28 July 1981
Supreme Court
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KAVITA W/O SUNDER SHANKARDAS DEVIDASANI ETC. Vs STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS. ETC. ETC.

Bench: REDDY,O. CHINNAPPA (J)
Case number: Writ Petition(Criminal) 2690 of 1981


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PETITIONER: KAVITA W/O SUNDER SHANKARDAS DEVIDASANI ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS. ETC. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT28/07/1981

BENCH: REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) BENCH: REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) SEN, A.P. (J) ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)

CITATION:  1981 AIR 1641            1982 SCR  (1) 138  1981 SCC  (3) 558        1981 SCALE  (3)1117  CITATOR INFO :  R          1981 SC1753  (2)  RF         1981 SC2041  (10)  RF         1981 SC2084  (1)  D          1983 SC 181  (5)  R          1983 SC 311  (7)  RF         1988 SC 109  (5)  R          1988 SC2090  (22)  R          1989 SC 389  (7)  R          1990 SC 231  (23)

ACT:      Constitution of  India 1950,  Articles 21  and  22  and Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974-S. 8(b), (c), (e) and (f).      Order of detention under Act-Specification of period of detention-To be  done at  final stage after consideration of report of Advisory Board.      Representation of  detenu-Whether to  be considered  by the same individual who made the initial order of detention.      Detenu-Whether has  a right to be represented by lawyer before Advisory Board.      Maharashtra Government  Rules of  Business, Rule  6 and Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities-Maharashtra Detention Order 1974.      Representation of  Detenu-Minister of  State  for  Home Affairs-Whether   competent   to   deal   and   dispose   of representation.

HEADNOTE:      The husband of the petitioner was detained by the State Government under section 3(1) of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and  Prevention of  Smuggling Activities  Act  1974 with a view to prevent him from smuggling goods and abetting the smuggling  of goods.  His representation  to  the  State Government was  rejected. The Advisory Board informed him by a letter  that the  Board had  reported  to  the  Government advising them  that there was sufficient material to justify his detention.      In the  writ  petition  filed  in  this  Court  it  was contended on  behalf of  the detenu: (1) although it was the Government that was required by section 8(b) of the COFEPOSA

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to make  the reference to the Advisory Board, it was not the Government but  one of its subordinate officer that had made the reference,  and that  this departure from the prescribed procedural requirement  had made  the continued detention of the detenu  for  any  period  longer  than  the  five  weeks mentioned in  section 8(b)  illegal; (2)  the representation was disposed  of by the Minister of State of Home Affairs of the State Government without any authority to do so; (3) the detenu was  not permitted  to be  represented  by  a  lawyer despite his  request that  he might be allowed to engage the services of  a lawyer  before the  Advisory Board; (4) there was a non-application of the mind of the detaining authority first in making the 139 order  of   detention   and   later   in   considering   the representation of  the detenu;  and  (5)  that  it  was  the Assistant Secretary  to the  State Government  who signed at the bottom of the grounds that he thought it was against the public interest  to disclose  the source of intelligence and the facts contained therein.      In the  connected writ  petition, only the first two of the aforestated contentions were raised.      Dismissing the writ petitions, ^      HELD: 1.(i)  The order  of detention has not to specify the proposed  period of detention at that stage. Within five days of  the detention,  detenu is  required to be furnished with the  grounds of detention so as to enable him to make a representation to the detaining authority. (Article 22(5) of the Constitution  and section  3(3), COFEPOSA).  Thereafter, within three months from the date of detention, the Advisory Board has  to report  on the  sufficiency of  cause for such detention. This  is a  constitutional mandate (Article 22(4) of the  Constitution). In order to enable the Advisory Board to discharge its constitutional obligation the Government is required to  make a  reference to  the Advisory Board within five weeks  from the  date of  detention. (Section  8(b)  of COFEPOSA). The  Advisory Board  in its  turn is charged with the task of submitting a report within eleven weeks from the date of  detention, specifying  its opinion as to whether or not there  is sufficient  cause for  the  detention  of  the person concerned  (Section 8(c)  COFEPOSA).  The  period  of eleven weeks is to enable compliance with the Constitutional time-limit of  three months.  On receipt  of the  report the Government has  to revoke  the detention,  if the  Board has reported that there is no sufficient cause for the detention or, to confirm the order of detention and specify the period of detention  if the  Board has reported there is sufficient cause for  the detention.  (Section 8(f)  COFEPOSA). In  the meanwhile at  any time  the Central  Government in any case, and the  State Government if the order of detention was made by the  State Government  or by  an  Officer  of  the  State Government, are  entitled to  revoke the order of detention. [144 C-G]      (ii) There is no constitutional or statutory obligation on any  one, until after the report of the Advisory Board is received to decide finally or tentatively upon the period of detention. The initial compulsion on the detaining authority before making  an order  of detention  is to  arrive at  the satisfaction that  it is  necessary  to  detain  the  person concerned with  a view  to preventing  him from  acting in a certain manner  or  with  a  view  to  preventing  him  from committing certain  acts.  The  obligation  to  specify  the period of  detention is  upon the appropriate Government and that has  to be done at the final stage, after consideration

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of  the   report  of   the  Advisory   Board.  There  is  no intermediate stage  at which  any tentative conclusion is to be arrived  at by  the Government  regarding the  period  of detention though, at any and every stage, the Government has the full liberty to revoke the order of detention.      [144 H-145 C]      (iii) The  act of  making a  reference to  the Advisory Board is  a  mechanical  or  ministerial  act  involving  no exercise of  discretion, though  of course the Government is at the  stage, as  at all  other stages at liberty to revoke the order  of detention.  The prescription  of five weeks in section 8(b) of the 140 COFEPOSA for the making of a reference to the Advisory Board is  with   a  view   to  enable   the  fulfilment   of   the constitutional requirement  of Article  22(4) and not with a view to  imposing  an  obligation  upon  the  Government  to consider the  question of the length of detention and arrive at a tentative conclusion even at that stage. [145 D]      2.(i) The Maharashtra Government Rules of Business made by the  Governor in  exercise of  the  powers  conferred  by Article 166(2)  and (3) of the Constitution provides by Rule 6 that  the Chief  Minister and  a Minister  in consultation with the  Chief Minister may allot to a Minister of State or a Deputy  Minister any business appertaining to a Department or a  part of  a Department.  The Standing Order made by the Chief Minister  of Maharashtra and Minister for Home directs allotment of  the business  appertaining to  "All  cases  of Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities  Act,   1974  and  the  Conservation  of  Foreign Exchange   and    Prevention   of    Smuggling    Activities ............... Maharashtra  Detention Order,  1974 and  all other matters  arising under  the provisions of the said Act and the  said Order.....and  any other  orders issued  under this Act,  except....." to  the Minister  of State for Home. The  Minister  of  State  for  Home  Affairs  was  therefore entitled to deal with the representation of the detenu. [145 H, F-G; 146 A]      (ii) Governmental business can never get through if the same individual has to act for the Government at every stage of a proceeding or transaction, however, advantageous it may be to  do so.  Nor can  it be  said that  it would be to the advantage of the detenu to have the matter dealt with by the same individual  at all  stages. It  may perhaps  be to  the advantage of  the detenu  if fresh minds are brought to bear upon the question at different stages. There is therefore no substance in  the suggestion  that the representation of the detenu should  have been  considered by  the very individual who had  exercised his  mind at  the initial stage of making the order of detention. [146 D, B]      3.  While   section  8(e)  disentitles  a  detenu  from claiming as  of right to be represented by a lawyer, it does not disentitle him from making a request for the services of a lawyer.  The importance  of legal  assistance can never be over-stated and  adequate legal  assistance may be essential for the  protection of  the Fundamental  Right to  life  and personal  liberty   guaranteed  by   Article   21   of   the Constitution and  the Right to be heard given to a detenu by section 8(e)  of COFEPOSA.  These rights  may be jeopardised and  reduced   to  mere   nothings  without  adequate  legal assistance.  That   would  depend   on  the  facts  of  each individual case,  in the  light of  the intricacies  of  the problems involved  and other  relevant  factors.  Therefore, where a  detenu makes  a request  for legal  assistance, his request would have to be considered on its own merit in each

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individual case. [146 H-147 C]      In  the  instant  case,  the  State  Government  merely informed the  detenu that  he had  no statutory  right to be represented by  a lawyer before the Advisory Board. Since it was for  the Advisory  Board and  not for  the Government to afford legal  assistance to  the detenu  the latter, when he was produced  before the  Advisory Board,  could have, if he was so  minded, made  a request  to the  Advisory Board  for permission to  be represented  by a lawyer. He preferred not to do  so. The  detenu was, therefore, not wrongfully denied the assistance of 141 counsel as  to the  conclusion that  procedural fairness,  a part of  the Fundamental  Right guaranteed  by Article 21 of the Constitution was denied to him. [147 D-E]      4. A  reading of  the grounds of detention reveals that all that was said was that the documents received by post at the time  of search  pertained to  an order dated 29.11.1980 and not  that there  was any  admission by  the detenu  that there was ever an order dated 29.11.1980. [147 H]      5. The mistake that it was only the Assistant Secretary of the  State Government  who signed  at the  bottom of  the grounds that  it was against the public interest to disclose the source  of intelligence was explained by the respondents as a  clerical mistake,  and was  later rectified  by making suitable corrections. [148 C-E]

JUDGMENT:      ORIGINAL JURISDICTION:  Writ  Petition  (Criminal)  No. 2690 of 1981.       (Under article 32 of the Constitution of India)                             AND      Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 3241 of 1981.       (Under article 32 of the Constitution of India)      Ram Jethmalani  and M.S.  Ganesh for  the Petitioner in W.P. No. 2690/81.      O.P. Rana  and R.N.  Poddar for the Respondents in W.P. No. 2690/81.      Ram  Jethmalani  and  Miss.  Rani  Jethmalani  for  the Petitioner in W.P. No. 3241 /81.      Hardyal Hardy,  S. Narayanan and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondents in W.P. No. 3241/81.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. These two Writ Petitions (Criminal) may be  disposed of  by a  single judgment  as some  of  the questions raised  are common  to both. To begin with, we may refer to  the facts  in Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 2690 of 1981. The  Government of  Maharashtra, in  exercise  of  the powers  under  Sec.  3(1)  of  the  COFEPOSA,  directed  the detention of  Sunder Shankardas Devidasani by an order dated March 9,  1981, with  a view  to prevent  him from smuggling goods and abetting the smuggling of goods. The 142 grounds of  detention, also  of the  same  date,  were  duly served on  the detenu.  The detenu  made a representation on April 14,  1981 and  this was  rejected by the Government on April 25,  1981. A further representation made by the detenu on April  25, 1981  was also rejected on May 2, 1981. In the mean-time the  Advisory Board  met on  April  29,  1981  and considered the  case of the detenu. By a letter dated May 6, 1981 the  detenu was informed by the Advisory Board that the Board had reported to the Government of Maharashtra advising them that  there was  sufficient  material  to  justify  his

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detention.      In this  application for  the issue of a Writ of Habeas Corpus, the  first submission  of Shri  Jethmalani,  learned counsel for  the  detenu,  was  that  although  it  was  the Government that was required by Sec. 8(b) of the COFEPOSA to make the  reference to  the Advisory  Board, in  the instant case, it  was not  the Government but one of its subordinate officers that  had  made  the  reference.  There  was  thus, according  to   Shri  Jethmalani,   a  departure   from  the prescribed procedural  requirement and  for that  reason the continued detention of the detenu for any period longer than five  weeks   mentioned  in   Sec  8(b)  was  illegal.  Shri Jethmalani’s contention  was that  Sec. 8  (b) required  the Government to  make a reference to the Advisory Board within five weeks  from the  date of  detention and this meant that the Government  had first to decide that it was necessary to detain the  person for  more than  five weeks  and  then  to forward the  reference to  the Advisory  Board. The  learned counsel would  have it that the making of a reference to the Advisory Board  necessitated a decision to detain the detenu for more than five weeks and this decision could be taken by the Government only and none else.      We are  unable to  agree with  the submission  of  Shri Jethmalani. Art.  22 (4)  (a) of the Constitution prescribes that  no   law  providing  for  preventive  detention  shall authorise the detention of a person for a longer period than three months  unless an Advisory Board consisting of persons who are,  or have been, or are qualified to be appointed as, Judges of a High Court has reported before the expiration of the said period of three months that there is in its opinion sufficient  cause  for  such  detention.  Art.  22  (7)  (c) empowers Parliament,  by law,  to prescribe the procedure to be followed by an Advisory Board in an enquiry under Art. 22 (4) (a).  Sec. 3  (1) of the COFEPOSA authorises the Central Government, the  State  Government  an  officer  of  Central Government,  not   below  the  rank  of  a  Joint  Secretary specially empowered in that behalf, or an Officer 143 of a  State Government  not below  the rank  of a  Secretary specially  empowered   in  that  behalf  to  make  an  order directing that  a person  be detained,  if  satisfied,  with respect to  that person,  that it is necessary to detain him with a  view to  preventing him  from acting  in any  manner prejudicial to  the conservation  or augmentation of foreign exchange or  with a  view to  preventing him  from smuggling goods, etc.  etc. Sec.  3 (3) provides for the communication of the  grounds of  detention to the detenu to enable him to make  a   representation.  The   communication  has   to  be ordinarily not later than five days of the date of detention though in  exceptional  circumstances,  for  reasons  to  be recorded in writing, it may be fifteen days. Sec. 8 provides for the constitution of Advisory Boards and the procedure to be followed  by them.  Sec. 8  (b) obliges  the  appropriate Government, within  five weeks from the date of detention of a person  under a  detention order,  to make  a reference in respect of the detention to the Advisory Board to enable the Advisory Board  to make  the report under Art. 22 (4) (e) of the Constitution.  Sec. 8 (c) prescribes the procedure to be followed by  the Advisory  Board and  requires the  Advisory Board to submit its report within eleven weeks from the date of detention  of the person concerned. Sec, 8 (f) stipulates that the  appropriate Government  shall revoke the detention order and  cause the  person to be released forthwith if the Advisory Board  has reported that there is in its opinion no sufficient cause  for the detention of the person concerned.

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If the  Advisory Board  reports that there is in its opinion sufficient cause  for  the  detention  of  the  person,  the appropriate Government  may confirm  the detention order and continue the  detention of  the person  concerned  for  such period  as  it  thinks  fit.  Sec.  11  empowers  the  State Government to  revoke an  order  of  detention  made  by  an Officer of  the State Government, and the Central Government to revoke  an order of detention made by a State Government, an officer  of a  State Government  or  an  Officer  of  the Central Government.  The power  of the  State Government and the Central  Government, under  Sec. 11  of the COFEPOSA, to revoke orders of detention is in addition to the power under Sec. 21  of the  General Clauses  Act to  revoke  their  own orders.      The first  important factor  to be noticed here is that the period  for which  a person  is to be detained under the COFEPOSA is  not to  be determined and specified at the time of making  the original  order of detention under Sec. 3(1). It has  to be  determined  and  specified  at  the  time  of confirming the  order of  detention under  Sec. 8 (f), after receiving the  report of  the  Advisory  Board.  The  second factor 144 of importance  which calls  for attention  is that  while an order of  detention may be made by the State Government, the Central  Government  or  an  Officer  of  either  Government specially empowered  in that  behalf, an  order of detention may only be confirmed by the appropriate Government. Keeping in mind  these two  factors, we  may now  examine the  time- scheme under  the COFEPOSA.  First the  detaining authority, who may  be the  Central Government, the State Government or an Officer of either Government, specially empowered in that behalf, must  be satisfied  that it is necessary to detain a person with  a view  to preventing  him  from  acting  in  a certain  manner   or  doing   certain  things,  and  if  so, satisfied, an  order of  detention may  be made (Sec. 3 (1), COFEPOSA). The  order of  detention has  not to  specify the proposed period of detention at that stage. Within five days of the  detention, the  detenu is  required to  be furnished with the  grounds of detention so as to enable him to make a representation to the detaining authority (Art. 22(5) of the Constitution and  Sec. 3(3),  COFEPOSA). Thereafter,  within three months  from the date of detention, the Advisory Board has to  report the  sufficiency of cause for such detention. This  is   a  constitutional  mandate  (Art.  22(4)  of  the Constitution). In  order to  enable the  Advisory  Board  to discharge its  constitutional obligation,  the Government is required to  make a  reference to  the Advisory Board within five  weeks  from  the  date  of  detention  (Sec.  8(b)  of COFEPOSA). The  Advisory Board  in its  turn is charged with the task of submitting a report within eleven weeks from the date of  detention, specifying  its opinion as to whether or not there  is sufficient  cause for  the  detention  of  the person concerned  (Sec. 8(c), COFEPOSA). Quite obviously the period of eleven weeks from the date of detention prescribed for the submission of the report of the Advisory Board is to enable compliance  with  the  Constitutional  time-limit  of three months. On receipt of the report the Government has to revoke the  detention, if  the Board has reported that there is no  sufficient cause for the detention or, to confirm the order of  detention and  specify the  period of detention if the Board  has reported  that there  is sufficient cause for the detention (Sec. 8(f) COFEPOSA). In the meanwhile, at any time, the  Central Government  in any  case, and  the  State Government if  the order  of detention was made by the State

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Government or  by an  Officer of  the State  Government, are entitled to  revoke the order of detention. Thus there is no Constitutional or  Statutory  obligation  on  anyone,  until after the report of the Advisory Board is received to decide finally or  tentatively upon  the period  of detention.  The initial compulsion  on the detaining authority before making an order of detention is 145 to arrive at the satisfaction that it is necessary to detain the person  concerned with  a view  to preventing  him  from acting in  a certain manner or with a view to preventing him from committing  certain acts. The obligation to specify the period of  detention is  upon the appropriate Government and that has  to be done at the final stage, after consideration of  the   report  of   the  Advisory   Board.  There  is  no intermediate stage  at which  any tentative conclusion is to be arrived  at by  the Government  regarding the  period  of detention though, at any and every stage, the Government has the full  liberty to  revoke the order of detention. We are, therefore, of the view that the act of making a reference to the Advisory  Board  is  a  mechanical  or  ministerial  act involving no  exercise of  discretion, though  of course the Government is  at that  stage, as  at all  other stages,  at liberty to  revoke the  order of detention. The prescription of five weeks in Sec. 8(b) of the COFEPOSA for the making of a reference  to the  Advisory Board is with a view to enable the fulfilment  of the  Constitutional requirement  of  Art. 22(4) and not with a view to imposing an obligation upon the Government  to  consider  the  question  of  the  length  of detention and  arrive at a tentative conclusion even at that stage. We,  therefore, reject  the first  submission of Shri Jethmalani.      The second  submission of  the learned  counsel for the detenu was  that the  representation was  disposed of by the Minister of  State, Home  Affairs, Government of Maharashtra without any  authority to do so. It is somewhat strange that this contention  should  have  been  raised  before  us.  We understand that  this very  contention was previously raised in another  Writ Petition  and that  the  relevant  standing order was  produced before  the Court  at the hearing of the Writ Petition  and that  it was  also shown  to the  learned counsel. The  standing order  is made  by Shri A.R. Antulay, Chief Minister  of Maharashtra  and Minister for Home and it directs allotment of the business appertaining to "All cases of  Conservation  of  Foreign  Exchange  and  Prevention  of Smuggling Activities  Act,  1974  and  the  Conservation  of Foreign Exchange  and Prevention  of  Smuggling  Activities. Maharashtra Detention  Order, 1974  and  all  other  matters arising under  the provisions  of the  said Act and the said order .........  and any other orders issued under this Act, except. ......."  (We are not concerned with the exceptions) to the  Minister of State for Home, Shri Abhey Singh Maharaj Raje Bhosale.  Rule 6  of the  Maharashtra  Govt.  Rules  of Business made  by the Governor of Maharashtra in exercise of the powers  conferred by  Article 166  (2) and  (3)  of  the Constitution provides that the Chief Minister and a 146 Minister in  consultation with  the Chief Minister may allot to a  Minister of  State or  a Deputy  Minister any business appertaining to  a Department  or a part of a Department. It is, therefore,  clear  that  the  Minister  of  State,  Home Affairs, Government of Maharashtra was entitled to deal with the representation  of the  detenu. It was suggested that it would have  been more  appropriate if the representation had been considered by the very individual who had exercised his

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mind at  the initial stage of making the order of detention, namely the  Secretary to  the Government, Shri Samant. There is no  substance in  this suggestion. The order of detention was not  made by  Shri Samant  as an  Officer of  the  State Government specially  empowered in  that behalf  but by  the State Government  itself acting  through the instrumentality of Shri  Samant, a  Secretary to Government authorised to so act  for   the  Government  under  the  Rules  of  Business. Governmental business  can never  get through  if  the  same individual has to act for the Government at every stage of a proceeding or  transaction, however,  advantageous it may be to do  so. Nor  can it  be said  that it  would  be  to  the advantage of the detenu to have the matter dealt with by the same individual  at all  stages. It  may perhaps  be to  the advantage of  the detenu  if fresh minds are brought to bear upon the  question at different stages. It is unnecessary to pursue the  matter any  further as we find no constitutional or  legal   infirmity  in  the  representation  having  been considered  by   the  Minister   of  State,   Home  Affairs, Government of Maharashtra.      The learned  counsel next submitted that the detenu was not permitted  to be  represented by  a lawyer  despite  his request that he might be allowed to engage the services of a lawyer before  the Advisory  Board. In his representation to the Government the detenu did make a request to be permitted to be  represented by  a lawyer. The Government informed him that under  the provisions  of Sec.  8(e) of the COFEPOSA he was not  entitled to  be represented  by a lawyer before the Advisory Board  and therefore,  it was not possible to grant his request.  The complaint  of the  learned counsel for the detenu was  that while  a detenu  may not be entitled, as of right, to  be represented  by a  lawyer before  the Advisory Board, there  was no bar against a lawyer being permitted to appear before  the Advisory Board and therefore, the request of a  detenu to  be  represented  by  a  lawyer  had  to  be considered on  the merits  of each individual case. This the learned counsel  submitted had  not been done in the present case and  the detenu’s  request was  never placed before the Advisory Board. It is true that while Sec. 8(e) disentitles 147 a detenu  from claiming  as of  right to be represented by a lawyer, it does not disentitle him from making a request for the services  of a  lawyer. We  agree that the importance of legal assistance  can never be over-stated and as often than nota dequate  legal assistance  may  be  essential  for  the protection of  the Fundamental  Right to  life and  personal liberty guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constitution and the Right to  be heard given to a detenu by Sec. 8(e), COFEPOSA. These rights may be jeopardised and reduced to more nothings without adequate  legal assistance. That would depend on the facts  of   each  individual  case,  in  the  light  of  the intricacies of  the problems  involved  and  other  relevant factors. Therefore, where a detenu makes a request for legal assistance, his  request would  have to be considered on its own merit  in each individual case. In the present case, the Government  merely  informed  the  detenu  that  he  had  no statutory right  to be  represented by  a lawyer  before the Advisory Board.  Since it was for the Advisory Board and not for the  Government to afford legal assistance to the detenu the latter,  when he was produced before the Advisory Board, could have;  if he  was so  minded, made  a request  to  the Advisory Board for permission to be represented by a lawyer. He preferred  not to  do so. In the special circumstances of the present case we are not prepared to hold that the detenu was wrongfully  denied the  assistance of  counsel so  as to

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lead to  the conclusion  that procedural fairness, a part of the Fundamental  Right  guaranteed  by  Article  21  of  the Constitution was denied to him.      The last  submission of  the learned  counsel was  that there was  a non  application of  the mind  of the detaining authority, first  in making the order of detention and later in considering  the representation  of the  detenu.  It  was contended that  the recital in the grounds of detention that detenu had  made a statement that certain documents received at the detenu’s residence at the time of search pertained to the order  dated 29.11.1980 of Shri Abdullahi Amin, Attache, Sudan Consulate  was  not  correct  and  that  the  detenu’s statement contained  no such  recital. It  was said that the grounds of  detention read as if the detenu had admitted the existence of  the order dated 29.11.80 in the statement made by him.  We do  not find any substance in this submission. A reading of  the document leaves no such impression. All that was said was that the documents received by post at the time of search  pertained to an order dated 29.11.80 and not that there was  admission by  the detenu  that there  was ever an order dated  29.11.80. It  was then  contended that  in  the course of  communication of  the grounds  of  detention  the detenu was informed that 148 it was against the public interest to disclose the source of intelligence and  the further  facts contained  therein. The actual sentence  by  which  privilege  was  claimed  against disclosure was as follows:           "I consider it against public interest to disclose      the source  of intelligence  referred to in the grounds      furnished above  and further consider it against public      interest to disclose further facts contained therein". The argument  was that  the grounds  did not  state that the Government considered it against public interest to disclose the source  of intelligence  and the further facts contained therein but  that it  was the  Assistant  Secretary  to  the Government of  Maharashtra who  signed at  the bottom of the grounds that  though it  was against  the public interest to disclose the  source of intelligence and the facts contained therein. The  emphasis was on the use of the first person by the  Assistant   Secretary.  This   was  explained   by  the respondents as a Clerical mistake and was later rectified by making suitable  corrections.  It  was  contended  that  the discovery of the mistake and its rectification was after the Advisory Board  had submitted  its report, though the detenu had even  earlier, raised  the  question  that  it  was  the Government and  not the Assistant Secretary that could claim privilege. It  was not brought to the notice of the Advisory Board at  any time  that the  mistake was  only clerical. We have the  least hesitation  in rejecting the contention. The mistake is  so obviously  clerical that we cannot permit the detenu to  take advantage  of it.  In the  result  W.P.  No. 2690/81 is dismissed.      The first  two questions  raised in  the previous  Writ Petition are  common to Writ Petition No. 3241 of 1981 also. An additional point was sought to be raised that the copy of a certain  document was not supplied to the detenu but after verification the point was abandoned by the learned counsel. This Writ Petition is also dismissed. N.V.K.                                  Petitions dismissed. 149