Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. KHATOON BEGUM ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/03/1981
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1077 1981 SCR (3) 137
1981 SCC (2) 480 1981 SCALE (1)507
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC1389 (1)
R 1986 SC 356 (3)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Article 22(5) - Whether
delay in considering the representation made by a detenu
vitiates the detention under the National Security Act.
HEADNOTE:
Allowing the appeals, the Court
^
HELD: 1: 1. Article 22 (5) of the Constitution enjoins
a duty on the authority making the order of detention to
afford the detenu the earliest opportunity of making a
representation against the order. The right and obligation
to make and to consider the representation at the earliest
opportunity is a constitutional imperative which cannot be
curtailed or abridged. [140 E]
1: 2. If the Parliament or the State Legislature making
the law providing for preventive detention devises a
circumlocutory procedure for considering the representation
or if the inter-departmental consultative procedures are
such that delay becomes inevitable, the law and the
procedures will contravene the constitutional mandate. [140
F]
1 : 3. It is essential that any law providing for
preventive detention and any authority obliged to make order
for preventive detention should adopt procedures calculated
towards expeditious consideration of representations made by
detenus. It will be no answer to a demand for liberty to say
that administrative red tape makes delay inevitable. The
constitutional mandate brooks no unreasonable delay in the
consideration of a representation. [140 G, 141A]
1: 4. The right of detenu to have his representation
considered "at the earliest opportunity" and the obligation
of the detaining authority to consider the representation
"at the earliest opportunity" are not a right and an
obligation flowing from either the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities, 1974 or the
National Security Act or, for that matter any other
Parliamentary or State law providing for preventive
detention. They are a right and an obligation created by the
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very Constitution which breathes life into the Parliamentary
or State law. [140 D]
Jayanarayan Sukul v. State of West Bengal, [1970] 3 SCR
225; Narendra Purshotam Umrao etc. v. B.B. Gujral and
Ors.,[1979] 2 SCR 315; V.J. Jain v. Pradhan, AIR 1979 SC
1501; Smt. Ichhu Devi Choraria v. Union of India and Ors.;
AIR 1980 SC 1983; Ramachandra A. Kamat v. Union of India and
Ors. [1980] 2 SCR 1072; Frances Coralie Mullin v. W. C.
Khambra and Ors.. [1980] 2 SCR 1095, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition Nos. 293,391 and
392 of 1981.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
138
M.M. Abdul Khader and Shakeel Ahmed for the
Petitioners.
R.K. Bhatt, D. Goburdhan and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. These three Writ Petitions may be
disposed of by a single judgment since the principal
question argued in all the three cases is one. The question
is whether delay in considering the representation made by a
detenu under Art. 22(5) of the Constitution vitiates a
detention under the National Security Act and entitles the
detenu to be released on that ground alone. As a result of a
series of decisions of this Court,(’) it is now well settled
that the representation made by a detenu under Art. 22(5) of
the Constitution against his detention under the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974, must be considered by the detaining
authority with the ut-most expedition and that any
unexplained delay in considering the representation will be
fatal to the detention. The learned counsel for the State of
Uttar Pradesh urged that the rule requiring expeditious
consideration of a detenu’s representation is a judge-made
rule based on provisions of the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of the Smuggling Activities Act,
1974, and that the extension of the application of the rule
to cases of detention under the National security Act was
unwarranted. The learned counsel contrasted the provisions
of the National Security Act and the provisions of the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange & Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974, and urged that in the case of
detention under the National Security Act, a certain amount
of delay was inevitable having due regard to the procedure
prescribed by the Act and,
139
therefore, delay in consideration of the representation
should not be allowed to prejudice the detention. We are
unable to agree with the submission of the learned counsel.
We will presently give our reasons for our inability to
accept the learned counsel’s submissions but we will first
like to refer to a few facts.
In Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 293 of 1981 the order
and the grounds of detention were served on the detenu on
October 30, 1980 and November 12, 1980 respectively. The
detenu made a representation on November 12, 1980. Though
according to the detenu he has received no communication
from the Government about his representation, the Additional
District Magistrate has stated in his counter-affidavit that
the representation was rejected on December 9, 1980 and that
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it was communicated to the detenu through the Superintendent
of the Central Jail. The counter-affidavit mentions not a
word to explain the delay in considering the representation.
The only reference to the representation in the counter-
affidavit is in these two sentences: "It is admitted that
the detenu made a representation to the Home Secretary on
November 12, 1980, and the same was rejected on December 9,
1980. The rejection of the representation was communicated
to the detenu through Superintendent, Central Jail by the
Government".
Similarly in Writ Petition (Criminal No. 391 of 1981,
the order and the grounds of detention were served on the
detenu on November 12, 1980. The representation was rejected
on December 10, 1980. In the counter affidavit filed by the
Section Officer, Confidential Department, of the Government
of Uttar Pradesh, it is stated that on receipt of the
representation, the Secretary’ Home Department, forwarded it
to the District Magistrate for his comments. In order to
meet the allegations in the representation, the District
Magistrate had to gather information from many sources and
the representation alongwith his comments was returned to
the Home Secretary by the District Magistrate on November
25, 1980. Thereafter Law Department was consulted and the
file could reach the Home Minister on December 5, 1980 only.
The representation was rejected by the Home Minister on
December 8, 1980 and then communicated to the detenu through
the Superintendent, Central Jail.
In Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 392 of 1981 the order
and the grounds of detention were served on the detenu on
October 16, 1980. The detenu made a representation on
October 24, 1980. It was rejected on November 25, 1980. The
counter-
140
affidavit filed by the Additional District Magistrate does
not offer any explanation for the delay in the consideration
of the representation. He has satisfied himself with the
statement "as regards the representation of the detenu to
the Home Secretary this fact is admitted."
The question for consideration is whether a person
preventively detained under the provisions of the National
Security Act is entitled to be released if there is delay in
the consideration of the representation made by him to the
detaining authority. It is true that the series of cases
where delay in the consideration of the representation made
by a detenu was held to be fatal to detention were cases
which arose under the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and
Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974. We are
however, unable to see how that would make any difference.
The right of detenu to have his representation
considered "at the earlier opportunity" and the obligation
of the detaining authority to consider the representation
"at the earliest opportunity" are not a right and an
obligation flowing from either the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act 1974, or
the National Security Act or, for that matter any other
Parliamentary of State law providing for preventive
detention. They are a right and an obligation created by the
very Constitution which breathes life into the Parliamentary
or State law. Art. 22(5) enjoins a duty on the authority
making the order of detention to afford the detenu "the
earliest opportunity of making a representation against the
order". The right and obligation to make and to consider the
representation at the earliest opportunity is a
Constitutional imperative which cannot be curtailed or
abridged. If the Parliament or the State legislature making
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the law providing for preventive detention devises a
circumlocutory procedure for considering the representation
or if the inter-departmental consultative procedures are
such that delay becomes inevitable, the law and the
procedures will contravene the constitutional mandate. It is
essential that any law providing for preventive detention
and any authority obliged to make orders for preventive
detention should adopt procedures calculated towards
expeditious consideration of representations made by
detenus. It will be no answer to a demand for liberty to say
that administrative red tape makes delay inevitable. The
learned counsel for the State of Uttar Pradesh pointed out
certain differences between the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act and the
National Security Act which according to him make delay
inevitable in
141
the consideration of representations in cases of detention
under the National Security Act. We think that the
differences pointed out are irrelevant. The constitutional
mandate brooks no unreasonable delay in the consideration of
a representation. In the cases before us, in Criminal Writ
Petition Nos. 293 of 1981 and 392 of 1981 no explanation was
offered by the detaining authority for the delay in the
consideration of representations and in Criminal Writ
Petition No. 391 of 1981, administrative red tape was the
only explanation offered. We are satisfied that in all the
three cases there was unreasonable delay in the
consideration of the representations and the detenus are,
therefore, entitled to be released. They will be released
forthwith. The Writ Petitions are allowed.
V.D.K. Petition allowed
142