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Monday, August 2, 2021

Preventive detention involves detaining of a person without trial in order to prevent him/her from committing certain types of offences. But such detention cannot be made a substitute for the ordinary law and absolve the investigating authorities of their normal functions of investigating crimes which the detenu may have committed. After all, preventive detention in most cases is for a year only and cannot be used as an instrument to keep a person in perpetual custody without trial

REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 733 OF 2021

[ARISING OUT OF SLP (CRIMINAL) NO.4729 OF 2021]

BANKA SNEHA SHEELA ..APPELLANT

VERSUS

THE STATE OF TELANGANA & ORS. ..RESPONDENTS

J U D G M E N T

R.F. Nariman, J

1. Leave granted.

2. The present appeal arises out of a judgment dated 31.03.2021,

passed by the High Court for the State of Telangana at Hyderabad, by

which a Writ Petition filed by the Petitioner challenging a Preventive

Detention Order [hereinafter referred to as “Detention Order”] passed

against the Petitioner’s husband [hereinafter referred to as “the

Detenu”] under Section 3(2) of the Telangana Prevention of

Dangerous Activities of Boot-leggers, Dacoits, Drug-Offenders,

Goondas, Immoral Traffic Offenders Land-Grabbers, Spurious Seed

Offenders, Insecticide Offenders, Fertiliser Offenders, Food

Adulteration Offenders, Fake Document Offenders, Scheduled

Commodities Offenders, Forest Offenders, Gaming Offenders, Sexual

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Offenders, Explosive Substances Offenders, Arms Offenders, Cyber

Crime Offenders and White Collar or Financial Offenders Act, 1986

[hereinafter referred to as “Telangana Prevention of Dangerous

Activities Act”] , was dismissed.

3. The Detention Order under the provisions of the Telangana Prevention

of Dangerous Activities Act is dated 28.09.2020. It refers to five FIRs

that have been filed against the Detenu, all the said FIRs being under

Sections 420, 406 and 506 of the IPC. The facts contained in the FIRs

range from October, 2017 to December, 2019 and are similar. We may

set out the facts contained in FIR No.705 of 2019 as a sample of

similar FIRs filed against the Detenu as follows [This narration of the

FIR is to be found in the Detention Order itself]:

“On 12.12.2019 at 1200 hours a complaint was received

from Sri Kommu Naveen Kumar S/o Veeraswamy, aged

about 24 years, Occ: Car Mechanic, R/o H.No. 2-32,

Yadaran Village, Shamirpet Mandal stating that he has been

running a Garage near main road at Muraharipally village for

the past one year. One Banka Ravikanth, aged about 35

years used to come to his garage for two to three times in a

month for his car servicing. In the month of March, 2019 the

said Ravikanth introduced himself as a High Court advocate

and he would invest money in newly upcoming companies

and insisted the complainant to invest money for 100%

return. He also informed that they are three advocates, of

them one is CA (Chartered Accountant) and another is CS

(Company Secretary) by name Chandramouli, aged about

65 years. On believing his words, he transferred Rs.50,000/-

through Phone-pay to his Indian Bank, Shamirpet branch

vide A/c No. 6714073306. Again on 28.05.2019 he

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transferred Rs. 1,00,000/- through Phone-pay as second

investment and on 20.06.2019 he deposited Rs. 1,00,000/-

from his Indian Bank, Gachibowli Branch account to his

account besides giving net cash of Rs. 2,00,000/- by hand.

While sending Rs. 1 lakh through phone pay in presence of

one Prasad, Banka Ravikanth assured the complainant that

in the 2nd

investment he would give him Rs. 41,000/- per month

throughout the year and he will take Rs. 3,000/- towards his

commission. On 12.12.2019 when the complainant asked

him to return his money, he threatened with dire

consequences. The complainant stated that the said

Ravikanth has cheated him by saying that he would get

more return. On the strength of the complainant, police

registered a case and investigation into.”

Following upon the narration of the 5 FIRs comes this important

paragraph:

“Due to above incidents, the complainants, victims and other

young aspirants, who want to invest money in stock/share

market and derive benefits became scared and feeling

insecure. These incidents have also caused loss of faith and

trust among investors in stock trading fearing similar

cheating towards them by the people like you. They are

hesitated to consult any consultancies or persons fearing

similar cheating by the unknown persons in the guise of

providing good profits. These prejudicial activities have also

caused disturbance in the public.”

4. The Detention Order then refers to the ‘Modus Operandi’ of the

Detenu as follows:

“You are a native of Karimnagar district. You completed

graduation (B.Com) in 2011 and LLB in 2019 and have been

doing trading in stock market. You have introduced

yourselves to the victims as a High Court Advocate and you

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have a team consisting of one CA (Chartered Accountant)

and CS (Company Secretary) and three advocates. Your CS

has an expertise and links in Central and State

governments. You have knowledgeable persons in share

marketing and used to invest money in upcoming

companies which ensure return of 100%. You would lure the

innocent public in the guise of providing good profit by

investing their money in share marketing. You used to

contact your known persons and lure them to invest their

money in share market to get good profits assuring the profit

100% within a short period. Further you used to give blank

cheques and ask commission from the victims to gain their

confidence. As per plan, you collected amount from the

victims through Phone-pe which is linked to your bank

account and net-banking and in-person. When you received

money to your bank account, immediately you had transfer

the received amount to your wife's bank account. When the

victims contact you over phone, you first start avoiding them

and then diverting their calls and finally cheating them.

Later, you changed your residential address in order to

conceal your where-abouts from the victims. You have

cheated so many people to the tune of more than Rs. 50.00

lakhs in the guise of providing good profit through

investment in share market.

You are involved in Cr.No.34/2020 u/s 406, 420 IPC of

Malkajgiri Police Station in the limits of Rachakonda Police

Commissionerate which referred by way of your antecedent

criminal background the same is not relied upon for your

detention.”

5. Thereafter, the Detention Order narrates that anticipatory bail/bail has

been granted to the Detenu in all the aforesaid FIRs, the last such

relief granted being on 10.08.2020. The Detention Order then narrates:

“Having regard to your involvement in series of criminal

activities such as cheating in the guise of providing good

profit by investing their money in stock market and collected

huge amounts to the tune of more than Rs. 50 lakhs from

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them in an organized way and in view of the bail petitions

moved by you and granted in the aforesaid cases and later

releasing on conditional bail, I am satisfied that free

movement of such an offender like you is not safe in the

interest of the society as there is an imminent possibility of

you indulging in similar prejudicial activities with another set

of innocent youth and cheat them on the pretext of providing

good profit by investing their money in stock market, which

are detrimental to public order, unless you were prevented

from doing so by an appropriate order of detention.

xxx xxx xxx

Thus you have indulged in the acts of White Collar offences

by committing offences such as cheating so many people by

collecting more than Rs. 50 lakhs from them through Phone

Pay and online banking and sometimes in person in the

guise of providing more profit in the limits of Cyberabad

Police Commissionerate. Further your acts have been

adversely affecting the maintenance of public order and

creating feeling of insecurity among young people, thus

disturbing peace and tranquillity in the area.

It is imperative to prevent you from acting in any manner

prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. I feel that

recourse to normal law may not be effective deterrent-in

preventing you from indulging in such further activities

prejudicial to the maintenance of public order in the area,

unless you were detained by invoking the provisions under

the "Telangana Prevention of Dangerous Activities of

Bootleggers, Dacoits, Drug-Offenders, Goondas, Immoral

Traffic Offenders, Land-Grabbers, Spurious Seed Offenders,

Insecticide Offenders, Fertiliser Offenders, Food Adulteration

Offenders, Fake Document Offenders, Scheduled

Commodities Offenders, Forest Offenders, Gaming

Offenders, Sexual Offenders, Explosive Substances

Offenders, Arms Offenders, Cyber Crime Offenders and

White Collar or Financial Offenders Act, 1986, (Act No. 01 of

1986)".”

6. As a result thereof, the Detenu was preventively detained from the

date of the Detention Order itself. A representation dated 31.10.2020

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was made by the Petitioner herein to the Commissioner of Police,

Cyberabad Commissionerate [Respondent No. 2] which was

considered by the Advisory Board, who by its Order 11.11.2020 found

that there was sufficient cause to continue the Detention Order. Vide

the Order of the State of Telangana dated 17.12.2020, the Detention

Order was confirmed and the period of detention was directed to be for

a period of one year from 05.10.2020.

7. The impugned judgment, after narrating the facts and the arguments

made by counsel on behalf of the Petitioner as well as counsel on

behalf of the State, then held:

“9.In the instant case, a perusal of the material placed on

record reveals that the detenu was granted bail by the

Courts concerned in all the five cases relied upon by the

detaining authority for preventively detaining him. Under

these circumstances, the contention of the respondents that

the illegal activities of the detenu would disturb the even

tempo of life of the community which makes it prejudicial to

the maintenance of the public order and there is imminent

possibility of the detenu again indulging in similar prejudicial

activities, cannot be brushed aside.”

The judgment then referred to the decisions of this Court in Madhu

Limaye v. Sub-Divisional Magistrate (1970) 3 SCC 746,

Commissioner of Police v. C. Sunita (2004) 7 SCC 467 and

R.Kalavathi v. State of Tamil Nadu (2006) 6 SCC 14, and then

concluded:

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“The modus operandi of the detenu in the alleged offences

which were committed in quick succession would certainly

disturb the public peace and tranquillity. So it is imperative

upon the officers concerned to pass the order of detention,

since the acts of the detenu are prejudicial to the

maintenance of public order. The illegal activities of the

detenu were of such a reach and extent, that they would

certainly affect the even tempo of life and were prejudicial to

the public order. The detaining authority had sufficient

material to record subjective satisfaction that the detention

of the detenu was necessary to maintain public order and

even tempo of life of the community. The order of detention

does not suffer from any illegality. The grounds of detention,

as indicated in the impugned order, are found to be relevant

and in tune with the provisions of the P.D.Act. Since the

detenu got bail in all the five cases relied upon by the

detaining authority, there is nothing wrong on the part of the

detaining authority in raising an apprehension that there is

every possibility of the detenu committing similar offences,

which would again certainly affect the public order. The

quick succession of commission of alleged offences by the

detenu makes it amply clear that there is every possibility of

detenu committing similar offences in future, which are

prejudicial to the maintenance of public order.”

8. Shri Gaurav Agarwal, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the

Petitioner has raised three points before us. First and foremost, he

said there is no proximate or live connection between the acts

complained of and the date of the Detention Order, as the last act that

was complained of, which is discernible from the first 3 FIRs [FIRs

dated 12.12.2019, 12.12.2019 and 14.12.2019], was in December

2019 whereas the Detention Order was passed 9 months later on

28.09.2020. He then argued, without conceding, that at best only a

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‘law and order’ problem if at all would arise on the facts of these cases

and not a ‘public order’ problem, and referred to certain judgments of

this court to buttress the same. He also argued that the Detention

Order was totally perverse in that it was passed only because

anticipatory bail/bail applications were granted. The correct course of

action would have been for the State to move to cancel the bail that

has been granted if any further untoward incident were to take place.

9. Shri Ranjit Kumar, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of the

State of Telangana, reiterated the grounds contained in the Detention

Order and argued that the Detenu was a habitual fraudster who had

therefore created fear amongst the gullible public, and since he was

likely to commit similar offences in future, it was important to

preventively detain him, as the ordinary law had no deterrent effect on

him. Further, there is no doubt that he had infringed ‘public order’ as

defined by the Telangana Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act and

had disturbed the even tempo of life of persons who were cheated by

him and were likely to be cheated by him.

10.Having heard learned counsel for both parties, it is first important to

set out the important provisions of the Act as follows:

“2. Definitions

In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,

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(a) “acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of

public order” means when a bootlegger, a dacoit, a drugoffender, a goonda, an immoral traffic offender, LandGrabber, a Spurious Seed Offender, an Insecticide Offender,

a Fertiliser Offender, a Food Adulteration Offender, a Fake

Document Offender, a Scheduled Commodities Offender, a

Forest Offender, a Gaming Offender, a Sexual Offender, an

Explosive Substances Offender, an Arms Offender, a Cyber

Crime Offender and a White Collar or Financial Offender is

engaged or is making preparations for engaging, in any of

his activities as such, which affect adversely, or are likely to

affect adversely, the maintenance of public order:

Explanation:- For the purpose of this clause public order

shall be deemed to have been affected adversely or shall be

deemed likely to be affected adversely inter alia, if any of the

activities of any of the persons referred to in this clause

directly, or indirectly, is causing or calculated to cause any

harm, danger or alarm or a feeling of insecurity among the

general public or any section thereof or a grave wide-spread

danger to life or public health;

xxx xxx xxxx

(x) “White collar offender” or “Financial Offender” means a

person who commits or abets the commission of offences

punishable under the Telangana Protection of Depositors of

Financial Establishment Act, 1999 (Act 17 of 1999) or under

sections 406 to 409 or 417 to 420 or under Chapter XVIII of

the Indian Penal Code, 1860.”

“Section 3. Power to make orders detaining certain

persons

(1) The Government may, if satisfied with respect to any

bootlegger, dacoit, drug-offender, goonda, immoral traffic

offender, Land-Grabber, Spurious Seed Offender, Insecticide

Offender, Fertilizer Offender, Food Adulteration Offender,

Fake Document Offender, Scheduled Commodities

Offender, Forest Offender, Gaming Offender, Sexual

Offender, Explosive Substances Offender, Arms Offender,

Cyber Crime Offender and White Collar or Financial

Offender that with a view to preventing him from acting in

any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order, it

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is necessary so to do, make an order directing that such

person be detained.”

“Section 13. Maximum period of detention

The maximum period for which any person may be

detained, in pursuance of any detention order made under

this Act which has been confirmed under section 12, shall be

twelve months from the date of detention.”

11.While it cannot seriously be disputed that the Detenu may be a “white

collar offender” as defined under Section 2(x) of the Telangana

Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act, yet a Preventive Detention

Order can only be passed if his activities adversely affect or are likely

to adversely affect the maintenance of public order. Public order is

defined in the Explanation to Section 2(a) of the Telangana Prevention

of Dangerous Activities Act to be a harm, danger or alarm or a feeling

of insecurity among the general public or any section thereof or a

grave widespread danger to life or public health.

12.As is well-known, the expressions ‘law and order’, ‘public order’, and

‘security of state’ are different from one another. In Ram Manohar

Lohia v. State of Bihar (1966) 1 SCR 709 the question before this

Court arose under a Preventive Detention Order made under Rule 30

of the Defence of India Rules, which permits apprehension and

detention of a person likely to act in a manner prejudicial to the

maintenance of public order. This Court set out the distinction between

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a mere law and order disturbance and a public order disturbance as

follows:

“The Defence of India Act and the Rules speak of the

conditions under which preventive detention under the Act

can be ordered. In its long title and the preamble the

Defence of India Act speaks of the necessity to provide for

special measures to ensure public safety and interest, the

defence of India and civil defence. The expression public

safety and interest between them indicate the range of

action for maintaining security peace and tranquillity of India

whereas the expressions defence of India and civil defence

connote defence of India and its people against aggression

from outside and action of persons within the country. These

generic terms were used because the Act seeks to provide

for a congeries of action of which preventive detention is just

a small part. In conferring power to make rules, Section 3 of

the Defence of India Act enlarges upon the terms of the

preamble by specification of details. It speaks of defence of

India and civil defence and public safety without change but

it expands the idea of public interest into maintenance of

public order, the efficient conduct of military operations and

maintaining of supplies and services essential to the life of

the community. Then it mentions by way of illustration in

clause (15) of the same section the power of apprehension

and detention in custody of any person whom the authority

empowered by the rules to apprehend or detain (the

authority empowered to detain not being lower in rank than

that of a District Magistrate), suspects, on grounds

appearing to that authority to be reasonable—

(a) of being of hostile origin; or

(b) of having acted, acting or being about to act or being

likely to act in a manner prejudicial to—

(i) the defence of India and civil defence;

(ii) the security of the State;

(iii) the public safety or interest:

(iv) the maintenance of public order;

(v) India's relations with foreign states:

(vi) the maintenance of peaceful conditions in any part or

area of India: or

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(vii) the efficient conduct of military operations.

It will thus appear that security of the state, public safety or

interest, maintenance of public order and the maintenance

of peaceful conditions in any part or area of India may be

viewed separately even though strictly one clause may have

an effect or bearing on another. Then follows Rule 30, which

repeats the above conditions and permits detention of any

person with a view to preventing him from acting in any of

the above ways. The argument of Dr Lohia that the

conditions are to be cumulatively applied is clearly

untenable. It is not necessary to analyse Rule 30 which we

quoted earlier and which follows the scheme of Section

3(15). The question is whether by taking power to prevent Dr

Lohia from acting to the prejudice of “law and order” as

against “public order” the District Magistrate went outside his

powers.

[page 738-739]

xxx xxx xxx

We have here a case of detention under Rule 30 of the

Defence of India Rules which permits apprehension and

detention of a person likely to act in a manner prejudicial to

the maintenance of public order. It follows that if such a

person is not detained public disorder is the apprehended

result. Disorder is no doubt prevented by the maintenance of

law and order also but disorder is a broad spectrum which

includes at one end small disturbances and at the other the

most serious and cataclysmic happenings. Does the

expression “public order” take in every kind of disorders or

only some of them? The answer to this serves to distinguish

“public order” from “law and order” because the latter

undoubtedly takes in all of them. Public order if disturbed,

must lead to public disorder. Every breach of the peace

does not lead to public disorder. When two drunkards

quarrel and fight there is disorder but not public disorder.

They can be dealt with under the powers to maintain law

and order but cannot be detained on the ground that they

were disturbing public order. Suppose that the two fighters

were of rival communities and one of them tried to raise

communal passions. The problem is still one of law and

order but it raises the apprehension of public disorder. Other

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examples can be imagined. The contravention of law always

affects order but before if can be said to affect public order, it

must affect the community or the public at large. A mere

disturbance of law and order leading to disorder is thus not

necessarily sufficient for action under the Defence of India

Act but disturbances which subvert the public order are. A

District Magistrate is entitled to take action under Rule 30(1)

(b) to prevent subversion of public order but not in aid of

maintenance of law and order under ordinary

circumstances.

It will thus appear that just as “public order” in the rulings of

this Court (earlier cited) was said to comprehend disorders

of less gravity than those affecting “security of State”, “law

and order” also comprehends disorders of less gravity than

those affecting “public order”. One has to imagine three

concentric circles. Law and order represents the largest

circle within which is the next circle representing public order

and the smallest circle represents security of State. It is then

easy to see that an act may affect law and order but not

public order just as an act may affect public order but not

security of the State. By using the expression “maintenance

of law and order” the District Magistrate was widening his

own field of action and was adding a clause to the Defence

of India Rules.”

[page 745-746]

13.There can be no doubt that for ‘public order’ to be disturbed, there

must in turn be public disorder. Mere contravention of law such as

indulging in cheating or criminal breach of trust certainly affects ‘law

and order’ but before it can be said to affect ‘public order’, it must

affect the community or the public at large.

14.There can be no doubt that what is alleged in the five FIRs pertain to

the realm of ‘law and order’ in that various acts of cheating are

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ascribed to the Detenu which are punishable under the three sections

of the Indian Penal Code set out in the five FIRs. A close reading of

the Detention Order would make it clear that the reason for the said

Order is not any apprehension of widespread public harm, danger or

alarm but is only because the Detenu was successful in obtaining

anticipatory bail/bail from the Courts in each of the five FIRs. If a

person is granted anticipatory bail/bail wrongly, there are well-known

remedies in the ordinary law to take care of the situation. The State

can always appeal against the bail order granted and/or apply for

cancellation of bail. The mere successful obtaining of anticipatory

bail/bail orders being the real ground for detaining the Detenu, there

can be no doubt that the harm, danger or alarm or feeling of security

among the general public spoken of in Section 2(a) of the Telangana

Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act is make believe and totally

absent in the facts of the present case.

15.At this stage, it is important to advert to the counter affidavit dated

17.07.2021 filed by the State of Telangana. Paragraph 18 of the

counter affidavit refers to the granting of bail by Courts in all the five

FIRs, which is the real reason for the passing of the Detention Order,

as follows:

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“18. It is submitted that in the instant case, the decision to

detain the detenu herein is based on the perusal of the

material on records which revealed that the detenu was

granted bail by the Courts concerned in all the five cases

relied upon by the detaining authority for preventively

detaining him. The Respondent No. 2 herein recorded his

satisfaction that the activities of the detenu are prejudicial to

the maintenance of public order, and that ordinary law may

not be an effective deterrent to prevent the detenu from

indulging in further prejudicial activities. Furthermore, the

materials relied upon and circumstances show that

subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority is not

tainted or illegal on any account. Therefore the passing of

the detention order is justified considering that the illegal

activities of the detenu would disturb the even tempo of life

of the community, which makes it prejudicial to the

maintenance of the public order and there is imminent

possibility of the detenu again indulging in similar prejudicial

activities.”

Paragraph 21 of the counter affidavit then states as follows:

“21. It is submitted that in the acts which disturb public

tranquillity or are breaches of the peace should not be given

a narrow meaning, but should be given a liberal

interpretation and the expression ‘in the interest of public

order’ is very wide amplitude as held by this Hon’ble Court in

Madhu Limaye Versus Sub Division Magistrate reported in

AIR 1971 SC 2486. Therefore the Respondent No. 2, before

passing the said detention order considered the crucial

issues as to whether the activities of the detenu were

prejudicial to public and as to whether public order could be

affected by only such contravention which affects the

community or the public at large.”

16.The reference to Madhu Limaye v. Sub-Divisional Magistrate

(supra) is wholly inapposite. This judgment dealt with the scope of the

expression “in the interests of public order” which occurs in Article

19(2) to 19(4) of the Constitution of India. The observations made by

this judgment were in the context of a challenge to Section 144 of the

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Code of Criminal Procedure. Importantly, this Court referred to the

judgment in Ram Manohar Lohia (supra) and then opined:

“19. Adopting this test we may say that the State is at the

centre and society surrounds it. Disturbances of society go

in a broad spectrum from more disturbance of the serenity of

life to jeopardy of the State. The acts become graver as we

journey from the periphery of the largest circle towards the

centre. In this journey we travel first though public

tranquillity, then through public order and lastly to the

security of the State.

20. In dealing with the phrase “maintenance of public order”

in the context of preventive detention, we confined the

expression in the relevant Act to what was included in the

second circle and left out that which was in the largest circle.

But that consideration need not always apply because small

local disturbances of the even tempo of life, may in a sense

be said to effect “public order” in a different sense, namely,

in the sense of a state of law abidingness vis-a-vis the

safety of others. In our judgment the expression “in the

interest of public order” in the Constitution is capable of

taking within itself not only those acts which disturb the

security of the State or act within ordre publique as

described but also certain acts which disturb public

tranquillity or are breaches of the peace. It is not necessary

to give the expression a narrow meaning because, as has

been observed, the expression “in the interest of public

order” is very wide. Whatever may be said of “maintenance

of public order” in the context of special laws entailing

detention of persons without a trial on the pure subjective

determination of the Executive cannot be said in other

circumstances. In the former case this Court confined the

meaning to graver episodes not involving cases of law and

order which are not disturbances of public tranquillity but of

ordre publique.”

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17.To tear these observations out of context would be fraught with great

danger when it comes to the liberty of a citizen under Article 21 of the

Constitution of India. The reason for not adopting a narrow meaning of

‘public order’ in that case was because of the expression “in the

interests of” which occurs to Article 19(2) to 19(4) and which is

pressed into service only when a law is challenged as being

unconstitutional for being violative of Article 19 of the Constitution.

When a person is preventively detained, it is Article 21 and 22 that are

attracted and not Article 19. Further, preventive detention must fall

within the four corners of Article 21 read with Article 22 and the statute

in question. To therefore argue that a liberal meaning must be given to

the expression ‘public order’ in the context of a preventive detention

statute is wholly inapposite and incorrect. On the contrary, considering

that preventive detention is a necessary evil only to prevent public

disorder, the Court must ensure that the facts brought before it directly

and inevitably lead to a harm, danger or alarm or feeling of insecurity

among the general public or any section thereof at large.

18.Several judgments of this Court have reminded us about the role of

the High Courts and this Court in cases of preventive detention. Thus,

in Frances Coralie Mullin v. W.C. Khambra (1980) 2 SCR 1095, a

Division Bench of this Court held:

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“We have no doubt in our minds about the role of the court

in cases of preventive detention: it has to be one of eternal

vigilance. No freedom is higher than personal freedom and

no duty higher than to maintain it unimpaired. The Court's

writ is the ultimate insurance against illegal detention. The

Constitution enjoins conformance with the provisions of

Article 22 and the Court exacts compliance. Article 22(5)

vests in the detenu the right to be provided with an

opportunity to make a representation. Here the Law Reports

tell a story and teach a lesson. It is that the principal enemy

of the detenu and his right to make a representation is

neither high-handedness nor mean-mindedness but the

casual indifference, the mindless insensibility, the routine

and the red tape of the bureaucratic machine.”

Likewise, in Vijay Narain Singh v. State of Bihar (1984) 3 SCC 14, a

3-Judge Bench of this Court (in which A.P. Sen,J. dissented),

Venkataramiah,J., speaking for the majority, reminds us:

“32. …It is well settled that the law of preventive detention is

a hard law and therefore it should be strictly construed. Care

should be taken that the liberty of a person is not

jeopardised unless his case falls squarely within the four

corners of the relevant law. The law of preventive detention

should not be used merely to clip the wings of an accused

who is involved in a criminal prosecution. It is not intended

for the purpose of keeping a man under detention when

under ordinary criminal law it may not be possible to resist

the issue of orders of bail, unless the material available is

such as would satisfy the requirements of the legal

provisions authorising such detention. When a person is

enlarged on bail by a competent criminal court, great caution

should be exercised in scrutinising the validity of an order of

preventive detention which is based on the very same

charge which is to be tried by the criminal court.”

[emphasis supplied]

O. Chinappa Reddy,J., in a short concurring judgment also sets out the

constitutional fundamentals qua preventive detention as follows:

18

“I entirely agree with my brother Venkataramiah, J. both on

the question of interpretation of the provisions of the Bihar

Control of Crimes Act, 1981 and on the question of the effect

of the order of grant of bail in the criminal proceeding arising

out of the incident constituting one of the grounds of

detention. It is really unnecessary for me to add anything to

what has been said by Venkataramiah, J., .but my brother

Sen, J. has taken a different view and out of respect to him, I

propose to add a few lines. I am unable to agree with my

brother Sen, J. on several of the views expressed by him in

his dissent. In particular, I do not agree with the view that

“those who are responsible for the national security or for

the maintenance of public order must be the sole judges of

what the national security or public order requires” It is too

perilous a proposition. Our Constitution does not give a

carte blanche to any organ of the State to be the sole arbiter

in such matters. Preventive detention is considered so

treacherous and such an anathema to civilised thought and

democratic polity that safeguards against undue exercise of

the power to detain without trial, have been built into the

Constitution itself and incorporated as Fundamental Rights.

There are two sentinels, one at either end. The Legislature

is required to make the law circumscribing the limits within

which persons may be preventively detained and providing

for the safeguards prescribed by the Constitution and the

courts are required to examine, when demanded, whether

there has been any excessive detention, that is whether the

limits set by the Constitution and the Legislature have been

transgressed. Preventive detention is not beyond judicial

scrutiny. While adequacy or sufficiency may not be a ground

of challenge, relevancy and proximity are certainly grounds

of challenge. Nor is it for the court to put itself in the position

of the detaining authority and to satisfy itself that the

untested facts reveal a path of crime. I agree with my

brother Sen,, J. when he says, “It has always been the view

of this Court that the detention of individuals without trials for

any length of time, however short, is wholly inconsistent with

the basic ideas of our Government and the gravity of the evil

to the community resulting from anti-social activities can

never furnish an adequate reason for invading the personal

liberty of the citizen except in accordance with the procedure

established by law.”

19

19.In Union of India v. Yumnam Anand (2007) 10 SCC 190, this Court

reiterated some of these principles as follows:

“8. In case of preventive detention no offence is proved, nor

any charge is formulated and the justification of such

detention is suspicion or reasonability and there is no

criminal conviction which can only be warranted by legal

evidence. Preventive justice requires an action to be taken

to prevent apprehended objectionable activities.

(See R. v. Halliday [1917 AC 260 : (1916-17) All ER Rep Ext

1284 : 86 LJ KB 116 : 116 LT 417 (HL)] and Kubic

Darusz v. Union of India [(1990) 1 SCC 568 : 1990 SCC

(Cri) 227 : AIR 1990 SC 605] .) But at the same time, a

person's greatest of human freedoms i.e. personal liberty is

deprived, and, therefore, the laws of preventive detention

are strictly construed, and a meticulous compliance with the

procedural safeguard, however technical, is mandatory. The

compulsions of the primordial need to maintain order in

society, without which enjoyment of all rights, including the

right of personal liberty would lose all their meanings, are

the true justifications for the laws of preventive detention.

This jurisdiction has been described as a “jurisdiction of

suspicion”, and the compulsions to preserve the values of

freedom of a democratic society and social order sometimes

merit the curtailment of the individual liberty.

(See Ayya v. State of U.P. [(1989) 1 SCC 374 : 1989 SCC

(Cri) 153 : AIR 1989 SC 364] ) To lose our country by a

scrupulous adherence to the written law, said Thomas

Jefferson, would be to lose the law, absurdly sacrificing the

end to the means. No law is an end itself and the curtailment

of liberty for reasons of State's security and national

economic discipline as a necessary evil has to be

administered under strict constitutional restrictions. No carte

blanche is given to any organ of the State to be the sole

arbiter in such matters.”

20.In Rekha v. State of Tamil Nadu, (2011) 5 SCC 244, a 3-Judge

Bench of this Court spoke of the interplay between Articles 21 and 22

as follows:

20

“13. In our opinion, Article 22(3)(b) of the Constitution of

India which permits preventive detention is only an

exception to Article 21 of the Constitution. An exception is an

exception, and cannot ordinarily nullify the full force of the

main rule, which is the right to liberty in Article 21 of the

Constitution. Fundamental rights are meant for protecting

the civil liberties of the people, and not to put them in jail for

a long period without recourse to a lawyer and without a

trial. As observed in R. v. Secy. of State for the Home Deptt.,

ex p Stafford [(1998) 1 WLR 503 (CA)] : (WLR p. 518 F-G)

“ … The imposition of what is in effect a substantial term

of imprisonment by the exercise of executive discretion,

without trial, lies uneasily with ordinary concepts of the

rule of law.”

Article 22, hence, cannot be read in isolation but must be

read as an exception to Article 21. An exception can apply

only in rare and exceptional cases, and it cannot override

the main rule.

14. Article 21 is the most important of the fundamental rights

guaranteed by the Constitution of India. Liberty of a citizen is

a most important right won by our forefathers after long,

historical and arduous struggles. Our Founding Fathers

realised its value because they had seen during the freedom

struggle civil liberties of our countrymen being trampled

upon by foreigners, and that is why they were determined

that the right to individual liberty would be placed on the

highest pedestal along with the right to life as the basic right

of the people of India.

xxx xxx xxx

17. Article 22(1) of the Constitution makes it a fundamental

right of a person detained to consult and be defended by a

lawyer of his choice. But Article 22(3) specifically excludes

the applicability of clause (1) of Article 22 to cases of

preventive detention. Therefore, we must confine the power

of preventive detention to very narrow limits, otherwise the

great right to liberty won by our Founding Fathers, who were

also freedom fighters, after long, arduous and historical

struggles, will become nugatory.”

This Court went on to discuss, in some detail, the conceptual nature of

preventive detention law as follows:

21

“29. Preventive detention is, by nature, repugnant to

democratic ideas and an anathema to the rule of law. No

such law exists in the USA and in England (except during

war time). Since, however, Article 22(3)(b) of the

Constitution of India permits preventive detention, we cannot

hold it illegal but we must confine the power of preventive

detention within very narrow limits, otherwise we will be

taking away the great right to liberty guaranteed by Article

21 of the Constitution of India which was won after long,

arduous and historic struggles. It follows, therefore, that if

the ordinary law of the land (the Penal Code and other penal

statutes) can deal with a situation, recourse to a preventive

detention law will be illegal.

30. Whenever an order under a preventive detention law is

challenged one of the questions the court must ask in

deciding its legality is: was the ordinary law of the land

sufficient to deal with the situation? If the answer is in the

affirmative, the detention order will be illegal. In the present

case, the charge against the detenu was of selling expired

drugs after changing their labels. Surely the relevant

provisions in the Penal Code and the Drugs and Cosmetics

Act were sufficient to deal with this situation. Hence, in our

opinion, for this reason also the detention order in question

was illegal.” [emphasis supplied]

In an important passage, this Court then dealt with certain general

observations made by the Constitution Bench in Haradhan Saha v.

The State of West Bengal (1975) 3 SCC 198 as follows:

“33. No doubt it has been held in the Constitution Bench

decision in Haradhan Saha case [(1975) 3 SCC 198 : 1974

SCC (Cri) 816] that even if a person is liable to be tried in a

criminal court for commission of a criminal offence, or is

actually being so tried, that does not debar the authorities

from passing a detention order under a preventive detention

law. This observation, to be understood correctly, must,

however, be construed in the background of the

constitutional scheme in Articles 21 and 22 of the

Constitution (which we have already explained). Article

22(3)(b) is only an exception to Article 21 and it is not itself a

22

fundamental right. It is Article 21 which is central to the

whole chapter on fundamental rights in our Constitution. The

right to liberty means that before sending a person to prison

a trial must ordinarily be held giving him an opportunity of

placing his defence through his lawyer. It follows that if a

person is liable to be tried, or is actually being tried, for a

criminal offence, but the ordinary criminal law (the Penal

Code or other penal statutes) will not be able to deal with

the situation, then, and only then, can the preventive

detention law be taken recourse to.

34. Hence, the observation in SCC para 34 in Haradhan

Saha case [(1975) 3 SCC 198 : 1974 SCC (Cri) 816] cannot

be regarded as an unqualified statement that in every case

where a person is liable to be tried, or is actually being tried,

for a crime in a criminal court a detention order can also be

passed under a preventive detention law.

35. It must be remembered that in cases of preventive

detention no offence is proved and the justification of such

detention is suspicion or reasonable probability, and there is

no conviction which can only be warranted by legal

evidence. Preventive detention is often described as a

“jurisdiction of suspicion” (vide State of

Maharashtra v. Bhaurao Punjabrao Gawande [(2008) 3 SCC

613 : (2008) 2 SCC (Cri) 128] , SCC para 63). The detaining

authority passes the order of detention on subjective

satisfaction. Since clause (3) of Article 22 specifically

excludes the applicability of clauses (1) and (2), the detenu

is not entitled to a lawyer or the right to be produced before

a Magistrate within 24 hours of arrest. To prevent misuse of

this potentially dangerous power the law of preventive

detention has to be strictly construed and meticulous

compliance with the procedural safeguards, however

technical, is, in our opinion, mandatory and vital.

36. It has been held that the history of liberty is the history of

procedural safeguards. (See Kamleshkumar Ishwardas

Patel v. Union of India [(1995) 4 SCC 51 : 1995 SCC (Cri)

643] vide para 49.) These procedural safeguards are

required to be zealously watched and enforced by the court

and their rigour cannot be allowed to be diluted on the basis

23

of the nature of the alleged activities of the detenu. As

observed in Rattan Singh v. State of Punjab [(1981) 4 SCC

481 : 1981 SCC (Cri) 853] : (SCC p. 483, para 4)

“4. … May be that the detenu is a smuggler whose tribe

(and how their numbers increase!) deserves no sympathy

since its activities have paralysed the Indian economy. But

the laws of preventive detention afford only a modicum of

safeguards to persons detained 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.”

xxx xxx xxx

39. Personal liberty protected under Article 21 is so

sacrosanct and so high in the scale of constitutional values

that it is the obligation of the detaining authority to show that

the impugned detention meticulously accords with the

procedure established by law. The stringency and concern

of judicial vigilance that is needed was aptly described in the

following words in Thomas Pelham Dale case [(1881) 6

QBD 376 (CA)] : (QBD p. 461)

“Then comes the question upon the habeas corpus. It is a

general rule, which has always been acted upon by the

courts of England, that if any person procures the

imprisonment of another he must take care to do so by

steps, all of which are entirely regular, and that if he fails to

follow every step in the process with extreme regularity the

court will not allow the imprisonment to continue.””

[emphasis supplied]

21.Shri Ranjit Kumar, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of the

State of Telangana relied strongly upon Subramanian v. State of

Tamil Nadu (2012) 4 SCC 699, and in particular upon paragraphs 14

and 15 which read as follows:

24

“14. It is well settled that the court does not interfere with the

subjective satisfaction reached by the detaining authority

except in exceptional and extremely limited grounds. The

court cannot substitute its own opinion for that of the

detaining authority when the grounds of detention are

precise, pertinent, proximate and relevant, that sufficiency of

grounds is not for the court but for the detaining authority for

the formation of subjective satisfaction that the detention of

a person with a view to preventing him from acting in any

manner prejudicial to public order is required and that such

satisfaction is subjective and not objective. The object of the

law of preventive detention is not punitive but only

preventive and further that the action of the executive in

detaining a person being only precautionary, normally, the

matter has necessarily to be left to the discretion of the

executive authority. It is not practicable to lay down objective

rules of conduct in an exhaustive manner. The satisfaction of

the detaining authority, therefore, is considered to be of

primary importance with certain latitude in the exercise of its

discretion.

15. The next contention on behalf of the detenu, assailing

the detention order on the plea that there is a difference

between “law and order” and “public order” cannot also be

sustained since this Court in a series of decisions

recognised that public order is the even tempo of life of the

community taking the country as a whole or even a specified

locality. [Vide Pushpadevi M. Jatia v. M.L.

Wadhawan [(1987) 3 SCC 367 : 1987 SCC (Cri) 526] , SCC

paras 11 & 14; Ram Manohar Lohia v. State of Bihar [AIR

1966 SC 740 : 1966 Cri LJ 608 : (1966) 1 SCR 709] ; Union

of India v. Arvind Shergill [(2000) 7 SCC 601 : 2000 SCC

(Cri) 1422] , SCC paras 4 & 6; Sunil Fulchand Shah v. Union

of India [(2000) 3 SCC 409 : 2000 SCC (Cri) 659] , SCC

para 28 (Constitution Bench); Commr. of Police v. C.

Anita [(2004) 7 SCC 467 : 2004 SCC (Cri) 1944] , SCC

paras 5, 7 & 13.]”

The statement made by this Court in paragraphs 14 and 15 were on

facts which were completely different from the facts of the present

25

case as reflected in paragraphs 16 and 17 thereof which read as

follows:

“16. We have already extracted the discussion, analysis and

the ultimate decision of the detaining authority with

reference to the ground case dated 18-7-2011. It is clear

that the detenu, armed with “aruval”, along with his

associates, armed with “katta” came to the place of the

complainant. The detenu abused the complainant in filthy

language and threatened to murder him. His associates also

threatened him. The detenu not only threatened the

complainant with weapon like “aruval” but also damaged the

properties available in the shop. When the complainant

questioned the detenu and his associates, the detenu

slapped him on his face. When the complainant raised an

alarm for rescue, on the arrival of general public in and

around, they were also threatened by the detenu and his

associates that they will kill them.

17. It is also seen from the grounds of detention that

because of the threat by the detenu and his associates by

showing weapons, the nearby shopkeepers closed their

shops out of fear and auto drivers took their autos from their

stand and left the place. According to the detaining authority,

the above scene created a panic among the public. In such

circumstances, the scene created by the detenu and his

associates cannot be termed as only law and order problem

but it is public order as assessed by the detaining authority

who is supposed to safeguard and protect the interest of

public. Accordingly, we reject the contention raised by the

learned Senior Counsel for the appellant.”

This was obviously a case in which ‘public order’ was directly affected

and not a case in which ‘law and order’ alone was affected and is thus

distinguishable, on facts, from the present case.

22.In Yumman Ongbi Lembi Leima v. State of Manipur (2012) 2 SCC

176, this Court specifically adverted to when a preventive detention

26

order would be bad, as recourse to the ordinary law would be sufficient

in the facts of a given case, with particular regard being had to bail

having been granted. This Court held:

“23. Having carefully considered the submissions made on

behalf of the respective parties, we are inclined to hold that

the (sic exercise of) extraordinary powers of detaining an

individual in contravention of the provisions of Article 22(2)

of the Constitution was not warranted in the instant case,

where the grounds of detention do not disclose any material

which was before the detaining authority, other than the fact

that there was every likelihood of Yumman Somendro being

released on bail in connection with the cases in respect of

which he had been arrested, to support the order of

detention.

24. Article 21 of the Constitution enjoins that:

“21. Protection of life and personal liberty.—No

person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except

according to procedure established by law.”

In the instant case, although the power is vested with the

authorities concerned, unless the same are invoked and

implemented in a justifiable manner, such action of the

detaining authority cannot be sustained, inasmuch as, such

a detention order is an exception to the provisions of Articles

21 and 22(2) of the Constitution.

25. When the courts thought it fit to release the appellant's

husband on bail in connection with the cases in respect of

which he had been arrested, the mere apprehension that he

was likely to be released on bail as a ground of his

detention, is not justified.

xxx xxx xxx

27. As has been observed in various cases of similar nature

by this Court, the personal liberty of an individual is the most

precious and prized right guaranteed under the Constitution

in Part III thereof. The State has been granted the power to

curb such rights under criminal laws as also under the laws

of preventive detention, which, therefore, are required to be

27

exercised with due caution as well as upon a proper

appreciation of the facts as to whether such acts are in any

way prejudicial to the interest and the security of the State

and its citizens, or seek to disturb public law and order,

warranting the issuance of such an order. An individual

incident of an offence under the Penal Code, however

heinous, is insufficient to make out a case for issuance of an

order of preventive detention.”

This judgment was followed in Mungala Yadamma v. State of A.P.

(2012) 2 SCC 386, as follows:

“7. Having considered the submissions made on behalf of

the respective parties, we are unable to accept the

submissions made on behalf of the State in view of the fact

that the decision in Rekha case [(2011) 5 SCC 244 : (2011)

2 SCC (Cri) 596] , in our view, clearly covers the facts of this

case as well. The offences complained of against the

appellant are of a nature which can be dealt with under the

ordinary law of the land. Taking recourse to the provisions of

preventive detention is contrary to the constitutional

guarantees enshrined in Articles 19 and 21 of the

Constitution and sufficient grounds have to be made out by

the detaining authorities to invoke such provisions.

8. In fact, recently, in Yumman Ongbi Lembi Leima v. State

of Manipur [(2012) 2 SCC 176] we had occasion to consider

the same issue and the three-Judge Bench had held that the

personal liberty of an individual is the most precious and

prized right guaranteed under the Constitution in Part III

thereof. The State has been granted the power to curb such

rights under criminal laws, as also under the laws of

preventive detention, which, therefore, are required to be

exercised with due caution as well as upon a proper

appreciation of the facts as to whether such acts are in any

way prejudicial to the interest and the security of the State

and its citizens, or seek to disturb public law and order,

warranting the issuance of such an order.

9. No doubt, the offences alleged to have been committed

by the appellant are such as to attract punishment under the

Andhra Pradesh Prohibition Act, but that in our view has to

28

be done under the said laws and taking recourse to

preventive detention laws would not be warranted.

Preventive detention involves detaining of a person without

trial in order to prevent him/her from committing certain

types of offences. But such detention cannot be made a

substitute for the ordinary law and absolve the investigating

authorities of their normal functions of investigating crimes

which the detenu may have committed. After all, preventive

detention in most cases is for a year only and cannot be

used as an instrument to keep a person in perpetual custody

without trial. Accordingly, while following the three-Judge

Bench decision in Rekha case [(2011) 5 SCC 244 : (2011) 2

SCC (Cri) 596] we allow the appeal and set aside the order

passed by the High Court dated 20-7-2011 [ The High Court

dismissed the same vide Munagala Yadamma v. State of

A.P., WP (Cri) No. 13313 of 2011, order dated 20-7-2011

(AP)] and also quash the detention order dated 15-2-2011,

issued by the Collector and District Magistrate, Ranga

Reddy District, Andhra Pradesh.”

23.Shri Gaurav Agrawal and Shri Ranjit Kumar also cited the judgments

of this Court in Sama Aruna v. State of Telangana (2018) 12 SCC

150 and Collector & District Magistrate v. Sangala Kondamma

(2005) 3 SCC 666 respectively. Since we are not going into other

grounds raised by the Petitioner, it is unnecessary to discuss the law

laid down in these judgments.

24.On the facts of this case, as has been pointed out by us, it is clear that

at the highest, a possible apprehension of breach of law and order can

be said to be made out if it is apprehended that the Detenu, if set free,

will continue to cheat gullible persons. This may be a good ground to

appeal against the bail orders granted and/or to cancel bail but

29

certainly cannot provide the springboard to move under a preventive

detention statute. We, therefore, quash the detention order on this

ground. Consequently, it is unnecessary to go into any of the other

grounds argued by the learned counsel on behalf of the Petitioner. The

impugned judgment is set aside and the Detenu is ordered to be freed

forthwith. Accordingly, the appeal is allowed.

…………………..………………J.

(R. F. Nariman)

……………..……………………

J.

(Hrishikesh Roy)

New Delhi,

August 02, 2021.

30