Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TALIB KHAN & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/10/1996
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, SUJATA V. MANOHAR, G.B. PATTANAIKWITHCRMINAL APPEAL NOS. 417-18 OF 1987THE STA
TE OF RAJASTHAN & ANR.V.BEERYRAM SINGH & ANR.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Pursuant to the order of this Court dated August 21,
1987 doubting the correctness of Ibrahim Ahmad Batti vs.
State of Gujarat & Ors. [(1983) 1 SCR 540 = (1982) 3 SCC
440], the case has been referred to this Bench.
These appeals by special leave arise from the Division
Bench judgment of the High Court of Rajasthan at Jodhpur in
Writ Petition Nos.831/87 and batch.
The facts are that the respondents were detained under
Section 3(1) of the National Security Act, 1980 (for short,
the ‘Act’), by proceedings of the District Magistrate,
Jaisalmer dated January 7, 1987. The exceptional
circumstance were recorded on January 11, 1987 for non-
supply of the ground and documents to the detenu. The
grounds of detention with the material were supplied on
January 16, 1987. The detenu made his representation on
January 20, 1987 to the State Government which was rejected
on February 2, 1987. He made a representation to the
Advisory Board on February 9, 1987 and it was considered and
rejected on February 19, 1987. The State Government
confirmed the order of detention on March 13, 1987 for a
period of one year w.e.f January 7, 1987. When the orders of
detention were challenged, primarily on the ground that the
exceptional circumstances and the reasons recorded by the
District Magistrate were not communicated to the detenu, the
order of detention was held violative of Article 22(5) and
the High Court by the impugned order dated June 9, 1987
enlarged the respondents from detention. It is not necessary
to go into the other grounds since the reference is on the
correctness of the view taken by a Bench of two Judges of
this Court in Batti’s case.
It is contended by Shri K.S. Bhatti, Jain Advocate on
behalf of the appellant, that after thorough preparation and
analysis of facts, the view taken by the High Court and this
court in Batti’s case is no correct in law. The objects and
reasons of the Act disclose the gravity under which
detention could resorted to. Section 3 and Section 8 of the
Act are to be read together. The detaining authority, if
satisfied with respect to any person that with a view to
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preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
security of the State or the maintenance of public order of
supplies and service essential to the community, it is
necessary so to do, may pass an order directing that he be
detained. In case the order is not communication to the
detenu within five days as envisaged in Section 8(1), the
detaining authority is required to record reasons for and
the exceptional circumstance under which order could not be
communciated to the detenue, and to serve the grounds of
detention within 10 days from the date of the order of
detention. In this case reasons have been recorded. It is
not a condition that exceptional circumstances or reasons
need be supplied to the detenu along with the grounds of
detention. The view taken in Batti’s case is not correct in
law. It is contended by the learned counsel for the
respondents, Shri Sushil Kumar Jain, that the view of this
Court in Batti’s case followed by that of the High Court is
correct in law for the reasons that under Article 22(5) of
the Constitution, the detenu is entitled to be supplied
with, as soon as may be, the grounds of detention, with a
view to make representation against his deprivation of
liberty at the earliest opportunity. Unless the reasons and
the exceptional circumstances for non-supply of the order of
detention are communicated to the detenu along with the
grounds of detention, the detenu would be prevented to make
effective representation either to the appropriate
Government or to the Advisory Board or the court. Therefore,
the communication of exceptional circumstances or reasons
recorded along with the grounds of detention, is a pre-
condition. Non-compliance thereof tantamounts to violation
of Article 22(5) of the Constitution. The view, therefore,
is correct in law.
In view of the diverse contentions, the question that
arises for consideration is: whether the view expressed by
this Court in Batti’s case is correct in law? The Act was
enacted for various reasons, viz., the prevailing situation
of communal disharmony, social tensions, extremist
activities, industrial unrest and increasing tendency on the
part of various interested parties to engineer agitation on
different issues; it was considered necessary that the law
and order situation in the country needed to be tackled in a
most determined and effective way. The anti-social and anti-
national elements including secessionists, communal and pro-
caste elements and also other elements who adversely
influence and affect the services essential to the
community, pose a grave challenge to the lawful authority
and sometimes even hold the society to ransom. Therefore, in
view of the complexity and nature of the problems, it was
felt that the defence, security, public order and
maintenance of essential supplies or services to the
community require to be maintained, with a view to
streamline the administration in a determined way and to
provide the teeth to effectively handle the nagging
aforesaid situation and to deal with such situations, the
Act was enacted. Section 3 is pivotal provision under which
the authority has been given to the State to exercise such a
power. If the Central or State Government is satisfied with
respect to any person that with a view to preventing him
from acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of
India, the relations of India with foreign powers or the
security of India, or if it is satisfied with respect to any
person that with a view to preventing him from acting in any
manner prejudicial to the security of the State or from
acting in any manner prejudical to the maintenance of public
order or from acting in any manner prejudicial to
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maintenance of supplies and services essential to the
community, it is necessary so to do, it may make an order
directing that such person be detained. In certain
circumstance, the liberty of the person gets restrained
subject to the protection given to him under the Act. The
grounds of detention and the material in support thereof,
unless the later touches the sensitive and confidential
evidence/material, must be supplied to him, as early as
possible, ordinarily within 5 days from the date of
detention so as to enable him to make a representation to
the appropriate Government etc. What is mandated by Article
22(5) is that the detenu must be supplied with the grounds
of detention and material without undue delay. Power has
been given to the State to delegate such a power to the
District Magistrate or the Commissioner of Police under sub-
Section (3) thereof. In this case, the District Magistrate,
Jaisalmer had delegated that power under sub-section (3) of
Section 3 of the Act and exercised his subjective
satisfaction and passed the detention order under Section
3(2). After the detention order has been made, it is
mandatory under Section 8(1) of the Act to supply the
grounds of detention to the person affected by the order.
Sub-section (1) reads as under:
"(1) when a person is detained in
pursuance of a detention order, the
authority making the order shall,
as soon as may be, but ordinarily
not later than five days and in
exceptional circumstance and for
reasons to be recorded in writing,
not later than ten days from the
date of detention, communicate to
him the grounds on which the order
has been made and shall afford him
the earliest opportunity of making
a representation against the order
to the appropriate Government."
A reading thereof would, therefore, manifest that when
a person is detained in pursuance of his detention order,
the authority making the order shall as soon as may be, but
ordinarily not latter than five days, and in exceptional
circumstances and for reasons to be recorded in writing, not
later than ten days from the date of the detention,
communicate to him the grounds on which the order has been
made and shall afford him the earliest opportunity of making
a representation against the order to the appropriate
Government. Section 8(1) circumscribe the range and
amplitude of the phase "earliest opportunity to supply the
grounds of detention" and sweep of the phrase "as soon as
possible", i.e., ordinarily within five days an in
exceptional circumstances within 10 days. It would thus be
seen that the detenu is entitled to be supplied with the
grounds on which the order of detention has been made and
shall, with a view to afford him an earliest opportunity of
making a representation against the order to the appropriate
Government, the grounds of detention be supplied ordinarily
within that prescribed period. The period during which the
grounds of detention are to be supplied has also been
indicated. The grounds shall be communicated, as soon as may
be, i.e., ordinarily not later than five days, In order
words, the five days limit has been prescribed by the
statute to supply the grounds of detention to the detenu. If
due to administrative exigencies of exceptional
circumstances, the detaining authority could not communicate
the grounds, it should record reasons for non-supply of the
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grounds within five days as envisaged in the first part. As
to what are the exceptional circumstances due to which the
grounds of detention could not be supplied within five days
but was done within 10 days from the date of detention is
always a question of fact. In A.K. Roy vs. Union of India &
Ors. [(1982) 1 SCC 271 = (1983) 1 SCR 540], the Constitution
Bench of this Court was required to consider the
constitutionality of Section 8(1) In that behalf, this Court
had held that :
"The objection of the petitioners
against the provisions contained in
Section 8(1) is that it
unreasonably allows the detaining
authority to furnish the grounds of
detention to the detenu as late as
five days and in exceptional cases
ten days after the date of
detention. This argument overlocks
that the primary requirement of
Section 8(1) is that the authority
making he order of detention shall
communicate the grounds of
detention to the detenu "as soon as
may be". The normal rule,
therefore, is that the grounds of
detention must be communitcated to
the detenu without meet the
practical exigencies of
administrative affairs that the
detaining authority is permitted to
communicate the grounds of
detention not later than five days
ordinarily, and not later than ten
days if there are exceptional
circumstances. If there are any
such circumstance, the detaining
authority is required by Section
8(1) to record its reason in
writing. We do not think that this
provision is open to any
objection."
It would thus be seen that the requirement of the
supply of the grounds, as soon as may be, indicates that
normally the detenu is entitled to be communicated with the
grounds of detention within five days, With a view tide over
unavoidable circumstances due to which the detaining
authority could not have the grounds of detention supplied,
the statute engrafted a leverage and directed him to record
reasons therefor in writing and the administration should
supply the grounds of detention, before the expiry of ten
days. So, the delay should be exceptional and those
exceptional and those exceptional circumstance are required
to be recorded in writing. What are exceptional
circumstances is always a question of fact in each case.
What is mandatory is the supply of the grounds of detention
before expiry of ten days but after the expiry of five days.
It is well settled legal position that the phrase "as soon
as may be" means within a reasonable dispatch when there is
no avoidable delay. What is avoidable delay is always a
question of fact.
The question is : whether the non-supply of the
exceptional circumstances and the reasons recorded for non-
supply of the grounds of detention before the expiry of five
days but within the outer limit of ten days, long with the
grounds of detention, vitiates the order of detention? The
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Division Bench has taken the view that detenu has a valuable
right of representation against the order of detention to
the appropriate Government or to the Advisor Board. Unless
the exceptional circumstances and the reasons for non-supply
of the grounds of detention and the documents in support
thereof or communicated to the detenu, by necessary
implication, the valuable right of representation at the
earliest opportunity, as envisaged under Article 22 (5), is
breached. Thereby, the detenu becomes entitled to be
released from detention. It could be seen that what is
material and mandatory is the communication of the grounds
of detention to the detenu together with documents in
support of subjective satisfaction reached by the detaining
authority. When the representation has been made by the
detenu to the appropriate Government or to the Advisory
Board, it may be one of the grounds for him to impugn the
order of detention that he was not supplied with the grounds
within the time prescribed and thereby he was unjustifiably
detained, without any reasonable justification. When such a
ground has been raised and pressed for consideration, it
would be for the detaining authority to satisfy the
appropriate Government or Advisory Board or in an
appropriate case in the proceedings under Article 226 of the
Constitution. The exceptional circumstances are those due
under which the grounds and the documents could not be
supplied to the detenu and that the same were recorded in
writing in the record of the detaining authority. If the
appropriate Government or the Advisory Board or the Court
are not satisfied with the recorded exceptional
circumstances due to which the grounds of detention could
not be supplied, after five days but before the expiry of 10
days, that may be one of the circumstances which the
appropriate Government or Advisory Board or the Court may
consider whether the detention order is vitiated or is an
infraction of Article 22(5) of the Constitution. But since
the Act does not envisage communication of the exceptional
circumstances and the reasons recorded for non-supply of the
grounds that ground of non-communication or their non-supply
by itself is not sufficient to hold that the order of
detention is in violation of Article 22(5) of the
Constitution. The Division Bench, therefore, was not right
in concluding that the detenu has been deprived of his
making a representation at the earliest opportunity for non-
supply of the grounds of exceptional circumstances and the
reasons recorded for non-supply of the grounds of detention.
Thus, we hold that the view taken in Batti’s case is not
correct in law. The District Magistrate in his proceedings
dated January 11, 1987 has recorded as under:
"Officer-in-charge (judicial) has
informed that in the cases so far
2/3rd Photostat copies have been
prepared and in the absence of
copies have been prepared and in
the absence of copies, it is not
possible to furnish the grounds of
detention to the detenu before the
expiry of prescribed minimum period
of five days. Since in all 35
cases, about 16,000 photostat
copies are to be prepared and the
sets are also to be prepared. But
due to frequent Power failure,
fluctuation; machine being the
private, its owner cannot be
compelled to sit and work for
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extra-time difficulty is being
faced in completing the work.
Therefore using the maximum period
of 10 days for furnishing the
grounds of detention to the detenu,
as provided under Section 8(1) of
the National Security Act, 1980,
the State Government was informed
of this decision."
In view of the grounds mentioned therein, we are of the
view that the District Magistrate was prevented due to
those exceptional circumstances as recorded in the
proceeding that the grounds of detention and the documents
in support thereof could no be supplied to the detenu within
five days but the same came to be supplied within ten days,
as envisaged in Section 8(1) of the Act. Therefore, the High
Court was not justified in law to hold that non-
communication of the ground of exceptional circumstances as
reasons recorded by the District Magistrate, vitiate the
order of detention. Since the time for detention of one year
has expired by efflux of time, we do not propose to
interfere with the order.
The appeals are accordingly allowed.