06 October 1989
Supreme Court
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STATE OF PUNJAB Vs SUKHPAL SINGH

Bench: SAIKIA,K.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Criminal 624 of 1989


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PETITIONER: STATE OF PUNJAB

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SUKHPAL SINGH

DATE OF JUDGMENT06/10/1989

BENCH: SAIKIA, K.N. (J) BENCH: SAIKIA, K.N. (J) DUTT, M.M. (J)

CITATION:  1990 AIR  231            1989 SCR  Supl. (1) 420  1990 SCC  (1)  35        JT 1989 (4)    95  1989 SCALE  (2)731

ACT:     National  Security Act, 1980--Sections 3(2), 9,  10,  11 and  12--Detention  Order--Advisory  Board--Not  a  judicial body--Charged  with  responsibility  of  advising  Executive Government--Decisions when binding on Government.

HEADNOTE:     Sri  Sukhjinder Singh has been under detention  pursuant to  the order dated 28.5.1988 of the Government  of  Punjab, Department of Home Affairs and Justice passed in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (2) of Section 3 of  the National Security Act, 1980 hereinafter referred to as  "the Act" read with section 14A as inserted by National  Security (Amendment)  Act,  1987 with a view to preventing  him  from indulging  in activities prejudicial to the security of  the State and maintenance of public order and interference  with the  efforts of the Govt. in coping with the terrorists  and disruptive activities.     The  detenu’s  son  Sukhpal Singh  filed  Criminal  Writ Petition  No. 1393 of 1988 in the High Court praying  inter- alia  for  a writ of Habeas Corpus, quashing  the  detention order, production of the detenu in the Court on the date  of hearing,  directing  the  authorities  to  arrange  for  the presence of the detenu before the Advisory Board at  Chandi- garh  and also to make arrangements & pay for  the  expenses required to be incurred for arranging the presence of  dete- nu’s  witnesses to be produced before the Board at  Agartala and  also  his relatives and counsel so  as  to  effectively assist  him in regard to the presenting of his  case  before the Board.     The High Court by order order 27.9.88 dismissed the Writ Petition but ordered that the petitioner would approach  the Advisory  Board at Chandigarh with the request for  allowing the detenu to produce evidence before it at Agartala and  in case  his prayer was granted by the Board, the expenses  for taking  those  witnesses to Agartala would be borne  by  the respondent-state.     Sukhpal  Singh  later moved Criminal Writ  Petition  No. 2365  of  1988  in the High Court of Punjab  &  Haryana  for quashing the detention 421

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order contending inter-alia that the order of detention  was passed  on 28.5.88 in a cursory and routine  manner  without application of mind, much less with subjective  satisfaction and there was an inordinate delay of two months in consider- ation of detenu’s representation and that the detention  was confirmed without affording the detenu any chance of appear- ing  and  producing witnesses before the Advisory  Board  in terms of orders of the High Court dated 27.9.88 made in Crl. Writ Petition No. 1393 of 1988.     The High Court upheld the above contention of the  peti- tioner  and accordingly quashed the order of  detention  and ordered  the  detenu to be set at liberty  for  with  unless required in any other case.     Aggrieved  by  this order the State has come  up  before this Court by way of special leave. The Court while dismiss- ing the appeal and directing the detenu to be set at liberty forthwith as ordered by the High Court.     HELD:  A clear distinction has to be drawn between  pre- ventive  detention in which anticipatory  and  precautionary action  is  taken to prevent the recurrence  of  apprehended events,  and  punitive detention under which the  action  is taken after the event has already happened. It is true  that the ordinary criminal process of trial is not to be  circum- vented  and short circuited by apparently handy  and  easier resort  to  preventive  detention. But  the  possibility  of launching  a  criminal proSecution cannot be said to  be  an absolute bar to an order of preventive detention. Nor  would it be correct to say that if such possibility is not present in  the mind of the detaining authority the order of  deten- tion would necessarily be bad. [426C-E]     It  is  true that the Advisory Board is not  a  judicial body. It is charged with the responsibility of advising  the Executive  Government. But when it advises in favour of  the detenu, namely that there was no sufficient cause for deten- tion, it would be binding upon the Govt- under section 12(2) of the Act to release the detenu forthwith. [439F]     Expressing inability to appear once could not have  been treated  as  the  detenu’s not desiring to  be  heard  under section 2(2) of the Act. In fact he desired to be heard  and to produce his witnesses. [439G]     The  protection of personal liberty is  largely  through insistence  on  observance of the  mandatory  procedure.  In cases  of preventive detention observance of  procedure  has been the bastion against wanton 422 assaults on personal liberty over the years. [440E]     One of the foremost and fundamental right guaranteed  in the  Constitution  is  personal liberty and  one  cannot  be deprived  of it except by the procedure prescribed  by  law. Libertas  Inestimabilis res est. Liberty is  an  inestimable thing above price. Libertus omnibus rebus favourabilier est. Liberty  is  more favoured than all  things  (anything).  It would be ironic if, in the name of social security, we would sanction the subversion of this liberty. [440F-G]     The  increasing  need  for ensuring  public  safety  and security  in the State of Punjab and the Union Territory  of Chandigarh  has  been  reflected in  the  recent  successive amendments of the National Security Act. [442F]     As a result of these amendments applicable to the  State of Punjab and the Union Territory of Chandigarh it is  found on the one hand addition to the grounds of detention and  on the  other, extension of period during which a person  could be  detained without obtaining the opinion of  the  Advisory Board. There is, however, no amendment as to the  safeguards provided  under Article 22 and ss. 9, 10 and 11 of the  Act.

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Indeed, there could be no such amendment. [444C-D]     Lex uno ore omnes alloguitur. Law addresses all with one mouth or voice. Quotaiens dubia interpretatio libertatis est secundum  libertatem respondentum erit--Whenever there is  a doubt  between liberty and bondage, the decision must be  in favour of liberty. [444E]     Fazal  Ghosi  v.  State  of U.P. &  Ors.,  AIR  1987  SC 1877:1987  (3)  SCR 471; Rex v. Halliday,  Ex  parte  Zadig, [1917] AC 260; Ujagar Singh v. State of Punjab, AIR 1952  SC 350:1952 SCR 756; Haradhan Saha v. The State of West  Bengal JUDGMENT: Maharashtra  & Ors., AIR 1982 SC 8:1982 (1) SCR 1028;  Ashok Kumar  v.  Delhi Administration & Ors., AIR  1982  SC  1143: [1982]  3  SCR 707; Giani Bakshish Singh  v.  Government  of India & Ors., AIR 1973 SC 2667: [1974] 1 SCR 662;  RajKumar- Singh  v. State of Bihar & Ors., AIR 1986 SC 2173; [1986]  4 SCC 407; Jayanarayan Sukul v. State of West Bengal, [1970] 3 SCR  225;  Frances Coralie Muffin v. W.C.  Khambra  &  Ors., [1980] 2 SCC 275; State of Orissa & Anr. v. Manilal  Singha- nia & Anr., AIR 1976 SC 456: [1976] 2 SCC 808; A.K.  Gopalan v. The State of Madras, AIR 1950 SC 27: [1950] SCR 88;  John Martin  v. State of West Bengal, [1975] 3 SCC 836;  Khudiram Das  v.  The State of West Bengal & Ors., [1975] 2  SCC  81; Saleh Mohammed 423 v.  Union of India & Ors., [1980] 4 SCC 428; Kamla  Kanyalal Khushalani v. State of Maharashtra & Anr., [1981] 1 SCC 748; Rattan  Singh v. State of Punjab & Ors., [1981] 4  SCC  481; YoussufAbbas  v.  Union of India & Ors., [1982] 2  SCC  380; Asha  Keshavrao Bhosale v. Union India & Anr., [1985] 4  SCC 361;  Aslam  Ahmed Zahire Ahmed Shaik v. Union  of  India  & Ors., [1989] 3 SCC 277; T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State of Kerala & Ors., J.T. 1989 3 SC 444; Rama Dhondu Borade v. Shri  V.K. Saraf, Commissioner of Police & Ors., [1989] 1 Scale Vol.  1 22;  Dr. R.K. Bhardwaj v. The State of Delhi & Ors.,  [1953] SCR 708; D.S. Roy v. State of West Bengal, [1972] 2 SCR 787; P.D.  Deorah  v.  The District Magistrate,  Kamrup  &  Ors., [1974] 2 SCR 12; N.P. Umrao v. B.B. Gujral & Ors., [1979]  2 SCR  315  at p. 321; V.C. Jawantraj Jain v. Shri  Pradhan  & Ors.,  [1979]  3 SCR 1007; Bal Chand Choraria  v.  Union  of India & Ors., [1978] 2 SCR 401; Smt. Kavita v. The State  of Maharashtra  &  Ors., [1981] 2 Crl. L.J. 1262: AIR  1981  SC 1641;  A.K. Roy v. Union of India, [1982] Vol. 88 Crl.  L.J. 340; and State of Rajasthan v. Shamsher Singh, [1985] Suppl. I SCR 83, referred to.

&     CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 624 of 1989.     From  the  Judgment and Order dated 31.7.  1989  of  the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Crl. W.A. No. 2365 of 1988.     K.   Parasaran, Attorney General and R.S.  Suri for  the Appellant.     Kapil Sibal, H.S. Randhwa and Ms. Kamini Jaiswal for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     K.N.  SAIKIA,  J. Special leave granted.  Heard  learned counsel for the parties.     The  State’s  appeal is from the Judgment  of  the  High Court of Punjab and Haryana dated 31.7.1989 passed in Crimi- nal  Writ Petition No. 2365 of 1988 quashing  the  detention order  of Sukhjinder Singh, father of the respondent,  under the National Security Act.

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   Sri  Sukhjinder Singh has been under detention  pursuant to the Government of Punjab, Department of Home Affairs  and Justice’s  Order dated 28.5.1988, passed in exercise of  the powers conferred by 424 sub-section  (2) of section 3 of the National  Security  Act 1980 (No. 65 of 1980), hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’; read  with  section  14A as inserted  by  National  Security (Amendment)  Act, 1987, with a view to preventing  him  from indulging  in activities prejudicial to the security of  the State and maintenance of public order and interference  with efforts  of  Government in coping with  the  terrorist  with disruptive activities. He was furnished with the grounds  of detention contained in 9 paragraphs thereof and saying  that on  account of the said activities, the President  of  India was  satisfied that he should be detained. As  no  arguments have  been  based  on the grounds themselves,  we  have  not extracted  them. The detenu was also informed that he had  a right  to make representation in writing against the  deten- tion order and if he wished to make any such representation, he  should  address it to the State Government  through  the Superintendent  of Jail, and that as soon as  possible,  his case  would  be submitted to the Advisory Board  within  the stipulated  period from the date of his detention and if  he wished  to make a representation to the Central  Government, he should address it to the Secretary, Government of  India, Ministry  of Home Affairs (Department of Internal  Security) North  Block, New Delhi through the Superintendent  of  Jail where he was detained. It further stated that he had also  a right  to appear before the Advisory Board for  representing his  case, and if he wished to do so, he should  inform  the State Government through the Superintendent of Jail in which he was detained.     It  appears  that the detenu’s son Sukhpal  Singh  filed Criminal Writ Petition No. 1393 of 1988 in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana praying, inter alia, for a writ of habeas corpus;  quashing of the detention order; for production  of the  detenu in court on the date of hearing;  for  directing the  respondents  to arrange the presence of the  detenu  at Chandigarh before the Advisory Board; and for directing  the respondents  to make arrangements and pay for  the  expenses required to be incurred for arranging the presence of  dete- nu’s  witnesses to be produced before the Board at  Agartala and  also of the relatives and the counsel of the detenu  so as  to  effectively assist him in regard to  presenting  his case before the Advisory Board.     The  High Court by order dated 27.9.1988  dismissed  the Criminal  Writ  Petition, but ordered that  "the  petitioner would  approach the Advisory Board stationed  at  Chandigarh with the request for allowing the detenu to produce evidence before it at Agartala and in case his prayer was granted  by the Board, the expenses for taking those witnesses to  Agar- tala would be borne by the respondent/State." 425     Sukhpal  Singh  later moved Criminal Writ  Petition  No. 2365  of  1988 in the High Court of Punjab and  Haryana  for quashing  the detention order contending, inter  alia,  that the order of detention was passed on 28.5.1988 in a  cursory and  routine manner without application of mind,  much  less with subjective satisfaction inasmuch as no case at all  was registered against the detenu for his alleged public  utter- ences as stated in the grounds of detention and,  therefore, the detention order was liable to be quashed; that consider- ation  of the detenu’s representation filed with  the  State Government on September 1, 1988 was inordinately delayed for

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two  months  till October 31, 1988 and even  thereafter  the State  took  8  long days to convey its  rejection  and  the representation  addressed  to the  detaining  authority  had neither been considered nor disposed of; and that  detention was  confirmed  without affording the detenu any  chance  of appearing and producing witnesses before the Advisory  Board in terms of the High Court’s order dated 27.9.1988 in Crimi- nal Writ Petition No. 1393 of 1988.     The  High  Court  upheld the above  contentions  of  the petitioner,  namely, lack of subjective satisfaction,  delay in considering representation and the denial of  opportunity to appear before the Advisory Board; and accordingly quashed the  order of detention and ordered the detenu to be set  at liberty  forthwith  unless required in connection  with  any other case.     The learned Attorney General of India for the  appellant assailing  the findings of the High Court submits  that  the High Court’s finding that there was no subjective  satisfac- tion  of the detaining authority simply because no  criminal case  was  registered  against the  detenu  for  his  public speeches is erroneous both in law and facts. The allegations were  that during the period from November 19, 1987  to  May 11, 1987 the detenu made 9 provocative speeches as stated in the  grounds of detention inciting communal hatred and  vio- lence  between  Hindus and Sikhs, inciting  Sikhs  to  armed violence  against the Government established by law both  in the State and in the Centre and making the offer of monetary and  other assistance to the terrorists. When the  detention order  was passed the detenu was already detained in  Burail Jail and the detention order itself said that he was already in custody and was taking steps to get himself released  and there was every likelihood of his being released from custo- dy;  and that in the event of his release he was  likely  to resume  such prejudicial activities in future and there  was thus compelling necessity to pass the order. He submits that the  subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority  was based on pertinent materials and it had in mind the question whether the pro- 426 secution of the detenu would be possible and sufficient. Mr. Kapil Sibal, learned counsel for the respondents  supporting the finding of the High Court reiterates that the fact  that no criminal case was registered during the period of  giving the  alleged  speeches clearly showed that  there  was  non- application  of mind preceding the detention order. We  find force in the submission of the learned Attorney General. The detention  order itself said that the detenu was already  in custody  and  was  likely to be released  wherefore  it  was necessary  to order for his preventive detention. It is  not denied that the above relevant materials were placed  before the  detaining authority. The act nowhere provides that  the detaining  authority cannot resort to  preventive  detention without  first  criminally prosecuting the detenu.  A  clear distinction has to be drawn between preventive detention  in which  anticipatory  and precautionary action  is  taken  to prevent  the recurrence of apprehended events, and  punitive detention  under which the action is taken after  the  event has already happened. It is true that the ordinary  criminal process of trial is not to be circumvented and shortcircuit- ed  by  apparently  handy and easier  resort  to  preventive detention.  But  the  possibility of  launching  a  criminal prosecution cannot be said to be an absolute bar to an order of preventive detention. Nor would it be correct to say that if  such possibility is not present in the mind of  the  de- taining  authority the order of detention would  necessarily

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be  bad. The failure of the detaining authority to  consider the desirability of launching a criminal prosecution  before ordering preventive detention may in the circumstances of  a case lead to the conclusion that the detaining authority had not applied its mind to the important question as to whether it  was necessary to make an order of  preventive  detention but  such  is not the case here. In this regard one  has  to bear in mind the relevant facts and circumstances of a  case including the time and place concerned. In this view we find support from the decision in Fazal Ghosi v. State of U.P.  & Ors.,  AIR  1987 SC 1877: [1987] 3 SCR 471, wherein  it  was pointed  out that the Act provided for preventive  detention which was intended where it was apprehended that the persons might act prejudicially to one or more considerations speci- fied  in the statute, and the preventive detention  was  not intended as a punitive measure for curtailment of liberty by way of punishment for the offence already committed. Section 3  read with Section 14A of the Act clearly  indicated  that the  power of detention thereunder could be  exercised  only with  a view to preventing a person from acting in a  manner which might prejudice any of the situations set forth in the Section. To apply what was said in Rex v. Halliday, Ex parte Zadig, 1917 AC 260, one of the most obvious means of  taking precautions against dangers such as are enumerated is to 427 impose  some restriction on the freedom of movement of  per- sons  whom there may be any reason to suspect of being  dis- posed  to commit what is enumerated in s. 3 of the  Act.  No crime  is  charged.  The question is  whether  a  particular person is disposed to commit the prejudicial acts. The  duty of  deciding  this question is thrown upon  the  State.  The justification is suspicion or reasonable probability and not criminal  charge which can only be warranted by  legal  evi- dence.  It  is true that in a case in which the  liberty  of such  person is concerned we cannot go beyond  natural  con- struction  of the statute. It is the duty of this  Court  to see  that a law depriving the person of his liberty  without the safeguards available even to a person charged with crime is  strictly  complied with. We have, however,  to  remember that  individual  liberty is allowed to be curtailed  by  an anticipatory  action only in interest of what is  enumerated in the statute.     In  actual practice the grounds supplied operate  as  an objective test for determining the question whether a  nexus reasonably  exists  between  grounds of  detention  and  the detention order or whether some infirmities had crept in.  A conjoined reading of the detention order and the grounds  of detention  is  therefore  necessary. It is,  as  was  heldin Ujagar  Singh v. State of Punjab, AIR [1952] SC 350:  [1952] SCR  756,  largely from prior events showing  tendencies  or inclinations of a man that inference can be drawn whether he is likely in future to act in a prejudicial manner. But such conduct  should  be reasonably proximate and should  have  a rational  connection with the conclusion that the  detention of  person  is necessary. The question of  relation  of  the activities to the detention order must be carefully  consid- ered.  Though the possibility of prosecution being  launched is not an irrelevant consideration, failure to consider such possibility would not vitiate the detention order. In Harad- han  Saha v. The State of West Bengal & Ors., [1975]  3  SCC 198 the Court did not lay down that possibility of a  prose- cution  being launched was an irrelevant consideration,  not to be borne in mind by detaining authority but it laid  down that  the mere circumstance that a detenu was liable  to  be prosecuted would not by itself be a bar to the making of  an

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order  of preventive detention. It did not follow  therefore that failure to consider the possibility of criminal  prose- cution being launched could ever lead to the conclusion that a  detaining authority never applied its mind and the  order of detention was therefore bad. Is it correct to say that if such possibility was not present in the mind of the  detain- ing  authority,  the order of the detention  is  necessarily bad? Unless it clearly appears that preventive detention  is being  resorted  to as the line of  least  resistance  where criminal prosecution would be the usual course, no fault can be found with it. 428 What  is to be seen is whether the detaining  authority  has applied  its  mind  or not to the question  whether  it  was necessary to make preventive detention. In the instant  case there  is  evidence of application of  mind.  The  proximity between  the date of commission of an offence and of  deten- tion order cannot also be said to be absent in this case. As we  have already seen the power of preventive  detention  is qualitatively  different from punitive detention. The  power of  preventive  detention is precautionary  power  exercised reasonably  in anticipation and may or may not relate to  an offence.  It cannot be considered to be a parallel  proceed- ing. The anticipated behaviour of a person based on his past conduct  in the light of surrounding circumstances may  pro- vide sufficient ground for detention. It cannot be said that the satisfaction of the detaining authority on the basis  of his  past activities that if the detenu were to be  left  at large  he would indulge in similar activities in future  and thus  act  in  a manner prejudicial to  the  maintenance  of public order etc. shall not be based on adequate  materials. Public  safety  ordinarily means security of the  public  or their freedom from danger. Public order also implied  public peace  and tranquility. There is no escape from the  conclu- sion  that the terrorists and disruptive activities  disrupt public  peace and tranquility and affect the freedom of  the public  from danger to life and property.  Disruption  means the  act of bursting and tearing as under. Disruptive  means producing or resulting from or attending disruption. Terror- ism means the act of terrorising; unlawful acts of  violence committed in an organised attempt to over-throw a Government or like purposes. Terrorist means one who adopts or supports the policy of terrorism. The terrorist and disruptive activ- ities are naturally disruptive of public peace, tranquillity and development. In Hemlata Kantilal Shah v. State of  Maha- rashtra  and Ors., AIR 1982 SC 8: [1982] 1 SCR 1028, it  was held  that  the prosecution or the absence of it is  not  an absolute  bar  to an order of preventive detention  but  the authority  is to satisfy the court that it had in  mind  the question of possibility of criminal prosecution while  form- ing the subjective satisfaction by the detaining  authority. It  may  be  based on inference from the  past  conduct  and antecedent history of the detenu. The High Court under  Art. 226  and  Supreme Court under Art. 32 or 136 do not  sit  in appeal from the order of preventive detention. But the Court is  only  to see whether the formality as enjoined  by  Art. 22(5) had been complied with by the detaining authority, and if so done, the Court cannot examine the materials before it and, find that the detaining authority should not have  been satisfied on the materials before it and detain the  detenu. In other words, the Court cannot question the sufficiency of the grounds of detention for the subjective satisfaction  of the authority as pointed out in Ashok Kumar v. Delhi  Admin- istration 429

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&  Ors., AIR 1982 SC 1143: [1982] 3 SCR 707. Those  who  are responsible for the national security or for the maintenance of  public  order must be the judges of  what  the  national security  or public order requires. Preventive detention  is devised  to afford protection to society. The object is  not to  punish a man for having done something but to  intercept before he does it and to prevent him from doing. The  justi- fication  for  such  detention is  suspicion  or  reasonable probability  and not criminal conviction which can  only  be warranted  by legal evidence. Thus, any preventive  measures even  if they involve some restraint or hardship upon  indi- viduals, do not partake in any way of the nature of  punish- ment,  but are taken by way of prosecution to  prevent  mis- chief to the State. There is no reason why executive  cannot take recourse to its powers of preventive detention in those cases  where  the executive is genuinely satisfied  that  no prosecution can possibly succeed against the detenu  because he  had influence over witnesses and against him no  one  is prepared  to depose. However, pusillanimity on the  part  of the executive has to be deprecated and pusillanimous  orders avoided.     It  is submitted that in the instance case,  there  were sufficient  materials to show that the detenu would  act  in the  future  to the prejudice of the maintenance  of  public order, security of the State and the Government’s effort  to curb terrorism. From the nature and contents of his speeches stated  in  the grounds of detention  there  was  sufficient justification  for the inference that he would  repeat  such speeches  if not preventively detained. Again when  grievous crime against the community was committed it would surely be subject to the penal law and stringent sentences, but at the same  time  it could be considered unsafe to allow  him  the opportunities to repeat prejudicial acts during :the  period the  penal process was likely to take. The learned  Attorney General  refers us to Giani Bakshish Singh v.  Government:of India  &  Ors.,  AIR 1973 SC 2667: [1974] 1  SCR  662,  Smt. Hemlata  v.  State of Maharashtra & Ors.,  (Supra)  and  Raj Kumar  Singh  v.  State  of  Bihar  &  Ors.,  AIR  1986   SC 2173:[1986]  4 SCC 407, submitting that the  possibility  of criminal  prosecution  was no bar to  order  any  preventive detention  and  that  the court should  not  substitute  its decision  or opinion in place of decision of  the  authority concerned on the question of necessity of preventive  deten- tion. "Possibility of a prosecution or the absence of it  is not  absolute bar to an order of preventive  detention;  the authority may prosecute the offender for an isolated act  or acts of an offence for violation of any criminal law, but if it  is satisfied that the offender has a tendency to  go  on violating such laws, then there will be no bar for the State to detain him under a Preventive 430 Detention  Act  in order to disable him to repeat  such  of- fences.  The  detaining authority is not the sole  judge  of what national security or public order requires. But neither is  the court the sole judge of the position. When power  is given  to an authority to act on certain facts and  if  that authority  acts on relevant facts and arrives at a  decision which cannot be described as either irrational or unreasona- ble,  in  the sense that no person instructed in  law  could have  reasonably taken that view, then the order is not  bad and  the Court cannot substitute its decision or opinion  in place  of  the decision of the authority  concerned  on  the necessity of passing the order."     Following Hemlata (supra) it could be said that in  this case of prosecution it may not be possible to bring home the

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offender to book as witnesses may not come forward to depose against  him out of fear, or it may not be possible to  col- lect  all necessary evidence without unreasonable delay  and expenditure  to prove the guilt of the offender beyond  rea- sonable doubt.     Considering the relevant facts and circumstances includ- ing the time and place, the contents of the detention  order and  the  allegations in the grounds of  detention  in  this case, we are of the view that nonregistration of any  crimi- nal case could not be said to have shown non-application  of mind  or absence of subjective satisfaction on the  part  of the detaining authority.     Assailing  the finding as to delay in disposing  of  the detenu’s  representation, the learned Attorney General  sub- mits  that  on  1.9.1988  the  detenu  filed  representation against  his detention addressed to the President  of  India through  the  Home Secretary, Government of Punjab  and  the Superintendent  of  District Jail, Agartala  (Tripura).  The State  Government  was  not aware of pendency  of  any  such representation with it. On 13.9.1988 the Central  Government issued  a  teleprinter message which was  duly  received  on 14.9.1988 in which the Central Government wanted to know the date on which the grounds of detention were supplied to  the detenu and also sought parawise comments on the  representa- tion of the detenu. However, the Central Government did  not send any copy of the representation to the State Government. Even   so,  it  directed  the  police,  vide  letter   dated 14.9.1988, to supply the required information to the Central Government. It was intimated to the Central Government  that parawise comments on the representation could not be offered as  copy  of the representation was not available  with  the State  of  Punjab. The Central Government  vide  teleprinter message dated 6.10.1988 which was 431 received on 10.10.1988 intimated that the photostat copy  of the representation had been sent along with the post copy of the  teleprinter  message. The representation was  duly  re- ceived  on  19.10.1988  by the State of Punjab  and  it  was examined  at various levels on 19.10.1988 (20.10.1988 was  a holiday),  21.10.1988 (22.10.1988 and 23.10.1988 were  holi- days),   24.10.1988  (25.10.1988  was  again   a   holiday), 26.10.1988,  27.10.1988 and 28.10.1988.  The  representation was  duly  put  up before the competent  authority  who  was pleased to reject the representation after due  deliberation and  consideration  on 28.10.1988. Thus,  according  to  the learned Attorney General, the State of Punjab from the  time of  receiving  the representation and till the time  of  its final  disposal  did not take more than  9  days,  obviously excluding  the aforesaid 14 holidays. According to him  this was  a  miraculous  job done in disposing  of  the  detenu’s representation  and  the  intimation of  the  rejection  was conveyed to the Superintendent of Jail, Agartala vide letter dated 31.10.1988, who informed the detenu on 8.11.1988. Thus the  detenu’s representation dated 1.9.1988 was disposed  of by  the  State Government on 28.10.1988 and the  detenu  was informed only on 8.11.1988 i.e. after more than two  months. It was pointed out by Mr. R.S. Suri, learned counsel for the appellant,  that excepting the photostat copy received  from the Central Government no separate representation was at all received  by  the State Government of  Punjab.  The  Central GOvernment  also  rejected the  representation  before  them after  due consideration on December 21, 1988 and  duly  in- formed the detenu.     Mr.  Kapil  Sibal, the learned counsel  for  the  detenu states that two copies, one meant for the Central Government

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and  the other meant for the State Government, were sent  by the  detenu on the same date. The learned  Attorney  General contends  that  the delay was caused by  the  representation having been addressed to the President of India,  wherefore, the copy went to the Central Government. Mr. Sibal, however, assets  that the detention order having said;  "whereas  the President  of India is satisfied", the detenu  was  required under law to address the representation to the President  of India and in view of the fact that it was routed through the Superintendent of the District Jail, Agartala (Tripura)  and the  Home  Secretary,  Government of Punjab,  there  was  no reason  why it should not have been delivered to  the  State Government  of Punjab. The learned Attorney  General  points out that the detention order itself having said that if  the detenu wished to make such representation, he should address it  to  the State Government through the  Superintendent  of Jail as soon as possible and the grounds of detention having also similarly stated that the 432 detenu  should address the representation to the State  Gov- ernment through the Superintendent of Jail, the delay caused up  till the receipt of the photostat copy from the  Central Government must be attributed to the detenu himself and  the State Government could not be blamed and the detention order could  not  be said to have been vitiated  by  any  latches, negligence  or  delay in disposing  of  the  representation, under the facts and circumstances stated above.     The  State of Punjab having been under  the  President’s rule  at  the relevant time and the detention  order  itself having stated that it was the satisfaction of the  President in passing the detention order Mr. Sibal points out that  it could not be said to have been a fatal mistake in the repre- sentation to have been addressed to the President of  India, Rashtrapati  Bhawan,  New Delhi and the  same  being  routed through  the Superintendent of the District  Jail,  Agartala (TRIPURA),  and the Home Secretary of the State  of  Punjab, there  was no reason why the same should not have  been  re- ceived by the State Government of Punjab. However it appears that  the  representation said to have been  meant  for  the State Government was not received by the State Government at all.  The detenu cannot be said to have deliberately  caused the delay. Though we feel that in view of the clear instruc- tions in the grounds of detention that he should address the representation to the State Government through the  Superin- tendent  of the Jail where he was detained should have  been followed.  May be this was due to the fact that  Punjab  was under President’s rule at the relevant time but  Rashtrapati Bhawan,  New  Delhi was not the proper  destination  of  the representation to the State Government,     It  is a settled law that in cases of preventive  deten- tion  expeditious  action  is required on the  part  of  the authorities in disposing of the detenu’s representation.  In Jayanarayan Sukul v. State of West Bengal, [1970] 3 SCR  225 it  was laid down that the consideration of the  representa- tion of the detenu by the appropriate authority was entirely independent  of any action by the Advisory  Board  including the  consideration  of the representation  by  the  Advisory Board.  There should not be any delay in the matter of  con- sideration.  It  is true that no hard and fast rule  can  be laid down as to the measure of time taken by the appropriate authority for consideration but it has to be remembered that the  Government has to be vigilant in the governance of  the citizens. A citizen’s right imposes correlative duty on  the State.  In Frances Coralie Mullin v. W.C. Khambra and  Ors., [1980]  2  SCC  275, it was reiterated  that  the  detaining

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authority must consider the representation as soon as possi- ble, and this preferably, must be before the 433 representation is forwarded to the Advisory Board before the Advisory Board makes its report and the consideration by the detaining  authority of the representation must be  entirely independent  of  the  hearing by the Board  or  its  report, expedition being essential at every stage. The time  impera- tive cannot be absolute and the Court’s observations are not to  be so understood, and there has to be lee-way  depending on  the  facts and circumstances of the  case.  However,  no allowance can be made for lethargic indifference or needless procrastination  but allowance has to be made for  necessary consultation  where legal intricacies and factual  ramifica- tions  are involved. The burden of explaining the  departure from the time imperative is always on the detaining authori- ty. The emphasis is on the constitutional right of a  detenu to  have his representation considered as  expeditiously  as possible and it will depend upon the facts and circumstances of  each case whether or not the appropriate Government  has disposed  of the case as expeditiously as possible. 1n  F.C. Mullin’s  case  the  representation of the  detenu  made  on December 22, 1979 was not communicated to the Advisory Board as  it ought to have been, when the Board met on January  4, 1980 and the detaining authority awaited the hearing  before the Advisory Board and took a decision thereafter. Under the facts  and circumstances of that case where the  detenu  re- quested for copies of statements and documents collection of which  took time, it was held that if there appeared  to  be any  delay,  it was not deemed due to any want of  care  but because  the representation required a thorough  examination in consultation with investigators of facts and advisors  on law  and  as such though the  Administrator  considered  the representation of the detenu after hearing by the Board, the Administrator  was  not entirely influenced by  the  hearing before the Board and the application for habeas corpus  was, therefore, dismissed. In State of Orissa and Anr. v. Manilal Singhania and Anr., AIR 1976 SC 456:[1976] 2 SCC 808, it was held  that  the  representation made by the  detenu  may  be considered by the State Government as soon as possible i.e., with  reasonable despatch and if that is not done, it  would have the effect of vitiating the order of detention, but  it is  neither  possible nor desirable to lay  down  any  rigid period  of  time uniformly applicable in  all  cases  within which the representation of the detenu must be considered by the  State  Government.  The Court would  have  to  consider judicially  in each case on the available  material  whether the  gap between the receipt of the representation  and  its consideration  by  the State Government is  so  unreasonably long and the explanation for the delay offered by the  State Government  was  unsatisfactory as to render  the  detention order thereafter illegal. 434     Article 21(5) of the Constitution enjoins that when  any person  is detained in pursuance of an order made under  any law providing for preventive detention, the authority making the  order  shall, as soon as may be,  communicate  to  such person  the  grounds on which the order has  been  made  and shall afford him the earliest opportunity of making a repre- sentation against the order. Since A.K. Gopalan v. The State of  Madras, AIR 1950 SC 27: [1950] SCR 88, there has been  a catena  of decisions of this Court taking the view that  the representation of the detenu must be considered promptly  by the  State Government. In John Martin v. State of West  Ben- gal,  [1975]  3 SCC 836 it was observed that  Article  22(5)

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does not say which is the authority to which the representa- tion shall be made or which authority shall consider it.  By s.  8(1)  of the Act the authority making the order  is  re- quired to communicate to the detenu his grounds of detention and  to  afford  him the earliest opportunity  of  making  a representation against the order to the appropriate  Govern- ment.  In Khudiram Das v. The State of West Bengal  &  Ors., [1975]  2 SCC 81 it was explained that  "the  constitutional Imperatives  enacted in Article 22(5) are two fold; (1)  the detaining  authority  must, as soon as may be, that  is,  as soon as practicable after the detention, communicate to  the detenu the grounds on which the order of detention has  been made and (2) the detaining authority -must afford the detenu the earliest opportunity of making a representation  against the  order of detention. These are the barest minimum  safe- guards which must be observed before an executive  authority can be permitted to preventively detain a person and thereby drown  his right of personal liberty in the name  of  public good  and  social security." In State of Orissa  &  Anr.  v. Manilal  Singhania  & Anr., (supra) the  representation  was made on October 21, 1974 and it was received by the District Magistrate on the same day. The representation was processed through  the different authorities. The Chief  Minister  was absent from headquarters between November 7, 1974 and Novem- ber  12, 1974 and immediately on return to headquarters  the Chief  Minister disposed of the representation and  rejected it  on  November 12, 1974. It was found that  there  was  no delay  at any stage in movement of the  representation  from one  officer  to  another. Every one having  dealt  with  it promptly and after examining it submitted to the  respective higher  officer. The Chief Minister was out of  the  Capital and  as soon as she returned without any delay at  all  dis- posed of the representation. Accordingly this Court did  not see  any gap between the receipt of the  representation  and its  consideration  by the State Government which  could  be said to be unreasonably long and the period had been  satis- factorily  explained in the affidavit of the State.  Accord- ingly the order of detention could not be held to be invalid on that ground. On 435 the  other hand in Saleh Mohammed v. Union of India &  Ors., [1980]  4  SCC  428 a delay of 22 days  in  considering  the representation  of  the  detenu was held  to  have  violated Article  22(5) and vitiated the detention order. The  repre- sentation in that case was lying unattended in the office of the  Superintendent  of  Jail or the  Inspector  General  of prisons  and accordingly it was held to have been a case  of gross negligence and chilling indifference and on that short ground  alone  the  detention order was  quashed.  In  Kamla Kanyalal Khushalani v. State of Maharashtra & Anr., [1981] 1 SCC  748 where the disposal of detenu’s  representation  was delayed for 25 days it was held that the continued detention of the detenu was void and that it was of the utmost  impor- tance  that  all the necessary safeguards laid down  by  the Constitution  under  Article 21 or Article 22(5)  should  be complied with fully and strictly and any departure from  any of  the  safeguards would void the order  of  detention.  In Rattan Singh v. State of Punjab and Ors., [1981] 4 SCC 48  1 the  representation to the State Government and the  Central Government were made by the detenu simultaneously though the Jail  Superintendent  who should either have  forwarded  the representation  separately to the Governments  concerned  or else  he should have forwarded them to the State  Government with  a  request for the onward transmission  of  the  other representation  to the Central Government. "Someone  tripped

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somewhere  and the representation addressed to  the  Central Government  was apparently never forwarded to it"  with  the inevitable  result  that the detenu had  been  unaccountably deprived of a valuable right to defend and assert his funda- mental right to personal liberty. Chandrachud, C.J. speaking for the Court observed:               "But  the laws of preventive detention  afford               only  a modicum of safeguards to  persons  de-               tained  under them and if freedom and  liberty               are  to  have any meaning  in  our  democratic               set-up,  it is essential that at  least  those               safeguards  are  not denied  to  the  detenus.               Section  11(1)  of COFEPOSA confers  upon  the               Central  Government  the power  to  revoke  an               order  of detention even if it is made by  the               State  Government or its officer. That  power,               in order to be real and effective, must  imply               the right in a detenu to make a representation               to the Central Government against the order of               detention.  The  failure in this case  on  the               part either of the Jail Superintendent or  the               State  Government  to  forward  the   detenu’s               representation  to the Central Government  has               deprived  the detenu of the valuable right  to               have his detention revoked by that Government.               The               436               continued detention of the detenu must  there-               fore be held illegal and the detenu set free."     In Youssuf Abbas v. Union of India & Ors., [1982] 2  SCC 380,  the  detenu  claimed to  have  made  a  representation against his detention on October 1, 1981. Government  stated that  an undated representation was received by it from  the District Magistrate on October 23, 1981. The Advisory  Board met on October 23, 1981. Thereafter the Government  rejected the representation of the detenu on October 29, 1981. Admit- tedly  the representation was not forwarded to the  Advisory Board.  It appears that the representation was forwarded  by the  Superintendent Central Jail to the District  Magistrate on  October  20, 1981. Why his representation  was  detained with  the Superintendent, Central Jail from October 1,  1981 to October 20, 1981 was not explained. On that ground  alone the writ petition was allowed and the detenu was directed to be  set at liberty forthwith. In Asha Keshavrao  Bhosale  v. Union of India & Anr., [1985] 4 SCC 361, it was found that a representation  was made by the petitioner on behalf of  the detenu which was received in the office of the Chief  Minis- ter  on November 28, 1984 and orders on that  representation were  passed  on January 23, 1985 and the same  orders  were received on January 28, 1985. In the representation made  by the  petitioner himself to the Chief Minister, the order  of detention was casually impugned but lot of attention appears to have been bestowed on the necessity of keeping the detenu in a Bombay Jail instead of sending him to Nasik Road Prison as directed in the Order of detention. A detailed  represen- tation  was  made by the Secretary of an  association  which espoused  his cause and that representation was received  on November  29, 1984 in the Secretariat of the Chief  Minister and  was  forwarded to the Home Department on  December  3,. 1984  and was finally disposed of on December 12,  1984  and the rejection thereof was communicated on December 13, 1984. This Court held that the petitioner was not entitled to make tenable submission on the score of delay in disposal of  the representation.  In Aslam Ahmed Zahire Ahmed Shaik v.  Union of  India  & Ors., [1989] 3 SCC 277, the  Superintendent  of

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Central  Prison  of Bombay to whom  the  representation  was handed  over by the detenu on June 16, 1988 for more  onward transmission to the Central Government has callously ignored and  kept it unattended for a period of seven days and as  a result of that the representation reached the Government  11 days  after  it was handed over to the  Jail  Superintendent without  any explanation despite opportunity given  by  this Court. Pandian, J. speaking for the Court observed: 437               "In our view, the supine indifference,  slack-               ness  and callous attitude on the part of  the               Jail   Superintendent  who  had   unreasonably               delayed in transmitting the representation  as               an  intermediary; had ultimately caused  undue               delay  in  the  disposal  of  the  appellant’s               representation  by  the Government  which  re-               ceived the representation 11 days after it was               handedover  to the Jail Superintendent by  the               detenu.  This avoidable and unexplained  delay               has resulted in rendering the continued deten-               tion  of the appellant illegal  and  constitu-               tionally impermissible." Similarly  in T.A. Abdul Rahman v. State of Kerala  &  Ors., Jt.  Today 1989 3 SC 444, the representation  was  submitted originally on 25.1.1988, but was got back and resubmitted on 2.2.1988  and was received by the third respondent  only  on 16.2.1988  and  took time upto 28.3.1988  in  receiving  the comments  of  the Collector of Customs. Again  there  was  a delay of seven days in forwarding the representation to  the Minister of State for Revenue with the comments of the Joint Secretary,  COFEPOSA section. In the opinion of their  Lord- ships, the manner in which the representation had been dealt with  revealed  a  sorry state of affair in  the  matter  of consideration  of the representation made by the detenu.  It was  not  clear  why such a long  delay  from  16.2.1988  to 28.3.1988  had occasioned in getting the comments  from  the Collector  of  Customs. Theft Lordships extracted  what  was said in Rama Dhondu Borade v. Shri V.K. Saraf,  Commissioner of Police & Ors., [1989] 1 Scale Vol. 1 p. 22:               "The detenu has an independent  constitutional               right to make his representation under Article               22(5)  of  the Constitution of  India.  Corre-               spondingly,  there is  constitutional  mandate               commanding the concerned authority to whom the               detenu forwards his representation questioning               the correctness of the detention order clamped               upon  him and requesting for his  release,  to               consider  the said representation within  rea-               sonable  dispatch and to dispose the  same  as               expeditiously as possible. This constitutional               requirement must be satisfied with respect but               if this constitutional imperative is  observed               in breach, it would amount to negation of  the               constitutional  obligation rendering the  con-               tinued detention constitutionally  impermissi-               ble  and  illegal, since such a  breach  would               defeat the very concept of liberty-the  highly               cherished right which is enshrined in  Article               21 of the Constitution."               438               "  .....  What is reasonably dispatch  depends               on  the facts and circumstances of  each  case               and no hard and fast rule can be laid down  in               that regard. However, in case the gap  between               the  receipt  of the  representation  and  its

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             consideration by the authority is so unreason-               ably  long and the explanation offered by  the               authority  is  so unsatisfactory,  such  delay               could vitiate the order of detention." Their Lordships accordingly held that the representation  of the detenu had not been given prompt and expeditious consid- eration  and was allowed to lie without being  properly  at- tended to and secondly the unexplained delay in the disposal of the representation was violative of Article 22(5) of  the Constitution  of  India, rendering the  order  of  detention invalid.     In the instant case we are satisfied that after  receipt of  the  Xerox copy from the Central Government,  the  State Government  took only 13 .days including 4 holidays in  dis- posing  of  the representation.  Considering  the  situation prevailing  and the consultation needed in the  matter,  the State Government could not have been unmindful of urgency in the matter. But the facts remain that it took more than  two months from the date of submission of the representation  to the date of informing the detenu of the result of his repre- sentation.  Eight  days  were taken after  disposal  of  the representation  by the State Government. The result is  that the detenu’s constitutional right to prompt disposal of  his representation  was denied and the legal  consequences  must follow.     Assailing the finding of the High Court that opportunity was  not  afforded to the detenu to appear and  produce  his witnesses  before the Advisory Board, the  learned  Attorney General submits that the finding is not correct inasmuch  as in spite of the best endeavour on the part of the  detaining authority to produce the detenu and his witnesses before the Board  in terms of the High Court’s order  dated  27.9.1988, the  detenu himself on a lame excuse avoided  appearing  and producing his witnesses before it and thereby left no  other alternative than to tender its opinion to the State  Govern- ment on 17.11. 1988 whereupon the State Government confirmed the order of detention vide its order dated 22.11.1988.     It  appears that it was decided to hold the  sitting  of the Advisory Board at Indore on 12.11.1988 which was  admit- tedly  a week before the mandatory last date for  submitting the report. On 8.11.1988 the 439 detenu  at  Agartala prayed for postponement  of  the  Board sitting.  The  State Government informed the  Board  on  the basis of Teleprinter message dated November 8, 1988 received from  Agartala that the detenu was unable to  undertake  the journey  from Agartala to Indore. Thereafter,  the  arrange- ments  made to carry the detenu and his witnesses to  Indore by  plane,  were also cancelled by the State  Government  of Punjab and the detenu was told through the Inspector General of  Prisons,  Tripura by communication dated  11.11.1988  as follows:               "In  response  to this  office  message  dated               8.11.1988,  Government of Punjab has  informed               me  that next date of hearing as fixed by  the               NSA Board, Punjab, will be intimated. This  is               in connection with his prayer dated  8.11.1988               for postponement of hearing by the NSA  Board,               Punjab  on  12.11.1988 in the  District  Jail,               Indore. This may kindly be noted."     Admittedly,  the detenu was arrested on  28.5.1988.  The total  period  for  Advisory Board’s  report  under  s.  14A (2)(d)(i)  was  five months and three  weeks.  Reference  to Advisory  Board was made on 26.8.1988. So the  period  would expire  on or about 19.11.1988. The Board  fixed  12.11.1988

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for  its sitting. The detenu prayed for adjournment  as  be- cause of frozen joint he was unable to perform ablution  and tie  his turban. Whether that was a lame excuse or not  need not be decided. The fact remained that he was told of anoth- er  sitting  of the Board. Having a week in  hand  it  would perhaps  have been possible to hold another sitting  of  the Board and give the detenu an opportunity which however,  did not  come. Of course the decision was that of  the  Advisory Board and not of the State Government. The High Court right- ly  observed that there was a communication gap. It is  true that  the  Advisory  Board is not a  judicial  body.  It  is charged  with the responsibility of advising  the  Executive Government.  But  when it advises in favour of  the  detenu, namely, that there was no sufficient cause for detention, it would  be binding upon the Government under s. 12(2) of  the Act to release the detenu forthwith. The detenu in this case did  not  have that opportunity to show that  there  was  no sufficient cause for this detention. Expressing inability to appear once could not have been treated as the detenu’s  not desiring  to be heard under s. 11(2) of the Act. In fact  he desired to be heard and to produce his witnesses. The result was that despite the State Government’s communication he was deprived of this opportunity. What then would be the result? As was observed in Dr. R.K. Bhardwaj v. The State of Delhi & 440 Ors.,  [1953]  SCR  708 preventive detention  is  a  serious invasion  of personal liberty and such meagre safeguards  as the Constitution has provided against the improper  exercise of  the power must be jealously watched and enforced by  the Court. Following D.S. Roy v. State of West Bengal, [1972]  2 SCR  787 it can be said that Article 22(4) provides that  no law  providing for Preventive Detention shall authorise  the detention of a person for a longer period than three  months unless  the Advisory Board has reported within  that  period that  there  is  in its opinion sufficient  cause  for  such detention. Law therefore mandates a reference to a Board and for  it  to report on the sufficiency or  otherwise  of  the detention which should be within three months from the  date of detention. It this case it is for this reason that  after the  Constitution every legislation dealing with  Preventive Detention  has made specific provision for confirmation  and continuance  of  detention  in view  of  the  constitutional mandate  in  Article 22(4). In this case, s. 11 of  the  Act prescribes  5  months 3 weeks. Unless the Board has  made  a report  to the effect that there is a sufficient  cause  for such detention within that period from the date of detention there  can be no detention of a person under any law  for  a longer period than that. Relying on the observation of  M.H. Beg, J. in P.D. Deorah v. The District Magistrate, Kamrup  & Ors., [1974] 2 SCR 12 it can be said that the gravity of the evil to the community resulting from anti-social  activities can not furnish an adequate reason for invading the personal liberty  of a citizen, except in accordance with the  proce- dure  established  by  the Constitution and  the  laws.  The protection of personal liberty is largely through insistence on  observance of the mandatory procedure. In cases of  pre- ventive  detention  observance  of procedure  has  been  the bastion against wanton assaults on personal liberty over the years.  Social security is no doubt the most important  goal of the State but it is not the only goal of a good  society. There  are other important values in a society. One  of  the foremost  and fundamental right guaranteed in the  Constitu- tion  is personal liberty and one cannot be deprived  of  it except by the procedure prescribed by law. Libertas  inesti- mabilis  res  est.  Liberty is an  inestimable  thing  above

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price. Libertus omnibbus rebus favourabilier est. Liberty is more favoured than all things (anything). It would be ironic if,  in the name of social security, we would  sanction  the subversion  of  this liberty. 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 strictly observed. As long back as in N.P.  Umrao v. B.B. Gujral & Ors., [1979] 2 SCR 315 at  page 321  it was held to be well settled that in case of  preven- tive detention of a citizen, the Constitution by Art.  22(5) as interpreted by this Court, enjoins that the obligation of the 441 appropriate Government is to afford the detenu the  opportu- nity to make a representation and to consider that represen- tation  and there is the Government’s obligation to  consti- tute a Board and to communicate the representation,  amongst other  materials,  to  the Board to enable it  to  form  its opinion  and to obtain such opinion. It was also  reiterated that when liberty of the subject is involved under a preven- tive  detention law it is the bounden duty of the  court  to satisfy  itself that all the safeguards provided by the  law have been scrupulously observed and that the subject is  not deprived  of his personal liberty otherwise than in  accord- ance  with law. Two of these safeguards under Art. 22  which relate to the observance of the principle of natural justice and  which a fortiori are intended to act as a check on  the arbitrary  exercise  of power, are to be  found  in  Article 22(5) of the Constitution. These safeguards might be  desig- nated as a regulative postulate of respect, that is  respect for the intrinsic dignity of the human person. The detention of individuals without trial for any length of time,  howso- ever  short, is wholly inconsistent with the basic ideas  of our Government. As was pointed out in V.C. Jawantraj Jain v. Shri Pradhan & Ors., [1979] 3 SCR 1007 one of the two  safe- guards  provided  to a detenu is that his case must  be  re- ferred to an Advisory Board for its opinion if it is  sought to detain him for a longer period than three months and  the other is that he should be afforded the earliest opportunity of  making a representation against the order  of  detention and such representation should be considered by the  detain- ing authority as early as possible before any order is  made confirming the detention. Neither safeguards is dependent on the  other  and both have to be observed  by  the  detaining authority.  It is no answer for the detaining  authority  to say that representation of the detenu was sent by it to  the Advisory Board and that the Board has considered the  repre- sentation and then made a report expressing itself in favour of  detention. Even if the Advisory Board has made a  report stating  that in its opinion there is sufficient  cause  for the  detention,  the State Government is not bound  by  such opinion  and it may still on considering the  representation of the detenu or otherwise, decline to confirm the order  of detention  and release the detenu. It is imperative for  the State  Government  to  consider the  representation  of  the detenu  before  making the order confirming  the  detention. Fazal  Ali, J. emphasised in Bal Chand Choraria v. Union  of India  and Ors., [1978] 2 SCR 401 that in matters where  the liberty  of the subject is concerned and a highly  cherished right  is  involved, the representation made by  the  detenu should  be construed liberally and not technically so as  to frustrate  or  defeat the concept of liberty  which  is  en- grained  in  Art. 21 of the Constitution of India.  In  Smt. Kavita v. The State of Maharashtra & 442

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Ors.,  [1981]  2  Crl. L.J. 1262 AIR 1981 SC  1641,  it  was emphasised that the Advisory Board is charged with the  task of submitting the report within the prescribed period  after hearing the detenu, specifying its opinion as to whether  or not  there  is  sufficient cause for the  detention  of  the person concerned.     The Advisory Board, as was held in A.K. Roy v. Union  of India,  [1982]  Vol. 88 Crl. L.J. 340, is  to  consider  the question whether there is sufficient cause for the detention of  the person concerned and not where the detenu is  guilty of  any  charge. The detenu may therefore  present  his  own evidence in rebuttal of the allegations made against him and may  offer  other oral and documentary evidence  before  the Advisory  Board in order to rebut the allegations which  are made  against  him.  If the detenu desires  to  examine  any witnesses, he shall keep them present at the appointed  time and  no  obligation  can be cast on the  Advisory  Board  to summon them. The Advisory Board, like any other Tribunal, is free to regulate its own procedure within the constraints of the Constitution and the statute. If report is submitted  by the Advisory Board without hearing the detenu who desired to be  heard  it will be violative of the  safeguards  provided under  Article 22 of the Constitution .and ss. 10 and 11  of the  Act.  Failure to produce the detenu, unless it  is  for wilful  refusal  of the detenu himself to  appear,  will  be equally violative of those provisions. In State of Rajasthan v. Shamsher Singh, [1985] Suppl. 1 SCR 83 the importance  of the  proceedings before the Advisory Board was  highlighted. In  fact it is the only opportunity for the detenu of  being heard  along  with his representation for  deciding  whether there was sufficient cause for his detention.     The  increasing  need  for ensuring  public  safety  and security  in the State of Punjab and the Union Territory  of Chandigarh  has  been  reflected in  the  recent  successive amendments  of  the National Security Act (Act 65  of  1980) with  which  we are concerned. The Act was  amended  by  the National  Security  (Amendment) Ordinance, 1984,  which  was repealed  by  the National Security (Amendment)  Act,  1984, (18th  May, 1984) (Act NO. 24 of 1984) which was  deemed  to have come into force on the 15th day of April, 1984. Section 2 of this amendment Act provided that the National  Security Act,  1980 shall, in its application to the State of  Punjab and  the Union Territory of Chandigarh, have effect  subject to  the  amendments specified in ss. 3 to 5. Section  3  was amended to the extent that in sub-section (4) of s. 3 of the Principal  Act  (detaining officer reporting  to  the  State Government)  in  the proviso, for the words  "10  days"  the words "15 days" shall be 443 substituted and for the words "15 days" the words "20  days" shall  be substituted. Similarly in sub-section (1) of  sec- tion  8 (communicating grounds of detention to  the  detenu) for the words" 10 days" the words "15 days" shall be substi- tuted. A new section namely, section 14A was inserted  after section 14. This was followed by the National Security  (2nd Amendment)  Act, 1984 and the National Security  (Amendment) Act  of  1985. This was followed by  the  National  Security (Amendment)  Ordinance  of 1987 which was  repealed  by  the National  Security Amendment Act, 1987 (Act No. 27 of  1987) which  further  amended the Act in its  application  to  the State  of Punjab and the Union Territory of Chandigarh.  The National  Security (Amendment) Act, 1984, section 4  of  the National  Security (2nd Amendment) Act, 1984,  the  National Security  (Amendment)  Act, 1985 and the  National  Security (Amendment) Ordinance, 1987 were thereby repealed. This  was

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followed  by  the National Security  (Amendment)  Ordinance, 1988 which was repealed by the National Security (Amendment) Act, 1988 (Act No. 43 of 1988).     In Section 14A as inserted by the Amendment Act of 1984, the provision was "where such person had been detained  with a view to preventing him from acting in any disturbed  area, in any manner prejudicial to  .......  "     It  was by the National Security (Amendment)  Act,  1987 (Act No. 27 of 1987) that the provision of detention without obtaining  the  opinion of the Advisory Board for  a  period longer  than 3 months, but not exceeding 6 months, from  the date  of his detention where such person had  been  detained with  a view to preventing him ’in any disturbed  area’--(1) "from  interfering with the efforts of Government in  coping with the terrorists and disruptive activities", was  insert- ed.     We  find that while sub-section (2) of section 3 of  the Act  before the amendment of 1984 provided that the  Central Government  and the State Government may if  satisfied  with respect  to  any person that with a view to  preventing  him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the security of the State or from acting in any manner prejudicial to the  main- tenance of public order or from acting in any manner  preju- dicial to the maintenance of supplies and services essential to  the  community it is necessary so to do, make  an  order directing  that  such  person be detained,  section  14A  as inserted by the Amendment Act of 1984 provided that notwith- standing  anything contained in the foregoing provisions  of this Act any person in respect of whom an order of detention has been made at any time before the 3rd day of April, 1986 444 may be detained without obtaining the opinion of the Adviso- ry  Board  for  a period longer than three  months  but  not exceeding  six months, from the date of his detention  where such person had been detained with a view to preventing  him from  acting, in any disturbed area, in any manner  prejudi- cial  to  (a) the defence of India; or (b) the  security  of India; or (c) the security of the State; or (d) the  mainte- nance  of public order; or (e) the maintenance  of  supplies and  services essential to the community. The amendment  Act of 1987 added of these the ground "from interfering with the efforts  of  Government  in coping with  the  terrorist  and disruptive activities."     Thus  as a result of these amendments applicable to  the State  of  Punjab and the Union Territory of  Chandigarh  we find on one hand addition to the grounds of detention and on the  other,  extension of the period during which  a  person could  be  detained  without obtaining the  opinion  of  the Advisory  Board. There is, however, no amendment as  to  the safeguards provided under Article 22 and ss. 9, 10 and 11 of the  Act.  Indeed, there could be no  such  amendment.  This reminds us of what was said, of course in a slightly differ- ent  context. "Amid the clash of arms laws are  not  silent. They may be changed, but they speak the same language in war and  peace."  Would laws speak in a  different  language  in internal  disturbance?  Lex uno ore  omnes  alloquitur.  Law addresses all with one mouth or voice. Quotiens dubia inter- pretatio  libertatis  est secundum  libertatem  respondendum erit Whenever there is a doubt between liberty and  bondage, the  decision  must  be in favour of liberty.  So  says  the Digest.     The  result in that this appeal fails and is  dismissed. As  ordered  by the High Court the detenu is to  be  set  at liberty  forthwith, if he is not required to be detained  in connection with any other case.

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R.N.J.                                Appeal dismissed. 445