Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NAWABKHAN ABBASKHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/02/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1471 1974 SCR (3) 427
1974 SCC (2) 121
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1981 SC 818 (19)
D 1988 SC1531 (193)
ACT:
Bombay Police Act, 1951, Sections 56 and 142-Prosecution for
contravention of externment order-Pending trial High Court
quashing the order under Art. 226-Effect of quashing-if void
ab initio-Natural justice.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was prosecuted under s. 142 of the Bombay
Police Act, 1951 on contravention of an externment order
issued under s. 56 of that Act. During the pendency of the
criminal trial, the High Court, in a petition under Art. 226
of the Constitution, quashed the order of externment on the
ground that no opportunity to show cause was given against
allegations relating to areas where the acts were alleged to
have been committed. In criminal trial, the trial court
acquitted the appellant. On appeal by the State the High
Court convicted the appellant. It held that the accused had
re-entered the forbidden area during the currency of the
order. The High Court was of the view that the quashing of
the order by the court did not render the order of
externment void ad initio but it only invalidated the order
with effect from the date of the issue of the writ quashing
the order.
On the question whether the externment order having been
quashed by the High Court during the pendency of the
criminal trial the order had become void ab initio and there
being no quit order there was no offence.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD : that an order which infringed a fundamental freedom
passed in violation of the audi alteram partem rule was a
’nullity. A determination is no determination if it is
contrary to the constitutional mandate of Art. 19. On this
footing the externment order was of no effect and its
violation was no offence. Any order made without hearing
the party affected is void and ineffectual to bind parties
from the beginning if the in jury is to a constitutionally
guaranteed right. May be that in ordinary legislation or at
common law a Tribunal having Jurisdiction and failing to
hear the parties may commit an illegality which may render
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the proceedings voidable when a direct attack was made
thereon by way of appeal, revision or review, but nullity is
the consequence of unconstitutionality and so the order of
an administrative authority charged with the duty of comply-
ing with natural justice in the exercise of power before
restricting the fundamental right of a citizen is void ab
initio and of no legal efficacy. The duty to hear menacles
his jurisdictional exercise and any act Is, in its
inception, void except when performed in accordance with the
conditions laid down in regard to hearing. [432 G. 436 F]
An order which is void may be directly and collaterally
challenged in legal proceedings. An order is null and void
if the statute clothing the administrative tribunal with
power conditions it with the obligation to hear, expressly
or by implication. Beyond doubt an order which infringes a
fundamental freedom passed in violation of the audi alteram
partem rule is a nullity. When a competent court holds such
official act or order invalid, or sets it aside, it operates
from nativity, that is, the impugned act or order was never
valid. [439 F]
In the present case a fundamental right of the petitioner
had been encroached upon by the Police Commissioner without
due hearing. The Court quashed that order. The legal
result Is that the accused was never guilty of flouting an
order which never legally existed. [439; D-E]
[The Court did not express its final opinion on the many
wide ranging problems in public law of illegal orders and
violation thereof by citizens.] [439 E]
428
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 83
of 1970.
From the judgment and order dated March 5, 1970 of the
Gujarat High Court at Ahmedabad in Criminal Appeal No. 673
of 1968.
S. K. Dholakia, for the appellant.
G. A. Shah and M. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. The appeal before us raises a thorny issue
of some importance which may be epigramatically expressed as
when has the citizen the discretion to disobey an order ?
When is a determination not a determination ? This riddle
has to be solved in the foggy legal light of conflicting
decisions and academic opinions, Indian and Anglo-American.
To appreciate the contention urged in the case a few facts
must be narrated.
Section 56 of the Bombay Police Act, 1951, (the Act, for
short), empowers a Police Commissioner to extern any
undesirable person on grounds set out therein and the
petitioner fell victim to such a direction issued on
September 5, 1967. On contravention of that order he was
prosecuted under Sec. 142 of the Act but was acquitted by.
the trial Court. The State appealed with success, for the
High Court held that the accused had re-entered the
forbidden area during the currency of the order. What is
crucial for this case is whether the externment order having
been quashed by the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution on July 16, 1968-during the pendency of the
criminal trial-it had become void ab initio and there being
thus no quit order in law there was no offence. The learned
Judge rejected this effect of the writ issued under Art. 226
and convicted the accused. His reasoning, invigorated by
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surgical imagery, flowed thus:
"Now the contravention took place on September
17, 1967 whereas the externment order in
question has been quashed about one year
thereafter on July 16, 1968. The question,
therefore, is : can a person against whom an
order of externment under section 56 of the
Bombay Police Act has been issued disobey the
said order and contravene the d
irections
contained therein with impunity if
subsequently the order is quashed ? If the
argument of the learned counsel were to be
accepted, though the externment order held the
field and had not been quashed at the material
time, no offence would be committed in view of
the subsequent quashing of the order. In
other words, though the order had not been
declared invalid at the material time a
contravention thereof would not constitute an
offence. A distinction in my opinion has to
be drawn between an order which is ab initio
void and an order which is subsequently
quashed on account of some technical defect or
irregularity. If the order was ab initio
void. if it was a nullity from the, inception,
if it was a still born child, the matter would
have stood on a different
429
footing. In the present case the child was
alive and kicking and apparently healthy. It
has subsequently died during the course of an
exploratory operation. The order has been
held to be invalid and is quashed on the
ground that it cannot be sustained on account
of some defect, infirmity or irregularity
which has been subsequently discovered. it
cannot be said that the order was void ab
initio. The order of the High Court passed on
July 16, 1968 does not render the order,
nullity from its very inception. It is not
retroactive. it does not render the order of
externment "non est". What it does is to
invalidate it with effect from the date of the
issue of the writ quashing the said order. If
the argument of the learned counsel were to be
sustained it would result in an anomalous
situation. The externment order can be
violated with impunity if a subsequent writ
petition is allowed and the order is quashed.
The contravention, however, would constitute
an offence if the writ petition is rejected.
It is not possible to take a view which would
result in such an anomalous situation. There
is no principle in upholding the respondent’s
claim that he has a right to violate an order
passed by an authority having jurisdiction to
pass it, if subsequently he can persuade the
court that there was an in built lacuna or
latent defect in the said order. In other
words he claims to have the right to judge for
himself whether the order is legal or not and
in anticipation of the court upholding his
contention, the right to violate it with,
impunity. Be it realised that these powers
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are vested into the administration to enable
it to take prophylactic action to protect the
society from imminent dangers. These powers
cannot be allowed-to be robbed of their
potency at the sweet will of the person
proceeded against in anticipation
of a
subsequent favourable verdict of the court."
There are some untoward potentialities and legal anomalies
visualised by the learned Judge which lend assurance to the
juridical concept that an order or act quashed by a court is
valid until judicially set aside or declared void. We have
to examine the validity of this temporary validity imputed
to an otherwise bad order. When does a bad order become bad
?
Violation of natural justice is the vice of the order which
was defied by the accused. We will first set out the
relevant provision in he Act and the ground of decision in
the writ petition, shorn of unnecessary portions. Section
56 reads:--
"Whenever it shall appear in Greater Bombay
and other areas for which a Commissioner has
been appointed under section 7 to the
Commissioner and in other area or areas to
which the State Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette, extend,
the provisions of this section’, to the Dis-
trict Magistrate, or the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate specially empowered by the State
Government are that behalf (a) that the
movements or acts of any person are causing or
calculated
Sup. CI/74
430
to cause. alarm, danger or, harm to person or
property, or (b) that there are reasonable
grounds for believing that such person is
engaged or is about to be engaged in the,
commission of an offence involving force or
violence or an offence punishable under
Chapter XII, XVI or XVII of the Indian Penal
Code, or in the abetment of any such offence,
and when in the opinion of such officer
witnesses are, not willing to come forward to
give evidence in public against such person by
reason of apprehension on their part as
regards the safety of their person or
property, or (c) that an outbreak of epidemic
disease is likely to result from the continued
residence of an immigrant the said officer
may, by an order in writing duly served on him
or by beat of drum or otherwise as he thinks.
fit, direct such person or immigrant so to
conduct himself as shall seem necessary in
order to prevent violence and alarm or the
outbreak or spread of such disease or to
remove himself outside the area within the
local limits of his jurisdiction (or such area
and any district or districts, or any part
thereof, contiguous thereto) by such route,
and within such time as the said officer may
prescribe and not to enter or return to the
said area (or the area and such contig
uous dis-
tricts, or part thereof, as the case may be),
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from which he was directed to remove himself."
The vital freedom guaranteed under Art. 19 of the
Constitution becomes a fleeting fragrance if a police or
magisterial officer can whisk you away by a more executive-
than-judicial fiat. This strange power, whose
constitutionality is not challenged before us, is hopefully
fettered in its exercise by Section 59 which runs thus :-
"(1) Before an order under section 55, 56 or
57 is passed against any person the officer
acting under any of the said sections or any
officer above the rank of an Inspector autho-
rised by that officer shall inform the person
in writing of the general nature of the
material allegations against him and give him
a reasonable opportunity of tendering an
explanation regarding them. If such person
makes an application for the examination of
any witness produced by him, the authority or
officer concerned shall grant such
application; and examine such witness, unless
for reasons to be recorded in writing. the
authority or officer is of opinion that such
application is made for the purpose of
vexation or delay. Any written statement put
in by such person shall be filed with the
record of the case. Such person shall be
entitled to appear before the officer
proceeding under this section by an advocate
or attorney for the purpose of tendering his
explanation and examining the witness produced
by him.
(2) The authority or officer Proceeding
under subsection (1) may, for the purpose of
securing the attendance of any person against
whom any order Is proposed to be made under
section 55, 56 or 57, require such person to
appear before
431
him and to pass a security bond with or
without sureties for such attendance during
the inquiry. If the person fails to pass the
security bond as required or fails to appear
before the officer or authority during the
inquiry, it shall be lawful to the officer or
authority to proceed with the inquiry and
thereupon such order as was proposed to be
passed against him may be passed."
The externment order was subject to this obligation of
judicialisation. Mr. Justice Bhagwati (as he then was) in
quashing the order reasoned:-
"The show cause notice started with a general
allegation that the petitioner was desperate
and dangerous man and was committing acts
involving force and violence This general
allegation was then particularised and four
different kinds of acts were specifically set
out in clauses 1 to 4 with an overriding
statement that these different kinds of acts
were committed by the petitioner during the
period from January 1967 upto the date of the
show cause notice in "the aforementioned
localities", i.e. the localities known as
Narol, Dani Limda Jamapur, Chandola and
Benrampura localities situate within the limit
of Kagdapity, Gaikwad Haveli and Maninagar
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Police Stations None of the allegations in
the show cause notice contained any reference
to the area round about these specified
localities and the petitioner was therefore
not called upon to meet any allegation in
regard to the ’area round about the specified
localities. Even so, the Deputy Commissioner
of Police relied on material which purported
to show that the petitioner was guilty of
different kinds of act in the area roundabout
the specified localities and acting on such
material proceeded to hold that he was
satisfied that the petitioner Was engaged in
the commission of acts involving force and
violence The externment order is so far as it
was based on the satisfaction of the Deputy
Commissioner of Police that the petitioner was
engaged in the commission. of acts involving
force and violence and acts punishable under
Chapter XVI and XVII of the Indian Penal Code
in the roundabout area within the limits of
Kagdapity, Gaikwad Haveli and Maninagar Police
Stations was, therefore, clearly beyond the
scope of the show cause, notice. No
opportunity to show cause against any
allegation relating to the roundabout area
within the limits of Kagdapity, Gaikwad Haveli
and Maninagar Police Stations was afforded to
the petitioner and the externment order must
therefore be held to be invalid.
There is also a second ground on which we-
must hold the externment order to be invalid.
It is well settled that it is a mandatory
requirement of section 56 that the externing
authority must from a subjective opinion that
witnesses are,
not willing to come forward to give evidence
in public against
432
the person sought to be externed by reason of
apprehension on their part as regards the
safety of their person or property. This
requirement is clearly not satisfied in the
present case it is clear that the opinion
formed by the Deputy Commissioner of Police is
only as regards the witnesses who are victims
of the said incidents and not as regards the
other witnesses. This opinion would clearly
not be the requisite opinion contempl
ated by
the mandatory requirement of section 56.
We therefore allow the petition and make the
rule absolute by issuing a writ quashing and
setting aside the externment order passed by
the Deputy Commissioner of Police against the
petitioner."
This judgment is now final and binds State and subject
alike. But does the demolition of the externment order take
effect retroactively ? If it does, the accused is not
guilty; if not, he is.
The constitutional perspective must be clear in unlocking
the mystique of ’.Void’ and ’viodable’ vis-a-vis orders
under the Act. The Act is a constraint on a fundamental
right and so the scheme of Art. 19 must be vividly before
our minds if extraordinary controls over human rights
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statutorily vested in administrative tribunals are to be
held in constitutional leash. Freedom of movement, of
association, of profession and property, are founding
commitments and severe restraints thereon must be strictly
construed, not in the name of natural justice-an elusive
phrase-nor in literal loyalty to Section 59 but in plenary
allegiance to the paramount law. The restriction on the
fundamental right must be reasonable and the harsher the
restriction the heavier the onus to prove reasonableness.
The High Court in Special Criminal Application 18 of 1969
held the basic condition clamped on the authority to hear
and be satisfied According to the ’due process’
prescriptions of Section 59 had been violated and the order
was liable to be quashed. In short, the finding ’Was that
the deprivation of the petitioner’s fundamental right having
been effected in a mode which is not reasonable, as
statutorily expressed in Section 59 of the Act, is illegal
and unconstitutional. Once the jurisprudential
underpinnings of Section 56 and 59 of the Act are seen, the
invalidatory effect is plain. An unconstitutional order is
void, consequential administrative inconveniences being out
of place where an administrator abandons constitutional
discipline and limits of power. What about the peril to the
citizen if an official, in administrative absolutism,
ignores the constitutional restrictions on his authority and
condemns a person to flee his home ? A determination is no
determination if it is contrary to the constitutional
mandate of Article 19. On this footing the externment order
is of no effect and its violation is no offence.
Unfortunately, counsel overlooked the basic link-up between
constitutionality and deviation from the audi alteram partem
rule in this jurisdiction and chose to focus on the familiar
subject of natural justice as an independent requirement and
the illegality following upon its non-compliance. In Indian
constitutional law, natural justice does not exist as an
absolute jural value but is humanistically read by
433
courts into those great rights enshrined in Part III as the
quintessence of reasonableness. We are not unmindful that
from Seneca’s Medea, the Magna Carta and Lord Coke,to the
constitutional norms of modem nations and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights it is a deeply rooted principle
that ’the body of no free man shall be taken, nor
imprisoned, nor disseised, nor outlawed, nor banished nor
destroyed in any way’ without opportunity for defence and
one of the first principles of this sense of justice is that
you must not permit one side to use means of influencing a
decision which means are not known to the other side.
Now, we may as well examine the invalidatory consequence of
violation of natural justice on a judicialised
administrative act like the externment order under Sec. 56.
The wider questions of error versus excess of jurisdiction,
declaration of invalidity as distinguished from voidable
orders being avoided, order void ab initio and valid tilt
voided retroactively by competent tribunal and the
directory-mandatory and ministerial-Judicial dichotomies and
allied problems, present, on current precedents, a picture
of juristic jungle and need not be ordered into a garden for
the limited purposes of this case. A learned’author has
cynically said : ’The case law, however, affords the usual
spectacle of anarchy upon which order can hardly be super-
imposed’.
Here, a tribunal, having jurisdiction over area, person and
subject matter, has exercised it disregarding the obligation
to gave a real hearing before condemning. Does it spell
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death to the order and make it still-born so that it can be
ignored, defied or attacked collaterally ? Or does it mean
nullifiability, not nullity, so that before disobeying it a
court must declare it invalid ? Or, the third alternative,
does it remain good and binding though voidable at the
instance of a party aggrieved by a direct challenge ? And if
a court voids the order does it work retroactively ?
All these lines of approach have received judicial blessings
from the House of Lords in the landmark case of Ridge v.
Baldwin.(2) The legal choice depends not so much on neat
logic but the facts of life-a pragmatic proposition. Where
the law invests an authority with power to affect the
behaviour of others what consequence should be visited on
abuse or wrong exercise or power is no abstract theory but
experience of life and must be solved by practical
considerations woven into legal principle. Verbal rubrics
like illegal, void, mandatory, jurisdictional, are
convenient cloaks but leave the ordinary man, like the
petitioner here, puzzled about; his remedy. Rubinstein
poses the issue clearly :-
"How does the validity or nullity of the
decision affect the rights and liabilities of
the person is concerned? Can the persons
affected by an illegal act ignore and
disregard it with impunity ? What are the
remedies available to the aggrieved parties?
When will the courts recognize a right to
compensa-
(1) Jurisdiction And Illegality-Rubinstein.
(2) [1963] 2 All E.R. 66.
434
tion for damage occasioned by an illegal act ?
All these questions revert to the one basic
issue; has the act concerned ever
had an
existence or is it merely a nullity ?
Voidable acts are those that,, can be
invalidated in certain proceedings; these
proceedings are, especially formulated for the
purpose of directly challenging such
acts...... On the other hand, when an act is
not merely voidable but void, it is a nullity
and can be disregarded and impeached in any
proceedings,before any court or tribunal
and whenever it is relied upon.In other
words, it is subject to ’collateral attack’."
Kelson’s view, when a court holds an act a nullity, is that
it is not a declaration of nullity; it is a true annulment,
an annulment with retroactive force’.
Even so, the dilemma of the petitioner is, if an authority
in excess or error of jurisdiction directs an illegal act,
should the citizen suffer it until upturned in a legal
proceeding directly or collaterally ? Can he resist the
injury even if the seat of authority simulates validity ?
The eloquent words of Wedderburn quoted by Rubinstein in the
context of nullity is pertinent:--
"What is a sentence ? It is not an instrument
with a bit of wax and the seal of a court put
to it; it is not an instrument with the
signature of a person calling himself a
register; it is not such a quantity of ink
bestowed upon such a quantity of stamped
paper : a sentence is a judicial determination
of a cause agitated between real parties, upon
which a real interest has been settled,."
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Illegal acts of authorities, if can be defied on self-
determined voidnes, startling consequences will follow, as
the High Court apprehends. A detenu will beat back, a
builder will put his wall on the forbidden line, a court
officer will meet with physical resistance, all because the
order is, on the view of the affected party, a nullity and
is later proved so before a court. Not every action by a
Government agency carries with it the force of law’ and
naturally what should he do if he concludes that the action
is invalid? Should he disobey, face penal proceedings and
get his. viola’tion legitimated by Court ? Is there no
alternative to breaking the law or ’order to expose the
lawlessness of the law or order? A recent book (’Discretion
to Disobey’ by Kadish and Kadish(1) establishes this line of
thought from Benjamin Courtis, a former Supreme Court
justice, who argued to the Senate on behalf of President
Andrew Jobnson(sic) during the latter’s impeachment trial a
century ago :
"I am aware that it is asserted to be the
civil and moral duty of all men to obey those
laws which have been passed through all the
forms of legislation until they shall have
been decreed by judicial authority not to be
binding; but this is too broad a statement of
the civil and moral duty incumbent
(1) A Study of Lawful Departures from Legal.
Rules P. 105 1973-Stanford University Press,
California, U.S.A.
435
either upon private citizen or public
officers. If this is the, measure, of duty
there never could be a judicial decision that
a law is unconstitutional, inasmuch as it is
only by disregarding a law that any question
can be raised judicially under it. I submit-
to senators that not only is there no such
rule of civil or moral duty, but that it may
be and has been a high and patrotic duty of a
citizen to raise a question whether a law is
within the Constitution of the country "
On this view it is almost as though the Constitution
contained the words to be found in the constitution of one
contemporary German state : "It is the right and duty of
every man to resist unconstitutionally exercised public
power."
More apposite to the present case are these remarks of the
same authors:--
"If a policeman, in the exercise of his
office, orders a Black person to leave a park
in a Southern town, is the citizen obliged to
obey the policeman’s order and wait until
later to invoke some, remedy to challenge fits
validity ? Can the citizen be,
constitutionally convicted, of some crime
based on his refusal to obey the, policeman’s
order, even if a court should later determine
that the order was unconstitutional? Not long
ago the Supreme Court considered just this
case. It had little difficulty reaching a
decision. The order was found to be an
unconstitutional violation of the defendant’s
rights first because it was designed to
enforce racial discrimination in the park, and
second because it was based on the possibility
of unlawful troublemaking by others rather
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than on any wrongdoing by the defendant. So
much was sufficient to require a reversal of
the defendant’s conviction : "Obviously, one
cannot be punished for failing to obey the
command of an officer if that command is
itself violative of the Constitution. The
policeman’s order was treated like a statute :
obedience to an unconstitutional order of an
official is not required, even though the
order has not yet been ruled invalid by a
court. The citizen is at liberty to make his
own judgment of the order’s validity
and to
act accordingly. If he turns out to be wrong,
of course, be is answerable. But if he turns
out to be right, he is not answerable in any
way and not for disobeying the order, since
the order was invalid, and not for undertaking
himself to decide in advance that the order
was invalid, since he was at liberty to make
that decision.
Where the situation escalates into active
resistance and perhaps the use of force,
typically involved in cases of resistance to
unlawful arrest or to the execution of some
process, such as serving a search warrant, the
’interest in the physical welfare of the
policeman and the citizen (as well as others)
may often produce a contrary answer. Indeed,
an increasing number of jurisdictions afford
no right to resist an arrest made under colour
of authority, even if the arrest is later
determined to be invalid. The citizen is
obliged in this circum-
436
stance to yield and submit his case to the
courts. As the Model Penal Code concludes,
"It should be possible to provide adequate
remedies against illegal arrest, without
permitting the arrested person to resort to
force-a course of action highly likely to
result in greater injury even to himself than
the detention."
The law in this area is full of alarming conundrums hardly
resolved by academic writing or judicial dicta.
We may narrow down the scope of the discussion by confining
it to breaches of the audi alteram partem rule. Does this
defect go to jurisdiction? Perhaps not all violations of
natural justice knock down the order with nullity. In Dimes
v. Grand Junction Canal(1) bias or pecuniary interest in the
judge was held to render the proceedings voidable, not void.
It must be conceded that even this proposition is not out of
the penumbra of doubt and dispute (vide A.I.R. 1958 S.C. P.
86). Formalistic moulds will not solve these issues of
life. and juristic policy enacted with clarity into the
statute book is the necessity of this lawless region of the
rule of law. The common man and the Courts are confronted
with issues we have touched upon; and, against the
background of processual guarantees under the Constitution,
the law of jurisdiction and illegality has to be
legislatively settled, not as logical extensions of
juridical doctrine but empirical formulations based on
experience. Grave implications of law and order lurk behind
this murky branch of public law.
Where hearing is obligated by a statute which affects the
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fundamental right of a citizen, the duty to give the hearing
sounds in constitutional requirement and failure to comply
with such a duty is fatal. May be that in ordinary
legislation or at common law a Tribunal, having jurisdiction
and failing to hear the parties, may commit an illegality
which may render the proceedings voidable when a direct
attack is made thereon by way of appeal, revision or review,
but nullity is the consequence of unconstitutionality and so
without going into the larger issue and its plural
divisions, we may roundly conclude that the order of an
administrative authority charged with the, duty of complying
with natural justice in the exercise of power before res-
tricting the fundamental right of a citizen is void and ab
initio of no legal efficacy. The duty to hear manacles his
jurisdictional exercise and any act is, in its inception,
void except when performed in accordance with the conditions
laid down in regard to hearing. May be, this is a radical
approach, but the alternative is a travesty of
constitutional guarantees, which leads to the conclusion of
post-legitimated disobedience of initially unconstitutional
orders. On the other hand law and order will be in jeopardy
if the doctrine of discretion to disobey invalid orders were
to prevail. As Learned Hand observed :-
"The idea that you may resist peaceful
arrest.... because you are in debate about
whether it is lawful or not, instead of going
to the authorities which can determine (the
question is) not a blow for liberty but, on
the contrary, a blow for attempted anarchy."
(1)[1852] 3 H.L.C. 759.
437
The opposite view is expressed by the California Supreme
Court in a case where one Yick came into the country
unlawfully but was held by the deputy sheriff without
authority. He escaped and his abettor in the escape was
convicted but in appeal the Court held :-
"An escape is classed as a crime against
public justice, and the law, in declaring it
to be an offense, proceeds upon the theory
that the citizen should yield obedience to the
law; that when one has been, by its authority
or command, confined in a prison, that it is
his duty to submit to such confinement until
delivered by due course of law. But when the
imprisonment is unlawful, and is itself a
crime. the reason which makes flight from
prison an offense does not exist. In such a
case the right to liberty is absolute, and he
Who regains it is not guilty of the technical
offense of escape."
American case-law is conflicting and doubtful expressions
like "void on its face" "transparently invalid" have been
used. We must remember the words of Justice Frankfurter "If
one man can be allowed to determine for himself what is law,
every man can. That means first chaos, then tyranny". We
dwell on these possible views to underscore the difficulties
of solution.
English Judges also have not been uniform. Granting the
order against a party to be void, does it have to be so
declared by a court at his instance of can the citizen
interpret for himself and act on the basis of invalidity.
The problem was considered by the Judicial Committee in
Fernado’s(1) case where a minister dissolved a municipal
council without opportunity to be heard. Lord Upjohn stated
the position thus:--
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"Apart altogether from authority their
Lordships would be of opinion that this was a
case here the Minister’s order was voidable
and not a nullity. Though the council should
have been given the opportunity of being heard
in its defence, if it deliberately chooses not
to complain and takes no step to protest
against its dissolution, there seems no reason
why any other person should have the right to
interfere. To take
a simple example to which their Lordships will
have to advert in some detail presently, if
in Ridge v. Baldwin the appellant Ridge, who
had been wrongly dismissed because he was not
given the opportunity of presenting his
defence, had preferred to abandon the point
and accept the, view that he had been properly
dismissed, their Lordships can see no reason
why any other person, such, for example,as a
rate payer of Brighton should have any right
to contend that Mr. Ridge was still the chief
constable of brighton. As a matter of ordinary
common sense, with all respect to other
opinions that have been expressed, ’if a
person in the position of Mr. Ridge had not
felt sufficiently aggrieved to take any action
by reason of the failure to afford him his
strict right
(1) L.R. [1967] 2 A.C. 337, 352 (Darayappah
V. Fernando)
438
to put forward a defence, the order of the
watch committee should stand and no one else
should have any right to complain Their
Lordships deprecate the use of the word void
in distinction to the word voidable in the
field of law with which their Lordships are
concerned because, as Lord Evershed pointed
out in Ridge v. Baldwin quoting from Sir
Frederick Pollock, the words void and voidable
are imprecise and apt to mislead."
In Ridge v. Baldwin (supra) Lord Reid and Lord Hodson opted
for ’nullity’, Lord Evershed and Lord Devlin supported the
’voidable’ theory and Lord Morris of Broth-Y-Gest struck a
practical note in between. The learned Lord said :-
"It was submitted that the decision of the
watch committee was voidable but not void.
But this involves the inquiry as to the sense
in which the word "voidable", a word deriving
from the law of contract, is in this connexion
used. If the appellant had bowed to the
decision of the watch committee and had not
asserted that it was void, then no occasion to
use either word would have arisen. When the
appellant in fact at once repudiated and
challenged the decision, so claiming that it
was invalid, and when in fact the watch
committee adhered to their decis
ion, so
claiming that it was valid, only the court
could decide who was right. If in that
situation it was said that the decision was
voidable. that was awaited. But if and when
the court decides that the appellant was
right, the court is deciding that the decision
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of the watch committee was invalid and of no
affect and null and void. The word "voidable"
is, therefore, apposite in the sense that it
became necessary for the appellant to take his
stand : he was obliged to take action for
unless he did the view of the watch committee,
who were in authority, would prevail. In that
sense the decision of the watch committee
could be said to be voidable."
In Spackman v. Plumstead Board of Works(1)
(181), Lord Selborne said :-
"There would be no decision within the meaning
of the statute if there was anything of that
sort done contrary to the essence of justice."
In 1959 A. C. 83 Lord Somervell of Harrow
highlighted the dilemma of ’void’ and
’voidable’ in these effective words :-
’Is a man to be sent to prison on the basis
that an order is a good order when the court
knows it would be set aside if proper
proceedings were taken ? The distinction bet-
ween void and voidable’is by no means a clear
one..."
The test of ex-facie illegality or bad on its face or in
Lord Radcliffe’s words ’it bears no brand of invalidity on
its forehead’, is also un work able in the work-a-day world
of law. Error of jurisdiction and error
(1) (1885) 10 A.C. 229.
439
within jurisdiction, have, been suggested as a means to cut
the Gordian Knot. Many great writers have dealt with the
subject but few have offered a fair answer to the question,
is a determination a determination. at all when made without
a statutory hearing and when is it void and to what extent?
Decisions are legion where, the conditions for the exercise
of power have been contravened and the order treated as
void. And when there is excess or error of jurisdiction the
end product is a. semblance, not an actual order, although
where the error is within jurisdiction it is good,
particularly when a finality clause exists. The order
becomes ’infallible in error’, a peculiar legal phenomenon
like the hybrid beast of voidable voidness for which,
according to a learned author, Lord Denning is largely
responsible. The legal chaos on this branch of
jurisprudence should be avoided by evolving simpler
concepts, which work in practice in Indian conditions.
Legislation, rather than judicial law-making will meet the
needs more adequately. The only safe course, until simple
and sure light is shed from a legislative source, is to.
treat as void and ineffectual to bind parties from the
beginning, any order made without hearing the party affected
if the injury is to a constitutionally guaranteed right. In
other cases, the order in violation of natural justice is
void in the limited sense of being liable to be avoided by
court with retroactive force.
In the present case, a fundamental right of the petitioner
has been encroached upon by the police commissioner without
due, hearing. So the Court quashed it-not killed it then
but performed the formal obsequies of the order which had
died at birth. The legal result is that the accused was
never gulity of flouting an order which never legally
existed.
We express no final opinion on the many wide-ranging
problems in public law of illegal orders and violations
thereof by citizens, grave though some of them may be. But
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we do hold that an order which is void may be directly and
collaterally challenged in legal proceedings. An order is
null and void if the statute clothing the administrative
tribunal with power conditions it with the obligation to
hear, expressly or by implication. Beyond, doubt, an order
which infringes a fundamental freedom passed in violation of
the audi alteram partem rule is a nullity. When a competent
court holds such official act or order invalid, or sets it
aside, it operates from nativity, i.e. the impugned actor
order was never valid. The French jurists call it
L’indevistence or outlawed order (p.127) Brown and Garner,
French Administrative Law) and could not found the ground
for a prosecution. On this limited ratio the appellant is
entitled to an acquittal. We allow his appeal.
P.B.R.
Appeal allowed
440