Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KIRIT KUMAR CHAMAN LAL KUNDALIYA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/01/1981
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1621 1981 SCR (2) 718
1981 SCC (2) 437 1981 SCALE (1)223
CITATOR INFO :
D 1990 SC 176 (25)
D 1990 SC 334 (25,26)
RF 1990 SC 605 (17)
RF 1991 SC2261 (7)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Art. 32-Habeas Corpus petition-
Urging additional grounds in different petitions-If barred
by constructive res judicata.
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act-Section 3-Petitioner’s
representation rejected by Secretary to the Department but
not by the detaining authority-Validity of.
Words and Phrases : "relied on", "referred to", "based
on" meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner filed a Special Leave Petition impugning
the order of the Foreign Exchange and Prevention of
Smuggling Activities Act impugned the order of his detention
on the grounds that the materials relied upon in the order
of detention were not supplied to him and that two of the
documents referred to in the order of detention were not
supplied to him because the Secretary of the Department
thought that they were not relevant.
After examining the file and relevant documents the
High Court held that failure to supply them did not vitiate
the order of detention.
The petitioner filed a Special Leave Petition impugning
the order of the High Court and also a petition under
article 32 urging certain additional grounds that the
endorsement by the Secretary showed that it was he who
decided the relevancy of the documents to be supplied and
not the Minister who was the detaining authority and his
representation was rejected by the Secretary acting on
behalf of the Minister instead of the Minister himself.
A preliminary objection was raised on behalf of the
State that the points not raised in the High Court by the
detenu could not be agitated in a writ petition under
Article 32 because that is barred by the principle of
constructive res judicata.
Allowing the petition,
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^
HELD : The well established position in law is that so
far as petitions for habeas corpus are concerned the
doctrine of constructive res judicata could not apply.
Secondly even successive petitions for habeas corpus under
article 32 would be maintainable in this Court provided the
points raised in the subsequent petitions are additional
points not covered or agitated in the previous petitions.
Thus if the principles of res judicata could not apply to
successive writ petitions in this Court, much less could
they be attracted to cases where points were not agitated
before the High Court but were raised for the first time in
this Court in a writ petition under Article 32. [723B&E]
Shri Lallubhai Jogibhai Patel v. Union of India & Ors.
[1981] 2 S.C.R. 352, followed.
Ghulam Sarwar v. Union of India & Ors. [1967] 2 S.C.R.
271, held inapplicable.
719
The doctrine of finality of judgment or principles of
res judicata are founded on the basic principle that where a
Court of competent jurisdiction has decided an issue, the
same ought not to be allowed to be agitated again and again.
Such a doctrine would be wholly inapplicable to cases where
the two forums have separate and independent jurisdictions.
[723F]
The jurisdiction under Article 226 is a discretionary
jurisdiction whereas the jurisdiction to grant relief in a
petition under Article 32 is guaranteed by the Constitution.
Once the Court finds that there has been a violation of
Article 22(5) of the Constitution it has no discretion in
the matter but is bound to grant the relief to the detenu.
The doctrine of res judicata or the principles of finality
of judgment cannot be allowed to whittle down or override
the express constitutional mandate to the Supreme Court
enshrined in Article 32 of the Constitution. [723G-H]
The concept of liberty has now been widened by Maneka
Gandhi’s case [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621 where Article 21 as
construed by this Court has added new dimensions to the
various features and concepts of liberty as enshrined in
Articles 21 and 22 of the Constitution. [724B]
Smt. Santosh Anand v. Union of India & Ors., W.P. No.
1097/79 (decided on 31-10-1979) referred to.
It was not open to the High Court to have waded through
the confidential file of the Government in order to fish out
a point against the detenu. Secondly, the question of
relevance was not to be decided by the Court but by the
detaining authority which alone had to consider the
representation of the detenu on merits and then come to the
conclusion whether it should be accepted or rejected. As the
reasoning of the High Court was legally erroneous the order
of the High Court cannot be allowed to stand. [724D-E]
Before the grounds were served on the petitioner, the
documents were placed before the detaining authority and
were, therefore, referred to in the grounds of detention.
Manifestly the subjective satisfaction could only be
ascertained from or reflected in the grounds of the order of
detention passed against the detetnu; otherwise without
giving the grounds the mere subjective satisfaction of the
detaining authority would make the order of detention
incomplete and ineffective. Once the documents are referred
to in the grounds of detention it becomes the bounden duty
of the detaining authority to supply the same to the detenu
as part of the grounds or pari passu the grounds of
detention. There is no particular charm in the expressions
’relied on’, ’referred to’ or ’based on’ because ultimately
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all these expressions signify one thing, namely, that the
subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority has been
arrived at on the documents mentioned in the grounds of
detention. The question whether the grounds have been
"referred to", "relied on" or "based on" is merely a matter
of describing the nature of the grounds. [725A-C]
720
Ram Chandra A. Kamat v. Union of India & Ors. [1980] 2
S.C.C. 271 applied.
Shri Tushar Thakkar v. Union of India & Ors. [1980] 4
S.C.C. 499 referred to.
Whether the documents concerned are "referred to",
"relied upon" or "taken into consideration", by the
detaining authority they have to be supplied to the detenu
to make an effective representation immediately on receiving
the grounds of detention. [725G-H]
In the present case this not having been done the
continued detention of the petitioner must be held to be
void.
There was no decision by the detaining authority that
the documents were irrelevant. The documents concerned were
examined not by the detaining authority but by the
Secretary. There is nothing to show that the opinion or
endorsement of the Secretary was placed and approved by the
detaining authority. [724G]
The petitioner’s representation had been rejected by an
authority which had no jurisdiction at all to consider or
pass any orders on the representation of the detenu. This
renders the continued detention of the petitioner void.
[726D]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 6354 of 1980.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
AND
Criminal Appeal No. 53 of 1981.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 25-11-1980 of the Gujarat High Court in Crl.
Application No. 218 of 1980.
Anil Divan, Harjinder Singh and M. M. Lodha for the
Petitioner in Writ Petition and in the Criminal Appeal.
M. N. Phadke and M. N. Shroff for Respondents 1-3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.-By our Order dated 21-1-1981 we had
already allowed the petition and directed the detenu to be
released forthwith. We now proceed to set out the reasons
for the Order which we passed on 21-1-1981.
The writ petition and the criminal special leave arise
out of the same subject matter, namely, that the petitioner
(Kirit Kumar Chaman Lal Kundaliya) was detained by an order
passed by the Home Minister of the State of Gujarat on 9-9-
1980 under s. 3 of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and
Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act.
The Petitioner/detenu in the first instance filed a
petition for habeas corpus in the High Court of Gujarat
which was dismissed by the High Court by its order dated 25-
11-1980. The detenu thereafter filed a petition for special
leave against the order of the High Court
721
and also a writ petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution
of India in this Court. Both the petition for special leave
and the writ petition have been heard together.
Before the High Court, the detenu assailed the order of
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detention mainly on the ground that certain materials relied
upon or referred to in the order of detention were not
supplied to the detenu and hence he was not in a position to
make an effective representation to the Government. It was
also pleaded by the detenu before the High Court that two of
the documents which were referred to in the order of
detention were not supplied to him because the Secretary
thought that they were not relevant.
The High Court while examining the contention of the
detenu sent for the entire file from the Government and
after examining the documents itself found that as the
documents concerned were not relevant and consisted of
statements of some other persons, the failure to supply the
documents to the detenu did not vitiate the order of
detention. Hence the petition in this Court for grant of
special leave against the order of the High Court.
A separate writ petition has also been filed by the
detenu in this Court in which apart from the point canvassed
before the High Court certain additional grounds have been
taken. In the view that we take in the present case. it is
sufficient to refer only to two important grounds that have
been taken in the writ petition. In the first place, it was
suggested that the endorsement by the Secretary shows that
the question as to whether or not the documents demanded by
the detenu were relevant was decided not by the Minister who
was the detaining authority but by the Secretary. Secondly,
it was urged that although the case relied upon by the
respondents also does not decide that the detenu made a
representation to the State Government on 3-10-1980 the same
was rejected on 14-10-1980 not by the detaining authority,
namely, the Hon. Home Minister acting on behalf of the
Government but by the Secretary, and this infirmity was
sufficient to render the order of detention void.
Mr. Phadke appearing for the State took a preliminary
objection regarding the maintainability of the writ petition
filed by the detenu in this Court. The sheet-anchor of the
argument of Mr. Phadke for the State was that as the detenu
had not raised the additional points taken in the High Court
he could not be permitted to agitate those very points in
the writ petition filed under Art. 32 of the Constitution as
the same were barred by the principles of constructive res
judicata. In sup-
722
port of his argument he relied on a decision of this Court
in the case of Ghulam Sarwar v. Union of India & Ors.
The learned counsel for the petitioner, however,
countered the submission of the respondents on the ground
that a writ under Art. 32 being guaranteed by the
Constitution the doctrine of res judicata can have no
application to a writ petition filed in this Court under
Art. 32. Mr. Dewan, learned counsel for the detenu further
submitted that the case relied upon by the respondents also
does not decide that the writ petition was not maintaining
as being barred by principles of res judicata. In our
opinion, the contention raised by the learned counsel for
the detenu is well founded and must prevail. Ghulam Sarwar’s
case (supra.) which was heavily relied on by the respondents
does not at all support the contention raised before us by
them. In that case this Court traced the history of habeas
corpus writs and ultimately held that atleast so far as
petitions for habeas corpus are concerned, the doctrine of
constructive res judicata could not apply. In this
connection Subba Rao, C. J. observed as follows :-
"If the doctrine of res judicata is attracted to
an application for a writ of habeas corpus. there is no
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reason why the principles of constructive res judicata
cannot also govern the said application, for the rule
of constructive res judicata is only a part of the
general principles of the law of res judicata and if
that be applied, the scope of the liberty of an
individual will be considerably narrowed.....If the
doctrine of constructive res judicata be applied, this
Court, though it is enjoined by the Constitution to
protect the right of a person illegally detained, will
become powerless to do so. That would be whittling down
the wide sweep of the constitutional protection."
Bachawat, J., in his concurring judgment also endorsed
the view of Subba Rao, C. J., and observed as follows :
"The order of Khanna, J. dismissing the writ petition
filed by the petitioner in the Punjab High Court
challenging the legality of the detention order passed
by the Central Government under s. 3(2) (g) of the
Foreigners Act, 1946 and asking for the issue of a writ
of habeas corpus is not a judgment, and does not
operate as res judicata. That order does not operate as
a bar to the application under Art. 32 of the
Constitution asking for the issue of a writ of habeas
corpus on the same facts. The
723
petitioner has fundamental right to move this Court
under Art. 32 for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus
for the protection of his right of liberty. The present
petition must, therefore, be entertained and examined
on the merits."
Apart from the aforesaid case, there is a recent decision of
a Constitution Bench of this Court in Shri Lallubhai
Jogibhai Patel v. Union of India & Ors. where this Court has
held that even successive petitions for habeas corpus under
Art. 32 would be maintainable in this Court provided the
points raised in the subsequent petitions are additional
points not covered or agitated in the previous petitions. In
this connection, Sarkaria, J. speaking for the Court
observed as follows :-
"The position that emerges from a survey of the above
decisions is that the application of the doctrine of
constructive res judicata is confined to civil actions
and civil proceedings. This principle of public policy
is entirely inapplicable to illegal detention and does
not bar a subsequent petition for a writ of habeas
corpus under Art. 32 of the Constitution on fresh
grounds, which were not taken in the earlier petition
for the same relief"
Thus, if the principles of res judicata could not apply
to successive writ petitions in this Court much less could
they be attracted in cases where points were not agitated
before the High Court but were raised for the first time in
this Court in a writ petition under Art. 32.
Apart from the cases discussed above there is another
ground on which the argument of Mr. Phadke for respondents
must be rejected. The doctrine of finality of judgment or
the principles of res judicata are founded on the basic
principle that where a Court of competent jurisdiction has
decided an issue, the same ought not to be allowed to be
agitated again and again. Such a doctrine would be wholly
inapplicable to cases where the two forums have separate and
independent jurisdictions. In the instant case, the High
Court decided the petition of the detenu under Art. 226
which was a discretionary jurisdiction whereas the
jurisdiction to grant relief in a petition under Art. 32
filed in the Supreme Court is guaranteed by the Constitution
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and once the Court finds that there has been a violation of
Art. 22(5) of the Constitution, then it has no discretion in
the matter but is bound to grant the relief to the detenu by
setting aside the order of detention. The doctrine of res
judicata or the principles of finality of judgment cannot be
allowed to whittle down or override the express constitu-
724
tional mandate to the Supreme Court enshrined in Art. 32 of
the Constitution. In a recent decision in the case of Smt.
Santosh Anand v. Union of India & Ors. this Court has
pointed out that the concept of liberty has now been widened
by Maneka Gandhi’s case where Art. 21 as construed by this
Court has added new dimensions to the various features and
concepts of liberty as enshrined in Arts. 21 and 22 of the
Constitution. For these reasons, therefore, we overrule the
preliminary objection taken by the respondents.
We now come to the merits of the cases. So far as the
writ petition filed in the High Court is concerned the only
point taken was that two documents referred to in the order
of detention were not supplied to the detenu. The High Court
rejected this contention on the ground that the documents
were merely referred to and not relied on by the detaining
authority and after having examined the documents it found
that the same were not relevant. With due respect to the
Judges we are unable to agree with the view taken by them.
In the first place, it was not open to the Court to have
waded through the confidential file of the Government in
order to fish out a point against the detenu. Secondly, the
question of relevance was not to be decided by the Court but
by the detaining authority which alone had to consider the
representation of the detenu on merits and then come to the
conclusion whether it should be accepted or rejected. As the
reasoning of the High Court, was legally erroneous the order
of the High Court cannot be allowed to stand and is hereby
quashed.
The matter does not rest here but two additional points
which have been taken in the writ petition before us are
sufficient to void the order of detention passed against the
detenu. In the first place, it was submitted that the
endorsement on the file produced before us by the Government
shows that the documents concerned were examined not by the
detaining authority but by the Secretary and there is
nothing to show that the note or endorsement of the
Secretary was placed and approved by the detaining
authority. In these circumstances, therefore, it must be
held that there was no decision by the detaining authority
that the documents were irrelevant. It was, however,
submitted by Mr. Phadke that the documents concerned were
merely referred to in the grounds of detention but did not
form the basis of the subjective satisfaction of the
detaining authority at the time when it passed the order of
detention. It was, however, conceded by Mr. Phadke that
before the grounds were served on the petitioner, the
documents were placed before the detain-
725
ing authority and were, therefore, referred to in the
grounds of detention. It is manifest, therefore, that the
subjective satisfaction could only be ascertained from or
reflected in the grounds of the order of detention passed
against the detenu otherwise without giving the grounds the
mere subjective satisfaction of detaining authority would
make the order of detention incomplete and ineffective. Once
the documents are referred to in the grounds of detention it
becomes the bounden duty of the detaining authority to
supply the same to the detenu as part of the grounds or pari
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passu the grounds of detention. There is no particular charm
in the expressions ‘relied on’, ‘referred to’ or ‘based on’
because ultimately all these expressions signify one thing,
namely, that the subjective satisfaction of the detaining
authority has been arrived at on the documents mentioned in
the grounds of detention. The question whether the grounds
have been referred to, relied on or based on is merely a
matter of describing the nature of the grounds. Even so in
the case of Ram Chandra A. Kamat v. Union of India & Ors. a
three Judge bench decision of this Court to which one of us
(Fazal Ali, J.) was a party, clearly held that even the
documents referred to in the grounds of detention have to be
furnished to the detenu. In this connection the Court
observed as follows :-
"If there is undue delay in furnishing the statements
and documents referred to in the grounds of detention
the right to make effective representation is denied.
The detention cannot be said to be according to the
procedure prescribed by law."
The same view was taken in a later decision of this Court in
Shri Tushar Thakker v. Union of India & Ors. where this
Court observed as follows :-
"This Court has repeatedly held that the detenu
has a constitutional right under Article 22 (5) to be
furnished with copies of all the materials relied upon
or referred to in the grounds of detention, with
reasonable expedition."
Thus, it is absolutely clear to us that whether the
documents concerned are referred to, relied upon or taken
into consideration by the detaining authority they have to
be supplied to the detenu as part of the grounds so as to
enable the detenu to make an effective representation
immediately on receiving the grounds of detention. This not
having been done in the present case the continued detention
of the petitioner must be held to be void.
726
Lastly, the order of detention suffers from yet another
serious infirmity which makes the order of detention
absolutely non est. The respondents, in their counter-
affidavit have categorically averred that the order of
detention was passed by the Home Minister, vide the counter
affidavit of P.M. Shah at page 86 of the writ petition,
where the following averments have been made by Mr. Shah,
Deputy Secretary to the Government of Gujarat :-
"Referring to ground No. XXII paragraph 7 of the
petition, I say that the file relating to the detention
of the petitioner was placed before the Home Minister
of the State of Gujarat and the Home Minister on
careful consideration of the same passed the impugned
order of detention."
The representation made by the detenu on 3-10-1980 has been
rejected on 14-10-1980 not by the Home Minister but by the
Secretary, thus, the representation has been rejected by an
authority which had no jurisdiction at all to consider or
pass any orders on the representation of the detenu. This,
therefore, renders the continued detention of the petitioner
void. In an identical case this Court in Smt. Santosh
Anand’s case (supra.) observed as follows :-
"The representation was, therefore, not rejected by the
detaining authority and as such the constitutional
safeguard under Art. 22(5) as interpreted by this
Court, cannot be said to have been strictly observed or
complied with."
For the reasons given above, therefore, we allow this
petition and direct the detenu to be released forthwith. The
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special leave petition is disposed of accordingly.
P.B.R. Petition allowed.
727