Mohd. Zakir
v.
Delhi Administration & Others
(Supreme Court Of India)
Writ Petition No. 1206 Of 1981 | 02-04-1981
2. Mr. Asok Sen appearing for the detenu submitted that in para 1 of the grounds of detention, which is extracted at pages 24-25 of the paper-book, the grounds clearly mentioned certain information and documents which have been relied upon for the purpose of detaining the petitioner and formed the subject-matter of the subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority. These documents would show that on Mr. D. H. Anand had a passport dated February 12, 1975 and had flown to Hong Kong by flight No. T602 and declared 90 kgs of silver. It was also alleged that the detenu having passport dated October 4. 1978 travelled from Delhi on flight No. PA 002 and declared 50 kgs. of silver. There was Darshan Lal Anand also who had returned from Bangkok and declared 117 kgs of silver. It was further stated that necessary enquiries from the Customs Department confirmed the information received from Hong Kong regarding the declaration of silver. Perusal of the grounds of detention on the basis of which the detenu was detained was the allegation that he smuggled out huge amount of silver from Indian to foreign countries. The documents regarding the facts mentioned in the grounds of detention referred to above and relied upon by the detaining authority were not admittedly furnished to the detenu at the time when the grounds were served on him or pari passu the same. On the other hand, these documents were supplied to him much later i.e., on January 5 1981. This infirmity therefore is clear violative of the constitutional safeguard enshrined in Art. 22(5) of the Constitution as held by this Court in a series of cases. Mr. Hardly appearing for the respondents tried to support the order of detention on the ground that some documents had been supplied along with the grounds, but these documents were given to him only when the same were demanded by him. In the view that we have taken in a number of decisions starting from Smt. Icchu Devi Chorarias case 1980 4 SCC 531 [LQ/SC/1980/374] : AIR 1980 SC 1983 [LQ/SC/1980/374] ) to the case of Kamla Kanhaiyalal Khushalani W.P. No. 5873 of 1980, decided on January 6, 1981 (reported in AIR 1981 SC 814), it is manifest that the question of demanding the documents is wholly irrelevant because it is constitutional mandate which required the detaining authority to give the documents relied on or, referred to in the order of detention pari passu the grounds of detention in order that the detenu may make an effective representation immediately instead of waiting for the documents to be supplied with. In the documents to be supplied with. In the instant case, the detenu did make a representation promptly on December 30, 1980 but was seriously handicapped in making an effective representation because the aforesaid documents which were of vital importance were not supplied to him.
3. For these reasons, therefore, the continued order of detention of the detenu is rendered void. We, therefore, allow this petition and direct detenu to be released forthwith.
4. Petition allowed.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties ----
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A. VARADARAJAN
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SYED M. FAZAL ALI
Eq Citation
AIR 1982 SC 696
(1982) 3 SCC 216
1982 CRILJ 611
LQ/SC/1981/201
HeadNote
Constitution of India — Arts. 226, 227, 32 and 225 — Writ of habeas corpus — Grounds of detention — Documents relied on by detaining authority — Non-supply of — Effect — Held, detaining authority is constitutionally mandated to give documents relied on or referred to in order of detention pari passu grounds of detention in order that detenu may make an effective representation immediately instead of waiting for the documents to be supplied with — In instant case, detenu did make a representation promptly but was seriously handicapped in making an effective representation because aforesaid documents which were of vital importance were not supplied to him — Order of detention, held, rendered void — Detenue directed to be released forthwith