Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PEER MOHD. & ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/09/1962
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 645 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 429
CITATOR INFO :
F 1965 SC 810 (6)
R 1966 SC1614 (13)
R 1971 SC1382 (11)
R 1972 SC2166 (6)
R 1974 SC 28 (1)
R 1986 SC1534 (8)
ACT:
Citizenship-Foreigner-Indian going to Pakistan after
Constitution-Return on Pakistani passport-If ceases to be
citizen of India-Constitution of India, Art. 7-Citizenship
Act, 1955 (57 of 1955).
HEADNOTE:
The respondents who were citizens of India left India for
Pakistan sometime after January 26, 1950. They returned to
India in 1956 on the strength of a Pakistani passport and
visa. They continued to stay in India even after the period
of the visa had expired and were prosecuted under s. 14
Foreigners Act’ 1946, read with cl. 7 Foreigner’s Order,
1948, for unauthorised and illegal overstay in India. The
High Court acquitted them holding that they had not become
foreigners on.account of their leaving India after January
26, 1950, and the question whether they had lost their
Indian citizenship on account of acquisition of Pakistani
citizenship could not be agitated before a court of law.
The appellant contended that in view of Art. 7 of the
Constitution the respondents could
430
not be deemed to be citizens of India as they had migrated
to Pakistan after March 1, 1947, within the meaning of Art.
7.
Held, that Art. 7 was applicable only to persons who had
migrated to Pakistan between March 1, 1947, and January 26,
1950, and under this Article the respondents had not ceased
to be citizens of India. The words "has migrated" in Art. 7
could not include cases of persons who would migrate after
the commencement of the Constitution, they refer only to
persons who had migrated at the date when the Constitution
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came into force. The absence of the words "at the
commencement of the Constitution" in Art. 7 has no
significance. Cases of acquisition of foreign citizenship
after January 26, 1950, were covered by the provisions of
the Citizenship Act, 1955, and of the rules made thereunder.
The Central Government or its delegate was the appropriate
authority to deal with such questions and they could not be
tried in courts.
Izhar Ahmad Khan v. Union of India, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 12 of
1961.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 26 1960, of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court Jabalpur in Criminal Appeal
No. 388 of 1958.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant.
The respondent did not appear.
1962. September 28. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-A charge-sheet was presented by the
appellant the State of Madhya Pradesh against the
respondents Peer Mohammad and his wife Mst. Khatoon under
s. 14 of the Foreigners Act, 1946 (hereinafter called the
Act) read with cl. 7 of the Foreigners Order, 1948
(hereinafter called the Order) in the Court of the
Magistrate 1st Class, Burhanpur. The case against the
respondents was that they had entered India on May 13, 1956,
on the strength of a Pakistani passport and a visa issued in
their favour on.May 8, 1956, and reached Burhanpur on May
15, 1956. Even after the period of the
431
visa had expired, they continued to stay in India.
Consequently, the district Magistrate, Burhanpur, served a
notice on them on May 14, 1957 calling upon them to leave
India on or before May 28, 1957. The respondents did not
comply with the notice and by their unauthorised and illegal
over-stay in India, they rendered themselves liable under s.
14 of the Act and cl. 7 of the Order.
The respondents pleaded that they were not foreigners but
were citizens of India. They were born in India at
Burhanpur and had been permanent residents of the said
place; and so the present criminal proceedings instituted
against them were misconceived.
The prosecution, however, urged that the respondents had
left India for Pakistan some time after January 26, 1950,
and under Art. 7 of the Constitution they cannot be deemed
to be citizens of India. In the alternative, it was urged
that since the respondents had obtained a Pakistani
passport, they have acquired the citizenship of a foreign
country and that has terminated their citizenship of India
under s. 9 of the Citizenship Act, 1955 (LVII of 1955). It
appears that before the learned Magistrate, only this latter
plea was pressed and the learned Magistrate held that the
question as to whether the respondents had lost their
citizenship of India under s. 9 (2) of the Citizenship Act
has to be decided by the Central Government and cannot be
agitated in a court of law. Therefore, the learned
Magistrate passed an order under s. 249 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, directing that the respondents should be
released, and the passport seized from them should be
returned to them after the period of appeal, if any.
Against this order, the appellant preferred an appeal in the
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High Court of Madhya Pradesh, and before the High Court it
was urged by the appellant that on a fair and reasonable
construction of Art. 7
432
it should be held that the respondents cannot be deemed to
be citizens of India *and so, they were liable under s. 14
of the Act and cl. 7 of the Order. This appeal was heard by
Shrivastava and Naik, JJ. Shrivastava, J., took the view
that Art. 7 did not apply to the case of the respondents who
had left India for Pakistan after January 26, 1950, and so,
they could not be held to be foreigners on the ground that
they had left India as alleged by the prosecution. Naik,J.,
however, came to a contrary conclusion. He took the view
that since it was proved that the respondents had left India
for Pakistan after January 26, 1950, Art. 7 was attracted
and so, they must be deemed to be foreigners. Since there
was a difference of opinion between the two learned judges
who heard the appeal, it was referred to Newaskar. J.
Newaskar, J., agreed with the conclusion of Shrivastava, J.,
and so, in the light of the majority opinion, it was held
that under Art. 7, the respondents could not be held to be
foreigners.
In regard to the alternative case of the prosecution that
the respondents had obtained a Pakistani passport and so,
had lost their citizenship under s. 9(2) of the Citizenship
Act, the High Court held that it was a matter which had to
be determined by the Central Government and it is only after
the Central Government decides the matter against the
respondents that the appellant can proceed to expel them
from India. It, however, appears that the High Court read
the order passed by the trial Magistrate as amounting to an
order of acquittal, and so, quashed the said order with
liberty to the appellant to institute fresh proceedings
against the respondents if and when considered necessary by
it. In fact, as we have already mentioned, the order passed
by the trial Court was one under s. 249 Cr. P.C. It is.
against this decision of the High Court that the appellant
has come to this Court with a certificate granted by the
High Court. At this stage, we may add that there were
eleven
433
other cases of a similar nature which were tried by the
Magistrate along with the present case and considered by the
High Court at the appellate stage. Appeals against the
companion matters are pending before this Court, but their
fate will be decided by our decision in the present appeal.
Section 14 of the Act provides, inter alia, that if any
person contravenes the provisions of this Act or of any
order made thereunder, he shall be punished in the manner
prescribed by the section. Clause 7 of the Order issued
under the said Act prescribes that every foreigner who
enters India on the authority of a visa issued in pursuance
of the Indian Passport Act, 1920 shall obtain from the
Registration Officer, specified therein, a permit indicating
the period during which he is authorised to remain in India
and shall, unless the period indicated in the permit is
extended by the Central Government, depart from India before
the expiry of the said period. The prosecution case is that
the respondents having entered India with a visa have
overstayed in India after the expiration of the visa and the
period indicated in the permit and so, they are liable to be
punished under s. 14 of the Act and cl. 7 of the Order.
It would be noticed that in order that the respondents
should be liable under the said provisions, it must be shown
that when they entered India, they were foreigners. In
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other words, cl. 7 of the order applies to every foreigner
who enters India in the manner therein indicated ; and that
raises the question as to whether the respondents were
foreigners when they entered India. The prosecution
contends that the respondents were foreigners at the
relevant date on two grounds. It is urged that they left
India for Pakistan after January 26, 1950, and so, under
Art. 7 they cannot be deemed to be citizens of India at the
relevant time. The alternative ground is that they have
acquired a passport from the Pakistan
434
Government and as such they lost the citizenship of this
country under s. 9(2) of the citizenship Act. It is common
ground that the latter question has to be decided by the
Central Government, and so, this J. Court is not
concerned with it. The only question which falls for our
decision, therefore, is: can the respondents be said to be
foreigners at the relevant date under Art. 7, because they
left India for Pakistan after January 26, 1950 ? The answer
to this question would depend on the construction of Art. 7.
In construing Art. 7, it would be necessary to examine
briefly the scheme of the seven Articles that occur in Part
11. These Articles deal with the question of citizenship.
Article 5 provides that at the commencement of the
constitution, every person who has his domicile in the
territory of India and who satisfies one or the other of the
three tests prescribed by cls. (a), (b) and (c), shall be a
citizen of India. Article 6 deals with persons who have
migrated to the territory of India from Pakistan and it
provides that they shall be deemed to be citizens of India
at the commencement of the Constitution if they satisfy the
requirements of clauses (a) & (b). In other words, Art. 6
extends the right of citizenship to persons who would not
satisfy the test of Art. 5, and so, persons who would be
entitled to be treated as citizens of India at the
commencement of the Constitution are covered by Arts. 5 and
6. Article 7 with which we are concerned provides that
notwithstanding anything in Arts. 5 and 6, a person who has
after March 1, 1947, migrated from the territory of India to
the territory now included in Pakistan shall not be deemed
to be a citizen of India. The proviso deals with persons
who having migrated to Pakistan have returned to the
territory of India under a permit for resettlement or
permanent return, but with that class of persons we are not
concerned in the present appeal. Article 8 deals with the
435
rights of citizenship of persons of Indian origin who reside
outside India. Article 9 provides that no person shall be a
citizen of India by virtue of Arts. 5, 6 or 8, if he has
voluntarily acquired the citizenship of any foreign State.
Articles 10 and 11 then lay down that the rights of
citizenship prescribed by Arts. 5 and 6 shall be subject to
the provisions of any law that may be made by Parliament;
that is to say, the said rights will continue unless they
are otherwise affected by any law made by Parliament in that
behalf. Article 11 makes it clear that the provisions of
Part 11 Will Dot derogate from the power of Parliament to
make any provision with respect to the acquisition and
termination of’ citizenship and all other matters relating
to citizenship. That, in brief, is the scheme of Part 11.
It is urged by Mr. Sen on behalf of the appellant that where
the Constitution wanted to limit the scope of the Article by
reference to the date of the commencement of the
Constitution, it has used appropriate words in that behalf,
and in that connection, he relies on the use of the words
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"at the commencement of the Constitution" which occur in
Arts. 5 and 6. Article 7 does not include such a clause, and
so, the migration from the territory of India to the
territory included in Pakistan to which it refers should not
be construed to be limited to the migration prior to the
commencement of the Constitution. Just as a person who has
migrated to Pakistan from India prior to January 26, 1950
shall not be deemed to be a citizen of India by virtue of
such migration, so should a person who has migrated from
India to Pakistan even after the commencement of the
Constitution be denied the right of citizenship. That is
the appellant’s case and it Is based substantially on the
ground that the clause "at the commencement of the
Constitution" is not used by
436
This argument, however, cannot be accepted because it is
plainly inconsistent with the material words used in the
Article. It will be noticed that a person who shall not be
deemed to be a citizen of India is one "who has, after the
first day of March, 1947, migrated from the territory of
India to the territory of Pakistan." It is true that
migration after January 26, 1950, would be migration after
March 1, 1947, but it is clear that a person who has
migrated after January 26, 1950, cannot fall within the
relevant clause because the requirement of the clause is
that he must have migrated at the date when the Constitution
came into force. "Has migrated" in the context cannot
possibly include cases of persons who would migrate after
the commencement of the Constitution. It is thus clear that
it is only persons who had migrated prior to the
commencement of the Constitution that fall within the scope
of Art. 7. The use of the present perfect tense is decisive
against the appellant’s contention and so, the absence of
the words on which Mr. Sen relies has no significance.
Besides, as the article is worded, the use of the said words
would have been inappropriate and having regard to the use
of the present perfect tense, such words were wholly
unnecessary. The proviso to Art. 7 which deals with cases
of persons who having migrated to Pakistan have returned to
India under a permit for resettlement, also supports the
same conclusion. The migration there referred to appears to
be migration prior to the commencement of the Constitution.
It is relevant to refer to Art. 9 in this connection. This
Article deals with cases of persons who have voluntarily
acquired the citizenship of any foreign State and it
provides that such persons shall not be deemed to be
citizens of India by virtue of Arts. 5, 6 or 8. Now, it is
clear that the acquisition of the citizenship of any foreign
State to which this Article refers is acquisition made prior
to the commencement,
437
of the Constitution. "Has voluntarily acquired" can have no
other meaning, and so, there is no doubt that the
application of Art. 9 is confined to the case of acquisition
of citizenship of foreign State prior to the commencement of
the Constitution. In other words, the scope and effect of
Art. 9 is, in a sense, comparable to the scope and effect of
Art. 7. Migration to Pakistan which is the basis of Art. 7
like the acquisition of citizenship of any foreign State
which is the basis of Art. 9, must have taken place before
the commencement of the Constitution. It will be noticed
that migration from Pakistan to India as well as migration
from India to Pakistan which are the subject-matters of
Arts. 6 and 7 deal with migrations prior to the commencement
of the Constitution. The Constitution makers thought it
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necessary to make these special provisions, because
migrations both ways took place on a very wide scale prior
to January 26, 1950, on account of the partition of the
country. Migrations to Pakistan which took place after
January 26, 1950, are not specially provided for. They fall
to be considered and decided under the provisions of the
Citizenship Act; and as we will presently point out,
citizens migrating to Pakistan after the said date would
lose their Indian citizenship if their cases fall under the
relevant provisions of the said Act.
It is true that as Art. 7 begins with a non-obstante clause
by reference to Arts. 5 & 6, and there is a little
overlapping. The non-obstante clause may not serve any
purpose in regard to cases falling under Art. 5 (c), but
such overlapping does not mean that there is any
inconsistency between the two Articles and it can,
therefore, have no effect on the construction of Art. 7
itself. Therefore, we are satisfied that Art. 7 refers to
migration which has taken place between March 1, 1947, and
January 26, 1950. That being so, it cannot be held that the
respondents fall within Art. 7 by virtue of the fact that
they migrated from India to Pakistan some time after
438
January 26, 1950, and should, therefore, be deemed not to be
citizens of India.
In this connection, it is necessary to add that cases of
Indian citizens acquiring the citizenship of any foreign
State are dealt with by Art. 9, and the relevant provisions
of the Citizenship Act, 1955. If the foreign citizenship
has been acquired before January 26, 1950, Art. 9 applies;
if foreign citizenship has been acquired subsequent to
January 26, 1950, and before the Citizenship Act, 1955 came
into force, and thereafter, that is covered by the
provisions of the Citizenship Act, vide Izhar Ahmed Khan v.
Union of India(1). It is well-known that the Citizenship
Act has been passed by the Parliament by virtue of the
powers conferred and recognised by Arts. 10 and 11 of the
Constitution and its relevant provisions deal with the
acquisition of citizenship of India as well as termination
of the said citizenship. Citizenship of India can be
terminated either by renunciation under s. 8, or by
naturalisation, registration or voluntary acquisition of
foreign citizenship in any other manner, under s. 9, or by
deprivation under s. IO. The question about the citizenship
of persons migrating to Pakistan from India after January
26, 1950, will have to be determined under these provisions
of the Citizenship Act. If a dispute arises as to whether
an Indian citizen has acquired the citizenship of another
country it has to be determined by such authority and in
such a manner and having regard to such rules of evidence as
may be prescribed in that behalf That is the effect of s.
9(2). It may be added that the rules prescribed in that
behalf have made the Central Government or its delegate the
appropriate authority to deal with this question, and that
means this particular question cannot be tried in courts.
The result is that the respondents cannot be said to be
foreigners by virtue of their migration to Pakistan after
January 26, 1950, and that is the only question
(1) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 235.
439
which can be tried in courts. If the State contends that
the respondents have lost their citizenship of India under
s. 9 (2) of the Citizenship Act, it is open to the appellant
to move the Central Government to consider and determine the
matter, and if the decision of the Central Government goes
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against the respondents, it may be competent to the
appellant to take appropriate action against the
respondents. So far as the appellant’s case against the
respondents under Art. 7 is concerned, the High Court was
right in holding that the respondents were not foreigners
within the meaning of cl. 7 of the Order and cannot,
therefore, be prosecuted under s. 14 of the Act. The appeal
accordingly fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.