acted within his jurisdiction. His argument attempts to make out, what we may
call, an exercise of extraterrestrial jurisdiction on the part of the District
Magistrate. He contends also that the notifications are bad because although
the Defence of India Act contemplates the imposition of conditions, none were
imposed and no circumstances for the exercise of power were specified. In our
judgment, none of these arguments can be accepted.
Section 40(2) of the Act does not require the
imposition of any conditions but only permits it. This is apparent from the words
"if any" in the sub-section. The only condition that the State
Government thought necessary to impose is that the District Magistrates must
act within their respective jurisdictions. It cannot be said that this
condition was not complied with. Dr. Lohia was in the Patna District at the
time. There was nothing wrong if the District Magistrate took a broad view of
his activities so as to weigh the possible harm if he was not detained. Such a
viewing of the activities of _a person before passing the order against him
does not necessarily spell out extraterrestrial in the sense suggested but is
really designed to assess properly the potentiality of danger which is the main
object of the rule to prevent. We find nothing wrong with the order on the
score of jurisdiction and argument No. (i) stated above must fail. Argument No.
(ii) is ,up. C. & I./65-4 7 38 not of any substance. There was a clerical
error in mentioning the notification and the error did not vitiate the order of
detention.
This brings us to the last contention of Dr.
Lohia and that is the most serious of all. He points out that the District
Magistrate purports to detain him with a view to preventing him from acting in
any manner prejudicial to the public safety and the maintenance of law and order
and argues that the District Magistrate had misunderstood his own powers which
were to prevent acts prejudicial to public order and, therefore, the detention
is illegal. On the other side, Mr. Verma contends that the Act and the Rules
speak of public order which is a concept much wider in content than the concept
of law and order and includes the latter, and whatever is done in furtherance
of law and order must necessarily be in furtherance of public order. Much
debate took place on the meaning of the two expressions. Alternatively, the
State of Bihar contends that the order passed by the District Magistrate prior
to the issue of the actual order of detention made use of the phrase
"maintenance of public order" and the affidavit which the District Magistrate
swore in support of the return also uses that phrase and, therefore, the
District Magistrate was aware of what his powers were and did exercise them
correctly and in accordance with the Defence of India Act and the Rules. We
shall now consider the rival contentions.
The Defence of India Act and the Rules speak
of the conditions under which preventive detention under the Act can be
ordered. In its long title and the preamble the Defence of India Act speaks of
the necessity to provide for special measures to ensure public. safety and
interest, the defence of India and civil defence. The expressions public safety
and interest between them indicate the range of action for maintaining
security, peace and tranquility of India whereas the expressions defence of
India and civil defence connote defence of India and its people against
aggression from outside and action of persons within the country. These generic
terms were used because the Act seeks to provide for a congress of action of
which preventive detention is just a small part. In conferring power to make
rules, s. 3 of the Defence of India Act enlarges upon the terms of the preamble
by specification of details. It speaks of defence of India and civil defence
and public safety without change but it expands the idea of public interest
into "maintenance of public order, the efficient conduct of military
operations and maintaining of supplies and services essential to the life of
the community". Then it mentions by way of illustration in 739 cl. (15) of
the same section the power of apprehension and detention in custody of any
person whom the authority empowered by the rules to apprehend or detain (the
authority empowered to detain not being lower in rank than that of a District
Magistrate), suspects, on grounds appearing to that authority to be reasonable
(a) of being of hostile origin; or (b) of having acted, acting or being about
to act or being likely to act in a manner prejudicial to(i) the defence of
India and civil defence;
(ii) the security of the State;
(iii) the public safety or interest;
(iv) the maintenance of public order;
(v) India's relations with foreign states;
(vi) the maintenance of peaceful conditions
in any part or area of India; or (vii) the efficient conduct of military
operations It will thus appear that security of the state, public safety or
interest, maintenance of public order and the maintenance of peaceful
conditions in any part or area of India may be viewed separately even though
strictly one clause may have an effect or bearing on another. Then follows rule
30, which repeats the above conditions and permits detention of any person with
a view to preventing him from acting in any of the above ways. The argument of
Dr.
Lohia that the conditions are to be
cumulatively applied is clearly untenable. It is not necessary to analyse rule
30 which we quoted earlier and which follows the scheme of section 3(15). The
question is whether by taking power to prevent Dr. Lohia from acting to the
prejudice of "law and order" as against "public order" the
District Magistrate went outside his powers.
The subject of preventive detention has been
discussed almost threadbare and one can hardly venture in any direction without
coming face to face with rulings of courts. These cases are now legion. It may
be taken as settled that the satisfaction of the detaining authority cannot be
subjected to objective tests, that the courts are not to exercise appellate
powers over such authorities and that an order proper on its face, passed by a
competent authority in good faith is a complete answer to a petition such as
this.
740 The rulings in our country adopt this
approach as do the English Courts. In England one reason given for the adoption
of this approach was that the power was entrusted to the Home Secretary and to
the Home Secretary alone. In India courts are ordinarily satisfied on the
production of a proper order of detention made in good faith by an authority
duly authorised and have not enquired further even though the power is
exercised by thousands of officers subordinate to the Central and State
Governments as their delegates.
When from the order itself circumstances
appear which raise a doubt whether the officer concerned had not misconceived
his own powers, there is need to pause and enquire. This is more so when the
exercise of power is at the lowest level permissible under the Defence of India
Act. The enquiry then is not with a view to investigate the sufficiency of the
materials but into the officer's notions of his power, for it cannot be
conceived for a moment that even if the court did not concern itself about the
sufficiency or otherwise of the materials on which action is taken, it would,
on proof from the order itself that the officer did not realise the extent of
his own powers, not question the action. The order of detention is the
authority for detention. That is all which the detenu or the court can see. It
discloses how the District Magistrate viewed the activity of the detenu and
what the District Magistrate intended to prevent happening. If the order passed
by him shows that he thought that his powers were more extensive than they
actually were, the order might fail to be a good order.
The District Magistrate here acted to
maintain law and order and not public order. There are only two possibilities :
(i) that there was a slip in preparing the
order, or (ii) that maintenance of law and order was in the mind of the
District Magistrate and he thought it meant the same thing as maintenance of
public order. As to the first it may be stated at once that the District
Magistrate did not specify it as such in his affidavit. He filed an earlier
order by him in which he had used the words "public order" and which
we have quoted earlier. That order did not refer to his own state of the mind
but to the report of the Senior Superintendent of Police. In his affidavit he
mentioned "public order" again but did not say that the words
"law and order" in his order detaining Dr. Lohia were a slip. He
corrected the error about the notification but naively let pass the other, and
more material error, without any remark.
Before us every effort possible was made to
reconcile "public order" with "law and order" as, indeed,
by a process of paraphrasing, it is possible to raise an air of similitude between
them. Such similitude is possible to raise even between phrases as dissimilar
as "for preventing breach of the peace", "in the 741 interest of
the public", "for protecting the interests of a class of
persons", "for administrative reasons" and "for maintaining
law and order". We cannot go by similitude. If public order connotes
something different from law and order even though there may be some common
territory between them then obviously the District Magistrate might have
traversed ground not within "public order". It would then not do to
say that the action is deferrable to one power rather than the other, just as
easily as one reconciles diverse phrases by a gloss. When the liberty of the
citizen is put within the reach of authority and the scrutiny from courts is
barred, the action must comply not only with the substantive requirements of
the law but also with those forms which alone can indicate that the substance
has been complied with. It is, therefore, necessary to examine critically, the
order which mentioned "law and order" with a view to ascertaining
whether the District Magistrate did not act outside his powers.
Before we do so we find it necessary to deal
with an argument of Mr. Shastri who followed Mr. Verma. He contends that there
is no magic in using the formula of the Act and Rules for the language of the
Act and the Rules can be quoted mechanically. We regret such an attitude. The
President in his Order takes away the fundamental rights under Arts. 21 and 22
from a person provided he has been detained under the Defence of India Act or
the rules made thereunder. The Order is strict against the citizen but it is
also strict against the authority. There can be no toleration of a pretence of
using the Defence of India Act.
The President's Order itself creates
protection against things such as arbitrariness, misunderstood powers, mistake
of identity by making his order apply only to cases where the detention is
under the Act or the rules there under. No doubt, what matters is the substance
but the form discloses the approach of the detaining authority to the serious
question and the error in the form raises the enquiry about the substance. It
is not every error in the order which will start such an enquiry. We have paid
no attention to the error in the reference to the notification because that may
well be a slip, and power and jurisdiction is referrable to the notification
under which they would have validity.
The other is not such a veneal fault. It
opens the door to enquiry what did the District Magistrate conceive to be his
powers ? In proceeding to discuss this question we may consider a decision of
the Court of Appeal in England in Carltona Ltd.
v. Commissioners of Works and Others(1).
Curiously enough it was 1. [1943] 2 All. E.R. 560.
742 brought to our notice by Dr. Lohia and
not by the other side. That case arose under Regulation 51(1) of the Defence
(General) Regulations in England during the last World War.
The Regulation read :
"A competent authority, if it appears to
that authority to be necessary or expedient so to do in the interests of the
public safety, the defence of the realm or the efficient prosecution of the
war, or for maintaining supplies and services essential to the life of the
community, may take possession of any land, and may give such directions as
appear to the competent authority to be necessary or expedient in connection
with the taking of possession of that land." There was an order against
Carltona Ltd. by the Commissioner of Works requisitioning the factory. The
order read:
"I have to inform you that the
department have come to the conclusion that it is essential, in the national
interest, to take possession of the above premises occupied by you." It
was objected on behalf of the Company that the mind was not directed to any one
of the various heads mentioned in the Regulation which were put in the
alternative. Lord Greene, M.R. speaking on behalf of Lord Goddard (then Lord
Justice) and Lord du Parcq (then Lord Justice) observed :
"It was said that it was the duty of the
person acting in the capacity of 'a competent authority' to examine the facts
of the case and consider under which, if any, of those various heads the matter
came, and it is said that the assistant secretary did nothing of the kind. It
is to be observed that those heads are not mutually exclusive heads at all.
They overlap at every point and many matters
will fall under two or more of them, or under all four. I read the evidence as
meaning that the assistant secretary, seeing quite clearly that the case with
which he was dealing and the need that he wished to satisfy was one which came
under the regulation, did not solemnly sit down and ask himself whether it was
for the efficient prosecution of the war that this storage was required for maintaining
supplies and services essential to the life of the community. He took the view
that it was required either for all those purposes, or, at any 743 rate, for
some of them, and I must confess it seems to me that it would have been a waste
of time on the facts of this case for anyone seriously to sit down and ask
himself under which particular head the case fell. He regarded it, as I
interpret his evidence, as falling under all the heads, and that may very well
be having regard to the facts that these heads overlap in the way that I have
mentioned. It seems to me, therefore, that there is no substance in that point,
and his evidence makes it quite clear that he did bring his mind to bear on the
question whether it appeared to him to be necessary or expedient to requisition
this property for the purposes named, or some of them." The case is
distinguishable on more than one ground. To begin with, it dealt with an
entirely different situation and different provision of law. No order in
writing specifying satisfaction on any or all of the grounds was required.
Detention under Regulation 18-B required an order just as detention under the
Defence of India Act. The distinction between action under Regulation 51 and
that under Regulation 18-B was noticed by the Court of Appeal in Point of Ayr
Collieries Ltd. v. Lloyd-George("). It is manifest that when property was
requisitioned it would have been a futile exercise to determine whether the act
promoted the efficient prosecution of the war, or the maintaining of supplies
and services. But when a person is apprehended and detained it may be necessary
to set out with some accuracy what he did or was likely to do within the
provisions of Rule 30, to merit the detention. The use of one phrase meaning a
different thing in place of that required by the Act would not do, unless the
phrase imported means the same thing as the phrase in the Act. Here the phrase
used is maintenance of law and order and we must see how that phrase fits into
the Rule which speaks of maintenance of "public order". The words
"public order" were considered on some previous occasions in this
Court and the observations made them are used to prove that maintenance of
public order is the same thing as maintenance of law and order. We shall refer
to some of these observations before we discuss the two phrases in the context
of the Defence of India Rules.
Reliance is first placed upon a decision of
the Federal Court in Lakhi Narayan Das v. Province of Bihar(2) where the Court
dealing with item 1 of Provincial List, 7th Schedule in the Government of India
Act, 1935 which read1. [1943] 2 All. E.R. 546 at 548.
2. [1949] F.C.R. 693 at 704.
744 .lm15 Public order (but not including the
use of His Majesty's naval, military or air -forces in aid of the civil power)
" observed that "public Order" with which that item began was
"a most comprehensive term". Reference is also made to Ramesh Thapar
v. State of Madras(1) where this Court dealing with the same subject matter
also observed :
". . . .'Public order is an expression
of wide connotation and signifies that state of tranquillity which prevails
among the members of a political society as a result of internal regulations
enforced by the Government which they have established it must be taken that
'public safety' is used as a part of the wider concept of public order and
referring to Entry 3 in List III (Concurrent List) of the 7th Schedule of the
Constitution which includes the "security of a State" and
"maintenance of public order" as distinct topics of legislation,
observedin the field of public order or tranquillity, marking off, may be,
roughly, the boundary between those serious and aggravated forms of public
disorder -which are calculated to endanger the security of the State and the
relatively minor breaches of the peace of a purely local significance, treating
for this purpose differences in degree as if they weredifferences in
kind." Fazl Ali J. took a different view which he had expressed more,
fully in Brijbhushan and Another v. the State of Delhi ( 2 ) but he also
observed that "public safety" had, as a result of a long course of
legislative practice, acquired a well rccognised meaning and was taken to
denote safety or security of the State and that the expression "public
order" was wide enough to cover small disturbances of the peace which do
not jeopardise the security of the State and paraphrased the words "public
order' as public tranquillity." Both the aspects of the matter were again
before this Court in The Superintendent Central Prison, Fatehgarh v. Ram
Manohar Lohia(3) when dealing with the wording of clause (2) of Art. 19 as
amended by the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951, it 1. [1950] S.C.R.
593 at 598.
2. [1950] S.C.R. 605.
3. [1960] 2 S.C.R. 821.
745 fell to be decided what "public
order" meant. Subba Rao J.
speaking for the Court referred to all
earlier rulings and quoting from them came to the conclusion that "public
order" was equated with public peace and safety and said :
"........ Presumably in an attempt to
get over the effect of these two decisions, the expression "public
order" was inserted in Art.
19(2) of the Constitution by the Constitution
(First Amendment) Act, 1951, with a view to bring in offences involving breach
of purely local significance within the scope of Art.
19.........." Summing up the position as
he gathered from the earlier cases, the learned Judge observed:
". . . . . . "Public ordee, is
synonymous with public safety and tranquillity: it is the absence of disorder
involving breaches of local significance in contradistinction to national
upheavals, such as revolution, civil strife, war, affecting the security of the
State;. . . . . . ".
These observations determine the meaning of
the words 'public order" in contradistinction to expressions such as
"public safety", "security of the State". They were made in
different contexts. The first three cases dealt with the meaning in the
legislalative Lists as to which, it is settled, we must give as large a meaning
as possible. In the last case the meaning of "public order" was given
in relation to the necessity for amending the Constitution as a result of the
pronouncements oil this Court. The context in which the words were used was
different, the occasion was different and the object in sight was different.
We have here a case of detention under Rule
30 of the Defence of India Rules which permits apprehension and detention of a
person likely to act in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public
order. It follows that if such a person is not detained public disorder is the
apprehended result. Disorder is no doubt prevented by the maintenance of law
and order also but disorder is a broad spectrum which includes at one end small
disturbances and at the other the most serious and cataclysmic happenings. Does
the expression "public order' take in every kind of disorder or only some
? The answer to this serves to distinguish "public order" from
"law and order" because the latter undoubtedly takes in all of them.
Public order if disturbed, must lead to public disorder. Every breach of the
peace does not lead to public disorder. When two drunkards quarrel and fight
there is disorder but not public disorder. They can be dealt with under the
powers 746 to maintain law and order but cannot be detained on the ground that
they were disturbing public order. Suppose that the two fighters were of rival
communities and one of them tried to raise communal passions. The problem is
still one of law and order but it raises the apprehension of public disorder.
Other examples can be imagined. The contravention of law always affects order
but before it can be said to affect public order, it must affect the community
or the public at large. A mere disturbance of law and order leading to disorder
is thus not necessarily sufficient for action under the Defence of India Act
but disturbances which subvert the public order are. A District Magistrate is
entitled to take action under Rule 30(1)(b) to prevent subversion of public
order but not in aid of maintenance of law and order under ordinary
circumstances.
It will thus appear that just as "public
order" in the rulings of this Court (earlier cited) was said to comprehend
disorders of less gravity than those affecting "security of State",
"law and order" also comprehends disorders of less gravity than those
affecting public order". One has to imagine three concentric circles. Law
and order represents the largest circle within which is the next circle
representing public order and the smallest circle represents security of State.
It is then easy to see that an act may affect law and order but not public
order just as an act may affect public order but not security of the State. By
using the expression "maintenance of law and order" the District
Magistrate was widening his own field of action and was adding a clause to the
Defence of India Rules.
We do not know the material on which the
District Magistrate acted. If we could examine the reasons we may be able to
say whether the action can still be said to fall within the other topic public
safety. That enquiry is not open to us.
If we looked into the matter from that angle
we would be acting outside our powers. The order on its face shows two reasons.
There is nothing to show that one purpose was considered to be more essential
than the other. We are not, therefore, certain that the District Magistrate was
influenced by one consideration and not both. The order -of detention is a
warrant which authorises action. Affidavits hardly improve the order as it is.
If there is allegation of bad faith they can be seen to determine the question
of good faith. If mistaken identity is alleged we can satisfy ourselves about
the identity. But if action is taken to maintain law and order instead of
maintaining public order, there is room to think that the powers were
misconceived and if there is such a fundamental error then the 7 47 action
remains vulnerable. It will not be possible to say that although maintenance of
law and order were specified, what was considered was the problem of
maintenance of public order. The error is an error of a fundamental character
and unlike quoting a wrong notification. It is thus apparent why one error in
the order of detention is admitted but not the other, and why with elaborate
arguments it is attempted to establish that "public order" involves
elements more numerous than "law and order" where, in fact, the truth
is the other way.
It may be mentioned that Dr. Lohia claimed
that the satisfaction of the President under Art. 359 is open to scrutiny of
the court. We have not allowed him to argue this point which is now concluded
by rulings of this Court.
In our judgment the order of the District
Magistrate exceeded his powers. He proposed to act to maintain law and order
and the order cannot now be read differently even if there is an affidavit the
other way. We have pondered deeply over this case. The action of the District
Magistrate was entirely his own. He was, no doubt, facing a law and order
problem but he could deal with such a problem through the ordinary law of the
land and not by means of the Defence of India Act and the Rules. His powers
were limited to taking action to maintain public order. He could not run the
law and order problems in his District by taking recourse to the provisions for
detention under the Defence of India Act. If he thought in terms of
"public ordee' he should have said so in the order or explained how the
error arose. He does neither. If the needs of public order demand action a
proper order should be passed. The detention must, therefore, be declared to be
outside the Defence of India Act, 1962 and the Rules made there under.
Dr. Lohia is entitled to be released from
custody and we order accordingly.
Raghubar Dayal, J. In this writ petition Dr.
Lohia challenges the validity of the order made by the District Magistrate,
Patna, dated August 9, 1965, under cl. (b) of sub-r. (1) of r. 30 of the
Defence of India Rules, 1962, hereinafter called the Rules. This order is as
follows :
"Whereas 1, J. N. Sahu, District
Magistrate, Patna, am satisfied with respect to the person known as Dr. Ram
Manohar Lohia, Circuit House, Patna that with a view to preventing him from
acting in any manner prejudicial to the public safety and the maintenance of
law and 748 order, it is necessary to make an order that he be detained.
Now, therefore, in the exercise of the powers
conferred by clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of rule 30 of the Defence of India
Rules, 1962 read with Notification No. 180/CW dated the 20th March 1964 of the
Govt. of Bihar, Political (Special) Department, 1 hereby direct that the said
Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia be arrested by the police wherever found and detained in
the Central Jail Hazaribagh, until further orders." If this order is
valid, Dr. Lohia cannot move this Court for enforcement of his rights conferred
by arts. 21 and 22 of the Constitution, in view of the Order of the President
dated November 3, 1962, in the exercise of powers conferred on him by cl. (1)
of art. 359 of the Constitution.
Dr. Lohia has challenged the validity of this
order on several grounds. I agree with the views expressed by Hidayatullah J.,
about all the contentions except one. That contention is that the appropriate
authority is not empowered to order detention with a view to prevent a person
from acting in any way prejudicial to the maintenance of law and order. It is
urged that though the District Magistrate could order the detention of the
petitioner with a view to prevent him from acting in any way prejudical to the
public safety and the maintenance of public order, he could not order detention
with a view to prevent the petitioner from acting prejudicially to the public
safety and maintenance of law and order, as the latter object, being not
synonymous with the object of preventing him from acting prejudicial to public order,
is outside the purview of the provisions of r.
30(1) of the rules and that, therefore, the
entire order is bad. I do not agree with this contention.
Under r. 30(1)(b), the District Magistrate
could have made the order of detention with respect to Dr. Lohia if he was
satisfied that he be detained with a view to prevent him from acting in any
manner prejudicial to public safety or maintenance of public order. Such
satisfaction is subjective and not objective. The Court cannot investigate
about the adequacy of the reasons which led to his satisfaction. The Court can,
however, investigate whether he exercised the power under r. 30 honestly and
bona fide or not i.e., whether he ordered detention on being satisfied as
required by r. 30. What is crucial for the validity of the detention order is
such satisfaction and not the form in which the detention order is framed. A
detenu can question the validity of the detention order-valid 749 on its
face-on various grounds including that of mala fides.
The onus will be on him to prove mala fides.
He can question the validity of the detention order on the same ground when, on
its face, it appears to be invalid. In such a case the onus will be on the
detaining authority to establish that it was made bona fide.
An order is made mala fide when it is not
made for the purpose laid down in the Act or the rules and is made for an
extraneous purpose. The contention of the petitioner to the effect that the
detention order cannot be made on the satisfaction of the detaining authority
that it is necessary to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of law and order, in effect, amounts to the contention that it is
made mala fide.
The detaining authority is free to establish
that any defect in the detention order is of form only and not of substance, it
being satisfied of the necessity to detain the person for a purpose mentioned
in r. 30 though the purpose has been inaccurately stated in the detention
order. The existence of the satisfaction required by r. 30 does not depend on
what is said in the detention order, and can be established by the District
Magistrate by his affidavit. We have therefore to examine whether the District
Magistrate was really satisfied about the necessity to detain Dr. Lohia with a
view to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to public safety and
maintenance of public order.
The impugned order was passed under r. 30 (1)
(b) of the rules. The District Magistrate decided to detain the appellant with
two objects, firstly, to prevent him from acting in any way prejudicial to
public safety and, secondly, to prevent him from acting in any way prejudicial
to the maintenance of law and order. The District Magistrate has-even in the
absence of any such contention as under discussion and which was raised after
the filing of the District Magistrate's affidavit-said that having regard to,
inter alia, the circumstances which were developing in Patna on August 9, 1965,
he was fully satisfied, in view of the report made by the Senior Superintendent
of Police, Patna, in regard to Dr. Lohia's conduct and activities, that it was
necessary to direct that he be detained in order to prevent him from acting
further in any manner prejudicial to the public safety and maintenance of
public order. There is no reason to disbelieve his statement. His original
order, set out below, bears out this statement of his in his later affidavit :
"Perused the report of the Senior S. P.
Patna for detention of Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, M.P. under rule 7 50 30(1) (b) of
the Defence of India Rules, on the ground that his being at large is
prejudicial to the public safety and maintenance of public order. From the
report of the Sr. S. P., Patna, I am satisfied that Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia,
M.P., aforesaid, be detained under rule 30(1) (b) of the Defence of India
Rules. Accordingly, I order that Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia be detained under rule
30 (1) (b) of the Defence of India Rules read with Notification No. 180/CW
dated 20-3-64 in the Hazaribagh Central Jail until further orders." The
District Magistrate's omission to repeat in the second sentence where he speaks
of his satisfaction that Dr. Lohia be detained with a view to preventing him
from acting prejudicially to the public safety and maintenance of public order,
does not mean that he was not so satisfied when the earlier sentence makes
reference to the report of the Senior Superintendent of Police for detaining
Dr. Lohia on the ground of his being at large to be prejudicial to public
safety and maintenance of public order.
The District Magistrate referred, in para 3
of his affidavit, to his satisfaction that the forces of disorder which were
sought to be let loose, if not properly controlled, would envelop the whole
State of Bihar and possibly might spread in other parts of the country which
would necessarily affect the problem of external defence as well in more ways
than one. The possibilities of such forces of disorder spreading to other parts
of the country satisfied him with the necessity of taking immediate action to
neutralize those forces. It appears from his statements in paras 6 and 7 of the
same affidavit that actual disturbances took place at Patna that day and that
he had to operate from the Control Room. In para 9 he states that the action
taken against Dr. Lohia was purely for the purpose of maintenance of public
peace in the circumstances stated by him earlier.
In his rejoinder affidavit Dr. Lohia states
with reference to the alleged forces of disorder referred to by the District
Magistrate that even if he was promoting what the executive would call `forces
of disorder', he was doing so not with a view to impair the defences of the
country but further to strengthen them, that the various allegations made
against him were extraneous to the scope and purpose of the legislative
provisions of the proclamations of emergency which had no rational relationship
to the circumstances which were developing in Patna on August 9, 1965.
751 Even in his original affidavit Dr. Lohia
stated in para 6 that :
"It is also revealing to note that after
the events of the 9th August for which responsibility should have been sought
to be fixed either through trial or enquiry, on me or Government or anybody
else, I addressed a crowd of nearly a lakh for over an hour after seven in the
evening." The setting of the events that appear to have happened at Patna
on August 9, 1965 further bear out the statement of the District Magistrate
that he was satisfied of the necessity to detain Dr. Lohia in order to prevent
him from acting in a manner prejudicial to public order.
Further, the expression 'maintenance of law
and order' is not used in cl. (1) of r. 30. The corresponding expression used
therein is 'maintenance of public order'. The two expressions are not much
different. The expression 'public order' has been construed by this Court in a
few cases, the latest of them being The Superintendent, Central Prison,
Fatehgarh v. Ram Manohar Lohia(1) wherein it was said at p.
839 :
"'Public order' is synonymous with
public safety and tranquillity: it is the absence of disorder involving
breaches of local significance in contradistinction to national upheavals, such
as revolution, civil strife, war, affecting the security of the State."
The expression 'maintenance of law and order' would cover 'maintenance of
public safety and tranquillity'. it -may be, as urged for the petitioner, an
expression of wider import than public order but, in the context in which it is
used in the detention order and in view of its use generally, it should be
construed to mean maintenance of law and order in regard to the maintenance of
public tranquillity. It is not usually used merely with reference to
enforcement of law by the agency of the State prose cuting offenders against
any of the numerous laws enacted for the purposes of a wellregulated society.
Simple and ostensibly minor incidents at times lead to widespread disturbances
affecting public safety and tranquillity.
Reference may be made to the case reported as
Sodhi Shamsher Singh v. State of Pepsu(2). In that case certain persons were 1.
[1960] 2 C.S.R.821.
2. A.I.R.1954 S.C. 276.
7 52 detained under an order under S. 3 ( 1 )
of the Preventive Detention Act, 1950, on grounds which, in substance, were
that one of them had published certain pamphlets whose circulation, in the
opinion of the Government, tended to encourage the Sikhs to resort to acts of
lawlessness and plunge the Hindus into a feeling of utter frustration and
discouragement and consequently to make them take the law into their hands for
the redress of their grievances.
Section 3(1) of the Preventive Detention Act,
1950, reads :
"The Central Government or the State
Government may(a) if satisfied with respect to any person that with a view to
preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to(i) the defence of
India, the relations of India with foreign powers, or the security of India, or
(ii) the security of the State or the maintenance of public order, or (iii)....
(b) . . . ., make an order directing that
such person be detained." This Court used the expression 'maintenance of
law and ordee in place of 'maintenance of public order' used in s. 3 ( 1 ) (a)
(ii) at three places in paras 4 and 5 of the judgment.
I do not refer to these to show that the
Court has construed the expression 'maintenance of public order' as 'maintenance
of law and order' but to reinforce my view that the expression 'maintenance of
law and order' is generally used for 'maintenance of public safety and
tranquillity' which is covered by the expression 'public order. When this Court
used this expression in place of 'maintenance of public order' I cannot
conclude, as urged by the petitioner, that the District Magistrate's using the
expression 'maintenance of law and order' in place of 'maintenance of public
order is any indication of the fact that he had not applied his mind to the
requirements of the provisions of r. 30(1) or had not actually come to the
conclusion that it was necessary to detain Dr. Lohia with a view to prevent him
from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order.
If the expression 'maintenance of law and
order' in the impugned order be not construed as referring to 'maintenance of
public order' the impugned order cannot be said to be invalid in 753 view of it
being made with a double objective, i.e., with the object of preventing Dr.
Lohia from acting prejudicially to the public safety and from acting
prejudicially to the maintenance of law and order. If the District Magistrate
was satisfied, as the impugned order and the affidavit of the District
Magistrate show that he was satisfied that it was necessary to detain Dr. Lohia
with a view to preventing him from acting prejudicially to public safety, that
itself would have justified his passing the impugned order. His satisfaction
with respect to any of the purposes mentioned in r. 30 (1) which would justify
his ordering the detention of a person is sufficient for the validity of the
order. There is no room for considering that he might not have passed the
impugned order merely with one object in view, the object being to prevent Dr.
Lohia from acting prejudicially to public safety. The entire circumstances in
which the order has been made and which I have referred to earlier, point to
that.
The question before us is not really at par
with the question' that arose in Romesh Thappar v. State of Madras(1). In that
case the provisions impugned were those of a statute whose language authorised
the passing of orders which could be constitutional in certain circumstances
and unconstitutional in others. In such a context, it was said that where a law
purports to authorize the imposition of restrictions on a fundamental right in
language wide enough to cover restrictions both within and without the limits
of constitutionally permissible legislative action affecting such right, it is
not possible to uphold it even so far as it may be applied within the
constitutional limits, as it is not severable; so long as the possibility of
its being applied for purpoes not sanctioned by the Constitution cannot be
ruled out, it must be held to be wholly unconstitutional and void. It was so
held as, otherwise, the orders passed for purposes not sanctioned by the Constitution
would have been in accordance with the law held valid. The validity of the
orders passed under a valid lawthe Defence of India Act and the rules have to
be assumed to be valid--depends on their being made by the appropriate
authority in accordance with the law empowering it to pass the orders.
The question before us is also not at par
with the question which often arises in construing the validity of detention
orders passed under the Preventive Detention Act for the reason that some of
the grounds for the satisfaction of the appropriate authority were irrelevant
or non-existent. The presence of such grounds raised the question whether the
remaining good grounds would 1. [1950] S.C.R. 594.
2. C & I./65-5 7 54 have led the
authority to the requisite subjective satisfaction for ordering detention. In
the present case, however, the question is different. The question is whether
the District Magistrate would have made the order of detention on his
satisfaction merely to the effect that it was necessary to detain Dr. Lohia
with a view to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to public
safety. It is not that his satisfaction is based on two grounds, one of which
is irrelevant or non-existent.
Even in such cases, this Court has held in
Dwarka Das State of J & K(1):
"The principle underlying all these decisions
is this. Where power is vested in a statutory authority to deprive the liberty
of a subject on its subjective satisfaction with reference to specified
matters, if that satisfaction is stated to be based on a number of grounds or
for a variety of reasons, all taken together, and if some out of them are found
to be nonexistent or irrelevant, the very exercise of that power is bad. That
is so because the matter being one for subjective satisfaction, it must be
properly based on all the reasons on which it purports to be based. If some
out' of them are found to be non-existent or irrelevant, the Court cannot
predicate what the subjective satisfaction of the said authority would have
been on the exclusion of those grounds or reasons. To uphold the validity of
such an order in spite of the invalidity of some of the reasons or grounds
would be to substitute the objective standards of the Court for the subjective
satisfaction of the statutory authority. In applying these principles, however,
the Court must be satisfied that the vague or irrelevant grounds are such as,
if excluded, might reasonably have affected the subjective satisfaction of the
appropriate authority. It is not merely because some ground or reason of a
comparatively unessential nature is defective that such an order based on
subjective satisfaction can be held to be invalid." As stated earlier,
there does not appear to be any reason why the District Magistrate would not
have passed the order of detention against Dr. Lohia on his satisfaction that
it was necessary to prevent him from acting prejudicially to public safety. On
such 1. A.I.R. 1957 S.C 164,168.
755 satisfaction, it was incumbent on him to
pass the order and he must have passed it.
I am therefore of opinion that the District Magistrate
made the impugned detention order on his being satisfied that it was necessary
to do so with a view to prevent Dr. Lohia from acting in a manner prejudicial
to public safety and maintenance of public order and that the impugned order is
valid. Consequently, Dr. Lohia cannot move this Court for the enforcement of
His rights under arts. 21 and 22 of the Constitution in view of the President's
Order under art.
359(1) of the Constitution. I would dismiss
this petition.
Mudholkar, J I agree that the petition of Dr.
Ram Manohar Lohia under Art. 32 of the Constitution be granted and would
briefly indicate my reasons for granting it.
At the outset I shall consider an objection
of Mr. S. P.
Varma on behalf of the State as to the
tenability of the petition. The objection is two-fold. In the first place,
according to him, in view of the Proclamation made by the President under Art.
359 this Court has no jurisdiction to entertain it. In the second place his
contention is that the order of detention made against the petitioner being one
under the Defence of India Rules, he cannot challenge the validity of his
detention thereunder in any court. In support of these contentions Mr. Varma
relies on the decision of this Court in Mohan Choudhury v. Chief Commissioner,
Tripura (1). In that case this Court has, while holding that the right of a
person whose detention has been ordered under the Defence of India Rules to
move any court for the enforcement of his rights under Art. 21 of the
Constitution is suspended. during the continuance of the emeregency declared by
the President by a Proclamation under Art. 352, held that the powers conferred
on this Court by Art. 32 of the Constitution are not suspended. It is true that
where a person has been detained under the Defence of India Rules he cannot
move this Court under Art. 32 for the enforcement of his right under Art. 21
and so there will be no occasion for this Court to exercise its powers under
that article in such a case. But what would be the position in a case where an
order for detention purporting to be made under the Defence of India Rules was
itself one which was beyond the scope of the Rules ? For, before an entry into
the portals of this Court can be denied to detenu he I must be shown an order
under r. 30(1) of the Defence of India Rules made by a competent authority
stating that it is satisfied 1. [1964] 3 S.C.R. 442.
7 56 that the detenu is likely to indulge in
activities which will be prejudicial to one or more of the matters referred to
in the rule. If the detenu contends that the order, though it purports to be
under r. 30(1) of the Rules, was not competently made, this Court has the
detenu contends that the order. though it purports to be under order if the
Court finds that it was not competently made or was ambiguous it must exercise
its powers under Art. 32 of the Constitution, entertain his petition thereunder
and make an appropriate order.
In this case the District Magistrate, Patna
purported to make an order under r. 3 0 ( 1 ) of the Defence of India Rules.
The State has placed on record copies of two orders: one is said to have been
recorded by the District Magistrate on his file and another which was served on
Dr.
Lohia. We are not concerned with the former
because the operative order must be the one served on the detenu. The District
Magistrate may well keep the former in the drawer of his table or alter it as
often as he likes. It cannot, therefore, be regarded as anything more than a
draft order.
The order which finally emerged from him and
was served on the detenu would thus be the only one which matters. The grounds
for detention given in the latter order are that Dr.
Lohia's being at large is prejudicial to
public safety and maintenance of law and order. Under r. 30(1) an order of
detention of a person can be made "with a view to preventing him from
acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of India and civil defence,
public safety, the maintenance of public order, India's relations with foreign
powers, the maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part of India, the
efficient conduct of military operations or the maintenance of supplies and
services essential to the life of the community". I find it difficult to
accept Dr. Lohia's argument that the appropriate authority must entertain an
apprehension that the person to be detained is likely to participate in every
one of the activities referred to in the rule. To accept it would be, apart
from making a departure from the rules of grammar, (for doing which no valid
grounds exist), making not only the rule in question but also s. 3 of the
Defence of India Act where similar language is used almost ineffective. What
has, however, to be considered is his other argument. The question posed by the
argument is whether an authority competent to make an order under the aforesaid
provision can make such an order on the ground that the authority feels it
necessary to prevent a person from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of law and order. The expression "law and ordee' does not find
any place in the rule and is not synonymous with "public order'. It s to
me that "law and order" is a comprehensive expression 757 in which
would be included not merely public order, but matters such as public peace
tranquillity, orderliness in a locality or a local area and perhaps some other
matters.
"Public order" is something
distinct from order or orderliness in a local area. Under r. 30(1) no power is
conferred upon that authority to detain a person on the ground that it is
necessary so to do in order to prevent that person from acting in a manner
prejudicial to the maintenance of order in a local area. What is it that the
District Magistrate, Patna had in mind when he ordered the detention of the
petitioner ? Was the apprehension entertained by the District Magistrate that
Dr. Lohia, if left at large, was likely to do some thing which will imperil the
maintenance of public order generally or was it that he apprehended that Dr.
Lohia's activities may cause disturbances in a particular locality? There is
thus an ambiguity on the face of the order and, therefore, the order must be
held to be bad. No doubt, the order also refers to the apprehension felt by the
District Magistrate about Dr.
Lohia's acting in a manner prejudicial to
public safety.
But then the question arises, what is it that
weighed with the District Magistrate, the apprehension regarding public safety
or an apprehension regarding the maintenance of law and order ? Again, would
the District Magistrate have made the order solely on the ground that he felt
apprehension regarding the maintenance of public safety because of the
activities in which he thought Dr. Lohia might indulge ? It could well be that
upon the material before him the District Magistrate would have refrained from
making an order under r. 30 solely upon the first ground. Or on the other hand
he would have made the order solely upon that ground. His order, however, which
is the only material on the basis of which we can properly consider the matter
gives no indication that the District Magistrate would have been prepared to
make it only upon the ground relating to public safety. In the circumstances I
agree with my brethren Sarkar and Hidayatullah that the order of detention
cannot be sustained. I have not referred to any decisions because they have
already been dealt with fully in the judgments of my learned brethren. In the
result, therefore, I allow the petition and direct that Dr. Lohia be get at
liberty.
ORDER In view of the majority opinion, we
allow the Petition and order that the petitioner be set at liberty.
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