Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIV RATAN MAKIM S/O NANDLAL MAKIM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/12/1985
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1986 AIR 610 1985 SCR Supl. (3) 843
1986 SCC (1) 404 1985 SCALE (2)1504
CITATOR INFO :
R 1986 SC2177 (48)
F 1989 SC1282 (9)
RF 1990 SC 225 (9)
ACT:
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act, 1974, s.3 - Detention order -
Solitary incident - Whether sufficient for detention - Time
gap between incident and detention order - Whether vitiates
order - Detention order - Whether can be made to subvert,
supplant or substitute the punitive law.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner while returning from Nepal was
intercepted by the Customs Officers in the morning of 20th
November, 1984 and searched in the presence of independent
witnesses. From his trousers’ pocket two pieces of foreign
marked gold in the shape of round tablets weighing 373.800
gms. were recovered and seized under the Customs Act. The
petitioner was arrested and on interrogation he filed a
written statement admitting the search and the seizure. On
an application made by him he was released on bail.
The second respondent thereafter passed an order dated
11th April 1985 under s. 3 of COFEPOSA Act directing the
detention of the petitioner. The representation of the
petitioner was rejected by the Central Government. The
advisory Board opined that there was sufficient cause for
the detention of the petitioner and the Central Government
confirmed the detention order directing detention for one
year.
The petitioner challenged the validity of the order of
detention before this Court contending: (i) that the order
of detention was based on a solitary incident and apart from
this incident there were no other incidents showing that he
was habitually smuggling gold, (ii) that considerable time
had elapsed between the date of recovery of gold pieces and
the detention order, and this long lapse of time showed that
the detention order was vitiated by malafides, and (iii)
that the detention order was made with a view to
circumventing or by-passing the criminal prosecution and
that the power of detention cannot be used to subvert,
supplant or substitute the punitive law.
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844
Dismissing the petition,
^
HELD : 1. Having regard to the nature of the activity
and the circumstances in which the petitioner was caught
smuggling gold, and the facts set out by him in his written
statement, the second respondent was justified in reaching
the satisfaction that the petitioner was engaged in
smuggling gold and that with a view to preventing him, it
was necessary to detain him. [847 E-F]
2. Where an unreasonably long period has elapsed
between the date of the incident and the date of the order
of detention, an inference may legitimately be drawn that
there is no nexus between the incident and the order of
detention and the order of detention may be liable to be
struck down as invalid. But there can be no hard and fast
rule as to what is the length of time which should be
regarded sufficient to snap the nexus between the incident
and the order of detention. [848 A-B]
In the instant case, the lapse of time between the date
of the incident and the date of order of detention has been
sufficiently explained by the detaining authority. No
inference of malafides can, therefore, be drawn. [848 B-C]
3. The object of making an order of detention is
preventive while the object of a criminal prosecution is
punitive. Even if a criminal prosecution fails and an order
of detention is then made, it would not invalidate the order
of detention. If an order of detention is made only in order
to bypass a criminal prosecution which may be irksome
because of the inconvenience of proving guilt in a Court of
law, it would certainly be an abuse of the power of
preventive detention and the order of detention would be
bad. But if the object of making the order of detention is
to prevent the commission in future of activities injurious
to the community, it would be a perfectly legitimate
exercise of power to make the order of detention. The Court
would have to consider all the facts and circumstances of
the case in order to determine on which side of the line the
order of detention falls. [848 F; 849 B-D]
In the instant case, the petitioner was caught in the
act of smuggling gold and the circumstances in which the
gold was being smuggled as also the facts set out in the
written statement of the petitioner clearly indicate that
the petitioner was engaged in the activity of smuggling
gold. It, therefore, cannot be said that the order of
detention was passed by the second
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respondent with a view to subverting, supplanting or
substituting the criminal law of the land. The order of
detention was passed plainly and indubitably with a view to
preventing the petitioner from continuing the activity of
smuggling and it was, therefore, a perfectly valid order of
detention. [849 D-F]
Subbharta v. State of West Bengal, [1973] 3 SCC 250
relied upon.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition (Criminal) No.
1122 of 1985.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
Soli J. Sorabji, A.K. Nag and K.D. Prasad for the
Petitioner.
N.C. Tulkdar, and R.N. Poddar for the Respondents.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, CJ. This is a writ petition filed by the
petitioner for a writ of habeas corpus praying for
revocation of the order of detention dated 11th April 1985
passed by respondent No. 2, Joint Secretary to the
Government of India, against the petitioner under Section 3
of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act 1974 (hereinafter referred to as
COFEPOSA Act). We heard the writ petition on 18th September
1985 and after hearing the arguments advanced on both sides,
we passed an order on the same date dismissing the writ
petition. We now proceed to give our reasons for making that
order.
On the basis of information received by them, the
Customs Officers at Panitanki Land Customs Station
intercepted an auto-rickshaw bearing No. WGY-9854 coming
from Nepal at about 8 a.m. in the morning of 20th November
1984. There were four occupants in the auto-rickshaw,
namely, the petitioner, Raj Kumar Gupta, Prem Prasad
Bothari, and Akadeshi Bahadur. These four occupants as well
as the driver of the auto-rickshaw were searched by the
Customs Officers in the presence of independent witnesses
and as a result of the search, no contraband goods were
found in the possession of the other three occupants and the
driver of the auto-rickshaw but from the pocket of the
trousers worn by the petitioner, two pieces of foreign
marked gold in the shape of round tablets weighing 373.800
gms. and valued at
846
Rs.74760 were recovered and they were seized under the
Customs Act. The petitioner was immediately arrested and on
interrogation, he filed a written statement on the same day
stating that he had been unemployed for a long time and that
he was introduced in the business of purchase and sale of
foreign marked gold by one Prakash Pincha and that on 16th
November 1984, he left Kathiar bus and arrived in Kathmandu
at 6 a.m. on 18th November 1984 and stayed at Kanji Lodge in
Kathmandu and as per prior arrangement, he contacted one
Dena Lal Aggarwal on Telephone No. 344889 and Dena Lal
Aggarwal thereupon came to Kanji Lodge along with the
requisite quantity of gold and he took delivery of gold from
Dena Lal Aggarwal and paid him Rs. 70400 in Indian currency
and thereafter he left Kathmandu at 1800 hrs. on 19th
November 1984 reaching Kakarbatha opposite Panitanki Land
Customs Station at 7.30 a.m. on 20th November 1984 and
boarded auto-rickshaw bearing No. WGY-9854 which later on
picked up the other passengers and ultimately the auto-
rickshaw was intercepted and he was searched resulting in
the seizure of two pieces of foreign market gold which were
in the pocket of his trousers. The petitioner was produced
before the Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate, Siliguri on
21st November 1984 and on an application made by him, he was
released on bail by the Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate
on 5th December 1984. The second respondent who is the Joint
Secretary to the Government of India thereafter passed an
order dated 11th April 1985 under Section 3 of COFEPOSA Act
directing that the petitioner be detained and kept in
custody in the Central Jail, Patna. The order of detention
recited that it was passed with a view to preventing the
petitioner from smuggling goods. The grounds on which the
order of detention was based were supplied to the petitioner
immediately on his arrest under the order of detention. The
petitioner made a representation dated 17th May 1985 against
the order of detention but the representation was rejected
by the Central Government on 23rd May 1985. The case of the
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petitioner was placed before the Advisory Board which gave
the opinion that there was sufficient cause for the
detention of the petitioner and on receipt of this opinion
of the Advisory Board, the Central Government by an order
dated 6th June 1985 confirmed the order of detention and
directed that the petitioner be detained for a period of one
year from the date of his detention, namely, 23rd April
1985. The petitioner thereupon preferred the present writ
petition challenging the validity of the order of detention
and seeking a direction that he may be released from
detention.
Though several grounds were taken in the writ petition
only three were seriously pressed by the learned counsel
appearing on behalf of the petitioner. The first ground was
that the order of
847
detention was based on the solitary incident in which two
pieces of foreign marked gold were recovered from the pocket
of the trousers of the petitioner on 20th November 1984 and
apart from this incident there were no other incidents
showing that he was habitually smuggling gold. The second
ground was that considerable time had elapsed between the
date when he was found to be carrying two pieces of foreign
marked gold and the date of the order of detention and this
long lapse of time showed that the order of detention was
vitiated by malafides. And the last ground was that the
order of detention was made with a view to circumventing or
bypassing the criminal prosecution instituted against the
petitioner and the detaining authority had not applied its
mind to the vital aspect that the power of detention cannot
be used to subvert, supplant or substitute the punitive law.
We do not think any of these three grounds can be sustained.
So far the first ground is concerned, it is obvious
that having regard to the nature of the activity of
smuggling, an inference could legitimately be drawn even
from a single incident of smuggling that the petitioner was
indulging in smuggling of gold moreover. The written
statement given by the petitioner clearly indicated that the
petitioner was engaged in the business of purchase and sale
of foreign marked gold and that this incident in which he
was caught was not a solitary incident. The facts stated by
the petitioner in his written statement could legitimately
give rise to the inference that the petitioner was a member
of a smuggling syndicate and merely because only one
incident of smuggling by the petitioner came to light, it
did not mean that this was the first and only occasion on
which the petitioner tried to smuggle gold. There can be no
doubt that having regard to the nature of the activity and
the circumstances in which the petitioner was caught
smuggling gold and the facts set out by him in his written
statement, the second respondent was justified in reaching
the satisfaction that the petitioner was engaged in
smuggling gold and that with a view to preventing him from
smuggling gold, it was necessary to detain him.
Turning to the second ground of challenge, we do not
think that the lapse of time between the date when two
pieces of foreign marked gold were found on the person of
the petitioner and the date of the order of detention was so
unduly long or that the explanation for such lapse of time
offered by the respondents was so unsatisfactory that we
should draw an inference of malafides on the part of the
detaining authority in making the order of detention. The
delay in making the order of detention has, in our opinion,
been satisfactorily explained by the time-chart set
848
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out as Annexure R-I to the counter affidavit filed by Shri
A.K. Agnihotri on behalf of the respondents. It is no doubt
true that where an unreasonably long period has elapsed
between the date of the incident and the date of the order
of detention, an inference may legitimately be drawn that
there is no nexus between the incident and the order of
detention and the order of detention may be liable to be
struck down as invalid. But there can be no hard and fast
rule as to what is the length of time which should be
regarded sufficient to snap the nexus between the incident
and the order of detention. We are of the view that here the
lapse of time between the date of the incident and the date
of the order of detention has been sufficiently explained by
the detaining authority and hence we are not prepared to
draw the inference of malafides merely because the order of
detention happened to be made about five months after the
petitioner was found carrying two pieces of foreign marked
gold.
The last ground urged on behalf of the petitioner is
also equally without substance. The contention of the
petitioner was that criminal prosecution cannot be
circumvented or short-circuited by ready resort to
preventive detention and the power of detention cannot be
used to subvert, supplant or substitute the punitive law of
the land. The petitioner urged that no material has been
disclosed by the respondents to establish the existence of
any exceptional reasons which would justify recourse to
preventive detention in the present case such as witnesses
being afraid to depose against the detenu in court or other
genuine difficulties in bringing the culprits to book in a
criminal court under the ordinary law of the land and in the
absence of such reasons before the detaining authority, it
was not competent to the detaining authority to make the
order of detention by passing the criminal prosecution. This
argument completely overlooks the fact that the object of
making an order of detention is preventive while the object
of a criminal prosecution is punitive. Even if a criminal
prosecution fails and an order of detention is then made, it
would not invalidate the order of detention, because, as
pointed out by this court in Subharta v. State of West
Bengal, [1973] 3 S.C.C. 250, "the purpose of preventive
detention being different from conviction and punishment and
subjective satisfaction being necessary in the former while
proof beyond reasonable doubt being necessary in the
latter", the order of detention would not be bad merely
because the criminal prosecution has failed. It was pointed
out by this Court in that case that "the Act creates in the
authority concerned a new
849
jurisdiction to make orders for preventive detention on
their subjective satisfaction on grounds of suspicion of
commission in future of acts prejudicial to the community in
general. This Jurisdiction is different from that of
judicial trial in courts for offences and of judicial orders
for prevention of offences. Even unsuccessful judicial trial
or proceeding would therefore not operate as a bar to a
detention order or render it malafide". If the failure of
the criminal prosecution can be no bar to the making of an
order of detention, a fortiorari the mere fact that a
criminal prosecution can be instituted cannot operate as a
bar against the making of an order of detention. If an order
of detention is made only in order to by pass a criminal
prosecution which may be irksome because of the
inconvenience of proving guilt in a court of law, it would
certainly be an abuse of the power of preventive detention
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and the order of detention would be bad. But if the object
of making the order of detention is to prevent the
commission in future of activities injurious to the
community, it would be a perfectly legitimate exercise of
power to make the order of detention. The Court would have
to consider all the facts and circumstances of the case in
order to determine on which side of the line the order of
detention falls. Here the petitioner was caught in the act
of smuggling gold and the circumstances in which the gold
was being smuggled as also the facts set out in the written
statement of the petitioner clearly indicate that the
petitioner was engaged in the activity of smuggling gold and
if that be so, it is not possible to say that the order of
detention was passed by the second respondent with a view to
subverting, supplanting or substituting the criminal law of
the land. The order of detention was plainly and indubitably
with a view to preventing the petitioner from continuing the
activity of smuggling and it was therefore a perfectly valid
order of detention.
These were the reasons for which we sustained the order
of detention and dismissed the writ petition.
A.P.J. Petition dismissed.
850