Manu Bhusan Roy Pradhan Vs. State of
West Bengal [1972] INSC 267 (31 October 1972)
DUA, I.D.
DUA, I.D.
SHELAT, J.M.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
CITATION: 1973 AIR 295 1973 SCR (2) 842 1973
SCC (3) 663
CITATOR INFO :
F 1973 SC 756 (1,2) R 1973 SC 896 (7) F 1975
SC1877 (3) F 1990 SC1086 (19)
ACT:
Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971-S.
3(2) Public Order What it amounts to.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was arrested and detained
under s.9 read with section 3(2) of the Maintenance of Internal Security Act of
1971 on the grounds :-(1) that on 16-4-71 at about 8 p.m.
the petitioner, a member of the action squad
of C.P.1, (ML), along with others, committed a murderous assault on one Shri
Bulo Das Gupta, who later died in hospital. As a result of this crime, people
of the locality became highly terrorised and the public peace was greatly
disturbed : and (2) on 19-7-71 at 7.30 p.m. the petitioner, along with others
forcibly entered a school and set fire to the school buildings, causing
irreparable loss to the institution with the object of causing dislocation in
the present system of education and compelling the school authorities to close
it down and as a result or the fire the teachers and the local people became
panicky and the public peace was greatly disturbed.
In this Court it was submitted by the counsel
appearing as amicus curiae that the petitioner had been arrested on August 5, 1971 in connection with six cases. He was bailed out on November 10, 1971 but was rearrested soon thereafter.
It was further submitted that ground no. l
stated in the order of detention, was vague and had no relevance to the
maintenance of public order with the result that the petitioner's detention was
illegal., Allowing the petition,
HELD : (1) Ground no. 1 which does not
mention the names or details of the others along with whom the petitioner was
alleged to have committed the assault only refers to an assault on an
individual which prima facie appear to raise only a law and order problem. It
merely mentions murderous assault by the petitioner on Bulo Das Gupta without
showing either the nature of the weapon used or the nature or extent of the
injuries inflicted; it also does not disclose as to how long after the assault
the injured person died; the motive or the purpose of the assault is also not
stated.
The difference between maintenance of law and
order and its disturbance and maintenance of public order lies in the degree
and extent of disturbance and its effect on the current life of the community.
Public order is the even tempo of the life of the community taking the country
as a whole or even a specified locality. Disturbance of public order is to be
distinguished from acts directed against individuals which do not disturb the
society to the extent of causing a general disturbance of public tranquillity.
Public order indeed embraces more of the
community than does law and order. [846 F] It is always a question of degree of
the harm and its effect upon the community. The question to ask is : "Does
it lead to disturbance of the current life of the community so as to amount to
a disturbance of the public order, or does it affect merely an, individual
leaving the tranquillity of the society undisturbed ?" This question is to
be answered in every case on facts. There is no rigid formula by which one case
can be distinguished from another. [847 H] 843 Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia v. State
of Bihar, [1966] 1 S.C.R.
709 and Arun Shah v. State of West Bengal,
[1970] 3 S.C.R.
288, referred to.
(ii) In the present case, the solitary
incident of assault on one individual which may well be equated with an
ordinary murder without any further details about the assault can hardly be
said to disturb public peace or place public order in jeopardy so as to bring
the case within the purview of the Act. It can only raise a law and order
problem and no more. [848 C-D] (iii) Ground no. 2, however, is quite germane to
the problem of maintenance of public order; but in the absence of ground no. 1,
it is difficult to comprehend whether the detaining authority would have felt
satisfied to make the impugned order. It has been laid down by this Court that
the requirement that the grounds must not be vague has to be satisfied with
respect to each of the grounds. 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 non-existent or irrelevant, the very exercise of
that power would be bad. But in applying this principle the Court must be
satisfied that the vague or non-existent or irrelevant grounds or reasons are
such as, if excluded, might reasonably have affected the subjective satisfaction
of the appropriate authority. In the present case there were only two grounds
and ground no. 1 which is irrelevant is not of an unessential nature. Its
exclusion from consideration might reasonably have affected the subjective
satisfaction of the .authority making the impugned order of detention.
[848 E] Keshab Talpade v. The King Emperor,
[1943] F.C.R. 88, Dwarka Das Bhatia v. State of Jammu & Kashmir,
[1956]S.C.R. 948, Dr. Ram Krishan Bhardwaj v. The State of Delhi, [1953] S.C.R.
708, Motilal Jain v. State of Bihar, [1968] 2 S.C.R. 505, Arun Ghosli v. State
of West ,Bengal, [1970] 3 S.C.R. 288, Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia v. State of Bihar,
[1966] I S.C.R. 709, Pushkar Mukheriee & Ors. v. State of West Bengal,
[1969] 2 S.C.R. 635, Shyamlal Chakraborty v. The Commissioner of Police,
Calcutta and Anr., [1970] 1 S.C.R.
762 Ncegendra Nath Mondal v. The State of
West Bengal, A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 665, Sudhir Kumar Saha v. Commissioner of Police,
Calcutta, [1970] 3 S.C.R. 360, Sk. Kader v. The State of West Bengal, A.I.R.
1972 S.C. 1647, Kanu Biswas v.
State of West Bengal, A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1656,
Kishori Mohan v. State of West Bengal, A.I.R, 1972 S.C. 1749 and Amiya Kumar
Karmakar v. State of West Bengal, W.P. No. 190 of 1972 decided on 31-7-1972,
referred to.
(iv) The Act encroaches on the highly
cherished right of personal liberty by conferring on the executive
extraordinary power to detain persons, without trial by coming to subjective
decisions. The detaining authority in exercising this power must act strictly within
the limitations this Act places on its power so that the guarantee of personal
liberty is not imperiled beyond what the Constitution and the law strictly
provide. The limited right of redress conferred on the detenu under the law
deserves to be construed with permissible liberality consistently with the
provisions of the Act and the constitutional guarantee. The impugned ,order in
this case seems to have been made without paying due heed to the provisions of
the Act and is clearly beyond the statutory scope. 1850 G] (v) Further the
respondent did not reply to the averments of the petitioner that he bad been
arrested six times before and that he was released on bail; moreover in the
grounds supplied to the detenu were was no 844 reference to the petitioner
being a staunch supporter of C.P.I. (ML) Party. The impugned order must,
therefore, be struck down.
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 252
of 1972.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India
for a writ in the nature of habeas corpus.
S. K. Gambhir, for the petitioner (amicus
curiae) Gobind Mukhoty and G. S. Chatterjee, for the, respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DUA, J. This petition for a writ in the nature of habeas corpus, by Manu Bhusan
Roy Pradhan has been forwarded to this Court by the Superintendent, Dum Dum
Central Jail, West Bengal.
Pursuant to the order of detention passed by
the District Magistrate, Jalpaiguri, on August 21, 1971 in exercise of the
powers conferred on him by S. 9 read with sub-s. (2) of S. 3 of the Maintenance
of Internal Security Act, 26 of 1971 (hereinafter called the Act) with a view
to preventing the petitioner from acting in any nianner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order, he was arrested on November 11, 1971. The grounds
of detention served on the petitioner at the time of his arrest read :
"On 16-4-71 at about 20.00 hours you
along with others committed a murderous assault on Shri Bulo Das Gupta on the
road in front of the office of Mahila Samity, Dhupguri, Police Station
Dhupguri, District Jalpaiguri causing severe injuries on his person. Shri Das
Gupta subsequently died in hospital. As a result of this murder committed by
you people of the locality became highly terrorised and the public peace was
greatly disturbed.
On 19-7-1971 at about 19.30 hours you along
with others forcibly entered into Dhupguri High School, Police Station
Dhupguri, District Jalpaiguri and set fire to the school buildings causing
irreparable loss to the institution in particular and the people in general. you
set fire to the school with the ulterior object of causing dislocation in the
present system of education and to compel the school authorities to close down
the same. As a result of the fire set by you, the teachers and the local people
became panic-stricken and the public peace was greatly disturbed." The
fact of making the detention order was reported to the State Government on
August 23, 1971. It was approved by the said Government on August 31, 1971; the
same day this fact was 845 reported to the Central Government. On December 9,
1971 the case was placed before the, Advisory Board which gave its opinion as
per its report dated January 18, 1972 that there was sufficient cause for the
petitioner's detention. The State Government confirmed this order on February
1, 1972 and this fact was reported to the Central Government on February 3,
1972.
The petitioner's representation was received
by the State Government on December 11, 1971. But it was considered on January
14, 1972. In the counter-affidavit this delay has been explained' in these
words :
"........ due to influx of refugees as
well as the Pakistan aggression at that time, most of the officers of the Home
Department of the State Government were very busy with serious problems which
threatened and faced the country at that time, and as such the said
representation could not be considered earlier. Moreover I further state that
delay was also caused due to abrupt increase in number of the detention cases
during that time as there was spate of anti-social activities by Naxalities and
other political extremists in the State." Before us Shri S. K. Gambhir,
the learned counsel appearing as amicus curiae submitted that the petitioner,
who is only 17 years old and is studying in the Xth class in Dhupguri High School,
was arrested on August 5, 1971 in connection with six cases. He was bailed out
on November 10, 1971 but was re-arrested soon thereafter. It was further
submitted that ground no. I stated in, the order of detention is vague and has
also no relevance to the maintenance of public order with the result that the
petitioner's detention must be held to be bad in law for it is not possible to
say how far this ground influenced the decision of the authority concerned in
making the impugned order of detention.
On behalf of the State it was contended that
the petitioner was found to be absconding when the detention order was made
and: that lie was arrested on November 11, 1971. Reliance for this submission
was placed on the counter-affidavit. It is note-worthy that in that
counter-affidavit, which was affirmed on August 24, 1972 by the Deputy
Secretary, Home (Special) Department ofGovernment of West Bengal, nothing, has
been stated in reply to the averments made in the petitioner's representation
dated December 4/6, 1971 addressed from Jail to the Assistant Secretary Home
(Special) Department, Government of West Bengal regarding the petitioner's
arrest in six cases of which specific numbers were stated; nor is there any
positive reply to the averment that he had been bailed out on November 10,
1971.
846 Surprisingly enough no explanation was
suggested for this omission even at the Bar during the course of arguments in
this Court.
The respondents' learned counsel relied on
the averments made in para 7 of the counter-affidavit. It is stated therein :
"The detenu-petitioner is a staunch
supporter of C.P.I. (ML) party and is active member of the Actionsquad of that
party. It appears that the petitioner along with his associates on 16-4-71 at
about 20.00 hours committed murderous assault on Shri Bulo Das Gupta on the
road in front of Mahila Samity P. S.Dhupguri in consequence whereof he died. It
further appears that the detenu-petitioner along with others forcibly entered
Dhupguri High School on 19-7-71 and set fire to the school buildings causing
substantial damages with ulterior object of causing dislocation in the present
system of education. The aforesaid activities of the petitioner causes panic
commotion amongst the members of the general public as well as the teachers of
the said institutes and disturbed public order and so the petitioner was
detained under the said Act." It was contended that this averment brings
the petitioner's case within the purview of S. 3(1) and (2) of the Act even
though in the grounds supplied to the detenu there was no reference to his
being a staunch supporter of C.P.I. (ML) party and to his being an active
member of the Action-squad of that party.
In our view, ground no. 1 which does not
mention the names details of the others along with whom the petitioner is
alleged to have committed the assault, only refers to an assault on an
individual named Bulo Das Gupta on April 16, 1971 which prima facie appears to
raise only a law and order problem. in Arun Ghosh v. State of West Bengal(1)
several instances of assaults were stated in the grounds of detention.
Hidayatullah C.J. speaking for the Court observed in that case "The
submission of the counsel is that these are stray acts directed against
individuals and are not subversive of public order and therefore the detention
on the ostensible ground of preventing him from acting in a manner prejudicial
to public order was not justified. In support of this submission reference is
made to three cases, of this Court : Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia v. State of Bihar(2)
Pushkar Mukherjee & Ors. v. State of West Bengal 3 ) and Shyamal
Chakraborty v. The Commissioner of Police Calcutta & Anr. (4) .
In Dr. Ram (1) [1970] 3 S.C.R. 288.
(2) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 709.
(3) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 635.
(4) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 762.
847 Manohar Lohia's case this Court pointed
out the difference between maintenance of law and order and its disturbance and
the maintenance of public order and its disturbance. Public order was said to
embrace more of the community than law and order. Public order is the even
tempo of the life of the community taking the country as a whole or even a
specified locality. Disturbance of public order is to be distinguished from
acts directed against-individuals which do not disturb the society to the
extent of causing a general disturbance of public tranquillity.
It is the degree of disturbance and its
effect upon the life of the community in alocality which determines whether the
disturbance amounts only to a breach of law and order.
Take for instance, a man stabs another.
People may be shocked and even disturbed,
but, the life of the community keeps moving at an even tempo, however much one
may dislike the act. Take another case of a town where there is communal
tension. A man stabs a member of the other community. This is an act of a very
different sort. Its implications are deeper and it affects the even tempo of
life and public order is jeopardized because the repercussions of the act
embrace large sections of the community and incite them to make further
breaches if the law and order and to subvert the public order. An act by itself
is not determinant of its, own gravity. In its quality it may not differ from
another but in its potentiality it may be very different." The learned
Chief Justice, after referring to the, lines of demarcation drawn by Ramaswami
J., in W.P. 179 of 1968 between serious and aggravated forms of breaches of
public order which affect the community or endanger the public interest at
large and minor breaches of peace which do not affect the public at large, and
after noting the analogy drawn by Ramaswami J., between public and private
crimes, cautioned against that analogy being pushed too far, observing, that a
large number of acts directed against persons or individuals may total up into
a breach of public order. After referring to Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia's case
(supra) the learned Chief Justice observed:
"It is always a question of degree of
the harm and its effect upon the community. The question to ask is : Does it
lead to disturbance of the current of life of the community so as to amount to
a disturbance of the public order or does it affect merely an individual
leaving the tranquillity of the society undisturbed ? This question has to be
faced in every case on facts. There 848 is no formula by which one case can be
distinguished from another." This view was reaffirmed in Nagendra Nath
Mondal v. The State ,of West Bengal(1), Sudhir Kumar Saha v. Commissioner of
Police Calcutta(2), Sk. Kader v. The State of West Bengal(3), Kanu Biswas v. State
of West Bengal(4), Kishori Mohan v. State ,of West Bengal(5) and Amiya Kumar
Karmakar v. State of West Bengal(6).
Ground no. 1 in the case before us merely
mentions murderous assault by the petitioner on Bulo Das Gupta. It shows
neither the nature of the weapon used nor the nature or extent of the injuries
inflicted, nor does it disclose as to how long after the assault the injured
person died.
The motive or the purpose of the assault is
also not stated.
This kind of a solitary assault on one
individual, which may well be equated with an ordinary murder which is not an
uncommon occurrence, can hardly be said to disturb public peace or place public
order in jeopardy, so as to bring the case within the purview of, the Act. It
can only raise a law and order problem and no more; its impact on the society
as a whole cannot be considered to be so extensive, widespread and forceful as
to disturb the normal life of the community thereby rudely shaking. the
balanced tempo of the orderly life of the ,general public. This ground is,
therefore, not at an relevant for sustaining the order of detention for
preventing the petitioner from acting in a manner prejudicial to, the
maintenance of public order.
Ground no. 2, however, is quite germane to
the problem of maintenance of public order. But the question arises whether in
theabsence of ground no. 1 which, in our view, Ts wholly irrelevant, the
detaining authority would have felt satisfied on the basis of the solitary
ground no. 2 alone to make the impugned order. Can it be said that ground no. 1
is of a comparatively unessential nature so as not to have meaningfully
influenced the decision of the detaining authority. Similar problem has faced
this Court on a number of occasions and the decision has generally gone in
favour of the detenu. This Court in Dr. Ram Krishan Bhardwaj v. The State of
Delhi(7) laid down that the requirement that the grounds must not be vague must
be satisfied with respect to each of the grounds. In Dwarka Das Bhatia v. The
State of Jammu & Kashmir(8) the principle deduced from the earlier
decisions of this Court and also from the decision of the Federal Court in
Keshav Talpade v. The King Emperor(9) was stated thus:
(1) A.T.R. 1972 S.C. 665.(2) [1970] 3 S.C.R.
360.
(3) A.I.R. [1972] S.C. 1647.(4) A.T.R. [1972]
S.C. 1656.
(5)A.T.R. (1972) S.C. 1749.(6) W.P.190/1972
dated/31-7-1972.
(7) [1953] S.C.R. 708. (8) [1956] S.C.R. 948.
(9) [1968] 2 S.C.R. 505.
849 .lm15 "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 non-existent 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 nonexistent 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. The Court while' anxious to safeguard
the personal liberty of the individual will not lightly interfere with such
orders. It is in the light of these principles that the validity of the
impugned order has to be judged." In Rameshwar Lal v. State of Bihar(1) it
was observed:
"Since the detenu is not placed before a
Magistrate and has only a right of being supplied the grounds of detention with
a view to his making a representation to the Advisory Board the grounds must
not be vague or indefinite and must afford a real opportunity to make a
representation against the detention. Similarly, if a vital ground is shown to
be nonexisting so that it could not have and ought not to have, played a part
in the material for consideration, the court may attach some importance to this
fact." In Motilal Jain v. State of Bihar(2), a decision by a Bench of six
Judges, after reviewing the earlier decisions, this Court expressed its view
thus :
(1) [1943] F.C.R. 88.
(2) [1968] 3 S.C.R. 587.
850 "The defects noticed in the two
grounds mentioned above are sufficient to vitiate the order of detention
impugned in these proceedings as it not possible to hold that those grounds
could not have influenced the decision of the detaining authority.
Individual liberty is a cherished right, one
of the most valuable fundamental rights guaranteed by our Constitution to the
citizens of this country. If that right is invaded, excepting strictly in
accordance with law, the aggrieved party is entitled to appeal to the judicial
power of the State for relief. We are not unaware of the fact that the interest
of the society is no less important than that of the individual. Our
Constitution has made provision for safeguarding the interests of the society.
Its provisions harmonise the liberty of the individual with social interest.
The authorities have to act solely on the basis of those provisions. They
cannot deal with the liberty of the individual in a casual manner, as has been
done in this case.
Such an approach does not advance the true
social interest. Continued indifference to individual liberty is bound to erode
the structure of our democratic society." In the case before us there are
only two grounds on which the detention order is based. One of them which
relates to an occurrence of April, 1971 has no relevance or relation to the
disturbance of public order. The other ground relates to an occurrence of July,
1971. This ground is no doubt germane to the object of maintenance of public
order; but we are satisfied that the first ground is not of an unessential
nature and in our view its exclusion from consideration might reasonably have
affected the subjective satisfaction of the authority making the impugned order
of detention.
This was the test laid down in Bhatia's case
(supra) and approved in Motilal Jain (supra). As has often been emphasised by
this Court the Act encroaches on the highly cherished right of personal liberty
by conferring on the executive extraordinary power to detain persons without
trial by coming to subjective decisions. The detaining authority in exercising
this power must act strictly within the limitations this Act places on its
power so that the guarantee of personal liberty is not imperiled beyond what
the Constitution and the law strictly provide. The limited 851 fight of redress
conferred on the detenu under the law deserves to be construed' with
permissible liberality consistently with the provisions of the Act and the
constitutional guarantee. We find that the impugned order in this case has been
made without paying due heed to the provisions of the Act and the order is
clearly beyond the statutory scope. The impugned order must, therefore, be
struck down as outside the Act.
The petitioner was released by us by means of
a short order on October 4, 1972. We have now stated our reasons in support of that
order.
S.C. Petition allowed.
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