Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1067 of 1999
PETITIONER:
State of Tamil Nadu & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Alagar
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/07/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & LOKESHWAR SINGH PANTA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Challenge in this Appeal is to the judgment rendered by a
Division Bench of the Madras High Court quashing the order
of detention passed by the District Magistrate and Collector,
Virudhunagar, Tamil Nadu under Section 3(1) of the Tamil
Nadu Prevention of Dangerous Activities of bootleggers, Drug
offenders, Forest Offenders, Goondas, Immoral Traffic
offenders and Slum Grabbers Act, 1982 (in short the ’Act’).
The order of detention was passed as the respondent was
identified as a "Goonda" as defined in the Act. It was indicated
in the order of detention that it had come to the notice of the
detaining authority that a large number of cases were
registered against him and on 27.4.1998 he acted in a manner
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. The order of
detention was challenged before the High Court by filing a
petition under Article 226 of the Constitution of India, 1950 (in
short the ’Constitution’). The only plea taken was that the
sponsoring authority had sworn to an affidavit dated
15.6.1998 and had forwarded the same to the detaining
authority with the material for consideration of the detaining
authority. In the said affidavit there could not have been any
mention of the order of remand dated 24.6.1998. But in the
order of detention reference was made to the said fact. The
Detaining Authority produced the records to show that in fact
the Sponsoring Authority had appeared before the Detaining
Authority on 26.6.1998 and the file clearly indicated that the
order of remand was brought to the notice of the Detaining
Authority before he passed the order of detention on
26.6.1998. The High Court perused the original file but was of
the view that the Detaining Authority should have sent the
document in question i.e. order relating to the remand along
with a forwarding letter and in any event an additional
affidavit was required to be filed. Therefore, it was held that
the order of detention was not sustainable.
Mr. V.G. Pragasam, learned counsel for the appellants
submitted that the order of remand had been brought to the
notice of the detaining authority by the Sponsoring Authority
before the order of detention was passed. On a hypo-technical
ground that, though the same was brought to the notice of the
Detaining Authority, there should have been a forwarding
letter to the Detaining Authority or at least an additional
affidavit should have been filed the order of detention should
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not have been quashed. The order, therefore, is clearly
unsustainable.
There is no appearance on behalf of the respondent-
detenu in spite of notice.
We find that there is no dispute regarding the production
of the order of remand dated 24.6.1998 when the sponsoring
authority appeared before the detaining authority who passed
the order of detention on 26/6/1998. As a matter of fact in
the grounds of detention it have been clearly noted as follows :
"The accused was remanded to judicial
custody in Central Prison, Madurai for a period
of 15 days upto 12.5.1998 and the remand has
been extended upto 30.06.1998 and the
accused is in Central Prison, Madurai."
This clearly establishes, that as has been noted in the file
which was produced before the High Court, the order of
remand was placed by the Sponsoring Authority before the
Detaining Authority. The High Court’s view that there should
have been a forwarding letter or an additional affidavit is
clearly without any basis.
There is no dispute that the sponsoring authority had
placed the material before the Detaining Authority. That being
so the High Court should not have quashed the order of
detention.
The order of the High Court is accordingly set aside.
The residual question is whether it would be appropriate
to direct the respondent to surrender for serving remaining
period of detention in view of passage of time. As was noticed
in Sunil Fulchand Shah v. Union of India and Ors. (2000 (3)
SCC 409), and State of T.N. and Another v. Kethiyan Perumal
(2004 (8) SCC 780), it is for the appropriate State to consider
whether the impact of the acts, which led to the order of
detention still survives and whether it would be desirable to
send back the detenu for serving remainder period of
detention. Necessary order in this regard shall be passed
within two months by the appellant \026 State. Passage of time in
all cases cannot be a ground not to send the detenu to serve
remainder of the period of detention. It all depends on the
facts of the act and the continuance or otherwise of the effect
of the objectionable acts. The State shall consider whether
there still exists a proximate temporal nexus between the
period of detention indicated in the order by which the detenu
was required to be detained and the date when the detenu is
required to be detained pursuant to the present order.
Appeal is allowed.