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1965 DIGILAW 43 (KAR)

JESU DASAN v. STATE

1965-04-14

A.R.SOMNATH IYER, AHMED ALI KHAN

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Page 1 of 2 1966-Crlj-0-831 , 1965-Tlkar-0-15 , 1965 (TLS)1022949 HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA Coram : A. R. Somnath Iyer And M. Ahmed Ali Khan, JJ. . . Of . (APRIL 14, 1965) JESU DASAN VS. STATE A. R. SOMNATH IYER, J. ( 1 ) IN these applications made under Section 491 of the Code of Criminal Procedure for a direction that the detenues shall be set at liberty, it was mentioned to us on Monday by Mr. Ramachandra Rao, the learned Advocate for the detenues, that there has been no review by the authority which was under a duty to make a review-within a period of six months from the date of the-Order of detention, as enjoined by Sub-rule (8) of Rule 30a of the Defence of India Rules. Since this question arose for the first time, when Mr. Ramachandra Rao made that submission, mr. Advocate; General asked for postponement of the proceedings till to-day to enable him to ascertain whether the review enjoined by Sub-rule (8) of Rule 30a has or has not been made. ( 2 ) THE Orders of detention in these cases were made by the Deputy Commissioner, Bellary, on october 8, 1964. The argument placed before us by Mr. Ramachandra Rao was that, under sub-rule (8) of Rule 30a a review was imperative before the expiry of six months from the date of the Order of detention. That period of six months having expired, according to Mr. Ramachandra Rao, on April 8, 1965, he contended that the detenues can no longer be continued in detention. ( 3 ) MR. Advocate General mentions to us to-day that there has till now been no review of the orders of detention under Sub-rule (8) of Rule 30a of the-Defence of India Rules. ( 4 ) MR. Advocate General did not contend before-us that the interval of six months specified in sub-rule (8) of Rule 30a does not commence from the date of the Orders of detention but commences from some other date which as the date on which the detenues were indeed arrested or the date on which there was a confirmation of the Orders of detention by the Government under the provisions of Sub-rule (6) of Rule 30a. ( 5 ) IN our opinion Mr. ( 5 ) IN our opinion Mr. Advocate General is right in not maintaining any such argument before us, it is clear from the decision of the Supreme Court tin W. P. No. 85 of 1964, Balmukund v. District Magistrate Delhi, AIR 1965 SC 877 , 1965 Crilj 4, [1965] 1 SCR 58 that the interval of six months to which Sub-rule (8) of rule 30a refers is an interval which commences from the date on which the Order of detention was made under Sub-rule (4 ). That being so, and since there has been no obedience to the provisions of Sub-rule (8) by Page 2 of 2 reasons of there being no review of the Orders of detention within an interval of six months referred to in that sub-rule, the continuance in detention of the detenues on whose behalf these applications have been made to us is illegal and they are entitled to be set at liberty. We make an Order accordingly. --- *** --- . The Laws_Super