Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SYED FAROOQ MOHAMMAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/05/1990
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
SAWANT, P.B.
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1597 1990 SCR (3) 240
1990 SCC (3) 537 JT 1990 (3) 102
1990 SCALE (1)205
CITATOR INFO :
C 1991 SC2261 (9)
RF 1992 SC1900 (17)
ACT:
Prevention of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances Act, 1988: Section 3(1) and 8.
Preventive detention--‘Live and proximate link’is neces-
sary between grounds of detention and purpose of deten-
tion--Long and unexplained delay between the date of deten-
tion order and the arrest of detenu--Court can assume that
link is snapped--But if delay is because of detenu’s recal-
citrant conduct in evading arrest then link is not snapped
but strengthened.
Preventive detention--Counter affidavit--Not sworn by
detaining authority himself--Averments in the affidavit
whether to be taken note of--In the absence of detaining
authority the affidavit should be sworn by a responsible
officer who personally dealt with the case.
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 22(5). Preventive
detention-Detention order--Non-supply of documents not
considered by detaining authority--Held not prejudicial to
detenu in making effective representation.
HEADNOTE:
On July 19, 1989, the Customs Department seized narcotic
drugs from two cars--one belonging to the petitioner-detenu
and the other to his associate. The statements of the driv-
ers were recorded under Section 108 of the Customs Act, 1962
on the very next day. Reports of the chemical examination of
the seized drugs confirmed that they were narcoting drugs
under the prevention of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs &
Psychotropic Substances Act, 1988. Accordingly, with a view
to preventing the petitioner from engaging in abetting and
transportation of narcotic drugs the detaining authority
passed a detention order under Section 3(1) of the Act on
20th December, 1989 i.e. after about 5 months of seizure of
the narcotic drugs. But the petitioner was arrested and
detained on service of the order of detention on 15th Febru-
ary, 1990.
The petitioner filed a writ petition in this Court
challenging the validity of the detention order contending;
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(1) that it was illegal because
241
(a) there was inordinate delay in serving the detention
order and arresting the detenu; (b) it was passed on stale
ground i.e. after five months of the seizure of narcotic
drugs; and (c) there was long delay in disposing the dete-
nu’s representation; (2) the non-supply of relevant docu-
ments i.e. bail application and the order made thereon to
the detenu seriously prejudiced his right to make effective
representation under Article 22(5) of the Constitution; (3)
the averments made in the counter affidavit cannot be taken
into consideration because it was not sworn by the detaining
authority himself and (4) the detention order was vitiated
for non-application of mind.
Dismissing the writ petition, this Court,
HELD: 1. There must be a ’live and proximate link’
between the grounds of detention and the avowed purpose of
detention. But In appropriate cases the Court can assume
that the link is ’snapped’ if there is a long and unex-
plained delay between the date of the order of detention and
the arrest of the detenu. Where the delay is not only ade-
quately explained but is found to be the result of the
detenu’s recalcitrant or refractory conduct in evading
arrest, there is warrant to consider the ’link’ not snapped
but strengthened- [25 IF-G]
2.1 In the instant case, the averments that the Depart-
ment served two notices--one on the petitioner’s mother and
another on his brother directing him to appear before the
detaining authority have not been denied by the petitioner.
Instead he intentionally absconded and thereby evaded ar-
rest. Therefore, it cannot be said that the delay was not
explained and the link between the grounds of detention and
the avowed purpose of detention has been snapped. [251H;
252A-B]
Shafiq Ahmad v. District Magistrate Meerut and Ors.,
[1989] 4 SCC 556; Bhanwarlal Ganeshmalji v. State of Tamil
Nadu & Anr., [1979] 2 SCR 633 and T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State
of Kerala and Ors., [1989] 4 SCC 741, relied on.
2. In the instant case the cars containing brown sugar
were impounded on July 19, 1989 and statements of the driv-
ers were recorded next day. Reports of the chemical examIna-
tion of contraband drugs were received on 29th September,
1989, 13th October, 1989 and 16th November, 1989. The cus-
toms officials screened all these thIngs and the detaInIng
authority after considering all these things passed the
order of detention on December 20, 1989. There fore, it
cannot be held that the delay of five months in making the
impugned order of detention
242
rendered the detention illegal and bad as it was made on
stale ground. The detention order has been made with promp-
titude considering the relevant and vital facts proximate to
the passing of the impugned order of detention. [248A-C]
3. It is evident from the record that after receipt of
the representation of the petitioner, it was sent to the
detaining authority for his comments and immediately after
the comments of the detaining authority were received the
same were processed and put up before the Minister concerned
who rejected the representation after considering the com-
ments of the detaining authority and the State Government.
It is also evident that the Central Government passed the
order after considering the comments of the detaining au-
thority. Therefore, the contention that the detention order
was passed by the Central Government without considering the
comments of the detaining authority and there was long delay
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in disposing the detenu’s representation affecting the
validity of detention is without any substance. [252C-D; E-
F]
4. Article 22(5) of the Constitution mandates that all
the relevant documents referred to in the grounds of deten-
tion and which are considered by the detaining authority in
coming to his subjective satisfaction for clamping an order
of detention are to be supplied to the detenu. [248F]
4.1 In the instant case the relevant document i.e. the
bail application and the order made thereon was not consid-
ered by the detaining authority in coming to his subjective
satisfaction and in making the impugned order of detention.
Therefore, the non-furnishing to the detenu of the said
document does not affect in any manner whatsoever the dete-
nu’s right to make an effective representation in compliance
with the provisions of Article 22(5) of the Constitution of
India. [248U; 249A]
Binod Singh v. District Magistrate, Dhanbad, Bihar &
Ors., [1986] 3 SCR 905 and Suraj Pal Sahu v. State of Maha-
rashtra & Ors., AIR 1986 SC 2177, held inapplicable.
5. In the absence of personal allegation of mala fide or
bias made by the detenu against the detaining authority in
person, the omission to file affidavit-in-reply by itself is
no ground to sustain the allegation of mala fides or non-
application of mind. In the absence of detaining authority,
the affidavit must be sworn by some responsible officer who
personally dealt with or processed the case in the Secre-
tariat or submitted it to the Minister. [253A; D]
243
5.1 In the instant case, the counter-affidavit has been
filed by the officer who was dealing with the papers relat-
ing to the particular order of detention and he placed those
papers before the Minister concerned. Therefore, the counter
affidavit filed on behalf of the respondents cannot but be
considered and there is no allegation of mala fide or malice
or extraneous consideration personally against the detaining
authority in making the impugned order of detention. [253G-
H]
Madan Lal Anand v. Union of India & Ors., [1989] 2 Scale
970; Mohinuddin v. District Magistrate, Beed and Ors.,
[1987] 4 SCC 58; Niranjan Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh,
[1973] 1 SCR 691; Habibullah Khan v. State of West Bengal,
[1974] 4 SCC 275; Jagdish Prasad v. State of Bihar, [1974] 4
SCC 455 and Mohd. Alam v. State off West Bengal, [1974] 4
SCC 463, relied on-
6. The persons examined under section 108 of the Customs
Act, 1962 were well known to the petitioner. The statements
of these persons clearly implicate the petitioner who know-
ing fully that the two cars will be used for the purpose of
transportation of prohibited drugs i.e. heroin and for
soiling of the same, handed over the keys of the two cars to
the driven- Therefore, the contention of the petitioner that
the detention order was vitiated by non-application of mind
is devoid of merit. [247A-B; 246F]
7. Accordingly, the impunged order of detention is
quite in accordance with law and the same is valid. [254A]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Crl.)
No. 247 of 1990.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
S.S. Ray, Vijay Bahuguna, S.K. Gambhir, Sunil Kr. Jain
and Vijay Hansaria for the Petitioner.
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Ashok Desai, Solicitor General, P- parmeshwaran and A.
Subba Rao for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAY, J- The petitioner, Syed Farooq Mohammad has chal-
lenged the order of his detention passed on December 20,
1989 under Section 3(1) of the Prevention of Illicit Traffic
in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1988, and
served on him on February 15,
244
1990. The order of detention was issued by Nisha Sahai
Achuthan, Joint Secretary to the Government of India who was
specially empowered under Section 3(1) of the Prevention of
Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs & Psychotropic Substances
Act and it recited that with a view to preventing the peti-
tioner from engaging in abetting and transportation of
narcotic drugs, the said Sayyed Farook Mohd. @ Farooq @
Sayyed Farooq Isamuddin @ Anand be detained and kept in
custody in the Yervada Central Prison, Pune. The grounds of
detention were also served on the same day i.e. February 15,
1990 immediately after his arrest by the Customs Authori-
ties.
On July 19, 1989 the staff of the Preventive Collector-
ate Customs, Bombay impounded two fiat cars bearing Nos. GJV
5440 and MHY 2625. The drivers of the said cars namely Aslam
Mohammad Nazir and Mohammad Yakub Sheikh were apprehended.
On search of the two cars, 100 packets of brown coloured
powder purporting to be narcotic drug of Pakistan origin was
found out of the dickies of the cars. The narcotic drug
recovered from the dickies of the said cars weighed 100 kgs.
and its value in the market is about 2.34 crores. Car No.
GJV 5440 belonged to the petitioner-detenu, Syed Farooq
Mohammad and the other car No. MHY 2625 belonged to one C.P.
Reddy, an Officer of international airport who was also
apprehended and his statement u/s 108 of the Customs Act was
recorded. It was revealed from his statement that this car
was also used for transporting heroin along with petition-
er’s car. The statements of Aslam Mohammad Nazir and Moham-
mad Yakub Sheikh who were apprehended as well as the state-
ment of other person i.e. Mohd. Azam Khan @ Wali Mohd. Khan
@ Hameed Khan were also recorded u/s 108 of the Customs Act
by the Customs Officials. From these statements it appeared
that these persons were known to the detenu and they used to
visit often the hotel ’Fisherman’ at Worli for disco. The
detenu i.e. Farooq Mohammad also used to go for disco in the
said hotel ’Fisherman’ at Worli. It has been stated by Aslam
Mohammad Nazir that on July 19, 1989 he was sitting in room
No. 106, 2nd Floor, Kali Building near Burtan apartment,
Bombay Central (residence of the detenu) along with his
friend, Mohd. Yakub Sheikh, driver of the other car. Hameed
also came there to meet Farooq Mohammad. Hameed asked him
and Mohd. Yakub Sheikh to go along with him to Kalina. He
told them that a truck had come to Kalina with some packets
of contraband goods and that they were to take those packets
near Jaslok hospital- Thereafter, he took two fiat cars
beating registration Nos. GJV 5440 and MHY 2625 from Farooq.
He gave the keys of car No. GJV 5440 to him and car No.
MID/2625 to Mohd. Yakub.
245
Thereafter, they drove those two cars to Kalina as per
Hameed’s instructions and Hameed led them in a red maruti
car bearing No. BLB 7445 where Hameed showed them one truck
wherefrom four gunny bags were unloaded and kept in the
dickies of the above said two cars. It further appears from
his statement that as per Hameed’s instructions after the
cars were parked near Jaslok Hospital, they handed over the
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keys of both the cars to Hameed and he told them to contact
him again in the evening on telephone No. 367373 of R.K.
Hotel- From Farooq’s place they contacted him over the
telephone. Hameed told them to wait there and he was coming
there. Thereafter Hameed took them in the Maruti Car to a
place near Tejpal Road, Gowalia Tank. There he showed them
the same two fiat cars bearing Nos. GJV 5440 and MHY 2625.
Hameed gave the keys of the car No. GJV 5440 to him and car
No. MHY 2625 to Mohd. Yakub Sheikh and asked them to drive
the said two cars following his car. etc. etc.
Similar statement was made by Mohd- Yakub Sheikh which
was recorded by the Customs Officials. It has also been
stated by them that they were told by Hameed that each of
them will get Rs.5,000 as monetary consideration. Yakub also
stated that similar jobs have been done by him on 4-5 occa-
sions and he received Rs.5,000 each time from Hameed. From
the statement of Hameed recorded by the Customs Officials,
it appears that on July 19, 1989 afternoon he collected two
drivers namely Aslam Mohd- Nazir and Mohd. Yakub Sheikh and
two fiat cars from Farooq of Bombay Central. This Farooq was
introduced to him by Mohd. Nasir, a narcotic drug dealer who
is now detained m’ Rajasthan in connection with a drug case.
The detaining authority searched the residence of the
detenu on July 20, 1989 but nothing incriminating could be
found therefrom. After recording the statements of these
persons and examining and considering the test reports dated
October 13, 1989, September 29, 1989 and November 15, 1989
which mentioned that the brown powder contained in those 100
packets is narcotic drug coming within the Narcotic Drugs
and Psychotropic Substances Act, the impugned order of
detention was made on December 20, 1989 and the petitioner
was arrested and detained on service of the order of deten-
tion on February 15, 1990.
The challenge to the detention order had been made in
the instant writ petition principally on four grounds which
are as under:
( 1 ) The impugned order of detention has been passed rely-
ing on
246
the incident which is absolutely stale as the incident is
dated July 19, 1989 whereas the impugned order has been
passed on December 20, 1989.
(2) The statements of the three persons as recorded in the
form of statement under section 108 of the Customs Act came
to the respondents on July 20, 1989. The order should have
been passed immediately on 20th July, 1989 but the order has
been passed on December 20, 1989 i.e. after five months. The
impugned order, it is therefore contended, is illegal and
has been passed on stale ground.
(3) Since no order of preventive detention has been passed
against C.P. Reddy on the same evidence, no order should
have been passed against the petitioner as his involvement
is of the same nature and to the same extent as that of C.P.
Reddy.
(4) Assuming that the order rejecting bail application has
been considered though not evident from the grounds of
detention supplied, yet the same has not been supplied to
the petitioner. This indicates that a relevant document has
not been supplied to the petitioner which affected his right
of effective representation guaranteed under Article 22(5)
of the Constitution. The petitioner after grant of bail by
an order of this Court appeared before the respondents and
applied for making statement u/s 108 of the Customs Act. He
was arrested and the order of detention was served on him.
This material aspect should have been considered before
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serving the impugned order.
As regards the first ground, the counsel for the peti-
tioner has vehemently urged before this Court that the
statements of the two persons i.e. Aslam Mohd. Nazir and
Mohd. Yakub Sheikh the drivers of the said two cars handed
over by the petitioner for carrying narcotic drugs and also
the statement of Hameed, did not implicate the petitioner in
the transportation and smuggling of the drugs and as such
there was non-application of mind on the part of the detain-
ing authority in clamping the order of detention on the
petitioner. The impugned order of detention is, therefore,
vitiated by non-application of mind. The learned counsel
referred to certain portions of the statements recorded by
the Customs Officials u/s 108 of the Customs Act and con-
tended with great emphasis that there was nothing to say
that the petitioner was implicated in the smuggling or
transportation of the heroin which has been seized from the
dickies of the two cars.
247
This contention of the learned counsel is totally devoid
of merit in as much as the statements of these three persons
as recorded by the Customs Officials u/s 108 of the Customs
Act clearly implicate the petitioner who knowing fully that
these two cars will be used for the purpose of transporta-
tion of prohibited drugs i.e. heroin and for selling of the
same, handed over the keys of the two cars to the said two
drivers who were sitting at his residence with Hameed on the
asking of Hameed for carrying the contraband goods. In these
circumstances, it is meaningless to argue that the state-
ments of these three persons did not implicate the petition-
er. All the aforesaid three persons were well known to the
petitioner and were sitting at the petitioner’s residence,
they were given the keys of the petitioner’s car as well as
the keys of the car of C.P. Reddy which was brought to his
garrage for repairs by one Ravi Poojari through whom C.P.
Reddy sent his car for repairs. The petitioner knowing fully
well that these two cars will be used for the purpose of
transporting contraband goods i.e. heroin from the truck
stationed at Kalina from which four gunny bags containing
the said heroin were unloaded and placed in the dickies of
these two cars, handed over the keys of the cars. It is also
evident from these statements recorded by the Customs Offi-
cials that the petitioner along with those three persons
used to visit hotel ’Fisherman’ for disco regularly and they
were well-known to the petitioner- In these circumstances,
it is beyond pale of any doubt that the petitioner knowing
fully well that these two cars will be used for transporting
contraband goods, i.e. heroin, handed over the keys of the
cars for the said purpose. Therefore, this challenge is
wholly without any basis.
The next ground of challenge is that the cars were
impounded and the contraband goods were seized on July 19,
1989 and the statements of these three persons were recorded
by the Customs Officials on July 20, 1989 and the residen-
tial premises of the detenu were searched on July 20, 1989
but no incriminatory articles’ were found. The detaining
authority made inordinate delay in passing the
impugned.order of detention against the detenu as late as on
December 20, 1989 under section 3(1) of the Prevention of
Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Sub-
stances Act, 1988 to be hereinafter referred to as the ’said
Act’. It has been submitted that if there was any urgent
necessity to prevent the petitioner, the order should have
been passed immediately on 20th July, 1989 but it has been
passed on December 20, 1989 i.e. after five months. The
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impugned order is, therefore, illegal being passed on stale
ground.
This contention is, in our considered opinion, devoid of any
248
substance as we have stated hereinbefore that the two cars
were impounded on July 19, 1989 and brown sugar weighing 100
kgs. was recovered from the dickies of these two cars on
that day. The said three persons i.e. Aslam Mohd. Nazir,
Mohammad Yakub Sheikh and Hameed were examined and their
statements were recorded by the Customs Officials on the
next day i.e. July 20, 1989. It is also evident that samples
of the said contraband drugs were taken from each of the 100
packets and the same were sent for chemical examination. The
test reports dated October 13, 1989, September 29, 1989 and
November 15, 1989 were received by the Customs Department
and the Customs Officials screened all these things and the
detaining authority after considering all these, passed the
order of detention on December 20, 1989. In these circum-
stances, it cannot be said that the delay of five months in
making the impugned order of detention rendered the deten-
tion illegal and bad as it was made on stale ground. The
detention order has been made with promptitude considering
the relevant and vital facts proximate to the passing of the
impugned order of detention. This ground of challenge is,
therefore, totally unsustainable.
The third ground of challenge is that the relevant
document i.e. bail application of the petitioner and order
made there on which might have been considered by the de-
taining authority were not supplied to the petitioner and as
such his right of making effective representation guaranteed
under Article 22(5) of the Constitution of India has been
seriously prejudiced. This ground is without any substance
because firstly there is nothing to show from the grounds of
detention that the rejection of this bail application by the
Sessions Judge, Greater Bombay on January 5, 1990 was con-
sidered by the detaining authority before passing the im-
pugned order of detention and as such this being not re-
ferred to in the grounds of detention, the documents had not
been supplied to the petitioner, and it, therefore, cannot
be urged that non-supply of this document prejudiced the
petitioner in making effective representation against the
order of detention. Article 22(5) of the Constitution,
undoubtedly, mandates that all the relevant documents re-
ferred to in the grounds of detention and which are consid-
ered by the detaining authority in coming to his subjective
satisfaction for clamping an order of detention are to be
supplied to the detenu. The said document was not considered
by the detaining authority in coming to his subjective
satisfaction and in making the impugned order of detention.
The non-furnishing to the detenu of the said document i.e.
the bail application and the order passed thereon, does not
affect in any manner whatsoever the detenu’s right to make
an effective representation in compliance with the provi-
sions of Article 22(5) of
249
the Constitution of India. This ground, therefore, is wholly
untenable.
It has been contented in this connection by referring to
the order made by this Court on January 22, 1990 in the
Special Leave Petition filed by the petitioner before this
Court against the rejection of his application of anticipa-
tory bail whereon this Court made an interim order while
issuing show cause notice on the Special Leave Petition and
directing that in the meantime the petitioner shall not be
arrested, that the impugned order of detention is illegal.
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This order was made in the Special Leave Petition which did
not challenge the impugned order of detention but questioned
the rejection of the application for anticipatory bail. The
order of detention was made on December 20, 1989 i.e. prior
to the passing of the said order dated January 22, 1990. The
said order of this Court has, therefore, nothing to do with
the subjective satisfaction arrived at by the detaining
authority in passing the order of detention in question. It
has been urged in this connection that the facts in between
the passing of the detention order and implementing the
detention order have to be taken into account for consider-
ing whether the detention order should be served on the
detenu even after passing of the order by this Court dated
January 22, 1990 stating that the petitioner shall not be
arrested in the meantime. The counsel for the petitioner
referred the case of Binod Singh v. District Magistrate,
Dhanbad, Bihar and Ors., [1986] 3 SCR 905. Wherein the
detenu was served with the order of detention u/s 3(2) of
the National Scurity Act while he was in jail custody in
connection with the criminal charge u/s 302 I.P.C. The
question arose whether in such cases where the detention
order which was passed before the detenu surrendered before
the Court and was taken into custody in a criminal case,
should be served on the detenu after he has surrendered in
the criminal case and was in jail as an under-trial prison-
er. It has been held by this Court that:
" ..... the power of directing preventive detention given
to the appropriate ,authorities must be exercised in excep-
tional cases as contemplated by the various provisions of
the different statutes dealing with preventive detention and
should be used with great deal of circumspection. There must
be awareness of the facts necessitating preventive custody
of a person for social defence. If a man is in custody and
there is no imminent possibility of his being released, the
power of preventive detention should not be exercised .....
"
250
This ruling as well as the ruling in Suraj Pal Sahu v.
State of Maharashtra and Ors., AIR 1986 SC 2177 relied upon
by the counsel for the petitioner have no application to the
instant case in as much as in the instant case the detenu
was not arrested and imprisoned in jail till February 15,
1990 when the order of detention was served on him and he
was arrested by the Customs Authorities. Considering all
these, this ground of challenge is also wholly untenable.
The next ground of challenge is that the detenu appeared
before the respondents and applied to them to record his
statement u/s 108 of the Customs Act. He was then arrested
and the order of detention was served on him. It is relevant
to mention in this connection the averments made in para 10
of the counter-affidavit filed on behalf of the respondents
which is to the effect that in fact, when the petitioner
presented himself, his statement was recorded on February
15, 1990 and it was only after the recording of the state-
ment that the petitioner was detained in pursuance of the
detention order. It has also been stated in para 11 of the
said affidavit that there existed sufficient grounds which
impelled the detaining authority to pass the detention order
against the petitioner. It has also been stated in para 12
of the said affidavit that a detention order under the
Prevention of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psycho-
tropic Substances Act, 1988 can be legally issued even if
there is a single and solitary case against a person. It has
also been stated that the detaining authority carefully
scrutinised all the relevant documents and facts of the case
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and arrived at his subjective satisfaction that preventive
order of detention of the petitioner is necessary to prevent
him from smuggling and transporting contraband goods and as
such the impugned order of detention is not at all illegal
or bad and the same is not vitiated by non-application of
mind or non-consideration of relevant materials. This
ground, therefore, is not sustainable.
The last ground of challenge is that there has been
inordinate delay in arresting the detenu and in serving the
detention order i.e. on February 15, 1990 after a lapse of 1
month and 25 days and no serious attempt was made to arrest
the petitioner and to serve the order of detention on him in
accordance with the provisions of Section 8 of the said Act
which specially provides for enforcing the provisions of
Section 82, 83, 84 and 85 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
It has been urged in this connection that this unusual delay
in arresting the petitioner shows that there was no real and
genuine apprehension in the mind of the detaining authority
regarding the necessity of detention of the petitioner and
as such continued detention of the petitioner is
251
illegal and contrary to law. It is apropos to refer in this
connection to the averments made on behalf of the respond-
ents in para 7 of the counter-affidavit. It has been stated
therein that the Department served two notices, one of which
was accepted by his mother and the second by his brother,
Nizamuddin for handing over the same to the petitioner, as
the petitioner was not available in the house. It has been
submitted that the petitioner deliberately avoided making
himself available to the Department and thus delayed comple-
tion of investigation of the case. Instead of appearing
before the Department, the petitioner applied to the Ses-
sions Judge for anticipatory bail which was rejected on
5.1.1990. Thereafter, the petitioner approached this Court
for anticipatory bail, which was granted on 22.1.1990. It
is, therefore, evident that the petitioner absconded and
tried to evade arrest pursuant to the order of detention
even though he knew the passing of such an order by the
detaining authority. It is relevant to mention here the
observations of this Court in Shafiq Ahmad v. District
Magistrate, Meerut and Ors., [1989] 4 SCC 556 to the follow-
ing effect:
" ..... We are, however, unable to accept this contention.
If in a situation the person concerned is not available or
cannot be served then the mere fact that the action under
Section 7 of the Act has not been taken, would not be a
ground to say that the detention order was bad."
In Bhawarlal Ganeshmalji v. State of Tamil Nadu & Anr.,
[1979] 2 SCR 633 an order of detention was made against the
appellant u/s 3(1) of COFEPOSA Act in December, 1974. It
could not be executed because the detenu was absconding and
could not be apprehended despite a proclamation made under
Section 7 of the Act. More than three years after the order
was passed, the appellant surrendered in February, 1978. It
was held that there must be a ’live and proximate link’
between the grounds of detention and the avowed purpose of
detention. But in appropriate cases the Court can assume
that the link is ’snapped’ if there is a long and unex-
plained delay between the date of the order of detention and
the arrest of the detenu. Where the delay is not only ade-
quately explained but is found to be the result of the
detenu’s recalcitrant or retractory conduct in evading
arrest, there is warrant to consider the ’link’ not snapped
but strengthened. It was, therefore, held that the delay in
serving the order of detention on the detenu does not viti-
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ate the order.
In the instant case, it has been clearly averred in the
affidavit that two notices were served, one on the petition-
er’s mother and another
252
on the petitioner’s brother directing the petitioner to
appear before the detaining authority. The petitioner, it
has been stated, has intentionally absconded and thereby
evaded arrest. These averments have not been denied by the
petitioner. In these circumstances it cannot be said that
the delay was not explained and the rink between the grounds
of detention and the avowed purpose of detention has been
snapped. Reference may also be made in this connection to
the decision in T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State of Kerala and
Ors., [1989] 4 SCC 741. This ground of challenge is, there-
fore, devoid of any merit.
It has also been submitted on behalf of the petitioner
that the representation made by the detenu on February 28,
1990 both to the Chairman, Advisory Board as well as to the
Central Government were not disposed of till March 29, 1990
when the said representation was rejected by the Central
Government. It has been submitted that this long delay of
one month made the continued detention of the petitioner
invalid and illegal. The counsel for the respondents has
produced before this Court the relevant papers from which it
is evident that after receipt of the representation of the
petitioner, it was sent to the detaining authority for his
comments and immediately after the comments of the detaining
authority were received the same were processed and put up
before the Minister concerned who rejected the representa-
tion after considering the comments of the detaining author-
ity and the State Government. It has been urged on behalf of
the petitioner that the comments were not duly considered.
This submission is not at all tenable in as much as it is
evident from the relevant papers produced before this court
that the Central Government passed the order after consider-
ing the comments of the detaining authority. So this submis-
sion is without any substance and the same is rejected.
It has been further submitted that the counter-affidavit
was sworn not by the detaining authority but by one Shri
A.K. Roy, Under Secretary in the Ministry of Finance, De-
partment of Revenue, New Delhi and as such this affidavit
cannot be taken into consideration and the averments made
therein are not relevant to explain the unusual delay in
serving the order of detention as well as in rejecting the
representation. In this connection some rulings of this
Court have been cited at the bar. In Madan LaI Anand v.
Union of India and Ors., [1989] (2) Scale 970 the counter-
affidavit filed on behalf of the respondents had been af-
firmed by Kuldip Singh, Under Secretary to the Government
and not by the detaining authority himself. It was urged
that the counter-affidavit being not sworn by the detaining
authority, the averments made therein should not be taken
notice of. It was held
253
that there being no personal allegation of mala fide or bias
made by the detenu against the detaining authority in-per-
son, the omission to file affidavit-in-reply by itself is no
ground to sustain the allegation of mala fides or non-appli-
cation of mind.
Similar observation has been made by this Court in
Mohinuddin v. District Magistrate, Beed and Ors., [1987] 4
SCC 58 which is to the following effect:
" ..... In return to a rule nisi issued by this Court or
the High Court in a habeas corpus petition, the proper
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person to file the same is the District Magistrate who had
passed the impugned order of detention and he must explain
his subjective satisfaction and the grounds therefore; and
if for some good reason the District Magistrate is not
available, the affidavit must be sworn by some responsible
officer like the Secretary or the Deputy Secretary to the
Government in the Home Department who personally dealt with
or processed the case in the Secretariat or submitted it to
the Minister or other officer duly authorised under the
Rules of Business framed by the Government under Article 166
of the Constitution to pass orders on behalf of the govern-
ment in such matters."
Reference has also been made therein to the cases of Niran-
jan Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1973] 1 SCR 691;
Habibullah Khan v. State of West Bengal, [1974] 4 SCC 275;
Jagdish Prasad v. State of Bihar, [1974] 4 SCC 455 and Mohd.
Alam v. State of West Bengal, [1974] 4 SCC 463.
In the instant case, the counter-affidavit has been
filed by Shri A.K. Roy, Under Secretary to the Government,
Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue, New Delhi al-
though the order of detention was made by Nisha Sahai Achu-
than, Joint Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry
of Finance. It is evident that the said Under Secretary was
dealing with the papers relating to the particular order of
detention and he placed those papers before the Minister
concerned. In these circumstances, the counter-affidavit
filed on behalf of the respondents cannot but be considered
and there is no allegation of mala fide or malice or extra-
neous consideration personally against the detaining author-
ity in making the impugned order of detention. This conten-
tion is, therefore, not tenable.
254
In the premises aforesaid we dismiss the writ petition
and hold that the impugned order of detention is quite in
accordance with law and the same is valid. The observations
made herein are confined to this application.
T.N.A. Petition dismissed.
255