Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GODAVARI SHAMRAO PARULEKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/01/1964
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1128 1964 SCR (6) 446
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC 340 (5)
R 1966 SC 816 (9)
RF 1966 SC1404 (7)
E 1967 SC 241 (6)
D 1967 SC1797 (5)
RF 1968 SC 327 (5)
RF 1986 SC2177 (37)
ACT:
Detention under Preventive Detention Act, 1950-Order revoked
by the State Government-Re-arrest under Defence of India
Rules-validity -Proper authority for passing order of
detention-Allocation of
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business of Governor under Art. 166(3) of Constitution
whether necessary-Satisfaction of State Government that
detention is necessary-Who should pass order of detention-
Revocation of order of detention during pendency of appeal.
HEADNOTE:
Appellants were first detained on November 7, 1962 under
Preventive Detention Act, 1950. That order was revoked by
the Government and the appellants were released but re-
arrested under Rule 30 of the Defence of India Rules. The
orders of detention were served on appellants in Jail. The
appellants challenged those orders in the High Court by
filing habeas corpus petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution and s. 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The writ petitions were dismissed by the High Court and the
appellants came to this Court under a certificate from the
High Court.
The contentions raised by the appellants were that their
detention was illegal because the detention order was served
on them when they were in jail, that the orders of detention
were passed without the satisfaction of the authority
concerned regarding their necessity, the satisfaction was to
be that of the Governor and not of any Minister, that there
should have been fresh allocation of business by the
Governor under Art. 166(3) of the Constitution after the
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passing of the Defence of India Ordinance, Act and Rules,
that before the State Government could exercise the power
conferred by Rule 30, there had to be delegation by the
Central Government that the order of detention did not show
that s. 44 of Defence of India Act was kept in mind when the
order was made and that unless the order showed on the face
of it that the State Government thought that detention was
the only mode in which the purpose of the Act and Rules
could be carried out, the order was bad. Dismissing the
appeals.
Held: The orders of detention passed by the State
Government and their service on the appellants in jail were
perfectly valid and did not make the detention illegal. The
appellants were detained not as undertrials or as convicted
persons but as detenus and hence the cases of Rameshwar Shaw
and Makhan Singh Tarsikka did not apply in the present case.
Reading the detention order as a whole, it was clear that it
did Ray in substance that it was necessary to detain the
appellants with a view to preventing them from acting in a
manner prejudicial to the Defence of India, public safety
and maintenance of public order. There was no difference
between the words "so to do" in Rule 30 and the words "to
make the following order’ in the detention order.
As the detention order mentioned both the defence of India
and maintenance of public order, such an order could be made
on the satisfaction of a Minister who was incharge of both
the subjects in view of the Rules of Business promulgated by
the Governor.
It was not necessary that fresh allocation of business
should be made by the Governor under Art. 166(3) after the
passing of the Defence of India Ordinance, Act and Rules.
It Is enough if the allocation of the
448
subject to which the Defence of India Ordinance, Act and
Rules refer has been made with reference to the three lists
in the Seventh Schedule and if such allocation already
exists, it may be taken advantage of if and when laws are
passed.
Rule 30 of the Defence of India Rules lays down that the
power can be exercised by the Central Government or the
State Government and hence no further delegation is
necessary in favour of the State Government for the exercise
of power under Rule 30.
It is true that s. 44 of the Defence of India Act provides
that there should be as little interference with the
ordinary avocation of life as possible when orders are made
under the Act or the Rules, but that does not mean that a
detention order must show on the face of it that the State
Government had considered the various clauses of Rule 30(1)
and had come to the conclusion that the only way in which
the purpose of the Act and the Rules could be carried out
was by the use of Rule 30(1) (b). When the order says that
it is necessary to make an order of detention in order to
restrain the prejudicial activities mentioned therein, it
means that that was the only way which the State Government
thought was necessary to adopt in order to meet the
situation. It is for the detenu to show that the order had
gone beyond the needs of the situation and was therefore
contrary to s. 44.
Makhan Singh Tarsikka v. State of Punjab A.I.R. 1964 S.C:
381 Keshav Talpade v. King Emperor, [1944] F.C.R. 57,
Rameshwar Shaw v. District Magistrate, Burdwan, A.I.R. 1964
S.C. 334, Alakhon Singh Tarasikka v. State of Punjab, A.I.R.
1964 S.C. 1120, referred to
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 109-
111 of 1963.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated May 31, 1963, of
the Bombay High Court in Criminal Applications Nos. 217, 218
and 114 of 1963.
The appellants (in Cr. A. Nos. 109 & 110 of 1963) appeared
in person.
Janardan Sharma and Appellant also, for the Appellant (in
Cr. A. No. 111 of 1963).
N. S. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar, for respondents (in Cr. A.
Nos. 109-111 of 1963).
Purushottam Trikamdas and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondents
(in Cr. A. No. 110 of 1963).
449
January 29, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO J.-These three appeals on certificates granted by
the Bombay High Court raise common questions of law and will
be dealt with together. They arise out of three habeas
corpus petitions filed by the appellants in the High Court
under s. 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure challenging
their detention under r. 30 of the Defence of India Rules
(hereinafter referred to as the Rules). A large number of
constitutional questions were raised in the applications and
were decided by the High Court against the appellants.
These appeals came up for hearing in August 1963 along with
some other appeals from decisions of other High Courts, and
the constitutional questions were decided by this Court on
September 2, 1963, (see Makhan Singh Tarsikka v. State of
Punjab) (1). It was held therein that the applications
under s. 491 (1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure were
incompetent in so far as they sought to challenge the
validity of the detention on the ground that the Defence of
India Act and Rules framed thereunder suffer from the vice
that they contravened the fundamental rights guaranteed by
Arts. 14, 21, 22(4), (5) and (7). The other points raised
in the appeals were not considered at that time and it was
directed that the appeals should be set down for hearing
before a Constitution Bench to be dealt with in accordance
with law. Consequently, these appeals have been put up
before this Bench for disposal of the other points raised
therein.
A preliminary objection has however, been raised on behalf
of the State to the hearing of these appeals on the ground
that the orders under which the appellants were detained and
which are under consideration in these appeals had been
revoked by the State Government and fresh orders of
detention had been passed, and in consequence these appeals
had become infructuous. Reliance in this connection is
placed on the decision of the Federal Court in Keshav
Talpade v. King Emperor(2). In that case the detenu was
released while his appeal was pending before the Federal
Court. It was however urged on his behalf that even
(1) A.T.R. (1964) S.C. 381.
(2) 134-859 S.C.-29.
450
though he had been released and no order could thereafter be
made on the habeas corpus application, the court should
pronounce an opinion on the correctness of the High Court
’a’ judgment. The Federal Court refused to do so and dis-
missed the appeal on the ground that no order in the appeal
could be made after the release of the detenu. Generally
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speaking, no useful purpose would be served by the appeal
court deciding the appeal in a habeas corpus matter where
the detenu has been released before the appeal comes up for
final hearing. But the facts in the present case are
different. Here what has happened is that the earlier order
of detention which is the basis of the present appeals has
been revoked by the Government of Maharashtra on the ground
of a technical -defect and a fresh order of detention was
passed on the same date, and the appellants were immediately
rearrested after their release from jail under the fresh
order of detention. In the Federal Court case, however, it
appears that the detenu was released and there was no
question of a fresh order of detention being made on the
same day leading to his re-arrert. In the circumstances, it
is urged by the appellants that though technically the
appellants were released before the present appeals came up
for final hearing, in substance they are under detention
even now and the points of law raised by them. against the
earlier order of detention will apply equally to the fresh
order of detention. It is therefore urged that the Court
should decide the present appeals as that would settle the
law and help the detenus in case they make fresh application
under s. 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure against the
fresh order of detention. It is further urged that the
appellants intend after the emergency is over to sue for
damages for false imprisonment and the order of the Bombay
High Court would stand in their way ’in case such a suit is
brought, and therefore an authoritative pronouncement on the
questions of law raised should be made by this Court in the
present appeals, even though technically the order out of
which the present appeals have arise ’ in has been revoked.
We are of opinion that the circumstances of the present
cases are different from the circumstances in Keshav
Talpade’scase(1) and therefore it would be in the interests
of justice to decide
(1) [1944] F.C.R. 57.
451
the points raised in the present appeals. We may add that
there is nothing to preclude this Court from deciding the
appeals even though the order from which these appeals have
arisen has been revoked, though ordinarily this Court would
not do so. But as we have already indicated, it seems to us
just and fair ’in view of the fact that the appellants have
not been filially released and are still under detention
under a fresh order of detention under the Rules that the
points raised in these appeals should be decided. The
points are of general importance and are likely to arise in
many cases. We therefore over-rule the, preliminary
objection.
The facts in the three appeals are similar and we shall
therefore briefly refer to the facts in Appeal No. 1 1 0 for
the purposes of dealing with the points raised on behalf of
the appellants.
The appellants were first detained on November 7, 1962 by an
order made by the Commissioner of Police, Greater Bombay,
under the Preventive Detention Act, No. IV of 1950. The
matter was then reported to the Government. Before this,
however, the security of India had been threatened by the
Chinese invasion and an Emergency had been declared under
Art. 352 of the Constitution. Further on October 26, 1962,
the Defence of India Ordinance 1962 was passed, followed by
the Rules framed thereunder. When the matter came before
the Government, it decided that the order of November 7,
1962 made by the Commissioner of Police should be revoked
and ordered accordingly on November 10. On the same day,
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the Government decided to detain the appellants and passed
an order under r. 30 of the Rules. This order said that
with a view to preventing the appellants from acting in a
manner prejudicial to the defence of India, the public
safety and the maintenance of public order, it was necessary
to detain them,. and therefore in exercise of the powers
conferred upon the Government by r. 30 of the Rules, the
Government directed the detention of the appellants. This
order was served on the appellants in jail. It was
challenged by the appellants by filing habeas corpus
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution and under s. 491
of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The
452
High Court, as already indicated, dismissed the applications
but granted leave to the appellants to appeal to this Court.
The constitutional points raised, as already indicated, were
decided by this Court on September 2, 1963, and now we are
concerned with the other points raised on behalf of the
appellants.
The first contention that has been urged is that the de-
tention is illegal inasmuch as the detention order was
served on the appellants while they were in jail, and
reliance in this connection is placed on the judgments of
this Court in the cases of Rameshwar Shaw v. District
Magistrate, Burdwan(1), and Makhan Singh Tarsikka v. The
State of Punjab(2). In those cases, it was held by this
Court that where a person is detained in jail as an under-
trial prisoner no order of detention either under the
preventive Detention Act or under the Rules could be served
on him because one of the necessary ingredients which go to
make up the satisfaction of the detaining authority is
necessarily absent in such a case. It was pointed out in
Rameshwar Shaw’s case(1) that "before an authority can
legitimately come to the conclusion that the detention of
the person is necessary to prevent him from acting in a
prejudicial manner, the authority has to be satisfied that
if the person is not detained, he would act in a prejudicial
manner and that inevitably postulates freedom of action to
the said person at the relevant time. If a person is
already in jail custody, how can it rationally be postulated
that if he is not detained, he would act in a prejudicial
manner? At the point of time when an order of detention is
going to be served on a person, it must be patent that the
said person would act prejudicially if he is not detained
and that is a consideration which would be absent when the
authority is dealing with a person already in detention."
The same principle was reiterated in the case of Makhan
Singh Tarsikka(2). There is however a vital difference
between the facts of those two cases and the facts in the
present appeals. Those two cases were concerned with the
service of an order of detention under the Preventive
Detention Act or under the Rules on a person who was in jail
in one of two
(1) A. I. 1964 S.C. 334. (2) A. I. R. 1964 S.C. 1120
453
circumstances, namely-(1) where he was in jail as an under-
trial prisoner and the period for which he was in jail was
indeterminate, or (2) where he was in jail as a convicted
person and the period of his sentence had still to run for
some length of time. In those cases the service of the
order of detention under the Preventive Detention Act or
under the Rules in jail would not be legal for one of the
necessary ingredients about which the authority had to be
satisfied would be absent, namely, that it was necessary to
detain the person concerned which could only be postulated
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of a person who was not already in prison. In the present
cases, however, the appellants were not under detention
either as under-trial prisoners for an indeterminate time or
as convicted persons whose sentences were still to run for
some length of time. They were detained under the Pre-
ventive Detention Act by an order of November 7, 1962 which
had been reported to Government for approval and which order
could only remain in force for 12 days under s. 3 (3) of the
Preventive Detention Act unless in the meantime it had been
approved by the State Government. The State Government,
however, decided on November 10, 1962, to revoke the order
of the Commissioner of Police under the Preventive Detention
Act and to pass an order itself under the Rules. In those
circumstances, the principle of the two cases referred to
above would not in our opinion apply, for the detention of
the appellants depended upon the approval of the State
Government. The State Government, however, decided to
revoke the order of November 7, 1962 and instead decided to
pass an order under the Rules on the same day, namely
November 10, 1962. In these circumstances it would be in
our opinion an empty formality to allow the appellants to go
out of jail on the revocation of the order of November 7,
and to serve them with the order dated November 10, 1962 as
soon as they were out of jail. Where the detention is not
of the two kinds considered in the cases of Rameshwar
shaw(1) and Makhan Singh Tarsikka (2 ) and is either under
the Preventive Detention Act or under the Rules, and its
duration is dependent upon the will of the State Government,
we cannot see any reason for holding that if the State
Government decides
1964 S.C. 334. (2) A. I. R. 1964 S.C. I 120.
454
to revoke an earlier order of detention it cannot pass a
fresh order of detention the same day and serve it on the
detenu in jail, for the two- orders are really of the same
nature and are directed towards the same purpose. Further
the order of the Commissioner dated November 7, 1962 was
subject to the approval of the State Government without
which it could only be in force for 12 days. In these
circumstances the order passed by the State Government on
November 10 under the Rules when it had decided to revoke
the order of November 7, 1962, would in our opinion be
perfectly valid so far as the time of the making of the
order was concerned and its service in jail on the persons
who were detained not as under-trials or as convicted
persons but as detenus, could not be assailed on the ground
on which the order of detention was assailed in the cases of
Rameshwar Shaw(1) and Makhan Singh Tariskka(2). The
principal of those two cases cannot in our opinion be
applied to a case where a fresh order of detention is passed
after the cancellation or revocation of an earlier order of
detention. The contention therefore that the making of the
order of detention on November 10, 1962 or its service in
jail in these cases, makes the detention illegal, must be
negatived.
It is next urged that the detaining authority has failed to
arrive at that kind of satisfaction which the Rules require.
This contention is based on the words of the order dated
November 10, 1962. Rule 30 inter alia lays down that the
State Government, if it is satisfied with respect to any
particular person that with a view to preventing him from
acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of India and
civil defence, the public safety, the maintenance of public
order, India’s relations with foreign powers, the
maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part of India, the
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efficient conduct of military operations or the maintenance
of supplies and services essential to the life of the
community, it is necessary so to do, may make an order
directing that the person be detained. Now the order of
November 10, 1962 is in these terms:-
"No. S.B.III/DOR.1162-IV
Home Department (Special)
(1) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 334. (2) A.I.R. 1964 S.C.1120.
455
ORDER
"Whereas the Government of Maharashtra is
satisfied with respect to the person known as
Shri Shamrao Vishnu Parulekar of Bombay that
with a view to preventing him from acting in a
manner prejudicial to the defence of India,
the public safety and the maintenance of pub-
lic order, it is necessary to make the
following order:
"Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers
conferred upon it by rule 30 of the Defence of
India Rules, 1962, the Government of
Maharashtra does hereby direct that the said
Shri Shamrao Vishnu Parulekar be detained.
By order and in the name of the Governor of
Maharashtra Sd. Deputy Secretary to
Government of Maharashtra, (Home Department)
Sachivalaya, Bombay, this 10th day of
November, 1962".
The contention of the appellants is that the first part of
the order does not say that it is necessary to detain the
appellants. The words used in the first part of the order
are "it is necessary to make the following order" and then
follows the second part which says that the Government
directs that the said person be detained. We are of opinion
that when the first part says "it is necessary to make the
following order", it in effect says that "it is necessary so
to do which is what r. 30 of the Rules requires. Reading
the order as a whole, in substance it does say that it is
necessary to detain the person with a view to preventing him
from acting in a manner prejudicial to the defence of India,
etc. In r. 30 the words are "so to do" while in the
order they are "to make the following order". The two
expressions in our opinion mean the same thing and we cannot
456
accept the argument that the satisfaction necessary under r.
30 of the Rules was not arrived at in these cases by the
authority making the order.
Then it is urged that as the State Government is equivalant
to the Governor, it is the Governor who should. be satisfied
and not the Home Minister as is the case according to the
affidavit filed on behalf of the State Government. The
State Government in this connection relies on the Rules of
Business, copy of which has been made available to us.
These rules have been framed by the Governor under Art. 166
of the Constitution for the more convenient transaction of
the business of Government and for the allocation among
Ministers of the said business. In the affidavit on behalf
of the State Government reliance is placed on item 2 (b) of
the First Schedule to the Rules of Business dealing with
subjects allocated to the Home Department (Special), entry
(7) which provides for preventive detention for reasons
connected with the security of a State, the maintenance of
public order or the maintenance of supplies and services
essential to the community. During the hearing, our
attention was drawn to item (1) of the First Schedule to the
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Rules of Business dealing with subjects allotted to General
Administration Department, entry (44), which provides for
preventive detention for reasons connected with defence,
foreign affairs or the security of India. It is obvious
from the Rules of Business that preventive detention has
been divided into two parts and allocated to two different
departments. Where preventive detention is for reasons
connected with the security of a State, the maintenance of
public order or the maintenance of supplies and services
essential to the community, it can be dealt with by the
Minister in-charge of item 2 (b) dealing with subjects
allocated to the Home Department (Special); but where the
preventive detention is for reasons connected with defence,
foreign affairs or the security of India, it can be dealt
with by the Minister in-charge of item 1 relating to
subjects allotted to the General Administration Department.
The detention order in the present cases states that it was
made with a view to preventing the appellants from acting in
a manner prejudicial to the defence of India, the public
457
safety and the maintenance of public order. As the deten-
tion order mentions both the defence of India and the
maintenance of public order, such an order could only be
made by a Minister who was in-charge both of item 1 relating
to subjects allotted to the General Administration Depart-
ment and of item 2(b) relating to subjects allotted to Home
Department (Special). In the affidavit on behalf of the
State the order was sought to be justified on the -round
that it was made by the Home Minister in-charge of item 2
(b) relating to subjects allocated to the Home Department
(Special). We are of opinion that as the detention order
was for reasons connected with the defence of India also, it
could not be dealt with under item 2 (b), entry (7) only
which item deals with subjects allocated to the Home De-
partment (Special) and had to be dealt by a Minister who was
in-charge of both item 1 relating to subjects allotted to
the General Administration Department and item 2 (b)
relating to subjects allotted to Home Department (Special).
In the original affidavit filed on behalf of the State it
was however not clear whether the Minister who dealt with
these orders was also in-charge of the subjects allotted to
the General Administration Department but it was stated at
the bar that the Minister who dealt with the matter and
passed the order on the basis of which the appellants were
detained was in-charge not only of item 2 (b) relating to
subjects allocated to the Home Department (Special.) but was
also in-charge of item 1 relating to subjects allotted to
the General Administration Department. We therefore called
upon the State Government to file an affidavit to that
effect and an affidavit was filed on December 21, 1963.
That affidavit says that the order of November 10, 1962 was
passed by the Chief Minister who was at the relevant time
in-charge both of the General Administration Department as
well as the Home Department (Special). We have already
referred to the terms of the order of detention. That order
refers to three reasons as the basis for the order, namely,
(i) the defence of India, (ii) the public safety, and (iii)
the maintenance of public order. Now preventive detention
connected with the defence of India could only be ordered
under the Rules of Business by the Minister who was in-
charge of the General Administration Department.
458
while preventive detention for reasons connected with the
maintenance of public order could only be ordered by the
Minister in-charge of subjects allocated to the Home Depart-
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ment (Special). The order therefore in the present case
could only be made by a Minister who was in-charge both of
subjects allotted to the General Administration Department
and subjects allotted to the Home Department (Special). In
view of the affidavit now filed it appears that the Chief
Minister was in-charge of both the departments and in the
circumstances he could pass the order under challenge. The
contention under this head must therefore fail.
The next argument is that there is no order of allocation
made by the Governor under Art. 166 of the Constitution
after the passing of the Defence of India Ordinance and the
Rules framed thereunder and therefore the allocation of
business by the, Rules of Business which were enforced by an
order of the Governor dated May 1, 1960 would not be of any
effect in allocating the subject of preventive detention
arising under the Defence of India Ordinance Act and the
Rules to the Minister and the Governor should have passed
the order of detention himself. We are of opinion that
there is no force in this contention. Allocation of busi-
ness under Art. 166 (2) of the Constitution is not made with
reference to particular laws which may be in force at the
time the allocation is made; it is made with reference to
the three lists of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution,
for the executive power of the Centre and the State together
extends to matters with respect to which Parliament and the
Legislature of a State may make laws. Therefore. when
allocation of business is made it is made with reference to
the three Lists in the Seventh Schedule and thus the
allocation in the Rules of Business provides for all con-
tingencies which may arise for the exercise of the executive
power. Such allocation may be made even in advance of
legislation made by Parliament to be available when ever
Parliament makes legislation conferring power on a State
Government with respect to matters in List I of the Seventh
Schedule. It was therefore in our opinion not necessary
that there should have been an allocation made by the
Governor under Art. 166 (3) of the power to detain under
459
the Defence of India Ordinance, Act and Rules after they
were passed; it will be enough if the allocation of the sub-
ject to which the Defence of India Ordinance, Act and Rules
refer has been made with reference to the three Lists in the
Seventh Schedule and if such allocation already exists, it
may be taken advantage of if and when laws are passed.
Preventive detention is provided for in List 1, item 9, for
reasons connected with defence, foreign affairs and the
security of India, and in item 3 of List III for reasons
connected with the security of a State, the maintenance of
public order, or the maintenance of supplies and services
essential to the community. The allocation of business made
under Art. 166 is in pursuance of these entries in the three
Lists in the Seventh Schedule and would be available to be
used whenever any law relating to these entries is made and
power is conferred on the State Government to act under that
law. The contention of the appellants that fresh allocation
should have been made under Art. 166 (3) by the Governor
after the passing of the Defence of India Ordinance, Act and
Rules must therefore fail.
Lastly reliance is placed on ss. 40 and 44 of the Defence of
India Act. Section 40 gives power to the Central Government
to delegate its powers under the Act or the Rules to any
officer or authority subordinate to the Central Government
or to any State Government or any officer or authority
subordinate to such Government or to any other authority,
and the argument is that before the State Government can
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exercise the power conferred by r. 30, there has to be a
delegation by the Central Government. This argument in our
opinion is misconceived. It is true that s. 40 gives
authority to the Central Government to delegate its powers
under the Act or the Rules to the State Government and
others. But no delegation under that section is required
for the exercise of the power under r. 30 by the State
Government, for r. 30 itself lays down that the power there-
in can be exercised by the Central Government or the State
Government. No further delegation therefore was necessary
in favour of the State Government in so far as the exercise
of power under r. 30 is concerned.
460
Next it is urged that the order of detention does not show
that s. 44 was kept in mind when it was made. Section 44
lays down that "any authority or person acting in pursuance
of this Act shall interfere with the ordinary avocations of
life and the enjoyment of property as little as may be
consonant with the purpose of ensuring the public safety and
interest and the defence of India and civil defence". It is
urged that an order of detention necessarily interferes
completely with the ordinary avocation of life of the person
detained and therefore before such an order could be made,
s. 44 should be borne in mind. Therefore the order of
detention is to be made when it is the only way of carrying
out the purposes of the Act, for s. 44 provides that there
should be as little interference with the ordinary
avocations of life as possible under the Act. The argument
further is that r. 30 (1) provides as many as eight clauses
which provide for the regulation of conduct of an individual
and cl. (b) relating to detention, which amounts to complete
interference with the avocation of life of the detenu could
only be resorted to in view of s. 44 when it is shown that
no other way of regulating the conduct of the person de-
tained as provided in the other clauses of r. 30 (1) would
meet the needs of the situation. So it is urged that unless
the order shows on the face of it that the State Government
thought that the detention was the only mode in which the
purposes of the Act and the Rules could be carried out, the
order would be bad in view of s. 44 of the Act. We are of
opinion that there is no force in this contention. It is
true that s. 44 provides that there should be as little
interference with the ordinary avocations of life as
possible when orders are made under the Act or the Rules;
but that does not mean that a detention order must show on
the face of it that the State Government had considered the
various clauses of r. 30 (1) and had come to the conclusion
that the only way in which the purposes of the Act and the
Rules could be carried out was by the use of cl. (b) of r.
30 (1). In our opinion when the order says that it is
necessary to make an order of detention in order to restrain
the prejudicial activities mentioned therein it means that
that was the only way which the State Government thought was
necessary to adopt in order to meet the situation. It will
then
461
be for the detenu to show that the order had gone beyond the
needs of the situation and was therefore contrary to s. 44.
No such thing has been shown in the present cases and we are
satisfied that the orders in question cannot be said to go
beyond the needs of the situation, even assuming that s. 44
is mandatory as urged on behalf of the appellants and not
merely directory as urged on behalf of the State.
The appeals therefore fail and are hereby dismissed.
Appeals dismissed
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