Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AJAY DIXIT, N.S.A. DETENU,THROUGH HIS NEXT FRIENDAND FATHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/09/1984
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 18 1985 SCR (1) 843
1984 SCC (4) 400 1984 SCALE (2)529
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1990 SC 496 (9)
ACT:
National Security Act, 1980, sec. 3 (2) and 5A-"Law and
Order situation" and "Maintenance of Public Order"
distinguished.
HEADNOTE:
Section 3 (2) of the National Security Act 1980 (for
short, the Act) empowers the Central Government and the
State Governments, if satisfied With respect to any person,
with a view to preventing him, "inter alia from acting in
any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order",
it is necessary to do so to make an order directing such
person to be detained. Section 5-A of the Act by virtue of
section 2 of the National Security (Second Amendment) Act
provides. (i) that where a person has been detained under
section 3 of the Act on two or more grounds, such order of
detention shall be deemed to have been made separately on
each of such grounds and that such an order shall not be
deemed to be invalid or inoperative merely because one or
some of he grounds are vague, non-existent, non-relevant,
not connected or invalid for any reasons whatsoever and the
Government or officer making the order of detention shall be
deemed to have made the order of detention under the said
section after being satisfied as provided in that section
with reference to the remaining ground or grounds.
The District Magistrate, Agra passed an order of
detention of Ajay Dixit, the detenu, under s. 3 (2) of the
Act on 29th February 1984 stating that he was satisfied that
the detenu was likely to act in a manner prejudicial to
maintenance of public order and that it was necessary to
detain him with the object of preventing him from acting
prejudicially to the maintenance of public order. The
grounds of detention were (i) that on 10.4.81 the detenu
alongwith his companions surrounded Shri Kanhaiya Lal Sharma
with the intention of killing him but the latter escaped
slightly; (ii) that on 27.9.82 he fired at the police party
from his house where the policy had gone to arrest goondas
collected by him; (iii) That on his arrest on 27.9.1982 a
country made
844
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Tamancha and two live cartridges without licence were
recovered from him; (iv) That on 15.1.83 he shot dead Shri
Naresh Paliwal; (v) That on 31.10.1983, he forcibly
compelled Mrs. Sanjeev Kumar Paliwal at the point of a
revolver to take a nude snap of immoral act being committed
by Umesh with Sanjeev Kumar Gupta; and (vi) That on
26.2.1984, he attempted to murder Shri Jai Kumar Jain. The
grounds of detention also stated the fact that criminal
cases were pending trial in the court in respect of the
above criminal acts committed by the detenu.
The petitioner-father of the detenu, moved this Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution for a writ of habeas
corpus directing the release of the detenu from detention.
He contended, inter-alia, that the grounds mentioned in the
order wore illusory, insufficient and not bona fide and in
any case irrelevant for the detention of the detenu for the
maintenance of public order.
Allowing the writ petition,
^
HELD: (1) 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 a challenge is made to a
detention on the grounds that the stale and irrelevant
grounds were the basis for detention, then the detenu is
entitled to be released and to that extent the order is
subject to judicial review not on the ground of sufficiency
of the grounds nor the truth of the grounds but only about
the relevancy of the grounds which would come under judicial
scrutiny. It is, therefore, necessary in each case to
examine the facts to determine not the sufficiency of the
grounds nor the truth of the grounds, but nature of the
grounds alleged and see whether these are relevant or not
for considering whether the detention of the detenu is
necessary for maintenance of public order.
[850F; 853A-B; 854G-H]
(2) It is important to bear in mind the difference
between the law and order situation & maintenance of public
order. The contravention ’of law’ always affects ’order, but
before it could be said to affect ’public order’ it must
affect the community or the public at large. The question
whether a man has only committed a broach of law and order
or has acted in a manner likely to cause a disturbance of
the public order, is a question of degree and the extent of
the reach of the act upon society. The test is: Does it lead
to a disturbance of the even tempo and current of life of
the community so as to amount to a disturbance of the public
order. Or, does is affect merely an individual without
affecting the tranquillity of society. It may be remembered
that qualitatively, the acts which affect ’law and order’
are not different from the acts which affect ’public order’.
Indeed a state of peace or orderly tranquillity which
prevails as a result of the observance or enforcement of
internal laws and regulations by the Government is a feature
common to the concepts of ’law and order. and ’public order’
Every kind of disorder or contravention of law affects that
orderly tranquillity. The distinction between the areas of
’law and order’ and ’public order’ "is one of degree and
extent of the reach of the act in question on society". It
is the potentiality of the act to disturb the even tempo of
the life of the community which makes it prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order. If the contravention in its
effect is confined only to a few individuals directly
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involved as
845
distinguished from a wide spectrum of the public, it would
raise a problem of law and order only. These concentric
concepts of ’law and order’ and ’public order’ may have a
common ’epicentre’, but it is the length, magnitude and
intensity of the terror-wave unleashed by a particular
eruption of disorder that helps distinguish it as an act
affecting ’public order’ from that concerning law and order.
[851A-B; D-E; G-H; 852A-D]
(3) In the instant case, apart from the fact that the
first ground was old and stale, it is irrelevant in as much
as the detenu has been acquitted of the charge before the
detention order was passed. The other grounds mentioned in
the detention order no doubt are also unfortunate and the
conduct alleged of the detenu is reprehensible. Such
conducts, if true, are not of such nature which could
possibly endanger ’public order’. The grounds mentioned
therein are not of such magnitude as to amount to apprehend
disturbance of public order, nor was there any evidence that
for any conduct of the detenu public order was endangered,
or there could be reasonable apprehension about it. In view
of the nature of the allegations mentioned in the grounds,
this Court is satisfied that these are not of such a nature
as to lead to any apprehension that the even tempo of the
community would be endangered. Therefore, the detention of
the detenu under the provisions of section 3 (2) of the Act
was not justified. [853C-D; 855A]
Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia v. State of Bihar & Ors [1966] 2
S.C.R, 709. Arun Ghosh v. State of West Bengal [1970] 3
S.C.R. 288, Ram Ranjan Chatterjee v. State of West Bengal
[1975] 4 S.C.C. 143 at 146 Jaya Mala v. Home Secretary Govt.
of J & K. [1982] 2 S.C.C. 538, Alijan Mian V. District
Magistrate, Dhanbad and Others [1983] 4 S.C.C. p 301. at 308
and Kamlakar Prasad Chaturvedi v. State of M.P. and An
other. [1983] 4 S.C.C. 433. followed.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 916
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
Sunil K. Jain and Diwan Balak Ram for the Petitioners.
Manoj Swarup and Dalveer Bhandari for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. Shri Ram Narain Dixit in this
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution challenges the
detention of Ajay Dixit, his son in the District Jail of
Agra, under the National Security Act, 1980. The District
Magistrate, Agra passed a detention order and served on Ajay
Dixit hereinafter called the detenu under section 3 of the
National Security Act, hereinafter
846
called the Act, on six different grounds. The grounds
mentioned therein are as follows:
"1. That on 10.4.1981 at 10.30 p.m. you alongwith
your companions surrounded Shri Kanhaiya Lal Sharma
resident of Ferozepur and fired at him with the
intention of killing him but he escaped slightly. In
this connection a case under S.307 of I.P.C. was lodged
with the Police Station and is pending the trial in the
court against you.
2. That on dated 27.9.82 at 3.10 p.m. you
collected goondas in your house in the town of
Ferozabad and when the police party reached in order to
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arrest the goondas you fired at the police party on
which a case against you under S. 307/34 of Indian
Penal Code is pending the trial in the court.
3. That on dated 27.9.82 you were arrested by the
police in the town of Ferozabad and a country made
Tamancha and live cartridges without licence were
recovered from your possession in respect of which a
case against you under S.25/27 of Arms Act is pending
the trial in the court.
4. That on 15.1.83 at 5.00 p.m. you alongwith your
brother shot dead Shri Naresh Paliwal brother of Shri
Sanjeev Kumar Paliwal resident of Ferozabad. In this
respect a case against you under S.302 of Indian Penal
Code was registered in the Police Station and is
pending trial in the court.
5. That on 31.10.83 Shri Sanjeev Kumar Paliwal
lodged a report with the Thana Ferozabad (North) that
he was carrying the profession of photography. 12-13
days before a boy took him away for the purpose of a
photograph to a room where you and your associates were
present and you forcibly compelled Mrs. Sanjeev Kumar
Paliwal at the point of revolver to take a nude snap of
immoral act being committed by Umesh with Sanjeev Kumar
Gupta. In this respect a case against you under Section
342/286 of Indian Penal Code was registered and the
same is under trial.
6. That on 26.2.84 at about 5.00 p.m. you
alongwith your associates in the town of Ferozabad
attempted to murder
847
by sprinkling kerosene oil and by lighting it with a
match box Shri Jai Kumar Jain resident of Ferozabad in
order to recover your so-called money in respect of
which a case against you under S.307 of Indian Penal
Code was register ed and is under trial."
On the above grounds the District Magistrate by his
order dated 29.2.1984 stated that he was satisfied that the
said Ajay Dixit was likely to act in a manner prejudicial to
maintenance of public order and that it was necessary to
detain him with the object of preventing him from acting
prejudicially to the maintenance of public order. The said
order was passed under Sub-section (2) of Section 3 of The
National Security Act, 1980., and the petitioner was
detained from 29th February, 1984. On March 14th, 1984 the
petitioner submitted his representation to the Advisory
Board. On 23rd march, 1984, the State Government rejected
the representation of the detenu.
The petitioners alleged that the procedures and
formalities provided under the Act had not been made
available and applied in the case of the detenu. The
petitioner states that the detenu was detained and the
grounds mentioned in the order were illusory, insufficient
and not bonafide and in any case irrelevant for the
detention of the detenu for the maintenance of public order.
Subsection (2) of Section 3 of the Act empowers the Central
Government and the State Governments, if satisfied with
respect to any person, with a view to preventing him "inter
alia from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order", it is necessary to do so to
make an order directing such person be detained.
There are decisions which have dealt with limits and
the scope of this rather drastic power of preventive
detention vested in the Government and which is sanctioned
under the provisions of Article 22(3), (4) and (5) of the
Constitution. There are various procedural safeguards like
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making known to the detenu within a particular time the
grounds of detention and giving him information that he can
make representation against the detention within a
particular time and further that the representation should
be placed before the Advisory Board and the opinion of the
Advisory Board should be placed before the Government
concerned Land thereafter decision taken. The petitioner
made some other averments of non-com-
848
pliance with the procedural safeguards under the Act. The
main ground in the petition is that the petitioner was not
informed of the rights available to him nor of the reasons
or order passed on his representation. In view of the
averments made in the petition and the affidavits filed on
behalf of respondent, it is not necessary in the facts and
circumstances of this case to discuss these in detail.
Preventive detention is an exception to the normal
procedure. It is sanctioned and authorised for very limited
purpose under Article 22(3)(b) with good deal of safeguards.
The exercise of that power of preventive detention must be
with circumspection and care. We are governed by, the
Constitution and our Constitution embodies a philosophy of
government and a way of life. The working of this
Constitution requires understanding between those who
exercise power and the people over whom or in respect of
whom such power is exercised. The purpose of all government
is to promote common well-being and it must sub-serve the
common good and it is necessary therefore to protect
individual rights as far as consistent with security of the
society and an atmosphere where the even tempo of the
community is least endangered. These provisions should be so
read as to imply grant of power and also limit the user of
the power. The observance of a written law about the
procedural safeguards for the protection of the individual
is the normal and high duty of a public official. But in all
circumstances is not the highest. The law of self-
preservation and national security often claimed a higher
priority. "To lose our country by a scrupulous adherence to
written law, would be to lose the law itself, with life,
liberty, property and all those who are enjoying them with
us, thus absurdly sacrificing the end to the means", Thomas
Jefferson Writings (Washington ed. V. page 542-545 Sometimes
the executive may have to act without normal safeguards for
ordinary detention and resort to preventive detention when
the necessity demands it, but it must explain its action
when called upon in judicial review and ask for acquittance,
The question of difference between ’law and order’ and
’public order’ has come up many a times ill judicial
decisions. In the case of Dr. Ram Manhohar Lohia v. State of
Bihar & Ors., a Constitution Bench of this court had to
consider this controversy in the context of Rule 30 (i) (b)
of the Defence of India Rules, 1962. Mr. Justice Sarkar who
was a party to the majority view
849
observed that it was not necessary to take too technical a
view but one should proceed in a matter of substance, if a
man could be deprived of his liberty by the simple process
of making of an order he could only be so deprived of it if
the order is in terms of rule. If for the purpose of
justifying the detention such compliance by itself is
enough, non-compliance must have a contrary effect. A mere
reference in the detention order to the rule is not
sufficient to show that by "law and order" what was meant
was public order. The learned judge observed that the order
no doubt mentioned another ground of detention namely
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prevention of acts and 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 passed, because it
could not be said that in what manner and to what extent the
valid and invalid grounds operated on the mind of the
detaining authority. Of course, as the present law stands if
one of the grounds is invalid the order of detection can not
be set aside merely on that ground.
The National Security (Second Amendment) Act, 1984 was
assented to by the President on 31st August, 1984 and it
provided that it should be deemed that the Act had come into
force on the 21st of June, 1984. Section 5A of the Act by
virtue of Section 2 of the National Security (Second
Amendment) Act, reads as follows:
"5A. Where a person has been detained in pursuance
of an order of detention whether made before or after
the commencement of the National Security (Second
Amendment) Act, 1984 under section 3 which has been
made on two or more grounds, such order of detention
shall be deemed to have been made separately on each of
such grounds and accordingly:-
(a) Such order shall not be deemed to be invalid
or inoperative merely because one or some of the
grounds is or are-
(i) Vague,
(ii) non-existent,
(iii)not relevant,
850
(iv) not connected or not proximately connected with A
such person, or
(v) invalid for any other reasons whatsoever. and it is
not, therefore, possible to hold that the Government or
officer making such order would have been satisfied as
provided in section 3 with reference to the remaining
ground or grounds and made the order of detention:
(b) the Government or officer making the order of
detention shall be deemed to have made the order of
detention under the said section after being satisfied
as provided in that section with reference to the
remaining ground or grounds."
The Act specifically makes the provision of Section SA
of the amended portion of the Act applicable in case of an
order of detention whether passed before the commencement of
the ’ National Security (Second Amendment) Act, 1984 or
after it. Therefore in this order of detention section 5A
would be applicable, as the order was passed before the
coming into force of the National Security (Second
Amendment) Act, 1984.
Justice Hidayatullah, as the learned Chief Justice then
was, and Justice Bachawat observed in the said decision that
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 cause 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. When the
liberty of the citizen is put within the reach of authority
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and the scrutiny by courts is barred, the action must comply
not only with the substantive requirements of law but it
should be with those forms which alone can indicate the
substance. The learned judges further observed that the
contravention ’of law’ always affects ’order’ but before
851
it could 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 one must be careful in using these
expressions.
In the decision of this Court in this case of Arun
Ghosh v. State of West Bengal, the question was whether the
grounds mentioned could be construed to be breach of public
order and as such the detention order could b e validly
made. There the appellant had molested two respectable young
ladies threatened their fathers life and assaulted two other
individuals. He was detained under section 3(2) of the
Preventive Detention Act, 1950 in order to prevent him from
acting prejudicially to the maintenance of public order. It
was held by this Court that the question whether a man has
only committed a breach of law and order, or has acted in a
manner likely to cause a disturbance of the public order, is
a question of degree and the extent of the reach of the act
upon society. The test is: Does it lead to a disturbance of
the even tempo of the life of the community so as to amount
to a disturbance of the public order, or, does it affect
merely an individual without affecting the tranquillity of
society. This court found in that case however reprehensible
the appellant’s conduct might be, it did not add up to the
situation where it may be said that the community at large
was being disturbed. Therefore, it could not be said to
amount to an apprehension or breach of public order, and
hence, he was entitled to be released.
The law on this point was stated by this Court in the
case of Ram Ranjan Chatterjee v. State of West Bengal as
follows:
"lt may be remembered that qualitatively, the acts
which affect ’law and order’ are not different from the
acts which affect ’public order’. Indeed, a state of
peace or orderly tranquillity which prevails as a
result of the observance or enforcement of internal
laws and regulations by
852
the Government, is a feature common to the concepts of
’law and order’ and ’public order’. Every kind of
disorder or contravention of law affects that orderly
tranquillity. The distinction between the areas of ’law
and order’ and ’public order’ as pointed by this Court
in Arun Ghosh v. State of West Bengal, is one of degree
and extent of the reach of the act in question on
society". lt is the potentiality of the act to disturb
the even tempo of the life of the community which makes
it prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. If
tile contravention in its effect is confined only to a
few individuals directly involved as distinguished from
a wide spectrum of the public, it would raise a problem
of law and order only. These concentric concepts, of
’law and order’ and ’public order’ may have a common
’epicentre’, but it is the length magnitude and
intensity of the terror-wave unleashed by a particular
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eruption of disorder that helps distinguish it is an
act affecting ’public order’ from that concerning ’law
and order’.
Reliance was also placed upon Jaya Mala v. Home
Secretary Government of J & K. In that case also a criminal
case had been started on the basis of an incident. The Court
felt that the grounds of detention were such grounds upon
which no valid order can be sustained. It has been further
observed at page 540 as follows:
"But it is equally important to bear in mind that
every minor infraction of law cannot be upgraded to the
height of an activity prejudicial to the maintenance of
public order....... If every infraction of law having a
penal sanction by itself is a ground for detention
danger looms larger that the normal criminal trials,
and criminal courts set up for administering justice
will be substituted by detention laws often described
as lawless law."
See also in this connection the observations of this
Court in Alijan Mian v. District Magistrate, Dhanbad and
others.
Stale incidents cannot also be a valid ground for
sustaining detention. See in this connection the
observations of this Court
853
in Kamkalar Prasad Chaturvedi v. State of M.P. and Another.
When a challenge is made to detention on the grounds that
the stale and irrelevant grounds were the basis for
detention then the detenu is entitled to be released and to
that extent the order is subject to judicial review not on
the ground of sufficiency of the grounds nor the truth of
the grounds but only about the relevancy of the grounds
which would come under judicial scrutiny.
Bearing the aforesaid principles in mind, the first
ground mentioned in the order of detention was that the
detenu along-with the companions surrounded one Kanhaiya Lal
Sharma and had committed an offence under Section 307 of
Indian Penal Code on or about 10th April, 1981. Apart from
the fact that the ground was old and stale, it is irrelevant
inasmuch as the detenu has been acquitted of the charge
before the detention order was passed. He was acquitted on
2nd February, 1984 whereas the detention order was passed on
29th February. 1984. The respondents in their counter do not
dispute this position but state that the information had not
reached the detaining or the recommending authority. This is
unfortunate. The other grounds mentioned in the detention
order no doubt are also unfortunate and the conduct alleged
of the detenu is reprehensible. Such conducts, if true, are
not of such nature as could possibly endanger ’public
order’. The incident was alleged to have happened ten or
twelve days prior to 31st October, 1983, yet the detention
order was passed quite some time thereafter in February,
1984. In certain criminal charges mentioned in grounds
numbers 2,3, 4 and 5, there is no difficulty in arresting
the detenu. The grounds mentioned therein are not of such
magnitude as to amount to apprehend disturbance of public
order, nor was there any evidence that for any conduct of
the detenu public order was endangered, or there could be
reasonable apprehension about it. As emphasised by the
decisions of this Court, it is important to bear in mind the
difference between law and order situation and maintenance
of public order. The act by itself is not determinate of its
gravity. In its quality it may not differ from another but
its potentiality may be very different. Therefore the
question whether a man has only committed a breach of law
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and order or acted in a manner likely to the disturbance of
public order is a question of degree of the reach of the act
upon
854
society. In this connection it may be appropriate to refer
to the observations in the case of Arun Ghosh v. State of
West Bengal (supra) at page 290 as follows:
"It means therefore that the question whether a
man has only committed a breach of law and order or has
acted in a manner likely to cause a disturbance of the
public order is a question of degree and the extent of
the reach of the act upon the society. The French
distinguish law and order and public order by
designating the latter as order publique. The latter
expression has been recognised as meaning something
more than ordinary maintenance of law and order.
Justice Ramaswami in Writ Petition No. 179 of 1968 drew
a line of demarcation between the serious and
aggravated forms of breaches of public order which
affect the community or endanger the public interest at
large from minor breaches of peace which do not affect
the public at large. He drew an analogy between public
and private crime. The analogy is useful but not to be
pushed too far. A large number of acts directed against
persons or individuals may total up into a breach of
public order. In Dr Ram Manohar Lohia’s case examples
were given by Sarkar, and Hidayatulla, JJ. They show
how similar acts in different contexts affect
differently law and order on the one hand and public
order on the other. 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 is no formula by which one
case can be distinguished from another."
It is, therefore, necessary in each case to examine the
facts to determine, not the sufficiency of the grounds nor
the truth of the grounds, but nature of the grounds alleged
and see whether these are relevant or not for considering
whether the detention of the detenu is necessary for
maintenance of public order.
In view of the nature of the allegations mentioned in
the
855
grounds, we are of the opinion that these are not such a
nature as to lead to any apprehension that the even tempo of
the community would be endangered. Therefore the detention
of the detenu under the provisions of Section 3(2) of the
Act was not justified.
There are various allegations of mala fide in this
application namely that one of the relations of Advocate-
General of U.P. was involved. It is alleged that the
Advocate-General of U.P. is the father-in-law of a local
resident with whom the family of the detenu had land dispute
due to which many attempts on the life of the detenu and his
brother had been caused to be made by the Advocate General.
In the view we have taken it is not necessary for us to go
into these questions. There are some submissions about the
procedural irregularities. Though on the whole we do not
find much substance but it is not necessary also to detain
ourselves on the examination of these question.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, the detention
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order dated 29th February, 1984 which is Annexure I to the
petition is hereby quashed. The detenu should be set at
liberty forthwith.
M.L.A. Petition allowed.
856