Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. SHALINI SONI ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/10/1980
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1981 AIR 431 1981 SCR (1) 962
1980 SCC (4) 544
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC 814 (2,3)
D 1981 SC1191 (5)
R 1981 SC1861 (1)
R 1981 SC1909 (1)
R 1981 SC2166 (15)
R 1982 SC1500 (6,7)
R 1984 SC 211 (10)
RF 1984 SC1182 (11)
C 1984 SC1271 (26)
RF 1986 SC 687 (72)
R 1989 SC1861 (17)
RF 1990 SC 605 (14)
RF 1990 SC1361 (15)
F 1990 SC1455 (6)
RF 1991 SC2261 (8)
ACT:
Representation to the Advisory Board under section 3 of
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974, nature of-Constitution of India, 1950,
Article 22(5), scope of, explained-Words and phrases
"Grounds" under Article 22(5) meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
Allowing the petitions, the Court
^
HELD: (1) The representation by the detenu under the
COFEPOSA has not to be made in any prescribed form. There is
no formula nor any magical incantation like "open seasame"
to be repeated or chanted in order to qualify a
communication as a representation. So long as it contains a
demand or a request for the release of the detenu in
whatever form or language couched and a ground or a reason
is mentioned or suggested for such release, there is no
option but to consider and deal with it as a representation
for the purpose of Article 22(5) of the Constitution. [965D-
E]
In the instant case the communication dated July 27,
1980 by the counsel for the detenu in W.P. 4344 of 1980 was
a representation which was in law required to be considered.
The said representation admittedly not having been
considered the detenu was entitled to be set at liberty.
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[965H-966A, C]
(2)The obligation imposed on the detaining authority,
by Article 22(5) of the Constitution, to afford to the
detenu the earliest opportunity of making a representation,
carries with it the imperative implication that the
representation shall be considered at the earliest
opportunity. Since all the constitutional protection that a
detenu can claim is the little that is afforded by the
procedural safeguards prescribed by Article 22(5) read with
Article 19, the Courts have a duty to rigidly insist that
preventive detention procedures be fair and strictly
observed. A breach of the procedural imperative must lead to
the release of the detenu. [966B]
(3)Article 22(5) has two facets: (i) communication of
the grounds on which the order of detention has been made;
(ii) opportunity of making a representation against the
order of detention. Communication of the grounds pre-
supposes the formulation of the grounds and formulation of
the grounds requires and ensures the application of the mind
of the detaining authority to the facts and materials before
it, that is to say, to pertinent and proximate matters in
regard to each individual case and excludes the elements of
arbitrariness and automatism. [966G]
963
(4) It is an unwritten rule of the law, constitutional
and administrative, what whenever a decision making function
is entrusted to the subjective satisfaction of a statutory
functionary, there is an implicit obligation to apply his
mind to pertinent and proximate matters only, eschewing the
irrelevant and the remote. Where there is further an express
statutory obligation to communicate not merely the decision
but the grounds on which the decision is founded, it is a
necessary corollary that the grounds communicated, that is,
the grounds so made known, should be seen to pertain to
pertinent and proximate matters and should comprise all the
constituent facts and materials that went in to make up the
mind of the statutory functionary and not merely the
inferential conclusions. Now, the decision to detain a
person depends on subjective satisfaction of the detaining
authority. The Constitution and the statute cast a duty on
the detaining authority to communicate the grounds of
detaining to the detenu. The grounds communicated must
reveal the whole of the factual material considered by the
detaining authority and not merely the inferences of fact
arrived at. The same result would follow if the matter is
looked at from the point of view of the second facet of Art.
22(5), namely the opportunity to make a representation
against the order of detention. [966H-D]
(5)The "grounds" under Article 22(5) of the
Constitution do not mean mere factual inferences but mean
factual inferences plus factual material which led to such
factual inferences. The "grounds" must be self-sufficient
and self-explanatory. Copies of documents to which reference
is made in the "grounds" must be supplied to the detenu as
part of the "grounds". [1967E-F]
Smt. Icchu Devi Choraria v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1981] 1 S.C.R. p. 642, explained and followed.
Khudiram Das v. The State of West Bengal & Ors., [1975]
2 S.C.R. 832 @ 848-49; Vakil Singh v. State of Jammu &
Kashmir & Anr., A.I.R. 1974 SC 2337; Ganga Ramchand Bharvani
v. Under Secretary to the Government of Maharashtra & Ors.,
[1981] 1 S.C.R. p. 343, applied.
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition Nos. 4344, 1899
and 4500 of 1980.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
A. K. Sen, Herjinder Singh and M. M. Lodha for the
Petitioner.
M. M. Abdul Khader, T.V.S.N. Chari and Miss A.
Subhashini for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J.-By our orders dated October 7,
1980, we directed the release of the three detenus whose
detention under the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and
Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974, was challenged
in these three Writ Petitions. We now proceed to state our
reasons.
Rajesh Soni, the detenu in Criminal Writ Petition No.
4344 of 1980 was arrested on June 27, 1980. The order of
detention as well
964
as the grounds of detention were served on him on the same
day. On July 27, 1980, his Advocate addressed a
communication to the Administrator, Delhi Administration,
Delhi, alleging that the grounds were vague, (irrelevant and
non-existent, that his client was unable to make any
representation as he had not been given copies of the
statements, documents and materials relied upon by the
detaining authority in arriving at the satisfaction that
Rajesh Soni should be detained, that in view of the time
limit prescribed by Sec. 3(3) of the COFEPOSA and in view of
Art. 22(5) of the Constitution the continued detention of
his client was illegal and that he was entitled to be
released forthwith. Reference was made to a judgment of the
Gujarat High Court where it had been held that if documents
were not furnished within five days or fifteen days, as the
case might be, the detenus were entitled to be released. It
was further stated that if the Administrator was no revoking
the detention order, copies of documents and material
evidence relied upon in the grounds of detention should be
forthwith supplied so as to enable the detenu to make a
representation. The communication ended with a reiteration
of the request that the detention order should be revoked
and the detenu released forthwith. One of the main
complaints of the learned counsel for the detenu was that
the representation dated July 27, 1980 made by the detenu
through his Advocate was never considered by the
Administrator and no orders had been passed thereon till
now. Copies of the documents were, however, furnished on
August 6, 1980. Meanwhile the Advisory Board met on July 30,
1980. The order of detention was confirmed by the
Administrator on August 9, 1980. Another complaint of the
learned counsel for the detenu was that there was a delay of
over one month in furnishing copies of documents which
formed part of the grounds to the detenu and on that ground
also the detention was vitiated. The learned counsel invited
our attention to several judgments of this Court and in
particular to a recent one of Bhagwati and Venkataramaiah JJ
in Icchu Devi Choraria v. Union of India & Ors.
The answer of the respondents to the challenge based on
the failure to consider the representation dated July 27,
1980 was that the communication dated July 27, 1980 was not
a representation at all but was a mere request for copies of
documents and therefore the detention could not be
questioned on the ground of failure to consider the detenu’s
representation. The answer to the challenge based on the
delay in furnishing copies of documents was that the
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detaining authority was not obliged in law to furnish copies
of documents relied
965
upon in the grounds of detention. All that the detaining
authority was obliged to do under the law was to communicate
to the detenu all the basic facts and particulars which
influenced the detaining authority in arriving at the
requisite satisfaction and that obligation had been
discharged in the present case. The learned counsel urged
that the view taken by Bhagwati and Venkataramaiah JJ in
Icchu Devi Choraria v. Union of India & Ors. (supra) was
inconsistent with the view taken by this Court in a series
of cases and that the judgment required reconsideration.
The Writ Petition has to succeed on both the grounds.
As we mentioned earlier the answer of the respondents in
regard to the ground based on the failure of the detaining
authority to consider the representation dated July 27, 1980
submitted by the detenu through his Advocate was not that
the representation was ever considered but that it was not a
representation at all. We are unable to agree with the
submission made on behalf of the respondents. The
representation has not to be made in any prescribed form.
There is no formula nor any magical incantation like "open
seasame" to be repeated or chanted in order to qualify a
communication as a representation. So long as it contains a
demand or a request for the release of the detenu in
whatever form or language couched and a ground or a reason
is mentioned or suggested for such release, there is no
option but to consider and deal with it as a representation
for the purpose of Art. 22(5) of the Constitution. The
communication dated July 27, 1980 contains a demand that the
detenu should be released forthwith. It mentions a reason
for the demand for release, namely, that copies of
statements, documents and materials relied upon by the
detaining authority in arriving at the requisite
satisfaction were not furnished to the detenu and that the
detention was therefore, illegal. In support of the claim
that the detention was illegal reference was made to a
decision of the Gujarat High Court. The communication, then,
ended with a reiteration of the request for the release of
the detenu. We find it impossible to read the communication
as anything but a representation against the order of
detention. True the detenu also asked for copies of
documents to enable him to make a representation if the
detaining authority was not prepared to accept his demand
for revocation of the order of detention. The request for
copies of documents to enable the detenu to make a further
representation on merits as well as on other grounds in the
event of the detaining authority not agreeing to revoke the
order of detention for the reason mentioned in the
communication would not divest the communication of its
character as a representation. We have no doubt that the
communication dated July 27, 1980 was a
966
representation which was in law required to be considered by
the detaining authority. Quite obviously, the obligation
imposed on the detaining authority, by Art. 22(5) of the
Constitution, to afford to the detenu the earliest
opportunity of making a representation, carries with it the
imperative implication that the representation shall be
considered at the earliest opportunity. Since all the
constitutional protection that a detenu can claim is the
little that is afforded by the procedural safeguards
prescribed by Art. 22(5) read with Art. 19, the Courts have
a duty to rigidly insist that preventive detention
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procedures be fair and strictly observed. A breach of the
procedural imperative must lead to the release of the
detenu. The representation dated July 27, 1980 was
admittedly not considered and on that ground alone, the
detenu was entitled to be set at liberty.
In the view that we have taken on the question of the
failure of the detaining authority to consider the
representation of the detenu it is really unnecessary to
consider the second question raised on behalf of detenu in
Criminal Writ Petition No. 4344 of 1980. However, this
question has been squarely and directly raised and, indeed,
it was the only question raised in the other two Criminal
Writ Petitions and we have, therefore, to deal with it.
Art. 22(5) may be reproduced here for a better
understanding of the rival submissions. It says:
"22(5) When any person is detained in pursuance of
an order made under any law providing for preventive
detention, the authority making the order shall, as
soon as may be, communicate to such person the grounds
on which the order has been made and shall afford him
the earliest opportunity of making a representation
against the order".
The Article has two facets: (1) communication of the
grounds on which the order of detention has been made; (2)
opportunity of making a representation against the order of
detention. Communication of the grounds pre-supposes the
formulation of the grounds and formulation of the grounds
requires and ensures the application of the mind of the
detaining authority to the facts and materials before it,
that is to say to pertinent and proximate matters in regard
to each individual case and excludes the elements of
arbitrariness and automatism (if one may be permitted to use
the word to describe a mechanical reaction without a
conscious application of the mind). It is an unwritten rule
of the law, constitutional and administrative, that whenever
a decision making function is entrusted to the subjective
satisfaction of a statutory functionary, there is an
implicit obliga-
967
tion to apply his mind to pertinent and proximate matters
only eschewing the irrelevant and the remote. Where there is
further an express statutory obligation to communicate not
merely the decision but the grounds on which the decision is
founded, it is a necessary corollary that the grounds
communicated, that is, the grounds so made known, should be
seen to pertain to pertinent and proximate matters and
should comprise all the constituent facts and materials that
went in to make up the mind of the statutory functionary and
not merely the inferential conclusions. Now, the decision to
detain a person depends on the subjective satisfaction of
the detaining authority. The Constitution and the statute
cast a duty on the detaining authority to communicate the
grounds of detention to the detenu. From what we have said
above, it follows that the grounds communicated to the
detenu must reveal the whole of the factual material
considered by the detaining authority and not merely the
inferences of fact arrived at by the detaining authority.
The matter may also be looked at from the point of view of
the second fact of Art. 22(5). An opportunity to make a
representation against the order of detention necessarily
implies that the detenu is informed of all that has been
taken into account against him in arriving at the decision
to detain him. It means that the detenu is to be informed
not merely, as we said, of the inferences of fact but of all
the factual material which have led to the inferences of
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fact. If the detenu is not to be so informed the opportunity
so solemnly guaranteed by the Constitution becomes reduced
to an exercise in futility. Whatever angle from which the
question is looked at, it is clear that "grounds" in Art.
22(5) do not mean mere factual inferences but mean factual
inferences plus factual material which led to such factual
inferences. The ’grounds’ must be self-sufficient and self-
explanatory. In our view copies of documents to which
reference is made in the ‘grounds’ must be supplied to the
detenu as part of the ‘grounds’.
This was what was decided by Bhagwati and Venkataramiah
JJ in Smt. Icchu Devi Choraria v. Union of India & ors.
(supra), it was observed by Bhagwati J., who spoke for the
Court:
"Now it is obvious that when clause (5) of Article
22 and sub-section (3) of Section 3 of the COFEPOSA Act
provide that the grounds of detention should be
communicated to the detenu within five or fifteen days,
as the case may be, what is meant is that the grounds
of detention in their entirety must be furnished to the
detenu. If there are any documents, statements or other
materials relied upon in the grounds of detention, they
must also be communicated to the detenu, because
968
being incorporated in the grounds of detention, they
form part of the grounds and the grounds furnished to
the detenu cannot be said to be complete without them.
It would not therefore be sufficient to communicate to
the detenu a bare recital of the grounds of detention,
but copies of the documents, statements and other
materials relied upon in the grounds of detention must
also be furnished to the detenu within the prescribed
time subject of course to clause (6) of Article 22 in
order to constitute compliance with clause (5) of
Article 22 and section 3, sub-section (3) of the
COFEPOSA Act. One of the primary objects of
communicating the grounds of detention to the detenu is
to enable the detenu, at the earliest opportunity, to
make a representation against his detention and it is
difficult to see how the detenu can possibly make an
effective representation unless he is also furnished
copies of the documents, statements and other materials
relied upon in the grounds of detention. There can
therefore be no doubt that on a proper construction of
clause (5) of Article 22 read with section 3, sub-
section (3) of the COFEPOSA Act, it is necessary for
the valid continuance of detention that subject to
clause (6) of Article 22 copies of the documents,
statements and other materials relied upon in the
grounds of detention should be furnished to the detenu
alongwith the grounds of detention or in any event not
later than five days and in exceptional circumstances
and for reasons to be recorded in writing, not later
than fifteen days from the date of detention. If this
requirement of clause (5) of Article 22 read with
section 3, sub-section (3) is not satisfied, the
continued detention of the detenu would be illegal and
void".
It was argued that the observations of Bhagwati J were
inconsistent with the earlier decisions of this Court and,
therefore, the decision of Bhagwati and Venkataramiah JJ
required reconsideration. Reference was made in particular
to the decision in Khudiram Das v. the State of West Bengal
& Ors. We do not find anything in Khudiram Das’s case which
necessitates reconsideration of Smt. Icchu Devi Choraria’s
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case. On the other hand in our view what has been said in
Smt. Icchu Devi Choraria’s case is but a further development
and elaboration of what was said earlier in Khudiram Das’s
case. In Khudiram Das’s case it was said (at p. 848-849):
"Section 8 (1) of the Act, which merely re-enacts
the constitutional requirements of article 22(5),
insists that all basic facts and particulars which
influenced the detaining
969
authority in arriving at the requisite satisfaction
leading to the making of the order of detention must
be communicated to the detenu, so that the detenu may
have an opportunity of making an effective
representation against the order of detention. It is,
therefore, not only the right of the Court, but also
its duty as well, to examine what are the basic facts
and materials which actually and in fact weighed with
the detaining authority in reaching the requisite
satisfaction. The judicial scrutiny cannot be
foreclosed by a mere statement of the detaining
authority that it has taken into account only certain
basic facts and materials and though other basic facts
and materials were before it, it has not allowed them
to influence its satisfaction. The Court is entitled to
examine the correctness of this statement and determine
for itself whether there were any other basic facts or
materials, apart from those admitted by it, which could
have reasonably influenced the decision of the
detaining authority and for the purpose, the Court can
certainly require the detaining authority to produce
and make available to the Court the entire record of
the case which was before it. That is the least the
Court can do to ensure observance of the requirements
of law by the detaining authority".
Earlier in Vakil Singh v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Anr.,
one of us (Sarkaria, J.) had pointed out that apart from
conclusions of fact, grounds had a factual constituent also.
Grounds meant materials on which the order of detention was
primarily based, that is to say, all primary facts though
not subsidiary facts or evidential details. Recently in
Ganga Ramchand Bharvani v. Under Secretary to the Government
of Maharashtra & Ors., it was observed by one of us
(Sarkaria, J.) speaking for himself and Pathak J:
"The mere facts that the grounds of detention
served on the detenu are elaborate, does not absolve
the detaining authority from its constitutional
responsibility to supply all the basic facts and
materials relied upon in the grounds to the detenu. In
the instant case, the grounds contain only the
substance of the statements, while the detenu had asked
for copies of the full text of those statements. It is
submitted by the learned counsel for the petitioner
that in the absence of the full texts of these
statements which had been referred to and relied upon
in the grounds‘of detention’, the detenus could not
make an effective
970
representation and there is disobedience of the second
constitutional imperative pointed out in Khudiram’s
case. There is merit in this submission".
One of the submissions of Shri Abdul Khader, leaned counsel
for the respondents was that in several earlier cases the
question that was always considered was whether there was an
adequate explanation for the delay in the supply of copies
after a request for such copies had been made by the detenu
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but that the expression ‘grounds’ had never been understood
to comprise factual material as well as factual inferences
so that failure to communicate the factual material as part
of the ‘grounds’ was straightaway to be treated as an
infringement of the rule contained in the first facet of
Art. 22(5). This has been sufficiently answered by Bhagwati
J. in Icchu Devi Choraria v. Union of India & ors.(supra)
and by one of us (Sarkaria J.) in Ganga Ramchand Bharvani v.
Under Secretary to the Govt. of Maharashtra & Ors. (supra).
It is unnecessary for us to say anything further.
Shri Abdul Khader finally advanced a desperate argument
invoking the rule of "prospective overruling" enunciated in
Golaknath’s case. The rule has no application since Icchu
Devi’s case did not overrule any earlier case.
All the three Writ Petitions are therefore allowed.
V.D.K. Petitions allowed
971