Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KAMAL KlSHORE SAINI
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/11/1987
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 208 1988 SCR (1) 859
1988 SCC (1) 287 JT 1987 (4) 285
1987 SCALE (2)989
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC 764 (18)
ACT:
National Security Act, 1980-Detention under section
3(2) thereof.
HEADNOTE:
%
The respondent, Kamal Kishore Saini, was detained under
an order of detention under section 3(2) of the National
Security Act, 1980. He challenged the said order of
detention before the High Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution. Of India. The High Court quashed the order of
detention. The State appealed to this Court by special
leave.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: The order of detention is illegal and bad on the
ground of non-supply of the vital documents and materials to
the detenu to enable him to make an effective representation
against the grounds of detention and as such his right of
making an effective representation as contemplated under
Article 22(5) of the Constitution of India has been
infringed. Also, the non-production of the relevant
materials before the detaining authority for his
consideration before his passing the order of detention,
renders the order of detention invalid and illegal. [867G-H;
868A-B]
Asha Devi v. K. Shivrai, [19791 1 SCC 222; Gurdip Singh
v. Union of India, AIR 1981 SC 362; Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia v.
State of Bihar & Qrs., [1966] 1 SCR 705; Arun Ghosh v. State
of West Bengal, [1970] 3 SCK 283 Pushkar Mukharjee v. State
of West Bengal, AIR 1970 SC 352; Ashok Kumar v. Delhi
Administration, [1982] 2 SCC 403, and Gulab Mehra v. State
of U. P. & Ors. J 4 JT 1987 (3) 559, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURlSDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
531 of 1986.
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From the Judgment and order dated 17.4.1986 of the
Allahabad High Court in W. P. No. 6823 of 1985 .
DalVeer Bhandari for the petitioner.
860
Shakeel Ahmed Syed for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
B.C. RAY, J. This appeal by special leave is against
the judgment and order passed by the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad in writ petition Nos. 6823 of 1985
and 6522 of 1985. The facts giving rise to this appeal are
as follows:-
The respondent Kamal Kishore Saini was detained under
Section3(2) of National Security Act, 1980 by an order
served on him on 28th November, 1985 on three grounds which
are stated hereunder:-
(I) That on 4th June, 1985 one Jeet Narain Awasthi,
resident of Indira Nagar, Police Station Ghazipur, Lucknow
lodged a First Information Report at Police Station Ghazipur
that on the night of 4/5th June, 1985 his younger brother
Vishnu Narain Awasthi at about 20 hours had left to sleep in
house No. 2040 of Indira Nagar, Lucknow occupied by Sri R.S.
Raghuvanshi since Sri Raghuvanshi had gone out to Jaunpur,
his home town and had entrusted custody of his house to the
said Vishnu Narain Awasthi. At 11.00 in the night some
persons informed the complainant that his brother had been
shot by certain persons and when the complainant reached the
spot he found Vishnu Narain Awasthi lying in a pool of blood
and he had already died. It is alleged that on the basis of
the F.I.R. On 4th June, 1985 crime No. 101 of 1985 under
Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code was registered at the
Ghazipur Police Station against unknown accused. The names
of the detenus, it is said figured during investigation and
the charge-sheet has been submitted in the concerned court
which is pending trial.
(2) That on 13th June, 1985 one Baldeo Prasad Awasthi,
resident of Ismailganj, Police Station Ghazipur, Lucknow
lodged a First Information Report at Police Station
Alambagh, Lucknow that his son Ram Kumar and his son-in-law,
Nand Kishore had gone to meet an accused in the District
Jail where the complainant also reached at about 1.30 p.m.
but they could not meet the accused. Ram Kumar and Nand
Kishore proceeded towards home on one rickshaw while the
other rickshaw was being occupied by the complainant. When
they reached a little distance from the Jail, near the
residence of the jail Superintendent, at about 1.45 p.m.
Rajiv Hazra and Kamal Kishore Saini, the two detenus and one
Anandi Shukla, said to be an accomplice of one Ram Gopal,
came on a scooter, stopped it and challenged Ram Kumar, Nand
Kishore and the complainant and filed at
861
them. The complainant as also Ram Kumar and. Nand Kishore
ran helter and skelter when the accused are said to have
chased Ram Kumar for about 200 steps and fired twice or
thrice as a consequence of which Ram Kumar fell dead on the
spot and Nand Kishore as also the rickshaw-puller and the
complainant sustained injuries. On this basis crime No. 222
of 1985 under Section 302/307 of the Indian Penal Code was
registered on 13th June 1985 at about 14.30 hours at Police
Station Lucknow in which both the petitioners and Anandi
Shukla were named. After investigation a charge-sheet has
been submitted to the court which is pending consideration.
3. That on 16th August, 1985 at about 14. 10 hours Head
Constable 129 C.P. Balram Pandey of the Reserve Police
Lines, Lucknow lodged a First Information Report at Police
Station Qaiserbagh, Lucknow that on the same day he was on
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duty along with other police men in the Judicial Lock-up,
Collectorate, Lucknow. It was alleged that the complainant
accompanied by other policemen on duty were bringing back
accused after their production in the court of the Chief
Judicial Magistrate, Lucknow. Both the detenus (petitioners)
proceeded towards an accused, Vijay Pratap Singh, whereupon
Vijay Pratap Singh, in panic tried to retract and turned
back when Rajiv Hazra is said to have given a call that it
was appropriate time to finish the enemy who was before them
as a result of which both the detenus took out their pistols
and Kamal Kishore Saini, the detenu, with the intention of
killing Vijay Pratap Singh fired at him which resulted in
injuries to him and since this incident thither and an
atmosphere of terror spread over the area. On the basis of
this F.I.R., Crime No. 450 of 1985 under Section 307/34 of
the Indian Penal Code was registered at the Qaiserbagh
Police Station on 16th August, 1985 and after investigation,
the charge-sheet has been submitted which is under
consideration.
The other detenu Rajiv Hazra was served with a
detention order on identical rounds by the District
Magistrate, Lucknow.
The said order of detention was challenged in two writ
petitions filed before the High Court of Allahabad under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India praying for a writ
of mandamus or order or direction in the nature of writ of
habeas corpus for producing the body of the respondent along
with other respondent detenus before the Court and for
quashing of the order of detention. In the said order of
detention it has also been stated that the District
Magistrate after considering the fact that since the two
detenus/petitioners had filed
862
applications for bail which were pending before the Court
and for which the detenus were likely to be released on
bail, passed the impugned order of detention after being
subjectively satisfied that the petitioners on their release
from jail will participate in activities prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order. The grounds of detention were
duly served on the detenus mentioning therein that the
detenus may make representation to the State Government
against the said order of detention and the same would be
placed before the Advisory Board before whom the detenus
would be afforded opportunity of personal hearing.
The petitioners along with other detenus contended in
the writ petitions that as regards the ground No. 1 the
detenus were not afforded a fair and reasonable opportunity
of making an effective representation before the State
Government under Section 10 of the National Security Act
(Act No. 65 of 1985) inasmuch as they had not been supplied
with the relevant documents in support of the grounds except
the first information reports and copies of extract of
chargesheet submitted in the two cases. It has been further
submitted that the statements recorded under Section 16 1 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure which form a part of the
charge-sheet and accompanied by the same, were not supplied
to the two detenus along with the grounds. It has been
further submitted that the petitioners were not named in the
F.I.R. the basis on which their complicity came to be known,
is the material found in the course of the investigation. It
has been submitted that the detenus as such could not make
an effective representation in the absence of these relevant
material documents. As regards the third ground it has also
been submitted that an application was filed by three under-
trials Rajendra Singh, Pooran Mal and Jhamman on 8th
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October, 1985 addressed to the Judicial Magistrate, Lucknow
submitted to the Superintendent District Jail, Lucknow for
being forwarded to the Magistrate stating that some unknown
persons had fired at Vijay Pratap Singh and Kamal Kishore
Saini and other persons names had been implicated falsely.
It has also been contended therein that in the bail
applications moved on behalf of the petitioners before the
Sessions Judge, Lucknow, this fact was also mentioned. This
bail application was moved much before the order of
detention which was passed on 28th November, 1985. These
relevant materials were not produced before the detaining
authority for his consideration before the passing of the
order of detention. As regards the first two grounds Nos. 1
and 2, it has been contended further that they pertain to
the maintenance of law and order and not to public order.
863
After hearing the learned counsel for the parties the
High Court of Allahabad held that so far as ground No. 1 was
concerned the respective detenus were denied a fair and
reasonable opportunity to represent against the order of
detention and the detention order thus stood vitiated. It
was also held that the incidents referred to in ground Nos.
I and 2 do not affect public order inasmuch as the reach and
effect and the potentiality of the said incidents did not
disturb the even tempo of the life of the community, as it
did not create any terror and panic in the locality. These
incidents are confined to particular persons. It has also
been held that relevant materials such as the application of
the three under-trials as well as the statement in the bail
application of the detenus referring to the statement of the
under-trials that the detenus had been implicated falsely
were not placed before the detaining authority and as such
the order of detention passed by the detaining authority was
invalid and bad in as much as there was no proper subjective
satisfaction of the detaining authority due to non
consideration of the application of the co-accused and the
police report. The order of detention was therefore, quashed
by the High Court.
Against this order the instant appeal has been filed on
special leave. The learned counsel appearing on behalf of
the State, appellant did not question before us the validity
and legality of the finding of the High Court in so far as
it relates to the non-supply of the relevant and vital
materials, that is, the statements recorded under Section
161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure so far as ground No. 1
of the order of detention is concerned, to the detenus and
also of the non-placement of the application made by the co-
accused before the Judicial Magistrate to the effect that
the detenus were falsely implicated in the said case as
Vijay Pratap Singh was fired at by some unknown assailants
and this fact was also mentioned in the bail application
made by the detenus before the Court and the police report
submitted thereon. The only challenge made on behalf of the
appellant is to the finding of the High Court to the effect
that the incidents referred to in ground Nos. 1 & 2 created
only law and order problem and it did not affect public
order. In other words, the even tempo of the life of the
community has not at all been affected by the said incident.
It is relevant to mention in this connection that the names
of the detenus were not mentioned in the F.I.R. in respect
of incident in ground No. 1 and the basis of their
complicity came to be known only in the material found in
the course of the investigation. The detenus were supplied
only with the copy of the F.I.R and also extract of the
charge-sheet and not the statements under Section 161 of the
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Code of Criminal Procedure. It is undisputed
864
that the charge-sheet was subsequently submitted in the
Court and the respondents were furnished with the copies of
the statements recorded under Section 161 of Cr. P.C. long
after the passing of the order of detention communicating
the grounds of detention. Similarly, with regard to ground
No. 3, the application of the co-accused as well as the
statement made in the bail application filed on behalf of
the detenus alleging that they had been falsely implicated
in the same case and the police report thereon, were not
produced before the detaining authority before passing of
the detention order. The High Court, therefore, was
justified in holding that the assertion made in the return
that even if the material had been placed before the
detaining authority, he would not have changed the
subjective satisfaction as this has never been accepted as a
correct preposition of law. It is incumbent to place all the
vital materials before the detaining authority to enable him
to come to a subjective satisfaction as to the passing of
the order of detention as mandatorily required under the
Act. This finding of the High Court is quite in accordance
with the decision of this Court in the case of Asha Devi v.
K Shivraj, [ 1979] 1 SCC 222 and Gurdip Singh v. Union of
India., AIR 1981 (SC) 362.
The High Court has found that the incidents mentioned
in ground Nos. 1 and 2 are confined to law and order problem
and not public order inasmuch as these incidents concerned
particular individuals and do not create any terror or panic
in the locality affecting E. the even tempo of the life of
the community. This Court in the case of Dr. Ram Manohar
Lohia v. State of Bihar and Ors., l 1966] 1 SCR 709 has
observed:-
"The contravention of law always affects
order but before it can be said to affect public order
it must affect the community or the public at large.
There are three concepts according to the learned Judge
(Hidayatullah, J) i.e. "law and order", "public order"
and "security of the State". It has been observed that
to appreciate the scope and extent of each of them one
should imagine three concentric circles. The largest of
them represented law and order, next represented public
order and the smallest represented the security of the
State. An act might affect law and order but not public
order just as an act might affect public order but not
the security of the State".
Similar observation has been made in the case of Arun
Ghosh v. State of West Bengal, [1970] 3 SCR 288 The
observation is to the following effect:
865
"Public order is the even tempo of the life of the
community taking the country as a whole or even a
specified locality. Disturbance of public order is
to be distinguished from acts directed against
individuals which do not disturb the society to
the extent of causing a general disturbance of
public tranquility. It is the degree of
disturbance and its effect upon the life of the
community in a locality which determines whether
the disturbance amounts only to a breach of law
and order. Take for instance, a man stabs another.
People may be shocked and even disturbed, but the
life of the community keeps moving at an even
tempo, however much one may dislike the act. Take
another case of town where there is communal
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tension. A man stabs a member of the other
community. This is an act of a very different
sort. Its implications are deeper and it affects
the even tempo of life and public order is
jeopardized because the repercussions of the act
embrace large sections of the community and incite
them to make further breaches of law and order and
to subvert the public order. An act by itself is
not determinant of its own gravity. In its quality
it may not differ from another but in its
potentiality it may be very different."
In the case of Pushkar Mukherjee v. State of West
Bengal, AIR 1970 (SC) 852 it has been observed by this
Court:-
"The contravention of any law always affects order
but before it can be said to affect public order,
it must affect the community or the public at
large. In this connection we must draw a line of
demarcation between serious and aggravated forms
of disorder which directly affect the community or
injure the public interest and the relatively
minor breaches of peace of a purely local
significance which primarily injure specific
individuals and only in a secondary sense public
interest. A mere disturbance of law and order
leading to disorder is thus not necessarily suffi-
cient for action under the Preventive Detention
Act but a disturbance which will affect public
order comes within the scope of the Act. A
District Magistrate is therefore entitled to take
action under Section 3(1) of the Act to prevent
subversion of public order but not in aid of
maintenance of law and order under ordinary
circumstances."
866
In the case of Ashok Kumar v. Delhi Administration,
[1982] 2 SCC 403 to which one of us was a party, this Court
while dealing with the distinction between "Public order"
and "law and order" observed that:
"The true distinction between the areas of ’Public
order’ and ’law and order’ lies not in the nature
or quality of the act, but in the degree and
extent of its reach upon society. The distinction
between the two concepts-of ’law and order’ and
’public order’ is a fine one but this does not
mean that there can be no overlapping. Acts
similar in nature but committed in different
contexts and circumstances might cause different
reactions. In one case it might affect specific
individuals only and therefore touch the problem
of law and order. The act by itself therefore is
not determinant of its own gravity. It is the
potentiality of the act to disturb the even tempo
of the life of the community which makes it
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order."
Considering all these decisions we have held in the
case of Gulab Mehra v. State of U.P. & Ors., 4 JT 1987(3)
559 (judgment of this case was pronounced on September 15,
1987) that whether an act relates to law and order or to
public order depends upon the effect of the act on the life
of the community or in other words the reach and effect and
potentiality of the act if so put as to disturb or dislocate
the even tempo of the life of the community, it will be an
act which will affect public order.
In the instant case, the criminal acts referred in the
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ground No. 1 are to the effect that on 4th June, 1985 at
about 11 P.M. some persons informed the complainant that his
brother has been shot by some persons and when complainant
reached the spot he found his brother Vishnu Narain Awasthi
Iying in the pool of blood and he had already died. Crime
case No. 109 of 1985 under Section 302 I.P.C. was registered
at Ghazipur Police Station. This incident is confined to
individual persons and it is private crime as distinct from
public crime. It does not in any way affect the even tempo
of the life of the community nor does it affect the peace
and tranquility of people of that particular locality where
the crime has been committed. So far as the second crime
referred to in ground No. 2 is concerned, it is to the
effect that the complainant went to Lucknow Jail along with
his son, Ram Kumar and son-in-law, Nand Kishore to see an
accused in the District Jail.
867
They could not meet the accused. Ram Kumar and Nand Kishore
proceeded towards home in one rickshaw while the complainant
was coming by another rickshaw. When they reached a little
distance from the Jail near the residence of the Jail
Superintendent at about 1.45 p.m. the detenus Rajiv Hazra
and Kamal Kishore Saini along with another one Anandi Sukhla
said to be the accomplice of one Ram Gopal, come on a
scooter, stopped it and challenge Ram Kumar and Nand Kishore
and the complainant. They fired at them. The complainant,
Ram Kumar and Nand Kishore ran helter and skelter. The
accused chased Ram Kumar and fired twice or thrice and in
consequence of it Ram Kumar fell dead on the spot and Nand
Kishore and the rickshaw-puller sustained injuries. On these
basis crime case No. 222 of 1985 under Section 302/307
I.P.C. was registered on 13th June, 1985. This firing was
made in a public street during the day time. This incident
does affect public order as its reach and impact is to
disturb public tranquility and it affects the even tempo of
the life of the people in the locality where the incident is
alleged to have occurred. Therefore, the finding of the High
Court with regard to this incident that it did not disturb
in any way the public order is not legal and valid.
As regards the incident referred to in ground No. 3,
that is, the complaint regarding the firing by Kamal Kishore
Saini, the detenu on Vijay Pratap Singh, an under-trial
prisoner, in the court compound while he was being taken
back from the court by the complainant and other policemen
on duty, undoubtedly affects public order inasmuch as the
firing of shot in the court compound created panic and
terror in the minds of persons present there and thus it
affects the even tempo of the life of the community in that
place. This incident certainly affects public order and not
merely law and order inasmuch as the reach, effect and
potentiality of the act purports to disturb the even tempo
of the life of the community i.e. the people of that area.
The impugned order of detention was clamped on 28th
November, 1985 and the period of one year as provided in
Section 13 of the National Security Act has also expired.
Moreover, we have already upheld the finding of the High
Court that the order of detention is illegal and bad for
non-supply of vital documents to the detenus to enable them
to make an effective representation against the grounds of
detention and as such their right to make an effective
representation as contemplated under Article 22(5) of the
Constitution of India has been infringed rendering the
impugned order as illegal and bad. Furthermore, the non-
production of relevant materials i.e. the statement of the
under-trial prisoners in their application in the court that
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868
the detenus had been falsely implicated in the crime case
No. 450 of 1985 under section 307;34 I.P.C. as mentioned in
ground No. 3 and also the statement to that effect in the
bail petition and the police report thereon, before the
detaining authority for his consideration before passing the
order of detention, renders the order of detention invalid
and illegal.
for the reason aforesaid we dismiss the appeal
S.L. Appeal dismissed.
869