Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOHD. ALAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/02/1974
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 917 1974 SCR (3) 379
1974 SCC (4) 463
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1976 SC1207 (560)
RF 1980 SC1983 (4)
RF 1987 SC1977 (4)
R 1990 SC1597 (19)
ACT:
Prevention detention--’Services and Supplies’ in s.
3(1)(a)(iii) of the Maintenance of Internal Security Act,
1971, Scope of--Detention until the expiry of the Defence of
India Act. if valid--Counter-affidavit on behalf of
State--Who should file--Duty to communicate material
particulars to the detenu.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was detained by an order passed under s. 3(2)
of the Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971, with a
view to prevent him from acting in a manner prejudicial to
the maintenance of supplies and services essential to the
community. The detention order was confirmed by the
Government and the Government directed that the detention
should continue till the expiration of 12 months from the
date of detention or until the expiry of Defence of India
Act, 1971, whichever is later. Two instances of thefts of
copper wire were given in the grounds of detention
communicated to the detenu. He alleged that he had been
wrongfully arrested and detained for 22 days in the Police
Station and that thereafter the detention order was foisted
on him with false and concocted charges. The counter-
affidavit was filed, not by the District Magistrate who
passed the order of detention; but by a Deputy Secretary in
the Secretariat who had not personally dealt with the case
of the detenu, and it stated that from records it appeared
that the petitioner was a "veteran copper wire criminal".
In a petition for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus it
was contended that : (1 ) theft of telecommunication wires
or cables, may disrupt ’services’ essential to the community
but had no connection with the maintenance of ’supplies’,
and since no particulars whatever in relation to supplies
were communicated to the petitioner the ground with regard
to ’supplies’ is irrelevant and vague and hence the
detention order was violative of Art. 22(5) of the
Constitution; (2) the period of detention under the impugned
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order was indefinite and uncertain and infringed Art. 22(7)
(b); (3) the counter-affidavit filed was not by the officer
who was satisfied about the necessity of detention and was
insufficient to rebut the allegations of the petitioner that
his detention was on false grounds with ulterior motives;
and (4) the grounds of detention conveyed to the petitioner
were false, vague and deficient in material particulars in
that the ’reliable information’ showing that he was a
"veteran copper wire criminal" was not communicated to him.
HELD : (1 ) The expression ’supplies and services’ in s. 3
(1) (a) (iii) of the Act is to be construed pragmatically in
the context of each case with due stress on the phrase
’essential to the life of the community’. In a few cases
these expressions may carry a meaning distinct from each
other. But in most cases the same activity may equally
affect supplies and services and the connotations of I
supplies’ and ’services’ may coincide or telescope into each
other. Such will be the case where there is large scale
theft of copper wire by cutting and removing the same from
the power mains or telecommunication installations or under-
ground cables. [382 E-G]
Jagdish Prasad v. State of Bihar Writ Petition No. 1972 of
1973, followed Strouds’ Judicial Dictionary 3rd Edn. p. 2939
and Blackpool Corporation v. Locker [1948] 1, K.B. 349;
referred to.
(2) The period of detention fixed under the impugned orders
does not infringe the mandate of Art. 22(7) (b) of the
Constitution. [383 G]
Fagu Shah etc. etc. v. State of West Bengal Writ Petitions
Nos. 41, 106, 113, 214, 441 and 621 of 1973 decided on
20-12-1973, followed.
(3) The proper person to file the counter-affidavit is the
District Magistrate who had passed the order of detention
under s. 3 of the Act, and, if for some good reason he is
not available the affidavit of a senior officer who
personally dealt with the case of the detenu in the
Secretariat or had put it to the minister
380
for orders should have been filed. These obligations stem
from the well-settled principle that once a Rule Nisi is
issued on a habeas corpus motion by the Court the onus is on
the State to show that the liberty of the detenu has been
taken away in accordance with the procedure established by
law and that the safeguards provided in Art. 22 and in the
Act have not been transgressed or bypassed. But for the
fact that the allegations of mala fides in the affidavit of
the petitioner are imprecise and deficient in particulars
the omission to furnish the affidavit of the District
Magistrate might have been fatal to the impugned order.
Shaik Hanif v. State of West Bengal Writ Petition No. 1679
of 1973 followed. [384 G-385 C; 386 A-B]
(4) All the information received by the District Magistrate
and the Government about repeated criminal activities-of the
detenu had contributed towards the subjective satisfaction
of the detaining authority. But for the detenu being, in
the opinion of the detaining authority a ’veteran or
habitual copper wire criminal’ the District Magistrate might
not have taken the impugned action. But, admittedly the
whole of this material or reliable information about the
antisocial and prejudicial activities of the detenu on which
the detention order was based, was not communicated to him.
The non-communication of that material was violative of Art.
22(5) of the Constitution and the Act, inasmuch as it did
not intimate to the detenu the full grounds or material to
enable him to make-an effective representation. Omission to
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communicate this material to the detenu must have seriously
prejudiced him in exercising his constitutional right of
making an effective representation and therefore the
detention was illegal. [386 C-F; 387D]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 1678 and 1855 of
1973.
Under Art. 32 of the Constitution for issue of a writ in the
nature of habeas corpus.
O. P. Malviya, for the petitioners (amicus curiae)
G. S. Chatterjee, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J. As similar questions of fact and law arise in
these two petitions under Article 32 of the Construction,
they will be disposed of by this common judgment.
Petitioner in Writ Petition No. 1678 of 1973 is in detention
since January 15, 1972 in pursuance of an order dated
January 14, 1972, passed under s. 3 (2) of the Maintenance
of Internal Security Act, 1971 (for short, the Act) by the
District Magistrate, Burdwan. The detention order as
confirmed by the Government on April 12, 1972 under S. 12
(1) of the Act, directs that the detention "will continue
tin the expiration of 12 months from the date of his
detention or until the expiry of Defence of India Act, 1971
whichever is later."
In response to the Rule Nisi issued by this Court, Shri
Sukumar Sen, Deputy Secretary, Home (Special) Department,
Government of West Bengal filed a counter-affidavit in para
4 of which it is averred:
"It appears from the records that after receiving reliable
information relating to the illegal anti-social and prejudi-
cial activities of the above-named detenu-petitioner
relating to the maintenance of Supplies and Services
essential to the
381
community, the said District Magistrate of Burdwan passed
order of detention against him under the provisions of the
said Act."
In para 7 of the counter, it is said that "it appears from
the records, that the detenu-petitioner is a veteran copper
wire criminal." Two instances of thefts of copper wire or
cable used for telecommunication services, which took place
on December 19, 1971 and December 22, 1971, are also
mentioned.
The grounds of detention that had been communicated to the
detenu, read as under
"(1) That on 19-12--1971 at about 00-30 hrs. You alongwith
your associates including (1) Md. Kasim son of Md. Mandal
of Kashi Mohalla, P. S. Asansol, Dist. Burdwan (2) Hyder
Ali son of Bachchu Md. of Talpukuria, P. S. Asansol, Dist.
Burdwan, took away 40 kgs. underground copper wire cable
used for the purpose of tele-communication service from St.
Patric School compound, P. S. Asansol, Dist. Burdwan. As a
result of this theft important telecommunication service
between Panagarh Army Base Camp and Patna was totally
disrupted for long 6 hours causing much inconvenience to the
people.
(2) That between 28.30 hrs. on 22-12-71 and 00.30 hrs. on
23-12-71 you along with your associates including (1) Md.
Kasim son of Md. Mandal of Kasimohalla P. S. Asansol, Dist.
Burdwan (2) Hyder All, son of Bachcha Md. of Talpukuria, P.
S. Asansol, Dist. Burdwan took away 80 kgs. underground
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copper wire cable used for the purpose of telecommunication
service from St. Patric School compound, P. S. Asansol,
Dist. Burdwan. By your act important telecommunication
service Panagarh between Army Base Camp and Patna was
totally disrupted for long 8 hours to the sufferings of the
people." Mr. Malviya, who assisted the Court as amicus
curiae has canvassed these contentions :
(i) The impugned order says that the petitioner has been
detained "with a view to preventing him from acting in a
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of Supplies and
Services essential to the community". Theft of
telecommunication wire or cables, may disrupt ’services’
essential to the community, but it has no connection with
the maintenance of ’supplies’. In s. 3(1) (a) (iii) the
conjunction "and" is to be read as "or", and "supplies" and
"services" disjunctively, being two different and distinct
matters. The ground with regard to "supplies" is thus
irrelevant and vague and since no particulars whatever of
this ground were communicated to the detenu, the detention
order was violative of cl. (5) of Article 22 of the
Constitution;
54Sup CI/74
382
(ii) The period of detention fixed under the impugned order
is indefinite and uncertain inasmuch as it has been made co-
extensive with another indefinite and uncertain period viz.,
the life of the Defence of India Act, 1971. In this way,
the impugned order indirectly infringes the mandate of
Article 22 (7) (b) of the Constitution;
(iii) The District Magistrate who had passed the deten-
tion order, has not furnished his affidavit, nor has any
satisfactory explanation been given as to why he has not
done so. The stereotyped affidavit of the Deputy Secretary
who did not personally deal with the case of the detenu, at
any level, is not sufficient to rebut the allegations of the
petitioner that his detention has been effected on
"totally false" grounds, with "ulterior motives;"
(iv) The grounds of detention conveyed to the petitioner
were false, vague and deficient in material particulars.
All the material or the "reliable information" relating to
the "anti-social and prejudicial activities of the
petitioner", referred to in the Deputy Secretary’s
affidavit, showing how the petitioner was a "veteran copper
wire criminal", on the basis of which the District
Magistrate/the Government was satisfied about the necessity
of the impugned detention, was not communicated to the
detenu who, in consequence, was deprived of his right to
make an effective representation.
We will deal with the contentions ad seriatum. Contention
(1) does not appear to be tenable. The expression
"Supplies" and "Services" in s. 3 (1) (a) (iii) of the Act
are to be construed pragmatically in the context of each
case, with due stress on the phrase " essential to the life
of the community". In a few cases, these expressions may
carry a meaning distinct and different from each other. For
example, a sweepers’ strike may seriously disrupt the
"services" essential to the community, but no question of
disrupting "supplies" arises, in such a case. In most
cases, where, the same activity may equally affect
"supplies" and "services", the connotations of "Supplies"
and "services" may coincide or telescope into each other
Such will be the case where there is large scale theft of
copper wire by cutting and removing the same from the power
mains or telecommunication installations or underground
cables.
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According to Strouds’ Judicial Dictionary 3rd Edn. p. 2939,
"to supply" means to "pass anything from one who has it to,
those who want it". Construed in this sense,
"telecommunication" is both a "supply" and a "service". So
are the copper wires or mains through which the supply is
made and service conducted. The same is true about
electricity, water, light, fuel or other commodity essential
for the life of the community and the medium or the mains
essential for their
383
maintenance. In the context of the acute shortage of
essential commodities, many other things such as ’food’,
’copper’, ’coal’ etc. may partake the character of
"supplies" as well as "services". Thus in Blackpool
Corporation v. Locker(1), it was held that the provisions of
housing accommodation was within the ambit of "supplies and
services" in Regulation 51(1) of the Defence (General)
Regulation 1939.
In Jagdish Prasad v. State of Bihar(2), this Court had the
occasion to consider the meaning of "Supplies" and
"Services" in this statutory provision in the context of
hoarding and black-marketing in foodgrains It is, therefore,
not necessary to dilate on this subject any further. It
will be sufficient to extract here what the Bench,
constituted by both of us, said on the point :
". . . all supplies are not services and all services are
not supplies but the complex needs and amenities of modern
life and the multifarious obligations of a welfare state
mingle supplies and services so much that the concentric
circle geometry becomes a misleading stroke of gullibility
in ’his jural area. For example, an essential commodity is
at once a supply and a service. Section 36(3) of the
Defence of India Rules, 1971 defines it to mean :
’essential commodity’ means food, water, fuel, light, power
or any other thing essential for the existence of the
community which is notified in this behalf by Government.
Light and power’ thus are commodities; so also food and
water. Yet who will deny that light is a service or
drinking water, for that matter ? The touchstone of social
control is that it must be a thing essential for the
existence of the community; when crystallised it is
supplies, when sublimated it is services .... Food is
supplies, so is shipping and wagons, kerosene and gasoline.
And yet they are services."
Ail that we may now do is to add copper wire and cables used
for tele-communications or power transmission to the above
list of commodities, essential to the life of the community,
which are at once supplies" and "services" within the
contemplation of s. 3 (1) (a) (iii) of the Act. The first
contention of Mr. Malviya thus stands negatived.
We are unable to accept contention (ii) because this matter
stands concluded by this Court’s judgment in Fagu Shah etc.
etc. v. State of West Bengal(3). The argument therein was
that the expression "maximum period" in Article 22(7) (b)
connotes a definite period reckoned in terms of years,
months or days and that no period can be said to be maximum
period unless it is possible to predicate its beginning and
end in terms of years, months or days and that since the
determination of the period of detention, namely, expiry of
Defence of India Act, 1971, is dependent upon revocation of
Proclamation of Emergency, the period
(1) [1948] 1, K. B. 349. (2) Writ Petition No. 1972 of
1973.
(3) Writ Petitions Nos. 41, 106, 113, 214, 441 and 621 of
1973. decided on 20-12-1973.
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384
fixed under s. 13 of the Act is not the maximum period as
visualised by Art. 22 (7) (b) Mathew J., who spoke for the
majority, negatived this contention in these terms :
"........ as the object of preventive detention is to
prevent persons from acting in a manner pre-judicial to the
maintenance of internal security, public order or supplies
or services essential to the community or other objects
specified in entry 9 of List I the power to detain must be
adequate in point of duration to achieve the object. And,
how can the power be adequate in point of duration, if it is
insufficient to cope with an emergency created by war or
public disorder or shortage of supplies essential to the
community, the duration of which might be incapable of
being, predicated in terms of years, months or days even by
those gifted with great prophetic vision ? If ’the maximum
period’ can be fixed only in terms of years, months or days
certainly it would have been open to Parliament to fix a
long period in s. 13 and justify it as ’the maximum period’.
It would be straining the gnat and swallowing the camel if
anybody is shocked by the fixation of the maximum period of
detention with reference to the duration of an emergency but
could stomach with complacency the fixation of maximum
period, may, at fifteen or twenty years ...
We do not think that the Parliament in fixing the duration
of the maximum period of detention with reference to an
event like the cessation of the period of emergency has, in
any way, abdicated its power or function, to fix the maximum
period or delegated it to the President. There can be no
doubt that it is Parliament that has fixed the maximum
period in s. 13 of the Act. The only question is whether,
because the duration of the period is dependent upon the
volition of the President, it ceases to be ’the maximum
period’. We cannot presume that the President will
unreasonably continue the Proclamation of Emergency even
after the emergency has ceased to exist."
This takes us to contention (iii).
This objection has been repeatedly raised in habeas corpus
petitions that have come up before this Bench in the last
two months. In Shaik Hanif v. State of West Bengal(1) this
Court had pointed out that in return to a Rule Nisi issued
by this Court in a habeas corpus petition, the proper person
to file the counter-affidavit is the District Magistrate who
had passed the order of detention under s. 3 of the Act,
and, if for some good reason the Magistrate is not
available, the next best thing would be to furnish the
affidavit of a Senior Officer who personally dealt with the
case of the detenu in the Government Secretariat, or had put
it to the Minister for orders.
Our democratic Constitution inhibits blanket and arbitrary
deprivation of a person’s liberty by authority. It
guarantees that no one shall
(1) Writ Petition No. 1679 of 1973.
385
be deprived of his personal liberty except in accordance
with procedure established by law. It further permits the
State., in the larger interests of society, to so restrict
that fundamental right that a reasonable, but delicate
balance is maintained on a legal fulcrum between individual
liberty and social security. The slightest deviation from
or displacement or infraction or violation of the legal
procedure symbolised in that fulcrum, upsets the balance,
introduces error and aberration and vitiates its working.
This symbolic balance therefore has to be worked with utmost
care and attention. Viewed in that perspective, the
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requirement as to the filing of the counter-affidavit by the
proper person cannot be treated as an empty formality. This
obligation stems from the well-settled principle that once a
Rule Nisi is issued on habeas corpus motion, by the Court,
the onus is on the State to show that the liberty of the
detenu has been taken away in accordance with procedure
established by law, and that the safeguards provided in
Article 22 and in the Act, have not been transgressed or
bypassed.
In Jagdish Prasad v. State of Bihar (supra), also where the
counter-affidavit had been sworn by an Assistant of the Home
Department, not with personal knowledge, but paper wisdom,
the court, both of us, constituting the Bench, expressed
itself in the same strain, with added emphasis, thus :
"It is difficult to appreciate why in return to rule nisi in
a habeas corpus motion, it is not thought serious enough
even where liberty of a citizen is choked off, to get the
District Magistrate to explain his subjective satisfaction
and the grounds therefor. Not even why he is not available,
nor the next best, the oath of a Senior Officer in the
Secretariat who had been associated with the handling of the
case at Government level. Mechanical affidavits...... by
some one handy in the Secretariat cannot be regarded.....
This is not a mere punctilio of procedure but a probative
requirement of substance."
In the instant case, the Deputy Secretary who has sworn the
affidavit does not aver that he had personally dealt with
the case of the detenu. He has sworn the affidavit merely
on the basis of paper information gathered from the official
records. A stereotyped explanation, the same which was
offered in similar petitions decided by this Bench, earlier
has been given for not furnishing the affidavit of the Dis-
trict Magistrate. It is stated that the Magistrate is
"preoccupied in the matter of maintenance of law and order
and procurement of rice". Such an explanation is hardly
satisfactory.
It was all the more important in this case to get the
affidavit of the District Magistrate, because in this case
the detenu has alleged that lie had been wrongfully arrested
and detained for 22 days in the police station and
thereafter the detention order under the Act was foisted on
him on the basis of charges which were ’totally false’ and
had been concocted by the police and the detaining authority
from ulterior motives to cover up his initial wrongful
detention. These allegations of mala fides may be wrong.
But the best informed person to rebut the same on oath was
the District Magistrate against whom they were
386
levelled. But for the fact that these allegations of mala
fides are imprecise and deficient in particulars, the
omission to furnish the affidavit of the District Magistrate
itself might well have been fatal to the impugned order.
Nevertheless, it is a circumstance to be taken into account
in appreciating the next contention.
The Deputy Secretary in his affidavit has disclosed
that therewas "reliable information" and other
material,-in addition to whatwas communicated to the detenu
before the detaining authorities,in regard to the "anti
social and prejudicial activities" of the petitioner showing
how he was a "veteran copper wire criminal".
No body is born a criminal, much less a habitual or
"veteran" criminal- It takes time for one, to become so.
The adjective "veteran" which is synonymous with "habitual"
implies a long course of recurring or persistent criminal
behaviour or repeated commission of crime. Surely, all the
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information received by the District Magistrate/the
Government, about the repeated criminal activities of the
detenu had contributed towards the subjective satisfaction
of the detaining authority. It will not be extravagant to
say that but for the detenu being in the opinion of the
detaining authority a "veteran" or habitual copper wire
criminal, the District Magistrate might not have taken the
impugned action. Admittedly, the whole of ibis material or
"reliable information" about the "anti-social" and "pre-
judicial activities" of the detenu that led to his
detention, was not communicated to him. This information
which was withheld was not claimed to be privileged under
clause (6) of Article 22. The non-communication of that-
material was violative of Article 22(5) of the Constitution
and the Act inasmuch as it did not intimate to the detenu
the full grounds or material to enable him to make an effec-
tive representation. The detention is thus illegal. We,
therefore, allow this Petition, set aside the detention
order and direct that the Petitioner be set at liberty
forthwith.
In Writ Petition No. 1855 of 1973, Mr. O. P. Sharma, who
assisted the Court as amicus curiae, has canvassed the same
points which were urged by Mr. Malviya in Mohd. Alam’s case
(supra). The same Deputy Secretary has filed the counter-
affidavit in this case also. The same explanation of the
omission of the District Magistrate who passed the detention
order, to file the counter has been given. In the affidavit
of the Deputy Secretary, it is said that the petitioner is a
"person of desperate- and dangerous character" and "veteran
copper wire stealer". Only two instances spread over a
period of about 2-1/2 months of the theft of one valuable
underground post and telegraph telecommunication cables were
communicated to the detenu. But other material on the basis
of which the District Magistrate/the Government reached the
conclusion that the petitioner was a "desperate and
dangerous character" and "veteran copper wire stealer" was
not communicated to the detenu. The non-communication of
this material is not sought to be justified on the ground of
its, being privileged under Article 22(6). Indeed, learned
Counsel for the
387
State has been fair enough to place a copy of the material
on record. It reads :
"Jiten Niniaoriginally hails from Dumka. He works
temporarilyas loading cooly in the colliery. He has got
no educationgot no landed property. He is addicted to
wine and indulges in gambling in the area. The place where
he is staying being infested by criminals and due ’lo his
close association with them. he developed criminal
propensity. His mode of living is beyond his means and as
such he started committing petty thefts against property.
He came in contact with copper wire criminals of the
locality and started committing theft in respect of P.T.
’telecommunication cables and D.V.C. cables in the area. He
is dangerous and desperate in character
What has been quoted above shows that the detaining
authority must have been greatly influenced in ordering the
detention by this undisclosed material, not the whole of
which was germane to the grounds on which preventive
detention can be ordered under the Act. In any case,
omission to communicate this material to the detenu must
have seriously prejudiced him in exercising his right of
making an effective representation.
We, therefore, allow Jiten Ninia’s petition also, set aside
his detention and direct that he be set at liberty
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forthwith.
V. P. S. Petition allowed.
388