Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIV PRASAD BHATNAGAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/03/1981
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 870 1981 SCR (3) 81
1981 SCC (2) 456 1981 SCALE (1)592
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC 211 (7)
ACT:
National Security Act-Section 12 (1)-Scope of-Staleness
and irrelevance of grounds of detention-If would vitiate the
order of detention.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was detained under section 12 (1) of the
National Security Act on the grounds that he, alongwith his
friends, in the second week of November, 1980 indulged in
filthy abuse of Muslims, threatened their lives and
performed "marpeet" and that he and his associates
terrorised the common man in the area by their various
criminal acts which caused disturbance to the public peace
and public safety.
In support of the petition it was contended on behalf
of the petitioner that the reference to associates without
naming even one rendered the ground vague and, therefore,
vitiated the order of detention and (2) that the incidents
enumerated in the second ground related to the years 1974,
1975, 1977 and 1978 which could not be said to be proximate
enough to sustain the order of detention.
Allowing the petition,
^
HELD: The detenu is entitled to be released.
It is now well settled that grounds of detention must
be pertinent and not irrelevant, proximate and not state,
precise and not vague. Irrelevance, staleness and vagueness
are vices any single one of which is sufficient to vitiate
the order of detention. [83 D]
In the instant case the incidents enumerated to
substantiate the second ground show that apart from the vice
of staleness from which they suffer, they were related to
"law and order" and not to the maintenance of public order.
They are stale because of the passage of time since the
happening of some of the incidents; they are irrelevant
because they related to law and order and not to maintenance
of public order. [83 E]
In Re: Sushanta Goswami and Ors., [1969] 3 S.C.R. 138
followed.
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 397 of 1981.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
Mrs. Shyamala Pappu, M. S. Mann, S Shukhar, Miss Raj
Shree and Mrs. Indra Sawhney for the Petitioner.
S. K. Gambhir and Vijay Hansaria for the Respondent.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY J. Shiv Prasad Bhatnagar is under
preventive detention pursuant to an order made by the
District Magistrate, Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh. The order and
the grounds of detention were served on him on November 28,
1980. The District Magistrate made a report of the order to
the State Government and the latter approved the detention
order on December 2, 1980. The approval was communicated to
the detenu on December 5, 1980. A representation was
submitted by the detenu on December 13, 1980. The Advisory
Board constituted by the State Government met on January 3,
1981, considered the material placed before it by the
detaining authority as well as the representation and the
written arguments submitted by the detenu. The detenu was
also given a personal hearing. The Advisory Board submitted
its report to the State Government on January 4, 1981.
Thereafter the State Government confirmed the order of
detention on February 3, 1981 under Sec. 12 (1) of the
National Security Act. The period of detention was
stipulated as one year from the date of the order of
detention. The order confirming the detention was
communicated to the detenu on February 12, 1981 and he was
also informed that the Advisory Board had opined that there
was sufficient cause for his detention.
Smt. Shyamla Pappu, learned counsel for the detenu made
a number of submissions. In the view that we are taking of
one of the primary submissions, we do not think it necessary
to consider the rest of the submissions. The primary
submission that we have in mind is that the grounds of
detention suffer from the vice of either vagueness or
staleness. The first ground mentions that the detenu
alongwith his friends, in the second week of November, 1980,
indulged in filthy abuse of Muslims, threatened their lives
and performed "mar pit’’. Details of incidents were given to
substantiate the ground. As many as six incidents were
mentioned and in everyone of them it was said that the
detenu alongwith his associates had indulged in this or that
violent action. No mention was made of the name of even a
single associate. The argument was that the reference to
’associates’ without naming even one rendered the ground
vague and, therefore, vitiated it. Similarly, it was said
the second ground also referred to the detenu and his
accociates without naming even a single associate and for
that reason the second ground also was vague. The further
submission was that the incidents enumerated in second
ground were of the years 1974, 1975, 1977 and 1978 and could
by no means be said to be proximate
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enough to sustain an order of preventive detention. The
second ground was to the effect that the detenu and his
associates had terrorized the common man in the Vidisha area
by their various criminal acts which caused disturbance to
public peace and public safety. Several incidents were
narrated to substantiate this ground. The first incident was
of the year 1974, the second incident was of the year 1975,
the next three incidents were of the year 1977 and the rest
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of the incidents barring the last one were of the year 1978.
A perusal of the incidents enumerated to substantiate the
second ground show that apart from the vice of staleness
from which they appear to suffer, the incidents are related
to "law and order" and not to the maintenance of public
order. The incidents appear to bear a striking resemblance
to the grounds of detention which were considered In Re:
Sushanta Goswami & Ors., (1) particularly in the cases of
Debendra Nath Das, Abdul Wahab, Anil Das, Dilip Kumar
Chakraborty and Ashoka Kumar Mukherjee. It is now well
settled that grounds of detention must be pertinent and not
irrelevant, proximate and not stale, precise and not vague.
Irrelevance, staleness and vagueness are vices any single
one of which is sufficient to vitiate a ground of detention.
And, a single vicious ground is sufficient to vitiate an
order of detention. In the present case we are satisfied
that the second ground of detention suffers both from the
vice of staleness, because of the passage of time since the
happening of some of the incidents and the vice of
irrelevance because they relate to ’law and order’ and not
to ’the maintenance of public order’. The detenu is entitled
to be released. He is directed to be released forthwith. The
petition is allowed.
P.B.R. Petition allowed
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