Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ARVIND SHERGILL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/09/2000
BENCH:
S. RAJENDRA BABU, J. & D.P. MOHAPATRA, J.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :-
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
Leave granted.
Harinder Pal Singh Shergill, the husband of respondent
No. 1, was arrested on 3.8.1998 by the Customs Authorities
on the suspicion that he was in possession of foreign
currency of 66217 US Dollars at Sahar International Airport,
Mumbai and a statement made by him under Section 108 of the
Customs Act was recorded. For seizure of the foreign
currency a Panchnama was drawn. Then the said Shergill was
produced before the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Mumbai,
on 4.8.1998 who remanded him to judicial custody till
10.8.1998. Thereafter, the said Shergill was granted bail
on 14.8.1998 by the Additional Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate, Mumbai. Subsequently, on 17.11.1998 application
filed by the appellants for cancellation of the bail in
respect of the said Shergill was dismissed. On the same
date appellant No. 2 passed an order directing the
detention of the said Shergill in the custody of the Central
Prison, Nasik and the grounds accompanying the said order
indicated that the same was made under Section 3(1) of the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974 (for short COFEPOSA Act) on the basis
that with a view to preventing him from smuggling of goods
in future it was necessary to make the order. In the
grounds it was further stated that though the said Shergill
was found to have indulged in a solitary incident, the
organised manner in which he indulged in such activity
reflected his potentiality and propensity to continue to
indulge in such activities in future and, therefore, it was
necessary to detain him so as to prevent him from smuggling
the goods. This was challenged by wife of the said Shergill
by a writ petition filed before the High Court even before
the said Shergill was apprehended by the concerned
authorities. In the High Court on behalf of the appellants
two preliminary contentions were raised one, as to the
jurisdiction of the court and, other that it was a pre-
detention case and, therefore, the court should not
interfere with the same. The appellants also referred to
various decisions on this aspect of the matter. The High
Court held against the appellants in both the points.
However, in the view we propose to take in the matter, we
consider it unnecessary to consider the preliminary
questions raised in the case.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
We turn now to the merits of the matter. The High Court
noticed that Section 3 of the COFEPOSA Act is a very drastic
provision as also the stand of the respondents husband that
his possession of the said foreign currency was valid.
However, the High Court stated that it would not like to
examine the merits of the case at this juncture because the
adjudication proceedings and criminal case arising under the
Customs Act are still pending. The High Court further
observed as follows :-
It is not the case of the Union of India that the
husband of the petitioner earlier had been taking out the
currency to the foreign lands. Whether for a solitary act,
even if it is assumed for the sake of arguments as correct,
would it be proper on the part of the U.O.I. to invoke the
provisions of Section 3(1) of the COFEPOSA Act. In this
view of this Court, it may not be worthwhile as it defeats
the very object of the Act which is preventive in nature.
If the husband of the petitioner has committed a substantive
offence, that offence should be tried by a competent court
of jurisdiction but if in the adjudication proceedings, the
husband of the petitioner is in position to explain the
possession of the currency, it will have a direct bearing on
the complaint which has been filed by the authorities before
the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Mumbai. In the view of
this court, the impugned order has been passed in haste
without application of mind as to whether the impugned act
attributed to the husband of the petitioner was, in fact,
with the object of conservation and augmentation of foreign
exchange.
Therefore, this Court is of the opinion that the
impugned detention order, Annexure P-7 with the grounds of
detention, cannot be sustained in the eyes of law and has to
be quashed and I order accordingly.
The High Court has virtually decided the matter as if it
was sitting in appeal on the order passed by the detaining
authority. Action by way of preventive detention is largely
based on suspicion and the court is not an appropriate forum
to investigate the question whether the circumstances of
suspicion exist warranting the restraint on a person. The
language of Section 3 clearly indicates that the
responsibility for making a detention order rests upon the
detaining authority who alone is entrusted with the duty in
that regard and it will be a serious derogation from that
responsibility if the court substitutes its judgment for the
satisfaction of that authority on an investigation
undertaken regarding sufficiency of the materials on which
such satisfaction was grounded. The court can only examine
the grounds disclosed by the Government in order to see
whether they are relevant to the object which the
legislation has in view, that is, to prevent the detenu from
engaging in smuggling activity. The said satisfaction is
subjective in nature and such a satisfaction, if based on
relevant grounds, cannot be stated to be invalid. The
concerned authorities have to take note of the various facts
including the fact that this was a solitary incident in the
case of the detenu and that he had been granted bail earlier
in respect of which the application for cancellation of the
same was made but was rejected by the court. In this case,
there has been due application of mind by the concerned
authority to that aspect of the matter as we have indicated
in the course of narration of facts. Therefore, the view
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
taken by the High Court in the circumstances of the case
cannot be sustained. However, the learned counsel for the
respondent submitted that the order of detention was made on
17.11.1998, whereas the writ petition was filed on 21.4.1999
and order of stay was passed on the same date and
subsequently that order continued till the disposal of the
matter on 4.8.1999. Thus, he submitted that the facts upon
which detention had been ordered and the actual detention
not being effected till today, the nexus thereto has snapped
and in the light of the decision of this Court in Sunil
Fulchand Shah v. Union of India & Ors., 2000 (3) SCC 409,
it would not be appropriate for this Court to direct
detention of the husband of the respondent now. A bench of
Five Judges of this Court examined this matter and majority
of Judges held that a detenu need not be sent back to
undergo the remaining period of detention after a long lapse
of time when even the maximum prescribed period intended in
the order of detention has expired, unless there is still a
proximate nexus between the period of detention prescribed
when the detenu was required to be detained and the date
when the detenu is required to be detained pursuant to the
appellate order and the State is able to satisfy the court
about the desirability of further or continued detention.
It was also made clear therein that where a long time has
not lapsed or the period of detention initially fixed in the
order of detention has also not expired, the detenu may be
sent back to undergo the balance period of detention.
Therefore, in the present case, what we have to look is
whether any long period has lapsed as it has happened in
Sunil Fulchand Shahs case (supra) wherein the petitioner
was directed to be detained for a period of one year with
effect from 4.7.1986 and the said period of one year expired
on 3.7.1987 and the matter was taken upon for hearing only
on 16.2.2000. In the circumstance, when the period of
detention itself had expired 13 years earlier, then this
Court came to the conclusion as aforesaid. However, this is
not the position in the present case at all. Husband of the
respondent evaded arrest as is obvious and obtained an
interim order from the High Court which was in force till
the disposal of the writ petition and thereafter on quashing
of the detention order question of detention made did not
arise now. Therefore, we do not think that it would be
appropriate to state that merely by passage of time the
nexus between the object for which the husband of the
respondent is sought to be detained and the circumstances in
which he was ordered to be detained has snapped. However,
we make it clear that if those circumstances did not exist,
then it would be appropriate for the Government to revoke
the order of detention and, if still certain circumstances
as apprehended in the order of detention exist, it will be
open to the Government to enforce the same. Making this
position clear, we allow this appeal and set aside the order
made by the High Court.