18 January 1967
Supreme Court
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SYED KHAWAJA MOINUDDIN Vs GOVERNMENT OF INDIA AND 3 ORS.

Case number: Appeal (crl.) 237 of 1966


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PETITIONER: SYED KHAWAJA MOINUDDIN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: GOVERNMENT OF INDIA AND 3 ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/01/1967

BENCH: BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA BENCH: BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA HIDAYATULLAH, M. MITTER, G.K.

CITATION:  1967 AIR 1143            1967 SCR  (2) 401

ACT: Citizenship Rules, 1956, Schedule III, para 3--When detailed enquiry on the acquisition of foreign citizenship necessary.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant  who was born in India left for  Pakistan  in 1951  at the age of 13.  He stayed there till 1955, when  he came  to  India  as a Pakistani  citizen  with  a  Pakistani passport.   In 1963, he was deported to Pakistan.  In  1964, he again came to India with a Pakistani passport.  In  order to  determine his nationality for the purpose  of  deporting him,  the Government of India issued notice to him  to  make representations,   if   any.    The   appellant   made   two representations, and though in both of them he urged that he had not voluntarily acquired the citizenship of Pakistan, he did  not  raise  any plea, at any stage,  that  he  had  not voluntarily  obtained the passport on the two  occasions  be came  to  India,  or, that he was  compelled  to  apply  for Pakistani  passports.   There was no plea that he  tried  to obtain  a permit for temporary stay when going  to  Pakistan nor  was  there  any suggestion that he tried  to  obtain  a repatriation certificate which he could have obtained if  he had  retained  his Indian citizenship.   The  Government  of India  considered  the representations and passed  an  order that  he  had voluntarily  acquired  Pakistani  citizenship, under s. 9(2) of the Citizenship Act, 1955. HELD:The order did not suffer from any infirmity. On the representations made by the appellant the  Government was  not called upon to make any detailed enquiry, when  the provisions  of  part 3 of Schedule III  of  the  Citizenship Rules, namely, that the authority must regard obtaining of a foreign  passport on a particular date as  conclusive  proof that  the  Indian  citizen  had  voluntarily  acquired   the citizenship  of  another  country  before  that  date,  were clearly applicable.  It was only when a plea was raised that a citizen had not voluntarily obtained the passport that  he should be afforded opportunity to prove that fact. [404 F-H] Mohd.  Ayub Khan v. Commissioner of Police, Madras, [1965] 2 S.C.R. 884, referred to.

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JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 237 of 1966. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated October 7, 1966 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Criminal Misc.  Petition No. 1621 of 1966. Yerramilli  Satyanarayana and K. R. Sharma, for  the  appel- lant. B. Sen and R. N. Sachthey, for respondent No. 1. sup.CI/67-12 402 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bhargava,  J. In this appeal, by special leave, we have  al- ready  passed the order on 14th December, 1966, and  we  now indicate our reasons for- that order. The  appellant was born on.  April 6, 1938, at  Suryapet  in Nalgonda  District,  Andhra Pradesh, and  was  educated  and brought  up there until the year 1951.  His father  died  in 1947.   After the partition of India and the enforcement  of the  Constitution, the appellant, in August 1951,  left  for Pakistan  where he stayed until 1955.  In 1955, he  returned to India on a passport obtained from the Pakistan Government as  a  Pakistani  citizen  with  a  visa  from  the   Indian Government.  Even after the expiry of the visa, he continued to  stay in India, but in August, 1963, he was  deported  to Pakistan.  He came again to India with a passport dated  4th December, 1963 issued by the Pakistan Government with a visa from  the Indian High Commission dated 20th  January,  1964. Be  arrived in India on 5th February,  1964.   Subsequently, the  question of deportation of the appellant by the  Indian Government  arose,  and  thereupon, the  appellant  filed  a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution challenging  the order  of deportation made by the Government of India.   The petition was allowed by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh and the  order  of deportation was quashed on  the  ground  that there  had  been  no determination that  the  appellant  had acquired Pakistani citizenship under s. 9 of the Citizenship Act  by the Indian Government.  Thereafter,  the  Government took  up the question of determining the nationality of  the appellant, and a notice was issued to the appellant on  19th March, 1965 through the Government of Andhra Pradesh  asking the appellant, within one month from the date of the service of the notice on him, to submit to the Government of  Andhra Pradesh  for  onward transmission to  consideration  of  the Central  Government  any representation that  the  appellant might wish to make. The  appellant made two representations.  The later  of  the two  representations  was sent by him in the month  of  May, 1965.  The Government of India, on 18th August, 1965, issued an order holding that the appellant had voluntarily acquired the citizenship of Pakistan.  The appellant challenged  this order by another petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution before  the High Court of Andhra Pradesh, and that  petition was dismissed by the order now under appeal before us. It  was  not disputed, as it could not be disputed  in  this case,  that the Government of India was competent  under  s. 9(2)  of the Citizenship Act, 1955 to determine whether  the appellant   had  acquired  the  citizenship   of   Pakistan. Admittedly,  the  appellant had gone to Pakistan  in  August 1951  after  the  enforcement  of  the  Constitution.    The question whether he had migrated with the                             403 intention  of  voluntarily  acquiring  the  citizenship   of Pakistan  and had actually acquired such citizenship  could,

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therefore,  be determined by the Government of  India  alone under s. 9(2) of the Citizenship Act.  The order dated  18th August, 1965 passed by the Government of India, shows ’that, before  giving its decision, the Government  considered  the cause  shown  by the appellant and gave due  regard  to  the principles  of  evidence contained in Schedule  III  of  the Citizenship Rules, 1956 in accordance with Rule 30 thereof. This order has been challenged on behalf of the appellant on the  ground  that the appellant was not  given  an  adequate opportunity   of  putting  forward  his  case   before   the Government  of India gave its decision on 18th August,  1965 holding  that  the appellant had  voluntarily  acquired  the citizenship  of Pakistan.  It was urged that the  Government of India should have held an enquiry before arriving at this decision, and for this proposition reliance is placed on the decision  of this Court in Mohd.  Ayub Khan v.  Commissioner of Police, Mad,-as and Another(1).  It was held in that case that :                "The  question  as to whether  when  and  how               foreign  citizenship has been acquired has  to               be  determined having regard to the  rules  of               evidence prescribed, and termination of Indian               citizenship being the consequence of voluntary               acquisition   of  foreign   citizenship,   the               authority  has  also to  determine  that  such               latter   citizenship  has   been   voluntarily               acquired.    Determination  of  the   question               postulates an approach as in a  quasi-judicial               enquiry;  the citizen concerned must be  given               due  notice of the nature of the action  which               in   the  view  of  the   authority   involves               termination    of   Indian-citizenship,    and               reasonable opportunity must be afforded to the               citizen to convince the authority that what is               alleged  against  him is not true.   What  the               scope and extent of the enquiry to be made  by               the authority on a plea raised by the  citizen               concerned   should   be,  depends   upon   the               circumstances of each case." Proceeding  further, the Court considered the  circumstances which  have  to  be  taken  into  account  in  applying  the provisions of paragraph 3 of Schedule III of the Citizenship Rules  which raises a conclusive presumption that a  citizen of India, who has obtained a passport from a foreign country on  any  date,  has before that  date  voluntarily  acquired citizenship  of  that  country.  It was held  that  "by  the application  of the rule in paragraph 3, the authority  must regard obtaining of a foreign passport on a (1)  [1965] 2 S.C.R. 884. 404 particular date as conclusive proof that the Indian  citizen has  voluntarily  acquired citizenship  of  another  country before that date.  But obtaining of a passport of a  foreign country  cannot  in  all cases  merely  mean  receiving  the passport.   If a plea is raised by the citizen that  he  had not  voluntarily obtained the passport, the citizen must  be afforded  an  opportunity to prove that  fact."  Relying  on these  views  of this Court, it was urged on behalf  of  the appellant that, in this case, the appellant should have been given  an  opportunity by the Government of India  to  prove that  he had not voluntarily obtained the passport from  the Pakistan Government which was the basis, of the decision  of the Government of India dated 18th August, 1965 against  the appellant.   We,  however, find that, on the  facts  of  the present  case, there was no occasion for the  Government  of

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India to enter into any such enquiry. As  we  have  mentioned  earlier,  the  appellant  made  two representations to the Government of India.  Though, in both those representations, he urged that he had not  voluntarily acquired  the  citizenship of Pakistan, he did  not  at  any stage  raise any plea that he had not  voluntarily  acquired the passports on the basis of which he came to India on  the two  occasions  in  1955  and 1964.   In  fact,  though  the appellant  did  put  forward a plea that  when  he  went  to Pakistan, the was a minor, it was never urged on his  behalf that he had not gone to Pakistan voluntarily, or that he had left because he was compelled by the disturbed conditions in India,  or that he was taken there by abduction  or  against his   will.    In  fact,  he  did  not   indicate   in   his representation  at  all  the  reason why  he  had  gone,  to Pakistan.   The facts put by him indicated that he had  gone voluntarily  even  though he was a minor, and there  was  no explanation  forthcoming  for exercising  this  volition  of going  to that country.  Even after arrival in Pakistan,  he stayed on for a period of four years, and in the representa- tion  to the Government he did not explain this  long-  stay there.   Then,  there was no plea that he was  compelled  to apply  for the passport as a Pakistani citizen and did  not, in  fact, obtain it voluntarily.  There is no mention  that, when going to Pakistan, he tried to obtain any permit for  a temporary  visit  nor was there any suggestion  that  before return, he tried to obtain a repatriation certificate  which he  could  have  obtained  if he  had  retained  his  Indian citizenship.   No such facts having been alleged, it is  not possible for this Court to hold that the Government of India was  called  upon  to make any  detailed  enquiry  when  the provisions of paragraph 3 of Schedule III of the Citizenship Rules,  were clearly applicable, because the  appellant  had obtained passports in Pakistan representing himself to be  a Pakistani  citizen.  It cannot, therefore, be said that,  in this  case,  the  Government of India  failed  to  hold  any enquiry which it was required to do, and consequently, 405 the  order dated 18th August, 1965 passed by the  Government of India does not suffer from any infirmity.  These were the reasons  which  led us to the view that the  appeal  had  no merit and had to be dismissed. v.p.s Appeal dismissed. 406