Fida Hussain
v.
State Of Uttar Pradesh
(Supreme Court Of India)
Criminal Appeal No. 129 Of 1960 | 05-04-1961
Sarkar, J.
1. The appellant who had earlier left India, returned on a passport granted by the Government of Pakistan on May 16, 1953. He had a visa endorsed on his passport by the Indian authorities permitting him to stay in India for three months and this permission was later extended up to November 15, 1953. He did not, however, return to Pakistan within that date upon which he was convicted under S. 14 of the Foreigners Act, 1946, by a Sub-Divisional Magistrate on March 14, 1959, and sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for one year. His appeal to a Sessions Judge was dismissed and the High Court at Allahabad, on being moved in revision, refused to interfere with the order of the Sessions Judge. This appeal is against the judgment of the High Court.
2. The appellant had been convicted for breach of paragraph 7 of the Foreigners Order of 1948, issued under S. 3 of the Foreigners Act. That paragraph requires that every foreigner entering India on the authority of a visa issued in pursuance of the Indian Passport Act, 1920, shall obtain from the appropriate authority a permit indicating the period during which he is authorised to remain in India and shall, unless that period is extended, depart from India before its expiry. As earlier stated the visa on the appellants passport showed that he had permission to stay in India till November 15, 1953, but he stayed on after that date. Hence the prosecution.
3. It is contended on behalf of the appellant that he could not be convicted of a breach of paragraph 7 of the foreigners Order for that paragraph applies to a "foreigner" entering India on the authority of a visa issued in pursuance of the Indian Passport Act and overstaying the period for which he is permitted to stay in India. It is contended that the foreigner contemplated in this paragraph is a person who was a foreigner on the date of his entry into India. The appellant says that on that date he was not a foreigner and, therefore, the provisions of the paragraph do not apply to him. This contention of the appellant is plainly correct. The paragraph contemplates a foreigner entering India, and therefore, a person who at the date of the entry was a foreigner.
4. Now, the word "foreigner" in paragraph 7 has the same meaning as that word has in the Foreigners Act. The word "foreigner" is defined in that Act in S. 2(a). That definition has changed from time to time, but we are concerned with the definition as it stood in 1953 when the appellant entered India, which was in these terms:
"foreigner" means a person who........
(1) is not a natural-born British subject as defined in sub-secs. (1) and (2) of S. 1 of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act, 1914, or
(2) has not been granted a certificate of naturalisation as a British subject under any law for the time being in force in British India, or
(3) is not a citizen of India.
The appellants contention is that he was not a foreigner because he came within Cl. (1) of the definition as he was a natural-born British subject within S. 1(1)(a) of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act, 1914. Now that provision is in these terms:
Section 1. (1) The following persons shall be deemed to be natural-born British subjects, namely,-
(a) any person born within His Majestys Dominion and allegiance.
That the appellant was born at Allahabad at a time when it was within his Britannic Majestys Dominion is not in dispute. That being so, we think that it must be held that at the date of his entry into India the appellant was a natural-born British subject and, therefore, not a foreigner. He could not have committed a breach of paragraph 7 of the Foreigners Order.
5. In the result we allow the appeal and set aside the conviction of the appellant and sentence passed on him.
6. Before leaving this case we think it right to make a few more observations. The definition of a foreigner in the Foreigners Act was amended with effect from January 19, 1957, by Act 11 of 1957. The definition since that date is as follows: " foreigner means a person who is not a citizen of India". Under S. 3(2) (c) of the Foreigners Act, the Central Government has power to provide by order made by it that a foreigner shall not remain in India. We wish to make it clear that we have said nothing as to the effect of the amended definition of "foreigner" on the status of the appellant. No question as to the effect of the amended definition on the appellants status fell for our decision in this case for we were only concerned with his status in 1953. We would also point out that no order appears to have been made concerning the appellant under S. 3(2)(c) and we are not to be understood as deciding any question as to whether such an order could or could not have been made against the appellant.
7. Appeal allowed.
1. The appellant who had earlier left India, returned on a passport granted by the Government of Pakistan on May 16, 1953. He had a visa endorsed on his passport by the Indian authorities permitting him to stay in India for three months and this permission was later extended up to November 15, 1953. He did not, however, return to Pakistan within that date upon which he was convicted under S. 14 of the Foreigners Act, 1946, by a Sub-Divisional Magistrate on March 14, 1959, and sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for one year. His appeal to a Sessions Judge was dismissed and the High Court at Allahabad, on being moved in revision, refused to interfere with the order of the Sessions Judge. This appeal is against the judgment of the High Court.
2. The appellant had been convicted for breach of paragraph 7 of the Foreigners Order of 1948, issued under S. 3 of the Foreigners Act. That paragraph requires that every foreigner entering India on the authority of a visa issued in pursuance of the Indian Passport Act, 1920, shall obtain from the appropriate authority a permit indicating the period during which he is authorised to remain in India and shall, unless that period is extended, depart from India before its expiry. As earlier stated the visa on the appellants passport showed that he had permission to stay in India till November 15, 1953, but he stayed on after that date. Hence the prosecution.
3. It is contended on behalf of the appellant that he could not be convicted of a breach of paragraph 7 of the foreigners Order for that paragraph applies to a "foreigner" entering India on the authority of a visa issued in pursuance of the Indian Passport Act and overstaying the period for which he is permitted to stay in India. It is contended that the foreigner contemplated in this paragraph is a person who was a foreigner on the date of his entry into India. The appellant says that on that date he was not a foreigner and, therefore, the provisions of the paragraph do not apply to him. This contention of the appellant is plainly correct. The paragraph contemplates a foreigner entering India, and therefore, a person who at the date of the entry was a foreigner.
4. Now, the word "foreigner" in paragraph 7 has the same meaning as that word has in the Foreigners Act. The word "foreigner" is defined in that Act in S. 2(a). That definition has changed from time to time, but we are concerned with the definition as it stood in 1953 when the appellant entered India, which was in these terms:
"foreigner" means a person who........
(1) is not a natural-born British subject as defined in sub-secs. (1) and (2) of S. 1 of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act, 1914, or
(2) has not been granted a certificate of naturalisation as a British subject under any law for the time being in force in British India, or
(3) is not a citizen of India.
The appellants contention is that he was not a foreigner because he came within Cl. (1) of the definition as he was a natural-born British subject within S. 1(1)(a) of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act, 1914. Now that provision is in these terms:
Section 1. (1) The following persons shall be deemed to be natural-born British subjects, namely,-
(a) any person born within His Majestys Dominion and allegiance.
That the appellant was born at Allahabad at a time when it was within his Britannic Majestys Dominion is not in dispute. That being so, we think that it must be held that at the date of his entry into India the appellant was a natural-born British subject and, therefore, not a foreigner. He could not have committed a breach of paragraph 7 of the Foreigners Order.
5. In the result we allow the appeal and set aside the conviction of the appellant and sentence passed on him.
6. Before leaving this case we think it right to make a few more observations. The definition of a foreigner in the Foreigners Act was amended with effect from January 19, 1957, by Act 11 of 1957. The definition since that date is as follows: " foreigner means a person who is not a citizen of India". Under S. 3(2) (c) of the Foreigners Act, the Central Government has power to provide by order made by it that a foreigner shall not remain in India. We wish to make it clear that we have said nothing as to the effect of the amended definition of "foreigner" on the status of the appellant. No question as to the effect of the amended definition on the appellants status fell for our decision in this case for we were only concerned with his status in 1953. We would also point out that no order appears to have been made concerning the appellant under S. 3(2)(c) and we are not to be understood as deciding any question as to whether such an order could or could not have been made against the appellant.
7. Appeal allowed.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties Naunit Lal, G.C. Mathur, C.P. Lal, Advocates.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE CHIEF JUSTICE MR. B.P. SINHA
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE S.K. DAS
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A.K. SARKAR
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE K.C. DAS GUPTA
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE N. RAJAGOPALA AYYANGAR
Eq Citation
1961 31 AWR 687
[1962] 1 SCR 776
AIR 1961 SC 1522
1961 ALT 953 (SC)
(1962) 64 PLR 171
1962 (1) SCJ 61
LQ/SC/1961/163
HeadNote
A. Foreigners Act, 1946 — S. 2(a) — Cl. (1) — Natural-born British subject — Appellant born at Allahabad at a time when it was within His Britannic Majesty's Dominion — Held, appellant was a natural-born British subject and, therefore, not a foreigner — He could not have committed a breach of para 7 of the Foreigners Order — Words and Phrases — "Foreigner" — Meaning of — Foreigners Order, 1948, Para 7 — Immigration Control — Visa — Overstaying period of visa — Penal provisions (Paras 4 and 5)
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