Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RASHIDMIYA @ CHHAVA AHMEDMIYA SHAIK
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
POLICE COMMISSIONER, AHMEDABAD & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/05/1989
BENCH:
PANDIAN, S.R. (J)
BENCH:
PANDIAN, S.R. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1703 1989 SCR (3) 182
1989 SCC (3) 321 JT 1989 (2) 323
1989 SCALE (1)1592
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1990 SC 496 (10)
F 1990 SC2069 (5)
RF 1992 SC 979 (15,16,21)
ACT:
Gujarat Prevention of Anti-social Activities Act, 1985:
Sections, 2(b), 2(c), 3 and 6.
Preventive detention--Order---Grounds of
detention--Severability and validity
of--’Bootlegger’--Activities of--Whether prejudicial to
maintenance of public order.
’Dangerous person’--Detenu--Whether should be a habitual
offender under Chapter XVI or XVII or XXII of Indian Penal
Code or under Chapter V of Arms Act.
Words and Phrases: ’Maintenance of public
order’--’Bootlegger’--’Dangerous person ’--Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner was detained, under an order passed by
the detaining authority under Section 3(1) of the Gujarat
Prevention of Anti Social Activities Act, 1985, with a view
to preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to
the maintenance of public order. The detaining authority
reached his subjective satisfaction on the grounds (i) that
the detenu was a ’bootlegger’ within the meaning of Section
2(b) of the Act because he was indulging in criminal and
anti-social activities by illegally storing and selling
foreign liquor and beer and that four cases were registered
against him under the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949; (ii)
that he was also a ’dangerous person’ within the meaning of
section 2(c) of the Act because he, as a member of a partic-
ular gang, was spreading an atmosphere of fear and terror by
beating innocent people in the Ahmedabad city thus affecting
the public order adversely and a case was also registered
against him under Section 120(B), 212 and 307 of the Indian
Penal Code, 1860 and Section 25 of the Arms Act besides
under the provisions of various other Acts.
The petitioner filed a writ petition in this Court
challenging the validity of the detention order contending
that the conclusions drawn by
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the detaining authority were not supported by materials.
Quashing the detention order and allowing the Writ Petition,
HELD: 1. To bring a person within the definition of
Section 2(c) of the Act it must be shown that the person
either by himself or as a member of or a leader of a gang
habitually commits or attempts to commit or abets the com-
mission of offences punishable under Chapter XVI or XVII or
XXII of the Indian Penal Code or any of the offences punish-
able under Chapter V of the Arms Act. It must be shown that
he is habitually committing or attempting to commit or
abetting the commission of offences enumerated therein.
[187-H; 188B]
1.1 In the instant case, the detenu is said to have
committed offences under Sections 307, 120-B, 212 of the
Indian Penal Code and Section 25 of the Arms Act besides
under the provisions of various other Acts. Only one case
registered under the provisions of Section 307 of the Indian
Penal Code and Section 25 of the Arms Act fails within the
said definition clause. The other two offences registered
under Sections 120-B and 212 are not covered under Section
2(c). Therefore, this solitary incident would hardly be
sufficient to conclude that the detenu was habitually com-
mitting or attempting to commit or abetting the commission
of offences. The general and vague allegations made in the
grounds of detention that the detenu was taking active part
in communal riots and entered into conspiracy to spread an
atmosphere of terror being a member of a particular gang in
the absence of any specific instance or registration of any
case thereof, cannot be construed as offences falling under
any of the above three chapters of the Indian Penal Code or
chapter V of the Arms Act enumerated under Section 2(c) so
as to characterise the detenu as a ’dangerous person’.
[188A-E]
2. A conjoint reading of Section 2(b) and Section 3(4)
with the explanation annexed thereto clearly spells out that
in order to clamp an order of detention upon a ’bootlegger’
under Section 3 of the Act, the detaining authority must not
only be satisfied that the person is a ’bootlegger’ within
the meaning of section 2(b) but also that the activities of
the said bootlegger affect adversely or likely to affect
adversely the maintenance of public order. [188H, 189A]
2.1 In the instant case, the vague allegations in the
grounds of detention that the detenu is the main member of a
particular gang indulging in bootlegging activities and that
he is taking active part in such dangerous activities, are
not sufficient for holding that his
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activities affected adversely or were likely to affect
adversely the maintenance of public order in compliance with
sub-Section 4 of the Section 3 of the Act that the activi-
ties of the detenu have caused harm, dangeror alarm or a
feeling of insecurity among the general public or any Sec-
tion thereof or a grave or widespread danger to life,
property or public health as per the explanation to Section
3(4). The offences registered in the. four cases, under the
Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949 against the detenu on the
ground that he was dealing in liquor have no bearing on the
question of maintenance of public order in the absence of
any other material that those activities of the detenu have
adversely affected the maintenance of public order. [189A-D]
Ashok Kumar v. Delhi Administration, [1982] 2 SCC 403
and Piyush Kantilal Mehta v. The Commissioner of Police,
Ahmedabad City and Anr, Judgments Today, [1988] 4 703,
applied.
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 395
of 1988.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
Miss Kamini Jaiswal and S.C. Patel for the Petitioner.
T.U. Mehta and M.N. Shroff for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RATNAVEL PANDIAN, J. This writ petition under Article 32
of the Constitution of India is filed by the petitioner (the
detenu herein) canvassing the correctness of the detention
order dated 30.8.88 made by the detaining authority namely
Commissioner of Police, Ahmedabad city in exercise of the
powers conferred on him under sub-Section 1 of Section 3 of
the Gujarat Prevention of Anti-social Activities Act 1985
(hereinafter referred as the Act) with a view to preventing
the detenu from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of public order in the area of Ahmedabad city.
In pursuance of the above order, the detenu is detained in
the Central Jail,’ Sabarmati. The detenu has been furnished
with the copies of the grounds of detention and all other
material documents inclusive of the statements of the wit-
nesses on the basis of which the detaining authority reached
his subjective satisfaction for passing this impugned order.
The sum and substance of the alleged activities of the
detenu
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mentioned in grounds of detention are that the detenu was
indulging in criminal and anti-social activities in the area
of Dariyapur Kalupur of Ahmedabad city by illegally storing
and selling foreign liquor and beer either personally or
through his associates and that in this regard the following
four cases were registered under the provisions of the
Bombay Prohibition Act of 1949. We reproduce that relevant
portion giving the details of the cases as found in the
grounds of detention:
Sr. No. Police CR No. Section Qty Disposals
Station Seized
1 Kalupur 130/88 Prov. 66(B) 8 Ltr. beer Pending
in court
2. Kalupur 152/88 -- 500 ML beer order pending
3. Kalupur 156/88 268 bottle Pending in
foreign and Court
122 bottle
box
4. Dariyapur 80/88 Prov. 66(B) foreign order pending
65(A)81 liquor
From the above materials, the detaining authority has
concluded that the detenu was a bootlegger within the mean-
ing of Section 2(b) of the Act.
It is further stated that the detenu besides indulging
in the activities of bootlegging, he and his companions were
creating terror in that area by beating innocent people in
public in Ahmedabad city which in turn affected adversely
the maintenance of public order.
Further it is stated that the detenu and his associates
always armed with dangerous weapons like bombs, cartridges
etc. were threatening the people in the city of Ahmedabad in
respect of which a case has been registered which is re-
produced as set out in the grounds of detention:
S. No. Police Station CR No. Section Disposal
(1) Kalupur 2/88 IPC 307, 120(B) Under
212, Terrorist inquiry
Act, Sec. 3(1)(3)
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Explosive Sec. 4,
5 Arms Act;
25(1)(A)(c);
Bombay Police
Act 135(1)
In addition to the above it is alleged that the detenu,
being the main member of the gang of Abdul Latif Abdul Wahab
Shaikh entered into a conspiracy to spread an atmosphere of
fear and terror among the residents of that area and also a
sense of insecurity among the people.
On the above materials, mentioned in the grounds of
detention, the detaining authority has come to the conclu-
sion that the detenu is a ’dangerous person’ within the
meaning of Section 2(c) of the Act.
Thus the detaining authority. has found that the detenu
was not only a ’bootlegger’ but also a ’dangerous person’
within the definitions of Section 2(b) and 2(c) of the Act.
For drawing the above conclusion the detaining authority has
also relied upon the statements of the witnesses whose names
are not disclosed.
Assailing the legality of the impugned order the learned
counsel appearing on behalf of the petitioner put forth
several contentions one of which being that the conclusions
drawn by the detaining authority that the detenu is a
’bootlegger’ as well as a ’dangerous person’ are not sup-
ported by the materials placed before him and that there is
nothing to show that the activities of the detenu either
affected or were likely, to affect adversely the maintenance
of public order.
We shall now deal with the above contention in the light
of the construction of the expressions ’bootlegger’ and
’dangerous person’ read with Section 3(4) of the Act with
the explanation annexed thereto.
The expression "bootlegger" and "dangerous person"
occurring in Section 2(b) and (c) of the Act read as fol-
lows:
"2(b) "bootlegger" means a person who distills, manufac-
tures, stores, transports, imports, exports, sells or dis-
tributes any liquor, intoxicating drug or other intoxicant
in contravention of any provision of the Bombay Prohibition
Act, 1949 (Bom. XXV of 1949) and the rules and orders made
thereunder, or any other law for the time being in
187
force or who knowingly expends or applies any money or
supplies any animal, vehicle, vessel or other conveyance or
any receptacle or any other material whatsoever in further-
ance or support of the doing of any of the things described
above by or through any other person, or who abets in any
other manner the doing of any such thing;
2(c) "dangerous person" means a person, who either, by
himself or as a member of or leader of a gang, habitually
commits, or attempts to commit or abets the commission of
offences, punishable under Chapter XVI or Chapter XVII or
Chapter XXII of the Indian Penal Code, (XLV of 1860), or any
of the offences punishable under Chapter V of the Arms Act,
1959 (54 of 1959)."
To bring the detenu herein within the definition of
Section 2(b) of the Act, four cases are made mention of in
the grounds of detention which we have already extracted.
All the four cases were registered in the year 1988. The
trials in respect of two of the four cases were pending
before the Court and in respect of the other two, the orders
were pending. Notwithstanding the result of those cases and
the quantity of liquor seized from the detenu, we shall
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examine the legality of the detention order, in the ensuing
part of this judgment, even assuming that the detenu is a
’bootlegger’ within the ambit of Section 2(b) of the Act.
For the conclusions drawn by the detaining authority
that the detenu was a ’dangerous person’ as defined under
Section 2(c) of the Act, the detaining authority has taken
into consideration the registration of a case in crime
number 2/88 in Kalupur police station. Added to that, it is
generally stated in the grounds of detention that the detenu
and his associates were beating the people in public and
that the detenu had entered into a conspiracy to spread an
atmosphere of fear and terror in the city of Ahmedabad city
being the main member of the gang of Abdul Latif Abdul Wahab
Shaikh. But no specific instance is given either in the
grounds of detention order or in any of the statements of
the witnesses.
To bring a person within the definition of Section 2(c)
of the Act it must be shown that the person either by him-
self or as a member of or a leader of a gang habitually
commits or attempts to commit or abets the commission of
offences punishable under Chapter XVI or XVII or XXII of the
Indian Penal Code or any of the offences punishable under
188
Chapter V of the Arms Act. In the case registered in crime
No. 2/88 in Kalupur police station, the detenu is said to
have committed offences under Sections 307, 120-B, 212 of
the Indian Penal Code and Section 25 of the Arms Act besides
under the provisions of various other Acts. Though Section
307 falls under Chapter XVI, the offences under Sections
120-B and 212 fall under Chapters VI and XI of the Indian
Penal Code respectively. Therefore, these two offences are
not covered under Section 2(c). The offence registered under
Section 25 of the Arms Act falling under Chapter V of the
said Act is included within the said definition clause. But
what the section requires is that to bring a person within
that definition, it must be shown that he is habitually
committing or attempting to commit or abetting the commis-
sion of offences enumerated therein. In the instant case,
the registration of only one case is mentioned under the
provisions of Section 307 of IPC and 25 of the Arms Act
falling within the said definition clause. Therefore, this
solitary incident would hardly be sufficient to conclude
that the detenu was habitually committing or attempting to
commit or abetting the commission of offences. The general
and vague allegations made in the grounds of detention that
the detenu was taking active part in communal riots and
entered into conspiracy to spread an atmosphere of terror
being a member of the gang of Abdul Latif Abdul Wahab Shaikh
in the absence of any specific instance or registration of
any case thereof, cannot be construed as offences falling
under any of the above three chapters of the IPC or Chapter
V of the Arms Act enumerated under Section 2(c) so as to
characterise the detenu as a ’dangerous person’.
Hence we are of the view that the conclusions drawn by
the detaining authority that the detenu is a dangerous
person is bereft of sufficient material as required under
Section 2(c). Therefore, we hold that the detenu cannot be
termed as a ’dangerous person’.
No doubt as per Section 6 of the Act, grounds of deten-
tion are severable and as such the order of detention should
not be deemed to be invalid or inoperative if one or some of
the grounds are invalid. In the present case, the question
for consideration is that even if the impugned order cannot
be sustained on the ground that the detenu is a ’dangerous
person’, can it be sustained on the other ground that the
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detenu is a ’bootlegger’. The answer is that the order could
be sustained, provided there are materials to show that the
bootlegging activities of the detenu affected adversely or
were likely to affect the maintenance of public order. A
conjoint reading of Section 2(b) and Section 3(4) with the
explanation annexed thereto clearly spells out
189
that in order to clamp an order of detention upon a ’boot-
legger’ under Section 3 of the Act, the detaining authority
must not only be satisfied that the person is a bootlegger
within the meaning of Section 2(b) but also that the activi-
ties of the said bootlegger affect adversely or likely to
affect adversely the maintenance of public order. Reverting
to the facts of this case, the vague allegations in the
grounds of detention that the detenu is the main member of
the gang of Abdul Latif Abdul Wahab Shaikh indulging in
bootlegging activities and that the detenu is taking active
part in such dangerous activities, are not sufficient for
holding that his activities affected adversely or were
likely to affect adversely the maintenance of public order
in compliance with subSection 4 of Section 3 of the Act that
the activities of the detenu have caused harm, danger or
alarm or a feeling of insecurity among the general public or
any Section thereof or a grave or widespread danger to life,
property or public health as per the explanation to Section
3(4).
The offences registered in the above mentioned four
cases against the detenu on the ground that he was dealing
in liquor have no bearing on the question of maintenance of
public order in the absence of any other material that those
activities of the detenu have adversely affected the mainte-
nance of public order.
There is a catena of decisions dealing with the question
of ’maintenance of public order’. But we think that it will
be sufficient to make reference to the following two deci-
sions.
This Court in Ashok Kumar v. Delhi Administration,
[1982] SCC 403 has observed:
"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."
In a recent decision of this Court in Piyush Kantilal
Mehta v. The Commissioner of Police, Ahmedabad City and
Anr., Judgments Today 1988 (4) 703 a question similar to one
before us arose for consideration. In that case, the allega-
tions in the grounds of detention were that the detenu was a
prohibition bootlegger, that he was indulged into the sale
of foreign liquor and that he and his associates indulged in
use of force and violence and also beating innocent citizens
by which an atmosphere of fear was created. In that case the
detenu was alleged to have been caught red-handed possessing
English wines with foreign marks and in the second occasion
he was caught while shifting 296
190
bottles of foreign liquor in an Ambassador car. While deal-
ing with that case, this Court observed as follows:
"It is true some incidents of beating by the petitioner had
taken place, as alleged by the witnesses. But, such inci-
dents, in our view, do not have any bearing on the mainte-
nance of public order. The petitioner may be punished for
the alleged offences committed by him but, surely, the acts
constituting the offences cannot be said to have affected
the even tempo of the life of the community. It may be that
the petitioner is a bootlegger within the meaning of Section
2(b) of the Act, but merely because he is a bootlegger he
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cannot be preventively detained under the provisions of the
Act unless, as laid down in sub-section (4) of Section 3 of
the Act, his activities as a bootlegger affect adversely or
are likely to affect adversely the maintenance of public
order."
The above observation, in our view, will be squarely
applicable to the facts of this case, in view of the rea-
sons, we have already adverted to in the earlier portion of
this judgment.
Hence for all the reasons aforesaid, we allow the Writ
Petition and quash the impugned order of detention and
direct the detenu to be set at liberty forthwith.
T.N.A. Petition
allowed.
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