Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P.K. SHAMSUDEEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/07/1992
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1937 1992 SCR (3) 587
1992 SCC (3) 523 JT 1992 (4) 179
1992 SCALE (2)52
ACT:
Conservation of Foregin Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act, 1974:
Section 3-Preventive detention-Detention order-
Interference by High Court on ground of inordinate and
unexplained delay in execution of-Justification of.
HEADNOTE:
An order of detention under the provisions of the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974 was passed by the appellant-State
against the respondent’s uncle. The detenu filed a writ
petition in the High Court at Calcutta challenging the
detention order. The High Court passed an order granting
temporary injuction restraining the appellant from detaining
the detenu but upon consideration of the counter-affidavit
filed by the appellant vacated the order of injunction.
Thereafter the respondent, a nephew of the detenu, filed a
writ petition before the High Court at Madras, which allowed
the same on the ground that there had been inordinate and
unexplained delay in the implementation of the detention
order.
In the appeal before this Court on behalf of the
appellant-State, it was contended that the High Court was
not justified in exercising its extraordinary powers to
restrain the execution of the detention order.
On behalf of the respondent, it was contended that
between the date of passing the order and the filing of the
writ petition before the High Court at Calcutta, the detenu
had regularly appeared before the concerned Magistrate and
there was no satisfactory explanation for the failure of the
authorities to detain him under the detention order and that
the live and proximate link between the grounds and purpose
of detention had been snapped by the undue and unreasonable
delay.
Allowing the appeal, this Court
588
HELD: The delay in the execution of the detention order
passed against the detenu, upon which the High Court at
Madras founded the relief it gave, had already taken place
by the date writ petition was filed by the detenu at
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Calcutta. That the delay had taken place was, obviously,
known to the detenu, who himself was the writ petitioner in
Calcutta. Nonetheless, the point of delay was not taken in
Calcutta. It was taken only after the High Court at
Calcutta had vacated the interim injuction restraining the
appellant from executing the detention order when the writ
petition was filed by the respondent in the High Court at
Madras subsequently. That a writ petition had been filed in
Calcutta challenging the detention order was mentioned, both
in the writ petition at Madras and in the reply filed
thereto. In these circumstances, the High Court was not
justified in exercising its discretion to issue the high
prerogative writ of mandamus to direct the appellant to
forbear from executing the detention order passed by it.[591
B-D]
The Additional Secretary to the Government of India &
Ors. v. Smt. Alka Subhash Gadia & Ors., J.T. (1991) 1 S.C.
549, distinguished.
N.K. Bapna v. Union of India, (1992) 60 E.L.T. 13 S.C.
and K.P.M. Basheer v. State of Karnataka & Anr. etc., [1992]
2 SCC 295, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
392 of 1992.
From the Judgement and Order dated 3.1.92 of the Madras
High Court in W.P. No. 9587 of 1991.
V.R. Reddy, Additional Solicitor General, K.V.
Venkataraman, K.V. Viswanathan and V.G. Pragasam for the
Appellant.
B.Kumar and K.K. Mani for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHARUCHA, J. Special leave to appeal granted.
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of a
Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature at Madras
issuing a writ of mandamus against the present appellant
directing it to forbear from implementing the order of
detention issued by it against one Sheik Ahamed Hajee, son
of
589
Mammoo, under the provisions of the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974
(hereinafter referred to as ‘COFEPOSA’).
The detention order was issued on 8th March, 1988. On
5th April 1989 the detenu filed a writ petition in the High
Court of Judicature at Calcutta (being Writ Petition
No.C.O.4202/W/89) impugning the detention order. The detenu
stated therein that he was a resident of Aberdeen Bazar,
Port Blair, and carried on business therefrom. The writ
petition was admitted and the present appellant was
restrained from detaining the detenu for a period of two
weeks. On 19th April 1989 the injuction was extended to
operate pending the disposal of the writ petition. On 12th
April 1991, upon consideration of the counter-affidavit
filed by the present appellant, the order of injuction was
vacated. Thereupon, on 10th July 1991, the present writ
petition was filed in Madras by the respondent to this
appeal, who is a nephew of the detenu. By the judgment and
order under appeal the writ petition was allowed upon the
ground that there had been inordinate and unexplained delay
in the implementation of the detention order. Emphasis was
placed upon the fact that an advocate of Coimbatore had
shown an affidavit on 12th November, 1991 wherein, as
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counsel for the detenu, he stated that the detenu had
appeared before the Magistrate’s Court in the related
criminal proceedings taken against him under the Customs Act
on various dates between 4th December 1987 and 3rd August
1988, which statements were, admittedly, correct.
Mr. V.R. Reddy, learned Additional Solicitor General,
appearing on behalf of the present appellant, drew our
attention to the judgment of this Court in The Additional
Secretary to the Government of India & Ors. v. Smt. Alka
Subhash Gadia & Ors., J.T. (1991) 1 S.C. 549. This Court
held thus:-
"It is not correct to say that the courts have no
power to entertain grievances against any detention
order prior to its execution. The courts have the
necessary power and they have used it in proper
cases as has been pointed out above, although such
cases have been few and the grounds on which the
courts have interfered with them at the pre-
execution stage are necessarily very limited in
scope and number, viz., where the courts are prima
facie satisfied (i) that the impugned order is not
590
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. The refusal by the courts to use their
extraordinary powers of judicial review to
interfere with the detention orders prior to their
execution on any other ground does not amount to
the abandonment of the said power or to their
denial to the proposed detenu, but prevents their
abuse and the perversion of the law in question".
In Mr. Reddy’s submission, the case of the detenu did
not fall within the limited scope set out in the aforesaid
judgment and the high Court was, therefore, not justified in
exercising its extraordinary powers to restrain the
execution of the detention order.
Mr. B. Kumar, learned counsel for the present
respondent, drew our attention to the judgment of this Court
in N.K. Bapna v. Union of India, (1992) 60 E.L.T. 13 S.C.
This Court there affirmed the judgment in the case of Alka
Subhash Gadia aforementioned.
Much emphasis was laid by Mr. Kumar upon the delay in
the execution of the detention order between 8th March 1988,
when it was issued, and 5th April 1989, when the Calcutta
High Court restrained its execution by an interim order. It
was submitted that during this period the detenu had
regularly appeared before the concerned Magistrate at
Coimbatore and there was no satisfactory explanation for the
failure of the authorities to detain him under the detention
order. Reliance was placed upon this Court’s Judgment in
K.P.M. Basheer v. State of Karnataka & Anr. etc., [1992] 2
SCC 295 and it was submitted that the live and proximate
link between the grounds and purpose of detention had been
snapped by the undue and unreasonable delay. The delay in
detention in K.P.M. Basheer’s case was of 5 months and 11
days but, it is important to note, detention had been
effected before the writ petition was filed.
Clearly, the present case does not fall within the
parameters outlined in the case of Alka Subhash Gadia
justifying interference with the detention order at the pre-
detention stage. There is no dispute that the detention
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order was passed under COFEPOSA, nor that it was sought to
be executed
591
against the right person, nor that it had been passed for a
wrong purpose, nor that it had been passed on vague,
extraneous or irrelevant grounds, nor that the authority
which had passed it had no authority to do so.
It is relevant also to note that the writ petition in
Calcutta was filed on 5th April 1989. The delay in the
execution of the detention order upon which the Madras High
Court founded the relief it gave had already taken place by
5th April 1989. That the delay had taken placed was,
obviously, known to the detenu who himself was the writ
petitioner in Calcutta. Nonetheless, the point of delay was
not taken in Calcutta. It was taken only after the Calcutta
High Court had on 12th April 1991 vacated the interim
injuction restraining the present appellant from executing
the detention order when the writ petition was filed by the
present respondent in the Madras High Court on 10th July
1991. That a writ petition had been filed in Calcutta
challenging the detention order was mentioned both in the
Madras writ petition and in the reply filed thereto. We do
not think that in these circumstances the High Court was
justified in exercising its discretion to issue the high
prerogative writ of mandamus to direct the appellant to
forbear from executing the detention order passed by it.
In the result, the appeal succeeds and the judgment and
order under appeal are set aside. There shall be no order
as to costs.
N.P.V. Appeal allowed.
592