Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RATTAN SINGH ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/10/1981
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
CITATION:
1982 AIR 1 1982 SCR (1)1010
1981 SCC (4) 481 1981 SCALE (3)1625
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1984 SC1095 (10)
RF 1990 SC 231 (17)
C 1991 SC1983 (6)
ACT:
Conservation af Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act 1974-Petitioner’s representation to
Central Government submitted through Jail Superintendent not
forwarded-Effect of-Scope of power of Central Government
under section 11(1).
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, who was detained under section 3(1) of
the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 made (on April 19,1981)
through the Jail Superintendent representation
simultaneously to the State Government as well as the
Central Government against the order of his detention. In
his petition under Article 32 of the Constitution he
contended that the failure of, the Central Government to
consider his representation inspite of the long passage of
time had rendered his detention illegal
The Jail Superintendent in his affidavit stated that
the representation was forwarded to the State Government.
The State Government after considering his representation
rejected it.
Allowing the petitions
^
HELD: The detention is illegal. [1012 F]
The petitioner had been unaccountably deprived of a
valuable right to defend and assert his fundamental right to
personal liberty. Laws of preventive detention afford only a
modicum of safeguards to person detained under them and if
freedom and liberty are to have any meaning in our
democratic set up it is essential that at least those
safeguards are not denied to the detenu. If the power
conferred on the Central Government by section 11(1) of the
Act to revoke an order of detention even if it was made by
the State Government or its officers is to be rial and
effective, it must imply the right in a detenu to make a
representation to the Central Government against the order
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of detention. In the instant case the failure on the part
either of the Jail Superintendent or the State Government to
forward the detenu’s representation to the Central Govern-
ment has deprived him of the valuable right. to have his
detention revoked by that Government. [1012 C-F]
Tara Chand v. State of Rajasthan, [1980] 2 S.C.C. 321
and Shyam Ambalal Siroya v. Union of India, [1980 2 S.C.C.
346, referred to.
1011
JUDGMENT:
ORlGlNAL JURlSDlCTlON: Writ Petition Nos. 3614 & 3647
of 1981.
Harjinder Singh for the Petitioner.
N. S. Das Bahl and M. S. Dhillon for Respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J.: By this petition under Article 32 of
the Constitution the petitioner challenges the validity of
an order dated March 27, 1981 passed by respondent 1, the
State of Punjab, under section 3(1) of the Conservation of
Foreign enchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act,
1974.
On April 19, 1981, while the petitioner was in
detention, his advocate, Shri Harjinder Singh, wrote a
letter to the Superintendent of Central Jail, Amritsar,
enclosing therewith two representations drafted on behalf of
the petitioner, one of which was addressed to D the Joint
Secretary, Department of Home, Government of Punjab,
Chandigarh, and the other to the Secretary, Union Ministry
of Finance, Department of Revenue, New ’Delhi. The Jail
Superintendent was requested by the aforesaid letter that
the representations be forwarded to the State Government and
the Central Government after obtaining the signatures of the
detenu thereon. The contention of the petitioner is that in
spite of the long passage of time, the representation to the
Central Government has not so far been considered by it,
rendering his detention illegal.
In his counter-affidavit dated July 29, 1981, the Under
Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry of Finance
(Department of Revenue), COFEPOSA Unit, New Delhi says that
"no representation by or on behalf of the detenu relating to
his detention has been received by the Central Government.
As such, the question of any delay in the disposal of such a
representation does not arise". In his affidavit dated July
21, 1981 the P.P.S. (1), Superintendent, Central Jail,
Amritsar says that the representation of the detenu Rattan
Singh was forwarded to the Punjab Government. The affidavit
of Smt. Shyama Mann, Joint Secretary to Government, Punjab,
Home Department, Chandigarh shows that the representation of
the detenu was considered by the Government of Punjab and
was rejected on April 28, 1981.
1012
There is no difficulty in so far as the representation
to the Government of Punjab is concerned. But the
unfortunate lapse on the part of the authorities is that
they overlooked totally the representation made by the
detenu to the Central Government. The representations to the
State Govermnent and the Central Government were made by the
detenu simultaneously through the Jail Superintendent. The
Superintendent should either have for warded the
representations separately to the Governments concerned or
else he should have forwarded them to the State Government
with a request for the onward transmission of the other
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representation to the Central Government. Some one tripped
somewhere and the representation addressed to the Central
Government was apparently never forwarded to it, with the
inevitable result that the detenu has been unaccountably
deprived of a valuable right o defend and assert his
fundamental right to personal liberty. May be that the
detenu is a smuggler whose tribe (and how their numbers
increase !) deserves no sympathy since its activities have
paralysed the Indian economy. But the laws of preventive
detention afford only a modicum of safeguards to persons
detained under them and if freedom and liberty are to have
any meaning in our democratic set-up, it is essential that
at least those safeguards are not denied to the detenus.
Section 11 (1) of COFEPOSA confers upon the Central
Government the power to revoke an order of detention even if
it is made by the State Government or its officer. That
power, in order to be real and effective, must imply the
right in a detenu to make a representation to the Central
Government against the order of detention. The failure in
this case on the part either of the Jail Superintendent or
the State Government to forward the detenu’s representation
to the Central Government has deprived the detenu of the
valuable right to have his detention revoked by that
Government. The coutinued detention of the detenu must
therefore be held illegal and the detenu set free.
In Tata Chand v. State of Rajasthan(1), it was held by
this Court that even an inordinate delay on the part of the
Central Government in consideration of the representation of
a detenu would be in violation of Article 22(5) of the
Constitution, thereby rendering the detention
unconstitutional In Shyam Anbalal Siroya v. Union of
India(2) this Court held that when a properly addressed
representation is made by the detenu to the Central
Government for
1013
revocation of the order of detention, a statutory duty is
cast upon the Central Government under section 11, COFEPOSA
to apply its mind and either revoke the order of detention
or dismiss the petition and that a petition for revocation
of an order of detention should be disposed of with
reasonable expedition. Since the representation was left
unattended for four months, the continued detention of the
detenu was held illegal. In our case, the representation to
the Central Government was not forwarded to it at all.
These then are our reasons for the order dated October
1, 198 1 whereby we directed that the detenu be released,
Writ Petition No. 3647 of 1981. C
For the reasons given above in Writ Petition No. 3614
of 1981, this Petition must also succeed and the detenu set
at liberty as directed in our order dated October 1. It was
on July 2, 1981 that the detenu made a representation to the
Central Government through the Superintendent of Jail,
Amritsar, and it is not denied that the representation has
still not been considered by that Government. The counter-
affidavit of the Under Secretary to the Government of India
shows that the representation made by the detenu was not
forwarded at all to the Central Government which explains
the statement in the affidavit that no representation was
received by the Central Government and that therefore the
question of delay in consideration of the representation did
not arise.
P.B.R. Petitions allowed.
1014
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