Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOLAM HUSSAIN ALIAS GAMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, CALCUTTA, AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/03/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1336 1974 SCR (3) 613
1974 SCC (4) 530
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC 473 (2)
RF 1975 SC 606 (4)
F 1975 SC 623 (3)
RF 1975 SC 919 (9)
R 1986 SC2177 (33,41)
RF 1987 SC1383 (9)
R 1988 SC1256 (12)
RF 1990 SC 225 (9)
ACT:
Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971--Ss. 3 (1) and 3
(2). If detention after discharge in criminal cases mala
fide--Link between criminal activity and’
detention--Detention without duration if invalid--Public
disorder--If acts aimed at a single person can disturb
public order.
HEADNOTE:
Pursuant to an order of detention under s. 3 (1)(a) (ii)
read with s. 3 (2) of the Maintenance of Internal Security
Act, 1971 the petitioner was arrested for hurling, soda
water bottles, brickbats and bombs indiscriminately on a
group of persons on different dates. The order of detention
said that if left free and unfettered the petitioner was
likely to continue to disturb maintenance of public disorder
by acting, in a similar manner. in an earlier criminal case
the petitioner was discharged by the court since no witness
dared to depose against him in open court. Thereafter the
petitioner was detained under the Act.
In a petition under Art. 32 it was contended : (1) that the
detention was mala fide because the petitioner was detained
under the Act after his discharge by the court for want of
evidence (2) that there had been a long interval of nine
months between the criminal incidents and the detention
order, (3) that the order of detention which did not specify
a period was violative of s. 12 of the Act and (4) that the
detention was founded on prevention of public disorder while
the acts imputed to the petitioner were aimed at a
particular person, not the general public,
Dismissing the petition,
HELD : Merely because the detaining authority had chosen to
base the, order of detention on the discharge of the
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petitioner by the court for want of evidence it cannot be
held that the order was bad in law. This branch of
jurisprudence, as interpreted by this Court, has made it
futile for a detenu to urge that because the grounds of
detention have been the subject matter of criminal cases
which have ended in discharge, therefore, the order of
detention was mala fide. The basic imperative of proof
beyond reasonable doubt does not apply to the subjective
satisfaction component of imprisonment for reasons of
internal security. There may be extreme cases where the
court had held a criminal case to. be false and the
detaining authority with that judicial pronouncement before
him, may not reasonably claim to be satisfied about
prospective prejudicial activities based on what a court has
found to be baseless. In the present case where the order of
discharge was made purely for want of evidence on the scope
that witnesses were too afraid to depose against a desperate
character cannot come under the exceptions carved out by the
court to this category. [616C-F] .
(2) it is true that there must be a live link between the
grounds of criminal, activity alleged by the detaining
authority and the purpose of detention. This credible chain
is snapped if there is too long and unexplained an interval
between, the offending acts and the order of detention. If
the detaining authority takes the chance of conviction and,
when the court verdict goes against it, falls back on its
detention power to punish one whom the court would not
convict, it is an abuse and virtual nullification of the
judicial process. But if honestly finding a dangerous person
getting away with it by overawing witnesses or concealing
the commission cleverly, an authority thinks on the material
before him that there is likelihood of and need to interdict
public disorder at his instance he may validly direct
detention. in the present case the acts were serious, being
bomb hurling and brickbat ’throwing in public places
creating panic. Involvement of the Petitioner was discovered
only during the investigation of the offences. No ground
exists for dismissing this statement as sham or factitious.
[616G-H;617C]
614
M. S. Khan v. C. C. Bose, A. 1. R. 1972 S.C. 1670, Ashim
Kumar v. State of West Bengal, A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2561 and
Sahib Singh Dugal v. Union of’ India, [1966] 1 S.C.R. 313,
followed.
(3) The argument that detention without defined duration is
ipso jure invalid ,cannot be sustained. No responsible
government should or would be irresponsive to the claim of
citizen’s freedom. [622F] Suna Ullah v. State of j & K,
A.I.R, 1972 S.C. 2431, 2433, Dattatreya Moreshwar Pangarkar
v. State of Bombay, [1952] S.C.R. 612, S. Krishnan v. The
State of Madras, [1951] S.C.R. 621; 629, and Prabhu Dayal v.
District Magistrate, Kamrup, [1974] 1 S.C.C. 103; 114,
referred to.
(4) The nature of the act, the circumstances of its
commission, the impact on people around and such like
factors constitute the pathology of public disorder. These
acts cannot be isolated from their public setting nor is it
possible to analyse its molecules as in a laboratory but
take its total effect on the flow of orderly life. it may be
a question of the degree and quality of the activity of the
sensitivity of the situation and the psychic response of the
involved people. To dissect further is to defeat the
purpose of social defence which is the paramount purpose of
preventive detention. [623B-C]
Mohd. Subrati v. State of West Bengal, [1973] 3 S.C.C.
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250; 256, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 1977 of 1973.
Under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for issue of a
writ in the nature of habeas corpus.
D. N. Mukherjee and M. M. Kshatriya, for the petitioner.
p. K. Chatterjee and G. S. Chatterjee, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-A few issues of some moment, in the context
of civil liberties have been argued in this application for
habeas corpus by Shri Mukherjee as amicus curiae. The facts
are disquieting at least for the reason that the petitioner
an aged ailing man around 74, has been under detention since
1973 and, previous to it, had been facing a criminal
prosecution which ended in a discharge on the date the
detention order was clamped down on him; and counsel pressed
the poignant circumstance that the ultimate order of
Government dated September 28, 1973 merely confirms the
detention, being unlimited in duration and ’unspeaking on
the terminus ad quem for the incarceration.
The relevant facts may be stated before discussing the
highlights ,of the arguments. The Commissioner of Police,
Calcutta, passed the initial order of detention dated July
19, 1973 on the petitioner, Golam Hussain alias Gama, under
S. 3(1) (a) (ii) read with sub-section (2) of the
Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971 (Act 26 of 1971)
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). The grounds which
induced the detaining authority to pass the order were
communicated the same day. They have been set out by the
State as annexure to the affidavit filed in opposition to
the petition and read thus
On 8-10-72 at about 22-25 hrs., you along with
your associates Achche Lal Show of 1,
Manickotolla Bazar Lane, Satya Narayan Jaiswal
of 123/2, Acharya Prafulla in Chandra Road,
and others, all being armed with bombs, soda-
water bottles created a great disturbance of
public order on Gouri Sankar Lane in front of
premises No. 8 by hurling bombs
615
indiscriminately with a view to attack one
Jiban Paul of 8. Gouri Shankar Lane and his
group in retaliation to an earlier quarrel
that took place with the said Jiban Paul at 8,
Gouri Sankar Lane with your associates Satya
Narayan Jaiswal and others. The incident
terrorised the locality and threw out of gear
the normal life stream of the residents of the
said locality amounting to police orde
r.
2. On 9-11-72 sometimes between 04-45 hrs.
you along with your associates Ratish Pradhan
alias Laltu of 23/lA, Abinash Kaviraj St.,
Benode Kr. Jaiswal of 34B, Gulu Ostagar Lane
and other all being armed with brickbats,
soda-water bottles, bombs poles, created a
great disturbance of public order on Gouri
Sankar Lane and Abinash Kaviraj’ Street by
hurling soda-water bottles, brickbats
indiscriminately with a view to overawe the
organisers of the Kalipuja that took place in
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front of 8 Gowi Sankar Lane and thereby to
terrorise the locality. As a result the
lights of the above pujab pandals were
damaged. This was in sequel to an incident
that took place earlier at about 04-30 hrs
when your associates Benode Kumar and others
threw beer bottles at the Kalipuja pandal at
8, Gouri Sankar Lane, where some females were
then dancing, which was then protested by the
local people and the organisers of the said
puja.
And if left free and unfettered you are likely
to continue to disturb manitenance of public
order by acting in a similar manner as
aforesaid."
As required by the statute, the fact of detention was
communicated to the State Government which in turn reported
to the Central Government. The case was placed before the
Advisory Board on August 13, 1973 and when the
representation of the detenu was, received it was duly
considered and negatived by the State Government which
thereafter made it over to the Advisory Board. After
adverting to the facts, the Board advised continuance of the
detention on September 21, 1973. The consequential order
confirming the detention was made by the State Government on
September 28, 1973 and communicated to the detenu by the
middle of October, 1973. We see no statutory shortcoming in
the time sequence set out above. But other grounds of
attack have been levelled against the order which deserve a
closer look.
Shri Mukherjee urged that although two criminal cases were
started in connection with the two incidents constituting
the grounds for the detention, the petitioner’s name was not
even mentioned in the first information reports, and he was
produced before the Magistrate only on July 5, 1973, and so
the order based on those accusations was too irrational to
be bona fide. The Commissioner of Police who passed the
detention order has stated in his affidavit that there were
cases connected with ,he incidents of October 8th and
November 9th, but the detenu could not be arrested until
July 4, 1973. It is not denied that the petitioner’s name
was not in the first information
616
report, but he was apprehended later on the basis of
evidence gathered during the investigation of the criminal
case. The commissioner admits that the detenu was
discharged by the, Court "as no witness dared to depose
against the detenu in open court." According to him the said
order of discharge was made on the prayer of the police on
July 19, 1973, and thereafter the petitioner was
Preventively detained. Could such an order be castigated as
malafide and oblique resort to the inscrutable order of
detention when the prospects in the criminal case became
bleak ? This charge has been repudiated by the Commissioner
on oath and we are not able to hold with the petitioner that
merely because the detaining authority has chosen to pass
the order on the discharge of the petitioner by the court
for want of evidence, the order is bad in law. , The branch
of jurisprudence bearing on prohibitory detention has been
crystallised by now and it is no longer a valid contention,
that because the accused has been discharged in a criminal
case the ground of charge cannot be relied upon by the
appropriate authority for passing an order of detention.
The former relates to the punitive branch of the criminal
law and relates to the past commission, the latter to the
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preventive branch of social defence and protects the
community from future injury. Whether we like it or not,
this branch of jurisprudence, as interpreted by this Court
has made it futile for a detenu to urge that because the
grounds of detention have been the subject matter of
criminal cases which have ended in discharge, therefore, the
order of detention is malafide. The basic imperative of
proof beyond reasonable doubt does not apply to the
’subjective satisfaction’ component, of imprisonment for
reasons of internal security. To quarrel with such a
proposition is to challenge the wisdom of Parliament. Of
course, we can visualise extreme cases where a court has
held a criminal case to be false and a detaining Authority
with that judicial pronouncement before him may not
reasonably claim to be satisfied about prospective
prejudicial activities based on what a court has found to be
baseless. But the present case where the order of discharge
is made purely for want of evidence on the score that
witnesses were too afraid to depose against a desperate
character cannot come under this exceptional category.
Another submission, equally an exercise in futility, made
before us is that there has been a long interval of nine
months between the criminal incidents of October and
November, 1972 and the detention order of July, 1973.
Counsel hopefully relied on recent decision of this Court in
Lakshman Khatik v. State of West Bengal (1) and an earlier
decision in Rameshwar Shah v. District Magistrate
Burdwan(2). It is true that there must be a live link
between the grounds of criminal activity alleged by the
detaining authority and the purpose of detention, namely,
inhibition of prejudicial activity of the species specified
in the statute. This credible chain is snapped if there is
too long and unexplained an interval between the Offending
acts and the order of detention. Such is the ratio of
proximity in Lakshman Khatik(l). No authority, acting
rationally, can be satisfied, subjectively or otherwise, of
future mischief merely because long ago the detenu had
(1) Writ Petit Judgment on 26-2-74.
(2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 921.
617
done something evil. To rule otherwise is to sanction a
simulacrum of a statutory requirement. But no mechanical
test by counting the months of the interval is sound. It
all depends on the nature of the acts relied on, grave and
determined or less serious and corrigible, on the length of
the gap, short or long on the reason for the delay in taking
preventive action, like information of participation being
available only in the course of an investigation. We have
to investigate whether the causal connection has been broken
in the circumstances of each case.
If the detaining authority takes the chance of conviction
and, when the court verdict goes against it, falls back on
its detention power to punish one whom the court would not
convict, it is an abuse and virtual nullification of the
judicial process. But if honestly finding a dangerous
person getting away with it by overawing witnesses or
concealing the commission cleverly an authority thinks on
the material before him that there is likelihood of and need
to interdict public disorder at his instance he may validly
direct detention. The distinction is fine but real. In the
present case, the acts ere serious, being bomb hurling and
brick-bat throwing in public places creating. panic. The
involvement of the petitioner is discovered only during the
investigation of the offences. The witnesses are scared
away from deposing. The Commissioner swears that in these
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special circumstances he did form the satisfaction requisite
for ordering preventive detention, No ground exists for
dismissing this statement as sham or factitious. It is one
thing to say that a more subjective satisfaction is
sufficient to deprive a person of a fundamental freedom. it
is another to reject that satisfaction as specious and non-
existent. Parliament makes the law and is responsible for
it; the court only applies it, as it must. We have,
therefore, to reject the plea that because the criminal case
has failed the detention must be bad. M. S. Khan v. C. C.
Bose, (1) Ashim Kumar v. State of West Bengal(2), and Sahib
Singh Dugal v. Union of India(3) are but three among many
cases taking this view. We follow these precedents.
The next serious contention of Shri Chatterjee is that an
order of detention which does not specify a period is
violative of s. 12 of the Act. We may reproduce the
relevant provisions which are of ancient vintage, being
wholly or substantially in pari materia with earlier
corresponding preventive detention sections. Nor is the
position of law can vassed for res integra. Section l2 and
l3 of the Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971, as
amended, read as follows :
"12(1)ln any case where the Advisory Board has
reported that there is in 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.
(2)
(1) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1670.
(2) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2561.
(3) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 313.
618
13. The maximum period for which any person
may be detained in pursuance of any detention
order which has been confirmed under section
12 shall be twelve months from the date of
detention, or until the expiry of the Defence
of India Act, 1971 whichever is later ;
Provided that nothing contained in this
section shall affect the power of the
appropriate Government to revoke or modify the
detention order at any earlier time."
Section 1(3) of the Defence of India Act, 1971 laid down the
duration of that Act and said that that Act shall remain in
force for the duration of the proclamation of emergency and
a period of six months thereafter. Section 13 of the MISA,
as amended, thus provided that the maximum period of
detention under the Act shall be twelve months from the date
of detention or until the expiry of a period of six months
after the cessation of the proclamation of emergency,
whichever is later.
The Court recently dismissed a similar argument in these
words in Suna Ullah v. State of J & K (1) :
"It is urged that the failure of the State
Government to specify the period of detention
introduces an infirmity in the detention of
the petitioner. This contention, in our
opinion, is without any force. According to
sub-section (1) of Section 12 of the Act, in
any case where the Advisory Board has reported
that there is, in its opinion, sufficient
cause for the detention of a person, the
Government may confirm the detention order and
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continue the detention of the person concerned
for such period as it thinks fit. Section 13
of the Act specifies the maximum period of
detention. According to that section the
maximum period for which a person may be
detained in pursuance of any detention order,
which has been confirmed under Section 12,
shall be two years from the date of detention.
It is further provided that nothing in the
section shall effect the power of the
Government to revoke or modify the detention
order at any earlier time. It is, in our
opinion, difficult to infer from the language
of Section 12 of the Act that the State
Government while confirming the detention
order should also specify the period of
detention. All that the section requires is
that, if the Advisory Board has reported that
there is, in its opinion, sufficient cause for
the detention of the person, the Government
may confirm the detention order. There is
nothing in the section which enjoins upon the
Government to specify the period of detention
order. The concluding words of sub-section
(1) of Section 12, according to which the
Government may continue the detention
of the
person concerned for such period as it thinks
fit, pertain to and embody the consequences of
the confirmation of the detention order. It
is, however, manifest that the period for
which a person can be detained after the
confirmation of the detention order is subject
to the limit of two years, which is the
maximum period of detention for which a person
can be detained vide section 13 of the Act.
(1) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2431; 2433.
619
Apart from the above, we are of the opinion
that it is not always practicable and feasible
for the State Government at the time of
confirming the detention order to specify the
period of detention. The continued detention
of the detenu, subject to the maximum period
prescribed by the Act, depends upon a variety
of factors and the State Government would have
to take into account all the circumstances
including fresh developments and subsequent
events in deciding whether to keep the detenu
in detention for the maximum period or to
release him earlier. It has accordingly been
provided in sub-section (2) of Section 13 of
the Act that the State Government would have
the power to revoke or modify the detention
order at any time earlier than the expiry of
two years from the date of detention."
The leading case, if we may say so, is Dattatraya Moreshwar
Pangarkar v. State of Bombay(l). The majority held that an
order of detention under a substantially like provision was
not invalid merely because the order did not contain the
period of imprisonment. Mahajan, J., as he then was, held a
contrary view. But even the majority was split on their
construction of the section.Das, J., as he then was, read
the section to imply no obligation towrite into the order
the duration, even though it may be desirable.The learned
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Judge observed :
"It is said that the section should be
construed irrespective Of whether it occurs in
a temporary statute or a permanent one, and it
is urged that if the statute were a permanent
one the section on the aforesaid
interpretation, would have permitted an
indefinite detention. The answer is given by
Mahajan J., in the following passage in his
judgment in S. Krishnan v The State of Madras
(supra) at page 639 with which concurred(2)
"It may be pointed out that Parliament may
well have thought that it was unnecessary to
fix any maximum period of detention in the new
statute which was of a temporary nature and
whose own tenure of life was limited to one
year. Such temporary statutes cease
to have
any effect after they expire they
automatically come to an end at the expiry of
the period for which they have been enacted
and nothing further can be done under them.
The detention of the petitioners therefore is
bound to come to an end auto matically with
the life of the statute and in these circums-
tances Parliament may well have thought that
it would be wholly unnecessary to legislate
and provide a maximum period of detention for
those detained under this law."
For all I know, such drastic and extensive power to continue
the detention as long as it may think fit may not be given
by Parliament to the executive Government in a permanent
statute.
(1) (1952) S.C.R. 612.
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 621; 629.
620
But if it does think fit to do so, it will not be for the
Court to question the knowledge, wisdom or patriotism of the
Legislature and to permit its dislike for the policy of the
law to prevail over the plain meaning of the language used
by the Legislature. Apart from this consideration, there is
a period specified in the sub-section itself, for as soon as
the appropriate Government will cease to think fit to
continue the detention it will revoke the detention order
under section 13 and the period of detention will
automatically come to an end."
"If the specification of the period of
detention is ’not at all sacrosanct and the
appropriate Government may nevertheless
continue the detention as long as it thinks
fit to do so, why is the specification of a
period to be regarded as virtually or at all
necessary? So far as the detenu is concerned,
his detention will not be any more definite
and less irksome if it is open to the
appropriate Government to continue the
detention by an indefinite number of orders
made from time to time until the expiry of the
Act itself by afflux of time in the case of a
temporary statute or by its repeal in the case
of a permanent Act. It is said that if we
insist on a specification of a definite period
when the confirmatory order is in a deand
there after each time the period of detention
is extended then the appropriate Government
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will have to apply its mind to the case of the
detenu before it will make an order for
further continuation of the detention, but
that if we say that no time need be specified,
the appropriate Government will lose sight of
the case and the detenu will be detained
indefinitely. I do not see why we should
impute such dereliction of duty to the
appropriate Government’, but even if we do so
and insist on the specification of the
period
of detention we shall perhaps be driving the
appropriate Government to fix the longest
permissible period of detention ending with
the expiry of the Act itself and then to lose
sight of the case of the detenu. That, I
apprehend, will do no good to the detenu."
"In any event, the considerations of hardship
urged upon us may make it desirable that a
period of detention should be fixed but this
cannot alter the plain meaning of the language
of the section :
Patanjali Sastri, C. J., concurred. However,
Mukherjea J. struck a different note
"The question now is whether the omission to
state the period of further detention while
confirming the detention order under section
II (1) of the Preventive Detention Act makes
the detention illegal ? The point is not free
from doubt, but having regard to the fact that
the new Preventive Detention Act is a
temporary statute which was to be in force
only up to the
621
1st of April, 1952, and. has only been
recently extended to a further period of six
months and no detention under the Act can
continue after the date of expiry of the Act,
I am in-.limed to hold that non-specification
of the further period in an order under
section 11(1) of the Act does not make the
order of detention a nullity. If no period is
mentioned, the order might be taken to imply
that it would continue upto the date of the
expiration of the Act itself when all
detentions made under it would automatically
come to an end. Of course, the appropriate
Government is always at liberty to terminate
the order of detention earlier, if it
considers proper, in exercise of its general
powers under section 13 of the Act,"
’It is perfectly true that an order for
detention for an indefinite period is
repugnant to all notions of democracy and
individual liberty, but the indefiniteness in
the case of an order made under section 11(1)
of the Preventive Detention Act is in a way
cured by the fact that there is a limit set to
the duration of the Act itself, which
automatically prescribes a limit of time
beyond which the order cannot operate. In my
opinion, section II (1) of the Preventive
Detention Act does contemplate that a period
should be mentioned during which the further
detention of the detwnu is to continue and the
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Government should see that no omission occurs
in this respect, but I am unable to ho
ld that
this omission alone would make the order a
nullity which will justify us in releasing the
detenu."
Chandrasekhara Aiyar J. concurred.
The undercurrent of judicial unease at loss or citizen’s
liberty because the Executive subjectively opined that way
is evident in the pages of the report, but the brooding
feeling that the preventive detention legislation was a
short-lived statute and all imprisonment without trial would
terminate at a near date was writ large in all the opinions.
After all civil liberty ordinarily ends where detention
without trial begins and commitment to the rule of law
receives a rude shock where a permanent statute authorises
long term gaol confinement. That is why courts have been
strict even on procedural steps. Mathew J. recently
observed in Prabhu Dayal v. District Magistrate, Kamrup(l):
"The facts of the case might induce mournful
reflection how an honest attempt by an
authority charged with the duty of taking
prophylactic measure to secure the maintenance
of supplies and services essential to the
community has been frustrated by what is
popularly called a technical error. We say
and that we think it is necessary to repeat,
that the gravity of the evil to the community
resulting from anti-social activities can
never furnish an adequate reason for invading
the personal liberty of a citizen, except in
accordance with the procedure established by
the Constitution and the laws. The history of
personal liberty is-largely the history of
insistence on observance of procedure’.
(1) W. P. No, 1496 of 1973; judgment dated
October 11, 1973.-[1974]
I SCC 103, 114.
622
Observance of procedure has been the bastion
against wanton assaults on personal liberty
over the years. Under our Constitution the
only guarantee of personal liberty for a
person is that he shall not be deprived of it
except in accordance with the procedure
established bylaw. The need today for
maintenance of supplies and services essential
to the community cannot be over-emphasized.
There will be no social security without
maintenance of adequate supplies and services
essential to the community. But social
security is not the only goal of good society.
There are other values in a society. Our
country is taking singular pride in the
democratic ideals in personal liberty. It
would indeed be ironic if, in the name of
social security, we would sanction the
subversion of this liberty. We do not pause
to consider whether social security
is more
precious than personal liberty in the scale of
values. For, any judgment as regards that
would be but a value judgment on which
opinions might differ. But whatever be its
impact on the maintenance of supplies and
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services essential to the community, when a
certain procedure is prescribed by the
Constitution or the laws for depriving a
citizen of his personal liberty, we think it,
our duty to see that that procedure is
rigorously observed, however strange this
might sound to some ears."
The basic feature of the Act as distinguished from its
predecessor is that it is no longer a temporary law and even
the duration of the detention can be distant and
considerable. We have misgivings about these anti-personal
freedom facets but regard hopefully the presence and use of
the power to revoke the detention on a review at any time.
Moreover there is no reason to think that this extraordinary
power will be used indiscriminately or inordinately by a
democratic government. A tenable interpretation that a
detention order of prolonged and unspecified duration has to
be abandoned for the time not merely because of the pressure
of precedents but because we are assured by the State’s
counsel that the fulfilment of the imperative obligation of
the State to review from time to time the changing social
situation and the individuals’ criminal potential tipping
the scales in favour of enlargement of the detenu is taking
place. No responsible government should or would be
irresponsive to the claim of citizen’s freedom and the
argument that detention without defined duration is ipso
jure invalid cannot be sustained.
Shri Chatterjee took up the further position that the
detention in the case on hand was founded on prevention of
public disorder while the acts imputed to the petitioner ex
facie were aimed at a particular person and not the public
generally. Lohia’s(l) case and other rulings were said to
reinforce this stance. The law is plain and the decided
cases are concordant. A criminal act hitting a private
target such as indecent assult of a woman or slapping a
neighbour or knocking down a pedestrian while driving may
not shake up public order. But
(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 769.
623
a drunk with a drawn knife chasing a woman in a public
street and all women running in panic, a Hindu or Muslim in
a crowded place at a time of communal tension throwing a
bomb at a personal enemy of the other religion and the
people all scared fleeing the area, a striking worker armed
with a dagger stabbing a blackleg during a bitter strike
spreading terror-these are invasions of public order
although the motivation may be against a particular private
individual. The nature of the act the circumstances of its
commission the impact on people around and such like factors
constitute the pathology of public disorder. We cannot
isolate the act from its public setting or analyse its
molecules as in a laboratory but take its total effect on
the flow of orderly life. It may be a question of the
degree and quality of the activity of the sensitivity of the
situation and the psychic response of the involved people.
To dissect further is to defeat the purpose of social
defence which is the paramount purpose of preventive
detention.
Another argument, rather flimsy, was made that a corrigendum
reading ’public order’ in the place of ’police order’ was
not communicated to the detenu. It is not so and merits no
consideration. One or two other points, too trivial to be
seriously noticed were also mentioned but we ignore them.
Basically we must realise the unpleasant truth that the new
jurisdiction of preventive detention by executive fiat
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founded on subjective satisfaction and jejune judicial
protection is an erosion of a great right. We may repeat
what this Court in a different context recently observed in
Mohd. Subrati v. State of West Bengal(1) :
"It must be remembered that the personal
liberty of an individual has been given an
honoured place in the fundamental rights which
our Constitution has jealously protected
against illegal and arbitrary deprivation and
that this Court has been entrusted with a duty
and invested with a power to enforce that
fundamental right."
The seriousness of the step must be appreciated by Govern-
ment and continuous check-up on the need to prolong the
prison life of the citizen made. The final cure for
prejudicial activities threatening the survival of the
community is not executive shut-up of all suspects in prison
for how long one is kept guessing. Such a strategy may
alienate and embitter men who should be weaned away and won
over. In the present case a septuagenarian allegedly sickly
is confined in jail for an unspecified period. It may well
be that his private enemy on whom he threw a bomb is not
there at all. It may also be that the detenu has altogether
changed his outlook as many well-known terrorists have
turned marvels of saintliness. History will, we hope, serve
the Administration as reminder of unwitting misuse while
exercising near-absolute power.
We dismiss the petition.
P.B.R.
(1) [1973] 3 S.C.C. 250; 256
Petition dismissed.
624