Attorney General for India and Others Vs Amratlal Prajivandas and Others

Supreme Court of India 12 May 1994 Transfer Petition (C) No. 17 of 1978 AIR 1994 SC 2179 : (1995) 83 CompCas 804 : (1995) CriLJ 426 : (1994) 3 JT 583 : (1994) 2 SCALE 925 : (1994) 5 SCC 54 : (1994) 1 SCR 1 Supp : (1994) 74 TAXMAN 469
Bench: Full Bench
Result Published
Acts Referenced

Judgement Snapshot

Case Number

Transfer Petition (C) No. 17 of 1978

Hon'ble Bench

S. Mohan, J; S. C. Agrawal, J; P. B. Sawant, J; N. Venkatachala, J; K. Ramaswamy, J; K. Jayachandra Reddy, J; G. N. Ray, J; B.P. Jeevan Reddy, J; A. M. Ahmadii, J

Advocates

Altaf Ahmad Addl. Solicitor General, Venugopal Reddy, N.M. Ghatate, A.K. Srivastava, -03-05. Subhashini, Shushma Suri, K.C. Dua, S. K. Agnihotri, Harijnder Singh, R.A. Shroff, Sarva Mitter, for Mitter and Co., S. Ganesh, K.J. John, G.S. Phale, Pramod Swarup, J. Sarla, M.N. Shroff, Nand Kumar, E.C. Agarwal, Praddep Kumar, G.S. Chatterjee, Shrinath Singh, Vineet Kumar, Anip Sachthey, S.V. Tambwekar, P. Parmeswaran, P.K. Pillai, ATM Sampath, M. Veerappa, K.R. Nambiar, Ambrish Kumar, T.S. Arora, CVS Rao, S. Fazal, U. Sagar, Sarda Devi, Yashank, Mukul Mudgal, D. Goburdhan, S.M. Jadhav, Sakesh Kumar, R.N. Joshi, Janki Ramchandran, U.A. Rana, Anand Prasad, Rajiv Tyagi, for Garget and Co., P.R. Seetharaman, M.T. George, S. K. Gambhir and R.S. Sodhi, for the Appellant;

Final Decision

Disposed Of

Acts Referred

Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 — Section 12A, 3, 5A#Constitution (Fortieth Amendment) Act, 1976 — Section 3#Constitution of India, 1950 — Article 14, 19, 21, 22, 22(5

Judgement Text

Translate:

1. Till the wind of liberalisation started blowing across the Indian economic landscape over the last year or two, the Indian economy was a

sheltered one. At the time of independence, India did not have an industrial base worth the name. A firm industrial base had to be laid. Heavy

industry was the crying need. All this required foreign exchange. The sterling balances built up during World War 11 were fast dissipating. Foreign

exchange had to be conserved, which meant prohibition import of several unessential items and close regulation of other imports. It was also found

necessary to raise protective walls to nurture and encourage the nascent industries. These controls had, however, an unfortunate fall-out. They

gave rise to a class of smugglers and foreign exchange manipulators who were out to frustrate the regulations and restrictions - profit being their

sole motive, and success in life the sole earthly judge of right and wrong. As early as 1947, the Central Legislature found it necessary to enact the

Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 and Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947. Then came the import (Control) Order, 1955 to place the

policy regarding import on a surer footing. In the year 1962, a new Customs Act replaced the antiquated Sea Customs Act, 1878. The menace of

smuggling and foreign exchange violations, however, continued to rise unabated. The Parliament then came forward with the conservation of

Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Act, 1974 (COFEPOSA). It provided for preventive detention of these anti-social elements.

2. On June 25, 1975, the President of India proclaimed an emergency under Article 352(1) of the Constitution of India on the ground that ""the

security of India is threatened by internal disturbance."" A proclamation of emergency dated December 3, 1971 issued under Article 352(1) on the

ground that ""the security of India is threatened by external aggression"" was already in force. These declarations had the effect of ''suspending'' - to

use a popular though not strictly accurate expression - Article 19 as provided by Article 358 of the Constitution. On 27th June, 1975 the President

of India made an order under Article 359(1) of the Constitution declaring ""that the right of any person (including a foreigner) to move any court for

the enforcement of the rights conferred by Article 14, Article 21 and Article 22 of the Constitution and all proceedings pending in any Court for the

enforcement of the above-mentioned rights shall remain suspending for the period during which the proclamation of emergency made under Clause

(1) of Article 352 of the Constitution on 3rd December, 1971 and on the 25th June, 1975 are both in force.

3. With effect from 1st July, 1975, COFEPOSA was amended in certain respects. Inter alia, it introduced Section 12A containing special

provisions for dealing with emergency. By virtue of Section 12A, the requirements of supply of grounds Section 3(3) and consultation with

Advisory Board (Section 8) were practically done away with.

4. In the year 1976, no doubt, during the continuance of emergency, the Parliament enacted the Smugglers and Foreign Exchange Manipulators

(Forfeiture of property) Act, 1976 (SAFEMA). If replaced an Ordinance to the same effect and was brought into force from the date of the

Ordinance, viz., 5th November, 1975. This Act applies to persons convicted under the Sea Customs Act, 1878/Customs Act, 1962/FERA,

1947/FERA, 1973 and to those detained under the COFEPOSA, whose detention order was neither set aside nor revoked in the circumstances

mentioned therein. Besides the persons so convicted/detained, the Act applies to their relatives and associates as well. The main purpose of the

Act is to forfeit the illegally acquired properties of such smugglers and foreign exchange manipulators in whomsoever''s name they may have been

kept.

5. During the period the Emergency proclaimed on 25th June, 1975 was in force, several orders of detention were made u/s 3 of COFEPOSA. In

view of the provisions of Section 12A, the said detenues were neither supplied with the grounds of detention nor were their cases referred to the

Advisory Board. The detenues, however, had no remedy. Because of the order under Article 359(1) and the operation of Article 358 - as

interpreted by this Court in A.D.M., Jabalpur v. Shivakant Shukla (1976) 2 SCC 521 - they could not approach the High Court or this Court for

relief. The emergency was revoked on March 21, 1977 and the detenues released. Subsequently notices were issued u/s 6 of the SAFEMA to the

said detenues, their relatives and associates calling upon, them to show cause why the properties mentioned in the notices be not declared as

illegally acquired properties and forfeited. SAFEMA was being invoked against them because of the orders of detention made against the detenues

under COFEPOSA during the period of emergency. The said orders of detentions were the connecting link, the foundation for the action being

taken against the detenues, their friends and relatives under SAFEMA. (The orders of detention, it is not in dispute, were not revoked or set aside

as contemplated by Clause (b) of Sub-section (2) of Section 2 of SAFEMA). It is then that the said persons approached the High Courts under

Article 226 and this Court under Article 32 for quashing the said notices. In these writ petitions, the Constitutional validity of the COFEPOSA,

SAFEMA and of the 39th, 40th and 42nd Amendments to the Constitution of India were questioned. (In a few cases, it appears, final orders were

also passed - but that circumstance does not make any difference to the principle involved herein). In most of the cases further proceedings were

stayed.

6. The Attorney General of India applied for transfer of the writ petitions pending in various High Courts to this Court to be heard alongwith the

petitions preferred directly iii this Court in view of the important constitutional questions raised therein. The prayer for transfer is granted in all the

transfer petitions. Leave granted in the S.L.P.

7. It may be mentioned that COFEPOSA was placed in the IXth Schedule at SI. No. 104 by the Constitution 39th (Amendment) Act, 1975 while

the SAFEMA and the COFEPOSA (Amendment) Acts, 1976 (Central Acts 13 and 20 of 1976 respectively) were placed in the IXth Schedule at

Serial Nos. 127 and 129 by the Constitution 40th (Amendment) Act, 1976.

8. The counsel appearing for the petitioners urged several contentions all of which have been contested by 3rd Altaf Ahmed, Learned Additional

Solicitor General. The issues arising from the rival contentions urged at the bar may be formulated in the shape of questions. They are to the

following effect:

(1) Whether the Parliament was not competent to enact COFEPOSA and SAFEMA?

(2) Whether an order of detention u/s 3 read with Section 12A of COFEPOSA made during the period of emergency proclaimed under Article

352(1) of the Constitution of India - with the consequent ''suspension'' of Article 19 and during which period the right to move the Court to enforce

the rights conferred by Articles 14, 21 and 22 was suspended can form the foundation for taking action u/s 6 of SAFEMA against the detenue, his

relatives and associates? And if it does, can the validity of such order of detention be challenged by the detenue and/or hrs relatives and associates,

when proceedings are taken against him/them under SAFEMA even though the said order of detention has ceased to be operative and was not

either challenged - or not successfully challenged - during its operation?

(3) If the answer to the Question No. 1 is in affirmative, should the validity of the order of detention be tested ''with reference to the position of law

obtaining at the time of making the said order and during its period of operation or with reference to the position of law obtaining on the date of

issuance of the show cause notice u/s 6 of SAFEMA?

(4) Whether the definition of ""illegally acquired property"" in Clause (c) of Section 3(1) of SAFEMA is violative of the fundamental rights of the

petitioners guaranteed by Articles 14, 19 and 21 and whether the inclusion of SAFEMA in the IXth Schedule to the Constitution cures such

violation, if any?

(5) Whether the application of SAFEMA to the relatives and associates of detenues is violative of Articles 14, 19 and 21 and Whether the

inclusion of the said Act in the IXth Schedule cures such violation, if any?

(6) Whether Section 5A of COFEPOSA is violative of Clause (5) of Article 22?

9. For a proper appreciation of the aforesaid questions, it is necessary to briefly refer to the relevant provisions of both the enactments.

10. COFEPOSA:- The Preamble to the Act explains the reasons for which and the objectives to achieve which the Act was made. It reads:

An Act to provide for preventive detention in certain cases for the purposes of conservation and argumentation of foreign exchange and prevention

of smuggling activities and for matters connected therewith.

Whereas violations of foreign exchange regulations and smuggling activities are having an increasingly deleterious effect on the national economy

and thereby a serious adverse effect on the security of the State;

And whereas having regard to the persons by whom and the manner in which such activities or violations are organised and carried on, and having

regard to the fact that in certain areas which are highly vulnerable to smuggling, smuggling activities of a considerable magnitude are clandestinely

organised and carried on, it is necessary for the effective prevention of such activities and violations to provide for detention of persons concerned

in any manner therewith;

Be it enacted by Parliament in the Twenty-fifth year of the Republic of India as follows:

11. The expression ""smuggling"" is defined in Clause (e) of Section 2. It says that the said expression shall have the same meaning as in Clause (39)

of Section 2 of the Customs Act, 1962 and that all its grammatical variations and cognate expressions shall be construed accordingly.

12. Clause (39) of Section 2 of the Customs Act defines ""smuggling"" in the following words: ""smuggling in relation to any goods, means any act or

omission which will render such goods liable to confiscation u/s 111 or Section 113.

13. Section 3 provides that where the Central Government, the State Government or any officer empowered in that behalf is satisfied with respect

to any person including a foreigner, that (1) with a view to preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the conservation or augmentation

of foreign exchange or (2) with a view to preventing him from (i) smuggling goods, or (ii) abetting the smuggling of goods, or (iii) engaging in

transporting or concealing or keeping smuggled goods, or (iv) dealing in smuggled goods otherwise than by engaging in transporting or concealing

or keeping smuggled goods, or (v) harbouring persons engaged in smuggling goods or in abetting the smuggling of goods, it is necessary to detain

him, he can do so. Sub-section (3) provides for service of grounds of detention within five days of the detention. (In ""exceptional circumstances

and for reasons to be recorded in writing"", the grounds of detention are allowed to be served within fifteen days).

14. Section 5-A which was inserted by the Amendment Act 35 of 1975 reads thus:

5-A. Grounds of detention severable - Where a person has been detained in pursuance of an order of detention under Sub-section (1) of Section

3 which has been made on two or more grounds, such order of detention shall be deemed to have been made separately on each of such grounds

and accordingly-

(a) such order shall not be deemed to be invalid or inoperative merely because one or some of the grounds is or are-

(i) vague,

(ii) non-existent,

(iii) not relevant,

(iv) not connected or not proximately connected with such person, or

(v) invalid for any other reason whatsoever,

and it is not therefore possible to hold that the Government or officer making such order would have been satisfied as provided in Sub-section (1)

of Section 3 with reference to the remaining ground or grounds and made the order of detention;

(b) the Government or officer making the order of detention shall be deemed to have made the order of detention under the said Sub-section (1)

after being satisfied as provided in that sub-section with reference to the remaining ground or grounds.

More about this section later.

15. Section 8 provides for Constitution of an Advisory Board as required by Clause (4) of Article 22 and for reference of each detenue''s case to

it. The opinion of the Advisory Board is binding upon the Government. Section 9 provides certain classes of cases, where the reference to

Advisory Board can be made within an extended period. This section is relatable to Clause (7) of Article 22. Section 12A containing special

provisions for dealing with emergency was introduced by COFEPOSA (Amendment) Act, 1976 (Act 19 of 1976). In view of its crucial

relevance, the section may be set out in full. It reads:

12A. Special provisions for dealing with emergency.- (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act of any rules of natural justice, the

provision of this Section shall have effect, during the period of operation, of the proclamation of Emergency issued under Clause (i) of Article 352

of the Constitution on the 3rd day of December, 1971, or the Proclamation of Emergency issued under that Clause on the 25th day of June, 1975,

or a period of twenty-four months, from the 25th day pf June, 1975, whichever period is the shortest.

(2) When making an order of detention under, this Act, against any person, after the commence ment of the conservation of Foreign Exchange and

prevention of Smuggling Activities (Amendment) Act, 1975, the Central, Government or the state Government or as the case may be the officer

making the order of detention shall Consider whether the detention of, such person under, this Act is necessary for dealing effectively with the

emergency in respect of which the proclamation referred, to in Sub-section (1) have been issued (hereafter in this section referred to as the

emergency) and if, on such consideration the Central Government or the State Government or as the case may be, the officer is satisfied that it is

necessary to detain such person for effectively dealing with the emergency, that Government or officer may make a declaration to that effect and

communicate a copy of the declaration to the person concerned:

Provided that Where such declaration is made by an officer, it Shall ''be reviewed by the appropriate Government within fifteen days from the date

of making of the declaration and such declaration shall cease to have effect unless it is confirmed by that Government, after such review, within the

said period of fifteen days.

(3) The question whether the detention of any person in respect of whom a declaration has ,been made under Sub-section (2) continues to be

necessary for effectively dealing with the emergency shall be reconsidered by the appropriate Government within four months from the date of such

declaration and thereafter at intervals not exceeding four months, and if, on such reconsideration, it appears to the appropriate Government that the

detention of the person is no longer necessary for effectively dealing with the emergency, that Government may revoke the declaration.

(4) In making any consideration, review or reconsideration under Sub-section (2) or (3), the appropriate Government or officer may, if such

Government or officer considers it to be against the public interest to do otherwise, act on the basis of the information and materials in its or his

possession without disclosing the facts or giving an opportunity of making a representation to the person concerned.

(5) It shall not be necessary to disclose to any person detained under a detention order to which the provisions of Sub-section (2) apply, the

grounds on which the order has been made during the period the declaration made in respect of such person under that sub-section is in force and,

accordingly, such period shall not be taken into account for the purposes of Sub-section (3) of Section 3.

(6) In the case of every person detained under a detention order to which the provisions of Sub-section (2) apply, being a person in respect of

whom a declaration has been made thereunder, the period during which such declaration is in force shall not be taken into account for the purpose

of computing-

(i) the period specified in Clauses (b) and (c) of Section 8;

(ii) the period of ""one year"" and ""five weeks"" specified in Sub-section (1), the period of ""one year"" specified in Sub-section (2)(i) and the period of

six months"" specified in Sub-section (3) of Section 9.

16. This provision was made during the period of emergency and is confined to the duration of emergency or such shorter period as may be

specified. It contemplates making a declaration that the detention of person is necessary for dealing effectively with the emergency and if such a

declaration is made, his case shall be governed by this Section. The only safeguards - if they can be called that are the provisions for review and

reconsideration by the appropriate Government mentioned in the Section itself. The constitutional safeguards in Clauses (4) and (5) of Article 22

and the provisions in the Act incorporating the said safeguards are dispensed with in the sense that they need not be complied with; the several time

limits prescribed in Sections 8 and 9 stand extended by the period of emergency.

17. SAFEMA:- The preamble to the Act sets out the reasons and objects behind the enactment. It reads:

An Act to provide for the forfeiture of illegally acquired properties of smugglers and foreign exchange manipulators and for matters connected

therewith or incidental thereto;

Whereas for the effective prevention of smuggling activities and foreign exchange manipulations which are having a deleterious effect on the national

economy it is necessary to deprive persons engaged in such activities and manipulations of their ill-gotten gains;

And whereas such persons have been augmenting such gains by violations of wealth-tax, income tax or other laws or by other means and have

thereby been increasing their resources for operating in a clandestine manner;

And whereas such persons have in many cases been holding the properties acquired by them through such gains in the names of their relatives,

associates and confidants;

Be it enacted by Parliament in the Twenty-sixth Year of the Republic of India as follows:

18. Section 2 specifies the persons to whom the Act applies. Sub-section (1) declares that the provisions of the Act shall apply ""only to the

persons specified in Sub-section (2)"". Sub-section (2) mentions five categories of persons to whom the provisions of the Act apply. The first

category mentioned under Clause (a) comprises persons convicted under Sea Customs Act, 1878 or the Customs Act, 1962 of an offence in

relation to goods of a value exceeding one lakh of rupees. The requirement of value exceeding Rupees one lakh does not apply in case of second

or subsequent conviction. Persons convicted under FERA, 1947/1973 of an offence, the amount and value involved in which exceeds one lakh

rupees are also included under Clause (a). The requirement of value (above one lakh), however, does not apply in the case of second or

subsequent conviction. The second category [clause (b)] comprises of persons in respect of whom an order of detention has been made under

COFEPOSA, but which order was not revoked or set aside in any of the situations set out in the four sub-clauses of the proviso. It would be

appropriate to set out Clause (b) in full. It reads:

(b) every person in respect of whom an order of detention has been made under the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of

Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (52 of 1974):

Provided that-

(i) such order of detention, being an order to which the provisions of Section 9 or Section 12A of the said Act do not apply, has not been revoked

on the report of the Advisory Board u/s 8 of the said Act or before the receipt of the report of the Advisory Board or before making a reference

to the Advisory Board; or

(ii) such order of detention, being an order to which the provisions of Section 9 of the said Act apply, has not been revoked before the expiry of

the time for, or the basis of, the review under Sub-section (3) of Section 9, or on the report of the Advisory Board u/s 8, read with Sub-section

(2) of Section 9, of the said Act, or

(iii) such order of detention, being an order to which the provisions of Section 12A of the said Act apply, has not been revoked before the expiry

of the time for , or on the basis of, the first review under Sub-section (3) of that section, or on the basis of the report of the Advisory Board u/s 8,

read with Sub-section (6) of Section 12A, of that Act, or

(iv) such order of detention has not been set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction;

19. the third category to whom the act applies [mentioned in Clause (c)] are the relatives of persons referred to in Clauses (a) and (b). Fourth

category [Clause (d)] consists of the associates of the persons referred to in Clauses (a) and (b). The fifth category mentioned under Clause (e)

comprises of holders of any property, which was at any time previously held by a person referred to in Clauses (a) or (b) unless such holder

proves that he is a transferee in good faith for valuable consideration. Explanation (1) specifies the manner in which the value mentioned in Clause

(a) has to be computed. Explanation (2) specifies the relatives covered by Clause (c), while Explanation (3) specifies the associates included under

Clause (d).

20. Section 3 defines certain expressions occurring in the Act, including the expression ""illegally acquired property"". It reads as follows:

(c) ""illegally acquired property"", in relation to any persons to whom this Act applies means-

(i) any property acquired by such persons, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, wholly or partly out of or by means of any

income, earnings or assets derived or obtained from or attributable to any activity prohibited by or under any law for the time being in force relating

to any matter in respect of which Parliament has power to make laws; or

(ii) any property acquired by such person, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, wholly or partly out of or by means of any

income, earnings or assets in respect of which any such law has been contravened; or

(iii) any property acquired by such person, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, wholly or partly out of or by means of any

income, earnings or assets the source of which cannot be proved and which cannot be shown to be attributable to any act or thing done in respect

of any matter in relation to which Parliament has no power to make laws; or

(iv) any property acquired by such person, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, for a consideration, or by any means, wholly or

partly traceable to any property referred to in Sub-clauses (i) to (iii) or the income or earnings from such property;

and includes-

(A) any property held by such person which would have been in relation to any previous holder thereof, illegally acquired property under this

Clause if such previous holder had not ceased to hold it, unless such person or any other person who held the property at any time after such

previous holder or, where there are two or more such previous holders, the last of such previous holders is or was a transferee in good faith for

adequate consideration;

(B) any property acquired by such person, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, for a consideration, or by any means, wholly or

partly traceable to any property falling under item (A), or the income or earnings therefrom;

More of this definition later.

21. Section 4 declares that after commencement of the said Act, it shall not be lawful for any person to whom the act applies to hold any illegally

acquired property either by himself or through any other person on his behalf. Any property so held is liable to be forfeited to Central Government

in accordance with the provisions of the Act. Section 6 provides for issuance of show-cause notice of forfeiture, while Section 7 provides for

passing of final orders in that behalf. Section 8 says that in proceedings under the act, the burden of proving that any property specified in the

notice served u/s 6 is not illegally acquired property shall be on the person affected. Section 11 declares transfers of properties specified in the

notice issued u/s 6, effected after the issuance of the notice, null and void. Section 12 provides for Constitution of the Appellate Tribunal for

hearing the appeals against the orders made u/s 7. Section 24 gives an overriding effect to the Act over any other law for the time being in force.

22. Before entering upon discussion of the issues arising herein, it is necessary to make a few clarificatory observations. Though a challenge to the

constitutional validity of 39th, 40th and 42nd Amendments to the Constitution was levelled in the writ petitions on the ground that the said

Amendments - effected after the decision in Keshavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala [1973] Suppl. S.C.R. 1 - infringe the basic structure of the

Constitution, no serious attempt was made during the course of arguments to substantiate it. It was generally argued that Article 14 is one of the

basic features of the Constitution and hence any constitutional amendment violative of Article 14 is equally violative of the basic structure. This

simplistic argument overlooks the reason d''etre of Article 31B - at any rate, its continuance and relevance after Bharati - and of the 39th and 40th

Amendments placing the said enactments in the IXth Schedule. Acceptance of the petitioners'' argument would mean that in case of post-Bharati

constitutional amendments placing Acts in the IXth Schedule, the protection of Article 31-B would not be available against Article 14. Indeed, it

was suggested that Articles 21 and 19 also represent the basic features of the Constitution. If so, it would mean a further enervation of Article 31B.

Be that as it may, in the absence of any effort to substantiate the said challenge, we do not wish to express any opinion on the constitutional validity

of the said Amendments. We take them as they are, i.e., we assume them to be good and valid. We must also say that no effort has also been

made by the counsel to establish in what manner the said Amendment Acts violate Article 14.

23. COFEPOSA is a law relating to preventive detention. It has, therefore, to conform to the provisions in Clauses (4) to (7) of Article 22. Insofar

as SAFEMA is concerned, it is, of course, not a law relating to preventive detention though it is designed to achieve the very same objective by

different means. While one seeks to deter them by means of preventive detention, the other seeks to punish them by depriving them of their ill-

gotten gains. SAFEMA is thus a measure designed to protect the economy of the country as also a measure to discourage law-breaking - in

particular, economic violations. The principles relevant in judging the validity and relevant in the matter of interpreting the provisions of such

economic measures are fairly well settled. It is held that in case of such enactments the legislature must be permitted a greater play in the joints. As

pointed out by Bhagwati, J. in R.K. Garg v. Union of India [1982] 1 S.C.R. 947

The court must always remember that ""legislation is directed to practical problems, that the economic mechanism is highly sensitive and complex,

that many problems are singular and contingent, that laws are not abstract propositions and do not relate to abstract units and are not to be

measured by abstract symmetry"" that exact wisdom and nice adaptation of remedy are not always possible and that ""judgment is largely a

prophecy based on meagre and uninterpreted experience"". Every legislation particularly in economic matters is essentially empiric and it is based on

experimentation or what one may call trial and error method and therefore it cannot provide for all possible situations or anticipate all possible

abuses. There may be crudities and inequities in complicated experimental economic legislation but on that account alone it cannot be struck down

as invalid. The court cannot, as pointed out by the United States Supreme Court in Secretary of Agriculture v. Central Reig Refining Co. (94

lawyers Edn. 381), be converted into tribunals for relief from such crudities and inequities. There may even be possibilities of abuse, but that too

cannot of itself be a ground for invalidating the legislation, because it is not possible for any legislation to anticipate as if by some divine prescience,

distortions and abuses of its legislation which may be made by those subject to its provisions and to provide against such distortions and abuses.

Indeed, howsoever great may be the care bestowed on its framing, it is difficult to conceive of a legislation which is not capable of being abused by

perverted human ingenuity. The Court must therefore adjudge the constitutionality of such legislation by the generality of its provisions and not by

its crudities or inequities or by the possibilities of abuse of any of its provisions. If any crudities, inequities or possibilities of abuse come to light, the

legislature can always step in and enact suitable amendatory legislation. That is the essence of pragmatic approach which must guide and inspire the

legislature in dealing with complex economic issues.

(Emphasis added)

24. To the same effect are the observations (at page 663) in Federation of Hotel and Restaurant Assn. of India v. Union of India (1989) 3 SCC

634 , a decision of the Constitution Bench.

It is not necessary to multiply the authorities.

Question No. 1;

25. It is argued for the petitioners that COFEPOSA is not relatable to Entry-9 of List-I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution inasmuch as

the preventive detention provided there for is not for reasons connected with defence, foreign affairs or security of India. Even Entry-3 of List-III,

it is submitted, does not warrant the said enactment. So far as SAFEMA is concerned, it is argued, it is not relatable to any of the Entries (1) to

(96) in List-I or to any of the Entries in List-III. We are not prepared to agree. COFEPOSA is clearly relatable to Entry 3 of List-III inasmuch as

it provides for preventive detention for reasons connected with the security of the State as well as the maintenance of supplies and services

essential to the community. While Entry 3 of List-III speaks of ""Security of a State"", Entry 9 of List-I speaks of ""security of India"". Evidently, they

are two distinct and different expressions. ""Security of a State"" is a much wider expression. A State with a weak and vulnerable economy cannot

guard its security well. It will be an easy prey to economic colonizers. We know of countries where the economic policies are not dictated by the

interest of that State but by the interest of multi-nationals and/or other powerful countries. A country with a weak economy is very often obliged to

borrow from International Financial Institutions who in turn seek to dictate the economic priorities of the borrowing State - it is immaterial whether

they do so in the interest of powerful countries who contribute substantially to their fund or in the interest of their loan. In the modern world, the

security of a State is ensured not so much by physical might but by economic strength-at any rate, by economic strength as much as by armed

might. It is therefore, idle to contend that COFEPOSA is unrelated to the security of the State. Indeed in the very Preamble to the Act, the

Parliament states that the violations of foreign exchange regulations and smuggling activities are having an increasing deleterious effect on the

national economy thereby casting serious adverse effect on the security of the State. Be that as it may, it is not necessary to pursue this line of

reasoning since we are in total , agreement with the approach evolved in Union of India v. H.S. Dhillon (1971) 2 SCC 779 :(1972) 2 SCR 33 a

decision by a Constitution Bench of Seven Judges. The test evolved in the said decision is this in short: where the legislative competence of the

Parliament to enact a particular statute is questioned, one must look at the several entries in list-II to find out (applying the well-known principles in

this behalf) whether the said statute is relatable to any of those Entries. If the statute does relate to any of the Entries in list-II, no further inquiry is

necessary. It must be held that Parliament is competent to enact that Statute whether by virtue of the Entries in list-I and list-Ill or by virtue of

Article 248 read with Entry 97 of list-I. In this case, it is not even suggested that either of the two enactments in question are relatable to any of the

Entries in list-II. If so, we need not go further and enquire -to which Entry or Entries do these Acts relate. It should be held that the Parliament did

have the competence to enact them.

26. Question Nos. 2 and 3: These questions arise this way. The orders of detention concerned herein were made on or after the date of the

proclamation of emergency to which Section 12A was applicable. None of them are, what may be called, ''normal'' orders of detention. For that

reason, the detenues were neither supplied with the grounds of detention, nor were they given an opportunity to make a representation against their

detention nor does it appear that their cases were referred to the Advisory Board not at any rate within the period prescribed by Section 8, or for

that matter, Section 9. They were released on or within a day or two of the date on which the emergency was lifted. In this sense, the order of

detention has worked itself out. But that order of detention is now being made the foundation, the basis for taking action under SAFEMA against

the detenues, their relatives and their associates. SAFEMA is made applicable to them by virtue of Section 2(2)(b) read with Clauses (c) (d) and

(e) of Sub-section (2). The petitioners say that since the order of detention under COFEPOSA is made the basis for action under SAFEMA

against them, they are entitled to challenge the validity of the order of detention. They may not have been able to question the validity of detention

during their detention by virtue of Section 12A of COFEPOSA (non-supply of grounds and non-reference to advisory board) and also because

their right to move the court for enforcement of the rights guaranteed to them by Articles 14, 21 and 22 was suspended during the period of

emergency by an order made by the President of India under Article 359(1) of the Constitution even Article 19 did not avail them by virtue of

Article 358-but when the said orders of detention are sought to be made the basis of action under SAFEMA, after the lifting of emergency, they

are now entitled to question them. They point out that by virtue of the order made under Article 359(1), the fundamental rights guaranteed to them

by Articles 14, 21 and 22 were not suspended, but only the right to move for their enforcement was suspended. If so, they say, the detention

orders made against them are invalid and illegal for violation of Clauses (4) and (5) of Article 22. They may have been barred from enforcing their

rights under Articles 22, 21 and 19 because of the said order of the President, but that did not render the orders of detention valid. Such invalid,

indeed void orders, they say, cannot serve as the basis or as the foundation of action under SAFEMA. They also stress the drastic nature of the

provisions of SAFEMA. On the other hand, the learned Additional Solicitor General relies upon the provisions of Clause (1A) of Article 359 and

submits that the validity of the said detention orders has to be judged with reference to the law then obtaining and not with reference to the law

obtaining on the date of issuance of notice u/s 6 of SAFEMA. At any rate, he submits, Clause (1A) of Article 359 saves all such orders.

Suspension of remedy, he says is tantamount to suspension of the right itself since one cannot conceive of a right without a remedy. There is no

distinction, he says, between Article 358 and an order under Article 359(1) in this regard. He places strong reliance upon the observations at page

312 of the decision in Makhan Singh v. State of Punjab (1964) 4 SCR 797 : AIR 1964 SC 381 : 1964 (1) Cri LJ 269

27. Article 352 of the Constitution empowers the President, if he is satisfied that a grave emergency exists whereby the security of India or of any

part thereof is threatened, whether by war or external aggression or internal, disturbance*, to declare by a proclamation that an emergency exists.

One of the consequences of such declaration is provided in Article 358. Article 358, as it stood prior to 44th Amendment, read thus:

358. While a Proclamation of Emergency is in operation, nothing in Article 19 shall restrict the power of the State as defined in Part III to make

any law or to take any executive action which the State would, but for the provisions contained in that Part be competent to make or to take, but

any law so made shall, to the extent of the incompetence, cease to have effect as soon as the Proclamation ceases to operate, except as respects

things done or omitted to be done before the law so ceases to have effect.

28. (By the Constitution 42nd Amendment Act, a proviso was added and by the 44th Amendment Act, some further amendments were made but

it is not necessary to notice them, for the purposes of these cases.)

29. Clause (1) of Article 359, as if stood prior to the 44th Amendment, provided that ""Where a Proclamation of Emergency is in operation, the

President may by order declare that the right to move any court for the enforcement of such of the rights conferred by Part-III as may be

mentioned in the order and all proceedings pending in any court for the enforcement of the rights so mentioned shall remain suspended for the

period during which the Proclamation is in force or for such shorter period as may be specified in the order.

30. The purport and effect of Articles 358 and 359(1) and the distinction between them fell for consideration of this Court in Makhan Singh. A

Special-Bench of Seven Judges stated the effect of Article 358 in the following words:

It would be noticed that as soon as a Proclamation of Emergency has been issued under Article 352 and so long as it lasts, Article 19 is suspended

and the power of the legislatures as well as the executive is to that extent made wider. The suspension of Article 19 during the pendency of the

Proclamation of emergency removes the fetters created on the legislative and executive powers by Article 19 and if the legislatures make laws or

the executive commits acts which are inconsistent with the rights guaranteed by Article 19, their validity is not open to challenge either during the

continuance of the emergency or even thereafter. As soon as the Proclamation ceases to operate, the legislative enactments passed and the

executive actions taken during the course of the said emergency shall be inoperative to the extent to which they conflict with the rights guaranteed

under Article 19 because as soon as the emergency is lifted, Article 19 which was suspended during the emergency is automatically revived and

begins to operate. Article 358 however, makes it clear that things done or omitted to be done during the emergency cannot be challenged even

after the emergency is over. In other words, the suspension of Article 19 is complete during the period in question and legislative and legislative and

executive action which contravenes Article 19 cannot be questioned even after the emergency is over.

31. Next the Bench took up the meaning and purport of Article 359(1) and held:

Article 359, on the other hand, does not purport expressly to suspend any of the fundamental, rights. It authorises the president to issue an order

declaring that the right to move any court for enforcement of such of the rights in Part III as may be mentioned in the order and all proceedings

pending in any court for the enforcement of the rights so mentioned shall remain suspended for the period during which the Proclamation is in force

or for such shorter period as may be specified in the order. What the Presidential Order purports to do by virtue pf the power conferred on the

President by Article 359(1) is to bar the remedy of the citizens to move any court for the enforcement of the specified rights. The rights are not

expressly suspended, but the citizen is deprived of his right to move any court for their enforcement. That is one important distinction between the

provisions of Article 358 and Article 359(1).

32. It was urged by the learned Attorney General that suspension of the citizens1 right to move any court for the enforcement of a particular

fundamental right amounts in law to suspension of the said right itself for the said period. The Bench, however, declined to go into the said question

and proceeded on the assumption ""that the said rights are in theory alive"" even during the period of the Presidential Order. The Special Bench

pointed out further:

It would be noticed that the Presidential Order cannot widen the authority of the legislatures or the executive; it merely suspends the rights to move

any court to obtain a relief on the ground that the rights conferred by Part III have been contravened if the said rights are specified in the Order.

The inevitable consequence of this position is that as soon as the Order ceases to be operative, the infringement of the rights made either by the

legislative enactment or by executive action can perhaps be challenged by a citizen in a court of law and the same may have to be tried on the

merits on the basis that the rights alleged to have been infringed were in operation even during the pendency of the Presidential Order. If at the

expiration of the Presidential Order, Parliament passes any legislation to protect executive action taken during the pendency of the Presidential

Order and afford indemnity to the executive in that behalf, the validity and the effect of such legislative action may have to be carefully scrutinised.

Since the objection of Article 359(1) is to suspend the rights of the citizens to move any court, the consequence of the Presidential Order may be

that any proceeding which may be pending at the date of the Order remains suspended during the time that the Order is in operation and may be

revived when the said order ceases to be operative; and fresh proceedings cannot be taken by a citizen after the order has been issued, because

the Order takes away the right to move any court and during the operation of the Order, the said right cannot be exercised by instituting a fresh

proceeding contrary to the Order. If a fresh proceeding falling within the mischief of Article 359(1) and the Presidential Order issued under it is

instituted after the Order has been issued, it will have to be dismissed as being incompetent. In other words, Article 359(1) and the Presidential

Order issued under it may constitute a sort of moratorium or a blanket ban against the institution or continuance of any legal action subject to two

important conditions. The first condition relates to the character of the legal action and requires that the said action must seek to obtain a relief on

the ground that the claimant''s fundamental rights specified in the Presidential Order have been contravened, and the second condition relates to the

period during which this ban is to operate. The ban operates either for the period of the proclamation or for such shorter period as may be

specified in the Order.

33. The law enunciated by the Special Bench is clear and explicit. It requires no elaboration at our hands.

34. After the said decision, however, Clause (1A) was introduced in Article 359 by the Constitution 38th (Amendment) Act, 1975. The Clause

was introduced with retrospective effect from the date of the Constitution. Clause (1A), as introduced by the said Amendment Act read as follows

:

1A. While an order made under Clause (1) mentioning any of the rights conferred by Part III is in operation, nothing in that Part conferring those

rights shall restrict the power of the State as defined in the said Part to make any laws or to take any executive action which the State would but

for the provisions contained in that Part be competent to make or to take, but any law so made shall, to the extent of the in competency, cease to

have effect as soon as the order aforesaid ceases to operate, except as respects things done or omitted to be done before the law so cease to have

effect:

35. A proviso was added to this Clause by the 42nd Amendment Act, 1976, to the following effect:

Provided that where a proclamation of Emergency is in operation only in any part of the territory of India, any such law may be made, or any such

executive action may be taken, under this article in relation to or in any State or Union territory in which or in any part of which the Proclamation of

Emergency is not in operation, if and in so far as the security of India or any part of the territory thereof is threatened by activities in or in relation to

the part of the territory of India in which the Proclamation of Emergency is in operation.

37. (By the 44th Amendment Act, 1978, the words ""except Articles 20 and 21"" were added after the words ""the rights conferred by Part III"" in

Clause (1A) besides adding Clause (1B) but these amendments, not being retrospective in operation, are not relevant in the case of detentions

governed by Section 12A of COFEPOSA during the period of emergency.)

38. It is obvious that Clause (1A) was put in with a view to bring the effect of the Presidential Order under Article 359(1) on par with Article

358(1) insofar as the competence of the State to make a law inconsistent with the specified fundamental rights is concerned. Article 359(1A) is

broadly in the same terms as Article 358. Article 358 says that while a proclamation of emergency under Article 352 is in operation ""nothing in

Article 19 shall restrict the power of the State as defined in Part-III to make any law or to take any executive action which the State would but for

the provisions contain ed in that Part be competent to make or to take, but any law so made shall to the extent of in competency cease to have

effect as soon as the proclamation ceases to operate except as respects things done or omitted to b; done before the law ceases to have effect"".

Clause (1A) of Article 359 says similarly that while the Presidential Order made under Article 359(1) is in operation ""nothing in that Part (Part-III)

conferring those rights shall restrict the power of the State as defined in the said Part to make any law or to take any executive action which the

State would but for the provisions contained in that Part be competent to make or to take but any law so made to the extent of incompetency shall

cease to have effect as soon as the order aforesaid ceases to operate except as respects things done or omitted to be done before the law so

ceases to have effect"". Of course, while Article 358 is confined only to Article 19, Clause (1A) extends to those rights whose enforcement may

have been suspended by an Order under Article 359(1). The other distinction is that while the ""suspension""* of Article 19 under Article 358 is co-

extensive with the duration of the proclamation of emergency, Clause (1A) is confined to the period for which the Presidential Order remains in

force. Yet another distinction is that while Article 358 enables the State to make any law or to take any executive action inconsistent with Article

19 during the period of emergency, Clauses (1) and (1A) of Article 359 read together provide for suspension (by means of a Presidential Order)

of the enforcement of the fundamental rights specified in the Order and simultaneously enable the State to make any law or to take any executive

action inconsistent with such fundamental rights. It is evident that what is said in Makhan Singh with respect to Article 358 (competence of the

State to make a law or to take executive action inconsistent with Article 19) does apply equally to Article 359 by virtue of the introduction of

Clause (1A) with retrospective effect. In other words, during the period the Presidential Order under Article 359(1) is in force, the State is

competent to make any law or take any executive action which it could not have taken but for the suspension of enforcement of the fundamental

rights specified in the Presidential Order. In our opinion, the position under Article 358 is this: Article 358 enables the State-it empowers the State-

to make any law or to take any executive action inconsistent with Article 19. This exceptional power is, however, confined to the period of

emergency and is intended to facilitate the effective implementation of the objectives of emergency. The justification of this extraordinary provision

is that individual liberties may have to be kept in abeyance temporarily if found necessary to meet the threat to the security of India or any part

thereof within the meaning of Article 352(1). As soon as emergency ceases, the law so made shall to the extent of inconsistency with Article 19

ceases to have effect, except with respect to things done or omitted to be done before the law so ceases to have effect. What it means is that the

validity of the law made or the things done or omitted to be done by virtue of the said Article during the period of emergency cannot be questioned

either during or after the emergency on the ground of inconsistency with Article 19. Neither the law nor the executive action (to the extent of its

inconsistency with Article 19) can continue even for a day beyond the cessation of emergency. Their validity and/or the competence of the State to

make or take them during the period of emergency is, however, placed beyond question. By way of illustration a law may have been made or an

executive action may have been taken unduly restricting the freedom of speech and the freedom of press during the emergency. Such restriction

insofar as it is not warranted by Article 19(2) ceases to operate or to have effect with the cessation of emergency. But the citizen whose right has

been unreasonably curtailed cannot sue the State for damages or other relief nor can he takes any other proceeding against the State for imposing

such unreasonable restriction during the period of emergency. This is because of the protection provided to the State by Article 358. It should be

remembered that Article 358 sanctions such a course because the Founding Fathers thought-and not without justification-that when the security of

India or any part thereof is threatened as contemplated by Article 352, the State should be left free to make such law or to take such executive

action as is necessary to safeguard security of the country unfettered by the provisions in Article 19. This subordination of Article 19, however, is

only for the period the proclamation of emergency under Article 352 is in operation.

39. Now coming to Causes (1) and (1A) of Article 359 the position is this: while Clause (1) empowers the President to suspend the enforcement

of the fundamental rights named in such notification (and any and all proceedings in that behalf in any court), it does not empower the President to

suspend the fundamental rights. Evidently, the founding fathers did not think it necessary to clothe the President with such a power. The words in

Clause (1) are clear and unambiguous. They only speak of suspending the enforcement of the right in Part-III and not suspending the rights

themselves. We see no warrant, no justification and no basis for holding that the suspension of enforcement of the rights means in effect the

suspension of the rights themselves. If that were the intention of the Founding Fathers, they would have said so expressly. Indeed, they have stated

what they meant in explicit language. It view of the fact that the fundamental rights in Part-III are allowed to be affected by a Presidential Order,

we think, we ought not to read anything more than what the Clause expressly says-and its language leaves nor 30m for any doubt. This is the view

taken in Makhan Singh as well as by Bhagwati, J., in A.D.M Jabalpur v. Shivkant Shukla 1976 CriLJ 945 and we agree with them respectfully.

Then came Clause (1A), introduced by the 38th Amendment Act with retrospective effect from the date of the Constitution. It says that while a

Presidential Order suspending particular fundamental rights is in operation, the State shall be entitled to make any law or to take any executive

action which it would not have been entitled to make or to take but for the suspension of the enforcement of the said rights. At the same time, the

Clause says that any law so made shall, to the extent of in competency, cease to have effect as soon as the Presidential Order ceases to operate

except as respects things done or omitted to be done before the law so ceases to have effect"". The effect of these words (""except as...respects

effect"") is evidently the same as that obtaining under Article 358 (which too employs identical words) which we have explained hereinbefore at

some length. It is true that Clause (1) of Article 359 does not provide for the suspension of any of the fundamental rights but only their enforcement

and it is equally true that those fundamental rights (whose enforcement is suspended) continue in theory to be alive, yet we must also give effect to

Clause (1A), which is equally a part of Article 359 now-and must be deemed to be such a part at all points of time commencing from 26th

January, 1950. The conclusion is, therefore, inescapable that during the period the Presidential Order under Article 359(1) suspending

enforcement of certain rights conferred by Part-Ill is in operation, the State is empowered to make any law or to take any executive action

inconsistent with such rights. All this is so because the emergency proclaimed to meet the threat to the security of India has to be effectively

implemented. The requirements of emergency constitute both the foundation as well as an implied limitation upon the power. What is warranted is

what is necessary for effective implementation of emergency.

40. It may be appropriate at this juncture to refer to a few decisions of this Court relevant in this behalf. In Jaichand Lal v. State of West Bengal

[1966] Supl. S.C.R. 464 t is held by a Constitution Bench:

But the appellant can challenge the validity of the order on a ground other than those covered by Article 358, or the Presidential Order issued

under Article 359(1). Such a challenge is outside the purview of the Presidential Order. For instance, a citizen will not be deprived of the right to

move an appropriate court for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that his detention has been ordered mala fide. Similarly, it will be open to the

citizen to challenge the order of detention on the ground that any of the grounds given in the order of detention is irrelevant and there is no real and

proximate connection between the ground given and the object which the legislature has in view. It may be stated in this context that a mala fide

exercise of power does not necessarily imply any moral turpitude as a matter of law. It only means that the statutory power is exercised for

purposes foreign to those for which it is in law intended. In other words, the power conferred by the statute has been utilised for some indirect

purpose not connected with the object of the statute or the mischief it seek to remedy.

41. To the same effect is the decision of another Constitution Bench in Anandan Nambiar v. Chief Secretary Government of Madras 1966 CriLJ

586 . The majority opinion in A.D.M., Jabalpur, however, appears to take a view contrary to the one expressed in Jaichand Lal and Anandan

Nambiar but for the purposes of this case, it is not necessary to go into the correctness of the reasoning in A.D.M. Jabalpur, since it has not been

debated before us. Indeed, a Three-Judge Bench in Union of India v. Bhanudas Krishna Gawde [1977] 107 ITR 101 (SC) has taken the extreme

view, purporting to follow A.D.M., Jabalpur that even the restrictions placed and facilities denied cannot be questioned in a Court during the

period the order under Article 359(1) is in operation!

42. The next issue that arises is whether it can be said in the case of detention orders passed during the emergency (i.e., orders of detention to

which Section 12A of COFEPOSA applies) that they are void or non-est, so that they cannot be treated as orders of detention within the meaning

of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA? It is submitted by the learned Additional Solicitor General that the said orders cannot be said to be void ab initio

or non-est. The orders were good and valid when they were made u/s 3 of COFEPOSA. May be, he says, the said orders ceased to be operative

with the cessation of the Presidential Order and cannot be continued beyond the said cessation, but they were certainly competent, legal and

effective when they were made and continued to be so until the cessation of the Presidential Order. They can, therefore, certainly be treated as

orders of detention under COFEPOSA for the purpose of and within the meaning of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA.

43. On the other hand, the learned Counsel for the petitioners contend that the order of detention made u/s 3 read with Section 12A of

COFEPOSA is void for being inconsistent with the provisions in Article 22 which were not suspended. The mere suspension of enforcement of the

said Article does not amount to suspension of the right. The orders of detention were, therefore, void and they remained in operation only because

the detenues were barred from questioning the validity of the said orders on account of the ban imposed by the Presidential Order under Article

359(1). They submit that the detention orders governed by Section 12A of COFEPOSA are inherently arbitrary and unjust. An order of

preventive detention is made without even telling the detenue of the grounds of his detention and without giving him an opportunity to make a

representation. Even the protection of consideration of his case by an independent body (Advisory Board) is taken away. The detenue is rendered

totally helpless. He is left with no remedy. He cannot prove his innocence. Such an order of detention is opposed to all concepts of fairness,

civilized conduct and democratic norms. They submit that such orders cannot form the foundation or the basis for applying SAFEMA to them.

Their argument is evocative of what Justice Cardozo once said: ""We must always take care to safeguard the law against the assaults of

opportunism, the expediency of the passing hour, the erosion of the small encroachments, and the scorn and derision of those who have no

patience with general principles.

44. The contending view points aforesaid give rise to two strands of thought. One line of thought runs thus: By virtue of Clause (1A) of Article 359,

inserted by the Constitution 38th (Amendment) Act with retrospective effect. Section 12A must be deemed to have been competently enacted, no

doubt for the duration of and limited to the period of the Presidential Order. If so, the detention thereunder cannot be said to be invalid. While the

order of detention cannot certainly subsist beyond the cessation of the Presidential Order because Section 12A cannot itself subsist beyond each

cessation, neither Section 12A nor the order of detention governed by it can be characterised as illegal or invalid during the period the Presidential

Order was in force. Once this is so, such order of detention does undoubtedly represent an order of detention within the meaning and

contemplation of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA. That it was not open to challenge during the period of the Presidential Order, or that it was not

subject to the constitutional safeguards provided by Article 22 does not affect its validity or legality. It was a valid order of detention when made. It

is not being enforced or acted upon beyond the period of Presidential Order. Since it is an existing fact, it is merely being taken notice of and that is

enough to attract SAFEMA to such detenu, his relatives and associates. Section 2(1) of SAFEMA says, ""the provisions of this Act shall apply

only to the persons specified in Sub-section (2)"" and Sub-section (2) speaks inter alia of a person ""in respect of whom an order of detention has

been made under the COFEPOSA, 1974"". Indeed, provisos (i) (ii) and (iii) to Clause (b) of Sub-section (2) of Section 2 of SAFEMA expressly

refer to the order of detention made u/s 12A and expressly affirm that such an order of detention is an order of detention for the purposes of the

said clause. The fact remains that provisions of SAFEMA were enacted in the first instance as an Ordinance issued on 5th November, 1975, i.e.,

during the period of emergency and later enacted into an Act and given effect from the date of the Ordinance. An order of detention governed by

Section 12A of COFEPOSA must, therefore, be held to be an order of detention for the purpose of and within the meaning of Section 2(2)(b) of

SAFEMA. The other line of reasoning goes along the following lines: an order of detention governed by Section 12A is a special type of order

made for the limited purpose of dealing effectively with the emergency. It has no existence, relevance or effect except for the said limited purpose.

Outside such purpose, it is non-est. It does not exist. If so, such an order of detention cannot furnish the foundation, the connecting link, or the

basis for applying SAFEMA. A normal order of preventive detention is itself an uncivilized action. An order of detention governed by Section 12A

of COFEPOSA-denying as it does even the minimum safeguards provided by Clauses (4) and (5) of Article 22-is an abhorrent action. It may be

tolerated as a cruel necessity when the very life of the Nation is threatened but it cannot certainly be recognised or taken note of for any other

purpose-much less made the basis of applying an extremely drastic enactment like SAFEMA. Treating such order of detention as an order of

detention for the purpose of and within the meaning of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA amounts to enforcing or giving effect to the said order of

detention beyond and outside the period of emergency and for purposes foreign to emergency. This is totally impermissible. Section 12A does not

sanction this-though it sanctions a lot many things.

45. While we are attracted by the logic as well as the emotional appeal of the second line of thought-it would appeal to any lover of liberty-we find

ourselves constrained to reject it in the light of the language of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA coupled with the fact that SAFEMA is armed with the

protective umbrella of Article 31B read with IXth Schedule. We proceed to elaborate. Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA expressly includes an order

of detention to which the provisions of Section 12A apply within the purview of an order of detention under COFEPOSA. For the sake of facility

of reference, we may reproduce the clause. It reads:

(b) every person in respect of whom an order of detention has been made under the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of

Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (52 of 1974):

Provided that-

(i) such order of detention, being an order to which the provisions of Section 9 or Section 12A of the said Act do not apply, has not been revoked

on the report of the Advisory Board u/s 8 of the said Act or before the receipt of the report of the Advisory Board or before making a reference

to the Advisory Board ; or

(ii) such order of detention, being an order to which the provisions of Section (9) of the said Act apply, has not been revoked before the expiry of

the time for, or on the basis of, the review under Sub-section (3) of Section 9, or on the report of the Advisory Board u/s 8, read with Sub-section

(2) of Section 9, of the said Act; or

(iii) such order of detention, being an order to which the provisions of Section 12A of the said Act apply, has not been revoked before the expiry

of the time for, or on the basis of, the first review under Sub-section (3) of that section, or on the basis of the report of the Advisory Board u/s 8,

read with Sub-section (6) of Section 12A, of that Act; or

(iv) such order of detention has not been set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction.

46. Proviso (iii) expressly treats ""an order (of detention) to which the provisions of Section 12A of the said Act apply"" and which ""has not been

revoked before the expiry of time for, or on the basis of, the first review under Sub-section (3) of that Section (Section 12A) or on the basis of the

report of the Advisory Board u/s 8, read with Sub-section (6) of Section 12A, of that Act"", as an order of detention for the purpose of and within

the meaning of Clause (b) of Section 2(2) of SAFEMA. In view of the fact that SAFEMA as well as COFEPOSA are included in the IXth

Schedule by the 39th and 40th (Amendment) Acts to the Constitution, Clause (b) of Section 2(2) of SAFEMA (including proviso (iii) appended to

it) are beyond constitutional reproach. One has to take the said provisions as they stand-and they stand solidly against the petitioners'' contentions.

On this single ground, we hold, as we must, that an order of detention made under COFEPOSA, to which the provisions in Section 12A applied,

is an order of detention within the meaning of and for the purposes of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA and can, therefore, constitute the basis for

applying SAFEMA to such person.

47. At this juncture, it would be appropriate to deal with two decisions of this Court brought to our notice. The first one is in Union of India v. Haji

Mastan Mirza 1984 CriLJ 610 rendered by a Bench of three Judges. The respondent therein was first detained under Maintenance of Internal

Security Act (M.I.S.A.) under an order dated September 17, 1974. On December 19,1974 the said order was revoked but simultaneously an

order of detention was made u/s 3(1) of COFEPOSA. The grounds of detention were served on him on December 23, 1974. On June 25, 1975,

emergency was proclaimed under Article 352(1) on the ground of internal disturbance, which continued in force upto March 21, 1977. The

respondent was released on March 23, 1977. Notice u/s 6(1) of SAFEMA was issued to him, his relatives and associates where upon he filed a

writ petition in the Bombay High Court challenging the validity of the order of detention dated December 19, 1974 on the ground inter alia that he

was not supplied with the documents clearly and unmistakably relied upon for arriving at the requisite satisfaction and which documents were also

referred to in the grounds of detention served upon him. The Bombay High Court allowed the writ petition, against which the Union of India

appealed to this Court. Vardarajan, J., speaking for the Bench referred to the provisions of Sections 2, 6 and 7 of SAFEMA and observed thus:

Therefore, a valid order of detention under COFEPOSA is a condition precedent to proceedings being taken under Sections 6 and 7 of

SAFEMA. If the impugned order of detention dated 10.12.1974 is set aside for any reason, the proceedings taken under Sections 6 and 7 of

SAFEMA cannot stand. Therefore, we have to consider whether the impugned order of detention dated 19.12.1974 under COFEPOSA is void

and has to be quashed.

48. From the facts stated above, it is clear that the order of detention was made long prior to the proclamation of emergency on June 25, 1975.

He was served with the grounds of detention but not the documents relied upon therein. It does not appear from the judgment whether a

declaration u/s 12A of COFEPOSA was made with respect to the said respondent, though it can be so presumed from the fact that his detention

was continued upto March 23,1977. In the above circumstances, this Court said that it was open to the respondent-detenu to question the validity

of the order of detention when proceedings are taken against him under Sections 6 and 7 of SAFEMA. It is not possible to agree with the

reasoning of the decision. There are two ways of looking at the issue. If it is a normal order of detention [not governed by Section 12A nor

protected by an order under Article 359(1) suspending the enforcement of Article 22] and if the detenue does not challenge it when he was

deprived of his liberty, or challenges it unsuccessfully, there is no reason why he should be allowed to challenge it when action under SAFEMA is

taken against him-for action under SAFEMA is not automatic upon the fact of detention but only the starting point. On the other hand, if it is an

order of detention governed by Section 12A (or by a Presidential Order under Article 359(1) suspending Article 22), it perhaps could still be

challenged even during the period of emergency on grounds not barred by the said provisions. Secondly, even if such an order is allowed to be

challenged when action under SAFEMA is taken, the challenge must be confined to grounds which were open or available during the period of

emergency; otherwise there would be no meaning behind the concluding words in Article 358(1) and Article 359(1A). Hence, we say that a

person who did not choose to challenge such an order of detention during the emergency when he was detained, or challenged it unsuccessfully,

cannot be allowed to challenge it when it is sought to be made the basis for applying SAFEMA to him. In either of the two situations mentioned

above, i.e., whether the challenge is made during the period of detention or later when proceedings under SAFEMA are-taken against him, the

grounds of challenge and scope of judicial scrutiny would be the same. Failure to challenge the detention directly when he was detained, precludes

him from challenging it after the cessation of detention, where it is made the basis for initiating action under SAFEMA.

49. The other case brought to our notice is in Union of India v. Manohar Lal Narang 1987 (30) ELT 37 (SC) a decision rendered by a Bench

comprising Khalid and Oza, JJ. The facts of this case are rather involved. Respondent, Manohar Lal Narang and one Ram Lal Narang were

brothers. An order of detention u/s 3(1) of COFEPOSA was made against Ram Lal Narang on December 19, 1974, He challenged the same

before the Delhi High Court in Writ Petition No. 10 of 1975 which was allowed on April 30, 1975 and the order of detention quashed. The Union

of India preferred an appeal against the said Order of the High Court to this Court alongwith an application for stay. On May 1, 1975, this Court

declined stay but imposed certain conditions on the movement of Ram Lai Narang (Later, the said appeal was dismissed for non-prosecution).

After the proclamation of emergency on the ground of internal disturbance on June 25, 1975, a fresh order of detention was made on July 1, 1975

against Ram Lai on the very same facts and grounds on which he was detained earlier. The said order of detention was challenged in Delhi High

Court in Writ Petition No. 115 of 1975 filed by a relative of Ram Lai but was dismissed on November 25, 1975. An appeal was preferred against

the said order to this Court being Appeal No. 399 of 1977. At this stage, notice under Sections 6 and 7 of SAFEMA was issued against Ram Lai

which he questioned in Delhi High Court in Writ Petition No. 720 of 1975. While the said writ petition was pending in Delhi High Court, Appeal

No. 399 of 1975 pending in this Court came up for hearing and was disposed of saying that it would be open to Ram Lai to raise all such

contentions as are available to him in Writ Petition No. 720 of 1975, notwithstanding the fact that those grounds were raised in Writ Petition No.

115 of 1975 (from which the said appeal No. 399 of 1975 arose). Writ Petition No. 720 of 1975 was heard and dismissed by the Delhi High

Court against which Ram Lai filed SLP No. 9361 of 1982 wherein leave was granted and the appeal was numbered as C.A. 2790 of 1985 which

was said to be pending on the date of the said judgment. An order of detention u/s 3 of COFEPOSA was made against the respondent, Manohar

Lal Narang, as well on January 31, 1975. He was then in England. He was brought to India and detained. He challenged the same by way of

W.P.2752 of 1975 in the Bombay High Court which was allowed and the detention quashed on July 8, 1980. An appeal preferred to this Court

against the said order was also dismissed. Thereafter, a show cause notice was issued to Manohar Lal Narang on the ground that he is the brother

(relative) of Ram Lai Narang, who was detained u/s 3(1) of COFEPOSA. It may be remembered that a writ petition questioning Ram Lal''s

detention under the order dated July 1, 1975 (evidently, an order of detention to which Section 12A of COFEPOSA applied) was dismissed by

the Delhi High Court (W.P. No. 115 of 1975) and even Writ Petition No. 720 of 1975 (in which he was allowed to raise all the available grounds

against his detention) was also dismissed. From the facts stated above, it is clear that the basis of action under SAFEMA against Manohar Lal

Narang was his brother Ram Lal''s detention during the period of emergency, which detention was governed by Section 12A of COFEPOSA.

According to our opinion indicated hereinbefore, such an order can constitute a basis for taking action under SAFEMA. So far as the reasoning of

the said decision is concerned, it is to the effect that the validity of such an order of detention can be questioned by the detenue or his relative, as

and when such an order is sought to be made the foundation for taking action against them under SAFEMA. On that basis, the court proceeded to

examine the validity of the order of detention of Ram Lal and found that the said order is bad for non-application of mind to certain highly relevant

and material circumstances. We must, however, say that the validity of an order of detention to which Section 12A of COFEPOSA applied, could

yet be examined even during the emergency on the touchstone of the law as it obtained during the operation of the Presidential Order under Article

359(1)-say on the ground that the provisions of Section 12A were not complied with, or on other grounds, as may not have barred during the said

period. But a person who could have so challenged the order of detention and yet chose not to do, cannot be allowed to do so when such an

order of detention is made the basis for applying SAFEMA to him-this is for the reason that even if he is allowed to challenge the said order when

he is served with the notice u/s 6 of SAFEMA, the challenge has to be examined with reference to the position of law as was obtaining at the time

the said order was made and the law in force during the period the said order of detention was in operation. Same would be the position in the

case of a person who challenged the order but failed in his challenge. Even in the case of a normal order of detention under COFEPOSA, the

position would be the same. A person who did not challenge (either by himself or through his next friend) the order of detention or challenged it but

failed, cannot be allowed to challenge the order of detention when action is taken against him under SAFEMA.

50. Question 4: The definition of illegally acquired properties"" in Clause (c) of Section 3(1) of SAFEMA is undoubtedly quite wide. It means and

includes any property acquired by such person, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, wholly or partly out of or by means of any

income, earnings or assets derived of obtained from or attributable to any activity prohibited by or under any law for the time being in force relating

to any matter in respect of which Parliament has power to make law"" [vide Sub-clause (i)]. Sub-clauses (ii) (iii) and (iv) of Clause (c) further widen

and elaborate its ambit. The definition thus takes in not only the property acquired after the Act but also the property acquired before the Act,

whatever be the length of time. Secondly, it takes in property which may have been acquired partly from out of illegal activity-in which case, of

course, the provision in Section 9 would be attracted. Illegal activity is not confined to violation of the laws mentioned in Section 2 but all laws

which the Parliament has power to make. To give an illustration, if a smuggler has acquired some properties by evading tax laws or by committing

theft, robbery, decoity, mis-appropriation or any other illegal activity prohibited by the Indian Penal Code or any other law in force (which the

Parliament has the power to make) all that would be liable to be forfeited. It is submitted by the petitioners that this is a case of excessive and

disproportionate response by the Parliament. The argument is that the Act is penal in nature and spreading its net as wide as is done by the

definition of ""illegally acquired properties"" brings it in conflict with Articles 14, 19 and 21. Alternatively, it is submitted that if the said definition is

unassailable on account of its inclusion in the IXth Schedule, the definition may be read down so as to confine it only to the properties acquired by

violating the prohibitions contained in the Acts mentioned in Section 2(a) of SAFEMA. We do not find it possible to give effect to either of these

submissions. Both the enactments being placed in the IXth Schedule, they enjoy the immunity conferred by Article 31(B). We have observed

hereinbefore that the petitioners have not been able to substantiate their submission that the 39th (Amendment) Act and 40th (Amendment) Act,

placing the said enactments in the IXth Schedule are unconstitutional. It is not necessary to repeat the reasons for the said opinion here over again.

In this view of the matter, the attack upon the validity of the said definition on grounds of unreasonableness, arbitrariness or for that matter on any

of the grounds relatable to Part-Ill is of no avail. Even apart from the protection of Article 31(B), we see no substance in the submission that the

definition is arbitrary or discriminatory nor do we see any reason for reading down the said definition to confine it to the violation of the acts

referred to in Section 2(2)(a) of SAFEMA. We can take note of the fact that persons engaged in smuggling and foreign exchange manipulations do

not keep regular and proper accounts with respect to such activity or its income or of the assets acquired there from. If such person indulges in

other illegal activity, the position would be no different. The violation of foreign exchange laws and laws relating to export and import necessarily

involves violation of tax laws. Indeed, it is a well-known fact that over the last few decades, smuggling, foreign exchange violations, tax evasion,

drugs and crime have all got mixed-up. Evasion of taxes is integral to such activity. It would be difficult for any authority to say, in the absence of

any accounts or other relevant material that among the properties acquired by a smuggler, which of them or which portions of them are attributable

to smuggling and foreign exchange violations and which properties or which portions thereof are attributable to violation of other laws (which the

Parliament has the power to make). It is probably for this reason that the burden of proving that the properties specified in the show cause notice

are not illegally acquired properties is placed upon the person concerned. May be this is a case where a dangerous disease required a radical

treatment. Bitter medicine is not bad medicine. In law it is not possible to say that the definition is arbitrary or is couched in unreasonably wide

terms. Further, in view of clear and unambiguous language employed in Clause (c) of Section 3, it is not possible or permissible to resort to the

device of reading down. The said device is usually resorted to save a provision from being declared unconstitutional, incompetent and ultra vires.

We are, therefore, of the opinion that neither the constitutional validity of the said definition can be questioned nor is there any warrant for reading

down the clear and unambiguous words in the clause. So far as justification of such a provision is concerned, there is enough and more. After all,

all these illegally acquired properties are earned and acquired in ways illegal and corrupt-at the cost of the people and the State. The State is

deprived of its legitimate revenue to that extent. These properties must justly go back where they belong-to the State. What we are saying is

nothing new or heretical. Witness the facts and ratio of a recent decision of the Privy Council in Attorney General for Hong Kong v. Reid [1993] 3

W.L.R. 1143 The Respondent, Reid, was a crown-prosecutor in Hong Kong. He took bribes as an inducement to suppress certain criminal

prosecutions and with those monies, acquired properties in New Zealand, two of which were held in the name of himself and his wife and the third

in the name of his solicitor. He was found guilty of the offence of bribe-taking and sentenced by a criminal court. The Administration of Hong Kong

claimed that the said properties in New Zealand were held by the owners thereof as constructive trustees for the Crown and must be made over to

the Crown. The party Council upheld this claim over-ruling the New Zealand Court of Appeals. Lord Temple man, delivering the opinion of the

Judicial Committee, based his conclusion on the simple ground that any benefit obtained by a fiduciary through a breach of duty belongs in equity

to the beneficiary. It is held that a gift accepted by a person in a fiduciary position as an incentive for his breach of duty constituted a bribe and,

although in law it belonged to the fiduciary, in equity he not only became a debtor for the amount of the bribe to the person to whom the duty was

owned but he also held the bribe and any property acquired therewith on constructive trust for that person. It is held further that if the value of the

property representing the bribe depreciated the fiduciary had to pay to the injured person the difference between that value and the initial amount

of the bribe, and if the property increased in value the fiduciary was not entitled to retain the excess since equity would not allow him to make any

profit from his breach of duty. Accordingly, it is held that to the extent that they represented bribes received by the first respondent, the New

Zealand properties were held in trust for the Crown, and the Crown had an equitable interest therein. The learned Law Lord observed further that

if the theory of constructive trust is not applied and properties interdicted when available, the properties ""can be sold and the proceeds whisked

away to some Shangri La which hides bribes and other corrupt moneys in numbered bank accounts""-to which we are tempted to add: one can

understand the immorality of the Bankers who maintained numbered accounts but it is difficult to understand the amorality of the Governments and

their laws which sanction such practices-in effect encouraging them. The ratio of this decision applies equally where a person acquires properties

by violating the law and at the expense of and to the detriment of the State and its revenues where an enactment provides for such a course, even if

the fiduciary relationship referred to in Reid is not present. It may be seen that the concept employed in Reid was a common law concept, whereas

here is a case of an express statutory provision providing for such forfeiture. May we say in conclusion that ""the interests of society are paramount

to individual interests and the two must be brought into just and harmonious relation. A mere property career is not the final destiny of mankind, if

progress is to be the law of the future as it has been of the past."" (Lewis Henry Morgan: Ancient Society).

51. Question No. 5: It is contended by the counsel for the petitioners that extending the provisions of SAFEMA to the relatives, associates and

other ''holders'' is again a case of over-reaching or of over-breadth, as it may be called-a case of excessive regulation. It is submitted that the

relatives or associates of a person falling under Clause (a) or Clause (b) of Section 2(2) of SAFEMA may have acquired properties of their own,

may be by illegal means but there is no reason why those properties be forfeited under SAFEMA just because they are related to or are associates

of the detenue or convict, as the case may be. It is pointed out that the definition of the ''relative'' in Explanation (2) and of ''Associates'' in

Explanation (3) is so wide as to bring in a person even distantly related or associated with the convict/detenue, within the net of SAFEMA, and

once he comes within the net, all his illegally acquired properties can be forfeited under the Act. In our opinion, the said contention is based upon a

mis-conception. SAFEMA is directed towards forfeiture of ""illegally acquired properties"" of a person falling under Clause (a) or Clause (b) of

Section 2(2). The relatives and associates are brought in only for the purpose of ensuring that the illegally acquired properties of the convict or

detenue, acquired or kept in their names, do not escape the net of the Act. It is a well-known fact that persons indulging in illegal activities screen

the properties acquired from such illegal activity in the names of their relatives and associates. Sometimes they transfer such properties to them,

may be, with an intent to transfer the ownership and title. In fact, it is immaterial how such relative or associate holds the properties of

convict/detenu whether as a benami or as a mere name-lender or as a bona fide transferee for value or in any other manner. He cannot claim those

properties and must surrender them to the State under the Act. Since he is a relative or associate, as defined by the Act, he cannot put forward any

defence once it is proved that that property was acquired by the detenue-whether in his own name or in the name of his relatives and associates. It

is to counter-act the several devices that are or may be adopted by persons mentioned in Clauses (a) and (b) of Section 2(2) that their relatives

and associates mentioned in Clauses (c) and (d) of the said sub-section are also brought within the purview of the Act. The fact of their holding or

possessing the properties of convict/detenue furnishes the link between the convict/detenue and his relatives and associates. Only the properties of

the convict/detenue are sought to be forfeited, wherever they are. The idea is to reach his properties in whosever''s name they are kept or by

whosoever they are held. The independent properties of relatives and friends, which are not traceable to the convict/detenue, are not sought to be

forfeited nor are they within the purview of SAFEMA. We may proceed to explain what we say. Clause c) speaks of a relative of a person

referred to in Clause (a) or Clause (b) (which speak of a convict or a detenue). Similarly, Clause (d) speaks of associates of such convict or

detenue. If we look to Explanation (3) which specifies who the associates referred to in Clause (d) are, the matter becomes clearer. ""Associates

means: (i) any individual who had been or is residing in the residential premises (including outhouses) of such person [''such person'' refers to the

convict or detenue, as the case may be, referred to in Clause (a) or Clause (b)]; (ii) any individual who had been or is managing the affairs or

keeping the accounts of such convict/detenue; (iii) any association of persons, body of individuals, partnership firm or private company of which

such convict/detenue had been or is a member, partner or director; (iv) any individual who had been or is a member, partner or director of an

association of persons, body of individuals, partnership firm or private company referred to in Clause (iii) at any time when such person had been

or is a member, partner or director of such association of persons, body of individuals, partnership firm or private company; (v) any person who

had been or is managing the affairs or keeping the accounts of any association of persons, body of individuals, partnership firm or private company

referred to in Clause (iii); (vi) the trustee of any trust where (a) the trust has been created by such convict/detenue; or (b) the value of the assets

contributed by such convict/detenue to the trust amounts, on the date of contribution, not less than 20% of the value of the assets of the trusts on

that date; and (vii) where the competent authority, for reasons to be recorded in writing, considers that any properties of such convict/detenue are

held on his behalf by any other person, such other person. It would thus be clear that the connecting link or the nexus, as it may be called, is the

holding of property or assets of the convict/detenue or traceable to such detenu/convict. Section 4 is equally relevant in this context. It declares that

as from the commencement of this Act, it shall not be lawful for any person to whom this Act applies to hold any illegally acquired property either

by himself or through any other person on his behalf. All such property is liable to be forfeited. The language of this section is indicative of the ambit

of the Act. Clauses (c) and (d) in Section 2(2) and the Explanations (2) and (3) occurring therein shall have to be construed and understood in the

light of the overall scheme and purpose of the enactment. The idea is to forfeit the illegally acquired properties of the convict/detenue irrespective of

the fact that such properties are held by or kept in the name of or screened in the name of any relative or associate as defined in the said two

Explanations. The idea is not to forfeit the independent properties of such relatives or associates which they may have acquired illegally but only to

reach the properties of the convict/detenue or properties traceable to him, wherever they are, ignoring all the transactions with respect to those

properties. By way of illustration, take a case where a convict/detenue purchases a property in the name of his relative or associate bit does not

matter whether he intends such a person to be a mere name-lender or whether he really intends that such person shall be the real owner and/or

possessor thereof-or gifts away or otherwise transfers his properties in favour of any of his relatives or associates, or purports to sell them to any

of his relatives or associates-in all such cases, all the said transactions will be ignored and the properties forfeited unless the convict/detenue or his

relative/associate, as the case may be, establishes that such property or properties are not ""illegally acquired properties"" within the meaning of

Section 3(c). In this view of the matter, there is no basis for the apprehension that the independently acquired properties of such relatives and

associates will also be forfeited even if they are in no way connected with the convict/detenue. So far as the holders (not being relatives and

associates) mentioned in Section 2(2)(e) are concerned, they are dealt with on a separate footing. If such person proves that he is ''a'' transferee in

good faith for consideration, his property-even though purchased from a convict/detenu is not liable to be forfeited. It is equally necessary to

reiterate that the burden of establishing that the properties mentioned in the show cause notice issued u/s 6, and which are held on that date by a

relative or an associate of the convict/detenue, are not the illegally acquired properties of the convict/detehue, lies upon such relative/associate. He

must establish that the said property has not been acquired with the monies or assets provided by the detenu/convict or that they in fact did not or

do not belong to such detenu/convict. We do not think that the Parliament ever intended to say that the properties of all the relatives and associates

may be illegally acquired, will be forfeited just because they happen to be the relatives or associates of the convict/detenue. There ought to be the

connecting link between those properties and the convict/detenue, the burden of disproving which, as mentioned above, is upon the

relative/associate. In this view'' of the matter, the apprehension and contention of the petitioners in this behalf must be held to be based upon a

mistaken premise. The bringing in of the relatives and associates or of the persons mentioned in Clause (e) of Section 2(2) is thus neither

discriminatory nor incompetent apart from the protection of Article 31B.

52. Question No. 6: Petitioners challenge the validity of Section 5A of COFEPOSA on the ground of it being violative of the twin safeguards

provided by Clause (5) of Article 22. It is submitted that the said Clause gives two rights to the detenue viz. (i) to have the grounds on which the

order of detention is based communicated to him as soon as possible and (ii) to be afforded the earliest opportunity of making representation

against the order of detention-See State of Bombay v. Alma Ram Vaidya 1951 CriLJ 373 It the grounds included irrelevant or non-existent

grounds, it is submitted, the first right is violated and if the grounds included vague grounds, the second right is violated. According to the learned

Counsel, Article 22(5), as interpreted by this Court over the last more than four decades, means this: an order of preventive detention is based

upon the subjective satisfaction of the authority and where such satisfaction has been arrived at on grounds some of which are relevant and definite

grounds and some irrelevant, vague and non-existent, it is not possible or permissible for the court to predicate which grounds have influenced the

formation of his satisfaction-which means that the order of detention must fall to the ground; if this is what Article 22(5) means and says, it is not

open to the Parliament to make a law saying that where the grounds upon which the requisite satisfaction has been formed are partly good and

partly bad, yet the order must be held to be good with reference to and on the basis of good grounds, eschewing the bad grounds. Such a law, it is

submitted, would be in direct conflict with Article 22(5). Let us examine this submission rather closely.

53. Section 5A of COFEPOSA may be reproduced here for ready reference. It reads:

5-A. Grounds detention severable.- Where a person has been detained in pursuance of an order of detention under Sub-section (1) of Section 3

which has been made on two or more grounds, such order of detention shall be deemed to have been made separately on each of such grounds

and accordingly

(a) such order shall not be deemed to be invalid or inoperative merely because one or some of the grounds is or are-

(i) vague,

(ii) non-existent

(iii) non relevant,

(iv) not connected or not proximately connected with such person, or

(v) invalid for any other reason whatsoever,

and it is not therefore possible to hold that the Government or officer making such order would have been satisfied as provided in Sub-section (1)

of Section 3 with reference to the remaining ground or grounds and made the order of detention;

(b) the Government or officer making the order of detention shall be deemed to have made the order of detention under the said Sub-section (1)

after being satisfied as provided in that Sub-section with reference to the remaining grounds or grounds.

54. The Section is in two parts. The first part says that where an order of detention is made on two or more grounds, ""such order of detention shall

be deemed to have been made separately on each of such grounds"", while the second part says that such order shall not be deemed to be invalid

or inoperative merely for the reason that one or some of the grounds are either vague, non-existent, irrelevant or unconnected. That the second

part is merely a continuation of and consequential to the first part is evident from the connecting words ""and accordingly"". The second part goes

further and says that the order of detention must be deemed to have been made on being satisfied with the remaining good ground or grounds, as

the case may be. Both the parts are joined by the word ""and"".

55. Now, it is beyond dispute that an order of detention can be based upon one single ground. Several decisions of this Court have held that even

one prejudicial act can be treated as sufficient for forming the requisite satisfaction for detaining the person. In Debu Mahato v. State of West

Bengal 1974 CriLJ 699 , it was observed that while ordinarily- speaking one act may not be sufficient to form the requisite satisfaction, there is no

such invariable rule and that in a given case one act may suffice. That was a case of wagon-breaking and having regard to the nature of the Act, it

was held that one act is sufficient. The same principle was reiterated in Anil Dey v. State of West Bengal 1974 CriLJ 702 . It was a case of theft of

railway signal material. Here too one act was held to be sufficient. Similarly, in Israil SK v. District Magistrate of West Dinajpur and Ors. 1975

CriLJ 275 and Dhanta Kanu v. State of West Bengal 1975 CriLJ 459 single act of theft of telegraph copper wires in huge quantity and removal of

railway fish plates respectively was held sufficient to sustain the order of detention. In Saraswathi Seshagiri v. State of Kerala and Anr. AIR 1982

SC 1165 a case arising under COFEPOSA, a single act, viz., attempt to export a huge amount of Indian currency was held sufficient. In short, the

principle appears to be this; though ordinarily one act may not be held sufficient to sustain an order of detention, one act may sustain an order of

detention if the act is of such a nature as to indicate that it is an organised act of a manifestation of organised activity. The gravity and nature of the

act is also relevant. The test is whether the act is such that it gives rise to an inference that the person would continue to indulge in similar prejudicial

activity. That is the reason why single acts of wagon-breaking, theft of signal material, theft of telegraph copper wires in huge quantity and removal

of railway fish plates were held sufficient. Similarly, where the person tried to export huge amount of Indian currency to a foreign country in a

planned and pre-meditated manner, it was held that such single act warrants an inference that he will repeat his activity in future and, therefore, his

detention is necessary to prevent him from indulging in such prejudicial activity. If one looks at the acts the COFEPOSA is designed to prevent,

they are all either acts of smuggling or of foreign exchange manipulation. These acts are indulged in by persons, who act in concert with other

persons and quite often such activity has international ramifications. These acts are preceded by a good amount of planning and organisation. They

are not like ordinary law and order crimes. If, however, in any given case a single act is found to be not sufficient to sustain the order of detention

that may well be quashed but it cannot be stated as a principle that one single act cannot constitute the basis for detention. On the contrary, it does.

In other words, it is not necessary that there should be multiplicity of grounds for making or sustaining an order detention.

56. Now, take a case, where three orders of detention are made against the same person under COFEPOSA. Each of the orders is based upon

only one ground which is supplied to the detenue. It is found that the ground of detention in support of two of such orders is either vague or

irrelevant. But the ground in support of the third order is relevant, definite and proximate. In such a case, while the first two orders would be

quashed, the third order would stand. This is precisely what the first part (the main part) of Section 5A seeks to do. Where the order of detention

is based on more than one ground, the Section creates a legal fiction, viz., it must be deemed that there are as many orders of detention as there

are grounds which means that each of such orders is an independent order. The result is the same us the one in the illustration given by us

hereinabove. The second part of it is merely clarificatory and explanatory, which is evident from the fact that it begins with the word ""accordingly""-

apart from the fact that it is joined to the first part by the word ""and"". In such a situation, we are unable to see how can the section be characterised

as inconsistent with Article 22(5). Had there been no first part, and had the section consisted only of the second part, one can understand the

contention that the section is in the teeth of Article 22(5) as interpreted by this Court-this was indeed the situation in K. Yadigiri Reddy v. The

Commissioner of Police ILR 1972 A.P. 1025 as we shall presently indicate. It is difficult to conceive any inconsistency or conflict between Article

22(5) and the first-the main-part of Section 5A. The Parliament is competent to create a legal fiction and it did so in this case. Article 22(5) does

not in terms or otherwise prohibit making of more than one order simultaneously against the same person, on different grounds. No decision saying

so has been brought to our notice. Be that as it may, we do not see why the Parliament is not competent to say, by creating a legal fiction, that

where an order of detention is made on more than one ground, it must be deemed that there are as many orders of detention as there are grounds.

If this creation of a legal fiction is competent, then no question of any inconsistency between the section and Article 22(5) can arise.

57. It is true that validity of Section 5A-or for that matter, of Section 5-A of National Security Act, 1980, which is in identical terms-does not

appear to have been questioned in this Court so far, though it has been applied in several decisions. Three of the reported decisions are brought to

our notice, viz., State of Gujarat v. Chaman Lal Manjibhai Soni 1981 CriLJ 1042 , Prakash Chandra Mehta v. Commissioner and Secretary

Kerala [1985| Suppl. S.C. 144 and N. Meera Rani v. State of Tamil Nadu [1989] 3 SCR 901 . Actually, in the last-mentioned decision, there are

observations affirming its validity, though no final opinion has been expressed on the question because it was not canvassed in that case. It is also

brought to our notice that a Bench of Gujarat High Court has affirmed and applied the said provision in a case arising under COFEPOSA.

58. Now, coming to the decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in K. Yadigiri Reddy, Section 6(a) of the A.P. Detention Act, 1970 read as

follows:

No detention order shall be invalid or inoperative merely by reason that one or more of the grounds on which the order is made is or are vague or

irrelevant, when the other ground or grounds does not or do not suffer from any such informity.

59. The Andhra Pradesh provision thus contained a provision approximating to the second part of Section 5A but did not contain any provision

corresponding to or approximating to the first (the main) part of Section 5A. It is the first part of Section 5A that creates the deeming fiction; the

second part merely elaborates the effect and consequence of the legal fiction in the first part. The second part, had it stood alone, could perhaps

have been characterized as being in the teeth of Article 22(5), as understood and construed by this Court-and that is what the Andhra Pradesh

High Court says-but that is not the situation herein as explained herein above. The said decision, therefore, does not advance the case of the

petitioners in any manner herein. Having said this, we must reiterate the admonition of Gajendragadkar, J., regarding the exercise of the power of

detention under the various detention laws in force. Speaking for the Constitution Bench in G. Sadanandan v. State of Kerala 1966 CriLJ 1533 the

learned Judge observed:

We feel rudely disturbed by the thought that continuous exercise of the very wide powers conferred by the Rules on the several authorities is likely

to make the conscience of the said authorities insensitive, if not blunt, to the paramount requirement of the Constitution that even during Emergency,

the freedom of Indian citizens cannot be taken away without the existence of the justifying necessity specified by the Rules themselves. The

tendency to treat these matters in a somewhat casual and cavalier manner which may conceivably result from the continuous use of such unfettered

powers, may ultimately pose a serious threat to the basic values on which the democratic way of life in this country is founded.

60. In matters touching liberty, greater care is called for on the part of the authorities exercising powers of detention.

An Additional question: Dr. Ghatate, appearing for one of the petitioners raised an interesting submission to the following effect: by Constitution

44th (Amendment) Act, the Parliament, acting in its constituent power, has substituted Clause (4) as well as Clause (7) of Article 22 leaving it to

the Central Government to specify the date from which the said amendment shall come into force. Sub-section (2) of Section 1 of the

(Amendment) Act empowers the Central Government to fix different dates for coming into force of different provisions of the said Act. Though the

Central Government has specified the date of coming into force in respect of several other provisions of the Amendment Act, it has not chosen to

specify the date from which the Amendments to-substitution of-Clauses (4) and (7) of Article 22 shall come into force. The 44th (Amendment)

Act was enacted as far back as April, 1979 and even though more than fourteen years have passed by, the Central Government has not thought it

fit to enforce the said Amendments. This failure on the part of the Central Government has the effect of virtually nullifying the said Amendments.

While enacting the said Amendments, the Parliament could never have contemplated that the Central Government would sit on them for more than

fourteen years. The Central Government must act in accordance with the spirit of the Amendment Act. It must act reasonably. It cannot undo a

Constitution Amendment just by refusing to specify a date from which it shall come into operation. Even if the power given to the Central

Government is characterized as a conditional legislation still shall the fact remains that such power too must have to be exercised reasonably and

within reasonable time. Can the Central Government wait for few more years and would the Court be powerless to command the Central

Government to bring into force the said Amendment? If no such command can be given, would it not mean that the Parliament was, in the year

1979, amending the Constitution, not for that generation but for the next generation? Section 1(2) of the 44th (Amendment) Act is indeed an

instance of abdication of or delegation of essential constituent power and, therefore, bad. Such a thing has never happened and cannot be allowed

to happen; the Central Government ought not to be allowed to play with a constitutional amendment-an amendment which, in particular, tends to

strengthen the safeguard contained in Clause (4) of Article 22, says the counsel.

61. We do not, however, think it necessary for the purposes of these cases to express any opinion on Dr. Ghatate''s submission, for the reason

that acceptance of his contention-assuming we do-makes no difference to the result of these petitions. We have already held that the orders of

detention made u/s 3 of COFEPOSA, which were governed by Section 12A do yet represent orders of detention for the purpose of and within

the meaning of Section 2(2)(b) read with Section 2(1) of SAFEMA. Even if we assume that the amendments to Clauses (4) and (7) effected by

the 44th (Amendment) Act have come into force on the day the Amendment Act received assent of the President, the result would be no different.

In this view of the matter, it is also not necessary to express any opinion on the respondent''s submission based upon A.K. Roy v. Union of India

1982 CriLJ 340 , viz., whether the opinion in the said decision can be validly applied even after a lapse of fourteen years.

62. To summaries:

(1) the Parliament was perfectly competent to enact both the COFEPOSA and the SAFEMA.

(2) for the reasons given in the body of this judgment, we do not express any opinion on the validity of the 38th and 40th Amendment Acts to the

Constitution of India placing COFEPOSA and SAFEMA in the IXth Schedule. We assume them to be good and valid. No arguments have also

been addressed with respect to the validity of 42nd Amendment Act to the Constitution either.

(3a) An order of detention made u/s 3 of COFEPOSA, which was governed by Section 12A thereof is yet an order of detention for the purpose

of and within the meaning of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA. Since the President had issued an order under Article 359(1) suspending Articles 14,

21 and 22, it became competent for the Parliament, by virtue of Clause (1A) of Article 359 to enact Section 12A of COFEPOSA for the duration

of and limited to the period for which the Presidential Order was in force. It was meant to achieve the purposes of emergency. Once Section 12A

is held to be a competent piece of legislation, orders of detention made thereunder (i.e., orders of detention to which the said provision applied)

cannot be held to be not amounting to orders of detention for the purpose of and within the meaning of Section 2(2)(b) of SAFEMA, particularly

in view of the express language of Section 2(2)(b) (including proviso (iii) thereto)-and the protection enjoyed by both the enactments by virtue of

their inclusion in the IXth Schedule to the Constitution.

(b) An order of detention to which Section 12A is applicable as well as an order of detention to which Section 12A was not applicable can serve

as the foundation, as the basis, for applying SAFEMA to such detenue and to his relatives and associates provided such order of detention does

not attract any of the sub-clauses in the proviso to Section 2(2)(b). If such detenue did not choose to question the said detention (either by himself

or through his next friend) before the Court during the period when such order of detention was in force,-or is unsuccessful in his attack thereon he,

or his relatives and associates cannot attack or question its validity when it is made the basis for applying SAFEMA to him or to his relatives or

associates.

(4) The definition of ""illegally acquired properties"" in Clause (c) of Section 3 of SAFEMA is not invalid or ineffective.

(5) The application of SAFEMA to the relatives and associates [in Clauses (c) and (d) of Section 2(2)] is equally valid and effective inasmuch as

the purpose and object of bringing such persons within the net of SAFEMA is to reach the properties of the detenue or convict, as the case may

be, wherever they are, howsoever they are held and by whomsoever they are held. They are not conceived with a view to forfeit the independent

properties of such relatives and associates as explained in this judgment. The position of ''holders'' dealt with by Clause (e) of Section 2(2) is

different as explained in the body of the judgment.

(6) Section 5A of COFEPOSA is not invalid or void. It is not violative of Clause (5) of Article 22.

(7) Petitioners have failed to establish that any of the provisions of SAFEMA are violative of Articles 14, 19 or 21-apart from the protection they

enjoy by virtue of the inclusion of the Act in the IXth Schedule to the Constitution.

63. All the Writ Petitions, Transferred Cases and Appeals are disposed of accordingly. The court and authorities before whom proceedings are

pending under SAFEMA shall proceed to dispose them of in accordance with law and in the light of this judgment. It is in the interest of all

concerned that the proceedings are concluded with all deliberate speed.

64. Civil Appeal No. 1418 of 1981 dismissed as withdrawn.

65. No orders are called for on I.A. No. 1 of 1993 in T.P. (C) No. 17 of 1978.

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