Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUNIL GUPTA AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/05/1990
BENCH:
PANDIAN, S.R. (J)
BENCH:
PANDIAN, S.R. (J)
REDDY, K. JAYACHANDRA (J)
CITATION:
1990 SCR (2) 871 1990 SCC (3) 119
JT 1990 (2) 372 1990 SCALE (1)22
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh Police Regulation: Chapter VII Part 111
Rule 465--Prisoners-handcuffs--Use of--Directions by
Court--Person remanded by judicial order--Escort party to
obtain orders of Court.
Constitution of India, 1950--Article 32--Handcuffing and
parading of offenders; escort party to record and intimate
reasons for imposing fetters--Obtain Court Orders.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners are social workers and Members of Kisan
Adivasi Sangathan, Kerala. They, alongwith a large number of
tribal people, had staged peaceful ’dharnas’ in front of the
office of Block Education Officer demanding appointment of
regular teachers in the school located in the tribal ham-
lets. The local police initiated criminal proceedings
against them for offences punishable under section 186 IPC
on the allegations that they had obstructed public servants
in discharge of their public functions. The Magistrate
convicted petitioners 1 to 3 and sentenced them to undergo
simple imprisonment for a period of one month. The petition-
ers 1 and 2 though having served their one month imprison-
ment from 22.4.1989 to 21.5.1989 were not released from jail
but continued to be detained on the allegation that they
were wanted in two more cases.
In the writ petitions filed in this Court the main
grievance was that petitioners 1 to 3 on being arrested were
subjected to torture and treated in a degrading and inhuman
manner by handcuffing and parading them through the public
thoroughfare during transit to the Court. in utter disregard
to the judicial mandates of this Court. On these allegations
the petitioners contended that they were entitled to compen-
sation.
The respondents have not denied the allegation of hand-
cuffing. but have attempted to justify the action of the
escort police. In this connection. the respondents have
relied on Paragraph 465(1) of Part III dealing with escort-
ing of arrested and convicted persons (including
872
Political Persons) failing under Chapter VII of Madhya
Pradesh Police Regulations. Under this regulation, if the
escort-in-charge feels the necessity of handcuffing persons,
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he is empowered to do so.
Disposing of the petitions, this Court,
HELD: (1) In spite of weighty pronouncement made by this
Court decrying and severely condemning the conduct of the
escort police m’ handcuffing the prisoners without any
justification, it is very unfortunate that the Courts have
to repeat and re-repeat its disapproval of unjustifiable
handcuffing. ]862G]
Prem Shankar Shukla v. Delhi Administration, [1980] 3
SCC 526; Bhim Singh, M.L.A.v. State of Jammu & Kashmir &
Ors., [1985] 4 S.C.C. 677; Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India,
[1978] 1 SCC 248; Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration,
[1978] 4 SCC 494 and Sunil Batra (II) v. Delhi Administra-
tion, [1980] 3 SCC 488, referred to.
(2) The petitioners are educated persons and selflessly
devoting their service to the public cause. They are not the
persons who have got tendency to escape from the jail custo-
dy. In fact, the petitioners 1 and 2 even refused to come
out on bail, but chose to continue in prison for a public
cause. The offence for which they were tried and convicted
under section 186 of Indian Penal Code is only a bailable
offence. [884B-C]
(3) When a person is remanded by a judicial order by a
competent court, that person comes within the judicial
custody of the Court. Therefore. the taking of a person from
a prison to the Court or back from Court to the prison by
the escort party is only under the judicial orders of the
Court. [884D]
(4) Even if extreme circumstances necessitate the escort
party to bind the prisoners in fetters, the escort party
should record the reasons for doing so in writing and inti-
mate the Court so that the Court considering the circum-
stances either approves or disapproves the action of the
escort party and issues necessary directions. [884D]
(5) Undeniably, the escort party neither got instruc-
tions nor obtained any orders in writing from the Magistrate
or the Jail Superintendent regarding handcuffing of the
petitioners. [881D]
(6) Even assuming that the petitioners obstructed
public servants in discharge of their public functions
during the ’dharna’ or raised any
873
slogans inside or outside the Court, that would not be
sufficient cause to handcuff them. Further, there was no
reason for handcuffing them while taking them to Court from
jail on 22.4.1989. [884C-D]
(7) It is most painful to note that the petitioners who
staged a ’dharna’ for public cause and voluntarily submitted
themselves for arrest and who had no tendency to escape had
been subjected to humiliation by being handcuffed which act
of the escort party is against all norms of decency and
which is in utter violation of the principle underlying
Article 21 of the Constitution of India. [884E-F]
(8) The Government of Madhya Pradesh is directed to take
appropriate action against the erring escort party for
unjustly and unreasonably handcuffing petitioners 1 and 2 on
22.4.89, in accordance with law. [884H]
(9) It is open to the petitioners to take appropriate
action against the erring officials, in accordance with law,
if they are so advised, and in that case. the Court in which
the claim is made can examine the claim not being influenced
by any observation made in this judgment. [885C]
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Criminal) Nos.
277-80 of 1989.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
R.B. Mehrotra for the Petitioners.
U.N. Bachhawat, Uma Nath Singh and N.N. Johri for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. RATNAVEL PANDIAN, J. Two important questions arising
for consideration in the above matter are:
1. Whether the petitioners 1 and 2 have been illegally
detained from 21.5. 1989 to 1.8. 1989 without any order of
remand?
2. Whether the petitioners 1 to 3 on being arrested were
subjected to torture and treated in a degrading and inhuman
manner by handcuffing and parading them through the public
thorough-fare during transit to the Court in utter disregard
to
874
the judicial mandates declared in a number of decisions of
this Court and whether they are entitled for compensation?
The salient and material facts as set out in the Writ
Petitions are as follows:
The petitioners are social workers and Members of Kisan
Adivasi Sangathan’, Kerala. The said ’Sangathan’ is actively
working against all kinds of exploitation purported against
the local farmers and tribal people in the district of
Hoshangabad. In villages of Morpani and Madikhoh of Hoshan-
gabad District there was only one school teacher employed in
the Morpani school. The teacher was not attending the school
for the last one and half years. Inspite of several com-
plaints lodged against the teacher, the authorities did not
pay any attention in this regard. Therefore on 27/28.7.1988,
the petitioners 1 to 3 along with a large number of tribal
women and children staged a peaceful ’dharna’ in front of
the office of Block Education Officer, Kesala demanding
appointment of two regular teachers in the schools located
in tribal hamlets. The Assistant District Inspector of
Schools gave an assurance in writing stating that he would
make enquiries and initiate action in this regard. But to
the petitioners’ dismay, the local police initiated criminal
proceedings against the petitioners 1 to 3 and one old
Adivasi widow aged about 65 years who was not paid her wages
by the said teacher, for an offence punishable under Section
186 IPC on the allegations that the petitioners and the
Adivasi woman have obstructed public servants in discharge
of their public functions. In connection with the said
criminal proceeding, the petitioners were arrested, abused,
beaten and taken to the Court of 1st Class Judicial Magis-
trate, Hoshangabad by handcuffing them. It seems that the
petitioners when questioned refused to tender apology or
repent for their conduct but tried to justify their action
of having staged the dharna for a legitimate cause. The
Magistrate convicted the petitioners 1 to 3 and sentenced
them to undergo simple imprisonment for a period of one
month while acquitting the woman. It is stated that even
after the pronouncement of the judgment, the police once
again abused them, made obscene gestures, beat and took them
to the penitentiary handcuffed. The fourth petitioner was
arrested in connection with the peaceful dharna on
25.11.1987 before the office of the Block Education Officer,
Kesala and put behind the bars. A warrant was said to have
been issued against the second petitioner directing him to
appear before the Magistrate on 8.5. 1989 in connection with
some other false case. According to the petitioner, they all
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were working for the welfare of the weaker sections and
down-trodden people in
875
a peaceful manner but they were inhumanly treated against
all norms of decency by the police in utter disregard of the
repeated and consistent mandates of this Court and in utter
violation of their fundamental rights guaranteed under
Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution of India. There-
after, the petitioners filed Criminal Miscellaneous Petition
Nos. 282 1-24 of 1989 in the above writ petitions for im-
pleading the Superintendent, District Jail and the 1st class
Magistrate, Hoshangabad as additional respondents and to
treat the additional facts as part of the main writ peti-
tions. The additional facts are as follows:
The petitioners 1 and 2, namely, Sunil Gupta and Raj
Narain though have served their one month imprisonment from
22.4.1989 to 21.5. 1989 they were not released from the jail
but continued to be detained on the allegation that they
were wanted in two more cases, namely, in Case No. 470 of
1988 registered under Section 341 read with Section 34 IPC
pending in the .Court of 1st Class Magistrate, Hoshangabad
and another in a case registered as Criminal Case No. 569/88
against the two petitioners and others under Section 353,
148 and 149, IPC. The Court proceedings disclosed that the
Magistrate issued bailable warrants as against the petition-
ers 1 and 2 and continued the same by issuing repeated
orders of bailable warrants in a very mechanical and casual
manner and without application of mind from 26.5. 1988 to
17.2.1989.
Even after the two petitioners have been sent to jail in
pursuance of their conviction for the offence under Section
186 IPC, a number of incorrect nothings were made in the
records of the courts as if both the petitioners were pro-
duced from jail. Even after the expiry of the sentence, the
Magistrate had not cared to proceed with the case and to
know as to why petitioners 1 and 2 were languishing in jail.
In connection with the second case, petitioner No. 3, Puru-
shottam Nayak was also remanded but later on released on
bail on 26.4.1989.
The Counter-affidavit is filed by one R.K. Shivhare, the
then SHO (Police), Itarsi, Hoshangabad District on behalf of
the respondents giving a detailed version about the incident
leading to the registration of various cases and justifying
the conduct of the police officials in handcuffing the
petitioners. Alongwith this affidavit, he has filed Annex-
ures I to VI. He justifies the action of the police stating
that the petitioners on pronouncement of their conviction,
got agitated, turned violent and shouted slogans inside the
Court which necessitated the escort police to handcuff the
petitioners. He cites Madhya Pradesh Police Regulation para
No. 465(1) as per which if the escort in-charge
876
feels the necessity of handcuffing persons, he is empowered
to do so. However, he denies allegations of torture, obscene
gestures etc.
A copy of the police report dated nil and without dis-
closing the author of the same is filed stating that while
first and second petitioners were taken to the prison on
their conviction, they turned violent not only inside the
Court but also outside the Court and they were taken to the
orison with the help of other members of the police force.
The Deputy Superintendent of Police, Headquarters, Hoshanga-
bad has filed a separate counter-affidavit denying the
allegations made in the writ petition. A rejoinder is filed
by the first petitioner reiterating his earlier stand and
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annexing certain newspaper clippings and some other docu-
ments inclusive of the copy of the judgment of the IInd
Additional Sessions Judge, Hoshangabad made in Criminal
Appeal No. 59 of 1989 setting aside the conviction of the
petitioners recorded by the Judicial Magistrate for the
offences under Section 186 IPC, and acquitting the petition-
ers of the said offence. Head Constable No. 66, who was
incharge of the escort party has sworn to an affidavit
stating that the petitioners 1 and 2 were taken to the jail
on being handed over by the Court after their conviction and
they took them to the prison by handcuffing them under a
bona fide belief that the situation might become worse. He
also cites paragraph 465(1) of the M.P. Police Regulation in
support of his action of putting the petitioners 1 to 3
under shackles. One other supporting affidavit is also filed
by a constable of the escort party. It seems that a Sub-
Inspector of CID made an enquiry on a petition regarding the
handcuffing of petitioners 1 and 2 and submitted his report
to the Superintendent of Police. The relevant portion of the
report reads as follows:
" ..... And the Court called the police guard and as per
Court’s direction the three accused were handcuffed and kept
in the lock-up, later on the Court again called all the
three accused persons to the Court where Purushottam Nayak
was released on bail .......................... It was
found on enquiry that the appellants Sunil and Rajnarayan
were sentenced to one-month imprisonment each under Section
186 IPC in the Court of Shri Chand Soria and police guards
under the order of the honourable court handcuffed the
appellants in the court itself and lodged them in jail. The
appellants say that they should not have been handcuffed but
the guards had no other instruction to the contrary in this
regard."
877
From the writ petition, counter affidavits and rejoinder
affidavit, we are able to gather certain facts, they being:
1. A case in Crime No. 80/87 under Sections 147, 341 was
registered against the petitioners along with some others on
11.12. 1987.
2. A case in Crime No. 86/87 under Section 353, 323, 332
read with Sec. 34 IPC was registered against the petitioners
on 25.11.87 by Kesala police.
3. A case in Crime No. 87/87 under Section 34 1 read with
Sec. 34 was registered against the petitioners on 25.11.
1987 itself. This case was tried in criminal case No. 470/88
which ended in conviction and the petitioners were released
on probation on 11.7. 1989.
4. A case in Crime No. 52/88 under Section 186 and 447 was
registered on 28.7. 1987 by Kesala police which case was
tried as case No. 58/88 on the file of the Judicial Magis-
trate 1st Class, Hoshangabad which ultimately ended in
conviction. This conviction has been set aside by the appel-
late Court.
It is stated that the petitioners 1 and 2 were avoiding
warrants of arrest in Crime Nos. 86/87 and 87/87. It seems
that a number of cases were registered against the petition-
ers 1 and 2 and both of them did not avail bail and they
were in prison.
In this connection, we would like to dispose of the
Criminal Miscellaneous Petition Nos. 2821-24 of 1989. As we
are not satisfied that the Superintendent of Jail and the
Magistrate are necessary parties for disposal of these writ
petitions, these petitions are dismissed.
According to Mr. R.B. Mehrotra, the learned counsel for
the petitioners, the sentence of imprisonment for a period
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of one month imposed on petitioners 1 and 2 for the offence
under Section 186 IPC expired on 21.5. 1989 and, therefore,
their subsequent detention till 1.8. 1989 was unauthorised
and illegal. A perusal of the materials placed on record, it
is seen that the case in crime No. 87/87 was registered as
criminal case No. 470/88 and it came to an end on 11.7.89
when the petitioners were released on probation. The case in
crime No. 86/87 was registered as criminal case No. 569/89.
There were 8 accused in that case inclusive of these two
petitioners who were
878
arrayed as accused Nos. 3 and 4. This case went on for
several adjournments on the ground that one or other accused
was either not produced before the Court or not appeared on
the hearing date. However, on 1.8.1989 the first petitioner
was released on his personal bond as per the orders of this
Court. On 11.8.1989, the case was adjourned to 21.8. 1989
for further proceedings. Though notes of the case diary,
copies of which are filed before us, are not very clear as
to the reasons of repeated issue of warrants yet we find
that these petitioners were under remand in both the cases
namely criminal case Nos. 470/88 and 569/88. Though the
petitioners were released on probation in criminal case No.
470/88 yet on 11.7. 1989 the petitioner No. 1, namely, Sunil
Gupta was in jail in case No. 569/89 till he was released
under the orders of this Court. It is not the case of the
petitioners that any complaint was made before this Court in
the previous occasion when their release was sought for that
they were in prison without orders of remand or that this
Court made any observation about it. Under these circum-
stances, we do not see any force in the contention that the
petitioners were illegally detained till 1.8. 1989. Accord-
ingly, the first question is negatived and answered against
the petitioners.
Next, we shall examine whether petitioners 1 to 3 were
subjected to all kinds of humilitation by being abused,
beaten up and ultimately handcuffed. At the threshold, it
may be noted that the writ petition is filed by Mr. R.B.
Mehrotra, Advocate for the petitioners whose registered
clerk has filed an affidavit of verification. The following
averments are made in the writ petition:
"That the petitioners were beaten, abused and they were
taken handcuffed to the Court of Shri Chansoria, Judicial
Magistrate 1st Class, Hosangabad" (vide paragraph 6).
"They had been handcuffed and were beaten by the police on
number of earlier occasions for holding peaceful dharna and
for making representations on behalf of the tribal people"
(vide paragraph 10)
"That the authorities have caused injuries, physical pain,
mental agony and insult to the petitioners" (vide paragraph
13)
"That the petitioners have suffered grave mental agony,
insult and physical pain at the hands of the police and the
local authorities". (vide paragraph 14)
879
The above allegations are stoutly refuted on behalf of
the respondents. However, the complaint of handcuffing is
not denied and that action of the escort police is attempted
to be justified mainly on the following grounds:
1. After pronouncement of the judgment in criminal case No.
248/88 arising out of crime No. 52/88 registered under
sections 186 and 447 IPC, the petitioners 1 to 3 on their
conviction got agitated, turned violent and shouted slogans
outside and inside the Court and in such turbulent circum-
stances, the escort party felt that it was necessary to
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handcuff the petitioners.
2. Paragraph 465(1) of Part III dealing with escorting of
arrested and convicted persons (including political persons)
falling under Chapter VII of Madhya Pradesh Police Regula-
tions captioned ’Protection and Escort’ empowers the escort
police to handcuff the arrested or convicted persons if the
escort police feels the necessity.
3. It has been reported by the Jail Superintendent that in
several cases the under-trial prisoners have run away from
police custody while being taken from jail to Court or
vice-versa.
Before scrutinising the material in regard to the com-
plaint of handcuffing, we shall dispose of the allegations
of abuse, obscene gestures, beating and torture etc. At the
cost of repetition, it may be stated that all those allega-
tions except the handcuffing are denied. Sunil Gupta, the
first petitioner has filed an additional reply affidavit
dated 8th July 1989 in which there is no allegation about
the alleged torture, abuse, obscene gestures etc. In his
rejoinder affidavit filed in September 1989 by Sunil Gupta
himself while referring to the incident relating to Criminal
Case No. 569/88, he has stated.
"We are doing only peaceful picketing. On this police and
the Gundas of the ruling party came and we were beaten by
the police and Gundas of ruling party and were forcibly
removed from the Block Office."
Barring that, there is no allegation of abuse and
obscene gestures etc. In view of the conspicuous omission in
both the affidavits filed by Sunil Gupta, we see no force in
the complaint that the police abused, tortured and made
obscene gestures etc.
880
The only remaining complaint to be considered is in
regard to the handcuffing. We have already mentioned in the
preceding part of the judgment the reasons given by the
respondents in justification of the conduct of the escort
party in putting menacles on the petitioners 1 and 2. With
regard to the reasons assigned by the police, Sunil Gupta in
his additional affidavit has stated thus:
"This act is incorrect, firstly neither myself nor Raj
Narain did shout any slogan in the Court though I was hand-
cuffed in the Court itself but the handcuffing was not done
with the consent of the Magistrate nor it was done under his
direction. Raj Narain was taken to jail on 21st April, 1989
and was brought in the Court on 22nd April 1989 under hand-
cuffs from the jail itself to Court lock-up and then taken
under handcuffs in the Court itself in the presence of the
Magistrate."
Coming to the Regulation relied upon by the police, we
would like to reproduce the relevant instructions of the
Madhya Pradesh Police Regulation hereunder for proper under-
standing the plea of justification.
’M.P. Police Regulation
CHAPTER VII
Protection and Escort
Part III-Escorting of the arrested and convicted per-
sons (including political persons)
465. When to use handcuffs
Handcuffing will be resorted to only when it is necessary.
Its use will be regulated by following instructions.
Instructions regarding use of handcuffs
(1) When a prisoner is to be taken from court to jail
or jail to court in the custody; the Magistrate or the Jail
Superintendent should give instructions in writing as to
whether the prisoner will be handcuffed or not and the
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escort commander will follow the instructions but when
881
the instructions are for not to handcuff the prisoner and
thereafter, due to some reasons if the escort commander
feels that it is necessary to handcuff the prisoner, he
should do so inspite of the instructions to the contrary.
(2) (1) ...............
(3) The escort commander should ask and obtain orders in
writing without fail, regarding handcuffing of prisoners,
from the Magistrate or the Jail Superintendent before taking
into custody the prisoner for escorting from the court or
the jail. Strict action should be taken against any disobe-
dience of this instruction."
Undeniably, the escort party neither got instructions
nor obtained any orders in writing from the Magistrate or
the Jail Superintendent regarding handcuffing of petitioners
1 to 3 as found under the above instructions (1) and (2).
The escort commander has also not noted any reason for
handcuffing the petitioners on 22.4.1989, on the other hand
in the letter dated nil annexed to the counter of S.H.O., no
mention of handcuffing is made at all.
Let us examine whether the plea of justification is
supported by the materials placed before this Court. Nand
Lal Sharma (Head Constable No. 66), who presumably headed
the escort party has not stated in his affidavit that he got
instructions in writing, either from the Magistrate or from
the Jail Superintendent to bind the petitioners 1 to 3 in
fetters.
Nowhere, in his affidavit he swears that he handcuffed
the petitioners 1 to 3 either under the orders or directions
of the Magistrate. Even the counter affidavit filed by
Shivhare, S.H.O. of Itarsi Police there is no averment that
the Magistrate directed the escort party to handcuff the
petitioners 1 and 2. For the first time, only in the report
dated 10.7.1989, the relevant portion of which is extracted
above, it is submitted by the Sub-Inspector, CID to the
Superintendent of Police, Hosangabad that the handcuffing
was under the direction of the Court.
However, in the copies of the daily diary of the ’date
22.4.1989, it
882
is mentioned that the Head Constable Nand Lal Sharma and the
constables of his escort party have been ordered to produce
the accused to the Court from the jail after handcuffing
them and they were further ordered to take the chains be-
sides handcuffs from the armoury. These entries are purport-
ed to have been made one at 10.05 A.M. and another at 5.15
P.M. There is a specific entry in the said daily diary that
the escort party had produced the three accused before the
Court after handcuffing them. It seems that certain state-
ments were also recorded from petitioners 1 and 2 on 4.7.
1989 and 5.7.1989. One, Jasbir has filed reply affidavit
submitting that the petitioners 1 and 2 were handcuffed
’within the court room without there being any occasion for
the same’ and ’the Magistrate never endorsed or directed
their handcuffing’. The petitioners have produced two photo-
graphs showing that the left hand of one person and the
fight hand of another person are bound in fetters with a
leading chain. In one of the photographs, yet another person
standing behind these two persons is also found handcuffed
with a leading chain. A number of persons inclusive some
police officials also found standing nearby indicating that
these petitioners 1 to 3 have been publically handcuffed.
This handcuffing of petitioners 1 to 3 with the leading
chains might not relate to the admitted handcuffing of these
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petitioners on 22.4.1989 while they were being taken from
the prison to the Court and from the Court to the prison
because the close examination of these photographs reveal
that the handcuffing of these three persons should have been
on a thorough-fare. Though neither the enquiry report dated
10.7.89 of the Sub-Inspector of CID nor the counter affida-
vits filed by the SHO, Head Constable and Constables dis-
close either about the handcuffing of these three petition-
ers earlier to 22.4.1989 or about the handcuffing of these
petitioners while being taken to Court from the jail. We are
very much distressed the way in which the respondents have
come forward to explain their conduct of handcuffing of
these three petitioners while being taken from the Court to
the jail but make no whisper about the handcuffing from jail
to Court.
This Court on several occasions has made weighty pro-
nouncements decrying and severely condemning the conduct of
the escort police in handcuffing the prisoners without any
justification. Inspite of it, it is very unfortunate that
the Courts have to repeat and re-repeat to disapproval of
unjustifiable handcuffing. As is pointed out by Krishna
lyer, J. speaking for himself and Chinnappa Reddy, J. in
Prem Shankar Shukla v. Delhi Administration. [1980] 3 SCC
526, this kind of complaint cannot be dismissed as a daily
sight to be pitied and buried but to be examined from funda-
mental view-point. In the same
883
judgment, the following observation is made with regard to
handcuffing:
"Those who are inured to handcuffs and bar fetters on others
may ignore this grievance, but the guarantee of human digni-
ty, which forms part of our constitutional culture, and the
positive provisions of Articles 14, 19 and 21 spring into
action when we realise that to manacle man is more than to
mortify him; it is to dehumanize him and, therefore, to
violate his very person hood, too often using the mask of
’dangerousness’ and security." ............
"Handcuffing is prima facie inhuman and, therefore, unrea-
sonable, is over-harsh and at the first flush, arbitrary.
Absent fair procedure and objective monitoring, to inflict
’irons’ is to resort to zoological strategies repugnant to
Article 21. Thus, we must critically examine the justifica-
tion offered by the State for this mode of restraint. Sure-
ly, the competing claims of securing the prisoner from
fleeing and protecting his personality from barbarity have
to be harmonised. To prevent the escape of an under trial is
in public interest, reasonable, just and cannot, by itself,
be castigated. But to bind a man hand-and-foot, fetter his
limbs with hoops of steel, shuffle him along in the streets
and stand him for hours in the courts is to torture him,
defile his dignity, vulgarise society and foul the soul of
our constitutional culture. Where then do we draw the humane
line and how far do the rules err in print and praxis?"
Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Bhim Singh, MLA v. State of J & K
and Others, [1985] 4 SCC 677 has expressed his view that
police officers should have greatest regard for personal
liberty of citizens in the following words:
"Police officers who are the custodians of law and order
should have the greatest respect for the personal liberty of
citizens and should not flout the laws by stooping to such
bizarre acts of lawlessness. Custodians of law and order
should not become depredators of civil liberties. Their duty
is to protect and not to abduct."
See also Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India and Another,[1978]1
884
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SCC 248; Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration and Others,
[1978] 4 SCC 494 and Sunil Batra (II) v. Delhi Administra-
tion, [1980] 3 SCC 488.
Coming to the case on hand, we are satisfied that the
petitioners are educated persons and selflessly devoting
their service to the public cause. They are not the persons
who have got tendency to escape from the jail custody. In
fact, the petitioners 1 and 2 even refused to come out on
bail, but chose to continue in prison for a public cause.
The offence for which they were tried and convicted under
Section 186 of Indian Penal Code is only a bailable offence.
Even assuming that they objected public servants in dis-
charge of their public functions during the ’dharna’ or
raised any slogan inside or outside the Court, that would
not be sufficient cause to handcuff them. Further, there was
no reason for handcuffing them while taking them to Court
from jail on 22.4.89. One should not lose sight of the fact
that when a person is remanded by a judicial order by a
competent Court, that person comes within the judicial
custody of the Court. Therefore, the taking of a person from
a prison to the Court or back from Court to the prison by
the escort party is only under the judicial orders of the
Court. Therefore, even if extreme circumstances necessitate
the escort party to bind the prisoners in fetters, the
escort party should record the reasons for doing so in
writing and intimate the Court so that the Court considering
the circumstances either approve or disapprove the action of
the escort party and issue necessary directions. It is most
painful to note that the petitioners 1 and 2 who staged a
’dharna’ for public cause and voluntarily submitted them-
selves for arrest and who had no tendency to escape had been
subjected to humiliation by being handcuffed which act of
the escort party is against all norms of decency and which
is in utter violation of the principle underlying Article 21
of the Constitution of India. So we strongly condemn this
kind of conduct of the escort party arbitrarily and unrea-
sonably humiliating the citizens of the country with obvious
motive of pleasing ’some-one’.
For the discussion made above, we have no compunction in
arriving at a conclusion that in the present case, the
escort party without any justification had handcuffed the
petitioners on 22.4.1989 on both occasions i.e. when taking
the petitioners 1 and 2 from the prison to he Court and then
from the Court to the prison. Hence, we direct the Govern-
ment of Madhya Pradesh to take appropriate action against
the erring escort party for having unjustly and unreasonably
handcuffing he petitioners 1 and 2 on 22.4.89 in accordance
with law.
885
As has been pointed out supra, the copies of the photo-
graphs produced before this Court clearly reveal that three
persons--evidently the petitioners 1 to 3 have been hand-
cuffed with leading chains. We are not able to arrive at a
correct conclusion as to when, where and under what circum-
stance this had happened. Therefore, we further direct the
Government of Madhya Pradesh to initiate an enquiry in this
matter and to take appropriate action against the erring
officials.
Lastly, with regard to the prayer of claim for suitable
and adequate compensation, we observe that it is open to the
petitioners to take appropriate action against the erring
officials in accordance with law, if they are so advised,
and in that case, the Court in which the claim is made can
examine the claim not being influenced by any observation
made in this judgment.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
In the result, the writ petitions are disposed of sub-
ject to the observations made above.
R.S.S. Petitions dis-
posed of.
886