Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHAMANLAL MANJIBHAI SONI
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/01/1981
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1480 1981 SCR (2) 500
1981 SCC (2) 24 1981 SCALE (1)257
ACT:
Conservation of Foreign Exchange & Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act, 1974, section 5A, interpretation
of.
HEADNOTE:
Maintaining the order of the High Court quashing the
detention, the Court
^
HELD : (1) The detention under section 3 of the
COFEPOSA is only for the purpose of preventing smuggling and
all the grounds, whether there are one or more, would be
relatable only to various activities of smuggling and no
other separate ground which could deal with matters other
than smuggling could be conceived of because the Act of
smuggling covers several activities each forming a separate
ground of detention and the Act deals with no other act
except smuggling. Indeed, if the interpretation, namely,
that Section 5A contemplates that there should be only one
ground which relates to the violation of section 3 of the
Act and if that ground is irrelevant while the other grounds
which relate to the same subject matter are clear and
specific the detention order will not stand vitiated, is
accepted, then section 5A will become otiose. [501 H, 502 A-
C]
(2) Whenever allegations of smuggling are made against
a person who is sought to be detained for preventing further
smuggling, there is bound to be one act or several acts with
the common object of smuggling goods which is sought to be
prevented by the Act. It would, therefore, not be correct to
say that the object of the Act constitutes the ground for
detention. If this is so, in no case there could be any
other ground for detention, except the one which relates to
smuggling. This is neither the object of the Act nor can
such an object be spelt out from the language in which
section 5A is couched. What section 5(A) of the Act provides
is that where there are a number of grounds of detention
covering various activities of the detenu spreading over a
period or periods, each activity is a separate ground by
itself and if one of the grounds is irrelevant, vague or
unspecific, then that will not vitiate the order of
detention on the other grounds.
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[502 H, 503 A]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
91 of 1980.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 22-12-1978 of the Gujarat High Court in Criminal
Application No. 245/78.
M. N. Phadke and M. N. Shroff for the Appellant.
J. G. Shah, Vineet Kumar and Ashok Kaul for the
Respondent.
501
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.- This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the Gujarat High Court dated
December 22, 1978 in a Criminal Habeas Corpus Writ for
quashing the order of detention passed against the detenu.
The detenu was arrested on October 20, 1978 and grounds of
detention were served on him that very day. The High Court
allowed the Writ Petition mainly on the ground that, as one
of the grounds, namely, ground No. 7 was irrelevant, the
entire order of detention is vitiated. In coming to this
finding, the High Court, has put, in our opinion, a wrong
interpretation on Sec. 5(A) of the Conservation of Foreign
Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974
(hereinafter referred to as the Act). Section 5A reads thus
:
"5A. Grounds of detention severable.- Where a
person has been detained in pursuance of an order of
detention under sub-section (1) of section 3 which has
been made on two or more grounds, such order of
detention shall be deemed to have been made separately
on each of such grounds and accordingly-
(a) such order shall not be deemed to be invalid
or inoperative merely because one or some of
the grounds is or are-
(i) vague,
(ii) non-existent,
(iii) not relevant,
(iv) not connected or not proximately
connected with such person, or
(v) invalid for any other reason whatsoever,
and it is not therefore possible to hold
that the Government or officer making
such order would have been satisfied as
provided in sub-section (1) of section 3
with reference to the remaining ground
or grounds and made the order of
detention,
(b) the Government or officer making the order of
detention shall be deemed to have made the
order of detention under the said sub-section
(1) after being satisfied as provided in that
sub-section with reference to the remaining
ground or grounds."
The High Court seems to think that Sec. 5(A)
contemplates that there should be only one ground which
relates to the violation of
502
Sec. 3 of the Act and if that ground is irrelevant and the
other grounds which relate to some other subject matter are
clear and specific, the detention will not stand vitiated.
In our opinion, the argument of the High Court with due
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respect amounts to begging the question because the
detention under Sec. 3 of the Act is only for the purpose of
preventing smuggling and all the grounds whether there are
one or more, would be relatable only to various activities
of smuggling and we cannot conceive of any other separate
ground which could deal with matters other than smuggling
because the act of smuggling covers several activities each
forming a separate ground of detention and the Act deals
with no other act except smuggling. Indeed, if the
interpretation of the High Court in respect of Sec. 5(A) is
accepted, then Sec. 5A will become otiose. While construing
section 5(A) the High Court observed thus :-
"But in the present case the subjective
satisfaction is based on one ground, that is, for
preventing the present petitioner from smuggling goods
and in support of that ground various statements have
been relied upon and the totality of consideration of
all these statements has resulted in the subjective
satisfaction of the detaining authority when it passed
the impugned order of detention. Now for these totality
of circumstances considered by the detaining authority,
if one irrelevant or unsustainable element has entered
in the process of subjective satisfaction, the process
of arriving at subjective satisfaction being
comprehensive, the said element would disturb the
entire process of subjective satisfaction and
consequently, even if one statement which could not
have been relied upon appeared before the mind’s eye of
the detaining authority, it could easily be seen that
its subjective satisfaction would be vitiated and its
final decision would rest upon a part of the material
which is irrelevant."
The process of reasoning adopted by the High Court is
absolutely unintelligible to us. It is manifest that
whenever the allegations of smuggling are made against a
person who is sought to be detained by way of preventing
further smuggling, there is bound to be one act or several
acts with the common object of smuggling goods which is
sought to be prevented by the Act. It would, therefore, not
be correct to say that the object of the Act constitutes the
ground for detention. If this is so, in no case there could
be any other ground for detention, except the one which
relates to smuggling. In our opinion, this is neither the
object of the Act nor can such an object be spelt out from
the language in which Sec. 5A is couched. What the Act
provides is that where there are a number of grounds of
detention covering various
503
activities of the detenu spreading over a period or periods,
each activity is a separate ground by itself and if one of
the grounds is irrelevant, vague or unspecific, then that
will not vitiate the order of detention. The reason for
enacting Sec. 5(A) was the fact that several High Courts
took the view that where several grounds are mentioned in an
order of detention and one of them is found to be either
vague or irrelevant then the entire order is vitiated
because it cannot be predicted to what extent the subjective
satisfaction of the authority could have been influenced by
the vague or irrelevant ground. It was to displace the basis
of these decisions that the Parliament enacted Sec. 5(A) in
order to make it clear that even if one of the grounds is
irrelevant but the other grounds are clear and specific that
by itself would not vitiate the order of detention. Mr. G.
A. Shah appearing for the detenu frankly conceded that he is
not in a position to support the view taken by the Gujarat
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High Court on the interpretation of Sec. 5(A). He also
stated that he does not want to challenge the vires of Sec.
5 (A) of the Act. Mr. Phadke has frankly stated that he only
wants the law to be settled in the peculiar circumstances of
this case and the order of the High Court quashing the
detention need not be disturbed. We, therefore, hold that
the view taken by the High Court on interpretation of Sec.
5(A) is legally erroneous and is hereby overruled. With
these observations the appeal is disposed of without
disturbing the order of the High Court quashing the order of
detention.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
504