Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GHULAM SARWAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/12/1966
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1335 1967 SCR (2) 271
CITATOR INFO :
O 1968 SC 765 (8,9,11,19,20,21)
R 1972 SC2215 (2)
RF 1973 SC1461 (836)
RF 1980 SC1789 (106)
RF 1981 SC 728 (4,10,12)
E 1981 SC1621 (7,8)
R 1988 SC1531 (189)
ACT:
Practice--Order of High Court dismissing petition for
issue of writ of habeas corpus--Petition to Supreme Court
under Art. 32--Order of High Court if res judicata.
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 359--If President can
issue more than one order--Order--applicable only to
foreigners--If violative of Art 14.
Foreigners Act (31 of 1946)., s. 3(2) (g)--Detention
under for investigation into conspiracy to smuggle gold--If
mala fide.
Supreme Court Rules, O.35, rr. 3 and 4 Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
After the President of India issued a Proclamation of
Emergency under Art. 352(1) of the Constitution in October
1962, he issued two orders under Art. 359(1) which were
subsequently amended. By one, as amended, the right of a
foreigner to move any court for the enforcement of the
rights conferred by Arts. 14, 21 and 22 of the Constitution
was suspended during the period of emergency. By the other
order, as amended, the right of any person to move any court
for the enforcement of the rights conferred by Arts. 14, 21
and 22 was suspended among the per of emergency, if such
person was deprived of any such ’rights under the Defence of
India Ordinance, 1962, or any rule or order thereunder.
In 1964, the petitioner, who was a Pakistani national, was
arrested for an offence under the Indian Customs Act, 1962.
When he was about to be enlarged on bail he was detained by
an order under s. 3 (2) (g) of the, Foreigners Act, 1946.
According to the respondent, the petitioner was detained as
investigation was in progress in respect of a case of
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conspiracy to smuggle gold, in which the petitioner was
involved. Thereafter, he was tried and convicted for the
offence under the Customs Act and sentenced to 9 months
imprisonment. Before the expiry of the term of imprisonment
he moved the High Court for the issue of a writ of habeas
corpus, but the petition was dismissed. After serving the
sentence he moved this Court, under Art. 32, again for the
issue of a writ of habeas, corpus raising now contentions as
to the validity of s. 3(2) (g) of the Foreigners Act and the
President’s order under Art.359(1), relating to foreigners.
HELD (Per Subba Rao, C. J. Hidayatullah, Sikri and Shelat,
JJ.): (1) The order of the High Court does not operate as
res judicata, either because it is not a judgment or because
the principle is not applicable to a fundamentally lawless
order, and this Court has to decide the petition on merits.
[277 D]
In the case of a High Court, when it functions as a
Divisional Bench it speaks for the entire court, and
therefore, it cannot set aside the order made by another
Divisional Bench in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus,
except on fresh evidence. But when the person detained
272
files an original petition for habeas corpus before this
Court under Art. 32, the order of-the High Court will not
operate as res judicata. If the doctrine of res judicata is
applicable in such a case so would be the doctrine of
constructive res judicata, and, if a petitioner could have
raised a contention which would make the detention order
’fundamentally lawless, but did not do so in the High Court,
it would be deemed to have been raised, and this Court,
though enjoined by the Constitution to protect the right of
a person illegally detained, may become powerless to do so.
[276 F-H; 277 A-C]
Daryao v. State of U.P. [1962] 1 S.C.R. 574, referred to.
(2) Article 359 empowers the President to make an order for
the purpose mentioned therein, and as the singular includes
the plural,, he can make different orders applicable to
different groups of persons. There is nothing in the,
Article which prevents the President from restricting the
scope of an order to a class of persons, namely, foreigners.
[280 A-C]
(3) There is a distinction between the President’s order
and the effect of that order. Under Art. 359(1) the
President can only make an order which is valid. If the
order does not violate Art. 14 it can validly take away the
right to move the court to enforce Art. 14. But an order
making an unjustified discrimination in suspending the right
to move a court under Art. 14 itself, will be void at its
inception. Therefore, the validity of the President’s order
issued under Art. 359(1) could be questioned if it infringed
the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution. [280 F-H]
Sree Mohan Chowdhury v. Chief Commissioner, Tripura, [1964]
3 S.C R. 442, explained.
(4) There is however; a clear nexus between the
classification into foreigners and citizens, and the object
sought to be achieved by the President’s orders. Therefore
the making of two orders, one confined to foreigners and the
other applicable to all persons including foreigners, does
not violate Art. 14. The two orders are mainly intended to
operate in different fields and their scope is different,
though there is some overlapping. There was a greater
danger from the subversive activities of foreigners, and
therefore,. it was necessary to issue a special order, wider
in scope and taking in other rights, than that which was
confined only to persons who had been deprived of certain
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rights under the Defence of India Ordinance. [282 A-D]
(5) As the President’s order suspending the right to move
the court to enforce the right under Art. 14 is valid, the
petitioner has no right to move the court subsequent to the
inclusion of Art. 14 in the President’s order relating to
foreigners. The fact that he complained of his detention
for a period earlier than the amendment has no-bearing on
the question of maintainability of the petition. [282 H; 283
A]
(6) If the petitioner was in fact involved in a conspiracy
to smuggle gold, there is no reason why the wide power
conferred on the Central Government to detain him under s.
3(2)(g) of the Foreigners Act could not be invoked. Such a
detention for the purpose of investigation was not mala
fide. [283 F-G]
[The question whether this Court can ascertain whether the
action of the Executive in declaring the emergency or
continuing it is actuated by mala fides and is an abuse of
its power, left open.] [278 E]
Per Bachawat, J : (1) The order of dismissal by the High
Court does not operate as res judicata and does not bar the
petition under Art. 32,
273
asking for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus on the same
facts. The petitioner has the fundamental right to move
this Court under Art. 32 and the petition must therefore be
entertained and examined on merits. The order of the High
Court is not a judgment; and the previous dismissal of such
a petition by the High Court is only one of the matters
which this Court may take into consideration under 0. 35,
rr. 3 and 4 of the Supreme Court Rules, before issuing a
rule nisi. The petitioner, however, would not have a right
to move this Court under Art. 32, more than once on the
same. facts. [283 H; 284 A-C]
(2) Assuming that the President’s order under Art. 359(1)
is "law" within the meaning of Art. 13(2), and can be
pronounced invalid on the ground that it abridges or takes
away the right conferred by Art. 14, the order in the
present case is not discriminatory and is not violative of
Art. 14.,[285 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 155 of 1966.
Writ Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
the enforcement of fundamental rights.
R. V. Pillai, for the petitioner.
N. S. Bindra and R. N. Sachthey, for respondents Nos. 1
to 3.
The Judgment of SUBBA RAO, C.J., HIDAYATULLAH, SIKRI and
SHELAT, JJ. was delivered by SUBBA RAO, C.J. BACHAWAT, J.
delivered a seperate Concurring Judgment.
Subba Rao, C.J. This petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution of India raises the question of validity of the
detention of the petitioner under s. 3 of the Foreigners
Act, 1946 (Act No. 31 of 1946) (hereinafter called the Act).
The petitioner is a Pakistani national who entered India
without any travel documents. On May 8, 1964, he was
arrested in New Delhi by the Customs Authorities under S.
135 of the Indian Customs Act, 1962. On May 9, 1964, he was
ordered to be enlarged on bail. On May 18, 1965, he was
ordered to be released. When he was about to be released
from jail, a detention order was served on him by the
Central Government under S. 3(2)(g) of the Act. it was said
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that he had to be detained, as police investigation was in
progress in respect of a case of conspiracy to smuggle gold
of which he was a member. On May 29, 1965, he was convicted
by the Magistrate, First-Class, Delhi, of an offence under
the Customs Act and sentenced to undergo rigorous
imprisonment for a period of 9 months and to pay a fine of
Rs. 2,000/-. The appeal filed by him to the Sessions Judge
against that order was dismissed. The petitioner underwent
imprisonment and also paid the fine. Before his term of
imprisonment expired, the petitioner filed a writ of habeas
corpus in the Circuit Bench of the Punjab High Court at
Delhi challenging his detention. That petition was
dismissed by Khanna, J., on merits. Before the learned
Judge the constitutional validity of s. 3(2)(g) of the Act
was not canvassed. The
Sup. CI/67-4
274
learned Judge held that the section authorised the
Government to make the said order of detention on its
subjective satisfaction and that the Court could not
question its validity in the absence of any mala fides. He
negatived the contention raised before him that an order
under that sub-section could not be made for the purpose of
completing an investigation in a conspiracy case, as no such
limitation was found therein. In short, he dismissed the
petition on merits.
The present petition was filed in this Court under Article
32 of the Constitution on May 12, 1966 for issue of a writ
of habeas corpus against the respondents directing them to
set him at liberty on the ground that the provisions of
the Act were invalid. Before we consider the various
contentions raised by Mr. R. V. Pillai in support of the
petition, we would at the outset deal with a preliminary
objection raised by Mr. N. S. Bindra, learned counsel
appearing for the respondents. Mr. N. S. Bindra, contended
that the order made by Khanna, J., dismissing the writ of
habeas corpus filed in the Circuit Bench of the Punjab High
Court operated. as res judicata and barred the
maintainability of the present application. The decision of
this Court in Daryao v. The State of U. P.(1) was relied
upon in support of the said contention. There, the High
Court dismissed a writ petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution after hearing the matter on merits, on the
ground that no fundamental right was proved or contravened
and that its contravention was constitutionally justified.
The petitioner therein did not prefer an appeal against that
order to this Court; but he filed an independent petition
under Art. 32 of the Constitution in this Court on the same
facts and for the same reliefs. This Court held that the
petition in this Court would be barred by the general
principles of res judicata. That decision related to a
right claimed by the petitioners therein. The petitioners
in that case sought to enforce their fundamental right to
property which had been negatived by the High Court in its
order made on an application presented by them under Art.
226 of the Constitution. While upholding the plea of res
judicata, this Court made the following observations in the
context of the said plea vis-a-vis the writ of habeas corpus
:
"In England, technically an order passed on a
petition for habeas corpus is not regarded as
a judgment and that places the petitions for
habeas corpus in a class by them selves.
Therefore, we do not think that the English
analogy of several habeas corpus applications
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can assist the petitioners in the present case
when they seek to resist the application of
res judicata to petitions filed under Art. 32.
Before we part with the topic, we would,
however, like to
(1)[1962] 1 S.C.R. 574,590-
275
add that we propose to express no opinion on
the question as to whether repeated
applications for habeas corpus would be
competent under our Constitution. That is a
matter with which we are not concerned in the
present proceedings."
A decision which expressly leaves open a question cannot
obviously be an authority on the said question. ’the said
question, which was so left open, now falls to be decided.
Conversely, the correctness of that decision does not call
for any reconsideration in the present petition, for that is
outside the scope of the question now raised before us.
This leads us to the consideration of the scope of a writ of
habeas corpus. The nature of-the writ of habeas corpus has
been neatly summarized in Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol. 39 at
p. 424 thus
"The writ of habeas corpus is a writ directed
to the person detaining another, commanding
him to produce the body of the prisoner at a
designated time and place, with the day and
cause of his caption and detention, to do,
submit to, and receive whatsoever the court or
judge awarding the writ shall consider in that
behalf".
Blackstone in his Commentaries said of this
writ thus
It is a writ antecedent to statute, and
throwing its root deep into the genius of our
common law.... It is perhaps the most
important writ known to the constitutional law
of England, affording as it does a swift and
imperative remedy in all cases of illegal
restraint or confinement. It is of immemorial
antiquity, an instance of its use occurring in
the thirty-third year of Edward I".
This writ has been described by John Marshall, C.J., as "a
great constitutional privilege". An eminent judge observed
"there is no higher duty than to maintain it unimpaired".
It was described as a magna carta of British liberty. Heavy
penalties are imposed on a judge who wrongfully refuses to
entertain an application for a writ of habeas corpus. The
history of the writ is the history of the conflict between
power and liberty. The writ provides a prompt and effective
remedy against illegal restraints. It is inextricably
intertwined with the fundamental right of personal liberty.
"Habeas Corpus" literally means "have his body". By this
writ the court can direct to have the body of the person
detained to be brought before it in order to ascertain
whether the detention is legal or illegal. Such is the
predominant position of the writ in the AngloSaxon
jurisprudence.
We need not go into the history of this writ in India, for
it is now incorporated in Art. 226 and Art. 32 of the
Constitution.
276
On the question of res judicata, the English and the
American Courts agreed that the principle of res judicata is
not applicable to a writ of habeas corpus, but they came to
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that conclusion on different grounds. It was held in
England that a decision in a writ of habeas corpus was not a
judgment, and therefore it would not operate as res judicata
and on that basis it was thought at one time that a person
detained could file successive applications before different
judges of the same High Court. But subsequently the English
courts held that a person detained cannot file successive
petitions for a writ of habeas corpus before different
courts of the same Division or before different Divisions of
the same High Court on the ground that the Divisional Court
speaks for the entire Division and that each Division for
the entire Court, and one Division cannot set aside the
order of another Division of the same Court [See Re Hastings
(1) (No. 2) and Re Hastings (2) (No. 3)]. The
Administration of Justice Act, 1960 has placed this view on
a statutory basis, for under the said Act no second
application can be brought in the same court except on fresh
evidence. The American Courts reached the same conclusion,
but on a different principle. In Edward M. Fay v. Charles
Nola (3) the following passage appears : "As put by Mr.
Justice Holmes in Frank v. Mangum (4) : If the petition
discloses facts that amount to loss of jurisdiction in the
trial court, jurisdiction could not be restored by any
decision of law. It is of the historical essence of habeas
corpus that it lies to test proceedings so fundamentally
lawless that imprisonment pursuant to them is not merely
erroneous but void. Hence, the familiar principle that res
judicata is inapplicable in habeas proceedings." The same
view was expressed in Wong Doo v. United States (5) Harmon
Metz Waley v. James A. Johnston (6) : Salinger v. Loisel (7)
United States v. Shaughnessy (8): and others.
But coming to India, so far as the High Courts are
concerned, the same principle accepted by the English Courts
will equally apply, as the High Court functions in Divisions
not in benches. When it functions as a Division, it speaks
for the entire court, and, therefore, it cannot set aside
the order made in a writ of habeas corpus earlier by another
Division Bench. But this principle will not apply to
different courts. The High Courts of Allahabad, Bombay,
Madras, Nagpur and Patna and East Punjab have accepted this
view, though the Calcutta High Court took the view that
successive applications of habeas corpus could be filed.
But unlike in England, in India the person detained can file
original petition for enforcement of his fundamental right
to liberty before a court other than the High Court, namely,
this Court. The order of the High Court
(1) [1958] 3 AII.E.R. 625. (2) [1959] 1 All. E.R. 698.
(3) 9 L. Ed. 859. (4) 237 U.S. 348.
(5) 68 L.E.D. 999. (6) 86 L. E.d. 1302.
(7) (1925) 265 U.S. 224. (8) [1954] 347 U.S. 260.
277
in the said writ is not res judicata as held by the English
and the American Courts either because it is not a judgment
or because the principle of res judicata is not applicable
to a fundamentally lawless order. If the doctrine of res
judicata is attracted to an application for a writ of habeas
corpus, there is no reason why the principle of constructive
res judicata cannot also govern the said application, for
the rule of constructive res judicata is only a part of the
general principles of the law of res judicata, and if that
be applied, the scope of the liberty of an individual will
be considerably narrowed. The present case illustrates the
position. Before the High Court the petitioner did not
question the constitutional validity of the President’s
order made under Art. 359 of the Constitution. If the
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doctrine of constructive res judicata be applied, this
Court, though it is enjoined by the Constitution to protect
the right of a person illegally detained, will become
powerless to do so. That would be whittling down the wide
sweep of the constitutional protection.
We, therefore, hold that the order of Khanna, J., made in
the petition for habeas corpus filed by the petitioner does
not operate as res judicata and this Court will have to
decide the petition on merits.
It was suggested that the declaration of Emergency under
Art. 352 of the Constitution in the year 1962 and the
continuation of the emergency for 4 long years after the
cessation of the hostilities with China is mala fide and is
an abuse of powers conferred on the President under Part
XVIII of the Constitution. The question raised involves two
points : (1) whether the declaration of emergency or the
continuation of it is vitiated by mala fides or abuse of
power, and (2) whether such a question’ justiciable in a
court of law. Our Constitution seeks to usher in a Welfare
State where there is prosperity, equality, liberty and
social justice. It accepts 3 concepts for bringing about
such a State: (1) Federalism; (2) Democracy; (3) Rule of
Law, in which fundamental rights and social justice are
inextricably integrated. Under Part XVIII when the
emergency is declared both the Legislative and the Executive
powers of the Union are extended to States. The Federal
Government is practically transformed into unitary form of
Government. The fundamental rights of the people under Art.
19 are abrogated and the Executive is empowered to suspend
the right to move the court for the enforcement of any other
fundamental right. The executive is also empowered to
direct that all or any other provisions relating to
distribution of revenue be suspended during that period.
Part XVIII appears to bring down the grand edifice of our
Constitution at one stroke, but a little reflection
discloses that the temporary suspension of the scheme of the
Constitution is really intended to preserve its substance.
This extra ordinary power is unique to our
278
Constitution. It reflects the apprehensions of the makers
of the Constitution and their implicit confidence in the
parties that may come into power from time to time. Two
expressions indicate the extra ordinary situation whereunder
this Part was intended to come into force. The expression
’grave emergency’ in Art. 352(1) and the expression
’imminent danger’ in Art. 352(3) show that the existence of
grave emergency or imminent danger is a pre-condition for
the declaration of emergency. Doubtless, the question
whether there is grave emergency or whether there is
imminent danger as mentioned in the Article is left to the
satisfaction of the Executive, for it is obviously in the
best position to judge the situation. But there is the
correlative danger of the abuse of such extra ordinary power
leading to totalitarianism. Indeed, the perversions of the
ideal democratic Constitution i.e. Weimar Constitution of
Germany, brought about the autocratic rule of Hitler and the
consequent disastrous World War. What is the safeguard
against such an abuse? The obvious safeguard is the good
sense of the Executive, but the more effective one is public
opinion. A question is raised whether this Court can
ascertain whether the ,action of the Executive in declaring
the emergency or continuing ’it is actuated by mala fides
and is an abuse of its power. We do /not propose to express
our opinion on this question as no material has been placed
before us in that regard. It requires a careful research
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into the circumstances obtaining in our country and the
motives operating on the minds of the persons in power in
continuing the emergency. As the material facts are not
placed before us, we shall not in this case express our
opinion one way or other on this all important question
which is at present agitating the public mind.
Mr. Pillai then contended that the power of the President
under Art. 359(1) to suspend the right to move any court for
the ,enforcement of fundamental rights must have a real
nexus to the security of India, and that the impugned order
had no such nexus. The President’s order under Art. 359(1)
of the Constitution reads
"GSR-1418/30-10-62 : In exercise of the
powers conferred by clause (1) of Article 359
of the Constitution, the President hereby
declares that the right of any person who is-
(a) a foreigner, or
(b)
to move any court for the enforcement of the
rights conferred by Article 21 and Article 22
of the Constitution shall remain suspended for
the period during which the Proclamation of
Emergency issued under clause (1) of Article
352 thereof on the 26th October, 1962 is in
force.
279
GSR 1276/27-8-1965 : In exercise of the
powers conferred by clause (1) of Article 359
of the Constitution, the President hereby
makes the following further amendment in Order
No. GSR-1418 dated 30-10-1962 namely :
In the said orders for the word and figure
’Article 21’ the words and figures ’Article
14, Article 21’ shall be substituted."
Under Article 352 an emergency could be declared only when
the security of India or of any part of the territory
thereof is threatened whether by war or external aggression
or internal disturbance, or when there is an imminent danger
thereof; and any order issued under Art. 359 must have some
correlation to the security of India, external aggression or
internal disturbance. But the impugned order, the argument
proceeded, was so wide as to deprive a foreigner of his
fundamental rights though there was no connection between
such deprivation and the security of India etc. To state it
differently, the argument was that the scope of the order
under Art. 359(1) should be confined only to the scope of
the reasons on the basis of which an emergency could be
declared. In the instant case, it was said that the said
order empowered the Executive to detain the petitioner to
await investigation in regard to smuggling of gold which
could possibly have no relation to the security of India.
We do not propose to express our opinion on this important
question, as we are not satisfied on the material placed
before us that the detention of the petitioner has no nexus
to the emergency. The next contention was that the President
under Art. 359(1) could not make orders suspending the right
to moveany court in respect of different categories of
persons for the enforcement of the same fundamental right.
To appreciate this contention, it may be mentioned that
apart from the order dated 30-10-1962 relating to
foreigners whichwe have already noticed,the President
passed an order dated 3-11-1962. It was subsequently
amended on 11-11-1962. The order as amended declares that
the right of any person to move any court for the
enforcement of the rights conferred by Arts.14,21 and 22 of
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the Constitution shall remain suspend for the period during
which the Proclamation of Emergency issued under clause (1)
of Art.352 thereof on the 26th October, 1962, is in force,
if such person has been deprived of any such rights under
the Defence of India Ordinance, 1962 (4 of 1962) or any rule
or order made thereunder. It will be seen that the order
dated 30-10-1962 was confined to foreigners and the order
dated 3-11-1962 was confined to persons who had been
deprived of their rights under the Defence of India
Ordinance, 1962. Reliance was placed upon the terms of Art.
359 and a contention was raised that the said Article did
not countenance orders on different
280
groups of persons. It is true that Article 359 does not
speak of persons but only speaks of a right to move any
court and also to a period, or a part or whole of the
territory. But Article 359 empowers the President to make
an order for the purpose mentioned therein and as the
singular includes plural he can certainly make different
orders. But the question is : can he make an order or
orders in respect of different groups of persons such as
foreigners and persons governed by the Defence of India
Rules ? It is true that the scope of his order shall be
confined to whole or a part of the territory of India and
during certain periods. But there is nothing in the Article
which prevents the President from restricting the scope of
the order to a class of persons, provided the operation of
the order is confined to an area and to a period. The
impugned orders apply to the entire country and the fact
that only the persons who are affected by that order could
not move the Court for the enforcement of their right,
cannot make them any the less valid orders.
The learned counsel then contended that Art. 359(1) did not
authorise the President to make an order meting out
discriminatory treatment to foreigners, and even if it did,
not the order made in the instant case violated Art. 14 of
the Constitution as there was no nexus between the
classification of foreigners and citizens and the object for
which the said order was made.
Mr. Bindra, learned counsel contended that Art. 359 con-
ferred an absolute power on the President subject to the
limitations found thereunder to make an order declaring that
the right to move any court for the enforcement of one or
more of the rights conferred by Part III should remain
suspended, and, therefore, any order made thereunder could
not be declared void on the ground that it infringed any of
the fundamental rights suspended by the said order. It was
said that the contrary view would amount to an argument In a
circle.
There is a clear distinction between deprivation of
fundamental rights by force of a constitutional provision
itself and such deprivation by an order made by the
President in exercise of a power conferred on him under a
constitutional provision. A comparison of the provisions of
Art. 358 and Art. 359 justifies this distinction. Under
Article 358, by the force of that Article itself, Article 19
is put out of the way. Article 359(1) does not operate by
its own force. The President has to make an order declaring
that the: right to move a court in respect of a fundamental
right or rights, in Part III is suspended. He can only make
an order which, is a. valid one. An order making an
unjustified discrimination in suspending the right to move a
court under Art. 14 itself, will be void at its inception.
It is a still born order. It cannot be said that this
involves an argument in a circle. This argument ignores the
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distinction between the order and the effect of that order.
281
If the order does not violate Art. 14, it can validity take
away the right to move the court to enforce Art. 14. So
viewed, the order of the President must satisfy the
requirements of Art. 14. Mr. Bindra relied upon the
decision of this Court in Sree Mohan, Chowdhury v. The Chief
Commission, Union Territory of Tripura (1) in support of his
argument that the order of the President was untrammelled by
the provisions of Art. 14. The passage relied upon reads :
"It was also contended that the President’s order of Novem-
ber 3, 1962, is subject to the condition precedent that
there is a valid Ordinance and the rules framed or the
orders made thereunder are valid. In other words, it is
contended that it is open to the petitioner to canvass the
validity of the Ordinance. This is arguing in a circle. In
order that the Court may investigate the validity of a
particular ordinance or Act of a legislature, the person
moving the Court should have a locus standi. If he has not
the locus standi to move the Court, the Court will refuse to
entertain his petition questioning the vires of the
particular legislation. In view of the President’s order
passed under the provisions of Article 359(1) of the
Constitution, the petitioner has lost his locus standi to
move this Court during the period of emergency as already
pointed out. That being so, the petition is not
maintainable". This passage has nothing to do with the
validity of the order made under Art. 359(1). What this
Court said was that, as under the Ordinance the petitioner
therein had no right to move the Court to enforce his
fundamental right, he had no locus standi to question the
validity of the Act, for, he could question the validity of
the Act only if he could move the Court in regard thereto.
We, therefore, hold that the validity of the President’s
order issued under Art. 359(1) could be questioned if it
infringed the provisions of Art, 14 of the Constitution,
The next question is whether it infrigned Article 14. Mr
Pillai put his arguments in two ways : (1) The President has
made two orders under Art. 359(1); (i) GSR 1418 dated 30-10-
1962 in respect of foreigners; and (ii) GSR 164 dated 3-11-
1962 in respect of all, including foreigners. The terms of
the order in regard to foreigners are without any
limitations. But the order dated 3-11-1962 only affects
persons who have been deprived of any of the fundamental
rights referred to in the order under the Defence of India
Ordinance, 1962 or any rule or order made thereunder., These
two orders permit the authorities concerned at their discre-
tion to rely upon the order which is more prejudicial or
drastic in respect of same persons. (2) The order of the
President relating to foreigners is discriminatory as the
fact that a person is a foreigner has no nexus to the object
sought to be achieved, i.e., the security ,of the State.
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R, 442, 451.
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The formula underlying the doctrine of classification has
become so crystallised that it is unnecessary to refer to
decisions. The principle is stated thus : "The
classification must be found on intelligible differentia
which distinguishes persons or things that are grouped from
those left out of the group and that the differentia must
have rational relation to the object sought to be achieved
by the statute in question." What was the object of the
order GSR 1418 issued by the President on 30-10-1962. There
was a grave emergency. The Chinese attacked India and
Pakistan was poised for an attack. There was a danger of
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internal sabotage. So, it was necessary to screen the
foreigners, and to guard against their acts of sabotage and
espionage. It was, therefore, necessary to issue a special
order wider in scope than that of GSR 164 dated 3-11-1962
which was confined only to persons that had been deprived of
certain rights under the Defence of India Ordinance. There
was a greater danger from foreigners, and, therefore, a more
drastic order only could meet the requirements of national
,security. Compared to foreigners, nationals, with some un-
fortunate exceptions, can be relied upon to support the
country’s integrity and security. There is, therefore, a
clear nexus between the classification of foreigners and the
citizens and the object sought to be achieved thereby.
Nor can we appreciate the argument that the making of two
orders, one confined to foreigners and the other confined to
all persons, including foreigners, violates Art. 14. Though
GSR 164 may also deprive foreigners, along with the
citizens, of their right to move the Court in respect of
their rights deprived under a particular Act, the scope of
the said order (GSR 164) is not sufficient to guard against
the subversive activities of foreigners. It is confined
only to rights deprived under the Defence of India Ordi-
nance. GSR 1418 has a greater sweep and it takes in other
rights. Though there is some overlapping, the two
categories of persons foreigners and citizens-offer
different security and other problems. Both the orders are
mainly intended to operate in different fields and their
scope is different. We, therefore, do not see any merit in
this contention also.
It is then argued that the President’s order GSR 1276 dated
27-8-1965 has no retrospective effect and, therefore, the
petitioner is entitled to move the court. GSR 1276 was
issued on 27-8-1965 .amending the earlier order by including
Art. 14 therein. After 27-8-1965, therefore, no foreigner
has the right to move the Court though his fundamental right
under Art. 14 of the Constitution is violated. In that
sense, the order is not retrospective but prospective. It
only operates on the right of a person to move the Court.As
the petitioner in the present case filed his petition on
12th May, 1966, that is subsequent to the promulgation of
the order, he has ceased to have any right to move this
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Court. The fact that he complained of his detention for a
period earlier to that date has no bearing on the question
of the maintainability of the petition. This contention has
also no merits.
Lastly, it was contended that the order detaining him was
vitiated by mala fides. The argument of mala fides was put
thus : The petitioner was prosecuted and tried for an
offence under the Sea Customs Act. He was sentenced to 9
months imprisonment and to fine. He paid the fine and
served his sentence. He was arrested pending the criminal
case. He was let on bail on 18-3-1965, but before he left
the jail he was detained under the Foreigners Act. It was
said that the detention was not for any purpose connected
with the security of the State, but only with a view to make
investigation in respect of a case of conspiracy of
smuggling gold into India of which, it is alleged, the
petitioner was one of the conspirators. As there are other
effective provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure to
conduct the said investigation, the argument proceeded, the
detention of the petitioner in the said circumstances was an
abuse of powers under the Foreigners Act. It was further
contended that s. 3 of the Foreigners Act was intended for
regulating the entry and the exit of foreigners into and out
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of India, that it had nothing to do with the investigation
of cases, and that therefore, the detention under that Act
for the sole purpose of investigation was mala fide. The
order of detention dated 18th September, 1964 reads: "In
exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) read
with clause (g) of sub-section (2) of section 3 of the
Foreigners Act, 1946 (31 of 1946) the Central Government
hereby orders that Shri Ghulam Mohuddin a Pakistani National
shall be arrested and detained until further orders." Clause
(g) enables the Central Government to make an order
detaining a foreigner. The clause does not narrate the
reasons for which he can be detained. If, as the respondent
says, the petitioner is involved in a serious case of
conspiracy to smuggle gold and on that account his detention
in India was necessary to make further investigation with
regard to his conduct, we do not see why the wide power
conferred on the Central Government to detain him under
clause (g) could not be invoked. There is no merit in this
contention also.
In the result, the petition is dismissed.
Bachawat, J. The order of Khanna, J. dismissing the Writ
petition filed by the petitioner in the Punjab High Court
challenging the legality of the detention order passed by
the Central Government under s. 3(2)(g) of the Foreigners
Act, 1946 and asking for H the issue of a writ of habeas
corpus is not a judgment, and does not operate as res
judicata. That order does not operate as a bar to the
application under Art. 32 of the Constitution asking for the
issue of a writ of habeas corpus on the same facts. The
petitioner
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has fundamental right to move this Court under Art. 32 for
the issue of a writ of habeas corpus for the protection of
his right of liberty. The present petition must, therefore,
be entertained and examined on the merits.
Order 35, Rule 3 of the Supreme Court Rules provides that a
petition for a writ of habeas corpus under Art. 32 shall
state whether the petitioner has moved the High Court
concerned for similar relief and if so, with what result.
This rule is a salutary safeguard against an abusive use of
a petition for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus under
Art. 32. The previous dismissal of a petition for a writ of
habeas corpus by a High Court is one of the matters which
this Court may take into consideration at the preliminary
hearing of the writ petition under Art. 32 in forming the
opinion whether a prima facie case for granting the petition
is made out, and if on a consideration of all the materials
the Court comes to the conclusion that a prima facie case is
not made out, the Court may refuse to issue a rule nisi
under 0 . 35. r. 4.
The petitioner did not previously move this Court for the
issue of a writ of habeas corpus challenging the legality of
the order of detention under s. 3(2)(g) of the Foreigners
Act. He has, therefore, the right to move this Court for
the issue of the writ. But he has not right to move this
Court under Art. 32 more than once on the same facts.
Having heard the petitioner fully on the merits once, the
Court will not hear him again on the same facts.
It is to be noticed that the present petition does not
challenge the validity of an order of, imprisonment passed
in a criminal trial. I must not be understood to say that
the remedy of a writ of habeas corpus is available to test
the propriety or legality of the verdict of a competent
Criminal Court.
The petitioner challenges the legality of the order, GSR
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1418 dated October 30, 1962 in respect of foreigners passed
by the President under Art. 359(1) of the Constitution on
the ground that it is discriminatory and violative of Art.
14. The argument is this : Article 359(1) does not operate
of its own force. The President has to make an order under
it declaring that the right to move a Court in respect of a
fundamental right in Part III is suspended. The order of
the President under Art. 359(1) is a law within the meaning
of Art. 13(2). An order under Art. 359(1) which takes away
or abridges a fundamental right is void under Art. 13 (2).
Therefore, the validity of an order under Art. 359(1) may be
questioned if it abridges or takes away a fundamental right
other than the right under Art. 19 which is already
suspended under Art. 358.
On the other hand, the respondent’s argument is this.- An
,order of the President under Art. 359(1) suspending the
right
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to move this Court for the enforcement of any right
conferred by Part III necessarily abridges the right
conferred by Art. 32. If the order of the President under
Art. 359(1) is a law within the meaning of Art. 13(2), the
President can never make a valid order under Art. 359(1).
This is reductio ad absurdum. It is impossible to hold that
the President can never make a valid order under Art.
359(1). The conclusion must be that an order of the
President under Art. 359(1) is not a law within the meaning
of Art. 13(2). Again, an order of the President suspending
the right to move any Court for the enforcement of the right
conferred by Art. 14 substantially abridges the right
conferred by Art. 14.If the remedy is totally suspended, the
right is temporarily abridged.If the President’s order under
Art. 359(1) is a law within the meaning of Art. 13(3)(a) the
President can never make an order under Art. 359(1)
suspending the right to move any Court for the enforcement
of the right under Art. 14. This is an impossible
conclusion, because by the very terms of Art. 359(1), the
President is given the right to pass an order suspending the
right to move any Court for the enforcement of the right
conferred by Art. 14. An order which by the express words
of Art. 359(1) can abridge or take away a right albeit
temporarily cannot be held to be void on the ground that it
infringes that right. The context of Art. 359(1) requires
that an order of the President cannot be a law within the
meaning of Art. 13(2).
I do not propose to decide in this petition which of the two
opposing contentions should be accepted. Even assuming for
the purpose of this case that the President’s order under
Art. 359(1) is a law within the meaning of Art. 13(2) and
can be pronounced to be invalid on the ground that it
abridges or takes away the right conferred by Art. 14, 1 am
of the opinion, for the reasons given by the learned Chief
Justice, that the President’s order is not discriminatory
and is not violative of Art. 14.
I agree with the conclusions of the learned Chief Justice on
other points and the order proposed by him.
V. P. S.
Petition dismissed
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