JUDGEMENT
-
(1.) This is a petition under Art. 31 of the Constitution for the issue of a writ in the nature of habeas corpus directing the release of the petitioner Dr. Ram Krishan Bhardwaj who is a medical practitioner in Delhi and is now said to be under unlawful detention.
(2.) The petitioner was arrested on 10-3-1953 under an order of the District Magistrate of Delhi made under S. 3, Preventive Detention Act as amended. The grounds of detention were communicated to the petitioner on 15-3-1953. Paragraph 1 of that communication states that "the Jan Sangh, the Hindu Mahasabha and the Ram Rajya Parishad have started an unlawful campaign in sympathy with the Praja Parishad movement of Kashmir for defiance of the law, involving violence and threat to the maintenance of public order" as evidenced by the sub-paragraphs which follow. The incidents referred to in sub paras (a) to (1) are said to have ranged from 4 to 10-3-1953, the date on which the petitioner was arrested, but they do not directly implicate the petitioner. They merely give particulars of the alleged unlawful activities of the three political organizations referred to above. Sub-paragraph (m) is important, as on it is founded the first contention of Mr. Veda Vyas, the learned counsel for the petitioner. It runs as follows;
(m) On the evening of 11-3-53 there was very heavy brick-batting indulged in by or at the instance of Jan Sangh and Mahasabha workers in Sabzlmandi when the police dispersed a Jan Sangh and Hindu Mahasabha procession and several persons including policemen, journalists and other non-officials were injured. An assault was made on Miss Mridula Sarabhai and Sri Dan Dayal one of her associates received a stab injury.
It will be noticed that the incidents related in the sub-paragraph are alleged to have taken place on the 11th March, the day after the petitioner was arrested and detained. Mr. Veda Vyas relies upon it as showing that the District Magistrate did not apply his mind to the alleged necessity for the detention of the petitioner as if he had done so he could not possibly have referred to what happened on the 11th March as a ground of Justification for what he did on the 10th. The so-called grounds on which the detention is said to have been based must, it was suggested have been prepared by some clerk or subordinate in the District Magistrate's Office and mechanically signed by him. The learned Attorney-General explained that the incidents of the 11th March were referred to not as a ground for the arrest and detention of the petitioner. but merely as evidencing the unlawful activities of the movement organized by the Jan Sangh and the other political bodies of which the petitioner was an active member. The explanation is hardly convincing and we cannot but regard this lapse in chronology as a mark of carelessness. Notwithstanding repeated admonition by this Court that due care and attention must be bestowed upon matters involving the liberty of the individual, it is distressing to find that such matters are dealt with in a careless and causual manner. In view, however, of the statements in the affidavit filed by the District Magistrate before us that he carefully perused and considered the reports and materials placed before him by responsible Intelligence Officers and that he was fully satisfied that the petitioner was assisting the movement and agitation started by the Jan Sangh etc. we are not prepared to hold the District Magistrate failed to apply his mind to the relevant considerations before he made the detention order as suggested for the petitioner.
(3.) The second contention raised by Mr. Veda Vyas is more formidable. As already stated para, 1 of the statement of grounds, while it sets out the unlawful activities of the three political bodies, does not directly implicate the petitioner in any of them. Paragraph 2 shows how the petitioner was concerned in those activities. It begins by stating.
"The following facts show that you are personally helping and actively participating in the above mentioned movement which has resulted in violence and threat to maintenance of public order."
Then follow four sub-paras. (a) to (d) which refer to private meetings of the Working Committee of the Jan Sangh in January and February 1953, where, it is alleged, it was decided to launch and intensify the campaign and the petitioner made inflammatory speeches. Sub-paragraph (e) on which this contention is based runs thus :
(e) You have been organising the movement by enrolling volunteers among the refugees in your capacity as President of the Refugee Association of the Bara Hindu Rao,
a local area in Delhi. It is argued by Mr. Veda Vyas that this ground is extremely vague and gives no particulars to enable the petitioner to make an adequate representation against the order of detention and thus infringes the constitutional safeguard provided in Art, 22 (5). Learned counsel relies on the decision in State of Bombay v. Atma Ram Shridhar Vaidya A. I. R. 1951 S. C. 157(A) where this Court held by a majority that the person detained is entitled, in addition to the right to have the grounds of his detention communicated to him, to a further right to have particulars "as full and adequate as the circumstance permit" furnished to him so as to enable him to make a representation against the order of detention. It was further held that the sufficiency of the particulars conveyed in the "second communication" is a justiciable issue, the test being whether it is sufficient to enable the detained person to make a representation "which on being considered, may give relief to the detained person." On this interpretation of Art. 22 (5) Two questions arise for consideration : first, whether the ground mentioned in sub-para (e) is so vagae as to render it difficult, if not impossible, for the petitioner to make in adequate representation to the appropriate authorities and second if it is vague, whether one vague ground among others, which are clear and definite, would infringe the constitutional safeguard provided in Art. 22 (5).;
Click here to view full judgement.
Copyright © Regent Computronics Pvt.Ltd.