Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 15
PETITIONER:
S.M.D. KIRAN PASHA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/11/1989
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
CITATION:
1989 SCR Supl. (2) 105 1990 SCC (1) 328
JT 1989 (4) 366 1989 SCALE (2)1083
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Articles 32 & 226--Life and
personal liberty--Right to-’Enforcement’ of right in
Court--Whether Court can insist that person surrenders and
then files habeas corpus petition--Post violation resort and
pre violation of protection----Distinction between.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant is a Municipal Councillor of the Cuddapah
Municipal Council. He was elected to the Council as an
independent candidate. According to him, he enjoys populari-
ty in his area and had previously held important positions
in the District. He states that the local leadership of the
ruling Telugu Desam Party having failed to woo him into
their fold, he was pressurised through the Excise and Police
authorities foisting false cases upon him. Scenting a move
to detain him under the provisions of the Andhra Pradesh
Prevention of Dangerous Activities of Bootleggers, Dacoits,
Drug Offenders, Goondas, Immoral Traffic Offenders and Land
Grabbers Act, 1986, the appellant filed a writ petition on
6.6.1988 in the High Court, averring inter alia that the
successive actions initiated against him were a part of
political vendetta. A learned Single Judge on 8.8.1988 was
pleased to direct interim the respondents not to take the
appellant into preventive custody for a period of 15 days on
the basis of the cases already registered. However, on
10.6.1988 the appellant was served the detention order dated
3.6.1988 as well as the grounds of detention, and he was
taken into custody, but was released after four days.
The appellant filed on 25.6.1988 in his pending writ
petition a miscellaneous petition, as an additional affida-
vit. He assailed therein the order of detention on various
grounds. A Division Bench of the High Court, on reference by
the learned Single Judge, held that the prayer in the writ
petition had become infructuous, and that there were no
extraordinary or special reasons to depart from the normal
rule, namely, that in such a case the appellant should first
surrender and move for a writ of habeas corpus. The Division
Bench accordingly, dismissed the writ petition.
Before this Court it was inter alia contended on behalf of
the
106
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 15
appellant that the High Court erred in holding that there
were no extraordinary circumstances or special reasons to
depart from the normal rule, thereby refusing to grant
relief to the appellant against infringement of his funda-
mental right to liberty; that the detention order having not
been approved by the State Government as required under
Section 3(3) of the Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act
and the appellant’s case having not been placed before the
Advisory Board as required under section 10 thereof, the
detention order ceased to be in force and hence was liable
to be quashed.
On behalf of the respondent, it was contended that the
detention order having been passed before the writ petition
was filed, the High Court was right in dismissing the writ
petition following the court’s practice and procedure, and
that there were no extraordinary or special reasons to
depart from the normal rule inasmuch as granting relief at
such a stage would defeat the very purpose of the Act.
Counsel, however, could not deny that the detention order
was not approved by the State Government and that the appel-
lant’s case was not placed before the Advisory Board.
Allowing the appeal and quashing the order of detention,
this Court,
HELD: (1) The position of a person who is actually under
illegal detention and of a person who is in imminent jeop-
ardy of illegal detention are not far dissimilar. Refusal to
interfere in such a case may amount to denial of the funda-
mental right itself. [114A].
Jayantiial Bhagwandas Shah v. The State of Maharash-
tra, [1981] 1 Cr. L.J. 767, referred to.
(2) There could be no reason why in an exceptional and
rare case, detention order already made, and either served
or yet to be served, and the person is still free, could not
be legally brought under challenge. [114F]
Vedprakash Devkinandan Chiripal v. State of Gujarat, AIR
1987 Gujarat 253.
A.K. Gopalan v. State of Madras, AIR 1950 SC 27; Addl.
District Magistrate, Jabalpur v. Shivakant Shukla, AIR 1976
SC 1207, referred to.
107
(3) For enforcement of one’s right to life and personal
liberty resort to Article 226(1) has been provided for. The
word ’enforcement’ has also been used in Article 32 of the
Constitution which provides the remedy for enforcement of
rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution. The word
’enforcement’ has not been defined by the Constitution.
[115B]
(4) ’Enforce’ means to compel obedience to laws; to
compel performance, obedience by physical or moral force.
[115C]
(5) Conferring the right to life and liberty imposes a
corresponding duty on the rest of the society, including the
State, to observe that right, that is to say, not to act or
to do anything which would amount to infringement of that
right, except in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
law. [115F]
(6) Resort to Article 226 after the right to personal
liberty is already violated is different from the pre-viola-
tion protection. Post-violation resort to Article 226 is for
remedy against violation and for restoration of the right,
while pre-violation protection is by compelling observance
of the obligation or compulsion under law not to infringe
the right by all those who are so obligated or compelled. To
surrender and apply for a writ of habeas corpus is a post-
violation remedy for restoration of the right which is not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 15
the same as restraining potential violators in case of
threatened violation of the right. [116B-C]
(7) Law surely cannot take action for internal thoughts
but can act only after overt acts. If overt acts towards
violation have already been done and the same has come to
the knowledge of the person threatened with the violation
and he approaches the court under Art. 226 giving sufficient
particulars of proximate actions as would imminently lead to
violation of right, should not the court call upon those
alleged to have taken these steps to appear and show cause
why they should not be restrained from violating that right?
[116 C-D]
(8) The difference of the two situations have different
legal significance. If a threatened invasion of a right is
removed by restraining the potential violator from taking
any steps towards violation, the rights remain protected and
the compulsion against its violation is enforced. If the
right has already been violated, what is left is the remedy
against such violation and for restoration of the right.
[116F-G]
(9) In the instant case, the appellant’s fundamental right
to
108
liberty is the reflex of a legal obligation of the rest of
the society, including the State, and it is the appellant’s
legal power bestowed upon him to bring about by a legal
action the enforcement of the fulfilment of that obligation
existing towards him. Denial of legal action would, there-
fore, amount to denial of his right of enforcement of his
right to liberty. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus
would not be a substitute for this enforcement. [120D-E]
K.K. Kochunni v. The State of Madras and Ors., [1959]
Supp. 2 SCR 316; Special Reference No. 1 of 1964, [1965] 1
SCR 413; M.C. Mehta v. Union of India, [1987] 1 SCC 395
referred to.
(10) As the detention order was already passed and
served and the detenu was already taken into custody during
the pendency of the writ petition, these subsequent events
having being brought to the notice of the court by a Misc.
application in the form of additional affidavit, the same
ought to have been dealt with by the High Court..[113A-B]
(11) The detention order had not been approved by the
State Government within 12 days of its being made, as en-
joined under subsection (3) of section 3 of the Act. The
result is that the order could not remain in force more than
12 days after making thereof and as such must be treated as
to have ceased to be in force and non-existent thereafter.
[122A]
(12) Even though the detenu was released, if the deten-
tion order was in force, his case was required to be placed
before the Advisory Board. This being a mandatory provision
and having not been complied with, the detention order even
if otherwise in force, cannot be said to have been in force
after three weeks. [122H; 123A]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 702
of 1989.
From the Judgment and Order dated 4.7.1988 of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in W.P. No. 8610 of 1988.
M.C. Bhandare and Ms. C.K. Sucharita for the Appellant.
Ganesh, S. Muralidhar, T.V.S.N. Chari and Raghav for the
Respondents.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 15
109
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K.N. SAIKIA, J. Special leave granted.
This appeal is from the Judgment and Order of the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad dated 4.7.1988 passed
in Writ Petition No. 86 10 of 1988.
The appellant states that he enjoys popularity in his
area and that he previously held several important positions
in the Cuddapah District of Andhra Pradesh, such as organis-
ing Secretary of the Andhra Pradesh Congress Committee for
several years, a Municipal Councillor from 1982 to 1986 and
a Vice-Chairman of Cuddapah Municipal Council. According to
him in December 1985 he was elected as a Chairman of the
Cuddapah Municipal Council for its residuary term and in
March 1987 he was elected to the Municipal Council as an
independent candidate defeating the Telugu Desam and Con-
gress (I) candidates by a large margin. It is his case that
the local leadership of the ruling Telugu Desam Party.
having failed to woo him into their fold he was pressurised
through the Excise and Police authorities foisting false
cases upon him. On 13.11.1987, the police having summoned
him to the Police Station for taking his photograph as was
done in case of criminals, he moved the Andhra Pradesh High
Court by Writ Petition No. 79038 of 1987 and the High Court
was pleased to issue directions as prayed for, by its order
dated 17.12.1987. Thereafter the excise authorities are
stated to have registered some cases against the appellant
who applied for and was granted bail on 10.5.1988 rejecting
the Excise authorities’ prayer for custody. Scenting a move
to detain the appellant under the provisions of the Andhra
Pradesh Prevention of Dangerous Activities of Bootleggers,
Dacoits, Drug Offenders, Goondas, Immoral Traffic Offenders
and Land Grabbers Act, 1986, hereinafter referred to as ’the
Act’, the appellant filed Writ Petition No. 8610 of 1988 on
6.6.1988 in the Andhra Pradesh High Court averting, inter
alia, that the successive actions initiated against him were
a part of political vendetta. A learned Single Judge on
8.6.1988 was pleased to direct interim the respondents not
to take the appellant into preventive custody for a period
of 15 days on basis the cases already registered. However,
on 10.6.1988 the appellant was served the detention order in
S.No. 7/1988 dated 3.6.1988 as well as the grounds of deten-
tion; and he was taken into custody and detained in Secun-
derabad jail, but was released after four days. The deten-
tion order stated that with a view to preventing him from
acting in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public
order, it was
110
necessary to make an order directing that "he shall be de-
tained." The grounds of detention as served upon the appel-
lant contained altogether 13 grounds ranging a period from
23.11.1974 to 7.5.1988.
The appellant filed on 25.6.1988 in his writ petition a
miscellaneous petition being W.P.M.P.S.R. No. 51830, as an
additional affidavit, stating, inter alia, that the writ
petition was filed by him seeking a direction to the re-
spondents to refrain from making an order detaining him
under the provisions of the Act and the same was admitted
and interim direction issued. But thereafter the detention
order in S.No. 7 of 1988 dated 3.6.1988 was served on him on
10.6.1988 and, therefore, he submitted the additional affi-
davit with reference to the impugned order of detention. He
assailed therein the grounds of detention as vague, stale,
non-existent and, in any case, irrelevant bearing no reasons
for the decision that his detention was necessary to prevent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 15
him from acting in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance
of public order. He also assailed the order on grounds of
non application of mind by the respondent NO. 2 and absence
of nexus between the grounds and maintenance of public order
and of non-disclosure of any rational basis for formation of
such an opinion. He refuted and denied each of the 13
grounds and prayed that the writ petition be amended by
substituting the prayer so as to issue a writ, order or
direction and more particularly one in the nature of writ of
mandamus declaring the order of the Collector and District
Magistrate respondent No. 2 herein in S.R. No. 7 of 1988
dated 3.6.1988 made under Act 1 of 1986 as illegal and void
and to pass such other orders as are necessary in the inter-
ests of justice. Admittedly no specific order was passed on
this miscellaneous petition. It appears that a Counter
Affidavit was filed in the writ petition on behalf of the
respondents and the appellant filed a reply affidavit there-
to.
A Division Bench of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh on
reference by the learned Single judge heard the writ peti-
tion analogously with another writ petition and observing,
inter alia, that as an order of detention was made even
before the writ petition was filed, held that the prayer in
the writ petition had become infructuous; and that there
were no extraordinary or special reasons to depart from the
normal rule, namely, that in such a case the appellant
should first surrender and move for a writ of habeas corpus,
and accordingly dismissed the writ petition.
Mr. M.C. Bhandare, the learned counsel for the appellant
submits, inter alia, that the High Court erred in dismissing
the appellant’s
111
writ petition holding that there were no extraordinary
circumstance, or special reasons to depart from the normal
rule that the appellant in such a case should first surren-
der and then move a petition for habeas corpus thereby
refusing to grant relief to the appellant against infringe-
ment of his fundamental right to liberty; and that the
grounds of detention were vague, irrelevant, stale and non-
existent having no relation to the stated purpose of deten-
tion, and there was mala fide exercise of power and complete
non-application of mind on the part of the detaining author-
ity for which the grounds of detention ought to have been
rejected and the detention order set aside. Counsel relies
on a decision of the Bombay High Court reported in 1981(1)
Crl. L.J. 767 and one of the Gujarat High Court since re-
ported in AIR 1978 Gujarat 253. Counsel further submits that
the detention order having not been approved by the State
Government as required under section 3(3) of the Act and the
appellant’s case having not been placed before the Advisory
Board as required under section 10 the detention order
ceased to be in force and hence is liable to be quashed.
Mr. M.S. Ganesh, the learned counsel for the respondents
submits that the detention order having been passed before
the writ petition was filed, the High Court was right in
dismissing the same following the court’s practice and
procedure; and that there were no extraordinary or special
reasons to depart from the normal rule inasmuch as granting
relief at such a stage would defeat the very purpose of the
Act. Counsel however, could not deny that the detention
order was not approved by the State Government and that the
appellant’s case was not placed before the Advisory Board.
The first question to be decided therefore, is whether
the High Court was right in dismissing the writ petition
holding that the rule or practice of the High Court in such
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 15
a case was to interfere only where there were extraordinary
or special reasons and otherwise to leave the appellant to
first surrender and then move a petition for habeas corpus.
From a perusal of the Judgment of the High Court it
appears that it analysed the question of maintainability of
the writ petition from two view points, namely, of the High
Court’s power, and the High Court’s rule or practice. The
High Court correctly analysed the power of the High Court to
interfere in such a case under Article 226 of the Constitu-
tion of India concluding that the High Court had power to
interfere. While tracing the High Court’s evolving rule or
practice, the Bench took the view that it was but appropri-
ate and proper that the
112
court evolved and followed a practice and procedure where it
would not ordinarily entertain a challenge to a preventive
detention unless the person concerned submitted himself to
the order and not to encourage persons against whom orders
of preventive detention were made by the competent authority
under a valid enactment to avoid the process of law and at
the same time seek the protection of law from this Court.
Relying on several decisions of its own, the Court observed:
"There is no presumption that any and every
order of detention is bad. The normal rule
shall therefore be "surrender to the order
first and then approach this Court." Only in
extraordinary cases, where it appears that the
State is exercising its power under a preven-
tive detention statute for an oblique purpose,
or in an outrageous and/or vindictive manner,
or where the order of detention is ex
facie invalid, would this Court depart from
this rule. Now, what would be such extraordi-
nary case cannot and, indeed, should not be
defined or specified. It is better left to the
sound judgment and decision of this Court."
The High Court on facts of the appellant’s writ peti-
tion, observed that the allegations that the entire adminis-
trative machinery was being misused by the local MLA who
happened to be a Cabinet Minister to hound the appellant and
that the Collector and District Magistrate was being used as
a tool were not correct and, therefore, said:
"Once we are of the opinion that there are no
extraordinary or special reasons to depart
from the normal rule, we will not look into or
examine the relevance or correctness of the
grounds as we would do in a writ of habeas
corpus."
The writ petition was accordingly dismissed.
Mr. Bhandare submits that when the appellant’s fundamen-
tal right to liberty was threatened through the machination
of a detention order, he approached the High Court for
protection and when despite the interim order of the High
Court his fundamental right was violated by detaining him,
after serving the order of detention on vague, stale, irrel-
evant and non-existent grounds, though he was released after
four days, he ought not to have been denied relief on the
ground of there having evolved a practice or procedure of
the Court not to interfere in such a case except where there
were extraordinary or special reasons
113
and to leave the appellant to surrender and then move a
petition for habeas corpus. We find force in this submis-
sion. As the detention order was already passed and served
and the detenu was already taken into custody during the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 15
pendency of the writ petition, these subsequent events
having been brought to the notice of the court by a Misc.
application in the form of an Additional Affidavit--the same
ought to have been dealt with by the High Court.
In Jayantilal Bhagwandas Shah v. The State of Maharash-
tra, [1981] 1 Crl. L.J. 767, the challenge was directed
towards orders of detention passed under the Conservation of
Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act,
1974, but the intended detenus under those orders were not
in detention. The State having raised a preliminary objec-
tion to the maintainability of the petition on the ground
that the habeas corpus jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution was exercisable only to examine the legality of
a detention where there was a detention and in no other
case, a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court took the
view that though the writ of habeas corpus might be issued
only when there was actual illegal detention, that was not
to say that an illegal order of detention could not be
successfully challenged.
In para 11 of the report, the Court held:
"Art. 226 is couched in language wide enough
to protect a person against an illegal inva-
sion of his fight to freedom by protecting him
while still free and by regaining his freedom
for him if he has already been wrongfully
detained. We cannot countenance and do not
accept the Advocate General’s submission that
the High Courts are impotent to give relief
against the prospect of illegal detention and
must first require the intended detenu to
surrender to the illegal detention. We are
satisfied that the High Courts may under the
provisions of Art. 226 issue a direction,
order and writ in the nature of mandamus
and/or certiorari quashing an illegal order of
detention and may by direction, order and writ
in the nature of prohibition enjoin the person
threatening the illegal detention from execut-
ing the threat."
Accordingly the Court held that it would intervene to strike
down an illegal order of detention. If the court could in
matters of personal liberty intervene on the strength of a
mere post-card, they surely could intervene on the strength
of a petition, though they may seek the
114
wrong relief or be phrased in the wrong form. The position
of a person who is actually under illegal detention and of a
person who is in imminent jeopardy of illegal detention are
not far dissimilar. We are inclined to agree with this view
as we feel that refusal to interfere in such a case may
amount to denial of the fundamental right itself.
A Full Bench of the Gujarat High Court in Vedprakash
Devkinandan Chiripal v. State of Gujarat, since reported in
AIR 1987 Gujarat 253 where the petitioner was said to be
detained under the provisions of Prevention of Blackmarket-
ing and maintenance of Supply of Essential Commodities Act,
1980 and the petitioner having absconded, a notification was
issued in the official gazette as provided under section
7(1)(b) of the said Act and the person moved the petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution of India praying a writ
of habeas corpus or a writ of mandamus, the question was
whether the petition would be maintainable before the detenu
had been served with order of detention and had been de-
tained in custody, answered the question in the affirmative.
Relying on the decisions in A.K. Gopalan v. State of Madras,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 15
AIR 1950 SC 27 and Addl. District Magistrate, Jabalpur v.
Shivakant Shukla, AIR 1976 SC 1207, the Full Bench took the
view "that before detention, if writ of mandamus is moved
for challenging unauthorised detention order which is al-
ready passed on the ground that the order is a nullity
because it is passed (a) by an incompetent person or (b) it
is a mala fide order or (c) it is contrary to the legal
procedure prescribed for passing such order, or (d) it is
otherwise a nullity for any other reason, for example,
passed against a wrong person, it cannot be said that such
challenge would be per se not maintainable." We are inclined
to agree inasmuch as it would be a challenge to an existing
order of detention which is posing an imminent threat to a
fundamental right of the named person guaranteed under Art.
21. There could, therefore, be no reason why in such an
exceptional and rare case, detention order already made, and
either served or yet to be served, and the person is still
free could not be legally brought under challenge.
Article 226(1) of the Constitution of India notwith-
standing anything in Article 32, empowers the High Court
throughout the territories in relation to which it exercises
jurisdiction, to issue to any person or authority, including
in appropriate cases, any Government within those territo-
ries directions, orders or writs, including writs in the
nature of habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto
and certiorari, or any of them, for the enforcement of any
of the rights conferred by Part III and for any other pur-
pose; and it also envisages
115
making of interim orders, whether by way of injunction or
stay or in any other manner in such a proceeding. Article 21
giving protection of life and personal liberty provides that
no person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty
except according to procedure established by law. For en-
forcement of one’s right to life and personal liberty resort
to Article 226(1) has thus been provided for. What is the
ambit of enforcement of the right? The word ’enforcement’
has also been used in Article 32 of the Constitution which
provides the remedy for enforcement of fights conferred by
Part III of the Constitution. The word ’enforcement’ has not
been defined by the Constitution. According to Collins
English Dictionary to enforce means to ensure observance of
or obedience to a law, decision etc. Enforcement, according
to Webster’s Comprehensive Dictionary, means the act of
enforcing, or the state of being enforced, compulsory execu-
tion; compulsion. Enforce means to compel obedience to laws;
to compel performance, obedience by physical or moral force.
If enforcement means to impose or compel obedience to law or
to compel observance of law, we have to see what it does
precisely mean. The right to life and personal liberty has
been guaranteed as a fundamental right and for its enforce-
ment one could resort to Article 226 of the Constitution for
issuance of appropriate writ,’ order or direction. Precisely
at what stage resort to Article 226 has been envisaged in
the Constitution? When a right is so guaranteed, it has to
be understood in relation to its orbit and its infringement.
Conferring the right to life and liberty imposes a corre-
sponding duty on the rest of the society, including the
State, to observe that fight, that is to say, not to act or
do anything which would amount to infringement of that
right, except in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
law. In other words, conferring the fight on a citizen
involves the compulsion on the rest of the society, includ-
ing the State, not to infringe that right. The question is
at what stage the right can be enforced? Does a citizen have
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 15
to wait till the right is infringed? Is there no way of
enforcement of the right before it is actually infringed?
Can the obligation or compulsion on the part of the State to
observe the fight be made effective only after the right is
violated or in other words can there be enforcement of a
fight to life and personal liberty before it is actually
infringed? What remedy will be left to a person when his
right to life is violated? When a right is yet to be violat-
ed, but is threatened with violation can the citizen move
the court for protection of the right? The protection of the
right is to be distinguished from its restoration or remedy
after violation. When right to personal liberty is guaran-
teed and the rest of the society, including the State, is
compelled or obligated not to violate that right, and if
someone has threatened to violate it or its violation is
imminent,
116
and the person whose right is so threatened or its violation
so imminent resorts to Article 226 of the Constitution,
could not the court protect observance of his right by
restraining those who threatened to violate it until the
court examines the legality of the action? Resort to Article
226 after the right to personal liberty is already violated
is different from the pre-violation protection. Post-viola-
tion resort to Article 226 is for remedy against violation
and for restoration of the right, while pre-violation pro-
tection is by compelling observance of the obligation or
compulsion under law not to infringe the right by all those
who are so obligated or compelled. To surrender and apply
for a writ of habeas corpus is a post-violation remedy for
restoration of the right which is not the same as restrain-
ing potential violators in case of threatened violation of
the right. The question may arise what precisely may amount
to threat or imminence of violation. Law surely cannot take
action for internal thoughts but can act only after overt
acts. If overt acts towards violation have already been done
and the same has come to the knowledge of the person threat-
ened with that violation and he approaches the court under
Art. 226 giving sufficient particulars of proximate actions
as would imminently lead to violation of right, should not
the court call upon those alleged to have taken those steps
to appear and show cause why they should not be restrained
from violating that right? Instead of doing so would it be
the proper course to be adopted to tell the petitioner that
the court cannot take any action towards preventive justice
until his right is actually violated whereafter alone he
could petition for a writ of habeas corpus? In the instant
case when the writ petition was pending in court and the
appellant’s right to personal liberty happened to be violat-
ed by taking him into custody in preventive detention,
though he was released after four days, but could be taken
into custody again, would it be proper for the court to
reject the earlier writ petition and tell him that his
petition has become infructuous and he had no alternative
but to surrender and then petition for a writ of habeas
corpus? The difference of the two situations, as we have
seen, have difference legal significance. If a threatened
invasion of a right is removed by restraining the potential
violator from taking any steps towards violation, the rights
remain protected and the compulsion against its violation is
enforced. If the right has already been violated, what is
left is the remedy against such violation and for restora-
tion of the right.
In K.K. Kochunni v. The State of Madras and Ors., [1959]
Suppl. 2 SCR 316, where the grievance of the petitioner was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 15
that the Madras Marumakkathayam (Removal of Doubts) Act,
1955 (Act 32 of 1955),
117
provided in section 2 of the Act that notwithstanding any
decision of court any Sthanam which fulfilled the conditions
stated in the section shall be deemed to be and shall be
deemed always to have been properties belonging to the
tarwad to which the provisions of the Madras Marumakkathayam
Act, 1932 shall apply, and thus, unlike other Acts that
contemplated some further action to be taken by the State
after the enactment had come into force, automatically took
away or abridged a person’s fundamental right (as right to
property then was) immediately it came into force, a Consti-
tution Bench of this Court speaking through Das C.J. held
that there was no reason why the aggrieved person should not
immediately be entitled to seek the remedy under Art. 32 of
the Constitution. The argument that an application under
Art. 32 could not be maintained until the State had taken or
threatened to take any action under the impugned law which
again, if remedy to be taken would infringe the petitioner’s
fundamental rights, was negatived by this Court holding that
in cases arising under those enactments the proprietors
could invoke the jurisdiction of this Court under Art. 32
when the State did or threatened to do the overt act,
(emphasis supplied). It was observed that quite conceivably
an enactment may immediately on its coming into force take
away or abridge the fundamental rights of a person by its
very terms and without any further overt act being done. The
impugned Act was said to be an instance of such enactment.
In such a case, it was held, the infringement of the funda-
mental right was complete eo instanti the passing of the
enactment and, therefore, there could be no reason why the
person so prejudicially affected by the law should not be
entitled immediately to avail himself of the constitutional
remedy under Art. 32. It was also observed that to say that
a person, whose fundamental right had been infringed by the
mere operation of an enactment, was not entitled to invoke
the jurisdiction of this Court under Art. 32, for the en-
forcement of his fight would be to deny the benefit of a
salutary constitutional remedy which was itself his funda-
mental right. The same reasoning is applicable to the facts
of the instant case inasmuch as the detention order was
already passed and served and the appellant was already
taken into custody and though released after 4 days the
Government could at any time cancel his release under sec-
tion 15 of the Act.
In the Special Reference No. 1 of 1964, reported in [
1965] 1 SCR 413 the Constitution Bench speaking through
Gajendragadkar, C.J. held (at page 493):
"If a citizen moves this Court and complains
that his fundamental fight under Art. 21 had
been contravened, it would
118
plainy be the duty of this Court to examine
the merits of the said contention, and that
inevitably raises the question as to whether
the personal liberty of the citizen has been
taken away according to the procedure estab-
lished by law. In fact, this question was
actually considered by this Court in the case
of Pandit Sharma, [1959] Supp. 1 SCR 806."
The same law applies to a High Court moved under Article 226
of the Constitution of India against similar contravention.
In M.C. Mehta v. Union of India, [1987] 1 SCC 395, the
Constitution Bench speaking through Bhagwati, C.J. said:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 15
"We are also of the view that this Court
under Article 32(1) is free to devise any
procedure appropriate for the particular
purpose of the proceeding, namely, enforcement
of a fundamental right and under Article
32(2), the Court has the implicit power
to issue whatever direction, order or
writ is necessary in a given case, including
all incidental or ancillary power necessary to
secure enforcement of the fundamental
right. The Power of the Court is not only
injunctive in ambit, that is, preventing the
infringement of
a fundamental right, but it is also remedial
in scope and provides relief against a
breach of the fundamental right already
committed vide Bandhua Mukti Morcha case. 1984
2 SCR 67. If the court were powerless to issue
any direction, order or writ in cases where a
fundamental right has already been vio-
lated, Article 32 would be robbed of all its
efficacy, because then the situation would be
that if a fundamental right is threatened
to be violated, the court can injunct
such violation but if the violator is quick
enough to take action infringing the fundamen-
tal right, he would escape from the net
of Article 32. That would, to a large
extent, emasculate the fundamental right
guaranteed under Article 32 and render it
impotent and futile."
"Despite the power of the State" says Jean Dabin, "there
are always smart people who contrive to violate the laws
without incurring the rigours of compulsion; or, again,
certain rules are psychologically or technically awkward to
apply, so that the machinery of compulsion lends them but
insufficient aid. In any case, actual inefficacy or impo-
tence of compulsion can affect the validity of the rule even
less than disobedience; that validity binds, and continues
to bind, by virtue of
119
the very disposition made by the rule."
Analytical positivist concept of right has been differ-
ently analysed. Hohfeld writing on fundamental legal con-
cepts as applied in judicial reasoning analysis four ideas.
One of those is that a right may be claim-right. P has a
right to do X, it means to indicate that Q or everyone else
has a duty to let P do X. The existence of such a duty gives
P some sort of claim against Q. Claim-rights may be either
in personam or in rem. A claim-right in personam co-relates
to a duty of a person, while claim-rights in rem co-relate
to duties in principle incumbent on everyone. A right en-
joyed by one thus co-relates to a duty on the part of oth-
ers.
In Hans Kelsen’s analysis it is usual to oppose the
concept of right to the concept of obligation and to cede
priority of rank to the former as we speak of rights and
duties. The behaviour of one individual that corresponds to
the obligated behaviour of the other is usually designated
as a content of a ’right’-as an object of a ’claim’ that
corresponds to the obligation. "The behaviour of the one
individual that corresponds to the obligated behaviour of
the other, particularly the claiming of the obligated beha-
viour, is designated as exercising a right." In case of an
obligation to tolerate something, the behaviour of the one
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 15
corresponding to the obligation of the other is spoken of as
’enjoyment’ of the right. According to Kelsen the ’right’ or
a ’claim’ of an individual, is merely the obligation of the
other individual or individuals. When we speak of a right as
a legally protected interest, in the words of Kelsen, it
refers to a right as the "reflex of a legal obligation".
Right is often understood as a will power conferred by law.
A ’right’ in the sense is present if the conditions of the
sanction that constitutes a legal obligation includes a
motion, normally of the individual in relation to whom the
obligation exists; the motion is aimed at the execution of
the sanction and has the form of a legal action brought
before the law applying organ. Then this organ may apply the
general norm to effectuate the fight, which is the reflex of
the legal obligation by executing the sanction. The right
which is the reflex of legal obligation is equipped with the
legal power of the entitled individual to bring about by a
legal action the execution of a sanction as a reaction
against the non-fulfilment of the obligation whose reflex is
his right; or as it is sometimes called, the enforcement of
the fulfilment of this obligation. To make use of this legal
power of motion is exercise of the right. In this sense each
right of an individual contains a claim to the behaviour of
another individual-namely to that behaviour to which the
second individual is obligated toward the first; the beha-
viour that constitutes
120
the content of the legal obligation identical with the
reflex right. If an individual, towards which another indi-
vidual is obligated to a certain behaviour, does not have
the legal power to bring about by a legal action the execu-
tion of a sanction as a reaction against the non-fulfilment
of the obligation, then the act by which he demands fulfil-
ment of the obligation has no specific legal effect; the act
is legally irrelevant, except for not being legally prohib-
ited. Therefore, a ’claim’ as legally effective act exists
only when a law exists, which means that an individual has
the legal power. The subject of a right may be not only one
individual but two or several individuals, including the
State.
In the language of Kelsen the right of an individual is
either a mere reflex right--the reflex of a legal obligation
existing towards this individual; or a private right in the
technical sense--the legal power bestowed upon an individual
to bring about by legal action the enforcement of the ful-
filment of an obligation existing toward him, that is, the
legal power. From the above analysis it is clear that in the
instant case the appellant’s fundamental right to liberty is
the reflex of a legal obligation of the rest of the society,
including the State, and it is the appellant’s legal power
bestowed upon him to bring about by a legal action the
enforcement of the fulfilment of that obligation existing
towards him. Denial of the legal action would, therefore,
amount to denial of his right of enforcement of his right to
liberty. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus would not be
a substitute for this enforcement.
We, therefore, proceed to consider the merits of this
case instead of remanding to the High Court to avoid further
delay.
Mr. Bhandare’s submission is that the detention order
having not been approved by the State Government under sub-
section (3) of section 3 it had ceased to be in force after
12 days of its being made. We find force in this submission
on the facts of the case. Section 3 of the Act provides the
power to make detention orders. Sub-section (1) thereof
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 15
empowers the State Government to make a detention order.
Sub-section (2) empowers the State Government to authorise a
District Magistrate or a Commissioner of Police to exercise
the powers conferred by sub-section (1) during such period
as may be specified in the order not exceeding three months
at the first instance with power to extend such period from
time to time by any period not exceeding three months at any
one time. Admittedly, the impugned detention order was
passed by the District Magistrate in exercise of powers
under section 2. Sub-section (3) is to the following effect:
121
"When any order is made under this section by
an officer mentioned in sub-section (2), he
shall forthwith report the fact to the Govern-
ment together with the grounds on which the
order has been made and such other particulars
as in his opinion, have a bearing on the
matter, and no such order shall remain in
force for more than twelve days after the
making thereof, unless, in the meantime, it
has been approved by the Government."
Examining the records we find that before the High Court
in the Misc. case W.P.M.P.S.R. 51830 in the form of an
Additional Affidavit at para 11 it was urged:
"Apart from the infirmities stated above which
vitiate the order, statutory requirement of
reporting to the Government and obtaining
approval of the Government within the pre-
scribed time has not been complied with."
In the counter affidavit filed by the Collector and
District Magistrate in the High Court to the writ petition
as well as the W.P.M.P., there was no reply to para 11 of
the W.P.M.P. and it was nowhere stated that the detention
order was approved by the State Government. In this Court in
the Special Leave Petition Ground No. V is as follows:
"The Hon’ble High Court has erred in not
noting the infirmity in the order of detention
inasmuch as the approval of State Government
of Andhra Pradesh for the order of the deten-
tion made by the District Magistrate, Cuddapah
was not obtained within the period of 12 days
as enjoined under sub-section (3) of section 3
of the Act. The order is therefore non est in
law."
In the Counter Affidavit of the Collector and District
Magistrate there was not even a whisper in denial of this
fact.
The learned counsel for the respondents at the heating
could not deny before us that the detention order had not
been approved by the Government within 12 days. On his
request time was granted to produce materials. He has now
filed reply affidavit on behalf of the respondents to the
rejoinder affidavit filed by the appellant. Scanning this
affidavit also we do not find any statement that the deten-
tion order was approved. Though the learned counsel submits
that it was
122
approved, in view of the above affidavits it cannot be acted
upon. We have, therefore, no other alternative than to hold
that the detention order had not been approved by the State
Government within 12 days of its being made. The result is
that the order could not claim in force more than 12 days
after making thereof and as such must be treated as to have
ceased to be in force and non-existent thereafter.
Mr. Bhandare then submits that the case of the appellant
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 15
was not at all referred to the Advisory Board under section
10 of the Act. This too has not been denied by the learned
counsel for the respondents. Section 10 of the Act provides
for reference to the Advisory Board and says:
"In every case where a detention order has
been made under this Act, the Government shall
within three weeks from the date of detention
of a person under the order, place before the
Advisory Board constituted by them under
section 9, the grounds on which the order has
been made and the representation, if any, made
by the person affected by the order, and in
the case where the order has been made by an
officer, also the report by such officer under
sub-section (3) of section 3."
Section 11 of the Act prescribes the procedure for the
Advisory Board. Under sub-section (1) of section 12, in any
case where the Advisory Board has reported that there is, in
his opinion sufficient cause for the detention of a person,
the Government may confirm the detention order and continue
the detention of person concerned for such period not ex-
ceeding the maximum period specified in section 13 as they
think fit. Under sub-section (2) thereof in any case where
the Advisory Board has reported that there is, in his opin-
ion, no sufficient cause for the detention of the person
concerned, the Government shall revoke the detention order
and cause the person to be released forthwith. Thus section
10 makes it mandatory for the Government to place the ground
on which the order has been made and the representation, if
any made by the person affected by the order and in the case
where the order has been made by an officer also the report
by officer under sub-section (3) of section 3. This section
prescribes a period of 3 weeks from the date of detention
irrespective of whether the person continues to be in deten-
tion or not. Therefore, even though the detenu was released,
if the detention order was in force, his case was required
to be placed before the Advisory Board. This being a manda-
tory provision and having not been complied with the deten-
tion order even if
123
otherwise it was in force, cannot be said to have been in
force after three weeks. Under Article 22 of the Constitu-
tion of India a person cannot be kept in detention beyond
three months without referring his case to an Advisory Board
under the appropriate law. In either case the appellant’s
case having not been referred to an Advisory Board the
detention order cannot be said to have remained in force
after the statutory period. It is, therefore, not necessary
to go into the validity or otherwise of the grounds of
detention.
In the result we set aside the impugned Judgment of the
High Court and hold that the detention order ceased to be in
force after 12 days of making thereof and even if it was in
force it ceased to be in force for failure to refer the
appellant’s case to Advisory Board within the time pre-
scribed by law; and accordingly we quash the same. The
appeal is accordingly allowed.
After the Judgment was finalised, another affidavit on
behalf of the respondents affirmed by one belonging to the
office of the Advocate-on-Record has been circulated. This
affidavit is not acceptable. Even if it was accepted it
would not affect the ultimate legal position.
R.S.S. Appeal allowed.
124
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 15