Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AJAIB SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/02/1965
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1619 1965 SCR (2) 845
CITATOR INFO :
D 1969 SC 483 (11)
ACT:
Defence of India Act, 1962 (Act 51 of 1962), s. 3(2)(15)(i)-
Defence of India Rules, 1962 r. 30A-Power of Detention-
Exercise By whom.
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act 5 of 1898), ss. 10(1),
10(2) & 11--Additional District Magistrate-Invested with
powers under s. 10(2)-Whether District Magistrate--Officer
Incharge of District Magistrate’s Office-But absence of
Appointment under s. 10(1)-If District Magistrate.
HEADNOTE:
The Additional District Magistrate of Amritsar who was
invested with the powers of a District Magistrate under s.
10(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 was under
instructions from the State Government in charge of the
office of the District Magistrate, when the District
Magistrate was transferred. No order appointing him as Dis-
trict Magistrate as required by s. 10(1) of the Code was
however passed. During the period he was in charge of the
office of the District Magistrate he passed an order
detaining the appellant under r. 30(1)(b) of the Defence of
India Rules, 1962. In appeal by special leave from Punjab
High Court, it was contended by the appellant, that in the
absence of an order under s. 10(1) of the Code the
Additional District Magistrate could not be the District
Magistrate for the purpose of passing an order of detention
under Defence of India Act and the Rules, and consequently
the order of detention passed by him was without authority
and liable to be set aside.
HELD : The order of detention was not in accordance with the
Defence of India Act and Rules and must be set aside, as he
was not then the District Magistrate, but only an Additional
District Magistrate. [852 F]
The Defence of India Act and the Rules show unmistakably
that the powers of detention can only be exercised by the
State Government or an officer or authority to whom it might
be delegated but who shall in no case be lower in rank than
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a District Magistrate. An Additional District Magistrate is
below the rank of a District Magistrate. [849 E-F; 851 H-852
A]
Even if an Additional District Magistrate had been appointed
with all the powers under the Code and also under any other
law for the time being in force, he was still not the
District Magistrate unless the Government appointed him as
such under s. 10(1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [850
D-E]
Even if an officer was exercising the powers of the District
Magistrate on there being a vacancy in the office of the
District Magistrate he was still not the District Magistrate
until he was appointed as such under s. 10(1) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. [850 F-G]
The instructions could not take the place of a notification
under s. 10(1) of the Code. [851 C-D]
846
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 252 of
1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
July 30, 1964 of the Punjab High Court in Criminal Miscella-
neous No. 742 of 1962.
M. C. Setalvad, and Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
J. N. Kaushal, Advocate-General for the State of Punjab
and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo J. This appeal by special leave from the judgment
of the Punjab High Court was heard on January 20, 1965. We
then pronounced a short order allowing the appeal and
directing the release of the detenu and indicated that
reasons would follow later. We now proceed to give the
reasons.
The appellant was detained under r. 3 0 (1 ) (b) of the
Defence of India Rules (hereinafter referred to as the
Rules) by an order passed by Shri Lal Singh on June 30,
1964. That order was passed by Shri Lal Singh as District
Magistrate of Amritsar. The only point that has been urged
before us on behalf of the detenu is that Shri Lal Singh was
not the District Magistrate of Amritsar on June 30, 1964 and
therefore he had no power to pass the order of detention
under the Defence of India Act, No. 51 of 1962, (hereinafter
referred to as the Act and the Rules.
It is necessary to set out certain facts with respect to the
position Shri Lal Singh was occupying on June 30, 1964 when
the order of detention was passed. It appears that Shri P.
N. Bhalla was the District Magistrate of Amritsar in April
1964. He was ordered to be transferred to the Secretariat
by an order passed on April 23, 1964. At that time Shri
Lall Singh was the Additional District Magistrate of
Amritsar and had been inter alia invested under S. 10 (2) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure (hereinafter referred to as
the Code) with all the powers of a District Magistrate under
the Code or under any other law for the time being in force
by an order which had been passed on April 10, 1963.
Further when the order of transfer of Shri Bhalla was made,
instructions were issued that Shri Bhalla should hand over
charge to Shri Lall Singh, Additional Deputy Commissioner,
Amritsar who would hold the current charge of the post of
Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar, till further orders. It
appears that Shri Bhalla handed over charge of the office of
the Deputy Commis-
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847
sioner to Shri Lall Singh on the afternoon of May 15, 1964
in accordance with the instructions above mentioned, and
thus Shri Lall Singh was in current charge of the office of
Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar from May 16, 1964. No order
appointing Shri Lall Singh as District Magistrate of
Amritsar as required under s. 10 (1) of the Code was passed.
But as Shri Lall Singh was already invested as an Additional
District Magistrate with all the powers of the District
Magistrate under the Code and under any other law for the
time being in force, he carried on the duties of’ the office
of the District Magistrate also. At the same time it may be
noted that no other officer was posted as District
Magistrate from May 16 till June 30, 1964 when the order of
detention was passed. The new District Magistrate Shri
lqbal Singh took over charge as District Magistrate,
Amritsar, on July 1, 1964 and’ Shri Lall Singh was then
appointed as District Magistrate, Hissar.
On these facts the contention on behalf of the detenu is
that Shri Lall Singh was not the District Magistrate of
Amritsar on June 30, 1964, even though he signed himself as
District Magistrate when he passed the order of detention.
It is submitted that in the absence of an order under S. 10
(1) of the Code appointing Shri Lall Singh as District
Magistrate of Amritsar, he could not be the District
Magistrate of Amritsar for the purpose of passing an order
of detention under the Act and the Rules, whatever might be
his powers to carry on the administration of the district as
an Additional District Magistrate and Additional Collector
under the powers conferred on him by various notifications
of April 1963. Consequently the order of detention passed
by him on June 30, 1964, was without authority and liable to
be set aside.
In reply, the learned Advocate General for the State of
Punjab has raised two points. In the first place he urges
that the notification delegating to all District Magistrates
the State Government’s powers to detain persons under r. 30
of the Rules is law and relies in this connection on the
decision of this Court in Jayantilal A mratlal Shodhan v. F.
N. Rana(1). It is further contended that by the
notification of April 1963, Shri Lall Singh was invested
with an the powers of a District Magistrate under the Code
and under any other law for the time being in force and
would therefore have the power to detain persons under the
law contained in the notification delegating the power of
detention to all District Magistrates. In the second place
it is urged that as Shri Lall
1. A.I.R. 1964 S. C. 648.
848
Singh was holding charge of the current duties of the office
of the Deputy Commissioner and as no one else had been
posted in Amritsar between May 16 and June 30, 1964 as
District Magistrate lie was in fact and in law the District
Magistrate of Amritsar.
We do not think it necessary for purposes of this case to
decide the first point raised by the learned Advocate
General, for we have come to the conclusion that no officer
other than the District Magistrate of a District can pass an
order of detention under r. 30 of the Rules in view of the
provisions of the Act and of the Rules to which we shall now
refer. Section 3(1) of the Act gives power to the Central
Government by notification in the Official Gazette to make
such rules as appear to it necessary or expedient for
securing the defence of India and civil defence, the public
safety, the maintenance of public order or the efficient
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conduct of military operations, or for maintaining supplies
and services essential to the life of community. Section 3
(2) then provides for the making of rules for various
purposes without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred by s. 3 (1), and the 15th clause thereof provides
for detention. The relevant portion of that clause
necessary for our purposes reads thus :-
"(15). Notwithstanding anything in any other
law for the time being in force--
(i) the apprehension and detention in
custody of any person whom the authority
empowered by the rules to apprehend or detain
(the authority empowered to detain not being
lower in rank than that of a District
Magistrate), suspects, on grounds appearing to
that authority to be reasonable, of being of
hostile origin or having acted, acting, being
about to act or being likely to act in a
manner prejudicial to the defence of India and
civil defence, the security of the State, the
public safety or interest, the maintenance of
public order, India’s relations with foreign
States, the maintenance of peaceful conditions
in any part or area of India or the efficient
conduct of military operations, or with
respect to whom that authority is satisfied
that his apprehension and detention are
necessary for the purpose of preventing him
from acting in any such prejudicial manner."
It would be seen that s. 3 (2) (15) (i) which is the source
of power to detain according to the Rules to be framed
thereunder itself
849
lays down that the authority empowered to detain shall not
be lower in rank than that of a District Magistrate.
Then we came to S. 40 (2) of the Act, which gives power to
the State Government to delegate its powers to any officer
or authority subordinate to it. This power of delegation,
however, must be read harmoniously with s. 3 (2) (15) and
therefore under S. 40 (2) the State Government cannot
delegate its power to detain to any officer below the rank
of a District Magistrate. Rule 30 of the Rules then
provides for detention and under that rule the power is
conferred on the Central Government or the State Government
to detain any person. That power of the State Government
can however be delegated under s. 40 (2) to any officer
subordinate to it. But as we have already indicated the
power of delegation must be read harmoniously with s.
3(2)(15) and therefore the State Government cannot delegate
the power to detain to any officer who is lower in rank than
the District Magistrate. The position is further clearly
brought out in r. 30-A which provides for review of a
detention order made by an officer. It is made clear there
also that the officer shall in no case be lower in rank than
a District Magistrate. The effect of these provisions thus
is that the power of detention can either be exercised by
the State Government or by its delegate who however can in
no case be lower in rank than a District Magistrate. The
Act and the Rules therefore show unmistakably that the power
of detention can only be exercised by the State Government
or an officer or authority to whom it might be delegated but
who shall in no case be lower in rank than a District
Magistrate.
We may in this connection contrast the language of S. 3 (2)
of the Preventive Detention Act, No. 4 of 1950, which lays
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down that any of the following officers, namely:-
(a) district magistrates,
(b) additional district magistrates specially empowered in
this behalf by the State Government,
(c)
(d)
may exercise the powers conferred by S. 3 (1) (a) (ii) and
(iii). If the intention under the Act and the Rules was
that the Additional District Magistrate may also exercise
the power of detention conferred thereunder we would have
found a provision similar to that contained in the
Preventive Detention Act.
850
Two questions then arise on the view we hold that no officer
below the rank of a District Magistrate can exercise the
power of detention under the Act and the Rules. The first
is whether Shri Lal Singh was the District Magistrate of
Amritsar on June 30, 1964. Secondly if he was not the
District Magistrate on that date, could he as Additional
District Magistrate exercise the power of detention and that
would depend upon whether an Additional District Magistrate
is of the same rank as the District Magistrate or below him
in rank ? Now S. 10 (1) of the Code provides for the
appointment of a District Magistrate and lays down that "in
every district outside the presidency-towns, the State
Government shall appoint, a Magistrate of the first class,
who shall be called the District Magistrate". The
appointment of a District Magistrate therefore has to be
made under S. 10 (1). Section 10(2) then gives power to the
State Government to appoint any Magistrate first class to be
an Additional District Magistrate and such Additional
District Magistrate shall have all or any of the powers of a
District Magistrate under the Code or under any other law
for the time being in force as the State Government may
direct. But even if an Additional District Magistrate has
been appointed with all the powers under the Code and also
under any other law for the time being in force, he is still
not the District Magistrate unless the Government appoints
him as such under S. 10 (1) of the Code. Further S. 11 of
the Code envisages the contingency of the office of the
District Magistrate becoming vacant. It provides that where
this contingency arises, any officer succeeding temporarily
to the chief executive administration of the district shall,
pending the orders of the State Government, exercise all the
powers and perform all the duties respectively conferred and
imposed by the Code on the District Magistrate. But even if
an officer is exercising the powers of the District
Magistrate on there being a vacancy in the office of the
District Magistrate he is still not the District Magistrate
until he is appointed as such under s. 10(1) of the Code.
We have therefore to see whether Shri Lall Singh was
appointed as District Magistrate of Amritsar under s. 10 (1)
of the Code. As to that it is admitted that there was no
notification appointing Shri Lall Singh as the District
Magistrate of Amritsar under s. 10(1) of the Code. All that
the Advocate General can point out is the instruction issued
by the Governor of the Punjab when transferring Shri Bhalla
who was the District Magistrate of Amritsar to the effect
that Shri Bhalla should hand over charge to Shri Lall Singh
who will hold the current
851
charge of the office of the Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar.
This means that there was a temporary vacancy on the
transfer of Shri Bhalla and Shri Lall Singh temporarily
succeeded to the chief executive administration of the
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district. As such he would be entitled to exercise the
powers of the District Magistrate under the Code under s.11.
Further as he had been empowered as Additional District
Magistrate to exercise powers of the District Magistrate
under any other law for the time being in force:, he would
exercise those powers also by virtue of being so authorised.
But even though Shri Bhalla may have gone away after handing
over charge on the afternoon of May, 15, 1964 Shri Lall
Singh could not and did not become the District Magistrate
of Amritsar in the absence of a notification under s. 10 (1)
of the Code by the State Government. The instructions to
which we have already referred cannot in our opinion take
the place of a notification under s. 10 (1) of the Code.
Therefore though Shri Lall Singh may be exercising all the
powers of the District Magistrate by virtue of his being an
Additional District Magistrate under the notification issued
in April 1963 and also by virtue of s. 11 of the Code he was
not the District Magistrate of Amritsar in law on June 30,
1964. It is true that when passing the order he showed his
designation as District Magistrate and that may be because
Shri Bhalla who was the District Magistrate had gone away
and no other officer had replaced him till June 30, 1964.
The transfer of Shri Bhalla would not automatically make
Shri Lall Singh, the District Magistrate of Amritsar, in the
absence of a notification under s. 10 (1) of the Code. When
we say this we should not be understood to mean that a
notification appointing a District Magistrate must
necessarily recite in terms that it was being made under s.
10 of the Code; all that we mean is that there must be an
order of the State Government appointing an officer as
District Magistrate of the district. In the absence of such
an order no officer can claim to be the District Magistrate
of the district. The instructions which were issued in this
case however do not say that Shri Lal Singh was being
appointed the District Magistrate of the district in place
of Shri Bhalla. If that were so, we would have found a
proper notification to that effect, published in the
Gazette. We, therefore, hold that Shri Lal Singh was not
the District Magistrate of Amritsar when he made the order
on June 30, 1964.
The next question is whether an Additional District
Magistrate can be said to be of the same rank as the
District Magistrate. We are clearly of the opinion that an
Additional District Magis-
852
trate is below the rank of a District Magistrate and cannot
be said to be of the same rank as the District Magistrate.
We may in this connection refer to s. 10(2) of the Code
which shows that an Additional District Magistrate need not
necessarily be conferred with all the powers of the District
Magistrate under the Code or any other law for the time
being in force. He can be an Additional District Magistrate
though he may be exercising only some of the powers of the
District Magistrate. Clearly, therefore, an Additional
District Magistrate must be an officer below the rank of the
District Magistrate. Further sub-s. (3) of s. 10 bears this
out. That sub-section says that for certain purposes, the
Additional District Magistrate shall be deemed to be
subordinate to the District Magistrate. Therefore even if
the Additional District Magistrate is invested with all the
powers of a District Magistrate under the Code or under any
other law for the time being in force he is still below the
District Magistrate for certain purposes mentioned in s.
10(3) of the Code. Besides there is only one District
Magistrate in a district and all other magistrates whether
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they be Magistrates first class or even Additional District
Magistrates must obviously be below him in rank. As s. 3
(2) (15) of the Act provides that the power of detention
cannot be exercised by any officer below the rank of the
District Magistrate, such power cannot be exercised by an
Additional District Magistrate who is in our opinion an
officer below the rank of a District Magistrate. The order
of the detention passed by Shri Lall Singh on June 30, 1964
when he was not the District Magistrate of Amritsar but only
an Additional District Magistrate is not in accordance with
the Act and the Rules and must be set aside.
Appeal allowed.
853