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[Cites 9, Cited by 18]

Supreme Court of India

Chotka Hembram vs State Of West Bengal And Ors on 29 August, 1973

Equivalent citations: 1974 AIR 432, 1974 SCR (1) 563, AIR 1974 SUPREME COURT 432, (1974) 3 S C C 101, 1974 (1) SCR 563, 1974 3 SCC 401, 1973 S C C (CRI) 966, 1973 S C D 851

Author: Hans Raj Khanna

Bench: Hans Raj Khanna, A. Alagiriswami

           PETITIONER:
CHOTKA HEMBRAM

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1973

BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.

CITATION:
 1974 AIR  432		  1974 SCR  (1) 563
 1974 SCC  (3) 401
 CITATOR INFO :
 F	    1974 SC1155	 (3)
 F	    1974 SC1796	 (3)
 R	    1974 SC2151	 (18)
 D	    1989 SC1234	 (10)


ACT:
Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971 (Act 26 of  1971)
Sections 13 and 14(2)-Order of detention set aside by Court-
Fresh  order of detention on same facts is  invalid-Violates
ss. 13 and 14(2).



HEADNOTE:
An order for the detention of the petitioner was made  under
sub-section (2) of section 3 of the Maintenance of  Internal
Security  Act, 1971 by the District Magistrate,	 Burdwan  on
July  3,  1972.	  A writ petition  against  that  order	 was
allowed by this Court by judgment dated April 19, 1973.	  In
pursuance  of this judgment the petitioner was	released  on
April  28,  1973.   Two	 days  before  the  release  of	 the
petitioner  the District Magistrate of Burdwan made a  fresh
detention  order under s. 3 of the Act for the detention  of
the petitioner and based that order on the same grounds upon
which the earlier order for the detention of the  petitioner
had been based.
 Allowing  the	petition tinder Art. 32	 against  the  fresh
order of detention,
HELD  : From the provisions of s. 14(2) of the Act it  would
follow	that if an order for the detention of a	 person	 had
been   made  under  the	 Act  and  that	 order	was   either
subsequently  revoked or the period for which the  detention
order  was made has expired, the said order would not  stand
in  the way of, the making of a fresh order under section  3
of  the	 Act against the same person provided,	fresh  facts
arise  after the date of the said revocation or expiry.	  If
no fresh facts come into being after the date of  revocation
or  expiry  as	may  warrant  the  making  of  an  order  of
detention.  the requisite condition precedent to the  making
of  the subsequent order would be non-existent and it  would
not  be permissible to make a subsequent order of  detention
under section 3 of the Act.
In  the present case, perusal of the grounds  of.  detention
made it manifest, that they related to incidents which	took
place  at  a  time prior to the revocation  of	the  earlier
detention order dated, July 3. 1972.  In fact they  related,
to  incidents which took place prior to the making  of	that
order.	 As  such those incidents could	 not  provide  valid
grounds	 for  the making of the subsequent  detention  order
dated April 26, 1973. [565 B-F]
The  impugment order was also violative of s. 13 of the	 Act
which provides that the maximum period for which any  person
may  be retained in pursuance of any detention order.  which
has been confirmed under s. 12. shall be 12 months from	 the
date of detention.  If for the same acts. repeated orders of
detention can be made, the effect would he that for the same
acts  a detenu would be liable to be detained. for a  period
of more than 12 months.	 This would run counter to the whole
scheme of the Act. [566A]
Masood	Alain  v.  Union  of India,  A.LR.  1973  S.C.	897,
applied.



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 841 of 1973. Under Article 32 of the Constitution for a Writ in the nature of habeas corpus.

B. Datta, for the appellant.

M. M. Kshatriya and G. S. Chatterjee, for the respondents.

564

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KHANNA, J. This is a petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India by Chotka Hembram for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.

An order for the detention of the petitioner was made under subsection 2 of section 3 of the Maintenance of Internal Security Act, 1971 (Act 26 of 1971) (hereinafter referred to as the Act), by the District Magistrate of Burdwan on July 3, 1972. The petitioner by means of this petition challenged the validity of the aforesaid order for his detention. From the reply filed on behalf of the State of West Bengal it would appear that the petitioner was released on April 28, 1973 and a fresh order for the detention of the petitioner was made on April 26, 1973 by the District Magistrate of Burdwan during the pendency of the present petition-

The present petition, it may be mentioned, was sent from jail, by the petitioner on February 22, 1973. The petitioner is now being detained in pursuance of the fresh order of detention dated April 26, 1973. It is the validity of this later order of detention which is now being assailed before us on behalf of the petitioner.

After hearing Mr. Datta, who has argued the case amicus curiae, and Mr. Kshtriya on behalf of the State of West Bengal, we are of the view that the validity of the detention order dated April 26, 1973 cannot be sustained. The grounds of detention on the basis of which the petitioner was ordered to be detained by the District Magistrate on July 3, 1972 were as under :

"(1) On 8-11-71 at about 12.30 hours, you along with your associates viz. Kartick Pal and others belonging to CPI(ML), being armed with lethal weapons like daggers, tangi etc. attacked Karunamcy Pal (Congress-R) of Daora-

danga, P.S. Bhatar, Distt. Burdwan and stabbed him to death near his house with a view to promoting the cause of the party to which you belong as he refused to join hands with you. Your act created a general sense of insecurity and deterred the residents of the locality from following their normal avocation of life for a considerable period after the incident.

(2)On 14-1-72 at about 17.35 hours, you along with your associates viz. Kartick Pal and others belonging to CPI (ML) being armed with gun attacked Ram Krishan Sarkar by barricading the roads with pillars and shot at him from an unlicensed gun with a view to annihilating them to promote the cause of the party to which you belong, As a result, Constable 721 Rajaram Jadav received gun shot injuries. Your act created a general sense of insecurity and deterred the residents of the locality from follow in their normal avocations of life for a considerable period after the incident." Precisely, these are the very grounds on account of which the fresh order of detention for the petitioner has been made on April 26, 1973.

565

According to sub-section (2) of section 14 of the Act "the revocation or expiry of a detention order shall not bar the making of a fresh detention order under section 3 against the same person in any case where fresh facts have arisen after the date of revocation or expiry on which the Central Government or State Government or an officer, as the case may be, is satisfied that such an order should be made' " It would, therefore, follow that if an order for the detention of a person had been made under the Act and that order was either subsequently revoked or the period for which the detention order was made has expired, the said order would not stand in the way of the making of a fresh order of detention under section 3 of the Act against the same person provided fresh facts arise after the date of the said revocation or expiry. If no fresh facts come into being after the date of revocation or expiry as may warrant the making of an order of detention, the requisite condition precedent to the making of the subsequent order would be non-existent and it would not be permissible to make a subsequent order of detention under section 3 of the Act. The order for the detention of the petitioner in the present case made on July 3, 1972 was revoked when this Court give its judgment in the case of Sambhu Nath Sarkar v. State of West Bengal W.P. 266 of 1972 decided on April 19, 1973(1). The petitioner was accordingly released on April 28, 1973. Two days before the release of the petitioner the District Magistrate of Burdwan made a fresh order under section 3 of the Act for the detention of the petitioner and based that order upon the same grounds upon which the earlier order for the detention of the petitioner had been based. Perusal of the grounds of detention makes it manifest that they relate to incidents which took place at a time prior to the revocation of the, earlier detention order dated July 3, 1972; in fact they relate, as they must in the very nature of things, to incidents which took place prior to the making of that order. As such, those incidents could not provide valid grounds for the making of the subsequent detention order dated April 26 , 1973.

The provisions of sub-section (2) of section 14 of the Act were considered by this Court in the case of Masood Alam v. Union of India(2) and it was observed that "the power of preventive detention being an extraordinary power intended to be exercised only in extraordinary emergent circumstances, the legislative scheme of sections 13 and 14 of the Act suggest that the detaining authority is expected to know and to take into account all the existing grounds and make one order of detention which must not go beyond a maximum period fixed. In the present case it is not urged, and indeed it is not possible to urge,, that after the actual expiry of the original order of detention made by the District Magistrate, which could only last for 12 days in the absence of its approval by the State Government, any fresh facts could arise for sustaining the fresh order of detention." This Court, in the circumstances, quashed the order of detention.

(1) [1973] 1 S. C. C. 856 ( 2) A. 1. R. [1973] 8. C. 897.

566

The matter can also be looked at from another angle. Section 13 of the Act provides that the maximum period for which any person may be detained in, pursuance of any detention order, which has been confirmed under section 12, shall be 12 months from the date of detention. It is, therefore, plain that the maximum period for which a person can be detained on account of specified acts should not exceed 12 months. If for the same acts repeated orders of detention can be .made, the, effect would be that for the same acts a detenu would be liable to be detained for a period of more than 12 months. The making of, a subsequent, order of detention in, respect of the same acts, for which an earlier order of detention was made, would run counter to the entire scheme of the Act. It; would, also set at naught the restriction which is imposed by section 13 of the Act, relating to the maximum period. for which a person can be detained, in pursuance of a detention ,order. In our opinion, the order of detention which was made by the District Magistrate, on April 26, 1973 contravenes the provisions of both section 13 and section 14 of the, Act. We, accordingly, accept the petition, quash the fresh order of, detention dated April 26, 1973 and direct that the petitioner be set at liberty forthwith.

G.C. Petition granted.

567