Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JOYDEB GORAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/07/1972
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
DUA, I.D.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2173 1973 SCR (1) 714
1972 SCC (2) 417
CITATOR INFO :
E 1972 SC2686 (3)
ACT:
West Bengal (Prevention of Violent Activities) Act (19 of
1970) s.3(1) (2) (d) and (3)-Threat to kill a person and
disturbing public order-If valid ground of detention-Period
within which confirmation of order of detention by State
Government should be passed.
HEADNOTE:
Section 3(2) (d) of the West Bengal (Prevention of Violent
Activities,’ Act, 1970, amongst other things, provides that
the committing of any offence punishable with imprisonment
for a term extending to 7 years of more, where the
commission of such offence disturbs or is likely to disturb
public order would be within the definition of the
expression "acting in any manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order".
In pursuance of an order under a. 3(1) and (3) of the Act,
the petitioner was arrested on August 6, 1971, with a view
to preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to
the maintenance of public order One of the grounds furnished
to him was that he threatened to kill a person on account of
his refusal to rub out the anti-naxalite slogan, written on
the wall of his house, that the threat terrorised the common
public and as such they could not pursue their normal
avocations, and that he disturbed public order. The State
Government confirmed the order on October 28, 1971, after
receipt of the opinion of the Advisory Board
(Dismissing the petition under Art. 32 Challenging the order
of detention.
HELD : (1) Under s. 506 I.P.C., a threat to commit an
offence punish able with death or imprisonment for life
shall be punish-able with imprisonment of either description
for a term which may extend to 7 years. Hence the ground
furnished was not extraneous or irrelevant since the
petitioner. had committed an offence enumerated in s. 3(2)
(d) and there was disturbance of public order. [716A-C]
(2) There was no delay in passing the order of
confirmation, since it was passed before the expiry of three
months from the date of detention. [716H]
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Deb Sadhan Rov v. West Bengal, [1972] 1 S.C.C. 308 and Ujjal
Manda v. West Bengal, [1972] 1 S.C.C. 456. followed.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 39 of 1972.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
the enforcement of fundamental rights.
S. Lakshminarasu, for the petitioner.
G. L. Mukhoty and Sukumar Basu, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. The District Magistrate, Burdwan, passed the
order impugned in this petition on July 14, 1971 directing
the
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petitioner’s detention under sub-sec. (1) read with sub-sec.
(3) of sec. 3 of the West Bengal (Prevention of Violent
Activities) Act, being President’s Act XIX of 1970, on the
ground that such detention was necessary "with a view to
preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order". In pursuance of the order the
petitioner was arrested on August 6, 1971 when he was
furnished, as required by the Act. the grounds of detention.
There is no dispute that consequent upon the passing of the
said order the Government of West Bengal and the other
relevant authorities under the Act duly took all
consequential steps, such as the reporting to and obtaining
the Government’s order of approval, reporting to the Central
Government, disposal of the petitioner’s representation,
referring the petitioner’s case to the Advisory Board and
obtaining its opinion etc., within the respective times
prescribed by the Act.
Two grounds questioning the, validity of the said order and
the detention thereunder were, however, urged by Mr.
Lakshminarasu, appearing for the petitioner amicus curiae.
The first was that the first ground in the grounds of
detention was irrelevant and therefore vitiated the entire
order. The second was that there was undue delay in the
confirmation by the State Government of the detention order
and the continuance of detention thereunder after the expiry
of three months of detention.
The first ground in the grounds of detention
runs as follows
"That on 7-2-71 at 13-30 hours you and your
associates had been to the house of Shri
Bibhuti Bhusan Ghosh of Ranchi Dhowrah, Police
Station Kulti, and asked him to rub [out] the
anti-naxalite slogans written on the wall of
his house. Being refused you threatened to
kill him. Your such act terrorised the common
public and as such they could not pursue the
normal avocations of life. Moreover, it
disturbed public order."
The question is whether threat to kill the said Bibhuti
Bhusan Ghosh amounted to " acting in any manner prejudicial
to-the maintenance of public order" as, defined in sec. 3
(2) (d) of the Act. Cl. (d), amongst other things provides
that committing any offence punishable with death or
imprisonment for life or imprisonment for a term extending
to seven years or more, where the commission of such,
offence disturbs or is likely to disturb public order, would
fall within tile said definition of the expression "acting
in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public
order". Sec. 506 of the Penal Code provides that threat to
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716
cause death or grievous hurt or to cause an offence
punishable with death or imprisonment for life shall be
punishable with imprisonment of either description for a
term which may extend to seven years or with fine or both.
That being so, the offence said to have been committed by
the petitioner clearly was one of the offences enumerated in
cl. (d) of sec. 3 (2) of the Act. Ground No. (1) further
alleges that the threat to kill the said Ghosh administered
to him on account of his refusal to rub out the anti-
naxalite slogans written on the wall of his house "terror-
ised the common public and as such they could not pursue the
normal avocations of life" and furthermore, disturbed public
order. This assertion, coupled with the satisfaction of the
other requirement of cl. (d) of sec. 3 (2), namely, the
committal of the offence of threatening to kill, would bring
the act in question within the expression "acting in any
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order" as
defined in sec. 3 (2). It cannot, therefore, be argued that
ground No. (1) was extraneous or irrelevant to the objects
set out in sec. 3 of the Act and in respect of which a valid
order of detention could be made under the Act.
The second contention also is not such as ran be sustained.
There is no dispute that the petitioner was arrested on
August 6, 1971 and the order of confirmation and the
impugned detention thereunder beyond the period of three
months was passed by the State Government on October 28,
1971, that is within three months from the date of his
arrest. Counsel, however, argued that though the decision
of this Court have laid down that such an order of
confirmation has to be passed within three months from the
date of arrest, the appropriate Government has to pass such
an order as soon as possible and cannot delay in doing so
until the expiry of three months. In Deb Sadhan Roy v. West
Bengal(1), a case under the President’s Act XIX of 1970,
this Court laid down that it was essential that the
appropriate Government should take positive action on the
report of the Advisory Board, which action alone would
determine whether the detention was to be terminated or
continued, that it would, therefore, prima facie, appear
that action should be taken immediately after the receipt of
the opinion of the Board, or at any rate, within three
months from the date a person was detained, and that failure
to confirm or extend the period within three months would
result in the detention becoming illegal, the moment the
three months period elapsed without any such confirmation
This decision, thus, makes it clear that the legality of a
detention order or the detention thereunder would not be
affected it an order of confirmation is passed before the
expiry of three
(1)[1972] 1 S.C.C. 308.
717
months from the date of detention. Similarly, in Ujjal
Mandal v. West Bengal(1), Mathew, J., speaking for the
Court, observed at page 459 of the report as follows:
"To put the matter in a nut-shell : the State
Government has power under the Act to detain a
person without trial beyond a period of three
months-, but limited to a period of on year.
That power the State Government may exercise
on receipt of the opinion of the Board that
there is sufficient cause for the detention.
When the State Government receives that
opinion, it has still the option to exercise
the power and to continue the detention beyond
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the period of three months or not.
Confirmation is the exercise of the power to
continue the detention after the expiry of
three months. Unless that power is exercised
within the period of three months from the
date of detention, the detention after the
expiry of that period would be without the
authority of the law."
Therefore, if the order of confirmation has been passed, as
it has been done in the present case, within three months’
time from the date of arrest, neither the legality of the
detention order nor the continued detention thereunder is
affected.
Both the contentions raised by counsel thus having failed,
the petition also must fail and is consequently dismissed.
V.P.S. Petition dismissed.
(1) [1972] IS.C.C.456.
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