Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
EBRAHIM VAZIR MAVAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY AND OTHERS.(With Connected Appeals)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/02/1954
BENCH:
HASAN, GHULAM
BENCH:
HASAN, GHULAM
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1954 AIR 229 1954 SCR 933
CITATOR INFO :
R 1956 SC 559 (4)
F 1958 SC 731 (21)
R 1959 SC 725 (11)
F 1959 SC1315 (4,6)
RF 1962 SC1371 (41)
ACT:
Constitution of India, arts. 13(1), 19(1) (e)-Influx from
Pakistan (Control) Act, 1949 (Act XXIII of 1949) s. 7
Whether ultra vires the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
Held, (Per MEHR CHAND MAHAJAN 0. J., MUKEMRJFA, ViviAN BosE
and GHULAM HASAN JJ. ; S. R. DAs J. dissenting) that s. 7 of
the Influx from Pakistan (Control) Act, 1949 is void under
art. 13(1) in so far as it conflicts with the fundamental
eight of a citizen of India under art.19(1) (a) of the
Constitution and the order of physical removal of the
citizen from in Is therefore liable to beset aside.
Per DAB J.-In view of the circumstances the provisions of s.
7 of the Act were reasonable restrictions within the meaning
of el. 5 of art. 19 of the constitution imposed in the
interests of the general public upon the exercise by Indian
citizen coming from Pakistan without a permit of, the rights
conferred by art. 19(1)(d) and (e) of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 65
and 66 of 1952, 5 and 19 of 1953 and Petitions Nos. 170 of
1952, 19 and 57 of 1953.
Appeals from Orders, dated the 9th April, 1952, of the High
Court of Judicature at Bombay in Criminal Applications Nos.
707 and 708 of 1951, from the Judgment and Order, dated the
15th December, 1952, of the High Court of Judicature at
Bombay in Criminal Application No. 1310 of 1952; from the
Judgment and Order, dated the 29th November, 1952, of the
Judicial Commissioners Court Vindhya Pradesh, Rewa, in
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Criminal Miscellaneous No. 49 of 1952; and Petitions under
article 32 of the Constitution of India.
J.B. Dadachanji and Z. F. Bootwala for the appellants in
Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952 and 5 of 1953.
C.K. Daphtary Solicitor-General for India(G. N. Joshi, with
him) for respondents Nos. I and 2 in
121
934
Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952 and respondent No. 1
in Criminal Appeal No. 5 of 1953.
K.B.Asthana, for the appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 19 of
1953.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, (Porus A. Mehta
and G. N. J08hi, with him) for the respondent in Criminal
Appeal No. 19 of 1953.
S. P. Sinha (Sri Narain Andley, with him) for the
petitioners in petition No. 170 of 1952.
Gopalji Mehrotra for respondent No. I in petition No. 170 of
1952.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (Porus A. Mehta,
with him) for respondent No. 3 in petition No. 170 of 1952.
S. P. Sinha (S. N. Mukherji, with him) for petitioner in
petition No. 19 of 1953.
Gopalji Mehrotra for respondent No. I in petition No. 19 of
1953.
G. N. Joshi for respondent No. 3 in petition No. 19 of 1953.
H.J. Umrigar, amicus curiae, for the petitioner in petition
No. 57 of 1953.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (G. N.
J08hi, with him) for the respondents in petition No. 57 of
1953.
1954. February 15. The Judgment of Mahajan C.J.,
Mukherjea, Vivian Bose and Ghulam Hassan JJ. was delivered
by Ghulam Hasan J. Das J delivered a seperate judgment.
Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952.
GHULAM HASAN J.-This batch of appeals raises a common
question of the constitutional validity of section 7 of the
Influx from Pakistan (Control) Act (XXIII of 1949). Section
3 of the same Act is also assailed on behalf of some of the
appellants but for the purpose of deciding these appeals it
will not be necessary to deal with the latter question.
Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952, which are directed
against the judgment and order of the High Court of
Judicature at, Bombay in two petitions under article 226 of
the Constitution praying for the issue of
935
a writ of mandamus requiring the respondent not to remove
them from India on the ground that the impugned section 7 is
void may be treated as the leading case which will govern
the other appeals.
The facts of each of these appeals are slightly different
but they proceed upon the common assertion that the
appellants are citizens of the Indian Republic. This fact
was assumed in the leading case but it is not, disputed that
the status of the appellants as Indian citizens in all the
cases has not been investigated and determined by any of the
courts below against whose decision the appeals have been
brought. Having heard the learned counsel appearing in
support of the appeals and the learned Solicitor-General we
have reached the conclusion that section 7 is void in so far
as it infringes the right of a citizen of India under
article 19(1) (e) of the Constitution.
The Act in question received the assent of the Governor-
General on April 22, 1949, and was published in the Gazette
of India Extraordinary on April 23. It is a short Act
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containing nine sections. It is intituled an Act to "
control the admission into, and regulate the movements in,
India of persons from Pakistan ". The preamble opens with
the words "Whereas it is expedient to control the admission
into, and regulate the movements in, India of persons from
Pakistan. "
Section 2 (b) defines " officer of Government " as any
officer of the Central Government and 2 (c) defines "permit"
as a "Permit issued or renewed or the period whereof has
been extended in accordance with the rules made under this
Act. " Section 3 says II No person shall enter India from
any place in Pakistan, whether directly or indirectly,
unless
(a) he is in possession of a permit or
(b) being a person not domiciled in India or Pakistan, he
is in possession of a valid passport as required by the
Indian Passport Act, 1920 (XXXIV of 1920), or
(c) he is exempted from the requirement of bein in
possession of a permit by or in accordance with the rules
made under this Act."
936
Section 4 empowers the Central Government, by notification
in the Official Gazette, to make rules:
(a) prescribing the authorities by which and the conditions
subject to which permits may be issued or renewed or the
period thereof extended, the condition to be satisfied by
the applicants for such permits and the forms and classes of
such permits;
(b) regulating the movements in India of any person who is
in possession of a permit;
(c) providing for the exemption, either absolutely or on
conditions, of any person or class of persons from the
requirement of being in possession of a permit or from the
operation of any rule made under the section ; and
(d).............................................................
section 5 is the penal section which says
" (a) Whoever enters India in contravention ’ of the
provisions of section 3, or having entered India contravenes
the provisions of any rule made under section 4, or commits
a breach of any of the conditions of his permit, shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
one year, or with fine which may extend to one thousand
rupees, or with both. "
Section 6 confers power of arrest upon an,officer of
Government. Section 7 is as follows:-
" Without prejudice to the provisions contained in section
5, the Central Government may, by general or special order,
direct the removal from India of any person who has
committed, or against whom a reason-, able SUSPICION exists
that he has committed, an offence under this Act, and
thereupon any officer of Government shall have all
reasonable powers necessary to enforce such direction. "
Section 8 provides for protection to persons acting in good
faith and section 9 repeals the Influx from, Pakistan
(Control) Ordinance, XXXXIV of 1948.
The use of the word ’person’ in section 7, read with the
title and preamble of the Act leaves no doubt that. the Act
applies to citizens and non-citizens alike. So
937
far as a non-citizen is concerned, it is not contended
before us3 that the executive Government has no authority to
direct his removal from India and the only contention raised
before us is whether the Central Government has any power to
direct the removal of an Indian citizen on either of the
grounds mentioned in section 7. Section 7, it is contended,
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confers upon the Central Government unfettered power to
direct the removal from India not only of a person who has
committed an offence punishable under section 5 of the Act
but also one against whom a reasonable suspicion exists that
he has committed such an offence. That an Indian citizen
visiting Pakistan for any purpose whatsoever and returning
to India may be required to produce D, permit or passport as
the case may be before he can be allowed to enter the
country, may well be. regarded as a proper restriction upon
entry but to say that if he enters the country without a
permit or on an invalid permit, or commits a breach of any
of the conditions of the permit he may, on conviction for
such offence, be ordered to be removed from the country is
tantamount to taking away his fundamental right guaranteed
under article 19(1) (e), " to reside and settle in any part
of the territory of India. " The order is sought to be
supported by the learned- Solicitor-General on the ground
that it falls within exception (5) of article 19. The
proposition that the order imposes in the interest of the
general public a reasonable restriction on the exercise of
the. right conferred upon an Indian citizen to reside and
settle in any part of the territory of India is hardly
statable. It is possible to conceive of an Indian citizen
being guilty of serious prejudicial Acts such as espionage
and disloyalty to his country in which case he may render
himself liable to the gravest penalty which the Government
may think fit by law to impose upon him but it would be
repugnant to all notions of democracy and opposed to the
fundamental rights guaranteed in Part III of the
Constitution to order his expulsion from the country, for to
hold otherwise would be tantamount to destroying the right
of citizenship conferred by Part II of the, Constitution.
This
938
result is permissible only by recourse to article 11 of the
Constitution. Again it will be noticed that section 7
imposes the penalty of removal not only upon a conviction
under section 5 but goes further and brings about the same
result even where there is a reasonable suspicion
entertained by the Central Government that such an offence
has been committed. The question whether an offence has
been committed is left entirely to the subjective
determination of the Government. The inference of a
reasonable suspicion rests upon the arbitrary and
unrestrained discretion of the Government, and before a
citizen is condemned, all that the Government has to do is
to issue an order that a reasonable suspicion exists in
their mind that an offence under section 5 has been
committed. The section does not provide for the issue of a
notice to the person concerned to show cause against the
order nor is he afforded any opportunity to clear his
conduct of the suspicion entertained against him. This is
nothing short of a travesty of the right of citizenship.
The learned Solicitor-General argued that the provision must
be viewed in the back-ground of the events which took place
at the time of the partition and the unsatisfactory
relations existing between India and Pakistan. up to the
present day. Even so the penalty imposed upon a citizen by
his own Government merely upon a breach of the permit
Regulations, however serious it may be and, more, upon a
reasonable suspicion only by the executive authority of his
having violated the conditions of the permit is utterly
disproportionate th the gravity of the offence and is in our
opinion indefensible. A law which subjects a citizen to the
extreme penalty of a virtual forfeiture of his citizenship
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upon conviction for a mere breach of the permit Regulations
or upon a reasonable suspicion of having committed such a
breach can hardly be justified upon the ground that it
imposes a reasonable restriction upon the fundamental right
to reside and settle in the country in the interest of the
public. The Act purports to control admission into and
regulate the movements in India of persons entering from
Pakistan but section 7 oversteps the limits of control
939
and regulation when it provides for removal of a citizen
from his own country. To use the language of this court in
Chintaman Rao v. The State of Madhya Pradesh and Ram Krishna
v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1), " The effect of the
provisions of the Act, however, has no reasonable relation
to the subject in view but is so drastic in scope that it
goes much in excess of that object.
It may be said that the sentry on guard at any of the check-
posts on the frontier between the two countries can prevent
not only unauthorised entry of a citizen by force but can
also throw him out if the person has managed to enter
surreptitiously. Exactly what the sentrys’ duties are was
not argued before us. They would naturally vary according
to the circumstances and the orders which be receives but
ordinarily we apprehend that the duty of a sentry at the
border would be to prevent as far as lay in his power un-
authorised entry into India. If any person claims to have
the right to enter, the sentry’s duty would be to hand him
over to the Commander of the Guard and normally it would be
the duty of that Commander to hand him over to the proper
authority empowered to determine the right which he claims.
In the case of an unauthorised entry, ordinarily the duty of
the sentry is to arrest a man and hand him over to the
proper authority for punishment and in extreme cases he may
have the right to shoot the person who does not halt on his
command and explain his presence at the outpost. In normal
circumstances we doubt if the sentry would have the right to
forcibly expel a man who crosses the border.
The learned Chief Justice (Chagla C. J.) took the view that
section 7 is consequential to section 3 and held that if
section 3 controlling admission by means of a permit is
valid, section 7 must be held to be equally valid. This
argument is fallacious. In the first place, section 7 is by
no means wholly consequential to section 3. The first part
no doubt renders the person concerned liable to removal upon
conviction under section 5 but further empowers. the Central
Government
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 759.
940
to pass the same order independently of these provisions
even where there is no conviction and a reasonable suspicion
exists that an offence has been committed. Assuming,
however, that section 7 is consequential to section 3 it
gives no opportunity to the aggrieved person to show cause
against his removal. There is no forum provided to which
the aggrieved party could have recourse in order to vindi-
cate his character or meet the grounds upon which it is
based. Neither the Act nor the rules framed thereunder.
indicate what procedure is to be followed by Government in
arriving at the conclusion that a breach of section 3 or of
the rules under section 4 has taken place,
In Shabbir Hussain v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and
Another(1) the Allahabad High Court held that a law allowing
the removal from a territory of India of any citizen is in
contravention of article 19 (1) (d) and(e) of the
Constitution and is void in view of article 13(1). The order
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which was challenged before them was one passed under
section 7 and was set aside.
In Criminal Writ No. 147 of 1951 decided on December 11,
1951, a Bench of the Punjab High Court (Weston C. J. and
Harnam Singh J.) while setting aside the order under section
7 against a citizen of India who had entered India without a
permit and was first convicted and then ordered to be
externed observed:
"The powers of removal or banishment given by section 7 of
the Influx from Pakistan (Control) Act, 1949, connot be
invoked against citizens of India. No doubt, she committed
an offence under section 3 of that Act which applied to all
persons, but that cannot justify her removal even though her
entry may have been contrary to the provisions of the Act."
We are not prepared to accede to the contention urged by the
Solicitor-General that a citizen of India who returns to the
country without a permit or without a valid permit commits
such a grave offence as to justify his expulsion from the
country. The object of the Act is, not to deport Indian
nationals
(1) A.I.R. 1952 All. 257.
941
committing a breach of the permit or passport Regulations
but merely to control admission into and regulate movements
in India of persons from Pakistan and therefore there is no
substance in the argument that section 7 was intended to
achieve the objective of expelling Indian citizens, by and
large, if they brought themselves within the mischief of
section 3.
It was faintly contended that the order of physical, removal
from India, in addition to the punishment imposed under
section 5 of the Act, amounted to what may be called "
double jeopardy " and is in conflict with article 20 (2) of
the Constitution. The short answer to this contention is
that there is no second prosecution for the same offence and
therefore no question of double jeopardy arises. See
Maqbool Hussain v. The State of Bombay etc.(1).
As a result of the foregoing discussion we declare section 7
to be void under article 13(1) in so far as it conflicts
with the fundamental right of a citizen of India under
article 19(1) (e) of the Constitution and set it aside. The
order will, however, operate only upon proof of the fact
that the appellants are citizens of India. The case will,
therefore, go back to the High Court for a finding upon this
question. It will be open to the High Court to determine
this question itself or refer it to the court of District
Judge for a finding. Parties will be given full opportunity
to file affidavits or give other evidence which they may
wish to produce.
Criminal Appeal No. 5 of 1953.
GHULAM HASAN J.-The appellant in this case is a resident of
Godhra, District Panchmahals, in the State of Bombay. He
went to Pakistan in Marc 1948, and returned to India on May
30, 1949, after obtaining a permit for permanent return to
India from the-High Commissioner for India. In January,
1950, he was prosecuted under section 5 of Act XXIII of 1949
for having obtained a permit which was not in accordance
with the provisions of the Act. The prosecution was
withdrawn after 21 years. Subsequently on December 5, 1952,
he was served with a notice
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 730.
122
942
ordering him to leave India for Pakistan within 10 days else
he would be bodily removed to the Indo-Pakistan border.
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Thereupon the appellant filed a petition under article 226
contending that section 7 was contrary to his fundamental
rights under articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution and that
the same provided no opportunity to the appellant to put his
case before the Government officers, nor was any such
opportunity afforded to him. He asserted that he was a
citizen of India.The application was summarily dismissed
on December 15, 1952, whereupon leave to appeal to this
court was granted under article 132(1) of the
constitutional. As this appeal also raises the question of
the constitutional validity of section 7, it will be
governed by the decision which we have arrived at in appeals
Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952.
Criminal Appeal No. 19 of 1953.
GHULAM HASAN J.-The appellant, Haji Faqir Ahmad, is a
resident of Rewa in Vindhya Pradesh and alleges that he is a
citizen of India. He was prosecuted under section 5 of Act
XXIII of 1949 on the ground that he entered India from
Pakistan without a permit and convicted and sentenced.
Thereafter he was by an order passed under section 7 bodily
removed out of India. His father applied under article 226
of the Constitution and section 491 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure for setting aside the order. The learned Judicial
Commissioner dismissed the application summarily holding
that section 7 was not ultra Vires the Constitution.
Mr. Asthana, who appeared on behalf of the appellant, raised
a further question that the order was void under article 14
inasmuch as it discriminated against members of a particular
community coming from Pakistan. There is no warrant for
this contention. The Act applies to citizens as well as
non-citizens. It applies to all communities irrespective of
caste or creed. It is contended that the Act must be held
to be discriminatory not only by virtue of its provisions
but because of the discriminatory manner in which those
provisions have been applied. This argument is
943
to be mentioned only to be rejected, for there is no
material whatsoever placed before us to justify the
statement. The case in Yick W o v. Peter Hopkins (1) is
wholly inapplicable to the facts of the present case. We
accordingly reject the contention. This case will also be
governed by the decision in Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952.
Petition No. 170 of 1952.
AND
Petition No. 19 of 1953.
GHULAM HASAN J.-These petitions under article 32 of the
Constitution raise the constitutional validity of section 7
of the Influx from Pakistan (Control) Act, XXIII of 1949.
Mr. S. P. Sinha, who appears for the petitioners, withdraws
these petitions and undertakes to file two petitions under
article 226 of the Constitution within a fortnight from this
day before the High Court. When these have been filed, they
will automatically be governed by the decision given in Ap-
peals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1652. No other order is called for.
The petitions are allowed to be withdrawn.
Petition No. 57 of 1953.
GHULAM HASAN J.-This a petition under article 32 of the
Constitution by Inamullah Khan alias Qamar Jamali for the
issue of a writ in the nature of habeas corpus directing
that the petitioner, who is illegally arrested and detained
be brought before the court and set at liberty and for the
issue of a writ of certiorari calling for the said order for
arrest and detention and the relevant papers and for setting
them aside as being void and in-operative. It is further
prayed that the State of Bhopal and the Superintendent of
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Central Jail,, Bhopal, where he was being detained be
restrained from putting into effect the said order. The
petition was made on March 11, 1953. It is stated that the
petitioner is a citizen of India having been born in Bhopal
in 1922. He was employed in Bhopal for 5 years immediately
preceding
(1) 118 U.S. 356; 30 Law. Ed. 220.
944
the commencement of the Constitution of India. He also
edited a weekly paper "Tarjuman" from Bhopal. His name
appears as. a voter in the voters" list of the Bhopal
Legislative Assembly (1951-52), as-well as in the electoral
roll of the Municipal Board, Bhopal. The was arrested on
November 24, 1952 by the Sub-Inspector of Police at
lbrahimpura, Bhopal, under section 7 of the Influx from
Pakistan (Control) Act XXIII of Pakistan. At the time of
the arrest the petitioner was being tried under section 448,
Indian Penal Code, in the court of 1st Class Magistrate,
Bhopal, and was on bail. The petitioner alleges that he
never went to Pakistan, nor entered India without a permit
and was never tried and convicted under the Influx from
Pakistan (Control) Act of 1949. He challenges the order
under section 7 as being void under article 19(d) and (e)
and articles 21 and 22.
The fact that the petitioner is a resident of Bhopal and was
employed in the State is not denied on behalf of the State.
The affidavit on behalf of the State mentions that the
petitioner had gone to Pakistan in may, 1952, and returned
in August, 1952, without a permit. He was arrested on
November 24, 1952, without any prior notice but was told at
the time of the arrest that he was to be removed out of
India. The petitioner filed an application through his
uncle before the Judicial Commissioner, Bhopal, under
article 226 on November 25, 1952, challenging. the order.
The Judicial Commissioner granted an interim stay order on
the same day. The petition was dismissed on February 23,
1953, and the interim order was vacated on March 10, 1953.
It is admitted that an oral request was made to the Judicial
Commissioner for leave to appeal to this court and it was
prayed that pending the grant of leave the order of stay
should continue. Leave was refused on the same day and the
stay order was vacated.
There is an affidavit by the Chief Secretary of the State
admitting that the petitioner on, the same day banded an
application to the Superintendent of Jail
945
addressed to this court. The Superintendent of Jail sent it
to the Chief Secretary on March 13, 1953. It was put up
before him on the 14th when he forwarded it to the Law
Department for opinion on March 16. The petition was
returned to him on the 19th with the remark that it should
be forwarded to the Supreme Court. It was sent to this’
court on ;March 22. On the same day a telephonic
communication was sent, by the Registrar of this court
through the States Ministry directing that the petitioner
should be detained if he was still in India, but it appears
that the petitioner had been handed over to the Rajas than
Police at Kotah on March 12, 1953, and a reply was received
by the Inspector-General of Police, Jaipur, that the
petitioner had crossed the border on March 18, 1953. The
Superintendent of Jail has also filed an affidavit
supporting the Chief Secretarpand has admitted that it was
wrong on his part not to have sent the, petition submitted
by the prisoner immediately to this court and that he in
good faith believed that as the order for stay had been
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vacated by the Judicial Commissioner, he should first send
it to the Registrar of that court. It is obvious that the
Superintendent was grossly in error and his action in not
submitting the petition resulted in the unlawful removal of
the petitioner out of the country. He, has made amends by
tendering an unqualified apology and nothing further need be
said about it. In Ebrahim Wazir Mavat v. The State of
Bombay and Others and Noor Mohammad Ali Mohammad v. The
State of Bombay and Others (Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and 66
of 1952) in which we have just delivered judgment we have
held that section 7 of the Act is void as against a citizen
of India being., an encroachment on his fundamental right
under article 19 (1) (e) of the Constitution. Following
that decision we hold that the order of removal of the
petitioner is liable to be set aside.
Mr. Umrigar, who appeared for the petitioner, pointed out
that the Judicial Commissioner has already held that the
petitioner is a citizen of India and that it will serve no
useful purpose by remanding
946
the case to him for an inquiry into the question. The
Solicitor-General on behalf of the Union of India has read
to us the order of the Judicial Commissioner and admits that
this is so. It is, therefore, not necessary to adopt the
course that we have taken in the aforesaid a peals involving
the validity of section 7. We accordingly hold that the
order passed against the petitioner is void and set it
aside.
Mr. Umrigar requests that the order should be communicated
to the petitioner through the High Commissioner for India in
Karachi to whom the petitioner sent a representation praying
that he should be allowed to return to India. This request
is granted.
Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952, No, 5 of 1953 and
No. 19 of 1953 and Petitions No. 170 of 1952, No. 19 of 1953
and No. 57 of 1953.
DAs J.-I regret I am unable to agree with the judgment just
delivered.
Four Criminal Appeals namely, Criminal Appeals Nos. 65 and
66 of 1952, No. 5 of 1953 and No. 19 of 1953 and three
Criminal Miscellaneous Petitions, namely Petition No. 170 of
1952, No. 19 of 1953 and No. 57 of 1953, were posted for
hearing and were heard by us one after another. In each one
of those appeals and petitions the appellants or the
petitioners, as the case may be, challenged the
constitutional validity of the Influx from Pakistan
(Control) Act,1949 (Act XXIII of 1949).
Learned advocate appearing in support of petitions No. 170
of 1952 and No. 19 of 1953 asked for leave to withdraw them
with liberty to file fresh’ petitions in the High Court.
Such leave having been given nothing further need be said
about those two petitions.
The facts of each of the remaining appeals and the remaining
petition have been set out in the judgment just delivered,,
and need not be repeated. Suffice it to say that the
appellants in Appeals Nos. 65 and 66 of 1952 first came to
India from Pakistan on temporary permits issued by the High
Commissioner for India in Pakistan but stayed on after the
expiry of the
947
period and were convicted under section 5 of the Act. Later
on they returned’ to Pakistan on a temporary permit issued
by the High Commissioner for Pakistan in India and
eventually came back to India on a permanent permit issued
by the High Commissioner for India in Pakistan. That
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permanent permit was cancelled on the. allegation that it
had been obtained on the strength of a "no objection"
certificate which had been obtained by them by the
suppression of material facts, namely, that they had
previously come. to India on a temporary permit. The
appellant in Appeal No. 5 of 1953 came to India from
Pakistan on a permanent permit which was subsequently can-
celled on the allegation that it had been obtained by fraud.
The appellant in Appeal No. 19 of 1953 came to India from
Pakistan without any permit and was prosecuted and convicted
under section 5 of the Act and later on arrested and sent
back to Pakistan. The petitioner in Petition No. 57 came to
India without any permit at all. On this petitioner as well
as on the appellants orders had been made under section 7 of
the impugned Act to the effect that unless they left India
within the time specified in the respective orders they
would be bodily removed from India. These orders were made
on the ground that they had entered India in violation of
section 3 of the Act and/ or the rules and order made
thereunder. Each of these persons claimed that they were
citizens of India and complained that the orders made
against them violated their fundamental rights under Chapter
III of the Constitution of India.
It will be recalled that on the 15th August, 1947, there was
a partition of India and two Dominions were formed under the
Indian, Independence Act, 1947. A grave emergency arose on
the partition of India resulting in mass-migration of
population from one Dominion to the other accompanied by
riots, arson, murder, rape and loot. Intense bitterness and
hatred were generated in the minds of the people of one
Dominion against those of the other Dominion. Even in one
Dominion there was suspicion in the
948
minds of the members of one community against those of the
other. In those circumstances the uncontrolled and
indiscriminate entry of persons, Hindu or Muslim, from
Pakistan into India was naturally regarded as fraught with
the possibility of espionage and sabotage the prevention of
which was essential for the security of the Dominion of
India. Further an uncontrolled entry of large numbers of
people was calculated to place and in fact placed a
tremendous strain on the economy of India and on the law and
order situation in the country. It was in order to prevent
such result that it was necessary to exercise some control
over such influx of persons from Pakistan into India.
Accordingly, the Influx from West Pakistan (Control)
Ordinance (XVII of 1949) was promulgated on the 19th July
1948, by the Governor-General in exercise of the powers
conferred on him by section 42 of the Government of India
Act, 1935. The preamble to that Ordinance recited that an
emergency had arisen which made it necessary to control the
admission into and regulate the movements in India of
persons from Pakistan. Thereafter the Influx from Pakistan
(Control) Ordinance (XXXIV of 1948) was issued on the 10th
November, 1948, replacing the earlier Ordinance. This
Ordinance applied to persons entering into India from both
West Pakistan and East Pakistan. It substantially
reproduced all the sections of the previous Ordinance-.
Finally, on the 22nd April, 1949, the Influx from Pakistan
(Control) Act (XXIII of 1949) replaced the second Ordinance.
Sections 3 and 7 of this Act substantially reproduced the
provisions of sections 3 and 7 of the Ordinance. The Permit
System Rules of 1948 were replaced on the 20th May, 1949, by
the Permit System Rules of 1949. This Act, however, was
repealed on the 15th October, 1952, by Act LXVI of 1952.
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Section 3 of this repealing Act, however, expressly
preserved the application of section 6 of the General
Clauses Act, 1897. Although the Influx from Pakistan
(Control) Act, 1949 has been repealed and the number of
persons who, like the appellants and the petitioners before
us. are affected by that Act is small, nevertheless the
matter has to
949
be scrutinised closely, for our decision may conceivably
affect the passport regulations which have replaced the
permit system.
The contention advanced in these appeals and the petition is
that sections 3 and 7 of the Act have, since the
commencement of the Constitution, become void in that they
violate the fundamental rights guaranteed by articles 14 and
19(1) (d) and (e) of the Constitution. The provisions of
these two sections, which have been sufficiently set out in
the judgment just delivered, will at once show that they
applied to all persons coming from Pakistan,, whether they
were citizens or noncitizens and irrespective of the
community to which they belonged or the religion which they
professed. It will also appear that, as regards citizens,
they did not touch all citizens but affected only such of
them as came from Pakistan, whether they were Hindus,
Muslims or Christians. It is, therefore, quite clear that
the Act applied to a small well defined class of persons who
were grouped together on an obviously reasonable basis of
classification as explained in the previous decisions of
this court. In this view of the matter no question of
unconstitutional discrimination can arise at all and,
indeed, the plea based on the equal protection clause of the
Constitution has not been seriously pressed. The main
contest has centred round the question whether these two
sections offend against the provisions of article 19(1)(d)
and (e) of the Constitution.
The learned Solicitor-General appearing for the respondents
contends that those sections are protected by article 19(5)
as being reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the
rights guaranteed by sub-clauses (d) and (e) of clause (1)
of that article. In State of Madras v. V. G. Row (1)
Patanjali Sastri C.J. observed:-
" It is important in this context to bear in mind that the
test of reasonableness, wherever prescribed, should be
applied to each individual statute impugned, and no abstract
standard, or general pattern of reasonableness can be laid
down as, applicable to all cases.
(1) [1952] 3 S.C.R. 597 at p. 607.
123
950
The nature of the right alleged to have been infringed, the
underlying purpose of the restrictions imposed, the extent
and urgency of the evil sought to be remedied thereby, the
disproportion of the imposition, the prevailing conditions
at the time, should all enter into the,judicial verdict. In
evaluating such elusive factors and forming-their own
conception of what is reasonable, in all the circumstances
of a given case, it is inevitable that the social philosophy
and the scale of values of the judges participating in the
decision should play an important part, and the limit to
their interference with legislative judgment I in such cases
can only be dictated by their sense of responsibility and
self restraint and the sobering reflection that the
Constitution is meant not only for people of their way of
thinking but for all, and that the majority of the elected
representatives, of the people have,’ in authorising the
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imposition of the restrictions, considered them to be
reasonable."
The impugned sections have, therefore, to be examined in the
light of the above observations.
I find nothing unconstitutional about section 3 of the
impugned Act It does not debar the entry of any person
absolutely. It only requires that a person entering India
from any place in Pakistan must be in possession of a permit
or a valid passport or be exempted from such requirements.
Passport regulations obtain in every civilized country
including even those the constitutions whereof confer
similar fundamental rights on their citizens, e.g.,
Switzerland (articles 43-45), Wiener Germany (article III),
Czechoslovakia (article 108), Jugoslavia (article 10),
Danzig (article 75) and Albania (section 202). Such regula-
tions serve to check up the persons who enter the
territories of the State and are necessary for the safety of
the State. Seeing that such regulations obtain everywhere
and have a definite utility for the protection of the
general public by securing the safety of the State, I have
no manner of doubt in my mind that such restrictions as are.
contemplated by section 3 must be regarded as reasonable
restrictions permissible under
951
clause (5) of article 19 of the Constitution. Indeed, the
objection of section 3 has not been seriously pressed before
us.
The main objection urged by learned counsel appearing in
support of these appeals and petitions was directed to the
question of the validity of section 7. In the’ first place,
it is clear that no objection can be taken to section 7 in
so far as it affected persons who were ’not citizens of
India, for article 19 guarantees certain fundamental rights
to the citizens of India only. In the next place, this
section did not affect all citizens but touched only a well
defined small class of citizens, namely, those who went to
Pakistan and intended to return to India. The question is
whether qua these citizens section 7 can also be regarded as
a reasonable restriction within the meaning of clause (5) of
article 19. The High Court of Bombay has held, and in my
opinion quite correctly, that the provisions of section 7
cannot but be regarded as consequential to the provisions of
section 3. Suppose at the check-post a person from Pakistan,
whether a, citizen or not, tried to cross the border without
a permit. Surely, the officer at the check-post would have
been well within the law to prevent a violation of section 3
of the Act and with that end in view to prevent that person,
who had no permit, from crossing the border and entering
India. I have no doubt that the officer might also have
prevented a person from Pakistan from crossing the border if
he suspected that the permit produced by the person was
forged or otherwise irregular and left him to take up the
matter with the higher authorities from Pakistan. Suppose
the man who sought to enter India without a permit or with a
permit which was suspected to spurious forcibly crossed the
border and took a step or two on our side of the line, the
Indian officer would certainty have been entitled to throw
him back to the other side of the line. Surely, such a
person could not be permitted to take advantage of his own
wrong and could not be heard to say that, in such
circumstances, he had, by his wrong doing, acquired a better
right than the person
952
who had not the temerity to violate the provisions of
section 3. If this is so then, logically, I can see no
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difference if the man ran into the Indian territory for some
distance and the Indian officer ran after him, overtook him
and took him back to the check-post and pushed him out of
our side of the line. It is, futile,, in such a situation,
to expect or to say that the officer should have held a
judicial enquiry and come to a judicial decision after
hearing an argument as to the validity of the permit or as
to the status of the permit holder or the fundamental rights
of a, citizen Of India to move freely in India and to settle
anywhere he liked in India. The truth and substance of the
matter are that in acting in the way indicated above the
officer simply performed an executive act and prevented a
person who held no permit or held a permit which appeared to
the officer to be spurious from entering India from Pakistan
in violation of section 3 of the Act. To throw out such a
person was not. to inflict any punishment on him or to do
him any greater injury than what was imposed on or done to a
person who, not having a permit, was stopped at the check-
post and not allowed to enter India at all. The man thus
thrown out was placed under no greater disability than the
man who had initially been prevented from entering India at
the check-post barrier. In both cases such a person might,
while staying in Pakistan, have taken steps to obtain a
permanent permit upon proof of his status as an Indian
citizen and if such permit was illegally withheld from him
he might have through some agent in India taken proceedings
in Indian courts’ for appropriate reliefs. To my mind the
position of the person who,entered India on a temporary
permit but who, in violation of the rules or order made
under the Act stayed on after the period of the permit
expired, was, as from that date, logically the same as that
of the person who entered India without a permit. To
arrest such a person, after the expiry of the period of
the temporary permit, with a view to sending him back back
to where he came from and to actually send him back
there did not involve or
953
constitute a judicial act at all but Was a rough and ready
executive act for enforcing and giving effect to the
provisions of section 3 of the Act. To arrest and send such
a person back to Pakistan was not to inflict a punishment
but was only to restore the status quo and to put him back
to the position he would have been in but for his illegal
act. In my opinion the act, authorized by section 7 was in
essence.a purely executive act for implementing the
provisions of section 3. Without such a provision it would
have been impossible for the State to control the admission
into India of persons from Pakistan and to prevent the
concomitant dangers referred to above. The act authorised
by the section being an executive act, discretion had
perforce to bib left to the executive Government which, by
reason of the information available to it" was in a much
better position than the courts to know and judge the
antecedents of such a person and his ultimate purpose.’
Suppose an Indian, citizen, no matter whether he was a Hindu
or a Muslim, had entered India from Pakistan without a
permit and suppose he was, upon confidential reports which:
could not be safely disclosed, suspected to be engaged in
espionage in the interests of Pakistan, would it have been
safe enough in those hectic days to have only prosecuted him
under section 5 and inflicted on him a fine of rupees one
thousand or a term of imprisonment not exceeding a year and
then to have left him free, after the term of imprisonment
was over, to surreptitiously carry on his nefarious
activities of espionage and sabotage against our State while
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embarking upon a protracted judicial enquiry to ascertain
the truth or* otherwise of his claim to Indian citizenship ?
It cannot ,be overlooked that there are. long common borders
between Pakistan and India both on the west and on the east.
The Kashmir situation had also -aggravated the emergency
brought about by the partition of India. Having regard to
all, the circumstances, the tension, bitterness and hatred
between the two countries that were generated at,the time of
the partition and all which must enter into the judicial
verdict, the provisions of section 7 appear to me to have
been eminently reasonable restrictions imposed in the
interests of the
954
general public upon the exercise by Indian’ citizen coming
from Pakistan without a permit of the rights conferred by
article 19(1)(d) and (e) of the Constitution. The Indian
citizen who was thrown out for not having the proper permit
or who was suspected to have violated the provisions of the
Act was placed in no worse position than an Indian citizen
who, not having a permit, had not been permitted to enter
into India at all. They were by no means without remedy.
They could from the other side of the border take steps
under the rules to obtain valid permanent permits upon proof
of their citizenship of India and if such permits were.
illegally withheld from them they could move the appropriate
High Court under article 226 or even this court under
article 32 while they were outside India and might, on proof
of their citizenship, have got appropriate writs or orders
directing the State or its -officers to issue suitable
permits and to desist from otherwise preventing them from
entering India or interfering with their movement while in
India. It is said that if such a person would have been
entitled to a permit on proof of his status as an Indian
citizen then why should he have Been thrown out at all
unless and until he failed to establish his claim to Indian
citizenship ? There occur to my mind several answers to this
question. In the first place, it would have been putting a
premium on wrong doing. In the second place, the person
would have been left free to carry on his secret activities,
if any, while judicial proceedings would have been going on
for ascertaining his status. In the third place, if the
person could not be thrown out before his status had been
judicially determined there would have been no incentive on
his part to take proceedings in court to establish his
status and it would have thrown upon the State the duty of
initiating proceedings and of discharging the onus of
proving the negative fact, of his not being a citizen of
India. In view of all the circumstances prevailing at the
time the law was enacted and remained in force and in view
of the considerations herein before alluded to I have no’
doubt in ray mind --except What
955
arises out of my respect for the opinions of my Lord and
other learned brothers-that the provisions of section 7 were
necessary and reasonable and fell within clause (5) of
article 19. In my judgment the four appeals as well as
Petition No. 57 of 1952 should be dismissed.
Appeals allowed, cases remanded.
Agents for the appellants and petitioners: S. S. Shukla, R.
A. Govind, Sardar Bahadur and P. K. Chatterji.
Agents for the respondents: G. H. Rajadhyaksha and C. P.Lal.