Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAKHAN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB(AND CONNECTED APPEALS)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/09/1952
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 381 1964 SCR (4) 797
CITATOR INFO :
R 1964 SC1128 (1)
R 1966 SC 657 (6)
R 1966 SC 740 (5,24,30)
F 1966 SC1078 (5)
RF 1967 SC 483 (5)
R 1968 SC1313 (10)
RF 1971 SC 530 (233)
R 1976 SC 958 (26)
E 1976 SC1207 (14,33,40,43, TO 49,547)
R 1977 SC1027 (12,23)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Arts. 352 and 359-Proclamation
of emergency-President’s order restricting enforcement of
fundamental rights-Detention under Defence of India Act (LI
of 1962) and Defence of India Rules-Application for release
under s. 491, Code of Criminal Procedure (Act V of 1898)-
Maintainability.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were detained under r. 30(l) of the Defence
of India Rules made by the Central Government under s. 3 of
the Defence of India Ordinance, 1962. They applied to the
Punjab and Bombay High Courts under s. 491(1)(b) of the Code
of Criminal Procedure and their case was that ss.
3(2)(15)(i) and 40 of the Defence of India Act, 1962, and r.
30(1)(b) of the Defence of India Rules, which were continued
under the Act, were unconstitutional and invalid inasmuch as
they contravened their fundamental rights under Arts. 14,
21, 22(4), (5) and (7) of the Constitution and that,
therefore, they should be set at liberty. The High Courts
held that the Presidential Order which had been issued on
November 3, 1962, under Art. 359(1) of the Constitution,
after a declaration of emergency under Art. 352, consequent
on the Chinese invasion of India, barred their right to move
the said petitions and dismissed them. These appeals raised
two common questions in this Court, (1) what was the true
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scope and effect of the Presidential Order issued under Art.
359(1), and (2) did the bar created by the Order operate in
respect of the applications under s. 491(1)(b) of the Code.
The Presidential Order was as follows:-
"G.S.R. 1464--In exercise of the powers
conferred by cl. (1) of article 359 of the
Constitution, the President hereby declares
that the right of any person to move any court
for the enforcement of the right conferred by
article 21 and article 22 of the Constitution
shall remain suspended for the period during
which the Proclamation of Emergency issued
under clause (1) of article 352 thereof on the
26th October 1962 is in force, if such person
has been deprived of any such rights under the
Defence of India Ordinance, 1962 (4 of 1962)
or any rule or order made thereunder."
By a later amendment of the Order Art. 14 was incorporated
into it.
798
Held:(per Gajendragadkar, Sarkar, Wanchoo,
Hidayatullah, Das Gupta and Shah, JJ.) that the proceedings
taken by the appellants in the High Courts under s.
491(1)(b) of the Code were hit by the Presidential Order and
must be held to be incompetent.
Article 359 of the Constitution was not capable of two
interpretations and it was, therefore not necessary to
decide the controversy raised by the parties as to whether
that Article should be interpreted in favour of the
President’s power granted by it or the fundamental rights of
the citizens.
The King (At the Prosecution of Arthur Zadig) v. Halliday,
[1917] A.C. 260, Liversidge v. Sir John Anderson, [1942]
A.C. 206, Keshav Talpade v. The King Emperor, [1943] F.C.R.
49, Nakkuda Ali v. M. F. De S. Jayaratne, [1951] A.C. 66 and
King Emperor v. Vimalabal Deshpande, L.R. 73 1. A. 144,
considered.
The words ’any court’ in Art. 359(1), construed in their
plain grammatical meaning, must mean any court of competent
jurisdiction including’ the Supreme Court and the High
Courts before which the rights specified in the Presidential
Order can be enforced. It was not correct to say that the
use of the words was necessary so as to include such other
courts as might be empowered in terms of Art. 32(3). Nor
was it correct to say that the words could not include a
High Court as its power to issue a writ under Art. 226(1)
was discretionary.
In judging whether a particular proceeding fell within the
purview of the Presidential Order the determining factor was
not its form nor the words in which the relief was couched
but the substance of it. If in granting the relief the
court had to consider whether any of the fundamental rights
mentioned in the Presidential Order, had been contravened,
the proceeding was within the Order, whether it was under
Art. 32(l) or 226(1) of the Constitution.
The right to move the court for writ of habeas corpus under
s. 491(1)(b) of the Code of Criminal Procedure was now a
statutory right and could no longer be claimed under the
common law.
Girindra Nath Banerjee v. Birendra Nath Pal I.L.R. 54 Cal.
727, District Magistrate, Trivandrum v. K. C. Mammen Map-
pillai, I.L.R. [1939] Mad. 708, Matthen v. District
Magistrate, Trivandrum L.R. 66 I.A. 222 and King Emperor v.
Sibnath Banerji, L.R. 72 I.A. 241, referred to.
Since the promulgation of the Constitution the two methods
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by which a citizen could enforce his right of personal
freedom were (i) by a writ under Art. 226(1) or Art.
32(l), or (ii) under s. 491(1)(b) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. Whichever method he adopted if the right he
sought to enforce was a fundamental right guaranteed by the
Constitution the matter must, come within Art. 359(1) of the
Constitution. That the court could exercise its power under
s. 491(1)(b) suo motu could make no
799
difference and Arts. 372, 225 or 375 could provide no valid
ground of attack. The suspension of the right to move any
court, as under the Presidential Order, must necessarily
suspend the Court’s jurisdiction accordingly.
The right to challenge a detention order under s. 491(1)(b)
of the Code had been enlarged by the fundamental rights
guaranteed by the Constitution and when a detenu relied upon
such rights in his petition under that section he was in
substance seeking to enforce his fundamental rights. The
prohibition contained in Art. 359(1) and the Presidential
Order must, therefore, apply.
The expression "right to move any court" in Art. 359(1) and
the Presidential Order takes in all legal actions, filed or
to be filed, in which the specified rights are sought to be
enforced and covers all relevant categories of jurisdictions
of competent courts under which the said actions would
other-wise have been normally entertained and tried.
Sree Mohan Chowdhury v. Chief Commissioner Union Territory
of Tripura, [1964] 3 S.C.R. 442, referred to.
Even though the impugned Act may be invalid by reason of
contravention of Arts. 14, 21 and 22, as contended by the
appellants, that invalidity could not be challenged during
the period prescribed by the Presidential Order and it could
not be said that the President could not because of such
invalidity issue the order.
Where, however, the challenge to the validity of the
detention order was based on any right other than those
mentioned in the Presidential Order, the detenu’s right to
move any court could not be suspended by the Presidential
Order because the right was outside Art. 359(1).
Where again the detention was challenged on the ground that
it contravened the mandatory provisions of the relevant act
or that it was malafide and was proved to be so and in all
cases falling under the other categories of s. 491(1) of the
Code excepting those under s. 491(1)(b), the bar of the
Presidential Order could have no application. So also the
plea that the operative provision of the law under which the
order of detention was made suffered from the vice of
excessive delegation, was an independent plea not relatable
to the fundamental rights mentioned in the Presidential
Order and its validity had to be examined.
The plea that s. 3(2)(15)(i) and s. 40 of the impugned Act
suffered from excessive delegation must fail. The
legislative policy was broad stated in the preamble and the
relevant provisions of ss. 3(1) and 3(2) gave detailed and
specific guidance to the rule making authority and it was
not correct to say that the Act had by the impugned sections
delegated essentially legislative function to that
authority. Rule 30(1)(b) which was consistent with the
operative provisions of the Act could not also be challenged
on that ground.
800
In " The Delhi Laws Act, 1912 etc. [1951] S.C.R. 747,
Harishankar Bagla v. The State of Madhya Pradesh, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 380, Bhatanagars and Co. Ltd., v. The Union of India,
[1957] S.C.R. 701, relied on.
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The impugned Act could not also he struck down as a piece of
colourable legislation because the Preventive Detention Act,
1950, was already on the Statute book. The Parliament had
power under Entry 9, List I of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution and if in view of the grave threat to the
security of India it passed the Act, it could not be said to
have acted malafide.
If the Parliament thought that the executive would not be
able to detain citizens reasonably suspected of prejudicial
activities by a recourse to the Preventive Detention Act,
1950, which provided for the required constitutional
safeguards and the impugned Act which it enacted did not, it
could not be suggested that it was acting malafide. Even if
the impugned Act contravened Arts. 14 and 22 and the
detentions thereunder were- invalid, Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order, which were precisely meant to meet such
a situation, barred investigation on the merits during the
period prescribed by the Order.
The proceeding under s. 491(1)(b) of the Code is one pro-
ceeding and the sole relief that can be claimed under it is
release from the detention. If that could not be claimed
because of the Presidential Order it was unreasonable to say
that a mere declaration that the impugned Act and the
detention thereunder were invalid could be made. Such a -
declaration is clearly outside the purview of s. 491(1)(b)
of the Code as also of Arts. 226(1) and 32(l) of the
Constitution.
The period for which the emergency should continue and the
restrictions that should be imposed during its continuance
are matters that must inevitably be left to the executive.
In a democratic state the effective safeguard against any
abuse of power in peace as also in emergency is the
existence of enlightened, vigilant and vocal public opinion.
Liversidge v. Sir John Anderson, [19421 A.C. 206, referred
to.
The inviolability of individual freedom and the majesty of
law that sustains it are equally governed by the
Constitution which has made this Court the custodian of the
fundamental rights on the one hand and, on the other,
provided for the declaration of the emergency.
Consequently, in dealing with the right of a citizen to
challenge the validity of his detention, effect must be
given to Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order issued under
it. The right specified in that Article must be held to
include such right whether constitutional or
constitutionally guaranteed and the words "any court" must
include the Supreme Court and the High Court.
The Punjab and the Bombay High Courts were, therefore right
in their decision that the applications under s. 491(1)(b)
of
801
the Code were incompetent in so far as they sought to
challenge the validity of the detentions on the ground that
the Act and the Rules under which the orders were made
contravened Arts. 14, 21 and 22(4)(5) and (7) of the
Constitution.
Per Subba Rao, J. It was clear that s. 3(2)(15)(i) of the
Defence of India Act, 1962, and r. 30(1)(b) made under the
Act contravened the relevant provisions of Art. 22 of the
Constitution and were, therefore, void.
Deep Chand v. The State of Uttar Pradesh, [1959] Supp. 2
S.C.R. 840, Mahendra Lal v. State of U.P., A.I.R. 1963 S.C.
1019, A. K. Gopalan v. State of Madras, [1950] S.C.R. 88,
referred to.
Under the Constitution, every person has a right to move the
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Supreme Court, the High Courts or any other court or courts
constituted by the Parliament under Art. 32(3) for the
enforcement of fundamental rights in the manner prescribed.
But while the right to move the Supreme Court is a
guaranteed right, the right to move the others is not so.
Article 359, properly construed, meant that the bar imposed
by the Presidential Order applied not only to the guaranteed
right to move the Supreme Court but also the rights to move
the other courts under Art. 32 and Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
There is no new rule of construction peculiar to war
measures. It is always the same, whether in peace or in war.
The fundamental rule is that the courts have to find out the
expressed intention of the Legislature from the words of the
enactment itself. Words must be given their natural and
ordinary meaning unless there is ambiguity in the language
in which case the court has to adopt that meaning which
furthers the intention of the Legislature.
A constitutional provision such as Art. 359, however, cannot
be given a strained construction to meet a passing phase
such as the present emergency.
Rex v. Halliday, L.R. [19171 A.C. 260, Liversidge v. Sir
John Anderson, L.R. [1942] A.C. 206, Nakkuda A1i v.
jayaratna, L.R. 1951] A.C. 66, Gibbon v. Ogden, (1824) 6 L.
Ed. 23, discussed.
Section 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is wide in its
terms and gives a discretionary power to the High Courts.
Unlike Arts. 32 and 226, the exercise of the power is not
channelled through procedural writs or orders and their
technicalities cannot circumscribe the court’s discretion.
Girindra Nath Banerjee v. Birendra Nath Pal, (1927) I.L.R.
54 Cal. 727, District Magistrate, Trivandrum v. Mammen
Mappillai, I.L.R. 1939 Mad. 708, Matten v. District
Magistrate, Trivandrum, L.R. (1939) 66 I.A. 222, referred
to.
Section 491 is continued by Art. 372 and -Art. 225 preserves
802
the jurisdiction of the High Court. The power it confers on
the High Court is not inconsistent either with Art. 32 or
Art. 226 or any other Article of the Constitution and the
section cannot, therefore, be said to have been impliedly
superseded even to the extent Art. 226 empowers the High
Court to give relief in cases of illegal detention. Though
remedial in form the section postulates the existence of the
substantive right that no person can be deprived of his
liberty except in the manner prescribed by law. It assumes
the existence of the rule of law and empowers High Court to
act suo motu. The rights, substantive and procedural
conferred by it arc different from those under Arts. 32 or
226 of the Constitution. It places the onus on the
custodian to prove that the detention is legal and although
in scrutinising the legality of the detention the court may
have to consider whether the law offends any fundamental
rights, that cannot make the proceeding one for the
enforcement of fundamental rights or the decision anything
but one on the unconstitutionality of a law because of
infringement of fundamental rights generally.
The mode of approach to the High Court under s. 491 of the
Code or the nature of the relief given thereunder cannot be
equated with those under the Constitution. The absolute
discretionary jurisdiction under it cannot be put on a par
with the jurisdiction under Art. 226 which is hedged in by
constitutional limitations.
Alam Khan v. The Crown, (1947) I.L.R. 28 Lahore 274, Ramji
Lal v. The Crown, I.L.R..(1949) 11 E.P. 28, King-Emperor v.
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Vimlabai Deshpande, (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 144, referred to.
While s. 491 gives no right to enforce fundamental rights,
operating as it does as a check on arbitrary action, Art.
359 is concerned not with statutory powers but deals with
the constitutional right and the constitutional enforcement
of it. It was not, therefore, correct to say that Art. 359
would be frustrated if s. 491 was allowed to stand for
Parliament might amend that section any time it liked.
The expression "right to move any court for enforcement of
such of the rights conferred by Part 111" in Art. 359 must
refer only to the right to move under Art. 32 or Art. 226
for the said specific relief and could not be applied to the
exercise of the statutory power of the High Courts under s.
491 of the Code and, consequently, the expression "all
proceedings pending in any court for the enforcement of the
rights" must refer to the proceedings initiated in exercise
of that right.
The detenus could not, therefore, enforce their fundamental
rights under Arts. 21, 32 and 14 while the Presidential
Order lasted, but that did not affect the High Court’s power
under s. 491 of the Code.
The President’s Order cannot bar the detenus from proving
even under Arts. 32(l) and 226 that the detentions were not
made
803
under the Defence of India Ordinance or the Act as they were
outside the Ordinance or the Act or in excess of the power
conferred by them or that the detentions were made malafide
or in fraudulent exercise of power.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 80 of
1963.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 26, 1963, of the Punjab High Court in Criminal Mis.
No. 186 of 1963.
Criminal Appeals Nos. 86 to 93 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 21, 1963 of the Punjab High Court in Criminal Misc.
No. 155, 102, 108, 105, 104, 101 and 107 of 1963 and
judgment and order dated February 1963 of the same High
Court in Criminal Misc. No. 99 of 1963.
Criminal Appeals Nos. 109 to 111 of 1963.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated May 31, 1963 of
the Maharashtra High Court in Criminal Applications Nos.
217, 218 and 114 of 1963.
Criminal Appeals Nos. 114 to 126 of 1963.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated May 31, 1963 of
the Maharashtra High Court in Criminal Applications Nos.
271, 265, 270, 267, 219, 220, 269, 264, 263, 266 and 273 of
1963.
Criminal Appeal No. 65 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 3, 1963, of the Maharashtra High Court (Nagpur Bench)
in Criminal Application No. 11 of 1963.
M. C. Setalvad, N. C. Chatterjee, A. V. Viswanatha Sastri,
S. Mohan Kumaramangalam, C. B. Agarwala, Sarjoo Prasad, D.
R. Prem, A. S. R. Chari, S. G. Patwardhan, W. S. Barlingay,
Etharajalu Naidu, Veda Vyas, Raghubir Singh, K. T . Sule,
Asif Ansari, Hardayal Hardy, Bawa Shiv Charan Singh, S. N.
Mukherjee, Durgabhai Deshmukh, M. S. K. Sastri, G. B. Rai,
Ganpat Rai, D. N. Mukherjee, A. N. Sinha, Udayaratnam, K. V.
Raghnatha Reddy, Janardhan Sharma, K. R. Choudhury, B. P.
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Maheshwari, I. B. Goyal, I. K. Nag, Y. Kumar, Hardev Singh,,
M. I. Khowaja, S. S. Shukla, K. K. lain, Bishambar Lal
Khanna, S. Murthi, P. K. Chakravarti, P. K. Chatterjee, A.
George Pudussary, Girish Chandra Mathur, Udai Pratap
804
Singh,Yogeshwar Prasad,M. R. Krishna Pillai, B. D.Sharma, K.
P. Gupta, T. S. Venkataraman, M. Veerappa,T.R.Ramachandra,
R. C. Prasad, Santosh Chatterjee,N.N. Keshwani, K. Jayaram,
R. Ganapathy Iyer, Thyagarajan, R. Vasudeva Pillai, R. V. S.
Mani, S. C. Majumdar, Shaukat Hussain, K. Baldev Mehta,
Mohan Behari Lal, Sadhu Singh, V. G. Row, S. N. Kakkar, S.
K. Kapur, Parthasarathy, Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar, K. L.
Mehta, Satish Mehta, Brij Kishore Prasad, Ali Ahmad, V. A.
Syeid Muhammad, Narayanarayan Gooptu, Tapesh Roy, Madhan
Bhaittia, Ajit Singh Banis and Brij Raj Kishore, J. B. Dada-
chanji O. C. Mathur, Ravinder Narain, D. P. Singh, M. K.
Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg, and S. C. Agarwal, for the appellant
(in Cr. A. No. 80 of 1963).
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, L. K. Kaushal, Deputy
Advocate-General, Punjab, D. D. Chaudhuri, R. N. Sachthey
and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent (in Cr. A. No. 80 of
1963).
A. S. R. Chari, D. P. Singh, M. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg
and S. C. Agarwal for the appellant (in Cr. A. No. 86 of
1963).
Hardev Singh and Y. Kumar, for the appellants (in Cr. A.
Nos. 87 to 93 of 1963).
L. D. Kaushal, Deputy Advocate-General, Punjab,
D.D.Chaudhri, R. N. Sachthey and R. H. Dhebar, for the
respondent (in Cr. A. Nos. 86 to 93 of 1963).
A. S. R. Chari, 0. P. Malhotra, B. Parthasarathy, J. B.
Dadachanji, 0. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the
appellant (in Cr. A. No. 65 of 1963).
N. C. Chatterjee, and Janardan Sharma, for the appellant
(in Cr. A. No. 109 of 1963).
K. T. Sule, Jitendra Sharma and Janardan Sharma, for the
appellants (in Cr. A. Nos. 111 and 114 to 126 of 1963) and
for the Detenue-Interveners Nos. 12, 14, 16, 18 and 37).
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, N. S. Bindra, B. R. G.
K. Achar, R. N. Sachthey and R. H. Dhebar, for the
respondents (in Cr. A. No. 65, 109 to 111 and 114 to
126/1963).
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, H. N. Sanyal, Solicitor-
General, S. V. Gupte, Additional Solicitor-General,
R.N.Sachthey and R. H. Dhebar, for intervener No. 1
Naunit Lal, for intervener No. 1.
B. Sen and P. K. Bose, for intervener No. 3.
S. P. Varma, for intervener No. 4.
M. Adhikari, Advocate-General, Madhya Pradesh and
I.N.Shroff, for intervener No. 5.
A. Ranganadham Chetty and A. F. Rangam, for intervener No.
6.
G. C. Kasliwal, Advocate-General, Rajasthan, R. H.Dhebar,
R. N. Sachthey, for intervener No. 7.
C. P. Lal, for intervener no. 8.
N. C. Chatterjee, Narayan Gooptu, Tapesh Roy, D. P.Singh,
M. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg and S. C. Agarwal, for
intervener No. 69.
A. S. R. Chari, Narayan Gooptu, Tapesh Roy, D. P. Singh,
M. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg and S. C. Agarwal, for
intervener No. 70.
A. S. Peerbhoy A. Desai, M. Rajagopalan and K. R.
Choudhari, for interveners Nos. 79 and 80.
September 2, 1963. The judgment of P. B. Gajendragadkar, A.
K. Sarkar, K. N. Wanchoo, M. Hidayatullah,B. Gajendragadkar,
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J. K. Subba Rao, J. delivered a dissenting Opinion.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.--This group of 26 criminal appeals has
been placed for hearing and disposal before a special
Constitutional Bench, because the appeals constituting the
group raise two common important questions of Constitutional
law. Nine of these appeals have been preferred against the
decisions of the Punjab High Court, whereas seventeen have
been preferred against the decisions of the Bombay High
Court. All the appellants are detenues who have been
detained respectively by the Punjab and the Maharashtra
State Governments under Rule 30(1)(b) of the Defence of
India Rules (hereinafter called the Rules) made by the
Central Government in exercise of the powers conferred on it
by section 3 of the Defence of India Ordinance, 1962 (No. 4
of 1962) (hereinafter called the Ordinance). They applied
to the Punjab and the Bombay High Courts respectively under
section 491 (1) (b) of the Code of Criminal Procedure and
alleged that they had been improperly and illegally
detained. Their contention was that s. 3(2)(15)(1) and s.
40 of the Defence
806
of India Act, 1962 (No. 51 of 1962) (hereinafter called ’the
Act’) and Rule 36(1)(b) under which they have been detained
are constitutionally invalid, because they contravene their
fundamental rights under Articles 14, 21 and 22(4), (5) &
(7) of the Constitution, and so, they claimed that an order
should be passed in their favour directing the respective
State Governments to set them at liberty. These petitions
have been dismissed on the ground that the Presidential
Order which has been issued under Art. 359 of the
Constitution creates a bar which precludes them from moving
the High Court under s. 491 (1) (b) Cr. P. C. That is how
the decisions of the two High Courts under appeal raise two
common questions of considerable importance. The first
question is : what is the true scope and effect of the
Presidential Order which has been issued under Art. 359 (1)
? The answer to this question would depend upon a fair and
reasonable construction of Art. 359(1) itself. The second
question is : does the bar created by the Presidential Order
issued under Art. 359(1) operate in respect of applications
made by detenues under section 491 (1) (b) of the Code? The
answer to this question would depend upon the determination
of the true character of the proceedings which the detenues
have taken under s. 491(1)(b), considered in the light of
the effect of the Presidential Order issued under Art.
359(1). Both the Punjab and the Bombay High Courts have
held against the appellants. Meanwhile, when similar
petitions were made before the Allahabad High Court in
Criminal Cases Nos. 1618, 1759 and 1872 of 1963 Sher Singh
Negi v. District Magistrate, Kanpur & Anr., the said High
Court took a contrary view and directed the release of the
detenues who had moved it under s. 491 (1) (b) of the Code.
It is because the questions raised are important and the
answers given by the different High Courts have disclosed a
sharp difference of opinion that a Special Bench has been
constituted to deal with these appeals. If the two
principal questions are answered in favour of the detenues,
a third question would arise and that relates to the
validity of the impugned sections of the Act and the
relevant statutory Rules.
On the 8th September, 1962, the Chinese aggressively
attacked the northern border of India and that constituted a
threat to the security of India. That is why on
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the 26th October, 1962, the President issued a Proclamation
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under Art. 352 of the Constitution. This Proclamation
declared, that a grave emergency existed whereby the
security of India was threatened by external aggression. On
the same day, the Ordinance was promulgated by the
President. This Ordinance was amended by Ordinance No. 6 of
1962 promulgated on November 3, 1962. On this day, the
President issued the Order under Art. 359(1), suspending the
rights of citizens to move any Court for the enforcement of
the rights conferred by Arts. 21 and 22 of the Constitution
for the period during which the proclamation of emergency
issued on October 26, 1962 would be in force. On November
6, 1962, the rules framed by the Central Government were
published. Then followed an amendment of the Presidential
Order on November 11 1962. By this amendment, for the words
and figures "article 21" the words and figures "articles 14
and 21" were substituted. On December, 6, 1962, Rule 30 as
originally framed was amended and Rule 30-A added. Last
came the Act on December 12 1962. Section 48(1) of the Act
has provided for the repeal of the Ordinances Nos. 4 and 6
of 1962. Section 48(2) provides that notwithstanding such
repeal, any rules made, anything done or any action taken
under the aforesaid two Ordinances shall be deemed to have
been made, done or taken under this Act as if this Act had
commenced on October 26, 1962. That is how the Rules made
under the Ordinance continued to be the Rules under the Act,
and it is under Rule 30(1) (b) that the appellants have been
detained.
Before dealing with the points which have been raised for
our decision in the present appeals, it is necessary to
indicate briefly at the outset the general argument which
has been urged before us by Mr. Setalvad on behalf of the
appellants, and the learned Attorney-General on the other
side. Art. 359(1.) which falls to be construed, occurs in
Part XVIII of the Constitution which makes emergency
provisions. Whenever the security of India or any part of
the territory of India is threatened whether by war or by
external aggression or internal disturbance, the President
may, under Art. 352, by proclamation, make a declaration to
-,hat effect. Articles 353 to 360 which occur in this Part
thus constitute emergency provisions. The learned
808
Attorney-General contends that in construing an emergency
provision like Art. 359(1), we must bear in mind the fact
that the said Article is intended to deal with a situation
which has posed a threat to the security of India, and so,
fundamental rights guaranteed by Part III which are un-
doubtedly of vital importance to the democratic way of life
guaranteed by the Constitution have to be regulated during
an emergency, because the very security of the nation is
exposed to serious jeopardy. The security of the nation on
such a solemn occasion must have precedence over the liberty
of the individual citizens, and so, it is urged that if Art.
359 is capable of two constructions, one in favour of the
fundamental rights of the citizens, and the other in favour
of the grant of power to the President to control those
rights, the Court should lean in favour of the grant rather
than in favour of the individual citizen’s fundamental
rights.
In support of this argument, the learned Attorney-General
has relied on two decisions of the House of Lords. In The
King (At the Prosecution of Arthur Zadig) v. Halliday,(1)
Lord Finlay L. C. who was called upon to construe Regulation
14B of the Defence of the Realm (Consolidation) Regulations
Act, 1914, noticed the argument that if the Legislature had
intended to interfere with personal liberty, it would have
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 49
provided, as on previous occasions of national danger, for
suspension of the rights of the subject as to a writ of
habeas corpus, and rejected it with the observations that
the Legislature -bad selected another war of achieving the
same purposes, probably milder as well as more effectual
than those adopted on the occasion of previous wars. He
added that the suggested rule as to construing penal
statutes and the provision as to trial of British subjects
by jury made by the Defence of the Realm Act, 1915, have no
relevance in dealing with an executive measure by way of
preventing a public danger.
The majority decision of the House of Lords in Liversidge
v. Sir John Anderson (2 ) has also been relied upon by the
learned Attorney-General. In that case, the House or Lords
had to consider the true scope and effect of Regulation 18B
of the Defence (General) Regulations, 1939.
(1) [1917] A.C. 260, 270.
(2) [1942] A.C. 206.
809
Viscount Maugham in I rejecting the argument of the detenu
that the liberty of the subject was involved and that the
legislation dealing with the liberty of the subject must be
construed, if possible, in favour of the subject and against
the Crown, quoted with approval the language of Lord Finlay,
L. C., in the case of Rex v. Halliday(1). Lord Macmillan
who took the same view observed that it is right so to
interpret emergency legislation as to promote rather than to
defeat its efficacy for the defence of the realm. That is
in accordance with a general rule applicable to the
interpretation of all statutes or statutory regulations in
peace time as well as in war time. Lord Wright and Lord
Romer adopted the same approach. The Attorney-General
relies on the fact that this approach has also been adopted
by Gwyer, C. J., in Keshav Talpade v. The King Emperor(2)..
In making his contention in regard to the proper approach.
which the Court should adopt in construing Art. 359, the
learned Attorney-General no doubt contended that the
question about the approach would arise only if two
constructions are reasonably possible. According to him,
Art. 359 was capable of only one construction and that is
the construction which the High Courts of Punjab and Bombay
have accepted.
On the other hand, Mr. Setalvad has argued that Art. 359 is
not an emergency -legislation properly so called and on the
merits, he has strongly resisted the suggestion made by the
learned Attorney-General that if two reasonable
constructions are possible, we should adopt that which is in
favour of the grant of power to the President and not in
favour of the citizens fundamental rights. He has relied on
the minority speech of Lord Atkin in the case of
Liversidge(3) and has argued that the view taken by Lord
Atkin should be preferred to the majority view which the
House of Lords adopted in that case. "In this country",
observed Lord Atkin, "amid the clash of arms, the laws are
not silent. They maybe changed, but they speak the same
language in war as in peace. It has always been one of the
pillars of freedom, one of the principles of liberty for
which on recent authority we are now fighting, that the
judges are no respecters of persons and stand between
(1) [1917] A.C. 260, 270.
(3) [1942] A.C. 206.
(2) [1943] F.C.R. 49, 63.
52-2 S. C. lndia/64
810
the subject and any attempted encroachments on his liberty
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 49
by the executive, alert to see that any coercive action is
justified in law. In this case, I have listened to
arguments which might have been addressed acceptably to the
Court of King’s Bench in the time of Charles I." Realising
that he was in a minority, Lord Atkin added that he
protested, even if he did it alone, against a strained
construction put on words with the effect of giving ail
uncontrolled power of imprisonment to the Minister. In this
connection, Mr. Setalvad referred to two subsequent
decisions of the Privy Council in which the view taken by
Lord Atkin has been accepted, vide Nakkuda Ali v. M. F. De
S. layaratne(1), and King-Emperor v. Vimalabai Deshpande(2).
In the former case, Lord Radcliffe observed that indeed, it
would be a very unfortunate thing if the decision of
Liversidge’s case came to be regarded as laying down any
general rule as to the construction of such phrases when
they appear in statutory enactments, and he added that the
said decision is an authority for the proposition that the
words "if A. B. has reasonable cause to believe" are capable
of meaning "if A. B. honestly thinks that he has reasonable
cause to believe" and that in the context and attendant
circumstances of Defence Regulation 18B they did in fact
mean just that. In distinguishing the said decision, Lord
Radcliffe made the somewhat significant comment that the
elaborate consideration which the majority of the House gave
to the context and circumstances before adopting that
construction itself shows that there is no general principle
that such words are to be so understood. Mr. Setalvad has
also invited our attention to the fact that the majority
decision of the House of Lords in Liversidge(3) has not
received the approval from jurists, (vide Maxwell on
Interpretation of Statutes p. 276, footnote 54, Craies on
Statue Law p. 309, and Friedmann, Law in a Changing Society
p. 37.) Like the Attorney-General, Mr. Setalvad also urged
that the stage to choose between two rival constructions
would not arise in the present appeals because, according
to him, the construction for which he contended was the only
reasonable construction of Art. 359.
(1) [1951] A.C. 66, 76. (2) 73 I.A. 144.
(3) [1942] A.C. 206.
811
In our opinion, it is unnecessary to decide the merits of
the rival contentions urged before us in regard to the rule
of construction and the approach which the Court should
adopt in construing Art. 359. It is common ground that the
question of approach would become relevant and material only
if we are satisfied that Art. 359 is reasonably capable of
two alternative constructions. As we will presently point
out, after hearing counsel on both sides, we have reached
the conclusion that Art. 359 is reasonably ,capable of only
one construction and that is the construction which has been
put on it by the Punjab and Bombay High Courts. That is why
we are relieved of the task of dealing with the merits of
the controversy between the parties on this point.
Let us then revert to the question of construing Art. 359.
In doing so, it may be relevant and somewhat useful to
compare and contrast the provisions of Articles 358 and 359.
Indeed, both Mr. Setalvad and the learned Attorney-General
contended that Art. 359 should be interpreted in the light
of the background supplied by the comparative examination of
the respective provisions contained in Arts. 358 and 359 (1)
& (2). The said two Articles read as under :-
"358. While a Proclamation of Emergency is in operation,
nothing in article 19 shall restrict the power of the State
as defined in Part III to make any law or to take any
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executive action which the State would but for the
provisions contained in that Part be competent to make or to
take, but any law so made shall, to the extent of the
competency, cease to have effect as soon as the Proclamation
ceases to operate, except as respects things done or omitted
to be done before the law so ceases to have effect
359-(1) Where a Proclamation of Emergency is in operation,
the President may by order declare that the right to move
any Court for the enforcement of such of the rights
conferred by Part III as may be mentioned in the order and
all proceedings pending in any court for the enforcement of
the rights so mentioned shall remain suspended for the
period during which the Proclamation is in force or for such
shorter period a may be specified in the order.
812
(2)Any order made as aforsesaid may extend to the whole or
any part of the territory of India."
It would be noticed that as soon as a Proclamation of
Emergency has been issued under Art. 352 and so long as it
lasts, Art. 19 is suspended and the power of the legis-
latures as well as the executive is to that extent made
wider. The suspension of Art. 19 during the pendency of the
Proclamation of emergency removes the fetters created on the
legislative and executive powers by Art. 19 and if the
legislatures make laws or the executive commits acts which
are inconsistent with the rights guaranteed by Art. 19,
their validity is not open to challenge either during the
’continuance of the emergency or even thereafter. As soon
as the Proclamation ceases to operate, the legislative
enactments passed and the executive actions taken during the
course of the said emergency shall be inoperative to the
extent to which they conflict with the rights guaranteed
under Art. 19 because as soon as the emergency is lifted,
Art. 19 which was suspended during the emergency is
automatically revived and begins to operate. Article 358,
however, makes it clear that things done or omitted to be
done during the emergency cannot be challenged even after
the emergency is over In other words, the suspension of Art.
19 is complete during the period in question and legislative
and executive action which contravenes Art. 19 cannot be
questioned even after the emergency is over.
Article 359, on the other hand, does not purport expressly
to suspend any of the fundamental rights. It authorises the
President to issue an order declaring that the right to move
any court for enforcement of such of the rights in Part III
as may be mentioned in the order and all proceedings pending
in any court for the enforcement of the rights so mentioned
shall remain suspended for the period during which the
Proclamation is in force or for such shorter period as may
be specified in the order. What the Presidential Order
purports to do by virtue of the power conferred on ’the
President by Art. 359(1) is to bar the remedy of the
citizens to move any court for the enforcement of the
specified rights. The rights are not expressly suspended,
but the citizen is deprived of his right to move any court
for their enforcement. That is one important
813
distinction between the provisions of Art. 358 and Art.
359(1).
Before proceeding further, we may at this stage, in
parenthesis, observe that there has been some argument
before us on the question as to whether the fundamental
rights specified in the Presidential Order issued under Art.
359 are even theoretically alive during the period specified
in the said Order. The learned Attorney-General has
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contended that the suspension of the citizens’ right to move
any court for the enforcement of the said rights, in law,
amounts to the suspension of the said rights themselves for
the said period. We do not propose ,to decide this question
in the present appeals. We will assume in favour of the
appellants that the said rights -arc, in theory, alive and
it is on that assumption that we ’will deal with the other
points raised in the present appeals.
The other distinction lies in the fact that the suspension
of Art. 19 for which Art. 358 provides continues so long as
the Proclamation of Emergency is in operation, whereas the
suspension of the right to move any court which the
Presidential Order under Art. 359(1) brings about can last
either for the period of the Proclamation or for a shorter
period if so specified by the Order.
It would be noticed that the Presidential Order cannot widen
the authority of the legislatures or the executive; it
merely suspends the rights to move any court to obtain a
relief on the ground that the rights conferred by Part III
have been contravened if the said rights are specified in
the Order. The inevitable consequence of this position is
that as soon as the Order ceases to be operative, the
infringement of the rights made either by the legislative
enactment or by executive action can perhaps be challenged
by, a citizen in a court of law and the same may have to be
tried on the merits on the basis that the rights alleged to
have been infringed were in operation even during the
pendency of the Presidential Order. If at the
expiration .of the Presidential Order, Parliament passes any
legislation to protect executive action taken during the
pendency, of the Presidential Order and afford indemnity to
the executive in that behalf, the validity and the effect of
such legislative action may have to be carefully
scrutinised.
814
Since the object of Art. 359(1) is to suspend the rights of
the citizens to move any court, the consequence of the
Presidential Order may be that any proceeding which may be
pending at the date of the Order remains suspended during
the time that the Order is in operation and may be revived
when the said Order ceases to be operative; and fresh
proceedings cannot be taken by a citizen after the Order has
been issued, because the Order takes away the right to move
any court and during the operation of the Order, the said
right cannot be exercised by instituting a fresh proceeding
contrary to the Order. If a fresh proceeding failing within
the mischief of Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order
issued under it is instituted after the Order has been
issued, it will have to be dismissed as being incompetent.
In other words, Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order
issued under it may constitute a sort of moratorium or a
blanket ban against the institution or continuance of any
legal action subject to two important conditions. The first
condition relates to the character of the legal action and
requires that the said action must seek to obtain a relief
on the ground that the claimant’s fundamental rights
specified in the Presidential Order have been contravened,
and the second condition relates to the period during which
this ban is to operate. The ban operates either for the
period of the Proclamation or for such shorter period as may
be specified in the Order.
There is yet another distinction between the provisions of
Art. 358 and Art. 359(1). The suspension of Art’. 19 for
which, provision is made under Art. 358 applies to the whole
of the country, and so, covers all legislatures and also
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States. On the other hand, the Order issued under Art.
359(1) may extend to the whole of India or may be confined
to any part of the territory of India. These, -broadly
stated, are the points of distinction between Art. 358 and
Art. 359(1),
What then is the true scope and effect of, Art. 359(1).?
Mr. Setalvad contends that the right to move any court for
the enforcement of such of the rights conferred by Part III
as may be mentioned in the Order should be -construed to
mean the right to move the Supreme Court which has been
guaranteed by Art. 32(1). He suggests that as one reads the
relevant clause in Art. 359(1), one seems
815
to hear the echo of the right which has been constitu-
tionally guaranteed by Art. 32(1). His argument, therefore,
is that the only right of which a citizen can be deprived
under Art. 359(1) is the right to, move the Supreme Court,
and so, his case is that even in regard to fundamental
rights specified in the Presidential Order, a citizen is
entitled to ask for reliefs from the High Court under Art.
226 because the right to move the High Court flowing from
Art. 226 does not fall within the mischief of Art. 359(1).
This argument attempts to interpret the words "the right to
move for the enforcement of the specified rights" in
isolation and without; taking into account the other words
which indicate that the right to move which is specified in
the said Article is the right to move "any courts$. In
plain language, the words "any court" cannot mean only the
Supreme Court- they would necessarily take in all courts of
competent jurisdiction. If the intention of the
Constitution makers was to confine the operation of Art.
359(1) to the right to move only the Supreme Court, nothing
could have been easier than to say so expressly instead of
using the wider words "the right to move any court.’)
To meet this difficulty,Mr. Setalvad attempted to invoke
the assistance of Art.. 32(3). Art. 32(3) provides that
without prejudice to the: powers conferred on the Supreme
Court by clauses (1) and’ (2), Parliament may by law empower
any other court, to exercise within the local limits of its
jurisdiction all or any of the powers exercisable by the
Supreme Court under clause (2). The argument is that the
Constitution -contemplates that there may be some other
courts in the country on which the powers exercisable by the
Supreme Court under Art. 32(2) may be conferred, and so, the
words "any court" may have been intended to take within
their purview the Supreme Court and such other courts oil
whom the Supreme Courts powers under Art. 32(2) may have
been conferred. This argument is fallacious. The scheme of
Art. 32 clearly indicates that the right to move this Court
which itself is a guaranteed fundamental right,, cannot be
claimed in respect of courts falling under Art. 32(3). Art.
32(3) merely provides for the conferment of this Court’s
816
powers under Art. 32(2) on the courts specified in clause
(3). The right guaranteed by Art. 32(1) cannot be claimed
in respect of the said other courts. Therefore, oh a plain
construction of the relevant clauses of Art. 32, it is
impossible to accept the argument that courts under Art.
32(3) must be regarded as having the same status as the
Supreme Court and as such the right to move them must also
be held to constitute a fundamental right of the citizen in
respect of such courts. Besides, it would be irrational to
suggest that whereas the Constitution did not confer on the
citizens a guaranteed fundamental right to move the High
Court under Art. 226, it thought of conferring such a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 49
guaranteed fundamental right in regard to courts on which
the Supreme’ Court’s powers under Art. 32(2) would be
conferred by Art. 32(3). Therefore, the attempt to suggest
that ’the use of the words "any Court" used in Art. 359(1)
is justified because they take in the Supreme Court and some
other courts, fails and the conclusion inevitably follows
that the words "any court" must be given their plain
grammatical meaning and must be construed to mean any court
of competent jurisdiction. In other words the words "any
court" include the Supreme Court and the High Courts before
which the specified rights can be enforced by the citizens.
In this connection, it was attempted to be argued that the
power of the High Court to issue the writs or orders
specified in Art. 226(1) is a discretionary power and as
such, no citizen can claim to have a right to move the High
Court in that behalf, and’. so, it was suggested that the
proceedings contemplated by Art. 226(1) are outside the
purview of Art. 359(1). In our opinion, this argument is
not well-founded. It is true that in issuing writs or
orders under Art. 226(1), the High Courts have discretion to
decide whether a writ or, %,order should be issued as
claimed by the petitioner; but the discretion conferred on
the High Courts in that behalf has to be judicially exer-
cised, and having regard to the scheme - of Art. 226(1), it
cannot be said that a citizen. has no right to move the High
Court for invoking its jurisdiction under Art. 226(1); Art.
226(1) confers wide powers on the High Courts to issue the
specified writs, or other appropriate orders or directions;
having regard to the nature of the said powers,
817
and the object intended to be achieved by their conferment
there can be little doubt that in dealing with applications
made before them the High Courts have to exercise their
discretion in a judicial manner and in accordance with
principles which are well-settled in that behalf. The High
Courts cannot capriciously or unreasonably refuse to en-
tertain the said applications and to deal with them on the
merits on the sole ground that the exercise of their juris-
diction under Art. 226(1) is discretionary. Therefore, it
is idle to suggest that the proceedings taken by citizens
under Art. 226(1) are outside the purview of Art. 359(1).
We must accordingly hold that the right to move any court
under Art. 359(1) refers to the right to move any court of
competent jurisdiction.
The next question to consider is, what is the nature of the
proceedings which are barred by the Presidential Order
issued under Art. 359(1) ? They are proceedings taken by
citizens for the enforcement of such of the rights conferred
by Part III as may be mentioned in the order. If a citizen
moves any court to obtain a relief on the ground that his
fundamental rights specified in the Order have been
contravened, that proceeding is barred. In determining the
question as to whether a particular proceeding falls within
the mischief of the Presidential Order or not, what has to
be examined is not so much the form which the proceeding has
taken, or the words in which the relief is claimed, as the
substance of the matter and consider whether before granting
the relief claimed by the citizen, it would be necessary for
the Court to enquire into the question whether any of his
specified fundamental rights have been contravened. If any
relief cannot be granted to the citizen without determining
the question of the alleged infringement of the said
specified ’fundamental rights, that is a proceeding which
falls under Art. 359(1) and would, therefore, be hit by the
Presidential Order issued under the said Article. The sweep
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,of Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order issued under it
is thus wide enough to include all claims made by citizens
in any court of competent jurisdiction when it is shown that
the said claims cannot be effectively adjudicated upon
without examining the question as to whether the citizen is
in substance, seeking to enforce any of the
818
said specified fundamental rights. We have already seen that
the operation of Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order
issued under it is limited to the period during which the
proclamation of emergency is in force, or for such shorter
period as may be specified in the Order. That being so, we
feel no difficulty in holding that proceedings taken by a
citizen either under Art. 32(1) or under Art. 226(1) are hit
by Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order issued under it.
In this connection it would be legitimate to add that the
contention of the appellants which seeks to confine the
operation of Art. 359(1) only to the right to move the
Supreme Court, would make the said provision almost
meaningless. There would be no point in preventing the
citizen from moving this Court, while leaving it open to him
to move the High Courts for the same relief and then to come
to this Court in appeal, if necessary.
That takes us to the question as to whether proceedings
taken by a citizen under s. 491(1)(b) are affected by Art.
359(1) and the Presidential Order issued under it. Section
491 (1) (b), inter alia, provides that any High Court may,
whenever it thinks fit, direct that a person illegally or
improperly detained in public custody be set at liberty. It
has been strenuously urged before us that the proceedings
for obtaining directions of the nature of habeas corpus
which are taken under s. 491 (1) (b) are outside Art.
359(1), and so, the Presidential Order cannot create a bar
against a citizen asking the High Court to issue a writ in
the nature of habeas corpus under the said provision. It is
necessary to examine this argument very carefully.
It is well-known that after section 491 was enacted in the
Code of Criminal Procedure in the present form in 1923, the
right to obtain a direction in the nature of a habeas corpus
became a statutory right in India. After 1923, it was not
open to any party to ask for a writ of habeas corpus as a
matter of common law. This question was elaborately
considered by Rankin, C. J., in Girindra Nath Banerjee v.
Birendra Nath Pal(1), where the learned C.J. considered the
history of the development of the law on this point and came
to the conclusion that the relief of a writ in the nature of
a habeas corpus could be claimed
(1) I.L.R. 54 Cal. 727.
819
after 1923 solely under Cr. P. C. The same view was taken
by a full Bench of the Madras High Court in District
Magistrate, Trivandrum v. K. C. Mammen Mappillal(1), where
the said High Court held that it had no power to issue a
writ of habeas corpus as known to the English Common Law.
Its powers are confined in that respect to those conferred
by s. 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which gives
authority to issue directions of the nature of habeas
corpus. When this point was raised before the Privy Council
in Matthen v. District Magistrate of Trivandrum (2), their
Lordships observed that the reasoning of Rankin C.J. in the
case of Girindra Nath Banerjee(3) was so clear and
convincing that they were content to adopt it, as also to
state that they were in entire agreement with the views
expressed by him. The same view was expressed by the Privy
Council in King-Emperor v. Sibnath Banerji(4). Basing
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himself on these decisions, Mr. Setalvad contends that the
statutory right to obtain relief under s. 491 (1) (b) is a
right which is separate and distinct from the Constitutional
right guaranteed by the relevant Articles of the
Constitution, and so, Art. 359(1) cannot be said to apply to
the proceedings under s. 491 (1) (b).
In support of the same contention, Mr. Setalvad has also
pressed into service the provisions of Art. 372 by which the
existing laws are continued and he has invited our attention
to the provisions of Art. 225 and 375 to show that the
jurisdiction conferred on the High Courts by s. 491 Cr. P.
C. continues unless it is expressly taken away by a
competent piece of legislation.
In this connection, reliance has also been placed on the
fact that in the past whenever the operation of s. 491 was
intended to be suspended, the legislature made a specific
provision in that behalf and as an illustration, reference
is made to s. 10 of the Restriction and Detention Ordinance,
1944 (No, III of 1944). Section 10 specifically refers to
s. 491 of the Code and provides that no Court shall have
power to make any order under the said section in respect of
any order made under or having, effect under the Ordinance,
or in respect of any person the subject of such an order.
It is urged that the Presidential Order is con-
(1) I.L.R. 1939 Mad. 708(2) 66 I.A. 222.
(3) I.L.R. :54 Cal, 727.(4) 72 I.A. 241.
820
fined only to proceedings taken for enforcement of consti-
tutional rights and if it was intended that the proceedings
under s. 491(1)(b) should also be prohibited, it was essen-
tial that the said provision should, in terms, have been
suspended by a competent piece of legislation.
Mr. Setalvad has also emphasised the fact that the approach
in dealing with a proceeding under s. 491(1)(b) is different
from the approach which the courts adopt in dealing with
proceedings under Art. 226 or Art. 32. In invoking the
Jurisdiction of the High Courts under Art. 226(1), or that
of the Supreme Court under Art. 32(1), the Courts always
enquire whether the party concerned is aggrieved by the
order against which complaint is made. Under s. 491(1)(b),
however, the court can take action suo motu and that brings
out the difference in the character of the two respective
categories of proceedings. That, broadly stated, is the
manner in which Mr. Setalvad has raised his contention that
proceedings under s. 491 (1) (b) are outside the purview of
the Presidential Order and do not fall within the mischief
of Art. 359(1).
There is no doubt that the right to ask for a writ in the
nature of habeas corpus which could once have been treated
as a matter of Common Law has become a statutory right after
1923, and as we have already seen after s. 491 was
introduced in the Cr. P. C., it was not open to any citizen
in India to-claim the writ of habeas corpus on grounds
recognised by Common Law apart from the provisions of s.
491(1)(b) itself. It has, however, been suggested by the
learned Attorney-General that just as the common law right
to obtain a writ of habeas corpus became a statutory right
in 1923, a part of the said statutory .tight has now become
a part of the fundamental rights guaranteed by the
Constitution, and so, after the Constitution came into
force, whenever a detenu claims to be released from illegal
or improper’ detention, his claim can, in some cases, be
sustained on the ground that illegal or improper detention
affects his fundamental rights guaranteed by Arts. 19, or 21
or 23 as the case may be. If that be so, it would not be
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easy to accede to the argument that the said part of the
statutory right recognised by s. 491(1)(b) retains its
distinctive and independent character even after
821
the Constitution came into force to such an extent that it
cannot be said to form part of the fundamental rights
guaranteed by the Constitution.
It is true that there are two remedies open to a party whose
right of personal freedom has been infringed; he may move
the Court for a writ under Art. 226(1) or Art. 32(1) of the
Constitution, or he may take a proceeding under s.491(1)(b)
of the Code. But it seems to us that despite the fact that
either of the two remedies can be adopted by a citizen who
has been detained improperly or illegally, the right which
he claims is the same if the remedy sought for is based on
the ground that there has been a breach of his fundamental
rights; and that is a right guaranteed to the citizen by the
Constitution, and so, whatever is the form of the remedy
adopted by the detenu, the right which he is seeking to
enforce is the same.
It is no doubt urged that under s. 491 (1) (b) a stranger
can apply for the release of a detenu improperly or
illegally detained, or the Court itself can act suo motu.
This argument is based on the provision that the High Court
may, whenever it thinks fit, issue the appropriate
direction. The learned Attorney-General contended that the
clause "whenever it thinks fit" postulates that some
application or petition has been filed before the Court and
on perusing the application or petition it appears to the
Court fit to take the appropriate action. In other words,
his argument is that the Court cannot take suo motu action
under s. 491(1)(b). He has also urged that a third person
may apply, but he must show that he has been duly authorised
to act on behalf of the detenu or he must at least purport
to act on his behalf. We do not think it necessary to
express any opinion on this part of the controversy between
the parties. We are prepared to assume that the court can,
in a proper case, exercise its power under s. 491(1)(b) suo
motu, but that, in our opinion, does not affect the decision
of the question with which we are concerned. If Art. 359(1)
and the Presidential Order issued under it govern the
proceedings taken under s. 491 (1) (b), the fact that the
court can act suo motu will not make any difference to the
legal position for the simple reason that if a party is
precluded from claiming his release on the ground set out by
him in his petition, the
822
Court cannot, purporting to act suo motu, pass any order
inconsistent with the provisions of Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order issued under it. Similarly, if the pro-
ceedings under s. 491(1)(b) are hit by Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order, the arguments based on the provisions of
Art. 372 as well as Arts. 225 and 375 have no validity. The
obvious and the necessary implication of the suspension of
the right of the citizen to move any Court for enforcing his
specified fundamental right.-, is to suspend the
Jurisdiction of the Court pro tanto in that behalf.
Let us take a concrete case which will clearly bring. out
the character of the proceedings taken by the detenues in
the present cases. An application is made on behalf of the
detenu that he is illegally or improperly detained. The
State in its return pleads that the detention is neither
illegal nor improper because it has been effected under rule
30(1) (b), and in support of this return reliance is placed
on the provisions of s. 3(2)(15)(i) of the Act. On
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receiving this return, it is urged on behalf of the detenu
that the provisions of s. 3(2)(15)(i) as well as Rule
30(1)(b) are invalid because they contravene the fundamental
rights guaranteed to the citizens under Arts. 14, 21 and 22
and so, the sole issue which falls to be determined between
the parties relates to the validity of the relevant
statutory provisions and Rules. If the impugned provisions
in the Act and the Rules are ultra Vires the detention is
illegal and improper, but if, on the other hand, the said
provisions are valid, the detention is legal and proper. In
deciding this point, the Court will naturally have to take
into account the provisions of s. 45(1) of the Act. Section
45(1) provides that no order made in exercise of any power
conferred by or under this Act shall be called in question
in any Court; and the reply of the detenu inevitably would
be that notwithstanding this provision, the validity of the
impugned legislation must be tested. This clearly brings
out the true nature and character of the dispute which is
raised before the Court by the detenu in asking for the
issue of a writ of habeas corpus in the present proceedings.
The question which thus arises for our decision is, can it
be said that the proceedings taken under s. 491 (1) (b) are
823
of such a distinctly separate character that they cannot
fall under Art. 359(1) ? Under s. 491 as it stood before the
date of the Constitution, it would have been open to the
detenu to contend that the law under which he was detained
was invalid, because it was passed by a legislature without
legislative competence. The validity of the law might also
have been challenged on the ground that the operative
provision in the law suffered from the vice of
excessive.delegation. The detenu might also have urged that
in detaining him the mandatory provisions under the Act had
not been complied with. But before the Constitution was
adopted, it would not have been open to the detenu to claim
that the impugned law was invalid because it contravened his
fundamental rights guranteed by the relevant Articles of the
Constitution. The right to challenge the validity of a
statute on the ground that it contravenes the fundamental
rights of the citizens has accrued to the citizens of this
country only after and as a result of the provisions of the
Constitution itself, and SO, there can be no doubt that when
in the present proceedings the detenues seek to challenge
the validity of the impugned statutory provision and the
Rule, they are invoking their fundamental rights under the
Constitution. If s. 491. is treated as standing by itself
and apart from the provisions of the Constitution, the plea
raised by the detenues cannot be entertained in the
proceedings taken under that section ; it is only when the
proceedings taken under the said section are dealt with not
only in the light of s. 491 and of the rights which were
available to the citizens before 1950, but when they are
considered also in the light of the fundamental rights
guaranteed by the Constitution that the relevant plea can be
raised. In other words, it is clear that the content of the
detenu’s right to challenge the legality of his detention
which was available to him under s. 491(1)(b) prior to the
Constitution, has been enlarged by the fundamental rights
guaranteed to the citizens by the Constitution, and so,
whenever a detenu relies upon his fundamental rights even in
support of his petition made under s. 491(1)(b) he is really
enforcing the said rights and in that sense, the proceedings
inevitably partake of the character of proceedings taken by
the detenu for enforcing these rights; that is why the
argument that Art. 359(1)
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824
and the Presidential Order issued under it do not apply to
the proceedings under s. 491(1)(b) cannot be sustained. The
prohibition contained in the said Article and the
Presidential Order will apply as much to proceedings under
s. 491(1)(b) as to those under Art. 226(1) & Art. 32(1).
In this connection, it is hardly necessary to emphasise that
in deciding the present question, we must take into account
the substance of the matter and not attach undue or
exaggerated importance to the form of the proceedings. If
the form which the proceedings take is held to be decisive
in the matter, it would lead to this irrational position
that an application containing the requisite averments in
support of a plea for the release of the detenu, would be
thrown out by the High Court if in form it purports to be
made under Art. 226, whereas it would be entertained and may
indeed succeed if it purports to be made under s. 491(1)(b).
Indeed, this argument seems to suggest that when the
Constitution-makers drafted Art. 359, they intended that
whenever an emergency arises and a Presidential Order is
issued under Art. 359(1) in regard to the fundamental rights
guaranteed by Arts. 21 and 22, it would be necessary to pass
another piece of legislation providing for an appropriate
change or repeal of a part of the provision of s. 491(1)(b),
Cr. P. C.; and since the legislature has through oversight
omitted to pass the necessary Act in that behalf,
proceedings under s. 491(1)(b) must be allowed to be
continued free from the bar created by the Presidential
Order. In our opinion, this position is wholly untenable.
Whether or not the proceedings taken under s. 491(1)(b) fall
within the purview of the Presidential Order, must depend
upon the construction of Art. 359(1) and the Order, and in
dealing with this point, we must look at the substance of
the matter and not its form. Before giving relief to the
detenu who alleges that he has been illegally and impropely
detained, is the High Court required to consider the
validity of the operative provisions of the impugned Act on
the ground that they infringe the specified fundamental
rights? If yes, the bar created by Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order must inevitably step in even though the
proceedings in form may have been taken under s. 49t(1)(b)
of the Code. In our opinion, therefore, once it is shown
that the proceedings under
825
s.491(1)(b) cannot make a substantial progress unless the
validity of the impugned law is examined on the ground of
the contravention of the specified fundamental rights, it
must follow that the bar created by the Presidential Order
operates against -them as much as it operates against
proceedings taken under Art. 226(1) or Art. 32(1). Thus,
the true legal position, in substance, is that the clause
"the right to move any court" used in Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order takes in all legal actions intended to be
filed, or filed, in which the specified rights are sought to
be enforced, and it covers all relevant categories of
Jurisdictions of competent courts under which the said
actions would otherwise normally have been entertained and
tried.
At this stage, we may conveniently refer to the recent
decision of this Court in Sree Mohan Chowdhury v. The Chief
Commissioner, Union Territory of Tripura(1), wherein this
Court rejected the detenu’s petition on the ground that it
was barred by the Presidential Order and it refused to
entertain the argument that the Ordinance and the Act and
the Rules framed thereunder were void for the reason that
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they contravened Arts. 14, 21 & 22, with the observation
that the challenge made by the petitioner in that behalf
really amounted to "arguing in the circle". If the
Presidential Order precludes a citizen from moving the Court
for the enforcement of the specified fundamental rights, it
would not be open to the citizen to urge that the Act is
void for the reason that it offends against the said
fundamental rights. It is in order to prevent the citizen
from making such a claim that the Presidential Order has
been issued, and so, during the period of its operation, the
challenge to the validity of the Act cannot be entertained.
Incidentally, it may be observed that a petition for a writ
of habeas corpus made by Mohan Chowdhury which was rejected
by this Court on the ground that it was barred under the
Presidential Order would, on the view for which the
appellants contend, be competent if it is presented before
the appropriate High Court under s. 491(1)(b) of the Code;
and that incidentally illustrates how exaggerated importance
to the form of the petition would lead to extremely
anomalous and irrational consequences. Therefore, our
conclusion is that the proceedings
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R.412.
53-2 SC India/64
826
taken on behalf of the appellants before the respective High
Courts challenging their detention on the ground that the
impugned Act and the Rules arc void because they contravene
Arts. 14, 21 and 22, arc incompetent for the reason that the
fundamental rights which are alleged to have been
contravened are specified in the Presidential Order and all
citizens ire precluded from moving any Court for the
enforcement of the said specified rights.
The next question to consider is the validity of tile
Presidential Order itself which was issued on the 3rd
November, 1962. This is how the Order reads:
"G.S.R. 1464.-In exercise of the powers conferred by clause
(1) of article 359 of the Constitution, the
President hereby declares that the right of
-any person to move any court for the
enforcement of the rights conferred by article
21 and article 22 of the Constitution shall
remain suspends for the period during which
the Proclamation of Emergency issued under
clause (1) of article 352 thereof on ,lie 26th
October, 1962 is in force, if such person has
been delivered of any such rights under the
Defence of India Ordanance, 1962 (4 of 1.962)
or any rule or order made thereunder."
We have already stated that this Order was subsequently
modified on the 11th November, 1962, by the addition of Art.
14. The first argument which has been urged against the
validity of this Order is that it is inconsistent with the
provisions of Art. 359(1). It is argued that the Order
which the President is authorised to issue under this
Article must be an Order of general application; in fact,
the Order purports to be confined to persons who have been
deprived of any of the specified rights under the Defence of
India Ordinance, 1962, or any Rule or Order made thereunder.
In other words, there is no doubt that this Order does not
apply to persons who have been detained under the provisions
of the earlier Preventive Detention Act No. 4 of 1950, and
so, in limiting the application of the Order to persons who
have been detained under the Ordinance, the President has
acted outside the powers conferred on him by Art. 359(1).
In our opinion, this argument cannot be sustained. The
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power conferred on the President is wide enough to enable
him to make an Order applicable to all parts of the country
and to all
827
citizens and in respect of any of the rights conferred by
Part 111. This wide power obviously includes the power to
issue a limited order. What the Order purports to do is to
provide that all persons wherever they reside who have been
detained under the Ordinance or the Act, will be precluded
from moving any court for the enforcement of the rights
specified in the Order. It is not easy to see how this
Order can be said to contravene or be otherwise inconsistent
with the powers conferred on the President by Art. 359(1).
It is then argued that the said Order is invalid because it
seeks to give effect to the Ordinance which is void. It
will be recalled that Ordinance No. 4 of 1962 was promul-
gated on the 26th October, 1962, whereas the Order was
issued under Art. 359(1) on the 3rd November, 1962. The
argument is that during the period between the 26th October
and the 3rd November the validity of the said Ordinance
could have been challenged on the ground that it contravened
Arts. 14, 21 and 22, and so, the said Ordinance can be held
to have been a still-born piece of legislation and yet
detentions effected under such a void law are sought to be
protected by the Presidential Order by depriving the the
detenues of their right to move any court to challenge the
validity of the orders of detention passed against them. In
our opinion, this argument is wholly misconceived. We have
already stated that for the purpose ’of these appeals, we
are prepared to assume that despite the issue of the Order
under Art. 359(1), the fundamental rights guaranteed by
Arts. 14, 21 and 22 are not suspended; what is suspended is
the enforcement of the said rights during the prescribed
period, and so, what is said about the invalidity of the
Ordinance during the period between 26th October and 3rd
November is true even after the Order was issued on the 3rd
November. If the detenues are justified in contending that
the Ordinance and the Act which took its place contravened
the fundamental rights guaranteed by Arts. 14, 21 and 22,
the said Ordinance and the Act would be and would continue
to be invalid; but the effect of the Presidential Order is
that their invalidity cannot be tested during the prescribed
period. Therefore, the argument that since the Ordinance or
the Act is invalid, the Presidential Order cannot preclude a
citizen from test-
828
ing its validity, must be rejected.
The same argument is put in another form. It is urged that
we have merely to examine the Ordinance and Act to be
satisfied that Arts. 14, 21 and 22 (4), (5) and (7) have
been contravened and it is suggested that if these
infirmities in the Ordinance and the Act are glaring, it
would not be open to the President to issue an Order pre-
venting the detenues from challenging the validity of the
said statutory provisions. That, in substance, is what is
described by this Court in Mohan Choudhury’s case(1) as
arguing in the circle". Therefore, we are satisfied that
the challenge to the validity of the Presidential Order is
not well-founded.
It still remains to consider what are the pleas which are
now open to the citizens to take in challenging the legality
or the propriety of their detentions either under s.
491(1)(b) of the Code, or Art. 226(1) of the Constitution.
We have already seen that the right to move any court which
is suspended by Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order
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issued under it is the right for the enforcement of such of
the rights conferred by Part III as may be mentioned in the
Order. If in challenging the validity of his detention
order, the detenu is pleading any right outside the rights
specified in the Order, his right to move any court in that
behalf is not suspended, because it is outside Art. 359(1)
and consequently outside the Presidential Order itself. Let
us take a case where a detenu has been detained in violation
of the mandatory provisions of the Act. In such a case, it
may be open to the detenu to contend that his detention is
illegal for the reason that the mandatory provisions of the
Act have been contravened. Such a plea is outside Art.
359(1) and the right of the detenu to move for his release
on such a ground cannot be affected by the Presidential
Order.
Take also a case where the detenu moves the Court for a writ
of habeas corpus on the ground that his detention has been
ordered malafide. It is hardly necessary to emphasise that
the exercise of a power malafide is wholly outside the scope
of the Act conferring the power and can always be
successfully challenged. It is true that a mere allegation
that the detention is malafide would not be
(1) [1964] 3. S.C.R. 442.
829
enough; the detenu will have to prove the malafides. But if
the malafides are alleged, the detenu cannot be precluded
from substantiating his plea on the ground of the bar
created by Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order. That is
another kind of plea which is outside the purview of Art.
359(1).
Section 491(1) deals with the power of the High Court to
issue directions in the nature of the habeas corpus, and it
covers six categories of cases in which such a direction
,can be issued. It is only in regard to that class of cases
falling under s. 491(1)(b) where the legality of the deten-
tion is challenged on grounds which fall under Art. 359(1)
and Presidential Order that the bar would operate. In all
other cases falling under s. 491(1) the bar would be inap-
plicable and proceedings taken on behalf of the detenu will
have to be tried in accordance with law. We ought to add
that these categories of pleas have been mentioned by us by
way of illustration, and so, they should not be read as
exhausting all the pleas which do not fall within the
purview of the Presidential Order.
There is yet another ground on which the validity of the
detention may be open to challenge. If a detenu contends
that the operative provision of the law under which he is
detained suffers from the vice of excessive delegation and
is, therefore, invalid, the plea thus raised by the detenu
cannot at the threshold be said to be barred by the Presi-
dential Order. In terms, it is not a plea which is
relatable to the fundamental rights specified in the said
Order. It is a plea which is independent of the said rights
and its validity must be examined. Mr. Chatterjee has urged
before us that s. 3(2) (15) (i) as well as s. 40 of the Act
are invalid, because they confer oil the rule making
authoritypower which is often described as excessive
delegation.It is,therefore, necessary to consider this
point. The Actwhich took the place of the Ordinance was
passed, because it was thought necessary to provide for
special measures to ensure the public safety and interest,
the defence of India and civil defence and for the trial of
certain offences and for matters connected therewith.
Section 3(2)(15)(i) whose validity is challenged purports to
confer on the Central Government power to make Rules.
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Section 3(1) reads thus :
830
"The Central Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, make such rules as appear to it necessary or
expedient for securing the defence of India and civil
defence, the public safety, the maintenance of public order
or the efficient conduct of military operations, or for
maintaining supplies and services essential to
the life of the community."
Section 3(2) provides that without prejudice to the gene-
rality of the powers conferred by sub-s. (1) the rules may
provide for, and may empower any authority to make orders
providing for, all or any of the following matters; then
follow clauses (1) to (57), including several subclauses
which provide for the matters that may be covered by the
Rules. Amongst them is cl. (15)(i) which reads as under:-
"Notwithstanding anything in any other law for the time
being in force,-the rules to be made may provide for the
apprehension and detention in custody of any person whom the
authority empowered by the rules to apprehend or detain (the
authority empowered to detain not being lower in rank than
that of a District Magistrate) suspects, on grounds
appearing to that authority to be reasonable, of being of
hostile origin or of having acted, acting, being about to
act or being likely to act in a manncr prejudicial to the
defence of India and civil defence, the security of the
State, the public safety or interest, the maintenance of
public order, India’s relations with foreign States, the
maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part or area of
India or the efficient conduct of military operations, or
with respect to whom that authority is satisfied that his
apprehension and detention are necessary for the purpose of
preventing him from acting in any such prejudicial manner."
The argument is that in conferring power on the Central
Government to make rules, the legislature has abdicated its
essentially legislative function in favour of the Central
Government. In our opinion, this argument is wholly un-
tenable. Right up from the time when this Court dealt with
Special References in 1951, In re The Delhi Laws Act, 1912
etc.(1) the question about the limits within which
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 747.
831
the legislature can legitimately confer powers on its dele-
gate has been examined on several occasions and it has been
consistently held that what the legislature is prohibited
from doing is to delegate its essentially legislative func-
tion and power. If it appears from the relevant provisions
of the impugned statute that powers which have been
delegated include powers which can legitimately be regarded
as essentially legislative powers, then the legislation is
bad and it introduces a serious infirmity in the Act itself.
On the other hand, if the legislature lays down its
legislative policy in clear and unambiguous terms and leaves
it to the delegate to execute that policy by means of making
appropriate rules, then such delegation is not
impermissible. In Harishanker Bagla v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh(1) where the validity of section 3 of the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, was challenged, this
Court in upholding the validity of the impugned statute held
that the preamble and the body of the relevant sections of
the said Act sufficiently formulate the legislative policy
and observed that the ambit and the character of the- Act is
such that the details of that policy can only be worked out
by delegating that power to a subordinate authority within
the framework of that policy. The same view has been
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expressed in Bhatnagars and Co., Ltd., v. The Union of
India(-). In the present cases, one has merely to read s.
3(1) and the detailed provisions contained in the several
clauses of s. 3(2) to be satisfied that the attack against
the validity of the said section on the ground of excessive
delegation is patently unsustainable. Not only is the
legislative policy broadly indicated in the preamble to the
Act, but the relevant provisions of the impugned section
itself give such detailed and specific guidance to the rule
making authority that it would be idle to contend that the
Act has delegated essentially legislative function to the
rule making authority. In our opinion, therefore, the
contention that s. 3(2)(15)(i) of the Act suffers from the
vice of excessive delegation must be rejected. What we have
said about this section applies with equal force to s. 40.
If the impugned sections of the Act are valid, it follows
that Rule 30(1)(b) which is challenged by the appellants
must be
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 380.
(2) [1957] S.C.R. 701.
832
held to be valid since it is consistent with the operative
provisions of the Act and in making it, the Central Gov-
ernment has acted within its delegated authority. This
conclusion is, of course, confined to the challenge of the
appellants based on the ground that the impugned provisions
and the Rule suffer from the vice of excessive delegation.
If we had held that the impugned provision in the Act
suffered from the vice of excessive delegation, it would
have become necessary to consider what the effect of that
conclusion would have been on the merits of the controversy
between the parties in the present proceedings. If we had
reached the conclusion that the impugned sections were
invalid because they conferred power on the rule-making
authority which suffers from the vice of excessive
delegation, the question would have arisen whether in
challenging the validity of the Order of detention passed
against him the detenu is enforcing his fundamental right
under Art. 21 of the Constitution. Art. 21 is one of the
articles specified in the Presidential Order and if at any
stage of the proceedings, the detenu seeks to enforce his
right under the said Article, that would be barred. It may
be urged that if the detenues had been able to show that the
impugned provisions of the Act were invalid because they
suffered from the infirmity of excessive delegation, the
next step which they would have been entitled to take was to
urge that their detention under such an Act is void under
Art. 21, because the law referred to in that Article must be
a valid law; and that would raise the question as to whether
this latter plea falls within the ambit of Art. 359(1) and
the Presidential Order issued under it. We do not propose
to express any opinion on this question in these appeals.
Since we have held that the Act does not suffer from the
vice of excessive delegation as alleged, it is unnecessary
to pursue the enquiry as to whether if the challenge had
been upheld, the detenu would have been precluded from
urging the said invalidity in support of his plea that his
detention was illegal.
We must now turn to some other arguments which were urged
before us at the hearing of these appeals. Mr. Sule
contends that part of the Act containing the im-
833
pugned sections was a colourable piece of legislation. His
argument was that since the Preventive Detention Act No. 4
of 1950 was already on the statute book, it was hardly
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necessary for the Legislature to have passed the impugned
Act, and he urges that since the sole object of the
Legislature in passing the impugned Act was to deprive the
citizens of their fundamental rights under Arts. 21 and 22,
it should be deemed to be a colourable piece of legislation.
The legislative competence of the Parliament to pass this
Act is not disputed. Entry No. 9 in List I in the Seventh
Schedule confers on the Parliament jurisdiction to make laws
in regard to the preventive detention for reasons connected
with defence, foreign affairs, or the security of India as
well as in regard to persons subjected to such detention.
If the Legislature thought that having regard to the grave
threat to the security of India posed by the Chinese
aggression, it was necessary to pass the impugned Act
notwithstanding the fact that another Act had already been
passed in that behalf, it would be difficult to hold that
the Legislature had acted malafide and that the Act must,
therefore, be struck down as a colourable exercise of
legislative power. It is hardly necessary to emphasise that
a plea that an Act passed by a legislature competent to pass
it is a colourable piece of legislation, cannot succeed on
such flimsy grounds. Whether or not it was wise that this
part of the Act should have been passed, is a matter which
is wholly irrelevant in dealing with the plea that the Act
is a colourable piece of legislation.
In this connection, we may refer to another aspect of the
same argument which has been pressed before us. Before
doing so, however, let us briefly indicate the effect of the
relevant Articles. Article 14 guarantees equality before
law. Article 21 provides, inter alia, that no person shall
be deprived of his personal liberty, except according to
procedure established by law, and Art. 22(4), (5) (6) & (7)
lay down Constitutional safeguards for the protection of the
citizen whose personal liberty may be affected by an order
of detention passed against him. Article 22(4) requires
that an Advisory Board should be constituted and that cases
of detenues should be referred to the Advisory Board for its
opinion as provided therein. Article 22(5)
834
imposes an obligation on the detaining authority to commu-
nicate to the detenu grounds on which the order of detention
has been passed against him with a view to afford him the
earliest opportunity of making a representation against the
order. Article 22(6) provides that in giving notice to the
detenu under Art. 22(5), facts need not be disclosed which
the detaining authority considers to be against public
interest to disclose, and Art. 22(7) prescribes certain
conditions which have to be satisfied by any law which the
Parliament may pass empowering - the detention of citizens.
It is thus clear that the Constitution empowers the
Parliament to make a law providing for the detention of
citizens, but this power has to be exercised subject to the
mandatory conditions specified in Art. 22(4), (5) & (7). It
is common ground that the Preventive Detention Act of 1950
complies with these requirements inasmuch as it has enacted
sections 7 to 13 in that behalf. It is also clear that
these Constitutional safeguards have not been provided for
by the impugned Act.
The argument is that even if the Parliament thought that
during the period of emergency, citizens reasonably
suspected to be engaged in prejudicial activities should be
detained without affording them the benefit of the Con-
stitutional safeguards guaranteed by Art. 22(4), (5) & (7),
the Parliament need not have enacted the Act and might well
have left the executive to take action under the Preventive
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Detention Act of 1950, and since Parliament has chosen to
pass the Act under challenge and has disregarded the
Constitutional provisions of Articles 14 and 22, the
exercise of legislative power by Parliament must, in the
context, be held to be a colourable exercise of legislative
power. This argument seems to assume that if the Parliament
had expected the executive to detain citizens under the
Preventive Detention Act of 1950 without giving them the
benefit of the Constitutional safeguards prescribed by Art.
22, their cases could have been covered if a Presidential
Order had been issued under Art. 359(1) in respect of such
detentions.
The question is: is this assumption well-founded? Assuming
that the Presidential Order had suspended the citizens’
right to move any court for enforcing their fundamental
rights under Arts. 14, 21 and 22 and had made
835
the said Order applicable to persons detained under the
Preventive Detention Act of 1950, could that Order have
effectively prevented the detenues from contending that
their detention was illegal and void? In such a case, if
the detenu was detained under the Preventive Detention Act
of 1950 and he challenged the validity of his detention on
the ground that the relevant provisions of the said Act had
not been complied with, would his challenge be covered by
Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order issued under it? In
other words, can it be said that in making the said
challenge, he was enforcing his fundamental rights specified
in the Presidential Order? If it is held that he was
challenging the validity of his detention because the
mandatory provisions of the Act had not been complied with,
his challenge may be outside Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order. If, on the other hand, it is held that,
in substance, the challenge is to enforce his aforesaid
fundamental rights, though he makes the challenge by
reference to the relevant statutory provisions of the Act
themselves that would have brought Ills challenge within the
prohibition of the Presidential Order. Normally, as we have
already held, a challenge against the validity of the
detention on the ground that the statutory provisions of the
Act under which the detention is ordered have not been
complied with, would fall outside Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order, but the complication in the hypothetical
case under discussion arises because unlike other provisions
of the Act, the mandatory provisions in question essentially
represent the fundamental rights guaranteed by Art. 22 and
it is open to argument that the challenge in question sub-
stantially seeks to enforce the said fundamental rights. In
the context of the alternative argument with which we arc
dealing at this stage, it is unnecessary for us to decide
whether the challengein question would have attracted
the provisions ofArt. 359(1) and the Order or not. We are
referringto this matter only for the purpose of showing
thatthe Parliament may have thought that the executive
would not be able to detain citizens reasonably suspected of
prejudicial activities by taking recourse to the Preventive
Detention Act of 1950, and that may be the genesis of the
impugned Act. If that
836
be so, it would not be permissible to suggest that in
passing the Act, Parliament was acting malafide.
It is quite true that if the Act has contravened the
citizens’ fundamental rights under Arts. 14 and 22, it would
be void and the detentions effected under the relevant
provisions of the said Act would be equally inoperative; but
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it must be remembered that it is precisely in this set of
circumstances that Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order
issued under it step in and preclude the citizen from
enforcing his fundamental rights in any court. The said
Article as well as the Presidential Order issued under it
indicate that there may be cases in which the specified
fundamental rights of citizens have been contravened by
executive action and the impugned executive action may be
invalid on that account. That is precisely why the said
Article and the Presidential Order impose a ban against the
investigation of the merits of the challenge during the
period prescribed by the Order. Therefore, the alternative
argument urged in support of the plea that the impugned
provisions of the Act amount to a colourable piece of
legislation fails.
Mr. Parulekar who argued his own case before us with
remarkable ability, contended that a detenu cannot be
prevented from disputing the validity of the Ordinance, Act
and the Rules under the Presidential Order if he did not ask
for any consequential relief. His argument was that the
prayer made in his petition under s. 491(1)(b) consists of
two parts; the first prayer is to declare that the impugned
Act and the Order are invalid, and the second prayer is that
his detention should be held to be illegal and his release
should accordingly be ordered. The first prayer, says Mr.
Parulekar, cannot fall within the mischief of the Order
because he is not enforcing any of his rights when he asks
merely for a declaration that the law is invalid, and he
suggested that even if we take the view that he is precluded
from challenging the validity of his detention by virtue of
the said Order, we should not preclude him from challenging
the validity of the law merely with a view to obtain a
declaration in that behalf. In our opinion, this argument
cannot be accepted. What s. 359(1) purports to do is to
empower the President to make an Order by which the right of
the detenue to move the Court
437
to challenge the validity of his detention on the ground
that any of his fundamental rights specified in the Order
have been contravened, is suspended, and so, it would be
unreasonable to suggest that what the detenu cannot do in
order to secure his release, he should be allowed to do
merely for the purpose of obtaining an academic declaration.
A proceeding taken under s. 491(1)(b) like a petition filed
under Art. 226(1) or Art. 32(1) is intended to obtain
relief, and the relief in such cases means the order for the
release of the detenu. If the detenu is prohibited from
asking for an order of release on the ground that the
challenge to the validity of his order of detention cannot
be made during the pendency of the Presidential Order, we do
not see how it would be open to the same detenu to claim a
mere declaration either under s.491, Cr. P.C. or Art.
226(1) or Art. 32(1) of the Constitution. We do not think
that it was open to the High Court to consider the validity
of the impugned Act without relation to the prayer made by
the detenu in his petition. The proceedings commenced by
the detenu by means of his petition under s. 491(1)(b)
constitute one proceeding and if the sole relief which the
detenu seeks to obtain cannot be claimed by him by virtue of
the Presidential Order, it would be unreasonable to hold
that he can claim a different relief, VI Z., a mere
declaration; such a relief is clearly outside the purview of
the proceedings under s. 491(1)(b) and Arts. 226(1) and
32(1).
During the course of the hearing of these appeals, it has
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been strenuously pressed before us by Mr. Setalvad that the
emergency created by the Chinese act of aggression may last
long and in consequence, the citizens would be precluded
from enforcing their fundamental rights specified in the
Presidential Order during the period that the Order is in
operation. That, however, has no material bearing on the
points with which we are concerned. How long the
Proclamation of Emergency should continue and what
restrictions should be imposed on the fundamental rights of
citizens during the pendency of the emergency, are matters
which must inevitably be left to the executive because the
executive knows the requirements of the situation and the
effect of compulsive factors which operate during periods of
grave crisis, such as our country is facing
838
today. As Lord Wright observed in the case of Liver-
sidge(1), "the safeguard of British liberty is in the good
sense of the people and in the system of representative and
responsible government which has been evolved. If extra-
ordinary powers are here given, they are given because the
emergency is extraordinary and are limited to the period of
the, emergency." The other aspect of Mr. Setalvad’s argument
was that during Operation the Presidential Order, the
executive may abuse. Its powers and the citizens would have
no remedy. This argument is essentially political and its
impact on the constitutional question with which we are
concerned is at best indirect. Even so, it may be
permissible to observe that in a democratic State, the
effective safeguard against abuse of executive powers
whether in peace or in emergency, is ultimately to be found
in the existence of enlightened, vigilant and vocal public
opinion.
The appellants have also relied upon the made by Lord Atkin
in the case of Eshuqbavi Elecko v. Officer Administering the
Government of Nigeria (2). "In accordance with British
jurisprudence," said Lord Atkin, "no member of the executive
can interfere with the liberty or property of a British
subject except on the condition that he can support the
legality of his action before a Court of Justice. And it is
the tradition of British Justice that Judges should not
shrink from deciding such issues in the face of the
executive." These noble sentiments so eloquently expressed
by Lord Atkin as well as his classic minority speech in the
case of Liversidge evoke a spontaneous response in the minds
of all of us who have taken the oath to administer law in
accordance with our Constitution and to uphold the
fundamental rights of citizens guaranteed by the
Constitution. This Court is fully conscious of the solemn
duty imposed on it by Art. 32 which constitutes it the
Custodian and Guardian of the citizens’ fundamental rights.
But we must remember that the democratic faith in the
inviolable character of individual liberty and freedom and
the majesty of law which sustains it must ultimately be
governed by the Constitution itself. The Constitution is
the law of laws-the paramount
(1) [1942] A.C. 206
(2) A.I.R. 1931 P.C. 248.
839
and supreme law of the country. It has itself enshrined the
fundamental rights of the citizens in the relevant Articles
of Part III and it is no doubt the duty of this Court as the
Custodian of those rights to see that they are not
contravened contrary to the provisions of the Constitution.
But the Constitution itself has made certain emergency
provisions in Chapter XVIII with a view to en-,Able the na-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 49
tion to meet grave emergencies like the present, and so, in
dealing with the question about the citizen’s right to chal-
lenge the validity of his detention, we will have to give
effect to the plain words of Art. 359(1) and the
Presidential Order issued under it. As we have already
indicated, the only reasonable construction which can be
placed upon Art. 359)(1) is to hold that the citizen’s right
to take any legal proceeding for the enforcement of his fun-
damental rights which have been specified in the Presi-
dential Order is suspended during the prescribed period. It
is, in our opinion, plain that the right specified in Art.
35)(1) includes the relevant right, whether it is statutory,
Constitutional or Constitutionally guaranteed, and the words
"any court" refer to all courts of competent jurisdiction
and naturally include the Supreme Court and the High Courts.
If that be so, it would be singularly inappropriate for this
Court to entertain an argument which seeks to circumvent
this provision by suggesting that the right of- the detenu
to challenge the legality of his detention under s.
491(1)(b) does not fall within the scope of the said
Article. The said argument concentrates attention on the
mere form of the petition and ignores the substance of the
matter altogether. In the context, we think, such a
sophisticated approach which leans solely on unrealistic and
artificial subtlety is out of place and is illogical,
unreasonable and unsound. We must, therefore, hold that the
Punjab and the Bombay High Courts were right in coming to
the conclusion that the detenues before them were not
entitled to contend that the impugned Act and the statutory
Rule under which they were deained were void for the reason
that they contravened Arts. 14, 21 and 22(4), (5) & (7).
Before we part with these appeals, we ought to mention one
more point. At the commencement of the hearing of these
appeals when Mr. Setalvad began to argue about
840
the validity of the impugned provisions of the Act and the
Rules, the learned Attorney-General raised a preliminary
contention that logically, the appellants should satisfy
this Court that it was open to them to move the High Courts
on the grounds set out by them before the validity of the
said grounds is examined. He suggested that, logically, the
first point to consider would be whether the detenues can
challenge the validity of the impugned Act on the ground
that they arc illegally detained. If they succeed in
showing that the applications made by them under s.
491(1)(b) are competent and do not fall within the purview
of Art. 359(1) and the Presidential Order, then the stage
would be reached to examine the merits of their complaint
that the said statutory provisions are invalid. If,
however, they fail on the first point, the second Point
would not fall to be considered. We then took the view that
since a large number of appeals were placed for hearing
before us and they raised important issues of Constitutional
Law, it would be better to allow Mr. Setalvad to argue the
case in the manner he thought best, and so, Mr. Setalvad
addressed us on the validity of the Act in the first
instance and then dealt with the question about the
competence of the applications made under s. 491 (1) (b) of
the Code. In the main, the same method was adopted by the
learned Advocates who followed Mr. Setalvad on the
appellants’ side. Naturally, when the learned Attorney-
General made his reply, he also had to address us on both
the points. It appeared that as regards the validity of the
impugned provisions of the Act and the Rules he was not in a
position to challenge the contention of the appellants that
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the Act contravened Arts. 14, 21 and 22(4), (5) & (7). Even
so, he strongly pressed before us his original contention
that we would not reach the stage of expressing our opinion
on the validity of the Act if we were to uphold the
preliminary objection that the applications made by the
detenues were incompetent. In our opinion, the learned
Attorney-General is right when he contends that we should
not and cannot pronounce any opinion on the validity of the
impugned Act if we come to the conclusion that the bar
created by the Presidential Order operates against the
detenues in the present cases. In fact, that is the course
which this Court
841
adopted in dealing with Mohan Choudhury’s case(1), and we
are satisfied that that is the only course which this Court
can logically and with propriety adopt.
In the result, we hold that the Punjab and the Bombay High
Court are right in coming to the conclusion that the
applications made by the detenues for their release under s.
491 (1) (b), Cr. P. C. are incompetent in so far as they
seek to challenge the validity of their detentions on the
ground that the Act and the Rule under which they are
detained suffer from the vice that they contravene the
fundamental rights guaranteed by Arts. 14, 21 and 22(4), (5)
and (7). Since these appeals were placed before the Special
Bench for the decision of the common questions of law raised
by them, we do not propose to examine the other contentions
which each one of the appellants seeks to raise in his
appeal. Therefore, we direct that all the appeals included
in the present group should now be set down before a
Constitution Bench and each one of them should be dealt with
in accordance with law.
SUBBA RAO J.-I have had the advantage of reading the
judgment of my learned brother, Gajendragadkar J. I regret
my inability to agree with him wholly. I agree with his
conclusion in regard to the applicability of Art. 359 of the
Constitution to a right to move a court both under Art.
32(1) and Art. 226 thereof, but not with his conclusion in
regard to the exercise of power by the High Court under
s.491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
These appeals raise questions of great importance touching
apparently conflicting, but really harmonious, concepts of
individual liberty and security of the State, for the former
cannot exist without the latter. My only Justification for
a separate treatment of the subject even on questions on
which ,here is general agreement is my conviction that on
important questions I should express my thoughts in my own
way. Broadly, two questions are posed for the consideration
of this Court, namely (i) whether s. 3(2) (15) (i) of the
Defence of India Act, 1962 (51 of 1962), hereinafter called
the Act, and r. 30(1)(b) of the Rules made in exercise of
the power conferred under the Act are constitutionally void;
and (ii) whether the Order made by the President in exercise
of the power conferred on ’him under Art. 359(1) of the
Constitution would be a
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 442.
54- 2 S. C. India/64
842
bar against the maintainability.of any action in any court
to question the validity of the detention order made under
the Act.
I shall deal with the two questions in the said order.
Before dealing with the first question it would be conveni-
ent to quote the impugned provisions of the Act.
Section 3.-( 1) The. Central Government may
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by notification in the Official Gazette, make
such rules as appear to it necessary or
expedient for securing the defence of India
and civil defence, the public safety, the
maintenance of public order or the efficient
conduct of military operations, or for
maintaining supplies and services essential to
the life of the community.
(2)Without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred by sub-section (1), the rules may provide for, and
may empower any authority to make orders providing for, all
or any of the following matters, namely.
(15)notwithstanding anything in any other law for the time
being in force,-
(i) the apprehension and detention in custody of any person
whom the authority empowered by the rules to apprehend or
detain (the authority empowered to detain not being lower in
rank than that of a District Magistrate) suspects, on
grounds appearing to that authority to be reasonable, of
being of hostile origin or of having acted, acting, being
about to act or being likely to act in a manner prejudical
to the defence of India and civil defence, the security of
the State, the public safety or interest, the maintenance of
public order, India’s relations with foreign States, the
maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part or area of
India or the efficient conduct of military operations, or
with respect to whom that authority is satisfied that his
apprehension and detention are necessary for the purpose of
preventing him from acting in any such prejudicial manner,
Rule 30.-(1) The Central Government or the State Government,
if it is satisfied with respect to any particular person
that with a view to preventing him from
843
acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of India and
civil defence, the public safety, the maintenance of public
order, India’s relations with foreign powers, the
maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part of India, the
efficient conduct of military operations or the maintenance
of supplies and services essential to the life of the
community, it is necessary so to do, may, make an order-
(b)directing that he be detained.
Rule30A.-(2) Every detention order shall be reviewedin
accordance with the provisions hereinafter
contained.
(3)A detention order made by the Central Government Or the
State Government or the Administrator shall be reviewed by
the Central Government or the State Government or the
Administrator, as the case may be.
(4)A detention -order made by an officer (who shall in no
case be lower in rank than that of a District Magistrate)
empowered by the State Government or the Administrator shall
be reviewed :-
(a) in the case of an order made by an officer empowered by
the State Government, by a reviewing authority consisting of
any such two officers from among the following officers of
that Government, that is to say, the Chief Secretary, a mem-
ber of the Board of Revenue, a Financial Commissioner and a
Commissioner of a Division, as may be specified by that
Government by notification in the Official Gazette ;
(b) in the case of an order made by an officer empowered by
the Administrator, by the Administrator himself.
Under the said provisions the Central Government or the
State Government or an officer on whom the power to detain
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 49
is delegated can direct the detention of any person if the
detaining authority is satisfied that his detention is
necessary for one or other of the reasons mentioned in r.
30. No grounds of detention need be served upon the detenu;
no opportunity need be given to him to make representations
or establish his innocence. The period of detention can be
indefinite. The Central Government or the
844
State Government or the Administrator of a Union Territory,
as the case may be, is authorised to review the order of
detention made by them. So too, a detention order made by
an officer empowered by the State Government in that behalf
can be reviewed by one or other of the officers mentioned in
r. 30A (4)
It is contended that the said provisions infringe Art. 22(4)
and (5) of the Constitution and, therefore, void. This
Court in Deepchand v. The State of Uttar Pradesh(1) laid
down the effect of a law made in infringement of fundamental
rights; and observed :
"The result of the aforesaid discussion may be summarized in
the following propositions; (i) whether the Constitution
affirmatively confers powers on the legislature to make laws
subject-wise or negatively prohibits it from
infringing any fundamental right, they
represent only, two aspects of want of
legislative power; (ii) the Constitution in
express terms makes the power of a legislature
to make laws in regard to the entries in the
Lists of the Seventh Schedule subject to the
other provisions of the Constituion and
thereby circumscribes or reduces the said
power by the limitations laid down in Part III
of the Constitution; (iii) it follows from the
premises that a law made in derogation or in
excess of that power would be ab initio void
wholly or to the extent of the contravention,
as the case may be;......................"
This view was accepted by a later decision of this Court in
Mahandra Lal v. State of U.P.(2).
It is, therefore, manifest that if the Act and the rules
framed thereunder infringed the provisions of Art. 22(4) and
(5) of the Constitution, they would be ab initio void they
would be stillborn law and any detention made thereunder
would be an illegal detention. Articles 21 and 22 enshrine
fundamental rights relating to personal liberty,. Clauses
(4) to (6) of Art. 22 specifically deal with preventive
detention. This Court has held in A. K . Gopalan v. State
of Madras(3) that the word ’.,law" in Art. 21 means State-
made law or enacted law and that Art. 22 lays down only the
minimum procedural conditions which such a
(1) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 8, 40.
(2 ) A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1019. (3) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
845
a statutory law cannot infringe in the matter of pre-
ventive detention. The minimum conditions arc as follows:
(1) Parliament may make a law prescribing the maximum period
for which any person may be detained; (2) he shall not be
detained for a period more than 3 months unless an Advisory
Board constituted for that purpose reports before the expiry
of three months that there is sufficient cause for detention
; and (3) the authority making the order shall communicate
to such person the grounds on which the order has been made
and afford him the earliest opportunity of making
representations against the order. At the same time cl. (7)
enables Parliament to make a law prescribing the
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circumstances under which and the class or classes of cases
in which a person may be detained for a period longer than
three months without obtaining the opinion of the Advisory
Board. Clause (6) of Art. 22 enables an authority not to
disclose facts to the detenu which it considers to be
against the public interest to disclose. While cls. (4) to
(6) of Art. 22 provide for the minimum safeguards for a
dctenu in the matter of preventive detention, cl. (7)
removes them enabling Parliament to make a law for
preventive detention ignoring practically the said
safeguards. The only outstanding safeguard, therefore, is
that Parliament can only make a law in derogation of the
said safeguards by defining the circumstances under which
and the class or classes of cases in which a person may be
so detained. Parliament did not make such a law.
Neither the Act nor the rules made thereunder satisfy the
conditions laid down in that clause. The Act and the rules
do not provide for the maximum period of detention, for the
communication to the detenu of the grounds of detention, for
affording him an opportunity of making representations
against his detention, or for an Advisory Board consisting
of persons with the requisite qualifications. The power to
review given to the detaining authority cannot conceivably
satisfy the condition of an Advisory Board provided for
under cl. (4)(a) of Art. 22. It is, therefore, a clear case
of Parliament making a law in direct infringment of the
relevant provisions of Art. 22 of the Constitution, and
therefore the law so made is void under the said Article.,
846
In this context a relevant aspect of the argument advanced
by the learned Attorney-General may be noticed. He contends
that, on a true construction of Art. 359(1) of the
Constitution, if the requisite order is made by the
President, a law can be made in infringement of Art. 22 of
the Constitution. Under Art. 359, the President may by
order declare that the right to move any court for the
enforcement of such of the rights conferred by Part III as
may be mentioned in the order shall remain suspended for the
period during which a Proclamation of Emergency is in force
or for such shorter period as may be specified in the order.
It is contended that when remedy is suspended in respect of
infringement of Art. 22, the right thereunder also falls
with it. It is said that right and remedy are reciprocal;
and if there cannot be a right without a remedy, there
cannot also be a remedy without a right. In "Salmond on
jurisprudence", 11th Edn., the following interesting passage
is found, at p. 531, under the heading "Ubi jus Ibi
Remedium";
"Whenever there is a right, there should also be an action
for its enforcement. That is to say, the substantive law
should determine the scope of the law of procedure, and not
vice versa. Legal procedure should be sufficiently elastic
and comprehensive to afford the requisite means for the
protection of all rights which the substantive law sees fit
to recognize. In early systems this is far
from being the case. We there find remedies
and forms of action determining rights than
rights determining remedies. The maxim of
primitive law is rather, Ubi remedium ibi
jus."
I understand this passage to mean that a right pertains to
the substantive law and the remedy, to procedural law; that
where a right is provided by a statute a remedy, though not
expressly provided for, may necessarily be implied. But the
converse, though obtained in primitive law, cannot be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 49
invoked in modern times. To put it in other words, the
suspension of a remedy cannot abrogate the right itself.
Indeed, a comparative study of Arts. 358 and 359 of the
Constitution indicates that it could not have been the
intention of the makers of the Constitution, for Art. 358
expressly suspends the right whereas Art. 359 suspends the
remedy. If the contention of the learned Attorney
847
General be accepted, both have the same effect: if that was
the intention of the makers of the Constitution, they would
not have expressed themselves in different ways in the two
articles. Where they intended to suspend the right, they
expressly said so, and where they intended only to suspend
the remedy, they stated so. We cannot, therefore, accept
this contention.
At this stage I may also notice the argument of the learned
Attorney General that Art. 359, by enabling the President to
suspend the right to move for the enforcement of the
fundamental rights mentioned therein, impliedly permitted
Parliament to make laws in violation of those fundamental
rights in respect whereof the right to move the court is
suspended. I cannot appreciate this argument. It is one
thing to suggest that in view of the amplitude of the
phraseology used in Art. 359, the right to move for the
enforcement of fundamental rights infringed by a void law,
even deliberately made by Parliament, is suspended but it is
a different thing to visualize a situation when the
Constitution permitted Parliament under the shelter of
executive fiat to make void laws. Indeed, a comparison of
Art. 358 and Art. 359 I shall deal with them in detail later
on-indicates the contrary. I cannot for a moment attribute
to the august body, the Parliament, the intention to make
solemnly void laws. It may have made the present impugned
Act bona fide thinking that it is sanctioned by the
provisions of the Constitution. Whatever it may be, the
result is, we have now a void Act on the statute book and
under that Act the appellants before us have been detained
illegally. To use the felicitous language of Lord Atkin, in
this country "amid the clash of arms, the laws are not
silent; they may be chanced, but they speak the same
language in war as in peace". The tendency to ignore the
rule of law is contagious, and, if our Parliament, which
unwittingly made a void law, not only allows it to remain on
the statute book, but also permits it to be administered by
the executive, the contagion may spread to the people, and
the habit of lawlessness, like other habits, dies hard.
Though it is not my province, I venture to suggest, if I
may, that the Act can be amended in conformity with our
Constitution without it losing its effectiveness.
This leads us to the question whether the appellants,
948
who are illegally detained, can move this Court under Art.
32 of the Constitution or the High Court under Art. 226
thereof or under s. 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
hereinafter called the Code. It would be convenient at this
stage to read the relevant provisions of the Constitution.
Article 32.(1) The right to move the Supreme Court by
appropriate proceedings for the enforcement of the rights
conferred by this Part is guaranteed.
(3)Without prejudice to the powers conferred on the
Supreme Court by clauses (1) and (2), Parliament may by law
empower any other Court to exercise within the local limits
of its jurisdiction all or any of the powers exercisable by
the Supreme Court under clause (2).
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(4)The right guaranteed by this article shall not be
suspended except as otherwise provided for by this
Constitution.
Article. 226 (1) Notwithstanding anything in article 32,
every High Court shall have power, throughout the
territories in relation to which it exercises jurisdiction,
to issue to any person or authority, including in
appropriate cases any Government, within those territories
directions, orders or writs, including writs in the nature
of habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition,’ quo warranto and
certiorari, or any of them, for the enforcement of any of
the rights conferred by Part III and for any other purpose.
(2)The power conferred on a High Court by clause (1) shall
not be in derogation of the power conferred on the Supreme
Court by clause (2) of article 32.
Article 358. While a Proclamation of Emergency is in
operation nothing in article 19 shall restrict the power of
the State as defined in Part III to make any law or to take
any executive action which the State would but for the
provisions contained in the Part be competent to make or to
take, but any law so made shall, to the extent of the
incompetency, cease to have effect as soon as the
Proclamation ceases to operate,
849
except as respects things done or omitted to be done before
the law so ceases to have effect.
Article 359 (1) Where a Proclamation of Emergency is in
operation, the President may by order declare that the right
to move any court for the enforcement of such of the rights
conferred by Part III as may be mentioned in the order and
all proceedings pending in any court for the enforcement of
the rights so mentioned shall remain suspended for the
period during which the Proclamation is in force or for such
shorter period as may be specified in the order.
Article 33 confers power on Parliament to modify the rights
conferred by Part III in their application to Armed Forces
or the Forces charged with the maintenance of public order;
Art. 34 enables Parliament to impose restrictions an the
rights conferred by Part III while martial law is in force
in any area.
The contention of learned counsel for the appellants on the
construction of the said provisions may be classified under
the following heads: (1) Art. 358 permits the State to make
laws only in infringement of Art. 19 of the Constitution,
and Art. 359 suspends only the right to move the enforcement
of the fundamental rights specified in the President’s Order
and, therefore, Art. 359 cannot be so construed as to
enlarge the legislative power of Parliament beyond the
limits sanctioned by Art. 358 and, therefore, it should be
confined only to executive infringements of the said rights.
(2) Article 359 does not permit the executive to commit
fraud on the Constitution by doing indirectly what
Parliament cannot do directly under Art. 358 and Art. 13(2)
of the Constitution. (3) For invoking Art. 359 two
conditions must be complied with, namely, (i) the party
shall have a right to move any court, and (ii) only for the
enforcement of the rights conferred by Part III. Such a
right to move for such a relief is expressly conferred by
the Constitution under Art. 32. Therefore, the President’s
order under Art. 359 would only suspend the right to move
under Art. 32 and not for approaching the Court under Art.
226 of the Constitution. In any view, those words are
inappropriate to a pre-existing statutory right under s. 491
of the Code.
850
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To appreciate the contentions from a correct perspective it
is necessary at the outset to notice the nature of the
fundamental rights enshrined in the Constitution and the
remedy or remedies provided for their enforcement. It would
be pedantic to go into the question whether fundamental
rights provided for under our Constitution are natural
rights or primordial rights : whatever their origin might
have been and from whatever source they might have been
extracted, they are enshrined in our Constitution in Part
III and described as fundamental rights. The constitution
declared under Art. 13(2) that the State shall not make any
law taking away or abridging the said rights and any law
made in contravention of this clause shall be void to the
extent of the contravention. After declaring such a law
void, it proceeds to provide for the mode of enforcement of
the said rights. Article 32(1) makes the right to move the
Supreme Court by appropriate proceedings for the enforcement
of the said rights a guaranteed right. Appropriate
proceedings are described in cl. (2) thereof, that is to
say, a person can move the said Court for directions,
orders, or writs in the nature described thereunder for the
enforcement of any of the said rights. The right to move,
therefore, is regulated by the procedure prescribed
thereunder. Article 226, though it does not find a place in
Part III of the Constitution, confers a power on every High
Court throughout the territories in relation to which it
exercises jurisdiction to issue such directions, orders, or
writs in the nature described thereunder for the enforcement
of any of the rights conferred by Part III. There is a
material difference between Art. 32 and Art. 226 of the
Constitution, namely, while in Art. 32 the right to move the
court is guaranteed, under Art. 226 no such guarantee is
given. But a fair construction of the provisions of Art.
226 indicates that the right to move, though not guaranteed,
is necessarily implied therein. As I have pointed out,
under Art. 32 the right to move the Court is given a
practical content by the provision indicating the different
modes open to the person who has the said right to approach
the Supreme Court. Article 226 employs the same procedure
for approaching the High Court and that procedure must
necessarily be for the exercise of the right to move that
851
court. When a power is conferred upon the High Court and a
procedure is prescribed for a party to approach that court,
it is reasonable to imply that the person has a right to
move that court in the manner prescribed thereunder. The
only difference between Art. 32 and Art. 226 is that the
Supreme Court cannot say, if it is moved in the manner
prescribed, that it will not decide on merits, but the High
Court, in exercise of its jurisdiction can do so. The
decision on merits is left to its discretion, though the
exercise of that discretion is regulated by convention and
precedent. Further, Art. 32(3) also enables Parliament to
make a law empowering any other court to exercise within the
local limits of itsjurisdiction all or any of the powers
exercisable by theSupreme Court under cl. (2) thereof.
One thing to benoticed is that Parliament can only
empower any othercourt to exercise any of the powers
exercisable under cl.(2) ; it cannot confer the
guaranteed right mentioned in cl. (1) on any person to move
that court. That is to say, the court or courts to which
such powers are given would be in the same position as the
High Court in respect of the enforcement of the fundamental
rights. To put it shortly, no person will have a guaranteed
right to move any such other court for the enforcement of
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fundamental rights. A discretionary jurisdiction similar to
that of the High Court can only be conferred on them. For
the same reason given in the case of the High Court, an
aggrieved party will also have a right to move those courts
in the manner prescribed.
This analysis leads us to the following position Under the
Constitution every person has a right to move, for the
enforcement of a fundamental right, the Supreme Court, the
High Courts or any other court or courts constituted by
Parliament by law in the manner prescribed i.e., by one or
other of the procedural writs or directions or orders
described thereunder.
With this background let me have a close look at the
provisions of Art. 359. The expressions used in Art. 359
are clear and unambiguous. Three expressions stand out in
bold relief, namely, (i) "right to move", (ii) "any Court",
and (iii) "for the enforcement of such of the rights
conferred by Part III". "Any Court" implies more
852
than one court, but it cannot obviously be any court in
India, for it must be a court where a person has a right to
move for the enforcement of the fundamental rights. It can,
therefore, be only the Supreme Court, High Court or the
courts or courts constituted by Parliament under Art. 32(3).
If the contention of learned counsel for the appellants be
accepted, the expression "court" should be confined to the
Supreme Court. But the Article does .not say either Supreme
Court or that the right to move is the guaranteed one under
Art. 32(1). The next question is, what do the words "right
to move" mean? The right to move is qualified by the
expression "for the enforcement of such of the rights
conferred by Part 111". Therefore, the right to move must
be a right to move the Supreme Court or the High Court in
the manner prescribed by Art. 32(2) or Art. 226(1) of the
Constitution for the enforcement of the fundamental rights.
The words in the second limb of the Article viz., that "all
proceeding.s pending in any court for the enforcement of the
rights so mentioned shall remain suspended" only relate to
the proceedings instituted in exercise of the said right :
they do not throw any light on the scope of the "right to
move’. This construction gives full meaning to every
expression used in the Article. if so construed, it can only
mean that the temporary bar that can be imposed by an order
of the President is not confined only to the guaranteed
right of a person to move the Supreme Court for the
enforcement of his fundamental rights, but also extends to
the right of a person to move the High Court or the Court or
Courts constituted by Parliament for the enforcement of such
of the fundamental rights as mentioned in the order. I
would, therefore, hold that the President’s order under Art.
359 suspending the right to move any court in respect of
specified fundamental rights includes not only the right to
move under Art. 32 but also that under Art. 226.
The more difficult question is whether Art. 359 can be so
construed as to empower the President to suspend all actions
which a person may take under a statute or common law, if he
seeks thereby to protect his liberty against unlawful
encroachment by State or its officers. To put it in other
words, can a person, who is illegally
853
detained under a void law, approach the High Court under s.
491 of the Code or file a suit in a civil court for damages
for illegal confinement or take any other legal proceedings
open to him? Learned Attorney General contends that "any
court" in Art. 359 means any court in India and that the
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expression "enforcement of fundamental rights" implies any
relief asked for by a party if the granting of such relief
involves directly or indirectly a decision on the question
whether any of the fundamental rights specified in the
President’s order has been infringed. This argument, if I
may say so, completely ignores the scheme of the
Constitution. Under the Constitution, a person may have
three kinds of rights, namely, (i) fundamental rights, (ii)
constitutional rights, and (iii) statutory or common law
rights. Under Art. 32(1) a person has a fundamental right
to move the Supreme Court for enforcement of his fundamental
rights; under Art. 226, a person has a constitutional right
to move the High Court for the enforcement of the said
rights. Parliament, by law, in exercise of its powers
conferred on it under Art. 245, may confer a right on a
person to move any court for a relief wider in scope than
that provided by Art. 32 or Art. 226 of the Constitution.
Though Parliament may not have power, except in the cases
specified to circumscribe the fundamental rights enshrined
in Part III it can certainly make a law enlarging the
content of the substantive and procedural rights of parties
beyond those conferred by Part III. Under this category
there may also be laws made by competent authority before
the commencement of the Constitution, but continued under
Art. 372, which do not any way infringe the fundamental
rights created by the Constitution. Section 491 of the Code
is one of the pre-Constitution statutory provisions
continued under Art. 372 of the Constitution. It does not
in terms posit any right to move the High Court for the
enforcement of fundamental rights. Therefore, the argument
of the learned Attorney General involves considerable strain
on the express language of Art. 359, for, he in effect asks
us to equate the expression "a right to move for the
enforcement of fundamental rights" with any relief asked for
in any proceedings in any court, whether initiated at the
instance of the party affected or not,
854
or whether started suo motu by the court, if it involves a
decision on the question whether a particular law was void
for the reason that it infringed the fundamental rights
mentioned in the President’s order. In support of this
contention he presses on us to hold that in days of stress
and strain i.e., when there is a threat of war and conse-
quently an emergency is declared, a court has to adopt the
principle of "strained construction" which will achieve the
object behind Art. 359 of the Constitution and the order
issued by the President. I shall briefly examine the
decisions cited by him to ascertain whether any such novel
doctrine of construction of statutes exists.
Rex v. Halliday(1) is a decision of the House of Lords made
in 1917 i.e., during the First World War. Regulation 14B of
the Defence of the Realm (Consolidation) Regulation, 1914,
empowered the Secretary of State to order the internment of
any person of hostile origin or associations, where on the
recommendation of a competent naval or military authority it
appeared to him expedient for securing the public safety or
the defence of the realm. This regulation was authorized by
the Defence of the Realm Consolidation Act, 1914, s. 1, sub-
section 1. The House of Lords, by a majority, held that the
Act conferred upon , the King-In-Council power, during the
continuance of the war, to issue regulations for securing
the public safety and the defence of the realm and, there-
fore, the regulation was valid. It was urged there that no
such restraint of personal liberty should be imposed except
as a result of judicial enquiry. It was also contended that
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if the Legislature intended to interfere with personal
liberty it should have provided for suspending the right of
the subject as to the writ of heabeas corpus. The argument
was negatived. Lord Atkin observed
"The subject retains every right which those statutes
confer upon him to have tested and determined in a Court of
law, by means of a writ of Habeas Corpus,, addressed to the
person in whose custody he may be, the legality of the order
or warrant by virtue of which he is given into or kept in
that custody. If the Legislature chooses to enact that he
can be deprived of his liberty and incarcerated or
(1) L.R. 1917 A.C. 260, 272.
855
interned for certain things for which he could not have been
heretofore incarcerated or interned, that enactment and the
orders made under it, if intra vires, do not infringe upon
the Habeas Corpus Acts in any way whatever, to take away any
rights conferred by Magna Charta, for the simple reason that
the Act and these Orders become part of the law of the
land."
This decision does not lay down any new rule of cons-
truction. Parliament is supreme in England. It its wisdom
it did not take away the habeas corpus, but empowered the
executive to issue regulations for public safety and defence
of the nation. The regulation made did not exceed the power
conferred by the Parliament. The House of Lords held that
the detention was in accordance with law.
Nor does the controversial decision in Liverside v. Sir John
Anderson(1), which was the subject of servere criticism in
later years, lay down any such new rule of construction.
There, the Secretary of State, acting in good faith under
reg. 18B of the Defence (General) Regulations, 1939, made an
order in which he recited that he bad reasonable cause to
believe a person to be of hostile associations and that by
reason thereof it was necessary to exercise control over him
and directed that that person be detained. The validity of
the detention turned upon the construction of the express
provisions of reg. 18B of the said Regulations. In that
regulation the expression used was "reasonable cause to
believe any person to be of hostile origin". The House of
Lords, by a majority, held that the expression meant that
"the Secretary of State thinks fit to be reasonable". There
was a powerful dissent by Lord Atkin on the question of
construction. With the correctness of the construction put
upon by the majority on the said provision we are not
concerned ; but none of the learned law Lords laid down in
their speeches any new rule of construction peculiar to war
conditions. Viscount Maugham observed :
"My Lords, I think we should approach the construction of
reg. 18B of the Defence (General) Regulations without any
general presumption as to its
(1) L.R. 1942 A.C. 206, 219, 251.
856
meaning except the universal presumption, applicable to
Orders in Council and other like instruments, that, if there
is a reasonable doubt as to the meaning of the words used,
we should prefer a construction which will carry into effect
the plain intention of those responsible for the Order in
Council rather than one which will defeat that intention."
Lord Atkin, in his dissenting judgment, protested against
the strained construction put on words with the effect of
giving an uncontrolled power of imprisonment to the
minister. Then he proceeded to observe :
"The words have only one meaning. They arc used with that
meaning in statements of the common law and in statutes.
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They have never been used in the sense now imputed to them."
These observations by the dissenting Lord may at the most
indicate that the majority in fact put a strained cons-
truction on the express words used in the regulation; but
they do not show that they have laid down any such rule of
construction. This is made clear by Lord Macmillan when he
stated:
"In the first place, it is important to have in mind that
the regulation in question is a war measure. This is not to
say that the courts ought to adopt in wartime canons of
construction different from those Which they follow in peace
time. The fact that the nation is at war is no
Justification for any relaxation of the vigilance of the
courts in seeing that the law is duly observed,. especially
in a matter so fundamental as the liberty of the subject-
matter the contrary. But in a time of emergency when the
life of the whole nation is at stake it may well be that a
regulation for the defence of the realm may quite properly
have a meaning which because of its drastic
invasion of the liberty of the subject the
courts would be slow to attribute to a peace
time measure. The purpose of the regulation
is to ensure public safety, and it is right so
to interpret emergency legislation as to
promote rather than to defeat its efficacy for
the defence of the realm. That is in
accordance with a general rule applicable to
the interpretation of
857
all statutes or statutory regulations in peace time as well
as in war time."
These observations should be understood in the background of
the earlier observation :
"I do not agree that the critical phrase in the context in
which I find it is susceptible only of one meaning, namely
that for which the appellant contends. Were it so it would
be strange that several learned judges should have found it
to possess quite a different meaning."
This judgment, therefore, is no authority for the position
for which it is relied upon. The decision in substance says
that the rule of construction of a statute is the same both
in peace time and in war time and that when there is an
ambiguity in the expressions used, the court may give such
meaning to the words used which are capable of bearing that
meaning as would promote rather than defeat the object of
the legislation. Indeed, the Privy Council, in Nakkuda Ali
v. Jayaratna(1), confined the interpretation put upon reg.
18B of the Defence (General) Regulations, 1939, by a
majority of the House of Lords to the particular
cricumstances of that case and they did not accept that
construction when similar words were used in the Regulation
62 of the Defence (Control of Textiles) Regulations, 1945.
I cannot, therefore, hold that the said decisions suggested
a new rule of construction peculiar to war measures. The
rules of construction are the same in war time as well as in
peace time. The fundamental rule of construction is that
the courts have to find out the expressed intention of the
Legislature from the words of the enactment itself. Where
the language is unambiguous, no more is necessary than to
expound those words in their natural and ordinary sense.
But where the words are ambiguous and reasonably capable of
bearing two meanings, the court may be justified in adopting
that meaning which would further the intention of the
Legislature rather than that which would defeat it.
In the present case we are not dealing with a war measure,
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but a constitutional provision which was designed to govern
the affairs of our country for all times so
(1) L.R. 1 [1951] A.C. 66.
55-2 S C India/64.
858
long the Constitution remains in force ; and it cannot
certainly be strained to meet a passing phase in a country’s
life. A strained construction put upon a statutory provison
to meet a particular emergency may be rectified by a
subsequent enactment. But such a construction put upon a
constitutional provision might entail serious consequences.
Even if Liversidge’s case(1) had laid down a new rule of
construction, that construction cannot be invoked in the
case of a constitutional provision.
In Gibbons v. Ogden(2) the following rule of construction of
a constitutional provision is stated :
"That which the words declare is the meaning of an
instrument ; and neither Courts nor legislatures have the
right to add or to take away from that meaning. This is
true of every instrument, but when we arc speaking of the
most solemn and deliberate of all human writings those which
ordain the fundamental law of states, the rule rises to a
very high degree of significance. It must’ be very plain,
nay absolutely certain, that the people did not intend what
the language they have employed in its natural signifi-
cation, imports, before a Court will feel itself at liberty
to depart from the plain reading of a constitutional pro-
vision."
No doubt a constitution should receive a fair, liberal and
progressive construction so that the true objects of the
instrument may be promoted ; but such a construction could
not do violence to the natural meaning of the words used in
particular provision of the Constitution.
The relevant provisions of s. 491 of the Code read
(1) Any High Court may, whenever it thinks fit,
direct-
(a) that a person within the limits of its appellate
criminal jurisdiction be brought up before the
Court to be dealt with according to law ;
(b) that a person illegally or improperly detained in
public or private custody within such limits be set at
liberty
Bearing in mind the said rules of construction, I ask myself
the question whether the exercise of the power un-
(1) [1942] A.C. 206.
(2) (1824) 6 L.Ed. 23.
859
der s. 491 of the. Code can be equated with a right to move
the High Court to enforce such of the fundamental rights
conferred by Part III of the Constitution as may be
mentioned in the order of the President. It is necessary to
ascertain the correct scope of the section to answer the
question raised before us. The section is framed in wide
terms and a discretionary power is conferred on the High
Court to direct one or other of the things mentioned therein
"whenever it thinks fit". Unlike Art. 32 and Art. 226, the
exercise of the power is not channelled through well
recognized procedural writs or orders. With the result the
technicalities of such procedural writs do not govern or
circumscribe the court’s discretion. A short history of
this section reinforces the said view. Originally, the
Supreme Courts in India purported to exercise the power to
issue a writ of habeas corpus which the Kings’ Bench
Division in England exercised. In 1861 Parliament passed
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Acts 24-25 Vict. Ch. 104 authorising the establishment of
High Courts of judicature in India. The Letters Patents
issued under that Act in 1865 were expressly made subject to
the legislative powers of the Governor-General in Council.
The courts were given the same jurisdiction, power and
authority which the Supreme Courts possessed but subject to
the legislative power of the Governor-General in Council.
Pursuant to the power so conferred, the Governor-General in
Council passed successive Codes of Criminal Procedure in the
years 1872, 1875, 1882;and,1898, and in 1923 by the Criminal
Law (Amendment) Act, some of the provisions of the Code of
1898 were amended. The High Courts Act of 1861 authorized
the Legislature, if it thought fit, to take away the powers
which the High Courts exercised as successor to the Supreme
Courts, and Acts of Legislatures passed in 1872 and
subsequent years had taken away the power of the High Courts
to issue prerogative writs ; and instead a statutory power
precisely defined was conferred upon the High Courts. That
statutory power underwent various changes and finally took
the form of s. 491 of the Code, as at present it stands.
The attempt to resuscitate the prerogative writs was
rejected by the Calcutta High Court in Girindra Nath
Banerjee v. Birendra Nath Pal(1) and
(1) (1927) I.L.R. 54 Cal. 727.
860
by the Madras High Court in District Magistrate, Trivandrum
v. Mammen Mappillai(1). The Privy Council in Matten v.
District Magistrate, Trivandrum(2) approved the said
decisions and held that the said Act.,, have taken away the
power of the High Courts to issue prerogative writs and
thereafter the only power left in the High Court was that
conferred by the statute. By reason of Art. 372 of the
Constitution, the Code of Criminal Procedure, including s.
491 thereof, continued to be in force until altered,
repealed or amended by the competent Legislature or other
competent authority. Article 225 of the Constitution
expressly preserved the High Courts’ powers and
jurisdiction, subject to other provisions thereof.
Admittedly, Parliament has not made any- law repealing s.
491 of the Code. The statutory power conferred on the High
Courts under that section is not inconsistent either Art. 32
or with Art. 226 or with any other Article in Part III or
any other Chapter of the Constitution. So, it cannot be
held that s. 491 of the Code has been impliedly superseded
by Art. 226 even to the extent it empowers the High Court to
give relief to persons illegally detained by the State. Now
what is the scope of that section? Though s. 491 of the
Code is remedial in form, it postulates the existence of the
substantive right. In India, as in England, the rule of law
was the accepted principle. No person can be deprived of
his liberty except in the manner prescribed by the law of
the land. If a person is illegally or improperly detained
in violation of the law of the land, the High Court can
direct his release "whenever it thinks fit" so to do. The
section prima facie does not predicate a formal application
; nor does it insist that any particular person shall
approach it. The phraseology used is wide enough for the
exercise of the power suo motu by the High Court. Nor does
the section introduce an antithesis between the exercise of
jurisdiction on application and that exercised suo motu ;
that is to say, even if an application was filed before the
High Court and for one reason or other, no orders could be
passed thereon, either because of procedural defect or
because it was not pressed,
(1) L.I.R. 1939 Mad. 708‘
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(2) L.R. (1939) 66 I.A. 222.
861
nothing prevents the High Court from acting suo motu ,on the
basis of the information brought to its notice. It is said
that various High Courts framed rules regulating the
procedure of the respective High Courts, but that fact is
not much relevance in the matter of construing the section.
Shortly stated, the High Court is given an absolute
discretion to direct a person, who has been illegally
detained, to be released, whenever that fact is brought to
its notice through whatever source it may be. This juris-
diction existed long before the Constitution was made and
long before the fundamental rights were conferred upon the
people under the Constitution. The rights, substantive as
well as procedural, conferred under Part III and Art. 226 on
the one hand and under s. 491 of the Code on the other, are
different. Under Arts. 32 and 226, an affected party can
approach the Supreme Court or the High Court, as the case
may be, only in the manner prescribed under Art. 32(2) or
Art. 226 i.e., by way of writs and orders mentioned therein
: he must ask the court for the enforcement of this
fundamental right. The relief implies that he must
establish that he has a fundamental right, that his
fundamental right has been infringed by the State and,
therefore, the Court should give the appropriate relief for
the enforcement of that right. Both the right as well as
the procedure are the creatures of the Constitution.
Whereas s. 491 of the Code assumes the existence of the
"rule of law" and confers a power on the High Court to
direct persons in illegal detention to be set at liberty.
It is not bound by any technical procedures envisaged by the
Constitution. If a person approaches the High Court
alleging that he or some other person has been illegally
detained, the Court calls upon the detaining authority to
sustain the validity of the action. The onus of proof lies
on the custodian to establish that the person is detained
under a legal process ; but if it fails to establish that
the person is detained under law, the said person may be
released. It is true that the detaining authority will have
to satisfy the court that the law under which the detention
is made is a valid one. It may also be true that in
scrutinizing the validity of that law the court has to go
into the question whether the law offends any of the
fundamental rights mentioned
862
in Part III of the Constitution. But that circumstance does
not by any process of involved reasoning make the said
proceeding one initiated in exercise of the right to move
the High Court for the enforcement of the petitioner’s
fundamental right. The distinction between the two lies in
the fact that one is an enforcement of a petitioner’s
fundamental right and the other, a decision on the
unconstitutionality of a law because of its infringement of
fundamental rights generally.
Further, the right and the relief have a technical and
specific significance given to them by the Constitution.
They cannot be equated with the mode of approach to the High
Court under s. 491 of the Code or with the
expression"whenever it thinks fit" confers an
absolute discretionon the court to exercise its power
thereunder or not todo so, having regard to the
circumstances of each case. While the word "may" used in a
statute was sometimes construed as imposing a duty on the
authority concerned on whom a power is conferred to exercise
the. same if the circumstances necessitated its exercise,
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the expression "whenever it thinks fit" does Rot warrant any
such limitation on its absolute discretion. Though ordi-
narily a High Court may safely be relied upon to exercise
its powers when the liberty of a citizen is illegally
violated by any authority, the said unlimited discretion
certainly enables it in extraordinary circumstances to
refuse to come to his rescue. The absolute discretionary
jurisdiction conferred under s. 491 of the Code cannot be
put on a par with the jurisdiction conferred under Art. 226
of the Constitution hedged in by constitutional limitations’
A brief reference to decided cases on the scope of s. 491 of
the Code will make my meaning clear.
In Alam Khan v. The Crown(1), the Full Bench of the Lahore
High Court has defined the scope of s. 491 of the Code. Ram
Lall, J., who spoke for the majority, stated, after quoting
the relevant part of the section
"The language of the section places no limit on the class of
person or persons who can move a High Court with relation to
a person in custody and if the
(1) (1947) I.L.R. 28 Lahore 274, 303.
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High Court on hearing the petition thinks fit. to do so, may
make an order that he be dealt with according to law."
In Ramji Lal v. The Crown(1), a Full Bench decision of the
East Punjab High Court, Mahajan, J., as he
then was, defined the wide scope of the
section thus
"Whatever may be the state of English law on the subject so
far as section 491 of the Criminal Procedure Code is
concerned it has been very widely worded and confers
Jurisdiction on the Court to issue directions whenever it
thinks fit. The Court may be moved by the prisoner or by
some relation of his, or it may act suo motu if it acquires
knowledge that a certain person has been illegally detained.
The mode and manner in which the judge has to be satisfied
cannot affect the Jurisdiction conferred on him under
section 491 of the Criminal Procedure Code."
In King Emperor v. Vimlabai Deshpande(2), a police officer
made an arrest of the respondents under sub-rule I of r. 129
of the Defence of India Rules, 1939, which read : "Any
police officer........ may arrest without warrant any person
whom he reasonably suspects of having acted........ (a) in a
manner prejudicial to the public safety or to the efficient
prosecution of the war."’ The Judicial Committee held that
the burden was upon the police officer to prove to the
satisfaction of a court before whom the arrest was
challenged that he had reasonable grounds of suspicion and
that if he failed to discharge that burden, an order made by
the Provincial Government under sub-rule 4 of r. 129 for the
temporary custody of the detenu was invalid. As the police
officer failed to discharge the onus, the Privy Council held
that the High Court was right in ordering the release of the
person from custody under s. 491 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. This shows that when a person is detained by a
police officer, the burden of establishing that the
detention is valid is on him.
These authorities well establish that s. 491 of the Code
does not contemplate any right to move a court by any
affected party, but the court can exercise the
(1) I.L.R. (1949). II E.P. 28, 54.
(2) (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 144.
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statutory power whenever it thinks fit, if the fact of
illegal detention of a person is brought to its notice.
The problem may be approached from a slightly different
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perspective. Three questions may be posed, namely, (1) has
any person the right to move the High Court under s. 491 of
the Code to enforce his fundamental right? (2) would it be
necessary for a person detained or any other on his behalf
to allege that the detenu has a fundamental right and that
it has been infringed by State action and seek a relief for
enforcement of that right? (3) would it be obligatory on the
Court to enforce the right if the said right had been
established? All the questions must be answered in the
negative. Under s. 491 of the Code there is neither a right
in the person detained to move the High Court for the
enforcement of the fundamental right nor there is an
obligation on the part of the High Court to give the said
relief. It is only a discretionary jurisdiction conceived
as a check on arbitrary action.
There is another aspect of the question. Article 359 has
nothing to do with statutory powers conferred by Parliament.
Article 359 expressly deals with the constitutional right to
move a court and the constitutional enforcement of that
right. So far as ordinary laws are concerned, Parliament
can always amend the law, having regard to the circumstances
obtaining at a particular point of time ; for instance,
Parliament could have amended s. 491 of the Code by
repealing that section altogether or by suitably amending
it. Briefly stated, Art. 359 provides for the suspension of
some constitutional rights in the manner prescribed
thereunder. The statutory rights are left to be dealt with
by the appropriate Legislature in exercise of the powers
conferred on them. The argument that the intention of the
makers of the Constitution in enacting Art. 359 would be
defeated, if s. 491 of the Code was salvaged, does not
appeal to me. If Parliament had amended s. 491 of the Code,
which it should have done if it intended to do so, this
alleged anomaly pointed outby the learned Attorney
General could not have arisen. I would, therefore, hold
that the expression "rightto move any Court for the
enforcement of such of the rights conferred by Part III"
could legitimately refer
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only to the right to move under Art. 32 or Art. 226 of the
Constitution for the said specific relief and could not be
applied without doing violence to the language used to the
exercise of the statutory power conferred on the High Courts
under s. 491 of the Code. If that be so, the expression
"all proceedings pending in any Court for the enforcement of
the rights" used in the second limb of Art. 359 must also
necessarily refer to proceedings -initiated in exercise of
the right to move envisaged in the first limb of the
article.
I shall now proceed to consider some of the minor points
raised at the Bar. Another argument advanced on behalf of
the respondents may also be briefly noticed. It is said
that while Art. 358 maintains the legislative incompetency
to make laws in derogation of fundamental rights other than
those enshrined in Art. 19, Art, 359 enables the President
by an indirect process to enlarge the said legislative
competency and, therefore, Art. 359 must be so read as to
confine its scope only to executive acts. I cannot agree.
Article 359 does not ex facie enlarge the legislative
competency of Parliament or a State Legislature. It does
not enable them to make laws during the period covered by
the order of the President infringing the fundamental rights
mentioned therein. It does not empower the Legislatures to
make void laws ; it only enables the President to suspend
the right to move the Court during the period indicated in
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his order. Once that period expires, the affected party can
move the Court in the manner prescribed by the Constitution.
Despite Art. 358 it may happen that void laws are made and
executive actions are taken inadvertently or otherwise ; and
Art. 359 is really intended to put off the enforcement of
the rights of the people affected by those laws and actions
till the expiry of the President’s order. The invalidity of
the argument would be clear if it was borne in mind that
Art. 358 also saved executive acts infringing Art. 19, but
nonetheless Art. 359 gave protection against the exercise of
the right to move any court in respect of such acts not
saved by Art. 358. If the infringement of fundamental
rights by executive action not saved by Art. 358 could not
be a basis for the exercise of a right to move during the
period of suspension,
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by the same token, laws not saved by Art. 358 could not
equally be the basis for such an action during the said.
period. Be it as it may, the phraseology of Art. 359 is
wide enough to comprehend laws made in violation of the
specified fundamental rights.
Another argument advanced is, while Art. 358 read with Art.
13(1) and (2), maintained the constitutional position that
all laws infringing fundamental rights other than that
enshrined in Art. 19 would be void during the emergency, the
President by issuing the order he did, indirectly, in effect
and substance, validated the laws infringing Arts.14, 21 and
22, and, therefore, the issuing of the said order must be
held to be a fraud on hi s powers. This argument has no
merits. It is based upon a misapprehension of the doctrine
of fraud on powers. In the context of the application of
the doctrine to a statutory law, this Court observed in
Gullapally Nageswara Rao v. Andhra Pradesh Road Transport
Corporation(1) thus :
"The legislature can only make laws within its legislative
competence. Its legislative field may be circumscribed by
specific legislative entries or limited by fundamental
rights created by the Constitution. The legislature can not
overstep the field of its competency, directly or
indirectly. The Court will scrutinize the law to ascertain
whether the legislature by device purports to make a law
which, though in form appears to be within its
sphere, in effect and substance, reaches
beyond it. If, in fact it has power to make
the law, its motives in making the law are
irrelevant."
To the same effect are the observations in Gajapati Narayan
Deo v. The State of Orissa(2). On the same analogy, the
President cannot overstep the limits of his power defined
under Art. 359 of the Constitution. So long as he does not
exceed his power, the effect of his order made within bounds
could not conceivably sustain the plea of fraud on powers.
Fraud on power implies that a power not conferred is
exercised under the cloak of a power conferred. But if an
act can legitimately be referred to a power conferred the
intention of the person exercising
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 319, 329. (2 ) [1954] S.C.R. 1.
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the power or the effect of his exercise of the power is ir-
relevant. Now, on the construction placed by me on Art.
359, the President has clearly the constitutional power’ to
suspend the aforesaid right. The fact that Parliament by
taking shelter under that order may enforce void laws cannot
make a valid exercise of a power of the President one in
fraud of his power.
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The next argument is that the order issued by the President
is in excess of the powers conferred under Art. 359 of the
Constitution. Under Art. 359, the argument proceeds, the
order made by the President can relate to a period or the
whole or a part of the territory of India and cannot be
confined to a class of persons. As the order is restricted
to persons that have. been deprived of their rights under
the Defence of India Ordinance, it is said that it is not
sanctioned by the provisions of Art. 359. There are no
merits in this contention. Under the order the right to
move for the enforcement of the rights mentioned therein is
suspended during the period of emergency and it applies to
the entire country. The fact that only persons, who are
deprived of their rights under the Defence of India
Ordinance, cannot exercise their right to move the Court
does not make the order one confined to a class of persons.
The Ordinance has force throughout India and ex hypothesis
only persons affected would move the Court. That does not
mean that the order is confined only to a class of persons.
The next contention is that the impugned section suffers
from the vice of excessive delegation and that in any view
the relevant rules framed are in excess of the power
conferred upon the Government by the said Act. I cannot
agree with either of the two contentions. On this aspect I
have nothing more to add to that found in the judgment of my
learned brother.
But the order made by the President still leaves the door
open for deciding some, questions even under Art. 32 or Art.
226 of the Constitution. The order is a conditional one.,
In effect it says that the right remains suspended if such
person has been deprived of any such right under the Defence
of India Ordinance, 1962, or under any rule or order made
thereunder. The condition is that the person should have
been deprived of a right under the
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Defence of India Ordinance or under any rule or order made
thereunder. If a person was deprived of such a right not
under the Ordinance or a rule or order made thereunder, his
right would not be suspended. If the order was made in
excess of the power conferred upon the Government by the
said Ordinance, it would not be covered by that order. If
the detention was made mala fide, it would equally be not an
order made under the Ordinance.
My view on the basis of the aforesaid discussion may be
stated thus : (1) The detenus cannot exercise their right to
enforce their fundamental rights under Arts. 21, 22 and 14
of the Constitution, during the period for which the said
right was suspended by the President’s order. (2) This does
not preclude the High Court to release the detenus in
exercise of its power under s. 491 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, if they were imprisoned under a void law, though
the voidness of the law arose out of infringement of their
fundamental rights under Arts. 14, 21 and 22 of the
Constitution. (3) The President’s order does not preclude,
even under Art. 32(1) and Art. 226 of the Constitution, the
petitioners from proving that the orders of detention were
not made under the Defence of India Ordinance or the Act
either because they were made, (i) outside the provisions of
the Ordinance of the Act, or (ii) in excess of the power
conferred under them, or (iii) the detention were made mala
fide or due to a fraudulent exercise of power.
I would close with a few observations. In the view I have
taken. there are three courses open to Parliament : either
it can make a valid law without infringing the fundamental
rights other than those enshrined in Art. 19 or amend s. 491
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of the Code in order to maintain the enforcement of void
laws, or do both. It is not for me to suggest the right
course.
In the result, the petitions will now go to the Constitution
Bench for disposal on the said questions.
ORDER BY COURT
In accordance with the opinion of the majority the
constitutional points raised in the Appeals are dismissed.
Appeals to be set down individually before a Constitution
Bench for dealing with the other contentions raised in each
one of them.
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