13 January 1981
Supreme Court
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FRANCIS CORALIE MULLIN Vs THE ADMINISTRATOR, UNION TERRITORY OF DELHI & ORS.

Case number: Writ Petition(Criminal) 3042 of 1980


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PETITIONER: FRANCIS CORALIE MULLIN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE ADMINISTRATOR, UNION TERRITORY OF DELHI & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/01/1981

BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:  1981 AIR  746            1981 SCR  (2) 516  1981 SCC  (1) 608        1981 SCALE  (1)79  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1981 SC2041  (9)  D          1982 SC 710  (92,93)  D          1982 SC1029  (14)  MV         1982 SC1325  (16,36,75)  R          1982 SC1473  (11)  E&D        1985 SC1618  (9)  R          1986 SC 180  (39,42)  RF         1986 SC 847  (12)  RF         1987 SC 990  (16)  R          1991 SC 101  (239)  RF         1991 SC1902  (24)  RF         1992 SC1858  (10)

ACT:      Right of  the  detenu  under  Conservation  of  Foreign Exchange &  Prevention of  Smuggling Activities Act, to have interview with  a lawyer  and the  members  of  his  family- Section 3(b)(i)  & (ii)  read with  rule 559A and 550 of the Punjab Manual  of  the  Superintendence  and  Management  of Jails-Whether  violates   Articles  14   and   21   of   the Constitution   and    hence   invalid-Distinction    between preventive detention with punitive detention-Constitution of India 1950 Article 21, scope of.

HEADNOTE:      Allowing the writ petition, the Court ^      HELD :  (1) While  considering the question of validity of conditions  of detention  courts must necessarily bear in mind the  vital distinction between preventive detention and punitive  detention.   Punitive  detention  is  intended  to inflict punishment on a person, who is found by the judicial process to  have  committed  an  offence,  while  preventive detention is  not by  way of  punishment at  all, but  it is intended to  pre-empt a  person from  indulging  in  conduct injurious to the society. [523 A-B]      (2)  The   power  of   preventive  detention  has  been recognised as  a necessary  evil and  is tolerated in a free society in  the larger interest of security of the State and maintenance of public order. It is a drastic power to detain a person  without trial  and in  many countries  it  is  not allowed  to   be  exercised   except  in  times  of  war  or

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aggression.  The  Indian  Constitution  does  recognise  the existence of  this power,  but it  is hedged-in  by  various safeguards set  out in  Articles 21  and 22.  Article 22  in clauses  (4)  to  (7)  deals  specifically  with  safeguards against preventive  detention and  enjoins that  any law  of preventive  detention   or  action   by  way  of  preventive detention taken  under such  law must  be in conformity with the restrictions  laid down  by those  clauses  on  pain  of invalidation, Article  21 also lays down restrictions on the power of preventive detention. [523 B-D]      Article 21  as  interpreted  in  Maneka  Gandhi’s  case requires that  no one  shall be  deprived  of  his  life  or personal liberty except by procedure established  by law and this procedure  must be  reasonable, fair  and just  and not arbitrary, whimsical  or fanciful and it is for the Court to decide in  the  exercise  of  its  constitutional  power  or judicial review  whether the deprivation of life or personal liberty  in   a  given   case  is  by  procedure,  which  is reasonable, fair  and just  or it  is otherwise.  The law of preventive detention must, therefore, pass the test not only of Article  22 but  also of  Article 21.  But, despite these safeguards laid  down by  the  Constitution  and  creatively evolved by  the Courts. the power of preventive detention is a frightful  and awesome  power  with  drastic  consequences affecting personal liberty, which is the most cherished 517 and prized possession of man in a civilised society. It is a power to be exercised with the greatest care and caution and the courts  have to  be ever vigilant to see that this power is  not  abused  or  misused,  inasmuch  as  the  preventive detention is qualitatively different from punitive detention and their  purposes  are  different.  In  case  of  punitive detention, the  person has  fullest  opportunity  to  defend himself,  while   in  case   of  preventive  detention,  the opportunity that  he has  for contesting  the action  of the Executive is  very  limited.  Therefore,  the  "restrictions placed on  a person preventively detained must, consistently with the effectiveness of detention, be minimal". [524A-G]      Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, [1979] 1 SCC 248; M.O. Hoscot v. State of Maharashtra, [1979] 1 SCR 192; Hussainara Khatoon v.  State of Bihar, [1980] 1 SCC 81; Sunil Batra (I) v. Delhi  Administration, [1979] 1 SCR 392; Sunil Batra (II) v. Delhi Administration, [1980] 2 SCR 557, referred to.      Sampat Prakash  v. State of Jammu and Kashmir, [1969] 3 SCR 574, followed.      3. The  prisoner or  detenu  has  all  the  fundamental rights and  other legal  rights available  to a free person, save those  which are  incapable of  enjoyment by  reason of incarceration. A  prisoner or  detenu is not stripped of his fundamental or  other legal  rights, save  those  which  are inconsistent with  his incarceration,  and if  any of  these rights are  violated, the Court will immediately spring into action and run to his rescue. [525 B-C, 526 G-H, 527 A]      Sunil Batra  (I) v.  Delhi Administration, [1979] 1 SCR 392; Sunil  Batra (II) v. Delhi Administration, [1980] 2 SCR 557, State of Maharashtra v. Prabhakar Sanzgire [1966] 1 SCR 702; D.  B. Patnaik v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1975] 2 SCR 24, followed.      Eve Pall’s  Case, 417  US 817:  41 Lawyers  Edition 2nd 495; Charles Wolffs Case, 41 Lawyers Edition 2nd 935, quoted with approval.      (4) While arriving at the proper meaning and content of the right to life, the attempt of the court should always be to expand  the reach  and ambit  of  the  fundamental  right rather  than   to  attenuate  its  meaning  and  content.  A

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constitutional provision  must be construed, not in a narrow and constricted  sense, but  in a wide and liberal manner so as to anticipate and take account of changing conditions and purposes so  that the  constitutional provision does not get atrophied or  fossilized but remains flexible enough to meet the newly  emerging problems  and challenges. This principle applies with  greater force  in relation  to  a  fundamental right enacted  by the Constitution. The fundamental right to life which  is the most precious human right and which forms the ark of all other rights must therefore be interpreted in a broad  and expansive  spirit  so  as  to  invest  it  with significance and vitality which may endure for years to come and enhance  the dignity  of the individual and the worth of the human person. [527 C-D, 528 A-C]      Weems v.  U.S. 54  Lawyers  Edition  801,  quoted  with approval.      (5) The right to life enshrined in Article 21 cannot be restricted to mere animal existence. It means something much more than just physical survival. 518 Every limb  or faculty through which life is enjoyed is thus protected by Article 21 and a fortiorari, this would include the faculties of thinking and feeling. Now deprivation which is inhibited  by Article  may be  total or partially neither any limb  or faculty  can be totally destroyed nor can it be partially damaged.  Moreover it is every kind of deprivation that is  hit by  Article 21,  whether  such  deprivation  be permanent or  temporary and, furthermore, deprivation is not an act  which  is  complete  once  and  for  all:  it  is  a continuing act  and so  long as  it lasts,  it  must  be  in accordance with  procedure established by law. Therefore any act which  damages or  injures or interferes with the use of any limb  or faculty  of a person either permanently or even temporarily, would  be within  the inhibition of Article 21. [528 D, G-H, 529 A]      Kharak Singh  v. State  of Uttar  Pradesh, [1964] 1 SCR 232, followed.      Munn v. Illinois [1877] 94 US 133, referred to.      Sunil Batra  v. Delhi Administration, [1980] 2 SCR 557, applied.      (6) The  right to  life includes the right to live with human dignity  and all  that goes along with it, namely, the bare  necessaries   of  life  such  as  adequate  nutrition, clothing and shelter and facilities for reading, writing and expressing oneself in diverse forms, freely moving about and mixing  and   commingling  with  fellow  human  beings.  The magnitude and  content of the components of this right would depend upon  the extent  of the  economic development of the country, but it must, in any view of the matter, include the right to the basic necessities of life and also the right to carry on  such functions  and activities  as constitute  the bare minimum  expression of  the human self. Every act which offends against  or impairs  human dignity  would constitute deprivation pro  tanto of  this right  to live  and it would have to  be in  accordance with  reasonable, fair  and  just procedure established  by law which stands the test of other fundamental rights. Therefore, any form of torture or cruel, inhuman or  degrading treatment  would be offensive to human dignity and constitute an inroad into this right to live and it would,  on this  view, be prohibited by Article 21 unless it is in accordance with procedure prescribed by law, but no law which  authorises and  no procedure  which leads to such torture or  cruelty, inhuman or degrading treatment can ever stand the  test of  reasonableness and non-arbitrariness: it would  plainly   be  unconstitutional   and  void  as  being

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violative of Article 14 and 21. [529 B-F]      (7) There  is implicit  in  Article  21  the  right  to protection against  torture or  cruel, inhuman  or degrading treatment which  is enunciated in Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of  Human Rights  and guaranteed by Article 7 of the international  Covenant on  Civil and  Political Rights. This right  to live  which is  comprehended within the broad connotation of  the right to life can concededly be abridged according to  procedure established  by law  and  therefore, when a  person is lawfully imprisoned, this right to live is bound to  suffer attenuation  to the  extent to  which it is incapable of  enjoyment  by  reason  of  incarceration.  The prisoner or  detenu obviously  cannot move  about freely  by going outside  the prison  walls nor can be socialise at his free will with persons outside the jail. But, as part of the right to  live  with  human  dignity  and  therefore,  as  a necessary component  of the  right  to  life,  he  would  be entitled to  have interviews  with the members of his family and friends  and no prison regulation or procedure laid down by prison regulation regulating the right to have interviews with the members of the family and 519 friends  can  be  upheld  as  constitutionally  valid  under Article 14 and 21, unless it is reasonable, fair and just.      Considered from  the point of view also of the right to personal liberty  enshrined in Article 21, the right to have interviews with members of the family and friends is clearly part of  personal liberty guaranteed under that Article. The expression "personal  liberty" occurring in Article 21 is of the widest amplitude and it covers a variety of rights which go to  constitute the  personal liberty of a man and it also includes rights  which "have  been raised  to the  status of distinct Fundamental  Rights and given additional protection under Article 19". Therefore, personal liberty would include the right  to socialise  with  members  of  the  family  and friends subject,  of course, to any valid prison regulations and under  Articles 14  and 21, such prison regulations must be reasonable and non-arbitrary. If any prison regulation or procedure laid  down by  it regulating  the  right  to  have interviews  with  members  of  the  family  and  friends  is arbitrary or  unreasonable, it  would be liable to be struck down as  invalid as  being violative  of Articles 14 and 21. [530 B-E]      Maneka Gandhi  v. Union  of India,  [1979] 1  SCC  248, applied.      (8) Sub-clause (ii) of clause 3(b) of the Conditions of Detention Order is violative of Articles 14 and 21 in so far as it  permits only  one interview  in a  month to a detenu. When an  under-trial prisoner  is granted  the  facility  of interviews with  relatives and friends twice in a week under Rule 559A  and a  convicted prisoner  is permitted  to  have interviews with  his relatives  and friends,  once in a week under Rule  550, sub-clause  (ii)  of  clause  3(b)  of  the Conditions of Detention Order, which restricts the interview only to  one in a month in case of a detenu, is unreasonable and arbitrary,  particularly  when  a  detenu  stands  on  a highest pedestal  than an under-trial prisoner or a convict. A detenu  must be  permitted to have at least two interviews in a  week with  relatives and  friends  and  it  should  be possible for  relative or  friend to have interview with the detenu at  any reasonable  hour on obtaining permission from the  Superintendent  of  the  Jail  and  it  should  not  be necessary to seek the permission of the District Magistrate, Delhi,  as  the  latter  procedure  would  be  cumbrous  and unnecessary from  the point  of view  of security  and hence

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unreasonable. Even  independently of  Rules 550 and 559A, of the Punjab  Manual for the Superintendence and Management of Jails, the  present norm  of two  interviews in  a week  for prisoners   furnishes   a   reasonable   and   non-arbitrary criterion. [530 F-H, 531 A-B]      Sampath Prakash v. State of Jammu and Kashmir, [1969] 3 SCR 574, applied.      (9) Sub-clause  (i) of clause 3(b) of the Conditions of Detention Order  regulating the  right of  a detenu  to have interview with a legal adviser of his choice is violative of Article 14  and 21  and therefore unconstitutional and void, It would be quite reasonable if a detenu were to be entitled to have  interview with  his legal adviser at any reasonable hour during  the  day  after  taking  appointment  from  the Superintendent of  the Jail,  which  appointment  should  be given by the Superintendent without any avoidable delay. The interview need not necessarily take place in the presence of a nominated  officer of  Customs/ Central Excise/Enforcement but if  the presence  of such  officer can  be  conveniently secured at  the time  of the interview without involving any postponement of  the interview, than such officer and if his presence cannot be so secured, 520 then any  other Jail  official may,  if  thought  necessary, watch the  interview but  in a  month to  a detenu.  When an under-trial prisoner is granted the facility [532C-F]      (10) The  right of  a detenu to consult a legal adviser of his  choice for  any purpose  not necessarily  limited to defence in  a criminal  proceeding  but  also  for  securing release from preventive detention or filling a writ petition or prosecuting any claim or proceeding, civil or criminal is obviously included  in the  right to live with human dignity and is  also part  of personal liberty and the detenu cannot be deprived  of this  right nor can this right of the detenu be interfered  with except  in accordance  with  reasonable, fair and just procedure established by a valid law. [531C-E]

JUDGMENT:      ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 3042 of 1980.      (Under Article 32 of the Constitution.)      N. M.  Ghatate  (Dr.)  and  S.  V.  Deshpande  for  the Petitioner.      Hardayal Hardy  and M.  N. Shroff  for the  Respondents Nos. 1-2.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      BHAGWATI, J.  This petition  under Article  32  of  the Constitution raises  a question  in regard of the right of a detenu  under   the  Conservation   of  Foreign  Exchange  & Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act (hereinafter referred to as  COFEPOSA Act) to have interview with a lawyer and the members of his family. The facts giving rise to the petition are few and undisputed and may be briefly stated as follows:      The petitioner, who is a British national, was arrested and detained in the Central Jail, Tihar under an Order dated 23rd November  1979 issued  under section  3 of the COFEPOSA Act. She  preferred a  petition in  this Court for a writ of habeas corpus  challenging her  detention, but by a judgment delivered by  this Court on 27th February 1980, her petition was rejected  with the  result that  she continued to remain under detention  in the  Tihar Central  Jail.  Whilst  under detention,   the    petitioner   experienced    considerable difficulty in  having interview  with  her  lawyer  and  the members of  her family.  Her daughter  aged about five years

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and her  sister, who  was looking  after the  daughter, were permitted to  have interview  with her  only once in a month and she  was not  allowed to  meet her  daughter more often, though a  child of  very tender  age.  It  seems  that  some criminal proceeding  was pending  against the petitioner for attempting to smuggle hashish out of the country and for the purpose of  her defence  in such criminal proceeding, it was necessary for her to consult her lawyer, but even her lawyer found it  difficult to  obtain an interview with her because in order to arrange an interview, he was 521 required to  obtain  prior  appointment  from  the  District Magistrate, Delhi and the interview could take place only in the presence of a Customs Officer nominated by the Collector of Customs.  This procedure  for obtaining  interview caused considerable  hardship  and  inconvenience  and  there  were occasions when,  even after obtaining prior appointment from the District Magistrate, Delhi, her lawyer could not have an interview with her since no Customs Officer nominated by the Collector of Customs remained present at the appointed time. The petitioner  was thus  effectively denied the facility of interview with  her lawyer  and even  her young  daughter  5 years old  could not  meet her  except once in a month. This restriction  on   interviews  was   imposed  by  the  Prison Authorities by  virtue of  clause 3(b)  sub-clauses (i)  and (ii) of  the Conditions  of Detention laid down by the Delhi Administration under  an Order dated 23rd August 1975 issued in exercise  of the  powers conferred under section 5 of the COFEPOSA Act.  These two sub-clauses of clause 3(b) provided inter alia as under:           "3.  The conditions  of detention  in  respect  of      classification and interviews shall be as under:-           (a) ..........           (b)  Interviews: Subject  to the  direction issued                by  the  Administrator  from  time  to  time,                permission for the grant of interviews with a                detenu  shall  be  granted  by  the  District                Magistrate, Delhi as under:-                (i)  Interview with legal adviser:                     Interview   with    legal   adviser   in                     connection with defence of a detenu in a                     criminal  case  or  in  regard  to  writ                     petitions and  the like,  may be allowed                     by prior appointment, in the presence of                     an officer  of  Customs/Central  Excise/                     Enforcement to be nominated by the local                     Collector of  Customs/Central Excise  or                     Deputy  Director   of  Enforcement   who                     sponsors the case for detention.                (ii) Interview with family members:                     A monthly interview may be permitted for                     members  of  the  family  consisting  of                     wife, children  or parents of the detenu                     .........." The petitioner,  therefore, preferred  a  petition  in  this Court  under   Article  32  challenging  the  constitutional validity of sub-clauses (i) 522 and (ii) of clause 3(b) of the Conditions of Detention Order and praying that the Administrator of the Union Territory of Delhi and  the  Superintendent  of  Tihar  Central  Jail  be directed to permit her to have interview with her lawyer and the  members  of  her  family  without  complying  with  the restrictions laid down in those sub-clauses.      The  principal   ground  on  which  the  constitutional

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validity of  sub-clauses (i)  and (ii) of clause 3(b) of the Conditions of  Detention Order was challenged was that these provisions were  violative of  Articles 14  and  21  of  the Constitution   inasmuch   as   they   were   arbitrary   and unreasonable. It  was contended  on behalf of the petitioner that allowing  interview with the members of the family only once  in   a  month  was  discriminatory  and  unreasonable, particularly when  under-trial prisoners  were  granted  the facility of  interview with relatives and friends twice in a week under  Rule 559A and convicted prisoners were permitted to have interview with their relatives and friends once in a week under  Rule 550  of the Rules set out in the Manual for the Superintendence  and Management  of Jails in the Punjab. The petitioner  also urged  that a detenu was entitled under Article 22 of the Constitution to consult and be defended by a legal  practitioner of  his choice  and she was, therefore entitled to  the facility of interview with a lawyer whom he wanted to  consult or  appear for  him in a legal proceeding and the  requirement of  prior appointment for interview and of the  presence of  a Customs  or  Excise  Officer  at  the interview  was  arbitrary  and  unreasonable  and  therefore violative of  Articles 14  and 21.  The respondents resisted the contentions  of the  petitioner and  submitted that sub- clauses (i)  and (ii)  of clause  3(b) were not violative of Articles 14  and 21,  since the restrictions imposed by them were reasonable,  fair and  just, but stated that they would have no  objection if  instead of  a monthly  interview, the petitioner was  granted the  facility of  interview with her daughter and sister twice in a week as in the case of under- trial prisoners  and so  far as interview with the lawyer is concerned, they  would not  insist  on  the  presence  of  a customs or excise officer at the interview. Though these two concessions were  made on  behalf of  the respondents at the hearing of  the  petition  before  us,  the  question  still remains whether  sub-clause (i)  and (ii)  of cl.  3(b)  are valid and  it is  necessary  that  we  should  examine  this question in  the context of our constitutional values, since there are  a large  number of detenus under the COFEPOSA Act and  the   conditions  of   their  detention  in  regard  to interviews must be finally settled by this Court.      Now it  is necessary  to bear  in mind  the distinction between ’preventive detention’ and punitive detention’, when we are considering 523 the question  of validity  of conditions of detention. There is a vital distinction between these two kinds of detention. ’Punitive detention’  is intended to inflict punishment on a person, who  is  found  by  the  judicial  process  to  have committed an offence, while ’preventive detention’ is not by way of  punishment at  all, but it is intended to pre-empt a person from  indulging in  conduct injurious to the society. The power  of preventive  detention has been recognised as a necessary evil  and is  tolerated in  a free  society in the larger interest  of security of the State and maintenance of public order.  It is  a drastic  power to  detain  a  person without trial  and there  are many countries where it is not allowed  to   be  exercised   except  in  times  of  war  or aggression. Our Constitution does recognise the existence of this power,  but it  is hedged-in  by various safeguards set out in  Articles 21  and 22.  Art. 22 in clauses (4) to (7), deals  specifically   with  safeguards   against  preventive detention and  any law  of preventive detention or action by way of  preventive detention taken under such law must be in conformity with  the restrictions laid down by those clauses on pain  of invalidation.  But apart  from Art. 22, there is

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also Art.  21 which  lays down  restrictions on the power of preventive detention.  Until the  decision of  this Court in Maneka  Gandhi.  v.  Union  of  India,  a  very  narrow  and constricted meaning  was given  to the guarantee embodied in Art. 21  and that article was understood to embody only that aspect of  the rule of law, which requires that no one shall be deprived  of his  life or  personal liberty  without  the authority of  law. It  was construed  only  as  a  guarantee against executive  action unsupported  by law.  So  long  as there was some law, which prescribed a procedure authorising deprivation of  life or personal liberty, it was supposed to meet the requirement of Art. 21. But in Maneka Gandhi’s case (supra), this  Court for  the first  time  opened-up  a  new dimension of  Art. 21 and laid down that Art. 21 is not only a guarantee against executive action unsupported by law, but is also  a restriction  on law  making. It  is not enough to secure compliance  with the  prescription of Article 21 that there should  be a  law  prescribing  some  semblance  of  a procedure for  depriving a  person of  his life  or personal liberty, but  the procedure  prescribed by  the law  must be reasonable, fair and just and if it is not so, the law would be void  as violating  the guarantee  of Art. 21. This Court expanded the  scope and  ambit of  the  right  to  life  and personal liberty enshrined in Art. 21 and sowed the seed for future  development   of  the   law  enlarging   this   most fundamental of  Fundamental Rights.  This decision in Maneka Gandhi’s case became the starting point-the-spring-board-for a most  spectacular evolution  the law  culminating  in  the decisions in M. O. Hoscot v. 524 State of  Maharashtra,, Hussainara Khatoon’s case, the first Sunil Batra’s  case and  the second  Sunil Batra’s case. The position now  is that  Art.  21  as  interpreted  in  Maneka Gandhi’s case (supra) requires that no one shall be deprived of  his   life  or  personal  liberty  except  by  procedure established by  law and  this procedure  must be reasonable, fair and  just and  not arbitrary, whimsical or fanciful and it is  for the  Court to  decide  in  the  exercise  of  its constitutional  power   of  judicial   review  whether   the deprivation of  life or  personal liberty in a given case is by procedure,  which is  reasonable, fair  and just or it is otherwise. The law of preventive detention has therefore now to pass  the test  not only  of Art. 22, but also of Art. 21 and if  the constitutional  validity  of  any  such  law  is challenged, the  Court would  have  to  decide  whether  the procedure laid  down by  such law  for depriving a person of his personal  liberty is  reasonable,  fair  and  just.  But despite these  safeguards laid  down by the Constitution and creatively evolved  by the  Courts, the  power of preventive detention is  a frightful  and awesome  power  with  drastic consequences affecting  personal liberty,  which is the most cherished and  prized  possession  of  man  in  a  civilised society. It  is a  power to  be exercised  with the greatest care and  caution and the courts have to be ever vigilant to see that this power is not abused or misused. It must always be remembered  that preventive  detention  is  qualitatively different from  punitive detention  and their  purposes  are different.  In   case  of  punitive  detention,  the  person concerned is detained by way of punishment after he is found guilty of  wrong doing as a result of trial where he has the fullest opportunity  to defend  himself, while  in  case  of preventive detention,  he is  detained merely  on  suspicion with a  view to preventing him from doing harm in future and the opportunity that he has for contesting the action of the Executive is very limited. Having regard to this distinctive

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character  of   preventive  detention,  which  aims  not  at punishing an  individual for  a wrong  done by  him, but  at curtailing his  liberty  with  a  view  to  pre-empting  his injurious activities  in future,  it has  been laid  down by this Court  in Sampat  Prakash v. State of Jammu and Kashmir "that the  restrictions  placed  on  a  person  preventively detained  must,   consistently  with  the  effectiveness  of detention, be minimal."      The question  which then  arises is  whether  a  person preventively detained  in a  prison has  any rights which he can enforce in a Court 525 of law.  Once his freedom is curtailed by incarceration in a jail, does  he have any fundamental rights at all or does he leave them  behind, when  he enters  the prison  gate ?  The answer to  this question  is no  longer res  integra. It has been held  by this  Court in  the two Sunil Batra cases that "fundamental rights  do not flee the person as he enters the prison although  they may  suffer shrinkage  necessitated by incarceration."  The   prisoner  or   detenu  has   all  the fundamental rights  and other  legal rights  available to  a free person,  save those which are incapable of enjoyment by reason of  incarceration. Even  before the  two Sunil  Batra cases, this  position was  impliedly accepted  in  State  of Maharashtra v.  Prabhakar  Sanzgiri  and  it  was  spelt-out clearly and  in no  uncertain terms by Chandrachud, J. as he then was, in D. B. Patnaik v. State of Andhra Pradesh :           "Convicts  are   not,  by   mere  reason   of  the      conviction, denuded of all the fundamental rights which      they  otherwise   possess.  A   compulsion  under   the      authority of  law, following upon a conviction, to live      in a  prison-house entails  to by  its  own  force  the      deprivation of  fundamental freedoms  like the right to      move freely  throughout the  territory of  India or the      right to  "practise" a  profession. A man of profession      would  thus   stand  stripped  of  his  right  to  hold      consultations while  serving out  his sentence. But the      Constitution guarantees  other freedoms  like the right      to acquire,  hold  and  dispose  of  property  for  the      exercise of  which incarceration  can be no impediment.      Likewise, even  a convict  is entitled  to the precious      right guaranteed by Art. 21 of the Constitution that he      shall not  be deprived  of his life or personal liberty      except according to procedure established by law."      This statement  of the  law was  affirmed by a Bench of five Judges  of this  Court in  the first  Sunil Batra  case (supra) and  by Krishna  Iyer, J.  speaking on behalf of the Court in  the second Sunil Batra case (supra). Krishna Iyer, J. in the latter case proceeded to add in his characteristic style; "The  jurisdictional reach  and range of this Court’s writ to  hold prison  caprice and  cruelty in constitutional leash is incontestable" and concluded by observing; "Thus it is now  clear law  that a prisoner wears the armour of basic freedom even  behind bars  and that  on  breach  thereof  by lawless officials  the law  will  respond  to  his  distress signals through  ’writ’ aid. The Indian human has a constant companion-the Court armed with the Constitution." 526 It is  interesting to  note that  the Supreme  Court of  the United States  has also  taken the  same view  in regard  to rights of prisoners. Mr. Justice Douglas struck a humanistic note when he said in Eve Pall’s case :           "Prisoners  are  still  persons  entitled  to  all      constitutional rights  unless their  liberty  has  been      constitutionally curtailed  by procedures  that satisfy

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    all the requirements of due process." So also  in Charles Wolff’s case, Mr. Justice White made the same point in emphatic terms.           "But, though  his  rights  may  be  diminished  by      environment, a  prisoner is  not  wholly  stripped  off      constitutional protections,  when he  is imprisoned for      crime. There  is no  iron  curtain  drawn  between  the      Constitution and the prisons of this country." Mr. Justice Douglas reiterated his thesis when he asserted:           "Every  prisoner’s   liberty  i.e.   of   courses,      circumscribed by  the very fact of his confinement, but      his interest in the limited liberty left to him is then      only the  more substantial.  Conviction of a crime does      not render one a non-person whose rights are subject to      the whim  of the  prison administration, and therefore,      the imposition  of any  serious punishment  within  the      system requires procedural safeguards." Mr. Justice  Marshall also  expressed  himself  clearly  and explicitly in the same terms:           "I have  previously stated my view that a prisoner      does not  shed his  basic constitutional  rights at the      prison gate,  and I  fully support  the court’s holding      that the interest of inmates in freedom from imposition      of serious  discipline is  a ’liberty’  entitled to due      process protection." What is  stated by  these learned  Judges in  regard to  the rights of  a prisoner  under the  Constitution of the United States applies equally in regard to the rights of a prisoner or  detenu   under  our   constitutional  system.  It  must, therefore, now  be taken  to be well-settled that a prisoner or detenu  is not stripped of his fundamental or other legal rights,  save   those  which   are  inconsistent   with  his incarceration, and  if any of these rights are violated, the Court which  is to use the words of Krishna Iyer, J., "not a distant abstraction omnipotent in the 527 books but  an activist  institution which is the cynosure of public hope," will immediately spring into action and run to his rescue.      We must  therefore proceed  to consider  whether any of the Fundamental  Rights of  the detenu  are violated by sub- clauses (i) and (ii) of clause 3(b) so as to result in their invalidation wholly  or in  part. We  will first take up for consideration the  Fundamental Right  of  the  detenu  under Article 21  because that  is a  Fundamental Right which has, after the decision in Maneka Gandhi’s case (supra), a highly activist magnitude and it embodies a constitutional value of supreme importance in a democratic society. It provides that no one  shall be  deprived of  his life  or personal liberty except according  to procedure  established by  law and such procedure shall  be reasonable  fair, and  just. Now what is the true  scope and  ambit of  the right  to life guaranteed under this  Article ?  While arriving  at the proper meaning and content  of the  right to life, we must remember that it is a  constitutional provision  which we  are expounding and moreover it  is a provision enacting a Fundamental right and the attempt  of the  court should  always be  to expand  the reach and  ambit of  the Fundamental  right rather  than  to attenuate its meaning and content. The luminous guideline in the interpretation of a constitutional provision is provided by the  Supreme Court  of United States in Weems v. U. S. 54 Lawyers Edition 801.           "Legislation, both statutory and constitutional is      enacted, it  is true, from an experience of evils, but-      its  general   language  should   not,  therefore,   be

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    necessarily  confined   to  the  form  that  evil  had,      therefore  taken.   Time  works  changes,  brings  into      existence new  conditions and  purposes.  Therefore,  a      principle, to  be  vital,  must  be  capable  of  wider      application than  mischief which gave it birth. This is      peculiarly  true   of  constitutions.   They  are   not      ephemeral   enactments   designed   to   meet   passing      occasions. They  are, to use the words of Chief Justice      Marshall, "designed to approach immorality as nearly as      human institutions can approach it" The future is their      care,  and  provisions  for  events  of  good  and  bad      tendencies of  which no  prophecy can  be made.  In the      application   of   a   constitution,   therefore,   our      contemplation cannot  be only  of what has been, but of      what may  be. Under any other rule a constitution would      indeed be  as  easy  of  application  as  it  would  be      deficient in efficacy and power. Its general principles      would have  little value, and be converted by precedent      into important  and lifeless  formulas. Rights declared      in the  words might  be lost  in reality.  And this has      been recognised. The meaning and vitality of the 528      Constitution  have   developed   against   narrow   and      restrictive construction." This principle  of  interpretation  which  requires  that  a Constitutional provision  must be construed, not in a narrow and constricted sense but in a wide and liberal manner so as to anticipate  and take  account of  changing conditions and purposes so  that the  Constitutional provision does not get atrophied or  fossilized but remains flexible enough to meet the newly  emerging problems  and challenges,  applies  with greater force  in relation to a fundamental right enacted by the Constitution. The fundamental right to life which is the most precious  human right  and which  forms the  ark of all other rights  must therefore  be interpreted  in a broad and expansive spirit  so as  to invest  it with significance and vitality which  may endure for years to come and enhance the dignity of the individual and the worth of the human person.      Now obviously,  the right  to life enshrined in Article 21 can  not be restricted to mere animal existence. It means something much  more than  just physical survival. In Kharak Singh v.  State of  Uttar Pradesh  Subba Rao  J. quoted with approval the following passage from the judgment of Field J. in Munn v. Illinois to emphasize the quality of life covered by Article 21:           "By the term "life" as here used something more is      meant  than   mere  animal  existence.  The  inhibition      against its  deprivation extends to all those limbs and      faculties by  which  life  is  enjoyed.  The  provision      equally  prohibits   the  mutilation  of  the  body  or      amputation of  an arm  or leg  or the putting out of an      eye or  the destruction  of any other organ of the body      through which  the soul  communicates  with  the  outer      world." and this  passage was  again accepted  as  laying  down  the correct law  by the  Constitution Bench of this Court in the first Sunil  Batra  case  (supra).  Every  limb  or  faculty through which  life is  enjoyed is thus protected by Article 21 and  a fortiorari,  this would  include the  faculties of thinking and  feeling. Now deprivation which is inhibited by Article 21  may be  total or  partial, neither  any limb  or faculty can  be totally  destroyed nor  can it  be partially damaged. Moreover  it is  every kind  of deprivation that is hit by  Article 21, whether such deprivation be permanent or temporary and, furthermore, depriva-

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529 tion is not an act which is complete once and for all: it is a continuing  act and  so long  as it  lasts, it  must be in accordance  with   procedure  established   by  law.  It  is therefore clear  that any  act which  damages or  injures or interferes with the use of, any limb or faculty of a person, either permanently  or even temporarily, would be within the inhibition of Article 21.      But the  question which  arises is whether the right to life is  limited only  to protection  of limb  or faculty or does it go further and embrace something more. We think that the right  to life  includes the  right to  live with  human dignity and  all that  goes along  with it, namely, the bare necessaries of life such as adequate nutrition, clothing and shelter and  facilities for  reading, writing and expressing one-self in  diverse forms,  freely moving  about and mixing and commingling  with fellow  human beings.  Of course,  the magnitude and  content of the components of this right would depend upon  the extent  of the  economic development of the country, but it must, in any view of the matter, include the right to the basic necessities of life and also the right to carry on  such functions  and activities  as constitute  the bare minimum  expression of  the human-self. Every act which offends against  or impairs  human dignity  would constitute deprivation protanto of this right to live and it would have to be in accordance with reasonable, fair and just procedure established  by   law  which   stands  the   test  of  other fundamental rights.  Now obviously,  any form  of torture or cruel, inhuman  or degrading treatment would be offensive to human dignity  and constitute  an inroad  into this right to live and it would, on this view, be prohibited by Article 21 unless it is in accordance with procedure prescribed by law, but no  law which authorises and no procedure which leads to such torture  or cruel,  inhuman or  degrading treatment can ever stand the test of reasonableness and non-arbitrariness: it would  plainly be  unconstitutional  and  void  as  being violative of  Articles 14 and 21. It would thus be seen that there is  implicit in  Article 21  the right  to  protection against torture  or cruel,  inhuman or  degrading  treatment which  is   enunciated  in   Article  5   of  the  Universal Declaration of  Human Rights  and guaranteed by Article 7 of the International  Covenant on  Civil and  Political Rights. This right  to live  which is  comprehended within the broad connotation of  the right to life can concededly be abridged according to procedure established by law and therefore when a person is lawfully imprisoned, this right to live is bound to suffer attenuation to the extent to which it is incapable of enjoyment  by reason  of incarceration.  The prisoner  or detenu obviously  cannot move  about freely by going outside the prison  walls nor can he socialise at his free will with persons outside the jail. But, as part of the 530 right  to  live  with  human  dignity  and  therefore  as  a necessary component  of the  right  to  life,  he  would  be entitled to  have interviews  with the members of his family and friends  and no prison regulation or procedure laid down by prison regulation regulating the right to have interviews with the  members of the family and friends can be upheld as constitutionally valid  under Articles  14 and 21, unless it is reasonable, fair and just.      The same  consequence would follow even if this problem is considered  from the  point  of  view  of  the  right  to personal liberty  enshrined in  Article 21, for the right to have interviews  with members  of the  family and friends is clearly part  of  personal  liberty  guaranteed  under  that

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Article. The  expression  ’personal  liberty’  occurring  in Article 21 has been given a broad and liberal interpretation in Maneka Gandhi’s case (supra) and it has been held in that case that  the expression  ’personal liberty  used  in  that Article is  of the  widest amplitude and it covers a variety of rights  which go  to constitute the personal liberty of a man and  it also  includes rights which "have been raised to the  status   of  distinct   Fundamental  Rights  and  given additional protection under Article 19". There can therefore be no  doubt that  ’personal liberty would include the right to socialise with members of the family and friends subject, of  course,  to  any  valid  prison  regulations  and  under Articles  14   and  21,  such  prison  regulations  must  be reasonable and   non-arbitrary.  If any prison regulation or procedure laid  down by  it regulating  the  right  to  have interviews  with  members  of  the  family  and  friends  is arbitrary or  unreasonable, it  would be liable to be struck down as invalid as being violative of Articles 14 and 21.      Now obviously  when an  under-trial prisoner is granted the facility  of interviews with relatives and friends twice in a  week under  Rule 559A  and  a  convicted  prisoner  is permitted to  have interviews with his relatives and friends once in a week under Rule 550, it is difficult to understand how sub-clause  (ii) of  Clause 3(b)  of the  Conditions  of Detention Order,  which restricts  the interview only to one in a  month in case of a detenu, can possibly be regarded as reasonable and  non-arbitrary, particularly  when  a  detenu stands on  a higher pedestal than an under-trial prisoner or a convict  and, as  held by  this Court in Sampath Prakash’s case  (supra)   restrictions  placed   on  a   detenu   must "consistent  with   the  effectiveness   of  detention,   be minimal." We  would therefore unhesitatingly hold sub-clause (ii) of clause 3(b) to be violative of Articles 14 and 21 in so far  as it  permits only  one interview  in a  month to a detenu. We  are of  the view that a detenu must be permitted to have  atleast two interviews in a week with relatives and friends and  it should  be possible for a relative or friend to have interview with 531 the detenu  at any  reasonable hour  on obtaining permission from the  Superintendent of  the Jail  and it  should not be necessary to seek the permission of the District Magistrate, Delhi,  as  the  latter  procedure  would  be  cumbrous  and unnecessary from  the point  of view  of security  and hence unreasonable. We  would go  so  far  as  to  say  that  even independently of  Rules 550  and 559A,  we would  regard the present norm  of two  interviews in  a week for prisoners as furnishing a  criterion of what we would consider reasonable and non-arbitrary.      The same  reasoning must also result in invalidation of sub-clause (i) of clause 3(b) of the Conditions of Detention Order which prescribes that a detenu can have interview with a legal adviser only after obtaining prior permission of the District Magistrate,  Delhi and  the interview  has to  take place in  the presence  of  an  officer  of  Customs/Central Excise/Enforcement to be nominated by the local Collector of Customs/Central Excise or Deputy Director of Enforcement who has sponsored  the case for detention. The right of a detenu to consult a legal adviser of his choice for any purpose not necessarily limited  to defence in a criminal proceeding but also for  securing  release  from  preventive  detention  of filing  a   writ  petition   or  prosecuting  any  claim  or proceeding, civil  or criminal, is obviously included in the right to  live with  human  dignity  and  is  also  part  of personal liberty  and the  detenu cannot be deprived of this

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right nor  can this  right of  the detenu be interfered with except  in   accordance  with   reasonable,  fair  and  just procedure established  by a  valid law.  A prison regulation may, therefore,  regulate the  right of  a  detenu  to  have interview  with  a  legal  adviser  in  a  manner  which  is reasonable,  fair  and  just  but  it  cannot  prescribe  an arbitrary or  unreasonable procedure  for regulating such an interview and  if it  does so,  it  would  be  violative  of Articles 14  and 21.  Now in  the  present  case  the  legal adviser can  have interview  with a  detenu  only  by  prior appointment  after  obtaining  permission  of  the  District Magistrate, Delhi. This would obviously cause great hardship and inconvenience  because the  legal adviser  would have to apply to  the District Magistrate, Delhi well in advance and then also  the time  fixed by the District Magistrate, Delhi may  not   be  suitable  to  the  legal  adviser  who  would ordinarily be a busy practitioner and, in that event, from a practical point of view the right to consult a legal adviser would be  rendered illusory.  Moreover, the  interview  must take place  in the presence of an officer of Customs/Central Excise/Enforcement to be nominated by the local Collector of Customs/Central Excise or Deputy Director of Enforcement who has sponsored the detention and this too would seem to be an unreasonable procedural  requirement  because  in  order  to secure the  presence of  such officer  at the interview, the District Magistrate, Delhi 532 would have to fix the time for the interview in consultation with the  Collector of  Customs/Central Excise or the Deputy Director of  Enforcement and  it  may  become  difficult  to synchronise the  time which suits the legal adviser with the time convenient  to the concerned officer and furthermore if the nominated  officer does  not, for  any reason, attend at the appointed time, as seems to have happened on quite a few occasions in  the case  of  the  petitioner,  the  interview cannot be held at all and the legal adviser would have to go back without meeting the detenu and the entire procedure for applying for  an appointment  to  the  District  Magistrate, Delhi would have to be gone through once again. We may point out that  no satisfactory  explanation  has  been  given  on behalf of  the respondents  disclosing the rationale of this requirement.      We are  therefore of view that sub-clause (i) of clause 3(b) regulating the right of a detenu to have interview with a legal  adviser of  his choice is violative of Arts. 14 and 21 and  must be  held to  be unconstitutional  and void.  We think that  it would be quite reasonable if a detenu were to be entitled  to have interview with his legal adviser at any reasonable hour during the day after taking appointment from the Superintendent  of the Jail, which appointment should be given by  the Superintendent without any avoidable delay. We may add  that the  interview need not necessarily take place in the  presence of  a nominated  officer of Customs/Central Excise/Enforcement but  if the  presence of such officer can be conveniently secured at the time of the interview without involving any  postponement  of  the  interview,  then  such officer and  if his  presence cannot be so secured, then any other Jail  official may,  if thought  necessary, watch  the interview but  not as  to be  within hearing distance of the detenu and the legal adviser.      We accordingly allow the writ petition and grant relief to the extent indicated above. V.D.K.                                     Petition allowed. 533

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