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[Cites 11, Cited by 65]

Supreme Court of India

D. Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik & Ors vs State Of Andhra Pradesh & Ors on 9 September, 1974

Equivalent citations: 1974 AIR 2092, 1975 SCR (2) 24, AIR 1974 SUPREME COURT 2092, 1974 6 SCC 397, 1974 SCR 583, 1975 MADLJ(CRI) 34, 1975 MADLW (CRI) 216, 1973 SCC(CRI) 962, 1975 (1) SCJ 102, 1974 SCD 81, (1974) 3 SCC 397, 1974 SCD 931

Author: Y.V. Chandrachud

Bench: Y.V. Chandrachud, Hans Raj Khanna, P.K. Goswami

           PETITIONER:
D. BHUVAN MOHAN PATNAIK & ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT09/09/1974

BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
GOSWAMI, P.K.

CITATION:
 1974 AIR 2092		  1975 SCR  (2)	 24
 1975 SCC  (3) 185
 CITATOR INFO :
 E&R	    1978 SC1675	 (57,197,212,226)
 F	    1980 SC1579	 (42)
 RF	    1981 SC 746	 (4)
 R	    1983 SC 361	 ((2)16,17)
 RF	    1983 SC 465	 (5,16,17)
 RF	    1985 SC 231	 (2,3)


ACT:
Constitution  of India, Articles 32, 21 and 13-Prisons	Act.
1894-Whether prisoner has fundamental right-Validity of live
wire mechanism atop jail wall-Posting Police out-side  jail-
Validity of.



HEADNOTE:
The  petitioners  are under-going sentences in	the  Central
Jail  at  Vizagapatnam.	  The  petitioners  have  filed	 the
present writ petitions for the reliefs that the armed Police
Guards	posted	around the Jail should be removed  and	that
live  wire  electrical mechanism fixed on top of  jail	wall
should	be dismantled.	It was contended by the	 petitioners
that (1) under section 3(1) of the Prisons Act, 1894  prison
includes  all lands and buildings appurtenant thereto.	 The
policemen occupied huts appurtenant to jail and,  therefore,
occupied a part of the prison, which is calculated to  cause
substantial interference with the fundamental rights of	 the
petitioners.  (2)  Naxalite prisoners  were  segregated	 and
inhuman	 treatment  was meted out to them as  if  they	were
inmates	 of a fascist concentration camp. (3) The live	wire
mechanism  fixed  atop the jail	 walls	is  unconstitutional
because a prisoner attempting to escape is by the use of the
device	virtually subjected to a death penalty.	  Under	 the
Penal  Code a prisoner who escapes or attempts to escape  is
liable	to  a maximum sentence of 2 years and a	 fine.	 The
live  wire  gadget  lacks the authority of  law	 and  is  in
flagrant  violation  of the personal liberty  guaranteed  by
Article 21 of the Constitution.
It was contended by the respondent that (1) the usual  watch
and  ward  staff  of  the  Jail	 having	 been  found  to  be
inadequate,  services of the Andhra Pradesh  Special  Police
force  had  to	be  requisitioned to  guard  the  jail	from
outside.  (2)  The prisoners were not subjected	 to  inhuman
treatment  and	were  on the other  hand  afforded  all	 the
facilities necessary for a decent and reasonably comfortable
existence.  (3) The live wire installed atop the wall is  14
ft.  from ground level, height of the wall itself  being  13
ft.   It rests on enameled non-conductors.  The wire has  no
direct contact with the wall and there is no possibility  of
the electrical current leaking through the wall.  The prison
walls themselves are situated at a distance of about 20	 ft.
from  the  cells  where	 the  petitioners  are	lodged.	  An
electrician inspects the system regularly.  The mechanism is
not  a	secret	trap  as all prisoners	are  warned  of	 its
existence.
Dismissing the petition.
HELD  :	 (i)  Convicts	are  not  by  mere  reason  of	 the
conviction, denuded of all the fundamental rights which they
otherwise  possess.  A prisoner is deprived  of	 fundamental
rights	like  the  right  to  move  freely  throughout	 the
territory  of India or the right to practice  a	 profession.
But  other  freedoms  like the right  to  acquire,  hold  or
dispose	 of property are available to the prisoner.   He  is
also  entitled	to the right guaranteed by Art. 21  that  he
shall  not be deprived of his life or the  personal  liberty
except	 according  to	the  procedure	 established   bylaw
Therefore.  under  our Constitution the	 right	of  personal
liberty	 and some of the other fundamental freedoms are	 not
to  be	totally	 denied to a convict during  the  period  of
incarceration. [26D-F; 27B]
(II) The petitioners are not denied any of their fundamental
rights	by posting of Police Guards immediately outside	 the
jail.  As many as 156 Naxalite Prisoners were lodged in	 the
Vizagapatnam jail, as a result of which the usual watch	 and
ward  arrangement proved inadequate. 11	 Naxalite  prisoners
including 2 out of the 3 petitioners escaped from the prison
in  1969.   It	was  decided  thereafter  to  take  adequate
measures  for preventing the scope of prisoners	 from  jail.
The  Policemen have no access to the jail which is  enclosed
by high walls.	Their presence in the immediate vicinity  of
the jail can cause no interference with the personal liberty
or the lawful preoccupations of the prisoners. [27B-D, G]
25
(iii)	  The court is not satisfied about the truth of	 the
allegations  of inhuman treatment though the court does	 not
accept the rosy picture drawn by the Jail Authorities. There
are subtle forms of punishment to whichconvicts	 and  under
trial  prisoners  are  sometimes subjected but	it  must  be
realize	 that these barbarous relics of a bygone era  offend
against the letter andspirit of our Constitution. [28B	&
G]
(iv)The	 live wire mechanism has no support of law.  It	 is
based on mere administrative instructions.  Therefore. if it
violates  the fundamental  rights it cannot be justified  on
the  ground  of its being reasonable.  If action of  the  WI
authorities   violates	 the  fundamental  rights   of	 the
petitioner  the justification of the measure must be  sought
in some law within the meaning of Article 13 (3) (a) of	 the
Constitution.  There is no possibility that the	 petitioners
will  come  into contact with the electrical device  in	 the
normal	pursuit	 of their daily chores.	 There	is  also  no
possibility that any other person in discharge of his lawful
functions  will	 come  into  contact  with  the	 same.	 The
prisoners have no fundamental freedom to escape from  lawful
custody.    Therefore,	 they	cannot	 complain   of	 the
installation of the live wire with which they are likely  to
come  into  contact  only if they try  to  escape  from	 the
prison. [29E; H; 30 AB]



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 295-297 of 1974. Under article 32 of the Constitution of India. R. K. Garg, for the petitioners.

P. Ram Reddy and P. Parmeshwararao, for the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHANDRACHUD, J. This is a group of three writ petitions under article 32 of the Constitution.

D.Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik, the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 295 of 1974 is undergoing the sentences of 4 1/2 years and 5 1/2 year& awarded to him in two sessions cases. He is also an under trial prisoner in what is known as the Parvatipuram Naxalite Conspiracy case. Nagabhushan Patnaik, who is the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 296 of 1974 was sentenced to death by the learned 11 Additional Sessions Judge, Visakhapatnam, but that sentence was commuted by the State Government to life imprisonment. P. Hussainar, the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 297 of 1974, is undergoing the sentence of imprisonment for life imposed by the same learned Judge. He is also an under-trial prisoner in the Parvatipuram Case. The three petitioners are undergoing the sentences in the Central Jail at Visakhapatnam. We are not concerned with any evaluation of the political beliefs of the petitioners who claim to be Naxalities nor with the legality of the sentences imposed on them nor indeed with the charges on which two of them are being tried. The only reliefs which they ask for are : (1)that the armed police guards posted around the jail should be removed and (2) that the livewire electrical mechanism fixed on top of the jail wall should be dismantled. Mr. Garg who appears on behalf of the petitioners contends that even the discipline of the prison must have the authority of law and that there should be a sort of "Iron curtain' between the prisoners and 26 the police so that convicts and under-trial prisoners may be truly free from the influence and tyranny of the police. Section 3(1) of the Prisons Act, 9 of 1894, defines 'prison' to mean any jail or place used permanently or temporarily for the detention of prisoners, including "all lands and buildings appurtenant thereto". The Superintendent of the Central Jail, Visakhapatnam, who is the 3rd respondent to the petitions, has filed an affidavit stating that the usual watch and ward staff of the jail having been found to be inadequate, the services of the Andhra Pradesh Special Police Force had to be requisitioned to guard the, jail from outside. The affidavit shows that these policemen live in huts built on a part of the vacant jail land and that the officers of the Force are, accommodated in the. "jail Club"

immediately outside the jail. Their office is situated in a block outside the jail, which was meant to be used as a waiting room for visitors wishing to meet the prisoners. The argument of Mr. Garg is that since prison includes lands appurtenant thereto, the members and officers of the Andhra Pradesh Special Police Force must, on the affidavit of the third respondent, be held to occupy a part of the prison and that must be prevented as it is calculated to cause substantial interference with the exercise by the prisoners of their fundamental rights.
Convicts are not, by mere reason of the conviction, denuded of all the fundamental rights which they otherwise possess. A compulsion under the authority of law, following upon a conviction, to live in a prison-house entails to by its own force the deprivation of fundamental freedoms like the right to move freely throughout the territory of India or the right to "practice" a profession. A man of profession would thus stand stripped of his right to hold consultations while serving out his sentence. But the Constitution guarantees other freedoms like the right to acquire, hold and dispose of property for the exercise of which incarceration can be no impediment. Likewise, even a convict is entitled to the precious right guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constitution that he shall not be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. In State of Maharashtra v. Prabhakar Pandurang Sangzgiri & A nr. (11) a person who was detained by the Government of Maharashtra under rule 30(1) (b) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962 wrote, while in jail, a book of scientific interest and sought permission from the State Government to send the manuscript out of the jail for publication. The request having been rejected the detenu filed a writ peti- tion in the Bombay High Court which allowed the petition. In an appeal filed in this Court by the State Government it was held that though the conditions of detention under rule 30(4) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962 were the same as under the Bombay Conditions of Detention Order, 1951 which laid down conditions regulating the restrictions on the liberty of a detenu, it could not be said that the order of 1951 conferred only certain privileges on the detenu. The Court observed : "If this argument were to be accepted, it would mean that (1)[1966] 1 S. C. R. 702.
27

the detenu could be starved to death, if there was no condition providing for giving food to the detenu". The refusal of the State Government to release the manuscript of publication was held to constitute an infringement of the personal liberty of the detenu in derogation of the law under which he was detained.

Though, therefore, under our Constitution, the right of personal liberty and some of the other fundamental freedoms are not to be totally denied to a convict during the period of incarceration, we are unable to appreciate that the petitioners have been deprived of any of their fundamental rights by the posting of police guards immediately outside the jail. The affidavit of the third respondent shows that as many as 146 Naxalite prisoners were lodged in the Visakhapatnam jail as a result of which the usual watch and ward arrangement proved inadequate. Eleven Naxalite prisoners including two out of the three petitioners before us, namely, Nagabhushan Patnaik and P. Hussainar, escaped from the prison on the night of October 8, 1969. It was decided thereafter to take adequate measures for preventing the escape of prisoners from the jail. We do not think that a convict has any right any more than anyone else has, to dictate whether guards ought to be posted to prevent the escape of prisoners. Prisoners will always vote against such measures in order to steal their freedom. The vacant land appurtenant to the jail is by the definition of 'prison' in section 3 (1) of the Prisons Act a part of the prison itself. It cannot, therefore, be gainsaid that members of the Andhra Pradesh Special Police Force must be deemed to be in occupation of a part of the prison premises. The infiltration of policemen into prisons must generally be deprecated for, under-trial prisoners, like two of the peti- tioners before us, who are remanded to-judicial custody ought to be immune from the coercive influence of the police. The security of one's person against an arbitrary encroachment by the police is basic to a free society and prisoners cannot be thrown at the mercy of policemen as if it were a part of an unwritten Law of Crimes. Such intrusions are against "the very essence of a scheme of ordered liberty". But the argument of Mr. Garg proceeds from purely hypothetical considerations. The policemen who live the vacant jail land are not shown to have any access to the, jail which is enclosed by high walls. Their presence therefore, in the immediate vicinity of the jail can cause no interference with the personal liberty or the lawful preoccupations of the petitioners. Counsel for the petitioners complained bitterly against the segregation of Naxalite prisoners in a "quarantine" and the inhuman treatment meted out to them as if they were inmates of a "fascist concentration camp." We would like to emphasis once again, and no emphasis in this context can be too great, that though the Government possesses the constitutional right to initiate laws, it cannot, by taking law into its own hands, resort to oppressive measures to curb the political beliefs of its opponents. No person, not even a prisoner, can be deprived of his 'life' or 'personal liberty' except according to procedure established by law. The American Constitution by the 5th and 14th 28 Amendments provides, inter alia, that no person shall be deprived of "life, liberty, or property, without the due process of law". Explaining the scope of this provision, Field J. observed in Munn v. Illinois(1) and that the term "life" means something more than mere animal existence and the inhibition against its deprivation extends to all those limits and faculties by which life is enjoyed. This statement of the law was approved by a Constitution Bench of this Court in Kharak Singh v. The State of U. P. and Ors.(2) But, on a perusal of the affidavit of the 3rd respondent, we are not satisfied that the allegations made by the petitioners are true, though we do not think that the rosy picture drawn by the 3rd Respondent of life in the Visakhapatnam Central Jail can too readily be accepted.

"Airy rooms with cross-ventilation", a "break-fast and two regular meals a day........ the total caloric value of which is about 4000 calories per day as against 2500 calories which is the average caloric value of food consumed by an Indian", "250 grammes of chicken, a liter of milk and 2 eggs per day" for one of the petitioners who hasa duodenal ulcer" a lot of reading material"; "facilities for playing games like Volleyball, Kabbadi, Badminton, Ring, tennis etc." the supply of "musical instruments" and "a radio net- work"-these and many other amenities are, according to the 3rd Respondent, made available to the prisoners. We hope and trust that the claim is founded on true acts. But attention of the jail authorities needs to be drawn to what the petitioners have described as the "marathon hunger- strike" by a large number of Naxalite prisoners for improvement in the subhuman conditions of their existence. We are also not prepared to dismiss as wholly untrue the reply of the petitioners to the 3rd Respondent's counter- affidavit, that there is difficulty even in getting a packet of powder for a rickety carrom-board, that the radio net work consists of a silent museum-piece, that the supply of "musical instruments' consists of an abandoned non-speaking harmonium and a set of dilapidated drums and that all the music that is there is provided by an army of mobile mosquitoes. These, however, are matters of reform and though they ought to receive priority in our Constitutional scheme,, there denial may not necessarily constitute an encroachment on the right guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constitution. We cannot do better than say that the directive principle contained in Article 42 of the Constitution that "The State shall make provision for securing just and humane conditions of work" may benevolently be extended to living conditions in jails. There, are subtle forms of punishment to which convicts and under-trial prisoners are sometimes subjected out it must be realized that these barbarous relics of a bygone era offend against the letter and spirit of our Constitution. For want of Satisfactory proof, we hesitate to accept the contention of the petitioners that the treatment meted out to them is in violation of their right to life and personal liberty. As regards the live-wire mechanism fixed atop the jail walls. Mr. Garg argues that the act is unconstitutional because a prisoner attempting to escape is, by the use of the device, virtually subjected to a death 877] 94 U.S. 113.
(2) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 3 332, 347.
29

penalty. The policy of law as reflected in section 224 of the, Penal Code, says the counsel, is to visit a prisoner attempting to escape, or successfully escaping, to a maximum sentence of two years and a fine. The live wire gadget lacks the authority of law and since it is a flagrant violation of the personal liberty guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constitution, it must be declared unconstitutional. Counsel fears that if the court puts its seal of approval on the use of the inhuman mechanism, prisons shall have been converted into cremation grounds.

This argument has a strong emotional appeal but not to reason. And the appeal to reason is what the court is primarily concerned with in deciding upon the constitutionality of any measure.

But before examining the petitioners' contention, it is necessary to make a clarification. Learned counsel for the respondents harped on the reasonableness of the step taken by the jail authorities in installing the high-voltage live- wire on the jail walls. He contended that the mechanism was installed solely for the purpose of preventing the escape of prisoners and was therefore a reasonable restriction on the fundamental rights of the prisoners. This, in our opinion, is a wrong approach to the issue under consideration. If the petitioners succeed in establishing that the particular measure taken by the jail authorities violates any of the fundamental rights available to them under the Constitution, the justification of the measure must be sought in some "law", within the meaning of Article 13(3) (a) of the Constitution. The installation of the high voltage wires lacks a statutory basis and seems to have been devised on the strength of departmental instructions. Such instructions are neither "law" within the meaning of Article 13(3) (a) nor are they "procedure established by law" within the meaning of Article 21 of the Constitution. Therefore, if the petitioners. are right in their contention that the mechanism constitutes an infringement of any of the funda- mental rights available to them, they would be entitled to the relief sought by them that the mechanism to be dismantled. The State has not justified the installation of the mechanism on the basis of a law or procedure established by law".

The live-wire is installed on the top of a wall, 14 feet from the ground level, the height of the wall itself being 13 feet. It rests on enamel non-conductors fixed to angle irons which are embedded in the wall. The wire has no direct contact with the wall and there is no possibility of the electrical current leaking through the wall. The prison-walls are themselves situated at a distance of about 20 feet from the cells where the petitioners are lodged. An electrician inspects the system regularly. Family, the mechanism is not a secret trap as all prisoners are warned of its existence and a non-electrical barbed-wire fences the jail walls.

There is thus no possibility that the petitioners will come into contact with the, electrical device in the normal pursuit of their daily chores. There is also no possibility that any other person in the discharge of 30 his lawful functions or pursuits will come into contact with the, same. Whatever be the nature and extent of the petitioners' fundamental right to life and personal liberty, they have no fundamental freedom to escape from lawful custody. 'Therefore, they cannot complain of the installation of the live-wire mechanism with which they are likely to come into contact only if they attempt to escape from the, prison. Carrying the petitioners' contention to its logical conclusion, they would also be entitled to demand that the height of the compound wall be reduced from 13 feet to say 4 or 5 feet as a fall from a height of 13 feet is likely to endanger their lives.

In fact the, petitioners could ask that all measures be taken to render safe their attempt to escape from the prison.

In holding that the live-wire mechanism does not interfere with any of the fundamental freedoms of the petitioners, we are not influenced by the consideration so prominently mentioned by the 3rd Respondent in his further affidavit that a similar system is in vogue in Hyderabad, Warangal and Nellore. If the system is unconstitutional, its widespread use will not make it constitutional.

Section 46, Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, furnishes no analogy to the present case because it lays down how arrests are to be made and the extent of force which may be used if the person to be arrested forcibly resists the endeavor to arrest him. Sub-section (2) of section 46 authorises the person making the arrest to "use all means necessary to effect the arrest" while sub-section (3) provides that "Nothing in this section gives a right to cause the death of a person who is not accused of an offence punishable with death or with imprisonment for life." Chapter V of the Code of 1898 in which section 46 appears is headed : "of Arrest, Escape and Retaking". Seething 46 deals with the mode in which arrests, for the first time, may be effected. Section 66 deals with the power, on escape, to pursue and retake the prisoner. It provides that "if a person in lawful custody escapes or is rescued, the person from whose custody be escaped or was rescued may immediately pursue and arrest him in any place in India." Apart from this, the installation of the high-voltage wire does not offend against the command of section 46(3) even on the assumption that the sub-section covers the rearrest of a prisoner who has escaped from lawful custody. The installation of the system does not by itself cause the death of the prisoner. It is a preventive measure intended to act as a deterrent and can cause death only if a prisoner courts death by scaling the wall while attempting to escape from lawful custody. In that sense, even a high wall without the electrical device would be open to the exception that a prisoner falling from a height, while attempting to escape by scaling the wall, may meet with his death. Section 46(3) is, therefore, not contravened and the grievance that the mechanism involves a total negation of the safeguards afforded by Criminal law is without any substance.

The petitioners are, therefore, not entitled to either of the two reliefs sought by them and the rule must be discharged but that is on the 31 ground that the acts complained of are not shown to cause any. interference with the fundamental rights available to them and not on the ground that prisoners possess no fundamental rights. The rights claimed by the petitioners as fundamental may not readily fit in the classical could of fundamental freedoms, but "basic rights do not become petrified as of any one time, even though as a matter of human experience some may not too rhetorically be called eternal verities. It is of the very nature of a free society to advance in its standards of what is deemed reasonable and right.... To rely on a tidy formula for the easy determination of what is a fundamental right for purposes of legal enforcement may satisfy a longing for certainty but ignores the movements of a free society."(1) P.H.P. Petitions dismissed.

(1) Per Frankfurter J. in Wolf v. ColOrado, (1949) 338 U. S. 25, 27.
32