15 March 1974
Supreme Court
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GOLAM HUSSAIN ALIAS GAMA Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, CALCUTTA, AND OTHERS

Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 1977 of 1973


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PETITIONER: GOLAM HUSSAIN ALIAS GAMA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, CALCUTTA, AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/03/1974

BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. KHANNA, HANS RAJ

CITATION:  1974 AIR 1336            1974 SCR  (3) 613  1974 SCC  (4) 530  CITATOR INFO :  F          1975 SC 473  (2)  RF         1975 SC 606  (4)  F          1975 SC 623  (3)  RF         1975 SC 919  (9)  R          1986 SC2177  (33,41)  RF         1987 SC1383  (9)  R          1988 SC1256  (12)  RF         1990 SC 225  (9)

ACT: Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971--Ss. 3 (1) and  3 (2).  If  detention after discharge in criminal  cases  mala fide--Link      between     criminal      activity      and’ detention--Detention  without  duration  if  invalid--Public disorder--If  acts  aimed  at a single  person  can  disturb public order.

HEADNOTE: Pursuant  to  an order of detention under s. 3  (1)(a)  (ii) read  with s. 3 (2) of the Maintenance of Internal  Security Act,  1971  the petitioner was arrested  for  hurling,  soda water  bottles,  brickbats and bombs indiscriminately  on  a group of persons on different dates. The order of  detention said  that  if left free and unfettered the  petitioner  was likely to continue to disturb maintenance of public disorder by acting, in a similar manner. in an earlier criminal  case the petitioner was discharged by the court since no  witness dared  to depose against him in open court.  Thereafter  the petitioner was detained under the Act. In a petition under Art. 32 it was contended : (1) that  the detention was mala fide because the petitioner was  detained under  the Act after his discharge by the court for want  of evidence  (2)  that there had been a long interval  of  nine months  between  the criminal incidents  and  the  detention order, (3) that the order of detention which did not specify a period was violative of s. 12 of the Act and (4) that  the detention was founded on prevention of public disorder while the acts  imputed   to  the  petitioner  were  aimed  at   a particular person, not the general public, Dismissing the petition, HELD : Merely because the detaining authority had chosen  to base  the,  order  of  detention on  the  discharge  of  the

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petitioner  by the court for want of evidence it  cannot  be held  that  the  order  was  bad  in  law.  This  branch  of jurisprudence,  as  interpreted by this Court, has  made  it futile  for  a detenu to urge that because  the  grounds  of detention  have  been the subject matter of  criminal  cases which  have  ended  in discharge, therefore,  the  order  of detention  was  mala  fide. The basic  imperative  of  proof beyond  reasonable  doubt does not apply to  the  subjective satisfaction  component  of  imprisonment  for  reasons   of internal  security.  There  may be extreme cases  where  the court  had  held  a  criminal case  to.  be  false  and  the detaining authority with that judicial pronouncement  before him,  may  not  reasonably  claim  to  be  satisfied   about prospective prejudicial activities based on what a court has found to be baseless. In the present case where the order of discharge was made purely for want of evidence on the  scope that witnesses were too afraid to depose against a desperate character cannot come under the exceptions carved out by the court to this category. [616C-F] . (2)  it is true that there must be a live link  between  the grounds  of  criminal,  activity alleged  by  the  detaining authority and the purpose of detention. This credible  chain is snapped if there is too long and unexplained an  interval between,  the offending acts and the order of detention.  If the detaining authority takes the chance of conviction  and, when  the court verdict goes against it, falls back  on  its detention  power  to  punish one whom the  court  would  not convict,  it  is an abuse and virtual nullification  of  the judicial process. But if honestly finding a dangerous person getting  away with it by overawing witnesses  or  concealing the commission cleverly, an authority thinks on the material before him that there is likelihood of and need to interdict public  disorder  at  his instance  he  may  validly  direct detention. in the present case the acts were serious,  being bomb  hurling   and  brickbat  ’throwing  in  public  places creating panic. Involvement of the Petitioner was discovered only  during  the investigation of the offences.  No  ground exists for dismissing this statement as sham or  factitious. [616G-H;617C] 614 M.   S.  Khan v. C. C. Bose, A. 1. R. 1972 S.C. 1670,  Ashim Kumar  v.  State of West Bengal, A.I.R. 1972 S.C.  2561  and Sahib  Singh Dugal v. Union of’ India, [1966] 1 S.C.R.  313, followed. (3)  The argument that detention without defined duration is ipso  jure  invalid ,cannot be  sustained.   No  responsible government  should or would be irresponsive to the claim  of citizen’s  freedom.  [622F] Suna Ullah v. State of  j  &  K, A.I.R, 1972 S.C. 2431, 2433, Dattatreya Moreshwar  Pangarkar v.  State of Bombay, [1952] S.C.R. 612, S. Krishnan  v.  The State of Madras, [1951] S.C.R. 621; 629, and Prabhu Dayal v. District  Magistrate,  Kamrup,  [1974] 1  S.C.C.  103;  114, referred to. (4)  The  nature  of  the  act,  the  circumstances  of  its commission,  the  impact  on people  around  and  such  like factors constitute the pathology of public disorder.   These acts cannot be isolated from their public setting nor is  it possible  to  analyse its molecules as in a  laboratory  but take its total effect on the flow of orderly life. it may be a question of the degree and quality of the activity of  the sensitivity of the situation and the psychic response of the involved  people.   To  dissect further  is  to  defeat  the purpose of social defence which is the paramount purpose  of preventive detention. [623B-C] Mohd.   Subrati    v. State of West Bengal, [1973] 3  S.C.C.

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250; 256, referred to.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 1977 of 1973. Under  Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for issue  of  a writ in the nature of habeas corpus. D.   N. Mukherjee and M. M. Kshatriya, for the petitioner. p.   K.   Chatterjee   and  G.  S.   Chatterjee,   for   the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KRISHNA IYER, J.-A few issues of some moment, in the context of civil liberties have been argued in this application  for habeas corpus by Shri Mukherjee as amicus curiae.  The facts are disquieting at least for the reason that the  petitioner an aged ailing man around 74, has been under detention since 1973  and,  previous  to  it, had  been  facing  a  criminal prosecution  which  ended  in a discharge on  the  date  the detention order was clamped down on him; and counsel pressed the  poignant  circumstance  that  the  ultimate  order   of Government  dated  September 28, 1973  merely  confirms  the detention,  being unlimited in duration and  ’unspeaking  on the terminus ad quem for the incarceration. The  relevant  facts  may be stated  before  discussing  the highlights  ,of the arguments.  The Commissioner of  Police, Calcutta,  passed the initial order of detention dated  July 19, 1973 on the petitioner, Golam Hussain alias Gama,  under S.   3(1)  (a)  (ii)  read  with  sub-section  (2)  of   the Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971 (Act 26 of  1971) (hereinafter  referred to as ’the Act’).  The grounds  which induced  the  detaining  authority to pass  the  order  were communicated  the same day.  They have been set out  by  the State  as annexure to the affidavit filed in  opposition  to the petition and read thus               On 8-10-72 at about 22-25 hrs., you along with               your   associates  Achche  Lal  Show   of   1,               Manickotolla Bazar Lane, Satya Narayan Jaiswal               of  123/2, Acharya Prafulla in  Chandra  Road,               and others, all being armed with bombs,  soda-               water  bottles created a great disturbance  of               public order on Gouri Sankar Lane in front  of               premises No. 8 by hurling bombs               615               indiscriminately  with  a view to  attack  one               Jiban  Paul of 8. Gouri Shankar Lane  and  his               group  in  retaliation to an  earlier  quarrel               that took place with the said Jiban Paul at 8,               Gouri  Sankar Lane with your associates  Satya               Narayan  Jaiswal  and  others.   The  incident               terrorised the locality and threw out of  gear               the normal life stream of the residents of the                             said locality amounting to police orde r.               2.    On 9-11-72 sometimes between 04-45  hrs.               you along with your associates Ratish  Pradhan               alias  Laltu  of 23/lA, Abinash  Kaviraj  St.,               Benode Kr.  Jaiswal of 34B, Gulu Ostagar  Lane               and  other  all being  armed  with  brickbats,               soda-water  bottles,  bombs poles,  created  a               great  disturbance  of public order  on  Gouri               Sankar  Lane  and Abinash Kaviraj’  Street  by               hurling    soda-water    bottles,    brickbats               indiscriminately  with a view to  overawe  the               organisers of the Kalipuja that took place  in

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             front  of  8 Gowi Sankar Lane and  thereby  to               terrorise  the  locality.   As  a  result  the               lights   of  the  above  pujab  pandals   were               damaged.  This  was in sequel to  an  incident               that  took  place earlier at about  04-30  hrs               when  your associates Benode Kumar and  others               threw  beer bottles at the Kalipuja pandal  at               8, Gouri Sankar Lane, where some females  were               then dancing, which was then protested by  the               local  people and the organisers of  the  said               puja.               And if left free and unfettered you are likely               to  continue to disturb manitenance of  public               order  by  acting  in  a  similar  manner   as               aforesaid." As  required  by  the statute, the  fact  of  detention  was communicated to the State Government which in turn  reported to  the Central Government.  The case was placed before  the Advisory   Board   on   August  13,  1973   and   when   the representation  of  the  detenu was, received  it  was  duly considered  and  negatived  by the  State  Government  which thereafter  made  it  over to  the  Advisory  Board.   After adverting to the facts, the Board advised continuance of the detention  on September 21, 1973.  The  consequential  order confirming the detention was made by the State Government on September  28,  1973 and communicated to the detenu  by  the middle of October, 1973.  We see no statutory shortcoming in the  time  sequence  set out above.  But  other  grounds  of attack have been levelled against the order which deserve  a closer look. Shri  Mukherjee urged that although two criminal cases  were started  in connection with the two  incidents  constituting the grounds for the detention, the petitioner’s name was not even mentioned in the first information reports, and he  was produced before the Magistrate only on July 5, 1973, and  so the  order based on those accusations was too irrational  to be  bona  fide.  The Commissioner of Police who  passed  the detention order has stated in his affidavit that there  were cases  connected  with  ,he incidents  of  October  8th  and November  9th,  but the detenu could not be  arrested  until July  4, 1973.  It is not denied that the petitioner’s  name was not in the first information 616 report,  but  he  was  apprehended later  on  the  basis  of evidence  gathered during the investigation of the  criminal case.    The  commissioner  admits  that  the   detenu   was discharged  by  the, Court "as no witness  dared  to  depose against the detenu in open court." According to him the said order  of discharge was made on the prayer of the police  on July   19,   1973,  and  thereafter   the   petitioner   was Preventively detained.  Could such an order be castigated as malafide  and  oblique resort to the  inscrutable  order  of detention  when  the prospects in the criminal  case  became bleak ? This charge has been repudiated by the  Commissioner on oath and we are not able to hold with the petitioner that merely  because the detaining authority has chosen  to  pass the  order on the discharge of the petitioner by  the  court for want of evidence, the order is bad in law. , The  branch of  jurisprudence bearing on prohibitory detention has  been crystallised by now and it is no longer a valid  contention, that  because the accused has been discharged in a  criminal case  the  ground  of charge cannot be relied  upon  by  the appropriate  authority  for passing an order  of  detention. The  former relates to the punitive branch of  the  criminal law  and relates to the past commission, the latter  to  the

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preventive  branch  of  social  defence  and  protects   the community  from future injury.  Whether we like it  or  not, this  branch of jurisprudence, as interpreted by this  Court has  made  it futile for a detenu to urge that  because  the grounds  of  detention  have  been  the  subject  matter  of criminal cases which have ended in discharge, therefore, the order  of  detention is malafide.  The basic  imperative  of proof  beyond  reasonable  doubt  does  not  apply  to   the ’subjective  satisfaction’  component, of  imprisonment  for reasons  of  internal  security.  To  quarrel  with  such  a proposition  is to challenge the wisdom of  Parliament.   Of course,  we  can visualise extreme cases where a  court  has held  a criminal case to be false and a detaining  Authority with   that  judicial  pronouncement  before  him  may   not reasonably   claim   to  be  satisfied   about   prospective prejudicial activities based on what a court has found to be baseless.  But the present case where the order of discharge is  made  purely  for want of evidence  on  the  score  that witnesses  were  too afraid to depose  against  a  desperate character cannot come under this exceptional category. Another  submission, equally an exercise in  futility,  made before  us  is that there has been a long interval  of  nine months  between  the  criminal  incidents  of  October   and November,  1972  and  the detention  order  of  July,  1973. Counsel hopefully relied on recent decision of this Court in Lakshman  Khatik v. State of West Bengal (1) and an  earlier decision   in   Rameshwar  Shah   v.   District   Magistrate Burdwan(2).   It  is  true that there must be  a  live  link between  the  grounds of criminal activity  alleged  by  the detaining  authority and the purpose of  detention,  namely, inhibition of prejudicial activity of the species  specified in the statute.  This credible chain is snapped if there  is too  long and unexplained an interval between the  Offending acts  and  the  order of detention.  Such is  the  ratio  of proximity  in  Lakshman  Khatik(l).   No  authority,  acting rationally, can be satisfied, subjectively or otherwise,  of future mischief merely because long ago the detenu had (1) Writ Petit Judgment on 26-2-74. (2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 921. 617 done  something  evil.  To rule otherwise is to  sanction  a simulacrum  of a statutory requirement.  But  no  mechanical test  by counting the months of the interval is  sound.   It all  depends on the nature of the acts relied on, grave  and determined or less serious and corrigible, on the length  of the gap, short or long on the reason for the delay in taking preventive  action, like information of participation  being available  only in the course of an investigation.  We  have to investigate whether the causal connection has been broken in the circumstances of each case. If  the detaining authority takes the chance  of  conviction and,  when the court verdict goes against it, falls back  on its  detention power to punish one whom the court would  not convict,  it  is an abuse and virtual nullification  of  the judicial  process.   But  if honestly  finding  a  dangerous person  getting  away  with it  by  overawing  witnesses  or concealing  the commission cleverly an authority  thinks  on the material before him that there is likelihood of and need to interdict public disorder at his instance he may  validly direct detention.  The distinction is fine but real.  In the present  case, the acts ere serious, being bomb hurling  and brick-bat  throwing in public places creating.  panic.   The involvement of the petitioner is discovered only during  the investigation  of  the offences.  The witnesses  are  scared away  from deposing. The Commissioner swears that  in  these

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special circumstances he did form the satisfaction requisite for  ordering   preventive detention, No ground  exists  for dismissing this statement as sham or factitious.  It is  one thing  to  say  that  a  more  subjective  satisfaction   is sufficient to deprive a person of a fundamental freedom.  it is another to reject that satisfaction as specious and  non- existent.   Parliament makes the law and is responsible  for it;  the  court  only  applies it, as  it  must.   We  have, therefore, to reject the plea that because the criminal case has  failed the detention must be bad. M. S. Khan v.  C.  C. Bose, (1) Ashim Kumar v. State of West Bengal(2), and  Sahib Singh  Dugal v. Union of India(3) are but three  among  many cases taking this view.  We follow these precedents. The  next serious contention of Shri Chatterjee is  that  an order  of  detention  which does not  specify  a  period  is violative  of  s.  12  of the Act.   We  may  reproduce  the relevant  provisions  which are of  ancient  vintage,  being wholly  or  substantially  in  pari  materia  with   earlier corresponding  preventive  detention sections.  Nor  is  the position of law can vassed for res integra.  Section l2  and l3  of  the Maintenance of Internal Security Act,  1971,  as amended, read as follows :               "12(1)ln any case where the Advisory Board has               reported   that  there  is  in   its   opinion               sufficient  cause  for  the  detention  of   a               person, the appropriate Government may confirm               the detention order and continue the detention               of the person concerned for such period as  it               thinks fit.               (2)                (1) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1670.                (2) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2561.                (3)  [1966] 1 S.C.R. 313.               618               13.   The maximum period for which any  person               may be detained in pursuance of any  detention               order  which has been confirmed under  section               12  shall  be twelve months from the  date  of               detention, or until the expiry of the  Defence               of India Act, 1971 whichever is later ;               Provided   that  nothing  contained  in   this               section   shall  affect  the  power   of   the               appropriate Government to revoke or modify the               detention order at any earlier time." Section 1(3) of the Defence of India Act, 1971 laid down the duration of that Act and said that that Act shall remain  in force for the duration of the proclamation of emergency  and a period of six months thereafter.  Section 13 of the  MISA, as  amended,  thus  provided  that  the  maximum  period  of detention under the Act shall be twelve months from the date of  detention or until the expiry of a period of six  months after  the  cessation  of  the  proclamation  of  emergency, whichever is later. The  Court  recently dismissed a similar argument  in  these words in Suna Ullah v. State of J & K (1) :               "It  is  urged that the failure of  the  State               Government to specify the period of  detention               introduces  an infirmity in the  detention  of               the  petitioner.   This  contention,  in   our               opinion,  is without any force.  According  to               sub-section  (1) of Section 12 of the Act,  in               any case where the Advisory Board has reported               that  there  is, in  its  opinion,  sufficient               cause  for  the  detention of  a  person,  the               Government may confirm the detention order and

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             continue the detention of the person concerned               for such period as it thinks fit.  Section  13               of  the  Act specifies the maximum  period  of               detention.   According  to  that  section  the               maximum  period  for  which a  person  may  be               detained in pursuance of any detention  order,               which  has  been confirmed under  Section  12,               shall be two years from the date of detention.               It  is  further provided that nothing  in  the               section   shall  effect  the  power   of   the               Government  to revoke or modify the  detention               order  at  any earlier time.  It  is,  in  our               opinion, difficult to infer from the  language               of  Section  12  of the  Act  that  the  State               Government  while  confirming  the   detention               order  should  also  specify  the  period   of               detention.   All that the section requires  is               that, if the Advisory Board has reported  that               there is, in its opinion, sufficient cause for               the  detention of the person,  the  Government               may  confirm  the detention order.   There  is               nothing in the section which enjoins upon  the               Government to specify the period of  detention               order.   The concluding words  of  sub-section               (1)  of  Section 12, according  to  which  the                             Government  may continue the detention   of  the               person concerned for such period as it  thinks               fit, pertain to and embody the consequences of               the  confirmation of the detention order.   It               is,  however,  manifest that  the  period  for               which  a  person  can be  detained  after  the               confirmation of the detention order is subject               to  the  limit  of two  years,  which  is  the               maximum period of detention for which a person               can be detained vide section 13 of the Act.               (1)   A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 2431; 2433.               619               Apart  from the above, we are of  the  opinion               that it is not always practicable and feasible               for  the  State  Government  at  the  time  of               confirming the detention order to specify  the               period of detention.  The continued  detention               of  the detenu, subject to the maximum  period               prescribed by the Act, depends upon a  variety               of factors and the State Government would have               to  take  into account all  the  circumstances               including  fresh developments  and  subsequent               events in deciding whether to keep the  detenu               in  detention  for the maximum  period  or  to               release him earlier.  It has accordingly  been               provided  in sub-section (2) of Section 13  of               the  Act that the State Government would  have               the  power to revoke or modify  the  detention               order  at any time earlier than the expiry  of               two years from the date of detention." The leading case, if we may say so, is Dattatraya  Moreshwar Pangarkar  v. State of Bombay(l). The majority held that  an order of detention under a substantially like provision  was not  invalid  merely because the order did not  contain  the period of imprisonment.  Mahajan, J., as he then was, held a contrary  view.   But even the majority was split  on  their construction of the section.Das, J., as he then was,  read the section to imply no obligation towrite into the order the  duration, even though it may be  desirable.The  learned

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Judge observed :               "It  is  said  that  the  section  should   be               construed irrespective Of whether it occurs in               a temporary statute or a permanent one, and it               is urged that if the statute were a  permanent               one    the    section   on    the    aforesaid               interpretation,   would  have   permitted   an               indefinite  detention. The answer is given  by               Mahajan  J., in the following passage  in  his               judgment in S. Krishnan v The State of  Madras               (supra) at page 639 with which concurred(2)               "It  may  be pointed out that  Parliament  may               well  have thought that it was unnecessary  to               fix any maximum period of detention in the new               statute  which was of a temporary  nature  and               whose  own tenure of life was limited  to  one                             year.   Such temporary statutes cease to  have               any    effect   after   they    expire    they               automatically come to an end at the expiry  of               the  period for which they have  been  enacted               and  nothing further can be done  under  them.               The detention of the petitioners therefore  is               bound  to come to an end auto  matically  with               the life of the statute and in these  circums-               tances  Parliament may well have thought  that               it  would be wholly unnecessary  to  legislate               and provide a maximum period of detention  for               those detained under this law." For all I know, such drastic and extensive power to continue the  detention as long as it may think fit may not be  given by  Parliament  to the executive Government in  a  permanent statute. (1) (1952) S.C.R. 612. (2) [1951] S.C.R. 621; 629. 620 But  if it does think fit to do so, it will not be  for  the Court to question the knowledge, wisdom or patriotism of the Legislature and to permit its dislike for the policy of  the law  to prevail over the plain meaning of the language  used by the Legislature.  Apart from this consideration, there is a period specified in the sub-section itself, for as soon as the  appropriate  Government  will cease  to  think  fit  to continue  the detention it will revoke the  detention  order under   section  13  and  the  period  of   detention   will automatically come to an end."               "If   the  specification  of  the  period   of               detention  is ’not at all sacrosanct  and  the               appropriate   Government   may    nevertheless               continue  the detention as long as  it  thinks               fit  to do so, why is the specification  of  a               period  to be regarded as virtually or at  all               necessary?  So far as the detenu is concerned,               his  detention will not be any  more  definite               and  less  irksome  if  it  is  open  to   the               appropriate   Government   to   continue   the               detention  by an indefinite number  of  orders               made from time to time until the expiry of the               Act itself by afflux of time in the case of  a               temporary statute or by its repeal in the case               of  a  permanent Act.  It is said that  if  we               insist on a specification of a definite period               when  the  confirmatory order is  in  a  deand               there after each time the period of  detention               is  extended then the  appropriate  Government

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             will have to apply its mind to the case of the               detenu  before  it  will  make  an  order  for               further  continuation  of the  detention,  but               that if we say that no time need be specified,               the appropriate Government will lose sight  of               the  case  and  the detenu  will  be  detained               indefinitely.   I  do not see  why  we  should               impute   such  dereliction  of  duty  to   the               appropriate Government’, but even if we do  so                             and insist on the specification of the   period               of  detention we shall perhaps be driving  the               appropriate  Government  to  fix  the  longest               permissible  period of detention  ending  with               the expiry of the Act itself and then to  lose               sight  of  the case of the  detenu.   That,  I               apprehend, will do no good to the detenu."               "In any event, the considerations of  hardship               urged  upon  us may make it desirable  that  a               period  of detention should be fixed but  this               cannot alter the plain meaning of the language               of the section :               Patanjali Sastri, C. J., concurred.   However,               Mukherjea J. struck a different note               "The  question now is whether the omission  to               state  the period of further  detention  while               confirming  the detention order under  section               II  (1) of the Preventive Detention Act  makes               the detention illegal ? The point is not  free               from doubt, but having regard to the fact that               the   new  Preventive  Detention  Act   is   a               temporary  statute  which was to be  in  force               only up to the               621               1st  of  April,  1952,  and.  has  only   been               recently  extended to a further period of  six               months  and  no detention under  the  Act  can               continue after the date of expiry of the  Act,               I am in-.limed to hold that  non-specification               of  the  further  period  in  an  order  under               section  11(1)  of the Act does not  make  the               order of detention a nullity.  If no period is               mentioned,  the order might be taken to  imply               that  it would continue upto the date  of  the               expiration   of  the  Act  itself   when   all               detentions  made under it would  automatically               come  to an end.  Of course,  the  appropriate               Government  is always at liberty to  terminate               the   order  of  detention  earlier,   if   it               considers  proper, in exercise of its  general               powers under section 13 of the Act,"               ’It  is  perfectly  true  that  an  order  for               detention   for   an  indefinite   period   is               repugnant  to  all notions  of  democracy  and               individual liberty, but the indefiniteness  in               the case of an order made under section  11(1)               of  the Preventive Detention Act is in  a  way               cured by the fact that there is a limit set to               the   duration  of  the  Act   itself,   which               automatically  prescribes  a  limit  of   time               beyond which the order cannot operate.  In  my               opinion,  section  II (1)  of  the  Preventive               Detention  Act does contemplate that a  period               should  be mentioned during which the  further               detention of the detwnu is to continue and the

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             Government should see that no omission  occurs                             in this respect, but I am unable to ho ld  that               this  omission  alone would make the  order  a               nullity which will justify us in releasing the               detenu."               Chandrasekhara Aiyar J. concurred. The  undercurrent  of judicial unease at loss  or  citizen’s liberty  because the Executive subjectively opined that  way is  evident  in the pages of the report,  but  the  brooding feeling  that  the preventive detention  legislation  was  a short-lived statute and all imprisonment without trial would terminate at a near date was writ large in all the opinions. After  all  civil liberty ordinarily  ends  where  detention without  trial  begins  and commitment to the  rule  of  law receives  a rude shock where a permanent statute  authorises long  term gaol confinement.  That is why courts  have  been strict  even  on  procedural  steps.   Mathew  J.   recently observed in Prabhu Dayal v. District Magistrate, Kamrup(l):               "The  facts of the case might induce  mournful               reflection   how  an  honest  attempt  by   an               authority  charged  with the  duty  of  taking               prophylactic measure to secure the maintenance               of  supplies  and services  essential  to  the               community  has  been  frustrated  by  what  is               popularly  called a technical error.   We  say               and  that we think it is necessary to  repeat,               that the gravity of the evil to the  community               resulting  from  anti-social  activities   can               never furnish an adequate reason for  invading               the  personal liberty of a citizen, except  in               accordance  with the procedure established  by               the Constitution and the laws.  The history of               personal  liberty  is-largely the  history  of               insistence on observance of procedure’.               (1)  W.  P. No, 1496 of 1973;  judgment  dated               October 11, 1973.-[1974]               I SCC 103, 114.               622               Observance  of procedure has been the  bastion               against  wanton assaults on  personal  liberty               over  the years.  Under our  Constitution  the               only  guarantee  of  personal  liberty  for  a               person is that he shall not be deprived of  it               except   in  accordance  with  the   procedure               established   bylaw.   The  need   today   for               maintenance of supplies and services essential               to  the community cannot  be  over-emphasized.               There  will  be  no  social  security  without               maintenance of adequate supplies and  services               essential   to  the  community.   But   social               security is not the only goal of good society.               There  are  other values in  a  society.   Our               country  is  taking  singular  pride  in   the               democratic  ideals  in personal  liberty.   It               would  indeed  be ironic if, in  the  name  of               social   security,  we  would   sanction   the               subversion  of this liberty.  We do not  pause                             to  consider whether social security is  more               precious than personal liberty in the scale of               values.   For,  any judgment as  regards  that               would  be  but  a  value  judgment  on   which               opinions  might  differ. But whatever  be  its               impact  on  the maintenance  of  supplies  and

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             services  essential to the community,  when  a               certain   procedure  is  prescribed   by   the               Constitution  or  the  laws  for  depriving  a               citizen of his personal liberty, we think  it,               our  duty  to  see  that  that  procedure   is               rigorously  observed,  however  strange   this               might sound to some ears." The  basic  feature  of the Act as  distinguished  from  its predecessor is that it is no longer a temporary law and even the   duration   of  the  detention  can  be   distant   and considerable.  We have misgivings about these  anti-personal freedom facets but regard hopefully the presence and use  of the  power to revoke the detention on a review at any  time. Moreover there is no reason to think that this extraordinary power  will  be used indiscriminately or inordinately  by  a democratic  government.   A tenable  interpretation  that  a detention order of prolonged and unspecified duration has to be abandoned for the time not merely because of the pressure of  precedents  but because we are assured  by  the  State’s counsel that the fulfilment of the imperative obligation  of the  State to review from time to time the  changing  social situation  and the individuals’ criminal  potential  tipping the scales in favour of enlargement of the detenu is  taking place.   No  responsible  government  should  or  would   be irresponsive  to  the  claim of citizen’s  freedom  and  the argument  that  detention without defined duration  is  ipso jure invalid cannot be sustained. Shri  Chatterjee  took  up the  further  position  that  the detention  in the case on hand was founded on prevention  of public disorder while the acts imputed to the petitioner  ex facie  were aimed at a particular person and not the  public generally.   Lohia’s(l) case and other rulings were said  to reinforce  this  stance.  The law is plain and  the  decided cases  are  concordant.  A criminal act  hitting  a  private target  such  as indecent assult of a woman  or  slapping  a neighbour  or knocking down a pedestrian while  driving  may not shake up public order.  But (1)  [1966] 1 S.C.R. 769. 623 a  drunk  with  a drawn knife chasing a woman  in  a  public street and all women running in panic, a Hindu or Muslim  in a  crowded  place at a time of communal tension  throwing  a bomb  at  a  personal enemy of the other  religion  and  the people all scared fleeing the area, a striking worker  armed with  a  dagger stabbing a blackleg during a  bitter  strike spreading   terror-these  are  invasions  of  public   order although the motivation may be against a particular  private individual.  The nature of the act the circumstances of  its commission the impact on people around and such like factors constitute  the  pathology of public  disorder.   We  cannot isolate  the  act  from its public setting  or  analyse  its molecules  as in a laboratory but take its total  effect  on the  flow  of  orderly life.  It may be a  question  of  the degree and quality of the activity of the sensitivity of the situation  and the psychic response of the involved  people. To  dissect  further  is to defeat  the  purpose  of  social defence  which  is  the  paramount  purpose  of   preventive detention. Another argument, rather flimsy, was made that a corrigendum reading  ’public order’ in the place of ’police  order’  was not communicated to the detenu.  It is not so and merits  no consideration.   One or two other points, too trivial to  be seriously noticed were also mentioned but we ignore them. Basically we must realise the unpleasant truth that the  new jurisdiction  of  preventive  detention  by  executive  fiat

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founded  on  subjective  satisfaction  and  jejune  judicial protection is an erosion of a great right. We     may repeat what this Court in a different context recently observed  in Mohd.  Subrati v. State of West Bengal(1) :               "It  must  be  remembered  that  the  personal               liberty  of  an individual has been  given  an               honoured place in the fundamental rights which               our   Constitution  has  jealously   protected               against illegal and arbitrary deprivation  and               that this Court has been entrusted with a duty               and  invested  with a power  to  enforce  that               fundamental right." The  seriousness of the step must be appreciated by  Govern- ment  and  continuous check-up on the need  to  prolong  the prison  life  of  the  citizen made.   The  final  cure  for prejudicial  activities  threatening  the  survival  of  the community is not executive shut-up of all suspects in prison for  how  long one is kept guessing.  Such  a  strategy  may alienate and embitter men who should be weaned away and  won over.  In the present case a septuagenarian allegedly sickly is confined in jail for an unspecified period.  It may  well be  that  his private enemy on whom he threw a bomb  is  not there at all.  It may also be that the detenu has altogether changed  his  outlook  as many  well-known  terrorists  have turned marvels of saintliness.  History will, we hope, serve the  Administration  as reminder of unwitting  misuse  while exercising near-absolute power. We dismiss the petition. P.B.R. (1) [1973] 3 S.C.C. 250; 256                                   Petition dismissed. 624