Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. POONAM LATA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M.L. WADHAWAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/04/1987
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1383 1987 SCR (2)1123
1987 SCC (3) 347 JT 1987 (2) 204
1987 SCALE (1)849
CITATOR INFO :
F 1987 SC1748 (30)
F 1987 SC2098 (1)
* 1989 SC1529 (1)
ACT:
Conservation of Foreign Exchange & Prevention of Smug-
gling Activities Act, 1974: ss. 3 & 12--Preventive deten-
tion--Period of parole--Whether could be added to period of
detention--Court whether competent to grant parole.
Constitution of India; Articles 226 and 32--COFEPOSA
Act-Preventive detention--Powers of the Court to release on
parole.
Words & Phrases: ’parole’--’detain’--Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
Sub-section (6) of s. 12 of the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act. 1974
prohibits release of a detenu on bail, or bail bond or
otherwise, during the period a detention order is in force.
Sub-sections (1) and (1A) of s. 12, however, permit tempo-
rary release by the Central or State Governments on certain
terms and conditions. Section 10 provides for a maximum
period of detention of one year in cases .to which provi-
sions of s. 9 do not apply.
The husband of the petitioner was detained under s. 3(1)
of the Act by an order dated February 28, 1986. His repre-
sentation under s. 8(b) was rejected by the detaining au-
thority on April 4, 1986. The Advisory Board in its sittings
on April 28 and 29, 1986 concluded that there was sufficient
cause for detention. The order of detention was confirmed by
the Minister on May 14, 1986.
The writ petition filed under Article 32 of the Consti-
tution on April 23, 1986 was heard by the Vacation Judge on
May 15 1986 who made an order for the release of the detenu
on parole and directed the matter to be listed in early
August of 1986. The case, however, could not be listed till
January 14, 1987, and was finally heard on March 3, 1987.
The detenu had been out of Jail during the entire period.
The period of one year expired on February 28, 1987.
1124
It was contended for the petitioner that the period of
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parole from May 15. 1986 till February 28. 1987 could not be
added to the period of detention specified in the order
under sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of the Act, that the period of one
year from the date of detention having expired on February
28. 1987 the order of detention had lapsed entitling the
detenu to be freed, and that once the detenu is taken into
custody under the Act pursuant to an order of detention the
running of time would not be arrested merely because the
court directs the release of the detenu on parole. Relying
on the decision in Lala Jairam Das & Ors. v. Emperor. (AIR
1945 PC 94) it was contended that the court cannot on gener-
al principles add the period of bail or parole to the period
of detention, and that the ratio laid down in Amritlal
Channumal Jain etc. v. State of Gujarat & Ors., (W.P. Nos.
1342-43 of 1982 decided on July 10, 1985) that the period
during which a detenu was on parole should be taken into
account while calculating the period of detention has to
prevail and must be taken as binding.
Dismissing the writ petition. the Court.
HELD: 1. The period of parole of the detenu from May 15,
1986 to February 28. 1987 has to be excluded in reckoning
the period of his detention for one year under sub-s. (1) of
s. 3 of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention
of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974. [1136D, G-H]
2.1 The purpose and object of s. 10 of the Act is to
prescribe not only a maximum period for which a person
against whom a detention order under the Act is made may be
held in actual custody pursuant to the said order but also
the method by which the period is to be computed. The key to
the interpretation of the section is in the words "may be
detained." The subsequent words "from the date of detention"
which follow the words "maximum period of one year" merely
define the starting point from which the maximum period of
detention of one year is to be reckoned in a case not fall-
ing under s. 9. There is no justifiable reason why the word
"detain" should not receive its plain and natural meaning
’to hold in custody’. [1134B; 1133G, EP]
2.2 The period during which the detenu is on parole
cannot be said to be a period during which he has been held
in custody pursuant to the order of his detention. In such a
case he was not in actual custody. The order of detention
prescribes the place where the detenu is to be detained.
Parole brings him out of confinement from that place and
detention as contemplated by the Act is interrupted until
the detenu is put back into custody. The running of the
period recommences then and
1125
a total period of one year has to be counted by putting the
different periods of actual detention together. In the
instant case it cannot, therefore, be said that the period
during which the detenu was on. parole has to be taken into
consideration in computing the maximum period of detention
authorised by s. 10 of the Act. [1133H; 1134A-D]
Harish Makhija v. State of U.P., Crl. M.P. No. 620 of
1984 in W.P. (Crl.) No. 301 of 1983 decided on February 11,
1985; State of Gujarat v. Adam Kasam Bhaya, [1982] 1 SCR 740
and State of Gujarat v. IsmaiI Juma & Ors., [1982] 1 SCR
1014. referred to.
Amritlal Channumal Jain etc. v. State of Gujarat & Ors.,
Writ Petitions Nos. 1342-43 of 1982 decided on July 10,
1985, distinguished.
3. Parole is the release of a prisoner from a penal or
correctional institution after he has served a part of his
sentence under the continuous custody of the State and under
conditions that permit his in carceration in the event of
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misbehavior. It is a grant of partial liberty or lessening
of restrictions to a convict prisoner and does not change
the status of the prisoner. [1131E, BC]
Preventive detention is not punishment. The scheme of s.
12. unless temporary release by the appropriate Government
is taken to be one of parole, keeps away parole from the
subject of preventive detention. [1130F; 1135F]
4.1 What in a given situation should be the sufficient
period for a person to be detained for the purpose of the
COFEPOSA Act is one for the subjective satisfaction of the
detaining authority. Preventive detention jurisprudence in
this regard is very different from regular conviction fol-
lowed by sentence that an accused is to suffer. [1134EF]
4.2 Whether it be under Art. 226 or Art. 32 of the
Constitution. the Court has no jurisdiction either under the
Act or under the general principles of law or in exercise of
extraordinary jurisdiction to deal with the duration of the
period of detention either by abridging or enlarging it. The
only power that is available to it is to quash the order in
case it is found to be illegal. It would not, therefore, be
open to the Court to reduce the period of detention by
admitting the detenu on parole. [1134F,E]
5. Sub-s. (6) of s. 12 of the Act puts a statutory bar
to the release of the detenu after an order of detention has
been made and the detenu lodged in custody. It is the appro-
priate Government and not the Court
1126
which deal with a case of temporary release of the detenu
under subss.(1) and (1A) of s. 12 of the Act. The detenu
seeking to have the benefit of temporary relief must go to
the appropriate Government first. The Court cannot entertain
his application for parole straightaway. On the principle
that exercise of administrative jurisdiction is open to
Judicial review by the superior Court, the High Court under
Art. 226 or this Court under Art. 32 may in a given case
examine the legality and propriety of the Government action.
[1135E,C, F, G; 1136A; 1135H]
Samir Chatterjee v. State of West Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC
801; State of Bihar v. Rambalak Singh & Ors., [1966] 3 SCR
344 and State of; Uttar Pradesh v. Jairam & Ors., [1982] 1
SCC 176, referred to.
Babulal Das v. State of West Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC 311;
Anil Dey v. State of West Bengal, [1974] 4 SCC 514 and Golam
Hussain v. Commissioner of Police, Calcutta & Ors. [1974] 4
SCC 530, overruled.
6. It is desirable to insert in the COFEPOSA Act or the
Rules made thereunder a provision like sub-s.(4) of s. 389
of the Code of. Criminal Procedure, 1973 that when an action
is taken under s. 12 of the Act and the appropriate Govern-
ment makes a temporary release order the order of such
temporary release whether on bail or parole has to be ex-
cluded in computing the period of detention. [1136C] Lala
Jairam Das & Ors. y. Emperor AIR 1945 PC 94, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 292 of 1986.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
Ram Jethmalani, Ms. Rani Jethmalani and A.K. Sharma for
the Petitioner.
Anil Dev Singh, Mrs. Indra Sawhney and Ms. S. Relan for
the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J. By this petition under Article 32 of the Consti-
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tution, the petitioner Smt. Poonam Lata has asked for the
issue of a writ of habeas corpus for the release of her
husband, Shital Kumar who has been
1127
detained by an order passed by the Additional Secretary to
the Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department of
Revenue. dated February 28, 1986. made under section 3(1) of
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Act’),
on being satisfied that it was necessary to detain him "with
a view to preventing him from dealing in smuggled goods".
Put very briefly, the essential facts are these. The
Directorate of Enforcement, New Delhi, gathered intelligence
over a period of time before making of the impugned order of
detention which revealed that the detenu was engaged in
receiving smuggled gold from across the Indo-Nepal Border
and was making payments in foreign currency and remitting
the sale proceeds of such smuggled gold out of the country
in the shape of U.S. dollars with the help of carriers. On
February 26. 1986, the Directorate received information that
the three carriers, namely, Ram Deo Thakur, Shyam Thakur and
Bhushan Thakur would be leaving under the assumed names of
Dalip, Mukesh and Rajesh respectively by 154 Dn. Jayanti
Janata Express leaving New Delhi Railway Station at 6.45
p.m. Accordingly, the officers of the Delhi Zone of the
Directorate mounted surveillance at Platform No. 5 of the
Railway Station from which the train was to steam off. The
said carriers were detrained and upon search of their bag-
gage, the officers recovered $ 29,750 and Rs.1500 from Ram
Deo Thakur @ Dalip, $ 28,900 and Rs.650 from Shyam Thakur @
Mukesh and $ 20,000 and Rs.1,000 from Bhushan Thakur @
Rajesh. The same ware seized under section 110(1) of the
Customs Act, 1962. The total value of the seized foreign
currency was equivalent to Rs.10,25,000 in round figure.
During interrogation by the officers under section 108 of
the Customs Act, these persons stated that the seized for-
eign currency totaling $ 78,650 had been paid by the detenu
towards the price of 48 gold biscuits of foreign origin
brought by them from Darbhanga to New Delhi and made over to
him and accordingly the detenu was taken into custody on
February 27, 1986. He too made a statement under s. 108 of
the Act confessing that he was dealing in smuggled gold
brought across the Indo-Nepal Border and has been remitting
the price of such gold in U.S. dollars through different
carriers.
On February 28, 1986, the detenu was served with the
impugned order of detention along with the grounds thereof
and copies of the relevant documents relied upon in the
grounds. On March 25, 1986. the detenu submitted a represen-
tation under section 8(b) of the Act and the detaining
authority by its order of April 4, 1986 rejected the
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same. On April 12, 1986 the detenu made a representation to
the Advisory Board through the Superintendent of the Central
Jail, Tihar. The representation together with comments of
the detaining authority and the relevant documents were
forwarded by the Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue
to the Advisory Board. On the same day the detenu appears to
have made a representation to the Central Government and it
was received in the Ministry of Finance on April 24, 1986.
The Minister of State for Finance rejected the said repre-
sentation on April 28, 1986 and the detenu was informed
about it the following day. The Advisory Board had its
sittings on April 28 and 29, 1986. and came to the conclu-
sion that there was sufficient cause for the detention and
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sent its report on May 8, 1986. The Minister considered the
report of the Advisory Board and confirmed the order of
detention on May-14, 1986 and the Central Government’s order
of confirmation was duly communicated on May 26, 1986.
The representation of the detenu was still before the
Advisory Board when the petitioner moved this Court under
Article 32 of the Constitution on April 23, 1986. On April
29, 1986, notice was ordered by the Court returnable on May
3, 1986, and it directed that the matter may be placed
before the Vacation Judge on May 15, 1986. On that date, the
learned Vacation Judge made an order for the release of the
detenu on parole in the following terms:-
"The detenu is released on parole until fur-
ther orders on the condition that he will
report to the Directorate of Revenue Intelli-
gence, New Delhi every day and the Directorate
will be at liberty to ask him to explain his
conduct during this time.
Reply affidavit may be filed within
two weeks. The matter will be listed two weeks
after reopening of the Court after summer
vacation.
In the meantime, the respondents will
be at liberty to make an application for the
revocation of the parole if any misconduct or
any other activity comes to their notice
which requires the revocation of the parole."
Notwithstanding the order of the learned
Vacation Judge that the matter should be
listed within two weeks after the re-opening
of the Court after the long vacation--it
should have been some time in early August of
1986--the case was not listed till January 14,
1987. The
1129
respondents also took no steps to apply for
early listing of the matter. On January 14,
1987, a prayer was made by the learned counsel
appearing for the Union of India seeking two
weeks’ time to file an additional affidavit
and the case was ordered to be listed on March
3. 1987. During all these months, the detenu
has been out of jail.
Indisputably the detention was for one
year. When the matter came up for hearing on
the 3rd of March, 1987, Shri Jethmalani,
learned counsel for the petitioner confined
his submissions to only one aspect, namely,
that the period of parole i.e. from May 15,
1986 till February 28, 1987, could not be
added to the period of detention specified in
the impugned order under sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of
the Act and the period of one year from the
date of detention having expired on February
26, 1987, the impugned order had lapsed and
the detenu became entitled to be freed from
the shackles of the order of detention. Ac-
cording to the learned counsel, section 10 of
the Act prescribes the maximum period of
detention to be one year or two years, as the
case may be, from the date of detention or the
specified period, whichever expires earlier.
Admittedly in respect of the detenu no decla-
ration under section 9 of the Act has been
made and, therefore, the maximum period of
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detention so far as he is concerned is one
year and it has to be reckoned as prescribed
under section 10 of the Act. That section
indicates not only the starting point but also
the outer limit. In other words, the argument
is that once the detenu is taken into custody
under the Act pursuant to an order of deten-
tion, the running of time would not be arrest-
ed merely because the Court directs release of
the detenu on parole.
Shri Jethmalani drew a distinction between
’bail’ and ’parole’; he contended that preven-
tive detention was not a sentence by way of
punishment and, therefore, the concept of
serving out which pertains to punitive juris-
prudence cannot be imported into the realm of
preventive detention. According to him, the
grant of parole to a detenu amounts to a
provisional release from confinement; yet the
detenu continues to be under judicial deten-
tion; release from jail custody subject to
restrictions imposed on free and unfettered
movement transfers the detenu to judicial
custody. Since there is no provision to autho-
rise interruption of running of the period of
detention, release on parole does not bring
about any change in the situation. It has
further been argued that when the Court enter-
tains a writ petition for grant of habeas
corpus and issues a rule nisi, the detenu is
deemed to have come into judicial custody and
the effect of grant of parole does not termi-
nate such custody but merely allows greater
freedom of move-
1130
ment to the detenu. Conditions imposed on the
detenu during parole impinge upon his freedom
and liberty; therefore, the period during
which a detenu is released on parole cannot be
taken as a period during which the detention
is not operative. Shri Jethmalani placed
reliance on the ratio of the Privy Council
decision in Lala Jairam Das & Ors. v. Emperor,
AIR 1945 PC 94 to contend that but for the
special provision contained in sub-section (3)
of s. 426 of the old Code of Criminal Proce-
dure, 1898 (corresponding to s. 389(4) of the
Code of 1973) the power of the Court to grant
bail to a convicted person or accused would
not include a power to exclude the period of
bail from the term of the sentence. The same
principle ought to apply in the case of re-
lease of a detenu on bail or parole and the
Court therefore cannot on general principles
add the period of bail or parole to the period
of detention. In the absence of any provision
regarding the grant of parole and the computa-
tion of the period thereof and in view of the
special provisions contained regarding com-
mencement and the computation of the period of
detention of one year, the period of parole
cannot be deducted while computing the period
of one year of detention. The learned counsel
also relied upon the direction made by a Bench
of three Judges in the case of Amritlal Chan-
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numal Jain etc. v. State of Gujarat & Ors.
(Writ Petitions Nos. 1342-43, 1345-48 and 1362
of 1982 and No. 162 of 1983 dated July 10,
1985) where this Court directed that the
period during which a detenu was on parole
should be taken into account while calculating
the total period of detention. According to
learned counsel the direction in Amritlal
Channumal Jain’s case was given after a Bench
of two Judges in Harish Makhija v. State of
U.P. Crl. M.P. No. 620 of 1984 in U.P. (Crl.)
No. 301 of 1983 held on February 11, 1985,
that the period of parole cannot be counted
towards the period of detention. Shri Jethmal-
ani has submitted that in view of the direc-
tion of the larger Bench of this Court, the
ratio laid down in Amritlal Channumal Jain’s
case (supra) has to prevail and must be taken
as binding on us.
There is no denying the fact that preven-
tive detention is not punishment and the
concept of serving out a sentence would not
legitimately be within the purview of preven-
tive detention. The grant of parole is essen-
tially an executive function and instances of
release of detenus on parole were literally
unknown until this Court and some of the High
Courts in India in recent years made orders of
release on parole on humanitarian considera-
tions. Historically ’parole’ is a concept
known to military law and denotes release of a
prisoner of war on promise to return. Parole
has become an integral part of the English and
American systems of criminal justice inter-
twined with the evolution of changing atti-
tudes of the society towards crime and crimi-
nals.
1131
As a consequence of the introduction of parole
into the penal system, all fixed-term sen-
tences of imprisonment of above 18 months are
subject to release on licence, that is, parole
after a third of the period of sentence has
been served. In those countries, parole is
taken as an act of grace and not as a matter
of right and the convict prisoner may be
released on condition that he abides by the
promise. It is a provisional release from
confinement but is deemed to be a part of the
imprisonment. Release on parole is a wing of
the reformative process and is expected to
provide opportunity to the prisoner to trans-
form himself into a useful citizen. Parole is
thus a grant of partial liberty or lessening
of restrictions to a convict prisoner, but
release on parole does not change the status
of the prisoner. Rules are flamed providing
supervision by parole authorities of the
convicts released on parole and in case of
failure to perform the promise, the convict
released on parole is directed to surrender to
custody. (See: The Oxford Companion to Law,
edited by Walker, 1980 edn., p. 931, Black’s
Law Dictionary, 5th edn., p. 1006, Jowitt’s
Dictionary of English Law, 2nd edn., Vol. 2,
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p. 1320, Kenny’s Outlines of Criminal Law,
17th edn., p. 574-76, The English Sentencing
System by Sir Rupert Cross at pp. 31-34, 87 et
seq., American Jurisprudence, 2nd edn., Vol.
59, pp. 53-61, Corpus Juris Secundum, vol. 67,
Probation and Parole, Legal and Social Dimen-
sions by Louis P. Carney). It follows from
these authorities that parole is the release
of a very long term prisoner from a penal or
correctional institution after he has served a
part of his sentence under the continuous
custody of the State and under conditions that
permit his incarceration in the event of
misbehavior.
There is abundance of authority that High
Courts in exercise of their jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution do not release
a detenu on bail or parole. There is no reason
why a different view should be taken in regard
to exercise of jurisdiction under Article 32
of the Constitution particularly when the
power to grant relief to a detenu in such
proceedings is exercisable on very narrow and
limited grounds. In State of Bihar v. Rambalak
Singh & Ors., [1966] 3 SCR 344 a Constitution
Bench laid down that the release of a detenu
placed under detention under Rule 30 of the
Defence of India Rules, 1962. on bail pending
the hearing of a petition for grant of a writ
of habeas corpus was an improper exercise of
jurisdiction; It was observed in that case
that if the High Court was of the view that
prima facie the impugned order of detention
was patently illegal in that there was a
serious defect in the order of detention which
would justify the release of the detenu, the
proper and more sensible and reasonable course
would invariably be to expedite the hearing of
the writ petition and
1132
deal with the merits without any delay rather
than direct release of the detenu on bail.
Again, in State of Uttar Pradesh v. Jairam &
Ors., [1982] 1 SCC 176 a three-Judge Bench
speaking through Chandrachud, CJ., referred to
Rambalak Singh’s case and set aside the order
passed by the learned Single Judge of the High
Court admitting the detenu to bail on the
ground that it was an improper exercise of
jurisdiction. As to grant of parole, it is
worthy of note that in none of the cases this
Court made a direction under Article 32 of the
Constitution for grant of parole to the detenu
but left it to the executive to consider
whether it should make an order in terms of
the relevant provision for temporary release
of the person detained as under section 12 of
the COFEPOSA, in the facts and circumstances
of a particular case. In Samir Chatterjee v.
State of West Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC 801, the
Court set aside the order of the Calcutta High
Court releasing on parole a person detained
under S. 3(1) of the Maintenance of Internal
Security Act, 1971 and unequivocally viewed
with disfavor the observations made by Krishna
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Iyer, J. in Babulal Das v. State of West
Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC 311 to the effect:
"While discharging the rule issued and dis-
missing the petition, we wish to emphasize
that s. 15 is often lost sight of by the
Government in such situations, as long term
preventive detention can be self-defeating or
criminally counter-productive. Section 15
reads:
15. Temporary release of persons detained--
We consider that it is fair that persons kept
incarcerated and embittered without trial
should be given some chance to reform them-
selves by reasonable recourse to the parole
power under s. 15. Calculated risks, by re-
lease for short periods may, perhaps, be a
social gain, the beneficent jurisdiction being
wisely exercised."
Alagiriswamy, J. speaking for the Court, observed in no
uncertain terms:
1133
"We fail to see that these observations lay
down any principle of law. Section 15 merely
confers a power on the Government. The power
and duty of this Court is to decide cases
coming before it according to law. In so doing
it may take various considerations into ac-
count. But to advise the Government as to how
they should exercise their functions or powers
conferred on them by statute is not one of
this Court’s functions. Where the Court is
able to give effect to its view in the form of
a valid and binding order that is a different
matter. Furthermore, section 15 deals with
release on parole and there is nothing to show
that the petitioner applied for to be released
on parole for any specific purpose. As far as
we are able to see, release on parole is made
only on the request of the party and for a
specific purpose."
The innovative view expressed by Krishna lyer, J. in Anil
Dey v. State of West Bengal, [1974] 4 SCC 5 14 which he
tried to reiterate in Golam Hussain v. The Commissioner of
Police, Calcutta & Ors., [1974] 4 SCC 530 and in Babulal
Das’ case, (supra), therefore, no longer holds the field,
and rightly so, because the Court cannot usurp the functions
of the Government.
Section 10 of the Act provides that the maximum period
for which any person may be detained in pursuance of an
order of detention to which provisions of section 9 do not
apply shall be for a period of one year from the date of
detention or the specified period, whichever expires earli-
er. The key to the interpretation of section 10 of the Act
is in the words ’may be detained’. The subsequent words
’from the date of detention’ which follow the words ’maximum
period of one year’ merely define the starting point from
which the maximum period of detention of one year is to be
reckoned in a case not falling. under section 9. There is no
justifiable reason why the word ’detain’ should not receive
its plain and natural meaning. According to the Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, vol. 1, p. 531, the word ’detain’
means "to keep in confinement or custody". Webster’s Campre-
hensive Dictionary, International Edition at p. 349 gives
the meaning as "to hold in custody". The purpose and object
of s. 10 is to prescribe a maximum period for which a person
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against whom a detention order under the Act is made may be
held in actual custody pursuant to the said order. It would
not be violated if a person against whom an order of deten-
tion is passed is held in actual custody in jail for the
period prescribed by the section. The period during which
the detenu is on parole cannot be
1134
said to be a period during which he has been held in custody
pursuant to the order of his detention, for in such a case
he was not in actual custody. The order of detention pre-
scribes the place where the detenu is to be detained. Parole
brings him out of confinement from that place. Whatever may
be the terms and conditions imposed for grant of parole,
detention as contemplated by the Act is interrupted when
release on parole is obtained. The position would be well
met by the appropriate answer to the question "how long has
the detenu been in actual custody pursuant to the order?"
According to its plain construction, the purpose and object
of s. 10 is to prescribe not only for the maximum period but
also the method by which the period is to be computed. The
computation has to commence from the date on which the
detenu is taken into actual custody but if it is interrupted
by an order of parole, the detention would not continue when
parole operates and until the detenu is put back into custo-
dy. The running of the period recommences then and a total
period of one year has to be counted by putting the differ-
ent periods of actual detention together. We see no force in
Shri Jethmalani’s submission that the period during which
the detenu was on parole has to be taken into consideration
in computing the maximum period of detention authorised by
section 10 of the Act.
It is pertinent to observe that the Court has no power
to substitute the period of detention either by abridging or
enlarging it. The only power that is available to the Court
is to quash the order in case it is found to be illegal.
That being so, it would not be open to the Court to reduce
the period of detention by admitting the detenu on parole.
What in a given situation should be the sufficient period
for a person to be detained for the purpose of the Act is
one for the subjective satisfaction of the detaining author-
ity. Preventive detention jurisprudence in this regard is
very different from regular conviction followed by sentence
that an accused is to suffer. Whether it be under Article
226 or Article 32 of the Constitution, the Court would,
therefore, have no jurisdiction either under the Act or
under the general principles of law or in exercise of ex-
traordinary jurisdiction to deal with the duration of the
period of detention.
Parliament has authorised the detention of persons under
the COFEPOSA to serve two purposes:-
"(1) To prevent the person concerned from
engaging himself in an activity prejudicial to
the conservation of foreign exchange and also
preventing him from smuggling activities
1135
and thereby to render him immobile for the
period considered necessary by the detaining
authority so that during that period the
society is protected from such prejudicial
activities on the part of the detenu. And
(2) In order to break the links between the
person so engaged and the source of such
activity and from his associates engaged in
that activity or to break the continuity of
such prejudicial activities so that it would
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become difficult, if not impossible, for him
to resume the activities."
Release of a detenu on parole after an order of detention
has been made and the detenu lodged in custody for achieving
one or the other of the aforesaid legislative objects is
thus contrary to the purpose of the statute. There is a
statutory prohibition against release of a detenu during the
period of detention in sub-section (6) of section 12 of the
Act. That sub-section which was inserted by Amending Act 39
of 1975 with effect from 1.7.1975 reads:-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law and save as otherwise provided in
this section, no person against whom a deten-
tion order made under this Act is in force
shall be released whether on bail or bail bond
or otherwise."
Sub-section (6) puts a statutory bar to the release of the
detenu during the period of detention in a manner otherwise
than the one provided in section 12. Section 12 authorises
either the Central Government or the State Government to
temporarily release the detenu on such terms and conditions
as the appropriate Government considers necessary to impose.
The scheme of section 12, unless release by the appropriate
Government is taken to be one of parole, keeps away parole
from the subject of preventive detention. At any rate, it is
the appropriate Government and not the Court which deals
with a case of temporary release of the detenu. Since the
Act authorises the appropriate Government to make an order
of temporary release, invariably the detenu seeking to have
the benefit of temporary relief must go to the appropriate
Government first. It may be that in a given case the Court
may be required to consider the propriety of an adverse
order by the Government in exercise of the jurisdiction
under section 12 of the Act. On the principle that exercise’
of administrative jurisdiction is open to judicial review by
the superior court, the High Court under Article 226 or this
Court under Article 32 may be called upon in a suitable case
to
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examine the legality and propriety of the governmental
action. There is no scope for entertaining an application
for parole by the Court straightaway. The legislative
scheme, keeping the purpose of the statute and the manner of
its fulfilment provided thereunder, would not justify enter-
taining of an application for release of a detenu on parole.
Since in our view release on parole is not a matter of
judicial determination, apparently no provision as contained
in the Code of Criminal Procedure relating to the computa-
tion of the period of bail was thought necessary in the Act.
But we would like to point out to the Government the desira-
bility of inserting a provision like sub-s.(4) of s. 389 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 that when an action is
taken under section 12 of the Act and the appropriate Gov-
ernment makes a temporary release order, the period of such
temporary release whether on bail or parole has to be ex-
cluded in computing the period of detention. Either the
statute or the rules made thereunder should provide for this
eventuality.
In the premises, it must accordingly be held that the
period of parole has to be excluded in reckoning the period
of detention under sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Act.
We find it difficult from the observations made by the
three-Judge Bench in Amritlal Channumal Jain’s case to infer
a direction by this Court that the period of parole shall
not be added to the period of detention. The words used
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’shall be taken into account’ are susceptible of an inter-
pretation to the contrary. We find that an order made by a
bench of two Judges of this Court in Harish Makhija’s case
(supra) unequivocally laid down that the period of parole
cannot be counted towards the period of detention. This
accords with the view taken by this Court in a bench of two
Judges in State of Gujarat v. Adam Kasam Bhaya, [1982] 1 SCR
740 and State of Gujarat v. Ismail Juma & Ors., [1982] 1 SCR
1014. In view of these authorities which appear to be in
consonance with the object and purpose of the Act and the
statutory provisions and also having regard to the fact that
the direction made in Amritlal Channumal Jain’s case (supra)
is capable of another construction as well, we do not find
Shri Jethmalani’s contention on this score as acceptable.
For these reasons, the only contention advanced by Shri
Jethmalani in course of the hearing, namely, that the period
of parole from May 15, 1986 to February 28, 1987 could not
be added to the maximum period of detention of the detenu
Shital Kumar for one year as specified in the impugned order
of detention passed under sub-s.(1) of s. 3 of the Conserva-
tion of Foreign Exchange & Prevention of Smuggling Activi-
ties Act, 1974, must fail. The writ petition is accordingly
1137
dismissed. There shall be no order as to costs. We direct
that the petitioner shall surrender to custody to undergo
remaining period of detention. We give the detenu ten days’
time to comply with this direction failing which a non-
bailable warrant for his arrest shall issue.
P.S.S. Petition dis-
missed.
1138