Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 122-123 of 2001
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNEESH SUNEJA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/01/2001
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & S.N. Variava.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
Leave granted.
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A writ petition was filed in the High Court of Punjab
and Haryana challenging the validity of the order of
detention passed against the respondent under Section 3(1)
of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act, 1973 (hereinafter referred to as
the Act] directing the detention of the respondent by an
order made on 9.6.1998. It appears that the respondent
filed a writ petition before the High Court of Delhi
challenging the validity of the said detention order which
was, however, withdrawn on 15.7.1998 with liberty to file a
fresh writ petition, if need be. Thereafter a petition was
filed before the High Court of Punjab and Haryana and in the
course of the petition filed before it the fact of having
filed a writ petition before the High Court of Delhi was not
disclosed. But, on the other hand, it is stated that no
petition had been filed in any of the courts, including the
Supreme Court for the identical relief that had been sought
for in the petition filed before the High Court of Punjab
and Haryana. The High Court took note of the fact that on
19.6.1997 the officials of the Enforcement Directorate,
Jalandhar searched the residential premises of the
respondent at Delhi and recovered Indian currency of Rs. 3
lakhs, 8 pieces of yellow metal appearing to be gold in the
form of biscuits of 110 tolas and Deustche Marks 5300/-. It
is alleged that business premises of the respondent at Karol
Bagh was searched which proved futile. Even when the search
of the business premises was going on a telephonic call was
stated to have been received from one Jagdish who was
bringing a sum of Rs. 6,50,000/-. Though the said Jagdish
was not arrested, the respondent was arrested and produced
before the Court of a Magistrate at Patiala on 21.6.1997.
He was released on bail on 19.8.1997 by the Court of
Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, New Delhi. He was
granted bail inasmuch as even after 60 days from the date of
his arrest no complaint had been filed, but on 9.6.1998 the
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detention order was passed.
The High Court, in the course of its order, took note of
the two grounds, firstly, that there has been delay in
making the order of detention inasmuch as the said order had
been passed on 9.6.1998 but the incident in respect of which
the said detention order had been passed is stated to have
taken place on 19.6.1997, nearly after about a year, and
secondly, that after making the order of detention no
effective steps had been taken to execute the same except to
make a vague allegation that the respondent was absconding.
This appeal is filed against the said order principally
on the ground that the High Court could not interfere at
pre-detention stage and no writ could have been issued in
the light of the decision of this Court in Additional
Secretary to the Government of India & Ors. v. Smt. Alka
Subhash Gadia & Anr., 1992 Supp. (1) SCC 496, which made it
clear that the courts should not interfere at the
pre-detention stage except in exceptional circumstances such
as :
(i) that the impugned order is not passed under the Act
under which it is purported to have been passed,
(ii) that it is sought to be executed against a wrong
person,
(iii) that it is passed for a wrong purpose,
(iv) that it is passed on vague, extraneous and
irrelevant grounds, or
(v) that the authority which passed it had no authority
to do so.
This principle has been reiterated by this Court in
Sayed Thaer Bawamiya v. Joint Secretary to the Government
of India & Ors., 2000 (8) SCC 630.
The learned Additional Solicitor General pointed out
that neither of the two grounds set out in the course of the
order of the High Court are such of those which fall within
the ratio of the decision in Additional Secretary to the
Government of India & Ors. v. Smt. Alka Subhash Gadia &
Anr. (supra) so as to interfere at the pre-execution stage
with the detention order. Further, he contented that no
part of cause of action having arisen in the jurisdiction of
the High Court inasmuch as recoveries had been effected in
Delhi after search made on the residential and business
premises of the respondent and detention order had been
passed in Delhi, though upon the information furnished by
the Enforcement Directorate officials at Jalandhar.
Shri K.T.S. Tulsi, the learned senior Advocate
appearing for the respondent, submitted that considered in
the background that the amount recovered either in the shape
of Indian currency and foreign currency or the quantum of
gold and the enactments such as the Foreign Exchange
Regulation Act (FERA) having been repealed, the Foreign
Exchange Maintenance Act (FEMA) and Gold Control Act not
contemplating prosecution in a criminal court the acts
imported to the respondent do not merit detention. He
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further pointed out that there is inordinate delay in making
the order of detention and no effective steps were taken for
executing the same, as noticed by the High Court and,
therefore, in those circumstances, the High Court was
justified in interfering with the order made by the Joint
Secretary to the Government of India under Section 3 of the
Act. He relied upon the decisions of this Court in Golam
Hussain alias Gama v. The Commissioner of Police, Calcutta
& Ors., 1994 (4) SCC 530, T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State of
Kerala & Ors. 1989 (4) SCC 741, and Ahamed Mohaideen Zabbar
v. State of T.N. & Ors., 1999 (4) SCC 417.
The present case is not for issue of any writ of habeas
corpus but for certain other types of reliefs. The matter
must be examined as any other ordinary writ petition would
be examined. When the respondent had filed a writ petition
before the High Court of Delhi and that writ petition was
subsequently withdrawn, this fact should have been clearly
stated in the course of the petition filed before the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana. Not disclosing this factor is
indeed fatal to the petition. Shri Tulsi submitted that
this lapse on the part of the respondent should not be
viewed seriously because ultimately any order that could be
made by the court would affect the liberty of a citizen
which is protected under Articles 21 and 22 of the
Constitution. He, therefore, very passionately pleaded that
we should not proceed to dispose of the matter on that short
ground. Even assuming that this non-mentioning of the
proceedings before the court was ill-advised, though not
deliberate, we do find great force in the other submissions
made by the learned Additional Solicitor General. This
Court has been categorical that in matters of pre-detention
cases interference of court is not called for except in the
circumstances set forth by us earlier. If this aspect is
borne in mind, the High Court of Punjab and Haryana could
not have quashed the order of detention either on the ground
of delay in passing the impugned order or delay in executing
the said order. For mere delay either in passing the order
or execution thereof is not fatal except where the same
stands un-explained. In the given circumstances of the case
and if there are good reasons for delay in passing the order
or in not giving effect to it, the same could be explained
and those are not such grounds which could be made the basis
for quashing the order of detention at a pre-detention
stage. Therefore, following the decisions of this Court in
Additional Secretary to the Government of India & Ors. v.
Smt. Alka Subhash Gadia & Anr., (supra) and Sayed Thaer
Bawamiya v. Joint Secretary to the Government of India &
Ors. (supra), we hold that the order made by the High Court
is bad in law and deserves to be set aside.
At the same time, it must also be noticed that the order
of detention having been made as early as on 9.6.1998 and
the same not having been effected till today, it is
certainly necessary for the authorities concerned in the
Government to apply mind as to whether detention of the
respondent is still necessary or not and take appropriate
steps either in giving effect to the order of detention or
to revoke the same. In addition, we may also notice that
the order made by us will not prejudice the interest of the
respondent that in the event the said order of detention is
given effect to, it is open to the respondent to raise all
grounds as are permissible in law notwithstanding what we
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may have observed in the course of this order.
The appeals are accordingly allowed by setting aside the
order made High Court.