09 August 1991
Supreme Court
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AMIR SHAD KHAN AZIZ AHMEDKHAN @ AZIZMOHD. KHAN Vs L. HMINGLIANA AND ORS.

Bench: AHMADI,A.M. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 485 of 1991


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PETITIONER: AMIR SHAD KHAN AZIZ AHMEDKHAN @ AZIZMOHD. KHAN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: L. HMINGLIANA AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT09/08/1991

BENCH: AHMADI, A.M. (J) BENCH: AHMADI, A.M. (J) RAMASWAMI, V. (J) II PUNCHHI, M.M.

CITATION:  1991 AIR 1983            1991 SCR  (3) 443  1991 SCC  (4)  39        JT 1991 (3)   367  1991 SCALE  (2)277

ACT:     Conservation  of  Foreign  Exchange  and  Prevention  of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974---Sections 3, 8, 11 read with section 21 The General Clauses Act and Article 22, Constitu- tion  of India, 1950--Detention--Obligations and  duties  of Detaining  Authority--Rejection of representation  by  State Government--Non-complying detenu’s request to forward repre- sentation, taking copy to Central Government--Whether  ille- gal.     Conservation  of  Foreign  Exchange  and  Prevention  of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974--Section 11 read with Article 22, Constitution of India, 1950--Whether confers any consti- tutional right.

HEADNOTE:     On  March 25, 1990, the officers of the  Directorate  of Revenue  Intelligence intercepted a motor car driven by  the appellant  No. 1 with the other appellant as  his  companion and recovered 1400 gold bars.     The  statements of the two appellants were recorded  and they  were formally arrested on March 28, 1990 and  produced before  the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, who  granted  re- mand.     While the matter was under investigation, a proposal was made  to the first respondent--Secretary (Preventive  Deten- tion),  Government  of Maharashtra for invoking  the  powers conferred on him by Section 3 of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974.     On  the very next day after the receipt of the  proposal the first respondent passed the orders of detention  against the two appellants under sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Act.     After  these detention orders were passed on  April  24, 1990  they  were  served on the appellants  along  with  the grounds  of detention and basic documents on which  reliance was  placed.  The appellants were informed that they  had  a right to make a representation to (i) the State 444 Government;  (ii)  the  Central Government;  and  (iii)  the Advisory  Board  against  the detention order,  if  they  so

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desired.  They were informed that to facilitate  expeditious consideration  thereof, ’the Superintendent of Jails may  be requested  to forward the same to the  detaining  authority. The  appellants preferred a representation addressed to  the Detaining  Authority and forwarded it through  the  Superin- tendent  of Jail. In the last paragraph of that  representa- tion  a request was made that copies of  the  representation may be taken out and the same may be forwarded to the  State Govt. and the Central Govt.     The  representation was considered and rejected  by  the State  Government.  It was, however, not  forwarded  to  the Central  Government and hence the Central Government had  no occasion  to consider the representation of  the  appellants for the revocation of the detention orders.     As the detention orders were not revoked the  appellants preferred separate habeas corpus writ petitions in the  High Court which dismissed both the writ petitions, answering  in negative  on the question whether the detention orders  were vitiated  as  the Detaining Authority as well as  the  State Government  had failed to forward their  representations  to the  Central Government for the reason that the detenus  who had  failed  to follow the clear and  specific  instructions given  in the grounds of detention regarding the manner  and mode of address to various authorities, could not be allowed to reap the benefit of their own default.     This  view of the High Court was challenged before  this Court by the appellants.     The  State Government as well as the Central  Government supported  the view taken by the High Court contending  that the appellants cannot make a grievance if they have  despite a  clear  direction in the grounds of  detention  chosen  to deviate therefrom. Once the procedure established by law  is followed  by the respondents the failure on the part of  the Detaining Authority or the State Government to accede to the request  made  by the appellants in the  last  paragraph  of their representations to take out copies thereof and forward the same to the Central Government cannot vitiate the deten- tion order.     The  Union of India contended that since no  representa- tion  had reached the Central Government there was no  ques- tion of the Central Government applying its mind thereto and taking a decision thereon. 445     On  the  question  whether failure on the  part  of  the Detaining  Authority  as  well as the  State  Government  to accede  to the request of the appellants to take out  copies of  the representations and forward the same to the  Central Government  for consideration has resulted in  violation  of their  considerational/statutory right to have their  repre- sentation considered by the Central Government, and if  yes, whether  the  detention orders are liable to be  quashed  on that ground, allowing the appeals, this Court,     HELD:  1. The Detaining Authority as well as  the  State Government  were  not justified in taking  a  hypertechnical stand that they were under no obligation to take out  copies of  the  representations  and forward them  to  the  Central Government.  Such action of the Detaining Authority and  the State  Government was unreasonable and resulted in a  denial of the appellants’ constitutional right. The impugned deten- tion  orders are liable to be quashed and directed that  the appellants, who were in detention, to be set free. [459B-E]     Per A.M. Ahmadi, J. on his behalf himself and V.  Ramas- wami, J. 1. Article 22(3)(b) (5) casts a dual obligation  on the  Detaining Authority, namely, (i) to communicate to  the detenu  the  grounds on which the detention order  has  been

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made; and (ii) to afford to the detenu the earliest opportu- nity of making a representation against the detention order. Consequently the failure to communicate the grounds promptly or to afford the detenu an opportunity of making a represen- tation against the order would clearly violate the constitu- tional  guarantee  afforded to the detenu by clause  (5)  of Article  22 of the Constitution. It ’ is by virtue  of  this right  conferred on the detenu that the Detaining  Authority considers  it a duty to inform the appellant-detenu  of  his right to make a representation to the State Government,  the Central Government and the Advisory Board. The right to make a representation against the detention order thus flows from the  constitutional  guarantee enshrined  in  Article  22(5) which  casts an obligation on the authority to  ensure  that the  detenu is afforded an earliest opportunity to  exercise that right, if he so desires. [450H-451C]     2.  The  necessity of casting a dual obligation  on  the authority  making  the detention order is obviously  to  ac- quaint  the  detenu of what had weighed with  the  Detaining Authority for exercising the extraordinary powers of  deten- tion without trial conferred by section 3(1) of the Act  and to give the detenu an opportunity to point out any error  in the  exercise of that power so that the said authority  gets an  opportunity to undo the harm done by it, if at  all,  by correcting the error at the earliest point of time. [451C-D] 446      3. Under section 11 an officer of the State  Government or that of the Central Government specially empowered  under section  3(1)  of the Act to make a detention order  is  not conferred  the  power  to revoke it; that  power  for  those officers  has  to  be traced to section 21  of  the  General Clauses  Act. Therefore, where an officer of the State  Gov- ernment  or the Central Government has passed any  detention order  and  on receipt of a representation he  is  convinced that the detention order needs to be revoked he can do so by virtue  of section 21 of the General Clauses Act since  sec- tion 11 of the Act does not entitle him to do so. [454A-C]      4. If the State Government passes an order of detention and  later desires to revoke it, whether upon receipt  of  a representation  from  the detenu or otherwise, it  would  be entitled  to do so under section 21 of the  General  Clauses Act  but  if the Central Government desires  to  revoke  any order  passed by the State Government or its officer it  can do so only under clause (b) of Section 11(1) of the Act  and not under section 21 of the General Clauses Act. [454C-D]      5.  On a conjoint reading of section 21 of the  General Clauses Act and section 11 of the Act it becomes clear  that the  power of revocation can be exercised by three  authori- ties,  namely,  the officer of the State Government  or  the Central  Government,  the State Government as  well  as  the Central  Government.  The power of revocation  conferred  by section 8(f) on the appropriate Government is clearly  inde- pendent of this power. It is thus clear that section 8(f) of the  Act satisfies the requirement of Article 22(4)  whereas section  11  of  the Act satisfies the  requirement  of  the latter part of Article 22(5) of the Constitution. The statu- tory provisions, therefore, when read in the context of  the relevant clauses of Article 22, make it clear that they  are intended  to  satisfy the  constitutional  requirements  and provide for enforcement of the right conferred on the detenu to  represent  against his detention order. Viewed  in  this perspective  it cannot be said that the power  conferred  by section  11 of the Act has no relation whatsoever  with  the constitutional obligation cast by Article 22(5). [454D-G]     6.  It  must be realised that when a  person  is  placed

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under  detention he has certain handicaps and if he makes  a request  that a representation prepared by him may  be  for- warded  to the Central Government as well as the State  Gov- ernment for consideration after taking out copies thereof it would  be a denial of his right to represent to the  Central Government  if the Detaining Authority as well as the  State Government  refuse  to  accede to his request  and  omit  to forward his 447 representation to the Central Government for  consideration. In  such  circumstances refusal to accede to  their  request would  be wholly unreasonable and in total disregard of  the right  conferred on the detenu by Article 22(5) of the  Con- stitution read with section 11 of the Act. [458F-G, 459B]     Razia Umar Bakshi v. Union of India & Ors., [1980] 3 SCR 1398;  Rattan Singh v. State of Punjab & Ors., [1980] 4  SCC 481; Sat Pal v. State of Punjab & Ors., [1982] 1 SCC 12  and Smt.  Gracy v. State of Kerala & Anr., JT (1991) 1  SC  371; Tara Chand v. State of Rajasthan, [1980] 2 SCC 321; referred to.     Per  M.M. Punchhi, J. 1. Section 11 of the Act does  not confer  any constitutional right on the detenu to  have  his representation  thereunder  considered as if  under  Article 22(5), but merely a provision enabling the State  Government or the Central Government, as the case may be, to revoke  or modify  detention  orders. Have section 11 of  the  Act  re- pealed,  it  causes  no affectation  to  the  constitutional guarantee  under Article 22(5) of the  Constitution.  Corre- spondingly, section 11 of the Act derives no sustenance from the said Article. Both operate in mutually exclusive fields, though not as combatants. [459F-G]

JUDGMENT:     CRIMINAL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal  Appeal  Nos- 485 & 486 of 1991.     From  the  Judgment and Order dated 31.8.  1990  of  the Bombay  High  Court in Crl. W.P. Nos. 530 and 53  1  of  the 1990.     R.K.  Jain and V.V. Vaze (For the State), Maqsood  Khan, R.S.M. Verma, S.A. Syed, M.T. Khan and A.S. Bhasme (For  the State) for the Appellants.      A.  Subba Rao, A.D.N. Rao and Ms. Sushma Suri  for  the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by AHMADI, J. Special leave granted.      The events leading to the filing of these two  appeals, briefly stated, are that on the afternoon of March 25, 1990, the  officers  of the Directorate  of  Revenue  Intelligence being  in possession of information intercepted a motor  car at  about 3.45 p.m. driven by the appellant Amir  Shad  Khan with the appellant Aziz Ahmad Khan as his compa- 448 nion.  On search of the vehicle 1400 gold bars  were  recov- ered. The statements of the two appellants were recorded and thereafter they were formally arrested on March 28, 1990 and produced  before the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate,  Bombay. The Chief Metropolitan Magistrate granted remand. While  the matter  was under investigation a proposal was made  to  the first respondent. Secretary (Preventive Detention),  Govern- ment of Maharashtra for invoking the powers conferred on him by  Section  3 of the Conservation of Foreign  Exchange  and Prevention  of Smuggling Activities Act,  1974  (hereinafter called ’the Act’). On the very next day after the receipt of

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the proposal the first respondent passed the impugned orders of  detention against the two appellants. These orders  were passed under sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Act with  a view  to preventing the appellants from smuggling goods  and engaging  in transporting, keeping and concealing the  same. After  these detention orders were passed on April 24,  1990 they were served on the appellants along with the grounds of detention and basic documents on which reliance was  placed. By  clauses  (iii),  (iv) and (v) of  paragraph  43  of  the grounds of detention the appellants were informed that  they had  a right to make a representation to (i) the State  Gov- ernment; (ii) the Central Government; and (iii) the Advisory Board  against the detention orders, if they so desired.  It was  further  stated that the representation  to  the  State Government should be addressed to the Minister of State  for Home Mantralaya, Bombay. They were informed that to  facili- tate expeditious consideration thereof the Superintendent of Jails may be requested to forward the same to the  detaining authority so that the Home Department can put up the case to the Minister for consideration. It was further stated  that’ the  representation  to the Central Government  may  be  ad- dressed  to the Secretary, Government of India, Ministry  of Finance  (Department  of  Revenue), New  Delhi  through  the Superintendent  of Jail. In the case of the  Advisory  Board the appellants were informed that the representation may  be addressed to the Chairman, Advisory Board constituted  under the  Act and may be forwarded through the Superintendent  of Jail.  On the basis of this advice contained in the  grounds of  detention  the  appellants  preferred  a  representation addressed  to  the  Detaining  Authority  and  forwarded  it through  the  Superintendent of Jail,  Arther  Road  Central Prison,  Bombay.  It is not necessary to state  the  various grounds made out in the representation for the revocation of the  detention orders but it would suffice to reproduce  the last  paragraph of the representation. That paragraph  reads as under:               "I  would  also like to request you  that  the               copies of these representations be sent to the               State and Central Govern-               449               ment  for their kind consideration in view  of               the  above  facts so as to revoke  and/or  set               aside  my  order  of detention  and  order  my               release forth with." It  is not disputed that the representation  was  considered and  rejected by the State GoVernment. It was, however,  not forwarded  to the Central Government and hence  the  Central Government had no occasion to consider the representation of the  appellants for the revocation of the detention  orders. As  the  detention orders were not  revoked  the  appellants preferred  separate habeas corpus writ petitions which  were numbered Criminal Writ Petitions Nos. 530-31 of 1991 in  the High Court of Bombay under Article 226 of the  Constitution. The  High Court on a detailed consideration of  the  various contentions raised by the appellants dismissed both the writ petitions. On the question whether the detention orders were vitiated  as  the Detaining Authority as well as  the  State Government  had failed to forward their  representations  to the  Central  Government,  the High Court  answered  in  the negative  for the reason that the detenus who had failed  to follow  the  clear and specific instructions  given  in  the grounds  of detention regarding the manner and mode  of  ad- dress  to various authorities could not be allowed  to  reap the  benefit of their own default. On the  question  whether the  fundamental  right guaranteed by Article 22(5)  of  the

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Constitution was violated, the High Court observed as under:                        "So  far we have not come across  any               authority  of  this court or  of  the  Supreme               Court  wherein it has been ruled that  despite               this  express communication to the detenu,  if               the  detenu  makes  any  representation,   the               Detaining Authority is under obligation  under               Article 22(5) of the Constitution to take  out               xerox  copies of the same and forward  to  the               State Government or the Central Government. We               are afraid, we cannot infer such obligation on               the  Detaining Authority or the State  Govern-               ment under Article 22(5) of the  Constitution.               But,  however, it is advisable that  upon  re-               ceipt of such representation from the  detenu,               the Detaining Authority may immediately inform               the detenu about the procedure that he has  to               follow  in forwarding representations  to  the               State  Government, the Central  Government  or               the Advisory Board against the order of deten-               tion." It  is  this  view of the High Court  which  was  vehemently challenged before us by learned counsel for the  appellants. In support of his contention counsel placed strong  reliance on four decisions of this 450 Court reported in (i) Razia Umar Bakshi v. Union of India  & Ors.,  [1980]  3  SCR 1398; (ii) Rattan Singh  v.  State  of Punjab  & Ors., [1980] 4 SCC 481; (iii) Sat Pal v. State  of Punjab & Ors., [1982] 1 SCC 12 and (iv) Smt. Gracy v.  State of  Kerala  & Anr., JT (1991) 1 SC 371. On  the  other  hand counsel  for  the State Government as well  as  the  Central Government  supported the view taken by the High  Court  and contended  that  the appellants cannot make a  grievance  if they have despite a clear direction in the grounds of deten- tion chosen to deviate therefrom. Once the procedure  estab- lished by law is followed by the respondents the failure  on the part of the Detaining Authority or the State  Government to accede to the request made by the appellants in the  last paragraph of their representation to take out copies thereof and forward the same to the Central Government cannot  viti- ate  the detention order. It was further pointed out that  a subsequent  representation  dated June 5, 1990 made  to  the Central  Government  was considered with  despatch  and  was rejected  on June 12, 1990. We may at this stage state  that we are not concerned with the subsequent representation. The point which we have been called upon to consider is  whether failure  on the part of the Detaining Authority as  well  as the State Government to accede to the request of the  appel- lants to take out copies of the representations and  forward the  same  to the Central Government for  consideration  has resulted  in  violation  of  their  constitutional/statutory right to have their representation considered by the Central Government,  and  if yes, whether the detention  orders  are liable to be quashed on that ground.     The  law of preventive detention is harsh to the  person detained and, therefore, there can be no doubt that it  must be  strictly construed. Article 22(3)(b) denies to a  person who  is  arrested or detained under any  law  providing  for preventive  detention the protection of clauses (1) and  (2) of  the  said Article. Clause (4) thereof enjoins  that  the preventive detention law must conform to the limitations set out thereunder. Clause (5) of Article 22 reads as under:               "When  any person is detained in pursuance  of               an  order  made under any  law  providing  for

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             preventive detention, the authority making the               order shall, as soon as may be, communicate to               such person the grounds on which the order has               been  made and shall afford him  the  earliest               opportunity of making a representation against               the order." This clause casts a dual obligation on the Detaining Author- ity, namely, (i) to communicate to the detenu the grounds on which the 451 detention  order  has been made; and (ii) to afford  to  the detenu  the earliest opportunity of making a  representation against  the  detention order. Consequently the  failure  to communicate the grounds promptly or to afford the detenu  an opportunity  of  making a representation against  the  order would clearly violate the constitutional guarantee  afforded to  the detenu by clause (5) of Article 22 of the  Constitu- tion. It is by virtue of this right conferred on the  detenu that  the Detaining Authority considers it a duty to  inform the  appellant-detenu of his right to make a  representation to  the  State Government, the Central  Government  and  the Advisory  Board. The right to make a representation  against the  detention  order  thus flows  from  the  constitutional guarantee enshrined in Article 22(5) which casts an  obliga- tion on the authority to ensure that the detenu is  afforded an  earliest  opportunity to exercise that right, if  he  so desires.  The necessity of casting a dual obligation on  the authority  making  the detention order is obviously  to  ac- quaint  the  detenu of what had weighed with  the  Detaining Authority for exercising the extraordinary powers of  deten- tion without trial conferred by section 3(1) of the Act  and to give the detenu an opportunity to point out any error  in the  exercise of that power so that the said authority  gets an  opportunity to undo the harm done by it, if at  all,  by correcting the error at the earliest point of time. Once  it is realised that Article 22(5) confers a right of  represen- tation, the next question is to whom must the representation be made. The grounds of detention clearly inform the  detenu that  he can make a representation to the State  Government, the Central Government as well as the Advisory Board.  There can be no doubt that the representation must be made to  the authority  which  has  the power to rescind  or  revoke  the decision,  if  need be. Our search for the  authority  must, therefore, take us to the statute since the answer cannot be found from Article 22(5) of the Constitution read in  isola- tion. As pointed out earlier that clause casts an obligation on the authority making the detention order to afford to the detenu  an  earliest opportunity to  make  a  representation against  the detention order. If we are to go by the  state- ment in the grounds of detention our search for that author- ity  would  end since the grounds  of  detention  themselves state  the authorities to which the representation  must  be made.  The question must be answered in the context  of  the relevant  provisions  of the law. Now as stated  earlier  by clause  (5) of Article 22 a dual obligation is cast  on  the authority  making  the detention order one on  which  is  to afford  to  the detenu an earliest opportunity of  making  a representation  against the order which obligation has  been met  by informing the detenu in the grounds of detention  to whom his representation should be addressed. But the author- ity  to  which  the representation is  addressed  must  have statutory backing. In 452 order to trace the source for the statutory backing it would be  advantageous to notice the scheme of the  Act  providing

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for  preventive detention. Section 2(b) defines a  detention order to mean an order made under section 3. Sub-section (1) of  section 3 empowers the Central Government or  the  State Government  or  any officer of the Central  Government,  not below  the  rank of a Joint Secretary  to  that  Government, specially empowered for the purposes of this section by that Government, or any officer of a State Government, not  below the rank of a Secretary to that Government, specially empow- ered for the purposes of this section by that Government, to make an order of detention with respect to any person with a view to preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to  the conservation or augmentation of foreign exchange  or with a view to preventing him from doing any one of the five prejudicial  acts enumerated thereunder. Subsection  (2)  of that  section provides that when any order of  detention  is made  by a State Government or by an officer empowered by  a State  Government,  the State Government shall,  within  ten days, forward to the Central Government a report in  respect of the order. It is evident from this provision that whenev- er a detention order is made by the State Government or  its officer  specially empowered for that purpose an  obligation is  cast on the State Government to forward a report to  the Central Government in respect of that order within ten days. The  purpose  of  this provision is clearly  to  enable  the Central  Government to keep an eye on the exercise of  power under  section 3(1) by the State Government or its  officer. Then comes sub-section (3) which reads as under:               "For the purposes of clause (5) of Article  22               of  the Constitution, the communication  to  a               person  detained in pursuance of  a  detention               order  of the grounds on which the  order  has               been  made  shall be made as soon  as  may  be               after the detention, but ordinarily not  later               than  five  days, and in  exceptional  circum-               stances  and  for reasons to  be  recorded  in               writing, not later than fifteen days, from the               date of detention." This  provision is clearly intended to meet  the  obligation cast by Article 22(5) that the grounds of detention shall be communicated  ’as  soon  as may be’.  The  legislation  has, therefore, fixed the outer limit within which the grounds of detention must be communicated to the detenu. Thus the first part  of  the  obligation cast by Article 22(5)  is  met  by section 3(3) of the Act. Section 8 provides for the  Consti- tution  of Advisory Boards. This section is clearly to  meet the obligation of 453 sub-clause (a) of clause 4 and sub-clause (c) of clause 7 of Article 22 of the Constitution. Section 8(f) which has  some relevance  provides  that in every case where  the  Advisory Board  has reported that there is in its opinion  sufficient cause for the detention of a person, the appropriate Govern- ment may confirm the detention order and continue the deten- tion  of the person concerned for such period as  it  thinks fit and in every case where the Advisory Board has  reported that  there  is in its opinion no sufficient cause  for  the detention  of the person concerned, the appropriate  Govern- ment  shall revoke the detention order and cause the  person to be released forthwith. This provision clearly obliges the appropriate Government to order revocation of the  detention order if the Advisory Board reports want of sufficient cause for  detention of that person. Then comes section  11  which reads as under:               "Revocation of detention orders--               (1)  Without  prejudice to the  provisions  of

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             section 21 of the General Clauses Act, 1897, a               detention  order may, at any time, be  revoked               or modified-               (a)  notwithstanding that the order  has  been               made  by an officer of a State Government,  by               that  State Government or by the Central  Gov-               ernment.               (b)  notwithstanding that the order  has  been               made  by an officer of the Central  Government               or  by  a  State Government,  by  the  Central               Government." Sub-section  (2)  is  not relevant for our  purpose.  It  is obvious  from  a plain reading of the two  clauses  of  sub- section (1) of section 11 that where an order is made by  an officer  of  the State Government, the State  Government  as well  as the Central Government are empowered to revoke  the detention  order.  Where, however, the  detention  order  is passed  by an officer of the Central Government or  a  State Government,  the Central Government is empowered  to  revoke the  detention order. Now this provision is clearly  without prejudice  to  section 21 of the General Clauses  Act  which lays  down  that where by any Central Act a power  to  issue orders  is  conferred,  then that power  includes  a  power, exercisable  in  the  like manner and subject  to  the  like sanction  and  conditions, if any, to rescind any  order  so issued.  Plainly  the authority which has passed  the  order under  any  Central Act is empowered by  this  provision  to rescind  the order in like manner. This provision when  read in the context of section 11 of the Act makes it 454 clear  that the power to rescind conferred on the  authority making  the  detention order by section 21  of  the  General Clauses Act is saved and is not taken away. Under section 11 an  officer of the State Government or that of  the  Central Government specially empowered under section 3(1) of the Act to  make  a detention order is not conferred  the  power  to revoke it; that power for those officers has to be traced to section  21 of the General Clauses Act. Therefore, where  an officer  of the State Government or the  Central  Government has passed any detention order and on receipt of a represen- tation he is convinced that the detention order needs to  be revoked he can do so by virtue of section 21 of the  General Clauses Act since section 11 of the Act does not entitle him to do so. If the State Government passes an order of  deten- tion and later desires to revoke it, whether upon receipt of a  representation from the detenu or otherwise, it would  be entitled  to do so under section 21 of the  General  Clauses Act  but  if the Central Government desires  to  revoke  any order  passed by the State Government or its officer it  can do so only under clause (b) of Section 11(1) of the Act  and not under section 21 of the General Clauses Act. This clari- fies  why  the power under section 11 is  conferred  without prejudice  to  the provisions of section 21 of  the  General Clauses Act. Thus on a conjoint reading of section 21 of the General  Clauses  Act and section 11 of the Act  it  becomes clear that the power of revocation can be exercised by three authorities, namely, the officer of the State Government  or the Central Government, the State Government as well as  the Central  Government.  The power of revocation  conferred  by section 8(f) on the appropriate Government is clearly  inde- pendent of this power. It is thus clear that section 8(f) of the  Act satisfies the requirement of Article 22(4)  whereas section  11  of  the Act satisfies the  requirement  of  the latter part of Article 22(5) of the Constitution. The statu- tory provisions, therefore, when read in the context of  the

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relevant clauses of Article 22, make it clear that they  are intended  to  satisfy the  constitutional  requirements  and provide for enforcement of the right conferred on the detenu to  represent  against his detention order. Viewed  in  this perspective  it cannot be said that the power  conferred  by section  11 of the Act has no relation whatsoever  with  the constitutional obligation cast by Article 22(5).      We  may now turn to the case law on which reliance  was placed.  In  Razia  Umar’s case, S. Murtaza  Fazal  Ali,  J. sitting singly during vacation was concerned with a more  or less  similar situation. In that case a detention order  was passed by the State Government against which the detenu  had made a representation to the said Government. By that repre- sentation he also prayed that his representation may be 455 forwarded  to the Central Government for  being  considered. That representation was disposed of by the State  Government but it was not forwarded to the Central Government, notwith- standing  the  specific prayer of the  detenu.  The  defence taken  was  that the detenu had himself sent a copy  of  his representation to the Central Government and, therefore, the Detaining Authority did not consider it necessary to forward the representation to the Central Government. The defence of the  State Government was held to be wholly unacceptable  on the following line of reasoning:               "Section 11 of the Act confers a constitution-               al right on the detenu to have his representa-               tion considered by the Central Government.  It               is  true  that the Central  Government  has  a               discretion to revoke or confirm the  detention               but  the detenu has undoubtedly a  right  that               his representation should be considered by the               Central  Government for whatever worth it  is.               The mere fact that the detenu had sent a  copy               to the Central Government does not absolve the               detaining authority from the statutory duty of               forwarding  the representation to the  Central               Government."               (Emphasis supplied) This  observation  would show that the power  of  revocation conferred  by  section 11 of the Act has a  nexus  with  the fight  of representation conferred on the detenu by  Article 22(5) and, therefore, the State Government when requested to forward a copy of the representation to the Central  Govern- ment  is under an obligation to do so. The  learned  counsel for  the appellant further pointed out that our case  stands on  a stronger footing because, admittedly,  the  appellants had  not  forwarded a copy of their  representation  to  the Central Government as in Razia Umar’s case.     The High Court distinguished this decision on the ground that  the facts of Razia Umar’s case reveal that the  detenu had sent a separate representation to the Detaining Authori- ty  with a request to forward the same to the State  Govern- ment and the Central Government whereas in our case only one representation  was sent to the Detaining Authority  with  a request  that  copies thereof be taken out and sent  to  the State Government as well as the Central Government for their consideration. With respect, this distinction has nothing to do  with  the ratio of the decision; if at all,  as  rightly pointed  out counsel for the appellants, the facts  of  this case are stronger than those of Razia Umar’s case. 456     In Rattan Singh’s case the facts reveal that the  detenu had written a letter to the Superintendent of Central  Jail, Amritsar,  enclosing  therewith two representations  one  of

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which  was addressed to the Joint Secretary,  Department  of Home, Government of Punjab, Chandigarh, and the other to the Secretary, Union Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue, New Delhi. The Jail Superintendent was requested to  forward the  representations to the State Government as well as  the Central  Government. In the counter filed on behalf  of  the Central  Government it was stated that no representation  by or on behalf of the detenu had been received by the  Central Government.  It  was contended that failure to  forward  the representation to the Central Government and the  consequent failure  of the Central Government to apply its mind to  the representation vitiated the detention order. This Court held that  the  detenu was unaccountably deprived of  a  valuable right to defend and assert his fundamental right to personal liberty.  Chandrachud.  CJ. who spoke  for  the  three-Judge Bench, observed as under:               "But  the laws of preventive detention  afford               only  a modicum of safeguards to  persons  de-               tained  under them and if freedom and  liberty               are to have any meaning in our democratic  set               up, it is essential that at least those  safe-               guards are not denied to the detenus.  Section               11(1)  of  COFEPOSA confers upon  the  Central               Government  the  power to revoke an  order  of               detention  even  if it is made  by  the  State               Government  or  its officer.  That  power,  in               order to be real and effective, must imply the               right in a detenu to make a representation  to               the  Central Government against the  order  of               detention.  The  failure in this case  on  the               part either of the Jail Superintendent or  the               State  Government  to  forward  the   detenu’s               representation  to the Central Government  has               deprived  the detenu of the valuable right  to               have his detention revoked by that Government.               The  continued detention of the  detenu  must,               therefore, be held illegal and the detenu  set               free." In taking this view reliance was placed on an earlier  deci- sion  of  this Court in Tara Chand v.  State  of  Rajasthan, [1980] 2 SCC 321.     In  Sat Pal’s case also counsel for the detenu had  for- warded two representations one meant for the Central Govern- ment  and  other for the State Government  for  exercise  of power  under section 11 of the Act. The Jail  Superintendent who was requested by a forwarding letter 457 to  sent the representations to the appropriate  Governments after  obtaining the signatures of the detenu  thereon  for- warded  them to the Joint Secretary in the State  Government with an endorsement that one of them may be forwarded to the Central Government. The representation of the detenu to  the Central  Government was not forwarded to that Government  by the State Government promptly. It was; therefore,  contended that the detention order was rendered illegal and liable  to be quashed. Dealing with this contention this Court observed that  the  making of an application for  revocation  of  the order  of detention by the Central Government under  section 11 of the Act is part of the constitutional right a  citizen has against his detention under a law relating to preventive detention. It was, therefore, observed:               "It  is, therefore, idle to contend that  this               State  Government had no duty to  forward  the               representation  made  by  the  detenu  to  the               Central Government for revocation of his order

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             of detention under section 11 of the Act." In  taking  this view the Court placed  reliance  on  Rattan Singh’s case     Gracy’s  case may not be entirely apposite  because  the question  which the court was required to consider  in  that case was that the representation made to the Advisory  Board was  not taken into consideration by the Central  Government after the papers were laid before it with the opinion of the Advisory  Board that there was sufficient cause  to  justify the  preventive  detention. That was, therefore, a  case  in which  the representation was very much before  the  Central Government  and it failed to consider the same  before  con- firming  and fixing the duration of the detention order.  In that  case,  therefore, the question for  consideration  was whether it was incumbent on the part of the Central  Govern- ment to consider a representation addressed to the  Advisory Board  notwithstanding its rejection by the Advisory  Board. Such  is  not  the question before us but  counsel  for  the appellants  invited  our attention to  certain  observations made in paragraphs 8 and 9 which indicate that the  detenu’s right for consideration of his representation by the Central Government  flows  from Article 22(5), irrespective  of  the fact whether the representation is addressed to the  Detain- ing Authority or to the Advisory Board or both. These obser- vations though made in a different fact-situation do support the submission made on behalf of the appellants. But counsel for  the respondents argued that the observations  were  too broadly  stated. It is not necessary for us to examine  this contention as the earlier decisions are sufficient to uphold the appellants’ contention. 458    In  the  case before us the facts.clearly show  that  the appellants had made a request to the Detaining Authority  to take  out copies of his representation and forward  them  to the  State Government as well as the Central Government  for consideration.  Counsel for the Detaining Authority as  well as the State Government contended that no such duty was cast on the said respondents to take out copies and forward  them to the Central Government for consideration. Counsel for the Union  of India contended that since no such  representation had reached the Central Government there was no question  of the Central Government applying its mind thereto and  taking a decision thereon. In support, reliance was placed on Phil- lippa Anne Duke v. The State of Tamil Nadu & Ors., [1982]  3 SCR  769 a judgment rendered by O. Chinnappa Reddy, J.  sit- ting  singly.  In  that case the two  petitioners  who  were British  nationals  were  detained  for  smuggling  electric equipments  and  goods secreted in specially  made  compart- ments/cavities  of their Mercedez Benz Van.  Representations were  presented  on their behalf to the  Prime  Minister  of India during her visit to England. No decision was taken  on those  representations and hence it was contended  that  the detention  orders  deserved to be quashed. This  Court  held that representation from whatever source addressed to whoso- ever  officer of one or other department of  the  Government cannot  be treated as representations under the Act. It  was further held that the Bout De Papier presented to the  Prime Minister of India during her visit to Britain and the subse- quent  reminder addressed to the External  Affairs  Ministry could  not  be  treated as representations  to  the  Central Government.  It  is, therefore, obvious that  this  decision turned  on  its special facts and is no  authority  for  the proposition  that the Detaining Authority or the State  Gov- ernment  was under no obligation to forward the  representa- tions to the Central Government.

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   It  must be realised that when a person is placed  under detention he has certain handicaps and if he makes a request that  a representation prepared by him may be  forwarded  to the  Central Government as well as the State Government  for consideration after taking out copies thereof it would be  a denial  of his right to represent to the Central  Government if  the Detaining Authority as well as the State  Government refuse  to  accede to his request and omit  to  forward  his representation to the Central Government for  consideration. It is difficult to understand why such a technical and rigid view should be taken by the concerned authorities in matters of  personal  liberty where a person is kept  in  preventive detention without trial. Detenus may be literate or illiter- ate, they may have access to legal advice or otherwise, they may  or  may not be in a position to prepare more  than  one copy of the 459 representation and if they make a request to the authorities which  have the facilities to take out copies to do  so  and forward  them for consideration to the  Central  Government, would  it be just and fair to refuse to do so? In such  cir- cumstances  refusal  to  accede to their  request  would  be wholly  unreasonable  and in total disregard of  the   right conferred on the detenu by Article 22(5) of the Constitution read  with section 11 of the Act. We are, therefore, of  the opinion  that the Detaining Authority as well as  the  State Government  were not justified in taking  a  hyper-technical stand that they were under no obligation to take out  copies of  the  representations  and forward them  to  the  Central Government.  We think that this approach on the part of  the Detaining Authority and the State Government has robbed  the appellants of their constitutional right under Article 22(5) read with section 11 of the Act to have their representation considered  by  the Central Government. The request  of  the detenus was not unreasonable- On the contrary the action  of the Detaining Authority and the State Government was  unrea- sonable and resulted in a denial of the appellants’  consti- tutional  right. The impugned detention orders  are,  there- fore, liable to be quashed.     In  the  result we allow these appeals,  set  aside  the order  of the High Court and quash the detention  orders  on this  single ground. We direct that both the appellants  who are  in detention shall be set free at once unless they  are required in any other pending matter.     PUNCHHI,  J. I agree to the release of the detenus,  but in the facts and circumstances of the case. I have  reserva- tions to section 11 of the Conservation of Foreign  Exchange and  Prevention  of  Smuggling Activities  Act,  1974  being treated  part of the constitutional guarantee under  Article 22(5)  of the Constitution of India. Section 11 of  the  Act does  not confer any constitutional right on the  detenu  to have  his representation thereunder considered as  if  under Article  22(5),  but merely a provision enabling  the  State Government or the Central Government, as the case may be, to revoke  or modify detention orders. Have section 11  of  the Act repealed, it causes no affectation to the constitutional guarantee  under Article 22(5) of the  Constitution.  Corre- spondingly, section 11 of the Act derives no sustenance from the said Article. Both operate in mutually exclusive fields, though  not as combatants. Both the detenus may be set  free as proposed by my learned brother, A.M. Ahmadi, J. V.P.R.                                               Appeals allowed. 460

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