Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARBANS LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M.L. WADHAWAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/12/1986
BENCH:
KHALID, V. (J)
BENCH:
KHALID, V. (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1987 AIR 217 1987 SCR (1) 425
1987 SCC (1) 151 JT 1986 960
1986 SCALE (2)925
ACT:
Section 3(1) and 8--Detenu--Right of--To lead evidence
in rebuttal of allegations against him before Advisory
Board-- To choose between affidavit evidence and oral evi-
dence.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner’s son was detained under s. 3(1) of the
COFEPOSA Act, 1974 pursuant to a detention order passed on
March 31, 1986. He was found in possession of a large quan-
tity of contraband goods worth over Rs. 21 lacs, hidden in
his premises, which he had brought from Hongkong.
On April 29, 1986, before the Advisory Board the detenu
wanted to prove that the premises in which the contraband
goods were found was not in his possession and in support
thereof he wanted to examine five witnesses, who were
present when the matter was being heard by the Advisory
Board. The Board declined to examine the witnesses, but
permitted the detenu to produce their affidavits. Since it
was net possible to secure the affidavits, on the next
hearing date, an application was made for their examination,
but the Board decline this request and forwarded its pro-
ceedings to the Central Government who confirmed the deten-
tion order.
The detenu filed a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution challenging the detention order. The High Court
dismissed the petition holding that the witnesses were not
required under the law to be subjected to crossexamination,
that the Advisory Board was right in suggesting to file the
affidavits of the witnesses, that the plea that the witness-
es declined to file their affidavits was flimsy and without
any valid reason, that the plea that evidence in the shape
of affidavits is an inferior type of evidence hardly de-
serves any worthwhile consideration, that if on perusal of
the affidavits the Advisory Board considered to call any of
the deponents it could have been done and that it cannot be
said that the detenu was deprived of his right of defence
before the Advisory Board.
In the Special Leave Petition and the Writ Petition
before this Court on behalf of the detenu it was contended
(i) that the Advisory Board acted in violation of law in
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denying the detenu his right to examine witnesses in rebut-
tal, who were readily available and present on the dates of
hearing; (ii)that the
426
Advisory Board was bound under law to send the entire re-
cords of the proceedings to the Central Government for
applying its mind before making the order of confirmation;
and (iii)that the Central Government, in this case, was not
informed about the presence of five witnesses before the
Advisory Board, ready to be examined and the Board’s refusal
to record their evidence.
Allowing the petitions, the Court,
HELD: 1. The Advisory Board committed an error in law in
denying to the detenu the fight to examine the witnesses,
rendering his continued detention bad. The detention order
is quashed, the judgment of the High Court set aside and the
detenu directed to be released forthwith. [434 E-F]
2. The "trinity of rights" available to the detenu
before the Advisory Board are: (i) the fight of legal repre-
sentation; (ii)the right of crossexamination; and (iii)the
right to present his evidence in rebuttal. [429 E-F]
3. The law recognises the right in a detenu to lead
evidence in rebuttal of the allegation against him before
the Advisory Board. All that is necessary is that the detenu
should keep the witnesses ready for examination at the
appointed time. There is no obligation cast on the Advisory
Board to summon them. The Advisory Board is competent to
regulate its own procedure within the constraints of the
Constitution and the statute and this procedure is referable
to the time limit within which the Advisory Board must
complete its inquiry. [430 D-E]
4. The right to adduce oral evidence by examining wit-
nesses is a right available to a detenu under the decision
of this Court in A. K. Roy’s case 1982, 2 S.C.R. 272 and
this should be deemed to be incorporated in the statute
dealing with detention without trial. Therefore, the right
in a detenu to adduce oral evidence in rebuttal being a
right in the nature of Constitutional safeguard embodied in
Article 22(5) of the Constitution as construed by this Court
in A.K. Roy’s case (supra) has necessarily to be read into
section 8(b) and (c) of the COFEPOSA Act. If this right is
denied to a detenu, the necessary consequence must follow.
[430 G, 431C]
A.K. Roy v. Union of India, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 272 and
Narendra Purshotam Umrao v. B.B. Gujral& Ors., [1979] 2
S.C.C. 637, followed.
5. Article 22(7)(e) enables Parliament to prescribe by
law the procedure to be followed by an Advisory Board in an
inquiry under Article 22(4)(a). Section 8 of the COFEPOSA
Act is sequel to this prescription. There is nothing in s. 8
prohibiting oral evidence of witnesses tendered by a detenu
being taken. The
427
concept of inquiry by the Advisory Board takes within its
ambit this aspect of ’hearing’ also. [431 D]
6. The High Court was wrong in saying that the witnesses
were not required under law to be subjected to cross-exami-
nation "admittedly". This Court has only laid down that
witnesses on behalf of the detaining authority cannot be
cross-examined by the detenu. It has nowhere been held that
the witnesses on behalf of the detenu produced in rebuttal
of the allegation against him cannot be cross-examined.
Cross-examination of such witnesses has to be by the detain-
ing authority and that right cannot be denied to them.
7. Unless there is any legal bar for oral evidence of
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the detenu being adduced before ’the Advisory Board it
should be left to the detenu to choose between affidavit
evidence and oral evidence subject of course to the rigorous
limitation placed upon this right relating to constraints of
time [433 C]
8. In the instant case in deying the right to examine
witnesses present before the Advisory Board, the Board acted
in violation of the law. [433 D]
9. The complaint that the report of the Advisory Board
did not contain all the necessary information regarding the
availability of the witnesses on 29.4.1986 and 1.5.1986, the
readiness of the detenu to examine them, rejection of the
requests to examine them and directing instead filing of the
affidavits cannot be said to be wholly unjustified. [434 D]
10. The Central Government is under an obligation to
apply its mind to the entire material before Confirming the
order of detention.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Special Leave petition
(Criminal) No. 2466 of 1986
From the Judgment and Order dated 26.8.1986 of the
Delhi High Court in Crl. Writ No. 170 of 1986.
and
Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 530 of 1986
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
Ram Jethmalani, A.K. Sharma and Ms. Rani Jethmalani for
the Petitioner.
428
V.C. Mahajan, A.S. Rao, Ms. Halida Khatun and C.V. Subba
Rao for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHALID, J. The Special Leave Petition is directed
against the Judgment dated 26.8.1986 of a Single Judge of
the Delhi High Court in Criminal Writ No. 170/86 filed by
Shri Harbans Lal father of the detenu Om Prakash. The Writ
Petition is also by the same person. Both these matters are
being disposed of by this common Judgment. Special Leave
granted.
The cases relate to the detention of Shri Om Prakash
under Section 3(1) of the COFEPOSA Act. An order of deten-
tion was passed against him on 31st March, 1986 by the
Additional Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry of
Finance, Department of Revenue--the Respondent No. 1 herein.
The detenu was served with the grounds of detention on the
same date. The case against the detenu is that he was in
possession of a large quantity of contraband good.s hidden
in his premises--No. 5/23, West Patel Nagar, New Delhi.
These premises were searched by the officers of the Direc-
torate of Revenue Intelligence in the early hours of
20/3/1986, as a result of which foreign goods worth Rupees
Twentyone lakhs and odd were recovered. The accusation
against the detenu is that he brought these articles during
the various trips that he made to Hong Kong between
10/12/1985 and 19/3/1986.
On 29th of April, 1986, the Advisory Board met to con-
sider the propriety of the detention order. The detenu
wanted to prove that the premises in which the alleged
contraband goods were found was not in his possession and
that in fact he lived at some other place. In support of
this case he wanted to examine five witnesses before the
Advisory Board. These 5 witnesses were present when the
matter was to be heard by the Advisory Board on 29th April,
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1986. This fact was made known to the Advisory Board. The
Board intimated the detenu’s legal Adviser that it would not
examine the said witnesses but would instead permit the
detenu to produce their affidavits. Thus an opportunity was
lost to him that day to examine the witnesses in rebuttal.
It is the detenu’s case that despite best efforts by his
legal Adviser it was not possible to secure the affidavits
of the witnesses. The said witnesses were therefore brought
again on the 1st of May, 1986, when the Board resumed its
hearing and an application was made to the Board to examine
them. Annexure-C attached to the Writ Petition shows that
the detenu filed an application before the Advisory Board on
29th April, 1986, requesting the Board to examine the wit-
nesses brought in his defence both on 29-4-1986 and 1-5-1986
and without making any request for an adjournment. The
Advisory Board declined this request. The High Court consid-
ered this aspect of the case and justified the rejection of
this request on the
429
plea that the detenu could not waste the time of the Adviso-
ry Board by asking the Board to record oral evidence. The
records of proceedings of the Advisory Board were forwarded
to the Central Government and the order of detention was
confirmed.
The learned counsel for the detenu raised two questions
of law, for our consideration, in his attempt to persuade us
to accept his plea that the detention in question had to be
quashed: (i) the Advisory Board acted in violation of law as
mandated by a Constitution Bench Judgment of this Court in
denying to the detenu his right to examine witnesses, who
were readily available and present on the dates of hearing
before the Advisory Board, in rebuttal of the ease of the
detaining authority, (ii) the Advisory Board was bound under
law to send the entire records of the proceedings before it
to the Central Government and the Central Government in turn
bound to apply its mind to the entire materials before
proceeding to make the order of confirmation. The Central
Government, in this case, was not informed about the
presence of 5 witnesses before the Advisory Board, ready to
be examined and the Board’s refusal to record their evi-
dence.
In support of the first contention, the learned counsel
for the petitioner relied upon the following observation by
a Constitution Bench of this Court in K. Roy v. Union of
India, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 272. In that case this Court had to
consider the extent of the "trinity of rights" which was
available to the detenu before the Advisory Board. These
fights are:
(i) The right of legal representation,
(ii) The right of cross-examination and
(iii) The right to present his evidence in
rebuttal.
We are here concerned with the third right, namely the
fight of the detenu to lead evidence in rebuttal before the
Advisory Board. The Constitution Bench repelled the plea
that the detenu had a right to cross-examine either the
persons on the basis of whose statements the order of deten-
tion was made or the detaining authority but observed as
follows on the third right:
"The last of the three rights for which Shri
Jethmalani contends is the right of the detenu
to lead evidence in rebuttal before the Advi-
sory Board. We do not see any objection to
this right being granted to the detenu. Nei-
ther the Constitution nor the National Securi-
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ty Act contains any provisions denying to the
detenu the right to present his own evidence
in rebuttal of the aliegations
430
made against him. The detenu may therefore
offer oral and documentary evidence before
the Advisory Board in order to rebut the
allegations which are made against him. We
would only like to add that if the detenu
desires to examine any witness, he shah have
to keep them present at the appointed time and
no obligation can be cast on the Advisory
Board to summon them. The Advisory Board, like
any other tribunal, is free to regulate its
own procedure within the constraints of the
Constitution and the statute. It would be open
to it, in the exercise of that power, to limit
the time within which the detenu must complete
his evidence. We consider it necessary to make
this observation particularly in view of the
fact that the Advisory Board is under an
obligation under section 11(1) of the Act to
submit its report to the appropriate Govern-
ment within seven weeks from the date of
detention of the person concerned. The pro-
ceedings before the Advisory Board have there-
fore to be completed with the utmost expedi-
tion." (Emphasis supplied).
The law laid down thus recognises the fight in a detenu
to lead evidence in rebuttal of the allegation against him
before the Advisory Board. All that is necessary is that the
detenu should keep the witnesses ready for examination at
the appointed time. There is no obligation cast on the
Advisory Board to summon them. This Court recognises a fight
in the Advisory Board to regulate its own procedure within
the constraints of the Constitution and the statute and this
procedure is referable to the time limit within which the
Advisory Board must complete its enquiry. It is in the light
of the law laid down by this Court in the above decision
that the first question, raised by the learned counsel, has
to be considered.
We have not. been told that the Advisory Board has
regulated any procedure that oral evidence will not be
permitted when it enquires into orders of detention. Even if
there is any such procedure it will be of no legal conse-
quence after the law in this behalf had been laid down by
this Court in A.K. Roy case (supra). The fight to adduce
oral evidence by examining witnesses is a fight available to
a detenu under the above decision and this should be deemed
to be incorporated in the statute dealing with detention
without trial. Support for this position was sought by the
learned counsel for the petitioner from a decision of this
Court in Norendra Purshotam Umrao v. B.B. Gujral & Ors.,
[1979] 2 S.C.C. 637. In that case, this Court was dealing
with the absence of any express provision in Section 8(b) of
the COFEPOSA Act placing an obligation to forward the repre-
sentation made by a detenu alongwith the reference to ’the
Advisory Board unlike those contained in Section 9 of the
Preventive Detention Act, 1950 and Section 10 of the
431
Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971. It was contended
in that case that in the absence of an express provision in
this behalf no obligation was cast on the Government to
consider the representation made by the detenu before for-
warding it to the Advisory Board or to forward the same to
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the Advisory Board. After discussing the scope of Article
22(5), this Court held "the constitutional safeguards em-
bodied in Article 22(5) of the Constitution, as construed by
this Court, must, therefore, be read into the provisions of
Section 8(b) of Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Preven-
tion of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 to prevent any arbi-
trary Executive action."
This decision rendered by a three Judge Bench of this
Court has laid down that the Constitutional safeguards
embodied in Article 22(5) of the Constitution as understood
by this Court must be read into Section 8(b) of the COFEPOSA
Act. Therefore, the fight in a detenu to adduce oral evi-
dence in rebuttal, being a right in the nature of a Consti-
tutional safeguard embodied in Article 22(5) of the Consti-
tution as construed by this Court in A.K. Roy’s case (supra)
has necessarily to be read into Section 8(b) and (c) of the
COFEPOSA Act. If this fight is denied to a detenu, the
necessary consequence must follow. Article 22(7) enables
Parliament to prescribe by law the procedure to be followed
by an Advisory Board an enquiry under Article 22(4)(a).
Section 8 of the COFEPOSA Act is a sequel to this prescrip-
tion. There is nothing in Section 8 prohibiting oral evi-
dence of the witnesses tendered by a detenu being taken. The
concept of enquiry by the Advisory Board takes within its
ambit this aspect of ’hearing’ also. This fight has received
the seal of approval in A.K. Roy’s case.
The facts are not very much in dispute in this case. The
Advisory Board met on 29th April, 1986. on that day an
application (Annexure-C) was made to the Advisory Board by
the detenu, requesting examination of witnesses to rebut the
evidence against him. It was ’mentioned therein that his
witnesses were present at the time of hearing before the
Advisory Board. A further request was made that the witness-
es may be permitted to be examined on the next hearing date,
that is 1-5-1986. Annexure-C is a communication from the
detenu to the Chairman and members of the Advisory Board.
This Annexure gives the names of the 5 witnesses whom he
proposed to be examined.
In the Counter Affidavit filed in the Writ Petition by
the Under Secretary, Ministry of Finance, Department of
Revenue, it is stated that the Advisory Board gave opportu-
nity to the detenu to file affidavits of the witnesses
present, that the detenu agreed to file the affidavits and
obtained time till 1-5-1986. On that day a statement was
made that these witnesses were not willing to file affida-
vits. "Therefore, the Advisory Board is justified in stating
that it is not necessary to record evidence of the persons
who were not prepared to give affidavits". There is some
factual dispute in the two versions,
432
one by the detenu and the other seen in the Counter Affida-
vit. The petitioner’s case is that the witnesses were
present both on 29-4-1986 & 1-5-1986. No request for any
adjournment was made,The Counter Affidavit would indicate
that time was sought for by the detenu to file affidavits
and the matter was adjourned to 1-5-1986 on this request.
For the purpose of this case we will accept the version
in the Counter Affidavit. Two facts that are not in dispute
are that the witnesses were present on both the days and
that on 1-5-1986, they were not permitted to be examined.
This aspect of the case is seen discussed by the High Court
as follows:
"Admittedly, these witnesses were not required
under the law to be subjected to cross-exami-
nation, the Advisory Board was right in sug-
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gesting to the learned counsel for the detenu
to file the affidavits of those witnesses.
Whatever those witnesses were to depose to by
them in the affidavits and that could have
saved the hard-pressed time of the Advisory
Board. The detenu could not gain anything
further by producing the witnesses before the
Advisory Board for their statements. Even
though the detenu was in custody, his father
Harbans Lal-petitioner could not procure the
affidavits of the witnesses and file the same
before the Advisory Board. The plea that the
witnesses declined to file their affidavits is
just flimsy and without any valid reason. The
further contention of the learned counsel for
the petitioner that evidence in the shape of
affidavits which are not subjected to cross
examination or close scrutiny by questions
asked by the Advisory Board, is an inferior
type of evidence and that honest witnesses may
create much more favourable impression by
deposing before the Advisory Board than by
reducing their testimony in the form of affi-
davits, hardly deserves any worthwhile consid-
eration. If on perusal of the affidavits the
Advisory Board considered to call any of those
deponents before them it could have been done.
The matter of any more favourable impression
by deposing before the Advisory Board is a
factor quite far-fetched. As already pointed
out above cross examination of these witnesses
is not permissible under the law. For these
reasons it cannot be said that the detenu was
deprived of his right of defence :before the
Advisory Board."
In our view the High Court has committed a few mistakes
in the above discussion. One fails to understand how the
High Court says that the witnesses were not required under
law to be subjected to cross-examination "admittedly".
433
In A.K. Roy’s case all that this Court has laid down is that
the witnesses on behalf of the detaining authority cannot be
cross examined by the detenu. It is not stated in that
Judgment nor in any other Judgment of this Court that the
witnesses on behalf of the detenu produced in rebuttal of
the allegation against him cannot be cross-examined. Cross-
examination of such witnesses has to be by the detaining
authority and that right cannot be denied to them. The
second mistake committed by the High Court is in its assess-
ment of the worth of the affidavit evidence and the oral
evidence. This is a matter to be decided by the detenu.
Unless there is any legal bar for oral evidence of the
detenu being adduced before the Advisory Board it should be
left to the detenu to choose between affidavit evidence and’
oral evidence subject of course to the rigorous limitation
placed upon this right by this Court in A.K. Roy’s case
relating to constraints of time. The High Court disbelieved
the case of the detenu that the witnesses declined to file
their affidavits and has characterised it as "just flimsy
and without any valid reason."
We do not agree with the wide statement made by the High
Court that by denying oral evidence it cannot be said that
the detenu was deprived of his fight of defence before the
Advisory Board. On the strength of the law laid down by this
Court, there is no escape from the conclusion that by deny-
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ing the right to examine witnesses present before the Advi-
sory Board, the Board acted in violation of the law laid
down by this Court in A.K. Roy’s case.
The second contention raised on behalf of the detenu is
that the Advisory Board failed to send the entire records of
proceeding before it to the Central Government. The gravamen
of the charge is that the Central Government should have
been made aware of the fact that the detenu had got ready
witnesses to be examined on 29-4-1986 and 1-5-1986 and that
the Advisory Board denied the right of examination of wit-
nesses but only permitted affidavits to be filed which could
not ultimately be filed. The Central Government was under an
obligation to apply its mind to the entire material before
making the order of confirmation of the detention order.
The petitioner’s learned counsel suggested that the
report to the Advisory Board contained factual mistakes. The
learned counsel for the respondents made available to us the
records of the proceedings of the Advisory Board. They are
confidential. However, relevant portions were shown to the
petitioner’s Advocate. He persisted that the report did not
reflect what really happened before the Advisory Board. If
the Central Government was told that the witnesses were
present and that they were not permitted to be examined,
argues the counsel, different consequences might have en-
sued. In Nand Lal Bajaj v. State of Punjab & Anr., [1981] 4
S.C.C. 327. A similar question arose and this Court observed
as follows in para 11 of its Judgment:
434
"The matter can be viewed from another angle.
we were informed that the Advisory Board did
not forward the record of its proceedings to
the State Government. If that be so, then the
procedure adopted was not in consonance with
the procedure established by law. The State
Government while confirming the detention
order under Section 12 of the Act has not only
to persue the report of the Advisory Board,
but also to apply its mind to the material on
record. If the record itself was not before
the State Government, it follows that the
order passed by the State Government under
Section 12 of the Act was without due applica-
tion of mind. This is a serious infirmity in
the case which makes the continued detention
of the detenu illegal."
In view of our finding on the first contention we do not
think it necessary to resolve this dispute and enter into a
finding of the second ground urged before us. Suffice it to
say that the complaint by the petitioner’s counsel that the
report did not contain all the necessary information regard-
ing the availability of the witnesses on 29-4-1986 and 1-5-
1986, the readiness of the detenu to examine them, rejection
of the request to examine them and directing instead filing
of the affidavits, cannot be said to be wholly unjustified.
After giving our careful consideration on the important
question of law involved in this case, we hold that, as we
are bound by the law laid down by the Constitution Bench of
this Court in A.K. Rov’s case, the Advisory Board committed
an error in law in denying to the detenu the right to exam-
ine the witnesses, rendering his continued detention bad.
Upon the particular facts and circumstances of this case, we
quash the order of detention, set aside the Judgment of the
Delhi High Court and direct that the petitioner’s son be
released forthwith.
A.P.J. Petitions
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allowed.
435