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2020 DIGILAW 57 (JK)

Harvinder Pal Singh v. Union Territory Of J&K

2020-02-10

SANJEEV KUMAR

body2020
JUDGMENT Sanjeev Kumar, J. - In this petition, the petitioner seeks a writ in the nature of writ of certiorari to quash the detention order issued by the District Magistrate, Jammu vide its order No. 17 of 2019 dated 23.10.2019, whereby the petitioner has been detained under Section 8 (1) (a) of the J&K Public Safety Act, 1978 with a view to prevent him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. The order of detention is yet to be executed. The detention order at pre-execution stage has been challenged by the petitioner, inter-alia, on the ground that the same suffers from total non-application of mind of the detaining authority, which has been mislead by the respondent Nos. 1 and 2. 2. The order impugned is also assailed on the ground that on the basis of some F.I.Rs and material, the detention order was issued against the petitioner in the year, 2010 vide order No. 36/PSA of 2010 dated 17.07.2010. The aforesaid order of detention was executed and the petitioner was put under detention but later on, this Court vide its judgment dated 16.12.2010, quashed Sr. No. 82 the detention order and set the petitioner free. The detaining authority, i.e. District Magistrate, Jammu has once again issued the detention order on the selfsame grounds and, therefore, not sustainable in law. It is contended that the order impugned is nothing but reproduction of the dossier submitted by respondent No. 4 and, therefore, there is no independent application of mind by the detaining authority. 3. Heard learned counsel for the petitioner and perused the record. 4. It is now well settled that judicial review against the order of detention, before it is actually executed, is available, however, the same is required to be exercised sparingly. In the cases of Deepak Bajaj Vs. State of Maharashtra and another,2008 1 SCC 14 and Additional Secretary to the Government of India Vs. Smt. Alka Subash Gadia, (1992) Supp1 SCC 496 , the Hon'ble Supreme Court has laid down following parameters for exercise of powers of judicial review at pre-execution stage:- (i) That the order is not passed under the Act under which it is purported to have been passed. (ii) That it is said to be executed against a wrong person. (iii) That it is passed for a wrong purpose. (ii) That it is said to be executed against a wrong person. (iii) That it is passed for a wrong purpose. (iv) That it is passed on vague, extraneous and irrelevant grounds; or (v) That the authority which has passed it has no authority to do so. 5. In the backdrop of the aforesaid legal position, when the case set up by the petitioner is examined, it is clearly found that none of the aforesaid conditions exist for exercise of powers of judicial review against the order of detention at pre-execution stage. It is not the case of the petitioner that the order of detention has not been passed under the J&K Public Safety Act, 1978 or is alien to the provisions of the Act. The detention under Section 8 (1) (a) of J&K Public Safety Act, 1978 can be passed by the District Magistrate, if it is satisfied that it is necessary to prevent the detenue from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. The activities in which the detenue has been found consistently involved, makes out a case for placing the petitioner under detention. The detention order has been passed by the District Magistrate and the same is intended to be executed against the petitioner and, therefore, it cannot be said that the order of detention is being executed against a wrong person. 6. There is nothing on record to indicate that the detention order has been passed for a wrong purpose. The order of detention clearly delineates the purpose for which it has been issued, i.e. to prevent the petitioner from indulging in activities prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. It is also not the case of the petitioner that the District Magistrate, Jammu is not a competent authority to pass the detention order under J&K Public Safety Act, 1978. 7. I have carefully gone through the grounds of detention. It is true that most of the grounds of detention pertain to the F.I.Rs registered prior to the year, 2010 and which were also part of the grounds of detention served upon the petitioner, when he was earlier detained, but the earlier detention of the petitioner which was, however, later on quashed by this Court, does not appear to have detered the petitioner to pursue his activities. 8. 8. F.I.R No. 177/2016 and F.I.R No. 159/2019 are additional material which has been considered by the detaining authority to arrive at the satisfaction that it is necessary to prevent the petitioner from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order and, therefore, he is required to be detained under the provisions of Public Safety Act, 1978. 9. For the foregoing reasons, it would not be possible for this Court to agree with the learned counsel for the petitioner that the order of detention has been passed on vague, extraneous and irrelevant grounds. The petitioner may have good grounds to assail the order of detention once, it is executed but the grounds for interfering with the order of detention at preexecution stage surely do not exist. 10. The Supreme Court in the cases of Alka Subash Gadia (supra) and Deepak Bajaj (supra) has laid down five different parameters where the judicial review against the detention order at pre-execution stage is permissible in law. These parameters laid down by the Supreme Court are not enumerative but exhaustive in nature. The case of the petitioner, admittedly, does not fall within the aforesaid parameters and, therefore, cannot be accepted. Reliance placed on Ghulam Qadir Ganai Vs. State of J&K, (2011) 2 JKJ 871 is totally misconceived. In the aforementioned case the order of detention had remained unexecuted for two years. That apart, the judgment of Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Alka Subash Gadia (supra) had also not been brought to the notice of learned Single Judge. 11. For all these reasons, no case is made out for interference with the impugned order of detention at this stage and as a result, the writ petition is dismissed along with connected CM. 12. The petitioner, however, shall be at liberty to work out his remedy against the detention order as and when the same is executed and when the petitioner is taken into preventive detention. In that event, nothing stated hereinabove shall be construed as an expression of any opinion on the merits of the detention order.