Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KANU SANYAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIST. MAGISTRATE, DARJEELING & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/02/1974
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 510 1974 SCR (3) 279
1974 SCC (4) 141
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 32--Petition for the issue
of writ of habeas corpus--Date with reference to which
legality of detention may be tested.
Prisoners (Attendance in Courts) Act, 1955 s. 6 and its
proviso--Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was remanded to the District Jail,
Darjeeling, in connection with certain offences.
Thereafter, two charge ’sheets were filed against him and
others for various offences under the I.P.C., which were
triable exclusively by a Sessions Court, before the Special
Magistrate, Visakhapatnam. The Special Magistrate issued a
warrant for the production of the petitioner in his Court,
under s. 3(2) of the Prisoners (Attendance in Courts) Act,
1955, and the officer in charge of the, Dt. Jail
Darjeeling, sent the petitioner to the Court of the Special
Magistrate, Visakhapatanam. The petitioner was then
remanded to the Central Jail. Visakhapatnam, pending the
disposal of the. committal proceedings.
In a petition for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus, the
petitioner contended that his initial detention in the Dt.
Jail, Darjeeling, was illegal, because, (1)(a) it was
violative of Art. 22(1) (b) the concerned Magistrate in
Darjeeling had no jurisdiction to try the offences in
connection with which he was detained in Darjeeling and
hence could not order detention beyond 15 days; and (2) the
officer in charge of the Dt. Jail, Darjeeling should have
refused to comply with the warrant for production issued by
the Special Magistrate, Visakhapatnam, by reason of s. 6 of
the Prisoners (Attendance in Courts) Act.
HELD: (1) As regards the earliest date with reference to
which the legality of detention challenged in a habeas
corpus proceeding may be examined, there are 3 views,
namely, (a) that it is the date on which the application for
habeas corpus is made to the Court, (b) that it is the date
of the return, and (c) that it is the date of hearing.
Whichever be the correct view, the earliest of the dates
would be the date of filing of the application for habeas
corpus. In the present case, the application was filed
after the petitioner was ordered to be detained in the jai
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at Visakhapatnam. Assuming that there was some infirmity in
the detention in the jail at Darjeeling, that cannot
invalidate the subsequent detention off the petitioner in
the jail at Visakhapatnam. The legality of the detention at
Visakhapatnam has to be judged on its own merits.
Therefore, it is unnecessary to examine the legality of the
detention of the petitioner in the jail at Darjeeling. [283
t)-284 C]
(2) Under s. 3(1) of the Prisoners (Attendance in Courts)
Act, the order contemplated is an order by a civil or
criminal court, for the production of a detained person for
giving evidence. But the order contemplated by s. 3(2) is
an order of production of a person for answering a charge in
a criminal court. Under s. 5, when an order of production
is made under s. 3(1) or (2), the officer in charge of a
prison shall cause the detained person to be taken to the
court where his attendance is required. Under s. 6, such
officer shall abstain from complying with the order of
production in certain circumstances. The proviso to the
section carves out an exception if the 3 conditions for its
applicability, laid down in the proviso, are satisfied. The
first condition is that the order of production should be by
a criminal court and the second is that the detained person
should not be unfit to be removed, and the
280
third is that the place where the evidence of the detained
person is required is not more than 5 miles from the prison
where he is confined. [285 A-G]
In the present case, the first two conditions are satisfied.
The 3rd condition can have no application where an order is
made by a criminal court under s. 3(2) requiring production
for answering a charge. The fulfillment of the first two
conditions would, in such a case, be sufficient to attract
the applicability of the Proviso, and to take the case out
of s. 6. Therefore, the officer in charge of the jail at
Darjeeling was bound to send the petitioner to the Court at
Visakhapatnam and he acted according to law. The subsequent
detention in the jail at Visakhapatnam pending trial must be
held to be valid and a writ of habeas corpus cannot be
granted where a person is committed to jail custody by a
competent court by an order which, prima facie, does not
appear to be without jurisdiction or wholly illegal. [285 H-
286 G]
B. R. Rao v. State of Orissa, A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 2197,
followed.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 205 of 1973.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for issue of a
writ in the nature of habeas corpus.
N. H. Hingorani, for the petitioner..
P. K. Chatterjee, Sukumar Basu and G. S. Chatterjee, for
respondents Nos. 1-5.
P. Ram Reddy and P. P. Rao, for respondent No. 6.
B. D. Sharma and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No. 7.
The Judgement of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J., This is a writ petition by the petitioner
under Art. 32 of the Constitution challenging the legality
of his detention in the Central Jail, Vsakhapatnam and
praying for a writ of hebeas ’corpus for setting him at
liberty forthwith. The petitioner is one of the
acknowledged leaders of the Naxalite movement which
originated in the area within Naxalbari, Kharabari and
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Phansidewa police stations in Siliguri Sub-Division of
Darjeeling District of West Bengal some ten years ago. The
movement represents armed revolt of the peasantry against
exploitation by landholders and it seeks to achieve its end
by violent means calculated to overthrow the democratic pro-
cess. The petitioner, as one of the top leaders of this
movement, was engaged in violent and anti-social activities
and was for quite some time underground evading arrest by
the police. Eventually on 19th August, 1970 the petitioner
was arrested by the police alongwith some of his associates
from a hideout within the jurisdiction of Phansidewa police
station. A huge quantity of arms, ammunition and explosives
was found with the petitioner and his associates at the time
of the arrest. Phansidewa PS case No. 3 was accordingly
registered against the petitioner on 19th August, 1970 under
s.5 of the Explosive Substances Act, s. 25 (1) (a) of the
Arms Act and ss. 120B, 121A, 122, 309 and 402 of the Indian
Penal Code. There was also another case, namely, Phansidewa
P.S. Case No. 28 registered against the petitioner on 29th
June, 1967 under s. 412 read with s. 34 of the Indian Penal
281
Code. That case was under investigation at the time when the
petitioner was arrested. Immediately after his arrest, on
the same day, i.e., 19th August, 1970, the petitioner was
produced before the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Siliguri. The
learned Sub-Divisional Magistrate, passed an order of remand
directing that the petitioner be detained in the District
Jail, Darjeeling and that he should be produced before the
Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Darjeeling. The petitioner was
accordingly produced before the Sub-Divisional Magistrate
Darjeeling from time to time and orders of remand were
passed by the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Darjeeling at the
interval of every fourteen days since the investigation in
P.S. Case No. 28 dated 29th June, 1967 and P.S. Case No. 3,
dated 19th August, 1970 was not complete. It appears that on
16th January, 1970 first information report in respect of
certain criminal offences alleged to have been committed by
the petitioner and a large number of other co-conspirators
was lodged in Parvathipuram police station and after the
completion of the investigation, two charge-sheets were
filed against the petitioner and other 139 accused in the
Court of the Special Magistrate, Visakhapatnam on 12th
October, 1970 charging them with offences under s. 120B read
with ss. 302, 395, 397, 121, 122, 123,-and 124A of the
Indian Penal Code. The offences charged under these two
charge-sheets were triable exclusively by the Court of
Sessions, and therefore, inquiry proceedings under Ch. XVIII
of the Cods of Criminal Procedure were initiated by the
Special Magistrate, Visakhapatnam. Since the petitioner, who
was accused No. 138 in these two criminal cases, which
were numbered as P.R.C. Nos. 1 and 2 of 1971, was under
remand in the District Jail, Darjeeling pending
investigation of the two Phansidewa P.S. cases, the Special
Magistrate, Visakhapatnam issued on 30th May, 1972 a warrant
for production of the petitioner in his Court under s. 3,
sub-s. (2) of the Prisoners (Attendance in Courts) Act,
1955. The officer in-charge of the District Jail,
Darjeeling, in obedience to this warrant for production,
sent the petitioner to the Court of the Special Magistrate,
Visakhapatnam on 14th June, 1972 and immediately on
arrival, the petitioner was produced in the court of the
Special Judge, Visakhapatnam on 17th June, 1972. The
petitioner was remanded by the Special Judge, Visakhapatnam
from time to time pending the disposal of the committal
proceedings and pursuant to the orders of remand, the
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petitioner was detained in the Central Jail, Visakhapatnam.
On 6th January, 1973, whilst under detention in the Central
Jail, Visakhapatnam, the petitioner preferred a writ
petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution in this Court
challenging the legality of his detention right from the
time of its inception and praying that he may be set free by
issue of a writ of habaas corpus. The District Magistrate,
Darjeeling, the Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrates,
Siliguri, Kuerseon and Darjeeling the State of West Bengal,
the Superintendent, Central Jail, Visakhapatnam and the Post
Master General, West Bengal were made respondents to the
writ petition. This Court ordered a rule nisi to be issued
on the writ petition but directed that the petitioner need
not be produced in person. The District Magistrate,
Darjeeling and the State of West Bengal filed their return
to the rule
282
nisi on 19th April, 1973 and the Superintendent of Central
Jail, Visakhapatnam filed his return to the rule nisi on
11th May, 1973. When the writ petition reached hearing,
counsel appearing on behalf of the petitioner raised a
contention that the writ petition could not be heard by the
Court unless the petitioner was produced in person and his
argument was that once rule nisi was issued, the Court was
bound to order production of the petitioner. Since, this
contention raised an important question of law affecting the
practice of the Court while dealing with petitions for a
writ of habeas corpus, the Division Beach hearing the writ
petition referred this question for decision by the
Constitution Bench. The writ petition was thereafter placed
before the Constitution Bench and by a judgment delivered by
the Constitution Bench on 11th September, 1973, it was held
that it was competent to the Court to dispense with the
production of the body of the person detained while issuing
rule nisi, and the rule nisi could be heard without requir-
ing the body of the person detained to be brought before the
Court. On this view being taken by the Constitution Bench,
the writ petition again came back to the Division Bench for
final disposal. In the meantime the committal proceedings
which were being held by the Special Judge, Visakhapatnam
against the petitioner and his other associates concluded
and by an order dated 12th July, 1973 the petitioner and 66
other accused were commuted to the court of Sessions to
stand their trial for various offences. The trial of this
Sessions Case, being Sessions Case No. 46 of 1973, is still
pending against the petitioner in the Court of the Second
Additional Sessions Judge, Visakhapatnam and the petitioner
is under detention in the’ Central Jail,-Visakhapatnam
pursuant to the orders made by the Second Additional
Sessions Judge, Visakhapatnam pending trial.
The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the petitioner
put forward three grounds challenging the legality of the
detention of the petitioner and they may be briefly
summarised as follows
A. The initial detention of the petitioner in
the District Jail, Darjeeling was illegal
because he was detained without being informed
of the grounds for his arrest as required by
cl (i) of Art. 22 of the Constitution;
B. The Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Darjeeling
had no jurisdiction to try the two Phansidewa
P.S. cases against.the petitioner and he could
not, therefore, authorise the detention of the
petitioner under S. 157 of the’ Code of
Criminal Procedure for a term exceeding
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fifteen days in the whole. It was only the
Sub Divisional Magistrate Siliguri who had
jurisdiction to try the two Phansidewa P.S.
cases and he alone could remand the petitioner
to custody after the expiration of the initial
period of fifteen days under S. 344 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. The orders of
remand under which the petitioner was
detained
in the District Jail, Darjeeling were,
however, made by the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate, Darjeeling and the detention of
the petitioner in the District Court,
Darjeeling was, therefore illegal.
283
C. The officer in charge of the District
Jail, Darjeeling was bound to abstain from
complying with the warrant for production
issued by the Special Judge, Visakhapatnam by
reason of S. 6 of the Prisoners (Attendance in
Courts) Act, 1955 and the production of the
petitioner before the Special Judge,
Visakhapatnam pursuant to such warrant for
production and his detention in the Central
Jail, Visakhapatnam were consequently without
the authority of law.
Re Grounds A and B.
These two grounds relate exclusively to the legality of the
initial detention of the petitioner in the District Jail,
Darjeeling. We think it unnecessary to decide them. It is
now welt settled that the earliest date with reference to
which the legality of detention challenged in a habeas
corpus proceeding may be examined is the date on which the
application for habeas corpus is made to the Court. This
Court speaking through Wanchoo, J., (as he then was) said in
A. K. Gopalan v. Government of India(1) : "It is well
settled that in dealing with the petition for habeas corpus
the Court is to see whether the detention on the date on
which the application is made to the Court is legal, if
nothing more has intervened between the date of the
application and the date of hearing". In two early
decisions of this Court, however, namely, Naranjan Singh v.
State of Punjab(2) and Ram Narain Singh v. State of Delhi(3)
a slightly different view was expressed and that view was
reiterated by this Court in B. R. Rao v. State of Orissa(4)
where it was said : "In habeas corpus the Court is to have
regard to the legality or otherwise of the detention at the
time of the return and not with reference to the institution
of the proceedings". And yet in another decision of this
Court in Talib Husain v. State of Jammu & Kashmir(5) Mr.
Justice Dua, sitting as a Single Judge, presumably in the
vacation, observed that "in habeas corpus proceedings the
Court has to consider the legality of the detention on the
date of the hearing". of these three views taken by the
Court at different times, the second appears to be more in
consonance with the law and practice in England and may be
taken as- having received the largest measure of approval in
India, though the third view also cannot be discarded as
incorrect, because an inquiry whether the detention is legal
or not at the date of hearing of the application for habeas
corpus would be quite relevant, for the simple reason that
if on that date the detention is legal, the Court cannot
order release of the person detained by issuing a writ of
habeas corpus. But, for the purpose of the present case, it
is immaterial which of these three views is accepted as
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correct, for it is clear that, whichever be the correct
view, the earliest date with reference to which the legality
of detention may be examined is the date of filing of the
application for habeas corpus and the Court is not, to quote
the words of Mr. Justice Dua in B. R. Rao v. State of
Orissa,(4) "concerned with a date prior to the-initiation of
the proceed-
(1) [1966]2 S. C. R. 427 (2) [1952] S. C. R. 395
(3) [1953] S. C. R. 652 (4) A. 1. R. 1971 S. C. 2197
(5) A. 1. R. 1971 S. C. 62
284
ings for a writ of habeas corpus". Now the writ petition in
the present case was filed on 6th January, 1973 and on that
date the petitioner was in detention in the Central Jail,
Visakhapatnam. The initial detention of the petitioner in
the District Jail, Darjeeling had come to an end long before
the date of the filing of the writ petition. It is,
therefore, unnecessary to examine the legality or otherwise
of the detention of the petitioner in the District Jail,
Darjeeling. The only question that calls for consideration
is whether the detention of the petitioner in the Central
Jail, Visakhapatnam is legal or not. Even if we assume that
grounds A and B are well founded and there was infirmity in
the detention of the petitioner in the District Jail, Dar-
jeeling, that cannot invalidate the subsequent detention of
the petitioner in the Central Jail, Visakhapatnam. See para
7 of the judgment of this Court in B. R. Rao v. State of
Orissa, (4). The legality of the detention of the
petitioner in the Central Jail, Visakhapatnam would have to
be judged on its own merits. We, therefore, consider it
unnecessary to embark on a discussion of grounds A and B and
decline to decide them.
Re : Ground ’C’
The only question which, therefore. requires to be
considered is whether the detention of the petitioner in the
Central Jail, Visakhapatnam is illegal. Now the legality of
this detention is challenged on the ground that by reason of
S. 6 of the Prisoners (Attendance in Courts) Act, 1955 the
officers in charge of the District Jail, Darjeeling was
bound to abstain from complying with the warrant for produc-
tion issued by the Special Magistrate, Visakhapatnam and was
not entitled to send the petitioner to the Court of Special
Magistrate, Visakhapatnam in compliance with such warrant
for production. This ground is wholly without substance.
It overlooks the Proviso to s. 6 of the Act. In order to
arrive at. a proper interpretation of s. 6 with the,
Proviso, it is necessary to have a look at ss. 3 and 5 as
well. Sub-s. (1) of s. 3 provides that any civil or
criminal court may, if it thinks that the evidence of any
person confined in any prison is material in any matter
pending before it, make an order in the form set forth in
the First Schedule, directed to the officer in charge of
the, prison. It is clear from this sub-section as well as
the form set out in the First Schedule that the order
contemplated by this sub-section is an order for production
of a person detained, in any prison for giving evidence and
such an order may be made by a civil court or a criminal
court. Section 3, sub-s. (2) provides for a different
situation. It says that any criminal court may, if a charge
of an offence against a person confined in any prison is
made or pending before it,, make an order in the form set
forth in the second Schedule directed to the officer in
charge of the prison. The order contemplated in this sub-
section-and that is evident also from the form set forth in
the Second Schedule-is an order of production for answering
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a charge and exhypothesi that can only be by a criminal
court. The warrant for production in the present case was
under s. 3, sub-s. (2) as the petitioner was admittedly
required to be produced before the Special Magistrate,
Visakhapatnam for answering the charges against him.
285
Now, when an order of production is made under sub-s. (1) or
sub-s. (2) of s. 3, what is to happen ? That is provided in
S. 5 which says that upon delivery of such order of
production to the officer in charge of the prison, that
officer shall cause the person named in the order to be
taken to the Court in which his attendance is required so as
to be present in the Court at the time mentioned in the
order. The main part of s. 6, however, sets out certain
circumstances in which the officer in charge of the prison
shall abstain from complying with the order of production.
It reads :
"6. Officer in charge of prison when to
abstain from carrying out order-Where the
person in respect of whom an order is made
under section 3-
(a) is, in accordance with the rules made in
this behalf, declared to be unfit to be
removed from the prison where he is confined
by reason of sickness or other infirmity; or
(b) is under committal for trial; or
(c) is under remand pending trial or pending
a preliminary investigation; or
(d) is in custody for a period which would
expire before the expiration of the time
required for removing him under this Act and
for taking him back to the prison in which he
is confined;
the officer in charge of the prison shall
abstain from carrying out the order and shall
send to the Court from which the order had
been issued a statement of reason.-, for so
abstaining : "
But there is a proviso to this section which
carves out an exception in the following terms
:
"Provided that such officer as aforesaid shall
not abstain where-
(i) the order has been made by a criminal
Court; and
(ii) the person named in the order is
confined under committal for trial or under
remand pending trial or pending a preliminary
investigation and is not declared in
accordance with the rules made in this behalf
to be unfit to be removed from the prison
where he is confined by reason of sickness or
other infirmity; and
(iii) the place,. where the evidence of the
person named in the order is required is not
more than fives miles distant from the prison
in which he is confined."
Now there can be no dispute that the petitioner in respect
of whom the warrant for production was issued by the Special
Magistrate, Visa
6--L954Sup.C.I./74
286
khapatnam under S. 3, sub-s. (2) was under remand pending
preliminary investigation in the two Phansidewa PS cases,
and therefore, under the main provision in s. 6, the officer
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in charge of the District Jail, Darjeeling was bound to
abstain from complying with the warrant for production,
unless, of-course, the Proviso was applicable. The Proviso
lays down three conditions for its applicability. The two
conditions set out in cls. (i) and (ii) were admittedly
satisfied. The only question could be about the condition
in cl. (iii), but that condition has obviously no
application in case of an order of production under sub-s.
(2) of s. 3. Clause (iii) posits an order of production for
giving evidence made under sub-s. (1) of s. 3. It is only
where such an order of production is made that the condition
in cl. (iii) can apply. It can have no application where an
order is made by a criminal court under sub-section (2) of
s. 3 requiring production for answering a charge. In such a
case, the condition in cl. (iii) would be wholly
inappropriate and would not have to be satisfied. The
fulfillment of the conditions set out in cls. (i) and (ii)
would in that case be sufficient to attract the
applicability of the Proviso. Here the warrant for
production was admittedly issued under sub-s. (2) of s. 3
and therefore the only requirement for bringing the Proviso
into operation was the fulfillment of the conditions set out
in cls. (i) and (ii). These two conditions were clearly
satisfied and the Proviso was accordingly attracted and it
took the case out of the main provision in s. 6. The officer
in charge of the District Jail, Darjeeling was, therefore,
bound to send the petitioner to the Court of the Special
Magistrate. Visakhapatnam in compliance with the warrant
for production and he acted according to law in doing so.
The, production of the petitioner before the Special Judge,
Visakhapatnam, could not, therefore, be said to be illegal
and his subsequent detention in the Central Jail,
Visakhapatnam. pursuant to the orders made by the Special
Judge, Visakhapatnam, pending trial must be held to be
valid. This Court pointed out in B. R. Rao v. State of
Orissa(4) that a writ of habeas corpus cannot be granted
"Where person is committed to jail custody by a competent
court by an order which prima ’facie does not appear to be
without jurisdiction wholly illegal". The present case is
clearly covered by these observation and the petitioner is
not entitled to a writ of habeas corpus to free him from
detention.
The writ petition is accordingly dismissed and the rule nisi
is discharged.
V.P.S.
Petition dismissed.
287