Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 269 of 2001
PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GLORY
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/03/2001
BENCH:
M.B. Shah & S.N. Variava
JUDGMENT:
S. N. VARIAVA, J.
Leave granted.
Heard parties.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
This Appeal is against an Order dated 22nd March, 2000.
By this Order a detention Order dated 15th May, 1999 has
been quashed on the following reasoning :
"2. The ground case which forms the immediate basis for
passing the order of detention is said to have taken place
on 4.5.99 at 9.15 p.m. The detenu was found committing the
offence punishable under Section 4(1-A) of the Tamil Nadu
Prohibition Act and the offence is registered in Crime no.
834/99 on the file of the Prohibition and Enforcement Wing,
Thuckkalay. There are totally 11 adverse cases, the last of
which is stated to have taken place at 05.00 a.m. on
4.5.1999, for which offences under the Tamil Nadu
Prohibition Act came to be registered in Crime No. 383/99
on the file of the Thiruvattar Police Station. The first
information report regarding to that case in the last
adverse case referred to above is found at page 115 of the
booklet and it shows that the accused/detenu was arrested.
Page 121 of the booklet contains the general diary for the
last adverse case and it shows that the arrested accused was
sent for remand. It is contended by the learned counsel for
the petitioner that if he was in remand pursuant to this
arrest at 5.00 a.m. on 4.5.199, in the last adverse case,
then there must be material in the form of Court orders to
show that the arrested accused was released on bail on the
being produced before the Court for remand. But there is no
material at all to show that the arrested accused in the
adverse case was released on Bail. Though it may be a
bailable offence, yet there must be record to show that the
arrested accused in the last adverse case was let on bail,
which facilitated him to commit the offence in the ground
case on the same day. The detaining authority, in the
absence of materials showing that the arrested accused in
the last adverse case was released on bail, ought to have
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applied his mind to that aspect and asked for a
clarification from the sponsoring authority as to the
circumstance under which the accused in the ground case was
found involving himself in the later part of the same day.
Since he had not done it, there is a clear non application
of mind on the part of the detaining authority, which
vitiates the order of detention.
It could not be denied that there were 11 adverse cases
against the detenu. As has been noted the last adverse case
was on 4th May, 1999 at 5 a.m. We have also been shown page
115 of the booklet wherein the First Information Report has
been recorded. The last adverse notice, referred to by the
Judge reads as follows :
Sl.No
.
Name of the
Range
Section of
Law
Disposal/Present Stage
11.
Thiruvattar P.S.
Cr.No. 383/99
Dated 4.5.99
4(1)(a)
TNP Act
1937
Thiru Rasalam. S/o Ponnaiyan was found in possession of
5 litre illicit distilled arrack in a 5 litre black coloured
plastic can. He was arrested on 4.5.99 with the
contrabands. The case was charged on 4.5.99 and pending
trial.
From the above it is clear that this does not show that
the detenu had been remanded to judicial or police custody
in this case.
We have also seen page 121 of the booklet containing the
general diary for the last adverse case. We do not find any
statement in this booklet which shows that the accused has
been sent for remand. The only statement is as follows :
"I have taken up the investigation and inquired the
witnesses and recorded their statements. I have enclosed
their copies. I have inquired the accused. The Accused
without any coercion or fear accepted their guilt of having
in possession of illicit arrack and confirmation of the
guilt from the statements of the witnesses and confession
statement made by the accused accepting their guilt, I have
closed my investigation and filed the charge sheet for the
commission of offences under mentioned Section and sent the
same to the Judicial Magistrate Court Padmanabhapuram.
General Diary of the Court continues."
A plain reading of this statement shows that what has
been sent to the Judicial Magistrate is the charge sheet for
the commission of the offence. The High Court seems to have
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misread the same and concluded that the detenu had been
remanded to judicial custody.
The learned Judges have themselves noted that the
offence is a bailable offence. The facts show that the
Detenu was again caught in the evening committing the same
offence. Thus apart from the fact that there is nothing on
record to show that the Detenu had been remanded to judicial
custody, the factual position was that the accused had been
apprehended on the same evening committing the same offence.
It is, therefore, apparent that without taking into
consideration these facts, the High Court has quashed the
detention order. The impugned Order of the High Court
cannot be sustained and it is hereby set aside. However,
the Detention Order was of 1999. The same had been quashed
by the High Court in March 2000. The period of detention is
over. In our view, this is not a case where the Detenu
should be made to surrender to undergo the remaining period
of detention.
The Appeal stands disposed off accordingly. There will
be no Order as to costs.