Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NIRMAL KUMAR KHANDELWAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/05/1978
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 1155 1978 SCR (3) 817
1978 SCC (2) 509
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1979 SC1953 (13)
ACT:
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling
Activities Act, 1974, Section 8, clause (f)-No order
confirming the detention passed by the appropriate
Government within three months of the commencement of the
detention-Whether violates Art, 22(4) of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was detained with effect from October 24,
1977 by an order passed by the Secretary to the Government
of Maharashtra under Section 3(1) of COFEPOSA. The Advisory
Board reported on 23-12-77 that there was sufficient cause
for the detention but the Government did not pass any order
confirming the detention within three months from the date
of detention. The petitioner assailed it as violative of
Art. 22(4) of the Constitution.
Allowing the petition the Court.
HELD : 1. since no order of confirmation of the detention
was made under clause (f) of Section 8 within three months
of the date of detention by the appropriate Government,
further detention of the petitioner after the expiry of that
period is without the authority of law. [822 C]
2.The law does not lend its authority to the continuance
of the detention even for a day more than the initial period
of three months if the Government does not take a decision
for that purpose on the report of the Advisory Board within
three months of the commencement of the detention. [822 A-B]
3.The expression "may confirm" in clause (f) of Section 8
of COFEPOSA, is significant. It imports a discretion. Even
where the Advisory Board makes a report that in its opinion,
there is sufficient cause for the detention of the detenu
concerned, the Government may not confirm the detention
order. Read in the light of Article 22(4) of the
Constitution and the context of the words "continue the
detention", the expression definitely leads to the
conclusion that the sine qua non for continuing the
detention made beyond the period of three months. is the
confirmation of the detention order by the appropriate
Government. Conversely, non-confirmation of the initial
order by the appropriate Government before the expiry of the
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period of three months detention, shall automatically result
in revocation and termination of the legal authority for its
continuance. This position is further clear from the
language of Section 10, which provides : "The maximum period
for which any person may be detained in pursuance of any
detention order...... which has been confirmed under clause
(f) of Section 8, shall be one year from the date of
detention." The crucial words in the Section are : "which
has been confirmed under clause (f) of Section 8." They
underscore the same policy which underlies the constitu-
tional mandate in Article 22(4). These words put it beyond
doubt that if the initial order of detention is not
confirmed by the appropriate Government within three months
of the date of the detention, the detention after the expiry
of that period ipso facto becomes unauthorised and illegal.
[821 C-F]
Ujjal Mandal v. State of West Bengal, AIR 1972 SC 1446
reiterated; Shibapada Mukherjee v. State of West Bengal, AIR
1972 SC 1356, Deb Sadhan Roy v. State of West Bengal, [1972]
2 SCR 787; Micki Khan etc. etc. v. The State of West Bengal.
AIR 1972 SC 2262; and Satyadeo Parshad Gupta v. State of
Bihar, [1975] 2 SCR 854 referred to.
818
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Criminal Writ Petition No.
1238 of 1978.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution for grant of a Writ of
habeas corpus.
A. K. Sen and Herginder Singh for the Petitioner.
E. C. Agarwal and (Miss) A. Subhashini for Respondent No. 1
M. N. Phadke and M. N. Shroff for Respondent No. 2
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.-This is a petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution for the grant of a writ of habeas corpus. The
petitioner has been detained with effect from October 24,
1977 by an order passed by the Secretary to the Government
of Maharashtra under Section 3 (1) of the Conservation of
Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act,
1974 (for short called COFEPOSA). Reference was made to the
Advisory Board on 24-11-1977. At its sitting held on 23-12-
i977, the Board rejected the representation of the detenu
and opined that there was sufficient cause for the
detention.
The detention has been challenged mainly on the ground that
no order under clause (f) of Section 8 of the Act confirming
the detention was passed by the appropriate Government
within three months of the commencement of the detention
and, as such, the continuance of the detention beyond the
initial period of three months was violative of the mandate
of Article 22(4) of the Constitution. In support of this
contention, Mr. Asoke Sen, appearing for the petitioner, has
cited five decisions of this Court-Shibapada Mukherjee v.
State of West Bengal(1); Ujjal Mondal v. State of West
Bengal(2); Deb Sadhan Roy v. State of West Bengal(3); Micki
Khan etc. etc. v. The State of West Bengal (4); and Satyadeo
Parshad Gupta v. State of Bihar(5).
As against the above, Mr. Phadke, appearing for the State of
Maharashtra, contends that the view taken in the aforesaid
decisions of this Court, is not in conformity with the plain
language of Article 22(4). In the counsel’s view, what
Article 22(4) requires is that no law providing for
preventive detention shall authorise the detention of a
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person for a longer period than three months, unless an
Advisory Board consisting of persons having the
qualifications specified therein, reports before the
expiration of the said period of three months that there is,
in its opinion, sufficient cause for such detention. This
requirement-proceeds the argument-was fully complied with in
(1) A. I. R. 1972 S. C. 1356
(2) A. I. R. 1972 S. C. 1446
(3)[1972] 2 S.C.R. 787
(4)A. I. R. 1972 S. C. 2262
(5) [1975] 2 S. C. R. 854
819
the instant case because the Advisory Board had made such a
report within three months of the date of detention and
within 11 weeks of the receipt of the Reference from the
Government. It is stressed that there is nothing in the
language of Article 22(4) or in COFEPOSA which requires that
the confirmation of the detention on the basis of the report
of the Advisory Board, should also be within three months
from the commencement of the detention.
According to Mr. Phadke, COFEPOSA on the other hand clearly
indicates that an order of confirmation of the detention can
be passed by the appropriate Government within a reasonable
time even after the expiry of the initial period of three
months’ detention. In this ’connection, counsel has
adverted us to Clause (c) of Section 8, which requires that
the Advisory Board shall, on receiving the Reference from
the appropriate Government, submit its report as to whether
or not there is sufficient cause for the detention, within
11 weeks from the date of the detention; while under the
corresponding provisions of the Maintenance of Internal
Security Act, 1971, the period prescribed for the report of
the Advisory Board is ten weeks only. The point sought to
be made out is that if the Advisory Board makes a report
that there is sufficient cause for the detention, to the
appropriate Government just before the expiry of the
aforesaid period of 11 weeks, then hardly about 13 or 14
days would be left to the Government to consider whether or
not the detention should be confirmed. This period, it is
contended, left to the Government for taking a decision on
the report of the Advisory Board is too short from a
practical point of view.
On the above premises, Mr. Phadke urges that the aforesaid
decisions of this Court-none of which was a case of
detention under COFEPOSA-need reconsideration.
Before dealing with these arguments, it may be noted that
the aforesaid ground of challenge has been specifically
adumbrated as Ground No. 12 in the petition. In the counter
filed on behalf of the, respondent-State, the fact that the
order of confirmation of the detention was not passed by the
appropriate Government within three months of the date of
detention, appears to have been impliedly admitted in these
terms :
" . No confirmation is needed on the part
of the State Government. After the advice of
the Advisory Board, the detention of the,
detenu was continued and the order of the
State continuing the detention on the basis of
the advice of the Advisory Report was served
upon the detenu of 27-2-78."
Nothing has been placed before us to show that the order of
detention was, in fact, passed by the appropriate Government
within the requisite period of three months. We therefore,
take it that the order, if any, for confirmation of the
detention of the petitioner by the Government, was made
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beyond three months of the date of the detention.
820
The ground is now clear for considering the legal question
raised by Mr. Asoke Sen. The decisions cited by Mr. Sen,
primarily proceed on an interpretation of Article 22(4) of
the Constitution, though they also in the context examine
the relevant provisions of the detention law, under which
the detention in question in those cases was purportedly
made. We can do no better than reiterate what Mathew,.
J. speaking for this Court, said in Ujjal Mondal’s case
(supra):
"Article 22(4) of the Constitution has
specified the maximum limit of initial
detention, and detention for a longer period
than 3 months can only be made on the basis of
the report of the Board. The Act authorises a
possible detention of more than 3 months. It
is because the appropriate Government wants to
detain a person for more than 3 months that
the matter is referred to the Board and it is
only ’when the Board makes its report that the
appropriate Government can fix the period of
detention under sub-section (1) of’ Section
12. So when the Government receives the
report of the Board stating that there is
sufficient cause for detention of a person, if
the Government wants to detain him for a
period beyond 3 months, it has to pass an
order or make a decision under section 12(1)
to confirm the order of detention. The
confirmation of the detention order without
anything more would result in an automatic
continuation of the detention, even if there
is no; separate decision to continue the
detention for any specific period. as held by
this Court in (1952) SCR 612-(AIR 1952 SC
181). When Section 12(1) of the Act speaks of
"and continue the detention of the person
concerned for such period as it thinks fit",
it can only mean continuance of detention from
the point of time at which detention would
become illegal if the order of detention is no
t
confirmed, namely, the expiry of 3 months from
the date of detention. It would not be
necessary to, confirm the order of detention
even after the receipt of the report of the
Board by the Government if the Government only
wants to continue the detention for the period
of three months from the date of detention, as
the initial order of detention would authorise
the continuance of detention for that period
without any confirmation. Confirmation is
necessary only to continue the detention after
the expiry of 3 months. If that be so, it
stands to reason to held that the order of
detention must be confirmed before the expiry
of 3 months."
The observations extracted above, apply
mutatis mutandis to the language of clause (f)
of Section 8, which is similar. This clause-
runs as follows
"8. For the purposes of sub-clause (a) of
clause (4), and sub-clause (c) of clause (7),
of article 22 of the Constitution--."(f) in
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every case, where the Advisory Board has
reported that there is in
821
its opinion sufficient cause for the detention
of a person, the appropriate Government may
confirm the detention order and continue the
detention of the person concerned for such
period as it thinks fit and in every case
where the Advisory Board has reported that
there is in its opinion no sufficient cause
for the detention of the person concerned, the
appropriate Government shall revoke the
detention order and cause the person to be
released forthwith."
(emphasis supplied)
’The key words in clause (f) are those which have been
underlined. These very words were also, employed in Section
12(1) of the West Bengal Prevention of Violent Activities
Act, 1970, the interpretation of which had come, up for
consideration in the context of Article 22(4) of the
Constitution in Ujjal Mondal’s case. These words also
occurred in Sections 10 and 11 of the Preventive Detention
Act, 1950, which were in pari materia with Sections 11 and
12 of the Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971. The
expression "may confirm" in clause (f) of Section 8 is
significant. It imports a discretion. Even where the
Advisory Board makes a report that in its opinion there is
sufficient cause for the detention of the detenu concerned,
the Government may not confirm the detention order. Read in
the light of Article 22(4) of the Constitution and the
context of the words "continue the detention", they
definitely lead to the conclusion that the sine qua non for
continuing the detention made beyond the period of three
months, is the confirmation the detention order by the
appropriate Government. Conversely, the non-confirmation of
the initial order by the appropriate Government before the
expiry of the period of three months detention, shall
automatically result in revocation and termination of the
legal authority for its continuance. This position is
further clear from the language of Section 10, which
provides : "The maximum period for which any person may be
detained in pursuance of any detention order...... which has
been confirmed under clause (f) of Section 8, shall be one
year from the date of detention." The crucial words in the
Section are : "which has been confirmed under clause (f) of
Section 8.". They under-score the same policy which
underlies the constitutional mandate in Article 22(4).
These words put it beyond doubt that if the initial order of
detention is not confirmed by the appropriate Government
within three months of the date of the detention, the
detention after the expiry of that period ipso facto becomes
unauthorised and illegal.
We do not find any merit in the contention that since the
period prescribed for the Advisory Board to make its report
has been increased from 10 weeks (as prescribed under MISA)
to 11 weeks in COFEPOSA, leaving only a short period for the
Government to take a decision under Section 8(f), the
legislative intent was that the order of confirmation of the
detention and its continuance could be made after the expiry
of three months from the date of the detention. It is true
that in certain situation when the Advisory Board makes its
report in favour of the detention just before the expiry of
II weeks from the date of the detention, the time left to
the Govern-
822
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ment for taking a decision as to the confirmation of the
detention and its continuance would be hardly two weeks.
That only shows the anxiety on the part of the legislature
to ensure that the Government continues the preventive
detention of a person beyond three months after due
application of mind and for that purpose acts with utmost
promptitude. The law does not lend its authority to the
continuance of the detention even for a day more than the
initial period of three months if the Government does not
take a decision for that purpose on the report of the
Advisory Board within three months of the commencement of
the detention.
There is no reason to doubt the law enunciated by this Court
in the aforesaid decisions. Respectfully following the
ratio of those decisions, we hold that since no order of
confirmation of the detention was made under clause (f) of
Section 8 within three months of the date of detention by
the appropriate Government, further detention of the
petitioner after the expiry of that period is without the
authority of law.
In the result, we allow this petition, quash the detention
of the petitioner and direct that he be set at liberty
forthwith. Rule made absolute.
S.R. Petition allowed.
823