Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PANKAJ KUMAR CHAKRABARTY AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/05/1969
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 97 1970 SCR (1) 543
1969 SCC (3) 400
CITATOR INFO :
R 1970 SC 675 (11,12)
F 1973 SC 824 (4)
R 1979 SC 420 (12)
F 1980 SC 798 (1)
R 1981 SC2069 (4)
RF 1987 SC1977 (7)
D 1988 SC2090 (25)
R 1989 SC1861 (16)
RF 1991 SC 574 (11)
RF 1991 SC1090 (5)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 22(5)-Preventive Detention-
Representation if to be considered by Government-Preventive
Detention Act (4 of 1950), ss. 7 and 13.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners who were detained under ss. 3(1)(a) (ii)
(iii) and 3(2) of the Preventive Detention Act, 1950, made
representations to the State Government against their
detentions. The representations were made after their cases
were placed before the Advisory Board. The State Government
without considering the representations, passed them on to
the Advisory Board. The Board considered the case of the
petitioners as well as their representations to the
Government and confirmed the order of detention. The
petitioners filed a writ of habeas, corpus, challenging
their detentions on the ground that the State Government had
failed to carry out its obligation. under Art. 22(5) of the
Constitution to consider the representation. On the
questions (i) whether there is on the appropriate Government
the obligation to consider the representation made by
detenue, and (ii) if there is, whether it makes any
difference where such a representation is made after the
detenue’s case is referred to the Advisory Board.
HELD : Setting aside the detenfion,
(i) Clause (5) of the Art. 22 not only contains the
obligation of the appropriate government to furnish the
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grounds and to give the earliest opportunity to make a
representation but also by necessary implication. the
obligation to consider that representation. The expressions
"as soon may be" and "the earliest opportunity" in that
clause clearly indicate that the grounds are to be served
and that the opportunity to make a representation is
provided for to enable the detenue to show that hit
detention is unwarranted and since no other authority who
should consider such representation is mentioned it can only
be the detaining authority to whom it is. to be made which
has to consider. [548 B, F]
Sk. Abdul Karim v. State of West Bengal, [1969] 3 S.C.R.
479, approved.
(ii) The Constitution could not have intended that a
representation under cl. (5) need not be considered by the
appropriate Government where an Advisory Board is
constituted. If that was the intention cl. (5) would not
have directed the detaining authority to afford the earliest
opportunity to the detenue. In imposing the obligation to
afford the opportunity to make a representation cl. (5) does
not make any distinction between orders of detention for
only three months or less, where there is no necessity of
having the opinion of an Advisory Board, and those for a
longer duration. The clause does not say that the
representation is to be considered by the appropriate
Government in the former class of cases and by the Board in
the latter class of cases. The obligation of the Government
to consider the representation is distinct from the
obligation to, constitute an Advisory Board. Whereas the
Government considers the representation to ascertain whether
the order is in conformity with its
544
power under the relevant law, the Board considers such
representation from the point of view of also arriving at
its opinion whether there is sufficient case for detention.
[549 B-C, E-H].
The provisions of the Act also strengthen the conclusion
that the Government has to consider the representation. If
the representation was for consideration not by the
Government but by the Board there was no necessity to
provide in s. 7 that it should be addressed to the
Government. Further, it could not have been the intention
of Parliament that the Government could pass an order under
s. 13 revoking or modifying an order of detention without
considering the representation which has under s. 7 been
addressed to it. [550 C-F]
Sk. Abdul Karim v. State of West Bengal, [1969] 3 S.C.R.
479, -approved.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 377 of 1968-
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
S. N. Prasad, for the petitioners Nos. 15 and 36.
Sukumar Basu, for the respondent.
R. S. Garg and A. K. Gupta, for interveners Nos. 1 to 5.
Niren De, Attorney-General, R. H. Dhebar and S. P. Nayar,
for intervener No. 6.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. 37 persons detained under S. 3(1)(a)(ii) and
(iii) read with s. 3(2) of the Preventive Detention Act, IV
of 1950 filed this petition against orders of detention
passed against them by the District Magistrates of Howrah,
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Midnapore and Purulia, West Bengal. We are, however,
concerned only with Subodh Chandra Barik and Guhiram Gope,
petitioners 15 and 36, as the rest of them have since then
been released. The petition came up for hearing on April
11, 1969 before Sikri and Bachawat, JJ. who referred it to a
larger Bench as the question involved in this petition was
of substantial importance. That is how this petition has
come up before us for disposal.
Petitioners in W. P. 448 of 1969, pending in this Court and
who are detained under the Jammu & Kashmir Preventive Deten-
tion Act, applied for intervention as the point involved in
this petition also arises in their petition and that having
been allowed, Mr. Garg representing them appeared before us
supporting the contentions raised on behalf of petitioners
15 and 36.
The order of detention against petitioner Barik was passed
on March 23, 1968 by the District Magistrate, Midnapore, as
he was satisfied that with a view to preventing the
petitioner from acting in a manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of supplies and services essential to the
community it was necessary to detain him.
545
The District Magistrate reported to the State Government his
said order on March 27, and the Governor approved the same
on April 1, 1968. As required by s. 3(4) of the Act, the
Governor reported the case to the Central Government. The
petitioner was taken into custody on September 16, 1968 when
he was served with the said order and the grounds therefor.
His case was placed before the Advisory Board on September
21, 1968 under S. 9 of the Act. On October 21, 1968 the
petitioner made his representation against the said order to
the State Government. On November 6, 1968 the Advisory
Board, after considering his case as also his said
representation, gave its opinion that there was sufficient
cause for his detention and thereupon the Governor, by his
order dated November 11, 1968, confirmed the said order.
The petitioner filed a petition in the High Court at
Calcutta against the said order but that was dismissed.
As regards petitioner Guhiram Gope, the order of detention
was passed against him by the District Magistrate of Purulia
on August 29, 1968 on the ground that he was satisfied that
he was acting in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of
supplies and services essential to the community and also to
the maintenance of public order, i.e., under cls. (ii) and
(iii) of s. 3 (1) (a). The order was reported to the
State Government on the sameday. The Governor approved the
order on September 6, 1968and made his report to the
Central Government on the sameday. The petitioner was
taken into detention on August 29, 1968after he was served
with the order and the grounds therefor. His case was
placed before the Advisory Board on September 29, 1968. The
petitioner made his representation to the State Government
on October 5, 1968. On November 6, 1968 the Board consider-
ed his case as also his said representation and on its
finding that there was sufficient cause for his detention
the Governor confirmed the said order on November 12, 1968.
It is not necessary to go into the various grounds furnished
to the petitioners. It, is sufficient to notice that in the
affidavit in reply filed on behalf of the State Government
the detention of the two petitioners was sought to be
defended on the ground that the petitioners, taking
advantage of the scarcity conditions prevailing in the
State, were indulging in illegitimate procuring, holding and
disposing of food grains thereby defeating the policy of and
the various control orders passed in that behalf by the
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State Government. We may also notice that the grounds
supplied to the petitioners also stated that the petitioners
may make a representation to the State Government as early
as possible and that such representation should be addressed
to the officer specified therein.
It is an admitted fact that though the grounds furnished to
the. detenues stated that they might, if they so desired,
make a representation to the State Government, the State
Government
546
did not consider the representations and merely passed them
on to, the Advisory Board for its consideration. Presumably
that was done as the representations were made after the
cases of the two Petitioners were referred to the board and
the Government felt that it should not interfere with the
decision of the Board by expressing its own views one way or
the other on those representations. The Stand taken before
us by counsel for the State was that neither Art. 22, cls. 4
and 5, nor ’any of the provisions of the Act made it
mandatory either expressly or by necessary implication for
the State Government to consider the representations and
that it was sufficient for the Government to pass them on to
the Board for its consideration while viewing the case of
the two detenues. Counsel argued that the decision in Sk.
Abdul Karim & Ors. v. State of West Bengal(1) which has held
that there was a legal obligation on the appropriate
Government to consider the representation of a detenue
besides constituting an advisory board and referring to such
board the case of such a detenue for its opinion was not
warranted by the provisions of Art. 22 or the provisions of
the Act and that in any event according to that decision
consideration of such a representation by the appropriate
Government was obligatory only where it was made before and
not after the detenue’s case was referred to the Board.
That decision, therefore, said counsel, cannot help these
petitioners as they had made their representations after
their cases were referred to the Advisory Board. Besides,
there was no practical utility, said counsel, in the
Government considering their representations when their
cases including the representations were being considered by
the Board.
On these contentions two questions arise : (1) whether there
is on the appropriate Government the obligation to consider
the representation made by a detenue, and (2) if there is,
whether it makes any difference where such a representation
is made after the detenue’s case is referred to the Advisory
Board.
In Sk. Abdul Karim’s case(1), this Court, examining Art.. 22
and the several provisions of the Act, held that (i) a
person detained under the Act has a right to be furnished
with the grounds for his detention, (ii) that he has a right
to make a representation against the order for his
detention, (iii) that though cl. 5 of Art. 22 does not in
express language provide as to whom such a representation is
to be made and how the detaining authority is to deal with
it, there is by necessary implication an obligation on the
part of the appropriate Government to consider it, and (iv)
the setting up of an advisory board under s. 8 of the Act
does not relieve the appropriate Government from its
obligation to consider the representation as soon as it is
received
(1) [1969] 3 S.C.R. 4 9.
547
by it. The Court held that the constitutional right to make
a representation guaranteed by Art. 22(5) includes by
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necessary implication the constitutional right to a
consideration of the representation by the detaining
authority to whom it is made and repelled the contention
that once an advisory board was constituted for the
consideration of the detenue’s case it was enough if the
State Government were to send the representation -to the
board for consideration without itself considering it. ’Me
learned Judges there gave several illustrations to show that
such a contention was not only incorrect but would defeat
the provisions of Art. 22(4) and (5) and those of the Act.
Article 21 guarantees protection against deprivation of per-
sonal liberty save that in accordance with the procedure
established by law. At first sight it would appear somewhat
strange that the Constitution should make provisions
relating to preventive detention immediately next after Art.
21. That appears to have been done because the Constitution
recognizes the necessity of preventive detention on
extraordinary occasions when control over public order,
security of the country etc. are in danger of a breakdown.
But while recognizing the need of preventive, detention
without recourse to the normal procedure according to. law,
it provides at the same time certain restrictions on the,
power of detention both legislative and executive which it
considers as minimum safeguards to ensure that the power of
such detention is not illegitimately or arbitrarily used.
The power of preventive detention is thus acquiesced in by
the Constitution as a necessary evil and is, therefore,
hedged in by diverse procedural safeguards to minimise as
much as possible the danger of its misuse. It is for this
reason that Art. 22 has been given a place in the Chapter on
guaranteed rights.
Clause 1 of Art. 22 guarantees to a detenue the right to be
informed as soon as possible of the grounds for his
detention and the right to consult and of being defended by
a legal practitioner of his choice. Clause 2 imposes the
obligation of his having to be produced before a magistrate
within 24 hours of his detention and of not being detained
beyond that period without the authority of such magistrate.
Clause 3, however, withdraws these safeguards in the case of
two categories of persons, namely, an enemy alien and
persons detained under a law providing for preventive deten-
tion. But the next two clauses impose certain restrictions
on and safeguards against the power of detention. Clause 4
thus lays down that no law providing for such detention can
authorise the detention for more than 3 months unless an
advisory board composed as therein stated certifies that
there is sufficient cause for such detention and such
detention is in consonance with and is not for a period
longer than the one provided by a Parliament Act made under
cl. 7. Clause 7 authorises Parliament to make a law
prescribing the circums-
548
tances under which and the class or classes of cases in
which a person can be detained for more than 3 months
without obtaining the opinion of the advisory board and the
maximum period for which a person may in any such class or
classes of cases be detained and the procedure to be
followed by the advisory board in the enquiry under cl.
4(a). Clause 5 imposes on obligation on the detaining
authority to furnish to the person detained by it grounds
for his detention "as soon as may be" and give him "the
earliest opportunity" of making a representation against the
order of detention passed against him. These clauses thus
clearly impose on the detaining authority the obligation to
furnish to the detenue as soon as may be the grounds for his
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detention, the, obligation to afford him the earliest
opportunity of making a representation against the order and
the- obligation to constitute an advisory board and not to
keep the detenue in detention for a period longer than 3
months unless before the expiry of that period it has
obtained the opinion of the board that there is sufficient
cause for such detention except in cases prescribed in a
Parliament Act passed under and by virtue of cl. 7. The
reason for the expressions "as soon as may be" for
furnishing the grounds and "the earliest opportunity" for
making a representation in these clauses is the extreme
anxiety of the Constitution to see that no person is
detained contrary to the law enabling preventive detention
or in breach of or countrary, to the safeguards and
restrictions provided in these clauses. The grounds for
detention are to be served on the detenue as soon as may be
and the earliest opportunity to make a representation
against the order is to be given to him to enable him to
protest against the order that he is either wrongly or
illegally detained.
It is true that cl. 5 does not in positive language provide
as to whom the representation is to be made and by whom,,
when made, it is to be considered. But the expressions "as
soon as may be" and "the earliest opportunity" in that
clause clearly indicate that the grounds are to be served
and the opportunity to make a representation are provided
for to enable the detenue to show that his detention is
unwarranted and since no other authority who should consider
such representation is mentioned it can ,only be the
detaining authority to whom it is to be made which has to
consider it. Though cl. 5 does not in express terms say so
it follows from its provisions that it is the detaining
authority which has to give to the detenue the earliest
opportunity to make a representation and to consider it when
so made whether its order is wrongful or contrary to the law
enabling it to detain him. The illustrations given in Sk.
Abdul Karim’s case(1) show that cl. 5 of Art. 22 not only
contains the obligation of the appropriate Government to
furnish the grounds and to give the
(1) [1969] 3 S.C.R. 479.
549
earliest opportunity to make a representation but also by
necessary implication the obligation to consider that
representation. Such an obligation is evidently provided
for to given an opportunity to the detenue to show and a
corresponding opportunity to the appropriate Government to
consider any objections against the order which the detenue
may raise so that no person is, through error or otherwise,
wrongly arrested and detained. If it was intended that such
a representation need not be considered by the Government
where an advisory board is constituted and that
representation in such cases is to be considered by the
board and not by the appropriate Government, cl. 5 would not
have directed the detaining authority to afford the earliest
opportunity to the detenue. In that case the words would
more appropriately have been that the authority should
obtain the opinion of the board after giving an opportunity
to the detenue to make a representation and communicate the
same to the board. But what would happen in cases where the
detention is for less than 3 months and there is no
necessity of having the opinion of the board ? If counsel’s
contention were to be right the representation in such cases
would not have to be considered either by the appropriate
Government or by the board and the right of representation
and the corresponding obligation of the appropriate
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Government to give the earliest opportunity to make such
representation would be rendered nugatory. In imposing the
obligation to afford the opportunity to make a
representation cl. 5 does not make any distinction between
orders of detention for only 3 months or less and those for
a longer duration. The obligation applies to both kinds of
orders. The clause does not say that the representation is
to be considered by the appropriate Government in the former
class of cases and by the board in the later class of cases.
In our view it is clear from cls. 4 and 5 of Art. 22 that
there is a dual obligation on the appropriate Government and
a ,dual right in favour of the detenue, namely, (1) to have
his representation irrespective of the length of detention
considered by the appropriate Government and (2) to have
once again that representation in the light of the
circumstances of the case considered by the board before it
gives its opinion. If in the light of that representation
the board finds that there is no sufficient cause for
detention the Government has to revoke the order of
detention and set at liberty the detenue. Thus, whereas the
Government considers the representation to ascertain whether
the order is in conformity with its power under the relevant
law, the board considers such representation from the point
of view of arriving at its opinion whether there is
sufficient cause for detention. The obligation of the
appropriate Government to afford to the detenue the
opportunity to make a representation and to consider that
representation is distinct from the Government’s obligation
to constitute a board and to communicate the representation
amongst other
550
materials to the board to enable it to form its opinion and
to ,obtain such opinion.
This conclusion is strengthened by the other provisions of
the Act. In conformity with cls. 4 and 5 of Art. 22, S. 7
of the Act enjoins upon the detaining authority to furnish
to the detenue .grounds of detention within five days from
the date of his detention and to afford to the detenue the
earliest opportunity to make his representation to the
-appropriate Government. Sections 8 and 9 enjoin upon the
appropriate Government to constitute an advisory board and
to place within .30 days from the date of the .detention the
grounds for detention, the detenue’s representation -and
also the report of the officer where the order of detention
is -made by an officer and not by the Government. The
obligation under S. 7 is quite distinct from that under as.
8 and 9. If the -representation was for the consideration
not by the Government but by the board only as contended,
there was no necessity to provide that it should be
addressed to the Government and not directly to the board.
The Government could not have been intended to be only a
transmitting authority nor could it have been -contemplated
that it should sit tight on that representation remit it to
the board after it is constituted. The peremptory language-
in cl. 5 of Art. 22 and S. 7 of the Act would not have been
necessary if the board and not the Government had to
,consider the representation. Section 13 also furnishes an
answer to the argument of counsel for the State. Under that
section the ’State Government and the Central Government are
empowered to -revoke or modify an order of detention. That
power is evidently provided for to enable the Government to
take appropriate action -where on a representation made to
it finds that the order in question should be modified or
even revoked. Obviously, the intention of Parliament could
not have been that the appropriate Government should pass an
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order under S. 13 without considering the ,representation
which has under S. 7 been addressed to it.
For the reasons aforesaid we are in agreement with the
decision in Sk. Abdul Karim’s case(1). Consequently, the
petitioners had a constitutional right and there was on the
State Government a corresponding constitutional obligation
to consider their representations irrespective of whether
they were made before or after their cases were referred to
the Advisory Board and that not having been done the order
of detention against them cannot be sustained. In this view
it is not necessary for us to examine the other objections
raised against these orders. The petition is therefore
allowed, the orders of detention against petitioners 15 and
36 are set aside and we direct that they should be set at
liberty forthwith.
Petition allowed.
Y.P.
(1)[1969] 3 S.C. R.479.
551