Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. ANANDAN NAMBIAR AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHIEF SECRETARY, GOVERNMENT OF MADRAS AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/10/1965
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 657 1966 SCR (2) 406
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC 816 (1)
RF 1975 SC2299 (84,85,86,178,365)
RF 1976 SC1207 (191,264,265,474,547)
ACT:
Defence of India Act and Rules, 1962, r. 30(1)(b)-If
invalid.
Constitution of India, 1950, Arts 352 and 359(1)-
Presidential Order suspending right to move Court for
enforcement of fundamental rights Petition challenging
validity of rule--Maintainability.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were members of Parliament. They were
detained by orders passed by the State Government under r.
30(1) (b) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962. They
challenged the validity of the orders of detention on the
grounds that : (i) rule 30(1) (b) was invalid because, a
legislator cannot be detained so as to prevent him from
exercising his constitutional rights as such legislator
while the legislative chamber to which he belongs is in
session; and- (ii) the impugned orders were passed mala fide
as they were passed for the purpose of stifling the;
petitioners’ political activities which were inconvenient to
the State Government. It was also urged that the orders
were passed by the Chief Minister of the State without
satisfying himself of the necessity of detaining the
petitioners merely because the Union Home Minister thought
that the petitioners should be detained. The respondent
raised a preliminary objection that the petitions were
incompetent in view of the Order issued by the President of
India under Art. 359(1), suspending the rights of any person
to move any court for the enforcement of the rights
conferred by Arts. 14, 21 and 22 for the period during which
the Proclamation of Emergency issued under Art. 352 was in
force, if such person had been deprived of any such rights
under the Defence of India Act, 1962, for any rule or order
made thereunder.
HELD : (i) The last clause of the Presidential Order
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postulates that the Defence of India Act or any rule or
order made thereunder is valid. During the pendency of the
Presidential Order, the validity of Act, rule or order made
thereunder cannot be questioned on the ground that they
contravene Arts. 14, 21, (and 22; but this limitation will
not preclude a citizen from challenging the validity of the
Act, rule or order made thereunder, on any other ground.
[410 F-G]
The petitioners contended that r. 30(1)(b) under which the
impugned orders of detention had been passed was invalid on
grounds other than those based on Arts. 14, 19, 21 and 22.
If that plea was well-founded, the last clause of the
Presidential Order was not satisfied and therefore the bar
created by it suspending the citizens’ fundamental rights
under Arts. 14, 21, and 22 could not be pressed into service
by the respondent. The petitions, therefore, were not
incompetent. [412 B]
Makhan Singh v. The State of Punjab, [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797,
followed.
(ii) Rule 30(1)(b) is not invalid. [421 A]
Articles 79, 85, 86 and 100(1), relied upon by the
petitioners cannot be said to deal with any rights which can
be, described as ’constitutional
407
rights of the members of Parliament. The totality of rights
cannot claim the status of fundamental rights and the
freedom of speech on which reliance was placed is a part of
the privileges failing under Art. 105. A plea that a breach
has been committed of any of these privileges could not be
raised in view of the decision of the Committee of
Privileges of the House of Commons in the case of Captain
Ramay, because the privileges, powers and immunities of the
members of the Indian Legislature are the same as those of
the members of the House of Commons as they existed at the
commencement of the Indian Constitution. Besides, freedom
of speech would only be available to a member of Parliament
when he attends the session of Parliament. If an order of
detention validly prevents him from attending a session of
Parliament, no occasion arises for the exercise of the right
of freedom of speech and no complaint can be made that the
said right has been invalidly invaded. [415 G-H; 419 B-D]
If a person who is convicted and sentenced for a period less
than two year such a conviction would not entail
disqualification for being a member of Parliament-has
necessarily to forego his right of participating in the
business of the legislature to which he belongs, because he
is convicted and sentenced it would follow that a person who
is detained must likewise forego his right to participate in
the business of the Legislature. Therefore, it could not be
contended that so long as the member of Parliament had not
incurred any disqualification, he was entitled to. exercise
his rights as such member. [419 H; 420 A-B]
The true constitutional position, therefore, is that so far
as a valid order of detention is concerned, a member of
Parliament can claim no special status higher than that an
ordinary citizen and is as much liable to be arrested and
detained under it as any other citizen. [420 E-F]
(iii) In view of the facts that the detention of the
petitioners formed" part of a larger question about the
attitude which the Government of India and the State
Governments should adopt in respect of the activities of the
party to which the petitioners be-longed, namely, the pro-
Peking faction of the Communist party, and that the issue
was examined by the, Union Home Minister along with the
Chief Ministers of States and only general decisions in
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relation thereto were, arrived at, and that the Chief
Minister of the State had made a clear and unambiguous
statement in his affidavit that he had examined the
materials in relation to the activities of the petitioners
and was satisfied that it was necessary to detain them,
there was no substance in the grievance of the petitioners
that the impugned orders of detention were made either mala
fide or without the. proper satisfaction of the detaining
authority. [424 H; 425 A-D, F-G, 426 B]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 47 and 61 of’
1965.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for enforce-
ment of Fundamental Rights.
M. C. Setalvad, N. C. Chatterjee, M. R. K. Pillai, R. K.
Garg, S. C. Agarwala, D. P. Singh and M. K. Ramamurthi, for
the petitioner (in W.P. No. 47/65).
R. K. Garg, S. C. Agarwala, D. P. Singh and M. K. Rama-
murthi, for the petitioner (in W.P. No. 61/65).
408
N. Krishnaswami Reddy, Advocate-General, Madras, V. P.
Raman and A. V. Rangam, for respondent no. 1 (in both the
petitions).
Niren De, Additional Solicitor General,N. S. Bindra, -B.
R. G. K. Achar and R. N. Sachthey, for respondent no. 2 (in
,both the petitions).
L. D. Kaushal, Dy. Advocate General, ’Punjab and R. N.
Sachthey, for intervener no. 1.
U. P. Singh, for the State of Bihar and Union Territory of
Tripura.
R. K. Garg, S. C. Agarwala, D. P. Singh and M. K. Rama-
murthi, for the intervener (Makhan Singh Tarsikka).
Veerappa and Hardev Singh for the interveners (Satwant Singh
and 12 ors.)
All the other interveners appeared in person.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Gajendragadkar, C.J. Mr. K. Ananda Nambiar, who is a Member
of Parliament, has been detained by the Government of Madras
since the 30th December, 1964. On the 29th December, 1964,
an order was passed under Rule 30(1)(b) and (4) of the
Defence of India Rules, 1962 in which it was stated that the
Government of Madras were satisfied with respect to the
petitioner K. Ananda Nambiar that with a view to preventing
him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of
India and the public safety, it was necessary to make an
order directing that he be detained The said order further
directed that the petitioner should be arrested by the
police wherever found and detained in the Central Jail,
Tiruchirapalli. Though this order directed the detention of
the petitioner in the Central Jail, Tiruchirapalli, it is
common ground that he has been detained in fact in the
Central Jail, Cuddalore. By his present writ petition (No.
47 of 1965) filed under Art. 32 of the Constitution, the
petitioner challenges the validity of the said order of
detention mainly on two grounds. He contends that Rule 30 (
1 ) (b) under which the impugned order has been passed is
invalid, and in the alternative, he argues that the impugned
order is not valid, because it has been passed mala fide and
is otherwise not justified by the relevant Rules.
Mr. R. Umanath, who is also a Member of Parliament, has
,been similarly detained by the order passed by the
Government of
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409
Madras on the 29th December, 1964 and in the same terms. He
has also been detained not in the Central Jail,
Tiruchirapalli, as mentioned in the order, but in the
Central Jail, Cuddalore, since the 30th December, 1964. By
his writ petition (No. 61 of 1965), the petitioner Umanath
has raised the same points before us. Mr. Setalvad has
argued the first point of law about the invalidity of the
relevant Rule, whereas Mr. Chatterjee has argued the other
,point relating to the invalidity of the impugned orders, on
behalf of both the petitioners. To these two petitioners
are impleaded respondent No. 1, -the Chief Secretary,
Government of Madras, respondent No. 2, the Superintendent,
Central Jail, Cuddalore; and respondent No. 3, the Union of
India.
Before-proceeding to deal with the points raised by the
petitioners, it is necessary to consider the preliminary
objection which has been urged before us by the learned
Additional Solicitor General who has appeared for respondent
No. 3. He contends that the writ petitions are incompetent
in view of the Order issued by the President on the 3rd
November, 1962. It will be recalled that on the 26th
October, 1962, the President issued a Proclamation of
Emergency in exercise of the Powers conferred on him by
clause (1) of Art. 352 of the Constitution. This
Proclamation declared that a grave emergency existed whereby
the security of India was threatened by external aggression.
Thereafter, two Orders were issued by the President, one on
the 3rd November, 1962 and the other on the 1st November,
1962 in exercise of the powers conferred by clause (1) of
Art. 359 of the Constitution. The first Order as amended by
the later Order reads thus
"In exercise of the powers conferred by clause
(1) of Art. 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 Arts.
14, 21 and 22 of the Constitution shall remain
suspended for the period during which the
Proclamation of Emergency issued under clause
(1) of Art. 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".
It may be added at, this stage that Ordinance No. 4 of 1962
later became an Act called The Defence of India Act, 1962
(No. 51 of 10.62.)’. The argument is that the petitioners
are admittedly detained under Rule 30(1)(b) of the Defence
of India Rules,
4 10
and so, the said Presidential Order is inevitably attracted;
and that means that the petitioners’ right to move this
Court under Art. 32 is suspended during the pendency of the
Proclamation of Emergency.
We are not impressed by this argument. In construing the
effect of the Presidential Order, it is necessary to bear in
mind the general rule of construction that where an Order
purports to suspend the fundamental rights guaranteed to the
citizens by the Constitution, the said Order must be
strictly construed in favour of the citizens’ fundamental
rights. It will be noticed that the sweep of the Order is
limited by its last clause. This Order can be invoked only
in cases where persons have been deprived of their rights
under Acts. 14, 21 and 22 under the Defence of India
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Ordinance or any rule or order made there under. In other
words, if the said fundamental rights of citizens are taken
away otherwise than under the Defence of India Ordinance or
rules or orders made thereunder, the Presidential Order will
not come into operation. The other limitation is that the
Presidential Order will remain in operation only so long as
the Proclamation of Emergency is in force. When these two
conditions are satisfied, the citizen’s right to move this
Court for the enforcement of his rights conferred by Arts.
14, 21 and 22 is no doubt suspended; and that must mean that
if the citizen wants to enforce those rights by challenging
the validity of the order of his detention, his right to
move this Court would be suspended in so far as he seeks to
enforce the said rights.
But it is obvious that what the last clause of the
Presidential Order postulates is that the Defence of India
Ordinance or any rule or order made thereunder is valid. It
is true that during the pendency of the Presidential Order,
the validity of the Ordinance, rule or order made thereunder
cannot be questioned on the ground that,they contravene
Arts. 14, 21 and 22; but this limitation mill not preclude a
citizen from challenging the validity of the Ordinance, rule
or order made thereunder on any other ground. If the
petitioner seeks to. challenge the validity of the
Ordinance, rule or order made thereunder on any ground other
than the contravention of Arts. 14, 21 and 22, the
Presidential Order can-not come into operation. In this
connection, we ought to add that the challenge to the
Ordinance, rule or order made thereunder cannot also be
raised on the ground of the contravention of Art. 19,
because as soon as a Proclamation of Emergency is issued by
the President, under Art. 358 the provisions of Art. 19 are
automatically suspended. But the point still remains that
if a challenge
411
is made to the validity of the Ordinance, rule or order made
thereunder on a ground other than those covered by Art. 358,
or the Presidential Order issued Art. 359(1), such a
challenge is outside the purview of the Presidential Order;
and-if a petition is filed by a citizen under Art. 32 on the
basis of such a challenge, it cannot be said to be barred,
because such a challenge is not covered by the Presidential
Order at all.
In Makhan Singh Tarsikka v. The State of Punjab (1) a
Special Bench of this Court has had occasion to consider the
effect of the Proclamation of Emergency issued by the
President and the Presidential Order with which we are
concerned in the present writ petitions. In that case, it
was held that the sweep of Art. 359 (1) and the Presidential
Order issued under it is 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 specified fundamental rights and that means the
fundamental rights under Arts. 14, 19, 21 and 22. Even so,
this Court took the precaution of pointing out that as a
result of the issue of the Proclamation of Emergency and the
Presidential Order, a citizen would not be deprived of his
right to move the appropriate court for a writ of habeas
corpus on the ground that his detention has been ordered
mala fide. Similarly, it was pointed out that if a detenu
contends that the operative provisions of the Defence of
India Ordinance under which he is detained suffer from the
vice of excessive delegation, the plea thus raised by the
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detenu cannot, at the threshold, be said to be barred by the
Presidential Order, because, in terms, it is not a plea
which is relateable to the fundamental rights specified in
the said order.
Let us refer to two other pleas which may not fall within
the purview of the Presidential Order. If the detenu, who
is detained under an order passed under Rule 30(1)(b),
contends that the said Order has been passed by a delegate
outside the authority conferred on him by the appropriate
Government under S. 40 of the Defence of India Act, or it
has been exercised inconsistently with the conditions
prescribed in that behalf, a preliminary bar against the
competance of the detenu’s petition cannot be raised under
the Presidential Order, because the last clause of the
Presidential Order would not cover such a petition, and
there is no doubt that unless the case falls under the last
clause of the Presi-
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797.
4 12
dential Order, the bar created by it cannot be successfully
invoked against a detenu. Therefore, our conclusion is that
the learned Additional Solicitor-General is not justified in
contending that the present petitions are incompetent under
Art. 32 because of the Presidential Order. The petitioners
contend that the relevant Rule under which the impugned
orders of detention have been passed, is invalid on grounds
other than those based on Arts. 14, 19, 21 & 22; and if that
plea is well-founded, the last clause of the Presidential
Order is not satisfied and the bar created by it suspending
the citizens’ fundamental rights under Articles 14, 21 and
22 cannot be press into service.
That takes us to the merits of Mr. Setalvad’s contention
that Rule 30(1) (b) of the Defence of India Rules is
invalid. The Rule in question has been framed under s. 3
(2) (15) of the Defence of -India Act, and in that sense it
can be said, prima facie, to be justified by the said
provision. But Mr. Setalvad argues that in so far as it
permits a Member of Parliament to be detained, it con-
travenes the Constitutional rights, of Members of
Parliament. According to Mr. Setalvad, a Member of
Parliament, like a Member of any of the State Legislatures,
has constitutional riots to function as such Member and to
participate in the business of the House to which he
belongs. He is entitled to attend every Session of
Parliament, to take part in-the debate, and to record his
vote. SG long as a member of Parliament is qualified to be
such Member, no law can validly take. away his right to
function as such Member. The right to participate in the
business of the-legislative chamber to which he belongs, is
described by Mr. Setalvad as his constitutional right, and
he urges that this constitutional right of a legislator can
be regarded as his fundamental right; and inasmuch as the
relevant Rule authorises the detention of a legislator
preventing him from exercising such right, the Rule is
invalid. In the alternative, Mr. Setalvad contends that the
Rule should be treated as valid in regard to persons other
than those who are Members of Legislatures, and in that
sense, the part of it which touches the Members of
Legislatures, should be severed from the part which affects
other citizens and the invalid part should be struck down.
This argument again proceeds on the same basis that a
legislator cannot be validly detained so as to prevent him
from exercising his rights as such legislator while the
legislative chamber to which he belongs is in session. On
the same basis, Mr’ Setalvad has urged another argument and
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suggested that we should so construe the Rule as not to
apply to legislators. It would be noticed that the common
basis of all these alternative arguments is the assump-
413
tion that legislators have certain constitutional rights
which cannot be validly taken away by any statute or
statutory rule.
In support of this argument, Mr. Setalvad has referred us
to, certain constitutional provisions. The first Article on
which he relies is Art. 245(1). This Article provides that
subject to the, provisions of this Constitution, Parliament
may make laws for the whole or any part of the territory of
India, and the Legislature of a State may make laws for the
whole or any part of the State. The argument is that the
power to make laws is subject to the provisions of the
Constitution and that being so, if there are any
constitutional rights which the legislators can claim, no
law can be validly passed to take away the said rights. In
other words, just as the validity of any law can be
challenged on the ground that it contravenes the fundamental
rights guaranteed by Art. 19, so can the validity of the
impugned Rule be challenged on the ground that it
contravenes the constitutional-cum-fundamental rights of the
legislators.
These constitutional rights, according to Mr. Setalvad, are
to be found in several Articles of the Constitution. Mr.
Setalvad’s argument begins with Art. 79. This article deals
with the constitution of Parliament; it provides that
Parliament of the Union shall consist of the President and
two Houses to be, known respectively as the Council of
States and the House of the People. Article 85 (i)provides,
inter alia, that the President shall from time to time
summon each House of Parliament to meet at such time and
place as he thinks fit. In accordance with the provisions
of this article, when the President decides to call for the
session of Parliament summons are issued under his
directions asking all Members of Parliament to attend the
ensuing-session. The Detitioner Ananda Nambiar received
such a summons issued on the 9th January, 1965 Article 86(i)
gives the President the right to address either House of
Parliament or both Houses assembled together, and it
Provides that for that purpose, the President shall require
the attendance of members. Mr. Setalvad argues that when a
summons is issued by the President requiring the member to
attend the ensuing session of Parliament, it is not only his
right, but his constitutional obligation to attend the
session and hear the speech of the President. Article
100(i) refers to the voting in the Houses, and it provides
that save as otherwise provided in this Constitution, all
questions at any sitting of either House or joint sitting of
the Houses shall be determined by a majority of votes of the
members present and voting, other than the Speaker or person
acting as Chairman or Speaker. Article 101 (4) provides
that if for a
414
period of sixty days a member of either House of Parliament
is, without permission of the House, absent from all
meetings thereof, the House may declare his seat vacant. It
is common ground that if a member is detained or otherwise
prevented from attending the session of the House for
personal reasons, as asks for permission of the House and
usually, such permission is granted’. Article 105 deals
with the powers, privileges and immunities of Parliament and
its Members. Mr. Setalvad strongly relies on the provisions
of sub-articles (1) & (2) of Art. 105 which deal with :the
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freedom of speech inside the House of Parliament, and confer
,absolute immunity on the Members of Parliament in respect
of their speeches and votes. If the order of detention
prevents a Member of Parliament from attending the, session
of Parliament, from participating in the debate and from
giving his vote, that amounts to a violation of his
constitutional rights; that, in substance, is Mr. Setalvad’s
argument.
Mr. Setalvad also relied on the fact that this right
continues to vest in the Member of Parliament during the
life of the Parliament unless he is disqualified under
Art.102 or under s.7(b) of the Representation of the People
Act, 1951 (No. 43 of 1951). Article 84 deals with the
qualification for membership of Parliament. With the
provisions of this article we are not concerned in the
present proceedings, because we are dealing with the rights
of persons who have already been elected to the Parliament
in ,other words, who possess the qualifications prescribed
by Art. 84. Article 102 prescribes disqualifications for
membership; it provides, inter alia, that a person shall be
disqualified for being a member of either House of
Parliament if his case falls under any -of its clauses (a)
to (e). This disqualification applies for being chosen or
for being a member of either House of Parliament. In ,other
words, if a person incurs the disqualification prescribed by
the relevant clauses of Art.102(1) after he is elected to
either House of Parliament, he will cease to be such a
Member as a result ,of the said disqualification. If a
disqualification is not incurred as prescribed by Art.
102(1), he is entitled to continue to be a member of the
House during its life. Section 7 of the Representation ,of
the People Act prescribes disqualifications for membership
of Parliament or of a St-ate Legislature. S. 7 (b) is
relevant for our purpose. It provides that a person shall
be disqualified for being -chosen as, and for being, a
member of either House of Parliament if, whether before or
after the commencement of the Constitution, be has been
convicted by a Court in India of any offence and sentenced
to imprisonment for not less than two years, unless a
415
period of five years, or such less’ period as the Election
Commission may allow in any particular case, has elapsed
since his release. The argument based on the provisions of
s 7 is the same as the -argument based on the provisions of
Art. 102. If a Member of Parliament incurs a
disqualification, he may cease to be such member, but if he
continues to be qualified to be a member, his constitutional
rights cannot be taken away by any law or order.
It will be noticed that in substance the claim made is one
of exemption from arrest under a detention order and, prima
facie, such a claim would normally and legitimately fall
under Art. 105(3) of the Constitution. Art. 105(3) deals
with the powers, privileges and immunities of Parliament and
its Members, and it provides that in other respects, the
powers, privileges and immunities of each House of
Parliament, and of the members and the committees of each
House, shall be such as may from time to time be defined by
Parliament by law, and until so defined, shall be those of
the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United
Kingdom, and of its members and committees, at the com-
mencement of this Constitution. But Mr. Setalvad expressly
stated before us that he did not rest his case on the
provisions of Art. 105(3) and that obviously is for the very
good reason that freedom from arrest under a detention order
is not recognised as a privilege which can be claimed by
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Members of House of Commons in England. It is because such
a claim cannot be based on the provisions of Art. 105(3)
that Mr. Setalvad has been driven to adopt the ingenious
course of suggesting that the rights of the Members of
Parliament to participate in the business of Parliament is a
constitutional and even a fundamental right which cannot be
contravened by any law. The narrow question which thus
falls to be considered on this contention is : if a claim
for freedom from arrest by a detention order cannot be
sustained under the privileges of the Members of Parliament,
can it be sustained on the ground that it is a
constitutional right which cannot be contravened ? Before
dealing with this point, it is necessary to indicate broadly
the position about the privileges of the members of the
Indian Legislatures, because they will materially assist us
in determining the validity of the contention raised before
us by Mr. Setalvad. It is common ground that the
privileges, powers and immunities of the members of the
Indian Legislatures are the same as those of the members of
the House of Commons as they existed at the commencement of
the Indian Constitution. Let us, therefore, see what was
the position about the privileges of the members of the
House of Commons in regard to freedom from arrest by a
detention order ?
Sup.CI./66-13
416
The position about the privileges of the Members of the
House of Commons in regard to preventive detention is well
settled. In this connection, Erskine May observes : "The
privilege of freedom from arrest is limited to civil causes,
and has not been allowed to interfere with the
administration of criminal justice or emergency
legislation."(1)
In early times the distinction between "civil" and
"criminal" was not clearly expressed. It was only to cases
of "treason, felony and breach (or surety) of the peace"
that privilege was explicitly held not to apply. Originally
the classification may have been regarded as sufficiently
comprehensive. But in the case of misdemeanours, in the
growing list of statutory offences, and, particularly, in
the case of preventive detention under emergency legislation
in times of crisis, there was a debatable region about which
neither House had until recently expressed a definite view.
The development of privilege has shown a tendency to confine
it more narrowly to cases of a civil character and to
exclude not only every kind of criminal case, but also cases
which, while not strictly criminal, partake more of a
criminal than of a civil character. This development is in
conformity with the principle laid down by the Commons in a
conference with the Lords in 1641 : "Privilege of Parliament
is granted in regard of the service of the Commonwealth and
is not to be used to the danger of the Commonwealth".
The last statement of May is based on the report of the Com-
mittee of Privileges of the House of Commons which dealt
with the case of the detention of Captain Ramsay under
Regulation 18B of the Defence (General) Regulations, 1939.
Cap. Ramsay who had been detained under the said
Regulation, urged before the Committee of Privileges that by
reason of the said detention, a breach of the privileges of
the House had been committed. This plea was rejected by the
Committee of Privileges. The Committee found that Reg. 18B
under which Cap. Ramsay had been detained, had been made
under section 1(2)(a) of the Emergency Powers (Defence) Act,
1939. It examined the question as to whether the arrest and
detention of Cap. Ramsay were within the powers of the
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Regulation and in accordance with its provisions; and it was
satisfied that they were within the powers of the Regulation
and in accordance with its provisions. The Committee then
examined several precedents on which Cap. Ramsay relied,
and it found that whereas arrest in civil proceedings is a
breach of privilege, arrest on a criminal charge for an
indictable
(1) Erskine May’s Parliamentary Practice, 7th Ed. p. 78.
417
offence is not. The Committee then examined the basis of
the privilege and the reason for the distinction between
arrest in a civil suit and arrest on a criminal charge. It
appeared to the Committee that the privilege of freedom from
arrest originated at a time when English Law made free use
of imprisonment in civil proceedings as a method of coercing
debtors to pay their debts; and in order to enable the
Members of Parliament to discharge their functions
effectively, it was thought necessary to, grant them
immunity from such arrest, because they were doing King’s
business and should not be hindered in carrying out their
business by arrest at the suit of another subject of the
King. Criminal acts, however, were offences against the
King, and the privilege did not apply to arrest for such
acts. In this connection, the Committee emphasised the fact
that consideration of the general history of the privilege
showed that the tendency had been to narrow its scope. The
Committee recognised that there was a substantial difference
between arrest and subsequent imprisonment on a criminal
charge and detention without trial by executive order under
the Regulation or under analogous provisions in the past.
It, however, observed that they have this in common that the
purpose of both was the protection of the community as a
whole, and in that sense, arrest in the course of civil
proceedings, on principle, was wholly different from arrest
on a criminal charge or arrest for the purpose of detention.
It is on these grounds that the Committee came to the
conclusion that the detention of Cap. Ramsay did not amount
to any infringement of his privilege of freedom of speech.
A similar question had arisen in India in 1952. It appears
that in the early hours of the morning of the 27th May,
1952, Mr. V. G. Deshpande, who was then a Member of
Parliament,. was arrested and detained under the Preventive
Detention Act, 1950 the House was then in session; and a
question was raised that the said arrest and detention of
Mr. Deshpande, when the House was in session, amounted to a
breach of the privilege of the House. The question thus
raised was referred to the Committee of Privileges for its
report. On the 9th July, 1952, the report made by the said
Committee was submitted to the House. The majority view of
the Committee was that the arrest of’ Mr. Deshpande under
the Preventive Detention Act did not constitute a breach of
the privilege of the House. In coming to this conclusion,
the majority view rested itself primarily on the decision of
the Committee of Privileges of the House of Commons in the
case of Cap. Ramsay. It is thus plain that the validity of
the arrest of the petitioners in the present proceedings
cannot be
418
provisions of Art. 105. That is why Mr. Setalvad naturally
did not and could not press his case under the said Article.
What then is the true legal character of the rights on
which’ Mr. Setalvad has founded his argument ? They are not
rights which can be properly described as constitutional
rights of the Members of Parliament at all. The Articles on
which Mr. Setalvad has rested his case clearly bring out
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this position. Article 79 deals with the constitution of
Parliament and it has nothing to ,do with the individual
rights of the Members of Parliament after they are elected.
Articles 85 and 86 confer on the President the power to
issue summons for the ensuing session of Parliament and to
address either House of Parliament or both Houses as therein
specified. These Articles cannot be construed to confer any
right -as such on individual Members or impose any
obligation on them. It is not as if a Member of Parliament
is bound to attend the session, or is under an obligation to
be present in the House when the President addresses it.
The context in which these Articles appear shows that the
subject-matter of these articles is not the individual
rights of the Members of Parliament, but they refer to the
right of the President to issue a summons for the ensuing
session of Parliament or to address the House or Houses.
Then as to Art. 100(1) : what it provides is the manner in
which questions will be determined; and it is not easy to
see how the provision that all questions shall be determined
by a majority of votes of Members present and voting, can
give rise to -a constitutional right as such. The freedom
of speech on which Mr. Setalvad lays considerable emphasis
by reference to Art. 105(1) & (2), is a part of the
privileges, of the Members of the House. It is no doubt a
privilege of very great importance and significance, because
the basis of democratic form of Government is that Members
of Legislatures must be given absolute freedom of expression
when matters brought before the Legislature are debated.
Undoubtedly, the Members of Parliament have the privilege of
freedom of speech, but that is only when they attend the
session of the House and deliver their speech within the
chamber itself. It will be recalled that in Cap. Ramsay’s
case, what had been urged before the Committee of Privileges
was that the detention of Cap. Ramsay had caused a breach
of privilege of his freedom of speech, and this plea was
rejected by the Committee. We are, therefore, satisfied
that on a close examination of the articles on which Mr.
Setalvad has relied, the whole basis of his argument breaks
down, because the rights which he calls constitutional
rights are rights accruing to the Members of Parliament
419
after they are elected, but they are not constitutional
rights in, the. strict sense, and quite clearly, they are
not fundamental rights at all. It may be that sometimes in
discussing the significance or importance of the right of
freedom of speech guaranteed by Art. 105 (1) & (2), it may
have been described as a fundamental right; but the totality
of rights on which Mr. Setalvad relies cannot claim the
status of fundamental rights at all, and the freedom of
speech on which so much reliance is placed, is a part of the
privileges falling under Art. 105, and a plea that a breach
has been committed of any of these privileges cannot, of
course, be raised in view of the decision of the Committee
of Privileges of the House of Commons to which we have just
referred. Besides, the freedom of speech to which Art. 105
(1) and (2) refer, would be available to a Member of
Parliament when he attends the session of the Parliament.
If the order of detention validly prevents him from
attending a session of Parliament, no occasion arises for
the exercise of the right of freedom of speech and no
complaint can be made that the said right has been invalidly
invaded.
There is another aspect of this problem to which we would
like to refer at this stage. Mr. Setalvad has urged that a
Member of Parliament is entitled to exercise all his
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constitutional rights as such Member, unless he is
disqualified and for the relevant disqualifications, he has
referred to the provisions of Art. 102 of the Constitution
and S. 7 of the Representation of the People Act. Let us
take a case falling under S. 7(b) of this Act. It will be
recalled that S. 7(b) provides that if a person is convicted
of any offence and sentenced to imprisonment for not less
than two years, he would be disqualified for membership,
unless a period of five years, or such less period as the
Election Commission may allow in any particular case, has
elapsed since his release. If a person is convicted of an
offence and sentenced to less than two years, clearly such
conviction and sentence would not entail disqualification.
Can it be said that, a person who has been convicted of an
offence and sentenced to suffer imprisonment for less than
two years, is entitled to claim that notwithstanding the
said order of conviction and sentence, he should be
permitted to exercise his right as a legislator, because his
conviction and sentence do not involve disqualification ? It
is true that the conviction of a person at the end of a
trial is different from the detention of a person without a
trial; but so far as their impact on the alleged
constitutional rights of the Member of Parliament is
concerned, there can be no distinction. If a person who is
convicted and sentenced, has necessarily to forgo. his right
of participating in the business of the Legislature to which
he belongs,
4 2 0
because he is convicted and sentenced, it would follow that
a person who is detained must likewise forgo his right to
participate in the business of the Legislature. Therefore,
the argument that so long as the Member of Parliament has
not incurred any disqualification, he is entitled to
exercise his rights as such Member, cannot be accepted.
Besides, if the right on which the whole argument is based
is not a fundamental right, it would be difficult to see how
the validity of the Rule can be challenged on the ground
that it permits an order of detention in respect of a Member
of Parliament and as a result of the said order the Member
of Parliament cannot participate in the business of
Parliament. It appears that a similar question had arisen
before the Madras and the Calcutta High Courts, and the
decisions of these High Courts are in accord with the view
which we are inclined to take in the present proceedings.
In Pillalamarri Venkateswarlu v. The District Magistrate,
Guntur and Another(1), it was held by a Division Bench of
the Madras High Court that a Member of the State Legislature
cannot have immunity from arrest in the case of, a
preventive detention order. Similarly, in the case of K.
Ananda Nambiar(1), it was held by the Madras High Court that
once a Member of a Legislative Assembly is arrested and
lawfully detained, though without actual trial, under any
Preventive Detention Act, there can be no doubt that under
the law as it stands, he cannot be permitted to attend the
sittings of the House. The true constitutional position,
therefore, is that so far as a valid order of detention is
concerned, a Member of Parliament can claim no special
status higher than that of an ordinary citizen and is as
much liable to be arrested and detained under it as any
other citizen.
In Ansumali Majumdar v. The State(3), the Calcutta High
Court has elaborately considered this point and has held
that a member of the House of the Central or State
Legislature cannot claim as such Member any immunity from
arrest under the Preventive-Detention Act. Dealing with the
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argument that a Member of Parliament cannot, by reason of
his detention, be prevented from exercising his rights as
such Member, Harries, C.J. observed that if this argument is
sound, it follows that persons convicted ,of certain
offences and duly elected must be allowed to perform their
duties and cannot be made to serve their sentence during the
life of a Parliament. We ought to add that in all these
cases, the learned Judges took notice of the fact that
freedom from crimi-
(1) I.L.R. [1951] Mad. 135 (2) I.L.R. [1953]
Mad. 93
(3) I.L.R. [1954] I.Cal. 272
421
nal arrest was not treated as constituting a privilege of
the members of the House of Commons-in England. Therefore,
we are satisfied that Mr. Setalvad is not right in
contending that R.30(1)(b) is invalid.
It now remains to consider the other grounds on which Mr.
Chatterjee has challenged the validity of the impugned
orders of detention. The first contention raised by Mr.
Chatterjee is that the Presidential Order itself is invalid.
This Order has been issued in accordance with the provisions
of Art. 77(2) of the Constitution. Mr. Chatterjee, however,
contends that the Order issued by the President by virtue of
the power conferred on him by Art. 359(1) is not an
executive action of the Government of India and as such,
Art. 77 would not apply. We are not impressed by this
argument. In our opinion, Art. 77(2) which refers to orders
and other instruments made and executed in the name of the
President is wide enough to include the present Order.
Besides, it is significant that Art. 359(3) itself requires
that every order made under clause (1) shall, as soon as may
be after it is made, be laid before each House of
Parliament; ’and it is not alleged that this has not been
done. In fact, Mr. Chatterjee did not seriously press this
point.
The next contention raised by Mr. Chatterjee is that the
present detention of the two petitioners is invalid inasmuch
as the orders of detention passed in both the cases directed
that the petitioners should be detained in the Central Jail,
Tiruchinapalli, whereas both of them have been detained
throughout in the Central Jail, Cuddalore. Mr. Chatterjee’s
grievance is that it is not shown that a proper order had
been passed changing the place of detention of the
petitioners from Tiruchinapalli to Cuddalore.
This plea has been met by the counter-affidavit filed on
behalf of the Government of Madras on the ground that the
original orders of detention indicating that the petitioners
should be detained in the Central fail, Tiruchinapalli, were
modified by Government by a later Order fixing the venue of
detention as the Central Jail, Cuddalore, for reasons of
security. The counter:affidavit did not indicate the date
on which this Order was passed, and that left an element of
ambiguity. At the hearing of these petitions, however, the
learned counsel appearing for the Government of Madras has
produced before us an abstract from the Madras Government
Gazette giving all the details about this order. It appears
that this later Order was passed on December 30, 1964, and
it purported to modify all the orders stated in the
preamble;
422
amongst these orders are the orders of detention passed
against both the petitioners. Therefore, -it is clear that
by virtue of the powers conferred on it by Rule 30(4), the
Government of Madras had changed the venue of the
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petitioners’ detention; and so, there is no substance in the
argument that their detention in the Central Jail,
Cuddalore, is illegal.
Mr. Chatterjee’s main contention against the validity of the
orders of detention, however, is in regard to the alleged
mala fides in the said orders. He argues that the impugned
orders have been passed by the Government of Madras mala
fide for the purpose of stifling the political activities of
the petitioners which appeared to the Government of Madras
to be inconvenient. These orders have been passed for that
ulterior purpose and not for the purpose set out in the
orders of detention. Besides, it is urged that the Chief
Minister of Madras passed these orders without satisfying
himself that it was necessary to issue them. He was
influenced by what the Union Home Minister had already
decided in regard to the petitioners. It is not as a result
of the satisfaction of the Chief Minister himself that the
petitioners had been detained; the orders of detention have
been passed against the petitioners solely because the Union
Home Minister was satisfied that they should be detained.
That, in substance, is the grievance made before us by Mr.
Chatterjee against the validity of the impugned orders of
detention.
It appears that the Union Home Minister made certain state-
ments in his broadcast to the Nation from the All India
Radio, on January 1, 1965, and in reply to a debate on the
Budget Demands of the Ministry of Home Affairs in the Lok
Sabha on April 27, 1965. This is what the Union Home
Minister is reported to have said in his broadcast :-
"As you are aware, a number of leaders and
active workers of the Left Communist Party of
India have been detained during the last three
days. We have had to take this step for
compelling reasons for internal and external
security of the country. It is painful to us
to deprive any citizen of this free country of
his liberty and it is only after the most
careful thought that we have taken this
action."
"This very disagreeable decision was taken
after giving the most serious thought to all
that was at stake".
’We came to the conclusion that we would be
taking a serious risk with the external and
internal security of the country if we did not
act immediately".
423
This is what the Union Home Minister is
reported to have
id in the Lok Sabha :-
"It is a matter of regret to me that I have
had to make myself responsible for throwing
into prison a fairly large number of citizens
of this country".
"I look into the cases personally. I may say
that it may be that some error may have
occurred here and there; that test has to be
satisfied. We have to make sure that it is
because of our clear appreciation of the
activities which we may call pro-Chinese,
disloyal activities, subversive activities,,
one way or another, that we have to resort to
this kind of action. If on any person, any
detenu on his part, it can be said that there
was a mistake made, that he actually is not
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pro-Chinese and he is a loyal citizen of the
country, I am personally prepared to look
into each case and again satisfy myself that
no wrong has been done or no injustice has
been done".
For the purpose of dealing with the present petitions, we
are assuming that the petitioners can rely upon these two
statements. The learned Additional Solicitor-General no
doubt contended that the statements were not admissible and
relevant and had not been duly proved; besides, according to
him, some of the statements produced were also inaccurate;
even so, he was prepared to argue on the basis that the said
statements can be considered by us, and so,,,, we have not
thought it necessary to decide the question about the
relevance or admissibility or proof of these statements in
the present proceedings.
In appreciating the effect of these two statements, it is
necessary to refer to the statements made on affidavit by
the Chief Minister of Madras and the Chief Secretary to the
Government of Madras respectively. This is what the Chief
Minister of Madras has stated on oath :-
"Consequent upon the outbreak of hostilities
between China and India and declaration of
Emergency it was necessary for the Government
of India and the various States to watch
carefully the movements and activities of
those persons, who either individually or as
part of any group, were acting or likely to
act in a manner prejudicial to the safety of
India and the maintenance of public order.
The Communist Party of
424
India was rift into two factions and the
faction known as the Left Communist Party of
India, which came to be known as the Pro-
Peking faction, had particularly to be
watched. The question of detaining persons
belonging to this faction and who were also
active, was engaging the attention of the
Governments and was also discussed at the
Chief Ministers’ Conference. Our sources ,of
intelligence continued to maintain a watch
over the movements and activities of these
individuals. The Communist Party of India
being an All-India Organisation with a wide
net work, the question of detention had
necessarily to be considered on a National
level, so that a coordinated and concerted
action may be taken. It was in this context
that the Central Government communicated with
the State Government".
"I submit that I ordered the petitioners in
the above petitions to be detained, on 29th
December, 1964. The petitioners are also
known to me and their detention was ordered on
my personal satisfaction that it was
necessary. My satisfaction was both on the
general question as to the need for detaining
persons like the petitioner and on the
individual question namely whether the
petitioner was one such, whose detention was
necessary".
The Chief Secretary’s affidavit is on the same lines.
On these statements, the question which falls to be decided
is : is it shown, by the petitioners that the impugned
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orders of detention were passed for an ulterior purpose, or
they have been passed by the Chief Minister of Madras
without satisfying himself, merely because the Union Home
Minister thought that the petitioners should be detained.
It is not disputed that if the Union Home Minister wanted to
make an order detaining the petitioners, he could have made
the order himself. But the contention is that the orders,
in fact, have been made by the Government of Madras, and it
is, therefore, necessary to consider whether the Chief
Minister of Madras satisfied himself or not.
In dealing with these pleas, we cannot ignore the fact that
the question about detaining the petitioners formed part of
a larger question about the attitude which the Government of
India and the State Governments should adopt in respect of
the activities of the Party to which the petitioners belong.
This Party is known
425
as the Left Communist Party of India which came to be known
as the Pro-Peking faction of the Communist Party. It is,
therefore, not surprising that this larger issue should have
been examined by the Union Home Minister along with the
Chief Ministers of the States in India. The sources of
intelligence available to the Government of India had given
it the relevant information. Similarly, the sources of
information available to the Governments of different States
had supplied to their respective States the relevant
information about the political activities of the Left
Communist Party of India. Having considered these reports,
the Union Home Minister and the Chief Ministers came to
certain decisions in regard to the approach which should be
adopted by them in respect of the Left Communist Party in
view of the Emergency prevailing in the country. This
general decision naturally had no direct relation to any
particular individuals as such. The decision in regard to
the individual members of the Left Communist Party had
inevitably to be left to the State Governments or the Union
Government according to their discretion. It is conceded
that the Union Government has in fact issued orders of
detention against as many as 140 members of the, Left Com-
munist Party of India, whereas different orders of detention
have been passed by different State Governments against
members of the Left Communist Party in their respective
States. It is in the background of this position that the
statements of the Union Home Minister as well as those of
the Chief Minister of Madras have to be considered.
Thus considered, we do not see any justification for the
assumption that the detention of the petitioners was ordered
by the Chief Minister of Madras without considering the
matter himself. Indeed, it is not denied that the Chief
Minister knows both the petitioners and he has stated
categorically that he examined the materials in relation to
the activities of the petitioners and he was satisfied that
it was necessary to detain them. We see no reason whatever
why this clear and unambiguous statement made by the Chief
Minister of Madras should not be treated as true. As the
Chief Minister states in his affidavit, his satisfaction was
both on the general question as to the need for detaining
persons like the petitioners, and on the individual question
of each one of them. In this connection, it is obvious that
when the Union Home Minister spoke in the first person
plural, he was speaking for the Union Government and the
State Governments as well, and when he spoke in the first
person singular, he was referring to cases with which he was
concerned as the Union Home Minister, and that would take in
cases of persons whose detention has been
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42 6
ordered by the Union Government. There is, therefore, no
inconsistency or conflict between the statements of the
Union Home Minister and the affidavit of the Chief Minister
of Madras. That being so, we are satisfied that there is no
substance in the grievance made by Mr. Chatterjee that the
impugned orders of detention passed against the petitioners
were made either mala fide or without the proper
satisfaction of the detaining authority.
In the result, both the writ petitions fail and are
dismissed.
Petition dismissed.
427