22 April 1987
Supreme Court
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SMT. POONAM LATA Vs M.L. WADHAWAN & ORS.

Case number: Writ Petition(Criminal) 292 of 1986


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PETITIONER: SMT. POONAM LATA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: M.L. WADHAWAN & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT22/04/1987

BENCH: SEN, A.P. (J) BENCH: SEN, A.P. (J) MISRA RANGNATH

CITATION:  1987 AIR 1383            1987 SCR  (2)1123  1987 SCC  (3) 347        JT 1987 (2)   204  1987 SCALE  (1)849  CITATOR INFO :  F          1987 SC1748  (30)  F          1987 SC2098  (1)  *          1989 SC1529  (1)

ACT:    Conservation  of Foreign Exchange & Prevention  of  Smug- gling  Activities Act, 1974: ss. 3 &  12--Preventive  deten- tion--Period of parole--Whether could be added to period  of detention--Court whether competent to grant parole.     Constitution  of  India; Articles 226  and  32--COFEPOSA Act-Preventive detention--Powers of the Court to release  on parole. Words & Phrases: ’parole’--’detain’--Meaning of.

HEADNOTE:     Sub-section (6) of s. 12 of the Conservation of  Foreign Exchange  and Prevention of Smuggling Activities  Act.  1974 prohibits  release  of  a detenu on bail, or  bail  bond  or otherwise, during the period a detention order is in  force. Sub-sections  (1) and (1A) of s. 12, however, permit  tempo- rary release by the Central or State Governments on  certain terms  and  conditions. Section 10 provides  for  a  maximum period  of detention of one year in cases .to  which  provi- sions of s. 9 do not apply.     The husband of the petitioner was detained under s. 3(1) of  the Act by an order dated February 28, 1986. His  repre- sentation  under s. 8(b) was rejected by the  detaining  au- thority on April 4, 1986. The Advisory Board in its sittings on April 28 and 29, 1986 concluded that there was sufficient cause for detention. The order of detention was confirmed by the Minister on May 14, 1986.     The writ petition filed under Article 32 of the  Consti- tution on April 23, 1986 was heard by the Vacation Judge  on May 15 1986 who made an order for the release of the  detenu on  parole  and directed the matter to be  listed  in  early August of 1986. The case, however, could not be listed  till January  14, 1987, and was finally heard on March  3,  1987. The  detenu had been out of Jail during the  entire  period. The period of one year expired on February 28, 1987. 1124     It  was contended for the petitioner that the period  of

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parole from May 15. 1986 till February 28. 1987 could not be added  to  the period of detention specified  in  the  order under sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of the Act, that the period of  one year  from the date of detention having expired on  February 28.  1987  the order of detention had lapsed  entitling  the detenu  to be freed, and that once the detenu is taken  into custody under the Act pursuant to an order of detention  the running  of  time would not be arrested merely  because  the court  directs the release of the detenu on parole.  Relying on  the decision in Lala Jairam Das & Ors. v. Emperor.  (AIR 1945 PC 94) it was contended that the court cannot on gener- al principles add the period of bail or parole to the period of  detention,  and  that the ratio laid  down  in  Amritlal Channumal  Jain etc. v. State of Gujarat & Ors., (W.P.  Nos. 1342-43  of 1982 decided on July 10, 1985) that  the  period during  which  a detenu was on parole should be  taken  into account  while  calculating the period of detention  has  to prevail and must be taken as binding. Dismissing the writ petition. the Court.     HELD: 1. The period of parole of the detenu from May 15, 1986  to February 28. 1987 has to be excluded  in  reckoning the period of his detention for one year under sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and  Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974. [1136D, G-H]     2.1  The  purpose and object of s. 10 of the Act  is  to prescribe  not  only  a maximum period for  which  a  person against whom a detention order under the Act is made may  be held  in actual custody pursuant to the said order but  also the method by which the period is to be computed. The key to the  interpretation of the section is in the words  "may  be detained." The subsequent words "from the date of detention" which  follow the words "maximum period of one year"  merely define  the starting point from which the maximum period  of detention of one year is to be reckoned in a case not  fall- ing under s. 9. There is no justifiable reason why the  word "detain"  should not receive its plain and  natural  meaning ’to hold in custody’. [1134B; 1133G, EP]     2.2  The  period during which the detenu  is  on  parole cannot be said to be a period during which he has been  held in custody pursuant to the order of his detention. In such a case  he was not in actual custody. The order  of  detention prescribes  the  place where the detenu is to  be  detained. Parole  brings  him out of confinement from that  place  and detention  as contemplated by the Act is  interrupted  until the  detenu  is put back into custody. The  running  of  the period recommences then and 1125 a total period of one year has to be counted by putting  the different  periods  of  actual detention  together.  In  the instant  case it cannot, therefore, be said that the  period during which the detenu was on. parole has to be taken  into consideration  in computing the maximum period of  detention authorised by s. 10 of the Act. [1133H; 1134A-D]     Harish  Makhija v. State of U.P., Crl. M.P. No.  620  of 1984 in W.P. (Crl.) No. 301 of 1983 decided on February  11, 1985; State of Gujarat v. Adam Kasam Bhaya, [1982] 1 SCR 740 and  State  of Gujarat v. IsmaiI Juma & Ors., [1982]  1  SCR 1014. referred to.     Amritlal Channumal Jain etc. v. State of Gujarat & Ors., Writ  Petitions  Nos. 1342-43 of 1982 decided  on  July  10, 1985, distinguished.     3.  Parole is the release of a prisoner from a penal  or correctional  institution after he has served a part of  his sentence under the continuous custody of the State and under conditions  that permit his in carceration in the  event  of

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misbehavior.  It is a grant of partial liberty or  lessening of  restrictions to a convict prisoner and does  not  change the status of the prisoner. [1131E, BC]     Preventive detention is not punishment. The scheme of s. 12.  unless temporary release by the appropriate  Government is  taken  to be one of parole, keeps away parole  from  the subject of preventive detention. [1130F; 1135F]     4.1  What in a given situation should be the  sufficient period  for a person to be detained for the purpose  of  the COFEPOSA  Act is one for the subjective satisfaction of  the detaining  authority. Preventive detention jurisprudence  in this  regard is very different from regular conviction  fol- lowed by sentence that an accused is to suffer. [1134EF]     4.2  Whether  it  be under Art. 226 or Art.  32  of  the Constitution. the Court has no jurisdiction either under the Act or under the general principles of law or in exercise of extraordinary jurisdiction to deal with the duration of  the period of detention either by abridging or enlarging it. The only power that is available to it is to quash the order  in case it is found to be illegal. It would not, therefore,  be open  to  the  Court to reduce the period  of  detention  by admitting the detenu on parole. [1134F,E]     5.  Sub-s. (6) of s. 12 of the Act puts a statutory  bar to the release of the detenu after an order of detention has been made and the detenu lodged in custody. It is the appro- priate Government and not the Court 1126 which  deal with a case of temporary release of the   detenu under  subss.(1)  and (1A) of s. 12 of the Act.  The  detenu seeking  to have the benefit of temporary relief must go  to the appropriate Government first. The Court cannot entertain his  application for parole straightaway. On  the  principle that  exercise  of administrative jurisdiction  is  open  to Judicial review by the superior Court, the High Court  under Art.  226  or this Court under Art. 32 may in a  given  case examine the legality and propriety of the Government action. [1135E,C, F, G; 1136A; 1135H]     Samir  Chatterjee v. State of West Bengal, [1975] 1  SCC 801;  State of Bihar v. Rambalak Singh & Ors., [1966] 3  SCR 344  and State of; Uttar Pradesh v. Jairam & Ors., [1982]  1 SCC 176, referred to.     Babulal  Das v. State of West Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC  311; Anil Dey v. State of West Bengal, [1974] 4 SCC 514 and Golam Hussain v. Commissioner of Police, Calcutta & Ors. [1974]  4 SCC 530, overruled.     6. It is desirable to insert in the COFEPOSA Act or  the Rules  made thereunder a provision like sub-s.(4) of s.  389 of the Code of. Criminal Procedure, 1973 that when an action is taken under s. 12 of the Act and the appropriate  Govern- ment  makes  a  temporary release order the  order  of  such temporary  release whether on bail or parole has to  be  ex- cluded  in computing the period of detention.  [1136C]  Lala Jairam Das & Ors. y. Emperor AIR 1945 PC 94, referred to.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 292 of 1986. (Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).     Ram Jethmalani, Ms. Rani Jethmalani and A.K. Sharma  for the Petitioner.     Anil Dev Singh, Mrs. Indra Sawhney and Ms. S. Relan  for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     SEN, J. By this petition under Article 32 of the Consti-

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tution,  the petitioner Smt. Poonam Lata has asked  for  the issue  of  a writ of habeas corpus for the  release  of  her husband, Shital Kumar who has been 1127 detained  by an order passed by the Additional Secretary  to the Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department  of Revenue. dated February 28, 1986. made under section 3(1) of Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Act’), on being satisfied that it was necessary to detain him "with a view to preventing him from dealing in smuggled goods".     Put  very  briefly, the essential facts are  these.  The Directorate of Enforcement, New Delhi, gathered intelligence over a period of time before making of the impugned order of detention  which  revealed that the detenu  was  engaged  in receiving  smuggled gold from across the  Indo-Nepal  Border and  was making payments in foreign currency  and  remitting the  sale proceeds of such smuggled gold out of the  country in  the shape of U.S. dollars with the help of carriers.  On February 26. 1986, the Directorate received information that the three carriers, namely, Ram Deo Thakur, Shyam Thakur and Bhushan  Thakur would be leaving under the assumed names  of Dalip,  Mukesh  and Rajesh respectively by 154  Dn.  Jayanti Janata  Express  leaving New Delhi Railway Station  at  6.45 p.m.  Accordingly,  the officers of the Delhi  Zone  of  the Directorate  mounted surveillance at Platform No. 5  of  the Railway  Station from which the train was to steam off.  The said  carriers were detrained and upon search of their  bag- gage,  the officers recovered $ 29,750 and Rs.1500 from  Ram Deo Thakur @ Dalip, $ 28,900 and Rs.650 from Shyam Thakur  @ Mukesh  and  $  20,000 and Rs.1,000 from  Bhushan  Thakur  @ Rajesh.  The  same ware seized under section 110(1)  of  the Customs  Act,  1962. The total value of the  seized  foreign currency  was  equivalent to Rs.10,25,000 in  round  figure. During  interrogation by the officers under section  108  of the  Customs Act, these persons stated that the seized  for- eign currency totaling $ 78,650 had been paid by the  detenu towards  the  price of 48 gold biscuits  of  foreign  origin brought by them from Darbhanga to New Delhi and made over to him  and  accordingly the detenu was taken into  custody  on February  27, 1986. He too made a statement under s. 108  of the  Act  confessing that he was dealing  in  smuggled  gold brought across the Indo-Nepal Border and has been  remitting the  price  of such gold in U.S. dollars  through  different carriers.     On  February  28, 1986, the detenu was served  with  the impugned  order of detention along with the grounds  thereof and  copies  of the relevant documents relied  upon  in  the grounds. On March 25, 1986. the detenu submitted a represen- tation  under  section  8(b) of the Act  and  the  detaining authority by its order of April 4, 1986 rejected the 1128 same. On April 12, 1986 the detenu made a representation  to the Advisory Board through the Superintendent of the Central Jail,  Tihar. The representation together with  comments  of the  detaining  authority and the  relevant  documents  were forwarded by the Ministry of Finance, Department of  Revenue to the Advisory Board. On the same day the detenu appears to have made a representation to the Central Government and  it was  received in the Ministry of Finance on April 24,  1986. The  Minister of State for Finance rejected the said  repre- sentation  on  April 28, 1986 and the  detenu  was  informed about  it  the  following day. The Advisory  Board  had  its sittings  on April 28 and 29, 1986. and came to the  conclu- sion  that there was sufficient cause for the detention  and

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sent its report on May 8, 1986. The Minister considered  the report  of  the Advisory Board and confirmed  the  order  of detention on May-14, 1986 and the Central Government’s order of confirmation was duly communicated on May 26, 1986.     The  representation of the detenu was still  before  the Advisory  Board when the petitioner moved this  Court  under Article  32 of the Constitution on April 23, 1986. On  April 29, 1986, notice was ordered by the Court returnable on  May 3,  1986,  and  it directed that the matter  may  be  placed before the Vacation Judge on May 15, 1986. On that date, the learned Vacation Judge made an order for the release of  the detenu on parole in the following terms:-               "The  detenu is released on parole until  fur-               ther  orders  on the condition  that  he  will               report to the Directorate of Revenue  Intelli-               gence, New Delhi every day and the Directorate               will  be at liberty to ask him to explain  his               conduct during this time.                         Reply affidavit may be filed  within               two weeks. The matter will be listed two weeks               after  reopening  of the  Court  after  summer               vacation.                        In the meantime, the respondents will               be  at liberty to make an application for  the               revocation of the parole if any misconduct  or               any other activity comes to their notice               which requires the revocation of the parole."                   Notwithstanding  the order of the  learned               Vacation  Judge  that  the  matter  should  be               listed  within two weeks after the  re-opening               of  the  Court  after  the  long  vacation--it               should have been some time in early August  of               1986--the case was not listed till January 14,               1987. The               1129               respondents  also took no steps to  apply  for               early  listing of the matter. On  January  14,               1987, a prayer was made by the learned counsel               appearing  for the Union of India seeking  two               weeks’  time to file an  additional  affidavit               and the case was ordered to be listed on March               3.  1987. During all these months, the  detenu               has been out of jail.                   Indisputably  the  detention was  for  one               year.  When the matter came up for hearing  on               the  3rd  of  March,  1987,  Shri  Jethmalani,               learned  counsel for the  petitioner  confined               his  submissions to only one  aspect,  namely,               that  the period of parole i.e. from  May  15,               1986  till  February 28, 1987,  could  not  be               added to the period of detention specified  in               the impugned order under sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of               the  Act and the period of one year  from  the               date  of detention having expired on  February               26,  1987, the impugned order had  lapsed  and               the  detenu became entitled to be  freed  from               the  shackles of the order of  detention.  Ac-               cording to the learned counsel, section 10  of               the  Act  prescribes  the  maximum  period  of               detention to be one year or two years, as  the               case may be, from the date of detention or the               specified  period, whichever expires  earlier.               Admittedly in respect of the detenu no  decla-               ration  under  section 9 of the Act  has  been               made  and,  therefore, the maximum  period  of

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             detention  so  far as he is concerned  is  one               year  and it has to be reckoned as  prescribed               under  section  10 of the  Act.  That  section               indicates not only the starting point but also               the outer limit. In other words, the  argument               is that once the detenu is taken into  custody               under  the Act pursuant to an order of  deten-               tion, the running of time would not be arrest-               ed merely because the Court directs release of               the detenu on parole.                   Shri Jethmalani drew a distinction between               ’bail’ and ’parole’; he contended that preven-               tive  detention was not a sentence by  way  of               punishment  and,  therefore,  the  concept  of               serving out which pertains to punitive  juris-               prudence cannot be imported into the realm  of               preventive  detention. According to  him,  the               grant  of  parole  to a detenu  amounts  to  a               provisional release from confinement; yet  the               detenu  continues to be under judicial  deten-               tion;  release  from jail custody  subject  to               restrictions  imposed on free  and  unfettered               movement  transfers  the  detenu  to  judicial               custody. Since there is no provision to autho-               rise interruption of running of the period  of               detention,  release on parole does  not  bring               about  any  change in the  situation.  It  has               further been argued that when the Court enter-               tains  a  writ petition for  grant  of  habeas               corpus  and issues a rule nisi, the detenu  is               deemed to have come into judicial custody  and               the effect of grant of parole does not  termi-               nate  such custody but merely  allows  greater               freedom of move-               1130               ment to the detenu. Conditions imposed on  the               detenu during parole impinge upon his  freedom               and  liberty;  therefore,  the  period  during               which a detenu is released on parole cannot be               taken  as a period during which the  detention               is  not  operative.  Shri  Jethmalani   placed               reliance  on  the ratio of the  Privy  Council               decision in Lala Jairam Das & Ors. v. Emperor,               AIR  1945  PC 94 to contend that but  for  the               special provision contained in sub-section (3)               of  s. 426 of the old Code of Criminal  Proce-               dure, 1898 (corresponding to s. 389(4) of  the               Code of 1973) the power of the Court to  grant               bail  to a convicted person or  accused  would               not  include a power to exclude the period  of               bail  from the term of the sentence. The  same               principle  ought to apply in the case  of  re-               lease  of a detenu on bail or parole  and  the               Court  therefore cannot on general  principles               add the period of bail or parole to the period               of detention. In the absence of any  provision               regarding the grant of parole and the computa-               tion of the period thereof and in view of  the               special  provisions contained  regarding  com-               mencement and the computation of the period of               detention  of one year, the period  of  parole               cannot be deducted while computing the  period               of one year of detention. The learned  counsel               also relied upon the direction made by a Bench               of three Judges in the case of Amritlal  Chan-

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             numal  Jain  etc. v. State of Gujarat  &  Ors.               (Writ Petitions Nos. 1342-43, 1345-48 and 1362               of  1982  and No. 162 of 1983 dated  July  10,               1985)  where  this  Court  directed  that  the               period  during  which a detenu was  on  parole               should be taken into account while calculating               the  total period of detention.  According  to               learned  counsel  the  direction  in  Amritlal               Channumal Jain’s case was given after a  Bench               of  two Judges in Harish Makhija v.  State  of               U.P. Crl. M.P. No. 620 of 1984 in U.P.  (Crl.)               No.  301  of 1983 held on February  11,  1985,               that  the period of parole cannot  be  counted               towards the period of detention. Shri Jethmal-               ani  has submitted that in view of the  direc-               tion  of the larger Bench of this  Court,  the               ratio  laid down in Amritlal Channumal  Jain’s               case (supra) has to prevail and must be  taken               as binding on us.                   There is no denying the fact that  preven-               tive  detention  is  not  punishment  and  the               concept  of serving out a sentence  would  not               legitimately be within the purview of  preven-               tive detention. The grant of parole is  essen-               tially an executive function and instances  of               release  of detenus on parole  were  literally               unknown until this Court and some of the  High               Courts in India in recent years made orders of               release  on parole on humanitarian  considera-               tions.  Historically  ’parole’  is  a  concept               known to military law and denotes release of a               prisoner  of war on promise to return.  Parole               has become an integral part of the English and               American  systems of criminal  justice  inter-               twined  with the evolution of  changing  atti-               tudes of the society towards crime and  crimi-               nals.               1131               As a consequence of the introduction of parole               into  the  penal system, all  fixed-term  sen-               tences of imprisonment of above 18 months  are               subject to release on licence, that is, parole               after  a third of the period of  sentence  has               been  served.  In those countries,  parole  is               taken  as an act of grace and not as a  matter               of  right  and  the convict  prisoner  may  be               released  on condition that he abides  by  the               promise.  It  is a  provisional  release  from               confinement but is deemed to be a part of  the               imprisonment.  Release on parole is a wing  of               the  reformative  process and is  expected  to               provide opportunity to the prisoner to  trans-               form himself into a useful citizen. Parole  is               thus  a grant of partial liberty or  lessening               of  restrictions  to a convict  prisoner,  but               release  on parole does not change the  status               of  the prisoner. Rules are  flamed  providing               supervision  by  parole  authorities  of   the               convicts  released  on parole and in  case  of               failure  to perform the promise,  the  convict               released on parole is directed to surrender to               custody.  (See: The Oxford Companion  to  Law,               edited  by Walker, 1980 edn., p. 931,  Black’s               Law  Dictionary, 5th edn., p.  1006,  Jowitt’s               Dictionary  of English Law, 2nd edn., Vol.  2,

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             p.  1320,  Kenny’s Outlines of  Criminal  Law,               17th  edn., p. 574-76, The English  Sentencing               System by Sir Rupert Cross at pp. 31-34, 87 et               seq.,  American Jurisprudence, 2nd edn.,  Vol.               59, pp. 53-61, Corpus Juris Secundum, vol. 67,               Probation and Parole, Legal and Social  Dimen-               sions  by  Louis P. Carney). It  follows  from               these  authorities that parole is the  release               of  a very long term prisoner from a penal  or               correctional institution after he has served a               part  of  his sentence  under  the  continuous               custody of the State and under conditions that               permit  his  incarceration  in  the  event  of               misbehavior.                   There is abundance of authority that  High               Courts in exercise of their jurisdiction under               Article 226 of the Constitution do not release               a detenu on bail or parole. There is no reason               why a different view should be taken in regard               to  exercise of jurisdiction under Article  32               of  the  Constitution  particularly  when  the               power  to  grant relief to a  detenu  in  such               proceedings is exercisable on very narrow  and               limited grounds. In State of Bihar v. Rambalak               Singh & Ors., [1966] 3 SCR 344 a  Constitution               Bench  laid down that the release of a  detenu               placed  under detention under Rule 30  of  the               Defence of India Rules, 1962. on bail  pending               the hearing of a petition for grant of a  writ               of  habeas corpus was an improper exercise  of               jurisdiction;  It  was observed in  that  case               that  if the High Court was of the  view  that               prima  facie the impugned order  of  detention               was  patently  illegal  in that  there  was  a               serious defect in the order of detention which               would  justify the release of the detenu,  the               proper and more sensible and reasonable course               would invariably be to expedite the hearing of               the writ petition and               1132               deal with the merits without any delay  rather               than  direct  release of the detenu  on  bail.               Again,  in State of Uttar Pradesh v. Jairam  &               Ors.,  [1982]  1 SCC 176 a  three-Judge  Bench               speaking through Chandrachud, CJ., referred to               Rambalak Singh’s case and set aside the  order               passed by the learned Single Judge of the High               Court  admitting  the detenu to  bail  on  the               ground  that  it was an improper  exercise  of               jurisdiction.  As  to grant of parole,  it  is               worthy of note that in none of the cases  this               Court made a direction under Article 32 of the               Constitution for grant of parole to the detenu               but  left  it  to the  executive  to  consider               whether  it should make an order in  terms  of               the  relevant provision for temporary  release               of the person detained as under section 12  of               the  COFEPOSA, in the facts and  circumstances               of  a particular case. In Samir Chatterjee  v.               State  of West Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC  801,  the               Court set aside the order of the Calcutta High               Court  releasing on parole a  person  detained               under  S. 3(1) of the Maintenance of  Internal               Security  Act, 1971 and  unequivocally  viewed               with disfavor the observations made by Krishna

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             Iyer,  J.  in  Babulal Das v.  State  of  West               Bengal, [1975] 1 SCC 311 to the effect:               "While  discharging the rule issued  and  dis-               missing  the  petition, we wish  to  emphasize               that  s.  15  is often lost sight  of  by  the               Government  in such situations, as  long  term               preventive detention can be self-defeating  or               criminally   counter-productive.  Section   15               reads:               15. Temporary release of persons detained--               We consider that it is fair that persons  kept               incarcerated  and  embittered  without   trial               should  be given some chance to  reform  them-               selves  by reasonable recourse to  the  parole               power  under s. 15. Calculated risks,  by  re-               lease  for  short periods may, perhaps,  be  a               social gain, the beneficent jurisdiction being               wisely exercised."     Alagiriswamy, J. speaking for the Court, observed in  no uncertain terms: 1133               "We  fail to see that these  observations  lay               down  any principle of law. Section 15  merely               confers  a power on the Government. The  power               and  duty  of this Court is  to  decide  cases               coming before it according to law. In so doing               it  may take various considerations  into  ac-               count. But to advise the Government as to  how               they should exercise their functions or powers               conferred  on  them by statute is not  one  of               this  Court’s  functions. Where the  Court  is               able to give effect to its view in the form of               a valid and binding order that is a  different               matter.  Furthermore,  section 15  deals  with               release on parole and there is nothing to show               that the petitioner applied for to be released               on parole for any specific purpose. As far  as               we are able to see, release on parole is  made               only  on  the request of the party and  for  a               specific purpose." The  innovative view expressed by Krishna lyer, J.  in  Anil Dey  v.  State of West Bengal, [1974] 4 SCC 5  14  which  he tried  to reiterate in Golam Hussain v. The Commissioner  of Police,  Calcutta  & Ors., [1974] 4 SCC 530 and  in  Babulal Das’  case, (supra), therefore, no longer holds  the  field, and rightly so, because the Court cannot usurp the functions of the Government.     Section  10 of the Act provides that the maximum  period for  which  any person may be detained in  pursuance  of  an order  of detention to which provisions of section 9 do  not apply  shall  be for a period of one year from the  date  of detention or the specified period, whichever expires  earli- er.  The key to the interpretation of section 10 of the  Act is  in  the words ’may be detained’.  The  subsequent  words ’from the date of detention’ which follow the words ’maximum period  of one year’ merely define the starting  point  from which  the maximum period of detention of one year is to  be reckoned in a case not falling. under section 9. There is no justifiable reason why the word ’detain’ should not  receive its  plain  and natural meaning. According  to  the  Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, vol. 1, p. 531, the word ’detain’ means "to keep in confinement or custody". Webster’s Campre- hensive  Dictionary, International Edition at p.  349  gives the meaning as "to hold in custody". The purpose and  object of s. 10 is to prescribe a maximum period for which a person

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against whom a detention order under the Act is made may  be held in actual custody pursuant to the said order. It  would not be violated if a person against whom an order of  deten- tion  is  passed is held in actual custody in jail  for  the period  prescribed by the section. The period  during  which the detenu is on parole cannot be 1134 said to be a period during which he has been held in custody pursuant  to the order of his detention, for in such a  case he  was not in actual custody. The order of  detention  pre- scribes the place where the detenu is to be detained. Parole brings him out of confinement from that place. Whatever  may be  the  terms and conditions imposed for grant  of  parole, detention  as  contemplated by the Act is  interrupted  when release  on parole is obtained. The position would  be  well met by the appropriate answer to the question "how long  has the  detenu been in actual custody pursuant to  the  order?" According to its plain construction, the purpose and  object of s. 10 is to prescribe not only for the maximum period but also  the method by which the period is to be computed.  The computation  has  to  commence from the date  on  which  the detenu is taken into actual custody but if it is interrupted by an order of parole, the detention would not continue when parole operates and until the detenu is put back into custo- dy.  The running of the period recommences then and a  total period of one year has to be counted by putting the  differ- ent periods of actual detention together. We see no force in Shri  Jethmalani’s submission that the period  during  which the detenu was on parole has to be taken into  consideration in  computing the maximum period of detention authorised  by section 10 of the Act.     It  is pertinent to observe that the Court has no  power to substitute the period of detention either by abridging or enlarging it. The only power that is available to the  Court is  to  quash the order in case it is found to  be  illegal. That  being so, it would not be open to the Court to  reduce the  period of detention by admitting the detenu on  parole. What  in a given situation should be the  sufficient  period for  a person to be detained for the purpose of the  Act  is one for the subjective satisfaction of the detaining author- ity.  Preventive detention jurisprudence in this  regard  is very different from regular conviction followed by  sentence that  an accused is to suffer. Whether it be  under  Article 226  or  Article 32 of the Constitution,  the  Court  would, therefore,  have  no jurisdiction either under  the  Act  or under  the general principles of law or in exercise  of  ex- traordinary  jurisdiction to deal with the duration  of  the period of detention.     Parliament has authorised the detention of persons under the COFEPOSA to serve two purposes:-               "(1)  To  prevent the  person  concerned  from               engaging himself in an activity prejudicial to               the conservation of foreign exchange and  also               preventing him from smuggling activities               1135               and  thereby  to render him immobile  for  the               period  considered necessary by the  detaining               authority  so  that  during  that  period  the               society  is  protected from  such  prejudicial               activities on the part of the detenu. And               (2)  In order to break the links  between  the               person  so  engaged  and the  source  of  such               activity  and from his associates  engaged  in               that  activity or to break the  continuity  of               such  prejudicial activities so that it  would

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             become  difficult, if not impossible, for  him               to resume the activities." Release  of a detenu on parole after an order  of  detention has been made and the detenu lodged in custody for achieving one  or  the other of the aforesaid legislative  objects  is thus  contrary  to the purpose of the statute.  There  is  a statutory prohibition against release of a detenu during the period of detention in sub-section (6) of section 12 of  the Act. That sub-section which was inserted by Amending Act  39 of 1975 with effect from 1.7.1975 reads:-               "Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in  any               other  law and save as otherwise  provided  in               this section, no person against whom a  deten-               tion  order  made under this Act is  in  force               shall be released whether on bail or bail bond               or otherwise." Sub-section  (6) puts a statutory bar to the release of  the detenu during the period of detention in a manner  otherwise than  the one provided in section 12. Section 12  authorises either  the  Central Government or the State  Government  to temporarily release the detenu on such terms and  conditions as the appropriate Government considers necessary to impose. The scheme of section 12, unless release by the  appropriate Government  is taken to be one of parole, keeps away  parole from the subject of preventive detention. At any rate, it is the  appropriate  Government and not the Court  which  deals with  a case of temporary release of the detenu.  Since  the Act  authorises the appropriate Government to make an  order of temporary release, invariably the detenu seeking to  have the  benefit of temporary relief must go to the  appropriate Government  first. It may be that in a given case the  Court may  be  required to consider the propriety  of  an  adverse order  by  the Government in exercise  of  the  jurisdiction under section 12 of the Act. On the principle that exercise’ of administrative jurisdiction is open to judicial review by the superior court, the High Court under Article 226 or this Court under Article 32 may be called upon in a suitable case to 1136 examine  the  legality  and propriety  of  the  governmental action.  There is no scope for entertaining  an  application for  parole  by  the  Court  straightaway.  The  legislative scheme, keeping the purpose of the statute and the manner of its fulfilment provided thereunder, would not justify enter- taining of an application for release of a detenu on parole. Since  in  our  view release on parole is not  a  matter  of judicial determination, apparently no provision as contained in  the Code of Criminal Procedure relating to the  computa- tion of the period of bail was thought necessary in the Act. But we would like to point out to the Government the desira- bility of inserting a provision like sub-s.(4) of s. 389  of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 that when an action  is taken  under section 12 of the Act and the appropriate  Gov- ernment makes a temporary release order, the period of  such temporary  release whether on bail or parole has to  be  ex- cluded  in  computing the period of  detention.  Either  the statute or the rules made thereunder should provide for this eventuality.     In  the premises, it must accordingly be held  that  the period of parole has to be excluded in reckoning the  period of detention under sub-section (1) of section 3 of the  Act. We  find  it  difficult from the observations  made  by  the three-Judge Bench in Amritlal Channumal Jain’s case to infer a  direction by this Court that the period of  parole  shall not  be  added to the period of detention.  The  words  used

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’shall  be taken into account’ are susceptible of an  inter- pretation  to the contrary. We find that an order made by  a bench  of two Judges of this Court in Harish Makhija’s  case (supra)  unequivocally laid down that the period  of  parole cannot  be  counted towards the period  of  detention.  This accords with the view taken by this Court in a bench of  two Judges in State of Gujarat v. Adam Kasam Bhaya, [1982] 1 SCR 740 and State of Gujarat v. Ismail Juma & Ors., [1982] 1 SCR 1014.  In  view of these authorities which appear to  be  in consonance  with the object and purpose of the Act  and  the statutory provisions and also having regard to the fact that the direction made in Amritlal Channumal Jain’s case (supra) is  capable of another construction as well, we do not  find Shri Jethmalani’s contention on this score as acceptable.     For these reasons, the only contention advanced by  Shri Jethmalani in course of the hearing, namely, that the period of  parole from May 15, 1986 to February 28, 1987 could  not be  added to the maximum period of detention of  the  detenu Shital Kumar for one year as specified in the impugned order of detention passed under sub-s.(1) of s. 3 of the Conserva- tion  of Foreign Exchange & Prevention of Smuggling  Activi- ties Act, 1974, must fail. The writ petition is accordingly 1137 dismissed.  There shall be no order as to costs.  We  direct that  the petitioner shall surrender to custody  to  undergo remaining period of detention. We give the detenu ten  days’ time  to  comply with this direction failing  which  a  non- bailable warrant for his arrest shall issue. P.S.S.                                       Petition   dis- missed. 1138