Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF DELHI AND ANOTHERBALRAJ KHANNAv.THE STATE OF DE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/04/1951
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1951 AIR 270 1951 SCR 451
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1954 SC 92 (39)
R 1958 SC 578 (155)
E 1958 SC 731 (17)
R 1960 SC 554 (20)
RF 1961 SC 232 (55)
R 1962 SC1006 (79)
R 1963 SC1047 (19)
RF 1967 SC 1 (42,138)
RF 1967 SC1643 (274)
O 1970 SC 564 (53)
RF 1973 SC1461 (1525)
E&R 1978 SC 597 (52,41,66,ETC.)
E 1980 SC 898 (52,49)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Arts. 19 (1) & (2), 22
(5)--Freedom of speech--Preventive detention to prevent
speeches with a view to maintain public order-- Omission to
state objectionable passages in grounds supplied--Legality
of detention.
HEADNOTE:
The District Magistrate of Delhi, "being satisfied that
with a view to the maintenance of public order in Delhi it
is necessary to do so" ordered the detention of the peti-
tioners under s. 3 of the Preventive Detention Act, 1950.
The grounds of detention communicated to the petitioners
were "that your speeches generally in the past and particu-
larly on the 13th and 15th August, 1950, at public meetings
in Delhi has been such as to excite disaffection between
Hindus and Mussalmans and thereby prejudice the maintenance
01 public order in Delhi and that in order to prevent you
from making such speeches it is necessary to make the said
order." The petitioners contended that under the Constitu-
tion the maintenance of public order was not a purpose for
which restriction can be imposed on the freedom of
452
speech guaranteed by Art. 19 (1) and that the grounds commu-
nicated were too vague and indefinite to enable them to make
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a representation and the provisions of Art. 22 (s) of the
Constitution were not complied with, and their detention was
therefore ultra vires and illegal:
Held by the Full Court (KANIA C.J., PATANJALI SASTRI,
MEHR CHAND MAHAJAN, S.R. DAs and VIVIAN BOSE JJ.) that
though personal liberty is sufficiently comprehensive to
include the freedoms enumerated in Art. 19 (1) and its
deprivation would result in the extinction of those free-
doms, the Constitution has treated these civil liberties as
distinct fundamental rights and made separate provisions in
Arts. 19, 21 and 22 as to the limitations and conditions
subject to which alone they could be taken away or abridged.
Consequently, even though a law which restricts freedom of
speech and expression which is not directed solely against
the undermining of the security of the State or its over-
throw but is concerned generally in the interests of public
order may not fall within the reservation of cl. (2) of Art.
19 and may therefore be void, an order of preventive deten-
tion cannot be held to be invalid merely because the deten-
tion is made with a view to prevent the making of speeches.
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. The deci-
sions in Brij Bhushan and Another v. The State of Delhi (1)
and Romesh Thappar v. The State of Madras(2) are not incon-
sistent with the decision in A.K. Gopalan v. The State(3).
Held per KANIA. C.J., PATANJALI SASTRI and S.R. DAS JJ.
(MEHR CHAND MAHAJAN and BOSE JJ. dissenting)--As the time
and place at which the speeches were alleged to have been
made and their general nature and effect,. namely, that they
were such as to excite disaffection between Hindus and
Muslims were also stated in the grounds communicated, they
were not too vague or indefinite to enable the petitioners
to make an effective representation and the detention cannot
be held to be illegal on the ground that Art. 22 (8) was not
complied with. Per CHAND MAHAJAN and BOSE JJ. (contra)--In
the absence of any indication in the grounds as to the
nature of the words used by the petitioners in their speech-
es, from which an inference has been drawn against them, the
petitioners would not be able fully to exercise their funda-
mental right of making a representation, and as there were
no such indications in the grounds supplied, there was a
non-compliance with the provisions of el. (5) Art. 22 and
the detention was illegal.
The State of Bombay v. Alma Ram Sridhar Vaidya(4) applied.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petitions Nos. 21, 22 and 44 of 1951.
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 605. (3) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
(2) [1950] S.C.R. 594, (4) [1950] S.C.R. 167.
453
Applications under Art. 32 of the Constitution praying
for the issue of writs in the nature of habeas corpus.
Hardayal Hardy for the petitioners in Petitions Nos. 21
and 22
Gopal Singh for the petitioner in Petition No. 44.
S.M. Sikri for the respondents.
1951. April 6. The following judgments were deliv-
ered.
PATANJALI SASTRI J.--These three petitions have been pre-
sented to this Court under article 32 of the Constitution of
India praying for the issue of writs in the nature of habeas
corpus for release of the petitioners who are respectively
the President, VicePresident and Secretary of the Hindu
Mahasabha of the Delhi State.
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The petitioners were arrested on 22nd August, 1950, by
order of the District Magistrate, Delhi, made under sub-
section (2) read with clause (a) sub-clause (i) of sub-
section (1) of section 3 of the Preventive Detention Act,
1950 (hereinafter referred to as the Act). The order ran as
follows:
"Whereas I, Rameshwar Dayal, District Magistrate, Delhi,
am satisfied that with a view to the maintenance of public
order in Delhi it is necessary to do so, I, Rameshwar Dayal,
District Magistrate, Delhi, hereby order the detention
of ............ under sub-section (2) of section 3 (1) (a)
(ii) of the Preventive Detention Act. Given under my seal
and signature".
The grounds of detention communicated to the petitioners
were in identical terms, save as to the dates on which the
speeches were said to have been made, and read thus:
"In pursuance of section 7 of the Preventive Detention
Act you are hereby informed that the grounds on which the
detention order dated 22nd August, 1950, has been made
against you are that your speeches generally in the past and
particularly on ...... August,
454
1950, at public meetings in Delhi has been such as to excite
disaffection between Hindus and Muslims and thereby preju-
dice the maintenance of public order in Delhi and that in
order to prevent you from making such speeches it is neces-
sary to make the said order".
The petitioners applied to the High Court at Simla for
similar relief under article 226 of the Constitution, but
the petitions were dismissed. It appears to have been con-
tended before the learned Judges (Khosla and Falshaw JJ.)
who heard those petitions that although this Court held in
A.K. Gopalan v. The State of Madras (1) that the provisions
of section 3 of the Act were constitutional and valid,
detention under that section was ultra vires and illegal
where, as here, it was based on the ground of making speech-
es prejudicial to the security of the State or the mainte-
nance of public order. This was said to be the result of
the later pronouncements of this Court in Brij Bhushan and
Another v. The State of Delhi (2) and Romesh Thappar v. The
State of Madras (3). This contention was rejected on the
ground that no such proviso could be read into section 3 on
the strength of the later decisions referred to above which
related to a different point, viz., the scope of authorised
restrictions on the right to freedom of speech conferred by
article 19 (1). Falshaw J. (with whom Khosla J. concurred),
proceeded, however, to draw attention to what he conceived
to be an’ ’anomaly’ ’--while a State Government should not
be allowed to interfere with the freedom of the press by way
of stopping the circulation of newspapers or by pre-censor-
ship of news, the Government should, for the same object, be
entitled to place a person under preventive detention which
is "even greater restriction on personal liberty than any
restriction on a newspaper ever could be". This distinction
appeared to the learned Judge to be illogical, and he
thought that there was "an apparent conflict" between the
decisions of this Court in Gopalan’s case (1) and the other
cases, which could only be resolved by this Court. "It
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 88. (3) [1950] S.C.R. 594,
(2) [1950] S.C.R. 605.
455
would be well" the learned Judge concluded "if the point
were raised in this form at an early date in the Supreme
Court".
No wonder that, after this encouragement, the peti-
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tioners have preferred these petitions raising the same
contention before us. On behalf of the petitioners Mr.
Hardy submitted that the provisions of the Act should not be
used to prevent a citizen from making speeches though they
might be considered to be prejudicial to the maintenance of
public order, for maintenance of public order is not a
purpose for which imposition of a restriction on freedom of
speech is authorised by the Constitution, as held by this
Court in the Cross-roads(1) and the Organizer(2) cases. It
is true that in those cases this Court decided by a majority
of 5 to 1 that "unless a law restricting freedom of speech
and expression is directed solely against the undermining of
the security of the State or the overthrow of it such law
cannot fall within the reservation of clause (2) of article
19 although the restrictions which it seeks to impose may
have been conceived generally in the interests of public
order". But it will be noticed that the Statutory provi-
sions which were there declared void and unconstitutional
authorised the imposition, in the one case, of a ban on the
circulation of a newspaper and, in the other, of pre-censor-
ship on the publication of a journal. No question arose of
depriving any person of his personal liberty by detaining
him in custody, whereas here, as in Gopalan’s case(s), the
Court is called upon to adjudge the legality of the deten-
tion of the petitioners with a view to prevent them from
making speeches prejudicial to the maintenance of public
order Although personal liberty has a content sufficiently
comprehensive to include the freedoms enumerated in article
19 (1), and its deprivation would result in the extinction
of those freedoms, the Constitution has treated these civil
liberties as distinct fundamental rights and made separate
provisions in article 19 and articles 21 and 22 as to the
limitations and conditions subject to which
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 594. (3) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
(2) [1950] S.C.R. 605.
59
456
alone they could be taken away or abridged. The interpreta-
tion of these articles and their correlation were elaborate-
ly dealt with by the full Court in Gopalan’s case(1). The
question arose whether section 3 of the Act was a law impos-
ing restrictions on "the right to move freely throughout the
territory of India" guaranteed under article 19 (1) (d) and,
as such, was liable to be tested with reference to its
reasonableness under clause (5) of that article. It was
decided by a majority of 5 to 1 that a law which authorises
deprivation of personal liberty did not fall within the
purview of article 19 and its validity was not to be judged
by the criteria indicated in that article but depended on
its compliance with the requirements of articles 21 and 22,
and as section 3 satisfied those requirements, it was con-
stitutional. If the learned Judges in the High Court had
paid close attention to the judgments delivered in this
Court, they would have found that there was nothing illogi-
cal in that view and no conflict between the decisions in
that case and in the other cases to which reference has been
made. The observations of the Chief Justice in Gopalan’s
case(1) make the position quite clear:
" As the preventive detention order results in the deten-
tion of the applicant in a cell it was contended on his
behalf that the rights specified in article 19 (1) (a), (b),
(c), (d), (e), and (g)have been infringed. It was argued
that because of his detention he cannot have a free right to
speech as and where he desired and the same argument was
urged in respect of the rest of the rights mentioned in
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sub-clauses (b), (c), (d), (e) and (g). Although this
argument is advanced in a case which deals with preventive
detention, if correct, it should be applicable in the case
of punitive detention also, to any one sentenced to a term
of imprisonment under the relevant section of the Indian
Penal Code. So considered, the argument must clearly be
rejected. In spite of the saving clauses (2) to (6), permit-
ting abridgement of the rights connected with each of them,
punitive detention under several sections of the Penal Code,
e.g., for theft, cheating, forgery and even
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
457
ordinary assault, will be illegal. Unless such conclusion
necessarily follows from the article, it is obvious that
such construction should be avoided. In my opinion, such
result is clearly not the outcome of the Constitution. The
article has to be read without any preconceived notions. So
read, it clearly means that the legislation to be examined
must be directly in respect of one of the rights mentioned
in the sub-clauses. If there is a legislation directly
attempting to control a citizen’s freedom of speech or
expression, or his right to assemble peaceably and without
arms, etc., the question whether that legislation is saved
by the relevant saving clause of article 19 will arise. If,
however, the legislation is not directly in respect of any
of these subjects, but as a result of the operation of other
legislation, for instance, for punitive or preventive deten-
tion, his right under any of these sub-clauses is abridged,
the question of the application of article 19 does not
arise. The true approach is only to consider the directness
of the legislation and not what will be the result of the
detention otherwise valid, on the mode of the detenu’s life.
On that short ground, in my opinion, this argument about the
infringement of the rights mentioned in article 19 (1)
generally must fail. Any other construction put on the
article, it seems to me, will be unreasonable."(1)
Similar conclusions expressed by the other learned
Judges will be found at pages 194, 229, 256 and 305. It
follows that the petitions now before us are governed by the
decision in Gopalan’s case(1), notwithstanding that the
petitioners’ right under article 19 (1)(a) is abridged as a
result of their detention under the Act. The anomaly, if
anomaly there be in the resulting position, is inherent in
the structure and language of the relevant articles, whose
meaning and effect as expounded by this Court by an over-
whelming majority in the cases referred to above must now be
taken to be settled law, and courts in this country will be
serving no useful purpose by discovering supposed conflicts
and illogicalities and recommending parties to re-agitate
the points thus settled.
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 88, 100-101.
458
Mr. Hardy next contended that, in view of the recent
decision of this Court in The State of Bombay v. Atma Ram
Sridhar Vaidya(1), the grounds of detention communicated to
each of the petitioners must be held to be too vague and
indefinite to enable them to make their "representations" to
the Chief Commissioner, Delhi, and the requirements of
clause (5)of article 22 not having thus been complied with,
the petitioners were entitled to be set at liberty. Accord-
ing to Mr. Hardy it was not sufficient that the time and
place of the alleged speeches and their general effect were
indicated, but it was also necessary that the offending
passages or at least the gist of them should be communicated
in order to enable the petitioners to make effective repre-
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sentations.
In the case relied on, this Court, no doubt, held by a
majority that, though the first part of article 22 (s),
which casts an obligation on the detaining authority to
communicate the grounds of the order of detention would be
sufficiently complied with if the" deductions or conclusions
of facts from facts" on which the order was based were
disclosed, the latter part of the clause, which confers on
the person detained the right of making a "representation"
against the order, imposed, by necessary implication, a duty
on the authority to furnish the person with further particu-
lars to enable him to make his representation. It was
further held that the sufficiency of this "second communica-
tion" of particulars was a justiciable issue, the test being
whether "it is sufficient to enable the detained person to
make a representation which, on being considered, may give
relief to the detained person." While the communication of
particulars should, subject to a claim of privilege under
clause (6), be" as full and adequate as the circumstances
permit", it did not, however, follow from clause (6) that
"what is not stated or considered to be withheld on that
ground must be disclosed and if not disclosed there is a
breach of a fundamental right. A wide latitude is left to
the authorities in the matter of disclosure." Referring to
the use of the term
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 167.
459
"vague" in this connection,. it was remarked: "If on reading
the ground furnished it is capable of being intelligently
understood and is sufficiently definite to furnish materials
to enable the detained person to make a representation
against the order of detention, it cannot be called vague"
This decision does not, in our opinion, support the
broad proposition contended for by Mr. Hardy that wherever
an order of detention is based upon speeches made by the
person sought to be detained, the detaining authority should
communicate to the person the offending passages or at least
the gist of such passages on pain of having the order
quashed if it did not. In the cases now before us the time
and place at which the speeches were alleged to have been
made were specified and their general nature and effect
(being such as to excite disaffection between Hindus and
Muslims) was also stated. It is difficult to see how the
communication of particular passages or their substance -
one of the petitioners denied having made any speech on the
day specified--was necessary in addition to the particulars
already given, to enable the petitioners to make their
representations. It should be remembered in this connection
that the Court is not called upon in this class of cases to
judge whether or not the speech or speeches in question
constituted a prejudicial act falling within the purview of
section 3 of the Act as it is called upon in prosecutions
for offences under section 124A or section 153A of the
Indian Penal Code to find whether the speech attributed to
the accused person constituted an offence under those sec-
tions. That is a matter for the detaining authority to be
satisfied about. Nor do these cases belong to the category
where a reference had to be made to the Advisory Board under
the Act, so that any attempt by the petitioners to rebut the
inference drawn by the detaining authority from their
speeches had to be made only before the executive authori-
ties. In such circumstances the suggestion that without the
communication of the offending passages or their substance
the petitioners were not in a position to make their repre-
sentations
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460
to the executive authorities sounds unreal and is devoid of
substance. It may be possible to conceive of peculiar
situations where perhaps the person detained on ground of
prejudicial speeches might be in a better position to make a
representation if he was given the objectionable passages or
the gist of them, but the present cases are not of such
peculiar character. On the other hand, cases have come
before this Court where speeches were alleged to have been
made after midnight at secret gatherings of kisans and
workers inciting them to violence, crime and disorder. Such
allegations could only be based in most cases on information
received by the executive authorities from confidential
sources and it would not be practicable in all such cases to
have a record made of the speeches delivered. To hold that
article 22 (5) requires that, wherever detention is grounded
on alleged prejudicial speeches, the detaining authority
should indicate to the person detained the passages which it
regards as objectionable would rob the provisions of the Act
of much of their usefulness in the very class of cases where
those provisions were doubtless primarily intended to be
used and where their use would be most legitimate. In the
case of these petitioners, no doubt, the speeches are said
to have been made at public meetings, and it is not suggest-
ed on behalf of the respondents that no record was made of
the speeches, so that the details asked for could have been
furnished. The omission to do so, for which no reason is
disclosed in these proceedings, is regrettable, as it has
given rise to avoidable grievance and complaint. The au-
thorities who feel impelled in discharge of their duty to
issue orders of detention will do well to bear in mind the
following remarks of the Chief Justice in the case referred
to above:
"In numerous cases that have been brought to our notice,
we have found that there has been quite an unnecessary
obscurity on the part of the detaining authority in stating
the grounds for the order. Instead of giving the information
with reasonable details, there is a deliberate attempt to
use the minimum number
461
of words in the communication conveying the grounds of
detention. In our opinion, this attitude is quite deplora-
ble".
This, however, does not affect our conclusion in these
cases that the grounds communicated to the petitioners
contain sufficient particulars to enable them to make their
representations to the authority concerned, and that the
requirements of article 22 (5) have thus been complied with.
It is also urged that the orders of detention were bad
because they did not specify the period during which the
petitioners were to be under detention. This point is now
concluded against the petitioners by the decision of this
Court in Ujager Singh v. The State of Punjab (1) and Jagjit
Singh v. The State of Punjab (2) where it was pointed out
that as section 12 of the Act itself prescribed a maximum
period of one year for detention thereunder, such orders
could not be said to be of indefinite duration and unlawful
on that ground.
Lastly, it was said that the petitioners were prominent
members of a political organisation which was opposed to the
ideals and policies of the party in power, and that the
orders of detention were made "for the collateral purpose of
stifling effective political opposition and legitimate
criticism of the policies pursued by the Congress Party and
had nothing to do with the maintenance of public order".
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Allegations of mala fide conduct are easy to make but not
always as easy to prove. The District Magistrate has, in
his affidavit filed in these proceedings, stated that, from
the materials placed before him by persons experienced in
investigating matters of this kind, he was satisfied that it
was necessary to detain the petitioners with a view to
preventing them from acting in a manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order, and he has emphatically repudi-
ated the purpose and motive imputed to him. We have thus
allegations on the one side and denial on the other, and the
petitioners made no attempt to discharge the burden, which
undoubtedly lay upon them, to prove that the District
(1) Petition No. 149 of 1950. (2) Petition No. 167 of 1950.
462
Magistrate acted mala fide in issuing the orders of deten-
tion.
The petitions are dismissed.
MAHAJAN J.--These three petitions under article 82 of
the Constitution of India were presented by Prof. Ram Singh,
Bal Raj Khanna and Ram Nath Kalia, all three of whom were
arrested and placed in detention on the 22nd August, 1950,
under the orders of the District Magistrate of Delhi, under
the Preventive Detention Act, 1950. The petitioners are
respectively, the President, Vice-President and the Secre-
tary of the Delhi State Hindu Mahasabha. The grounds of
detention supplied to them are almost identical. Those
furnished to Prof. Ram Singh read as follows :--
"In pursuance of section 7 of the Preventive Detention
Act, you are hereby informed that the grounds on which the
detention order dated August 22, 1950, has been made against
you are that your speeches generally in the past and partic-
ularly on the 13th and 15th August, 1950, at public meetings
in Delhi have been such as to excite disaffection between
Hindus and Muslims and thereby prejudice the maintenance of
public order in Delhi and that in order to prevent you from
making such speeches it is necessary to make the said order.
You are further informed that you are entitled to make a
representation against your detention to the State Govern-
ment, that is, the Chief Commissioner, Delhi."
The grounds supplied to the other two petitioners were
the same except that in the case of Bal Raj Khanna only
the 15th August, 1950, is mentioned as the date on which
the public speech was made, and in the case of the third
petitioner, it is only the 13 th August, 1950.
Mr. Hardy on behalf of the petitioners. inter alia urged
that the grounds served on the petitioners as justifying the
orders of detention are quite indefinite and are not suffi-
cient to enable them to make an effective representation to
the State Government against
463
their detention and that being so, their detention is ille-
gal.
An affidavit of the District Magistrate was placed
before us at the hearing of the cases stating that he was
satisfied that the petitioners’ speeches generally, and
particularly those made on the 13th and 15th August, 1950,
at public meetings in Delhi had been such as to excite
disaffection between Hindus and Muslims. No particulars of
the offending words or passages or any indication of the
nature of the language employed by the petitioners was
mentioned either in the grounds or in this affidavit.
Reference was made to two speeches of the 13th and 15th in
the case of the first petitioner and to only one speech
delivered on the 13th and 15th respectively by the other
two. So far as the earlier speeches are concerned, it is not
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even stated on what occasions, on what dates and during what
years were those speeches made or delivered. After a refer-
ence to the dates of the two speeches, the conclusion drawn
by the District Magistrate has been mentioned. The question
for decision is whether what is stated in the grounds is
sufficient material on the basis of which the fundamental
right conferred on the petitioners by article 22 (5) of the
Constitution can be adequately exercised and whether without
knowing the substance of the offending passages in the
speeches from which the inference has been drawn by the
District Magistrate it is possible to prove that this infer-
ence is not justified.
After considerable thought I have reached the decision
that these cases fall within the ambit of the decision of
this Court in The State of Bombay v. Atma Ram Shridhar
Vaidya (1). In that case certain general principles ap-
plicable to cases of this nature were stated by the learned
Chief Justice, who delivered the majority judgment, in the
following terms:
(1) That if the representation has to be intelligible to
meet the charges contained in the grounds, the information
conveyed to the detained person must
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 167.
60
464
be sufficient to attain that object. Without getting infor-
mation sufficient to make a representation against the order
of detention it is not possible for the man to make the
representation. Indeed, the right will be only illusory but
not a real right at all.
(2) That while there is a connection between the obliga-
tion on the part of the detaining authority to furnish
grounds and the right given to the detained person to have
an earliest opportunity to make the representation, the test
to be applied in respect of the contents of the grounds for
the two purposes is quite different. For the first, the test
is whether it is sufficient to satisfy the authority. For
the second, the test is, whether it is sufficient to enable
the detained person to make the representation at the earli-
est opportunity. On an infringement of either of these two
rights the detained person has a right to approach the court
and to complain that there has been an infringement of a
fundamental right and even if the infringement of the second
part of the right under article 22(5) is established he is
bound to be released by the court.
(3) That it cannot be disputed that the representation
mentioned in the second part of article 22(5) must be one
which on being considered may give relief to the detaining
person. It was pointed out that in the numerous cases that
had been brought to the notice of the court it was found
that there had been quite an unnecessary obscurity on the
part of the detaining authority in stating the grounds for
the order, and that instead of giving the information with
reasonable details, there is a deliberate attempt to use the
minimum number of words in the communication conveying the
grounds of detention and that such an attitude was quite
deplorable.
In my opinion, these observations have an apposite
application to the grounds furnished to the petitioners in
the present cases. The speeches alleged to have been made
by the petitioners were made in public meetings and could
not be described as of a confidential nature and no privi-
lege in respect of them was
465
claimed under article 22 (6) of the Constitution. That
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being so, the material on the basis of which the District
Magistrate drew the inference that these speeches would
cause or were likely to cause disaffection amongst Hindus
and Muslims should have been communicated to the petitioners
so that they may be able to make a representation, which on
being considered may give relief to them. For that purpose
either the words used by them or the substance of the
speeches should have been communicated to the detenus so
that they may be able to prove that such words or passages
never formed part of the speeches and have been introduced
in them as a result of some error or that no reasonable
person could draw an inference from them that those were
likely to cause hatred and enmity between the two communi-
ties. The sufficiency of the material supplied is a justi-
ciable issue, though the sufficiency of the grounds on which
the detaining authority made up his mind is not a justicia-
ble issue. In my opinion, in the absence of any indication
in the grounds as to the nature of the words used by the
detenus in their speeches from which an inference has been
drawn against them they would not be able fully to exercise
their fundamental right of making a representation and would
not be able to furnish a proper defence to the charge made
against them.
Envisaging oneself in the position of a person asked to
draw out a written representation on behalf of the detenus
on the materials supplied to them, the effort could not
proceed beyond a bare denial of the speeches having been
made, or a bald statement that no words were used which
could possibly excite disaffection between Hindus and Mus-
lims. Such a representation would be an idle formality
inasmuch as mere denials without any cogent arguments to
support them would convince nobody. Without a knowledge of
the offending words or passages, or their substance, it is
not possible to argue that the inference drawn is not a
legitimate one or to allege that the words used fall within
the ambit of legitimate criticism permissible in law and
cannot be considered to excite disaffection
466
amongst Hindus and Muslims. The phraseology employed by the
detaining authority in the charge sheet supplied to the
detenus seems to have been borrowed from the language used
in sections 124A and 153A of the Indian Penal Code. Judicial
literature abounds in cases where words and passages likely
to cause disaffection between Hindus and Muslims or which
have that effect have been considered and discussed. In the
words objected to were known, the representation on behalf
of the detenus could easily have been drawn up with the help
of judicial precedents and reasoning considered good in
those cases. Again, without knowing the substance of the
offending words from which the inference has been drawn by
the detaining authority it is not even possible to urge that
these words were merely a quotation from some known author
or that the words used fall within legitimate religious
propaganda permitted by article 25 of the Constitution or
concern the propagation of some political creed to which no
objection could be taken. As regards the two speeches
alleged to have been given by the detenus, if the allegation
that they were such as to excite disaffection between Hindus
and Muslims is correct, the detenus were guilty of the
offence under section 153A of the Indian Penal Code and
could not only have been punished for the offence under that
section but could also have been kept out of harm’s way for
the future by that procedure. A charge sheet under that
section or in a trial under section 124A which uses analo-
gous language would have been defective if it did not men-
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tion the substance of the speeches alleged to have been made
by the person charged. [Vide Chint Ram v. Emperor (1);
Chidambaram Pillai v. Emperor(2); Mylapore Krishnaswami v.
Emperor(3).] In some of these cases the charge was in
substance similar to the charge here. If a charge in an
open trial for an offence under these sections is defective
without the substance of the words used or the passages
being cited therein, a fortiori, the material supplied in a
preventive
(1) A.I.R. 1931 Lah. 186. (3) I.L.R. 32 Mad. 384.
(2) I.L.R. 32 Mad. 3.
467
detention case on a similar charge should be regarded as
insufficient when a man has not even a right of being heard
in person and has merely to defend himself by means of a
written representation. It has to be remembered in this
connection that the phrase "excite disaffection amongst
Hindus and Muslims" is of a very general nature and an
inference of this kind may easily have been drawn on materi-
al which would not warrant such an inference. No reason
whatsoever has been stated in the affidavit of the District
Magistrate for not disclosing the words used by the detenus
even after ’this length of time and from which he drew the
conclusions on the basis of which he has kept the petition-
ers under detention for a period well over six months or
more.
For the reasons given above I venture to dissent from
the opinion of the majority of the Court with great respect
and hold that the detention orders above mentioned are
illegal. I accordingly order the release of the petition-
ers. On the other points argued in the case I agree with
judgment of Sastri J.
BOSE J.--I agree with my brother Mahajan whose judgment
I have had the advantage of reading, and with the utmost
respect find myself unable to accept the majority view. I
am of opinion that these petitioners should all be released
on the ground that their detentions are illegal.
I do not doubt the right of Parliament and of the execu-
tive to place restrictions upon a man’s freedom. I fully
agree that the fundamental rights conferred by the Constitu-
tion are not absolute. They are limited. In some cases the
limitations are imposed by the Constitution itself. In
others, Parliament has been given the power to impose fur-
ther restrictions and in doing so to confer authority on the
executive to carry its purpose into effect. But in every
case it is the rights which are fundamental, not the limita-
tions; and ’it is the duty of this Court and of all courts
in the land to guard and defend these rights jealously. It
is our duty and privilege to see that rights which were
468
intended to be fundamental are kept fundamental and to see
that neither Parliament nor the executive exceed the bounds
within which they are confined by the Constitution when
given the power to impose a restricted set of fetters on
these freedoms; and in the case of the executive, to see
further that it does not travel beyond the powers conferred
by Parliament. We are here to preserve intact for the peo-
ples of India the freedoms which have now been guaranteed to
them and which they have learned through the years to cher-
ish, to the very fullest extent of the guarantee, and to
ensure that they are not whittled away or brought to nought
either by Parliamentary legislation or by executive action.
It is the right to personal freedom which is affected
here: what the Constitution calls the "right to move freely
throughout the territory of India." Now I do not for a
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moment deny the right of Parliament to place limitations
upon that right and to do it by preventive detention. Much
as all freedom loving persons abhor the thought of locking
men and women up without trial and keeping them behind bars
indefinitely, the regrettable necessity to do so is to my
mind undoubted. The safety of the State, which is para-
mount, requires it and, in any event, the Constitution
allows it but--and this is important--subject to limita-
tions.
So far as the Constitution is concerned, it has given
Parliament the power to legislate on this subject by article
246 read with item 9 of List I of the 7th Schedule and item
a in List III, and I have no doubt that the legislation
sought to be impugned here is intra vires. But I am unable
to hold that the executive action taken in these cases on
the strength of that legislation is within the law. The
executive has no power to detain except within the four
corners of the Constitution and the Act now challenged. In
my, opinion, it has not kept itself within those limits.
The provisions of the Constitution relevant to the
present purpose have been examined by this Court in previous
cases and I have neither the right-nor the desire to go
behind them. My brother Mahajan has
469
set out his view of the law which these cases have settled.
I respectfully agree with him and will not cover the same
ground. But I do wish to say this. I am not prepared to
place any narrow or stilted construction either upon the
Constitution or upon the decisions of this Court which have
so far interpreted it. If it were permissible to go behind
file Constitution and enquire into the reason for the provi-
sions dealing with the fundamental rights, one would find
them bound up with the history of the fight for personal
freedom in this land. But that is not permissible and is
irrelevant. What does matter is that the right to personal
freedom has been made fundamental and that the power even of
Parliament itself to hedge it round with fetters is
"cribbed, cabined and confined". I conceive it to be our
duty to give the fullest effect to every syllable in the
Articles dealing with these rights. I do not mean to say
that any impossible or extravagant construction should be
employed such as would make the position of Government
impossible or intolerable. But I do insist that they should
be interpreted in a broad and liberal sense so as to bring
out in the fullest measure the purpose which the framers of
the Constitution had in mind as gathered from the language
they used and the spirit their words convey, namely to
confer the fullest possible degree of personal liberty upon
the subject consistent with the safety and welfare of the
State. My Lord the Chief Justice has pointed out in The
State of Bombay v. Atma Ram Shridhar Vaidya (1) that the
information supplied to the detenu must be sufficient to
enable him to meet the charges contained in the grounds
given to him. and that without that the right would be
illusory. Are the present cases covered by that rule ? I do
not think they are. Put at their highest, the grounds set
out the date and place of the meetings at which the speeches
complained of are said to have been made and they do no more
than say that they were.
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 167.
470
"such as to excite disaffection between Hindus and Muslims
and thereby prejudice the maintenance of public order in
Delhi."
I have no quarrel with the details regarding the date and
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place but I do not consider that the portion relating to the
nature of the speeches fulfils the requirements which have
been laid down by this Court regarding particulars.
Now I fully agree that each case will have to be decided on
its own facts so far as this is concerned. But when weighing
the circumstances this must be borne in mind. The detenu
has no right of personal appearance before the Advisory
Board or other revising authority, nor can he be represented
by counsel. The Board or other authority can deal with his
representation without hearing him or anyone on his behalf.
Therefore, his only hope of being able to convince the Board
lies in the explanation he offers. But how can anyone give
a fair explanation of his conduct unless he is told with
reasonable plainness what he has done, and in the case of a
speech, the words used are everything. They have been called
"verbal acts" in another connection. Now I take it to be
established that Government is bound to give a detenu rea-
sonable particulars of the acts complained of when conduct
is in question. Why should a different rule obtain when the
acts complained of are verbal ?
It was contended in the argument that the man who makes the
speech is in a position to know what he said and so is not
at a disadvantage. But that, in my opinion, is not the
point. He may know what he said but he cannot know what the
authorities think he said unless they give him some reasona-
ble inkling of what is in their minds. It has to be remem-
bered that what the Advisory Board has before it is not
necessarily the words employed or even’ their substance but
what the authorities say the man said.
This has to be viewed from two angles. The first is whether
the reports handed in to the authorities are Correct. Even
with the utmost good faith mistakes do
471
occur and it is quite easy for a reporter to get his notes
mixed and to attribute to A what was said by B. But unless A
knows that is what happened, it would be very difficult for
him to envisage such a contingency and give the necessary
explanation of fact in his representation.
The next point is this. When a man ,is told that his
speech excited disaffection and so forth, he is being given
the final conclusion reached by some other mind or minds
from a set of facts which are not disclosed to him. If the
premises on which the conclusion is based are faulty, the
conclusion will be wrong. But even if the premises are
correct, the process of reasoning may be at fault. In
either event, no representation of value can be made without
a reasonably adequate knowledge of the premises.
Envisage for a moment the position of the Board. In the
ordinary course, it would have before it a speech with the
offending passages in full, or at any rate the gist of them.
From the other side it would have a bare denial, for that is
about all a detenu can say in answer to the grounds given to
him when he is not told the premises on which the conclusion
is based. In most cases, that sort of representation would
have very little value. Consider this illustration. Let us
assume the detenu had spoken about Hindus and Muslims but
had urged unity and amity and had said nothing objectionable
but that unknown to him the police, through a perfectly bona
fide mistake, had imputed to him certain offensive words
used by another speaker. What would be the value of a
detenu saying "I said nothing objectionable" and that is
almost all he can say in such a case. He cannot envisage
the mistake and say, "Oh yes, that was said, but not by me.
It was said by A or B." Consider a second illustration where
the detenu had quoted a well known living authority. I can
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conceive of cases where words in the mouth of A might be
considered objectionable by some but would never be condem-
ned in the mouth of B. It might make a world of difference
to
472
the detenu if he could explain the source of the passages
complained of in his speech. But it might be very difficult
for him to envisage the possibility of objection being taken
to anything coming from the source from which he quoted.
I am anxious not to be technical and I would be averse
to an interpretation which would unnecessarily embarrass
Government, but I do conceive it to be our duty to give a
construction which, while falling strictly within the ambit
of the language used, is yet liberal and reasonable, just to
the detenu, fair to the Government. And after all, what does
a construction such as I seek to make import ? It places no
great or impossible strain on the machinery of Government.
All that is required is that the authorities should bestow
on the cases of these detenus a very small fraction of the
thought, time and energy which the law compels in the case
of even the meanest criminal who is arraigned before the
Courts of this country. The fact that there is absent in
the case of these persons all the usual safeguards, the
glare of publicity, the right to know with precision the
charge against him, the right to speak in his own defence,
is all the more reason why Government should be thoughtful,
considerate and kind and should give them the maximum help.
In any case, that, in my opinion, is what the Constitution
requires and I am not prepared to abate one jot or tittle of
its rigours.
My attention has been drawn to two decisions of this
Court which are said to be on all fours with the present
case. One is Vaidya’s case (1) and the other Lahiri’s (2).
In the latter, the point whether the gist of the speech
should be given was not considered. It seemed to have been
assumed that it need not. But I am unable to accept that as
authority for anything beyond the fact that was not consid-
ered necessary on the facts and in the circumstances of that
particular case. As my Lord the Chief Justice pointed out
in the earlier decision cited above, the question of
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 167. (2) Not reported,
473
what is vague "must vary according to the circumstances of
each case." It was also said there that
"the conferment of the right to make a representation
necessarily carries with it the obligation on the part of
the detaining authority to furnish the grounds, i.e., mate-
rials on which the detention order was made."
It was further said
"Ordinarily, the ’grounds’ in the sense of conclusions
drawn by the authorities will indicate the kind of prejudi-
cial act the detenu is suspected of being engaged in and
that will be sufficient to enable him to make a representa-
tion setting out his innocent activities to dispel the
suspicion against him."
This envisages cases in which that would not be enough.
It is therefore sufficient for me to say that in a case of
this kind, where the matter has to turn on the facts and
circumstances of each case, no useful purpose can be served
by examining the facts of some other case for use as an
analogy. In my opinion, on the facts and circumstances of
the present cases, the grounds supplied were insufficient
and the gist of the offending passages should have been
supplied. The omission to do so invalidates the detention
and each of the detenus is entitled to immediate release.
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Petitions dismissed.
Agent for the petitioners in Petitions Nos. 21 & 22:
Ganpat Rai.
Agent for the petitioner in Petition No. 44: V.P.K.
Nambiyar.
Agent for the respondents: P.A. Mehta.
474